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                    <text>Crooms Merger Plan Before Board Wednesday

Sanford Says
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'Gandhi' Big Winner In Oscar Ceremony

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Sanford Threatens To Cut Off The Water

Do You Want To Finance House Members' Campaigns?

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�Gunter: Ban Sex
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FLORIDA

INBRIEF

And Who'll Give Me...?

House Panel Votes To Keep
Teacher Assessments Secret ,

★ CREMATION EXPLAINED*
SEND FOR FREE BOOKLET PUBLISHED
BY THE CREMATION ASSOCIATION
OF NORTH AMERICA
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS MOST OFTEN ASKED

SEND TOi Cremation Explained

CALENDAR

Announcing your new

Building
Supply Store
We’ll supply the casK/when you remodel!

ALPINE
Cancer Patient Kills 2,
Himself After Argument TOUR

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Raise the r o o f . . . add that second story. T hen screen your
neighbors . . . by enclosing your patio. W hatever you've
been thinking about, now’s the best time to nail
us for a home improvement loan.
O n the level, our new program to loan
remodeling money may floor
you.
You c an borrow and
take as long as 15 years to
repay. Be prepared for a fast reply and good service on your
loan request, too.
W ith plane facts like that, why wait? Come in today. . . hamyeat way to start modernizing

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Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERY

The M are’s N est
Carriage Cove residents enjoy the use ol this clubhouse.

A Few Choice Lots Left
At Carriage Cove Park
REALTY TRANSFERS

Uhornhid's 9nteriors G/c.

Storer Sues; Other Firms List Profits

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY
AREA

" J I A N NORRIS
FERNSAEXOTICPLANTS
SpecialisingInWeddings•Receptl

Med-Care Surgical
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RENTALS &gt; SALES

Filing Deadline Friday For
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R E N T A C A R *9 ??

Blue Book Service Center

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75th Year, No. 176-Monday, March 14, 1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald-(USPS 481-2B0)-Prlce 20 Cents

Requested Bus Service To Zoo Unlikely
By Michesl Beha
Herald Staff Writer

But Harbour recommended against the bus service connections and hurt rldcrehlp."
Harbour said tody that the extension would serve only
extension of service to the zoo because II would have an
Bus service should not be extended to the Central adverse affect on service to other bus riders.
the zoo "and would attract few other riders."
Florida Zoo. according to a recommendation from the
"It Is anticipated that few zoo workers or patrons
He said the board would have to extend service from
staff of the Orange-Scmlnole-Osccola Transportation the last current stop on the line — the Central Florida would use the service," he said. "A t the present time,
Authority.
Regional Hospital — which Is about five additional miles most zoo employees have other forms of transportation.
The request for service came from Zoo Executive to the zoo. That would make It virtually Impossible to This transit service route cannot depend only on
Director A1 Rozon through Seminole County Commis­ maintain the hourly schedule that buses currently occasional zoo visitors from Sanford."
sioner Bill KlrchhofT. a member of the OSOTA board, follow on the route, he said.
He said there were no factors In the authority's review
according to Michael Harbour, assistant general manag­
"T h e best we could do would be about every hour and ( of the request which suggested that the zoo route would
15 minutes." he said. "That would upset transfer have much ridcrshlp.
er of the transportation authority.

MuffettBaker Crowned '83 Pageant Winnner
By Doris Dietrich
People Editor
Muffett Baker seemed to drift “ Up. Up and
Away.” — the theme of the second annual
Miss Sanford Scholarship Pageant, to a
shocked state of euphoria when she was
crowned Miss Sanford 1983 Saturday night at
Lake Mary High School.
“ I’m speechless." the blonde beauty queen
said. She added that she has been In several
pageants, but this Is her first as the grand
winner

Miss Baker was crowned by Catherine Jean
Stewart. Miss Sanford 1982. first runner-up
In last year's pageant. Miss Stcwcart was
advanced to Miss Sanford when Miss Sanford
Deanna Pitman went on to capture the Miss
Florida title.
On her own cloud In summarizing her
memories of Miss Sanford. Miss Stewart
ended her commentary with. "Sanford truly
lives up to Its motto as the friendly city."
The glittering crown was the frosting on the
cake for Miss Baker's competition gown — a
navy background lavishly embellished with
beads and Iridcscents. She wore a purple
swimsuit In the swimsuit competition.
Miss Sanford 1983 will receive a $300 cash
scholarship, a $595 Image Development
scholarship, a $500 gold chain and engraved
m e d a llio n , a $ 25 5 c a r e e r and s e lfdevelopcmnt scholarship, dinner certificates
and trophy. She will reign over events In
Sanford to promote the city and will compete
In the Miss Florida Scholalrshlp Pageant In
June In Orlando.
.

Haraltf ffwtot By Jeta Oordan

1983 Miss Sanford
Muffett Baker
According to Carole Pcgram. co-chairman
with Meg Newman of the pageant sponsored
by the Junior Woman's Club of Sanford. Inc..
Miss Sanford Is available for public appear­
ances by contacting a woman's club member.
Miss Baker, a senior at Rollins College
where she Is majoring In theatre arts and
communications. Is a 1979 graduate of Lake
Howell High School. She has worked her way
through school as a singer and dancer at Walt
Disney World.
The green-eyed. 5 '3 " beauty queen Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baker of
Seminole County. She appeared In the movie
"Jaws 3-D" and hopes to pursue a career In
musical theatre and dance. She has two
brothers, one younger and one older.
Mrs.Pegram said. "W e had fantastic con­
testants and we are looking forward to
working with MufTctt.
The other Miss Sanford contestants In­
clude: Marsha Sawczuk. 18. Sanford; Rcene
Karen Kllncko. 24. Goldcnrod: Carol Anne
Tardlf. 17. Sanford: Tammy Jean Bohannon,
17. Sanford: Lauara Anderson. 17. Sorrento:
Barbara Anne Childers, 17, Geneva: and
Clyncll Denise Fort. 19. Sanford.

2nd Runner-Up
M ary Freeman

Seminole County's 30.000 elementary
school students could be fingerprinted as a
safeguard against kidnapping under a plan
being worked out by the Sheriffs Department
and school officials.
Fingerprinting o f the children would be
strictly on a voluntary basis and the
fingerprints would be kept by the parents,
school officials and the Sheriffs Department
officials stressed.
The Idea o f launching a fingerprinting
campaign — a similar program already exists
in Brevard and Orange counties — came after
about 40 parents called the Sheriffs De­
partment and asked If fhelr children could be
fingerprinted. The requests were made after u
recent movie dealing with the abduction of
children.
Fingerprinting o f the youngsters would be
done by volunteers of the local chapter of the
National Council of Jewish Women, who
would have to be trained by fingerprint
experts. It is acknowledged by law enforce­
ment officers that taking the fingerprints of

Marina Work
Loan OK'd;
State To Act

young children Is difficult.
Seminole County School Board's director of
elementary education. Marlon Glanninl. said
the Idea Is In the early stages o f planning and
no decision has been made.
Once details have been worked out and
sent to Robert Hughes, Seminole County
superintendent of schools, the proposal will
have to be approved by the school board.
"W e are In the very early stages and the
Sheriffs Department has agreed to do the
fingerprinting training. It would be a strictly
voluntary thing and up to the parents. If we
'd o It we would like (o fingerprint all the
students In Seminole County, from kin­
dergarten to elementary and middle school,"
said Miss Glanninl. She estimated that there
are about 40,000 students who would be
eligible to have their prints taken.
If (he program goes ahead. It Is expected to
start In September.
"T h e police won’t have the prints. They
will be done at school and they will be taken
home and they will be the only copy." she
said.
Glanninl will hold meetings with the
Sheriffs Department to work out details of

M onroe H arbour M arina owneroperator Charles Volk has completed
arrangements to finance maintenance
dredging In the harbor and to extend the
eastern bulkhead about 300 feet north.
But the work can’t begin until approval
Is received from two state agencies.
H o ld in g up the Im p ro v em e n ts ,
estimated to cost $100,000. is permit
approval by the state Department of
Environmental Regulation and the state
Department of Natural Resources.
Volk said today that he hopes those
approvals will be received this month.
Applications were filed seeking the
permits more than three months ago.
Included In the planned Improvements
at the marina are the construction of 80
new slips, to expand from 120 to 200 the
slips available at the harbor and to
extend the dock. Volk Is to handle
financing for this part of the Improve­
ment on his own.
The Sanford City Commission, which
leases the property to Volk under a long
term arrangem ent. Is expected to
fo rm a lly endorse V o lk 's $100,000
approved loan from Sanford Atlantic
Banks for the dredging and bulkhead
improvement project at Its 7 p.m.
meeting today at city hall. 300 N. Park
Ave.
Volk arranged the loan to run for 15
years at an annual Interest rate of 14
percent. Volk said the city will endorse
the $100,000 loan to be used for the
dredging of 14.000 square feet of sill and
dirt from the harbor and for extending
the bulkhead about 300 feet north.

Volk has estimated the construction ol
the 80 new slips at $275,000 and he will
finance this Improvement without help
from the city.
The City Commission previously
agreed to waive collection of the marine
lease fee of up to $10,000 a year for the
length of the loan period. If the money Is
used to repay the loan.
The original lease on the marina Is for
a 55-ycar period with an option to renew
for another 45-year period. About 15Vi
years of the original lease has expired.
City Manager W.E. "P ete" Knowles
recommended that the city become
co-signer on the loan for the mainte­
nance dredging and the bulkhead
extension. He said, however, that his
recommendation was not magnanimous.
He reminded at the time that the marina
Is city-owned property and the perma­
nent Improvements Increase the value of
the property.
Volk said earlier that the 14.000
square feet of dirt dredged from the
harbor will be used to Improve the Isle.
The commission tonight Is expected to
adopt a resolution guaranteeing repay­
ment of the loan and to sign tne bank
documents.
The city has also requested the
Seminole Legislative delegation to sub­
mit legislation during the April session of
the Florida Legislature correcting the
Icgul description of the property. The
city acquired the property some years
ago from the state through a special
legislative act.
Vogt said today the special legislation
Is not holding up the state permits.

Transfers

Com m ission E xpected
To O K F e a th e r Project,
S an fo rd Library D eals

Runner-Up Dara Wells
And Catherine Stewart

Elementary Students May Receive
Fingerprinting Safeguard Service
B y Victor Assersohn
Herald Staff Writer

He said unless circumstances change, the authority's
recommendation would be against extending service to
the zoo.

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer

Miss Florida Pageant
In Orlando In June
Is Next For Muffett

Dr. C.R. "C h ip " Edwards was stepping
nearly as high as the new Miss Sanford. For
the second year the contestants he sponsored
have worn the Miss Sanford crown. "I'm
really thrilled." the Sanford dentist said.

Harbour said what the authority examines In
reviewing routes Is "what afTect It will have on present
riders."

City O K Expected

M iss S a n fo rd

The 21-year-old high-stepping dancer
wowed the judges — and the audience — with
a lilting country-western ballet. Shades of the
Old West were reflected as the coy ballerina
wearing a lavender and white gingham
checked can can-style costume swirled and
twirled across the stage, hoedown fashion.
Suspense stifled the auditorium while
master o f ceremonies Mark Hess ad libbed
and 11 pretty contestants lined the stage
awaiting the judges' decision. He announced
Dara Elizabeth Wells. 17. of Sanford as the
first runner-up and Mary Beth Freeman. 20.
Sanford, as second runner-up.
Miss Wells played the piano and sang
"Maybe This T im e " while Miss Freeman's
talent was tap dancing. Each received a
scholarship and other prizes.
Helalna Ruth Howard. 19. o f Alaamonte
Sprungs was the non-flnalht talent winner
who performed a spirited jazz-acrobatic
dance.

"T h e deviation would Inconvenience present riders on
Route 50." Harbour said. "Ridcrshlp Is good and has
shown steady Increase. We discourage any action that
could negatively affect tills route."

the program. She said she could report a
recommendation to Hughes In the next two
weeks.'
"T h e purposes o f the program Is for
Identification purposes If the child was
abducted. Basically it Is for identification
purposes and hopefully will be a llfesavcr."
she said.
Li. Beau Taylor o f the Seminole County
Sheriffs Department said the
department
had received about 40 calls from persons
Interested In the fingerprinting program. As a
result of that, the department contacted the
School Board to see If Its officials were
Interested In the program.
"A ll the calls we have gotten are at the
eltmentary level." Taylor said. "W e are only
doing this for the people who want It. The
only persons who will have the prints are the
parents."
Harriet Calmanson, vice president of com­
munity service o f the local chapter of the
National Council of Jewish Women, said the
local chapter would raise funds to pay for the
equipment needed for I he program, and
members were Interested to receive training
so that they could carry out the program.

The Sanford City Commission at a 7
p.m. meeting at city hall today is
expected to approve final documents to
co m p lete the tran sfer o f Its p re­
viously-owned 8.8 acre tract behind the
Evening Herald Building and fronting on
U.S. Highway 17-92 to County Commis­
sioner Robert G. "B ud" Feather.
Also to be completed Is the transfer of
the city's 1917 vintage former post office
building on First Street (now the Sanford
branch library) to the Seminole County
Commission.

restriction will be placed In the deed to
the property noting that the property
and Its Improvements will remain on the
tax rolls.
In the library’ matter, the agreement Is
to Include a deed restriction requiring
that the property will revert to the city
unless a library is housed there until
April 17.2003.

Documents In both cases Include
contingencies which could bring the
propertlrs back to the city if conditions
aren't met.

The county has the alternative of
(laying the city $136,250 If It decides to
discontinue the library before that time.
Another clause In the deed would permit
the city and county through mutual
agreement "for the public good" to
waive the option value and set any other
value.

The agreement with Feather calls for
him to pay the city within 90 days from
March 1 the sum of $54,500 after which
the city will release reverter clauses on
the property. The agreement also re­
quires Feather to pay the city $10,000
annually In addition to property taxes for
the tract beginning March 1. I9S4, and
continuing annually until the city Issues
a certificate of occupancy signifying that
the $16 million life-care center he plans
to build Is finished. In addition, a

The development of the formerly
city-owned property has been considered
for various types of development over
the past 10 years. The city has been
trying to encourage Its development to
get the tract on the tax rolls.
The city acquired the former post
office building from the federal govern­
ment for use as a city library. When the
county went into the library business In
the 1970s. the city library operation was
taken over by the county.— Donas Estes

•*
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•»

TODAY
Action Reports.............. 2A
Around The Clock.........4A
Bridge...........................4B
Calendar....................... 8A
Classified Ads
2,3B
Comics.......................... 4B

K

Crossword........ ...........4B
Dear Abby........ ........... IB
Deaths.............. ...........8A
Dr. Lamb......... ........... 4B
Editorial........... ...........4A
Florida......................... 8A
Horoscope........ ........ ,»4B

Hospital............ ...........2A
Nation.............. ............2A
People.............. ............IB
Sports............... .........6,7A
Television
. . IB
Weather....................... 2A
World............... ............IA

�,A ~ Ev* n&lt;n0 H trald , Sanford, FI.

Monday, March 14, If U

NATION
IN BRIEF
Environmental Group Says
Superfund Is Underfunded
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A national conserva­
tion group charges the Reagan administration's
proposed 1984 budget for the Environmental
Protection Agency will allow It to clean up Just
126 toxic waste dumps In the next 18 months.
The study by the Environmental Defense
Fund Is based on EPA data showing "very little
o f the preliminary work needed for cleanup has
been completed or Is underway," the group said.
"E P A ’s budget proposal for fiscal 1984 reflects
nothing less than a systematic and purposeful
attempt to postpone necessary work as part of a
mythical attempt to show you can do more with
less." said David Lcnnctt, attorney for the
Washington-based group.
The $1.6 billion Superfund program was
enacted by Congress to clean up the nation's
400 worst hazardous waste dumps by 1985.
EPA toxic waste officials admit progress In
cleaning up 419 sites Identified on Its "priority
list" of chemical dumps Is excruciatingly slow.
But they argue the delay Is at least partly due to
enormous technical problems Involved In re­
habilitating a severely contaminated area.

Artsy Endeavors
Fifth graders In Seminole County's gifted student
program spent a day with the arts Friday at
Seminole Community College Students like
Christy Edwards (above), an 11-year-old from
Sanford's Idyllwllde Elementary School had an

Gas Prices Still Dropping
LOS ANGELES (UPI} — Major oil companies
are trying to put the brakes on the continuing
fall in average retail gasoline prices but
nationwide this month they went down another
one and one-half cents a gallon, an analyst says.
Oil Industry analyst Dan Lundberg said
Sunday that retail prices will probably continue
the downward slide unless oil producing nations
reach agreement on prices.
The semi-monthly Lundberg Survey of sendee
stations In all 50 states showed the overall price
of gasoline at the pump — all grades and
sendees and Including taxes — was 112.31 a
gallon, down 1.63 cents over two weeks.
Lundberg said the wholesale price shows that
dealers are still giving up profits In a highly
competitive marketplace.

H tra ld Ph*to by T o m m y V ln c tn l

opportunity to make wire sculpture. At right,
Andrea Nordbeck, a 10-year-old from Wekiva
Elementary School, learns to make paper and Is
shown preparing to dry the paper in the sun.

EPA Conflict O f Interest Probed

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Gale-force winds and rains
battered the storm-plagued West Coast from Los
Angeles to Seattle, and Vermont dug out from more
than a foot of snow, but a near heatwave wanned the
Midwest and the Sunbelt. Rains that soaked Fresno and
Sacramento. Calif. Sunday sent residents Into the streets
to sandbag as several rivers in Northern California and
Oregon rose to floodstage. The storm doused Qulllayutc.
Wash., with nearly 1 Inch of ratn as winds out of the
southwest roared through Hoquiam and Bellingham.
Wash, at 60 mph. Seattle and Olympia, along with
Astoria. Ore., reported gusts up to 50 mph. the National
Weather Service said. Snow was expected today In the
eastern half of Colorado and In western Nebraska, where
winter storm watches were Issued. A travelers advisory
was Issued for snow In the Cascades of Oregon. In
Missouri and Kansas, however, temperatures In 70s
brought an early breath of spring. Readings In the 50s
were reported In Chicago. Fair skies stretched across the
south from the Atlantic to Arizona with afternoon
temperatures reaching into the 70s. Southern Texas and
the desert Southwest warmed to the middle 80s. The Big
Bend area of southwestern Texas — Lajltas — had a
high of 86 degrees. But winter weather held onto the
Upper Midwest where Minnesota. North Dakota and
Upper Michigan only reported highs In the 30s. Light
snow dusted International Falls. Minn.
Under cover of a grey cloud of drizzle, the mercury
only reached the 30s and 40s along the New England
coast. Vermont cleaned up after a storm that dumped up
16 Inches of snow and glazed New England highways
with Ice before moving out to sea. Vermont Highway
Department spokesman Ray Burke said tired plowing
crews were gaining on the wet. slushy snow left by the
storm. Officials said snow depth varied around the state
from less than 1 Inch In Brattleboro to 14 to 16 inches
on Jay Peak and other mountains and high gaps. The
late winter storms pelted upstate New York and New
England during the weekend with a combination of
freezing rain, heavy snow and winds.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congressional Investigations
of the Environmental Protection Agency. Intensifying
this week. Involve allcdgcd misuse o f toxic waste
cleanup money and possible conflict of Interest by
agency officials.
The Invcsligallons of Ihc agency have been fueled by
release of confidential documents President Reagan kept
from Congress for six months.
Five subcommittees In the House and another In the
Senate are looking Into charges that the EPA’s SI.6
billion Superfund toxic waste cleanup program was
manipulated to benefit polluters and political allies of
the administration. There arc accusations of possible
perjury as well as conflicts of Interest by top agency
officials.
No evidence has yet been made public establishing
that a crime has been committed. When he commented
on EPA chief Anne Burford's resignation last week. Rep.
John Dlngcll. D-Mlch., said. "I know or no wrongdoing
on her part to compel that."
Dlngcll Is chairman of both the Energy and Commerce
Committee and Its Investigations subcommittee, which
Is looking Into the EPA. Disatisficd with a compromise
accepted by the panel headed by Rep. Elliott Lcvltas.
D-Ga., Dlngcll insisted on unfettered access to the EPA
documents. The White House caved In and accepted Ills
terms less than an hour before Mrs. Burford resigned
last Wednesday.
The Justice Department is also investigating.
The House Judiciary Committee Tuesday will ques­
tion Attorney General William French Smith on Justice
Department Involvement In the U S. attorney's decision
not to convene a grand Jury to consider a Dec. 16
congressional contempt citation against Mrs. Burford for
refusing to turn over EPA files.
Appropriations subcommittees In the House and
Senate arr concerned Reagan's proposed EPA budget
cuts Jeopardize enforcement of environmental laws. And
the Senate Environment and Public Works Commltlcc
will hold confirmation hearings on whoever Reagan
names as Mrs. Burford's permanent successor.
It Is not easy (o define the Jurisdictions of all the
committees and subcommittees, at least In part because
their chairmen arc being secretive.
Rep. Mike Synar, D-Okla., chairman of the Govern­
ment Operations environm ent subcommittee. Is
examining the agency's expenditures to sec if taxpayers'
money was spent properly. "W e could be throwing
billions down a ratholc," he said.

Rep. James Scheuer. D-N.Y., chairman of the Science
and Technology environment subcommittee. Is looking
at EPA’s scientific research and alleged "hit lists" of
employees’ political leanings.
Dlngell's oversight subcommittee has more authority
than any other for examining Superfund operations for
health and safety consequences. Originally the panel
picked three dump sites to view in terms of how the
system worked. That broadened to five and now seven
sites.
. Among them is the Stringfellow Acid Pits, classified
by former Gov. Edmund Brown as California's lop
priority for cleanup. Mrs. Burford decided last summer
to hold up $6.1 million in cleanup funds. The
subcommittee Is Investigating whether that decision
was made because she wanted to avoid helping Brown's
Senate campaign. He lost to Pete Wilson, a Republican.
The allegations o f possible conflicts of Interest center
on James Sanderson, a Denver lawyer who was one of
Mrs. Burford's closest advisers, on EPA chief counsel
Robert Perry and on Superfund chief Rita Lavelle. All
have been accused of Involvement In hazardous waste
matters In which their former employers were poten­
tially liable.

Missing Staple Leads To Insurance Probe
FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) - The
Florida Ethics Commission Is In
vcstlgattng the chairman' of the
South Florida Water Management
District for selling a $400,000 In­
surance package to the water dis­
trict's governing board.
Robert L. Clark, a Fort Lauderdale
businessman, confirmed the com­
mission Is Investigating him. but
said he could not discuss the matter
because state law prohibited It.
The commission probe stems
from an article published In the
Miami Herald revealing (hat Clark's
firm sold a three-year Insurance
puckagc to the water management's
governing board despite lower bids
by other firms.
Arthur J, Gallagher, a nationally
known insurance broker, offered the

same insurance for $45,000 less.
Two independent Insurance experts
who studied the bids at the request
of The Herald decided the Gallagher
proposal was superior to Clark’s.
The water management board
declared Clark's bid the lowest,
h o w e v e r, a ft e r d is q u a lify in g
Gallagher's offer because of minor
technicalities such as not stapling
the bids and bid specifications
together.

“ If It was done In a sealed hid and
we were the successful bidder."
Clark said, "then I don't see what
difference it would make whether it

Clark revealed his Interest In Ihc
Dawkins and Clark Insurance firm
when the bid was made. He did nol
vote on the selection.

Walker: ‘We Could Have All Been Blown Up'
B y Victor Asscrsohn

HOSPITAL NOTES

STOCKS*
S

M W *

*4

dealer market* change throughout
the day. Price* do not Include retail
mart up'mart dorm
A tla n tic Bank
B arn ett Bank

»

The Ethics Commission plans to
meet April 21 to review the results
of Its preliminary Investigation into
the Insurance deal. The commission
will decide after the review whether
th e In v e s t ig a t io n s h o u ld be
extended and made public.

Clark said he did not violate (he
state's conflict of interest or ethics
laws with the sale, which earned his
firm a $40,000 profll.

Action Reports

i.

came from a board member or
someone else."

Under Florida's conflict ot Interest
law. public officials can do business
with government agencies as long
as the business Is obtained through
public channels and the officials do
not use their Influence to win
government contracts.

low: 44: SUNDAY high: 70; barometric pressure: 29.99:
Herald Staff Writer
relative humidity: 74 percent; winds: southwest at 5.4
A Sanford restaurant should have been evacuated
mph: rain: none; sunrise 6:38 a.m.: sunset 6:33 p.m.
following a weekend bomb threat, according to a diner
TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs. 8:35 who was there with her three-month-old baby.
* Fires
a.m.. 8:47 p.m.; lows, 1:57 a.m., 2:28 p.in.: PORT
Bahama Joe's seafood restaurant on S. French Avenue
* C ourts
CANAVERAL: highs. 8:27 a.m.. 8:39 p.m.; lows. 1:48 was the target of two bomb threats, one at about 6:30
a.m.. 2:19 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs. 1:38 a.m.. 2:05 p.m.: p.m. and the oihcr about four hours later on Friday, but
★ Police
lows. 8:06 a.m., 8:23 p.m.
the restaurant was not evacuated.
Kelly Walker of Lake Mary went Into the restaurant
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
with
her husband John and Infant daughter Maria at
out 50 miles — Wind westerly around 10 knots through
about
6:45 p.m. while Sanford police and fire depart­ me. Obviously. I would have evacutacd the restaurant
Tuesday. Seas less than 3 feet. Increasing cloudiness
had there been any danger."
with widely scattered showers developing mostly south ment units were on the scene.
She left at about 7:45 p.m., not having been told by
Herb Shea, assistant to Sanford Police Chief Ben
part tonight and Tuesday.
anyone
that
there
had
been
a
bomb
threat.
Butler
said that It Is usual procedure for the owner o f the
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with highs In
“ They let us sit there eating our meals and they didn't
buldlng, or the person In charge, to decide whether the
the low 70s. Wind southwest around 10 mph. Tonight
premises should be.clearcd.
mostly cloudy with lows in the low to mid 50s. Wind have the decency to tell us," Mrs. Walker complained. "I
think
they
should
have
given
us
the
opportunity
to
"W e Inform the owner or custodian of the alternatives
near calm. Tuesday cloudy with a 30 percent chance of
decide whether we wanted to leave. We could have all
and he can clear the building or allow us to do it,” Shea
showers. Highs In the low 70s.
been blown up.
said. " I f we find anything where there Is credence to the
" I am very upset about It." she said. "W c were Just
call wc will take over and clear the building.
eating and we saw all the police and wc thought there
The same procedure Is used by the Seminole County
was a problem with a customer.
Sheriffs Department.
" I found out afterwards about it. Why didn't they tell
The caller who phoned In the first bomb scare said a
m e?" she asked. "I had my baby with me. 1 would have
bomb would go ofT In 10 minutes. The second caller who
Jonathan S. W h it*. O rlando
CMtral Floruit R tf Itnal H*t*t1al
taken my baby out and eaten later. I don't want to be made a threat at about 10 p.m. said that he had planted
laturSay
blown up and I want my daughter to grow up."
AD M ISSIO N S
three bombs because Bahama Joe's allegedly treated Its
A OM ISSIONS
Eliiabatti A. M ytrt. CatMlbtrry
Mrs. Walkci said that her husband asked one of the
waitresses badly.
San lord:
Harry L Vandutan. DtBary
waitresses what was going on but she 6ald she didn't
Debara J. Jtffordt
The restaurant Is In the midst of a industrial dispute
Jam ** E. br**n. DtBary
know.
BIRTHS
Sltphanl* A H*rrtra. Ovltdo
with some o f Its workers.
William L and Dtbra Jtffordi. a
M a g g ld S .M c C W ta n .O v M f
"I don't feel they did the right thing I think people
baby boy
D ISCHARG ES
BOY HURT ON DIRT BIKE
should have the right to know and decide If they want to
Sanford:
D ISCHARG ES
A
14-year-old
Long wood boy broke his collar bone
stay or leave." she said. "It was a very unfair thing to
Ally ton L Cahill
Sanford:
after
crashing
on
his
bicycle In a field Friday,
Patricia
A.
Hartwrlf
do.
My
husband
said
that
we
won't
go
back
to
the
John 0. Adam*
Baby g irl H a rtw ig
Dale Lance Abbott. 14. o f 103 Hilltop Drive.
GladyaOavlt
restaurant."
Chary! D. Marlow
Ertttl M Nowman
Longwood, was knocked out about 5&amp;0 p.m. while
Restaurant manager James McKnulty said police did
Baby girl Marlow
Carl A. Prowotl
Jumping
a dirt mound about five feet high in a field next
Edith
HAAc
William*
not
order
an
evacuation.
"I
just
do
what
the
police
tell
Edward W. Plnney, LakeMonro*
Lout* L Luca*. Dolton*
to H.P. Cassidy's restaurant on Markham Woods Road.
Prlnc*lla Hardy, Laka Monro*
D ally Fratman. Laka Monro#
D o rliP Sortnton. Orang* City
Altamonte Springs.
Dale, who was treated for a broken collar bone at
Florida Hospltal-Altamontc and released said later. "1
E iw t in g H e ra ld
don't know how it happened. I Just remember waking up
on the ground. I'm fine, but my shoulder hurts a little
Thttf quotation* provided by F la g ih ip B a n k * ....... .............. I ) U ' t
Monday. March 14, 1913-Vol. 75, No. 174^
member* of Ifw National Auoclahon F lo rtd * P o w * r
bit."
of Securllle* Dealer* a rt rtpr*
S L ig h t.................................. 271* J7«*
F u SI i U m S D a ily a n * Sunday, tttapl Saturday fey Th# la n ia rd
He has been told by doctors that he cannot ride his
tentative
Inttr
deeler
price*
at
of
H tr a ld . la c ., ltd K - F r*M d i A t * ., la n ia r d , F la . 12/71. .
F I* P r o g r tu __________ I t IfW
bike for six weeks.
approximately noon today Inter

H a m * D a U v a ry : W h L I U * ) M aalfe, M . U j 4 Meant. l l t . M t
V a a r, H I M . B y M a ll: Waafe U . l l t M a a tti, I M t i * M anlfe*.
M t a t ) Y a a r , SS7JS________________________________________________

LONDON (UPI) — A Swiss blologlsl may have
found the first natural cure for insomnia — not In
sheep, or the counting of them, but In rabbits, the
Dally Mirror said today.
Professor Guide Schoenenberg isolated the chemi­
cal agents In rabbits' blood which programs sleep
and successfully tried It on human beings. Ihc paper
said.
"W e've had highly satisfactory resulls." said
Schoenenberg. citing the case of one paticni. a
68-ycar-old chronic insomniac who had been
dependent on sleeping pills for years.
"He hardly slept a wink for a fortnight when we
took him ofThis pills," the professor said. "It's three
months since we treated him and he sleeps quite
normally again."
The rabbit's blood pollan — said to be "horri­
fyingly expensive" - Is Injected Intravenously.
Besides curing Insomnia the concoction also consid­
erably reduces withdrawal symptoms among drug
addicts, the Mirror said.

Bomb Scare Causes Flap O v e r Evacuation

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 58; overnight

Itc o n d C M * * F * * t * H r a id a t Sanford. F l* r id * « » l

W a k e Up A n d
Read This Story

~. Jl'i 3*
It t a W H

H ug h** S upply........................ J7'.i 21
M o r r lio n 't.......................... Il&gt; t tlka
NRC C o rp ....................... ... lOOkt 107' i
Plettey........................................... U U
S c o tty '*..............................
17 '* t7U
S o u th ***! B an k..,......... 21 unchanged

HAN / KRE8TF.D OUTSIDE COURTROOM
William David Ward. 24. o f 900 Wlldemcre Ave..
Longwood. was urrested outside a courtroom on the
fourth floor o f Seminole County Courthouse Friday

afternoon after he had been told lo keep quiet but didn't.
Ward, who police said had been drinking, was charged
wllh disorderly conduct.

BURGLARY BUNGLED
Thomas John Gorman. 18. went to the front door of a
house In Winter Park at 2:50 a.m. Saturday morning,
woke up the resident and demanded that her son come
out. police say.
When he refused, Gorman, of 1921 Puritan Ave..
Winter Park, tried to force his way Into the house,
according to a sheriff s report. Gorman was arrested and
charged with burglary with forced entry and trespassing
at the house at 3451 Australian Circle.

RADAR DETECTOR 8TOLEN
A radar detector valued at $300 was stolen from the
car or Winter Park resident Linda Gallcran when a thief
smashed the window of her car which was parked In the
Seminole Community College parking lot between 9:20
a.m. and 12:10 p.m. Thursday.

BIKES RAISE $800
About 35 bikes auclioned Saturday by the Seminole
County Sheriffs Department raised around $800. The
bikes had been stolen, and later recovered but tbeli
owners never showed up to claim them.
The funds will go Into the State Education Fund
which provides facilities and equipment for public
schools.
r

DUI ARRESTS
The following persons were arrested In Seminole
County and charged with driving under the Influence:
- Bobbie Joe Fry. 749 Orange Avc.. Longwood, was
arrested after he reportedly ran a tralftc light at Airport
Boulevard and U.S. Highway 17-92 at 1:55 a.m.
Saturday.
• William Jerry Mitchell. 53. of 124 Dew Drop Lane,
Casselberry, was arrested following an accident on
Longwood Avenue at about 1:51 a.m. Saturday. He was
also charged with improperly reversing his vehicle.

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department
following emergency calls:

responded to the

Thursday
• 12:28 a.m., Apt. D. 611 Park Ave.. rescue.
•6:47 a.m.. Lot 96. Exeter Court, rescue.
•9:41a.m., 1211 Mellonvllle Ave., rescue.
- 6:04 p.m.. 2nd St. and Park Ave., rescue.
•7:42 p.m., 1501 W. 15th Si., rescue.
•8:41 p.m., 1006 W. 13th St., rescue.
■P:34 p.m.. 2nd St. and Mellonvllle Ave.. rescue.

I

�M onday, M arc h 14, ) W —JA

.

*

,

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* #.

i,

# * « votV*\*XV

E v tnlnfl H « r*M , Ssntord, F I.

Road Becomes
New Dumping Ground

Indians
Love
'Gandhi
NEW DELHI. India (UPI)
— From seasoned war
v e t e r a n s lo s c h o o l
c h ild re n , In d ia n s are
t h r o n g in g In r e c o r d
numbers to the motion
picture ‘ 'G andhi.'* en­
couraged by low ticket
prices and eager for the
history lesson.
N orm ally row dy, au­
diences arc rapt and at­
t e n tiv e as th e y v ie w
English director Sir Rich­
ard Attenborough's film
vers io n o f the life o f
Mohandas K. Gandhi, and
the events leading up to
Indian Independence from
Britain.
" W e 'v e been h avin g
three shows dally with
capacity crowds, plus one
In the morning for school
children, since It opened
Jan. 2 8 ." said Rattan
Sethi, m anager o f the
Chanakya Theater.
"Th e way It's been go­
ing. the movie should play
another eight weeks or so.
a very long run for us."
S eth i said the film ,
w h ic h has a s lew o f
Hollywood Oscar nomina­
tions Including one for
British actor Ben Kingsley
as Gandhi, already has
broken a decade-old at­
tendance record.
The Indian government
rem oved the usual 60
percent tax on tickets for
"G a n d h i." cutting the
price o f admission to 40
cents from 65 cents —
expensive In a country
w h e r e th e a v e r a g e
worker's dally wage Is less
than $1.
"Gandhi Is known as the
father of our nation," said
R.K. Anand of the Ministry
o f In fo r m a t io n and
Broadcasting. "W e would
like our youngsters to get
to know him — and many
o f the older generation
have almost forgotten him.
"In Indian theaters we
are fond o f music and
fights during movies. But
during tills Him you could
have heard a pin drop. The
same was the case when
Gandhi used to address
the masses — he had the
power to hypnotize."
The ministry set up a
booth In the theater lobby
to sell literature ranging
from com ic books on
Gandhi's life to 86 vol­
um es o f his colle c te d
works. Sales are good, said
salesman V.S. Rowat. In­
d ica tin g the words o f
"Gandhijl." as he Is afTcctloM iely culled, are rele­
vant today.
"Gandhi understood the
p M fle o f India." Rowat
• ■ Id . “ an d t h e y u n ­
derwood him."
hadla today Is a different
c ou n try than the one
Oondhl knew.
A d v e r t is e m e n t s fo r
W M e m jeans and acrylic
fa b r ic s a c c o m p a n y
sboivingB o f this film .
wMch advocates wearing
In d ia n h o m e s p u n or
"khadl" cloth and native
dress.

H « r&gt; M P be to t fey T a m V incent

Bedford Road off County Road 427 near Sanford
has become an unofficial dumping ground,
According to one resident of the area, the dumping
has been going on for several years despite the

efforts of residents and county law enforcement
officials to catch those tossing out their unwanted
1, lT,s- Reportedly, people park their cars or
Pickup trucks alongside the road and unload trash

as if the roadside constituted a public landfill
dump. Area residents hope stepped up efforts to
catch the violators will succeed.

WellP

THfiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiii|iMimimi»&gt;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiMimimiiiiiniiiiiiii&gt;i|iiimMiiiiimiir f'i|i|iiiiiiiimmrriiMiiiTniiriiiMi|ii!i’,M

Actually, that $10 may be
a bargain for us. Because new
customers can be worth a great
deal to a bank.
And that’s exactly what

opening, were going to make
you this offer: Open a checking
or savings account with at least
$50,and Barnett will deposit a
$10 bonus toyour account right
then and there.
OFFICE H O U R S
That’s in addition to giving
LO BBT
Monday-Thursday 9am-4pm.
you a handy new place to bank,
Friday 9am-6pm.
and a staff o f professional
DRIVE-IN
M onday-Friday 8am-6pm.
bankers to answer all o f your
Saturday 9am-12pm.
banking requests.
A bonus and a new office.
we’d like you to become: a new
Just two more ways
customer at our brand-new
we deliver when we Barnett
Sanford Office.
Bank
promise performance?
So, for our office’s grand
Offer auuitabif only at the Sarfurd Office, 3094 Orlando Drni*. One offer per household
All Ihunrtt Banks are members nfFDIC.

�A

Evening Herald
(U S P S 4 1 -M O )

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305422-261lor 831-9993
Monday, March 14,1983—4A

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
ThomatGiordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 91.00; Month, $4-8; 8 Mentha, (24.00;
Year, *45,00. By MaU; Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

It's Time To
Decontrol Gas
Congress has given a cold-shoulder so far to
President R eagan 's plan for decontrolling the price
o f natural gas. T h is season o f high gas bills for
heatin g h om es Is the w ron g tim e to take steps that
w ould let the price o f natural gas go even higher.
Or so goes the w ord from Capital Hill.
T o the contrary, this Is an Ideal tim e to take up
the decontrol o f gas prices. Congress w ill suffer
considerable em barrassm ent If It doesn't.
Am erican s w ritin g b ig checks to their local gas
com panies h ave a righ t to som e explanations. If
the c o n tro l s y stem n o w in p lace is w o rth
defending, w h y have natural gas prices paid by
consum ers been rising at a rate o f 20 to 25 percent
a year?
W h y is It that In som e parts o f the country
natural gas produced dom estically n ow costs m ore
than the equivalen t in Im ported oil, w h ich until
recently had its price kept artificially high by the
OPEC cartel?
W h y are pipeline com panies p ayin g prem ium
prices for gas from new ly-drilled w ells w hile
cheaper gas from older w ells is bein g kept In the
ground?
Oil prices w ere decontrolled In 1B81 and the
m otorist today is payin g sharply low er prices for
gasoline. W h y w ou ldn 't decontrol o f natural gas
prices have the sam e effect?
Such questions cannot be answered w ithout
conceding that the Natural Gas P olicy A ct o f 1978,
which put the present price control system Into
effect. Is not d oin g w hat It was supposed to do. It
provided for a partial phasing out o f controls by
1985 and was supposed to shield the consum er
from sudden price Increases as the gas price
approached the equivalen t price o f oil.
Inasmuch as gas In som e categories already Is
priced higher than oil, it Is questionable w hether
the accelerated decontrol proposed by Mr. Reagan
would cause an y further Increase In prices. If It
did, the price m ost certain ly w ould settle down
eventually at a point roughly equal to the price o f
oil. T h a t Is the benefit o f a com petitive en ergy
m arket — a benefit now being lost.
T h e adm inistration's plan w ou ld phase out
controls altogether b y 1986, and p rovide for the
renegotiation o f "ta k e or p a y " contracts requiring
pipelines to buy gas at a price fixed under the
assum ption that both oil and gas w ou ld b e scarce
in the mid-1980s. T h ose supply projections have
turned out to be dram atically in error.
A n accelerated decontrol pdllcy w ill further
stim ulate exploration and production o f natural
gas and Increase its avllab lllty as an alternative to
im ported oil. T h e m ore w e can hold dow n demand
for oil as the econ om y recovers, the less lik ely that
OPEC w ill again find Itself In a position to dictate
unwarranted Increases in the price o f oil.
Gasoline was selling for about 91.20 a gallon
when President Reagan lifted the last controls on
dom estic oil prices In Janu ary o f 1981. Today,
gasoline can be bought for less than 91 a gallon.
Next lim e w e hear m em bers o f Congress say that
decontrol o f natural gas prices w ould be a bad
break for consum ers, let's rem ind them o f that.

Casualties O f War
T h e C om m ission on W artim e R elocation and
Internm ent o f C ivilians has returned a pow erful
indictm ent against the A m erica o f 1942.
T h e com m ission concludes that "ra c e prejudice,
w ar hysteria, and a failure o f political lead ersh ip"
prom pted the relocation o f 120,000 JapaneseA m e r ic a n s fro m th e W e s t C o a s t to In lan d
Internm ent cam ps a fter the attack on Pearl Harbor
on Dec. 7.1941.
T h e com m ission, created by Congress In 1980
and appointed by form er President Carter, w ill
decide later w h eth er to recom m en d a paym en t o f
"rep a ra tio n s" to those w hose lives w ere disrupted
or to th eir survlvore. W e see no reason fo r the
govern m en t to offer such paym ents. T h o se w h o
lost p roperty In the relocation should be c o m ­
pensated, o f course, but It w ould be dem ean in g to
the Japan ese-Am erlcan population to assum e that
a m o n eta ry va lu e cou ld be placed on their
experience.
•

BERRYS WORLD

“4

‘Oh, yeh? Well, I bet MY teen-ager has invent­
ed and sold more video games than YOUR
teen-agerI"

By Jane Casselberry

S e c u rity w as tig h t fo r P resid en t
Reagan's appearance at the National
Association of Evangelicals at the Sheraton
Twin Towers In Orlando Tuesday. Some
1,500 eager convention goers were tightly
crammed Into a hallway and exhibit area
for more than 114 hours as corridors and
rooms where the President was going to be
were cleared.
This was more close communion than
the evangelicals had bargained for. The air
was hot and stifling and one woman said
she felt like she was going to faint, but not
wanting to miss anything asked her friend
to make sure she was carried along by the
crowd to the ballroom as there was no
room to fall down.
In this atmosphere, which might have
caused ordinary folks to become a might
testy, this group displayed considerable
Christian forbearance. But finally they
broke Into song having found the perfect

hymn to express everybody’s feelings. The
corridors echoed with the words from
"Am azing Grace"— "When we've been
there 10.000 years (or maybe It Just
seemed like that long) bright shining as the
son, we’ve no less days to sing God's praise
than when we first begun."And sing
praises they did, but when they got to
"Onward. Christian Soldiers" someone
finally got the message and the line began
to move.
The line was then narrowed and
everyone was run through a check for any
hidden weapons and a thorough scorch
was made o f handbags, cameras and other
carry-ins.
Once Inside the ballroom there was more
waiting. The orchestra and concert band
from First Baptist Church of Orlando
entertained the gathering as excitement
and anticipation built, but they had Just

about exhausted their repertoire when the
moment finally came to strike^ up the
strains of "Hall to the Chief."
In spite of any Inconvenience they might
have had, the welcome given the President
by the enthusiastic crowd could not have
been warmer.
"Th e other day In the East Room of the
White House at a meeting therc,"sald
Reagan, "someone asked me whether I
was aware of all the people out there who
were praying for the President and I had to
say, 'Yes. I am. I've felt It. I believe In
intercessory prayer.' But I couldn't help
but say to that questioner after he'd asked
the question that if sometimes when he
was praying he got a busy signal it was
Just me In there ahead of him."
It's not every day that the President of
the United States drops In for a visit and It
was a big deal for central Florida, the NAE,
Epcot. and the GOP.

JEFFREY HART

WASHINGTON WORLD

Reagan
Asserts
Feelings

Innocents
Slaughter
Part Two
In a recent column, I reported on the
effects o f the anti-nuclear hysteria on
early-grade school children.
Tots In the Boston area are being led
by the anti-nuclear hype to believe that,
for example, the “ button" is every­
where, and that anyone can push It and
destroy the world.
U n fo r t u n a t e ly th is s o r t o f
psychological rape Is not confined to the
Boston public school system.
There crosses my desk a report about
sim ilar a ctivities at St. Patrick's
Catholic parochial school In Roxbury.
Mass.
In the Boston Globe of January 30,
the seventh-grade class o f teacher
Elaine Killea pre-empted most o f the
"fu n " pages o f the newspaper. This is
usually the comics sections of the paper,
but the children took it over to let
President Reagan in on their thoughts
about the impending nuclear holocaust.
It doesn't take a fertile Imagination to
decide Just where those thoughts came
from.
The seventh grade of Elaine Killea is
strongly against nuclear war. The stu­
dents feel that President Reagan doesn't
mind being vaporized by a nuclear
bomb because, after all, he's "seventy
something." Elaine Killea, evidently, is
not rigorous on such facts as the
president's age, much less on his
well-documented attitudes as regards
nuclear war.
The 13-year-old Terrance and Telia
and Dcacla and Wanda, unlike the aged
president, want to live full lives, which
they doubt will be possible because of
Reagan's policies, whatever they are.
The kids at St. Patrick's School have
come up with some highly original
thoughts, doubtless cogitated without
teacher's supervision during breaks in
the schoolyard.
Thus, instead of stupidly spending
billions on his plans to nuke the world,
the president ought to be spending the
dough on educating poor kids, that sort
of thing.
A small minority of the letters printed
from Elaine Klllea's seventh grade
showed any awareness that there exists
something called the Soviet Union, a
fact which one would Imagine ought to
figure prominently In any class devoted
to current world history. As a matter of
fact, since St. Patrick's Is a Catholic
school, at least sort of, one would have
expected a passing mention of the
presumption that said Soviet Union
tried to assassinate the pope. But all we
hear from this seventh grade is that the
United States already has too many
atomic weapons.
In one o f the memorable expressions
of our time, seventh-grader Kimberley
Robinson asks President Reagan to
"stop this bombness now."
Kimberley spoke much more wisely
than either Bhe or her teacher ventrilo­
quists knew.
T h is e x p lo ita tio n o f Im m atu re
children by the anti-nuclear people is
dishonorable and cruel and really has to
slop.

ROBERT WAGMAN

Tip Stalls Fight, For Now
their success In November, arc beginn­
W A S H IN G T O N (N E A ) - House
ing to avenge themselves on those who
Speaker Thomas P. "T ip " O’Neill's
spumed the party during the election.
announcement that he will run for
re-election in 1984 — and that he
One target is the Independent oil
expects to remain speaker — has ended
producers.
Almost all of the oil pro­
the infighting over who would succeed
ducers
supported
Republicans last
him.
November — even against Democrats
O’Neill felt compelled to make such an
who had spotless voting records In
announcement two years before the
support of oil Interests. As a result,
election In order to keep the Democratic
oil-state
Democrats arc saying that this
House leadership from splintering over '•
Congress should take another look at
the issue o f who would succeed O'Neill
as speaker.
.J; special tax breaks for Independent
producers.
After the Republican victory In 1980,
O'Neill became much less enthused
The U.S. Chamber or Commerce has
about his Job, which fueled erroneous
also been targeted by the Democrats.
speculation that he would not run In
Last year, It announced that It would be
1982. After he won in November, rumor
bipartisan
In Its endorsement of can­
had it that this was Tip's "last hurrah"
didates,
with
decisions to be based on
— although he clearly was relishing the
how
well
each
candidate — whether
Democrats* more powerful position In
Incumbent or chattrnger — supported
this Congress.
business Interests.
Sides already were forming around
p o t e n t i a l c a n d i d a t e s f o r th e
But the final endorsement list In­
speakership. M ajority Leader Jim
cluded 91 Republicans und not one
Wright o f Texas was regarded as the
Democrat — and the chamber was more
clear favorite and had a large following.
than a little uncomfortable when the
However, Whip Tom Foley was seen as
Democrats won their November victory.
a major potential candidate, and others
Now the chamber has announced that
— including Morris Udall, Budget
It has "radically revised" its criteria for
Chairman Jim Jones and Ways and
endorsing candidates, and It's likely
Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowskl —
that It will endorse quite a few Demo­
were also gathering support.
crats two years hence.
O'NelU's announcement ends an Im­
pending battle, which could have been
However, the Democratic leaders say
extraordinarily divisive for the Demo­
they aren't ready to bury the hatchet.
cratic Party as it entered a national
Rep. Tony Coelho, D-Callf., chairman of
election campaign.
the House D em ocratic Cam paign
Actually, it's more correct to say that
Committee, has sent a letter to all
the battle has been postponed, not
Democratic House members saying. In
quashed: Right after O'Neill announced
effect, that they should shun the
that hr w ou ld run in 1984, the
chamber, not cooperate with any of Its
speculation began as to whether that
programs and make It clear that
would be his final race. If .so. the
chamber lobbyists aren't welcome in
speakership battle will begin again In
their offices.
1985 with the same general cast of
characters, since all hope to be re­
The Chamber of Commerce says It
elected In 1984.
wants peace, but the Democrats say
they've heard those words before — and
Democrats on the Hill, flushed with
actions will speak louder.

By Helen Thomas
UP1 White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP1) President
Reagan takes most things in his stride.
But he cannot stand It when he Is
accused of lacking compassion for the
poor. And he doesn't like It one bit when
he Is viewed its anti-environmentalist.
As a Californian, that Is hard for
Reagan to swallow.
In terms o f his attitude toward the less
fortunate. Reagan made it clear that
those charges rub him the wrong way.
In a recent speech he ticked off the
projected budget outlays for food
stamps and other social programs, and
quipped "hard-hearted me."
He also feels he has been unfairly
tagged as one who docs not believe In
conservation and preserving the na­
tion's natural resources. A recent poll
did not give him high marks as a leader
ngalnst the nation's polluters, either.
Nor has the controversy engulfing the
Environmental Protection Agency and
the Investigations Into the handling of
the $1.6 billion "superfund" for toxic
waste disposal helped the White House
Image as protectors of the public health.
In remarks at Klamath Falls, Ore.,
where he toured a lumber mill and
talked with Industry representatives,
Reagan said that in 1966. when he was
running for governor of California, he
addressed a forestry products group In
San Francisco "and my opponent went
out and said that I had said that if
you’ve seen one tree, you've seen them
all.
"I never said any such thing." Reagan
said Indignantly, having never been
able to shake the cfTccts o f that quote.
The subject came up when the
Industry representatives asked him if he
would consider vetoing new wilderness
legislation "which would take millions
of acres from our timber base."
Reagan said In the '60s the "big
wave" from the conservationists was for
setting aside outdoor recreational land.
"Th ey were even foreclosing on some
mining claims and they were buying up
land and using eminent domain to do
It." he said, "claiming that It was
needed for the future so there would be
outdoor recreational space.
“ W e ll, fin a lly w h en th ey had
exhausted about all they could do with
that, then came the environmental
surge."
Reagan said the nation now has 80
million acres of wilderness land off
limits for private development. "This Is
land that you cannot have a road In or
anything of the kind," he said. "It’s
there because out of 250 million Ameri­
cans in this country, we realize that at
le a s t 2 4 0 m illio n o f th e m are
backpackers who want to hike Into that
wilderness area."
Reagan's Joking remark about the
astronomical number of backpackers
drew a laugh from the lumbermen.
The president said he realized that
some areas "still should be protected,
that arc so unique ... I mean In addition
to the 80 million ... but let’ s be
reasonable and sensible about that.

JACK ANDERSON

Thurmond Bribe Witness Identified
WASHINGTON - The man who told a
federal grand Jury he saw Sen. Strom
Thurmond, R-S.C., take at least $20,000
In bribes can now be named. He Is
William W. Pearce.
I had been naked to keep his name out
o f my previous reports, but my sources
believe his Identity has now leaked back
to the senator. Pearce swore to a
Washington. D.C.. grand Jury on Feb. 10
that he had witnessed the bribery.
Thurmond denied the allegation.
Five days later — under suspicious
circumstances — a federal grand Jury In
Norfolk, Va-. Indicted Pearce on six
counts o f fraud.
As the Senate Judiciary chairman,
Thurmond has considerable clout with
the Justice Department. My sources
thought It was a strange coincidence
that Pearce should suddenly be indicted
after testifying against the powerful
Thurmond.
The indictment followed a long and
bitter legal dispute between Pearce and
his former employer. Honeywell, Inc. —
a dispute that Prarce thought had been
settled months ago.
For years Pearce was a private
detective in Washington; his exploits

even made It into a popular book.
Pearce also served as a bailiff In the
District of Columbia court system.
Lawyers in the Washington area used
Pearce's services as a detective. In 1975.
one of these attorneys lined him up with
Edwin P. Wilson, who was then running
a covert operation for the CIA and Navy
intelligence.
Like Just about everything Involving
Wilson, Pearce's story Is complex. It was
unraveled In a long series of Interviews
with my associate Dale Van Alia. Here
Is the substance o f It:
Pearce acted as a bodyguard and
security man for Wilson. Pearce also
spied on other Wilson employees. As a
cover for his espionage activities, Wilson
set Pearce up In a lavish apartment with
a woman. Wilson also provided him
with a full set o f Identification papers for
two separate Identities.
Pearce was known around the Wilson
office as Peter Wagner. But when he
attended m eetings Wilson arranged
with Israelis, he was identified as Dr.
David Schwartz. And he had passports,
drivers' licenses and Social Security
cards In both names.
Some o f Pearce's assignments from

Wilson were odd. He was Instructed, for
example, to secure specially prepared
chickens for Wilson's Moslem clients.
A n o th e r tim e, Pearce arranged
through Wilson to deliver 400 combat
helmets to the Red Cross for use In
disaster work. Afterward, he received a
worried call from a Red Cross official.
Many o f the helmets were dented and
had bloodstains on them, the official
complained.
And once, Pearce was assigned to raid
my office files. But upon refiectio’n.
Wilson dropped the Idea.
At the same lime that Pearce was
accepting assignments from Wilson, he
was working full lime as branch man­
ager o f Honeywell's protective services
division In Norfolk.’ Though the Wilson
contact helped him win customers for
Honeywell, company officials did not
know (h eir Norfolk m anager was
moonlighting for the ex-CIA agent.
When President Carter named Adm.
Stansfleld Turner as CIA director.
Wilson called Pearce and suggested he
arrange a security system for Turner's
home in McLean, Va. Honeywell got the
contract, which convinced Pearce (hat
Wilson was still secretly working for the

CIA. Actually, Turner had no idea
Wilson was behind the contract: he said
he picked Honeywell because an old
friend was a company executive.
The relationship between Wilson and
Pearce soured In late 1979. Wilson’s
activities came under federal scrutiny,
and he was Indicted on charges of
smuggling arms to Libya.
When a Wilson associate was arrested
In the shooting of a Libyan dissident In
Colorado, an apparent "hit list" con­
taining Pearce’s name was found on the
suspect. This was reported In the
newspapers.
Honeywell officials, apparently em­
barrassed at this public link between
their branch manager and Wilson, fired
Pearce in April 1982. He sued; they
countersued.
The dispute was later settled — or so
Pearce thought. But then, last De­
cember, Pearce told federal officials that
on two separate occasions he had seen a
middleman deliver $10,000 cash bribes
from Wilson to Thurmond.
I first reported Pearce’s accusations —
and Thurmond's denial — on Feb. 2. On
Feb. 15, Pearce was Indicted on charges
related to his dispute with Honeywell.

�Evtnlng H srald, Sanford, F I.

Mondsy, M arch 14, m i —JA

Soviet Oil Clout Rises As OPEC Loses Punch
MOSCOW (UPI) — OPEC's disarray over production
and pricing Is a mixed blessing for the Soviet Union, the
world's largest oil-producing country.
Faced with a staggering reduction In its biggest source
of vital hard currency earnings.* Moscow's aggressive
marketplace reaction Indicates It may no longer be
content to follow the lead or the 13-mcmbcr Organiza­
tion of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
At today's precipitously falling prices, the Soviet
treasury will earn about $850 million less than last year
by selling the same amount o f oil. 55 million metric
tons.
The Soviet Union's hard currency needs have not
diminished In the wake of a fourth consecutive poor
grain harvest.
The Kremlin also annol shed overnight the two main
restraints that squeeze exports to a trickle of overall
production. Eastern Europe Is still dependent on Soviet
energy and the U.S.S.R.'s own conservation program
never got past the slogan and poster stage.

The Soviets must divert more oil for export to the
West without further depressing prices and thus
Increasing the need for even more sales abroad.
Western diplomats who study the Soviet economy say
Moscow has never had the Influence on world markets
that It now possesses. It Is a role the U.S.S.R. fell Into
rather than carved for Itself.
When the Soviets were exporting 1 million barrels of
oil a day, as they were as recently as 1981, they were
barely In the big leagues. Saudi Arabia was the
pacesetter with exports eight times greater.
When world demand slackened and prices began to
slide that year, the Saudis cut back production
accordingly. They have continued to cut back until they
are producing only 3.6 million barrels dally.
The Soviet reaction to slackening demand and falling
prices was to Increase exports to the West to as high as
1.5 million barrels a day In 1982. although production
was relatively constant.
"Th e Soviets arc like the head of a bl£ family with a lot

President's Council Chairman Freddie Smith William Simmer and Director of Chaplains Doug
(second from left) Is shown with Seminole County Hoey.
Chaplain Charles Pitroff, Good News President

of mouths to feed," one analyst said.
At 1 million barrels a day. Moscow was exporting 8
percent of Its daily output. At 1.5 million, the figure
Jumps to 12.5 percent.
"That 1.5 million Is quite important because It Is
causing a rapid dow award effect on price," said an
analyst with the London firm of Grleveson. Grant and
Co. stockbrokers.
In the process, experts estimate that the Soviet Union
Jumped from eighth to fourth In the rankings of world
exporters.
Access to Indisputable figures on the Soviet trade and
thus Moscow's relationship to other producers "Is a
problem that we all have." said a Western diplomat. He
conceded that everyone Is left with "their own best
guess" as to exactly what the Soviets are doing at any
given time.
Increases In production have been coupled with
reductions In prices to customers In Western Europe,
where almost all of the hard currency for the Kremlin Is

earned.
/
Finland, which takes 70 percent of Its oil from the
Soviet Union at prices It docs not disclose, obtained a
new contract price of no more than $28 a barrel In early
March, a Finnish oil source said.
It Is that sort of discounting that has dealt misery to
the when done from within and all the more so when It
occurs outside the oil cartel's reach.
"OPEC has lost Its monopoly mainly because the
reduction In demand, which Is the main reason for the
glut." said a European diplomat.
"Before. Soviet oil followed OPEC In price essentially,
but was seen as an alternative. Now enough oil Is being
sold outside OPEC so that OPEC Is becoming a price
follower. .
"The Soviet Union Is more a price setter than It used
to lie. The market Is freer."
The diplomat predicted the price of oil may fall as low
as $20 per barrel before It Is balanced with world
demand.

H tr a M F h a tM fry J m m C a tM lfta rry

Officers of the new Good News Mission Presi­ Dr. Freddie Smith, Dr. Earle Weldon, Jenny Long,
dent's Council In Seminole County are, from left, and the Rev. Thomas Shelton.

Seminole Jail Chaplain's Group Is Organized
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
Ur. Freddie Smith, pastor of
Central Baptist Church of Sanford,
has been named to head up the
newly formed President’s Council
organized to assist Seminole Jail
Chaplain Charles "Chuck" B. PltrofT
assigned here by the Good News
Mission.
Good News Mission Is the largest
supplier of Jail and prison chaplains
in the United Slates and possibly in
the world.
Prior to com ing to work In
Seminole County. PltrofT served as a
volunteer In the Jail ministry In
Orange County for 10 years. He
fo r m e r ly p a s to re d C h ris tia n
Missionary Alliance Churches In
Pennsylvania.
The luncheon meeting to organize
the council was held recently at the
Slzzlln Steak Restaurant. On hand
to help It get started were Dr.

William L. Simmer, Good News
Mission president and founder from
the International headquarters In
Arlington. Va.; Doug Hoey. director
of chaplains; and Orange County
Jail Chaplain Bill Austin.
In addition to Smith, other officers
c h o s en by th e c o u n c il w e re
Semihole Community College Pres­
ident Dr. Earle W eld on , v ice
chairman: Jenny Long, secretary:
and the Rev. Thomas Shelton of
Rolling Hills Moravian Church.
Lougwood. program chnlrman. Mrs.
Long, a member of First Baptist
Church of Oviedo. Is Involved as a
volunteer In the Jail ministry In
helping the chaplain set up a
follow-up program for prisoners
after they arc released.
Other members of the council
attending the meeting were Circuit
Court Judge S. Joseph Davis. Chief
D eputy Duane H arrell o f the
Sem inole County S h e riffs De­

p a r t m e n t . C o u n t y J a il A d ­ counseling sessions each week and
ministrator Jim Shoultz, Dr. Jim
was Involved In counseling tn crisis
Edgemon. the Rev. Amos Jones,
situations 45 times with an average
cxcctlve director of Seminole Com­ of four a week. He has registered a
munity Action and pastor of St.
total of 104 professions of faith and
Paul Missionary Baptist Chuch, I rededlcattons br'kltV average of eight
Sanford, and Mr. and Mrs. .Leonard a week. He has passed oul approxb'
Casselberry o f the Mission Com­ mately 500 Christmas cards and
mission of the Community United
several birthday 'edrds. * He has
Methodist Church o f Casselberry.
arranged for after care help for at
P itr o ff was assigned to the
least three former Inmates and has
Seminole County Jail on Nov.l,
helped In setting up an Alcoholics
1982. and has been ministering to
Anonymous program In the facility.
the prisoners and their families
PltrofT said he has had six speak­
since. Through Feb. 26 he had
ing engagements and one film
conducted a total of 46 services with
showing to Inform the public o f his
an average attendance of 16 and 19 Jail ministry. Churches or organiza­
Bible classes with an average at­ tions Interested In having such a
tendance of 18. In addition, he has
program can contact him at his
distributed an average of 84 Bible
office at 323-2550. he said.
correspondence courses each week
Prior to Ills coming the work was
and awarded six Bibles to Inmates
carried on for some time In the Jail
completing the course.
by volunteers.
He reported to the council that he
"Eight men gave their hearts to
has averaged 100 one-on-one
the Lord In a two-day period at the

Socialists Take Firm
Control N ow In Spain
MADRID. Spain (UPI) - After 100 days of rule by
Socialist Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez, the threat
o f a coup from rightist Army officers seems to be of
little concern to most Spaniards.
A newly released poll shows 58.5 percent of the
nation's 37 million people fe e l. that the new
government so far has "worked efficiently." Three
out o f four Spaniards see "a better future."
The poll, conducted by a liberal publishing
house, said 86.4 percent of the respondents no
longer saw the armed forces as u threat to their
young democracy.
Gonzalez. 41. pledged to lead "a government
that will govern" when he was sworn In by King
Juan Carlos offer his election Oct. 28.
Diplomats agree that the Socialist cabinet, its
average age only 42, has moved with confidence
despite Its lack o f experience In affairs Of state.
The Socialist party was not legalized until five
years ago when Spain began moving toward
democracy following the death o f right wing
dictator Francisco Franco.
Gonzalez, trying to modernize the country,
began by ordering Its pampered civil servants to
shape up — get to work by 8 a.m. sharp and no
nyirc afternoon siestas.
The government quickly dcvulucd the wobbly
peseta by 8 percent and. In Its boldest move to
date, nationalized a giant holding company called
Rumosa that business experts and state officials
said was threatened with collapse.

tion campaign" before scheduling a vote.
. Gonzalez told U.S. Secretary of State George
Shultz, who came last December os the first
foreign official to hold talks with the new prime
minister, that Spain will rrmaln In NATO until the
vote Is held.
The 100-day opinion poll, published Friday by
the Dlarlo 16 newspaper, provided a possible
explanation.
Slxty-onc percent of those polled sa|d they want
the government to take Spain out o f the defense
alliance and cancel a treaty that gives the U.S. Air
Force and Navy the right to four bases In Spain.
A move to streamline the armed forces and
reduce their political clout'was expected to meet
tough opposition from rightist officers, but has
thus far met little reslstence. The army is losing a
quarter of Its officers and a third of Us men In the
first shakcup since Franco's death In 1975.
Rightist ofllcers have tried three times since
1975 to restore Franco-style rule. One coup plot
was uncovered and squashed only weeks before
the election.
The new government has been harshly criticized
by conservatives and the Roman Catholic Church
for a proposal to legalize abortion In restricted
cases and by regional leaders for falling to engineer
a truce with separatists In the violence-tom
northern Basque country.
The first real test of the government's popularity
will come In municipal elections May 8.

The move was designed to salvage 60.000 Jobs at
the group’s 18 banks and more than 200
companies and the saving* of 100.000 smalltime
Investors.
Gonzalez, whose campaigned on a promise to
create 800.000 new Jobs during his four-year term.
Is wrestling with Europe's highest unemployment
rate. 16.85 percent o f the work force. The number
o f Joblcss-Spaniards has risen to 2.207.866. nearly
400.000 more than one year ago.

Sources close to King Juan Carlos say the
popular monarch, who helped thwart a coup
attempt two years ago. has doubts about Spain's
Image abroad because "the government doesn’t
make clear enough that Spain Is a Western
country."

The Socialists promised a referendum on Spain's
membership In the North Atlantic Treaty Organi­
zation. but later decided to conduct "an Informa­

"W e have to decide whether we want to lie a
Third World country or not." u Spanish newspaper
editor said.

V

Observers said Gonzalez won no friends In
Western capitals by sending officials to the
nonallgncd summit in New Delhi. India, last week.

Jail," said Pitroff. "but I am not
Interested In Just ‘Jail house religion’
but In changed lives after they get
out."
Chaplain PltrofT said he has re­
ceived "tremendous support", from
the Institutional staff at ,thc Jail
Including the former admlnstrator,
Steve Saunders, and the new ad­
ministrator. Shoultz.
Recently
Instituted at the Jail has been
service for female Inmates. Services
and Bible study are now held three
times a week. PltrofT said, and there
are usually eight or nine In atten­
dance.
A fellowship covered dish lun­
cheon for friends of the Jail ministry
and those Interested In learning
more about It will be held April 14
at noon at Central Baptist Church.
1311 Oak Avc.. Sanford. The next
meeting of the President's Council
Is scheduled for noon on April 4 at
Slzzlln Steak.

The Good News Mission Is a
ministry to prisoners, ex-offenders,
and their families. It has 72 chap­
lains serving In federal, state,
county, and city prisons and Jails
plus Juvenile,detention centers. The
rplnlstry extends from the tip of
Long Island to Hawaii and from the
Canadian border to Florida, p liii
foreign countries as far away as
India. It serves more than 120
Institutions on a regular basis plus
many others Intermittently.
Good News Mission ministers to a
dally average o f 33.592 p.-rsons and
an annual average o f 52 J,810 men.
women and children. Tne chaplains
arc augmented by a staff o f 5.000
volunteers. In addition to those
behind bars, an active ministry to
their families on the outside Is
maintained. There Is also a division
of opportunity houses, which serve
as dlscipleship centers for persons
recently released.

’Mrs. Calabash' Feeds The Poor
By Robert Doherty
PITTSBURGH (UPI) Mrs. C a l a b a s h —
wherever, whoever you
are — the Jobless of some
o f P it t s b u r g h a r e a 's
hardest-pressed mill towns
thank you.
Two unknown women,
working separately, have
taken the m on iker of
Jimmy Durantc's "Mrs.
Calabash" and have kept
two food banks stocked
w ith cash in n e a rb y
Beaver County, where the
unemployment rate is 25
percent.
The food banks, set up
mainly to help lald-off
steelworkers make ends
meet, have been swamped
as a result of the steel
industry's worst slump In
50 years.
The anonymous largess
began last August when a
woman donated $2,000 to
the P resentation Food
Bank in Midland. Pa., run
b y th e P r e s e n t a t io n
C h u r c h a n d U n it e d
Steelworkers Local 1212.
Since then, she has

given $13,000 In cash to food bank that serves
the food bank, donating at about 4.000 people a
Thanksgiving. Christmas. month and runs on about
Valentine's Day and St. $3,000 a week, said. "W e
Patrick's Day. The last Just can't get over how
contribution. $2,000, was generous she's been.”
accompanied by a note
T.R. Graham, executive
r e a d in g . " H a p p y S t.
director of the United Way
Patrick's Day."
of Beaver County, said he
"Naturally, we’re pretty has n ever seen "M rs.
elated. I’m sure everybody Calabash" and refuses to
appreciates the fact she's say whether he knows her
been so good to us." said name.
food bank official Jack
" I 'm personally con ­
Conway, who described vinced she is a genuine
the woman as "fairly at­ person here In Beaver
tractive, in her mld-60s."
County." Graham said.
"She Just hands some­ "W e've had two contacts
one the envelope (with with her. One by tele­
money In It)." said Con­ phone ... the other when
way, who needs $12,000 a she made the payment."
year to run the bank.
Graham said he has no
"Several people In here d e s ir e to r e v e a l th e
have seen her."
woman's Identity. "W e
The generosity has not respect her apparent de­
been restricted to the sire to rem ain anony­
Presentation Food Bank. mous," he said.
In late February, another
It appears the United
woman using the name W ay's "Mrs. Calabash"
Mrs. Calabash gave $3,000 took the name given the
to the United Way Food Presentation's supporter.
Bank in Beaver County.
Graham said that's how
Herschcl Shearer, a vol­ the woman first Identified
unteer at the United Way herself to the United Way.

But Conway said his group
named their friend after
D u ra n tc's w ell-k n o w n
sign-off. "Good night. Mrs.
Calabash, wherever you
arc."
"W e tagged that name
on her (after her donation
In August)," Conway said.
"The first time she came
In we asked her If she
wanted a receipt. She said
she didn't want anybody
to know who she was."
Until late last week. It
was not certain whether
th e re w as on e "M r s .
Calabash." or two.
T h i n g s s t a r t e d to
become clear, when Presentatlon's "Mrs.
Calabash" delivered her
St. Patrick Day gift.
"I asked her if she was
the one who had donated
to the United Way. She
said. 'No. maybe 1 should
have,'" said Anna Marie
Tom linson, a secretary
who took the gift.
“ She told me she's not
the sam e person who
c o n t a c t e d th e ( P r e s ­
entation) Food Bank.

N e w Store To O p en In Sanford
The 33rd Family Dollar store in Florida will open In
Sanford on Thursday.
The new store, located at 413 E. 1st St., will open at
10a.m.
Local officials and Family Dollar executives will take
part In a brief ribbon cutting ceremony at the main
entrance to the store Immediately before the opening.
Jim Seagraves. vice president of store operations, said.
"Family Dollar looks forward to locating in Sanford and
being part of a fine business market." Greg Monk, the
firms district manager for the urea. said. "Family Dollar
offers excellent employment opportunities In this area
and throughout the 13 states In which our stores arc
located. As many local people as possible will be

employed at the new store." Monk added that Family
Dollar Is a rapidly expanding company.
The store will carry a complete line of merchandise for
the family and home. Including clothing and shoes,
health and beauty aids, housewares, school supplies,
candy, toys, paint and auto supplies.
Family Dollar was founded in 1959 with a single store
In Charlotte. N.C. and today has more than 4.067.992
square feet of total sales space In the chain's 600 stores.
The company operates In the two Carollnas. Georgia.
Mississippi. Alabama. Florida. Tennessee. Virginia.’West
Virginia. Arkansas. Maryland. Arkansas. Louisiana and
Kentucky. The General Offices and Distribution Center
are located In Charlotte. N.C.

�SPORTS
Virdon Runs Raines, Expos Ragged In Preparation For Pennant Heat
WEST PALM BEACH (UP!) - Ttm
Baines didn’t have any breakfast
and that was a mlslakc. It would’ve
been a bigger one If he had. He was
so bushed, so completely whipped,
he nearly passed out.
Jim Wohlford was In worse shape.
"Honest, he looked as If he was
gonna die," laughs Billy DcMars,
who’s got a little sadist In him. "W e
were genna give him the last riles.”
D eM ars, one o f M o n tr e a l’ s
coaches, was talking about the
same thing everybody else who has
seen the Expos this spring Is talking
about. T h eir new work ethic.
Specifically, he was referring to a
recent workout conducted by Bill
Virdon. the Expos’ new manager.
Someone has neglected to tell
Virdon that the next Olympics arc
ticketed for Los Angeles. He thinks
they're coming back to Montreal.
That's how It looks from the way
he’s running the Expos every day.
They’re already in better shape than
any other club In Florida. You
should see Ray Burris. He's lost over

30 pounds and makes the late
Mahatma Ghandl look as If he was
carrying around too much weight.
"I've been to 11 spring training
camps and that was the hardest I've
ever ran." says Wohlford about that
same session DcMars mentioned.
"After we had done our regular
work for two or 'three hours, lie
(Virdon) had us run the bases. We
had to go from first to third, from
home to second and from home to
third twice. Then wc had to go nil
around the bases three times. By
the time wc were through. I couldn't
move. I saw stars and they weren’t
the kind that you see at night. It
was a good workout, though.”
Wohlford came to the Expos from
the Giants last month. Very likely
he'll be used In the outfield and as a
pinch hitter. He has played for a
half-dozen different managers In his
career but never for any manager
who worked his players harder In
spring training than Virdon does.
"Nobody was even close." says
the 32-year-old veteran.

Milton
Richman
UPI Sports Editor

Expos, finally got him to manage
them last October.
If he had his way, McHale would
have wanted Virdon as Montreal's
manager last year so that Jim
Fanning, who handled the club last
season, could’vc gone back Into the
front office sooner. McHale asked
Houston's Al Rosen if he could
speak to Virdon about managing the
Expos at the end of 198) when
Virdon was still handling Houston,
but Rosen said no. The Astros
wanted him to stay with them.

Virdon has been an exceptionally
hard worker from the first lime he
put on a professional baseball shirt
with Independence. Mo., of the old
K-O-M League In 1950. He was still
working hard trying to win the
regular center field Job with the
Yankees when he came up with
them a few years later but he ran
Into a guy by the name of Mickey
Mantle.

"You gotta have a strong man if
you're gonna win," says McHale.
"Bill Virdon Is that kind of man.
There arc a lot of reasons wc got
him and among those reasons Is
how he stood up to some of those
guys In Pittsburgh and Houston."

The Expos' new manager was
strictly a no-nonsense guy when he
played the outfield for the Cardinals
and Pirates still later and he
managed the same way with the
Pirates, Yankees and Astros before
Johnny McHale, the president of the

McHale doesn't name names. He
doesn't have to. When Virdon was
managing the Ptrtes. Richie Hebncr
challenged his authority. Virdon
challenged him right back and
Hebncr backed down. There was a
similar episode at Houston with

Cesar Cedeno. Virdon, who Is a
gentleman along with everything
else, never talks about the episodes.
He Isn't one of those muscle-flexere.
But at 51. he's In such fine
physical shape, some people who
don't otherwise know sometimes
mistake him for one of his players.
Virdon doesn’t think he's being
too tough on the Expos.
"Nobody's kicked." he says. "W e
worked longer when 1 was with the
Yankees. We had two workouts a
day. And sometimes they would go
more than a total of four hours. I
never liked that but that was the
way It was and there wasn't any­
thing you Could do about It. The
reason I'm running our players the
way I am is because I Just think
you've got to be better than the
other clubs In August and Sep­
tember. If you're In good condition. I
don't say you're necessarily going to
Win. but It's the only way I know to
get the maximum out o f your
players' ability."
The Atlanta Braves do their

training only a hundred yards or so
from the Expos. You can see the
Braves through the branches o f the
trees separating both fields and In
the last two weeks, their manager.
Joe Torre, generally had them
finishing at least an hour earlier.
"That doesn’ t mean they won't
win," Virdon points out.
Fanning, who brought the Expos
home In front during the second
hair o f a strike-divided, two-part
season in 1981. Is back In his old
Job as vice president In charge of
player development and scouting
for Montreal. He secs Virdon doing
the Job he did last year and has this
to say about him:
"I'm happy Bill -Virdon Is the
manager. If I had to pick Jim
Fanning or Bill Virdon to manage
the club. I'd pick Bill Virdon. I say
that from the heart."
That's typical of Jim Fanning. He
Is a gentleman, too. Maybe more
than he should be sometimes.
Unfortunately, a few of the Expos
took advantage of that. They're a lot
less likely to with Bill Virdon.

B o o n e B eats O d d s , J a c k s o n v ille ;
K o w b o y s C o m p le te 'D re a m R id e '
Boys Basketball Tournament
Saturday'areaulta
1A — Malone 62, Hastings 59
2A — Pahokee 71. Montlccllo
Jefferson County 70.3 overtimes
3A — Osceola Kissimmee 47.
Crestview 44
4 A — O r la n d o B o o n e 5 1 .
Jacksonville Jackson 47

By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor

H erald Photo by Tom V ln to n t

Lyman's Gene Allen strains to throw the discus
158 feet during the Lyman Invitational Friday.
Allen barely stratched on this throw, but came

back with a heave of 149-11 to help the
Greyhounds to their first championship In the
annual event. Allen finished third.

Lyman Invitational Results
Lym on InvItoU onol
a t LY M A N H IO H 1C H O O L
G IRLS
T ta m S c o rn I. T ltu tv llla IT ) ’ 4.3.2. Longwood
Lym an I D 40 5: 1 Santord Seminole IS) 34, 4.
A ltam onte S prings Lake B ran tle y (L S I 37.5.
DeLand ID ) 15. 4 Apopka (A ) 21 7. T ltu»vllle
A itro n a u l IT A ) 24 I M a itla n d Lake How ell IL H )
I I f Spruce Crook ISC) 14. 10 Lake M a ry (L M )
12. I I . Oviedo (01 4
D .tc u t - 1 M c C ra ry IT ) 117 4 .2 B lo c k e r IL H )

I I I I ) French ( L I 1101: 4 Law rence (SI
101 » '* ; Shot - I M c C ra ry (T ) 41 Ska. 2. H ill (T )
3 *7 to 3 Steven* IT A ) 371 4. French (L ) 37AW.
3 Law rence (S) 3 4 * 4 H illa ry (S) 14»; Long
Jump ~ I W illia m * ( 0 ) 17 5»a 2 M cC loud (T )
17 31a 3 S levent IT A ) 14* V, 3. C a rro ll (L ) 14 7.
4 W lllla m t (L ) I4 * '» ; H igh Jum p — I . C a rro ll
IL ) 5 4. 7 Shi v e rt IT ) 5 2. 3 Sm ith (L B ) SO. 4.
McConkey (O) 5 0 4 F o rty th I D 4 » ; 100 - 1.
Gordon (L M ) II. * ; 2. M c C ra ry (T ) 11*. I .
Cock (laid (T A ) 12 0. 4 Jenkln * ($) 120. 5 Brown
(S) 13 1; HO H u rd 'e t — t T h o m e t (D ) 140. 2
D uket (T ) 14 I 1 Oman (A ) 14.1. 4 R Sp* 4rm an
(LH ) 14.4. 4 T tchlede r (L ) 17J; M il* - I K.
H iy w e rd IL B I 5:17.1. J Gardner (SCI 3:17.4 1
Telford (TA1 3 2* I. 5. R yte r (L H | 5 :2 *4 . 4. J.
H 4yw e rd (L B ) 5.30.4; 440 R a lly - 1. T llu tv lllo
(M cC lou d. M c C ra ry . Sim on, D a v it) 51.4. 2.
Lym an 511 1 Apopka 31:1. 4 Lake M a ry 53 f . 5
Seminole 53 *. 4. O viedo 54 4; 440 - 1 C aldw ell
(SI *3 3 3. Shi v e rt (T ) 45 0. 3. W alke r (S) IS 4 4.

G relllng (L B I 45 4: 330 H u rd le t - 1. W lllla m t (L )
44*. 3 Flannery (T ) 41.2. 1 T h om a t (O ) 4* 5. 5
Johnton (SI 50.1 4. R. Spearm an (L H ) 31 0; M0 —
1 H ayw ard (L B I 3 35 4 2 M ack (T A ) 2 27 2 1
W lllla m t (D ) 2:11.1 4 H o lm e t (L B ) 2:34 1 5
B a rn h ill (L B I 3:34 2 4 K llbourne IL I 2:14 4; 320
- 1. Cockl eld (A ) 24 7 2. M cC ra ry IT ) 27.4: 3
C aldw ell (SI 27J . 5. Jackto n IL I 27», 2 M ila - I.
G ardner (SCI 11.32.3 (record ) 2. TeHord IT A )
11:1* 7.3. Lu ca t IL H ) 12 21.2.4. K H iy w e rd (L B )
12:74 0; M l)# Relay — 1 DeLand (B auer, Thom et.
W lllla m t. D ubute) 4 14 5 2 Seminole 4: 1 1 1 1
Lake B rantley 4 20 4 . 4 Lym a n 4:70 4. 5 Lake
Howell 4:25 5 4 Lake M e ry 4 31.3.
H ig h P o in t In d iv id u a l — J ane l M c C ra ry .
T itu s ville
BOYS
Team Score* I. Longwood Lym an (L ) 54 2
Santord Seminole (S i 50 J. 1 (lie ) O viedo 10) 41.5.
H eine* C ity (H C I 41,5 5. (tie ) O rlendo Colonial
(C ) 40 M a ltle n d Lake H ow ell (L H ) 40 7. Apopka
(A ) 15 I Lake M a ry (L M ) 23 * D aytona
S ee brte ie ID S) 17 * 10. DeLand ID ) M l II.
Spruce C reek (SCI II. I I A ltam onte Spring* Lake
B ran tle y ( L B ) I .
D itc u t - I. M l near (C) 1*74. 2 Shepard (SC)
1504 1. A lle n (L ) 1e* 11; Shot - I. W eb tte r (HC)
5 *4 2 M lne er (C l 54 2 J. A lle n (L I 4* I I ; Long
Jum p — 1, Jackto n (SI 23-1 *4 (record ) 2. W rig ht
ID S) 21 *Vy. 1. F a ir (D ) 2111*. 4. D um a* (O)
20 lOVi; H igh Jum p — I. (tie ) Route (L M ) * 0 .

S to cke d ( 0 * 0 3 P itt* (A ) 5 10. 4 B ro w n (L H )
3 10 5. D u m a t (O ) S I : 1 0 0 - 1 . Sy. S m ith (A ) 10 1
2 S lo c k e ll (C l 103 1 B la ke ( H O 10 3 4
J e lle rto n IO I 10 4: 120 H u rd le t - 1. B la k e ( H O
14 4 2 K im IL H ) 15 0 3 L o d 1 0 ) 15 4. 4 R o u te
( L M ) 151 5 K in g IL H ) 14.1.
M ile 1,
C h e e te m a n IL H ) 4 27 1 2 M e B ro o m I D 4:34 5; 3
H u n le r I D 4 41.2. 4 S ch m e lm a a c k ( L ) 4:44.0. 4
P h illip s ( 0 ) 4:45 0; 440 R e la y — I . A p o p k a
(O 'D e ll. F o tle r, Sy, S m ith , S S m ith )' 44 3 2
O vie d o 44 4 1. D e L an d 4 5 * . 4 L y m a n as * 5
S em inole 4* j . 440 - 1 C a m p b e ll IS ) 57.2. 3. Sy.
S m ith (A ) 52 4 3. W lllla m t IS ) 53.4 4 G e rm a n o
( L ) 53 4 ; 330 H u rd le t - I. LoM (O l 41.4. 3. K lm
(L H ) 41 a 1 T u rn e y (L M ) 43 0 4 M a n le y (S ) 43 4,
M 0 - I M e B ro o m (L ) 3.01 7. 3 W ooten (S) 2:02.1.
3 O M are (L H ) 2 04 4 4 M c C a rln e y (O ) 2 0* 1 5.
S cofield (L M ) 2:07 4; 220 - I. H adden 1 0 ) 22 7. 2
S lo cke d (C ) 2 1 0 3 W h a ck (S) 211 4. E w in g I L B I
23 4; 3 M il# — I. C h e ete m a n (L H ) * 50 4, 2.
T a n g e m a n (L M ) 10 01 3 1 O v e rb a y ( L ) 10:04 2 5
G a rr lq u e t I L B I 1 0 :1 0 0 ; T rip le J u m p — I.
J a c k to n (S I 47 4 'y 7 P ll t t (A ) 41 3 ' r 3 T o liv e r
ID S ) 4 l2 to . 4 L ln g a rd (O ) 4 0 *. 4. C h la ro lu ia
( L B I 1* I I ; P ole V # u ll - I F lth e r &lt;L) 1 2 * 2.
W illia m to n (L ) 12 4 1. P M II.p t (L B ) 104. 4.
W e ip p e rl (L M ) 10 4. M ile R elay — 1 S em ino le
(W oolen. M ob le y. C a m p b e ll. W lllla m t) 3 33 2 2.
L a ke H o w e ll 3 1 1 * 3 H e in e * C d y 1:11.1 4.
Lym an 1 I f I
H ig h P o ln l In d iv id u a l — D a v id S lo c k tll, O r
U n d o C o lo n ia l.

N ic o le tte Blows Lead But Regroups
For $63,000 Bay Hill C ham pionship
1 1 5 4 ,* 0 0

Bay

H ill C la iilc

ORLANDO (UPI) - A couple of
A t O r l a n d o , M a r c h 11
days ago. Mike Nicolette didn't
I P a r 7 1 )
( Nicolette wen p le y e ll on l i r t t e i t r *
even have enough money to get
hole)
married.
M ik e N ic o le tte , 143.000
44 73 71 -74 -311
Now. though not exactly a mil­ tournament from his opening- G re g N o rm a n . 17.100
73-71.72 4 1 - 2 * 3
71 74 77 4 f - 7 U
round 66 Thursday, carded a B ill R o g e r*. 20.300
lionaire, lie Is $63,000 richer.
D A W e lb rln g . 70.100
71-75-70 70— 214
Nicolette, who has struggled on 3-over-par 74 Sunday for a four- G il M o rg a n . 12.2*1
72 74-72 4 4 - 2 I7
round total of I-under-par 283. H a lt Ir w in . 12.2(3
74 71 70 4 1 -2 1 7
the professional golf tour for more
72 72 71 7 0 -3 1 7
than four years, gained his first Norman, who started Sunday tied J a c k N lc k la u l. 17.7*3
Sava B a lle t la r o t. I2 .2 t3
70 74 7 1 -7 2 -3 *7
for second with Seve Ballesteros T o m W a lto n . M O O
P G A v ic to r y S u n day In the
73 7 1 -7 * 7 0 -3 (4
six strokes behind Nicolette. fired a F u lly Z o a lla r, * 4 0 0
$350,000 Day Hill Classic.
72 74 74 * 1 - 2 1 1
M ik a M c C u llo u g h . 1.050 74 73 74 0 1 -3 1 *
Nicolette nearly added another final-round 68 to force the playoff.
" L a r r y N tlto n 1.050
72-7l 7 4 -7 2 -2 («
" I got ofT to a very good start." B ruca L la lik a , 1.050
week to his non-winning skid,
74 7 71 4 7 - 2 * *
blowing a five-stroke lead on the said Norman, one o f the premier R a y F lo y d . 0.475
71 74 74 7 1 -2 * 0
72 75 77 * 4 - 2 * 0
final five holes Sunday. But he International golfers who was G o ry M c C o rd . 0.475
D a v id G ra h a m . 5.150
77 7 1 7 0 7 1 -3 * 1
making
his
1983
debut
on
the
sank a three-foot par putt on the
Tom J t n k ln i, 5.350
71 74 7 1 7 1 -2 * 1
7575 * * 7 2 - 2 ( 1
first hole of a sudden-death playoff American tour. "I knew that would G lb b y G ilb e rt. 5.250
J im T h o rp e , 5.250
73 73 72 7 1 -2 * 1
with Australian Greg Norman and be enough to put the heat on.”
T o m P u rU a r. 5.250
71 71 7 5 *7 - 3*1
The pressure unravled NJcolelte. J im O a n t. 4. 0*0
came away with the first-prize
74 74 7 0 7 4 -2 * 2
He stood 2-under-par for the day Joe In m a n . 4.040
41 74 7 7 7 1 -2 * 3
purse.
79 71 777 5 - 7*1
"I couldn't afford a wedding." and 6-under for the tournament Bob G lid e r. 1.340
W oody B la c k b u rn . 1.140 70 7 * 7 5 7 0 - 7 * 1
said Nicolette. who earned barely after the front nine Sunday. He J im C o lb a rl, 3.3*0
7175 10 * 7 - 3 * 3
70 75 7 5 7 4 -2 * 4
over $62,000 during his firet four still led by five shots with five G a ry H a llb a rg . 2.113
years on the tour. “ Now. I can holes to play, but hr bogeyed the L e o n a rd T h o m p to n . 2.212 75 74 7 5 7 0 -2 * 4
Lo u G ra h a m . 2.317
7 ] 75 7 1 7 5 - 7*4
14th and 15lh holes and Ills J C Snead, 2.112
afford u marriage and some rent,
71 *0 71 7 0 -3 * 4
advantage narrowed lo two strokes H a t S u tto n . 2.3(2
loo."
7 5 7 *7 2 7 1 -3 (4
C u r d * S tra n g e , 2.1*1
(1 * * 7 2 7 7 -3 * 4
N ico lette. 26. who led the over Norman.

Pro Golf

LAKELAND — When Orlando
Boone coach W ayne Rickm an
looked onto the floor Saturday night
and saw 6-2 Andy Hungerford and a
band o f cripples all less than 6 feet
tall, a betting man wouldn't have
given much for the Braves champi­
onship chances.
That didn't disturb Rickman,
however. Las Vega9. and the state of
Florida, had been counting for his
Braves to cash In their chips a long
time ago. But Rickman continued to
roll the dice and Saturday night one
of the stale's saavlcst coaches —
with the slate's biggest-hearted
team — came away with the Jackpot
— a 51-47 victory over previously
unbeaten Jacksonville Jackson for
the 4A State Boys Basketball cham­
pionship.
"N o one expected us to go as far
as we did," said Rickman whose
team was a third-place finisher In
the tough Metro Conference. "W e
overcame a lot of adversity. Wc
knew wc had to do certain things to
win and wc did those things."
Adversity was a mild term for the
injuries which befell the Braves. In
Thursday's dramatic 57-51 victory
over Fort Lauderdale Dillard. Lcnnie
G ra c e , B o o n e 's h ig h -le a p in g
forward, broke a bone In his hand.
Bulky forward Pat Lewis took a
knock to the leg and couldn't walk
Friday. Guard Anthony Shorter
caught an elbow in the chops, "and
went down like he wasn't going to
get up." said Rickman.
"There was no way those kids
cou ld p la y on F r id a y ,” said
Rickman. "W e were fortunate we
had a day's rest to get ready.”
Grace spent Friday night In the
hospital after having two screws
placed In his hand to set the bone.
Saturday, Rickman was hesitant to
call on the courageous senior, but
when he beckoned, Grace was up to
the task. Grace Jumped Into the fray
with the Braves down. 8-2. Three
soft Jumpers and one rebound later,
Boone was on top. 9-8.
During his tour of duty, however.
Grace had his hand bumped twice
which prompted Rickman to pull
his leapcr. "Lennle wanted to play a
lot more (in the second half) but the
pain was Just too much." said
Rickman. "Th e guys on our bench
(Ted Smith and Chris Grlsklewlcz)
dtd the Job."
Hungerford. a skillful gunner with
good range who led all scorers with
25 points, carried the Braves of­
fensively In the second half while
the Boone half-court trap gave
Jacksonville Jackson trouble get­
ting into Its offense. Hungerford,
who hit 17 straight free throws in
the tournament, converted all nine
Saturday to hand Jackson Its first
loss after 25 consecutive wins. Two
free tosses with 12 seconds to play
secured the victory for Boone.
" O n e w e g o t b e h in d , w e
p an ick ed," said a discouraged
Jackson coach James Humphrey.
"W e didn't handle the press well.
We took low-percentage shots and
we didn't play defense. We did
things we normally don't do."
Welcome to the club. "W c beat a
lot o f very good teams on our way
here." said Rickman. “ The kids
thought Dillard may have been the
best (ram In the tournament. Their
In s id e p la y e r s p o s it io n e d
them selves h eller than anyone
wc'vc faced."

Prep Basketball
'W e're 37-0, we
put on a show
and now it's
tim e to go/
Jimmy
McCrimon.
—

The championship was the sec­
ond for Rickman. His 1977 team
won It all and his 1978 squad,
which returned four starters, lost In
the semi-finals after star guard
Jimmie Ferrell was Injured and
couldn't play.
" N e it h e r ch a m p ion sh ip was
expected." said Rickman. "In 1977.
we finished tied for second In the
Metro and this year we finished
third. I think It was Just a matter of
intensity. Wc had a little more
desire and togetherness.
"W e won a lot o f those games (on
the way to state) by 15 or 20 points
and winning takes care o f Itself. We
didn't have to look back. We Just
had to worry about the next game."
The Braves won their final 10
games to finish with a 24-8 record.
They were one of four Metro schools
to win 20 games, a fact that
Rickman said helped prepare Boone
for the tough tournament trail.
"W e're Just proud to represent
o u r c o n fe r e n c e and C e n tr a l
Florida." concluded Rickman. "W c
feel that's important. There were
probably two or three teams which
could have done Just as well,"
BOONE SI, JACKSON 47
O R LA N D O BOONE ( I I ) :
G race B. S m ith 2, M e le er 4, H unger lo rd 15,
Shorter 5. L e w li 1. T o ta l! 1* 1( 2*51.
JA C K S O N V IL LE JACKSON (47)
B a rc o u t «. Pea tom 2, B u lc h o lti i j . C olem an (0.
W illia m * 12. L u c a t 4. T o ta l!: 21 2-4 47.
H a lftim e Jackto n 23, Boon* 71. F a u lt — Boon*
I . Ja ck io n 11 . Fouled out - Peetom , Luca*.
R ecord! - Boon* 14 *. Jackton 257

In the 3A. coach Ed Kerehner'a
Osceola Kissimmee Kowboys com­
pleted a dream season by knocking
off patient Crestview, 47-44. The
victory gave the Kowboys a perfect
37-0 season and made them the first
team since the 1975 Lake Weir
squad to complete an unbeaten
championship season. Osceola re­
ceived national acclaim in De­
cember when It won the prestigious
Las Vegas Nike Classic.
Kershner felt the Las Vegas expe­
rience paid off for his Kowboys
because when the pressure came,
they didn 't crack. All-Am erica
gu ard J im m y M cC rim on and
teammate Eddie Hayes converted
several clutch free throws down the
stretch to ensure the victory. Hayes
two tosses with 1:47 to go clinched
the victory.
"W e went 37-0. we put on a show
and now It's time to go," said
McCrimon after the game. The
remark was In reference to Os­
ceola's trio o f McCrimon, fellow
A ll- A m e r ic a F ra n k Ford and
Kershner who have planned the
state championship since three
years ago when Kershner took over
the program.
Ford, a 6-4 power forward who
will attend Auburn next year, did
his part with 13 points and 15
rebounds. Ford got several clutch
boards In the final quarter as
C restview . 31-4, stormed back
behind the fine play o f Floridabound Joe Lawrence and Kenny
Slier.
Kershner felt the Kowboys' de­
fense made the difference. "That's
one area where we haven't received

I
* * * * * *

* ^

mi

r m - m-

»0

■ much credit." said Kershner. "W
knew we had to slop Lawrence am
Slier. We must have changed dc
fenscs 30 or 35 times to do It. W&gt;
opened up man-to man, then wen
3-2 (zone), 2-3, half-court trap am
triangle and two. Wc used every
thing wc had worked on all year (tin
slow-down gam e), hut haven'
shown because we were saving It."
S iler finished with 16 whllt
Lawrence was held to 12. Botl
average 17 points per game. Me
Crlmon totaled 12 In the slow-dowt
affair. “ We showed wc could pluj
any way wc needed to. We playrt
with poise. Intensity and defense.'
Kershner added.

OSCEOLA 47, C R E IT V IE W 44
K IS S IM M E E OSCEOLA (471:
T. B la nfo rd 3. M cC rim o n 13. 0 F o rd I . H a y t* 4
F. F o rd 13.M cG e e * T o tal* 1* 15 31 47.
C R E S TV IE W (44):
J. Law rence 12. S lier 1*. P . Law rence (. G reer 4
B ethun* *. T o ta l* : 22 SO 44.
H a lttlm # — O tceola IS. C re ilv le w 14 F o u l! C restview u . O tc e o i* * R ecord* — O u e o i* 37 o
C re ilv le w 31-4.

In Saturday's two other chatnpl
onshlp games, 1A Malone, despli
losing standout Bruce "Action'
Jackson for half the game with fou
trouble, held off Hastings. 62-59.
Three free throws by Woodrov
Rogers and Holt Floyd In the fina
24 seconds secured Malone's slxtl
state championship In as man)
Hies. The Tigers also won In 1952
'53.'54.'77 an d '78.
In the tournament's most hotly
contested game, Pahokee took i
second straight title with a hnrd
stopping 71-70 triple-overtime wlr
over Montlccllo Jefferson County Ir
the state tournam ent's longcsi
game since West Palm Beach Twin
Lakes needed seven overtimes u
subdue Winter Haven In 1971.
Walter Johson, who missed a
dunk in regulation which could
have won the game, dropped In a
lay up with one second lo play.
Demetrius Brown saved Pahokee
with an 19-footer from the baseline
at the end of the second overtime.
Pahokee, 24-4, became the first
2A school to ever win back-to-back
championships.
P A H O K E E 71, JE F F E R S O N CO. 7*
P A H O K E E (71):
P a tric k 10, JackMTt 0, W ilto n (. John io n 13. J o n *!
IF# B row n
Sm ith 4. B e rry • T o t if t : 33 S 13 71
M O N T IC E L L O JE F F E R S O N CO U N TY (7 ()i
Jonet 15. G S terling I I, B roule «, B ro o kln * J.
*• *■ S U f,ln 0 IS, M a r * id. Johnton I
T o l t l t l * 12 21 70.
R tg u la tlo n : J a tfa rto n *5. Pahokee * 5, F lr t t
o v e rtim e : *S *5 ; Second o vertim e ,*? * 7; H a lftlm a Pahoko* 4*. J e lle rto n 44 F o u l* - Pahokee 73.

\S S S S /S S S ,Z,S
J fW fc £ *"•W etley 3. T o ta l*: 31 i s n s * .
M A L O N E (43):
^ A rth u r

I . Print*IJ. ft.m M y , . W i r t

t . R o b ln to n 0,
R C t e v , r R R os* f * 4- -to o k to n ID.
T o ta l*: 3022 30
*2,
H a lttlm * - H a ttin g * jj, M e lo n * j j , F o ul* -

Mc A Mh u , * -

V ' £ owl* d «v* -

H .* X ,, , ^ K

V

H a ra id P h e la

Osceola's Frank Fo
take a charging foul.

M y‘

J a ck to n ,

" ,C O rd‘

“

�Wolfpack Denies Sampson ACC Crown
United P ress International
North Carolina State coaoh Jim
Valvano knew his team was guaranteed
a spot In the NCAA Tournament If it won
the Atlantic Coast Conference tourney
Sunday. But nobody ever promised the
Wolfpack an easy draw.
N.C. State, which nipped No. 2
Virginia 81-78 In the ACC title game, will
play Peppcrdlne Friday In the West
Regional first round at Corvallis, Ore.
If the Wolfpack. 20-10, win that game,
they will face Uth-ranked Nevada-Las
Vegas.
“ W e're Just happy to be In the
tournament," Valvano said. "It’s difficult
going across country, but we're looking
forward to playing. I don't know much
about Peppcrdlne. Hopefully, we can get
some film on them and be ready to play
on Friday."
Meanwhile. Virginia, 27-4, was seeded
No. 1 In the West Regional and will play
the winner o f Weber State Washington
State at Boise, Idaho Saturday,
In other league tournament title games
Sunday, No. 3 Louisville trimmed
Tulane, 66-51, In the Metro Conference:
Oklahoma State defeated No. 9 Missouri
93-92 In double overtime to win the Big
Eight and Georgia downed Alabama
86-71 to win the Southeast Conference.
At Atlanta, North Carolina State guard
Dereck Whlttcnburg hit two free throws
with six seconds left to clinch the upset
over Virginia. N.C. State, which knocked
off sixth-ranked North Carolina 91-84 In
overtime In the semifinals Saturday,
trailed by as much as 8 points In the
second half before launching the winn­
ing rally.

College Basketball
At Cincinnati, Charles Jones led three
Louisville players scoring In double
figures and the Cardinals held off pesky
Tulane to win their fourth Metro title In
the league’s 8-year history. The win also
ran Louisville's winning streak to 13
games and the Cardinals are 15-0
lifetime against Tulane. Elgin Webster
led the Green Wave, 19-11, with 21
points.
At Kansas City, Mo„ reserves David
Taylor and Rick Anderson each sank a
free throw In the final 33 seconds to
deliver Oklahoma State Its first NCAA
berth since the Henry Iba days. Leroy
Combs added a season-high 34 points,
Lorenza Andrews 24 and Raymond
Crenshaw 14 as Oklahoma State Im­
proved Its record to 24-6 — the most
victories by the Cowboys since the 24
they won In 1953-54 — in advancing to
the NCAA Tournament for the first time
since 1965.
Steve Stlpanovlch scored 22 points,
Jon Sundvold 18 and Greg Cavener 17
for Missouri, which fell to 26-7 and had a
six-game winning streak snapped.
At Birmingham, Ala., Vem Fleming
scored points and backcourt mate Gerald
Crosby added 21 to lead Georgia to Its
first SEC tournament championship.
The Bulldogs, who had never won any
sort o f conference title in basketball,
pulled away after the gamp was tied
43-43 with 15:29 remaining.
The victory Bends Georgia, 21-9, into
the NCAA playoffs for the first time. The

Evpnlng H tra ld , Sanford, F I.

Boone Runs Foe Record,
Bandits Bounce Panthers

Bulldogs played In the NIT the past two
years. Alabama, 20-11, also received an
NCAA bid.
Those scedlngs Included No. Is to
top-ranked Houston, holder of the na­
tion's longest winning streak at 22
games. In the Midwest: No. 3 Louisville,
which at 29 has more victories than any
other team in the tournament. In the
Midcast; and No. 8 St. John's, the
s u rv iv o r o f the ru gge d B ig East
tournament, In the East.
St. John's will have a lot o f conference
company In the tournament. Gavltt. the
Commissioner o f the Big East, also
announced at-large berths for No. 12
Vlllanova. No. 13 Boston College, No. 14
Georgetown and unranked Syracuse.
Syracuse Joins St. John’s in the East
Regional, while Boston College Is the
fourth seed In the West and Vlllanova
and Georgetown the third and fifth
seeds, respectively, In the Midwest.
The Big Ten didn’t have any top seeds,
but the conference could place four
teams In the Final Four as five confer­
ence members will play In the tourna­
ment. Big Ten champion Indiana Is
seeded second In the Mideast and Ohio
State third In the East. Other Big Ten
teams arc Iowa, seeded seventh In the
Midwest: Purdue, seeded fifth In the
Midcast; and Illinois, seeded seventh In
the West.
The ACC and the Southeastern Con­
ference proved, at least to the selection
committee, that they, too, belong among
the nation’s top leagues as each had four
teams tabbed for the tournament.
ACC members Joining Virginia In
post-season play Include defending

M onday, M arch 14, H W —7A

RALPH
SAM PSO N
...Denied title

champion North Carolina and North
Carolina State — the team that beat both
the Cavaliers and the Tar Heels to gain
the ACC's automatic berth — and
Maryland.
The SEC hnd n snprlse post-season
tournament winner In Georgia, but
Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama will
all follow the Bulldogs Into the national
tournament.
T h e M idcast appears to be the
strongest region with four Top 10 teams
seeded. Behind Louisville arc No. 2 seed
Indiana. No. 3 Kentucky and fourthseeded Arkansas. Oklahoma, ranked
19th. and 20th-ranked Illnois State arc
also In that regional.
The 21-day tournament opens Tues­
day with a pair of qualifying doubleheaders. Georgia Southern, making Its
Initial appearance in the tournament,
faces Robert Morris and Xavier (Ohio)
meets Alcorn State at Dayton. Ohio, with
the winners getting the No. 12 seeds In
the Mideast and Midwest, respectively.

M ore Sports On 2B.

TAMPA (UPI) — Rookie running back Greg Boone
was used primarily as a blocking back at Duke
University when Steve Spurrier was offensive
coordinator, but Saturday night Spurrier turned him
loose with the football for the Tampa Bay Bandits.
Boone was slow starting, with Just 31 yards on five
carries In the first half against the Michigan Panthers.
But he turned It on in the second half and finished the
night with 157 yards on 31 carries and one
touchdown from seven yards out. The Bandits only
had two other yards rushing.

Stars 28, Generals 0
At Philadelphia, rookie Kelvin Bryant rushed for
114 yards and one touchdown and the Stars' defense
forced seven turnovers on the Generals' first eight
possessions. The Stars, 2-0. converted a fumble and
two Interceptions Into their first 15 points o f the game
— an 8-yard touchdown pass from Chuck Fusina to
Scott Fltzkee and a 2-yard scoring run by Bryant In
the second quarter and a 26-yard field goal by David
Trout In the third quarter.
Bryant, out of North Carolina, carried 24 times'In
outgalning 1982 Helsman Trophy winner and
Generals rookie Herschel Walker. Walker gained 60
yards In 13 carries and fumbled twice. New Jersey.
0-2, had four passes Intercepted and fumbled the ball
away three limes.

Stallions 20, Invaders 14
At Oakland, quarterback Bob Lane, filling In for the
Injured Reggie Collier, scored on a 1-yard plunge to
lead the Stallions to victory In the USFL’s first
overtime game.

Wranglers 30, Blitz 29
At Tempe, Ariz., Jim Asmus kicked a 33-yard field
goal with one second left, helping the Wranglers post
the USFL's first major upset. Asmus, a rookie from
the University o f Hawaii, capped a comeback that saw
Arizona outscorc Chicago 18-6 In the fourth quarter.

Livernois Leads Long w o o d W in;
W in te r Springs Tops Forest City
Jeff Livernois slammed a homer and a double and
collected four RBI to lead Longwood I to a 9-2 rout of
Winter Springs I In Major League Mustang Division
baseball action at the Seminole Pony Baseball
Complex. Livernois also scored two runs to back the
pitching of Chuck Lamb.
In softball action at the complex. Winter Springs 1
scored three runs In the top of the eighth Inning en
route to an 11-8 extra-inning victory over Forest City
II In Eagle League play o f the Seminole Softball Club.
With the victory. Winter Springs has already equalled
last year's win total, when It was 1-23.
Jessica Bradley ripped a pair o f singles and a pair of
doubles to lead Winter Springs while teammate Terri
Bledsoe added two doubles and Lomlcla Whitaker
added a triple. Christy Tlbblts picked up the pitching
victory. Dcana Jefferson led Forest City with two
doubles.
In other Eagle League play. Kuren DeShctler
showed why she one of Lake Mary High’s most
valuable players as she went 3 for 3 at the plate with
two doubles and a triple and scored five runs to lead
H.D. Realty to a 20-3 trouncing of Casselberry Rotary
Club,
H.D. Realty had a total of 17 hits for the night
Including three by Lori Helms and Marcia Dalzlel and
two by Rlanc Richardson and Kristie Kaiser. Tamara
Smith had a solo homer for Casselberry who
managed only four hits against H.D. Realty's pitcher
Dalzlel.
The three-hit pitching o f Cara Derrlngton paved the
way for Casselberry I Salvaglo's Girls to upend Forest
City III Altamonte Billiards. 11*1. Derrlngton went the
distance on the mound, walked only two and made
five putouts. Casselberry 1 also took advantage of
seven Forest City errors.
Semoran Commercial Roof Decks roped 14 hits en
route to a 15-4 thumping o f Winter Springs II
Trlvlslon's Chevron. Mindy Manual led Semoran with
three hits and two RBI and also picked up the
pitching victory while Wendy Ward added a two-run
single and Carla Crowly scored three runs and
knocked In another. BulTy Osborne had two hits and
two RBI for Winter Springs II.
In Hawks League action, Forest City II Freeway Oil
Co. erupted for 20 runB on 19 hits and Kristen Bates
pitched a no-hlttcr as Freeway Oil hammered Winter
Springs Salvaglo's Photo Arts, 20-1.
Kimberly Steinke. Stacy Brandenburg. Tracy
Brandenburg, Tonla Colvin and Shannon Kennedy
had thice hits apiece for Forest City II.

Baseball
lm i* f » Ei MWSwi R tu lh
By IM N d P rm lntorraHorai
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NIGHTLY 7:30
MATINEES
MONW EDSAT.

1:00 P.M .
PLAY THEEXCITINO

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end Sweet. W -C le rt. L -W M tim H R Sen Diego. Leiefcvre A-MOO.

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M -E v e n ln g Herald. Senford, FI.

h

WORLD
IN BRIEF

Israel Not Ready To Pull
Its Troops Out O f Lebanon
JERUSALEM(UPI) — Israel Is not prepared to
withdraw all of Its troops* from Lebanon In the
near future, despite U.S. Impatience with the
slow-moving process.
After more than four hours of talks with
Secretary of State George Shultz Sunday. Israeli
foreign minister Yitzhak Shamir said there was
agreement on the basic Idea of the removal of
Israel's troops from Lebanon.
But he said. "It Is clear to us that In the
coming months ... (the) Lebanese government
will not be able control the security of Its
territory by its own forces."
Schultz said there was no U.S.-lsracll dis­
agreement on the need to control the security on
Israel’s northern border, or on re-establishing
Lebanese sovereignty and Independence.
Israel has suggested svcral possibilities, in­
cluding Joint Isracll-Lcbancsc patrols, or a
phased Israeli withdrawal.
The pullout of Syrian and Palestinian forces
arc conditional on an agreement by Israel to
withdraw all forces, and Shamir Indicated that
Is not ready to do this soon, or as he described It
"the near future."

OPEC Near Oil Accord
LONDON (UPI) - The 13 OPEC ministers
needed only a nod from the Venezuelan capital
today to conclude a precedent-setting agreement
to cut prices for the first time In the oil cartel's
22-year history and avoid an all-out rate war.
After 11 marathon days of* Informal talks, the
ministers expected today to close an accord on a
pricing and production package that Included a
15 percent rate cut from the present crude
benchmark of S34 a barrel.
To prop up the new price of $29 per barrel, the
13 nations will Impose an overall production
celling of 17.5 million barrels a day almost
halving the peak production in 1979 of 31
million barrels per day.
The final sticking point Sunday was the oil
production level to be allocated to Venezuela,
limited to 1.5 million barrels a day under the
original OPEC proposal.
Venezuela sorely wanted to pump another
300.000 to replenish coffers that are In debt by
$30 billion. Venezuelan Oil Minister Humberto
Calderon Bcrtl said his government probably
would approve a compromise pumping level
today.
For Americans, the $5-a-barrel cut should
mean a price cut of 12.5 cents at the gas pump,
but oil analysts say refiners and producers
probably will try to restore flagging profits and
consumers will sec only about a 5-ccnt
reduction.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Liberty City Rocked
By Racial Violence

y n v i y &lt;.»#.

MIAMI (UPI| — Police restored calm today to
the Liberty City ghetto where black youths
hurled rocks and bottles and stoned officers who
tried to break up an outdoor dance party.
About 500 blacks poured Into the streets after
police broke up a gathering at a park late
Sunday night. Riot-equipped police squads were
withdrawn from the area about 2 a.m. toay.
authorities said.
Police dismantled a blockade around a
40-block area and were patrolling one main
street In the area.
When the disturbance began, police In riot
gear Immediately cordoned off a 40-block area
and urged motorists to stay out of Liberty City, a
predominantly black community where 18
people died In race riots nearly three years ago.
Miami police spokesman Juan Santos said the
violence started when music from large
speakers at a late-night dance In African Square
Park prompted calls from neighbors. Police went
to the scene three or four times and Instructed
the crowd to turn the music down.
After the last warning, the youths began
tossing rocks and bottles at police.

CALENDAR
MONDAY, MARCH 14

Altamonte Springs Alcoholics
Anonymous. 8 p.m.. closed. Altamonte Springs Com­
munity Church. State Road 436 and Hermits Trail.
Sanford Al-Anon. 8 p.m. First United Methodist
Church. Park Avenue and Fifth Street.
League of Women Voters o f Seminole County. 7:45
p.m.. 114 Live Oak Lane, Altamonte Springs. Program
on election laws.
Sanford-Semlnole Art Association. 7:30 p.m.. Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. Demonstration on
photography by Joyce Mikkola.
. Sanford Rotary Club, noon. Sanford Civic Center.

TUESDAY. MARCH IS
South Seminole Chapter AARP. 1 p.m.. Casselberry
Senior Citizen Multipurpose Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
Free Income Tax Aid for the Elderly. 9 a.m.to 1 p.m.,
Longwood Community Center. Wilma and Warren.
Longwood.
Casselberry Rotary. 7 a.m- Casselberry Senior Center.
Secret Lake Park, North Triplet Drive.
Seminole Halfway House AA. 8 p.m.. off U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford, closed.
Rcbos and Live Oak Rebos Club AA. noon and 8 p.m.,
220 Live Oak Center. Casselberry, closed.
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on lakefront.
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.m-.. Longwood
Hotel. County Road 426.

Reagan M ay Settle For Less In A rm s Talks

'Zero Option' Not Etched In Granite
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The pressure
Is mounting on President Reagan to
settle for something less than his "zero
option" In negotiating an agreement
with the Soviet Union to reduce the
num ber o f m edium -range nuclear
missiles in Europe.
While administration officials have
portray* J Reagan as unwavering In his
belief t at the zero option Is "the high
moral ground." they have hinted at
flexibility to assuage those who Insist he
Is not* Interested In arms control.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger
said Sunday Reagan might accept an
interim agreement at the Intermediate
Nuclear Forces talks In Geneva If
convinced it will lead to his goal of
eliminating all missiles from Europe.
"1 suppose there might be some
(Interim agreement) If the first paragraph
was that Immediately following the
signing of this Interim agreement we
would reconvene to negotiate a final
stage, which Is zero." Weinberger said.
"W e ’ve emphasized all along that we
would look seriously at any Soviet
proposal that takes us a step further
toward the ultimate goal of the zero
option." said White House spokesman
Lyndon Allln.
The Geneva talks will be on the
agenda Tuesday when Reagan meets
with Dutch Prime Minister Rudolphus
Lubbers, whose country has agreed lo
accept some of the 572 missiles the
United States will begin deploying In
December If an agreem ent Is not
reached.
The administration hopes Lubbers will
reaffirm Western Europe's support for
Reagan's arms policies.
However, the meeting will follow calls
by two allied leaders — Italian Foreign
Minister Emilio Colombo and West
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl — and
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Chairman Charles Percy. R-1IL. for
changes in Reagan's position.

Colombo, during a meeting with
Reagan, and Percy. In a speech Satur­
day. said Reagan could revitalize the
talks by submitting a new proposal. Kohl
told the Washington Post that Reagan
should accept an interim arms agree­
ment.
However, the administration's position
Is that the burden Is on the Soviets.
Weinberger. Interviewed Sunday on
CBS' "Face the Nation.” said the Soviets
"have not yet mndc made any serious
proposal In response to ours."
"it Is time for them to do so." he
insisted.
In response to suggestions that Reagan
accept an Interim agreement. Wein­
berger said, “ Our worry Is: What Is the
Inducement to the Soviets to come back
to the table If they get an interim
agreement that satisfies all o f their needs
and none of ours?"
Adm inistration sources disclosed
Sunday that the United States has asked
the Soviet Union to open a new set of
arms talks to renegotiate verification
procedures contained In an unratified
treaty limiting nuclear weapons tests lo
lSOkllotonsorlcss.
Reagan, concerned that current tech­
nological means cannot detect all vio­
lations. wants on-site verification built
Into the pact, which was signed In 1974
and has been a focus of political feuding
within the administration and between
Reagan and Congress.
Administration sources said the re­
quest for formal negotiations was deliv­
ered to a Soviet diplomat In Washington
last month by two American officials.
Despite a second Inquiry by the State
Department, the Soviets have not re­
plied.
The lack of a response has rnlscd
concerns among some U.S. officials, who
believe the eventual reaction from
Moscow may provide insight Into Soviet
leader Yuri Andropov's position on the
broad Issue of arms control.

Intermediate
Bombers.
Planned
K Missiles

Existing
Theater
Missiles

MRS. META BAEHR

MRS. MINNIE M.
NEUMAN
Mrs. Minnie M. Neuman.
76. o f 1460 Coronet Drive,
Deltona, died Friday at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Born Dec. 25.
1906 In Elizabeth. N.J.,
she moved to Deltona from
Chesapeake. Va. In 1979.
She was a homemaker and
a Catholic.
She Is survived by her
sister. Mrs. Anni e M.
Morris. Virginia Beach. Va.
Stephen Baldaufi
Funeral Home. Deltona. Is
In charge of arrangements.

WILLIAM K. DONNELLY

$

n rs , n

FRANCE:

a
1 1 , 572 33 ^
493 j
1 108
I 98

BRITAIN:

N A TO :,
$
1,229

*
56
I
I 64

3,787
1,057

1,480

NEA/Merk Oebreny*

President Reagan's "zero option"
proposal to cancel U.S. plans to
Introduce new nuclear missiles Into
Europe In exchange for Soviet dis­
mantling of existing medium-range
missiles has proven to be a stumbl-

Ing block In the Geneva arms talks.
A major Soviet objection Is that the
offer leaves out British and French
delivery systems. Figures are from
U.S. sources. Similar Soviet data
shows the two sides close to parity.

Daddy Dearest?

moved to Deltona from
Liberty. N.Y. In 1978. He
w a s a
r e t i r e d
assemblyman In a truck
body shop and was a
me mb e r of St. A n n ' s
Culhollc Church. DeBary.
Survivors include his
wife, Anna L.; a son,
G aspare G.. o f Nort h
Massapcqua, N.Y.; a
daughter, Mrs. JoAnn M.
Plttl, of Lake PanasofTkec:
a b r o t h e r , F r a n k , of
Wcstbury , N.Y.; a sister.
Mrs. Savina Racanello. of
New Hyde Park. N.Y.;
eight grandchildren.
(Stephen B a l d a u f f
Funeral Home. Deltona, is
In charge of arrangements.

WILLIAM B. BOWMAN
William B. Bowman, 65,
o f 800 Santa Barbara
Drive. Sanford, died at his
residence Saturday night.
Born May 23. 1917 In
Turtle Creek, Pa., he had
lived In Sanford for the
past 21 years. He was the
retired owner and operator
o f the Rose and W llk
Restaurant. He was a
Methodist.
Survivors Include his
wife. Rose; a son, William
Anderson, of Sanford; two
grandchildren; two sisters.
Mrs. Jessie Elgenfritz, of
Orlando, Mrs. E. Aiello, of
Turtle Creek.
Brisson Funeral Home Is
In charge of arrangements.

William K. Donnelly. 68.
of 111-A' Landmark St..
Deltona, died Saturday at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Born July 4.
1914 In Hartford, Conn.,
he moved lo Deltona from
RAYMOND B.GORE
Colchester. Conn, in 1980.
Raymond
B. Gore. 57, of
He was a retired post office
First Avenue. Chuluota,
superintendent and was a
died Sunday at his home.
member of Our L#dy of the
Born Oct. 6. 1926 In
Lakes Catholic Church.
Chuluota. he was a life­
DcUonu. He was a member
long resident. He was a
o f th e E l k s L o d g e
store clerk and a Baptist.
Wethersfield. Conn.
Survivors Include his
Survivors include his
w ife, Ruth; and three
wife. Muriel R.; a son.
brothers, Harry and Eltgh,
William, of Longwood: a
both o f Chuluota. and
daughter. Mrs. Maribcth
Harvey, of Sanford.
Klrchbaum. of Con­
Bald w ln - F a lr c h ild
necticut; two brothers.
Funeral Home. Goldenrod.
R ichard, o f M atthews.
Is In charge of arrange­
N.C.. and Erwin, of Fort
Lauderdale; five grand­ ments.
children.
SHIRLEY ANN TUCKER
Stephen Baldauff
I n f a n t S h i r l e y An n
Funeral Home. Deltona. Is Tucker, of 613 Parkwood
In charge o f a r r a n g e ­ Ave.. Altamonte Springs,
ments.
died Sunday at Orlando
VITO ALLECCIA
Regional Medical Center.
Vito Alleccla. 68. o f 901 She was bom Jan. ]6 In
E. Fairbalrn Drive, De­ Orlando.
ltona. died Sunday in
Survivors include her
Central Florida Regional p a r e n t s . G l e n n a n d
Hospital. Born July 21. Heather; a sister. Miss
1914 In Brooklyn. N.Y.. he Amy Elizabeth, o f Alta-

French Government. Warned
PARIS (UPI) — The Socialist-led government of
President Francois Mitterrand received a clear "w arn ­
ing" from the electorate despite retaining control of
most of France's major town councils In local elections.
After suffering sweeping setbacks in the first round of
voting, the left .minimized Its losses in the runoffs
Sunday. With most results in. leftist councils won In 117
of France's 220 cities with more than 30,000 Inhabi­
tants.
The left lost control of only half the 61 town councils it
won in the previous local elections six years ago. Nine
out of 10 government ministers wor. their elections.
All the left’s defeats Sunday were In communist local
councils — 16 in all. the same number the Socialists lost
In the first round.

■ a * r **

W M .
Warsaw
Pact

i Total Nuclear Warheads

AREA DEATHS
Mrs. Meta Bachr, 91, of
16 Mcrrlmac St.. Deltona,
died Friday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital.
Born April 1. 1891 In New
York City, she moved to
Deltona from Bcllerosc
Village. N.Y. In 1973. She
was a homemaker and a
m em ber o f A ll Saints
Episcopal Church. En­
terprise.
She is survived by her
son. Robert N., of Deltona.
Stephen Baldauff
Funeral Home, Deltona. Is
in charge o f arrangements.

B P !
!1111111
NATO |

Nueleer D elivery Syetem e:

t *•,.

monte Springs; maternal
grandparents. Edward and
Shi r l ey S anderson, o f
Altam on te Springs;
paternal grandparents,
Wayne and Jean Tucker,
o f Orlando; paternal
great-grandparents, Edgar
and Ruth, of Orlando.
Bald w l n - F a l r c h f l d
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs, is in charge of
arrangements.

MRB. ANNE WOLFSON
Mrs. Anne Wolfson. 71,
of 689 Sandpiper Lane,
Casselberry, died Satur­
day at Florida Hospital,
Orlando. Born May 14.
1911 In Cincinnati, Ohio,
she moved to Casselberryfrom Cleveland in 1978.
She was a homemaker and
Jewish.
Survivors include her
husband. Louis; three
sons. Bruce. Howard, and
Kenneth West, all of Cleve­
land; a sister. Mrs. Rose
Grcenwald. Cleveland.
C o x - P a r k e r Fune r a l
Home. Winter Park. Is In
charge of arrangements.

Douglas, of Laccyvllle. Pa.:
f our d a u g h t e r s . Mrs.
Es t h e r Pip her.
Montgomery. Ala.. Mrs.
Rac he l Re a de r , of
Longwood, Joan Pickett,
of Laccyvllle, and Barbara
Higgins, of Longwood: a
sister, Mrs. Eunice Stllson,
of Sliver Spring. Md.; 22
gr andchi l dr en and 35
great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Falrchild
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

MRS. MARGUERIT
EVANS

Mrs. Margucrit Evans.
67. of 25 14 S.Orangc Ave.,
S an ford, died Sunday
night at Central Florida
Hospital. Bom April 9,
1915 in Phcnlx City. Ala..
she came to Sanford In
1937. She was a member
o f the First Christian
Chur ch, the Sanf ordSemlnole Art Association,
the Sanford Senior Citi­
zens Club, the Florida
State Poetry- Assn., and
NFSPS.
SEAN THOMAS CLINE
Survivors include two
Sean Thomas Cline. 15. daughters. Mrs. Beverly
o f 164 Ma n o r D r i v e , Srock, o f Sanford, and
Longwood, died Saturday Mrs. Katherine Bracken, of
at Orlando Regional Medi­ Altamonte Springs; two
cal Center. Bom Oct. 4. sons, Donald, of Sanford,
1967 In Loganspori, Ind., and Wayne, of Wiesbaden,
he moved to Longwood Germany: eight grand­
from there In 1975. He children; two sisters, Mrs.
was a member of Calvary Carl Lane, of Lanclt. Ala..
Assembly o f God, Winter Mrs. Charles Herm, of
Park and the Boy Scouts.
Daytona Beach; a brother.
Survivors include his Ashby Jones, of Sanford;
Brisson Funeral Home Is
parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas F.; a sister. Miss in charge of arrangements.
Li s a R e n e e Cl i n e , of
L o n g w o o d ; maternal
Funeral Notices
grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Westfall, of
BOWMAN, MX. WILLIAM B.
Lon gwo od; maternal
— F u n tie I S ervice) (or M r. W illia m
great-grandparents.
B. B ow m a n , as. o f 104 Santa
Mr . a n d Mrs. H o w a r d
B a rb a ra D rive, Sanford, who died
S a tu rd a y , w ill be a f 10 a .m .
Westfall, of Longwood.
W ednesday a l B risson F u nera l
Baldwln-Falrchild
Home w ith the Rev. Leo K in g
Funeral Home, Altamonte
o f fic ia t in g B u r ia l In H lg la n d
Springs. Is in charge of M e m o ry C ard ens. F o re st C ity .
Brisson F uneral Home In charge
arrangements.

EMIL B. COGSWELL
Emil B. Cogswell. 89. of
201 N. Sunset D rive,
Casselberry, died Friday at
the Better Living Center.
Bom Jan. 18. 1894 In
Tuscardra Township, Pa.,
he moved to Casselbeny
from Punta Gorda in 1978.
He was a retired security
guard and a Baptist. He
was a Mason and member
of the Veterans o f Foreign
Wars.
Survivors Include two
s o n s . W a r d , of
W ash in gton . D.C. and

EVANS. M RS. M A R G U E R IT
- F u n e r a l s e r v ic e s fo r M rs .
M a rg u e rii Evans. *7. o l 35 u $
Orange A ve., Sanford, who died
Sunday, w ill be at t p m Wednes
day a t F irs t C hristia n C hurch w ilh
p a sto r $. E d w a rd Johnson ol
d e la tin g . B u ria l In E v e rg re e n
C em etery. Brisson F uneral Home
In charge.

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* * ’ * •'« A v e , I t " . , &lt;

JJJ-tl*;

|I

It makes
a difference
It help* if a family going through a time of
lost can have a tourca to turn to for informa­
tion, advice, and help. We try to be that
*ource in s tinefcrely concerned w»y.

1 F r u y r t HeeSechet
I In U c tw H ip
Pete
1 D u m a s * er Less e*

4

e»Feei

GRAMKOW

* N tn w tM ii

■jSS s4'
•

When he was told his lather had died, Gary was
playing tennis In Los Angeles. He said he paused
only a moment and continued his game, thinking,
"A m I supposed to act like I loved him all my life?"

D»*9«* f r j ' Fs 9

• Neck Fete tf

[ j-"-1 L T i " ':

He said said the boys were required to eat
everything on their plates and once, after the family
moved Into their 20-room Hollywood mansion,
Phillip hid bacon and eggs under a rug. When the
food was discovered, Phillip was required lo eat it.
"dirt, hairs and all," Gary said.

FREE

___

Etecrmc

"I had a big, broad ass on me as a kid that used to
annoy the hell out of my father." Gary said,
recalling his father's favorite nickname for him was
"Bucket Butt."

S I ’I N A l E X A M I N A J I ON

ALLitti

_

NEW YORK (UPI) — Bing Crosby, the crooner who
charmed millions with his silky voice and family
Image, was an abusive father who beat his sons to
such an extent one of them dreamed of murdering
him. published reports say.
In his memoirs. "Going My Own W ay." Gary
Crosby. 49. the eldest of Crosby's sons by first wife
Dixie Lee. said Ills father beat him almost dally.
"I'd get bent over and my pants taken down and
beat till I bled." he said. He said he endured the pain
by dreaming up ways to kill his father.
In People magazine Interviews, published Sunday.
Gary's three brothers had varying comments on life
Inside the Crosby family.
Phillip Crosby. 48. called Gary a "whining,
bitching crybaby." and said. "W e never got an extra
whack or a cuff we didn't deserve."
Gary dismissed Phillip's comments and said. "He
isn’t worth the powder to blow him to hell."
Phlllip'H twin. Dennis, said Gary's revelations
were "Gary's business," but said his older brother
was the most severely treated o f the four sons of
Bing boys. "He got the first licking, and wc got the
second."
Lindsay Crosby. 45. the youngest of Bing's sons
by his first wife, told People he supports his
brother's memoirs. "I hope it clears up a lot of the
old lies,” he said.
In the book, Gary said he had a weight problem
and recalled his father weighed him once a week. If
he had gained weight he was ordered Into his
father's office for a whipping.

f tee sNtr-'v**W|
'*&lt;€*4* l

FUNERAL HOME

do«t non1

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH t HOMAS VANOt l t
Chiropractic Physician
7017 FRFNCH AVE

SANFORD
323-5763

.

130WEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFORD, FLORIDA
TELEPHONE 322 3213
WILLIAM L. GRAMKOW

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, March 14, l t U - l B

TONIGHT'S TV

Briefly
A rt And Essay Contest
For County Students

6:00
9 ) 3 ) 0 1 1 ) 0 NEWS
(M )C H A H U F S ANO ELS
(10)OCEANU8

6:05

Seminole County Middle School choral directors
and their students will participate In the Annual
Choral Clinic. Friday. March 18. at Seminole
Community College from 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Directors and students will attend various
workshops and mini concerts throughout the day.
Clinicians arc: Dr. Burt Perlnchlef. Doris Butsch.
Janet Adams. Alice Ann Nllsen. Ted Douce and
Paula Gale.
Contact John Blair, music coordinator, Seminole
County school system. 322*1252. for Information.

Beta Sigma Phi
XI THETA EPSILON
XI Theta Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi met at the
home of Mary Johnson.
President Faye Lord conducted the business meeting
and led the discussion on the upcoming membership
rush and the preperatlons surrounding the event.
City Council representative Linda Morris announced
the annual Founder's Day Luncheon will be held April
30 at the Rosempnt Country Club,
Service chairman Ruth Gaines reported that the
Christian Sharing Center Is In a crisis situation and
desperately needs donations of food and clothing. Also,
sh^reporied, the Seminole County Humane Society Is In
need of pet food. Members will donate Items to both
organizations.
Mrs. Gained further announced that plans for the
Chapter's contrlbutulon to the Ronald McDonald House
will be presented at the next meeting.
XI Theta Epsilon celebrated with member Glnny
Hagan who was selcted Queen at the Valentine flail.
Refreshments were served to: Tracey Wight. Donna
Frank. Faye Lord. Glnny Hagan. A1 Kurtz. Linda Morris.
Lois Smith. Linda Dunn. Laurel Rodgers. Tina BoJanowskl. Ruth Gaines. Mary Johnson and Vtckle Hall.

X I B E TA E TA
"Th e Modem World: Trends and Movements" was the
subject for discussion led by Charlotte Blades at a recent
meeting ofBeta Sigma Phi. XI Beta Eta Chapter.
The group briefly touched on changes in quality of life,
how It affects society, the family and the Individual. The
economy and although high unemployment Is em­
phasized by the media there Is an even greater number
of new fields and Job opportunities open to women
today. Mrs. Blades also brought out how freedom and
censorship affect the Individual rights today.
Marty Colegrove continued the program discussion of
trends of the modem world and how It affects all
through television as versus live theater or movie
theater. In particular the discussion brought out how
young people are Influenced by movies for fashions in
dress and halr-styles.
Statistics show people spend the greatest part of their
lime in front of television after sleeping and working.
Film rating was also briefly mentioned during the
discussion.
Valentine Girl Lib Gordon was honored with a
luncheon at H.P. Cassidy's in addition to two guests.
Barbara Labrusclano and Doreen Scribner. Also honored
as transferee was Jane Blrcheat from Ft. Pierce.
A perfume distributor demonstrated perfume samples
at the meeting held In the home o f Fran Morton.
Following the demonstration refreshments were served.

O (?) UE DETECTOR
P.M. MAGAZINE A famous
psychic who ll hired by eetebrllies
such as Burl Reynold* snd EM»
Presiey, top designer* preterit the
Itthioni of the future.
( S O JO KER'S WILD
a D (35) THE JEFFER80N3
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Interview with Ken Howard,
m O C SS NEW S N1QHTWATCH

7:05

3:45
32 (17) MOVIE -Rebut" (1855)

32)

(17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

V»

( D O MOVIE "The Fugitive Kind"
(I860) Merton Brando, Anna Magnanl.

MORNING

5:00
0 (D NSC NEW S OVERNIGHT
(TUE-fRI)
&lt;n&gt; (in
(IT) MISSION: IM POSSIBLE
(FW)

7:35

8:00

Club Sponsors First
Annual 'Miss Kiwanis'
The First Annual Miss Kiwanis Club of
East-West Sanford, the awarding of the
H.L. Douglas and Jack Welble Scholar­
ship. a musical banquet and crowning of
the queen will take place Saturday.
March 19 at 8 p.m. In the Skyport
Banquet Room. Sanford Airport. The S8
tickets are available from members of
the club.
The contestants competing for Miss
Kiwanis Club of East-West Sanford arc:
Alleen Patterson. 16, attends Lake
Mary High School where she Is on the
girls basketball team and Is a member of
the Slr-tcen'Club.
Alleen plans a career In the .teaching
field. Her hobbles Include playing
basketball, dancing, reading and meet­
ing new people.
She Is a member o f Springfield
Missionary Baptist Church where she
serves as secretary of the Sunday School
Department.

PAPA BEAR
DEAR PAPA BEARt It's Just a wild
guess, but I think somebody's been
sleeping In your bed. Pity, the evidence
went up in smoke.
DEAR ABBYt Please, please print this
letter. You are my last hope.
"Dear Mom: Although you are my
mother-in-law. I show you the same
consideration and respect 1 show my
own mother, and I wish you would do
the same for tne. Your visits have
become Intolerable.
"When you come to my home, you
stuff so much candy and cookies Into my
children, they become hyperactive. I
don’ t give them sweets — it makes them
wild and crazy.

QJ (36) MOVIE "Another Time.
Another Place" (1858) Lane Turner,
Berry SuCrven
CD (10) THE LETTER*!EN IN CON­
CERT The premier* vocal group of
the late ‘50* and aarty 'SO* appear
In a concert taped at the hittoric
Chautauqua Amphitheatre In Chau­
tauqua. New York.

Marva
Hawkins
.122-511!!

Sybil Baker, 15. is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Stcwat Baker. Sybil Is a
sophomore at Seminole High School
where she Is an active member of the
band. Spanish Club atid sophomore class
representative.
Her hobls are skating, swimming,
bowling, traveling and listening to
music. She plays the piano and French
horn.
Sybil Is an active member of St. James
AME Church where she Is secretary of
the Sunday School and president of the
Young People's Department.

©

Dear
Abby

"A t bedtime you say (to me), "Oh. let
them stay up a while longer" — making
me look like the mean mother. You toss
them around and get them so excited at
bedtime it takes hours for them to settle
down and go to sleep. Then you go
home, leaving me to deal with hard-lohandle children.
"I'v e tried to talk to you about It. but
you turn a deaf ear. I've tried to talk to
your son about It. but he doesn't want to
take sides against his mother.
"S o here's the final word. Mom. You
are not to upset the children's sleeping
schedules or their eating regulations. If
you Insist on bringing them candy and
cookies against my wishes. 1 can't stop
you. but you will be getting their doctor
and dentist bills. — Your Daughter-InLaw"
Gee. thanks Abby. I feel better already.
Any suggestions on how to handle this?

FED UP IN
PHILADELPHIA
DEAR FED UP; Between us. I think
we've handled this sticky situation as
diplomatically as It can be handled)
ir you put olT writing letters because
you don't know what to say, send for
A b b y ’s com plete booklet on fetterwriting. Send $2 and a long, stumped (37
cents/, self-addressed envelope to Abby.
L e tte r B o o k le t, P .O . B ox 38923.
Hollywood. Calif. 90038.

memorial service for Mrs. J.E. Soverns. sister
o f the late Mrs. Fred Harris, was conducted by
the chaplain. Mrs. Joe Corley and Mrs. L. D.
Hastings.
In trodu ced by Mrs. C orn eliu s, Mrs.
Talmadge K. Wiley showed a film entitled "A
J o u rn ey wi t h Music T rou gh C olon ial
Am erica,"placing emphasis on historical
landmarks.

Following the program and refreshments, a
tour of the building and a room furnished by
the UDC wasconductec by Mrs. Zlke.
Attending were: Mrs. Cornelius. Mrs. Cor­
ley, Mrs. Hastings, Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Charles
Hobson. Mrs. John Krider. Mrs. Troy Ray,
Mrs. M.R. Strickland, Mrs. Julian Vam. Mrs.
W.B. Wallace, Mrs. Zlke. and visitors. Mrs. T.
K. Wiley and Mrs. J. M. McBride, houseguesl
o f Mrs. Hobson.

5:45

HTW)

12:05
0 ® NEWS
m o th e yo u n g
RESTLESS
( D O RYAN 'S HOPE

IKK)

J

3 J (17) MOVIE

2:00
ANOTHER WORLO
ONE UFE TO LIVE
(10) THE SOUNDS OF LOVE

rruo

0 ((10) MAO 1C OF OIL PAINTING
(FRf)

6:30
0 ® EARLY TODAY
® O C BS EARLY MORNINO
NEWS
CDO ABC NEW8 THIS MORNING

2:30

O

CAPITOL
(10) MIRAOE (THU)
0 (10) M A O C OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FW)

3:00
I ® FANTASY
GUOtMaUGHT
GENERAL HOSPITAL
) 135) CASPER
(10) COOKIN'CAJUN (TUC)
(10) ENTERPRISE (WED)
) (10) THE LAW MAKERS (FRf)

S

7:00

® TOOAY
m O MORNING NEWS
CDO GOOO MORNINO AMERICA
31(35) NEWS
0 (1 0 ) TO LIFE

3:05

7:05

3 2 (17)FU N TU It

7:15

32 (35) BUG S BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
0 (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

32 (17) FUNTIME

6:30

m O SM ALL 4 FRYE Nick and
Chip at# hired to investigate the
dumping of illegal chemical* that
threatens to wipe out the black-bel­
lied tree duck.

0:00

3:30

(10) A.M. WEATHER

0

7:30

3*35

3 2 (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
0 (10) SESAME STREET g

(0 (17 ) THE FUNT1TONES

7:35

0

3 2 (IT ) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

O m MOVIE "M.A.D.D.: Mother*
Against Drunk Drivers" (Premiere)
Meiiett* Hadley. Paula Premia*.
The true story ot a California wom­
an's fight to change the nation'*
law* and altitudes concerning
'drunk driver* u dramatized.
O ) O ALICE The waitress** com­
pel* against three plumbers for the
fabulous prize* on t local gam*
show
CD (10) BEACH BOYS 10TH ANNI­
VERSARY SPEC IAL The great
moment* and triumph* of the leg­
endary rock and roll band include
footage of their 1850 Washington,
D C concert and atcfualv* Inter­
view* with the group member*
Special guests: Gian Campbell.
Andy Williams. Darytl Oregon.

6:00
0 2 (35) FRED FLINT STONE ANO

•K&gt;6

8:35

4 .0 6
32 (17) THE M U NSTER*

9:00

(D O

sa

RICHARD SIM M ONS
DONAHUE
_ MOV*
(35) LEAVE rT TO BEAVER
(10) SESAM E STREET g

500

9:05

O ® LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
( D O THREE'S COMPANY
® O ALL IN THE FAMILY (MON.
TUE.THU.FRI)
(35) EXJHT IS ENOUGH
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

9:30

8

10:00

S

10:00
m
O
C AG N EY 4 LAC EY
Detective Isbeckl's "cover" I*
blown while Investigating a danger­
ous car-theft ring.
02 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) DONT KNOCK THE ROCK
A nostalgic look at rock and roll
atari include* Jerry Lee Lewi* and
Bill Haley and the Comets

80
O

5:30

10:30

) PEO PLE'S COURT
IM *A *S ’H

® SALE OF THE CENTURY
0 CH ILD'S PLAY
(35) DORIS OAY
(10) 3-3-1 CONTACT (R) g

)(10) POSTSCRIPTS

11:00

32 (17) BEWITCHED (TUE-FRI)

® WHEEL O f FORTUNE
( D O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
O LOVE BOAT (R)
(55)35 LIVE
0 ( 1 0 ) OVER EASY

■ ft

S

iy.ir« Harm

A N N E B O N N IE ’ S - a t

10:45

TAVERN

11:00

CRAB BAR

32 (17) NEWS

505

32 (17)THEBRA0V BUNCH

10:30
(U) (35) I LOVE LUCY

4:35

32 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

® IN SEARCH OF...
(35) FAMILY AFFAIR

0

4 :3 0
AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL

(35) BCOOBY DOO

THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
MORE REAL PEOPLE
_ (35) ANOY GRIFFITH
0 (10| ELECTRIC COMPANY (R&gt;

32) (17) IN DEFENSE OF FREEDOM
A profile of the United Stile*
Army Is presented

HOUR M AQ AZM S (MON,
THU, FRf)
~ CBS LIBRARY (WED)
SACRV QMFF1N (VSOSi, TUB,
ON THE OO (WED)
) TOM AND JERRY
) SESA M E STREET g

® (1 7)T H A T 0 IR L

9:30

9:45

LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

8:30

GREAT SPACE COASTER
W) M U TER ROGERS (R)

31 (17) THE MAN FROM ATLANTA
A profile of Ted Turner la present*d
m o ONE DAY AT A TIME

m

4:00

®

32(17) MY T H R U SO N S

32 (17) MOVIE

9:05

1:05

1:30

6:45

32) (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
Georgia, on* of the original thirleen colonies and a ttal* ateeped in
the tradition* of the old South la
profiled.

THE

DAYS OF OUR LtVES
ALL MY CHILDREN
) (35) MOVIE
(10) CLARENCE DARROW
5TAARJNO HENRY FONDA (WED)
0 (10) THE MSTORY OP THE E X
(THU)
(10)
0(
i FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRO

6:00
0 ® 2 '8 COUNTRY
m O C BS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
CDO SUNRISE
‘ (35) JIM BARKER
(17) NEWS

0

ano

O A S THE WORLD TURNS
(10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRf)

3 2 (17 ) WORLD AT LA R 0E{TU E)

C D O NEWS
0 (10) A.M. WEATHER

8:05

Someone's Sleeping
In Papa Bear's Bed
DEAR ABBYi I'm a traveling man
who's on the road five days a week. I
have a pretty young wife (my second)
whom I've always trusted until last
Friday night when 1 came home, put on
my bathrobe and found a well-used pipe
In the pocket!
I don't smoke a pipe. Never have. And
my wife has never smoked anything. She
claims she has never seen that pipe
before and doesn't know how It got
there.
OK so she's not admitting to any­
thing. but the next day when I went to
get the pipe, it wasn't there where I had
put it! It Just plain disappeared. I
searched the apartment but It was
nowhere to be found.
My wife claims she doesn't know what
happened to It. We are the only two
people In this apartment.
From what I've told you. what con­
clusions would you draw? No names,
please. My wife calls me...

0 (?) LITTLE HOUSE: A NEW
BEGINNING Wilke Oleton shocks
his perenti when he reveeti hit
plant to pat married, n
m O SQUARE PEGS Vinnte end
Jennifer ere on the out* when Vlnnle atari* making eye* af Patty. M i
co-alar In the school musical. (R)
CD O MOVIE "Ctoae Encounter!
G* The Third Kind" (1877) Richard
Dreyfuat. Franco!* Truffaut.

M1C» LIFE ON EARTH (WED)
)(10) NOVA (THU)
l RETURN O f THE GREAT

12:30

3:30

i l l i V l

32) (17) BOB NEWHART

S

0 m NBC NEW S OVERNtOHT

Ann-Margrat, Laurence Harvey.

(?) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Interview with Ken Howard.
( B O TIC TAC DOUGH
m a FAMILY FEUD
(U (35) BARNEY MILLER
CD(10) UNTAMED WORLD

12.-00

® SO AP WORLD
O CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
0 NEWS
(35) BIG VALLEY
0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE

32 (17) PEOPLE NOW

3.-00

7:30

0

UDC Chapter Tours Historical Museum
Mrs. Burch Cornelius and Mrs. Guy L.
Wood were co-hostess. Mrs. Linda Zlkr,
president, presided.
Follow ing the ritual and business, a

2:30

O

AFTERNOON

8

1:45

ALL SEATS

99'

AND

0 ® ( D O ( D O NEWS
(11 (38) SOAP
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

C ra b H e u r 1:30 -5 :1 0
O a rlic C ra b I K E a c h
’ R oasted O yste rs I K E ach

11:30

O m THE BEST OF CARSON
Host: Johnny Carton. Guest*
Tony Bennett. Jon Walter. (Ft)
1 MARY TYLER MOORE
I ABC NEW S NIGHTLINE .
) (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES

O UR H A P P Y HOURS
11:1* AM . T * 4 :MF.M
II F.M. -Til Cletine
] Far 1 All HifkMIli
Ana Met! Cacklails
L * * *t *e l a s t *

11:35

JJalunlil&lt;§J5e3

32 (17) MOVIE "The Deadly
Affair" (1887) Jama* Mason,
Simon* Signoret.

j( MOVIttAMPjL
■

tsa* Franca A**.
(MWY tf-tll

m O TRAPPER JOHN. M il. A
police officer suffers * critical
wound during a not by Sen Francis­
co 8 K * (R)
C D O THE LAST WORD

12:30
0 3 ) LATE NIG HT W ITH OAVID
LETTERMAN Guest: John

FREE

&lt;6

Announcing. . .
MR. PAUL SMITH

Storrs Schaefer Tailors

N sxtiasiu
i

1 O U M *s* at lee* *f

' • I- Heck Paim m

«

of On

S l ’ l N A l t * A M I N A 1 I ON

1 Frequent Hu S k N
1 Lea Back *r H *
Feta

Hey tMil milt*

RATIONAL us room

CLASS ItUNIOI
^ O jrO U N ^X J^LO Jf^J

12:00

« k a a Sm ii t» K&gt;ne*

The Norman deVere Howard Chapter o f the
United Daughter* of the Confederacy met at
the fcormer Old Folks Home which is being
converted Into a historical museum for
Seminole County.

1:30
(D NBC NEW S OVERNIGHT

3 2 (17) MOVIE "M an With The icy
Eyes" (1871) Keenan Wynn. Faith
Domergu*.

CD0

ria ra M P hato by M a rv a H aw kins

Choral Clinic Set

11:30
® HfTMAN
(0) (35) IINDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 ( 1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

O

7:00

Sybil Baker, left, and Alleen Patterson enter contest,

Central Florida Civic Theatre Children's Theatre
wants applications from directors who are Interested
In submitting one-hour scripts with small casts, one
each in October and March 1984 which they would
like to direct atid product and arc suitable for
children's theatre.
Application deadline Is Friday. April 15.
For Information and application forms contact the
theatre. 896-7365.

(4) NBC NEWS
C M NEWS
I ABC NEW S n
&gt;(10)O C EA N U S^

31(17)G O M ERPYLE

Central Park In downtown Winter Park will come
alive Friday through Sunday. March 18-20. for the
annual Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival. Hours arc
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. all three days.
The 24th annual festival will feature exhibits by
264 fine artists and craftsmen from over thirty
states across the U.S. They will compete for a total
of S14.100 In prize money, with Best of Show a
$ 1.750 purchase award.
One of the many highlights of the show will be
three days of free entertainment by music, dance,
and theater groups.

Children’s Plays Wanted

6:30

6:35

Sidewalk A rt Festival

1:00

*
1:10
m
O COLOMBO A scientist
whose son was plagiarizing scientif­
ic research kill* a colleague who
threatened to reveal the Informa­
tion to lhe pres* (R)

(Q) (17) ANDY GRIFFITH

0

32 (17) PERRY MASON

O MOVIE "Alexander The
Great" (1855) Richard Burton,
Fredrlc March.

(D

EVENING

Florida Hospital Is sponsoring an art and essay
contest In the public and non-public schools of
Orange and Seminole counties. Prizes include
ribbons, pizzas and two computers with free courses
of Instruction.
Theme Is "Getting Wcll/Staylng W ell," and each
school has been asked to submit five entries In each
of several age divisions. The submissions will be
displayed In the lobby of Florida Hospltal/Orlando
from March 20 through 27.
Contest rules were mailed to 192 school principals
and many entries have been received by the
hospital. Entries must be postmarked by March 11.
All children whose work is submitted to the
hospital by the school will be awarded a large pizza
courtesy of Pizza Hut Restaurants of Orange and
Seminole counties.

11:05

of the Monty Python troupe
03) (35) NEWS

MONDAY

will be In our store

TUESDAY, MARCH 15th
(one dey only)
Mr. Smith will be showing s complete line of the neweel
spring ft summer fabrics. He krill be heppy to tska your
measurements lor suits, sport costs or stacks to be
delivered at your convenience.

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH 1HLIMA5 r ANtft . i
Chnop'ri(li( Hh,\ir i.iti
201/ FRENCH AVF
SANFORD

323-5763

104 EAST FIR S T tT ,
DOWNTOWN SANFORD

Weal
322-1811

I

�2 8 — E v tn ln g H t r ild , Sanford, F I.

M o n d iy , M arch 1 4 ,1M3

Watson
W atch
T o m W a ts o n 's d is ­
consolate look tells the
story of this putt on the
sixth hole which failed
to drop in Sunday's Bay
H ill Classic. Watson
finished at 288, five
strokes back of winner
M ik e N ic o le tte . See
Sports, page 6A for all
of the Bay Hill results.
H erald Photo by B r itt S m ith

Astros Batter Valenzuela
United Pres* International
VERO BEACH — Fernando
Valenzuela, the Los Angeles Dodgers'
mllllon-dollar baby, wasn't worth a dime
Sunday.
The 22-year-old Valenzuela, who won
a $1 million 1983 contract alter an
arbitration hearing last month, made his
spring training exhibition debut and was
crushed for six runs and five hits In two
Innings as the Houston Astros pummeled the Dodgers, 15-3.
In the first inning. Phil Garner had a
bases-loaded single for two runs before
Valenzuela walked Wes Clements and
Alan Knlcely to force in the third run. A
single and a walk set things up in the
second inning for Jose Cruz, who drilled
a three-run homer off Valenzuela.
Cruz also singled and doubled and
scored three times. Garner. Bill Doran
and Terry Puhl each had two RBI.
Astros' left-hander Bob Knepper held
the Dodgers to one hit over five innings.
Los Angeles finally scored In the eighth
against Frank Dlpino on a run-scoring
grounder by Pedro Guerrero and a
two-run single by Mike Marshall.
Elsewhere, Philadelphia downed the
Chicago White Sox 7-5, Texas defeated
Kansas City 7*1, Boston beat Detroit 8-5,
Montreal topped the New York Yankees
5-4 In 10 innings, Baltimore edged
Atlanta 3-2, St. Louis nipped the New
York Mets 3-1, Pittsburgh beat Cincin­
nati 3-2 in 11 Innings. Cleveland outslugged San Francisco 13-9, Seattle
whipped San Diego 8-1 and Oakland
trimmed California 4-3.
At Sarasota. Tony Perez drove In four
runs to lead the Phillies to victory. Perez,
a 40-year-old first baseman who signed
with the Phillies as a free agent, hit a
solo homer In the second inning, singled
in another run in the third then doubled
home two more runs In the fifth.
At Pompano Beach. Jon Matlack. Rick
Honeycutt and Tom Hankc combined on
a seven-hitter to lead the Rangers to
victory. The Royals only run came In the
first Inning off Matlack on consecutive
two-out singles by Leon Roberts. Amos
Otis and Bombo Rivera. Matlack retired
the next seven hitters.
At Winter Haven. Ed Jurak's RBI
single with the bases loaded snapped a
3-3 lie and triggered a five-run, eighth
inning rally that lifted the Red Sox to
victory. Jurak, trying to win one o f two
utility infield Jobs, slapped a one-out
drive to left field ofT loser Larry Pashnlek
to drive in Chico Walker with the

Legal Notice
IN T H K C IR C U IT CO U R T IN A N D
FOR
S E M IN O L E
CO U N TY,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL AC TIO N NO. U 1 U C A 4+ E
ALLSTATE
E N T E R P R IS E S
M O R TG A G E C O R PO R ATIO N .
P la in tiff,

vi.
R IC H A R D A . LA C E Y . t l a l,
Defendants
N O T IC E O F AC TIO N
TO : Thom as C a rm l D ibble
end B a rb a ra Ann O lbbie
R E S ID E N C E : U nknow n
A ll p a rtie s c la im in g Interests by,
th roug h, under o r against Thom as
Car m l D ibb le and B arb ara Arm
D ibb le and to a ll p a rtia l h a ving o r
c la im in g to ha ve any rig h t, Hite o r
Interest In Ihe re a l p ro p e rty he roin
dtftcrlbtd.
YOU A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE O
th a t an actio n to fo rte lo w a
m o rtga ge an Ihe fo llo w in g re e l p ro ­
p e rty In Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a .
L o t S, and the E a it '■» of Lo t *.
B lo ck
F,
LAKE
W AYM AN
H E IG H T S , L A K E A D D IT IO N , ac
c o rding to the p la t thereof a t re ­
corded In P la t Book a. Page n . of the
P u b lic R ecord* o f Sem inole County.
F lo rid a .
h a i b ra n tile d e g e fn tt you and you
a re re q u ire d to aerve a copy of your,
w ritte n defenses. If a n y, to It on
C u rry , T a y lo r B Carla, a t MO E.
R ebtm on Street, Suite IIM . O rlando.
F lo rid a H IS I. and tile the o rig in a l
w ith the C lerk o f the above styled
c o u rt on o r before A p ril I I. m i ;
a lodg m en t m a y be an
you to r the re lie f
dem anded In the c o m p la in t o r p e ll

tien.

W ITN ESS m y hand and the te a l ot.
M id C ourt on M a rc h I I . 144).
IS E A L l
A rth u r H . Beck w ith J r.
C LE R K
O F TH E C IR C U IT CO U R T
B Y : Eve C rab tree
D eputy C le rk
P ub lish M a rc h IX I I , » A A p ril 4.

ms
DEPS4

Baseball
go-ahead run. Chet Lemon homered for
Detroit.
At Fort Lauderdale, a pair o f New York
errors in the 10th Inning handed Ihe
Expos their victory. The winning Expo
rally was started when first baseman
John Mayberry allowed a grounder by
Mike Gates to go through his legs for a
two-base error. Gates moved to third on
a sacrifice bunt and came home when
Bryan Little's liner went right through
second baseman Ed Rodriguez' glove for
another error. Andre Dawson hit a
two-run homer for the Expos.
At West Palm Beach. Leo Hernandez
hit a home run and A1 Bumbry had four
hits and knocked In a run as the Orioles
defeated the Braves 3-2. The Orioles
never trailed after Hernandez' homer led
off the second inning against reliever
Rick Mahler. Bob Horner homered for
Atlanta.

Barefoot Tames Brantley;
SC C Blows Lead, Falls, 6-5
Jeff Barefoot scattered seven hits for
his second straight pitching victory
Saturday as Lyman's Greyhounds up­
ended Lake Brantley's Patriots, 9-5, in
Five Star Conference baseball action at
Lake Brantley.
Lyman took a 4-0 lead after two
Innings and held off a late Lake Brantley
rally for the win. Steven Lorenz was 2 for
3 with four RBI as Lyman improved to
6-4 overall and 4-1 In the conference,
Mark Coffey and Bill Neville had two hits
apiece for Lake Brantley who fell to 7-3
overall and 2-3 In the conference.
Lake Brantley remains at home to host
conference foe Seminole today at 3:30
p.m. while Lyman stays on the road and
will head for Spruce Creek for a 4 p.m.
matchup with the Hawks.
In Junior college action. Santa Fe
scored two runs in the bottom o f the
ninth to edge Seminole Community
College's Raiders, 6-5.
SCC had built a 5-3 lead after four
innings and held It until the seventh
Inning when Santa Fe scored once to cut
It to 5-4 and then scored twice In the
ninth to squeeze out the win. Tom
Barker clubbed a home run for the
Raiders who fell to 10-12 overall and 3-1
In the Mid-Florida Conference. Santa Fe
raised Its record to 12-4 overall and 4-1
in the conference.

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY, F L O R ID A
P R O B A TE D IV IS IO N
F ile N um ber 41-44 CP
D ivision Probate
IN R E : ESTATE OF
Deceased
N O T IC E OF A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The e d m in ls lre tlo n o l the estate of
E lsie 5 M enander, deceased. F ile
N um ber 4 ) 44 CP, Is pending In Ihe
C irc u it C ourt lo r Sem inole County,
F lo rid a . P robate D ivision, the
address o l w hich Is P.O D ra w e r C.
Sanford. F lo rid a The nam es and
addresses o l the personal repre
se n te llve end Ihe personal rep re
sentetlve's attorn ey a re set fo rth
bo low.
A ll Interested persons ore re q uire d
to Hie w ith th is court, W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N TH S OF TH E FIR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N OF TH IS N O T IC E :
i l l o il c la im s against the oslo to and
ID any o b je ction by an interested
person to whom th is notice was
m o ile d th at challenges the v a lid ity ot
tho w ill, tho q u a lific a tio n ! o l tho
personal representative, venue, or
ju ris d ic tio n of Ihe court.
A L L C LA IM S A N D O BJEC TIO N S
N O T SO F IL E D W IL L BE F O R E V ­
ER BARRED.
P u b lic a tio n ot th is N otico has
begun on M onday, M a rch 14,1f t )
Personal R e p re se n t*live :
C lifto n I. T a ylo r Sr.
A lta m o n te Springs. F lo rid a 11701
A tto rn e y lo r Personal
R eprosantalive:
Stephan H. Coover
H U TC H ISO N A M A M E L E
P.O. D ra w e r H
Sanford. F I 33771
Telephone: (M SI 323 4011
P ublish M a rch 14. I I , IM 1
O EFSS

LHMJY

GRAPEFRUIT
IG M lM H X N tlU A

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Deals
Sunday’s
Sports
By U nited
Press

Transactions
In tern ationa l

Hockey
Quebec — Reached an agreem ent
w ith lo rw a rd i P aler, A nton end
M e rlo n Stestny to r tho renegotiation
ot
th e ir
contracts.
Callage
B roo klyn College — N am ed B ruce
Flloso heed football coach and Joe
V e rd i w om en's softb all coach.

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T FDR
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY, F L O R ID A
PR O B A TE D IV IS IO N
F ile N um ber n a n - c p
D tvislen PRO BATE
IN R E : ESTATE OF
B E A T R IC E M . M U R R A Y ,
Deceased
NO TIC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L PERSONS H A V IN G
C LA IM S OR D E M A N D S A G A IN S T
TH E A B O VE E STATE A N D A L L
O TH E R PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D
IN TH E E S TA TE :
YOU A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
the! the a d m in is tra tio n o l Ihe estate
of B ea trice M . M u rre y , deceased.
F ile N um ber 13-013 C P, Is pending In
the C irc u it C ourt lo r Sem inole
C ounty, F lo rid a , probate D ivision ,
the address o l w hich Is Sem inole
County
C ourthouse,
P robate
D ivision, Sentord, F L , 11771.
The personal rep resentative o l the
estate Is Betts L. Topping, whose
address Is 1445 Cypresswood C ourt,
Columbus, Ohio. 41234. The name
end address ot the p rtso n a l repre
sentetlve's a tto rn e y ere set lo rth
below.
A l persons having c la im s o r de
mends eg slnsl the estate a re re
qulred. W IT H IN TH R E E M O NTHS
FR O M TH E D ATE OF TH E FIR ST
P U B LIC A T IO N OF TH IS N O T IC E ,
to tile w ith the c le rk o l the above
court e w ritte n statem ent o l any
c la im o r dem and they m ay have
Each c la im m ust be In w ritin g end
m ust Indicate the basis fo r the cla im ,
Ihe nam e end address of the c re d ito r
o r his agent o r attorn ey, end the
am ount claim ed It the c la im Is not
yet due. Ihe date when It w ill becom e
due shall be stated. It the c la im Is
contingent o r un liq uidated. Ihe
nature o l the u n ce rta in ty sh e ll be
staled. If Ihe c la im Is secured, the
s e cu rity shell be described. The
c la im a n t shall d e liv e r s u ffic ie n t
copies of the c la im to the c le rk to
enable the c le rk to m a ll one copy lo
each personal representative.
A ll persons Interested In the estate
to w hom a copy o l th is N otice of
A d m in istra tio n has been m a ile d are
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
THREE
M O N TH S FR O M T H E D A T E OF
T H E FIR ST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O TIC E, to tile any objections
they m a y have that challenge the
v a lid ity o l the decedent's w ill, the
q u alification s of the personal re p re
sentellve. o r the venue o r ju ris d ic ­
tion o l the court.
A L L C LA IM S . D E M A N D S . A N D
O BJEC TIO N S NOT SO F IL E D W IL L
BE FO R E V E R B A R R E D
D ale o l the lir s l p u blica tio n o l this
Notice of A d m ln litre flo n : M a rc h 7,

im

B E T T E L. TO P P IN G
As Personal R epresentative
a ! the Estate o l
B E R T R IC E M M U R R A Y
A T T O R N E Y FOR PER SO NAL
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
F ra n k C. W hlgham , E squire,
ol
STENSTRO M .
M clN T O S H ,
J U L IA N , C O LB E R T A W H IG H A M .
P .A .
P O Box 1U0
Sentord, F L . 11771
1)051 311 3171
P ublish: M a rch 7, U , 144)
D EF II
LEO AL
N O T IC E
TO
AR­
C H IT E C T S ,
P R O F E S S IO N A L
E N G IN E E R S , R E G IS T E R E D
LAN O SURVEYORS
P u b lic A n n o u n c e m e n t
C o n s tru c tio n P ro te c ts
The School B o a rd o t S e m in o le
C o u n ty , in c o m p lia n c e w ith th e
C o n s u lta n ts
C o m p e t itiv e
N e g o tia tio n A c t. — C h a p te r TS U I ,
does d e c la re th e In te n tio n to
c e r tify fir m s o r In d iv id u a ls as
C o n s u lta n ts o r to p e rfo rm s e rv ic e s
fo r p ro te c ts b e g in n in g In th e m i ­
ls scho ol y e a r.
T o be e lig ib le to r c o n s id e r a t Ion,
a l l In te r e s te d f i r m s m u s t be
c e rtifie d b y th e School B o a rd o l
S e m in o le C o u n ty as q u a lifie d ,
p u rs u a n t to C o n s u lta n ts C o m ­
p e titiv e N e g o tia tio n s A c t, en d
re g u la tio n s o f th e B o a rd . ( F o r m
154)
A n y f i r m o r In d iv id u a l d e s irin g
- t o p ro v id e p ro fe s s io n a l s e rv ic e s
fo r th e S chool B o a rd o f S e m in o le
C ou nty s h a ll a p p ly In w r itin g to r
c o n s id e ra tio n w ith a le tte r of In ­
te re s t d e s c rib in g Ih e f i r m ’s:
0. C a p a b ilitie s
b. A d e q u a c y o f P e rs o n n e l
c. P ast R e c o rd
d. L o c a tio n
e. R e c e n t, c u rre n t a n d p ro je c te d
w o rk lo a d
t. W illin g n e s s to m e et tim e an d
b u d g e t re q u ire m e n ts
g. V o lu m e o l w o rk p re v io u s ly
a w a rd e d to th e ll r m b y the B o a rd
TO B E E L IG IB L E F O R C O N ­
S ID E R A T IO N A L L A P P L IC A N T S
M U S T B E R E G IS T E R E D IN T H E
S T A T E O F F L O R ID A TO P R A C ­
T IC E T H E IR P R O F E S S IO N A T
T H E T IM E O F A P P L IC A T IO N .
A P P L IC A T IO N S W IT H O U T T H E
D A T A D E S C R IB E D W IL L B E
C O N S ID E R E D
IM P R O P E R .
E A C H F IR M W IL L S U B M IT A
GENERAL
S E R V IC E S
AP­
P L IC A T IO N F O R M 154 A N D A
P E R S O N A L L E T T E R O F IN ­
T E R E S T TO P E R F O R M S E R ­
V IC E S .
F irm s In te re s te d in p ro v id in g
s e rv ic e s m a y a p p ly d ir e c tly to th e
S u p e rin te n d e n t's O ffic e a t 1111
m e 11onv 111e A v e n u e , S a n fo r d ,
F lo rid a 13771. A p p lic a tio n s w ill be
re c e iv e d b e tw e e n th e h o u rs o l 1:00
A M . e n d 4:10 P .M .. u n til 3:00
P .M ., M a rc h I I , IT U . T h e School
B o a rd w ill c o n s id e r o n ly fir m s th a t
a p p ly a n d a re c e r tifie d b y th e
B o a rd to r th e IM 1 -I4 scho ol y e a r.
The fo llo w in g p ro je c ts a re a n ­
tic ip a te d :
1. E x c e p . E d C la s w o o m A d ­
d itio n lo R o s a n w o ld
3. V a rio u s R e -ro o fln g P ro I e e ls
3. V a rio u s M ls c . P ro ! acts
D a te d th is 2Sth d a y o f F e b ru a ry ,

im

Legal Notice
N O TIC E O F R ESO LU TIO N CLOSIN O . V A C A T IN O A N D A B A N D O N
IN O
B IO K TS -O F-W A Y
OR
O R A IN A O E E A S E M E N T .
TO W HO M IT M A Y CO N C ER N :
N O TIC E Is hereby g ive n th a t the
Board o t County C om m issioners ot
Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a , at Its
R eg ula r M eeting ho ld on the Mh day
o l M a rch . A .D ., ISO . In the County
C om m issioners’ M oating Room In
the Courthouse a l Sanford. Semi note
C ounty, F lo rid a , pu rsu an t to P e titio n
and N otice heretofore give n, passed
end adopted a R esolution d o sin g ,
vaca tin g and abandoning, renounc
log and d is c la im in g any and a ll rig h t
o t Ihe C ounty o f Sem inole and Ihe
p u b lic In and to th e fo llo w in g de­
scrib ed r lg h ti o f w ay o r drainage
C E N T E R S T R E E T In D E W E Y ’S
COVE R E P L A T , acco rding to the
P ie t th ereo f as recorded
trd id In P lo t
IX Poge M . P u b lic R ecants.
Sem inole County, F a rid a
B y Ihe B oa rd o f County C om m is­
sioners o f Sem inole C eunty, F lo rid a ,
Ih ls tth d a y o f M a rch . A .D .. l* M .
BO AR D O F C O U N TY
C O M M ISSIO NER S
*
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
F L O R ID A
B Y A rth u r H. B eckw ith J r,
C LER K
P ublish M a rc h 14.110)
QEF-44

4

R o la n d V . W illia m s ,
C h a irm a n
R o b e rt W H ughes,
S u p e rin te n d e n t
P u b lis h : F e b .31, M a r c h ! , 1 4 ,1M 1

IDCYlONIEI--------The School Board o f Sem inole
County Intends to h ire an auctioneer
experienced In governm ental a u c ­
tione erin g lo r • p u blic sale to be he ld
on A p ril 14. I N ) between the hours o l
1:00 AM. and 4:00 P .M . a t Lake
M onroe, F lo rid a
A ny firm o r In d ivid u a l d e siring to
pro vid e professional services lo r th e
School Board o l Sam lnola C ounty
shall ap ply In person lo r consid
* fa lig n w ith a le tte r o l in te re st
de scrib ing the llrm s :
a . C apabilities
b. Adequacy of Personnel
c. Past Racord
d. Location
e. W illingness to m eet tim e r e ­
quirem ents
I. Foe S tru rtu re
Interested llrm s m a y ap ply d ire c t
ly to the School B oard o f Sam lnola
C ounty, P urchasing D ep art m oot, a t
t i l l M e lllo
Ionn v llle
illa A
A«venue. Sanford.
F lo rid a 11771. A p p lica tio n s w ill be
receive d betw e en the hours of 1:00
A M . and 4:10 P M . u n til 1:00 P M .
M a rc h IX I M l
D ated this ll t h d a y o t M a rch . IM X
i R oland V. W illia m s .
C hairm an
R obert W. Hughes.
Super in
P ub lish M a rc h IX H a n d le
O EF S I

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT OF
F L O R ID A IN AN O FOR T H E
C O U N TY O F S E M IN O LE
C IV IL AC TIO N N O : 4 )0 3 CA-45 L
D IV IS IO N O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N .
STATE O F F L O R ID A O E P A R T
M E N T O F TR A N S P O R TA T IO N ,
P e titio n e r, - vsSTARS. RO EBUC K I. CO , e l e l .
Defendants.
N O TIC E O F H E A R IN G
TO SHOW CAUSE
AND
N O TIC E OF S U IT
STATE O F F L O R ID A TO:
Gordon E . Em erson, J r.,
as Trustee
1 F aneull H ill M e rk e l
Piece
Bos ton. Massech uset ts 01104
P A R C E L 1117
Antony E. Monk
G eneral P a rtn e r
B arnsclenem e Proper I le i I, Inc.,
e L im ite d P artnership
345 P e rk Avenue. I3 rd Floor
New Y o rk . New Y ork 10021
P A R C E L fS U
E . R obert Rosklnd.
G eneral P artner
Barnsclenem e P roperties I. Inc.,
e L im ite d P artnership
345 P e rk Avenue, 13rd F loor
New Y ork, New York lo o p
P A R C E L 1404
Philip H. Shears.
as T ru s Is e
3000 Two Notch Road
C olum bia. South C arolina I tlO l
PARCEL f i t !
To a ll said defendants who are
liv in g , and II any o r a ll defendants
•re deceased. Ihe unknow n spouse
heirs, devisees, grantees, cre ditors,
lienors, o ro lh e r p a rtie s cla im in g by,
through, under, o r against any such
deceased defendant o r defendants. If
•liv e , and. If dead, Ih e lr unknown
spouie. heirs, devisees, legatees
gran lees, cre ditors, lienors, o r o lhe r
pa rtie s c la im in g by. through, under,
o r against any such deceased defen­
dant o r defendants, and a ll other
pa rlie s having o r c la im in g to have
any rig h t, title , o r Interest In end to
the pro p e rty described In the P e ti­
tion, fo -w ll:
SECTION 7704*1544
STATE R O AD 414
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY
D ESC R IPTIO N
F E E S IM P L E R IO H T O F W A Y
P A R C E L 1117

That p e rt o l:
The W &gt;s o l the NW U o l the SE U
ot Section 14, Township I I South.
R in g * i f East ly in g Sotrtti o l State
Road 436 and W e tl of the e xistin g 10
loot rig h t o l w ay ot N orth Lake
Boulevard,
described as fo llo w s:
Com mence on Ihe West line o l the
NE 1* o l Section 14, Township I t
South. Range I t East e l e point 25 44
feel N o rth 00*1414" W esl along said
line fro m the Southwest c orne r of
M id NE U . end ru n n in g thence South
It - 53*44’ ’ East.. 444 M teat lo the
beginning o l e curve concave lo the
N o rth e rly end having a rad ius of
1,144 41 te a l; thence along said curve
through e c e n tra l angle of 00* 01’ 11’ *'■
distance o l 1.14 (te l lo a point on said
curve having a tangent bearing o l
South It - 54 54'' E ast; thence South
00*07*14” W est a distance o l 100 )0
le a l to e point on the existin g
Southerly rig h t ol w ay lin e o l Slate
Road 434, M id point being Ihe
beginning ot a cu rve concave lo the
N o rth e rly end having a rad ius o l
3444.4) fe e l: thence tro m e tangent
bearing ot South i r s i ’44" E ast, run
along M id curve through a c e n tra l
angle of 03*0) 34" a distance o f 104.45
feel to the P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G ,
being a po in t on M id curve , h a vin g a
tangent bearing of N o rth sr-OJ’41’ ’
E ast, thence South 00*15 01” East e
distance o t 344.74 teat; thence N orth
4f*34'53” East a distance of 3.13 feet;
thence N o rth 00*13’50" West 7 S 4 II
(eel lo Ihe point ot Intersection o l Ihe
West existin g rig h t o l w ay line of
N o rth Lake Boulevard and the South
e xistin g rig h t of w ay lin e o l State
Road 414, M id p o ln l being the
beginning ot e curve concave to the
N o rth e rly end having e rad ius ol
7444.4] le et: thence Iro m a tangent
bearing ot South M *00’ 45” West, run
W este rly along the ere o l Mid curve
e distance o l 3.41 feet through o
c e n tra l angle o l 00*03'01" to Ihe P olnl
o l Beginning
C ontaining 751 square leet, m ore o r
less
O W N ED B Y . E D W A R D A . STER N ,
as Trustee of the M ilto n Stein F a m ily
T ru s t under the W ill o l M ilto n Stein

d#cnitd

EASEM ENT
P A R C E L #404
STO RM SEW ER E A S E M E N T le ft
( N orth ) Station H 0 3 + » 41 ( P a rti
T hat P a rto l:
The NE 14 o t Section IX Township
I I South. Range 3 t E ast, Sem inole
C ounty, F lo rid a ;
described as follow s:
Com m ence on th e W estline o t the
SE 14 o l the NE 14 of Section IX
Township )1 South, Range 3 f E ast, at
a p o in t 1141.04 feet South 00 *U ’04”
East of the N orthw est corne r
th ereo f; said point being on a curve
concave to th e N o rth e rly and having
a ra d iu s o t M 4 4 .t) lo ot (ch o rd );
Ihence. Iro m a tangent be arin g ot
N o rth 71*17'34” E ast, ru n E a ste rly
•lo n g the ere o l said cu rve through a
c e n tra l angle o l I2 *)4 '4 4 " a dlslanca
o l 430.41 leet to • p o in t on said curve,
having a tangent bearing o l N orth
*0*30'54”
E a s t;
Ihence
N orth
00*4X31" W esl a distance o l 41*04
leet lo the P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G :
Ihence continue N o rth 0 0 * « ’13" W esl
e distance o t 55 fe e t; thence South
4t * 45‘ 4« " W est e distance of 37155
fe et; thence N o rth 0 0 *I*’ I3” W est e
distance of 10 fe et; thence South
4t - * 5'* » " W est a distance o l 35*4
teal; thence South 00*14*13" East e
distance of 45 fe et; thence N orth
4 f*45*44” E ast e distance o t 15.44
feet; thence N o rth 00* I 4’ 1I " W est e
distance ot )5 fe e t; Ihence N orth
4 t* 45*44” E ast a distance o l 335.1
fe e l; thence South 00* 4X 33" East a
distance o l 35 feet; thence N orth
4f * 45'44 *
1 E ast a distance o f 40 feet to
the P oint of Beginning.
C ontaining 0.135 acre, m ore o r less.
O W N E D B Y : A L T A M O N T E , IN C .,
A /K /A A L T A M O N T E M A L L , IN C ., a
F lo rid a C orporation; and H Q M A R T
D EVELO PM ENT
CO..
A /K /A
H O M A R T D E V E L O P M E N T COM
P A N Y , an Illln o ls C o rp o ra tlo n
SU BJEC T TO : LE A S E recorded In
O ffic ia l Records Book 1051, poge 1447
end A S S IG N M E N T A B IL L OF
SALE recorded In O ffic ia l Records
Book 1114, pa ge 704 In la v o r o l
B A R N S G IN E M A P R O P E R T IE S I,
IN C ., •
N ew Jersey L im ite d
P a rtn e rs h ip ; and
N O TIC E OF LE A S E recorded In
O ffic ia l R ecords Book 111X page 712
In la v o r of G E N E R A L C IN E M A
C O R P O R A TIO N , a D elaw are Cor.
p o re llo n ; and
M O R TG AG E recorded In O ffic ia l
R ecords Book M IX page 71*;
A S S IG N M E N T OF LE A S E A N D
R EN TS recorded In O ffic ia l Records
Book M i x page 745; and F IN A N C ­
IN G S T A T E M E N T recorded In O l
llc la l Records Book M24, page 774 In
fa vo r o l JE F F E R S O N STA N D A R D
L IF E IN SU R AN C E C O M P A N Y ; end
U T IL IT Y E A S E M E N T recorded In
O ffic ia l R ecords Book 1031, page 304
In fa v o r of F L O R ID A POW ER
C O R PO R ATIO N , a F lo rid a Cor
pof i t Ion.
You e re each n o tifie d th a t the
P e titio n e r tile d Its sw orn P e titio n
end Its D eclara tio n o f Ta kin g In this
C ourt against you as defendants,
seeking to condem n by em inent
dom ain proceedings the above de
scribed p ro p e rty located In the State
of F lo rid a , County o l Sem inole.
You ere fu rth e r n o tifie d that the
P e titio n e r w ill c e ll up lo r hearing
before th e H onorable S. Joseph
O evls, J r, one of tha Judges of this
C ourt on the 31st day o l A p ril A .D .,
IS t), a t 1:30 o 'c lo c k P .M , In
Sem inole County Courthouse, R m
370. Sanford. F lo rid a , Its a p plica tio n
fo r an O rd e r of T a kin g . A ll p a rtie s to
th is su it and a ll other Interested
pa rlie s m ay appear a t the tim e and
piece designated and be heard.
AN D
Each defendant Is hereby re q uire d
to serve w ritte n delenses. It an y, to
said P e titio n o n :
D R P A R T M E N T O F TR A N S P O R ­
T A T IO N
Post O ffic e Box 47
D eLand. F lo rid a 33730
C/o Charles $. Stratton,
D is tric t F iv e A tto rne y
(*04} 734 3171
AND
STATE
OF
F L O R ID A
DE
P A R T M E N T O F TR AN SPO R TA
TIO N
O ffice o l Legal O perations
M a ll Station 34
Haydon B urns B u ild in g
Tallahassee, F lo rid a 33X1
(40*1444 3411
on or before th e 4th day o l A p ril.
A .D ., 1443, and Ilia the o rig in a l w ith
the C lerk o l Itsls C ourt on th a t date,
to show cause w hat rig h t, title ,
Interest, o r lie n you o r any o l you
have In end lo th e pro p e rty described
In the P e titio n and lo show cause, II
any you have, why the pro p e rty
should not be condem ned lo r the uses
and purposes sot lo rth In th e P e ti­
tion. It you fe ll to do so, • de fau lt
m a y be entered against you to r tha
re lie f dem anded In the P e titio n
W ITN ESS M Y H A N D A N D SEAL
of sold C ourt on tho 4th day ol
M a rch , A .D ., 1441.
A rth u r H . B eckw ith, J r.
CLERK
O F T H E C IR C U IT COURT
B y: SusanE. Tabor
D eputy Clerk
(S E A L)
P ublish M a rch 7. I X I I , 34,1443

SU BJEC T TO : M O R TG AG E re
corded In O ffic ia l Records Book 1004.
page 7; A G R E E M E N T S recorded In
O ffic ia l Records Book 1034, page 1131
end O ffic ia l Records Book 1014, page
l i l t : M O R TG AG E recorded In Of
H ciel Records Book 1030, page f7 t5 i
AS S IG N M E N T O F R ENTS recorded
In O ffic ia l Records Book 1030. page
1104;
C O N SO LID ATIO N ,
M O D IF IC A T IO N
end
extension
agreem ent recorded In O ffic ia l Re­
cords Book Ia n . page 11M ; SUBOR­
D IN A T IO N
AGREEM ENTS
TO
S S U .I
F E E LO AN recorded In O ffic ia l
N O TIC E O F R E S O LU TIO N CLOSRecords Book 10)4. page 1151, OfIN O , V A C A T IN O A N D A B A N D O N ­
flc le l Records Book 1014, page M44
IN G
R IG HTS-O F-W AY
OR
end O ffic ia l Records Book 10)4, page
O R A IN A O E E A S E M E N T
1134: AS S IG N M E N T O F LEASES
TO W HO M IT AAA Y CONCE R H :
recorded in O ffic ia l R ecords Book
N O TIC E Is hereby g ive n th a t the
1014. page 1114; end A S S IG N M E N T
B oard o l County C om m issioners o l
O F M O R TG AG E recorded In O ffic ia l
Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a , a t Its
Records Book 1014. page 1157 In
R egular AAaetlng held on the 4th day
fa vo r o l JOHN HANCOCK M U T U A L
o f AAerch, A O , 1441. In the County
L IF E IN SU R ANC E C O M P A N Y ; end
C om m issioners' AAaetlng Room In
LE A S E H O LD
M O R TG AG E
re­
tho Courthouse a t Sentord, Sem inole
corded In O ffic ia l Records Book 1043,
County, F lo rid a , pu rsu an t to P e titio n
page
104:
A S S IG N M E N T
OF
end N otice heretofore give n, passed
LEASES AN O R EN TS recorded In
end adopted a R esolution closing,
O ffic ia l R ecords Book 1043. page tS t;
vaca tin g and abandoning, renounc­
F IN A N C IN G
S T A TE M E N TS re ­
corded In O ffic ia l R ecords Book 1043, ing and d is c la im in g any and a ll rig h t
o l tha C ounty o t Sem inole and tha
page NO end O ffic ia l Records Book
p u b lic In and lo tha fo llo w in g do
1077, page 1514 In I e ver o l GORDON
scrib ed rlg h ts -o l w ay o r drainage
E. EM ERSO N , JR .. Nom inee o l the
easem ent, t * w l) : A ll T h a t P a ri o l
Trustees o l Cabot. Cabot &amp; Forbes
O range Street as shown on tha pla t o l
Land T rust under D eclara tio n o l
S A N LA N D O SPRING S T ra c t No. 47,
T ru st deled Janu ary 31, 1171, now
acco rding to the p la t thereof as
know n as B A Y CO LO NY PR O
recorded In P la t Book X Page 45. o l
P E R T Y C O M P A N Y , IN C . e Dele
the P ub lic R ecords o f Sem inole
w ere C orp oration ; and
C ounty, F lo rid a ly in g W est o f tha
SECOND M O R TG AG E recorded In
W est Right-Of-W ay Line o f In te rs ta te
O ffic ia l R ecords Book II3 J. page
No. 4 IS.R . 400) and E ast o f the
171);
A S S IG N M E N T
OF
S outherly extension of the W est Line
M O R TG AG E ' recorded In O ffic ia l
Ol L o t 17, B lock F , said S AN LAN D O
Records Book 1144. page 1401 In
SPRING S T ra c t N o .« !, S ub |ad to an
la v o r ot P H IL IP H . SHEARS, as
easement fo r U tilitie s o v e r the N o rth
Successor Trustee o l C layton F a m ily
IS fe et thereof. A n d Also Subject to
Trusts, de le d J a n u a ry ). 1440. and
an easem ent to r d ra in a g e o ver the
LE A S E racorded In O ffic ia l Records
N o rth 15 to o l o l the E ast 75 le et
Book 1004. page 1474: A M E N D M E N T
TO LEAS E recorded In O ffic ia l
B y the B oa rd o f County C o m m itR ecords Book 10)4. page 1110, and
Stoners of Sem inole C ounty. F lo rid a ,
F IN A N C IN G
STATEM ENT
re
th is 4th day o t AAerch. A .D ., IN ) .
corded In O ffic ia l R ecords Book M IX
BOARDO FCO UNTY
page NO In fe v e r o l TH E G R E A T
C O M M ISSIO NER S
A T L A N T IC
A
P A C IF IC
TEA
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
C O M P A N Y . IN C ., a M a ry la n d C or­
F L O R ID A
p o ra tio n ; and
B Y A rth u r H. B e ckw ith J r.
LE A S E recorded in O ffic ia l Records
C LER K
Book 1004, page 14), and LEAS E
P iA lls h M a rc h IX 1143
D E F 47*
M O D IF IC A T IO N recorded In O ffic ia l
R ecords Book 10M, page 1I I ) held by
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
SU PER X DRUG S, now know n os
N otice Is hereby g ive n th a t I am
SUPER X DRUGS O F F L O R ID A .
engaged In b u s ln e u a l 1410 Spalding.
INC. a F lo rid a C orporation, by
W in te r Springs. Sam 'note C ounty,
m e rg e r; end
F lo rid a under the fic titio u s nam e of
M O R TG A G E recorded In O ffic ia l
JR . C H E M IC A L CO. O F F L A .. IN C .
Records Booh l i f t , page 454 In la v o r
dbe A L L C H E M CO , and th a t l
Of B E N IT A S T E IN , and
Intend to re g is te r said nam e w ith tha
LE A S E racorded In O ffic ia l Records
C la rk o l ttw C irc u it C ou rt, Sem inole
M I 4. page IT ) and ASSIGN
C ounty, F lo rid a tn accordance w ith
M E N T A ASSU M PTIO N O F LEAS E
the pro visio ns of ttw F ic titio u s Nam e
recordod In O ffic ia l Records Book
Sletufes. To W it: Section 145 04
IN S . page 1)07 held by JE F F E R S O N
F lo rid a S tofutes I4S7.
STORES. IN C ., a D elaw are Cor
Jeanette Ross
po re tio n
» 4 &gt; ilih 'Aarch 1, I X 11. N , IN )
STORM
SEW ER
(P E R P E T U A L
D E F 23

i

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 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 ? - Noon

RATES

( t im e .........................54c • lint
J consecutive times . 54c a (In*
7 consecutive tim es.. 44c B line
10 consecutive times 42c • line
S2.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

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

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care

21—Personals
IM P R O V E Y O U R F U N L IF E
Com panions to r a ll occasions c a ll
331 4337,________________________

23—Lost &amp; Found
B lack and tan shepherd puppy.
Lost v lc ln ty 5th X 17 43 . 313 3040
o r 331-4500 ext. 704 Annette
Lost puppy black and w h ite Husky,
blue eyes 4wks old. R EW AR D.
Please c e ll 31) 7411 a ft 5 M l 3433

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY. F L O R ID A
P R O B A TE D IV IS IO N
F ile N um ber 43-OM-CP
D ivision
IN R E : ESTATE O F
H A R R Y L. H A R K E R ,
N O TIC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The a d m in is tra tio n ot the estate ol
H A R R Y L. H A R K E R . deceased. F ile
N um ber 43004 CP, Is pending In the
C irc u it C ourt lo r Sem inole County,
F lo rid a , P robate D ivision , the
address o l w hich Is C irc u it C ourt,
P robate D ivision . Sem inole County
Courthouse, Sentord. F lo rid a 33771.
The names end addresses ot the
personal rep resentative end the
personal re p resentative 's attorney
ere set fo rth below.
A ll Interested persons ere re q u ire d
to tile w ith this co u rt. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N TH S OF T H E FIR ST
P U B L IC A T IO N O F T H IS N O T IC E :
( I) a ll c la im s e g slnsl the estate end
&lt;31 an y objection by an Interested
person to w hom th is notice was
m a ile d lh a l challenges the v a lid ity ol
w ill, the q u a lific a tio n s o l Ihe
personal representative, venue, o r
ju ris d ic tio n of the court.
A L L C LA IM S A N D O BJEC TIO N S
N O T SO F IL E D W IL L BE FO R EV
ERBARRED.
P ub lication o l th is Notice has
begun on M a rch 7, I ft J
Personal R epresentative:
M rs . M a ry Jana N icholas
P.O. Box 140
W in te r P ark, F lo rid a 33740
A tto rn e y for Personal
R epresentative:
W E B B E R B. H A IN E S
W IN D E R W E E D L E . H A IN E S .
W A R D * W O O DM AN, P A
P.O. BO X 440.
W IN T E R P A R K , FL337SO
Telephone: (3051444 4)11
P ub lish M a rch 7, IX I t , 1441
DEF »

B A BY SITTIN G - my homa. Hrs.
A days Ilex. Rates neg
. __________ G all 331 1177.__________
* WE C A R EATe
S E M IN O L E C H IL D C A R E
l i t S em in ole O r. L a ke M e ry .
C hildren ere our sp e c ia lty ! We
are Stele licensed end c e rtifie d
lo r teaching and c a rin g . Low
fa m ily rales C ell 373-1450 tor
In lo rm e tlo n .
B ab ysitting In m y hom e.any age
day o r nlte 3 m eals and a snack
a day. Good re f 333 5344.________
B a b ys ittin g In m y hom e. E xpert
enced m o l her, hot lunches.
____________ 333 434)_______________

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT OF TH E
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L
C IR ­
C U IT , IN A N D FOR S E M IN O LE
C O U N TY. F L O R ID A
CASE NO. 41-I444-CA-44-P
G R A C E C L IN O B L O M .e s T ru s te e ,
P le ln tltl,

vs

L IN D S E Y IN D U S T R IE S , IN C . e
F lo rid a corpo ration
D e le n d a n t

N O TIC E OF SALE
N otice Is hereby g ive n lh a l
pursuant to a F in al Judgm ent of
M o rtga ge Foreclosure entered In the
above captioned action. I w ill sell the
pro pe rty
situa ted In Sem inole
County, F lo rid a descrlbedas
Lo! A 1 : That pa rce l o t land lyin g
In Section 10. Tow nship » South,
Range )3 East. Sem inole County,
F lo rid a described as fo llo w s: F rom
the Southwest c orne r o l said Section
10. ru n N o rth M 0 00 leet to a p o ln l on
the c enterline o l the 50 loot R igh t ot
W ay of Osceola Road; thence ru n
East )5 00 leet to the E ast R igh t o l
W ay line ot said Osceola Road.
Ihence ru n along the E asl R ight o l
Way line o l Osceola Road. N orth
34) 00 feet to the P oint of B eginning;
thence run N orth 14] 00 te at; thence
leaving said R igh t o l W ay lin e o l
Osceola Road, ru n E asl 400 00 feel,
thence ru n South 343 00 feet, thence
run W esl 400 00 leet to the P olnl ol
Beginning
a l p u b lic sale lo the highest and best
bidder tor cash at the W est fro n t door
of the Sem inole County Courthouse In
Santord. F lo rid a a l 11 00 A M on the
3tth day Ot M a rch . 144)
IS E A L l
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H JR
C lerk ol the C irc u it C ourt
By C a rrie E. B uetfner
D eputy C lerk
P ublish M a rc h M * . t f ( ]
OEF N

NOTICE OF PUBLIC H EA R IN G
S s u j n o u C ounty P.-m ninc Ahc Z oning C ommission
APRL 6U 1983,
7 CC P M
Rccu 200
Cc u w il e C ounty Courthouse
S anfcro , F u r io a

®

®

THC00U3 PURNELL
Relone R* single Family to
A -2 (O welei)

® txx.___

w in . T A JOHNSON
R tm ee RHA (SMtf* R w K jl to
C-2 (R a ta l Com m and)

( 6 J Reaene A* (Agrtcuihea) to

f *1______

s OOROTHY T. DeWie
'■ o n e R -IA
-lA IS n y t F«n
Raeone
R 4 { Chews j

/ — \ HAM O O RESIDENTIAL COM.
R * BtogM Family)

sa«i*

—j /»«;•«' fY p—

7 0 -F H
O

HUNT G ASSOCIATES
---------I
l
tterona R-iAl (Stogie
Femiy)
AM* AH ( Ayr icul h r*) la
RH CSm*i Fanety)

XHTTCN COMMENTS FILED AlTH THE
.’ •ENT MANAGE* M U SC CONSIDERED
J7 "HE .“ JflL-C SCARING M U BE
i£&lt;.V*t3 S MAY 3C CONTINUED FROM
’JtCCSSARr
C fG L .i y - L L s a u

-■t t h ;

r

VA - . *

**— - -

’

LANO UAhACC PERSONS APPEARHEARD CRALLY
*.ME TO TIME AS

}r CAT..-NC

5 2 ;- A H O Ci! *Fc

�•

33—Real Estate
Courses
BR O K E R COURSE
S ta rt* M a rch 2* Bob B a ll J r. School
o( Real E state 171 4111.

55—Business
Opportunities
I t you an|oy sports. y o u 'll Ilka th li
b u t ln a s i. F u n , p r o lll a b lt ,
established Itr r llo r y , no com
p a tlllo n . P ric e d rig h t. Phone
*04 3(3 7103 a lte rs p m .

63—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
W e P A Y c a th fo r l i t ( ]n d
m o r tg a g e !. R a y L t g g . L ie .
M o rtga ge B ro k e r 7 U 15**.

71—Help Wanted
A P P L IC A T IO N S being laken. u c
re le ria i, general Labor.
Ap
p o ln tm e nt only. 377 344*.________
A pp ointm ent M t te n no e ip e rle n ce
necessary *4 an hour to H a rt
E nthusiasm a plus. 13*44(4.
B a rm a id ! B a rte n d e r! lu ll and pa rt
tim e ro ta tin g s h ills , ta ia ry plus
t ip i, B o n u i h o ip lta llta tlo n no
eeperlence necessary A p p ly In
person ABC Liqu ors Santord
BUSIN ESS IS G R E A T ) We need 4
e x p e r ie n c e d r e a l e i l a t e
a ito c la te i to help u * m a rke t our
m a n y la le a b le li lt in g * . Top
com m issions W ith N um ber I
C entury 31, y o u 're ahead a ll Ihe
w ay. L e t'! la lk l C all June P o rilg
a t C entury 31.
J u n e P o rtlg R ealty
373 X 7 I_________________ ' R ealtor
C L E R IC A L Experienced. A ccurate
ty p in g . T a k e p h o n e o r d e r !.
P eniIon p ro tll th e re and m edical
p la n t. U nited S olve nt! 373 1400
C O N S T R U C T IO N AND
T R A D E S M A N Needed Im m edl
ately. Good pay a ll p h e te t. C all
t3 t 40*4________________________
COOKS FOR F IN E D IN IN G Ex
perlenced only. A M . F M th ill.
C a ll P o rtia fo r a p p o ln lm e n t.
M onday th ru F rid a y * 5 574

tan____________________

D E S K C L E R K .S 3 .4 0 h r.
F u ll and p a rt tim e p e titio n !. Ile x l
ble h o u rt, w ill tra in II good w ith
llg u re t
A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
It17 French A re
333 5174
E itlm a to r i m in im u m 1 y e a n e i
perlenca, te n d re tu rn * to Vienc
Han Bay C o n ilru c to rt Inc. 1*51
JAC Boulevard N ap let. F lo rid a
3 3 * 4 3 . E q u a l O p p o r t u n it y
E m p lo ye r.
eeeeeaaeeee
FAST FOOD OPE RATIO N
W ill tra in . E xcelle nt ta ia ry and
b e n e lltt. F o r In fo rm a tio n Call
333 3444

G ASATTENDANT
G ood t a ia r y . h o ip lla llia tio n , I
w eek p a id v a c a tio n e v e ry 4
m o n th !. F o r In fo rm a tio n c a ll
333 3443 between I 5 P M

71-Help Wanted

141—Homes For Sale

W ORKFINDERS
N E E D A JO B 7
WE H A V E IT
C O M E IN A N D S E E US

M C f REALTORS

7435 F R E N C H A V E N U E

(In S o b lk i B u ild in g )
331 5743

91—Apartment/
House to Share
La rge 3 b d r furnished In Sanford.
M a xim u m 5150 m onth If 1 o r 3
•d u lls share w ith tin g le m ala
337-37*4-

93—Rooms for Rent
B d rm .w /b a th , hom e p rivileg es on
large la ke good fish in g 1175 mo.
_ *04 7** 4*0*_____________________
Room w ith p rlv a le e n tra n t* In a
p riv a te home. W orking g e n ii*
m an pre fe rre d . 333 1534_________
SAN FO RD , Reas, w eakly &amp; M on
th ly ra le s U lll. Inc. *H . 500 Oak
A dults 1 *41 7*33________________
SANFO RD furnished room s by the
week. Reasonable rates. M a id
service, ca te rin g to w o rk in g peo
pie. U nfurnished ap artm en ts I
and 3 bedrooms. 333 4507. 500

Be Wise
CM Keyes

I d y llw lld e 4 /2 E a t- ln - k ltc h e n ,
fo rm a l din in g area. Den, 30 x 13
screened porch. Secluded fenced
back. 3 ca r garaga. V A o r FH A
**4 *0 0

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

C u tto m e r s ervice w ilt tra in for
purchasing, lig h t typ in g , r a lta t
and b e n e fit*
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
1*17 F rench Ave.__________ 333 5174
G O V E R N M E N T JO B S
V arious p o t'tlo n t a v a ila b le through
lo c a l g o v e rn m e n t a g e n c ie s .
130.000 to tSO.OOO po ten tia l. C all
(re fu n d a b le I 141* 54* 4304 Dept
F L IT t lo r your 1X3 d ire c to ry
34hrt.__________________________

340 C r e iI S e n lo rd 3/2*45.000
S A N D Y W IS D O M

869-4600 or 349-5698
E xecu tive neighborhood 5/3, c o r­
ne r lot, stone fire place, centra l
• I r ( heat, fans, w a ll paper.
C o n v -F H A -V A . S up er h o rn e t
M u st le e . I y r w a rra n ty I **4,500.
The W all St. Company
R ea lto r*
331 5005
E X T R A la rge 7 ito r y Colonial on I
•e ra o l Oak tra c t A ll Ihe am en i­
ties plus guest ap t. Best locale.
5100.000 W m . M A L IC Z O W S K I
R E A LTO R 333 7*11_____________
F E E L S L IK E HOM E
D riv e by 1*07 M e llo n v llle . De
llg h tfu l 3 b d rm home fo r your
fa m ily In a gre at neighborhood
G enerous lo t. b e a rin g c itru s ,
p re tty shrubs. New roo t. F le xible
fin a n c in g . P ric e d *54,750 fo r
Im m e dia te ta le .

CALL BART

R E A L ESTATE
R E A LTO R _______________ 333 74**
H ALC O LB E R TR E A LTY
R E A LTO R
307 E. 35th St.
373 7*13

INSTALLERS. $3.50hr.
W ill tra in , c a rp e n try experience
tte lp lu l. van o r p icku p needed,
raises and b e n e lltt
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
1*17 French Ave
333 5174
LABO R WORK S la rt w o rk in g rig ht
aw a y. F u ll tim e , good pay.
____________ 47* 40*4._____________
L O A D IN G U N L O A D IN G A N D
S H IP P IN G F u ll tim e w ork, good
s ta rtin g pay. C all 43* 40*4._______
M anagem ent Trainee. Poppa J a y t
I t looking lo r aggressive fa il
food m anagem ent trainees who
w an t to g ro w w ith com pany
E xperience In m anagem ent or
Food se rvl c * pre fe rre d , but not
n e c e t ia r y . B t n e llls In c lu d e
G roup Insurance, pa id vacations
a n d e x c e lle n t fin a n c ia l com
p e n s a tlo n o p p o rtu n itie s . C a ll
333 *317 to set up In terview . 3501
( F r e n c h Ave.__________________
O F F IC E C LE R K S W ill tra in . Basic
phone w o rk , filin g and etc. Im m e d ia l* openings fu ll lim e .
43* 40*4.________________________
-O ffice secre tary c le rk needed.
A dd in g m achine s k ills , and ty p ­
ing req uire d. Some experience
n e c e tia ry . C a ll 34* 5570 fo r
fu rth e r In fo rm a tio n

............63*35Hr

PBX.

F u ll lim a and p a rt tim e o p e n in g *
w ill tra in tla lx lb la hours C all

Ridgewood A ve 333 4430________

TR U C K D R IV E R S Local or long
houl openings, rig h t now,
____________ 47*40*4_____________
Von d riv e r w onted to tra n sp o rt
c h ro n ic a lly disabled ad ults to
and fro m day tre a tm e n t pro
g ra m . M u tt possets high school
d ip lo m a and a v a lid F lo rid a !
chau ffe urs license M a il resum e
to Search C om m ittee 301 W . 1st
S tr. S a n fo rd . F lo r id a 33771.
E qu al O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo ye r

W AREHOUSE SISOwk.
W ill tra in , shipping and receivin g,
lig h t d e liv e ry . gSod job
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
1*17 F n n c h A v t.__________ 333 517*
W ill I n i n t o ll m o tiv a te d In d iv id u a l
w ith d a s lra to m a k a m oney
s a iling used c a r. No experience
necessary 331 3050______________

\

\ y 0 N * T £ A L L H IM , HE’ L L C A LL Y&lt;2ue /
ti WH|*M( B* rWHdj 'UB'Pjt 6 Hi-cw

141—Homes For Sale
Y O U N G 3 bd rm horn*. Can ba used
as residence o r professional o f­
fices o r co m m e rcia l. O nly *12.000
down *413 M o n th ly . C all B roker
O w ner 331-1411__________________
SAN FO RD R E A L T Y
R E A LTO R
333 5314
A ft. H r t. 3714*54.333 4345

STENSTROM
Sanford's Sales Leader
W E L IS T A N D 'S E L L
MORE HOM ESTHAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY
JL'ST L IS T E D 2 B d rm . I bath home
In CCM I Just pa in ted ! New w ell
lo w a ll c a rp e l. New roof, te r.
p e llo , le n e rd yd. and m o re l
*34,*00
IN V E S T M E N T P R O P E R T Y 5
B d rm . 3 Bath 2 story hom etSold
a t Is. Good re n ta l p ro p e rty !
O w ner finan cing. *45.900
D O LL HOUSE 3 B d rm . 2 Bath
hom e In Sen Lenta w ith tc r.
petlo. paddle fant.fenced C EN T.
H A , and lots m ore. *54,900.
B E A U T IF U L 1 B d rm . 1 Bath b rick
home In Sylve G rade on I A cre,
w ith e very Im aginable feature.
3*00 sq It. liv in g area. *144.000
JUST STAR TIN G OUT? 2 B d rm I
ba th home w ith lots of potential I
New root, eat In kitchen and
m o re l S u b m lto lle rtl *34.900

7 - /ijt

157-Mobile
Homes/Sale
71 A rlin g to n 17x40 v e ry good con
d l t l o n . 1 2 2 -3 0 (9 E v e s a n d
weekend* 55000________________
I I L ib e rty 14x54 e d u lt section, bay
w indow , gas heat, a /c , 1 bdr.
extras 13.000 down, m o rt atsu m .
SI49 372 4940___________________

N E E D to sell your house q u ic k ly !
We cen offer guaranteed sale
w ith in 10 deys.
Cali 111 1411

181—Appliancies
/ Furniture
Cash fo r good used fu rn itu re .
L a rry 's New ( Used F u rn itu re
M a rt. 215 Sanford Ave. 333 4112
Ken more pa r Is, service, used
w ashers. 121 0497
M O O N E Y A P P LIA N C E S
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111-115 E. FIR S T ST
_____________ 333 5472_____________
1 Piece B drm , set. French, w hite,
g o ld T w in bed w /m e ttre * s .
springs E xc. Cond, (11 7313.

183—Television/
Radio/Stereo
COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
Zenith 25” color TV In w aln ut
console O rig in a l p rice over (750
Balance due (194 cash o r pay
m e n t* s 19 m o. NO M O N E Y
DOWN S till In w a rra n ty . C all
3t i l Century Sales 143 5394 day or
n ig h t. Free home tria l. No ob
lig a tio n ______________________
Good Used T V ’s 125 ( up
M IL L E R S
2419 O rla n d o D r
Ph 172 0357

322-2420

IN D E LT O N A

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

D AYS 574 1434
__________EVES 7 t* 4251__________
Sunland 3 b d rm . 2 b 4th A /C 5350
M O 1st, la s) p lu s d e p o sll
333 0545aller 4 PM ._____________
3 bedroom Its both Inside u tility
ro o m , fenced y a rd , a v a ila b le
Im m e d ia te ly . L e a s * *375 a
m onth. 373 4243

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
SANFO RD.2 b d rm .. kids, lencad.
* * 7 5 0 F a a 33* 7700. Sav On
R enlaU , Inc. R ta llp r___________
Sanford Lake A venue, Deluxe 3
b d rm ca rp o rt, equipped kitchen.
la un dry rm . d ra p e ! *30 05*5.

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
C A S S E L B E R R Y 7 b d rm .,
tu rn .k id !, p e t!, y tr d . p riv . lot.
5775. Fee 33* 7300
Sav-Ois- R e n ta l!, In c., R e*H er
F o rre st H ilts D eland 3 B d rm 2
bath, unfurnished. R e frig e ra to r,
■love N ear La ke M a c k .1775 a
m onth plus deposit 331 3050

117—Commercial
Rentals
FOR LEAS E
C om m e rcia l b u ild in g tlo ra Iro n t
1500 square teet f i t W. 1st S ir.
b e tw e e n N E W
h o s p ita l In
d o w n lo w n S a n to r d T ia llt* ? ^

W ould You believe I A lm ost new 7
story "B e a u ty " 4 B D R M 1 Bath,
C H (A , k llc h a n equipped plus
m ic ro w ave, p riv a c y fenced!
U nbelievably huge b d rm t and
w orkshop to ol E xcelle nt term s.
O nly *54.100.
Horse P la y I N ice 3 b d rm hom e on
14 acres w /la rg e pool surrounded
by h u nd red! o f o a k i and plen ty of
p riv a c y and b rin g yo u r h o rte tl
E x ce lle n t fin a n cin g a v a ila b le !
O nly *7*.*00.
M a g n ific e n t L a k a fro n t 3bdrm 1
bath w /fa m lly rm , c u tlo m b u ilt
dbl tid e d te ethrough fire p la ce !
E x t r a la r g e m a i t e r b d r m
w /v e n lty , k itc h e n e q u ip p e d !
P riv a c y fenced, energy e ffic ie n t,
e a iy V A a tiu m p tlo n end w hat a
view ! C all u i quick.

WE N E E D LISTINGS
CALL US NOW!!

323-5774
__________3404 H W Y IT *3_________

KISH REAL ESTATE
7533S. FR E N C H
R E A LTO R
3310041
N IC E ) L ik a rtaw 3 B d rm . 1 Bath
C u tto m drape* Plush carpet.
A lu m , overhang G arage. * 4* .* 00.
L A K E F R O N T 5 - s e c r e t on
b e a u tifu l Lake Jessup Vs cleared
*40.000 te rm s possible.
3.5 a c re s b e a u tifu l L a k a fro n l
• p p ro x la m ttiy to In be arin g o r ­
ange grove, m a je stic oaks on
w ate r Iro n t gorgeous hom e site
(71.500
M A Y F A IR ! This 3 bedroom . 1 bath
w e ll kept hom e h a i a b e au tifu l
y a rd c o rn e r lo t. O nly 144.500 ca ll
u t today to tae.
Salesman needed.

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

121—Condominium
Rentals
Condo Santord 2 bedroom s, 2 bath
screened porch, fu lly equipped
w ith w asher and d ry e r, new ly
re n o v a te d *375 m o n th ly p lu t
m o nth deposll 7 f( 4M0

123—Wanted to Rent
W anted Lease o r Lease w ith option
to buy. 3 B d rm p lu t. Sanford
a n a *350 D ays 331-014*.

JUNE P0RZIG REALTY
R E A LTO R

M LS

*01 ( F r e n c h Ave.

322*8678
R ent / Sale. La ka fro n t. 3 B d rm . 35
m ile tra m Senlord *if.5 0 0 . *375
M o nth by ow ner 373 *7*7_________

127—Office Rentals
O F F IC E SPACE on French Ave
S to r a g e s p a c e o f S a n fo r d
373 4403

___________

P R IM E O F F IC E SPACE
P rovidence B lv d ., D eltona 2144 Sq
F t. Can Ba D ivid e d W ith P a rk
Ing D ays 305 574 1434 Evenings
( Weekends
___________ *04 7** 4251___________
P R O FESSIO N A L O ffic e space fo r
lees*, on 17 *2. Ideal local ion lo
dow ntow n area 705 S French
A ve o r c a ll 333 3170

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipment

Monday, M irch H , 1H3—IB

213— A u ctio n s

231- C a r s

FOR E S T A T E , C o m m e rc ia l o r
R esidential A u c tlo n i ( A p p ra is ­
als. C all D tll's A uction
333 5470

By O wner ! acres on Orange Ave
n e xt to D avidson's Tree F a rm In
Senlord. Zoned A -l 140' frontage
near W ilto n E le m e n ta ry School
C all 44* 5555___________________
Lake access to be a u tifu l little Lake
M a r y . H ig h w o o o d e d lo ts ,
e x c e lle n t n e ig h b o rh o o d an d
schools, fro m 11.500 D onald G.
Jackson Inc. R ealtor o tllc a
____________ 333 53*5____________
Lot fo r ta la
5*0x125 In P ool*
___________ 313 731 1*33___________
ST. JOHNS R iver frontage, 2to
a c r e p a r c e ls , a ls o I n t e r io r
parcels w ith riv e r access 113.900
P u b lic w a te r. 30 m in to A lta
m o o t* M a ll 12% 30 y rs financing,
no q u a lify in g . B roker
_____________ a2» 4133_____________
V O L U S IA
S E M IN O L E
C O U N TR IES W O O DED LOTS
FR O M (3000
ACRE
LO TS . F R O M 57500
LA R G E R A C R EAG E FRO M
*1500 per.

C la s s ifie d A d s a re th a s m a lle s t
b ig new s Ite m * yo u w ill fin d
a n y w h e re .

215—Boats/Accessories
Boat, m o tor and tra ile r 75 tip
runs good. 5700 C all
3115144

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
D .B.F.S. In c .190* French. Business
( In d iv id u a l Incom e tax * 9 M F.
*1 7 Sal. 321 1913.

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
ALLTY P E S C A R P E N TR Y
C ustom B u ilt a d dition s Patios,
screen roo m s, c a rp o rt. Door
lo ck s, p a n e lin g , shin gle s, re
rooting. F o r fast u r v lc e . call
331-4917.145 2371________________
BATHS, kitchens, rooting, block,
concrete, windows, add a room
Frae estim ates 333 *443

Remodelini Specialist
We handle The
W hole B a llo t Wax

O V E R 100 P R O P E R T IE S A V A IL
A B L E S E L L E R T E R M S ON
MOST.

______Financing Available______

14x51 fl. screen enclosure porch,
u tility shed. Cent. H A 1 B d rm . I
Beth. L o t t l i e I t 50x100 Can ba
seen a t 124 Leisure O r. N orth
O eB ary. F lo rid a In th e M ead
ow lea on th e R iv e r M o bile Hom e
C om m u nity.
Please con I a d Tom Lyon a l 133
H U fo r a d d itio n a l in fo rm a tio n .

DORCHESTER
APTS.
L ib Karj't Pints! Commuml)

R E A LT O R . M LS
33*1 I . F re n c h
S uite 4
S e n fe rd . F la ,

24 HOUR 9 322-9283
U N D E R 12.000 DOW N
1 B d rm . d o ll house . A ffo rd a b le
m o n th ly paym ents C all O w ner
B ro k e r 331-1411

NonKoniK imiunoRS
Eftjoy Couatiysida Iieaqmliti
Aid City Constowocn
Unique Caden Apt*
Private P ilo t W/D Hojkupt
A Laundry Alta*
PrKoastrutltt Rate*
cm

u c *r«
m3U m.
L S J CT" ,n uJgL

195—Machinery/Tools

219—Wanted to Buy

Equipment Auction
Sal. M a rch 1910AM
F a rm tra cto rs, tru ck s and equip
m e nt. C onsignm ents accepted
d a ily

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. t i Daytona B*ach
904 733 *311___________

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
F R E E P U P P IE S to g o o d ho m t.
Sm all Dachshund type dogs.
W eekdays a fte r 3 341-49*4
Free *1* weeks old black ( w hite
C ollie and Shephard puppies
333 *397_______________________
R A B B IT S : G iant Lop. M in i Log,
D w a rf, N ew Z e a la n d W h ile ,
F a n te ll Pigeons 1 13 433 4490.
2 Young A m a ron P arro ts w ith
stands and cage. 1350 each
444 59(9.

213—Auctions
PUBLIC AUCTION
M ON. M A R .14 7 PM
W icke r baby byggy, sleigh bed. oak
rockers. 4 ch e rry chairs, mahog
any dresser, m ahogany b u lle tl,
o a k l i b r a r y t a b le , w a ln u t
w ardrobe, w aln ut china cabinet,
o rie n la l ra d io cabinet, and odd
chairs.
N ew Sofas an d C h a irs , w ood
d ln e tte i rockers
C lea n used fu r n itu r e , * piece
bedroom suit, w aln ut gra nd la
(h e rs c lo c k , c o ffe e and end
tables, 2 china cabinets, table
an d c h a irs , d ro p le a l ta b le ,
bedroom suits, solas and chairs,
odd dressers and chests, and
m ltc tlla n e u s household Items
Consignm ents welcom e.
A uctioneer Blen Gibson.

SANFORD AUCTION
1215 S.FRENCH AVE.
323-7340

Need E x tra Cath?
KO KO M O Tool C o , at *11 W. F irs t
S tS a n fo rd . It now buying glass,
new spaper, b im e ta l steel and
a lum inu m cans along w ith a ll
o t h e r k in d s o l n o n - le r r o u s
m etals. W hy not tu rn this Idle
c lu tte r Into e x tra dollars? We a ll
benefit fro m re cycling
F o r details c a ll; 373 1 100
We buy A n llq u e s .lu m ltu re
and appliances C all
333 7340

223—Miscellaneous
BUY

S E LL
TR AD E
F lo rid a T ra d e r Auction
Longw ood.Fla.33* 311*
F u ll s ite bed w ith m attress and
springs, d r e s u r , chest, nigh t
stand Good condition. C all 371
*93* a ll. 5 P M __________________
Mens shirts M l* . (l.W e a c h .
A R M Y N A V Y SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave___________ 372 57*1
Teahwood Colfee Table and two
end ta b le s , * n d tw o s w lv le
chairs, 1 lam ps 5175 and Stereo
Cabinet 545. C all 372 7447________
Used Beds (35 u t . Santord A uc­
tion. 1215 S. French
323 7340
3 HP com pressor
m otor. 320 single
new. 2 Year plus
ra n ty. Paid SI,000
331014*.

•
&gt;
.

71 Dodge C olt engine, 74 Chevy
engine 150. Toyota angina
323-4042.

235—Trucks /
Buses/ Vans
Bucket trucks
1*73 Ford F-500 w ith 34 foot w o rk ­
ing height buckets choice of 12.
15.250 each a t D aytona A uto
A uction H w y. *1 D aytona Baach
*04 253*111.____________________
71DATSUN pickup Needs
body w ork. * 1*00
333 0340

3 Piece B d rm u t . French, w hite,
g o ld . T w in bed w /m a ttr e s i.
springs Exc. Cond. (31-7311.

Bad C redit?
No Credit?
WE FIN A N C E
N oC red it Check Easy Term s
N A T tO N A L A U T O SALES
1130 S. Santord Ave
331 4075

1

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories

H igh torque
phase Like
u r v lc e w ar
Asking *500

231-Cars

;
&gt;
I
;
•

243—Junk Cars
BU Y JU N K CARS ( TRUCKS
F ram (10 to 150 or m o re .
__________ C all 333 1414__________
TOP D ollar P aid fo r Junk ( Used
cars, trucks ( heavy equipm ent.
333 5*90_______________________
WE P A Y top do lla r fo r Junk C a rt
and T rucks. CBS Auto P a ris
3*3 4505

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

322-7029

G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S IN C
A R E A S L A R G E S T E X C LU S IV E
S K Y L IN E D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
P a lm Baach V illa .G reenlaaf
P a lm Springs, P alm M anor.
Siesta Kay
V A F H A finan cing, 303 323 5200.
I N I S K Y L IN E M o b ile Home

Stove, s ilv e r u t . |fw e lry , cedar
chest, glassw are, v io lin etc. I
week 44* 59(9 H w y 17*3 D eB ary
N axl lo K a la m lty 's Lounge

To List Your Business...

R oo m a d d itio n s , g a ra g e con
versions
FIREPLACE
S P E C IA LIS T. Q u a lity ( depen
dable ( lowest prices. Ask tor
Dawson 111 4940

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
A ir C onditioning and R e frig e ra to r
re p a irs and u r v lc e . C all to r tree
estim ates 111 703*

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screened Rooms
A L U M IN U M siding, v in y l tid in g ,
s o ltll ( fascia A lu m in u m g u tte rs .
a n d d o w n s p o u ts . F r . E s t.
X 5 343 5543

Appliance Repair
C LA R E N C E 'S
A P P L IA N C E SE R V IC E
Wa sarvlca a ll m a jo r brands Reas
rales. 13 y rs .tx p . 333-0331.
JO H N N IE S A pp lia nce. We M rv ic a
re frig e ra to rs , w ashers, dryers,
ranges Reas, rales
133 (334

B ookkeeping
D eG arm eau Bookkeeping Serv.
332 2307
P e rs o n a l In c o m e T a x e s .o p e n

Carpentry
C A R P E N T E R re p a irs end
additions 30 years exp
C all 337 1352

Carpet/Floor Coverings
1* Y rs. Exp. Sales, Install, rep airs
We buy d ire c t. F o r personal
u r v lc e 131 1(44 Ith r.A n s . phone

Cleaning Service
A M K E L L Y clea nin g service
Specialising In restau ran t ( ol
fica b u ild in g * 433 035*__________
FOR a lflc ie n l and re lia b le Home
C lea ning C a ll P e tty '* Home
P am pe ring service 331 3544
« "TR IPLE A *
&lt;1 P rice special (34 *5 lo r F a m ily
or L iv in g R m .*42 7740__________
W in d o w w a s h in g F lo o r r e lin ls h in g C arp al cleaning. C all
R alph at B ills Clean 111 4712

Electrical
M A STER Electrician
R egistered contra ctor. Com m (
R et. Q u a lity hom e sarvlca. F ra *
E st. Jam es Paul 333 755*.

Fence
FEN C E In sta lla tio n Chain lin k,
wood post ( ra il, ( fa rm tenet
L lc e n u ( Insured 131 *1*1.

General Services
M IS T E R F ix It. Joe M cA dam s w ill
re p a ir y o u r m o w ers a l your
home C all 133 7055

health &amp; Beauty
TO W ER 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie tt's B eauty
• Nook. 31* E. 1st St. 333 5743
TR Y C A V IS Q uick ro lta t lin im e n t
fo r your aches and pains. None
b e tte r 130’ 54*4

A u to m o tiv e
CB Stereo In sta lla tio n R epair
A uto Sound Center
110* F rench Ave
323 4(15

Pint To Majiiu Coif Cotnu

R O B B f l’S
R IA L T V

217—Garage Sales

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

B.E.Link Const.

157-Mobile
Homes /Sale

D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C TIO N
H w y *3. t m il* west of Speedway,
D aytona Beach w ill hold a public
A U TO A U C T IO N every M onday
(W e d n e s d a y a t 7:30 p m . It's the
o n ly on * in F lo rid a You u t tha
reserved price . C all 904 315*311
fo r fu rth e r d a ta ll*.
D tb a r y A u to ( M a rin a Seta*
•c ro ss the riv e r top of h ill 174
hay 17*3 D tb a ry 44* (54*
Selected ttodi clean 1 owner car*.
Wa Invito your In sped lor.. Jack
Merttn'1 41X 1737 2337*0*.
1*75 COLT W AG O N. 4 spaed, regu­
la r gas. 25 M P G Good re lia b le
condition 333 0155______________
1*7* C am era *3000 M ust
u l l . runs perfect.
__________ C all 33373*1.__________
1f*0 O lds D elta U Royal# D le u l
A /T , P /B , P /S 7134 m pg *54*5
E ve so r weekend* *04 773-4305.
M Ford Classic E-100 Van * 73.000
o rig in a l m ile *, new tire *, cam per
•q u ip p e d , e x tr a good c o n d llio n 1*73 323 2343._______________
73 DODGE II*
R un* good *150.
___________C all 373 1* 1* 1_________
74 T o yo ta P ic k up a u to m a tic ,
c r u lu control. *17*5. No money
(town . 333*100^34 4*05._________
75 Chevy Is ton p ick up le ts than
504100 m ile s w ith cam per shell
*7100 C all a fte r 3 333 1*13.
71 Ford L T D wagon. * passenger,
loaded. Good condition, St*95 No
money down. 139 *100 J34 4403.

HSMESSSEMISM

L A K E F R O N T A N D
R IV E R F R O N T F R O M 531.000

S E IG LE R R E A L T Y .B R O K E R
________ T E L .305 111 0440________
W a n t e d 1-5 a c r e * w e s t o f
S e n to rd -N o R e a lto rs . P hone
313 4370 a tta r 4 p m ._____________
S ACRES. Secluded V e ry wooded,
w ith stream , tli.s o o P rin cip a ls
o n ly .A tte r 3 P M . 313 47431.

CASH FOR YO U R CAR
M A R T IN M O TO R SALES
7*11. French
3337*34

CONSULT OUR

3541S. P ark

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

A ir p o r t

™

CALL ANY T IM E

373 4304

2 TOW NHOM ES, 3 B r , f ly bath,
LR . dinin g a rta screened porch

Tuesday - S aturday 10 f
Sunday 1-4
Shoot S tra igh t Paw n and A uction
Com pany, c orna r 441 and 434.
Apopka 1*90*43._______________

Evening Herald, Senlord, FI.

Blinds A Drapes
CUSTOM M A D E D R A P E R IE S
T r e v e ru Roda Installed
D oro thy B lits
34* 5435

Boarding &amp; Grooming
A n im a l H a v e n B o a rd in g an a
G room ing Kennels heated, in
tu te le d . screened tty pro of in
side and outside runs. Fans Also
AC cages We cate r to your p e lt
Ph 333 5733

H o m e Im p ro v e m e n t
C a re a n try b y " B I L L "
WOOD A rtesian General
carpentry, screened room doors
etc Reas R ates 377 2*30_______
C O L L I E R 'S H o m e R e p a ir s
c a rp e n try , ro o tin g , p a in tin g .
w indow re p a ir. 331-4423_________

COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
No |Ob to small Minor ( major
repairs Licensed ( bonded
133*13.________________________
PAIN TIN G and repair, patio and
screen porch built. Call anytime
______ ______ 373 *44)__________
Q U A L IT Y home re p a ir and
rem odeling C all (31 1434
F o r tree estim ates

Home Improvement
R O O M a d d itio n s , re m o d e lin g
d ry w a ll hung ceiling s sprayed,
fireplaces, rooting
______________333 4*32____________

Home Repairs
C A R P E N T E R 75 y r* . exp. Sm all
r tm o d a lln g jo b * . re a so n a b le
rates Chuck 333 *443___________
H o m t R epairs
Sm all jobs wel
come. Sheet rock, p a in ting t l
dein, carpe ntry, patios ( general
ca rp e n try . 12 y rs experience,
reasonable 321 47*3____________
M aintenance o l a ll types
C arpentry, pa in ting , plum bing
________ ( e le c tric 373 401*________
PORCHES, bathroom floors, rotten
wood replacem ent, a ll sm all |o b i
w elcom e .3310(31

Lawn Service
* A-l LAWNSERVICE*
M ow . weed. trim , haul Regular
Service 1 tim e clean up. 34 hrs.
best ra le s S3* 443*______________
L itto n Law n Service
C om m ercial and Residential
W inter Clean up 331 5541.
SMOKE Y'S LAW N SERVIC E Year
round work Specialising In San
lo rd and Lake M a ry . 333 71*3.

Masonry
A ll b ric k , block and stone w ork.
F ire place specialist
__________ 331 e to fla lt 3.__________
B E A L C oncrete I m an q u a lity
o p e ra tio n P a tio s , d rive w a ys .
D a y s 331 n i l Eves 3271321PIAZZ A MASON R Y
Q u a lity W ork A t Reasonable
P rices Frae E stim ates.
Ph 54* SSOOAflerSp m .
S W IF T C O N C R E T E w o rk a ll
types Footers, drive w a ys, pads,
floors, pools, com plete. Free est
133 7103

Plastering/Dry Wall
A L L P h a te t o f P la tla r ln g
P lastering re p a ir, stucco, hard
cota. sim ulated b ric k . 321 5**3

Roofing

A&amp;B ROOFING
23 y rs . experience. Licensed (
Insured
Free E stim ates on Roofing.
Re Rooting and Repairs.
Shingles. B u ilt Up end Tile.

JAMES ANDERSON
G.F. BOHANNON

322-9417
Built up and Shingle foot,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936
JAMES E. LEE INC.
M orrison Rooting Co

S p e c ia liz in g In s h in g le s e n d
bulk) up Low. Low Rates. 14 hr.
service. 7 tt 7373._______________
N EW re ro o fin g .a n d re p a irs . 15
Y rs Exp.

Sprinklers/Irrigation
SA N F O R D Irrig a tio n (

Sprinkler

Systems Inc. Free e tt. 333 0747.
33y rs e x p .____________________

Tile

LO V IN G E X P E R IE N C E D
C AR E. F o r your e ld e rly loved one
In m y hom e 333 4305.___________
O URRATESARELO W ER
Lekavtaw N ursing Canter
*1 *E Second St.. Santord
131*707

JOHN A L L E N Y A R D ( T R E E
S E R V IC E . W e 'll rem ove pine
tre e*. Rees p rice 211 51*0
STUM PS ground out.
Reasonable, tre e estim ates

Pest Control
SP EN C ER PEST CONTROL
Comm . Retd , Lawn, Ttrmile
W ork 323 ((* 3 A sk fa r Chomp,

Plastering/Dry Wall
D ry w a ll P la ste r ( C eilin g R epairs
" A ll w ork G u a ra n te e d " L ie (
Ir * . D ry w a ll S pecialty Serv. Inc.

7X *117

'

DRAPES BY D E B B IE
Reasonable ra te *
_____________331 53*0_____________
E X P E R T d re s s m a k in g , t i l e r
a llo n t A slan Cleaners. 1(44 H w y.
17 *2. Lake M e ry B lvd.
331-r

Nursing Care

Painting

*

122 1*74
Sowing

COODY ( SONS
Tile Contractors
311-0511
Lie. Inc.

I w ill p a in t any I story
house tor *4CJ
C all 331 3710

;

Tree Service

-a r

M ° " a AA EM P LO YM EN T
1*17 F rench A ve
333 517*
R E C E P T IO N IS T Good pay m u st
be able to tra n s fe r c a lls ra p id ly .
Good phone voice * 3* 40*4_______
S ecretary p trm a m a n l p a rt tim e
ty p in g a ts e n lia l, shorthand deslrab le-J. Tyson (31-11*4.
ta ll Avon te r e x tra m oney, your
o w l ho urs,Ivn |eb 333 1031 313l t t » 333-445* 333(311____________

v-

M A Y F A IR V IL L A S I 2 ( 3 B drm . 7
B a th C on do V illa s , n e x t to
M a y fa ir C ou ntry C lub Select
your lot. floor plan and In te rio r
decor I Q u a lity constructed by
Shoem aker lo r *49,700 and up I

3 bedroom unfurnished e p e rtm e n l
*335 o m onth. No p e t*. C oll

S M A LLE R le m lly home. 3 b r 7
bath. LR . D r., dble garage

INDOOR GUN
RANGE

F IL L D IR T iT O P SOIL
Y E LL O W SAND
C lark ( H l r t 333 75*0,333 3*23

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

1,7 a n d 3 B D R M F ro m 1770
R id g e w o o d A r m s A p t. 3510

LA R G E L a ke tra n t home. 3 B dr.,
2’ s ba th, office, fo rm a l DR., LR .
Fam R m . huge garage

187—Sporting Goods

Desks, ch a irs, ty p e w rite rs , adding
m a ch in es, c a lc u la to rs , ta b le t,
photo copiers etc. C all 311-3444
•H e r 3 p.m . A ll day weekends

I-: i f

D A N IE L A N D W O H L W E N O E R

.............................. $140wk.

V 0 Z t&gt;

159-Real Estate
Wanted

97—Apartment
Furnished / Rent

G E N E R A L O F F IC E

W Y

VERY
TH0U6HT!
,-wHAKKAFF.'-wWHEN

YOUR TECHNI0 UE5
THE
FOR THE BIO
6CN ERN0R
WANT

it .

Adults I (41 7X 3 _______________

G ASATTENDANT
G ood ta ia r y , h o tp lla llia tlo n . I
w eek p a id v a c a tio n e v e ry 4
m o nth s F o r In fo rm a tio n c a ll
333 3443 betw een I S PM .
* * * * * * * * * * • • e
G E N E R A L O F F IC E T R A IN E E S .
No experience needed fu ll tim e
Im m e dia te op ening! 43* 40*4.

i'T h e y w a n t t o m v e

L ie . R a a lE sta ta B roker
3440 Senlord Ave.

C ountry I acre b e a u tifu l bu ild in g
ilta tll.S O o .

B AM BO O C O VE APTS
300 E. A irp o rt B lvd.
1(7 B d rm t
F ro m !3 J 0 m o
_________ Phone 333 4470__________
EN JO Y coun try liv in g ? 3 B drm .,
D uplex Apts , O ly m p ic s i. pool
Shenandoah V illa g e Open f to 4
____________ 373 3*30____________ _
GENEVAGARDENS
1 ( 7 B d rm apts *770 U K
Mon th ru F r i f A M t o t PM.
1505 W. 35th St
377 30*0
LU X U R Y A P A R TM E N TS
F a m ily ( A dults section P o o ltld *.
7 B d rm t. M a ster Cove Apts
333 7*00
_______ Open on w eekends________
M a rin e r's V illag e on L ik e Ada, 1
b d rm fro m *345. 7 b d rm fro m
*300 Located 17 *7 lu st south of
A irp o rt B lvd. In Santord. A ll
A du lls 333 &gt;470________________
P ark Ave . 3 b d rm , garege, pels,
kids *350 Fee 33* 7300
Sav-On-Rentals, Inc, R ealtor
Santord Spacious. 1 B drm . plus den
o r 3nd B d rm F u rn itu re *740

C0N&lt;SRATULATlCNS,
, MAJOR! X?U PUT RE66IE
M trtE LEM? WITH A FEWdUUJK MCVES.'TriE
• PTATBH0U$E' PEOPLE
WERE SO IMPRESSED

BATEMAN REALTY

95—Room/Board

99—Apartment
Unfurnished / Rent

FERES THE MAIN
EVENT. SPORTS
FANS'. HE HAST#
STOP THE MAJOR
FROM HELF/H'
REaoiE
SPENPER
WITHOUT
ACTUALLY
SAY IN6
SO!

with Major Hoople

193—Lawn &amp; Garden

^jalmettoAvr^^_^^_^^_

F u rn lih e d ap artm en ts to r Senior
C ltlre n s 31* P a lm e tto Ave. J.
Cowen No phone cells.__________
7 B D R M . kids, porch, a ir, carpel
U O w k. Fee 33* 7300
Sav-On Rentels, Inc. R ealtor

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

54* W. L a k a M a ry Blvd.
Sulfa B
L a k a M a ry , F la . 33744
313 3700

R E N T W IT H O P TIO N 4/2 F a m ily
ro o m , C H A , carpe ted , fenced
back, nlca neighborhood. *3*5
mo.

Large bra nd new 7 bd rm 3 bath
h o rn * lo s h a re w ith m a tu re
wom an Located In secluded De
Itona/O steen area. 5300 m o nth ly
u tilitie s C all D are 3331071 o r
333 3*10
1

f

17
-•74

ta

7M 0441_____________

Trees end th r u * * rem oved, pruned
etc. Stum p* ren te red aey laceHen. R em Tree Service 13*43*1,
T R I County T ree S e rvka . T rim
rem ove, tra sh , ha uling , firew ood
F r .ts t.in x tg

TV 4 Radio Repairs
Sun TV Service Cantor
Servka charge *7 *5 plus parts All
mates. 7X17 5*

Upholstery
LO R EN E S U p h o isttcy. F r e t pkk
up. d r i. 4 M t C * r 4 to « t i n I i
F jr n . 3211721

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BLONDIE

4 B— Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI.

B EETLE BAILEY

by Chic Young

Monday, M a rch 14, 1983

by Mort Walker

G E T UP, BEETLE/
THE GENERAL WANTS

42 Superlative
suffix
1 Small
44 Membrenout
whirlpool
pouch
5 Home ol
46 Film
Adam
technique
9 Capture
49 Effece
12 Pennsylvania 53 Animal's limb
port
54 Natural
13 Placet
56 Exist
14 1957 science
57 Tear
event (abbr)
58 Indian
15 Pendant
garment
17 Born
59 Bushy clump
IB Eye boldly
(Brit)
19 Achievem ent
21 Put to g e th e r 60 Let it stand
61 Stationary
w ith th re a d
23 Consume
24 Request
DOWN
repeetedly
27 Antiprohibi­
Electric fish
tionists
Exclamation
29 Ire
of annoyance
32 Creature
Opera star
34 Current unit
Time measure
36 Sets in
(PD
37 Close relative
Samuel's
38 Pool player
teacher
Minnesota
Performs not
(cont)
39 Ben Car­
Shade of tan
twright'S boy
Brother's
41 Chick's
daughter
. mother
1

2

3

5

4

9 Four score
end ten.
ordinal
10 Eons
11 Farewell (p i.
abbr)
16 Room to move
20 Lives in
wilderness
22 Cymric
24 Naive (F r)
25 King
Mongkut'S
tutor
26 Type of book
page (comp
wd)
28 Impudent

6

7

30 Emancipate
31 Flowerless
plant
33 Billiard shot
35 Longs for
40 Eight
43 Guided visits
45 Hernia
support
46 Even
47 Air (prefix)
48 One
50 He loves (Lst)
51 Evening in
Italy
52 Blue-pencil
55 Stage need
9

8

"

30

31

51

52

20

22

29

”

35

33

32

11

17

”1
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■ 93■
m■
■
■
■
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21
25

10

14

18

16

3*

36

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42
-

A R C H IE

S -1 4 S

by Bob Montana

46
53

”

,0

38

47

45

43

*’

50

48

54

DEAR DR. L A MB Recently I had some test In
a hospital and learned that
Dr.
I have gallstones. Before I
went Into the hospital I
had nausea, some pain In
the area of the gallbladder
and a lot of gas. The doctor
told me that I would have
to have my gallbladder newspaper. P.O. Box 1551.
r e mo v e d , e v e n If the Radio City Station. New
stones w ere dissolved,
York. NY 10019.
because the gallbladder Is
One of the Important
diseased.
considerations Is the gen­
My question Is this, how
eral health of the patient.
can you tell that a
An older person with other
gallbladder Is diseased
medical problems who Is
from an X-ray? Why can
not having any symptoms
some people have the
from a gallstone may do
stones removed or dis­
well to avoid surgery. A
solved and keep their
younger person mi ght
gallbladder? If 1 feel better
avoid future problems by­
on a fat-free diet, do I
having It. You could ask
really need the surgery’? I
for a consultation with
have had major surgery
anot he r d o c to r b efore
before and am not very
agreeing to surgery.
thri l le d about goi ng
DEAR DR. LAMB - How
through It again.
can grandparents endure a
DEAR READER — Some
l i vel y beautiful gra n d ­
doctors believe that the
daughter who I am posi­
.very presence of stones In
tive Is hyperactive? She
the gallbladder means you
was very small when she
have gallbladder disease.
was born and required
The stones are formed
special treatment. Her
because of an abnormal
m other did drink and
reaction to cholesterol or
smoke during the pre­
bile pigments. You can
gnancy as she didn't real­
have two types of stones,
ize that this could have
p i g m e n t e d s t o n e s or
any effect on the pre­
cholesterol stones. The
gnancy. It breaks my heart
latter may be dissolved In
to hear her threaten to
some cases. Thi s pro­
cedure Is still under study punish the little girl when
I know my- granddaughter
to determine when It Is
needs help to enable her to
useful and when It Is
be more responsive.
better to operate.
DEAR READER - First,
Also, the gallbladder
let
me agree that ciga­
should be Seen In X-rays
rettes and alcohol, and
when It fills with bile
perhaps caffeine In coffee,
containing a dye used for
arc
harmful to pregnan­
the test. If the X-ray shows
cies.
That Is especially
that the gallbladder has
not filled, one possible true If they arc used In
cause Is from scarring and large quantities.
But ba b i e s born to
fibrosis from previous Inf l a n i m a t i o n s o f t h e mothers who have been
v e ry creful can still
gallbladder.
There arc differences of become hyperactive. Why
o p i n i o n s on w h e t h e r don't you forget about the
gallbladder surgery- Is nec­ alcohol and cigarettes and
essary In patients who do Just talk to your daughter
along the lines of the value
n ot h a v e s i g n i f i c a n t
symptoms. This Is dis­ of having a check-up to see
cussed more fully In The If the little girl Is all right
Health Letter number 4-9. now. In view of her small
size when she was born.
G a l l s t o n e s and
As a grandparent you do
G a l l b l a d d e r Disease,
which I am sending you. have some responsibilities
Others who want this and some rights. Perhaps
Issue can send 75 cents If your daughter secs this
with a long, stamped, column she may realize
self-addressed envelope for that her child has a pro­
It to me. In care of this blem-

Lamb

16

15

24

nrr

13

12

Bladder Surgery ?
G et 2nd Opinion

Answer to Previous PuKle

ACROSS

55

56

57

58

59

60

61
it

HOROSCOPE
B y B E R N IC E B E D E O S O L

W IN AT BRIDGE
PRISCILLA'S POP

by Ed Sullivan

The dally horoscope normally ap­
pearing In this space was unavailable
today because of technical problems
beyond our control. The Evening Herald
regrets this Inconvenience to our
readers. The horoscope column will
resume In this space Tuesday.

NORTH

♦ KQI 0 6

S-14-RS

f AS3

♦ 14
♦ A Q54
W EST
♦ 985
VJ986
♦ 7
♦ K J 9 87

EAST
J 72
V 10 7 4 2
♦ Q 10 9 6 5
+3

♦

S O U TH
♦ A4S
♦ KQ
♦ AKJ32
♦ 1062

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
W est

N o rth

E x it

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

24
3 NT
6 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead. 4 8

South
1 NT
39
4 NT
Pass

suggested there might well
be a slam."
Jim: "South's three-dia­
mond call showed a good no­
trump with a five-card dia­
mond suit. This didn't fit
North's hand, so North
signed off at three no­
trump"
Oswald: "South stretched
when he bid four no-trump
to suggest a possible no­
trump slam North stretched
even further when he bid the
slam, but this time every­
thing came out for the best."
Jim: "That is from declar­
er's viewpoint. The defend­
ers were most unhappy with
the result."
Oswald: "South read the
opening lead as top of two,
middle of three or just some­
thing really irregular. He
won with dummy's queen,
led a diamond, finessed his
ack and continued with the
.ins. West' discarded a club
and South looked for tricks
in other suits. He needed
them "
Jim: They were there. The
diamond finesse had given
him three tricks. There were
always three heart tricks.
The club finesse worked and
finally South guessed to drop
the spade jack to score a
rather lucky slam."

J

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

t

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By Sanford Tonight

W a te r U se
O u tsid e C ity
Up Fo r V o te

TODAY

Lyman Root Records Sought

For Brown Bovorl Firm

�Chicago Election Tuesday

NATION

Racial Tension Mars Mayoral Race

IN BRIEF

' Gandhi' A n d ‘E. T.' Favorites
To Win O scar For Best Picture

R e a lto rs
S p ru ce Up

Orlando Woman, 22
A c t io n R e p o rts
K' Rlcha,d“ n' “ •

* Courti

,M' ' S t ln

rLudwlftobleedtode

�“Together - with Freedom’s
new banking power - w e’ll
serve you even better!”

Two leading financial institutions are joining together
— ComBank and Freedom Savings. And frankly,
you’re going to see some changes. Exciting
changes that will broaden the scope of services
a va ila b le and m eet m ore of you r banking
requirements.
With our combined capabilities, we'll be able to intro­
duce some innovative new services. Lending limits
will be raised. More funds will be available for com­
mercial loans and business financing. You’ll enjoy
the convenience of increased 24-hour teller service.
And we’ll continue to respond to the special needs
of the business community with our commercial
services. Our Trust Department will still be avail­
able to provide both corporate and personal
financial planning.

Together, we’ll have the financial strength of more
than $1.7 billion in combined assets. Our banking
facilities will expand to more than 46 offices in 15
counties throughout central, southwestern and
northern Florida.
BUT SOME THINGS WILL NEVER CHANGE. The
same congenial staff you're accustomed to will con­
tinue to greet you. The experienced personnel
you’ve relied on for financial counseling will be here
to offer their assistance. Our tradition of personal
service is guaranteed.
And just as importantly, our commitment to the com­
munity, its growth and development will persist in a
stronger, more vital fashion than ever before.

'RUJ'W.. KL~j LPmsiOenl—CanMFtaictaDivision.Freedom /

Com
Bonk

�The Papal
Plot Thickens
ROBERT W ALTERS

JEFFREY HART

Little
“Comfort
In Unity

Reagan's
Missile
Defense

ROBERT W A O M AN

Ex-Presidents Costly?

Cop Blacklisted For Doing Job Well

l

�Alice Bennett: Sanford's 7-Time All-Am erica

�Juniors Open
Season Today

H T £ !S r:

Refinished Bench Clubs Cubs
a s S S i S S K Ba,,ba"Roundup l s l i 3 £

S ts s s s p sg ilsi iSSiliP
SsS^

��Challenger Set To Fly
Again In Record Time

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

Mideast Peace Plan Never Left The Ground

AREA

Secret A ir Unit
Battles Migrating
Sm ugglers

W ORLD
IN BRIEF

�PEO PLE
'Insult'May Be
A Compliment
In Disguise

TONIGHT'S TV
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35(35)
32 (17)
(10) ®

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runBSin._ . K 'N' CARLYLE1"

[cftiTACTg

Minnesota Judge
Salvation Army's
Banquet Speaker

Chapter Reviews
Self-Enrichment

caMGeorge TWihy.
table through Salva-

Lake M onro* Diabetes Chapter Meeting

byLarryWrlghl

���CPU Saves Lives;
Learn To Use If

�</text>
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                    <text>SU N D AY EDITION

Breakfasts

Subsidies Help Program In 4 Seminole Schools

Parade,
Cleanup
Are Set

Against Blacks

Qualifying
Teacher Test
Called Biased

Crime A lso Drops In State

Crime Rate In Seminole

Sanford Commissioner
Named To Health Fund

today
ActlonReporU....

From Car Accident

Rouses' Escape Called Miracle

�NATION

Interstate

■ ss

Administration Blasted For Lax Food Rules

" ss r “ i

“ fx S rH

sh es

-t”

Several DUI Cases Settled In Court

^ ^ = 1 *

��"S' {SolBy mS*!’wS;,r i? ,S , 6|5&lt;a;l?Mmlta;,

��Tuition
Colleges Resorting To Creative
Financing For Cash-Short Students

Need Some Last-Minute Tax Info?

Books To
Ghana

# #
COM E HEAR
BILLY G R A H A M
W IT H A MESSAGE
T H A T CAN
CHANGE
YOUR L IF E !
SUNDAY, APRIL 10

thru
A rts W eek A p ril 17-24 A t SCC

SUNDAY, APRIL 17
7:30 NIG H TLY
4:00 PM SUNDAYS

rrnaleGrille

MuUmL. Hamilton
TanuraHuktl
DavidHenderaon

JudyWhin
GenericStallworth
TlahaTlplon
BnbieyTyre
KimberlyWlthenrar
CherylWriabt
KimberlyWebb

TA N G ER IN E
BOW L
fm h ;

�Congressional Study Warns

FLORIDA

No Way To Protect MX From Soviet Attack

INBRIEF

ComBankSi
Bank Sub|ect Of Drug
Fundi
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Probe

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Good News!
Now.Rheeni' proves high
efficiency In a heat pump
is more than a dream

ALUM INUM
SID IN G SALE
6 DAYS O NLY

PCX 1000 U N . FT . (In c lu d e ! C O M M IT! IN STA LLA TIO N )
* 100% Fin an cing — N o M oney Down
M o nthly Paym ents A s lo w A s * * * .0 0 P e r M onth

| ILO C K HOM M A M O U « K PSC tA lTY |
N iv n AOAIN PAINT YOU* OVUtHANOI
- Insuletss Your Meets
A ffile s Over Any Serfece
Saves Feel

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K im W W IUILKRS) INC.
„
SAN FO RD

.Q v United States Steel
SOLID VIN YL SI

�Mass-Marketing
Artificial Organs

Greyhounds Sweep Meet
A s 11 Records Bite Dust

kLivernois Upstages Cochran A s Lyman Pulls Closer To
— s S S fe —

S 2 H

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P r.p B a fb a ll

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S S H * - -

U.S. Grain Influences World Prices

State Business
Conference Set

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White Sox
Trip Tigers
f ;;S S S .- a
’ •Wv/Jtaycd .cfflhly,h^ l»« twodays. andIdon'l

Redus, Soto Lead Reds By Cubs,
Raines Slaps 3 Singles, Steals 2

��17-Year-Old Land
C a se Is Settled

Study Says
Move Zoo
To Orlando

Man Dies On His
Way To Hospital
Crime Drops In County, State

WORLD

Parade Planned

Lake Mary Royalty

Body Of Missing
Woman Found In
Ormond Beach

A LL IN SU RA N CE ACCEPTED
FOR EXT EN S IV E
H EALTH-CA RE TREATM EN TS
WITHOUT A N Y COST
TO YOU - EVER!

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC

�------------- —

Spirits Move Mr. Cap
To Popping Bottle Caps

Arts And Crafts
Dancing And Pottery Just Seem To Go Together

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���RELIGION
Good Newt Mission
Sets Fellowship Luncheon

Inasmuch Center
Gives Counseling

Inasmuch Counseling Director Thomas Ireland with
Delores Lash, Lake Mary chamber program director.

Billy Graham Crusade
A pril 10-17 In Orlando

G race To Celebrate

Butterfly Brunch

Bishop Names Dinkins Director

McClains To Speak

��W-Apwlnwirt^
TSBBB^gWB*

NOW LMSINO
• tts s s is a

|5 2 S 5
■ sia5- H E
■ssrEsss 'S P ^

a i o M I P L A C IS N A V I
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A L L T N I PU N !
N o w 1 and 2 bdrm . a p is.

BUSINESS SERVICELISTING
AND L E T AN E X P E R T DO T H E JO B
To List Your Business...
Dial'322-2611 or 831-9993

" tb s s l

Ptlltcriflg/Dry Will
0, .......
Sprlnkliri/lrrlullon
ioSTTBSTTf__ ____

■^jgSSa

�STENSTROM

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

3 Bedroom, IV2 Baths, Central Heat &amp; Air Con­
ditioning, Self Cleaning G.E. Range, Wall-To-Wall
Carpeting, One-Car Garage, Many Other Features.
* ‘37,900 Including Lot.
Mortgage Amount *34,050

'p f S il;
322-2420

VSR

■

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s s s i

(tlfiv i C»»wfltr TOYOTA

INSTANT INFORMATION rJlT L 1-800-A3S-1877

CARDINAL
INDUSTRIES INCORPORATED
GmWr, R-JTW7

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�[DETERGENT

SA V E 5C

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POTATOES

SA VE 59

�</text>
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                    <text>School Board Eyes 4-Day Summer School Plan

Lake Mary

C h esh ire
W ill Not Be
Prosecuted

City Delays Widening
O f Boulevard Decision

mcRaf^^kwd^nV^Vgiic-onlrtbu'u^sr' WhC" '" hC
Investigation of allegedCampaign*' Improprieties^
Cheshireprobablycouldnothesuccessfullyprosecuted.
PinellasCountyStateAttorneyJimRussellsaid.

Girl Scouts G et Grant

Could Cost Lake Mary $1 Million

City Interested In Downtown Property

�Astronauts' Spacewalk Was Outta Sight

NATION

11 Die In Southern Floods; New Orleans Cut Off

Retailers Buoyed By Sales Boost

Wife Of Bucs QB
Williams To Be
Buried Monday

Way Cleared For County Expansion

Sanford Educator
Named To National
Fellows Program

Man Who Escaped Trial In Seminole, Nabbed In Orange
Action Reports
* Fires

Older Joggers Should Get A Checkup

�i£ P 3 g 3 s i
As State Song

SATURDAY BANKING
^ H N SANFORD!
Most other banks in town think you don't need
them on the weekend. But at Barnett we know
your busy work schedule often does not permit
much spare time. You might need to make a
deposit or cash a check, and Saturday is the only
day you have time to stop at the bank. So, our
drive-in windows are open on Saturdays... just in
case you need us. That’s just one more way we
deliver when We Promise Performance.

Barnett Bank
of Central Florida, N.A.
Sanford Office
3094 Orlando Drive
(17192and Airport Blvd.)
DflIVE-IN HOURS:

LOBBY HOURS:

�Evening Herald
MANFRRNfTtAVF RANFnRTl.FIA.JB71

Fantasy Or
Deliverance?

Front

On-The—
Japanese
System

WASHINGTON WINDOW

Arms Control Choices

JACK ANDERSON

Bureaucrats Purge Mentally

�WEEK ■ END Sale
Super Value

5 0 % off

Fantastic Group
of Misses Coordinates
In Color Tones
On Tan and Navy.

Women’s U.S.A. Olympics
Tennis Shoes
2 Styles.
All White or White with Terry Trim
Orlg. ‘ 18

Y o u r C h o ic e o f
T u n ic T o p s
3 Styles.

Sale

&lt;

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Women’s Sandals
50% off
Wedge Style
Orlg. '18

B e lte d S la c k s
M a tc h th e
T o p s w ith a
S k irt o r J a c k e t

8 "
Men’ Golf Shoes

School Age
White Only
Orlg. 7.99

Orig.33.99

Sale

8

"

Sale

2

9

M isses’ Tops
Assorted Solids and Prints
Short Sleeve
Aga
S, M, L
O

Save 50%
Boys’ Jeans

W h ite , B ro w n /W h ite
V in y l U p p e rs

« Q Q

Sale

"

3

"

Women’s Tops
Assorted Solids
and Prints

T99
f

Women’s Canvas
Slide Sandals

Save Up To 60%
Men’ Slacks

Save Over 35%
B o y s ’ Crewneck T-Shirt

Save Up To 50% Off
Women’s Handings

Assorted Colors
Orlg. ‘ 18

Dress or Casual
Belt Loop or Belted

School Age
Asst. Stripe

Canvas Handbags In
Assorted Styles and Colors

C99

Orig. to *12

Sale

7

"

Save 60%
Children’s C.V.
Tennis Shoes
Sizes 9 to 3

° " “ '*

A Q Q

Nike®
M o n te re y II T ra in in g S h o e
M e n 's o r W o m e n ’s
j

Sale

1

1

0

"

Save Up To 50%
Men’s Sport Shirts

Sale C

Reg. 21.99

“ ’ “ '“ sale

Short Sleeve
Assorted Styles
Orlg. to *18

T9 9
Sale I

"

Save 38-60% Off
Girls’ Pants and Jeans
Assorted Styles. Jeans
Available In White Only.

"Crayola" Logo

Sale

2

"

, __

Sizes S, M, L

“ S '6“

Sale

3

9

"

Sale 19.99
Sale 39.99
Sale 55.00

° ”" 65"

Sale

Junior Hunt Club" Denims
Denim Jeans In Junior Sizes
or 5 Pocket Denim Skirt
Reg. ‘20

Spring Home Sale in our Home Furnishing Dept.

Twin Sheete
Reg. 7.99 Sale 5.99
Full Sheets
Reg. 9.99 Sale 7.99
Std. Pillow Cases Reg. 7.99 Sale 8.99

• A ll N o v e lty C u rta in s
• A ll W in d o w S h a d e s
• A ll D e c o ra tiv e R u g s

Reg. 7.99
Short
Reg. 8.99

Sale 5 "
Sale 6 "

Matching Drapes
48x63
46x46

Reg. ‘30
Reg. *35

Sale *24
Sale &gt;26

Matching Spreads
Twin
Full

Reg. ‘45
Reg. ‘60

Sale *36
Sale &gt;46

A 99
Sale 4

All Infant and Toddlers
Playwear.
For Example:
Shirt or Shorts
Reg. 3.00 Sale 2.40
Short Sleeve Polo Reg. 2.99 Sale 2.39
Twill Boxer
Reg. 3.66 Sale 2.92

25% Off

Sale s1 2

#

Save 20% Off

Solid Color Percale

Reg. *14

T99

Boxer Waist with Athletic
Styling In Nylon/Cotton Fabric
Orig. *16

1 99

S h e e ts •T o w e ls - P illo w s • Bedspreads - Great Savings.

Track-And Court

,

Save 20% Off

Reg.‘15

V-Neck Shirt or Shlmmel Shirt

„

Sale

J u n io r H ig h G irls ’ P a n ts

Adidas V-Neck Shirt
Sale s1 3

Sizes 7-14
Orig *13-*20

G ir ls ’ O ff T he S h o u ld e r
K n it T o p . S c h o o l A ge.

For Example:
Booster Seat Reg. 24.99
Car Seal
Reg. 49.99
Stroller
Reg. 69.00

Adidas Short

O

C o m fo rt B la z e r
N a vy, G re y , B ro w n

Lo-Cut
Reg. 18.99
Hi-Top
Reg-I|19,99|i

Athletic Apparel

Save 50% Off
Preschool Girls’
Knit Tops
°"3 “

Sale

"

Save 69% Off

S a v e 2 0% O ff
A ll C a r S e a ts an d S tro lle rs

H C99
1O
.J £ 9 9
Sale 1 D

2

Save 69% Off

Nike®
Basketball Shoes
Sale

Sale

Men’s Sport Coats
A Q Q

8

” a 3"

Bed Pillows
Standard Reg. ‘ 10 Sale 7.00
Queen
Reg. ‘ 13 Sale 10.40
King
Red. ‘15 Sale 12.00

Limited Quantities
Sanford Plaza Only

Sale 1 5 ® ®

40 To 50% Off
Samsonite or American Tourfstor
Luggage
Hard and Soft Side
Large Selection.
As Example: Soft Side
Tote
Orig, &gt;48 Sal* »24
29" With Wheele Orlg. *110 S*l* *66
Hard Side 26"
Reg, *140 Sale *70
29Reg. ‘ 185 Sal* 82“

Open Sunday 12:38”to 5:30
Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.

�SP O R TS

Seminole Boys, Girls Defend
County Track Titles Tonight
S s H fc S

is ^ s s s i

Williamson Breaks Pole Vault Mark

The King Still Lives,
Arnie 1 Stroke Back

Huamart, Tribe
Smother Lions

Brantley Hands Error-Prone Seminoles Another Loss

�Raines' Single Lifts Expos Past Cubs

Righetti Tops M a rii
B O X SCO RES

McCloud Outduels Merthie, 4-1

SYSA Registers Saturday

�Women Wonder About
Older Male Impotence

EEK « MEEK

7
/

P
"h

MEALS

J

lU C R U K im m

I /yS® K

�Proper Mowing Is Essential Part Of Lawn Care

Son's 'Sleep-Over' Gives
Mom A Rude Awakening
S

S

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S S S s H : S 3S 3S =*«*

Cooking For 'Busy Bodys'
To Benefit New Museum

Flying Candy Scramble
Highlights Camp Trip

BillingslyBerry Vows
Repeated

r ^ s s s s s s s ts K O t:

�legal Notice'

21 To Be U.S.
Drinking Age

ISOPENINGS
LicenseEiamSchool

��W O R LD
INBRIEF

Warsaw Pact
Nations Call
For Missile Halt

U.S. Arms To Thailand

REALTY TRANSFERS

Complete Detailed Coverage Of
Sem inole County News And Sports. . .
Daily Comics, Classified Ads
And Television Listings. . .
G rocery And Department Store Ads
Including Money-Saving Coupons. . .

OBt WMW0 a ‘1/LLLiCtL^
X SPECIAL 3 MONTHS &gt;10.00

For Immediate Delivery
322-2611
or (305) 831-9993

�1141111
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�������</text>
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                    <text>Cities In Sem inole Have Trouble Filling Jot

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                    <text>r

SUNDAY EDITION

E v e n in g

H

75th Y ear, No. 133-S unday, J a n u a ry 23, 1983-Sanford, F lo r id a 32771

e r a ld

E v en in g H e ra ld -lU S P S 481 280)—Price 35 C ents

School O fficials Lobby To Head Off Vocational Cuts

Students at Seminole High School get hands-on experience in the school's
automobile mechanics course. These students (from left) M arty Bander,
Greg Parker, Neil (lesson and Erin Moreno are shown performing an engine
analysis.

By MICHEALBEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County school officials are working to
convince the state Legislature that their vocational
programs are worth keeping.
A recent state report told the Department of
Education and stale legislators that too much
emphasis is being placed on vocational education.
The report recommended reducing the number of
offerings and cutting expenditures for vocational
programs.
But Betty Hogle, coordinator of. vocational
program s In Seminole County schools, said the
program s offered here are ‘‘meeting the needs of
the community."
She said about 10,000 of the district’s 36,000
students participate In vocational programs.
‘‘There are some kids who stay In school Just for
the vocational programs," she said. "If you take
away those programs the number of dropouts will
Increase."
The programs are beneficial to the students and
•to the community because they provide a training

center for local employers, give students a job skill
and turn students into taxpayers when they
graduate, she said.
The drafting program at Seminole High School is
one of the standout programs, she said.
That 24-year-old program , taught by Bob Sch­
mitt, has about an 80 percent placement ratio.
"My priority here is Job placement," Schmitt
explained. Many of his students have gone on to jobs
at Southeast Video and Page Air Services of Florida
in Orlando, Camp, Dresser and McKee near
Altamonte Springs and other businesses in the area.
Schmitt's program currently has about 50
students. Twenty-one students are In the Drafting I
course, which meets one hour a day for a semester.
Drafting II students are In class for two hours a day.
Drafting III students are in class for two hours a
day or work as interns or apprentices at various
businesses.
For Ron Kidd, his internship at Page Air Services
was the doorway to a $12,000-a-year Job with the
firm drawing designs for the interiors of airplanes.
He recently helped with drawings for more than

Pay Raise

'Hello, I'm A
Computeri
•••

By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
If you have a telephone, you probably
have been interrupted on numerous
occasions by annoying phone calls from
solicitors who want to sell something,
have a "valuable" gift to give away or
want to ask questions.
Fed up with these human solicitors?
Well, the next voice you h ear may be a
computer.
It takes some people a while to realize
they are talking with a computer:
One computer caller making calls to
area residents now reportedly uses the
direct approach.
It opens a conversation with "Hello,
I’m a computer." Then it asks If the
person answering the phone is Interested
in earning extra money part-time at
home.
If told "yea," the computer begins to
get personal, wanting to know “How old
a rc you?"
Alter receiving an answer, It then
wants to know “ Are you I n te r r e d In
making extra money and can you spare
three to four hours a week from your
home?"
If it receives a “yes," it asks for the
person's current mailing address. If It
doesn’t receive an answer, the computer
says "I'm sorry. 1 didn’t understand
you." Still if there is no answer the
computer will close with, “ I see, well that
will be all for now."
A lnngwood resident who reported
receiving such a call from a computer
which wanted to sell h er aluminum
siding said she hung up. "But the next
time I'm just going to leave the phone off
the hook. I understand that really ties
them up."
Southern Bell and American Bell
spokesmen said their companies do not
produce or market these machines but
. only lease the lines either regular access
lines or WATS lines.
The tape recorders or computers used
as electronic salesmen a re set up by
individual companies, said American
Bell spokesman Lee C arrier In Atlanta.
Some larger firms set up their own
computers, while others use a computer
on a time share basis.
Both Carrier and Sanford Southern
Bell Manager Larry Strickler admitted
having received computerixed calls and
being just as annoyed as anyone else.
"Most operate with a WATS line using
a computer to dial Individual numbers.
But they could order from 1 to 100 access
. lines depending on how many they need,"
Carrier said. "Most of the calls are long
distance, so the WATS lines are cheaper.
For instance, a company can set up in
A tlanta and s a tu ra te the entire
southeast. As long as they pay their
phone bills the telephone company has no
control over the operation."
The technology Is fairly simple using
automatic dialing equipment and multi­
channel answering. They can dial 20 lines
and have 20 reco rd in g s going
simultaneously, Carrier said. It is a
software program.
They purchase telephone numbers and
demographic lists from companies, such
as Time Magazine.
"If you ever order something and fill
out a card, you get on a mailing list,”
Carrier said. “ And the telephone com­
pany Is one of the few firm s where the
information from customers Is protected
by law."
Carrier said there probably will be an
increasing number of this computer-type
solicitation.
From the dem ographic lists the
computer esn select persons 1n a certain
financial or age bracket, persons with
children, or specific interest groups.
Now, all you have to do Is program
your telephone answering device to
. converse with the com piler and you
won’t have to be bothered with these
. unwanted "trash" calls.

$20 million in renovations to a plane purchased by
Jordan's King Hussein.
"I really don't know where 1 would be if 1 hadn't
been in the class," Kidd said.
Students in Schmitt’s class get hands-on ex­
perience drafting machinery, land use maps,
automobiles and other things using computer
equipment. The school has an Apple II computer
with drawing capabilities—one of only two in
central Florida schools.
£chmitt said the students all work at their own
level. "They are encouraged to use their
creativity," he said. "Creativity kills boredom. And
while they may not t* able to use it on their first job
it will help them net that first Job."
Seminole students also have the opportunity to
receive training in auto mechanics.
Howard Butcher, who teaches the program, said
he works with an advisory group of community
businesses to determine the program taught to
students.
Butcher has a complete set of training facilities
See TRUCKERS, Page 10A

Lake Mary W o rkers Get
Second Hike In A Month
Lake Mary’s 20 city employees have
gotten their second (.percent across-theboard-pay raise in a month.
Insisting to a man that they don't like
across-the-board pay raises, City
Commissioners nevertheless granted the
increases retroactive to Oct. 1 by a 4-1
vote Thursday night.
In late December, the previous City
Commission granted a 4 percent acrossthe-board raise, also retroactive to Oct.
1.
The cost of the combined raises is
$21,600 annually.
Commissioner Ray Fox (ought the
Increases, saying his colleagues were
using up all the money designated In the
budget for pay raises and rejecting any
part of the $1,100 study on a pay scale, job
classification and performance analysis
recently completed by consultants, Long
and Associates of Ft. Lauderdale.

M»r»ld Photo by Tom V liK tn t

Independent tru c k e r Red Phipps say s
truckers are being caught between ever rising
state and federal taxes and a proposed Jan . 31

U

truckers strike which could lead to violence
and financial hardship.

Truckers Strike Gets
Little Local Support
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
(Second la A Twa P art Series 1
The Independent Truckers Association, a national
organization, has called on its members to go on strike Jan.
31.
The purpose of the strike is to put pressure on Congress to
repeal the flve-cent gasoline hike tax scheduled to go into
effect April 1, increases slated for lM t in federal, highway
use taxes, and to nullify the 56 mile per hour speed limit.
But Independent truckers from Seminole County say they
won’t go on strike, are Indicating no support, although they
sympathize with the intentions of the walkout.
And many out-of-state truckers who make hauls in and
out of Seminole say they will park their trucks If a strike is
caUed.
They don't think the strike will do any good. But they are
afraid for themselves and their expensive equipment if they
work during a strike.

Interviewed at the Sanford F arm er’s Market, an in­
dependent trucker from Lake Mary said, “I don’t know
enough about the proposed strike to know what I will do."
He added that a strike over rising fuel prices a decade ago
did no good.
And a Sanford-based trucker said, "It ain’t gonna do no
good." Both men said they feared reprisals from brokers
If their names were published, pointing out that they depend
on brokers for work.
John Barrington of Altamonte Springs, an Independent
trucker for the past four years, said he has heard rumblings
about a strike, but he believes striking is not a proper way
to handle the problem.
,
"The only thing that will happen is a lot of poor truckers
won’t be able to pay for their equipment," Barrington said.
Barrington, who hauls tropical foliage from Seminole
County to Texas, says he has an 1980 truck and refrigerated

Fox said that by using all the money
budgeted for pay raises, the commission
has foreordained that no more raises
would be granted this fiscal year.
Earlier in the evening, commissioners
listened for 35 minutes as company
representative Donald Ijong explained
the firm's proposal for judging em­
ployees' performances for annual merit
increases.
Commissioner Russ Megonegal said he
was disappointed with the Long report,
noting he had requested data from the
firm showing how it had arrived at
various pay scales for individual em­
ployees. Although he was promised the
data by Thursday, Long did nyt turn the
promised information over to the City
Commission.
Megonegal said although he Is opposed
to across-the-board pay raises, the
resulting salaries would still be below the
Long recommendations.
"By no means Is this an end to the
procedure (of bringing salaries up to an
acceptable level)," Megonegal said,
indicating that fu rth e r salary ad­
justments would be forthcoming.

Fox said he was opposed to granting
the increases now, saying across-theboard raises is the wrong way to go. He
said it is hard to compare other com­
munities with Lake Mary’- Fox warned
that with an ever declining tax base, the
time is not far off when the city may not
be able to pay employees what they want.
Long's 35-minute presentation on a
m ethod of Judging em ployee p e r­
formance was not well received by the
commission. The criticism begin when
Ix)ng said he would be at City Hall Friday
to talk with "key employees" about how
the job performance analysis forms
would be used.
Commissioner Burt Perinchlef said
Long was getting the "cart before the
horse." He said that Long apparently
Intended to discuss with employees
implementing a plan which had not yet
been accepted by the commission.
Perinchlef was especially offended
about Long's continual use of the word
"high achievers." He said as an
educator, he has heard the term "until I
feel like vomiting."
Perinchlef said government seems to
be leaning toward standardizing and
pigeonholing without regard to people.
"They are not all doers and creators," he
said, adding that not all jobs allow
creativity. " I’ve seen a lot of high
achievers go down the tube because they
cannot handle being a celebrity or
competition."
.
Megonegal said he would like to read
the Long report before considering ac­
tion.
Meanwhile, Fox suggested that the
commission, by "granting raises based
on emotion,” had set aside any
possibility of considering a Job
classification and pay plan this year.
He suggested that the commission
write Long and Associates a check for the
pay classification plan and job per­
form ance analysis and ignore Its
recommendations. — DONNA ESTES

TODAY
Around The Clock................................. 4A
Bridge ..................................................«B
B usiness................................................IA
Calendar ................
JA
Classified A ds................................... MB
C om ics..................................................SB
•Crossword ......................
(B

See TRUCKERS, Page 10A
Deaths.

10A

E ditorial............................
F lo rid a .............................. ................... 3A
Horoscope
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H o s p i t a l ....................... ................2A
School Menus ................
Sports................................
Television .....................
W eath er...........................

................... 7B
................7-9A
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................... 2A

10 Years Ago

When America Marched Out Of Vietnam
ByTOMTIEDE
Good evening. I have asked for this
radio and television time tonight for the
purpose of announcing that we today
have concluded an agreement to end the
w ar and bring peace with honor in
Vietnam and Southeast Asia. — Richard
Nixon, Jan. 23, 1173.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - And that's
how it ended. Ten years ago. After
decades of wretched destruction, at
home as well as abroad, President Nixon
took command of the airwaves to say
that the longest and most frustrating
conflict in U.S. history had come to a
close with a stalemate.
More than 47,000 Americans had been
killed.
At least $146 billion had been spent.

Now, on Jan. 23,1973, It was over.
It was not a day for merrymaking,
however. The end was more a time for
subdued relief than wild delight. Some
people danced in the streets in Nauvoo,
111., and motorists honked their horns on
the highways, but, for the most part, the
day they signed the peace treaty was
almost routine.
At Fort Jackson, S.C., 300 people were
too Involved with bingo to watch the TV
announcement. In Wayne, Mich., the city
council voted not to watch the president
either. When a TV station in Chicago
interrupted an all-star basketball game
with the news, hundreds of irate viewers
protested.
The mood was not surprising. TIm
commander of the American Legion,

Frank D'Amico, explained that (here
was "nothing to celebrate." He said the
United States had been in Vietnam for
more than 20 years, and all It had to show
for it were fresh graves, world ridicule
and a sundered population.
The 20 years began in 1960. Vietnam
had already been at war for a decade,
first with the Japanese who occupied the
country during World War II, and then
with the French who sought to regain
control after 19*5. The U.S. sent 35
military advisors in 1950 to aid the
French effort.
And that's all there was to it for a
while: a token U.S. involvement to help
stop what the government said was a
communist design on Indochina. Then, in
1959, two American advisors were killed

In a terrorist attack, the U.S. contingent
was Increased to 685, and the escalation
began.
In time Washington dispatched 10,000
men a week to take over the reins of a
war that had started a s a civil dispute.
Altogether, more than 2 million GIs
participated; they shot more bullets than
any army had fired in history, and they
dropped more bombs than were released
in World War II.
llen ry K issinger and North
Some of the bullets were fired at the
Vietnam's Le Due Tho met
innocent. In 1971, a nondescript Army
privately for hours in January
lieutenant named William Calley was
before reachin g
an
convicted by a m ilitary court of having 1973
ordered the murder of 22 civilians In the a g ree m en t that ended the
village of My Lai in 1968; he was sen- Vietnam War. For the Viet­
f
n a m e se , however, the fight
See PEACE, P age 10A

continued.

I‘

�3A— Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, J a n .IJ , i f l )

NATION
IN BRIEF
El Salvador Certified
For U.S. Military Aid
WASHINGTON (U P I)—Despite admitted short*
comings, the administration has ignored outcries from
human rights organizations and certified the govern­
ment of El Salvador for continued U.S. military aid.
The biennial certification required by law, will
directly affect $25 million in military assistance funds.
Additionally, it is an important symbol throughout
totln America of U.S. support for friendly govern­
ments. *
Americas Watch and the American Civil liberties
Union said Thursday, "The State Department action
showed contempt for the Congress by certifying a
regime whose death squads commit 200 murders a
month.”

Baker To Leave Senate
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (U PI) - S e n a te M ajority
lead er Howard Baker will quit the Senate at the end of
his current term , but is leaving the door open for a 1904
presidential bid if President Reagan does not run
again.
If the president seeks another term, Baker said he
would be interested In making the race in 1988 and, "I
might even begin exploring the possibilities very ac­
tively" after 1984.
Baker said he intends to remain Senate Republican
leader while completing the last two years of his term.

Student Planned Shooting
ST. IX)UIS (U PI)—An eighth-grade boy who began
firing a gun during study hall, killing one boy and
seriously wounding another before killing himself,
"knew exactly what he was doing" because he left a
note detailing his plans, police say.
Investigutors initially speculated David F. Lawler
was firing at random when he pulled two handguns
during a study hall at Parkway South Junior High
Thursday in the unincorporated village of Manchester
and began firing. Lawler and one boy were killed and
another seriously wounded.
That theory changed when a three-page, handwritten
suicide note was discovered Friday, tucked In one of
tow ler's textbooks, detectives said.
Police refused to release the text of the note, but said
it revealed tow lcr planned to shoot two classmates
and himself.

S cho e tte lko tte Is C e rtifie d
As A rm y S ecretary C ivilian A id e
without pay. They represent each state,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and
the Virgin Islands.
Schoettelkotte, who has served in the
U.S. Naval Air Reserve, is a graduate of
Memphis State University.
A resident of Winter Park, he is
chairman of the Seminole County Port
Authority, chairman of the Seminole
County Tourist Development Council and
owner of several Holiday Inns.
As a civilian aide, Schoettelkotte will
Other affiliations include membership
interpret information about the Army's
In the Sons of the American Revolution,
missions and objectives to the people of
the Military Order of the Stars and Bars,
Florida and provide the community's
Sons of Confederate Veterans, and Sigma
poiQt of view to Secretary John O. Marsh
Alpha Epsilon Fraternity. The civilian
Jr., and other senior Army officials.
aides program was started after World
He also will advise commanders of the War I. A group of citizens concerned with
Army N ational Guard, the Army national defense, the Military Training
Reserve and the ROTC within the state. Camps A ssociation (MTCA), was
Civilian aides serve a two-year term prnmolinp military training for civilians

The U.S. Army recently conducted a
special investiture ceremony for the new
civilian aide to the secretary of the Army
for Florida at the Citrus Gub in Orlando.
J. W allace Schoettelkotte was
presented a certificate of appointment
from the secretary of the Army by 11.
Gen. Donald E. Rosenblum, commander
of First U.S. Army, headquartered in
Fort Meade, Md.

who could be called to active duty Im­
mediately In the event of war. In
November 1922 Secretary of War John W.
Weeks appointed some Individuals from
the MTCA to be Civilian Aides to the
Secretary of War.
Originally the civilian aides consisted
of a chief civilian aide and an aide from
each corps area, each state and the
District of Columbia. Each appointment
was for a period of four years, and then,
as now, the aides served without pay.
Since then the focus and structure of
the program has changed. During World
War II civilian aides were called upon to
perform highly Important and often
confidential missions for the then
Secretary of War.
Aides today are selected by and
respond to the secretary of the Army.

Abortion Ruling Decade Old

Anniversary O f 'Bloody Monday # Ruling Noted
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An anti-abortion leader calls the
1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion a "bloody"
decision that has cost the lives of more than 10 million
"defenseless children."
But supporters of the Jan. 22,1973, decision reaffirmed their
belief In the decision Friday and said they would work to
overturn restrictive laws that m ake it difficult for poor women
to obtain abortions.
‘The United States Supreme Court was wrong — dead wrong
-w hen they ruled 10 years ago unborn babies are not deser­
ving of legal protection." said Peter Gemma, Jr., czecutivc
director of the National Pro-life Political Action Committee,
and anti-abortion lobby
"Since that 'Bloody Monday’ decision, more than 10 million
defenseless children have been aborted In their mothers’
womb," Gemma said in a statement.

He said the decade-old decision had generated a growing
anti-abortion movement that could ezercise increased power
in Congress but warned "it may lake another 10 years of
political action, educational efforts and legal challenges before
there is a complete turnaround of the 1973 abortion-on-demand
Supreme Court rulings."
But a group of Roman Catholics who support the 1973
decision, Catholics for a Free Choice, pledged it will Join
others in seeking to overturn the restrictive gains the antiabortion movement has made In the past.
"The central issue resolved In the 1973 Supreme Court
decisions was the constitutional right of all women — rich or
poor — to choose abortion," said Frances Kissllng, executive
director of Catholics for a Free Choice.
"Public funding to enable poor women to obtain abortions Is
a clear Issue of social and economic justice," she said, adding

NATIONAL REPORT: A paralyzing winter storm lashed the
ice-encrusted South with hurricane-force winds, freezing rain
and \7 Inches ot mow, then churned north, coating roads from
Texas to Illinois with a treacherous glaze and knocking out
|)ower to thousands. The Ice and snowstorms have been
blamed for at least 20 deaths since Tuesday—Including five In
Oklahoma. Hurricane-force winds knocked out power to
hundreds of thousands in the South-most of them In Georgia,
Alabama and the Carolinas. The weather caused scores of
accidents and closed schools in hundreds of districts. Kentucky
Gov. John Y. Brown gave state employees the day off rather
than have them drive on a thick sheet of Ice. Government of­
fices also were closed in South Carolina and Georgia. More
freezing rain and snow were forecast for Virginia and the
Carolinas today. Seventeen inches of snow buried Lubbock,
Texas, Friday. Two runways at Atlanta's Harlafleld Airport
were dosed due to ice and snow Friday when a landing Delta
Air lines plane turned too sharply and got stuck In the mud off
the field's remaining open runway.

BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Islet, Out
50 Miles: Cope Canaveral northward wind north to northeast
10 to 15 knots today becoming west to northwest 10 to 15 knots
during tonight and Sunday. Seas 3 to 5 feet. Areas of sea fog
with visibilities below one mile. Occasional rain or drizzle
through tonight then mostly cloudy Sunday. South of Cape
Canaveral wind south 10 to 15 knots today and tonight
becoming west to northwest 10 to 15 Sunday. Seas 2 to 4 feet.
Showers and few thunderstorms today and tonight then partly
cloudy Sunday.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly cloudy with 70 percent chance of
showers and few thunderstorms this afternoon. Highs low to
niid 70s. Wind variable 10 mph or less but stronger near
thunderstorms. Cloudy and foggy tonight with 70 percent
chance of rain and possibly a few thunderstorms. Lows in the
50s. Wind becoming northwest less than 10 mph. Becoming
partly cloudy and cooler Sunday with highs In the 60s.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Variable cloudiness with a
chance of showers south Monday and elsewhere Tuesday.
G earing north and central and partly cloudy south Wed­
nesday. tow s In the mid 30s to low 40s extreme north to 50s
south except 60s extreme southern peninsula and Keys. Highs
near 60 north to 70s south.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C entral F la rM a

H atfM e l

Friday
A D M ISSIO NS*
S A N FO R D :
E tta S. Appleby
Roy L. M a |o r
D avid M . Skates. Deltona
B IR TH S
Billy end U s e 0 . Love, a baby
boy, O rlando
D Is 'c H A R O B I

S A N FO R D :
m oienne S. Blackburn
M a rg a re t A . Brown

Evrning Herald

Gfugory r . D a v it
Patricia A . G rady
Law It M . G riffin
Maggie A . K a ita r
J a m tt R. M ad d o *
John C. T a y lo r, O a ta r y
R n H. W ordan, D a ta r y
Albarf C. E rn e!. Dultona
Claude W . H ilton. Deltona
O la d y t
R o b a rto n ,
W in te r
Springe
' B a rtera M . F V d d tr end a baby
bov, Sanford
Laralana S. B u th o y and a baby
boy, Daltona

ivsmmmui

Sunday, January 23, 1983—Vol. 75. No. 133
PubtiOMd D ally and Sunday, eicag t Saturday by Tbe Santerd
H erald, Inc., see N . French A ve.. Santerd, F la . JJ7I1.
Second C la n Pottage Paid a t Santerd. Florida 10 71
Heme D elivery: W eek, S t.M r M eets. U t t i 4 M e n th w SSe.ee;
v e e r, S4S.ee. By M a ll: Weeh SM S; Meath. SS-SSr 4 *
4S0 M i Veer. 1ST 04
_____________

her group would seek to develop a grass-roots campaign
urging Catholics to work for a restoration of public funding of
abortions for the poor.

Anti-Abortion Bill Backed
WASHINGTON (U P I)-P resldent Reagan has en­
dorsed a bill to prohibit use of federal funds for
abortions for the poor, bolstering activists who planned
a m arch today to demonstrate unity In the divided
right t 0 life movement.
On the eve of the 10th anniversary of the Supreme
Court decision legalizing abortion, Reagan endorsed a
bill introduced Jan. 6 by. Rep. Henry Hyde, R-ni., that
defines the beginning of life at conception and says the
Supreme Court erred.

New Christian School
Receives Zoning OK

WEATHER

AREA READINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 58; overnight
low: 56; Friday high: 73; barometric pressure: 29.98; relative
humidity: 100 percent; winds: northeast at 7 mph; rain: 18;
sunrise 7:18 a.m., sunset 5:56 p.m.
SUNDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 2:12 a.m.,
lows, 8:30 a.m., 8:41 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL: highs, 2:04
a.m., 2:22 p.m.; lows, 8:21 a.m., 8:32 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs,
8:06 a.m., 7:51 p.m.; lows, 2:26 a.m., 1:51 p.m.

J. Wallace Schoettelkotte of Winter Park receives
his credentials as civilian aide to the secretary of
the arm y from Lt. Gen. Donald E. Hosenblum,
com m ander of First U.S. Army.

CARING, SHARING

M,r,dfh#,#*»TomV"KM”

Students at Hosenwald Elementary School, some of whom are victims of
cerebral palsy themselves, and their parents have contributed $131 to the
Cerebral Palsy Foundation, which is conducting a nationally televised
telethon this weekend to raise funds. Lakeitha Sanders, 9, left, and Michael J.
Hurd, 7, present the contribution to Marva Hawkins, right, a member of the
Seminole County Cerebral Palsy board, a s school Principal Ruby Hendrix
looks on. The telethon is being televised on WCOX Channel 6 this weekend.

at the LiT Champ Food store at 2990 S. Sanford
By DONNA ESTES
Ave.
Herald Staff Writer
—A church annex for the Church of Christ at
The Sanford Planning and Zoning Com­
mission has given Us blessing to a request for 116 W. 16th St. The property is located west of
the existing Church of Christ at 1512 W. 15th St.
a conditional use to permit the operation of a
—A church for Freedom Assembly of God at
private C hristian school in existing
1515 W. 5th St. The property Is on the southwest
classrooms at the Church of God, 801 W. 22nd
comer of 5th Street, across from Seminole
St.
The Rev. William Thompson, pastor said he Gardens Apartments.
plans to open the school with kindergarten
— A home occupation for an environmental
- consultant at 3291 Sanford Ave., Apartment 61,
through third grade clauses In August.
And if demand develops, additional grades Sanford Court Apartments.
through the secondary level will be added in
— A home occupation for forestry servicing
the future.
for telephone service and mall order at 1106 S.
"Hopefully, we will start with 20 students Myrtle Ave.
per grade in each of the four levels, opening
— A home occupation for pressure cleaning
with 75 to 80 children," Thompson said.
business with telephone service only at 221
“We have not progressed to the point where Tuskegee St., Academy Manor subdivision.
we know how much the tuition per child will
—A home occupation with telephone service
be," he said.
only for a Class B air conditioning contractor
"We will teach a traditional school with at 2411 Lake Ave.
emphasis on Christian conduct and character.
—A home occupation with telephone service
We will teach Christianity,” he laid.
only at Apartment 60, Master's Cove, 2744
In other business Thursday night, the Ridgewood Ave.
commission granted conditional uses after
—A home occupation telephone service only
public hearings on nine other requests. A
for a trim carpenter, Apartment 68, M aster’s
conditional use Is permitted under the city’s
Cove, 2748 Ridgewood Ave.
zoning bode with the approval of the Planning
and Zoning Commission.
Site plans were also approved (or a church
for Freedom Assembly of God at 1515 W. 5th
The advisory board’s decision is final unless
St.; a building for a Pizza Hut at 3652 Orlando
someone wants to appeal to the G ty Com­
Drive, east of Village Marketplace and south
mission.
of Cumberland Farm s; and an addition to the
Other conditional uses granted were:
existing publisher’s service bureau for storage
—A self-service gasoline pump to be located
at 1100 E. 25th St.

Dog's 'Credibility' Focus Of Murder Trial
Whether a tracking dog can follow a scent accurately enough
to convict a man of murder is expected to be the focus of
arguments when Juan Ramos' murder trial resumes Monday.
Ramos, 26, Is accused of brutally murdering Mary Sue Cobb,
a Cocoa homemaker whose nude body was found'stabbed 17
limes, the knife still embedded in her chest.
One of Ramos' attorneys, public defender J.R. Russo Jr.,
asked to bar testimony from a dog handler whose German
shepherd trailed Ramos based on the scent o( the knife and
Mrs. Cobb's blouse.
Prosecutors contend the tracking dog Is a special "highly
trained" breed with a keen sense of smell.
Russo contends the validity of the scenting test is too un­
certain to be used as evidence. He said opinions of dog han­
dlers who specialize in tracking vary regarding the amount of
time a scent lasts and the best conditions for such tests.
Brevard Circuit Judge William Woodson admitted the dog
handler’s testimony, saying he will allow the jury to determine
the credibility of the testimony.
A neighbor said she saw Ramos dashing from the area of the
Cobb home April 27, the morning the 27-year-old housewife was
killed. Testimony earlier in the week contradicted Ramos'
statement that he went to work at 7 a.m. that day.
The trial recessed Friday after hair and fiber analyst David
Jem igan testified a hair found on Cobb’s body did not belong to
Ramos or to any crime scene investigators. He said none of
Ramos’ hair was found at the Cobb home.
Lack of Ramos' hair at the crime scene is a significant part
of his defense. Ramos has maintained his Innocence since he
w u Indicted in June. His attorneys contend he was singled out
by police and that detectives failed to fully investigate other
They also claim the case is prejudiced because Ramos is a
Cuban refugee who came to the U.S. on the 1M0 Martel boatlifl.
BREATHALYZER CHALLENGED
A ruling u expected from Seminole County Judge Alan
Dickey possibly by Monday on a motion which could invalidate
many drunk driving cases m ade in Seminole since a new tough
driving under the influence law went into effect on July 1.
On Thursday, lawyer Steve Homelier, a former Assistant
State Attorney, asked Dickey to throw out tbe results of two
blood-alcohol tests taken from his clients on the grounds that

1

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts
* Police
the state failed to enact guidelines covering the use and
maintenance of breathalyzer machines prior to the law’s
enactment.
In making his argument before Dickey, Homeffer said the
new DUI law required the state Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Services to hold public hearings and prepare
regulations for.administering breath teats.
However, no hearings were held and no guidelines issued
until Dec. 15 when emergency rules were adopted, Homeffer
said.
Dickey "has been ruminating over my motion since I filed it
about two weeks ago,” Homeffer said. "I'm hoping w ell get a
ruling by Monday. But," he added, "he has been known to take
up to nine months to rule on something like this."
(
FIREFIGHTERS BATHE BRUSH FIR E
Forest rangers and firefighters from Seminole County,
Casselberry and Winter Springs fought a bnuh Ore in Lake
Avenue, Winter Springs, Wetaeeday morning.
The fire, which Investigated think may have been
deliberately started, burned 10 acres of brush as it was fanned
by erratic winds which sprang up around 11 a.m .
It took over an hour to extlnqulah the blase.
Ringers, using tractors to build Are breaks, and firefighters
stopped the dam es tram racing up a ridge and threatening a
new house
POT FARMER CONVICTED
A former worker at tbe Central Florida Zoo who w u
arrested in s pot field near the zoo has b eta convicted of
possession of m arijuana.
,
But similar charges against a 24-year-old woman arrested
after a raid on her home In which police found 9161,000 worth of
marijuana were dropped because police had illegally searched

her house.
In the case against the former zoo worker, Jesse Dwighl
Mitchell of 1335 Elliot Ave., Sanford, s six-woman Jury found
him guilty Wednesday of possession of more than 20 gram s ol
m arijuana.
He w u arrested September 20 in a wooded area next to the
zoo near Sanford, where about 30 marijuana plants up to six
feet tall were found growing. Mitchell denied any knowledge ol
the Illegal plants and testified Wednesday that he usually
placed his bike near the woods and would walk through the
dense fields. He said he had wandered off the path and had
become lost. Police, however, claimed the plants were his and
he had been looking after them.
Mitchell w u convicted of burglary in 1976 and was serving
10 y e a n probation at the tim e of his arrest.
A sentencing date has not been set.
E arlier Wednesday, Judge Joseph S. Davis Jr. ruled that
police Illegally searched the residence of lisa Darlene Eaddj
who w u living m ar Lake Howell High School when she wai
“ Tested by Seminole County Drug Task Force agents on Sept
29.
Agents said they u w m arijuana plants growing near thi
house, and could be seen from the street. But that was noi
sufficient reason for police to enter the house whereTnon
m arijuana w u found, Davis ruled.
Assistant State attorney Steve Plotnlck said that without th&lt;
evidence from inside the house there could be no case.
’T h e lew provides great protection for people’s homes,'
Plotnlck said. "The bottom line is that the law says that somi
guilty people will go free rather than relax those stringen
standards.”
A M TAKEN WHILE MAN SLEEPS
J a m a William FUulnuiiuos fell asleep for an hour and i
h a lfto hU room at the. Fountain Lodge motel in Sanford o&lt;
Wednesday afternoon and when he woke up he found th at hi
wallet containing $2,000 had been taken.
He told Seminole County ta e riffs deputies that he suspect ei
a m an called Scott McCormick of Albany, New York, who hai
been In the room with him.
No arrests have been m ade in the case.

�E vening H era ld , Senlord, FI.

Sunday, Jen. 2), 1?BJ— JA

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Temlk's Maker Disputes
Federal Residue Claim
TALLAHASSEE &lt;U P I)—The m anufacturer of
Temik says numerous tests found no traces of the
pesticide in the groundwater of a remote Hillsborough
County area where a disputed federal study pur­
portedly found a lingering Temik residue.
The stale Department of Environmental Regulation
said Friday it plans to conduct its own tests at the site
and has asked the federal Environmental Protection
Agency to clarify whether it stands by its 1980 study or
not.
State officials emphasized that even if the federal
findings were valid, there has been no evidence found
to suggest a health problem exists in the area.

Hastings Prosecution Ends
MIAMI (UPI (-Prosecutors are wrapping up their
bribery conspiracy case against U.S. District Judge
Alcee Hastings, but concede the evidence is almost
wholly circumstantial.
Justice Department attorneys concluded their case
at today's half-day session.
Hastings, 46, is conducting his own defense of the
bribery conspiracy and obstruction of justice charges
against him, the first-ever criminal prosecution of a
silting federal judge. He is scheduled to begin his
defense Monday.
An Altamonte Springs native, Hastings is accused by
the government of conspiring with Washington, D.C.,
attorney William A. Borders Jr., a longtime friend, to
solicit a $150,000 bribe from two racketeers convicted
in Hastings’ court. Borders was convicted of briberyconspiracy charges last sum m er as a result of the
FBI’s undercover investigation of the two men and
sentenced to five years in prison. An appeal is pending.

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Jaruzelskl Calls For End
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foreign “ food blackmail" and called for increases in
agricultural production to avert economic and social
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Jaruzclski did not mention the American sanctions
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OPEC Fights For Survival
GENEVA, Switzerland (U P I)-O P E C oil ministers
prepared today for a crucial meeting seen as a lastditch attempt to enforce production quotas to prop up
prices and avert a collapse of the oil cartel.
Effects of OPEC disunity could Include a price war
that would send the price of oil plummeting and
possibly spark a world banking crisis, they said.
Yamani reportedly is arguing a price collapse would
endanger the entire world banking system, because
many oil-producing nations like Mexico and Nigeria
desperately need high oil revenue to nvold defaulting
on loans.

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Rebate

Oviedo Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m., Town House
Restaurant.
. Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 a.m., Big Cypress.
Sanford Toastmasters, 7:18 non. Sanford Airport

Krr&gt;a&lt;t ■ S ale P rice 1 0 . 9 7 j
le s t F a c to ry B a b o ta - 3 , 0 0 j

Seminole League of Civic Associations, 7:30 p.m.
Westmont* Civic Ccnler, Spring Oaks Boulevard,
Altamonte Springs.
League ol Women Voters of Seminole County, 8-10
p.m., wine and cheese party, 909 Spring Valley Road,
Spring Valley.

t o o * N e t C o il
A lta i R a b a t#

7 .9 7 !
WITH COUPON

Lake Mary Rotary Club, 8 a .m , lak e Mary High

PRICE AFTER REBATE

PRICE
AFTER
REBATE. 7I . 9 7
W a k e ‘N W arn II*
Fire and smoke d e ­
tector for less.

TUESDAY, JANUARY »
Historic
Longwood Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m .,
Ixmgwood Hotel, County Road 426.
THURSDAY, JANUARY n
Quilt Guild meeting, 7:30 p.m., Patchwork Cottage,
222 E. First St., Sanford.
Seminole Rebekah Lodge 43, 8 p.m., Odd Fellows
Hall, 107li Magnolia Ave., Sanford.
Greater Seminole Toaitm istreas Club, 7:30 p.m.,
G reater Seminole Chamber of Commerce, Maitland
Avenue, Altamonte Springs.

Tour Net
Cost Alter
Factory
Rebate

B a b a U U m X M Io
MW| SMpiAotton

R e sta u ra n t.

2 F la s h lig h ts

Alkalite* flash­
light with blinker
signal. Plastic
case. Pkg. of 2.

1 G ood tr»u Jart )J, 191J

MT. DORA
ITG O lO E N TRIANGLE
S H O E IN G CENTER

WEST ORLANDO
21SS A f ST COLONIAL
NEAR TE IA S AVE

KISSIMMEE

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SANFORD

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NORTH CITRUS BLVO
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S E. ORLANDO

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AJRPORT BiVO

1201 SOUTH
AOOOLANOBLVO

M lA AA SS E i ROAD
AT SILVER STAR ROAP

S. ORLANDO

CASSELBERRY

TITS S ORANGE BIO S
TRAM. AT SANO LAKE RO

U S HWY &lt;7 9 2 NEXT
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�Evening Herald
(U ? P S M l ? » )

300 N. FRENCHAVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 30*322-2611 or 831-9993
S u n d ay , January 23, 1983—4A

Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, $24 00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months.
$30.00; Year. *57.00.

Reining-ln
Mr. Rostov/

By DORIS DIETRICH

Ball chairman Margie Bclne says she expects
the contest to be "lots of fun." But Margie ad­
mits some of the lagging leg contestants are

t

President Reagan was betting on a long shot
when he decided in 1981 to put Eugene V. Kostow
in charge of the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency. Rostow's qualifications were imposing
enough — experience as an arm s negotiator going
back to the .Johnson years — but the same ex­
perience as a Democrat made him a difficult fit in
a new Republican administration.
*'•

Roslow saw eye to eye with Mr. Reagan on the
inadequacies and danger of the SALT II Treaty,
which had proved unacceptable to the U.S.
Senate. Indeed, he had broken with President
Jimmy C arter over SALT II issues. It was Rostow
who suggested that the term Strategic Arms
limitation Talks, which produced the acronym
SALT, be dropped in favor of START, for
Strategic Arms Reduction Talks, better em ­
phasizing the goal the Reagan administration was
bringing to arm s negotiations. Rostow supported
Jdr. Reagan's call for a m ajo r investment in
defense to restore the U.S. deterrent as we en­
tered a new phase of arms negotiations with the
Soviet Union.
| For all that. Rostow is now out, in what appears
in be a general shake-up of the arm s control
gency. The unstated reasons run the gamut from
ecent health problems limiting Rostow's acivities, to a Democratic charge that he is being
: acrifici'd to satisfy Senate conservatives who
lave been suspicious of him all along.
TTie stagecraft evident in the removal of Rostow
&lt;uggests to us that he is the victim of a problem
i ot unlike the one that led to Alexander Haig’s
departure as secretary of sta te last June. Hen.
laig was demanding a looser rein in making
wlicy than Mr. Reagan could afford to give him,
md the sam e appears to be the case with Rostow.
In announcing his replacem ent, the adninistration wbnt out of its way ,to reassert that
he president is in charge of arm s control policy,
ind the director of the arms control agency serves
indcr the guidance of the secretary of state. In
&gt;thcr words, Mr. Reagan and Secretary George
&gt;hultz a re taking charge as arm s negotiations
nove toward center stage in U.S.-Soviet relations.
\enncth Adelman, nominated to succeed Rostow,
knows exactly where he stands.
■ 'Ibere is another reason why the shake-up
keems designed to cure a personality problem
rather than change the style or direction of arm s
negotiations. The administration also made a
point of announcing that our two chief arm s
negotiators — Edward Rowny, at the START
talks, and Paul Nitze, conducting the negotiations
on medium-range missiles in Europe, will remain
on the job.
The adm inistration's vote of confidence in these
able negotiators, and the clarification of Mr.
Reagan’s direct link with arm s control policy,
should help Vice President George Bush in his
forthcoming mission to W estern Europe. Among
other things, his swing through seven countries is
aimed a t convincing our allies that the United
States is as interested as they are in seeking
progress in arm s negotiations, and that there is
more than rhetoric in Mr. R eagan’s stated goal of
achieving an actual reduction in nuclear arm s.
Europeans are said to be impatient for a U.S.
response to the "peace offensive” by the new
Soviet leader Yuri Andropov. He is trying to
convince Western Europe that arm s reductions
would be easy if only the Americans were not so
warlike. Inasmuch as the Europeans should know
better than to buy that line, it's disappointing that
Bush’s trip is necessary.

BERRY'S WORLD

A woman's legs are gawked at, talked about,
constructively or cruelly evaluated, flaunted if
they arc slim and shapely and covered up if they
don't measure up.
Men have scrutinized, surveyed and critiqued
woman’s gams since centuries before the Year I.
Hut I seriously doubt that many women would
give a second look to a man's knees, joints and
calf unless they are part of the complete
physique. Don't overlook charm and sparkling
eyes.
We'll wait and sec.
The Sanford Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi will
lie conducting a I&gt;egs Contest in conjunction with
the Valentine Charity Ball Saturday, Feb. 12, at
the Sanford Civic Center. Ball proceeds will
benefit Seminole Mutual Concert Association.

leery about publicly displaying their limbs.
The contestants are men.
The idea when the contest was bom was for
businesses and organizations to sponsor a
contestant which ball revelers will vote on Feb.
12. But not too many men are willing to show
their legs — even for the concert association.
Now, the women can whistle —or hiss — at lots
of legs at the ball.
To date, according to Margie, Sanford Mayor
Ixe P. Moorp and Delbert Abney will represent
the Sunniland Corporation in the contest.
Seminole County Sheriff's Department’s can­
didate is Sheriff John Polk with Phil Roche,
manager of I/&gt;ssing Transfer, the choice of
Sanford Kiwanis Club.
And if that isn’t enough, .Seminole county
school superintendent Bob Hughes will be
sponsored by Seminole Education Association.
John Reichert, assistant principal of l-ikc

Mary High School, will show his legs for the
concert association.
Ricky Byrd, service consultant, will represent
Sanford Heating and Air Conditioning.
The cafeteria at Central Florida Regional
Hospital is one of the most popular spots in the
facility these days. A large board is on display
featuring 39 sets of legs belonging to CFRH
employees and the medical staff.
The CFRH Employees Activities Committee is
sponsoring a candidate in the contest. But they
are holding their own contest. Employees have
the options of voting for their favorite candidate
by Monday.
Two questions will surely be raised at the ball
by master of ceremonies Harry Cup, talk show
host. Who will be the Queen of Hearts among the
Valentine Girls, and who will get the most votes
for Mr. I.egs?

JULIAN BOND

RUSTY BROWN

Let
Brutes
Stay Here

Manners
Are Back,
Thank You
I'm Klad I've lived long enough (o ex­
perience a cycle.
They tell us Ihe age of manners — aban­
doned with scorn during the '60s and 70s —
lias returned. I couldn't be more pleased.
When I was a kid, my mother used to
always say, ‘Now, mind your p's and q's." I
minded them and her, too. But that type of
behavior became almost obsolete.
To this day, I don't know what the letters
"p " and "q" stand for. If they meant
remembering to thank your chum's mother
for inviting you over to play and not eating
cookies in their living room, I adhered to
them.
In time, I took p's and q's to mean not being
rude and asking things, like, "Does your
mother dye her h air?" or lying across the
dinner table or waving a fork while talking.
I alter, I learned that mannerly people knew
how to answer formal wedding invitations,
write sympathy notes on plain white paper
and send thank you’s for gifts and dinner
parties.
But p's and q's weren't limited to table
etiquette and thank you notes. The major
thrust was how to be considerate, respectful
and avoid hurting another’s feelings —evpn if
it meant swallowing a snide remark or not
telling the unvarnished truth when a friend
asked for an opinion.
Manners made living easier and gave us a
feeling of security in dealing with others. We
each knew what was expected of us. •
However, many of the niceties and the
orderliness went out when the "m e"
generalton came In. Manners were con­
sidered fakery and etiquette and imposition
incompatible with naturalness and honesty. It
became "in" to be natural In dress, eating
habits, posture and conversation.
Contempt for conformity often replaced
courtesy and self-preoccupation replaced
politeness and consideration.
Many adults, myself included, had dif­
ficulty enduring the new disdain. Once, when
I complained about the lack of thank you's, I
was told, “It is hypocritical for the giver to
expect anything in return. If you do, that is
your problem."
I ignored it when people I knew well
commandeered my bread and butter plate
and leaned their knife against it, Instead of
across the rim, but I c-ouldn't help shuddering
at teelh-picking in public.
Now. hurrah! The counter-revolution has
begun. Manners are staging a comeback. An
old pattern is being recycled.
At the forefront of the movement is
Washington Post writer Judith Marlin, author
of the immensely popular syndicated column
"M iss M anners." She opposes to tal
naturalness, saying, "Two-year-olds eat
naturally, and that's not polite."
I love her for declaring that the main
techniques of child-rearing arc "one,
example, and two, nagging. It's an un­
beatable combination."
Courses in etiquette for youngsters as
young as 5 are cropping up all around the
country.
There are even workshops (or business
executives. A woman who teaches "Good
Taste in Business" claims her course spares
execs from bungling opportunities for suc­
cess, such as the man who lost a *300,000 job
offer because he ordered his turbot mediumrare.

JEFFREY HART

Sex: A Sad Story
No doubt we are not going back to the
sexual roles oi the 1950's, which, as I was
reminded when doing the research for my
new book on that decade, contained some
pretty strange things.
Nevertheless, th e changes that have
recently taken place in the role of women in
our society have introduced a whole new set
of problems of their own.
A couple of years ago, Gloria Steinetn, a
pioneer leader of the radical feminists, mad*
a speech in which she reflected thus: "What
has happened,” she said, "is that we arc
becoming the men we once wanted to
m arry."
There's a good deal of truth and not a little
sadness in this reflection, as I set it borne oat,
for example, in my female college students.
They tend to get caught in a tough paradox.
On the one hand, they view Ihe world of
business and the professions as a cruel and
male-dominated part of society, and they
wish to liberate men from it. But in striving to
enter it, these young women become —
necessarily — pretty tough and competitive
themselves. On the whole, ambitious female
students are much more ferocious in the
pursuit of grades than are their male coun­
terparts, and from all reports they are
tigresses on the corporate ladder and in the
professions.
Then they face the problem of having
children. Some decide to forego a family In
the name of a career, not a particularly heart­
warming prospect. But, if they decide to have
children, many demand the right to devote a
minimum of attention to the household, again
in the name of career success. As Ms.
Stelnem remarked, they "are becoming the
men we once wanted to marry."
Midge Decter, that astute First lady of neo­
conservatism, recently had some reflections
on all of this in The American Spectator.
"The men that 'we' once wanted to marry,"
she writes, "have responded to this assault on
th e ir worldly d ire c te d masculine untenderness in one of two ways - and in many,
many cases in both ways simultaneously.
"First, they have withdrawn from the
rigors of their allegedly no-longer-wanted and

no-longer-needed performances as successful
providers and protectors of the household.
Female-headed households have become
probably the most active growth stock on the
American market of social phenomena.
‘Meanwhile, men have begun to display an
unprecedented degree of preoccupation with
what were once by and large held to be
feminine concerns: such as the care,
beautification, and ornamentation (Including
perfuming) of their bodies; the state of their
em otions, finely celeb rated and openly
discussed; and the quality of their sex lives.
"A happy outcome, from the point of view
of those wishing to eradicate distinctions
between the sexes. But it somehow docs not
seem beside the point to ask, if this is a
condition to be desired, how come there is so
much resentment and discontent on the faces
and in the voices of both sexes?"
Midge Decter notes that many men have
simply given in and allowed themselves to be
defined by liberated women, whether wives,
girlfriends, professional colleagues, or
daughters. She might have turned Stcincm's
epigram around and said: "The men are
becoming the women they wanted to marry."
Not surprisingly, one detects rumblings of
revolt, since, after all, the differences bet­
ween the sexes has always been the focus of
Interest and excitement.
Hence the elegiac popularity of figures like
Humphrey Bogart, Gary Copper, and John
Wayne. It seems to me no small part of the
widespread contempt in which Jimmy Carter
was held that he was perceived as dominated
and manipulated by his powerful wife.
Hence, too, the popularity of books like
"Real Men Don’t Eat Quiche."
Most of us do not really recognize in Phil
Donahue or Robert Bedford plausible
alternatives to Bogart or Cooper. Hence, the
popularity &lt;5f movies celebrating traditional
maleness, such as "An Officer and a Gen­
tleman," "Breaker Morant," and "Chariots
of Fire."
Something at least partly traditional is
stirring in the culture, and it’s about time.

The United States wants Dennis Brutes to
leave.
Dennis Brutes isn’t one of those recently
discovered Nazis who slipped into the United
States after World War II with a little help
from pro-Nazi friends in the State Depart­
ment.
And he isn't any other kind of criminal who
committed a crime he didn't report when he
entered the land of the brave and the home of
the free.
But the United States still wants him to
leave. Luckily for Brutes, the United States
doesn't want him to go home.
They just want him to leave here.
Home for Brutes is actually two countries
— the Republic of South Africa and the twoyear-old nation of Zimbabwe.
Brutes doesn't want to go to either place,
and has told American authorities at the State
Department's Bureau of Human Rights and
Humanitarian Affairs that he fears for his life
should he return to his parents' homeland —
South Africa — or Zimbabwe.
And the United States agrees. But it wants
him to leave here nonetheless.
Dennis Brutes, who teaches at Nor­
thwestern University in suburban Chicago,
was bom in what was Southern Rhodesia to
South African parents but lived in South
Africa itself until 1966. (It is fiction to say that
Brutes or his parents are citizens of South
Africa; no black person has citizenship rights
in the apartheid state. None can vote and none
can live, without special permission, on the
majority of South African soil which is
reserved for whites.)
Brutes story is as complicated as Africa's
modem history. He left South Africa in 1966
under a British passport — a document
regularly available to many of the empire's
former colonial subjects until Jan. 1, 1963,
when Britain's new nationality act, creating
three categories of British subjects, went into
effect.
But Brutes' United Kingdom passport was
good in 1966 and was reissued 10 years later,
and in 1978, 1979 and 1980.
In 1980, however, Southern Rhodesia ceased
to exist. It became Zimbabwe, and the British
counsel In Chicago told Brdtes that his UK
passport would not be renewed. He was ad­
vised to seek a passport from the new nation
of Zimbabwe, which he did.
In a rare burst of candor, the chief of the
asylum division of the State Department's
human rights bureau, Lawrence Arthur,
agreed with Brutes' fear of life and limb
should he be reqtiired to return to South
Africa or Zimbabwe. Arthur advised the
immigration court that will decide Dennis
Brutes' fate that Brutes has a well-founded
fear of persecution in South Africa.
"We would not recommend that he be
returned to Zimbabwe," wrote Arthur, noting
that Brutes cited the assassination, allegedly
by South African agents, of an official of the
African National Congress in Zimbabwe. •
Other supporters of Professor Brutes had
detailed repeated South African invasions of
each of the states surrounding the whiteruled state, and expressed fear that his
criticism of apartheid had marked him if he
returns to the land of his birth.
But Lawrence Arthur offers the im­
migration court, and Dennis Brutes, another
slightly less unattractive alternative — Great
Britain.

JACK ANDttSON

Freeing Prisoner Sign From Andropov?

,

•

H is m o m and dad are re a lly n e a t! No lorm o t
b e h a vio r is considered u n a c c e p ta b le '''

WASHINGTON - President Reagan has
said he is waiting for a positive sign from Yuri
Andropov before be will consider the Soviet
lead er's ex p ressed hopes for friendlier
relations more than just empty rhetoric.
Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan or a
relaxation of the repression in Poland is
probably too much to expect. But there is a
simple act of decency Andropov could make
that would demonstrate his good intentions—
and would cost him nothing.
* He could let Anatoly Shcharansky go.
Shcharansky Is the 35-year-old "refusenik"
who angered the Kremlin by championing the
cause of Soviet Jew s who want to emigrate to
Israel. In 1977 he was sentenced to 13 years in
prison for treason.
.
Even In the depths ot the Gulsg,
Shcharansky has refused to surrender. He is
engaged in a hunger strike as a desperate,
dramatic protest. His jailers have been forcefeeding him, but his health is reportedly
precarious.
The men in the Kremlin would dearly love
to have the world forget Shcharansky. But
this will not happen. Just this week.

Washington Jews staged a symbolic one-day
hunger strike and mounted a vigil near the
Soviet Embassy to m ark Shcharansky's 35th
birthday.
The single greatest obstacle to the world's
forgetfulness Is Shcharansky's wife, Avital.
Since she was forced to leave Russia the day
after their marriage in 1974, she has traveled
the world appealing for help In winning her
husband's release.
Last month, she m et with senior White
House advisers, who promised her the
president's support. Before she went to the
White House, she spoke at length with my
associate, Indy Badhwar.
Simply dressed, a Russian peasant shawl
wrapped around her head, Mrs. Shcharansky
spoke softly, but with deep emotion.
Asked bow it felt to be the wife of a symbol,
•he replied: "For me he is not a symbol. Ha la
my husband. We are terribly suffering.
Everything that we wanted (w u) just to be
together like a whole, normal family, to be in
Israel, in a place where we both want to go.
We are separated He Is persecuted. He Is
tortured."

Her last direct word from her husband was
in a letter smuggled out of his prison cell
three years ago. "I can hear his voice and his
voice is strong," she said. "Through this
letter I feel he Is not broken by spirit. But I'm
very worried about his condition now."
Until recently, she w u able to maintain
some contact with her husband through his
mother, Ida Migrom, who w u allowed to visit
him once every six months. He w u also
allowed to write to his mother once a month.
But both these privileges have been
suspended since he began his hunger strike
last Yam Kippur.
"He absolutely can't be afraid," Mrs.
Shcharansky said. "He is very fre e . . . They
can do what they want with him, but they
c a n t break his spirit."
, Sources in th e White House say
Shcharansky's release would be taken u a
signal that Andropov is serious in his ex­
pressed hopes for a relaxation of tension
between East and West.
■ It would be a bold gesture for Andropov —
perhaps too bold for him to make until he has

consolidated his power in Ihe Kremlin.
And it would be only a first step. There an
still about 10,000 Soviet Jews who have ap
plied for exit visas and have been refused
Since October 1979, when emigration reachec
its peak of 4,746 the number of Jews allowet
to leave the Soviet Union h u filler
drastically. In 1900, only 1,424 were permlttei
to emigrate; in 1961 the total w u 311; l u
year, only 166.
There Is no telling what would happen ll
Andropov chooses to let Shcharansky go. Hi
undoubtedly realizes that he can't lei
Shcharansky alone em ig rate. An em
barrassment to the Kremlin even in prison
Shcharansky would be even m on
troublesome outside Russia U the othei
refusenik’s weren’t allowed to leave alao.
And that might well open the floodgates
Official estimates put the number of Soviet
Jews at 1.8 million; my sources say the trw
figure is probably close to 2.5 million. Giver
the Kremlin’s long history of Jewish per
secution, many — perhaps most — of thes4
Soviet Jews would leap at the chance U
emigrate.

.1

f

�• i/

OPINION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

OUR READERS WRITE

H t r a ld P h o to Oy T o m V ln t o n t

Bikes A t S anford M id d le

O f t e n S t o le n

Mom Wants To Stop
Theft Of Bicycles
To whomever has had a bike stolen
from Sanford Middle School, 1 would
like to talk to you! Call 322-2766.
How long are we going to support the
thieves in this community?
I don't know about you, but I'm mad
and I would like very much to do
something about it.
Can you afford to keep buying bikes
for your kids to go to school on?
1 saw three kids in the office and
know of five or more who have lost
bikes from that school this year!
If you could have seen their eyes full
of tears, you'd want to do something.
What would you do if something you
valued very much was stolen from you?

Sunday, Jan. J3,1«3—SA

Demos Face Double Drowning Risk?
By DAVID Y. DENHOLM
When I was a young man I put in
many summers as a lifeguard. Those
who haven’t been through it might be
interested to learn that most of a
lifeguard's training consists of learning
how to keep from becoming Ihc victim
of the person you are trying to save.
A double drowning of both the victim
and Ihe lifesaver is Ihe biggest single
threat to Job tenure for a lifeguard.
With this in mind, it might be a good
idea for the Democratic Party lo get on
down to ihe YMCA for a few lessons in
lifesaving.
The American union movement lias
been having increasing trouble keeping
its head above water. Ever since 1955,
union membership as a percentage of
the private sector work force, lias been
declining. Unions are losing the
majority of NRB elections and workers
arc voting in record numbers lo
decertify unions. Despite union political
muscle, no major piece of new pro­
union legislation has been approved by
Congress in recent years.
Now as the unions go down for the
second or third time — I've lost count —
they have devised a plan to save
themselves by helping the Democratic
Party pick a presidential candidate for
1984. For the union movement, it’s a

calculated risk. If they name the
candidate and the candidate wins, the
unions win big. If the candidate loses,
well, the unions didn’t have much to
lose anyway.
The union plan goes something like
this. They will meet in December of
1963 to select a Democratic Partycandidate for President and give that
candidate support in obtaining the
nomination of the Democratic Parly.
Given the considerable impact that
union support might have within the
ra th e r ‘ lim ited context of the
D em ocratic
P a rty
presidential
nominee selection process, the unions
might just be able to pull off the first
part of the plan. But, then what?
Any nominee selected in such a
manner would find himself cast as the
leading defender of, and apologist for,
the incredible array of special powers
and privileges which the unions have
acquired over the years.
Can you imagine how such a can­
didate would respond to questions about
union power at a press conference?
Q. Mr. Candidate, under present
federal law unions arc exempt from
prosecution for crimes of extortion so
long as the objective of the extortion is
a "legitimate" union goal. Do you
favor continuation .i 'his special

exemption?
'
Q. Mr. Candidate, 20 stales have
exercised their right under Section H
ib) of the National ta b o r Relations Act
to pass laws protecting workers from
being forced to support a union as a
condition of employment. The unions,
which support you, advocate repeal of
Section 11 (b). This would repeal these
right-to-work laws. Would you support
repeal of Section 11 (b&gt;?
Q. Mr. Candidate, according lo
conservative e stim a te s the DavisBacon Act, under which the Depart­
ment of Iabor sets wages on federallyfinanced construction projects, causes
the waste of about $2.3 billion per year
in taxes. The only beneficiaries of the
Davis-Bacon Act arc the unions which
support you. How do you stand on
repeal of the Davis-Bacon Act?
Q. Mr. C andidate, unions are
specifically exempted from coverage
by the nation's anti-trust laws. Many
people believe that this exemption has
allowed them to become larger and
more powerful then they ought lo be.
How do you stand on extending the anti­
trust laws to union activity?
Q. Mr. Candidate, for years now the
unions have advocated a federal taw to

preempt state law on public em­
ployment. The law supported by the
unions would legalize strikes by public
employee unions. How do you stand on
legalizing strikes against government?
Q. Mr. Candidate, ta n e Kirkland, Ihe
president of the AFDCIO. has said that
the unions would organize street riots if
that was what it took to accomplish
their goals. How do you feel about tin1
use of organized violence as a means of
accom plishing social and political
goals?
This list could be virtually endless
because the list of special privileges
and legal immunities for unions is
virtually endless. It is inconceivable
that any candidate who espoused these'
positions could be elected by a majority
of the, American public.
The Democratic Party may need and
want the money and manpower the
union movement has to offer, but unless
it can figure out how to keep the unions
from taking it down with them, ihc
headlines the day after the election in
1984 will report the largest "double
drowning" In history.
David Y. Denholm is president ol the
Publie Sendee Research Council, a
national citizens' lobby roneemed with
publie lector union power.

The kids can't help themselves so I'm
more than willing with your help to
please stop this from happening to
anymore kids.
First we the parents can get the
school to improve on a location with a
higher fence, and maybe someone to
look out for the bikes on different oc­
casions or to at least ask questions
when someone is there unlocking a bike
before school is out.
If the school had to replace the bike
stolen, do you think something would be
done before now? My child is worth it!
Diane Mctallan
Sanford

Theft Of Child s
Presents Upsetting
I would like to address this letter to
the person or persons who thoughtlessly
Invaded our yard the week of January
10, 1983, in which our 3-year-old’s
Christmas presents, a new red metal
fire chief’s car and red 16 inch AMF
tricycle were stolen.
Yes, she Is heartbroken and wants to
know why someone would take her new
toys.
Worse yet she wonders if Santa
decided she has been a bad girl and has
taken back her new toys. It's hard to
be parents of small children and teach
them the values of honesty, respect and
caring of other people's belongings and
property when people turn around and
either take or steal from them.
For a threc-year-old does not un­
derstand the word or phrase stolen or
taken. This Is not an easy thing to ex­
plain to a small child when jrou yourself
as a parent or aa an adult really cannot
understand the reason behind this type
of theft.
1 really am shocked to think that

someone would comedown to the level
of stealing children's toys in the
privacy and safety of their own fenced
in back yard.
It's most disturbing to think in a
small community minded town of
Sanford we cannot let our small
children play outside without cause for
concern and fear that the next time it
may not be the toy car or trike but
worse yet the child that rides it may be
taken or harmed.
I know there arc more serious crimes
committed everyday, but it tends to
follow true to form that the small
crimes lead to bigger and more serious
ones. I honestly hope the person who did
this to our daughter reads this letter
and realizes who he really has hurt.
Ask yourself: Was it really worth
hurting a 3-year-old's Joy of riding her
new Christmas toys she loved so
dearly? We know how much It hurls
her, because she tells us everyday.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bill Crapps

H o m e o w n e rs S u ffe r
W ith Pit Sm ells
This letter will state the point of view
of a large segment of Hidden Lake,
Sanford, homeowners, referring to a
series of unbiased articles by Evening
Herald reporter Donna Estes published
recently in your newspaper concerning
a stench eminating from a pit west of
Art Lane in an unincorporated area of
Seminole County, owned by Ralph H.
Peacock, his wife, Violet, and nephew,
Jam es Durs Jr.
The pit i s ‘being filled with waste
material from the buildings of Cardinal
Industries, Inc., and from a roof
building company. This material Is
mostly man made and Is known to have
a large content of chemicals In its
manufacture. When allowed to dlsintegate In stagnant water in the pit,

fumes and gases are emitted which we
contend are hazardous to our health;
causing nausea, headaches, coughing
and loss of sleep.
We respectfully differ with the
opinions of several of our city, county
and state officials who have indicated
that the stink presents no health
hazard.
Must there be the presence of a lifeth reaten in g ailm ent before foul­
smelling, dehabllltatlng fumes are
recognized as health hazards?
Thus far, admittedly, the pit is being
filled for free; while the families of over
fifty homeowners pay with prolonged
suffering.
J. George Janes
Hidden Lake homeowner

Blood Bank Grateful
The first week in January (he Central seven Central Florida counties.
We had to nuke a major media ap­
Florida Blood Bank experienced an
unexpected critical shortage of 0 and B peal as a last resort lo avoid a crisis.
types of blood despite Ihe fact we had a The response from volunteer blood
great response from volunteer blood donors and the media helped us through
donors during the month of December. dangerously low blood supplies. On
Even with the best planning one cannot belialf of Ihc Central Florida lilnod
accurately predict how much blood will Bank, and the patients we serve, wo
be required lo ensure coverage of would like to express our appreciation
patients' needs. During the New Year's to the media and our heartfelt gratitude
weekend, se v e ra l patients used to each person who rolled up their
unusually large amounts of 0 and B sleeve to give, so others might live.
types of blood. In addition, we need
Edward 0 . Canapproximately 250 pints on an average
Executive Director
dally basis to supply patients located in
Central Florida Blood Bank
21 hospitals and four dialysis centers in

Enterprise News Service
The m ore things change} the m ore they stay the same

Grandparents Have Rights To Kids
Q. My &gt;oa and his wife are getting
divorced alter 11 years ol marriage.
Unfortunately it has been a sad and
bitter battle and they are now engaged
in a custody lig h t They have two
children who 1 love dearly, and I am
(earful that I may be deprived ol the joy
ol seeing them. Do grandparents have
any right at all?
A. You are experiencing one of the
most disturbing and painful realities of
modem life. With so many m arriages
ending in divorce, more and more
grandparents are facing the prospect of
losing tiieir grandchildren. The special
bond betw een g ran d p aren ts a n d ,
grandchildren has alw ays been
celebrated in this nation, but the issue
of grandparent visitation rights is only
now emerging as an important aspect
of family law.
To answer your question directly,
grandparents do have rights, but the
extent of them is unclear. Most states
have laws allowing grandparents to
petition in court for visitation riglits,
but those laws are not uniform and one
cannot be certain whal remedies will be

v Growing
Older
•

U.S. Rep.
Claude Pepper

parents and children.
I suggest you contact GrandparentsChildren’s Rights, Inc., 5728 Bayonne
Ave., Ilaslett, Mich. 48840, and Foun­
dation for Grandparenting, 10 West
Hyatt Ave., Mount Kisco, N.Y. 10549 for
support and information.

Fortunately, a growing awareness of
this potentially tragic problem has led
to the formation of organizations to
assist grandparents and to a deter­
mination on the part of many national
leaders lo bring more compassion and
uniformity to this delicate area of the
law.

Q. I've been retired lor several years
and drawing an adequate pension from
my former employer. I recently applied
(or a part-time position in specialized
tool and die — similar to my old job —
that calls for only about 45 hours a
month. The company advertising the
position Is affiliated with my old em­
ployer. The personnel director said he
wanted to hire me but that my pension
benefits would be suspended 111 worked
over 40 hours per month (or this em­
ployer. What’s this all about?

A recent hearing of the Human
Services Subcommittee of our Aging
Committee highlighted the problems
faced by grandparents cut off from
their grandchildren. It was clear from
the testimony of grandparents and
psychiatrists that the emotional bond
between g ran d p aren ts and grand­
children Is second only to that between

A. The Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) is a
federal law that protects employees
covered by private pension ond welfare
benefit plans. ERISA sets certain
minimum standards that pension plans
must satisfy on such m atters as em­
ployee eligibility, vesting, funding,
fiduciary responsibility, and reporting

available when ^grandparent is denied
access by a parent or guardian.

and disclosure.
ERISA docs nol regulate the amount
one may earn while receiving pension
benefits, nor d o o it set the level of
benefits. But it does permit a pension
plan to suspend the payment of normal
retirement benefits to a retiree if he
returns to work for more than 40'hours
per month for an employer who
maintains the plan through which he is
receiving his pension paym ents.
Benefits may also be suspended if the
retiree returns to any work for more
than 40 hours per month in the same
industry, the same trade and the same
geographical area covered by the plan
when benefits began.
It is important lo note that 40 hours is
a minimum I.abor D epartm ent
guideline, and plans may allow an
employed retiree to work more than 40
hours in a month without suspending
his benefits. I would suggest you talk to
your prospective employer and ihe
administrator of your pension plan io
see
whether
som e
equitable
arrangement could be worked out so
you could continue to receive all or a
portion of your monthly retirement
benefit during your re-employmenl.

MX Missile Meaning Obscured
By M. STANTON EVANS
The debate about the MX missile and
its "basing mode" is so bogged down in
technical jargon that the real
significance of the issue has been ob­
scured.
Critics of the MX say the demand for
this extrapowerf ul new missile and new
methods of concealing it proves a
"military-industrial complex" calls the
tunc in national affairs. Ih e truth is just
the opposite. The need for the MX
arises, not from American muscleflexing, but from woeful weakness. We
have dug ourselves into a military hole
Iron) which, it is hoped, this weapon can
extract us.
For the past 20 years, with relatively k

4

9

little fanfare, the United Slates has
pursued a course of military backdown.
We have dismantled intermediaterange missiles in Europe, Junked
several thousand strategic aircraft, cut
back our air defenses, reduced our
number of long-range missiles, and
refused to develop an antimissile
defense lABM). Wc have not deployed
a new strategic weapon system since
1967.
The theory behind all this was that bypulling back "provocative” weapons
and refusing to protect our cities, we
would show the Soviets how peaceful we
are. This would overcom e th e ir
suspicions of us, and cause (hern lo
follow our example - renouncing
further weapons and leaving their cities

open lo attack. This would produce a
"stable balance of terror," leading lo
peace and more disarmament.
Unfortunately, it didn't work that
way. While we were marking time or
moving backwards, the Soviets were
forging ahead to build their war
machine as rapidly as possible. They
have been working to develop powerful
new missiles, harden their launching
sites, deploy new airplanes, and
develop antimissile defenses - doing
all the things we hoped they wouldn't
do. While we were getting weaker, they
were growing stronger.
As a result of these contrasting
trends, according to recent intelligence
estimates, the Communists can now

knock oul our strategic missiles. Bui
because of their superhardened launch
sites, we can't do the sam e to them. The
MX and its "basing m ode" are efforts
to deal with this problem: The mtlsUr
Is supposed lo be powerful enough to
lake out Soviet missile sites: the
"basing mode" dispute arises because
wc don't have an ABM lo knock down
Soviet missiles, and have lu develop
some way of hiding the MX.
In other words, the drive for ihe MX.
is a result, not of America's yen frit
overpowering m ilitary strength, but »|
our uxrcdiblc binge of self-inflicted
weakness.
*i Mr. M. Stanton Evans is editor ol the
Enterprise News Service i.

--04-—
4i-fc

�AA— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Jan. JJ, m j

Parade Of Homes To Begin On Feb. 5
I*

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Cardinal Crew Installs
53-Unit Modules In Georgia
A five-man crew and the operator of a 50-ton crane
recently “ set" modules for the construction of the
Stillwater Apartments, a 53-unit factory-built multi­
family modular residential complex being developed
by Cardinal Industries of Sanford on l/'afm ore Drive
off of Waters Avenue in Savannah, Ga.
The six-ton modules, produced on a 490-foot
assembly line in Cardinal’s 125,000-square-foot Sanford
plant, arc transported to the job site and placed on prebuill crawl-space foundations at the rate of one every
six minutes.
“The six-sided modules," according to William
Gauchat, Cardinal’s director of construction," are
strong enough to be lifted by the roof alone. This allows
us, says Gauchat, to set the complete project in only a
few days." The individual living units, Gauchat ex­
plains, are set back-to-back and side-by side, resulting
in two Independent walls between each apartment. The
double walls especially the insulated party walls,
provides maximum energy, sound and fire control.
After the modules are “set", little on-site work
remains and the development can be opened months
before a sim ilar project utilizing conventional con­
struction.

Alvarez Named President
Joe A. Alvarez, Jr., formerly vice president of
Central Constructors, Inc., has been promoted to
president of the Altamonte Springs general contracting
and construction management firm.
Alvarez Joined Central Constructors (formerly
Harrison Central Construction Corp.) as vice president
in the Fall of 1982.
Prior to joining Central Constructors, Alvarez, who
lives in Izingwood, was employed by M.R. Harrison
Construction Corp. for nine years. He Joined the Miami
construction firm in 1973 as a project engineer and was
promoted to project manager In 1978. He managed a
number of multi-million dollar projects while there.
Alvarez received his bachelor of science degree in
engineering from the University of South Florida. He is
a Certified General Contractor in the state of Florida
and a licensed real estate salesman.

Spegele Is A Top Dealer
William H. Spegele of
C asselberry has earned
recognition as one of
Chrysler Corporation's top
autom obile
dealership
sales m an ag ers in th e '
nation.
Spegele, employed by
laike Potter Dodge, Inc., in
Winter P ark , w m one at 75
m em bers of Chrysler's
Sales m a n a g e rs Society
Inner Circle group par­
ticipating in a three-day
National Sales Conference
in New Orleans.
As recognition of out­
sta n d in g a c c o m p lish ­
ments, Spegele received a
i t u i i i M e w m ’i i ’ Plflt)ue aml sPecia"y ~
W IL L IA M S I h t . h L h designed gold ring.

Walker To Retire At UCF
LynnW. Walker, the first
and only d irecto r of
libraries at the University
pf Central Florida, will
retire from that post Aug.
31 after more than 30 years
of state service
W alker,
the
third
professional employee to
be hired by the then-new
university, in September
1966, has seen the library
grow to m ore than 400,000
volumes and a current $8
million expansion-reno­
vation that will provide
much needed space for an
e x p a n d in g .s tu d e n t
population and research
activities.
Walker was director of
the engineering
and
physics lib ra ry at the
University or Florida prior
to Joining UCF. He Is a

45% Of Homes In Seminole County

The biggest annual event in the Central Florida housing
industry—the Parade of Homes—will kick off Feb. 5 and will
run through Feb. 20.
This year, 45 percent of the new homes in the 30th annual
parade will be in Central Florida.
Sponsored by the Home Builders Association of Mid-Florida,
the parade offers something for everyone, with new homes in
all s*yles and price ranges. The event traditionally attracts
thousands.
Sixty new homes, ranging in price from $38,000 to $375,000,
will be on display.
"The variety of homes entered this year is enormous," said
Parade of Homes Co-Chairman Bing Hacker. "Every price
range, and every style imaginable will be available. As usual,
the parade entries reflect the best and most innovative that
Central Florida’s Builders have to offer."
Co-Chairman Ron Schwartz agreed that the Central Florida
area, perhaps more than any other region, offers residential
architectural styling of all types.
"We have a lot of young professionals, a lot of retirees, a lot
of middle income people and a lot of people who are very wellto-do," Schwartz said. "Because the population is so diver­
sified, the housing demand is also very diversified."
One major trend that Is reflected in the 1983 parade is a move
toward more multi-family housing. Nearly 40 percent of the
new homes entered are attached, Schwartz said — more than
* ever before in the history of the Mid-Florida Parade.
"Multi-family living is an ideal way to go for many people,"
Schwartz said. "Young couples, retirees and more and more
singles are finding multi-family housing to be ideal for Uicir
needs."
U kc the single family homes in the parade, the multi-family
entries reflect a wide range of prices. The lowest-priced at­
tached entry is a $38,000 condominimuin by Bon-Aire
Development, located in Orlando’s Umontree development.
The highest priced attached home Is Harkins Corporation's
luxurious $160,000 entry in Plantation Oaks.
"With the kind of innovative designs our builders are doing,
you don't sacrifice privacy or space with multi-family," Sch­
wartz said.
But th e m ain stB y of the parade c o n tin u e s to b e the single
family h o m e .
Potential buyers will be able to tour single family homes of
every style and price range — from a $46,000 entry In Sanford
by Residential Communities of America to a $375,000 Winter
Park mansion by Vogel Construction Co. The Vogel home on
Joline Court is expected to attract many visitors. The spec­
tacular 5,200-square-foot home features an entry of Travertine
Marble and accents brass throughout.
All parade entries will be Judged. The homes have been
grouped Into categories according to selling price — seven
categories for single family homes and four for attached units.
Judging teams will be made up of qualified homebuying

D e s ig n e d by th e E v a n s G ro u p , th e th re e -b e d ro o m ,
tw o -b a th B a rc e lo n a is o n e o f fiv e s in g le -fa m ily
h o m e s b e in g o ffe re d a t V is ta H ills by O lln
A m e ric a n o f F lo rid a , In c . T h e B a rc e lo n a w ill be
prospects whose names were submitted by area builders.
The teams from the general public will select two finalists in
each category. The winners will then be selected by
representatives of other Florida Home Builders Associations.
The winners in each category will be announced during the
final weekend of the parade.
A special parade magazine also will be published this year.
The publication will include drawings, descriptions, and
directions to each of the 60 entries. There will also be a large
map of the Greater Orlando area with the home locations
marked.
"There will be a limited number of Parade of Homes
magazines available at each of the parade homes,” Hacker
said. "For those uho don't receive one or want extras, contact
the Home Builders Association at 898-7661."
Participating Builders will be All State Homes, Inc., Area

n ative of Okeechobee,
Florida, and a 1350 Florida
graduate. He subsequently
earned a m aster's degree
in library science from
Florida State University.

Southeast Income Up 7%
4

Southeast Banking Corporation has reported net
income for the year ended Dec. 31 of $52.6 million, a 7
percent Increase over the $49.3 million reported for the
same period a year ago. Per share earnings for 1982
totaled $3.03, a 4 percent decrease from the $3.15
earned In 1981.
Southeast's average number of outstanding common
shares and equivalents was 17.4 million for 1982,
compared with 15.7 million for 1981 which accounts for
__ the year-to-year decrease In 1983 earnings par share.
' The increase in average shares outstanding w u due to
new shares Issued in connection with an acquisition at
the beginning of the 1981 fourth quarter and to dividend
reinvestment, stock purchase and employee related
:stock plans.
Southeast's 1962 year-end results include an after-tax
gain of $3.9 million, or 22 cents per share, from the sale
of an office building in Orlando during the 11C2 third
quarter.
For the fourth quarter of 1982, Southeast had total net
.income of $15.0 million, a 20 percent Increase over the
$12.5 million for the fourth quarter of 1911. On a per
y,hnre basis,. 1982 fourth quarter earnings were 85 cents
;or 16 percent above the 73 cents earned in the fourth
{quarter of 1981.
! At December 31,1982, Southeast’s total assets were
'up 15 ercent to $7.3 billion from $8.5 billion in 1961;
‘total b a n s were up 14 percent to $3.8 billion from $3.1
'billion in 1981; total stockholders' equity was up 11
percent to $430.5 million from $387.8 million in 1911;
and total deposits were up 11 percent to $5.5 billion
‘from $5.0 billion in 1981.

Building Corp., the Babcock Co., Bay Hill Construction Co.,
Bon Aire Development Co., Inc., Brewer Homes, Cameo
Construction, Inc., Cardinal Industries, Inc., Catalina Homes,
Community Development ol Orange County, Complete
Interiors, Inc., l^ r r y Dale Construction, Delco, Inc.,
Demetree Industries, Inc., Environmental Homebuilders,
First Southern Group, Inc., Florida Residential Communities,
Hacker Homes, Hagen Homes, Inc. the Harkins Corp.,
Kingsberry Builders of Florida, Inc., Laurel Homes, Inc.,
Magnolia Service Corp., Maronda Homes, Inc., the Mason
Group, Mason-Cassily of Florida, Inc., H. Miller &amp; Sons, Allan
W. Miller, Olin American Homes, Residential Communities of
America, Rich Realty of Orlando, Rollingwood Homes, Inc.,
Rosewood Builders, Inc., the Hyland Group, Inc., Sabal Point
Properties, Sandpiper Homes, Inc.,T. R. Properties of Winter
Park, Thomas Home Builders, Village Craftsmen, Inc., Vogel
Construction Co. and Wekiva Country Club Villas.

Multi-Family Sales Outpace Single-Family Sales
Multl-Iamily housing In Central Florida is selling nearly
twice as fast as its single-family counterpart, according to a
recent marketing study conducted by Republic Funding
Corporation of Florida (RFC), a multi-faceted real estate
brokerage.
Vtcure* from lh« study show that the area's multi-family
projects have experienced an average monthly sales pace of
five units compared to sales of 3.1 units among single-family
developments, says Jim Williford, RFC's director of
marketing services.
The findings were based on a continuing study of more than
125 residential developments in Orange, Seminole and nor­
thern Osceola counties.
"The pendulum is definitely swinging in favor of multifamily housing-not so much by choice but for economics,"
explains Williford. "The meteroric rise In the cost of new
single-famil/houSing brought about by record level mortgage

Interest rates has priced out a major percentage of the home
buying market. As a result, prosepective buyers have been
forced to look to alternative housing styles such as con­
dominium apartments, townhoines and attuchcd patio homes
it they hope to realize the American dream of home ownership.
The demand lor traditional single-family ownership is there
but the resources are not."
Wifflford adds that Just 10 years ago nearly half of the labor
force could afford to own a home. "But In the past decade the
cost of housing has soared until we've reached the point where
less than 10 percent of the home buying market can afford a
new single-family home at today’s prices," he says. "And
every time prices rise $2,000 another 1-2 percent fall by the
wayside."
The nation's housing experts estimate that more than 25
percent of tile country’s urban population lives in some form of
multi-family housing and that by the year 2000 that figure will

Barnett Posts Record Earnings
Record 1982 earnings of $64.6 million was 12 percent to $3.75 from the $3.36
were reported by Barnett Banks of reported in 1981.
Florida,- Inc.
Net income (after securities tran­
The com pany's income before sactions) was $56.8 million for 1982, an
se c u ritie s transactions increased 42
Increase of 38 percent from $41.2 million
percent (rom $45.5 million in 1981, an­
in 1981.
nounced Charles E. Rice, president and
Barnett's record 1982 performance was
chief executive officer. Because of a 24
prim arily attributable to continuing
percent Increase tn outstanding shares,
earning-asset growth and a higher net
prim ary earnings per share Increased 15
yield on earning assets, Rice said.
percent to $3.94 from $3.44 in 1981. On a Average earning assets were $5.2 billion
fully diluted per-share basis, the Increase in 1982, an increase of 30 percent from $4

LYNN WALKER

o n e of 60 h o m e s f e a tu r e d in th e 3 0 th
annual
P a r a d e o f H o m e s s p o n s o r e d by th e H o m e B u ild e rs
A sso c ia tio n of M id -F lo rid a , F e b . 5-10.

billion in 1981. Net Interest income was
$282 million, 41 percent above the $200
million in 1981.
F o u rth -q u arter results provided
Bamelt’s 24th consecutive quarter of
earnings Increases, with record highs in
the last 19. The quarter’s Income before
securities transactions was $16.7 million,
up 39 percent from $12 million in the 1981
period. This was equal to $1.02 tn primary
earnings per share (88 cents in fourthquarter 1981) and 97 cents In fully diluted
earnings per share (87 cents In the 1981
period).

Stromberg-Carlson Installs System
Alaska's second Stromberg-Carlson DCO System is also a
first. The newest system Installed Includes the first lx&gt;cal Line
Switch (LU5) installed in Alaska according to Donald L
Hoffman, vice president of Telco sales. Placed In service at the
Juneau and Douglas Telephone Co. (an operating company of
the Continental Telephone Co. of the Northwest), the system
provides telephone service to the community of Sterling and is
the host office for two digital satellite units serving Mendenha!
and Auke Bay.
All three communities are in a fishing area north of Juneau.
There are approximately 25,000 subscribers in the area who
receive telephone service over more than 6,000 digital lines.
ITie new DCO System with the LLS offers them a full line of
custom-calling features, pushbutton dialing, and Centralized
Automatic Message Accojinting (CAMA).
Stromberg-Carlson also has placed in service another

System Century Digital Central Office with the new Local Une
Switch ( LLS) for the Continental Telephone Co. of Virginia in
Haymarket. The first was installed in Smithfieid in November
1982.
The Haymarket DCO System is a 3,lQ0-line, C’iass 5 central
office, serving an area west jot Washington, D.C., that is ex­
periencing significant growth," said James M. Bridges,
president of Stromberg-Carlson. With the I.I.S, the system can
accomodate the telecommunications needs that accompany
growlh.
"Continental's second cutover in Virginia went Just as
smoothly as its first," Bridges added. "Now we are con­
centrating on bringing digital telecommunications to three
small communities In the area through the Haymarket office
by means of our Remote Une Switch (RLS). Three RLSs will
be shipped to Continental by the end of March."

Telephone System Consolidates
United Telephone System’s affiliates in
Florida have consolidated under one
• name, "United Telephone Company of
F lo rid a ,” according to Troy Todd,
president of the Florida company.
Florida Telephone Corp., based In
Leesburg; the Winter Park Telephone
Co., and Orange City Telephone Co. now
are being called by the new name.
, United's affiliate based in Fort Myers
has been called United Telpehone
Company of Florida since 1967.
The consolidated telephone company
encompasses some 200 communities
throughout 20 counties in Florida. The
company provides service to nearly
600,000 customers in a 15,900-square-mile
area which is almost 30 percent of the
statb.

The United Telephone System, with
operations in 20 states and 3,000 com­
munities, Is the nation's second largest
Independent (non-Bell) telephone
system.
In many areas ol Central Florida,
United Telephone customers can now
dial direct overseas, according to F. R.
McPherson, vice president at Winter
Park.
International Direct Distance Dialing
(IDDD) Is a new service designed to
make calling overseas (aster and easier.
To make an overseas caU, all
customers now need to do is dial "Oil,"
the international access code, (or "01" if
the call is collect, person to person or
calling card). Next, dial the country
code, the city code and finally the local

number.
The installation of new digital swit­
ching equipment by United Telephone
has also resulted in number changes for
approximately 2,000 of United's Central
Florida customers.
The addition of this new advanced
switching equipm ent will require
number changes for nearly 1,600 sub­
scribers in the Casselberry area who
have phone numbers beginning in 83 or 33
and some 400 customers in the Maitland
Center area who have phone numbers
beginning in 62 or 64.
McPherson said the reasons for the
addition of this new equipment arc to
keep pace with the company’s growlh
and to enhance the quality of service to
United's customers in this area.

swell to 50 percent.
"With median price of a new home approaching $80,000,
builders are being forced to come up with viable housing
alternatives," says Williford. "Highs density, multi-family
housing provides one of the best alternatives because it can
reduce land costs significantly which can result in a lower
home price to the consumer."
According to Williford, the average single-family project in
the family study consisted of 223 units compared to 111 units in
the mullt-family developments. Yet, the average 30-day in­
ventory Is twice as much among multi-family projects (9.8
units versus 4.4 units) than single-family.
t
The study also showed that 97 percent of the single-family
projects are utilizing a broker co-op program, compared to 88
percent of the multi-family developments. Gosely associated,
89 percent of the single-family projects generally handled
sales through a builder-developer representative compared to
71 percent for multi-family.

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Don Q Rum
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JOB Scotch
11.59 MR.
Gilbey’s Vodke
£ 8.99 mtit.
Fleischmann’s Gin £ 9.69 UUNl
Harwood Canadian £ 1049 UUNl
Jim Beam Brb.
£ 10.49 uUN»
Seagram’s 7 Mend £ 1 1 .9 9 uUNi
Wiedemann !&gt;«.•*.•«.$«» 1.69 • ML
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SPORTS

Same Old Story

—

Forfeits Kill Seminoles

Seminole High's wrestlers gave up 24
points by forfeits Friday night but still
managed to stay close to Daytona Beach
Seabreeze. Only a narrow loss by Kevin
Tapscott and an injury' to Tony Turner
kept the Tribe from winning as
Seabreeze's Sand C rabs escaped
Seminole High with a 36-33 victory.
,"We wrestled extrem ely w ell,"
Seminole coach Scott Sherman said.
"Tapscott beat his guy all over the mat
but the referee somehow had the other
guy ahead. That and Turner's were the
key matches."
Tapscott wound up losing to
Seabreeze's Bruce Barclay, 98, and, in
the opening seconds of Turner's match,
Bill McKerman "picked Turner up and
body slammed him to the m at," Sherman
said. "He was unable to go on because of
an injury and had to default."
Seminole got off to an early lead as
Stan Ferguson won by forfeit in the 101weight class and Mike G ark pinned his
opponent. One of the most impressive
performances for the Tribe was Ronnie
Watson’s in the 115-pound class. Watson
pinned last year's conference champion,
Marshall Free. 1:10 into the match.
When Vince G ark pinned Jim Garnett
at 3:32 in the 146-pound match, Seminole
took a commanding 33-9 lead, but the
Tribe didn’t score the rest of the match.
Once again, lack of personnel in the
heavier weights loomed ominous in
Seminole’s downfall. The Tribe forfeited
the 189, 223 and heavyweight classes.
Seminole will try to rebound Wed­
nesday night when it travels to Apopka
and next Saturday Seminole will be in a
triangular meet with New Smyrna Beach
and Mainland at New Smyrna Beach.

101 — Hyde (BM) p. Johnson :33.
108 — IJkens (LM) d. Syvertson 3-1.
115 — Hauman (BM) d. T. Olson 10-4.
122 - Wicklin (BM) d. G rant 14-1.
129 McKecknic
(BM )
d.
Beacuchamp 14-0.
135 — Smith (BM) d. F arm er 22-4.
141 - B. Olson (LM) d. Corso 10-2.
148 - Atkins (BM) d. Lindquist 10-2
158 - Blakely (LM) tied McDccd 5-5.
170 - Salvia (BM) d. Green 12-9.
189 — Kolbjomsen (LM) tied Dekleva
7-7.
223 — Brown (BM) p. Ades 5:55.
UVI. — Rawls (LM) p. Ycrashunas :33.

Greyhounds Stick
Lake Howell, 37-23

- GIRLS FLSTER
101 — Ferguson (Sem.) won by forfeit.
108 — M. G ark (Sem.) p. Merrell 3:07.
115 — Watson (Sem.) p. Free 1:10.
122 - Jumker (SB) won by forfeit.
129 — Brown (Sem.) d. hoyden 18-9.
135 — Barclay (SB) d. Tapscott 9-8.
141 — Haddock (Sem.) p. Wolfe 4:34.
148 — V. G ark (Sem.) p. Garnett 3:32.
158 — McKerman (SB) won by default.
170—Urgahart (SB) d. Gonterman 9-3.
189 — Uhllkl (SB) won by forfeit.
223 — Kelly (SB) won by forfeit.
UNL - Gary (SB) won by forfeit.
In other m at action Friday, tak e
Mary's Rams ran Into the state’s thirdranked Bishop Moore Hornets and
dropped a 41-18 decision at Orlando.
Despite the 25-point setback, tak e
Mary coach Frank Schwartz was pleased
with his Rams’ showing. "Bishop Moore

H t r a M P h o to b y T o m V lr x t n t

Seminole’s Honnie Watson (top) gets set to pin defending conference
champion Marshall Free of Seabreeze in prep wrestling action
Friday night at Seminole High. Watson, the Tribe's tough 108has some really tough wrestlers," he
said. "I thought we gave one of our best
efforts of the year.”
The Rams received strong per­
formances from Juniors Jack IJkens
(108), Bob Olson (141) and Robert Rawls
(UNL). IJkens, in a return match with
Jim Syvertson who he beat for the
Lym an C hristm as championship,
dominated the Hornet ace for a 3-1 win.

The talented junior "shucked" Syvertson
and used a single-leg takedown for a 2-0
first-period edge. Syvertson escaped in
the second penod but Likens tacked on
an escape in the third for the victory.
Olson dropped Joe Corso, 10-2, by
building up points and takedowns and
near falls throughout the match. "Olson
was close to pinning him. He Just couldn't
turn him ."

pounder, stuck Free but forfeits in the upper weights cost the
Seminoles a victory.

Rawls, 15-1 for the year, was taken
down by Mark Ycrashunas in the first
period,' but the monstrous 8-9, 320-pound
Sanford resident rolled Yerashunas over
and pinned him in a scant 33 seconds.
Schwartz was impressed with the work
of juniors Eld Ades (223) and Ned
Kojbjomsen. Ades had a 96 lead in the
third period against tough Don Brown
before he tried a "Peterson" which didn’t

Lake M a ry Booters

Fought Blisters Course, Watson
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPI) - John
Fought who whipped Rast Craig Stadler
to take the lead going into the third round
in the $375,000 Bob Hope Desert Gassic,
had some acerbic comments about
another player — Tom Watson.
"Tom Watson has his opinions like
everyone else, but he’s not God," Fought
said Friday.
Watson angered Fought last week by
saying he didn't think the 100th through
125th money winners on the PGA tour
should be exempt from qualifying, that
they should be forced to qualify each
Monday for every tournament.
Fought was No. 125 on the money list
last year.
"It’s easy for Tom to say," an angry
Fought said. "He makes a million dollars
a year. He doesn't understand what it’s
like to play poorly ... to struggle. I
respect his game of golf, but I think he’s
dead wrong."
Hours earlier he let his actions do the
real talking, blistering the Indian Wells
Country Gub with a 19-underpar 62 to
take Craig Stadler's position in the lead.
Stadler entered the third round with
what appeared to be a commanding lead
of six strokes after rounds of 63 and 86.
But playing on the tougher Bermuda
Dunes course he carded his first bogey of
the tournament and turned In an evenpar 72. He now Is a t 15-under for the
tournament, two strokes behind Fought.
Fought, 28, who earned just $28,596 last
year in attaining the 125th and final
qualifying spot, shot a (9 Wednesday at
tha Bermuda Dunes c o p e , the toughest
of the four being used, and came back
with a 68 Thursday a t La Quinta.

Pro Golf

B lank Barracudas, 2-0

Friday he put together consecutive 31s
at Indian Wells, considered the easiest of
the four courses, to drop to 17-under-par
199 for the tournament.
"I'v e never shot 10-under in a tour­
nam ent before," Fought said in
amazement at his own accomplishment.
“ Heck, how can you get much lower than
th at?"
Only one man has, in the 24 years of the
tournament. Bert Yancey carded a 61 —
on the same course — in 1974.
Stadler said he did everything well and
still shot a 72.
"Nothing happened out there," the 1982
M asters champion said. "I played well. I
missed only two greens in regulation. But
I Just couldn't get the ball In the hole. But
there's still a lot of golf left."
A stroke behind Stadler at 14-under 202
was Ray Floyd, who shot a 67 at Ber­
muda Dunes to go with previous rounds
of 68 and 67. At 203 was Chip Beck (67
Friday at the Tamarisk course).
Hal Sutton was alone at 294 while three
golfers, Including 1981 Bing Crosby
winner John Cook, Rex Caldwell and
Keith Fergus were deadlocked at 12tuider-par 204.
The tournament ends Sunday with
$67,500 for the winner.
SARASOTA (U P I) Veteran
Anne Marie Palll of Phoenix, Arix., fired
a final round 73 Friday to take medalist
honors In the LPGA Qualifying School
tourney with a 54-hole total of 214.

work and got pinned.
Kolbjomsen battled Tom Dekleva to a
7-7 standoff after tailing behind, 8-0.
“ Ned completely dominated the third
period,” said Schwartz. "If he would
have had 30 more seconds, he would have
beaten him."
ta k e Mary, 8-3-1, travels to Port
Orange to wrestle Spruce Creek Wed­
nesday.

In a big county matchup Friday night,
L y m an 's Greyhounds tu rn e d in a
powerful performance, stopping ta k e
Howell, 37-23, at tak e Howell. Just a
week ago, the Silver Hawks were a close
second to Lyman in the conference
tournament.
" I t really wasn't that easy," said
Lyman coach Skip Pletzer. "There were
a lot of close matches, but for a change
things went our way. We got the breaks."
The Greyhounds, 3-4-2, built a com­
manding 37-11 lead before forfeiting the
final two weight classes.
Pletzer pointed to four m atches as the
determining factors.
Chris Battle (101) slipped past Paul
Cina, 3-1. Cina was second in last week's
conference meet. P at Bell (108)
scrambled back three times from deficits
to finally overhaul Paul O'Callahan, 198.
Freshm an Chris Waxier (135) dominated
Pete Glertych and Shane Harwell (170)
upset conference champion Steve Cina, 73.
“ If those fopr matches go the other
way, we may get beat," said Pletzer.
"B ut all four guys did a real good job."
Lyman hosts the Seminole County
Freshm an Tournament Monday at 3:30
p.m.
101 — Battle (L) d. Cina 3-1.
107 — Welman (L) d. Korzon 16-1.
115 — Bell (L) d. O'Callaghan 1041.
122 — Hutchins (LH) d. Lee 14-0.
129 — Schrenk (IJ1) p. Forest 1:43.
135 - Wacler (L) d. Glertych 10-4.
141 — Wauerman (L) d. W ard VW.
147 — lx&gt;chwood (L) d. Wood 9-1.
151 — Queniesberry (L) p. Kovach
1:59.
179 - Harwell (L) d. Cina 7-3.
181 - Smifh (L) p. Pafford 4:55.
223 — Ray (LH) won by forfeit.
Uni — Bryant (LH) won by forfeit.

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
tak e Mary goalie Joe Dalton returned
to action with a shutout performance
Friday while Donald Kelly and Mark
Volchko booted goals as the Bams
whipped New Smyrna Beach, 2-0, in prep
soccer at tak e Mary High School.
The victory lifts the Rams' record to 75. take Mary played ta k e Brantley
Saturday. The Rams are on the road
Wednesday at Florida Central for a 4
p.m. match.
"It was a good game for Dalton to
return," said coach Larry McCorkle.
"He got his feet wet but he was never
really tested.”
The Rams outshot the Barracudas, 2910, but couldn't dent the scoring column
until the second half. "We could have
won 8 or 94)," said McCorkle. “But we
had our usual first-half troubles. It would
mean so much for our confidence if we
could just get a goal early."
Lake Mary finally broke on top, 1-0,
with 19 minutes elapsed In the second
half as Kelly snared a rebound off the
New Smyrna keeper and blasted In his
15th goal of the season.
The swift sophomore had dribbled the

Paul Holmes, Lake Mary defensive ace, turns back a threat by New ball from midfield, evading several
Smyrna Beach in Friday’s soccer mstch. The Rams blanked the defenders before booting it off the NSB
Barracudas, 2-0, at Lake Mary High School.
keeper. The ball deflected to Kelly and he

Prep Soccer
ram m ed it home.
Nine minutes later, Volchko scored on
a sim ilar play, dodging defenders on a
half-the-fleld excursion before following
up a deflected shot for a 2-0 lead.
The New Smyrna goalie turned In 20
saves while Dalton countered with 10. It
was his first game after sitting out three
weeks with a knee injury.
Although Dalton Is back in the Ram
fold, Kelly, who has eight assists along
with his 15 goals, has a slight case of
mononucleosis and will miss about a
week, according to McCorkle.
"W e're really going to m iss Donald,"
said McCorkle. "Not only for his goals,
but his assists too. He generates most of
our offense. It'll be a day-by-day
situation whether he can play or not."
McCorkle cited Jose Delrosario and
David Andreone for their defensive work
Friday. "They were finding the outlet
man Instead of Just kicking the ball
upfield," said McCorkle. ‘"n iat helped us
control the game better."
The Rams also took the junior vanity
gam e against Oviedo aa Louis Rosen
kicked In two goals for ta k e Mary.

Dickerson Flattens Beise In 1st
DAYTONA BEACH - Sanford’s
Jerry Dickerson floored Brad Belie
with a succession of right-hand leads
to gain a technical knockout after just
33 seconds of the first round In Golden
Gloves District Tournament action at
the Bavarian Beer Garden.
D ickeraon, undefeated a t 119
pounds, advances to Saturday night’s
championship round.

Jerry Dickerson, a 169-pounder Horn Sanford, knocked out Ed B eb e in the first round Friday

"Dickerson had never fought a
southpaw (B eise) before,” sa id
m anager Vic "Taco" Perez. "A s soon

Boxing
as we saw the guy was lefthanded, I
said 'get him with a right-hand lead."
The move paid off as the light-quick
Dickerson sm acked Beise with the
first punch of the fight and sent him
sprawling. The form er Seminole High,
basketball player followed up with
several more Jolts to the face and the
referee stopped the bout.
The action w as part of the 11-card
bout which kicked off the Golden

Gloves Tournament for the state of
Florida. The tighten got a t it again
Saturday before advancing to Sanford
for a Feb. 4 show.
After the Sanford show, the tour­
nament moves to Orlando for bouts on
Feb. 17-18 prior to the State Cham­
pionship Tournament on March 9,10,
11 and 12.
All (our tournaments a re sponsored
by Melbourne's WMOD TV, channel
43. Friday’s fights will be aired
Saturday night at I.

• •• ^

■

»• V

V - A w * «v v

v /»

�I A — Evening H erald. Sanford, F I.

Sunday, Jan. 2 1 ,1tl3

Valenzuela To Shake Up

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

IjOS ANGELES (UP1) - Here we go again.
Remember how Fernando Valenzuela got the
Dodgers all shook up by asking them for 91.4
million last year. Well, guess what he’s going
to ask for this year? Same thing — 91.4 million.
A 19-game winner last season, Valenzuela,
now vacationing in Mexico, will be making his
request in the next few days because the
deadline for filing for arbitration is next
Tuesday. More than likely, that's where
Fernando will wind up next month. His
momma didn't raise any dumb kids . . . .
First thing Don Shula and the rest of
Miami’s coaches warned the Dolphins was to
forget about how well they performed against
the Charges. The Jets will be a brand new ball
game Sunday . . . .
The big weeklong meeting of Olympic of­
ficials winds up Friday and a temporary furor
over "gouging" countries for housing their
athletes in this city during the 1984 Olympics
proved to be simply that — temporary and
without any real substance.
At the seat of the trouble was a proposal by
,the I jos Angeles Olympic Committee that all
committees pay a 20-day minimum for their
athletes who stay In the Olympic Village
although the Games themselves will only last
16 days. Some countries complained they were
being overcharged.
"I can’t understand what all the fuss is
about," says Richard Pcrelman of the I/&gt;s
Angeles Olympic Committee.

Vazquez Leads Brantley
Girls, Boys' Comeback Fails
Rhonda Vazquez poured in 17 points and Iinda Nunez
added 10 as the I^ady Patriots of I,ake Brantley went on
a second half binge to claim a 48-39 victory over
Apopka Friday night at Apopka.
Apopka, 3-13, held a 27-25 halftime lead but went cold
in the second half, scoring only 14 points. Meanwhile,
Brantley, 6-11, scored 21 second-half points en route to
its second victory of the season over Apopka. I^ake
Brantley raised its Five Star Conference record to 5-5.
The 1-ady Patriots host Edgewater Monday night and
return to conference action Tuesday night at Daytona
Beach Seabreeze.
I.AKK BRANTLEY (48)
Vazquez 17, Nunez 10, Trimble 8, Brown 5, Asplen 2,
Lnbenow 4, Meikle 2. Totals: 21-6-11 48.
APOPKA 139)
Grant 20, McMiller 7, Griffin 10, Robinson 2. Totals:
19 1-4 39.
Total fouls: l-ake Brantley 8, Apopka 10. Fouled out:
None. Technicals: None.
Like Brantley's boys were not as fortunate as the
girls as Apopka built a big lead early and hung on for a
69-63 victory.
At one point in the second quarter, Apopka, 5-10, had
a 37-21 lead but Brantley, 4-12, went in at halftime
trailing by only nine points at 39-30.
The Patriots opened the second half with six straight
points to cut Apopka's lead to, 39-36, but the Blue
Darters ran off 10 straight points to pull ahaad, 49-36.
The Patriots didn't fold though, I.ake Brantley went
on a 14-2 scoring binge to cut Apopka's lead to 51-50
early in the fourth quarter.
Apopka again went on a scoring spree of its own and
built a 57-50 lead, after that the Patriots could get no
closer than four points.
Paul Hoffman poured in 27 points for the Patriots and
Dennis Groseclose added 12.
1.AKF, BRANTLEY (63)
Hoffman 27, Garriques 2, Trombo 8, Shorey 1, Zullo 5,
Cochran 4, Groseclose 12, Ewing 4. Totals: 22 19-33 63.
APOPKA (69)
Hughes 17, Bridges 2, Peterson 8, Elmore 14, Thomas
8, Jones 8, Hopper 4, Fountain 6, McMiller 4. Totals: 29
11-23 69.
Total fouls: I^ake Brantley 24, Apopka 25. Fouled
out: Cochran, Groseclose, Thomas. Technicals: None.

"Try to find anywhere in the world where
you can get housing, eat all you want, secure
transportation, then go out and dance and be
entertained all for 935 a day. I don't know if we
can do it or we can't, but we will.”
Before this Olympic session was set up,
Peter Uberroth, president of the Los Angeles

Milton
Richman
UPI Sports Editor
Olympic Committee asked his other com­
mittee members what they felt was the
primary goal to be achieved at these meetings.
He got all kinds of answers, to which he
listened, then shook his head.
Then he said, to all his associates. "Our
primary’ goal is to make friends."
Uberroth and the rest of the U s Angeles
Olympic Committee are all entitled to take a
bow.
You never saw so much good fellowship as
there was at this get together. It looked more
like one of those good old-fashioned Shriners’
conventions . . .
Dave Winfield sees Billy Martin's rehiring
as helping the Yankee players. "Maybe it’ll
take some pressure off the guys," he s a y s . . . .
Ron Ccy and Steve Garvey were never
exactly buddy-buddy with the Dodgers, but
Garvey, who recently signed as a free agent
with the Padres, told them the 34-year-old Cey
could still help them.
The Padres made a pitch for Cey before the
Cubs got him but the Dodgers apparently
weren't too eager to send the veteran third
baseman to San Diego where he would have
been reunited with Garvey.
Cey did all right money-wise with the Cubs.
In addition to the 93.5 million he'll get from
them pver the next five years, he also received
9500,000 up front.

Sixers Run To N th Straight
United Press International
If Philadelphia Coach Billy Cunningham's com­
ments mean anything, he’s afraid the 76ers’ might
catch the Seattle Swoon.
With the 76ers’ 14th straight victory Friday night, a
10-117 decision over slumping Seattle, the SupcrSonlcs
who opened the season with a 12-game winning streak,
have now lost 10 ot 11.

M a rk G a s t i n e a u , No. 99, is th e N F L d e fe n d e r o f th e y e a r . T h e fla s h y N ew
Y o rk J e t lin e m a n s u c c e e d s t e a m m a t e J o e K le c k o in w in n in g th e N E A
G e o rg e l l a l a s a w a rd .

'•We have to keep striving to be better in all phases of
the game," said Cunningham even though his team
opened a 32-point lead over Seattle after 2 4 periods
and coasted the rest of the way. "Right now we're on a
nice roll, but we can't be complacent and ... sit back
and admire it."

Pregame Joust Sets
Stage For Struggle

Moses Malone paced the 76ers with a season-high 34
points on 12-of-19 shooting and pulled down 14
rebounds. Julius Erving added 27 points and Andrew
Toney contributed 19,
"They're the best team we’ve seen this year," said
Seattle Coach I^nny Wilkens. "They’re playing un­
selfishly and moving the ball well... it's a great team ."
David Thompson led Seattle with 26 points and Jack
Sikma, starting his first game since suffering a
sprained ankle Dec. 28, scored 14 points with 12
rebounds.

MIAMI (UPI) — The last few days before
the*AFC championship game between the
Miami Dolphins and the New York Jets have
resembled the kind of back-and-forth you get
before a heavyweight championship fight.
The Jets say the Dolphins use chop blocks.
The Dolphins say the Jets hold. The Jets say
Miami Coach Don Shula gets a break from the
officials. The Dolphins say the Jets take cheap
shots. Then ’both sides say they either didn't
mean it, or were misquoted.

In other games, Kansas City topped Houston, 115-108,
Lis Angeles beat San Antonio, 119-110, Golden State
defeated Denver, 136-121, New Jersey clipped
Cleveland, 105-99, Boston beat Chicago, 117-106,
Milwaukee defeated Washington, 111-104, Indiana
outdid Phoenix, 118-117, and Utah clubbed New York,
108-93.

What remains is the promise of a quality
game. The Dolphins already have beaten the
Jets, 45-28 and 20-19, this season. But both
teams are saying that doesn't mean anything
anymore.

Capitals Fall To Nordlques
United Press International

As Shula put it Friday night: “ Everything
we’ve done — all the accomplishments — now
go on the line. They forget about the loser in a
hurry, and we want to be the team they con­
tinue to talk about."

Even the Washington Capitals have a letdown
sometimes.
The Capitals, flying high after recent impressive
victories over Chicago and Philadelphia, fell to the
Quebec Nordiques, 5-4, at Landover, Md., Friday night
after having recovered from a 4-1 deficit to tie the
game. Anton Stastny’s power-play goal with 5:52 left
was the deciding goal.
In the only other game, Winnipeg topped the New
York Rangers, 4-1.

The winner goes to the Super Bowl. It would
be the first appearance since the 1973 season
for Miami and the 1969 Super Bowl for the Jets.
Early in the week, Jet tackle Mark
Gastineau said the Dolphins make a practice
of using the tight end to block down on a
defensive lineman while an offensive tackle
has him engaged. Thai's called a chop block
and it's against the rules. The Dolphins said
they block first with the tight end, then with a
tackle, which is legal.

Volusia Speedways Opens
R.I.M.P.I.A. Association presents the First Annual
World Series of Dirt Racing at the finest 4 mile dirt
track in the South, Volusia Speedway located on High­
way 40, 15 miles west of 1-95 in Daytona Beach.
Volusia' Speedway, under the supervision of new
owners, Paul Parrish, Dick Murphy and Mike Duvall
brings to you more seating capacity, new lighting,
modem concessions and clean restroom facilities.
Volusia Speedway has been remodeled with the fans'
comfort in mind.
Volusia Speedway bring the stars to you Speedweek,
Feb. 12-19,*1983. For eight nights, you will see some of
the top drivers and fastest equipment in dirt racing.
World Scries of Dirt Racing begins Feb. 12, with
modified and limited late models. Race lime Is B p.m.
for this 50 lap spectacular.
Sunday and Monday, Feb. 13-14, brings you the All
Star Outlaw Sprints with Wolfgang, Steve Kinser,
Jim m y Sills, Bobby Allen, and many, many more.
These are some of the finest from the Sprintcar World
and all will be on hand with these magical winged
machines providing a spectacular show for Volusia
Speedway race fans. Race time 8 p.m.
Then, on Feb. 15-19, late model and modifieds will
bring you unforgelable racing with race lime at B p.m.
. at Volusia Speedway. Top stars will be on hand to
battle for the 100 lap racing championship, Feb. 19.
Drivers like Buck Simmons, Rodney Combs, Larry
Moore and upcoming Super Star Donnie Moran will be
on hand to provide exciting, thrilling shows with the
expertise of championship drivers and many more.

Later In the week, Jet Coach Walt Michaels
said: "Any block that is not called is a legal
block as far as I'm concerned. It's as simple as
that.”
Then cam e the holding accusations from the
Dolphins.

Pro Football
“They are saying things, but they are
probably one of the better clubs in the league
at holding," said Miami safety Lyle Black­
wood. "They are just trying to draw attention
to us."
The Jets retaliated with the frequently
repeated allegation that Shula gets
preferential treatm ent from officials because
he is a member of the NFL Competition
Committee, which determines NFL rules. The
Miami coach bridled.
"I’m getting tired of answering that
question," Shula sa id ."... I've had my share of
penalties."
Then cam e a hint from Miami comerback
Gerald Small that once in a while, the Jets
might sneak in a late hit.
"They have a couple of guys on their team
who are known for cheap shots,” Small said,
linebacker Tom "Newlon Is one of them and
(Stan) Blinka has gotten that reputation. I
think they get caught up in the game.
This time denial came from Woody Bennett,
a funner Jet running back who has seen action
for the Dolphins in shortyardage situations the
last three weeks.
"Well, you know, they really aren’t cheap
shot artists," Bennett said. "What they do is
engage with a person and intimidate him.
"Everybody is trying to look out for Tom
Newton. He's not really a cheap-shot artist.
He’s probably one of the best special teams
players I've ever seen.”

College Basketball
B y U n ite d P r e u in te rn a tio n a l
F rid a y
,
E a t!
B e r k s h ire C h ris t. M . V a l F o rg e

*5J
B rid g e p o rt 77. M e r rim a c k 75. o t
C la rk to . B a te s }7
D e la w a re St 54. F lo rid a a s m a t
F re d o n ia 97. U tic a le c h a t
H o w a rd 44, B e lh y n e Cook m a n 40
L o n g is la n d U . 71, L o y o la (M d )
57
M a rn e 10. V e rm o n t 4 t
M id d ie b u ry 14, B ra nd e iS 7 t
h o r w ic n 71. P ly m o u th 42
O ld W e s fb u ry 71. Y o r k 42
O u in n ip ia c 14. L o w e ll 10
R o c h e s te r 44, R o ch e ste r Tech 41
S acre d H e a r t 92, N e w H e m p
C oll 44
St. J o h n F is h e r 4 t. N a z a re th 41

i

•*
t

S u s q u e h a n n a 55. D e la w a re V a il
51. o t
T re n to n St. 45. K e a n 41
S o u th
B is c a y n e 41, F lo rid a M e m o r ia l
St
E a s te rn K e n tu c k y 11. Y o u n g s
to w n 71. c t
F la S o u th e rn M . R o llin s 77
M a r y v ille 71. C a th o lic 77
M o r a h e a d St 14. A k ro n 77
N C G re e n s b o ro 51. V a . W es
le y a n 45
SI. L e o 41. C e n t F lo r id a 70
* W V a S t. 41. D a v is 1 E lk in s 54
W h e e lin g 57. S he p h e rd 55
S M id w e s I
B e lo it 44. G r in n e ll 54
D e P a u l 54. D a y to n 52
D e P a u w 4 t. O liv e t N a ta r e n e 45
L a k e la n d l l t . M e o d y B ib le ( I I I . ) 41
M o n m o u lh 51. L a w re n c e 55. o t

N e b O m a h a 79, 51. C lo u d St. 50
R ip o n N . K n o x 74
S chool O l O ia r k s 44. P a r k 44. ot
St. N o rb e rt 14. Coa 44
W it M ilw a u k e t 47, N E I llin o is
44
S o u th w e st
N e w O r le a n s 84, T e x t s S an
A n to n io 71
W a il
C h ic o St. I I . S onom a S t. 41
G o n ta g t 49, P c p p e rd ln a 41
H u m b o ld t St 7 i, C a lif. D a v it 40
L o y o la M a ry m o u n t M . P o rtla n d

It
M a n k a to SI 75. N o C o lo ra d o 72
U re . le c h a t. N o tra D a m e (C A )
41
San F ra n . St. 71. S o c ra m e n lo St.
70
S t. M a r y ’ t (C a lif.) 41. S an O ie g o

5*
S ta n isla u s SI 13. H a y w a rd 49

Scorecard
Dog Racing
A t S a n la rd -O rla n d o
F rid a y n ig h t re s u lts
F ir s t r a c e - 5 - 1 4 . 6 :1 1 :4 4
4 1 B ex P a c to la
11 10 1 20 5 40
1 M a n a te e B u lle t
5 40 1 10
3 R K 'S B e tty Jones
510
O (2 4) 75 00: P (4 -1 ) 145 BO; T 142 21 1 ,lt0 40
S e c o n d r e c e - l- I . C : ) t:3 2
4 M ig h ty L y n n
0 30 6 00 4 60
S M it U e N a y
7 40 5 00
7 T im e ly T une
5 00
O (4-5) 44 00; P (4 -5 ) 101.00; T (45-7) 5I t . 70
T h ir d r a c e — S -1 4 .M : 12:01
4 S ca tte r lene
4 00 1 60 3 00
1 SS C le m
6 00 4 00
0 JG 'S D o ll
7 40
Q l l- 4 ) 24 00; P (4 -1 ) 4 1 4 0 ; T (41 I I 254.20
F o u rth ra c e - 5-14. D : 11:14
3 Gen Too
10 00 4 20 3 40
I R a p id P ro g re ss
4 40 3 00
1 H o o k e r’ s P o in t
3 40
0 ( 1 - 1 ) I t 00; P ( I I ) 47.10; T l l l - l ) 12.20
F ilt h r a c e - M . C : 31:15
1 M a lv e rn
6 00 6 30 4 30
4 M a n a te e N e e d le s
15 30 7 40
3 W rig h t C aper
. 100
0 (1 -4 1 1 .2 0 ; P (1 -4 ) 143,00; T &lt;143 ) 454 00
S ii t h r a c e - 1 - 1 , B : )t:3 S
I R R s P re tty B oy 12 00 0 40 1 20
5 O u r Bobba L o u ie
6 30 4 00
2 F a st E a rl
2 00
O ( i l l 42 40; P ( I I ) 141 4 0 ; T ( I511 441 40
S eventh ra c e — 5-14. A : ) t : i s
2 W rig h t G ra m m e 7 40 4 10 140
3 S olid P u rch a se
5 30 5 40
4 D u s tin D e v il
4 00
0 (3 -3 1 I t 00; P ( 2 3) 55.20; T l i ­
l t ) 373 00
E lg h th ra c e — 5 -1 4 .C : 31:00
S T ra v e lin O n e y
12 00 5 00 5 40
4 F re e G ilt
5 20 4 20
0 Say N o m o re
4 00
0 ( 5 4) 14 M ; P (5-47 42 00; T 154-1) 240 40
N in th r a c e - 3 1. A : ) t : 3 l
7 P a ris to
73 60 a 60 6 20
6 B ig Bubba S m ith
6 60 3 40
2 W rig h t C yp re ss
6 20
O (4-7) 49.40; P (7-43 174.40; T (74-3) 1.047.40
1 0 th ra c e — 7-14, B : 44:52
lO u g h ta d o it
19 10 10 20 5 40
1 K ’s C e le b ra tio n
5 00 3 00
7 M id la n d C ric k e t
100
0 ( 1 - 1 ) 41 I t ; P (B -1) 145.20; T (41-7) 35) 40
n t h ra ce — 5 - l t . A : i n t o
6 W e G o tcha
14 10 4 60 3 60
2 W rig h t F o n d e
3 00 7 40
3 B ill M a c
4 10
O (3 4) 17 30; P ( 4 2 ) M l 00; T (6
2 )1 723.40; P ic k S in (0-2 5 7 0 4 ) 4
ot 4 p a id 421 00 to I w in n e r “ J a c k ­
pot** c a rr y o v e r 1,114
ll t k r a c e — 5 -1 4 .C : 31:02
1 J e lly S an d w ich 2 1 00 10 40 4 60
5 T a le n t Sloan
10 00 3 60
7 F re e d a s P rid e
4 60
&lt;3 (5 I I 57 20; P U S ) 101 24; T ( I
5 7) 725 00
llt h r a c e — 3 1. D ) t : l l
2 A v a R iv e r
71 20 16 00 1 00
1 W a lte r G ene
5 40 0 60
7 A ngel S am m y
110
Q ( l - l l 41 00; P (2 -3 ) 111.10; T l l l - l ) 1.0)100
A - 4,507; H a n d le 5416.641

NBA
N B A S ta n d in g s

B y U n ite d P re s s In te rn a tio n a l
E a s te rn C o n fe re n c e
A tla n tic O lv is le n
W L P e t. OB
P h lla
14 5 172 —
B oston
30 t
761 4
N e w Je rsy
26 15 614 1
W sh ng tn
17 72 416 17
N e w Y o rk
14 76 3 50 20’ J
C e n tra l D iv is io n
70 14 667 —
M ilw a u k e
70 I t 513 6’ ;
A tla n ta
70 21 410 7 'i
D e tro it
13 36 111 11' &gt;
In d ia n a
11 27 325 14
C hicago
7 33 .179 I t ' i
C le ve la n d
W e s te rn C o n fe re n c e
M id w e s t D iv is io n
W L P c i. GB
San A nto n
34 I I 405 —
K an C ity
3 ) 16 590 1
D enver
30 2) 445 4
17 22 414 7
O a lla s
11 25 419 4
U ta h
6 14 150 11'&gt;
H ouston
P a c ilic D iv is io n
Los A ng
30 6 7*1 —
4
P hoenix
24 I t t i t
24 14 400 7
P o rtla n d
24 17 515 m
S eattle
G olden SI
IB 24 479 14
I t 31 747 21
San Oiego
F r id a y 's R e s u lts
D e tro it a l A tla . p p d . snow
P h ila 1)0. S e a ttle 117
N ew J e rs e y 105. C le v e la n d I t
K ansas C ity 115, H o u s to n 101
Boston 117, C h ic a g o 104
M ilw 111. W a s h in g to n 104
U ta h 104. N e w Y o r k 13
In d ia n a 111. P h o e n ix 117

Los A n g l i t . S an A n to n io 110
G olden S ta te 134. D e n v e r 121
T o d a y 's G a m e s
( A ll T im e s E S T )
C h ic a g o a t W a s h in g to n . 8 05
p m.
A tla n ta a t D e tr o it. I 05 p m
U ta h a t D a lla s . 0 15 p m
P o rtla n d
at
H o u sto n . 8 35
p m
N ew Y o r k a t D e n v e r. 1 35
p m
G olden S ta te a t San D iego.
10 30 p m
S u n d a y 's G a m e s
C le v e la n d a l B o s to n , a lt
P h ila a t M ilw a u k e e , a ft
P h o e n ix a t K a n C ity , a lt
S ea ttle a t N e w J e rs e y
P o rtla n d a t S an A n to n io
In d ia n a a t L o s A n g e le s

Hockey
N H L S ta n d in g s
B y U n ite d P re s s In te rn a tio n a l
W a le s C o n fe re n c e
P a t r ic k D iv is io n
W L T Pl»
29 13 4 44
P h iitd e lp n i
25 I t a 58
N Y Is la n d e rs
W a s h in g to n
71 14 11 5 )
N Y R a n g e rs
77 1? 4 50
P itts b u rg h
17 17 7 31
31
N ew J e rs e y
10 21 n
A d a m i O iv is io n
Boston
30 10 7 47
M o n tre a l
75 t) 9 51
77 15 9 53
B u ffa lo
31 20 4 48
Quebec .
12 30 5 39
H a rtto rd
C a m p b e ll C o n fe re n c e
N o r r is D iv is io n
W L T Pt».
28 13 7 8)
C hicago
24 M 9 57
M in n e so ta
15 34 1 36
SI L o u is
I t 25 12 34
D e tro it
10 25 9 21
T o ro n to
S m y th e D iv is io n
77 13 9 6)
E d m o n to n
W in n ip e g
20 77 5 45
C a lg a ry
16 M 7 4)
Vancouver
15 22 10 40
14 7) 7 39
Los A n g e le s
F r id a y 's R e s u lts
Q uebec 5. W a s h in g to n 4
W in n ip e g 4. N Y R a n g e rs I

p
p
p
8

p

T o d a y 's G a m e s
( A ll T im e s E S T )
B osto n a t D e tr o it. 7 35 p m
B u lla lo
at
M o n tre a l
8 05
m
E d m o n to n a t V a n c o u v e r. 8 0S
m
Q uebec a t P itts b u rg h , 8 05
m
P h ila d e lp h ia a t N Y Isla n d e rs .
05 p m
C h ic a g o a t T o ro n to . I 05 p m
C a lg a ry a t St
L o u is . 1 05
m
H a r tfo r d a t M in n e s o ta . 1 05

pm
S u n d a y 's G a m e s
N ew J e rs e y a t W a s h , a lt
W in n ip e g a t B u lla lo
N Y R a n g e rs a t P h ila
Los A n g e le s a t E d m o n to n
H a r tfo r d a t C h ic a g o

NFL
N F L P la y o ffs
B y U n ite d P re s s In te rn a tio n a l
( A ll T im e t E S T )
F i n t ro u n d
Jen. 4*9
NFC
W a s h in g to n 31. D e tro it 7
G re e n B a y 4 t, St. L o u lt 14
D a lla s 30. T a m p a B a y 17
M in n e s o ta 30. A tla n ta 34
ARC
Los
A n g e le s
R a id e r s
37,
C le v e la n d 10
M ia m i 78. N e w E n g la n d 1)
N ew Y o r k J e ts 44, C in c in n a ti 17
San O ie g o 31. P itts b u rg h 28

C o n le r e n c t » e m il!n il»
J a n . 15-14
NFC
W a s h in g t o n 21. M in n e so ta 7
O a lla s 37, G re e n B ay 24
AFC
N e w Y o r k J e ts 17. Los A n g e le s
R a id e rs 14
M ia m i 34. San D ie g o I )
N F C C h a m p io n s h ip
S a tu rd a y
D a lla s a t W a s h in g to n . 12 30 p m
A F C C h a m p io n s h ip
S unday
N e w Y o r k Je ts at M ia m i, 1 p m .
S u n d a y , J a n . 30
S u p e r B o w l X V II a t P a s a d e n a ,
C a lif. 4 p m

Deals
S p o rts T ra n s a c tio n s
B y U n ite d P re s s In te rn a tio n a l
F r id a y
B a s e b a ll
C ie v e la o d — A c q u ire d c a tc h e r
J im E s s la n fr o m S e a ttle lo r a
p la y e r to b e n a m e d la te r.
K a n s a s C ity — Signed s h o rts to p
U L . W a s h in g to n to a th re e y e a r
c o n tr a c t, li r s t b a sem an W illie
A ik e n s lo a one y e a r c o n tra c t, a n d
in fie ld e r G re g P ry o r to a tw o y e a r
c o n tra c t.
M in n e s o ta — Signed p it c h e r
P e te R e d te rn and in fie ld e r J o h n
C a s tin o to o n e y e a r c o n tra c ts
N Y M e ts — R eleased c a tc h e r
B ru c e B o c h y
N Y Y a n k e e s — Signed p it c h e r
S te v e C o m e r to a o n e ye a r co n
tra c t
P h ila d e lp h ia — S igned p itc h e r
A l H o lla n d to a th re e y e a r co n
tr a c t .
P itts b u r g h — S igned p itc h e r D o n
R o b in s o n to a m u lti y e a r c o n tr a c t;
a p p o in te d M ilt G r a il d ir e c to r o t
s c o u tin g
T o ro n to — S igned p itc h e r J im
G o tt. in tie ld e rs R anee M u llin ik s
a n d T im T h o m p s o n and c a tc h e r
Ja y S c h ro e d e r
C o lle g e
In d ia n a — A nn o u n ce d re s ig
n a tio n o f c e n te r John F lo w e rs
fr o m b a s k e tb a ll le a rn .
M in n e s o ta — N a m e d C la re n c e
H u d s o n to f o o t b a ll o f f e n s iv e
c o a c h in g s t a ll, p e n d in g a p p ro v a l
N o rth e a s t M is s o u ri — N a m e d
ja c k B a il h e a d fo o tb a ll c o a c h
F o o tb a ll
L o s A n q e le s IU S F L ) — S ig n e d
r u n n in g b a c k C h u ck F o re m a n
M ic h ig a n (U S F L ) S ig n e d
c o rn e rb a c k C la re n c e C h a p m a n .
N e w J e rs e y (U S F L ) — N a m e d
G e o rg e W h e e le r d e fe n s iv e lin e
c o a c h , s ig n e d p u n te rk ic k e r D a n a
M o o re a n d c e n te r T im D o ria n
P h ila d e lp h ia (U S F L ) — N a m e d
J im E r k e n b e c k o lt e n s iv e lin e
co a c h
C h ic a g o ( U S F L ) — S ig n e d
ta ilb a c k T im Spencer lo a to u r
y e a r, n o o p tio n c o n tra c t
D e n v e r (U S F L I Nam ed
C h a rle y A rm e y d e fe n s iv e lin e
c o a c h , E llis R a in s b e rg e r o ffe n s iv e
b a c k fie ld co a c h , G re g R o b e rts o n
tr a in e r , a n d C a rte r T a te e o u ip
m ent m anager
B a s k e tb a ll
C le v e la n d — W a ive d f o r w a r d
D a v id M a g le y .
C o lle g e
In d ia n a — N a m e d 5 a m W y c h e
h e a d fo o tb a ll coach, s u b te c t to
a p p ro v a l o t th e B o a rd o f T ru s te e s .
O re g o n — N a m e d B ob T o le d o
fo o tb a ll o lte n s iv e c o o rd in a to r
W a s h in g t o n
— A nnounced
r e s ig n a tio n ot fo o tb a ll o lte n s iv e
b a c k fie ld co a c h A t R o b e rts.

FREE
S P IN A L E X A M IN A T IO N
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I le w Back •« Mi#

Pete

) Diciieett •*Less •*
4 N.lMMII in

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NIGHTLY 8 PM
MATINEES

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

MON.-WED.-SAT.
1:15 P.M.

O H 1M O M A S Y A N O tl l
C h i r o p i a i t i i P h y s ic ia n

201/ F R E N C H AV E
SANFORD

•
P L A Y T H E E X C IT IN G

323-5763

PKK-SIX
W IN N E R SIX IN
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OF D O LLAR S

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A O M IT T E D F R E E I

U N IQ U E O P P O R T U N IT Y
Area franchise available for Sanford pro­
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Excellent cash (low and investment
return. Successful business person must
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$15,500.00 investment plus small
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(404) 546-6001, 9:00 AM - 6:00 PM.

/W O R D ORLPHOO
KH m aauB
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f t f u m m u - u i i»M
Uny. Be 0«e (Met II

R M R &amp; E TIR E CO.
ANNOUNCES ITS

GRAND OPENING
SALE PRICES ON
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FRONT END
« A 83 I
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A LIG N M ENT
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Easy Credit Terms
Rt. 3, Box 434, Sanford
Hwy. 17-92 lust So. of Flea World

s

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�&gt;
1/

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Jan. 7 3 ,198J—9A

Greyhounds Hang 38th
Loss On Howell; G irls Win
ByBRENTSMARTT
Herald Sportswriter
From examining the fact that threefourths isn't as much as a whole, one can
understand the fate of coach Greg "The second half was real methodical,
Robinson's frustrated l^ke Howell Silver but we played a good all-around team
Hawks in their 53-46 defeat at the hands game. They played us even in the second
of Lyman’s Greyhounds, in a Five Star
half."
Conference matchup in Longwood.
In the opposite lockerrooin, Robinson,
Shutout much of the initial period, whose Hawks slip to 0-15 and 0-8 in
U ke Howell, 0-15, saw its chances conference play, could only wonder. "I
dwindle a s Lyman raced to a 12-2 first- think we’re just in awe of some of the
period edge. The Hawks would spend the people we play at the beginning. I was
remainder of the evening fighting this pleaced with the rebounding, but not at
lead unsuccessfully.
all with the free-lhrow shooting.
“ We’re gonna have to do something to
In the scoring column, Cleveland led
get us going in the first quarter," said
Robinson after Howell lost its 38th Lyman, now 8-6 and 5-4 in the conference,
with 20. Guard m ate Hillman followed
straight gam e. "We played them
with 13 and center Tom Feltcr had 10.
(Lyman I pretty close in the second half.
For Howell, Brooks finished with 18,
The first quarter just killed us."
Indeed the Hawks never did get going while Norton had 9.
LAKE HOWELL |46|
as Lyman's swarming lone press kept
Banyaski 1 3-4 5, Brooks 82-218, Dail 1
Howell from moving the ball over half
court, not to mention to the bucket. Only 0-0 2, Gordon 0 1-2 1, Hamrick 3 2-3 8,
McNeil 11-4 3, Norton 41-49, Wood 00-0 0.
a John Hamrick layup would avoid a first
quarter shutout, but Lyman’s failure to Totals 18 10-19 46.
penetrate Howell's zone and missed, LYMAN 1631
Hillman 5 3-3 13, Simpson 02-4 2, Nelson
opportunities would keep the Hawks
0 (Ml 0.Cleveland 8 4-B 20. G. Pilot 2 2-3 7,
somewhat in the contest.
In the second quarter, the Greyhounds Walker 1 (Ml 2. J. Pilot 1 3-3 5, Feltcr 4 2-6
got out early to run the margin to 18-4 on 10, Osborn 0 CM) 0, Stewart 2 2-2 6, Totals
good guard ptay by Rod Hillman. After 23 19-29 63.
Lyman’s early success, both clubs I.akrHowell
2
9 17 IB
4t.
became error-prone as Lyman went into Lyman
12 14 14 11 - 63
halftime with a 28-11 bulge.
The visiting Hawks finally got things
In the girl's preliminary Lake How ell's
hitting on all gears in the third, outonce-beat
(17-1) and undefeated in Fivescoring the 'Hounds, 17*14, in the period
Star play 1 9-0) Ijidy Silver Hawks
on junior E frem brooks' 10-point
escaped with a 58-48 conference triumph.
quarter, mostly on long jumpers
Trailing much of the contest, Dennis
Heading into the final stanza, both
Codrey's seventh-ranked Hawks shook
clubs traded tallies much of the period
their sloppy, early play to mount a late
with the 'Hounds standout senior guard' third-quarter surge to pull within one at
Alexis Cleveland and Howell's guards
37-36 heading into the final stanza.
Brooks and Ed Norton providing the
The turning point came in the fourth as
offense. At the midway point of the
coach Dick Copeland’s 'Hounds a t­
period, Howell would pull to 49-40 but the
tempted to m atch the Hawks in a running
Hawks never got any closer or made any
game.
serious challenge.
Taking a 38-37 lead at the 7:00 mark,
"1 thought we played real well in the Howell held the lead through poor frecfirst half," said Lyman boss, Lawrence." throw shooting, until the Lyman squad

P rep B a s k e t b a ll

A »

M

H e r ild P h o to b y T o m V ln c t n l

Lyman’s Hod Hillman fjocs up and over Lake Howell's Kicky Diaz for two points ns Howell’s Ed
Norton joins the fray.

regained the edge at 43-12 at 4:44 on a
Vikki McMurrer layup.
Rut at 4 06, Howell's lanky center
Chiquita Miller hit a short jumper to
reclaim the lead for good at 44-43 From
here, Codrey's gals ran off four unan­
swered buckets to outdistance Lyman.
50-43, with 2:24 left
Lyman bounced right back with five
unanswered p in ts of its own to close to
50-48 at 1:48 but that would end the
Greyhound scoring on the night. Howell's
Tammy Johnson quickly raced downcourt for two quick counter tallies to ice
the Lake Howell victory.
Howell’s skipper Codrey held high
praise for Lyman after the contest. "The
Lyman girls did a good job tonight.
They'll (Lyman) bounce back and be
lough now.
"They’re doing what they can do. We
just got a few breaks otherwise they
could have won this one." he added.
Lyman's Copeland pointed out his
clubs downfall. "We started playing their
game. We got into a running game with
them and you just can't do that."
He also mentioned Howell's bench
strength. "They just wore us down with
all their good players off the bench. We
also created some tiredness by running
so much with them ," he said
In the statistics, Howell's Miller led all
efforts with 22.
For the scrappy Greyhounds,
McMurrer (16), Pam Jackson i!2i, and
Kim Gorouin &lt;101 did the scoring.
LIKE HOWELL |5H|
Scott 2 0-14, Green 0 0-0 0. Banna 1 (Ml
2, M. Johnson 2 2-1 6. Dictrick 1 0-1 2.
lim e 00-00, McNeil 0 0-0 0, Miller 9 4-8 22.
T. Johnson 3 2-8 8, Blocker 4 6-7 14.
McPherson 0 0-0 0, Brown 0 (Ml 0, Marx n
(Ml 0. Totals 22 14-22 58.
LYMAN 148)
McMurrer 8 0-1 16, Williams 0 1-1 1,
Jackson 5 2-512, Neary 0 0-0 0, Gigico's 0
0-0 0, Goroum 5 0-0 10. Lemon 2 0-4 4,
Rowland 11-2 3, Forsyth 0 0-0 0, Gilliam 1
OO 2, Totals 22 4-13 48.
Like Howell '
17 9 10 22 - 58
Lyman
20 11 6 11 — 48

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L

I

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T IO N , S T A T E O F F L O R ID A
DEPARTMENT
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P O R T A T IO N ,
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f! al.
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N O T IC E O F H E A R IN G
TO S H O W C A U S E
ANO
N O T IC E O F S U IT
S TA TE O F F L O R ID A TO
R o b ert W B e a le , I I I ,
G e n e ra l P a r t n e r
A m e ric a n H e r ita g e in v e s tm e n ts .
L td ,, a C o lo ra d o L im ite d P a rt
n e rsh ip
7909 E a s t 7 th A v e n u e
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t044 M a je lla R o a d
P ebble B e a c h , C a lifo r n ia 919S1
P A R C E L N o 811
T e rry E. J o h n s o n ,
G e n e ra l P a r t n e r
R o c k y M o u n t a in I n v e s t m e n t ! ,
L td a C a n c e lle d P a rtn e rs h ip
tOO South C h e r r y S tre e t. No IIS
D enver, C o lo ra d o 80770
P A R C E L N o 807
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G e n e ra l P a r t n e r
A m e ric a n H e r ita g e in v e s tm e n ts .
L td ., a C o lo ra d o L im ite d P a rt
n e rsh ip
100 South C h e r r y S tre e t. No. 115
D enver, C o lo ra d o 80270
P A R C E L N o. 801
D a v id W . R h o a d e s .
G e n e ra l P a r t n e r
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L td ., a C a n c e lle d P a rtn e rs h ip
7700 E a s t D r y C re e k R oad
E n g le w o o d , C o lo ra d o 10112
P A R C E L N o. 802
D a v id W . R h o a d e s .
G e n e ra l P a r m e r
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k h e lt d S u le m a n A le ss a
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N eser A l A r b a s h
R eside n ce U n k n o w n
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M o h a m m e d T a g e H. A l A w a d l
R esidence U n k n o w n
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J e ffre y B e d e ll
R e side n ce U n k n o w n
P A R C E L No M2
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R e sidence U n k n o w n
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R e side n ce U n k n o w n
P A R C E L NO. M 2
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T o a ll s a id d e fe n d a n ts w h o i r e
liv in g , a n d If a n y o r e ll de4endanls
a re d e c e e s e d . th e u n k n o w n spouse,
h e ir s .
d e v is e e s .
g ra n te e s ,
c re d ito rs , lie n o rs , o r o th e r p e rtie s
c la im in g b y . th ro u g h , u n d e r, o r
e g a ln s t a n y
s u c h deceased
d e fe n d a n t o r d e fe n d a n ts , if a liv e .

a n d , i f d e a d , t h e ir u n k n o w n
sp o u se , h e ir s , d e vise e s, le g a te e s,
g ra n te e s , c r e d ito rs , lie n o rs , o r
o th e r
p a r t ie s
c la im in g
by,
th ro u g h , u n d e r, o r a g a in s t a n y
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d e fe n d a n ts , a n d a lt o th e r p a r lie s
h a v in g o r c la im in g lo h a ve a n y
r ig h t , t it le , o r I n t e r e s t . s end to th e
p ro p e rty d e s c rib e d in th e P e titio n ,
to w it :
S E C T IO N
77010-1544 S T A T E
R O A D 410 S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
D E S C R IP T IO N
P A R C E L NO. 100
F E E S IM P L E W A T E R
R E T E N T IO N A R E A
W A T E R R E T E N T IO N A R E A le ft
( N o r t h ! S ta tio n 1407 10017
T h a t p a r t o f:
T h e N o rth ' i o f th e SE &lt;4 o l th e
N E ’ r o t S e c tio n 14, T o w n s h ip 21
S o u lh . R a n g e 79 E ast Hess th e
E a s t 737 I t fe e t th e re o f);
ly in g
w it h in
th e
f o llo w in g
d e s c rib e d b o u n d a rie s :
C o m m e n c e on th e W est lin e o t
th e S E &lt;4 o t th e N E &lt;4, S ectio n la .
T o w n s h ip 21 S ou th , R ange n E a s t
at a p o in t n o ] 06 feet S outh 00
d e g re e s 13' 04“ E a s t of th e N o r
t h w e il c o rn e r th e re o f; said p o in t
b e in g o n a c u rv e co n cave lo th e
N o rth w e s te rly a n d h a v in g a
ra d iu s o f 286 4 93 fe e l ( c h o r d ) ;
th e n c e Ir o m a ta n g e n t b e a rin g o t
N o rth 77 d e g re e s 37' 38" E a s t r u n
E a s te r ly a lo n g th e a rc of s a id
c u rv e th ro u g h a c e n tra l a n g le o f 12
d e g re e s 30' 4 4 " a d is ta n c e of 030.01
te e t to a p o in t bn sa id c u rv e ,
h a v in g a ta n g e n t b e a rin g o t N o rth
00 d e g re e s 20' S4" E a s t; th e n c e
N o rth 00 d e g re e s 42' 2 2 " W e st a
d is ta n c e o t 471.70 I te t to a P O IN T
O F B E G IN N IN G ; th e nce c o n tin u e
N o rth 00 d e g re e s 42' 2 2 " W e st a
d is ta n c e o t 771 le e t; th e n c e S o u lh
•9 d e g re e s S5' 3 2 " W est a d is ta n c e
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4 2 '7 7 " E a s t a d is ta n c e d 27) fe e t;
th e n c e N o r th 89 degrees 55' 3 2 "
E a s t a d is ta n c e o l 21S teet to th e
P o in t o l B e g in n in g
C o n ta in in g 1.137 a c re , m o re o r
less.
OW NED
BY:
KHALED
S U L E M A N A L E S S A ( M a r it a l
S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
M O H A M M E D TAGE H . A L
A W A D I ( M a r it a l S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
N A S E R A L A R B A S H ( M a r it a l
S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
ABD U LR AZO O L
JU M A
( M a r it a l S ta tu s U n kn o w n )
S U B JE C T TO: M O R TG A G E
re c o rd e d in O ffic ia l R e co rd s B oo k
1151, p a g e 991, M O R T G A G E
A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d In O f
f ic ia l R e c o rd s B ook 1311, p a g o M S.
a n d M O R T G A G E A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d In O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B ook
1400, p a g e 0001 In fa v o r o f B A R ­
NETT
BANK
OF
SOUTH
F L O R ID A . M .A .; and M O R G A C E
re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l R e co rd s B oo k
1411. p a g e 340 in fa v o r o f S A N ­
T A N A B U IL D IN G A N D C O N
S T R U C T IO N
COM PANY,
a
F lo r id a C o rp o ra tio n ; a n d M O R ­
T G A G E A S S IG N M E N T re c o rd a d
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13*2,
p a g e 1875 in fa v o r o f S T E R L IN G
C A P IT A L IN V E S T M E N T , I N C . . *
F lo r id a C o rp o ra tio n .
P A R C IL N O .III
F E E S IM P L E • R IO H T O F W A V
T h a t p a r t o f;
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W e s t i l l 08 fe e t, thence S o u th 1 *
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r ig h t o l w a y lin e , th e n c e N o r th 89
d e g re e s 40' 34" W est 2SOO le e t
a lo n g s a id rig h t o f w a y lin e , th e n c e
N o rth 00 d e g re es 19' 2 4 " E a s t
170 00 le e t a long sa id r i g h t o f w a y
lin e , th e n c e N o rth 19 d e g re e s 41'
5 8 " W e st 200 00 fe e l, th e n c e N o rth
00 d e g re e s 19- 7 4 " E a s t 200 OO fe e l
to a p o in t on th e S ou lh r i g h t o f w a y
lin e o f S ta le R oad No. 4 )4 , th e n c e
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d e g re e s !9 ‘ 0 0 " E a s t a d is ta n c e o l
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S o u th 19
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B E G IN N IN G ;
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th e n c e N o rth 00 d e g re e s 07' 19"
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P o in t o l B e g in n in g .
C o n ta in in g 5 . I X s q u a re fe e t
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O W N E D B Y : W Y M O R E IN N .
L T D ., a F lo r id a L im it e d P a r t
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P a r tn e r
S U B JE C T TO : M O R T G A G E
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A S S IG N M E N T S
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M E N T r e c o r d e d In O f f i c i a l
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R e c o rd s B ook 1185, p a g e 1840 In
f a v o r o f th e R O Y A L B A N K O F
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ALTAM O N TE
418, L T D . , a
F lo r id a L im it e d P a r t n e r s h ip ;
W y m o re , In c ., a
F lo r id a C o r­
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South 71 d e g re e s 13' 3 5 " W e st ru n
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64 d e g re es 18' 5 4 " W e s t, thence
South 19 d e g re e s 55’ 3 7 " W est a
d ista nce o l 371 57 le e t. thence
South 00 d e g re e s 42' 2 2 " E a s t a
d ista nce o l 20 f e e t , th e n c e N o rth 19
degrees 55’ 3 2 " E a s t a d is ta n c e of
325.18 le e t to th e e x is tin g rig h t ot
w a y lin e o f S ta te R o a d 436 a n d to a
p o in t on a c u r v e c o n c a v e to the
S o u th e a ste rly a n d h a v in g a ra d iu s
of 1,960 08 fe e t; th e n c e Iro m 8
ta n g e n t b e a r in g o l N o r t h 61
degrees 12' 1 4 " E a s t ru n N o r
th e a s te rly a lo n g th e a rc o f said
c u rv e th ro u g h a c e n lr a l a n g le ot 07
degrees 49' 4 1 " a d is ta n c e o l 96 I t
feet to Ih e P o in t o f B e g in n in g
C o n ta in in g 1 442 s q u a re fe e t,
m ore o r le u .
OW NED
BY:
A M E R IC A N
H E R IT A G E
IN V E S T M E N T S ,
L T D . a C o lo ra d o L im it e d P a rt
n e rsh ip . T E R R Y E . JO H N S O N ,
R O B E R T W . B E A L E . I I I . and
D A V ID W . R H O A O E S . a s G e n e ra l
P a rtn e rs
S U B JE C T T O : M O R T G A G E
re co rd e d in O t l ic ia l R e c o rd s Book
69a page I l f ; M O D IF IC A T IO N
A G R E E M E N T re c o rd e d in Of
H cla l R e c o rd s B o o k 775, page 151;
F I N A N C IN G
STATEM ENT
re co rde d in O f f ic ia l R e c o rd s Book
774, page 414; A S S IG N M E N T OF
M O R T G A G E re c o r d e d In O tlic ia l
R ecords B o o k 775,
p a g e 154;
F IN A N C IN G
S tA T E M E N T
A S S IG N M E N T re c o r d e d In Ot
f ld a l R e c o rd s B o o k 1044; page
1411; F IN A N C IN G S T A T E M E N T
re c o rd e d I n o f f i c i a l R e c o rd s Book
1728, p e g * 1 5 0 1. F I N A N C I N G
STATEM ENT
C O N T IN U A T IO N
re co rd e d in O lf ic ia l R e c o rd s Book
1144. page 1819; M O D IF IC A T IO N
A G R E E M E N T re c o r d e d In o ffic ia l
R ecords
B o o k 1071, p a g e 141;
S U B O R D IN A T IO N
AGREE
M ENT
r e c o r d e d in O f f ic ia l
R ecords B o o k 1110, p a g e 1917;
M O R T G A G E A N O T E M O D IF I
C A T IO N A G R E E M E N T re co rd e d
in O f f ld a l R e c o rd s B o o k 1121, page
1401; M O R T G A G E * N O T E M O D
IF I C A T I O N
AGREEM ENT
re co rd e d in O f f ic ia l R e c o rd s Book
1217, p a g e t t S ; M O R T G A G E t
N O T E M O D IF IC A T IO N A G R E E
M E N T re c o rd e d
in O f f ic ia l
R ecords B o o k 1219. p a g e 1844;
M O R T G A G E * N O T E M O O IF I
C A T IO N r e c o r d e d in O f f ic ia l
R ecords B o o k 1121; p a g e t i l l ; and
F IN A N C I N G
STATEM ENT
re co rd e d in O f f ic ia l R e c o rd s Book
1321, p a g e 1M 4 in fa v o r of
N A T IO N A L L I F E IN S U R A N C E
C O M P A N Y . a n d ( N l t N E S T Of
S T E V E N J . G R E E N a s Ih e la s t
s u rv iv in g D ir e c t o r o f K -R E A L
M ANAGEM ENT,
IN C .,
a
D is s o lv e d F l o r i d a C o r p o r a tio n ,
and as s u c h T ru s te e f o r sa id
d is s o lv e d
c o r p o r a tio n
under

M O R T G A G E re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l
R e co rd s
B ook 1121; page 684;
A M E N D M E N T TO M O R TG A G E
re c o rd e d I n o f f i c i a l R e co rd s B ook
1123. p a g e 6 9 ); A S S IG N M E N T O F
RENTS
re c o rd e d
In O lt lc la l
R e co rd s B oo k 1173. page 693;
F IN A N C IN G
STATEM ENT
re c o rd e d in O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B ook
1173. p a g e *9 9 ; C O R R E C T IV E
M O R T G A G E re c o rd e d in O ffic ia l
R e co rd s
B oo k 1157. page 730;
M ORTGAGE
A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d in O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B ook
1157. p a g e 1168; F IN A N C IN G
STATEM ENT
C O N T IN U A T IO N
re c o rd e d in O f f ic ia l R ecords B ook
1157, p a g e 1919; F I N A N C I N G
S T A T E M E N T re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l
R e co rd s B o o k 1157, page 1970;
F IN A N C IN G
STATEM ENT
C O N T IN U A T IO N
re co rd e d In
O il I d a I R e c o rd s B ook 1196, page
12. A S S IG N M E N T S re c o rd e d in
O ffic ia l R e c o rd s B ook l)S8. pa g es
1526 a n d 1577; M O D IF IC A T IO N
A G R E E M E N T re c o rd e d In O f
fic ia l R e c o rd s B ook 1377, page
1757. a n d M O R T G A G E re c o rd e d
I n o f f ic ia l R e c o rd s B ook 1776. page
1149, A S S IG N M E N T OF R E N T S
re c o rd e d In O f f ic ia l R ecords B ook
1776. p a g e 1469. F I N A N C I N G
S T A T E M E N T re c o rd e d In O ffIc ia l
R e co rd s B o o k 1276. page 1173;
M O D IF IC A T IO N
OF M O R T
GAGE
r e c o r d e d In O f f i c i a l
R e c o rd s B o o k 1171, p a g e 114* in
fa v o r
of V A L L E Y FORGE
A P A R T M E N T S , L T D ., I C an
c e lle d F lo r id a L im ite d
P a rt
n e r s h ip .
and
M ORTGAGE
re c o rd e d in O f f ic ia l R ecoA fs B ook
1319. p a g e 220; F IN A N C IN G
S T A T E M E N T re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l
R e co rd s B o o k 1119. page 221 In
fa v o r o f R O C K Y M O U N T A IN IN
V E S T M E N T S , L T D ., a C a n ce lle d
C o lo ra d o L im it e d
P a rtn e rs h ip ;
and
U T IL IT Y
EASEM ENT
re c o rd e d in O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B ook
779, p a g e 37 in la v o r of F L O R ID A
P O W E R C O R P O R A T IO N ; a n d
J U D G M E N T re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l
R e c o rd s B o o k 897, page 369 In
fa v o r o f J A C K E L L IS , a n d J U D G
M ENT
r e c o r d e d In O f f i c i a l
R e c o rd s B o o k 911, page 177 In
f iv o r o f J E F F R E Y B E D E L L ; and
J U D G M E N T re c o rd e d In O f f ic ia l
R e c o rd s B o o k 9 5 ), page 159 In
la v o r o f M A R IO N K . W O R M A N ;
and IN T E R E S T o f D O N A L D R
E M M O N S . N O R M A N P O O L, a n d
G A R O L D F . C R A Y T O N as th e
la s t s u r v iv in g D ir e c to r) o f A D ­
V A N C E A Q U A T E C H N IC ASS O
C l A T i O N , I N C - a c a n c e lle d
F lo r id a C o rp o ra tio n a n d as su c h
T ru s te e s f o r M id c a n c e lle d c o r
p o r a llo n
u nder JU D G M E N T
re c o rd e d In O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B oo k
1047, p a g o 1849; a n d M O R T G A G E
re c o rd e d in O lf ic ia l R e co rd s B oo k
1351. p a g e 9 t2 ; A S S IG N M E N T O F
M O R T G A G E re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l
R e c o rd s B o o k 1151, page 995; a n d
A S S IG N M E N T O F M O R T G A G E
re c o rd e d In O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B ook
1400, p a g e 0001 in fa v o r o l B A R ­
NETT
BANK
OF
SOUTH
F L O R ID A , N . A . ; a n d IN G R E S S
l
EGRESS
EASEM ENTS
re c o rd e d In O f f ic ia l R e co rd s B ook
l i s t , p a g e 990 a n d O ffic ia l R e c o rd s
B ook 1414, p a g e 1948 In fa v o r o f
KHALED
S U LE M A N A LE S SA ,
MOHAMMED
TAG E H. A L
A W A O I, N A S E R A L A R B A S H ,
A ND A B D U LR A ZO O L JU M A
F A R C IL N O .M 4

P E R P E T U A L S T O R M D R A IN
A N D M A IN T E N A N C E R O A D
R IO H T O F W A V E A S E M E N T

Thjt Dirt of:

T h e N V i o f Ih e SE 'A o f I h ^ N E to
of S e c tio n 14, T o w n s h ip i t S o u th ,
R a n g e 29 E a s t, ( l « s ) h t C a s t
737 81 fe a t th e r e o f) ly in g w it h in th e
fo llo w in g d e s c rib e d b o u n d a rie s :
C o m m e n c e o n th e W est lin e o f
th e S E &lt;k o f th e N E Vs of S e c tio n 14,
T o w n s h ip 21 S o u th , R e n go 29 E a s t
e t a p o in t 1181.08 fe e t S ou th 00

O eg re e s 33' 04” E ast ot ih e N o r
th w e s l c o rn e r th e re o t, s a id p o in t
b e in g o n a c u rv e c o n c a v e to Ih e
N o rth w e s te rly and h a v in g a ra d iu s
of 7864 93 I eel ( c h o r d ) ; th e n c e
f r o m a ta n g e n t b e a rin g o l N o r th 77
d e g re e s 57’ 3 8 " E a st ru n E a s t e r ly
a lo n g Ih e a rc o f s a d c u r v e th ro u g h
a c e n lr a l a n g le 17 d e g re e s 14' 4 4 " a
d is ta n c e o f 830 81 feet to a p o in t on
s a id c u rv e , h a v in g a ta n g e n t
b e a rin g o f N o rth 60 d e g re e s 20' 5 4 "
E a s t; th e n c e N o rth 00 d e g re e s 4?'
7 7 " W e s t a d ls t4 n c e o f 754 76 f# e t lo
th e P O IN T OF B E G IN N IN G ;
th e n c e S ou th 89 d e g re e s 55' 32'*
W e st a d is ta n c e of 70 55 le e t;
th e n c e N o rth 01 d e g re es 47' 3 ? "
E a s t a d is ta n c e of 74 01 fe e t;
th e n c e N o rth 49 d e g re e s 55' 3 2 "
E a s t a d is ta n c e of 69 54 te e t.
th e n c e S ou th 00 d e g re e s 42' 2 2 "
E a s t a d is ta n c e of 74 fe e t to Ih e
P o in t o l B e g in n in g
C o n ta in in g 1.641 s q u a re le e t,
m o re o r less
OW NED
BY
KHALED
S U L E M A N A LE S S A ( M a r ita l
S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
M O H A M M E D TAGE H
AL
AW ADE
( M a r it a l
S ta tu s
U nknow n)
N A S E R A L A R B A S H ( M a r it a l
S ta tu s U n k n o w n !
ABDULRAZO O L
JU M A
( M a r it a l S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
S U B JE C T TO M O R T G A G E
re c o rd e d In O f lld a l R e c o rd s B oo k
1151, p a g e 992. M O R T G A G E
A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d in O l
f ic ia l R e c o rd s Book 1351. p a g e 995,
a n d M O R T G A G E A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d In O ffic ia l R e c o rd s B oo k
1400. p a g e 0001 in fa v o r o f B A R
NETT
BANK
OF
SOUTH
F L O R ID A , N .A .:
and M O R T
GAGE
re c o rd e d
in O l f i c i a l
R e c o rd s B ook 1413, p a g e 360 in
la v o r o f S A N T A N A B U I L D I N G
A N D C O N S T R U C T IO N C O M
P A N Y , a F lo r Ida C o rp o ra tio n , a n d
M O R T G A G E A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d in O tlic ia l R e c o rd s B oo k
1382. p a g e 1875 in la v o r o f &amp; T E R
L IN G C A P IT A L IN V E S T M E N T S ,
IN C ., a F lo r id a C o rp o ra tio n
P A R C E L NO 80S
P E R P E T U A L STORM S E W E R
EASEM ENT
S to rm S ew er E a s e m e n t le f t
( N o r t h l S ta tio n 1402 800.87 ( P a r t )
T h a i p a r t o f:
T h e N 1 jo f t h e S E W o t th e N E
of S e c tio n i f . T o w n s h ip 71 S o u th ,
R a n g e 29 E e s l, (le s s th e E a s t
737.11 te e t th e re o f I
d e s c rib e d as fo llo w s :
C o m m e n c e on th e E a s t lin e o t
sa id S e c tio n 14 a t a p o in t 1,950 Of
fe e l S o u lh 00 d e g re e s 35' 11“ E a s t
a lo n g s a id lin e fro m th e N o rth e a s t
c o rn e r th e re o f; sa id p o in t b e in g o n
a c u r v e co n c a v e lo th e S o u th e rly
a n d h a v in g a ra d iu s o f 191001 fe e t;
th e n c e fr o m a ta n g e n t b e a rin g o f
S outh 10 d e g re e s 13' 7 4 " W e s t r u n
S o u th w e s te rly a lo n g th a a r c o t s a id
c u rv e th ro u g h a c e n tra l a n g lt o f 20
d e g re e s 15' 10" a d is ta n c e o f 875 09
fe e t to th e end o f s a id c u r v e ;
th e n c e S ou th 59 d e g re e s 51' 1 4 "
W e st a d is ta n c e o f 97.10 fe e t to th e
b e g in n in g o f a c u rv e c o n c a v e lo
th e N o r th w e ite r ly a n d h a v in g a
ra d iu s o t 2184.93 fe e l, th e n c e r u n
W e s te rly e iong Ih e a r c o f s a id
c u r v e th ro u g h e c e n tra l a n g le o f 00
d e g re e s 27' 4 0 " • d is te n c e o f 11 a t
te e t t o a p o in t o n u i d c u rv e h a v in g
a ta n g e n t b e a rin g of S o u th 80
d e g re e * 20' S f" W e s t; th e n c e ru n
N o rth 00 d e g re e s 42' 2 2 " W e s t a
d is ta n c e o f 549.78 fe e l to th e
P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G ; th e n c e
c o n tin u e N o rth 00 d e g re e s 41' 2 2 "
W e s t a d is ta n c e o f 184 32 fe e t;
th e n c e S outh 19 d e g re e s 45’ 41“
w e s t a d is ta n c e of 40 le e t ; th e n c e
S o u th 00 d e g re e s 42’ 2 2 " E a s t a
d is ta n c e of 164 21 f e e t ; th e n c e
N o rth 19 d e g re e s S3' 1 2 " E a s t a
d is ta n c e o f 40 fe e l to ih e P o l it o f
B e g in n in g .
C o n ta in in g O U l ’ a c re , m o r e o r
less.

OW NED
BY
, KHALEO
S U L E M A N A L E S S A ( M a r it a l
S tatus U n k n o w n !
MOHAM M ED TAG E H
AL
A W A D I ( M a r it a l S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
NASER AL A N B A S H
Status U n k n o w n !

(M a rita l

m o re o r le ss
OW NED
BY
LO M BARDI
A L T A M O N T E , IN C ,, a F lo r id a
C o rp o ra tio n
S U B JE C T TO
M O R TG A G E
re c o rd e d In O tlic ia l R ecords Book

995. p a g r 884. F I N A N C I N G
ABD U LR AZO O L
JU M A
S T A T E M E N T re c o rd e d in O f t lc ia l
(M a r ita l S ta tu s U n k n o w n )
R
e c o rd ! B oo k 995. p a g e 889 a n d
S U B JE C T TO
M ORTGAGE
A
S S IG N M E N T O F L E A S E S A N D
re co rd e d In O l f ic ia l R e c o rd s Qdbk
RENTS
re c o r d e d in O t lic ia l
1351, p a g e 9 9 2 , M O R T G A G E
R e c o rd s
B oo k 995. page 891 in
A S S IG N M E N T r e c o r d e d In Ot
fic ia l R e co rd s B o o k 1351, p a g e 995. la v o r o f S E C U R IT Y F IR S T
F E D E R A L S A V IN G S A N D L O A N
a n d M O R T G A G E A S S IG N M E N T
re c o rd e d in O t lic ia l R e c o rd s Book A S S O C IA T IO N , fo r m e r ly k n o w n
as S e c u rity F e d e ra l S avin g s and
1400. page 0001 in f a v o r o t OAR
L o a n A s s o c ia tio n o t W in te r P a rk
NETT
BANK
OF
SOUTH
a n d E A S E M E N T r e c o r d e d in
F L O R ID A . N A . , a n d M O R T
G A G E re c o rd e d
in 'O f f ic ia l O tlic ia l R e c o rd s B o o k 1 tl3 , page
R ecords B oo k 1413, p a g e 360 in 1547 m fa v o r o f F L O R ID A P O W E R
C O R P O R A T IO N , a n d M O R T
la v o r o l S A N T A N A U U IL D IN G
GAGE
re c o rd e d
in O f f i c i a l
A N O C O N S T R U C T IO N C O M
P A N V , a F lo r id a
C o rp o ra lio n ; R e co rd s B o o k 139 4, page 791 in
la v o r o t J U L I A E K U E T T N E R .
a n d M O R T G A G E A S S IG N M E N T
and
re co rd e d In O f f ic ia l R e c o rd s Book W IL S O N G R E E N , J R .,
1367, page 1675 in fa v o r of R O B E R T L . S T A U F F E R . And
IN T E R E S T o f R O B E R T M IN
S T E R L IN G C A P IT A L IN V E S T
S H E W a n d R O S A L IN E F R IE D
M E N T S . IN C .;
a F lo r id a C or
M A N a s th e la s t s u r v iv in g
p o ra t ion
D ire c to rs o f F M &amp; G . IN C ., a
P A R C E L NO. IIJ
D is s o lv e d F lo r id a C o r p o r a t io n ,
P E R P E TU A L S TO R M SEW ER
and a s s u c h T ru s te e s lo r s a id
EASEM ENT
S to rm S ew e r E a s e m e n t R ig h t d is s o lv e d c o rp o ra tio n , u n d e r U N
R E C O R D E D LEASE A G R EE
(S o uth ) S ta tio n 1478♦ 30 57
M E N T a n d A S S IG N M E N T OF
That p a rt o f:
L o ts 573, 574. 599 a n d 600. L E A S E in l a v o r o t R .A 8 G ., IN C .
A lta m o n te L a n d , H o t e l, a n d
Y o u a r e e a c h n o tifie d th a t tn e
N a v ig a tio n Co , p la t a s re c o rd e d In P e titio n e r file d its s w o rn P e titio n
P la t Book I , p a g e 12, p u b lic and Its D e c la r a tio n ot t a k in g in
re c o r d s o t S e m in o le C o u n ty , th is C o u rt -a g a in s t you as d e te n
F lo rid a ; d e s c rib e d a s lo llo w s
d am s, s e e k in g to co n d e m n b y
F ro m th e SW c o rn e r o f L o t 570 o l rm m e n t d o m a in p ro c e e d in g s Ihe
sa id A lta m o n te L a n d , H o te l and a b ove d e s c rib e d p ro p e rty lo c a te d
N a v ig a tio n Co p la t, ru n N 89 In th e S ta te of F lo rid a , C o u n ty of
degrees 56' 4 4 " E a lo n g th e Soulh S em ino le
lin e o l L o ts 570. 571 , 572 a n d 573 of
Y o u a r e f u r t h e r n o tifie d th a t th e
said p la t 480 00 te e t to th e P o in t of
B e g in n in g , th e n c e N 00 d e g re e s 19' P e titio n e r w ill c a ll u p lo r h e a rin g
16" E 113 67 fe e t to Ih e s o u th e rly R b e fo re th e H o n o ra b le S Joseph
W lin e o t S la te H o a d 436, th e n c e N D a v is , J r o n e o f th e Judges of th is
17 degrees 37' 4 4 " E 7.15 fe e t to th e C o u rt o n th e 7 8 th d a y of F e b ru a ry
P C o f a c u rv e c o n c a v e s o u th e rly A O . 1983. a t 1 30 o 'c lo c k P M . in
and h a vin g a r a d iu s o t 5681 8$ te e t; S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e ,
ru n th e nce e a s te r ly a lo n g th e a rc S an fo rd , (ro o m 270) F lo rid a , its
of sa&gt;d c u rv e 172 93 fe e l th ru a a p p lic a tio n lo r a n O rd e r o t T a k in g
c e n lra l a n g le of 01 d e g re e s 45' 0 0 "; A ll p a rtie s lo th is s u it a n d a ll o th e r
thence ru n S 00 d e g re e s 19' 18" E in te re s te d p a rtie s m a y a p p e a r'a t
7 )3 0 9 fe e t to a p o in t 25 fe e t Ihe lim e a n d p la c e d e s-g n a ie d and
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601. th e nce S 89 d e g re e s 54' 4 4 " W
ANO
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teet to thw P o in t o l B e g in n in g ;
DEPARTMENT
OF
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ly in g
w ilh ln
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Post O ffic e B ox 47
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d is ta n c e of 189 44 fe e t, th e nce M a il S ta tio n 74
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w h y th e p r o p e r ty sh o u ld n o t be
c u rv e c o n c a v e t o th e S o u th e rly
and h a v in g a r a d iu s o f 5441 45 le a f; c o n d e m n e d f o r th e u s e s a n d
Ihence fr o m a ta n g e n t b e a rin g of p u rp o s e s s e t fo r th in ih e P e titio n .
N o rth 17 d e g re e s 45* 1 5 " E a s t ru n I t y o u f a l l to d o so. a d e fa u lt m a y
E a s te rly a lo n g th e a r c o f sa id be e n te r e d a g a in s t yo u t o r th e
cu rv e t h r o u g h # c e n tr a l a n g le o f 00 re lie f d e m a n d e d In Ih e P e titio n
degrees 74* I I " a d is ta n c e o t 40 02
W IT N E S S M Y H A N D A N D
feet lo a p o in t o n s a id c u rv e h a v in g S E A L o t s a id C o u rt o n Ih e 7 0 lh d a y
a ta n g e n t b e a r in g
o f N o rth | | of J a n u a r y , A t) .. 1983
degrees 09' 3 J " E a s t; ih e n c e S oulh ( A r t h u r H B e c k w ith , J r .
00 d e g re es 18' 1 4 " E a s t a d is ta n c e
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
of 104.15 fe e t ; Ih e n c e S ou th 77 C O U R T
degrees 02' 7 6 " W e s t a d is ta n c e of
B Y C y n th ia P ro c lo r
119.41 f e e t ; Ih e n c e S o u lh 19
D e p u ty C le rk
degrees S4* 4 7 " W e s t a d is ta n c e o l
(S E A L )
44.94 f e e lt o th e P o in t o f B e g in n in g P u b lis h ; J a n 21. 191]
C o n ta in in g 7,301 s q u a re fe e l. O E D 115

4^/9

�lO A -E v e n in g Herald. Sanlord, F I.

Sunday, Jan. 13, 1983

...Peace Treaty Failed To Halt The W ar In Indochina
Continued From Page 1A
tcnced to 20 &gt;ears and was released after a few months.
Calley was the exception, of course. Most GIs fought the war
as properly ns they could under the circumstances. Still, the
U.S involvement was condemned around the world, by friends
and foes alike, and millions of Americans were hopelessly
divided by what seemed to be an endless slaughter.
There were many attempts to end it. to be sure. But most of
them were futile. Henry Cabot Ixxlgc tried to arrange truce
talks in Warsaw as early as 1966, but he failed And Lyndon
Johnson offered to meet North Vietnamese leaders on a
neutral ship, in international w aters, but they refused.
Then, in 1968, U S. troubleshooter W. Avereil Harriman set
up a peace conference in Paris. Harriman and Cyrus Vance
represented the United States.
The conference was held in the ornate grand ballroom what
had once been the Majestic Hotel. And the atmosphere was
thick with bitterness and acrimony. The South Vietnamese
delegate refused to speak directly to Madam Nguyen Thi Binh,
the representative of the Viet Cong, and the communists
whiled away long hours with sodden reports of no consequence.
At first, the participants could not even agree on the shape of
the table. Madam Binh objected to an oblong table because it
had unequal sides. Pham hang I Jim, the chief negotiator for
the South Vietnamese, turned down a square table because he
opposed equality. Finally, the delegates agreed to a large
round table, with green baize.
That was to be the last agreement for more than four years.
The parties continued to meet almost every week, but there
was no progress to speak of through 1972. At one point in the
negotiations. Madam Binh said the United States did not want

peace so much as it wanted to murder children.
Madam Binh said a lot of things during the sessions. She was
more or less the top performer at the conference. She was
graceful, sophisticated and full of hate; she gave interviews at
a home in a Paris suburb, and wept convincingly when she told
of Viet Cong suffering and solidarity.
“ 1 have seen babies with their legs blown off," she said once,
"and 1 have seen wives collapse on the caskets of their
husbands. But I have not seen surrender. We will not give up,
either in Paris or in Vietnam. We will continue this struggle
until the United States goes home."
The U.S. started to do just lhat shortly after Nixon took office
in 1969. In June of lhat year, when the number of U.S. troops in
Vietnam stood at an unprecedented Ml,000, he ordered the
first of many withdrawals. By the end of 1972 there were only
27,900 American GIs remaining.
Then, with the United States all but out, the Paris peace
conference came suddenly to life. During one six-day period in
mid-January, Henry Kissinger, Nixon's em issary to the talks,
and North Vietnam's I ,c Due Tho talked privately for 35 hours.
Afterward, Nixon called off the last of the bombing of the
North Vietnamese, and a treaty was printed.
The treaty covered nine main points, four of which were
crucial. One, the cease fire would begin a| 7 p.m., Washington
time, Jan. 2J. Two, the U.S. would withdraw completely in 60
days. Three, prisoners would lie exchanged. And, four, the
truce would be supervised by a 1,160 member commission with
members from four nations.
I,e Due Tho said the truce represented victory for the
communists. South Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu said
it was a vindication for allied cooperation. But on balance, it

...Vocational Education Programs Backed

...Truckers

Continued From Page 1A
Continued From Page IA
van. F o r years prior to operating in­
dependently, he leased his equipment to a
trucking company.
"The federal taxes are very harsh," he said,
estimating the new gas and use tuxes will cost
him an additional $5,000 a year.
Bed Phipps amt his wife, Harlean, of
Plymouth, N.C., hove been working together
in the trucking industry for 22 years.
"I've heard of the proposed strik e,” he said,
“and I agree with them. I’ve got to par­
ticipate."
He pointed to his blue truck and trailer,
noting it cost $125,000 and he has only one more
year before it will be paid for.
“We’re about to go broke," he said. Hnrlean
agreed, noting lhat last year while they
grossed about $120,000, their net income was
about $19,000. “The road and tire taxes are just
too m uch," he said.
"Everything we've got-our home and fur­
nishings—are tied to this truck. The new
federal taxes will cost us $1,800 to $2,800 more
a year. We arc struggling to haul freight nowfur the sam e amount we received four to five
years ago.
"We hauled cukes five years ago for the
same rale und fuel costs three lim es as much.
It used lu cost (30 to gel u loud o( cabbage
unloaded und now It costs (75," Phipps said.
Phipps said Harlean shares driving with him
and is a big help. "If you're driving produce
out of Florida to New York, you need two
drivers," he said. "If we load up on Monday at
3, they want us In New York by Tuesday
night."
Phipps predicted that truckers who must go
to or through Alabama, Ohio or Pennsylvania,
will stiut down. "If you roll trucks through
those states during a strike, you'll be in
trouble," he said, hinting at the violence that
marked the truckers' strike of the '70s.
Sidney Bunch of Tyner, N.C., an in­
dependent trucker for the past 27 years, said in
the past a m an could buy and pay for a truck,
and pay a driver. "I sent my wife and
daughter to college and set m y son up in
business with what I earned," Bunch said.
"Now, I’m struggling to stay in business
myself.
"As soon as I get home from this trip, I’m
going to park my truck in my yard. There are
some young boys who are truckers out there
ami they will shoot your tires off," he said,
noting lhat tires for an 18-whcelcr cost more
than $300 each.
"Truckers are the worst enemy of truckers.
If they would do this and do it in the right way,
they might accomplish something," Bunch
said.
Bobby Short of Georgetown, Del. who has
been in the business for three years says he

for students to disassemble, repair, and reassemble
brakes, engines, cooling systems and other parts of
the car. In the final year of the program, students
get hands-on experience repairing their own
vehicles or cars brought in through the program,
When a student graduates from the program he is
qualified to work as a mechanic, Butcher said.

JO H N
HAH K IN G T O N

BOBBY

could probably pay the additional five cents
tax, but the increase in the highway tax is just
more than he can afford.
"I've dam n near got to park my truck," he
said.
"Everybody’s going to have to go on the
strike. We can’t afford to pay union men the
costs of unloading and pay the higher fees
too," he said.
Short also said it won’t tie safe to drive on the
roads in the North if the independent truckers
go out on strike. He added, however, he can
afford to sit the strike out. His wife is working.
Detailing one financial aspect of the
trucker's plight, Short said that the rate per
case of cabbage out of Sanford has been $1.90.
Two weeks ago Friday, however, the rale
dropped to $1.50.
"The legal limit is 780 boxes. At 91.00 a box,
a load would have sold at the old rate for
$1,182, Under the $1.50 rate, it sold for $1,170. A
trucker would have, lost $312 on that load,"
Short said.
"No one is saying anything about raising the
rates we can charge."
The 55 mph speed limit was also a favorite
com plaint of the truckers interview ed.
Without exception they said that abiding by
that law is also an extra burden for big rig
drivers.
They said it takes more fuel to drive a truck
•at 55 mites per hour than it does at a higher
speed.
Meanwhile, the independent truckers are
concerned not only about the highway use tax
increases, but also about the proposed fivecenl-a-gallon in taxes on fuel being considered
in Florida and the proposed hike doubling of
the cost of vehicle license plates.
“ I Just don’t believe the federal govern­
ment and the stales can blame the road
deterioration on truckers," Short said. The
others agreed.
And Vicky Getman, of Vickie’s permit
service at the Farm er's Market, has taken the
truckers' case to Tallahassee, speaking to
legislators individually.
"Some arc listening," she suid, adding that
others ure Just plain rude.

N O T IC E T O M l

VETERANS
WhoHivi HbeonWy SirvodTh#lr Countryii Tint of Waror Pmt

%

BtcauM of tfe lack of burial ip a ct and tt» dtttanoa of ths National Century In Florida,
we are antenmg grave ip a cw In V * m i U rtn i f V im . W lm I w h l N t As an
honorably discharged veteran of the Unfed State* Armed Force*, you may be qualified
for F ile Burial Space. However, you n u t register for tht*. Vou m e t be Ufe to show
proof of Honorable Discharge. There are a limited number of Veteran spaces available.
Certificate* for spaces w ill be «su*d on i first come ftrtt served basis. To M ure reser­
vation. marl tfe coupon below to

r
i

|

• OAKLAWN MEMORIAL PARK*
Rt 4 Boi 244 Santoro. FL 32771
f i n a l 111 i U l

Please Send

I N A M E _____
I ADDRESS ---------I B ra n c h of S erv ice.
I

more than 30-to-one odds against their ^iccess.
Sure enough, the bookkmakers were right. Two million
American servicemen could not force conciliation in Southeast
Asia, and neither could the observers from Canada, Hungary.
Indonesia and Poland. The fighting did not really stop in
Vietnam, nor did it in neighboring I j io s and l ambodia.
Things got worse when the last of the U.S. troops departed in
March of 1973. The South Vietnamese government was not
strong enough to stand alone. In 1975 the communists took over
the south, as U.S, diplomats fled in fear; the regimes in Lios
and Cambodia also toppled.
And fate was to be equally cruel to some of the human
players in the Indo-Chinese drama. Two U.S. presidents were
chased from office, for different reasons. One South Vietnam
premier is now a liquor store owner in exile. And the Viet Cong
stars have been largely ignored in the new Vietnam,
Still, the future was not to be told on Jan. 23, 1973. So there
was even some optimism on the day they signed the treaty.
Pres. Nixon referred to a "peace with honor" five times during
his announcement, and an opinion poll suggested that 5B
percent of the people agreed with the assessment.
Yes there were more sighs than cheers. And the Dow Jones
stock market average dropped 13 points the following day. Hut
ship captains blew Ibeir horns in the New Orleans harbor. And
in l/mgmeadow, Mass., a bell that had been forged by Paul
Revere was rung into the late hours of the night.
In a few days the newspapers returned to Watergate. And
more than 550 prisoners of war were repatriated. In a week
Time magazine ran a cover story about popular music, and
everybody was talking about a Marlon Brando sex film. For
America, the war it couldn't win was at least completed.

was neither; Kissinger was to say later that it was a com­
promise struck by parties with no palatable alternatives.
The compromise was sealed at a stiff, unemotional
ceremony in Paris. It took IB minutes. William Rogers signed
for the U.S., using 20 pens. The Vietnamese belligerants would
not shake hands for photographers. Kissinger said all of the
delegates had aged during the peace process.
But at least they survived it. Many others had not. More than
3 million people died during the war, and as many as 1 million
of them may have been killed during the four years of the Paris
conference. Actually, some 100 people died in Vietnam on the
very day the truce was signed.
One of the latter was an American army colonel named
William Nolde. He was killed during an artillery bombardment
of the U.S. military installation at An Dtc. His wife said she
had a premonition of it. He w as from Mount Pleasant, Mich.,
and he was the last American to die before the peace.
The colonel's death put a pall on peace celebrations in
Mount Pleasant. But people there said there probably would
not have been many shouts anyway. The war had become an
em barrassm ent; F.lton McNeil, a University of Minnesota
psychiatrist, put it this way: "We just got garbaged."
There were some festivities in Vietnam. Bight after the
peace announcement, Viet Cong flags were hoisted all around
Saigon, and loudspeakers played martial music in Hanoi,
Some of the GIs who were left put flowers in their rifle barrels,
while others ceremoniously buried ammunition.
Yet the relief in Vietnam was tempered by the ambiguities of
the moment. Particularly those surrounding the keeping of the
peace. Four nations had been chosen to oversee the Paris
treaty, but bookmakers in Tay Ninh province were giving

_No. in Family
.Telephone No

ica Serial N o. ...

t

While the program is in its first year, one student
already is employed at a local garage. Butcher said.
He also lias several students who have jobs lined up
after graduation.

"T hat’s something we didn't have a few years
ago," said Karen Coleman, an administrative
trainee with the school district. "We prepared
students for the job but didn't worry about training
them for the interview," she said.
And Seminole High Assistant Principal Jim
Thompson said even though the school offers a wide
range of specialized vocational skills, that training
is only a part of the total school program.
"We are a comprehensive school,” Thompson
said. "We provide opportunities for vocational
training but we also give the regular academic
curriculum .”

"I keep records of their testing," he said. "If they
apply for a job, I can take (heir records down to the
employer and show him exactly what they can do."
Catherine Alexander, who teaches secretarial
and office skills at Seminole High, said her students
also work in cooperative program s with local
businesses.
At graduation, many go on to work with the
businesses where they served the internship, Mrs.
Alexander said.
Her students also receive training in job interview
strategies. .

Reagan To Propose Contingency Tax Hikes
WASHINGTON lUPJl - ITesidcnt Hcagan will
propose in his 1984 budget about $135 billion in
contingency tax increases for later years, including
a possible oil import fee that may raise gasoline
prices, if the deficit is too large.
Despite congressional opposition to the idea,
ad m in istratio n officials said F rid a y Heagan
decided to include the contingency tax package in
the budget proposal he will submit to Congress Jan.
31.

The taxes would lake effect Oct. 1, 1985 if the
deficit is higher than about $100 billion, administration officials said.
Administration officials who asked not to be
identified said Heagan will ask for a combination
of energy taxes and an income surtax to raise $40
billion to $50 billion in fiscal 1986 and a total of
about $135 billion over a three-year period. They
said specific details had not been worked out.

Another item in the package is a one-time 4
percent to 5 percent surtax on income, similar to
one President Lyndon Johnson imposed to help pay
for the Vietnam War.
The government also may try to tax employees
for part of the health insurance contributions made
by their employers, which could raise as much as
$9.7 billion in fiscal 1986.

A R E A D EA TH S
MR. WAYNE It. BROCK
Mrs. Wayne R. Brock, 37, of
839 Dunbar Terrace, Winter
Springs, died Thursday. Born
in Marietta, (la., he moved to
Winter
Springs
from
Mublcton, Ga. in 1978. He was
a Protestant and an engineer.
He also was a member of the
Rainbow Express Club.
Survivors include his wife,
Suzanne; parents, Mr. and
Mrs, Arthur Brock, Marietta;
a son, Robert Wayne, Winter
Springs: a daughter, Jennifer
Carol, W inter Springs; a
brother, L arry , Neptune
Beach; and a sister, Mrs.
Sandra West, Austell, Ga.
Garden ChapeLHome for
Funerals, Orlando, is in
charge of arrangements.
MR. ENRItjUE DESMOINES
Mr. Enrique Desmolnes, 53,
of 507 W. Helms Way,
C asselberry, died Wed­
nesday. Born in Vieques,
Puerto Rico, he moved to
Casselberry from New York
in 1979. He was a teacher's
assistant.
Survivors include a son,
Albert, Fort Johnson, N.Y.;
d au g hters, Ms. Mibdalia,
Orlando, Ms. Elizabeth,
Longwood, and Ms. Ivette,
C asselb erry ; a brother,
C hristian; a sister, Mr.
Juanita C hristian, Puerto
Rico and one grandchild.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS. LILLIAN B. VICKERY
Mrs. Lillian B. Vickery, 96.
vf 515 Magnolia Ave., Sanford,
died Thursday morning at
2901 S. Sanford Ave. Born
Feb. 7. 1886 in Hartwell, Ga.,
she moved to Sanford in 1913
with her late husband, J.M.
Vickery. She was a member
of the F irst Baptist Church for
more than 50 years. She was
active in the Women's
Missionary Union and SundaySchool and was a member of
the Seminola Rebekah Lulge.
She ts survived by four
d au g h ters, Mrs. Lourine
M essenger, Mrs. Lillian
Dugan, both of Sanford, Miss
Theo Vickery, Key West, and
Mrs. J.S. I-ee, Ijttim ore,
N.C.; two sons, P.M. Vickery,
Arlington, Texas; and John

W. Vickery, Palatka; two
sisters, Mrs. Ruth Sanders,
H artw ell, and Mrs. Sally
W isbram , Piedmont, A la.;
two b ro th ers, Bill B aker,
Hartwell, and Hike Baker,
Norcross , Ga.; 16 grand­
children and 20 g re a t­
grandchildren, including TV
a c to r and singer John
Schneider, formerly of the
"Dukes of Hazzard.”
Bresson Funeral Home-PA
is in charge of arrangements.

Thursday. Born in Memphis,
Term., she
moved to
Altamonte Springs from
Covina, Calif, in 1976. She was
a
Protestant
ami a
homemaker.
S u rv iv o rs
in c lu d e
daughters, Mrs. Mary E.
P eters, Alatmonte Springs
and Mrs. Alice B. Zeggcl,
Altamonte Springs.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Altamonte S prings, is in
charge of arrangements.

MRS. ROSEMARY
HEALY LUKE
M rs. Rosemary Healy
Luke, 59, of 113 Shady Vale,
Longwood, died Thursday.
Born In Oil City, Pa., she
moved to Longwood from
Atlanta in 1973. She was a
homemaker and a Catholic.
Survivors include h e r
h u sb an d , Ivan; daughters,
Miss Andra l.uke and Miss
R osem ary Luke, both of
I/mgwood; sons, Ivan T. Luke
J r ., Portsmouth, Va., John A.
Luke und Franklin J. Luke,
both of logw ood; brothers,
Robert E. Healy, Oil City,
John Healy, Ashtabula, Ohio,
and the Rev. Patrick J. Healy,
Galeton, Pa.; sisters, Mrs,
Joan Winklebaur, Altoona,
P a .,
Mary
M ortim er,
Kathleen Murray, both of Oil
City, and Ceclia Cashdollar,
Mount Airy, Md.; and two
grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

Funeral Notices

MRS. LINDA I. BRATTON
Mrs. lin d a I. Bratton, 34, of
111 S.W. 75th T e rra c e,
P la n ta tio n ,
Fla.,
died
Thursday. Bom July 19, 1948
In Virginia, she moved to
Sanford In the early 1950s and
to Plantation in 1973. She was
a school teacher and a
m em ber of Pinecrest Baptist
Church, Sanford. She was a
1967 graduate of Seminole
High School and a University
of South Florida alumni.
She is survived by her
h u sb an d
Richard
and
daughter Terri of Plantation;
her parents, Robert and Irene
Ashby, Sanford; a brother,
Robert Ashby Jr., Titusville;
and a sister, Janie Williams,
Arcadia.
Gratnkow Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS. ETHELS. BOWEN
Mrs. Ethel S. Bowen, 92, of
123 S pring Valley Loop,
A ltam onte Springs, died

and 10 a m to n o o n M o n d a y
B risson F u n e r a l H o m e PA in
charge

pm
M o n d a y a t P in e c r e s t
B a p t is t C h u r c h w it h M a r k
W e a v e r o f f ic ia t in g
v is ita tio n
w ill b e Ir o m n o o n to ! p m a t th e
c h u rc h B u r ia l w ill be In G le n
H a ve n M e m o r ia l P a rk , W in te r
P a rk C r a m k o w F u n e ra l H o m e
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B R A T T O N . M R S L IN D A I F u n e ra l s e rv ic e s t o r M r s L in d a
I B ra tto n . J4, o l I I I S W 75th
Terrace, P la n ta tio n , F l a , w ho
died T h u rs d a y , w ill be h e ld a l ]

HOWARD L. PRANIKOFF, D.D .S., M. Sc. D.

ANNOUNCES
The Opening O f A n A d d i t i o n a l
O f f i c e In D e lto n a , F l o r id a
For The P r a c tic e O f .

V IC K E R Y . M R S . L I L L I A N B . M e m o r ia l t e r v ic e s l o r M r s
L illia n 0 V ic k e ry , 96. o l SIS
M a g n o lia A v e , S a n fo rd , w h o
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�PEOPLE
Evening H«raId, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Jan. 33, 1983- iE

C oo kin g
b r e a k fa s t for
l a r g e c r o w d s is
jus t o n e o f A s h b y
Jones' v o lu n te e r
se rv ices. H e says,
'I c a n ' t c o o k p a s t
10 a . m . A f t e r
th a t, a l l o f m y
culinary arts go
ou t o f the
w in d o w .'
Her a id Photo' by D o m

Cla vtla and Ashby J o n e s are both artists — in
different areas, lie is the painter and she

arranges flowers — among her other artistic
endeavors.

Ashby Jones
A Sanford Man For All Seasons
By DORIS DIETRICH
PEOPLE Editor
Ashby Jones changes hats often during a normal, busy
day. And he always has. The 60-year-old public servant
from Sanford is husband, father, grandfather, teacher,
singer, artist an&lt;J sometimes a breakfast cook if he is
cornered early in the morning.
"1 can’t cook past 10 a.m .," the pleasant volunteer says.
“After that, all my culinary arts go out of the window."
A self-described ham. as he calmly puts it, Ashby is
likely to be cast center stage In a comedy skit now and
then. He is willing to attempt ]usl about anything.

Ashby Jones is a man for all seasons.
Bom in Columbus, Ga, Ashby's family moved to San­
ford from Daytona Beach in 1937. His father owned a drug
store where the Perkins Men's Store is now located on
East First Street. After Ashby graduated from Seminole
High School in 1940, his family moved to Ocala.
Prior to entering Seminole County government in 1961,
Ashby put m 11 years on the railroad, worked as
bookkeeper for Wall Plumbing and clerked at "Doc"
McRcynolds Drug Store nights.
He also spent several years working In the insurance
field and served a hitch In the U.S. Navy.

On his job at
Seminole County
Courthouse,
Jones serves as
deputy clerk
under A rth u r
Beckwith Jr.,
Clerk o f Circuit
*

Dietrich i

Court for

Seminole County.

H e ra ld P ho to b y T o m V in c e n t

Ashby has been a member of the Kiwanis Club for 17
years. Weekly at 7:30 a.m., his wits are constructively
criticized at the Sanford Toastmasters d u b meeting
An active member of the First United Methodist
Church, Sanford, Ashby has held nearly every office in the
church. Presently he sings in the choir and has taught a
Sunday School class for '12 or 15 years," he says. "What
started oul as young adults is now middle-aged,” he
laughs.
About 12 years ago, Ashby began taking art seriously.
Having studied mechanical drawing, "1 knew perspective
pretty well," he says. He signed up for art classes at
Seminole Community College in 1970 under Both Hodges.
"She is a very good artist,” he acknowledges.
Ijiter he studied under E.B. Slowe of Indian Mound
Village, Sanford, and Judy Maloney, Sanford. He is a
member of the Sanford Seminole Art Association and
exhibits in all of the SSAA member shows.
Ashby's attractive wife of 40 years, Hay da. shares his
enthusiasm fur puinting, a perfect complement to her
music and writing. She also sings in the church chutr.
Explaining that she is not an artist. Clayda pointed to a
still life she painted. "He stood over me and told me every
stroke to m ake." she laughs
The Jones charming home In Idyllwildc is a melange of
soft citrus tones in yellows and pale greens, Clayda's
favorite colors. Over the cozy round Ice cream parlor
type table in lhe breakfast nook is a collage of the Joneses
two grandsons, "so that we can enjoy them," the proud
grandmother beams,
Clayda and Ashby are the parents of two children.
U’slie Jones, a legal secretary in Memphis, and Glenn
Jones, music director for Seabreeze Junior High School,
Daytona Beach.
The Jones home has all the elements for a superbly
staged art show. Seascapes, landscapes and still life
paintings are tastefully displayed on the walls of every
room. Splashes of carefully combined colors artistically
incorporated on canvas is Ashby's style of expressing
himself.
On one wall of bis meticulously neat home studio is a
framed poem. “The Artisl," written by Clayda.
Mementos, tubes of oil paints, brushes and thinner in­
dicate the busy artist’s love for his rewarding avocation.
Proudly showing a silver medal he won in Sanford’s
Golden Age Games for Art was folluwed by a wide grin
while Ashby explained the gold medal—won for his art
during the 1982 Golden Age Gaines. “ I'm really proud of
this one," he says.
Clayda travels with Ashby several limes a year In arl
shows in which he exhibils and sells. Sometimes he gets
his price and sometimes he doesn't. "I kind of make
enough lo get Ihe frames paid for and about break even,"
he explains.
An artist's lot is nol easy. Art enthusiasts can be

painstakingly picky. A critic cither likes a painting or
dislikes il. 'll (paintingi isn’t lucrative unless you pauil
fulltime or are established," he says.
Ashby mentioned the forthcoming SSAA member show
on Feb, 2(1 where he will be exhibiting and selling The
show , free to the public, will be held from 1 to 5 p in at the
Sanford Civic Center.
The Joneses are a happy, sharing couple who pitch m
when needed-from loading the home dishwasher to
giving the community a helping hand. They share many
common inlerests-from digging in the good earth to
exploring all facets of the fine arts.
Ashby says. “ If you lake the Golden Rule seriously, it
helps.” Tliis is his c r e e d - his philosophy ; "Do unto others
as you would have them do unto you."

Ashby Junes sings in (lie churl'll clmir.

Grand Prix Racers Line Up, Speculate And Crash
greeted each other with hand shakes ami
By KAREN WARNER
slaps on the back. They laughingly joked
Herald Correspondent
to
one another about past races and their
The sun was just beginning to rise as
Ihe cars and trailers began to arrive in victories and defeats.
1
Two hours of set-up was ahead of them
the pit area at the NCR parking lot, l^k e
Mary, for the Second Annual Grand Prix. to be ready for the warm-ups that they
It was a cool brisk morning and a gusty greatly needed. With wrenches in chilled
breeze added a chill that you could feel hands, every engine bolt would need to
be lightened, the clutch and gears would
all the way down to your bones.
Volunteers
w ere
arriving
in be adjusted, air pressure in the tires
preparation for the two days of racing. would be checked and the mix of the fuel
There were tables lo be set up, and would be tested.
Then, slowly, the driver would slide
mountains of tires to be placed around
the curves to act us safely buffers. into the seal and sit there for awhile and
Officials were slowly making their way get the feel of the kart, again carefullyaround the point nine ntile track checking the steering and pedals. After
checking for possible obstructions or Ihe kart was completely sel-up to the
drivers' satisfaction, they would have to
‘hazards.
j Many of the racers had already spent register, then go lo Ihe'weight scale for a
two weeks preparing for this weekend — final check.
The different classes of racing are
..spending all of their free time replacing
decided by Ihe weight of the kail and
nnd repairing worn parts.
The drivers and pit crews worked driver. Many of the drivers will run in
together to unload the gear they had mbre than one class by changing Hie
brought with them and gently lifted out weight of the kart. They can add lead
Jhe go-karls. The only distraction they weights or delete them to get in under the
allowed was in taking time lo greet the weight requirements.
The drivers vary in age. Most of them
^ther drivers as they arrived.
Most of them knew each other, and are from late teens lo early 30s. Many

brought their wives and children along
for the extra support. Nothing to do now,
bul wail until race time.
One by one, they silently lined up at the
starting line. Nervously they wailed for
the time that the silence would be broken
wilh the explosion of engines wanting to
break free into full throttle. The drivers
could hear the pounding of their heart s
and the blood rushing through their
veins. Hesitantly, as they adjusted their
helmets, they would look from left (o
right, at the karts and drivers beside
them at the starting line. Who will Hie
winner be1.’
They pushed aside any thoughts they
had about the danger they were going to
face. Hidden by the gloves they wore
were sweating palms, firmly holding the
steering wheel. On the outside they gave
the appearance of being cool and calm,
but even the spectators could sense Hie
excitement and anticipation the drivers
were feeling This was, after all the
moment they had worked so liard for.
To some, il was just for fun. Hut for
many it was a chance to lest their skill, in
a serious challenge of man against man.
kart against kart.

The flagman entered into view and in
his hand was Hie symbol that the race
was about lo begin. The drivers startl'd
their engines. Slowly, the flag was
raised, and [mused, for ivlial seemed like
an endless (line. Every muscle in the
d riv e rs' bodies tightened and the
pounding in their thesi increased. There
was a lump in their throats that made it
impossible to swallow. Suddenly (lie flag
was lowered and the air was filled with
Hie sound of screaming engines. The race
has begun.
Among the many trophies that could lxhaaded out over the two daVs of racing
created some problems for several
racers. Howard lewis, a five year
veteran of the racing circuit, had his
share of them. Over the 2-day races.
Howard had a total of three dutches blow
on him. He was able to make repairs and
still get some racing in He placed fourth
place in one heat, and eighth place m two
others.
Wl*4jn asked about the track set up at
NCR, he said “ It's great. Some of the
curves are .really dangerous, but the
track is one of the best I've raced on."
Howard has two young daughters that

gel to spend the weekend at grandma's
house while lie races. He said "It's a
great time for my wife and 1 to spend
some time alone."
Will he allow his daughters to follow in
his footsteps?
"Nol if 1 have any thing to do with it,"
lie chuckled.
He is employed with United Telephone
as a repair and installation man who
lives in longwmid.
Curtis Hoffman, 225 Bulge Hoad, Like
Mary, and his new 12,000 Yamaha 100 CC
were not us fortunate.

a leg fracture. A splint was applied and
he was rushed lo the hospital via am­
bulance.
Luckily Curtis was not seriously in­
jured. Hut he did receive several lorn
ligaments in Ins leg. a shoulder popped
from its socket and several bruises. He
was able lo leave the hospital with the aid
of crutches.
Curtis, a strong and determined young
man. while watting for the X-rays, asked
Ills mom if she thought his'kart could be
fixed m time for Sunday’s races. He was
unaware that he had totaled oul his kart.
He was up and around on Sunday, at
the track, bul this time only as a spec­
tator. By the end of the aflcm oor, Curtis
had already picked out the kart he Is
going to purchase.

(in Saturday. 19-year-old Curtis was
excited about this race. Il was to lx- the
fifth race he lias ever been in. He was
doing fine until he was going around a
c u n earn! Hie kart in front of him stalled,
causing Curtis In swerve In avoid a
collision. His kart hit an embankment.
Hipped inlu the air, throwing him up
about four feet and into a ravine cm the'
side of the track.

In speaking with Curtis on Sunday, he
explained that "you take a chance every
time that you get out on the track. The
possibility is always there. I don’t intend
for this to stop me."

Ambulance workers rushed down the
ravine and gave medical assistance to
( urtis. wlin was thought to have suffered

Aside (nun his racing, he intends to
enroll in a business course at Seminole
Community College.

�1&amp;— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, J in . 13,1983

In And Around Lake Mary

Engagements

Thanks To Volunteers,
CIA Building $$ Boosted

Musselwhite-Rape
Marvin Mussel while &lt;.f Orlando, and Mrs. Pal
M usseluhitenf lakeland, announce the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Deborah
Chrisllm', to Hubert Chalmers Hapc, son of Dr. and Mrs.
William (’. Rape of 2H5 McllonviUc Avc., Sanford.
Born in Orlando, Ihc bride-clect is Ihc paternal grand­
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I’. I). Mussclwhitc of llarriman,
Tenn. She is a June, 1981 graduate of Del-aml High School
where she was a member of Anchor Gub, Litin Club and
Bulldog Babes. She attends Seminole Community College
and is employed by Barnett Bank of Volusia County.
Her fiance, born in Atlanta, (la., is the maternal
grandson of Mr. ami Mrs. W.M. Michael of Ijecsburg. He
is the paternal grandson of Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Rape of New
Smyrna Beach
Mr. Hapc is a 1976 graduate of Seminole High School
where he was a member of Key Gub, president of
Fellowship of Christian Athletes, a member of Intcrclub
Council and a member of the baseball team.
He is a 198] graduate of University of Central Florida
where he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity
and Phi Theta Kappa. Mr. Rape is employed as comp­
troller at K-C Mechanical Inc., Orlando.
The wedding will be an event of March 12, at 4 p.in., at
Grace United Methodist Church, Sanford.

The I-ake Mary CIA is trying to
recuperate this week from the weeks and
hours of work and planning that went into
making the Grand Prix races successful.
It is fortunate to have a group of such
dedicated people who gave so much of
themselves in helping to make Lake
Mary the growing and beautiful com­
munity that it is.
The proceeds from this event (about
15,000) will be used in the community
Center Building Fund, which is a greatly
needed facility that will be of benefit to
the entire area.
A special thank you to CIA president
Dick Fess for the time he gave, and also
to the hundreds of volunteers who worked
so hard.
The CIA has an annual meeting set for
Jan. 24 at 8:00 p.m. In city hall. The
agenda includes a retrospective look into
the past year of service and suggestions
on any improvements that, could be
made. There are also three seats open on
the Board of Directors and elections will
be held to fill the vacancies.

MELANIE SUE HART,
STEPHEN C. BAGGS

Hart-Baggs
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Hart, 900 Willow Grove St.,
Altamonte Springs, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Melanie Sue, to Stephen S. Baggs, son of Mr.
and Mrs. B.D. Baggs of Route 4, Sanford.
Born In Orlando, the bride elect is a 1979 graduate of
Lyman High School, l^ngwood, where she was a member
of the marching band and softball (cam. She is a biology
major at the University of Central Florida, Orlando,
where she received an A.A. degree in 1982.
Her fiance, bom in Sanford, is a 1977 graduate of
Seminole High School and attended Seminole Community
College. He is vice president of Culti-Quip Corporation,
I^ike Monroe.
The wedding will be an event of May 14, at 3 p.rn., at
Sanford Alliance Church.

Nominations of new officers will also
be accepted. The meeting Is open to the
public. Community involvmcnt. is en­
couraged.
A meeting of the Planning and Zoning
Board is set for8 p.m. Jan. 25 at city hall.

Karen
Warner
lake Mary Fire Department.
Bob will be speaking on F ire
Prevention in the home. The women will
be given a tour of the fire hall and the
equipment that is used by the fire
fighters. Following will be a luncheon at
Cafe Sorrento.

Seminole Heights Baptist Church will
begin a new Bible Study Program on Jan.
30. This study will take a revealing look
Into the New Testament book of 1st
Peter.
The study begins Sunday, Jan. 30 at 6
p.m. in the auditorium at Lake Mary
High School, and will continues, Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the
Covenant Presbyterian Church, comer of
I ak e Mary Boulevard and U.S. Highway
17-92.
On Jan. 5,12 Brownies from Troop 905
in Lake Mary, had a great time at Sea
World. The trip was planned to teach the
girls about the adaptability of mammals
such as seals and otters.

The ta k e Mary Woman’s G ub will
A special performance of the sea lions
meet at the fire hall on Jan. 27 at 10 a.m. and otters was put on In honor of the
Planned in a program presented by Bob Troop. Adding to the excitement was a
Stoddard, Public Relations officer of the 600 pound sea lion that came up Into the

It's Girl Scout Cookie time again. On
Jan. 26 the sale will officaUy begin. Door
to door sales will be kept down to a
minimum for safety reasons so in order
to purchase cookies you m ay have to go
to these designated areas: Brownie
Troop No. 504, under leadership of Donna
Young, will have a booth out at Flea
World on U.S. Highway 17-92; Jan. 29 and
30, Brownie Troop No. 905, under
leadership of Donna Foley, will have a
table set up at Winn Dixie food store the
same weekend. Junior Troop No. 441,
under leadership of Peggy Stickler, will
be at Flea World the following Saturday,
Feb. 5.
The Brownies of Troop No. 504 are
trying to raise money so they can spend a
week at Girl Scout Camp Makahwee in
Chuiuota and if possible, a trip to DisneyWorld. Junior Troop No. 441 Is saving for
a trip to the home of Juliet Lowe, founder
of the Girl Scouts, in Savannah, Ga.
According to Peggy Stickler, manyyoung girls who are interested in
becoming Juniors cannot because there
are not enough leaders for that age
group. They are on a waiting list. If
anyone is interested in becoming a
leader, please contact Peggy at 323-1838.
This column is for the people of Lake
Mary and encourages readers’ par­
ticipation. If you have any information
that would be of interest to the com­
m unity, special birth d ay s or an­
niversaries, or parties, call me at 3239034.

Students Named To Honor Society

DEBORAH CHRISTINE MUSSELWIHTE,
ROBERT CHALMERS RAI'E

Twenty-four Seminole County students attending the
University of Central Florida have been initiated into Phi
Kappa Phi, national honor society for overall academic ex­
cellence founded in 1897 at the University of Maine.
Among those honored at the traditional campus ceremony
afe:
From Winter Springs: Alicia L Key, Judith A. Phelps, Toni
L Schlllo and Unda Van De Graff.
From Altamonte Springs: Barbara Hill, Dian B. King, Alice
Prather, Ronald A. Riley, Jr., Kathy B. Wild and Janice P.
Gilvin.
FVoin Casselberry: Karen L. Casaleae, Karen W. Coleman,

Whittern-Weimer
Mr. and Mrs, Harold B. Whittern, 815 Escambia Drive,
Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter,
1-eslie June, to Stephen Jam es Wcimer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bichard K. Miller, 590 Belair Drive, Merritt Island.
Bom in Sanford, the bride-elect Is 1975 graduate of
Semiijole High School, Sanford, and a 1979 graduate of
Stetson University, DeLand. She is employed by Flagship

audience to give the Brownies kisses.
Lake Mary
Correspondent
323-9034

Banks Inc. as internal auditor.
Her fiance, born in Daytona Beach, is a 1973 graduate of
Edgewater High School. Orlando, and a 1977 graduate of
Stetson University, Dcl-and. He is also an internal auditor
employed by Flagship Banks Inc.
TTic wedding will be an event of Feb. 12, at 2 p.m., at
First United Methodist Church, Sanford.

Janet C. Golden, Uretchen D. Meyers and Mary Van Tronk.
From Longwood: Deborah J. Balpg, Dirk p . DeRoo, Brenda
B. Schoonover and Beatrice VandiveKFrom Oviedo: Della E. Dell and Catherine L. Williams.
From Sanford: Joseph S. Smith and Paula M. Taylor.
From Fern Park: Charles A. Thrall.

First Mistake Fooling Around; Second Jelling Wife
DEAR ABBY: My parents
have been m arried for over 35
years. They’ve raised a fine
family and deserve to have a
wonderful re tire m e n t. But
something happened about 10
years ago that has had a
devastating effect on their
marriage, and things have
been going downhill ever
since.
My father had an affair with
a woman of questionable
character. It lasted three
years. No one knew (no
gossip), but for some reason
he unloaded the whole storyon my m other. She couldn't

eat for weeks, and she was so
shaken and distraught she
required medical treatment.
To this day she is a very bitter
woman. Their relationship is
only tolerable, even though
my
fu th er
has
done
everything in his power to
make it up to her.
They tried counseling. It
helped him to forgive himself,
but It hasn’t helped her to
forgive him.
Can a woman ever really
forgive on unfaithful spouse?
1 know if the shoe were on the
other foot, Dad would have
forgiven her. Is there such a

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Dear
Abby

*

thing os male and female
mentality? How can we help
Mother?
DAUGHTER IN THE

M1DD1E
DEAR DAUGHTER: The
ability to forgive an unfaithful
spouse comes no more easily
to a man than a woman.
‘■Confessions" ol this kind
usually do more harm than
good. That was your father’s
second mistake. (The first
w as fooling around with
another woman.)
Yes, women can forgive U
they reiUy want to. Your
mother needs to get Into
therapy to find out why she’s
hanging on to her bitterness.
Urge her to get help. If she
refuses, she's expressing her
sick determination to suffer —
and make everyone around
h e r miserable, too.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 33year-old, overage-looking
male with a fonr-year college
education who seems to have
terrible luck finding a young
woman. I have joined dating
clubs, which cost me a lot and
got me nowhere. I am not In
the habit of going to bars, but
I was so desperate for female
companionship one night I
went to a bar and picked up a
young woman and she turned
out to be a prostitute.

rtgulif ftMt tnKi

Mt-uniing *I*J wn4lJlJ|ls¥l rUfa

CALL 322-3315 or
ytMitf Mini

4V*i ptitrukiiu!

Stilf libit Fihtuuo I Mtfi. l u l l (Ulan.

PHILIPS
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fra ifE I arm w*

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Support

March of Dimes
FV«UBH(M

TMt V N ff CCNTft4 *’l|Q BV

G la m o ro u s G o w n s

For the
Valentine
Belli

IlH OrOMfMUFi

E very teen-ager should
know the truth about drugs,
•ex and how to be happy. For
Abby’a booklet, send |2 and a
long, Ramped (17 cents),
addressed envelope to: Abby,
Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 3 l* a,
Hollywood, Calif.

323-8950

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And that means the fashion minded
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Gigantic selection of the newest,
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We look forward to being able to be a real
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or

...Beauties

The
Bridesmaids
Far

ea e

Lovely looks that will
win your heart. The
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d ra m a tic ,
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and
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Let the romance begin...

J iiv ttlf tsi litur Hums' *

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The co lorful store m at com et to your d

In some extension courses at
your local university.
And let everyone at work
know that you’re Interested In
meeting someone. Everyone
has a "lovely" cousin, niece,
neighbor or friend who Is
aching to m eet a nice guy who
doesn't want to go to bars to
meet a nice glrL

I see guys all around me
with girls, and they don't
appear to have any more on
the ball lhan f have. What’s
wrong with me? I’m starting
to worry about myself, Abby.
I've even prayed to St. Jude,
und I’m not even Catholic.
1 consider having a com­
panion of the opposite sex
more important than a Job or
career. I want someone to
share my life with. Without
th at, everything else is
meaningless. Can you help
me?
LONELY IN DENVER
DEAR LONELY: What are
your outside Interests? The
theater? Music? Museums?
Art? Dancing? Sports?
Antique cars? There are any
number of places to meet
people (church Included) that
will bring you Into contact
with women whose Interests
are the same as yours, which
la a good starting point. Enroll

L SERVICES
G O O D T H R U J A N . II, III)

Our goal Is total customer
faction. If I can be of any help
you, *pltase feel free to ask.
Sincerely,
Fred Bible
Store Manager

Boatfl

I * * • 0»*•#*•**

SANfORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
1» W 1 H I iM A S f A N L )i i
t f l i t l i p i d t f 44 I ' l l V ■U Id lt

l (j (I f W t N O i A V E

IN BUSINESS SINCE IM1
J ltW . 1 JT H S T .

SAN» O R U

323 5763

SANFORD

i

3 2 2 -3 5 2 4

Cloth World - Sanford Plaza

�*
c

Evening H tra ld , Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Jan. 23, m i —3B

A M E R IC A S FA M ILY D I^ U G STORE

BAYER
H e ra ld P h o to by T o m V in c e n t

Mrs. I). L. Spivey, program chairman of Mimosa
Circle of the Garden Club of Sanford, presents
Wildflower seed to Jack Heed, roadside

development coordinator for Florida’s Departmeat of Transportation.

f-4 Beautification Set
By Garden Club Circle
Mimosa Circle of the Garden Club of
Sanford became interested in having a
program on Wildflowers during the past
club year, according to Mrs. D. C.
Spivey, program chairman, who con­
ducted a research, followed by the
presentation of a program.
After speaking to Mimosa Circle. Mrs.
Spivey was invited to speak to Central
Circle and to the Garden Club of Sanford
Horticulture Committee.
As a result of this program, the circle
agreed to contact Mrs. Hugh Simmons,

the Council of State Garden Clubs,
Roadside Development Chairman for
information concerning planting Wild­
flowers along Florida's Interstate High­
ways.
M rs. Simmons supplied the in­
formation needed but by this time the
planting season was over for last year. It
was decided to wait until this club year to
purchase and gather the seed.
At this time, Mimosa Circle is
presenting Wildflower Seed to Jack
Heed, roadside development coordinator

of the State of Florida Department of
Transportation. Heed says he will sec
that the seed are planted and taken care
of.
"Heed is a very congenial and helpful
person," Mrs. Spivey says. "W e
gratefully acknowledge his assistance in
this project."
Any other circle or club interested in
helping Mimosa Circle beautify Inter­
state 4 with Wildflowers should contact
him (904-734-2171), Mrs. Spivey says.

Earl E. M lnott,
center, receives
Distinguished
Service A w a rd
from B arbara
Jackson, vice
president, and
Kevin Backman,
president o f the
A fro-A m erican
Society.
H t r a ld P h o to by M a rv a H a w k in s

Society Honors M in o tt W ith
D istinguished Service A w a rd
It was like attending the Metropolitan Opera while listening
to Sanford's songbird, Mrs. Patricia Merritt Hitchinon when
she appeared in a concert with accompanists Sandra Petty
jjnd Dale Stafford.
The Afro-American Society of Seminole Community College
sponsored Heritage Jubilee, a celebration of Black I*adership, Jan. 14. at the SCC Concert Hall.

Marva
Hawkins
122-5118

The evening of music was held in commemoration of the late
Dr. Martin Luther King J r. on his birthday. Heritage Jubilee is
a varied and spirited celebration of leadership in America with
special emphasis on the contributions of all black leaders who
are loo often forgotten.

Sanford, and other communities.
His dream as a young man was to be a musician, teacher and
leader in the community in which he lives. For over 30 years he
has inspired many a young mind in the scliool system of
Sanford and Seminole County.

The prayer was offered by the Rev. Robert Doctor and the
welcome was given by Dr. Earl Weldon, president of SCC. Vice
president of the Afro-American Society Barbara Jackson gave
the invocation.

He is presently assistant principal 11 at Seminole High
School where he is well-respected and loved by his co-workers
and students.

Selections sung by soloist Patricia Merritt Hitchmon, were
"Ave Maria" by Franz Schubert, “He Shall Feed His Flock,"
recitative and aria from "The Messiah" by Georg F. Handel
and several other pieces.
Highlight of the evening was the presentation of the 19Ki
Distinguished Service Award to Earl E. Minott in recognition
of three decades of unselfish, dedicated devotion as a musician
and educator to thousands of students and persons who have
passed his way.
Mr. Minott was the recipient of many awards and plaques
presented to him by his family, church, Seminole High School
and other organizations. He has touched the lives of many in

NEW ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mrs. D. L (Doug &amp; Darlene) Woodworth, Grant
Street, Longwood, announce the birth of their second child, a
ion, Joseph Curtis, who arrived Jan. 1, at Florida Hospital
Jrlando. He weighed 8 lb. 1J oz.
Curtis is the first grandson of rriatemal grandmother, Mrs.
x)is C. I-aFollette of Sanford. He is also the first grandson of
&gt;atemal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis R. Williams of
Vinana, Mo.

Even with a busy school schedule, Mr. Minott is organist and
an ordained deacon of St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church;
vice president, Seminole Chapter, Florida A and M University
Alumni Association; music director of the Bicentennial
Concert Choir; Esteemed lecturing Knight, IBPO Elks of the
World and secretary, Kiwanis Club of East-West Sanford.
He also belongs to the local National Education Association.
Phi Delta Kappa, Greater Orlando Chapter, National
Association of Notaries and is VIP representative for the
Central Florida United Cerebral Palsy.

DRAGON LADY
NAIL TIPS
* When you’re serious about 35mm
Eckerd introduces

$25°°
PH. 322-7684

^ittgs of ^Satr
m i FRENCH AVE.

SANFORD

LILTRALAB 35

OPEN DAILY 9 to 9.
SUNDAY 9 to 9.
Solo Price* good thru
Wed. Jan. 26th.
We reserve the right
to limit quantities.

processing.
•30% larger* p rin ts, one print p e r n egative on high g loss Kodak paper.
•Unique d isp lay folio. •Sleeved n e g a tiv e s for superior p rotection.
•Special p ack ag in g for safe sto ra g e of p rints and n e g a tiv e s

*

�4 B—E vening Htnld, Sanford. FI.

Sunday. Jan. n , itu

M ethodist

Adventist
TMt SEVENTH OAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
C*»««r el tin 4 dm
■ev Kenneth (rytn!
Patter
SatvrEay Services:
Sibbaih Kkui
*
Na
m.
Warship Service
II Nam
NifM
Prayer lervica
» Npm

...THE HOPE OFOUR COMMUNITY,

Assembly O f God

ORACE UNITED
METHODItTCHURCH
Airport RlyR. 4 Woodland Or
WilliamJ. Biyir
Plitvr
Church School
IMam
Wortkip Sorvtci
IIMam.
Yovth Followtkip
IMpm
Tvotdiv Rlkll Study
IIMam
Nvrtary pravidod lor all tarvlcat

PIhlT ASSEMBLYOF 000
Center im 4 Elm
C*vi4 B«fcftnr&gt;«n
Patt»f
Sunday Itheel
II Ma m.
Nursery thru ath prase
Warship Servlet
IIMam.
Servicle ia (ipanai
II Ma m.
Emm*, warship
IMpm.
WrE Family N.pnt
I Mpm.
MM Llphthevte Yvvtk
IMpm.
haytt (expert 4
Mmienetlei
»:Mp.m.

CINTRAL RAFTIIT CHURCH
111I Oah Art, laniard
111 Nil
Freddie Smith
Pailar
tvnday Scheel
Ml a m
MerMnp Wvrthtp
UMam
Church TrelMnp
IMpm
Bvenlnp Warthlp
IMpm.
MM Prayer terv
IMpm
COUNTRVIIOI1AFTI1T CHURCH
Cavalry Clv» RaM. tail Mary
AraryM. Lan*
Fatlar
Sunday Itheei
litta.m.
Prtscblnp 4 Warthipmp 11:11am.
kldt Study
IHpm
Sfctrlnp 4 Prteltimmp
l:Mpm
MM. Frayar Marl
l:Fpm
Nvrtary Frtndad

OUR NATION!

Church

KHEMAASSEMBLYOF000
earner al Cavalry Civk atad
and Wiibvr Avenue
Lair Mary .
IIIMtt
Rate* Rawan
Patter
MerMap tarvica
II am.
Bvenlnp Service
&gt;pm

Baptist

CHRIST UNITED
METH00I1T CHURCH
TiKkor Drivt. tvnlindEtlltot
RrvRrhortW Mliltr
Plitvr
Syndic Ithool
t :41am.
Mornint Worth,p
II Kim
tvn Eveninp
Wortkip
IMpm

Suppose you were given the keys that would unlock
the mysteries of the universe. With them, you could
answer the "whys" that plague all of us. You'd know
what was going to happen to you and those around you
tomorrow—next month—next year.

Baptist
RAVINNAPARK
RAPTItTCHURCH
llll Cavalry Clvk RaM
Rev OaryOakvtk
Pettvr
Sunday tekaal
1:41 am
Marniny Martklp
Ham.
Church TralMnp
liNpm.
Cramny Martklp
t:Mpm
MM. Pyayertarylca
IMpm.

Would you use them?
Of course, you say! Think again. And. once you ve
thought, you might shake your head, hand them back,
and say. "No thank you."

NEMMOUNT CALVARY
MlttlONARY RAPTIIT CHURCH
lUSMatt Ittk tl.
Ray. Oayrya w. Warren
Sunday tekaal
IMam
Marnlny tarylca
IIMam
■yanlny tarylca
SMpm.

FIRtT 4APTIITCHURCH
III Park Araava. laniard
Rar Pavl I Murphy, Jr.
Pailar
1:11 a m.
Maramp Warship
II:Ma m.
Ckvrch Traiaiaf
IMpm
■raninf MartMp
IMpm
l:Mp m
MM. Prayar tarylca
PIRIT RAPTIIT CHURCH
OP DRLTONA
INI Prarldaara Bird
111 Itllaril! inn
Ray. Danila Harckanradar
Pailar
Ray. Rarnard Park
Ant Pailar
Dr.M.C. Caltlnt
Attl. Pailar
Mil. Jalfray Karlay
Yavtn Otr.
Man't Prayar
.. FallayrtMp
IMam.
MerMnp MartIMp • M4U Ma m
tvnday tekaal
lilla.m.
Children's Church
ll:Ma.l
Church Trim.ay
SMpi
■van.ay Warthlp
l:H P I
Madnatday Prayar 4
. (IbWStudy
IMpm.
Nvrtary and Rat tarylca
JORDAN RAPTIITCHURCH
(MUptaiak*
(lyia Harntky
Pailar
tvnday tekaal
II Mam.
MarMny Service
IIMam.
Evaniay tarylca
III pm
Madnatday larvlca
Ml pm.
Old Truth! tar a NewDay
LAKCVIRMRAPTIIT CHURCH
III Lateviara. Lake Mery 111kill
tvnday tekaal
MS am
Martklp tarylca
lliMarn.
Eranlny Wartklp
IN pm
MM Prayer Serv
I.Mpm
Nvrtary Preridad
PIRIT RAPTItTCHURCH
OF LONOMOOO
• Rlk Matt el ITT1ta Hwy 114
Iftavlhura)
Ray. Jamat W Hammack
Patter
tvnday tekaal
t:Ma.m.
Marnlny Warthlp I:It 4 ll:llan
Cklldren'iChvrck
llllam
Church TralMnp
lllp m
Cvaalny Warthip
INp.m
MM I van!ay
Prayar tarylca
I Mpm
PALMETTOAVENUE
RAPTItTCHURCH
Itll Pelmetta Are
Rev. Raymand Cracker
Pailar
tvnday tekaal
1:41am
Marnlny Martklp
IIMam
Eranyelltlic tarvlcat
IMpm
MM. Prayer 4 RikleStudy IMp m
ladepandeal M.itiaaa'y
PINECREtT RAPTIIT CHURCH
III M. Airpan RIM. laniard
111 ltd
•dark P. Maavar
Patter
RIMa Study
till am.
Marnlny Martklp
1l:t*mam.
Eveniny Martklp
TM p m
FeUewtJyp tapper
IMpm.
Nvrtary PravldM Far
All tarvlcat

Common sense tells us that man was not meant to
understand every mystery of life. The reasons "why"
remain as they are because our Creator and His wisdom
thoroughly knows just how m uch man can both stand
and understand
God has a giea’ter gift for you than these, or any
other keys . . . the gift of Faith You will find it by
worshipping regularly.

SANLANDOUNITED
METHODItTCHURCH
tt.Rd.4MRM
Loadwood. Fla.
Jamat E. Ulmar tr.
tvn School
IM 4 V:41
Warthlp
•M.tiltRIIM
UMYF
IM

Congregational
CONORBOATIONAL
CHRItTIAN CHURCH
14(11. PprkAvp.
11141(4
Pester
Rpy. FrMNtil
Rtv EPmvML. Mckvr Attt wetter
Hem
Syndic ICkVVl
*1
FellewtMp
II N II i m
Mirntn«Wtrtktp
III Mam
MM Prlyte Mvvtln*
4 BISKStudy
IMpm

FIRtT UNITED
METHODItTCHURCH
ill ParkAva
Lao F Kinp
Fatlar
Jamat A. Thomas Oiractar at Mane
Mormny Worship
I N 4 11 am
tvnday School
441 am
UMYF
IMpm
Man't Prayar Braaklait
tad 4 Ilk Tkvrtday
IMam

Episcopal

COMMUNITYUNITED
MBTHODIIT CHURCH
Hwy tMl at Plnar RiEpe Rd
Cattolharry
Ray. H Mifht Kirtlay
Petltr
Rlv David H Hodpot Attc. Pailar
Marnind Wortkip
(Milam.
Ckvrch tekool
(M il am
tarvlcat with ciattat tor all a|(&gt;
Fallawtkip Caltao batwtan tarvlcat
JYF'art
SMpm
UMYF
IMpm.
Eremap Worship
TMp m.
WeE klble Study
IMpm.

HOLY CROSS
4(1 Pick Art
Tkt Rpy Ltrov O Soper
Hlly Cimmwnivn
Holy Communion
CkvrckSckvvl
Hlly Cimmynlvn

SEMINOLE HEIOHTS
RAPTItTCHURCH
Or. Jay T. Catmata
Patter
lunday tarricat mtka
Lata Mary Hi|k tekaal
Auditarlum
RIMa Study
f 41a m.
Martklp
IIMam
YautkCkalr
IMpm.
Ckurck Traiainy
IMpm
Martklp
TMp m.

Rictir
Ilia
1100am
II Mint
II 001 m

EFIICOPALCHURCHOF
THE NEMCOVENANT
ITSTvtkowillo ROM
Mintpr Sprinpi
Phono ATI (TTI
hev OnperyO Brewer
Vlcor
Syndic Evckprlit
14110 m
Syndic School
Km

WMnatday tarricat al
Certain! Pratkytaflin Ckurck
Prater 4 (Ida Itudy
TMp m
Adult Ckalr
TCI pm

NonDem onlnatlonal

Catholic
ALL tOULl CATHOLICCHURCH
Til Oak Ary .laniard
Fr. Mllllam Ennlt
Patter
lal. VlfllMatt
Ip m
tan Matt
I. IIM.it M
Canlaiilant. Sat.
Mpm

WINTERSPOS COMMUNITY
EVANOELICAL
CONORBOATIONAL
III Modi Sirtot
Rov Rokort (vrnt
Potior
tvndoy School
ilM im
Worship
II Mpm

Christian
FIRST CHRISTIAN
1MTI. taafvrd Aw.
t. Edward Jakntan
Minuter
tvnday tekaal
I:C| am.
Marmny Martklp
IIMam.
Sunday
Psalm s
50:1-23

tANFORDCHRISTIANCHURCH
1STAlrperl Rlvd
Phana III MM
Jee Jakntan
Minittar
Sunday tekaal
FMa m
Martklp tarvica
IIMam
Bvemny larvlca
TLNpm
Prayar Maatmy Mad
IMpm

Monday
Psalm s
130:1-0
(Tuesday
Psalm s
84:1-12

Christian Science
CHRItTIANSCIENCE SOCIETY
ca Sweetwater Academy
Bail Lata Brantley Drive
IIMam
Sunday larvlca
•(Mam
tvnday tekaal
MM Tattimany
Meetlny
TMp m

W ednesday
Psalm s
36 5-12
Thursday
Psalm s
107:1-43

Church O f Christ
CHURCHOF CHRIST
llll Park Avenue
FrM Raker
Evenyellt!
R.bie Study
IIMam.
Marnlny Martklp
IIMam
Evanmy tarvica
(Mpm.
Ladiat RIMa Clatl
Madnatday
IIMam.
Madnatday RIMaClatt
IMp m.
Martklp tarvica Inc
IIMam
the Dail
IMp m.

.Friday
Psalm s
113:1-9
Saturday
Psalm s
23:1-6

To Understanding

Church O f G od
CHURCHOF OOD
HIM Had Strati
Ray. Rill Tkempten
Patter
Sunday tekaal
title m
Marnlny Martklp
IIMam
Evanyalltttc Sara.
IMpm
Family Enrichment
tarvica
IMpm

CopymjN '903 fttiti* Advtftivng Service

Scnptur**

P 0 Bob 0024 O*wios«f« Vtfgwx* 22906

try Th# Amncan Bo*# Soci#r*

Tilt THAT RINO
evangelistic center
(llrdtll Aw. la d Sh 44E
Fall Ootpvl ■littvrlpitk
tvn Worship 4
CknitiinGrowth l(M i m.RTpm
Prayer 4 liklo
Study Wodnotdoy
Tpm
Sltvrdly
4 Npm
CORNERSTONE CHRItTIAN
CENTRE
NSDriftwood VllllfV
M Lake Mery Rlvd
Fall Ootpvl - Inlorluth
MornintMartklp
II Rim
Eveninp Worship
IMpm
Healinp School, Thvrt
IMpm
iu fh « ro n
LUTHERANCHURCH OF
THE REDEEMER
"Tha Ivtkoran Hoar" and
TV IkitltTkoLiTa"
ISISOah Ava
Rav Elmir A Rautckar
Pastor
Svnday School
( Ha m
Wartklp tarvica
IIMam
Nlndarfirtan and Nvrtary

N axarene
PIRIT CHURCH
OP THE NAZARBNE
2S(i Santord Ava.
John J. Hinton
Fatlar,
Sunday School
( tie m.
Merwnp Wortkip
l(:4Sa m
Yovth Hour
IMpm
Evenpelist tarvica
IMpm
Midwaok tarvica (Wad I IMpm.
Nvrtary Pravidad lor all lerviret

Eastern
O rthodox
tti. Patar 4 Pavl
Ortkodai Parish
"Itato - Ryiantmo"
lltlMapnolia Ava.
Rav Fr Anthony Orant
Pattar
Dtvina Litwrdv
IIMam
Ractory
IIIMTT

Pentecostal .
FIRST PENTECOSTAL
CHURCHOF LONOWOOD
Ml Ornape Siroat. Loot— Rov. R. Noth Orowa
tvnday School
II Ml I
Mornin« Worship
II Mai
tvnday Evanlnf
TNpm
Wad Bibla Study
TNpm
CanouarortMaatmttunday I Npm

Presbyterian
OOODSHEPHERD
LUTHERANCHURCH
ntlOrlondo Dr. IT(I
ILvthoran Ckvrch in Amarleal
Rav. Ralph I Lvman
Fatlar
tvnday tekool
(M r*
warthlp
II Nam
Nvrtary Pravidod
tT. LURE'SLUTHERANCHURCH
SR1114 Rad Rvf Rd.
Oviadaltlavial
Edwin J.Rvttow
Pastor
Sunday tekool
(illam.
Wartklptorvicat IM 4 IIMa m
Wa maintain a Chrutun tekool
Kmdardartao thrown Eiphth GraOa

FIRST PRKSIYTCRIAN CHURCH
Oah Avt. I 3rd It
■•v Virftl L Brvafif. Pailar
Wheee 1111441 •
Mtrnmf Worihip
I Mam
Church Schaal
9 41am
Marmaf Wonhip
IIMam
Naraary
T H E L A K E M A R Y U N IT E D
P R E IB Y T E R IA N CHURCH
W ilfrv r A va ., Laha M ary
R tv A F $»•»*«»
M if t lit tf
tva A a y C hu rch Schaal
t at a m
M a rm a f M t f lM p
1194 ft eft
Y a a th O ra w f
9 :M p m
W H C h a ir P r a d ic #
I M pm

■The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
A TL A N TIC N A T IO N A L BANK
Sanford, F la.
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

FLA G SH IP BANK
OF S E M IN O LE and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.
G R EG O RY L U M B E R
T R U E VA LU E HAR D W A R E
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

CELERY CITY
PRINTING CO.r INC.

H A R R E L L *B E V E R L Y
TRANSM ISSIO N
David Beverly and Staff

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT

ft

|
VX
t4
) I

Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
BUI &amp; Dot Painter

K N IG H T'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don K n ig h t*S ta ff

OSBORN'S BOOK
and BIBLE STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

L .D . PLANTE, INC .
Oviedo, Florida

PANTRY P R ID E
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

T H E M cK IB B IN A G E N C Y
Insurance

P U B L IX M A K K E T S
and Employees

M EL'S
G ULF S E R V IC E
M el Dekleand Employees

SEN K A R IK GLASS
&amp; PA IN T CO., IN C .
Jerry &amp; EdSenkarlk
and Employees

JC Penney
Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemann and Staff

SMITTY'S SNAPPIN* TURTLE
MOWERS, IN C
2506 Park Ave.
M ik e * Connie Smith
STENSTROM R E A L T Y
Herb Stenstrom and Staff
W IL S O N -E IC H E L B E R G E R
M O R TU A R Y
Eunice Wilson and Staff
W ILSON M A IE R F U R N IT U R E CO.
M r. and Mrs. Fred Wilson
W IN N -D IX IE STORES
and Employees

•SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY1
RIUMELY OP MO

F irs t Assam M y (4 0 ( 4 . t X * A I I *
R h a a m A ite m W y a t 0 *4 . C araar a t C avalr y C lvk R a M an4
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M P T I IT
A w ft t R l i i t l l t Chw rdL O v M i
C a lv a ry R s p titt C kvrch. C ry tts l La ka A X L L a ta M a ry
C d liE M r r y A a p titl C kvrch. m ta m la a ta AivV
i ( s a t r a l A a p tld C kvrch. t i l t O ak Ava.
C M a rta ( t a r M lttJ a a a ry A a v tiit C k v rc h . ta v td tv v tt RE.
"
ry tJ E a A a p tH I C kvrch . C a va try C iv * RaaE. La ka M a ry
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i F irs t A a p titl C kvrch a t F e r n ! c ity
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id Ckvrch at lian vii. I AM. Watt at 11(1 aa Mary.

i R a p tiil a t OviaEa
i A a p tit l C k v rc h a t ftatEaaEa t w iv a a
1A a p titl C kv rch at W la ta r ip r la p t. I M A a k a m a RE.

I ihHah Miaatahary kaptttt Ckvrch, Itai *r; IM*tl.
^ A a a tta t C M * at O daaa
a M M M E R a p k a lC h a re *. OvMEa
l A a a a a k ty O t RaE. l l l l W . I t * t t . . SaaMrE.
r RtkSa C k v rc h . tM 4 ( . ta a s a r* A v a

Maw L ite F a lla w tk ip . ( M l R . Laka O rlva . C a tie tk e r ry . F l. H IM
R svam ia P a rk A a p titl C kvrch . 1141 w . M tk t t .
P a a p ia 't A a p ttit Chapat. l l l l W. P in t ttr a a t. ta a tv ra
P ia a c ra tl A a p titl C kvrch. I l l W. A lrp a rl A lvE .
P ra lrta La ha A a p titl. RtEpa RE.. Para P a r*
■ PraprvM M n ttv a a r y A a p titl C *« rc *. M tE w ay
ta ca vE tM la h M M d a a a ry A a p titl C h a re * W a d ta a ta ra

|HH^H|a

|^ H ||

lifitcH | | L00* M|f| HffR

te ka vt" A v E H a rtv *
tm y r a a A a p titl C kvrch , I t * O vprhraak O r.. C a tta tk a rry
Iv d a ttE A a p titl C kvrch . U K P alm atta
t t . J a m a t M itU a n a ry B s p iiil C hare*. I t . RE. ( I t . Q ttaaa
t t . L vha M ittta v a r y A a p tttt C kvrch d C sm araa C ity, la c .
t t . P a v l A a p tttt C kvrch. I l l Pina Ava.
t t . M a tth e w s C a p fu l C kvrch . Caaaaa I
S priaptteiE M ittta a a ry A a p titl. l i t * A CaEar
t t . J e h a 't M ittla n a r y A a p titl C kv rck . t i t C v p ra tt t l .
T a m p la A a p titl C kv rch , P alm t p r la p t RE.. A tts a is iita Ip r iv a t
w illia m Chapat N U u ia v a ry A a p titl C kv rch . M a r k A W illia m t t .
d ia m a n te tp r la a t
t a t H ava A a p titl C kv rck . I l l O r papa Ava.
C A T H O LIC
C k v rc h d tk a N a tiv ity . La ka M a ry
A ll t a v t l Ca tka lie C kvrck. I l l Oah A va.. ta a ta r a
* r LaEy Ovaaa d Paaca C a th d K Chapat. I l l t M a p a d la A v a .

tl. Am i catkaltc Ckvrch. OiavaaE Trail. OaAary
W. Avpvatlaa Calkinc Ckvrch. tvaad Or , paar Ratten RE.

C kv rck a l C k r ltt. Oanava
C kv rck d C k r ltt. LawfwaaV
C kv rck d C k r ltt. W I t t k t t .
N d ih tlE e C k v rc k d C k rltt. F la H aven O r . M p itlia E
C H URCH O F OO D
C kv rc k d O va. M l H icka ry
C kv rch d OeE. a t l W . I K E t l
C kv rc k d OeE. OviaEa
C k v rc k d OeE H d la e t t . Laka M a n rm
C kv rc k d OeE M iit le n . la ta r p r u a
C kv rch d OeE. 14(1 W . IM k t t .
C kv rc k d OeE In C k r ltt. OviaEa
,
C kv rch d O e E d P ra p ka cr. l t d S. A im Ava
C h v rc h d O a E a l P rspkacy. i t t a t P a rtim m a n Ava.
h a te v a C k v rc h d O e E . ltM W . t i t b i t . ta n ta rE
True C k v rc k 04 OeE. l t d R IEptwaaE Ava . ta n ta rE
E A tT B R N O . l h v w A
C a t t d a O rtk a E a i C kvrch . t i t . Patar A P a d . I I K M aanaHa A v a .
ta n ta rE . F la .
R a tta rn O rtk a E a i C kvrch . t t . 0 aarpa. U S tka rw a a E Cl .
A ita m a a ta t p r ta p t
R a tta rn O rtk a E a i C kvrck. I t tla v a n 'i d O C A .. S it ta v tk t t .
F a r * P a rk
B a tte r * O rtk a E a i C kvrck. t l . J d m C k r y te tte m Ckapal. U I
H w y. 1 1 (1 . P a r * P a rk
C O N O R E O A T IO N A L
C an pra patia nal C k r itlia a C kvrck. 14(1 t . P a rk A va ., tantarE
E P IS C O P A L
la rc h d Mae Maw Cevespat. a i t T v tk jw iD a laaE .

t t tle p k e n L v tk a ra n C kvrch. 4M | v d W a d d 14, LanpwaaE
M E T H O O ItT
B a rn e tt U pdeE M e m e rid C kvrch. B . O a A a ry A ve . E n tw p r its
A v a r L a k e U m le E M e ika E .d C kvrck
B ethel A M B C kvrch . C tn ss n H y tt.
C a t t d k e r r y C a m m vm ty U n itM M d k a E ld C k v rc k . H w y. 1 1 (1 .
Pm ey ViE pe RE.. C a ttd k e r ry
C k r lt t U d ta E M d k a E itt C kvrck. T acker D r., SvnJaaE B tta te t
O a B a ry C a m m vm ty M d k a E ld C kv rc k . W . H lp k k a n k t R E .
O a B a ry
P i n t U n ite * M athaE K I C kvrck. ( I I P a rk A m .
F i r d M d k a E itt C kv rch s i OviaEa
F l n t le a th e r n M e tke B id C kvrck. USE ta n ta rE A m .
F ree M a tk a E itl C k v rc k . MS W. am t t .
F irs t U m le E M d k a E itt C kvrck d O anava. Oanava
O encva M d k a E itt C kvrck. Oanava
O ra ca U m leE M d k a E itt C kvrck. A lrp a rl AlvE .
O ra n t C hapel A M B. C kvrck. OviaEa
O a k p ra va M d k a E itt C kvrch , OviaEa
O ite e n M d k a E itt C kvrck
P a d a W a d a y a n M a tka E .it, R t. as w . a t P a d a
t t J a m a s A M R. (Ik d C y p r ttt
t t L a ke M B C k v rc k d C a m a ra n C ity . I * * . . A asrE a ll d t I t . ( (

The C kv rch d th e OeeE I h a p h ira . M a m in * , i n L ik a A re
A ll t a i d t E p la c a p d C kv rck . B O aA ary A v a . E n ta rp n ta
C h ild E p ttc a p d C kvrck. LanpwaaE
M aty C ra a t I p K c v p d , P a r t A m ., a t (th St . ta n ta rE
t t . R K h a rE 'tC k a rc A . t i l l Laka H a w d i R E . W in te r P ark
JE W IS H
R ath A m tyn a p a p v a m s d tn p a t i d a r t t a t a M a ll. A itam aata

N A IA R R N B
F irs t C k v rc k d tk a M a il,a n a , t i l l t a n ta rE A m .
O anava C k v rc h d tha N atarana, t .R . as. O anava
L a h a M a r y C k v rc h d tha N a ia ra n a . i l l A . C r y d d La ka A m ,
L a k a M a ry
M a rk h a m W aeEt C h a re * d th e N a ia ra n a . t R 4 ( . l&gt; t M U a i W . d
14 a l tk a W e klva R ive r
Lanpw aaE C k v rc h d tka N atarana. W ay m an A J e ttv p A m .

B.

t l M a r y 's A M B . C kvrck, t l . R t. ( I L O ttaen
I t . P a d 's M d k a E ld C kv rck . O ttaen R E - B a te rp rlta
S la lte rE M e m a n d C kvrck. t . O aAary
ta d a n E a U m leE M a tk a E itl C kvrch. I R 0 4 anE 14. LanpwaaE
O tta e n U m t» s M d k a E ld C kvrck, Car. d C a rp e n te r A M a rra y t l .
Ottaen

SI.
J A la ry A ap M d C h v rc *. A an ava H w y . *
, m a r ia * P rta d H v a A a p ttit. I K I L e tv e l A v a . ta a ta ra
OMvp M u d e n a ry A a p tttt C k v rc h . la d a a E a I p r la p t RE..
I M H d a tw ry R e d id C kv rc k . K M J e rry Ava.
A ta d E M ry A a d K t. L p a a A a*.
I Mata la n a ry C kv rck . H k t &lt; 4 H tc k a rv Ava
I M i ta C ivic L ia n a A M *.. LanpwatE
l F a ra d C ity C a m w vm ty C e d a r. F a ra d
Eanary l ip H a l . i i H W . l i m i t
I A a d K t C h w a iL l l d w . m * i t .
Mpm T a d a m a d R e d id C kvrck. O v d tty i m . M a rik LanpwaaE
N p w M l P a n A a d K t C kvrch. i n * Paar A m .

M a ry

M ip iE H a n a

CaNnUc

C kvrch .

M d ttp a E

A m ..

O v T u H X d 't t M L a k n C a tka ilc C kvrch . IS K M A a lm U ia * . O d ta n a
C H R IS T IA N
C h rtd ip a ld a * c a Sectary. C-O tw a a tw a ta r A caE am y. R a d Lake
1 / ftf it I* t D r l m m m I
P in t C h rld ta a C kv rch . I M I S. ta n ta rE A m .
I C h rld ta a C kv rch . l i t W . A lrp a rl A lvE
I C h ris tia n C kv rch . F le rtE a H a v a * O r.. M ptttaaE

---- — - — •-

pp _n jvmtta*

C H U R C H O P C HRIS T
C k v rc h d C h rta l. l l l l »• P a r * A m .
_____
C k v rc h d C h ild d L a ke I k d t . U .». I l - t l . M C a ttd b a r r y
ta v tk ta m itw N C kv rch d C h ild . H K U k a H a w d i RE
C h w c h d C h ris t. ( M P a lm t p r la p t O r . A ita m a a ta S ppt

vH*•? e»^ - ^ p^ p^dl. IIdk id .Mi. (p«B

ie&gt;-

tarMpa

LU TH ER AN
*
A tc a n d a n L d k a r a a C kvrch . O v a rtra a k O r.. C a ttd b a r ry
OaaE t k ip k a r p Um laE Lv tk a ra a . I d l t O rtan E a Or
L v tk a ra n C k v rc h d P rvuE a nca. O d ta n a
L d k a r a a C k v rc h d Ike RaEavm ar. l u w l i t * P lace
M a td a h L u th e ra n C kvrck. O ilp e n O a y l O r. A H w y 11(1,
C llM f llf fY
t l L v k a i L v tk e ra a C kvrck. E l ala. tia v ia

P R E S B Y T E R IA N
O d ta n a P r e tk y te r U * C kvrck. H aksnE A lvE . A A v d ta A m ,
* O eitana
L a k a M a r y U m la E P i e th y le n e * Ckveck
F ir s t P r a tk y ta r la n C kv rc k Oak A m A H E t t .
F ir s t P r a tk y ta r la n C kv rck d D sB a ry. B . H id *
C an vena nt P ra tk y te r ia n C kv rch . H i t t . O r le a p * O r.

t t . A a E r tw t P r ttk y ta n a a U m rc k . ( t i l A d
t t . M a rk s P r ttk y ta n a a C kv rck . t u t P d m tp r la p t A E A lta m a a ta t p r la p t
a
U p ta ia C a m m vm ty P ra tk y te n a a C k v rc k . U p t d a RE.
W a d m im d d P ra tk y ta rla n C kv rch , RaE h u p R E - c a u d k a r r y
W in te r t p r ln y t P ra tk y te ria n C hapel. t tk E a y A E v a n tld C kvrck.
M a t t R E . W in te r tp rla p t
tB V S N T H O AV A D V R N T ItT
P a r e d L a ka ta v a n tk O ay A E v a d itl C k v rc k . H w y. u s . F s r t d
O ly
ta v a n tk O ay A E n n ttd C kv rck . M a itta a E A M . A ita m a a ta t p p t
ta n ta r E ta v a n tk D ay A E v e a titl C k v rc h . m . A E lm
W id e r t p r la a t ta v a n tk Day A E v a n tld C k v rc h . M 1 M a tt R (.
M a r t M iH ta v a n tk o a y A E v a n tld C k v rc h . M l B . M E t l - ta n ta rE ,
O TM SR C H URCHBt
U la n 's A M B C kvrch . O tlM A l l t k
A ll P d t h C k a p d . C a m * la m in a te . W a klva P a rk RE.
A e a rE d l A ra a v a H d in e tt C k a p d . A e e rE d l A m .
C b v lv d a C a m m vm ty C kvrck
C k v rc h d J e w s C h rld d La te r O ay tp in t s . t i l l P a rk A m
L a k e M e area C ka p d . O r t * * a A lv E - L a k a M ann a
m apEam H a ll d J a ka e a k't w itn e s s . L a k a M anrae U m l. IU 1 W.
TtM rE t i r e d
P i n t B a r * C k v rc k d tka L v ta * OeE. M eEway
F ir s t C k v rc h d C h r ld . S d e a tttt. R lp a m A lvE . anE Vsavs I t .
O d ta n a
P e d e c a s ld Open A id a T ab ern acle. R IEpew a s E A m - OH IMS
P i n t P e d e c a s l d Charch d I
P i n t P p d t c a d H C kvrck d ta n ta rE
P d l A v s p d C kv rch d O e E In C k r ltt. IM S J e rry A m . ta n ta rE
P d l O a s p d T a k a rn a cK . ms C a v a try C lvk
M l. 041m M eanest C kvrck, Oak H ill RE . Ostaan
ta n ta r E A llia n c e C kv rck . t u t 1 . p a r k A m .
ta n ta r E B lk tp C kv rc k . H U ta n ta rE A va .
t a n ta rE C a * B r t p d l( * ( l d J a k a v d t's W Knasaas. IK S W . H k t t .
T h a ta iv a tte a A rm y . IM w . M th M .
R d lM B H ills M m a vta n C kvrch. SR a M . LanpwaaE
R ap e a m a r M a r iv ta * C kvrch, n s T v a c a w d a R E . W id e r Ip rM p t
U d ta E C k v rc h d C h rld . d i a m an te C a m m vm ty C ka p d .
A t ts m a d t S p rin p i
H a ty T n m ty C k v rc k d AaE in C h ris t. U K M app av d m e A m .
T h * P d l O a s p d C harch d O vr L a rE J e tv t C h r ld . W a th w p ta n ,
t t - C anaan CHy
W id e r t p r l a * * C am m vm ty B e ( * * d l c * l Canp r s p a lta n d . W .d e t
S p rm p t. B K m a d ary S d ta d

V v P^Bnkf^ •»(mr d* •

1/ V

f

�RELIGION
Church Holds
Consecration

Briefly
Youth Quake '83 Features
Singer And All-American
Youth Quake 83, an advance feature event of the up­
coming Central Florida Billy Graham Crusade, will be held
Friday, at 7:30 p.m. in the First Baptist Church of Orlando.
l-amelle H arris, popular young Gospel singer whose
fourth album received the Dove Award for Best Con­
temporary Black Gospel Album, will be featured as guest
soloist.
Recently chosen as Best Male Vocalist by Religion in
Media, Harris has sung in several Billy G raham Crusades,
and has appeared on national television.
Also appearing at the Youth Quake will be Darby Cottle, a
Florida State University senior and two-time All-American
shortstop for the FSU girls’ softball team.
Active in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes at FSU,
Miss Cottle played for two years on the national cham­
pionship softball team . In 1981 she was named top amateur
softball player of the year by the U.S. Olympic Committee,
and in 1982 she won the Broderick Award for Softball.
Admission will be free for this first of two Youth Quakes
scheduled in advance of the Central Florida Billy Graham
Crusade, April 10-17, In the Tangerine Bowl.

January Bible Study
The First Baptist Church, Sanford, will begin its January
Bible Study on Sunday in the 11 a.m. worship hour. The
theme of the study will be “A Message of Encouragement,"
which takes its text from I Peter. The study is approved by
the Southern Baptist Convention and will be led by the Rev.
Paul E. Murphy.

OMS Mission Conference
The 28th Annual Missions Conference, sponsored by OMS
International, will convene, Thursday evening through
Sunday at the ta k e Yale Baptist Assembly, on Route 452
between lic sb u rg and Eustls.
Tlie conference begins 7:15 p.m. Thursday with music led
by the Rev. Howard Jacob of Allentown, Pa. Speakers for
the conference will be: The Rev. J. B. Crouse of Korea, the
Rev. John Woodhouse of Tell the World Crusades, Dr. Ed
Kilboume missionary to Peking, China, and Korea, now
vice-president-at-large for OMS and the Rev. Harold Brown
of Haiti.
Other features of the conference will be the World
Intercessor rally on Friday at 1:15 p.m. led by Alice Huff,
director of World Intercessors for OMS. On Saturday af­
ternoon sem inars will be conducted by Men for Missions,
led by S. E. director Francis Muia, Motivated Woman by
Faith Weber and Development by Charles Spicer. Men for
Missions founder Dwight Ferguson will also be at the
conference.
After the sem inars on Saturday afternoon there will be
reports by the Rev. Dale McClain, of Casselberry,
missionary returning to Hong Kong and the Rev. Harold J.
Peasley of South Africa.
The conference closes on Sunday with Bible study hour at
9 a.m. followed by a missionary panel and closing message
by Rev. Crouse.
Further information may be obtained by calling the Lake
Yale Baptist Assembly
m b l j (904 ) 357-3050.

III
Mission Emphasis
The annual mission emphasis weekend at Community
United Methodist Church, Highway 17-92, Casselberry, will
begin with a dinner Saturday, Jan. 29 at 6:30 p.m. in
fellowship hall. The Rev. Virgil E. Maybray, executive
secretary of the Evangelical Council of Good News,
taxlngton, Ky., and Mrs. Mabray will lead the conference.
He will speak at the dinner, which will be followed by a
slide-tape presentation on the work of Wycliffe Bible
Translators Pat and Melenda Edmlston, members of the
church, in Papua, New Guinea. On Sunday there will be a
breakfast followed by church services and Sunday School at
9:30 and 11 a.m. Local missions sponsored by the church
will also be represented.

Joy Fellowship Has Study
The Joy Fellowship women's group of Trinity Assembly
of God will meet a t 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the church at 875
Elkcam Boulevard, Deltona. Mrs. Nancy Evana Is leading a
series on "A Measure of a Woman."

Annual Meeting At Trinity
Trinity Assembly of God, 875 Elkcam Boulevard,
Deltona, will hold Its annual business meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in the church sanctuary.

Youth Alive Sharing
The Youth Alive Fellowship (ages 13-18) of Trinity
Assembly of God, Deltona, will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
the church under the direction of Youth Pastor Mike
Modica. Afterwards they will go out for pizza.

Center Elects
The Sanford Christian Sharing Center has elected Gary
De Busk, pastor of Ravenna Park Baptist Church to serve
as president and Annabdle Henderson of First
Presbyterian Church, Sanford, is vice president.

H e ra ld P h o to * b y J *n « C m o lb o r r y

Tuskawilla United Methodist Church on Hed Hu)* Lake Hoad, Casselberry,
recently consecrated first phase of its facility.

Anger Is Dangerous To Health
Violence, we all agree, is bad. But what about anger, which
gives rise to violence—and to broken families, mental illness
and much of our unhappiness. Is anger bad too?
On that we do not all agree.
In the January Issue of Psychology Today magazine, a
clinical professor of behavioral medicine and psychiatry at the
University of Virginia gives a long list of troubles that follow in
the train of suppressed anger — including greater risk of
prem ature heart attack and major dental problems as well as
increased hostility and heightened probability of homicide and
spouse and child abuse.
Dr. W. Doyle Gentry’ is responding to a w riter in the
November issue of the sam e magazine who cited new research
Indicating "there is little evidence that suppressing nnger is
dangerous to health."
Gentry’s further point is that suppressing anger may be
dangerous not only to the angry person's health but to (he
health of the person he is angry at - that is, suppressing anger
can lead to violence. By letting your anger out in words, you
and your opponent have something to talk about which can
forestall a rain of harmful blows.
What did Jesus say about anger? We don’t really know.
According to the King Jam es Version of the Bible, Jesus said
in the Sermon on the Mount, “ He that is angry with his brother
without a cause shall be in danger of the Judgment." But a
later translation, "The New Oxford Bible," omits the words,
"without a cause."
This follows many of the earliest manuscripts of the Bible
which quote Jesus as saying simply, "He that is angry with his
brother shall be in danger of the Judgment." Some scholars
feel the words, "without a cause," are an addition of later
Bible editors.
,
,
... .
Even if anger may be called for at times, I agree with those
who say that we are living in an age that "deifies" the ex­
pression of anger.
“Anger today is becoming one of our most praised values,"
writes Melvin Maddocks, a columnist for the Christian Science
Monitor. "In raising anger to an emotional ideal, we have
gravely misgauged the limited utility of adrenalin's quick
flashes."
What can we do about it?
"There is one thing we can do about it," says Maddocks.
"We can refuse to glamorize anger, especially when it is selfindulgence — the sound of baby shoes stomping."

Saints
And
S in n e r s

Tuskawilla United Methodist Church, located in one of the
fastest growing areas of Central Florida, recently consecrated
its new $324,000 facility at 3925 Red Bug ta k e Road.
Casselberry.
The 7,000 square-foot multi-purpose building designed b&gt;
architect I.ynn Ten Eyck, is the first phase of a planned
building program. Bomar Construction Inc. was the con­
tractor.
The Rev. Barbara Williams Riddle, minister, began the
church which celebrated its second birthday in December,
with 18 persons in attendance. The church, which grew 60
percent in membership last year, now has 190 members and an
average attendance of 170. Prior to completion of the new
building, the congregation met in the Red Bug Elementary
School.
The church received a $100,000 gift from the Orlando District
to its building fund and a $200,000 loan at nine percent interest
from the Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church.
Orlando District Superintendent Robert Bledsoe was the
guest speaker for the Jan. 9 consecration service. The choir
from the Sanlando United Methodist Church, where Mrs
Riddle's husband, Jam es, serves as minister of music. Joined
with the Tuskawilla Choir to provide special music.
The building includes a large flexible room with folding
doors, which serves as a worship center and. meeting room,
eight classrooms, two offices, and a kitchen.
Mrs. Riddle credits the population explosion in the area of
the church as one reason for the congregation's rapid growth.
"We have 19-20 visitors each Sundae." she added.
—JANE CASSKI.HKHRY

George I’lagenz

Robert Raines, who wrote "To Kiss the Joy," is another who
believes that one thing this world needs is a thermostat for
hotheads.
"Sometimes when I let all my anger out," says Raines, "it
may give me momentary relief but it may destroy someone
else. Sometimes I should hold my anger in for the sake of
another."
Now we are back to where we began. Won't holding in our
anger be dangerous?
"There is not one shred of evidence that it is dangerous to
suppress anger," says Dr. John Decker, a physiologist at
Arizona State University. Anger is a deliberate choice, he
says, and can be avoided with no ill effects.
Anger, once forgotten, has no more lorce, Decker insists. It
is when a person continues to harass himself by remembering
old hurts that anger may well cause depression — and worse.
This person experiences the hurt not once but maybe a hun­
dred tim es "and a person can stand only so many defeats."

Dr. Karl Joiner, a Sam
II. Marks p ro fesso r
ami chairman of the
D e p a r t m e n t

o f

Hrligion at Stetson
University, DeLand,
will lead a January
Hihle
Study
at
I'in e c r e s t
B a p tis t
Church, Sanford, Jan.
:10-Feb. 2. The study
will include all ages
and will begin at 6:15
p.m . on Sunday, 7
p.m .. Monday and
Tuesday, and (1:30 p.m.
Wednesday. The study
is open to the public.

Open House
The

four-day

Lutheran

Open H o u se b e g in s Ja n . 30 at

Redeemer tath eran Church,
at 2525 Oak Ave., Sanford,
with special 7:30 p.m. ser­
vices featuring guest speaker
the R ev. Ja n Munch of
Decatur, 111.
“The whole community is
invited to drop in. and gel
better acquainted said the
pastor, the Rev. E.A.
Reuscher. F o r additional
details call 322-3552.

Religion Is Not Dying
Today a lot of people are lamenting over the
decline of religion, but the interesting thing is
that this has always been so, Nietzsche, back
In the 1800s, wrote a book on the first page cf
which Zarathustra is made to ask, "docs the
man not know that God is dead?" And a
generation ago, Harry E. Barnes entitled a
book, “ The Twilight of Christianity."
But I expect come next Sunday millions of
people will still be worshipping in churches,
and a century from now, the same will be true.
Why will religion not die? Because it has a
powerful hold on us; it ministers to human
needs. It Is one of these needs I wish to discuss
in this article: THE UNQUENCHABLE
THIRST FOR MEANING IN LIFE.
Animals do not seem to be disturbed about
the meaning of anything. No squirrel bothers
about why It Is a squirrel. But a human is
always wondering, wondering, wondering.
Why am I what I am? Who a n I? Sometimes
he tries to forget himself in "pastimes" but
always something breaks through the crust of
forgetfulness and wrings from him the
question: "What meaning does my life have?"
and there is no answer that can be supplied by
gadgetry or science.
I feel certain that Time magazine Isn't
concerned with prom oting religion, but
sometime ago one of its stories started with
M arx's famous assertion:"It's the people's
opiate. Common people will never be happy
until religion Is abolished." (Marx said that
more than 150 years ago, and it still seems to
be the Communist party 's official line.)
T im e's article went on to state: "Behind the
Iron Curtain a dreadful question Is often heard

REV. S. EDWARD
JOHNSON
First ChrtiUan
Church, Sanford

in homes, cafes, and classrooms: "What Is the
meaning of life? Polish young people, the
article went on, are bothered by it. A student In
Warsaw asked, 'Professor, could you tell me
the meaning of life? The professor paused a
moment, then he said, "We Marxists have
always pooh-poohed this question, and said the
idea of God is a superstition. But now I think
that as long as people suffer, die, or lose what
they love, the question about God will always
come up."
Then he concluded — and the Time reporter
said it was almost as If he wistfully glanced
over his shoulder at Moses, Isaiah and Jesus
"m aybe we need some beliefs that will satisfy
a person's deepest questions."
I feel certain that there Is In all of us an
unquenchable thirst for meaning In our lives.
No one ever obliterates religion. "Lord, to
whom else shall we go, You have the words of
eternal life." No, my friends, I can never
« believe that religion Is in danger of dying -r
not so long as we humans are Interested In life.
To find meaning In our lives much of the time
we have to live on faith even when we don't
have the answers to all of our questions, but of
this we can be sure, If we hold on we will later
enjoy the privilege of understanding, and even
give thanks, for what we a re and who we are.

PIE IN THE EYE
All set for the "Pie in the Eye" Choir enrollment
contest. Feb. 6-March 6, between First Baptist
Church of Sanford and First Baptist, Winter Park
are David Haines (left), minister of music at
Sanford and Billy Jack, minister of music, at
Winter Park, while their music secretaries,
Marilyn Wright, left, and Sue Pearson stand by
crutches and wheelchair In case one of the choir
directors should get injured in the "battle." The
contest wiU culminate in a fellowship picnic at
which the losei? will treat the winners and losing
director will get a pie in his face. Purpose of the
event is to create rapport between the churches as
well as increase choir membership.

Sanford Ministerial Association President Peter
Courlas, pastor of Sanford Alliance Church, left,
discusses plans for Raster Sunrise service to In*
held April 3 on Lake Monroe, with llulon Black,
right, who is chairm an of the event. Tentative
plans call for having the speaker and massed
choirs to be aboard the Hay Queen cruise boat off
shore.

SUNRISE
SERVICE

&lt; £ t-

mO

j u k e ’s

^ u % ra n

C iju r c ij

r

United Why

Highway 414 4 Rod Bug Road, Ovhdo J274J

SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES
1:30 A.M. and 11:00 A.M.
SUNDAY SCHOOL-9:45 A.M.

�BLONDIE

^

I'M SELLIN G A 1~
PABULOUS NEW BOOK

4 B— Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

IT S E N T IT L E D ,'H O W
T O S E L L A N Y T H IN G
TO A N Y B O D Y ' &gt; &lt; 1

Sunday, Jan. J 3 ,1983

by Chic Young

Romm poet
Egg cell
Aged, as meal
Former
German corn
12 Dessert pastry
13 Lets down
15 Month (abbr)

by M o rt Walker

Answer to Previous Puzzle

57 Gardens

I
5
9
II

BEAT IT/ HIT THE
ROAD/ 9C R A M .'

B E E T L E B A ILE Y

across

HOROSCOPE

DOWN

1. Fill
T Lowbred
3 George Gersh­
win's brother
4 Of God (1st |
5 Gold (Sp)
18 Fixed pom
6 Mike a
in historical
promise
lime
7 Unequal
18 Struggle
8 Of the sea
19 Saratoga
10 Silectad card
20 Furniture
11 Horns
29
polish
12 Direction
33
21 Compass
14 Grams
34
point
17 fiutt
35
22 Novices
23 Chooses
25 Expressed
24 Urban eyesore
sorrow
36
26 Of liquid
28 Work at
38
waste
30 Depression ini­ 27 Full of test
39
tials
•
1
I
I
31 Day of week
(abbr)
1
32 Thus (Lat)
33 Rower
37 Persian ruler I I
41 Speed
is
measure
(abbr |
11
42 Saw
72
n
lengthwise
44 Arrival-time
21
guess (abbr)
45 Away (prefix)
11
46 Indefinite in
order
IS
)]
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47 Adenosine tri­
41
phosphate
(abbr)
48 Give another 41
title to
ID
4*
51 Makes used 81
to
14
54 Said further
55 Metric unit
H
56 Endure

■|
1

by A rt Sansom

T H E BORN LOSER

Wtf.WREeflOtfAUD,

■■
1

KIT 'N' CARLYLE,U

By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Sunday, January 23, 1983

40 Rosins
43 Singer Harris
49 Commercials
50 Encountered
52 Beak
53 American
Indian

Pined
Actor Sharif
Adjuration
Actress
Fleming
Insect egg
Brought up
Pronounces
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by Larry W right

YOUR BIRTHDAY
January 23,1953
Although It may not come in
n sudden windfall, if you have
patience and persistence the
chances to strengthen your
material security are good in
the year ahead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) It's true that you have
rights, but so do the other
guys. Don't get so locked-Ln on
something that you fall to
respect the family’s Interests.
1983 predictions for Aquarius
are now ready. Send f l to
Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify birth date.
Send an additional 12 for the
NEW Astro-Graph Mat­
chmaker wheel and booklet.
Reveals rom antic com­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
This is one of those days when
you could be a trifle too
emotional, and overreach to
situations. Be aware of the
problem and you should be
able U) control it.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You have a tendency to
reward the new and exciting
person In your life. This Is
fine, but take care not to slight
an old pal In the process.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
In your d eterm in atio n to
achieve your goals today,
take care you don’t appear to
be too self-serving. Your
Image would suffer.

A R C H IE

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
One of your greatest assets is
your
curiosity
about
everything, but if ^ou lack
purpose In life this can also

work against you. Follow a
blueprint.
CANCER (June 21-JuIy 22)
Should a misunderstanding
arise today with a pal over
something m a te ria l, ask
yourself if it's more valuable
to you than the friendship.
You might back off.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Someone of whom you thought
quite highly may disappoint
you today. Don't let this spoil
the association. We are all
human.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you have any doubts about the
outcome of an innovative
project, it’s best to back off
for the time being. This is not
one of your more creative
days.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You'd be better off spending a
quiet day at home today.
You're not in the mood for a
lot of frolicking. Your
patience might be short.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Tolerance may be called for
today in dealing with family
m em bers, especially your
mate. Be a good sport. Turn
the other check instead of
arguing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) It’s a rarity when
your mental faculties are out
of order, but today could be
one of those days. Don't tackle
any
th o u g h t-p ro v b k ln g
projects.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) If possible, avoid all
financial transactions today,
whether they be shopping,
renegotiating allowances or
gambling. Chances are you'd
come out on the short end.

For M onday, January 24, 1983
YOUR BIRTHDAY
January 24, 1983
Benefits could develop for
you this coming year through
your affiliation with clubs or
political groups. It will
behoove you to get out and
make new contacts.

P R IS C IL LA 'S POP

by Ed Sullivan
I h a p A HARP TIM E
CONVINCING HER TO
S L E E P IN.

I CA N
IM A G IN E .

SIN C E S H E S T H E ONE
WHO S T A R T E P T H E S E
EA RLY MORNING WALKS,
SH E'S PRO BABLY F E E L ­
ING V E R Y G U ILTY
ABOUT IT

by Stoffel A Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

NORTH
Ml 11
♦ J 7J
YAK
♦ K J 7J 4
♦ AK 1
EAST
WEST
♦ A 982
♦5
▼I0I 7IS 1
YOU
4941
• S
♦ 74
4 Q HI12
SOUTH
♦ KQ19I 4
YJ 9
♦ AQ102
♦ J 10
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Wmi Norik East Sooth
14
24
Pass 24
Pass
24
Pass 24
Pass
Pass - 44
Pais 44
Pats
4 NT Pass 54
Pass «♦
Pats Pass
Pass

IN A BlUON &gt;SAR9 OS SO

THEY WILL. EVOLVE DOWN
INU) A MORE MANAGEABLE /(

Opening lead: 41
By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

S i Z S - T - 7 / --------------- 1 -------------

South was a believer In his
ability to play all contracts
and the Inability of his part­
ners to handle the dummy.
Hence, his failure to ever
show anything but token
support for his partner's diamonds and his repeated

rebids of hia own five-card
spade suit.
A look at all the cards will
show that If North played in
six diamonds and E ast
opened a spade, the defense
would take the first two
tricks. The same look will
show that six no-trump
makes In a breeze since no
ruffs are available to the
defense.
South won the diamond
lead in dummy and led the
three of trumps to his king,
which held the trick. A sec­
ond trump went to dummy's
jack aa West ducked again.
At th li point, South
stopped to figure out If he
could guard against the pos­
sibility that west might just
have been dealt one diamond
and two clubs.
Then South justified his
faith in his ability to play the
dummy. He cashed dummy's
ace-king of hearts and clubs
before leading that third
trump.
West won and led a heart.
South ruffed, drew the laat
trum p and claimed his
contract.
Note that if South had led
that third trumps before
playing those ace-kings he
would have been struck In
dummy and unable to set to
his hand lo shut out w est's
nine of spades.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2(LFeb.
19) Your purse could suffer
today If you pal around with
free-spending
companions.
You have some extravagant
whims which they may
trigger. 1983 predictions for
Aquarians are now ready.
Send |1 to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign. Send an ad­
ditional |2 for the NEW AstroGraph M atchm aker wheel
and
booklet.
R eveals
romantic combinations and
compatibilities for all signs.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Guard against tendencies
today to seek to place the
blame on others for things for
which they are not respon­
sible. Admit to your mistakes.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
If you fail to keep pace with
your d u ties today, things
could begin to pile up and
cause you frustrations. You
won’t work well under
pressure.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try
not to put yourself In a
position today where control
of important m atters is in the
hands of others. Maintain
authority.
VIRGO^Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your possibilities for success
will be lessened considerably
today If you do things fitfully.
Be persistent concerning your
objectives.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Take extra pains to be a good
listener today. Your attention
span may not be up to par.
You might not grasp facts as
readily as you normally do.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Be very careful today In
business dealings, especially
ARIES (March 21-April 19) If you're Involved in a joint
Rather than stick with un­ v e n tu re .
D ouble-check
workable Ideas to d ay , be everything your counterpart
prepared lo a d ju st your does.
thinking. Be open-minded as
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23to suggestions.
Dec. 21) Your Independence
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) will be Important to you
Keep a tight reign on your today. Try to avoid situations
financial expenditures today. which could prevent you from
If you let your guard down, moving around as freely as
there’s a chance you'll spend you’d like.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
more than you should.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) 19) Ih ls Is not a good day to
Both you and your m ate must experim ent with untested
be careful today not to do work procedures. Stick to
things the other finds ob-&lt; methods w hich experienci
jectlonalb.e E ven sm a ll' tells you produce results.

G A R F IE L D

F R A N K AND E R N E S T

disagreements could get out
of hand.

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thaves

X Glass IT’S HARP
TO C U T C O R N B P f

W H EN You w opg
AN

O V A L O F F IC E .
—

TUMBLEW EEDS

mnsMjwa

in

I-It

by T. K. Ryan

A N N IE

bv Lao nard Starr
BUT ICMET0TB1
0H-50MY-IT
(EF-)US NHflTTWS FEEL5 $05000 TO
15 ALL ABOUT HAVE MVAMS
AROUND MY LITTLE
Gift. AGAIN, 1 HATE
TOLET SO-

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&lt;

5

Evening H erald, Sanford. F I.

Sunday. Jan.?3, m i — 7B

TONIGHTS TV
Cable Ch

CD O
(DO
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and e cm e n who care lo r and teed
the m ore than 2 000 rare and
e ndangered animals at C h icago s
Lin coln Park Zoo

C a b le Ch
In d e p e n d e n t
O rla n d o

(ED(35)
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(A B C ) O rla n d o
(C B S ) O rla n d o
(N B C I D a y to n a B each
O rla n d a

In d e p e n d e n t
A tla n ta , Ga

In a d d itio n ta th e c h a n n e l) title d , c a b te v iiro n s u b s c rib e rs m a y tu n e in la in d e p e n d e n t c h a n n e l 44,
51. P e te rs b u rg , b y tu n in g to ch a n n e l I . tu n in g to c h a n n e l 1). w h ic h c a rrie s s p o rts a n d th e C h ris tia n
B ro a d c a stin g N e tw o r k (C B N I.

SATURDAY
AFTERN O O N

2:00
O '4 MOVIE
t O w r e s t l in g
1] (35) MOVIE
The C all O t The
W ild &lt;19761 John B eck B ernard
F re u o n
f D (10) r r s EVERYBODY'S B U S I­
NESS

2:30
f D (10) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS

3:00
l? O NEW ACCELERATORS
f D ( t 0 ) PRESENTE

3:30
O ® LORNE OR EEN E'S NEW
WILDERNESS
CD O PBA BOWLINO Live c o v e r­
age c l the $135,000 A C -D e ico C la s­
sic (Irom Mel s S om hshore B ow l in
A lam eda Cali 1|
CD (10) TONY BROWN S JO U R N A L
G eorge K irby P resents K ing
H eroin Comedian G e o rg e Kirby
ta lk s about his battle w ith drugs
arid prison life

4:00
0 4 PQAQ OLF Live Coverage ot
the Bob Mope Desert C la ssic trom
P alm Springs, CaM ,
1*1 O
SPO R TS S A T U R D A Y
Scheduled live co ve ra ge ot m e
G e rri C o tie e / Pmklon T h o m a s 10ro u n d heavyweight b o u t (Iro m
A tla n tic City N J )
n (35) INCREDIBLE H U LK
t D (10) HIDDEN PLACES: WHERE
HISTORY LIVES A ncie n t Places
M ost Philip A b b o tt v is its the
Canyomands w ilderness o f Utah
and Mueco Tanks in w e ste rn T e ia s
-- tw o sites where In d ia n ro c k art
has endured tor centuries (R)

4:05
l ) i (IT ) MOVIE S tra ng e rs In 7 A "
(1972) Andy G nltith. Id a Lup.no

4:30
t D (10) ENTERPRISE The D ia ­
m on d G a m e ' The tra il o t newly
m ined diam onds is fo llo w e d as they
are graded cleaved saw ed, p o l­
ished. traded, designed a n d so ld as
(ewelry in fashionable F ifth Avonue
show room s

5:00
0 ) O
N C AA B A S K E T B A L L
Regional coverage ot T u lsa G o ld ­
en Hurricane at Bradley Braves,
Idaho Vandals at South C arolina
rig h tin g Gamecocks. W est V irginia
M ountaineers at R utgers S carlet
K nignts
t D O WIDE WORLD OP SPORTS
Scheduled The H a rle m G lo ­
b e tro tte rs return to New Y ork C ity,
sam e-day coverage ot M en 'a W o rld
C u p D o w n h ill S k iin g ( I r o m
K its bullet. Austria i. Hie 1UB2 W ide
W o rld o f Sporta Athlete o t th e Year
A w a rd presentation to W ayne
Q re tik y ot the NHL (T h li p ro g ra m
m ay be postponed due to p ro g ra m ­
m in g considerations)
a t (35) DANIEL BOONE
0D (10) WASHINGTON W E EK IN
REVIEW

5:30
0

(10) WALL STREET W EEK
"R ea g a n At H a lftim e " G u e st ConO fetsm an Jack K«mp (R N Y )

5:35
O (IT ) MOTORWEEK ILLU S TR A T­
ED
EVENING

0:00
® NEWS *
. I) (35) KUNQ FU
f D (10) JANE QOOOALL AN O THE
W O R LD OF ANIMAL B EH A VIO R

0:05
dX (IT ) WRESTLING

•

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0

I I (3 5 )E.J. DANIELS
I
O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
C H U RC H O F ORLANDO

C l)

TAXI Louie

4

8:05
a t (IT )C A R T O O N S

9:05

ax (17) LO S T IN SPACE
•

O
®
T H E F A M IL Y TREE
IPrem ierel W hen A n n ie Beniamin
and Kevin N ich ols d ecide to get
m arried, they d isco ve r that therr
respective ch ild re n a re not overtoyed at the idea
CD O FANTASY IS LA N D A young
man wants to fin d o u t if h»s grand!®*
ther was tru ly a m usical genius, and
a soap opera a ctre ss fears th a l the
evil character she p o rtra y s is taking
Over her m ind Q
11 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
fD (10) DAVE A LL E N A T U R G E

10:00
0 ( 4 H EALTH BEAT
(J ) O
C E R E B R A L P A LS Y
TELETH O N (C O N T'D )
( D O FISHIN G WITH ROLAND
M ARTIN
i)(i(3 5 )M O V IE
T he N oose Hangs
High " (1948) A b b o tt and Coslello.
C athy D o w m R o b b e it relieve the
buys o t a huge sum o f money

10:05
JX ( IT ) LIG H TER SIDE

10:05

10:30

QX (IT ) JA P AN B O W L Top collegi­
ate players w ill be o n display live
Irom Y okoham a S ta d iu m . Japan, as
East meets W est In th is all-star
football classic

0 ( 4 ' EMERGENCY
IT ) o FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
f D (10) A M E R IC A TO THE MOON

ax

10:30

11:00 ■

11:00

f D ( 10) A LP IN E SKI SCHOOL The
C re a tive C h ris tie Butch Fmdersen
and K a th y W ood dem onstrate te ch ­
n iques lo r th e refinem ent ot the
cU rfitk t

G ® ( 7 J O news

C l) O
C E R E B R A L PALSY
TELETHON W eekend W ith The
Stars ' Jo h n R itter. Paut A nka and
Dennis Jam es h e a d a ca s t ot celeb­
rities m the fifth a n n ua l national
appeal lo be te levised liv e Irom Los
Angeles and N ew York
(1)) (35) BENNY K ILL
fD (10) ALFRED H ITC H CO C K PRE­
SENTS

11:30

0 ( 4 1 N O R M SLO AN
CD a TH IS W EEK WITH 0AV10
BRIN KLEY
O (35) LA U R E L A N O HARDY
f D ( 10) C O O K IN ' CAJUN

11:30

1:00
0 ( 4 ) LAUGH TRAX
(L t (35) M O V IE
"T h e B rim
M achine" ( I9S6I P a trick Barr. E lifabelh Allen

OX (IT ) MOVIE "innocent B yattndets (I9T 3) S tanley B aker, G eral­
dine Chaplin

1:45
( D O MOVIE "P e n d u lu m " (1969)
George P eppard. Jean Seberg.

10:35

(1T| M O V IE
El C id" (19611
C h a rlto n H eston Soohia Loren

fD ( 10) DAVE A LLE N A T U R G E

PALBY

9:30

Q ®
M O N TA G E: THE BLACK
PRESS
* T) Q DIRECTIONS
I I (35) TH E JETSONS

10:00

12:00

1

AFTERNOON

12:00

0 ( 4 'M E E T THE PRESS
(})
O
C E R E B R A L PALSY
TE LETH O N W eekend With The
S ta rs " J o h n R itter. Paul Anka and
D ennis Jam es head a cast o l celeb­
rities in th e tilth annual national
appeal to be televised live trom Loa
Angeles a n d New York
I I I (35) M O V IE
The Country G irl"
(1954) B in g C rosby. Grace Kelly
fD (10) TH E G O O D NEIGHBORS

12:30
a (4 ) FLO R ID A 'S WATCHING
111 o W A L L 8TREET JOURNAL
REPORT
fD (10) M A G IC OF DECORATIVE
P AIN TIN G

6:00
® PUBLIC A F F A M S
O
C E R E B R A L PALBY
TELETHON "W eekend W ith The
S ta rt" John R itla r. P aul Anka and
O e n n t Jam es head a ca s t ot cafebritwa m the tilth an n ua l national
appeal to be lafevtsed live from L o t
Angeiea and New Y ork.
(D O AG R ICULTURE U S A

8

10:05

SCHOOL MENU

2:00
( Z ) 0 M O V IE ' D eception (1946)
B ette Davta. C laude R am s,
1 1 (3 5 ) M O V IE ' To Catch A T h ie f
(1955) C e ry G ran t. Graca Ke*y.
O (10) M O V *
"Pot 0 Gold
(1941) Jam es S le w e d. Paulette
G o d d a rd

3:00
Fresh F ruit
MUkor
Orange Juice

THURSDAY, JAN. *7
ENTREE
Oven Fried Chicken
Whipped Potatoes
Green P eas
Oven Baked Rolls
Milk
,
EXPRESS
Chicken Patties
French Fries
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange J u k e
FRIDAY, JAN. t t
ENTREE
MANAGER’S CHOICE
(Ground Beef)
• Menu Will Vgry

By School

EN JO Y

GRAPEFRUIT
F R O M FLO R ID A

1 *l O
CEREBRAL PALSY
TELETHON Weekend W ith The
S ta rs John Ritter, Paul A nka and
Oenm s Jam es head a cast ot c e le b ­
ritie s in the fifth! annual n a lio n a l
appeal to be televised live Irom Los
A ngeles and New York
( T ) O HEWS
M (35) KUNQ FU
ED (10) NOVA Hawau C ru cib le O f
L ite " A revealing (our is taken ot the
land o l volcanoes whose beauty has
m ade it a symbol ot pleasure and
vaca tio n r ]

6:30
Q (4 NBC NEWS
5 O CBS NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS

6‘35

«

11 ( IT) FUNTIM E
f D (10) A M W EATHER

7:30
7:35

8:00
a i (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

8:05
JX (IT ) MY THREE SONS

8:35
13 (IT ) THAT GIR L

7:00

1:00

ax (IT ) MOVIE

G 4 RIC HAR D S IM M O N S
5 O DONAHUE
( ' O M OVIE
11 (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
f D ( 10) SESAM E STREET g

9:05
JX (17) M OVIE

12:00

9:30

(7) O MOVIE ' C itu e n Kane
(19411 O rson Welles. Joseph G o t­
ten
I t |3 5 )W V. GRANT

4:05
IX ( IT) THE MUNSTERS

4:30
I I I (3 5 )S CO O BYO O O

4:35

ax (IT ) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
ANNE BONNIE’S
TAVERN
AND
CRAB BAR

1:05

* 1:30
5 o AS THE W ORLD TURNS
fD ( tO ) THIS O LD HOUSE (FRI)

C ra b H o u r 1 :20 4 :2 0
G a rlic C r jb J J t E a c h
' R o a ile d O y ste rs 10c E a c h

G 4 ANO TH ER WORLD
T O ONE LIFE TO LIVE

CD (10) ODYSSEY (THU)
fD (10) M AG IC C.r OIL

OCR HAPPY HOURS
II &gt;9AM Tot 10 PM
10 P M TiKloi.no

PAINTING

(FBI)

9:00

4 ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
} l O TENNIS C overage o l me
G rand P ru M asters T ournam ent
(Irom Madison Square G a rd e n l
( I f O JACK ANDERSO N CONFI­
DENTIAL
il l (35| IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

4:00
B
4 LITTLE MOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
S O HOUR MAGAZINE
&gt; O MERV GRIFFIN
I I (35) TOM AND JERRY
f D (10) SESAM E STREET g

2:00

III (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
fD (10) M ISTER ROGERS (R)

2:30

mO

1 For I A ll HiohOaii,
M o t! C o th fu ilt

C APITO L
fD ( to ) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (M ON)
fD (10) THE PRIZEWINNERS (TUE)
fD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
fD (10) M AG IC OF OECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

LocA tftM nttdt

JW I F r tr iih A v*

n
(HWYr uU.fJI
S in W d

0 ( 4 IN SEARCH O F ,.
t t (35) FAM ILY AFFAIR

10:00

12:05
a x (IT ) OPEN UP "S tru c tu ra l And
A rchitectural Decaying O t A m e rica "
Guest John Brenner, a rch ite ctu ra l
engineer lo r Heery E ngineering
Company

O
m
It
fD

4 THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
o MORE R EAL PEOPLE
(35) ANDY GRIFFITH
(10) ELECTRIC COM PANY (R)

Q
m
It
fD

4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
O C H ILD 'S PLAY
(3 5 )DORIS DAY
(10) 3-2-1 C ONTACT | R ) g

10:30

12:30

(4 MOVIE
Days O l Glory
(19441 Tamara Toum anova. G rego­
ry Peck

O
4 VOYAQERSI Ptuneas and
Je ffre y travel to the O ld W est o l
1830 to Save Teddy Roosevelt Iro m
the d eadly hands ol Billy the K id |R |
( J I O 50 MINUTES
T O RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR
N O TI Featured an u n d e rw a te r
a tta ck on a man testing a shark
p ro o f" suit, some glasses tor th e
b lin d and other w onders ot m e d i­
cine. the h o a i o l the C a rd itl g ia n t;
u n ique m useums ol the w orld, u n u ­
sual s p o rtin g events
f D (10) AUSTIN CITY LIM ITS "D o n
W illiam s &lt; W est T i m S on g w riters
S p e c ia l" Don WHiiams p erform s
so m a o l hie classics, and i t jo in e d
by T e ia t Singers and SOngwrrtere
B u lch H ancock. Townee Van Z a n d t.
Jim m ie G ilm ore and Pavid Halley

3:35

12:30

G

8:30

11:30

3:30
ill
(3 5 ) BUG S BUNNY A N D
FRIENDS
fD &lt;101 ELECTRIC C O M PAN Y &lt;R)
1X (IT ) THE FLINTSTONES

O 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
&gt; O a l l MV CHILDREN
11 (35) M OVIE
f D (10) BETTY BOOP FESTIVAL
(MON)
f D ( 10) M OVIE (TUE)
fD (10) MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
(WED)
fD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THUI
fD (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)

i

3:05
1} (IT )F U N T IM E

12:05

7:05

11:05

O

ax (17) NICE PEOPLE

t o n ew s

II (35) B ia VALLEY
fD (10) M YSTERY (MON)
fD (10) M ASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
fD 110) LIFE ON EARTH (W EDl
fD (10) NOVA (THU)
fD 110) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)
&gt;2 (IT ) PEOPLE NOW

IX (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

0 4 5 O l’ J O N E W S
fD (10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
G abier and Jeffrey L yo n s select
what they consider to b e the fu n n i­
est scariest best, w orst and m ost
rom antic tilm s IR)

AT

4 NEWS
1 O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
■» O R Y A N S HOPE

10:30

11:00

12:00
0 4 SOAP W O RLD
5 O
C ARO LE NELSON
NOON

G 4 TODAY
5 O M ORNING NEW S
» G GOOD M O R N INO AMERICA
M (35) NEWS
€Z) (10) TO LIFEI

i l l (35) JIM BARKER
fD (10) FAWLTY TOW ERS

O

6:00

^0 *
V *

-

11:00
O 4 WHEEL OFTO R TU N E
15 10 THE PRICE IS RIGHT
IT) G L O V E B O AT (R)
it I: (35) 35 LIVE
CD ( 101 OVER EASY

1:05
a t (IT ) MOVIE
In O u r Tim e"
(1944) Ida Lupmo. Paul H enreid

2:00
( D O MOVIE
S e a rc h " (1972)
Hugh O Brian, Elke S om m er

11:05

B IS C U IT S A N D W I C H E S

IX (17) PERRY M ASON

2:30

11:30

( 5 1O CBS NEW S NIQHTW ATCH

SAUSAGE * COUNTRY-FRIED STEAK

Q l4 iH I T M A N
Our kutlermllk Uric will art M k H tr.ih tvtrv morning, tight
neve in our kllihoe. Wo korvt «m to you tokt •"« hot »it*
vour tnolct ot oouoeeo u, aeuetry tnoa itoofe Try o « amn.
WKUit u n k e lt lw i 1*40,1

:-----------------------------------------c

B R IN G Y O U R FAMILY

o u p o n

---------------------------------------- 1

BUY 1 SAUSAGE BISCUIT

&amp; FRIENDS TO

e rr i ra n

7:05

COUPON REQUIRED, GOOD THRU

OX ( IT ) WRESTLING

q

0:00
O ® CHIPS Ponch and B o b b y
get cau g h t up in some co u n try /
w estern chaos while On the tra il o l
ui b a n c a ttle rustlers
I H O ARCHIE BUNKER’S PLACE
(J ) o M ATT HOUSTON
H
(3 5 ) H EA LTH M A T T E R S
' P la slic S urgery"
f D (TO) LIFE ON EARTH B uilding
B o d ie s " A ustralia's G reat B arrie r
R eel e ih ib it t a wide variety o l
m arin e invertebrates whose a n ce s­
try began 600 m illion years ago (R)

) oe's

GOOD! FRESH! HOT! GARLIC CRABS.

O P IN TAM S U N . !;M M O H TH RU *AT
C L O U I I PM IU N - T H U R I. It PM P R I A iA T

If* A Little Bit Meaty But Oh So
DtliclousI 2 Psundi
DINNER *6.95

323-1790
2504 5. FRENCH AVE.

8:05

DINNER * . 9 5

O U R $ 3 .0 0 O F F

ALACARTE *5.95

MARYLAND STYLE CRAB CAKE
Two Cak«* Made with 15 Pet. FreUi Local
Crab Moat Sauteed To A Oolden Brown
DINNER 7 . 9 5

SANFORD

ALACARTE *3.95

SAUTEED CRAB MEAT&amp; MUSHROOMS
Chunk* Ol Lump Meat A Frtth
Mushrooms Sauteed tn Pure Butler I

OX ( I T ) N A S H V IL L E A L IV E )
G uests Brenda Lea. Dean D illon.
G ary Stew art

_3

BurgerChef

IT’S CRAB SEASON

Q

w

n i

MAKE

A LA CARTE *9*95

HAPPY HOURS
11 iM Ta «i M And tt;M 'Till ClatlnB

2 FOR I ALL IIIBALLS
&amp; MOST-LOCK TAILS!

IN ANNE BONNIE’S TAVERN'

United Why

IS M F P IN C H A V I (H W Y . 17-91)
SANFOBO

DOLLY MADISON

To take advantage of Ifie speoa! offer, present
thiscoupon to our photografttier and make a 9Bc
deposit on youi SI 2.95 collection.
TOTAL PORTRAIT COLLECTION INCLUDES:
2 - 8 x 10s, 3 - 5 x 7s and 15 wallets.

j B a t a y * n ir if t § h o f &gt; )

PALBY

3:30
O ) (10) Z O O K U P C R S A behindthe-scenes lo o k Is taken at the m an

W lu ra you S tv a up to 8 0 % ■ T ip QudRy fcNNl ft C ak i

N O W O N L Y *9 .9 5 a *

FRESH B R E A D L O U R BREAD IS F R E S H L . F R E S H BR EA D !

* Giant Sandwich White (1!^ lbSe)^••••••....**3for *1#39
★ Assorted IVi lb. Whoat Broods.......... 2 for*1.55
* Grossing* Rye l Pumpemickle • •• •*U O l. LOAF**** • 791
^Rasin-Omamon Swiri........
..............*1.29
★ Hamburger or Hot Dag Butts ....... 8 FACK 2 PKOI. 95’
ASSORTED .
BOXED
9
55
SNACK
4
ZINGERS “ x"
9
9
*
CAKES
F0
18 ZINOKRI IN A M X
ASSORTS
ASSORTED
.
FRUIT # 4
LARGE SWin 2
35
FOI
9 9 ' ROUS L , ^ $ 1
PIES
a

EVERY TUESDAY...
BUY ONE — GET ONE FREE!
400 N. HWY. 17-92-1 Hocks N. Of 4)4

Next To Sobiks Rsst.
longwood, FI. 32790

a *

6:45
T O new s
ID (101 A M W EATHER

I T (IT ) JERRY FALW ELL

EVENING

4 FANTASY
O GUIDING UQHT
O GENERAL HOSPITAL
(3 5 )CASPER
fD (10) FRENCH C H EF(M O N)
f D ( 10) C O O KIN ' CAJUN (TUE!
fD (10) ENTERPRISE IWEOI
fD (10) HIDDEN PLACES W HERE
HISTORY LIVES (THU)
fD 110) THE LAW MAKERS |FRl)

SilMiSIXScOirficCraBB Itc Roasted Oysters

(7 ; O B IL L DANCE OUTDOORS
fD (10) FLO R ID A HOWE GROWN

®
O
CEREBRAL
TE LETH O N (C O N T'D )

O 4 EARLY TODAY
5 O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
T O ABC NEW S THIS MORNING

II (35) WOODY W OODPECKER
f D 110) S ESAM E STREET g

ax (IT )N E W S

1:00

OX (IT ) M O V IE
W idow ' ( IB 76)
M ichael L e a rn ed . B ra dfo rd Diitman

Tossed Salad
Frail
Milk
EXPRESS
P in a
French Fries
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
WEDNESDAY, JAN. M
ENTREE
Hotdof m Bub
Taler Tots
Cole Slaw
Ice Cream
Milk
■EXPRESS
Hotdof on Bun
Cheeseburger
Taler Tots

I I (IT ) UNDERSEA WORLO OF
JA C Q U E 3 COUSTEAU

6:30

7:15

5 0 TRAPPER JO HN. M O
fD (10) THE GOOD NEIGHBORS

O
®
N FL FOOTBALL AFC
C ha m p ion ship G a m e " (K lckofl may
be m ove d lo 5 p m EST)
®
O
N C A A BASKETBALL
M em p h is S ta te Tigers at N orth
C a ro lin a S ta le W oltpack
( 7 ) 0 P R O A N D CON
fD (10) M A G IC OF O fL PAINTING

2:35

Pina

9:30

1:30

MORNING

TUESDAY, JAN. 25
ENTREE

5:35

G
5
T
II

AFTERNOON

7:00
•

10:00

I t (3 5 )DANIEL BOONE
CD (10) FIRING LINE Resolved
W om en Have It A t G ood As M e n "
The first part ot a debate between
W illiam F Buckley author Jam es
D ickey and National Review senior
e d ito r Joseph Sobran (a th rm a tive l
and a tto rn ey Harriet Pilpel. p sy­
ch o a n a lyst Dr Enka Padan F re e ­
m an and public relations e ie c u tiv e
M urie l F o i (negative) is presented

6:00
O 4 NEWS (M O N )
5 O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
T O SUNRISE
n (35) JIM BAKKER
13 ( I T ) NEWS

9:05
J U IT) WEEK IN REVIEW

is o tls e l by a hum orous flashback
sto ry

9:00
O ® TH E W O R LD TOMORROW
&gt; O SPEAK EASY
HD (3 5 ) B U G S BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
f D (10) M A TIN E E AT THE BIJOU

G
4 MOVIE The A Team'
(Prcm -cre) G ecraa P ap p a rd M r T
5 O THE JEFFERSO NS P utting
aside her pnde. Louise m akes a last
ditch effort lo save the H elp C enter
(torn financial rum
I O MOVIE Mahbu (P rem ,erel
W illiam A lherton, S usan Dey
fD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"W inston C hurchill The W ild e r­
ness Years Having lost a fo rtu n e in
the Wan S treet crash. C hurchill
Im ds him seil p itched in to a co n flict
with the leaders ot his ow n party
(Part 2 i n

y o u n g e r sister dying in an a c c id e n t

4:35
12 ( IT ) VERY GOOD FRIENOS The
som ber ness o! a tfurleen-year-old 1

3:00

t i (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

M O RNING

(5 O ONE DAY AT A TIM E A nn s
m other returns hom e Iro m a C a rib ­
bean cruise w ith a d a sh in g younger
man
' l l (IS )JIM M Y S W AQ G AR T

8:30
0 14 S U N D A Y M ASS
’ O O R A L ROBERTS
i l l (35) JO SIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS

tancy co-op a p a rtm e n t
fD (10) FAW LTY TOW ERS

®
O
CEREBRAL
TELETHON (C O N T O )

4:30
0
4 PGA GOLF Bob M ope
D esert C lassic" Live co ve ra ge o l
the hnal round Itrom Palm Springs.
C a u l) (Tim eTentative)
&gt;
O
A M E R IC A N B L A C K
ACHIEVEM ENT AWARDS R o b ert
G uillanum e hosts the 15th an n ua l
IM A C P Image Awards given lo
th o se blacks who have a tta in e d
g re a t heights and best served lo
enhance the black image

5:00

O ' i VO IC E O F VICTORY
(I)
O
C E R E B R A L PALSY
TELETH O N (C O N T'D )
&gt; O B O B JONES
I I (35) JO N N Y QUEST
f D (10) S E S A M E STREET ( R ) n

decides to

O ® SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Host Lily Tom lin G u e st m im e Bill
Irwin
( D O MOVIE
Days O t Wine And
Roses ' (1963) Jack Lem m on. Lae
Remick
111) (35) MOVIE - I B ury The L iv in g '
(1958) Richard B oone. Theodore
Bikel

5
O
CEREBRAL PALSY
TELETHON (CONT'D)
11 (35) INCREDIBLE HULK
f D (10) ODYSSEY Som e W om en
Ot M arrakech' Several M oro cca n
w om en fH a fd fh fir fe ltin g s a b o u t
frien d ship , family and religion g

7:35
1 1 (IT ) IT IS W RITTEN

Change his im age by m oving in to a

O (3) FLORIDA'S W A TC H IN G
d l (SB) BARNEY M ILLER

0:00

7:30

9:30

SUNDAY l

O
®
DtFF'RENT S TR O K E S
( D O BRING E ft B A C K ALIVE
Buck i t talked k ilo g u id in g a U 3
businessman on a (tingle Ira k , una­

4 2 3 C O M PAN Y
I o T O D A Y 'S BLACK WOMAN
i l l (35) H E R A LD OF TRUTH

G i,4 GLEN C A M P B E LL MUSIC
SHOW
•3) O M OVIE U n com m on Valor"
IPrem ierel M itch e ll Ryan. B arbaia
Pei kms
(T O LOVE B O AT D oc questions
his career ch o ice w hen he meets a
form er classm ate, a shy man takes
e ip lo siv e a ctio n to get a woman to
notice him, and tw o co n sta n t com ­
panions m ust te ll th e ir children
about their livin g arrangem ent n
:T1 (35) FOR TH E LOVE O f A
CHILD Shields A Yarnell. Robert
Wagner C arol La w re nce Dale
Evans and G lenn F o rd Join hosts
Daniel J Travanti and A nita Gillette
lo r an in fo rm a tive look at the pro b ­
lem ot child abuse

7:30

JX (IT ) COLLEGE B A S K E TB A LL
Arkansas R aiorbacks vs H o uston
C ougars

0

8:00

1:35

7:45

7:00

9:00

1:05

O (4 ) IN SEARCH OF...
( J ) O HEEHAW
(C o
MEMORIES W ITH LA W ­
RENCE WELK
JlD (39) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) UNDERSEA W O R LD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

6:30
G 4 O PPO R TU N ITY LINE
’ o VIE W P O IN T ON NUTRITION
I t (3 5 )B E N H A D E N

G 4 SILVER SPOO NS EdeaiO
h ires a 1 2 -y e a r-o ld g irl who
possesses an u n ca n n y knack tor
predicting w hich new toys will be
successful

OX ( U ) NEWS

7:00

T l (IT ) W E EK IN REVIEW

8:30

0:30
0 9 ) NBC NEWS
( C O NEWS

6:05

ware that he is really G eneral MacArthur on a to p se cre t m ission
CZ O T.J. HOO KER Stacy volunteeis to becom e a decoy to help
solve a series ot m urd ers in the
swinging singles m a rin a area
11 (35) CHILDREN O N THE RUN
Johnny M ann h o sts a docum enta­
ry about the m illio n s o t child refu­
gees in the w o rld
CD (10) M O VIE
O liver T w is t'
(19331 D&gt;ckie M oore. Irving Pichef

5 O GLORIA
I t (35) JERRY FALW ELL

9:00

4:00

O rla n d o P u b lic
B ro a d c a s tin g S ystem

M O N D AY,

8:30

998 1881
— W it Itt) —

um

with this coupon

iS A v i= 3 “

I

"

on your child's regular $12 95
portrait collection.

I
i^JCl) i.TI
W 'tJ te-k-Kk
Ck
■ th .lu g rjf/*' Pd
jA x u r V tB wivg Vo*
*

■

ocA k I o i

a* pAtr»i

or#

THESE DAYS ONLY •
JANUMY:

WED THUE PEI SAT SUN
SS
27
SI 1. SO

DAIlTr 10 A N - 1 F M
SUNOAYi 12 MOON - 5 PM

•f

%&gt;

HOURS
M on-Fr I-9 A.M.-4 P.M.
Saturday • OsM AM. • S P.M.

3101 ORLANDO
DRIVE, SANFORD

�• &amp; — Evening H erald . Sanford, FI.

REALTY
TRANSFERS
iQ C D l B la m S A ls b a u g h j r A
R o b e rt F a u lk lo A s s o c ia te s AulO
B ody L o t i 9 &amp; 10. O ra n g e P a rk ,
SIOO
IO C D I E R ic h a r d K in g , T r to
B ecky J o M o re th , S ' j ot L o t 62, B lk
3. W est W itd m c re . s tc c
ASF In c D B A S p rin g s L a n d in g
V e n tu re to H a c k e r H o m e s In c . L o t
104. S prin g l a n r l n g , U n 3. 678.400
C a rm e n s C a ta la n o A w t Tanya
to M ille r I n t r , I n c , N 73 S’ oe
Beg pt S lin e 10 E o l W lin e o f B ik
D , Th e C o lo n n a d e s 1 st A o n
SJt.SOO
IO C D I E d w a rd J L u n d e rm a n A
S haron K to S h a ro n K L u n
d e rm a n . L o t 20 A } t (le s s S 8 5 'l
F o re st Slopes, SIOO
R ic h a rd L L ls tle r l i N o rm a n L
. (fa th e r) lo R ic h a r d L U s tle r. N SO'
Of S 369 ot W 700' Of L o t 79 M c N e ils
O ran g e V illa . SIOO
N o rth C ove t n v to P r y o r D
S m ith &amp; w l S usan H L o t 33. N o rth
C ove. 6175.000
L a u ra 7A K o r n ic k to R o n a ld T
P ic o tle A w l N a n c y . L o ts 3a. 35 A
36, B lk 76. C r y s t a l L a k e W in te r
H om es s d, 595,000
IO C D I R o n a ld C R o t/ to L in d a
N R o ll. L o t 73. B lk A . W in te r
W oods s d U n I, SIOO
L a r r y O L a r k in s A w t D ia n a R
to G lenn T C a llin A w f Elcnse N ,
Beg 71161’ N A 6)6 59 W Of SE
co r of NE&lt;&lt; of N E ’ x Sec 77 71 37
etc . t r 737 C h u la V is ta . 67.8W
IQ C D l Je a n E H ln ty . s g l to
Jean E H in ly A F a b ia n H u rta d o ,
L o t t , B lk 77. H e ftie r H o m e s
H o w e ll P a rk , Sc one SIOO
C a h ill C o n s lr C o to W illia m A
Beers, I I I A w l D o r o th y A . L o t 45.
B lk B. S w e e tw a te r O a k s , Sec 13.
5376.000
F r s n c is c o l A / u la A w f S o lita to
SusanC W h its o n A R o b e rt C .. L o t
t, B lk A , S w e e tw a te r O a k s , Sec 13.
6704.000
IQ C D l A n n H W y n n lo L o n nie
G W ynn, L o ts 1 A 7. B lk G . T r 15.
S anlando S p rin g s s d SIOO
C a talm o F C a s tillo A w l 7A ary lo
S ig n a ture B u ild e r s In c ,. T ra c ts to
A I t B a llm e r A W e is s S d 3nd Addn
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S prings L a n d in g V e n tu re to A r
De H om es. In c ., L o t 113. S p rin g s
L a n din g , U n F o u r . 131.000
S prings L a n d in g V e n to M A G
T o p a i C u sto m H o m e s In c ,. L o t 161
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F o u r.
S31.SO0
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B ru no J r A w t T h e re s a , L o t 154.
Oak F o re s t. U n 7. SIO.IOO
G eorge L A y e r s A w f E v e ly n lo
A ngela M B a i t e r , B eg SW c o r o l
G ovt L o t 5. Sec 73 t9 37 e tc 116
a cre s m I SIOO
Isa b e lle T h u ra u . r c p r e s t Ja m e s
R C la rk to C h ris to p h e r W G illm o r
A Teresa J B u t le r . L o t 36 P h illip s
T e rr . 176.600
Le tan d C o n itr , In c t o G e ra ld L
B la u t A w t C a ro ly n S , L o t 66
S prings L a n d in g U n 3, 1147.500
IQ C D l B e tty B M e r r it t I m a r r . )
to T hom as R R is h e r ( m a r r I A
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o4 S W '. ot N W 1a o l Sec 36 31 31
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T im o th y J S u lliv a n A T h o m a s R
R ilh r r , N ' j o f S W ’ . o t S W '. ot
N W '&lt; of Sec 76 71 31. SJ4.300
G re a te r C o n s lr C o rp lo A ng e l
R D ia l A w f L a u r a E . L o t 69
M a n d a rin , sec f o u r , 6115.900
D iv e rs ifie d R e a l E s t S vc fo
E llo n A H e r r ic k IV A w t S usan W .
Lot 16, B a rc la y W o o d s. 687.500
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to Shawn M H e a ly s g l A C a ro l
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s g l, U n I6 E B ld g 16. T u sc a n y
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sgl A C la ire M L a R use, s g l., Un
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to M ic h a e l M . P a ia k A w l N in a , 11
int Beg SE c o r L o t 1. B lk E E .
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9B. 1136,500
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H u n tin g to n H ilt s , S6S.600
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I r D re p l U 6 .0 0 0

Sunday, Jan. 1), IMS

Legol Notice
'F I C T I T I O U S N A M E
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
eng ag e d in b u s in e s s a t P 0 B o i
No 1077. L o n g w o o d . F lo r id a .
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a u n d e r
tnc f ic t it io u s n a m e of A R L E N E 'S
A R T IF A C T S , a n d th a t I in tend to
re g is te r s a id n a m e w ith the C le rk
of Ih e C ir c u it C o u rt, S em inole
C ounty, F lo r id a in a cco rd an ce
w dh th e p ro v is io n s o l th e F i t
lilio u s N a m e S ta tu te s , To W it
S ection 66S 09 F lo r id a S ta tu te s
1957
Sig A r le n e H a r r is
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 9, 16. 33, 30 1961
D E D 43
IN T H E C O U N T Y C O U R T. FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
CASE N O 67 0745 SP 03
D IA L F (N A N C E .
P la in tiff,
VS
R iC K E Y W JO H N S O N
D e fen d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO
R ic k e y W Jo h n so n
c o V o lu s ia C o u n ty L a n d fill
T o m o k a F a r m s R oad
D a y to n a B e a c h , F lo rid a
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y n o tifie d
th a t a n a c tio n fo r d a m a g e s has
been f ile d a g a in s t yo u , and you a re
re q u ire d to a p p e a r b e lo re H a ro ld
F Jo h n so n , a ju d g e o f th is C o u rt a t
9 0 0 o 'c lo c k a m o n lh e ? 6 t h d a y o l
F e b ru a ry . 1983 a l S e m in o le C o u nty
C o u rth o u s e C o u rtro o m
D An
n e i, S a n to ro , F lo r id a lo a n sw e r
ih e C o m p la in ! tile d h e re in A ny
w ritte n a n s w e r o r o th e r p le a d m q s
m u s t b e f ile d w ith th e C le rk ot th is
C o u rt a n d c o p ie s th e re o f lu rn is h e d
to th e P la in t i f f 's a tto rn e y , JO H N
C E N G L E H A R D T , P A , whose
a d d re s s is 1574 E a s t L iv in g s to n
S tre e t. O r la n d o , F lo r id a 37603
U p o n y o u r f a ilu r e lo a p p e a r on
the o b o v
l
f d a le , a d e la u ll
m ay b o t t i' tr
..g a in s t y o u I g r th e
re lie f d e m a n d e d in th e C o m p la in t
W IT N E S S m y h a n d and Ih e
o ffic ia l s e a t o f th is C o u rl In San
fo rd , S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a
th is 17th d a y o f J a n u a ry , 1963
(S E A L )
A r t h u r H B e c k w ith , J r ,
C le rk o f th e C o u rt
B y E le a n o r F B u ra lio
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h
J a n u a r y 16. 73, 30.
F e b ru a ry 6, 1983
O ED 8I
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
e n g a g e d in b u s in e s s a l P O B o i
697, L a k e M a r y , 17746 0697,
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a u n d e r
Ihe f ic t it io u s n a m e ot C A N D ID
C O M M U N IC A T IO N S , and lh a t I
in te n d to r e g is te r s a id n a m e w ith
Ihe C le r k o f Ih e C irc u it C ourt,
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a m ac
c o rd a n c e w it h th e p ro v is io n s of ih e
F ic titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s. To W it
S ectio n 865 09 F lo r id a S ta tu te s
1957
S ig J u d ith H Z ip a y
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 9. 16. 7 1 ,10. 1981
D E D 41
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t w e
a re e n g a g e d in b u s ln e s i a t 7676 W
SR
434, L o n g w o o d S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a u n d er the tic
tttk o u l n a m e o t C A L IC O C A N D Y
K IT C H E N , a n d th a t w e in te n d to
re g is te r s a id n a m e w ith (he C le rk
of th e C ir c u it C o u rt. S em ino le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a In a cc o rd a n c e
w ith th e p ro v is io n s o f th e F ic
lilio u s N a m e S ta tu te s, T o w n
S ectio n 665 09 F lo r id a S ta tu te s
1957
S ig n a tu re
J u d ith E M a k i
B a r b a r a S D u ra n
P u b lis h J a n 7. 9, 16. 31, 1961
O FF ) 7
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n lh a t I a m
e n g a g e d in b u s in e s s a t 7600 W
SI at e R d
434, L ong w ood. F I
S e m in o te C o u n ty , F lo rid a u n d e r
Ih e f i c t i t i o u s n a m e o l O P
P O R T U N lT IE S U N L IM IT E D , and
th a t I in te n d to re g is te r said n a m e
w ith C le r k o f th e C irc u it C o u rt.
S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo rid a in ac
c o rd a n c e w it h t h e p ro v is io n s ol th e
F ic titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s, To W it
S e c tio n 86S09 F lo r id a S ta tu te s
1957
S ig n a tu re D a v id B e rg m a n
P u b lis h J a n 7. 9. I t . 73. 1963
D E D 10

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 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 A S E N O 17 7999 CA 17 G
J U D G E : C. V E R N O N M IZ E . J R
IN R E F O R F E IT U R E OF A 1967
O L D S M O B IL E C U TLA S S A U T O
M O B IL E V E H IC L E I D E N T I F I
C A T IO N N U M B E R 334I77M398958
R E N O T IC E OF
F O R F E I T U R E P R O C E E D IN G S
TO
SI e ve n R K ile y
S10 L o n g w o o d L a k e M a r y R d
L a k e M a r y , F lo rid a
C a ro ly n S K ile y
530 L o n g w o o d L a k e M a r y R d
L a k e M a r y . F lo rid a
a n d a ll o th e rs w ho c la im a n in
te re s t in Ih e fo llo w in g p ro p e rty
a 1 O n e 196’ O ld s m o b ile C u tla s s
A u to m o b ile , V e h ic le Id e n tific a tio n
N u m b e r 33AI77MJ98958
JO H N E
P O L K , S h e rilt o l
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r 'd a . th ro u g h
h is d u ly s w o rn D e p uty S h e ritts .
s e iie d th e d e s c rib e d p r o p e r ly on
th e 1st d a y o l D e ce m b e r. 1983, a t
o r n e a r S ta te R oad 600 a n d 13th
S tre e t. S a n lo rd . S em m ole C o u n ty ,
r t o r i d a , is p re s e n tly h o ld in g sa&lt;d
p r o p e r ly , a n d w ill a p p e a r b e fo re
th e H o n o ra b le C V e rn o n M«4e, J r
ju d g e o t th e C ir c u it C o u r t ,
E ig h te e n th J u d ic ia l C irc u it, R o o m
760, S e m in o le C o u nty C o u rth o u s e ,
S a n to rd , F lo r id a on Ihe 33fd d a y o t
F e b r u a r y , 1983, a t I t 00 a m f o r
th e p u rp o s e ot re q u e s tin g a n d
t ilin g a R u le to Show C ause w h y
Ih e d e s c rib e d p ro p e rty sh o u ld n o t
bo fo r le i le d lo th e use ot, o r s o ld b y
ih e S h c r ifl upon p ro d u c in g due
p ro o f tn a l s a m e w as b e in g u se d in
v io la tio n o t F lo rid a L a w s d e a lin g
w itn c o n tra b a n d , a ll p u rs u a n t to
S e c tio n s 933 701 704. F l o r id a
S ta tu te s (1981) I f no c la im a n ts
a p p e a r, a tc q u e s l w ill be m a d e to r
a n im m e d ia te h e a rin q a n d F in a l
O rd e r o t F o rfe itu re ,
L m d a R M cC a n n
A s s is ta n t S ta le A lto rn e y
S e m in o le C ounty C o u rth o u s e
S a n lo rd . F lo rid a 33771
13051 333 7534
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 33, 30, 1983
D E D 116
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tic e is h e re b y q iv e n th a t I a m
e n g a g e d In b u sine ss at 3109 F re n c h
A v e S a n to rd S em m ole C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a u n d e r Ih e fic titio u s n a m e
o l A U T O SOUND C E N T E R , and
th a t I in te n d to re g iste r, sa id n a m e
w ith Ih e C le rk o t th e C irc u it C o u rl,
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a in ac
c o rd a n c e w it h t h e p ro v is io n s o t th e
F ic titio u s N a m e S tatutes, T o W it
S e c tio n 865 09 F lo rid a S ta tu te s
1957
S ig n a tu re
R o n a ld W C h ris tia n
P u b lis h J a n 7, 9. 16. 73, 1981
D F D It

N O T IC E
OF
IN T E N T
TO
V A C A T E P O R T IO N ! OF C E R
T A I N P L A T S IN S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
T A K E N O T IC E th a t a P e titio n
s h a ll tie tile d , p u rs u a n t to C h a p te r
177 to t o l th e F lo rid a S ta tu te s ,
vw.th th e B o a rd o l C o u nty C o m
m is s io n e rs o l S em ino le C o u n ty ,
t lo r id a . to v a c a te p o rtio n s o t
c e r ta in p la ts o t th e s u b d iv is io n
k n o w n as L o ts t A 7 M ic o u 's . ac
r o r d i n g to th e p la t t h e r e o f
re c o rd e d In P la t Book 2 P a q e (s ) 7,
P u b lic R e c o rd s o t S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , d e s c rib e d a s
fo llo w s , t o w it
t h is P e titio n sh o u ld be su b
m ille d o n b e h a il o l T u s k a B a y
C V , L td A n d Tuska, In c d a te d
th e l l l h d a y of J a n u a ry , 1983

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4—Personals

• ABORTION •
1st T rim e s te r a b o rtio n 7 17 w k s .,
S I50
M e d .c a n t 5170 13 14
w ks 1700
M e d .c a id SI65.
G yn S ervice s S75 P re g n a n c y
te s t.
tr e e
c o u n s e lin g
P ro le s s io n a l c a re s u p p o rtiv e
a tm o s p h e re , c o n fid e n tia l
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
W OMEN 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
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305 898 0971
I BOO 22 1 3568

5—Lost &amp; Found
LO ST b la c k k itte n , b o b b e d ta li
Id y ltw itd e a re a
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6 Child Care

- j-------------------------------------------------------L E T O a v is Q u ic k R e lie f L m i
m c n l m assage a w a y y o u r
a ches &amp; p a m s N o n e b e tte r
830 5694

T u s k a B a y C V L td
E d le e r d a m
T u s k a . &gt;nc
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 16, 73. 1963
D E D 80

H A IR S T Y L IS T b la c k o r w h ile
needed G o o d c o m m is s io n
333 7S30
P A R T T IM E M e n W o m e n W o rk
Iro m h o m e P ho n e P ro g ra m
E a r n 525 1100 p e r w e e k
F le x ib le H rs , C a ll 894 3204 c
869 0916 CASE M a n a q e r to r ( r a il e ld e rly
r N or B A
In so c ia l w o rk
And I y e a r fie ld e x p e rie n c e In
so cia l w o r k w ilh e ld e rly , EOE
678 7884
H O M E M A K E R S lu ll tim e to
p ro v id e c le a n in g s e rv ic e s to
e ld e rly A c t a s p a rt o f s k ille d
c a re
te a m
E x p e r ie n c e d
p re fe rre d , t r a in in g p ro v id e d
EOE 628 7884
T E X A S O IL C O M P A N Y needs
m a tu re p e rs o n t o r c o m m e rc ia l
sales s u rr o u n d in g S a n lo rd We
tra m W r ite N X D ic k e rs o n ,
P re s ,
S o u th w e s te rn
P e tro le u m , B ox 189, F t W o rth ,
!■ 16101

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G E N E R A L O lt ic e w o r k , n o
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W A I T R t S S a n d d is h w a s h e r
A p p 'y in p e rso n b e fo re 1 p m
O m e le t R e v o lu tio n 1500 S
F re n ch . S a n to rd
R E L IE F
H o u s e p a re n !
fo r
C h ris tia n C h ild re n 's H o m e ,
p o ssible liv e in 149 5069
M E D IC A L T e c h n o lo g is t to w o rk
in d o cto r s o ffic e 10 7 M o n ,
tu e s . T h u rs , F r i S a la ry p e r
t r S3 56 C a ll M r s T h o m a s o n
W ed o n ly 373 7750
T E X A S R E F IN E R Y C O R P
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S an lo rd a re a R e g a rd le s s o t
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co n fid e n c e to P . 0
B o x 17,
P anam a C ity , F la . 37401.
N E E O e x tra M o n e y ?
W hy n o t s e ll A V O N 1

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F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
enqaged m b u sine ss a t t a n H illto p
R o a d . C a s s t lb e r r y . S e m in o le
C o u nty, F lo rid a u n d e r Ih e tic
lilio u s n a m e o l R O G E R H E L E N
B IC Y C L E R E P A IR S H O P O N
W H E E L S , a n d th a t I in te n d to
re g is te r said n a m e w it h C lr r k o l
ih e C ir c u it C o u r l, S e m in o le
C o u nty, F lo rid a in a c c o rd a n c e
w ith m e p ro v is io n s o t th e F ic ­
titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s , To W it:
S ectio n 645 09 F lo r id a S ta tu te s
1957
♦
Sig R oger W K in g
H e le n W K m g
. P u b lis h
J a n u a r y 14, 7 3 . 30.
k e b ru a ry t , 196)
D E O 76

LU XU R Y
APARTM ENTS
F a m il y A A d u lt s s e c tio n
P o o ls id e , 3 B d rm s . M a s te r
C ove A p ts 37) 7900 Open on
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M a r in e r s V ilt a g e o n L a ke A d a , l
h d r m I r o m S365, 7 b d rm Iro m
S300 L o c a te d 17 92 lu s t so u th
tit A - r p o r t B fv d m S an to rd A ll
373 6670

N IC E A P T L ik e n e w 7 b d rm
R e lia b le
t e n a n t w a n te d
R e a s o n a b le 322 5776
L A R G E 6 rm
apt ll lh
F re n c h , u p s ta ir s , 5350
li r s t a n d la s t 3211104

and
mo

»-u r n ,sh e d a p a rtm e n ts to i S e n io r
C 'I 'le n s 116 P a lm e tto A ve . J
C o w a n N o p h o ne cans
. 7 A N D J B D R M F ro m S260
■ '.g q e w ro d A rm s A pt 258(
R id g e w o o d A v e 373 44)0
H a ve s o m e c a m p in g e q u ip m e n t
you no lo n g e r use? Sell it a ll
w ith a C la s s ifie d A d in The
H e ra ld C a ll 377 7611 o r 631
9663 a n d a trie n d ty ad v is o r
w ill h e lp you

S av O n R e n ta ls . In c R e a lto r

P O T A T O E S . 50 lb b a g S3 99
w h ile s u p p ly la s t s
AAJ
P ro d u c e A t S la te F a r m e r s
M a rk e t, U 50 F re n c h A v e ,
S a n lo rd . 321 7498

CORRESPONDENTS
w a n te d
lo r th e C a s s e lb e rry , L o n g w o o d
and A lta m o n te S p rin g s a re a s
lo w rite a w e e k ly c o lu m n on
new s fro m th e se c o m m u n itie s
A p p lic a n ts m u s t h a v e a H a ir
lo r w rllm q . a n e ye t o r n e w s
and ue a n te to ty p e c o lu m n a t
your hom e
C a ll
D o r is
D ie tric h , The E v e n in g H e ra ld ,
377 7611, a lte r 3 p m

30-Apartments Unfurnished

COOK F j l t t im e , a p p ly in p e r
son M r C a p p s R e s ta u ra n t,
S an to rd A v e

6144

GENERAL
F a rm
and
W a re h o u s e w o r k e r , t r a c t o r
e x p e rie n c e p r e fe r r e d
C a ll 122 0841 b e tw e e n a a n d 5

R O O M fo r re n t lu rn ilh e c l. 8,
ch e n la t i li t ie s SS0 *vk
172 7629

E N J O Y c o u n try liy in q ? J B d rm .
D u p le x A p is , , O ly m p ic St
p o o l S h e n a n d o a h V illa g e
O pen 6 to 6 J73 7920

— q
THEE
R ip e n e d
o ra n g e s ,
g ra p e fru its A la n q H B u 139
W G o o d h e a rt L k M a r y 327

F A C T O R Y w o rk , lu l l lim e ,
ito o d p a y . s ta rt r ig h t a w a y
679 4094

S A N F O R D , R eas w e e k ly A
m o n th ly r a le s U M me e tl 500
O ak A d u lts I 641 7863

•’ d u lt s

*

*

*

A

*

*

A

E M P L Q

*

*

*

*

A

TOO MANY
TO LIST _ ^
N E E D TO G E T
TO WORK?
CALL EARLY MONDAY
W AREHOUSE
5 7 M W k.
E le c tric a l e x p e rie n c e h e lp fu l,
lig h t d r i v i n q . w o r k in to
m a n a g e m e n t, b e n e fits , a ix t
ra ise s
P U B L IC
R E L A T IO N S
S l. lI H r .
L ig h t o ffic e d u tie s , p u t to g e th e r
n e w s le tte r, lu n io b , ra is e s
S A LE S R E P
t it
W ill tr a m ( o r in s u ra n c e license,
s a la ry p lu s bo n us C a re e r
m in d e d , n e e d s s e v e ra l
GENERAL
W ORKER
1 1 )1 H r.
W ill t r a in , lo r a lt jobs, per
m a n e n t,
b e n e lils ,
a lt e r
tra in in g
O EU PERSON
ttl
S harp a t t r a c t iv e , m u s t know
p la n ts a n d p ro d u c e R u n m ra t
sheer
GENERAL
O F F IC E
IS H r.
Good ty p in g , t r a in co m p u te r,
som e
p a y r o l l,
b lu e p r in t
k n o w le d g e h e lp tu l
M A ID S
m
E x p e rie n c e needed, d e p en d a b le ,
s e v e r a l p o s it io n s , a ll p e r
m anenl
A S S IS T A N T
MANAQER
ttl
Some m a n a g e m e n t e x p e rie n c e
needed F o o d s e rv ic e a- plus.
E x c e lle n t o p p o r tu n ity .
N a tio n a l c o m p a n y
b e n e fits.

1917 FRENCH AVE
323-5174
D IS C O U N T F E E — T E R M S
3 W E E K S SALARY
12 00 R E G IS T R A T IO N F E E
F R A N C H I S E lA V A I L A I L E .

21—Situations Wanted
H O U S E C L E A N IN G R easonable
ra te s . M o n d a y t h r u T h u rsd a y ,
a v a ila b le 321 1767
C H IL D C A R E o v e r 2 y r i old
M y h o m e . E x . re t.
L k M a r y a re a 372 5*1)

24—Business Opportunities
I M . M 6 t lS M . 6 M
P E R Y e a r . A r e yo u b o re d w ith
y o u r io b ? T ire d o l w o rk in g to r
Ih e o t h e r m a n ? N a tio n a l
C o m p a n y b a se d in L e x in g to n .
K e n tu c k y lo o k in g to r q u a lifie d
lu ll a n d p a r t lim e d is trib u to r*
in 4 c o u n ty a re a In v e s tm e n t
c o v e re d b y in v e n to ry P hone I
800 354 6564

S A N f O R D V b d r m SIOO d o w n
a p p l 5350 m o F e e 339 )7 00

B A M B O Q C O V E APTS
300 E A irp o rt B lvd
' A j Hdr m s
F r om S3 30 m o
P h o n e 323 6420

3 B D R M . new k i t . la r g e y a m
d e a d end si 63 50 m o 321 0173
N o ph o ne c a lls a lte r 6 p m
M O O E R N 3 B d rm . 2 B a th , w ith
C H A d ra p e s, a p p l fu rn is h e d
S4)S M o , 679 5758 o r 614 4346

34—M obile Homes
D O U B L E w ide M o b ile lo r re n t
on 5 a c re s ot la n d 2 b d rm 7
b th w a ll w a ll c a rp e t S400 lir s t
a n d la s t 37? 9777
G E T TH 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
COST F R O M T O D A Y 'S W A N T
ADS!

37— Business P roperty
S M A L L C o m m e rc ia l B u ild in g
lo r r e n t D o w n to w n L a k e
M a ry
D a ys phone 321 7SS0
E v e s 333 6052

37-B— Renta I Offices
1600 Sq t t o ll'C e . U S M a p le
A ve , S an fo rd A v a il Im m e d
B ro k e r O w n e r 377 7206
P P IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE.
P ro v id e n c e B lv d , D e lto n a
2)66 Sq F t C an Be D iv id e d
W ith P a rk in g D a y s 305 574
1414 E v e m n g i &amp; W e e ke n d s
904 789 6251
S P A C E to r re n t O ltic e . R e ta il.
S to rag e F re n c h A v e n u e a n d
A irp o rt 377 4 40)

37CFor Lease
P R O F E S S IO N A L O ffic e s p a c e
to r L ease, on t? 92
Id e a l
lo c a tio n lo d o w n to w n a re a 70S
S F re n c h A ve o r c a ll 372 3170
O F F IC E S P A C E
FOR L E A S E
630 7723

I B d r m A p ts 1365 M o
M o n t h r u F f i. 9 a m , lo S p m
ISO! W 7Slh SI
337 3090

31—A p a rtm e n ts Furnished
A pt
p lu s

L O V E L Y 3 B d r m 1 b a th a p t. in
re s id e n tia l n e ig h b o rh o o d 590
w k p lu s 1200 sec dep C a ll
3 7) 3749 o r 371 6947
S A N F O R D 3 b d r m , kid s o k, lu ll
c a rp e t. 680 w k. F e e 139 7700
S av O n R e n ta ls . In c . R e a lto r
I b d r m a p t lu rn is h e d M u lle t
L a k e P a r k R d , G eneva
346 5959
B E A U T IF U L 7 b d rm . 2 b th a p t .
s p l it I n t o 2 s e p a r a te lo in in g
u n it s , n e w ly d e c o ra te d a n d
lu r n is h e d 6100 w k p lus 6700 sec
d e p C a ll 321 7769 o r 671 6947

31 A—Duplexes
N E W D u p le x 2 b d rm b th u t il
r m c a r p o r t k itc h a p p l. L e a s t
3)9 154}
L A K E M A R Y 7 B d rm . k id s , lu ll
k it , I m e e d . 676! Fee 339 7700
S av O n R e n ta ls . In c ., R e a lto r

4!—Houses
E X C E P T IO N A L 3 B d rm d o u b le
lo t. n e w ro o t, n e w p a in t In a n d
out
C a rp e t a n d d r a p e s
th ro u g h o u t, m a n y e x tra s B y
o w n e r 637.000 373 4766
Y O U N G 3 B d rm h o m e C a n be
used as re s id e n c e o r p ro le s s io n a l
o tlic e s o r c o m m e r c ia l
O n ly
617.000 d o w n 641) M o n th ly . C a ll
B ro k e r O w n e r 331 1611
3 b d rm h o m e in O ra n g e C ity .
636.900 L a rg e lo w In te re s t
m o r tg a g e
a s s u m a b le
to
q u a lifie d b u ye r F o r In to c a ll
E R A .V illa g e R e a l E '.ta ie , In c .
F lo B urse

32—Houses Unfurnished
S A N FO R D Lake
M a ry
G ro v e v ie w . 1 b d rm . 7 b th ,
C H A , g a ra g e . $425 m o 122 1094
a lte r 3 30 a n d w eekends
I b d rm . H y in g ro o m , d in in g ro o m
a n d k itc h e n , m u s t be o v e r 50
332 6741
4 b d r m s , I ’ , b a th , c a r p e l,
d ra p e s . N o p e ls I m o n th s
le a s e 6400 a m o n th 6300 sec
d e p 377 0860
C A S S E L B E R R Y L k ln t } b d a ir
677! F e e 1)9 1700,
S av O n R e n ta ls . In c R e a lto r

R E T IR E w in co m e , 7 h o u s e s on
I lo t. I h d rm ea . C B S . co m
p le te ly re n o v a te d In s id e o u tl
Y e a rly in c o m e $6,740 T e rm s
655.000 Cast, In o r tra d e d o w n
p a y m e n t O w n e r f in a n c in g
n u m b e r o t 1 y e a rs 867 8 806

Onto*
JUNE PORZIG REALTY
N E W L is tin g I Y o u ’ ll w a n t to see
th is 3 b d rm , 7 b th , I y r . o ld
h o m e o n 19 a c re s In a
b e a u t if u l n a t u r a l s e t t in g .
L o c a te d in P ao ia 671.900
REALTO R
803 S F re n c h A ve .

M LS

322-8678
U N D E R 67,000 D O W N
t b d rm d o ll house A llo r g a b le
m o n th ly
p a y m e n ts
C a ll
u w n c r B ro k e r l i t 1611

HCjfieMTOfiS

Be UJfoe
CoCC Keyed
FOR A L L Y O U R
R E A L ESTATE N E E D S

323-3200
549 W . L a k e M a r y B lv d .
S uite •
L a k e M e ry , F la . 11744
31)1700

S a n lo rd 3 b d rm . k id s . a ir . a p p l.,
c a rp e t. tlS O . Fee 319 7 700
S a v -O n R e n ta ls , In c . R e a tta r
N E W Y E A R H o u se in O ra n o e
C ity 3 b d rm . t b th C H A ,
re d e c o ra te d 5)50 per m o. •
iiv O iK p n o le a se 105131 IM A

L e t a C la s s itie d A d h e lp y o u lin d
m o r e ro o m lo r s t o r a g e
C la s tilie d A ds lin d b u y e rs
la s t

S M A L L 4 te a ro o m , I b a th .
C le a n 6150 m o n th p lu s d e p o s it.
7 7 ) 1177.

321 0759

EVE

322 7643

L E A S E o r le a s e o p tio n 3 B d rm .
7 B a th I d y ilw ild e school a re a
6400 m o
JU N E P O R IIG R E A L T Y
REALTO R
C E N TU R Y Jt
377 x 47*
F O R R E N T 1 b d rm . 7 b alls,
s u m m i n g o o o ', s c re e n e d

1717141

S
TE
N
S
TR
O
M
REALTY - REALTORS
S a n fo rd 's Sales Leader
W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M ORE HO M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y !
L O V E L Y 3 B d rm , 2 B a th hom e
on nice c o rn e r lo t in S a n la nd o !
S p lit
B d rm
p la n
lu t ly
e q u ip p e d k it c h e n , p a n e lle d
room C e n tra l h e a t a n d a ir.
w a ll lo w a ll c a rp e l a n d m o te
149.500
B E A U T IF U L 3 B d rm . 7 B ath
hom e tn R a m b le w o o d . w ith
g re a t ro o m , b r ic k fire p la c e ,
e a rth o n e d e co r, s p lit b e d ro om
p la n e q u ip p e d e a t in K itc h e n .
C e n tra l h e a t and a ir . a n d iu s t 3
yrs o ld 1)5,500
CO UNTRY
ATM O SPHERE
y p a c ro u s 3 B d r m . 2 b a th
M o b ile H o m e on 4 9 c le a re d
acres
P a n e lle d th ro u g h o u t,
y p l.l b ed room p la n , ta m ,
ro o m , e a t in K it c h e n and
horses w e lc o m e $54,900
IM M A C U L A T E 3 B d r m 3 ' i b a th
h o m e in L o n g w o o d . w ilh
C e n tra l h e a t a n d a ir , w a ll w a ll
c a rp e t, e q u ip p e d e a t in K it
chen. la m ily ro o m a n d m o re
O et 24x30 q a ra g e . ca n be
c o n v e rte d lo in c o m e a p a rt
m e n t o r in ta w q u a r te r s P ric e
is 567.(00

R E A L T O R A S S O C IA T E S
NEEDED!
One R e s id e n tia l — T w o Com
m t r c t a l In v e s tm e n t! I t you
h o n e s tly w a n l a S uccessful
C a r e e r , jo in
th e
No
I
P ro le s s io n a l S ales T e a m t A ll
in t e r v ie w s
S tr ic t ly
C on
tid e n lia l!
REAL ESTATE C AR EER I
C a ll to see it you q u a lity lo r o u r
F re e T u itio n P r o g r a m ! E x
c itin g A R e w a r d in g !

CALL A N Y T I M E
IU I

322-2420

Mavr* so m e c a m p in g rq u ip rm ftll
you no lo n g e r use ? Sell ft a ll
w ith a C la s s itie d A d in The
H e ra ld C a ll 322 2611 o r 8)1
9993 a n d a f r ie n d ly a d v is o r
w ill help yo u

HAROLD

HALL

REALTY, IN C

R EALTO R
323-5774
I )1 Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E ]
STONE F I R E P L A C E ! S e ll the
m ood lo r th is 3 b d rm . 7 b a th
gem
D e n . C H A , s e p a ra te
e n tra n c e lo 1 b d rm a n d bath,
huge lo t, a n d m u c h m o re
655.000
F H A -V A 5 P E C IA L 1 W h y re n t
w h in y o u c a n o w n N O W . 63,150
dow n p a y m e n t. 1 b d rm hom e
on fe n ce d lo t. L a r g * o a k and
c itru s tre e s G o o d lo c a tio n I
O n ly 1 )9 } a m o . T a xe s and
in s u ra n c e in c lu d e d . 13 .*30 yrs.
P ric e 634.604.
R E M O D E L E D • 3 b d rm .,’ I ' l
b a th , w -n e w r e e l. E nclo sed
g a ra g e a n d tile d F la . rm . O ak
sh aded y a rd . E e lr a d e a n i
G r e a t lo c a t io n ! C r e a t iv e
fin a n c in g ) See i t to d a y 647,940.
G E T A FR E SH START
W IT H 'S A N F O R D ’ S N O . 1
P R O F E S S IO N A L "
C u r r e n t ly s e e k in g m o tiv a te d
Sales A s s o c ia te s . E x c e lle n t
c o m m is s io n S c h e d u le ' le a d s
lu rn is h e d A sk (o r M r . H a lt

NOWS THE TIM E
TO BUY!
FHA-VA 12 s*
WE NEEO LISTINGS!
CALLUSNOW KII

323-5774
7444 M W Y I 7 92

Oon l D e s p a ir O r P u ll Y o u r H a )r
U se A W a n l A d 372 7411 o r
111 9993

F E E L S L IK E H O M E
D r iv e b y 1907 M e llo n v llie
D e lig h tfu l 3 b d r m h o m e (o r
yo u r ( a m ity in 'a g re a t neign
txsrhood G e n e ro u s lo t. b e a rin g
c itru s , p r e t t y s h ru b s
N ew
ro o t
F l e x ib l e
fin a n c in g
P ric e d 154.750 to r im m e d ia te
sate

CallBart

3 B D R M . tre e s , fire p la c e . 131S. 7
B d r m F e n c e d y a rd , c a rp o rt.
13u0 K id s , p e ts, re fe re n ce s.
D e p o s it 377 5021.

’ O om

4 | B lk N ic e n e ig h b o r h o o d
A ssu m e m o rtq a q e a n d pay
w /u 'ty A r e a l b u y 1 634,500

FO R S A LE b y O w n e r
C le a n 3 b d rm . I ' j b a th ,
fe n c e d y a rd , g a ra g e 321 7363

OPEN HOUSE
S unday Ja n 7 ), t i l l P a lo m a
A v e . 10 a m . I p m
B e a u tifu l 4 b d rm , 7 b a th h o m e
I m m a c u la t e
C o n v e n ie n t ly
lo c a te d in . b e tte r s e c tio n ot
S a n to rd
A lt x A le x a n d e r R e a lty
REALTO R
411.1177

A V A I L A B L E n o w 3 b d rm , I b a th
h o u se , t u lly c a rp e te d , re n t 6300
t e c d e p 6775 C a ll 371 1900 o r
3 2 )5 1 17

la m ily

L it . R ea! E s la te B ro k e 2640 S a n lo rd A y e

Pith

IF T H IS IS T H E D A Y to b u y a
n e w c a r . see to d a y ’ s C la s sitie d
ads to r b e st buys.

p a iio .

BATEM AN R E ALTY

M A Y F A IR V IL L A S ! 1 A 3 B d rm
1 B a th C ondo V illa s , n e x t to
M a y fa ir C o u n try C lu b Select
yo u r lo t, P oor p la n A in te rio r
d e c o r! O u i li t y c o n s tru c te d by
S h o rm a k e r lo r 147.900 A u p !

944 714 46*1 t v e i 774-/9/7

OENBVAOARDENS

C O M F O R T A B L E t B d rm
d o w n to w n a re a 670 w k
u t ilit ie s C a ll 321 6947

E L E G A N T L Y re s to re d 7 B d rm ,
t H a th Cent H A W a ll w a ll
c a rp e l, fire p la c e , a d u lls i no
p e ls 6375 645 4 441 o r 377 6978

It yo u d o n 't te ll p e o ple , h o w a re
th e y g o in q to k n o w 1 T e ll th e m
w ilh a cla ss ,lie d ad b y c a llin g
323 3611 o r 631 9993

G O V E R N M E N T JO BS
V a r io u s p o s it io n s a v a ila b le
th r o u g h lo c a l g o v e rn m e n t
a g e ncie s 130.000 to 150.000
p o te n tia l C a ll (re fu n d a b le ) I
1619 ) 569 62 14 d e p t 381 lo r yo u r
1983 d ir e c t o r y 24 h rs

9—Good Things to Eat

W A R E H O U S E w o rk e rs n e e de d
W ill tu lly tra m , g o o d p a y . lu l l
tim e 629 4094

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

29—Rooms

B U S IN E S S is g r e a t ! W e need 4
e x p e r ie n c e d
re a l
e s ta te
a sso cia te s to h e lp u s m a rk e t
o ur m a n y s a le a b le lis tin g s
Top c o m m is s io n s
W ilh
N u m b e r I C e n tu r y 71. y o u 're
ahead a ll th e w a y L e t's ta lk !
C a ll J u n e P o r / ig at C e n tu ry 21
J u n e P o r / lg R e a lly
377 86)8
R e a lto r

W IL L do b a b y s ittin g in m y h o m e
m P aoia
C a ll 173 0196
U A B Y S I t T IN G
m y hom e
H rs
6 days, lie * R a te s n e g
G a il 371 1177

6A Health &amp; Beauty

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 AS H
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D
N O W C a ll 373 7611 o r 8)1 9963

L A D Y tn o r n e a r 30 s to s h a re
re n t p lu s u tilitie s N o dope o r
h e a v y d r in k e r D eposit and
re fe re n c e s
C a ll 373 3335
B e fo re 3 P M

R E C E P T IO N I S T
and
Ap
p o m tm e n t S e tte rs , g o o d p a y.
m ust b e a b le to h a n d le in
c o m in g r a i ls q u ic k ly , s ta rt
rig h t a w a y 679 4094

4t— Houses

32—Houses Unfurnished

C R E O IT P R O B L E M S ?
R e c e iv e a M a s te rc a rd o r V is a ,
G u a ra n te e d . B ad C re d it N o
P ro b le m F o r F re e B ro c h u re
c a ll H o u s e o t C re d it. T o ll F re e
I 800 442 IS 3I a n y tim e

18—Help Wanted

1 Card of Thanks

Br

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T . OF
T H E E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT . IN A N D FO R S E M IN
O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
C A S E N O I I 3061 CA 04 P
IN R E Th e M a rria q e Ot
S U S A N L O U IS E F L O R E S ,
W ife ,
and
E U S E B IO A N D R E S F L O R E S .
JR .
H usband
N O T IC E OF A C T IO N
TO
E U S E B IO A N D R E S F L O R E S .
JR
8508 S k y v ie w D r
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
A le ia n d r ia , V irg in ia 77306
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t l a m
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
e n g a g e d in b u s in e s s a t 313 B a rc la y
N O T IF IE D th a t a P e titio n lo r
L e tha M W a rd , w id to E ldon A v e
A lt a m o n t e S p rin g s , F I
D is s o lu tio n o l M a rria g e h a s b e e n
Lee W a rd A L e th a M W a rd . J!
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a u n d e r
tile d a q a in s l you and th a t yo u a re
ten. L o t 5. B lk G . N o rm a n d y Addn
th e f i c t i t i o u s n a m e o l E N
re q u ire d lo se rv e a copy o t y o u r
lo CB. SIOO
T E R P R IS E S T E A M C L E A N IN G ,
R e sp o n se o r P le a d in g to th e
a n d lh a t I in te n d lo r r q i il e r sa id
P e titio n u p o n th e W ile ’S a tto rn e y ,
n a m e w it h th e C le rk o l th e C irc u it
A A M c C la n a h a n . J r . 106 S P a r k
C o u rl, S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo rid a In
A ve
S u ite B, S an to rd . F lo r id a
a c c o rd a n c e w it h m e p ro v is io n s o l
37771, a n d l i l t Ih e o r i g i n a l
th e F ic t it io u s N a m e S tatutes, To
R rs p o n s e o r P le a d in g m th e o t h e r
W it
S e c tio n 1 6 ! 09 F lo r id a
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
o l th e C le f h o t Ih e C irc u it C o u rt, on
S ta tu te s 1957
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv r n th a t I am
o r b e lo re th e 3rd d a y o t F e b ru a ry ,
S ig n a tu re
engaged in b u s in e s s a t 119 E fth
1661 I I y o u t a il lo do to . a D e ta u lt
C h a rle s T d e la T o u r
Si
S a n fo r d ,
F l o r id a
37773
J u d q m e n l w ill be ta k e n a q a m s t
S em m ole C o u n ty , F lo r id a un d er
By
yo u to r th e re lie f d e m a n d e d m th e
H e le n R d e L a T o u r
the lic lilio u s n a m e o l D O R M A N S
P e titio n
P u b lis h Ja n 9, 16. 73. 10, 1983
U N L IM IT E D , a n d lh a t I in te n d to
D a te d a t S a n lo rd , S e m in o le
D E O 47
re g is te r s a id n a m e w it h Ih e C le rk
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , th is JQln g a y o l
ol Ihe C ir c u it C o u rt. S em inole
D e c e m b e r 1967
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
C ounty, F lo r id a In a cc o rd a n c e
f SEAL)
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t l a m
w ith th e p ro v is io n s o t th e Fic
A r t h u r H B e c k w ith . J r
e n g a g e d m b u sin e s s a l 7605 P a rk
lilio u s N a m e S ta tu te s . T o W 'l
C le rk o l th e C irc u it C o u rt
O r . S a n lo rd F I 17771. S em ino le
Section (65 09 F lo r id a S tatutes
B y C y n th ia P ro c to r
C o u n ty . F lo r id a under th e tic
1957
titlo u s n a m e o l U N C L E N IC K S P u b lis h J a n u a ry 7. 6, 16, 73, 1983
S ig n a tu re
L IQ U O R A O Y S T E R B A R . and D E D 14
B e tty e B D o r m a n
th a t I In te n d to re g is te r sa id n a m e
P u b lis h J a n 7 3 .1 0 . F e b 6. I I . !9«1
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
w ith th e C le f k o l Ih e C irc u it C o u rt.
DED It}
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
S e m m o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a In ac
e n g a g e d in business a t 667 E.
c o rd a n c e w it h th e p ro visio n s ot the
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
A lt a m o n t e D r iv e , A lt a m o n t e
F ic titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s, T o W ii
N o tic e Is h e r e b y g iv e n th a t I am
S p rin g s . F la S e m in o le C o u n ty .
e n g a g e d In b u s in e s s a t 1505 S e c tio n 165 09 F lo rid a S ta tu te s
F lo r id a u n d e r th e lic lilio u s n a m e
I9S7
W yn ne w o o d A v . S a n lo rd
Fla
o t N E W D IM E N S IO N S R E A L T Y ,
S
ig
N
ic
k
P
a
p
p
a
s
17771 S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a
a n d lh a t I In te n d to re g is te r s a id
P u b lis h J a n u a ry 7, 9, 16. 71. I » t l
u n d e r t h e f i c t i t i o u s n a m e ol
n a m e w it h th e C le rk o t th e C ir c u it
U N IQ U E O E S IG N S . a n d th a i I D E D I I
C o u rt. S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a in
in tend to r e g is t e r s a id n a m e w ith
a c c o rd a n c e w ith Ihe p ro v is io n s o t
F
IC
T
IT
IO
U
S
N
A
M
E
th e C le rk o l th e C ir c u it C ourt,
th e F ic titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s . T o
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
S em m gle C o u n ty . F lo r id a in ac
W it
S e c tio n 165.06 F l o r id a
c o rd a n c a w llh Ih e p ro v is io n s ot the e n g a g e d m b u sin e s s a l I36S E
S ta tu te s 1657
F ic titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s , T o w n : A lt a m o n t e D r iv e , A lta m o n te
A b r a m In v e s tm e n ts , In c
37701. S e m in o le
S ection 165 06 F lo r id a S tatutes S p r in g s F la
S ig n a tu re A lic e T. H u g h e s
C o u n ty . F lo r id a u n d e r th e lie
1957
P re s
lilio u s n a m e o l A L T A M O N T E
S ig n a tu re
P u b lis h J a n 6. 14, 73. 30, 1611
E A S T E R N , a n d th a t I in te n d lo
C a ro ly n T h u rs to n
D E O 31
P u b lis h J a n 7 3 .1 0 . F e b 6 ,1 3.1 9 (1 r e g is te r s a id n a m e w ith C le rk o l
th
e
C
ir
c
u
it
C
o
u
r
l.
S
e
m
in
o
le
D E O 111
N O T IC IO F IN T IN T
C o u n ty , F lo r id a m a cc o rd a n c e
T O R C O IS T I R F IC T IT IO U *
w ith Ih e p ro v is io n s o t th e F ic
NAME
titio u s N a m e S ta tu te s. To W it
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
S e c tio n 665 09 F lo r id a S ta tu te s th a t lh a u n d e rs ig n e d , d e s ir in g to
Tlw Id for
1957
e n g a g e in b usiness u n d e r Ih e
S ig R o n a ld E C a ria n d e r
f ic t it io u s n a m e ot L A K E V I E W
P u b lis h J a n u a r y 16. 71. 10, B A P T IS T C H U R C H , a t 174 L ik e
F e b ru a ry 6 . 19(1
V ie w A v e n u e , l a k e M a r y , F lo r id a
D E O 76
37746 in te n d s lo re g is te r th e s a id
I ran in Friday's
n a m e w it h Ih e C le rk o l Ih e C ir c u it
C o u rto &gt; S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo r id a .
riing H traid statad
D A T E D IM S 7 9 th d a y o t
Incorract talaphona
D e c e m b e r, A .D 1917
'. . r
F IR S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
ite r. T te number
O F S A N F O R D . IN C
jtd hava baan
B Y W IL L IA M L C O L B E R T .
TRUSTEE
C A LL TO LL F E W
P u b lis h J a n 7, I , 14. 73, t i l l
M ill
OEO I

Legal Notice

25—Loans

DA66IEL A N D W O H L W E N D E R
G E N E V A 7 S to ry 4 I n e a r L a k e
H a rn e y . N e w p a in t, s id in g ,
a n d ro o t, f a m ily ro o m , la r g e
g a ra g e , fe n ce d y a r d , re d u c e d
to ISO.000
S A N O Y W IS D O M

169-4600 or 349-5691

R E AL ESTATE
R E A L T Q H 117 /4*6

KISH REAL ESTATE
331 0041
W t A ll
A lt e r H rs 373 7 4 6 1 A 177 49'
S P R IN G
H O U S E C l E A fc ih
S E L L TH O S E N O L O N G
N E E D E D IT E M S W IT H
C L A S S IF IE D A D

I

�s

I
41— Houses

42—M obile Homes

A L L F LO R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFO RD R E A LT O R

PRE O W N E D HO M ES
2 Bd F a m P a rk
12*10
113.500
2 B d F a m P a rk
12*41
110.500
2Bd F a m P a rk
H »51
111, 300
3 Bd 24*64 M u s t See
114.900
2 Bd 12*40 N ic e
14.495
2 0 d 11*61 F u rn .
111,500
3 B d 12**0
14.500
3 Bd 14*64 A d P k
123.500
C R E C O R Y M O B IL E IN C
3803 O rla n d o D r 17 92 S S an fo rd
___________ 301 311 1700

2544 1 F rench
32} 0331
A fte r Hours 339 29 10 322 0773

&lt;§ 2 \ R O B B IE ’S
'C 2 \
R S A lT Y
’ I V

i

I

BEALTO H w ls
73*1 S F re n c h

sai.

...

24 HOUR E 322 9283

19)1 S K Y L IN E M o b ile H u m e
34*52 I t s c r e e n e n c lo s u r e
p o rch , u t il it y s h e d , C e n t H A 3
B d rm , 2 B a th . L o t s ite is
50*100 C an be se e n a l 136
L e is u re D r. N o r lh D e B a ry ,
F lo rid a in th e M e a d o w le a on
th e R iv«.r M o b ile H o m e C om
m o n ily P le a s e c o n ta c t T o m
L y o n a t 322 1243 t o r a d d itio n a l
in fo rm a tio n

R E A L T O R S *

35' P a rk M o d e l t r a il e r w it h 2 tip
out. q ia s s e n c lo s e d p o rc h
Can liv e th e re a ll y e a r ro u n d .
321 1718

M C O N D O , c o n s id e r le a t e w t lh o p llo n . C lose to sch o ols A
sh o p p in g . I ie . n o .

I960 M O B IL E H o m e 14 '*4 0 ' set
up in a d u lt s e c tio n o f m o b ile
p a rk D a y 831 2423
E v e n in g * * ! ! s i 16

1-1 H O M E , n e w ly re m o d e le d
in s id e ! N e w ro o f. C o rn e r lo t.
E ic e lle n t
s ta rte r
hom e.
S chools d o ie b y . O n ly 139,900.

• S A N F O R D I 4 8 4* A R E A *
l 11 a cre s + o r — c o u n tr y hom esite . O a k -p in e , s o m e c le a re d •
paved. 10*. d o w n , 10 y rs . a t 12*,
STEN1TRO M R E A LT Y
R EALTO RS
C a ll * 111.1420 * A n y tim e *

D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E
J4 9 W . L a k e M a r y B lv d .
L a k e M a r y , F lo r id a 11741
O ffic e 130S) J I I SOOS
L O C H A R B O R , la rg e 2 le v e l, 4
B d rm , 3 B a th , 1105.000 b y a p p t. ’
W m M a liC IO w S ki. R E A L TO R ,
331 7901 E v e 322 3107
M a y la ir A re a
M iJ M ‘ 1
O PEN HOUSE
Sat. - Sun. 1 5
S U P E R IN V E S T M E N T
! Im
m a c u la te 3 b d rm . 2 t u t h h o m e ,
eat in k i t , ta rn , r m C H A . h u g e
• S c r. e n c l P a t io w 16' k 32’
P O O L ! F e n ce d y a rd w c itru s
M a n y e x tra * . F H A a p p ra is e d
C e rtille d N M e llo n v ille to E
I t h S t . r t to 900 S cott A v e See
th is to d a y !

ST J 'T H N i R iv e r fro n ta g e , 2 ',
a c re p a rc e ls , a ls o in te r io r p a r
cels w ith r iv e r a c c e s s 113,900
P u b lic w a te r , 30 m in to A lta
m o n te M a l l 12 • * 30 y r .
f in a n c in g , n o q u a li f y in g
B ro k e r 128 4133

46—C om m ercial P roperty
P R O F E S S IO N A L L Y
to n e d
O ttic e b u ild in g 2160 sq It.
p ric e d a t 135 p e r sq t l. F ro n ts
on S tate R d 46. 2 B lk s to N ew
H o sp ita l 175,600 333 4445

47-A—M ortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
WE P A Y c a s h to r 1st A 2nd
m o rtg a q ^ S R a y L e g q L'C
M o rtg a g e B ro k e r 781 2599

411 1790

HALC O LBER T R EA LTY
R EALTO R
107 E . 21th St
1317113

41-B-Condomlniurre
C O N D O M IN IU M In S a n o ra 1
B d r m , 2Vv b a th . B e a u tifu lly
t d e c o r a te d 73 4 * M l r * t m o r
tg a g e . a s s u m a b le , o w n e r w ill
c o n s id e r s e c o n d m o r t g a g e .
1*7&lt;SOO b y o w n e r . 123 5944
e v e n in g A 332 6*45.

j;

1913 W IN C H E S T E R M o d e l 13
g a u qe s h o tg u n m o d ifie d p u m p
in m in t c o n d 323 7525 a fte r 1
1500
S E A R S F r e e t e r 19 cu f t 125
F r ig ld a ir e r e f r ig t i l E a r ly
A m e r ic a n c o u c h 125 G u n
ca b in e t 125 313 1813
1 p ie c e b e ig e p it set M a k e s
co u ch a n d o r lo v e seat 1100
best o tte r , 323 7119
F IR E W O O D 145
P ic k u p load
322 4057
F a tig u e a n d P a in te r p a n ts
A R M Y N A V Y SUR PLU S
110 S a n to rd A y e
3121791
BUY S ELL TR ADE
F lo r id a T ra d e r A u c tio n
L o n g w o o d , F la 339 1119

51—Household Goods
E le c tric h o s p ita l b e d , 1500 o r
m a k e o tte r . 1973 M a v e ric k
1500: liv in g ro o m co u c h 1150:
s w iv e l r o c k e r 135. 3 h ig h b a c k
b lu e v e lv e t c h a irs 140 e a c h : I
I! o r ie n ta l d e sk 1450. L a rg e
b e v e lle d m ir r o r 140 Sauna 171.
S ew ing m a c h in e U S . Chest of
d re w e rs 111 E n g lis h B u lld o g ,
le m a te . p a p e rs . 1110 322 1785

St-A— F u rn itu re

S A N F O R O R e d u c e d 110.000 Ea.
1 U n its . 168,87S 5 U n its .
188,850
B uy
W h o le s a le ,
fle x ib le f in a n c in g , a n d o w n e r
te rm s L e t's d e a l I 8811871.*

N E E D t o s e ll y o u r h o u s e
q u ic k ly !
We
can
o tte r
g u a r a n te e d s a le w i t h i n 30
d a ys C a ll 331 1411.
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S of m e rc h a n d is e
e v e ry d a y ,

NOW LIASING
SAT.
1 0 :0 0 -1 :0 0

52—Appliances
K e n m o rr p a r ts , s e rv ic e , used
w a s h e rs 323 0497
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S

\ . is

in

ca sh

FCR / R E ALITY/
ME.' A * * A - (

*C^VZ\

3* 1

M i

jeP=v

IT C O JlP
BE w o r s e :

R E P O S S E S S E D C O LO R T V S
W e s e ll re p o s s e s s e d c o lo r
te le v is io n s , a ll n a m e b ra n d s,
consoles a n d p o rta b le s E X
A M P L E Z e n ith 2 1 " c o lo r in
w a ln u t co n s o le O r ig in a l p ric e
o ve r 1710. b a la n c e due 1194
cash o r p a y m e n ts 117 rn o n ih ,
NO M O N E Y D O W N H il l in
w a r r a n ty C a ll 21st C e n tu ry
Sates 142 5394d a y o r n ite F re e
h o m e t r i a l , n o o b lig a tio n
&lt;

54—G arage Sales

Clubhouse w health club, on Site Lake
Tennis, Racquetball, Volleyball, Jogging Trail,
Swimming, Self-Cleaning Oven, Icemaker A More.

Y a r d S ale L a s t house
R id g e R o a d L it t le b it of
e v e r y th in g . Sat O n ly .
M O V IN G S a le E v e ry th in g M u s i
G o 412 E lm A v e ., S an to rd ,
S u n d a y O n ly l
S TO P A N D T H IN K A M IN U T E .
It C la s iH lt d
A d s d id n 't
w o r k . . th e re w o u ld n 't ba a n y.

BUILDING THROUGHOUT CENTRAL FLORIDA

ON
YOUR
LOT
Custom, JUfordabla, Luxury Homes
fromSSO’s to STO’s

*NP IT

G Y E R T i .m E,

55— Boats &amp; Accessories
1980 H y r y d e r 16' lib c rQ la s s B ass
B o a t, 20 H P S p irit m o to r,
t r a ile r a n d tr o llin g m o to r,
u se d one season. 12.800 00
1973 K a w a s a k i, 750 needs w o rk
m a k e o tte r. 122 1440

75— Recreationa I Vehicles
S C O T T Y IS ' T r a ile r w 76 Im
p a la : eng e *c 12.900 O B O ,
O r p u rc h a s e s e p a ra te 574
4130

I m interested m a .
9
I o w n p ro p e rty in .

-» P .
. hD ■
torlrri
cronomm ,,

-b a th h o m e .

W e b u y C a r t and T ru c ks.

Martin Motor Salts
701 5 French
111.7134

A B O V E a v e ra q e p ric e s p u d lo r
c le a n c a r t , tru c k s a n d tra v e l
t r a ile r s 123 2*00.
* D ID Y O U K N O W )*
Y ou c a n b u y o r lease a new c a r
in th e p r iv a c y o f y o u r hom e o r
o th c o F la A u to B ro k e rs
321 2044
1980 C H E V Y M A L IB U 4 d r
PS. P B . V 6 eng . e *c c o n d
14 48 0 331 0825
M G B C o n v 1977 60,000 m l S ilv e r
w b la c k
to p
8
In t e r io r ,
s a c r ific e . 11.995 283 5446
75 D A T S U N 2 d r w ith a u to tra n s
a n d o th e r e x tra s Good con
d ilio n 199 d o w n
Cash o r
T ra d e . 33 9 9100. 13 4 4605
M E R C U R Y 1974, 2 d o o r M a rq u is
B ro u g h a m . 1 o w n e r, a ll op
lio n s
p lu s t r a ile r lo w in g
p a c k a g e , re g g a s. 1600
122 6112

76 Im p a la J&gt;u, 11.695 S c o tty
t r a ile r . 11 200. b o th t o r 13,495
O B O 574 6830
B ad C r e d it ’
N o C r e d it ’
W E F IN A N C E
No C re d it Check E asy T e r m s
N A T IO N A L A U TO S A L E S
1120 S antord A ye
321 4075
1980 C h e v y p ic k u p C 10 A m F m
a ir , a u to , p t e xc
cond
w h o le s a le p ric e c a ll 322 SS66
78 F O R D G ran a d a A ll e x t r a s
I n c lu d in g a u to tr a n s . 1450
d o w n Cash o r tra d e 319 9100
134-4405

D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
H w y 92, I m ile w est ol S p e e d
w a y . fTaVTOha Beach w i l l VioTe
a p u b lic A U T O A U C T IO N
e v e ry M o n d a y 8 W e d n e s d a y a*
7 30 p m It'S the o n ly o n e in
F lo r id a Y ou set the re s e r v e d
p ric e
C a ll 904 255 8311 t o r
fu r t h e r d e ta ils
IS IT T R U E you can b u y
f o r 144 th ro u g h t h e
g o v e rn m e n t? G el th e
to d a y l C a ll 312 742 1142
616. (O p e n S unday)

|e e p *
U .S
ta c ts
E xt

CONSULT (DUR­

62— Lawn-Garden

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

F IL L 0 1 H 1 8 T O P S O IL *
Y E L L O W SAND
C la rk 8 H ir t 331 7580. 333 3821
s

65— Pets-Supplies

To List Your Business...

A K C B la c k C o ck e r, le m a le 2 y r s
o ld , v e r y a ffe c tio n a te 145
323 8476

Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

W ilc a la le s H w y . M W . '

112 4870

B a le d sh a v in g s 14 50 i t r a w
t ) 50. Q u a lity n a m e c a t and
dog lo o d s . In c lu d in g A .N .F .
A v ia r y lu p p lie s .
P IT B u ll p u p p y , w h ite w b r it t le
sp o ts lo r sale, 175, fe m a le ,
321 4051,

66—Horses
M U S T s e ll 4 S he tla nd p o n ie s.
G re a t w ith c h ild re n P le a s e
c a ll 321 2091

67— Li vestock- Pou Itry
C o w s to r Sale
G e n e va . F la
149 5220

67 A —Feed

H A V E Y O U R fin a n c ia l d re a m s
b e co m e a re a lity w it h A lo e
P T , n o in v e s tm e n t 333 7268

i,

S TO P A N D T H IN K A M IN U T E
It C la s s ifie d A ds d id n 't w o rk
th e re w o u ld n 't b e a n y

Alteration &amp; Tailoring

Home Improvement

• T R IP L E A *
P ric e s p e c ia l 114 91 lo r
F a m ily o r L iv in g H m 8622740

H A Y 12 50 p t r b a le ,
25 o r m o ro fre e d e l.
O th e r fe e ds a v a il. 149 1194.

W .inM t lb

Auto CB Stereo
C B . S te reo In s ta lla tio n R e p a ir
a p r A u to Sound C e n te r
A &gt; V 2109 F re n c h A v e
322 4 1 3 ^

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

A L U M IN U M , ca n s, c o p p e r,
le a d , b ra s s , s ilv e r, g o ld W e e k
d a ys 8 4 30, Sat 9 1 K KOMO
T o o o lC o 9 I I W 1st SI. 331 1100
W A N T E D L in c o ln M a r k 4. 1971
76 S u p e r s h a rp , lo w m ile a g e ,
n o r u i t , p re fe r su n ro o l 8
le a t h e r
s e a ls .
B * 3427,
A llia n c e , O h io o r O rla n d o 2911117.

71— Antiques

B A T H S k itc h e n s ro o tin g b lo c k ,
c o n c r e te , w in d o w s , a d d a
ro o m tre e e s tim a te s 32 3 8 463
A L L T Y P E !C A R P E N T R Y
C u s to m B u ilt a d d itio n s P a tio s ,
sc re e n ro o m s , c a r p o r t D o o r
lo c k s , p a n e llin g , s h in g le s ,
re ro o fin g F o r la s t s e rv ic e ,
can

A R L E N E 'S A R T IF A C T S
A n t iq u e s
and
C o lle c t ib le s
s p e c ia lilin g in R o y a l D o lto n ,
W e b u y a n d s e ll n e w a n d
d is c o n tin u e d Ite m s . 142 0041.

CENTRAL FLORIDA
ANTIQUE MARKET
SHOW AND SALE
DELAND, FLORIDA
JAN. 22-23, 1983
SAT.9-lp.rn., SUN. 185 p.m.
F R E E ADMISSION
OVER IM DEALERS
HWY. 44 (&gt;» Ml. E . OF M l
VOLUSIA COUNTY*
FAIRGROUNDS
OLASS RESTORATION

3 2 3 -4 9 1 7 ,3 6 5 -2 3 7 1

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
A L U M IN U M S id in g , v in y l s id in g
s o ld i 8 fa s c ia . A lu m in u m
g u tte r s and dow n s p o u ts .
F r E st 305 345 53*3

PUBLIC AUCTION
MONDAY* JAN. 24, 7 PM
FURNITURE
NEW USED ANTIQUE
xm w uing ro r cvfryonB
H h M Building
SANFORD AUCTION
121-7340

SAT. JA N . 21,4:30 P .68
E v e ry S a t. n ig h t, th e fin e s t
s e le c tio n o f h o u sd vo ld f u r ­
n it u r e to b e sold to th e h ig h e s t
b id d e r. W e d a re yo u to c o m e
se e lo r y o u rs e lf.

The F lorkfc Trader
Auction P i Ik * North
♦90 Bay Meadows Rd.
Longwood, Fla. 3) 94.118
L o c e te d o n H w y . 427 b e tw e e n 17
91 A 434

R O O M A d d itio n s , re m o d e lin g ,
d r y w a ll
hung,
c e ilin g s
s p ra y e d , fire p la c e s , ro o tin g
323 4832

Plastering

M E I N t / E R T I L E E * P S .n c e
N f a &amp; o ld w o rk c o m m &amp;
fet*d P rev M t i m j l p 169 1 ^ }

W,C

COOD r \ s r)N \
T lie t f m t f a c to rs
1?1 OWJ

ln \

THE H A P P Y ELV E S
Q u a lity c h ild c a re a n d p re
school in fa n ts a s p e c ia lly
I n d iv id u a l a t t e n t i o n
H a te
lice n s e d 120 E C r y s ta l L a k e
A v e , L k M a r y 37 1 2384

Cleaning Services
H O M E O W N E R S , re la x o n y o u r
days o tl L e t uS c le a n yo u r
hom e a t a ffo r d a b le ra te s C a ll
now 321 3546 P a tty 's H o m e
P a m p e rin g S e rv ic e
A M K e lly c le a n in g s e rv ic e
S p e c ia lilin g in re s ta u r a n l 8
o ffic e b u ild in g s . 427 035*.

C p n c u ' l e *V o rW

B E A L C o n c re te I m a n q u a lity
o p e ra tio n p a t.c n d riv e w a y s
D ays 331 7313 E v q s 327 1321
S W IFT C O N C R E T E w o rn a ll
ty p e s . F o o t e r s , d r iv e w a y s ,
pads. H o a rs, p o o ls , c o m p le te .
F re e e st 322 7101
FO R a ll y o u r c o n c re te n e e d s c a ll
1211^77. F re e e s tim a te s . N o
b u ild e rs p le a s e .

DogTraining

TO W ERSBEAUTYSALO N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie tt s B e a u ty
N ook 119 E 1st I t . 322 1742

Boarding &amp; Grooming

mN

IM A L H a v e n B o a rd in g a n d
G r o o m in g K e n n e ls h e a te d ,
in s u la te d , sc re e n e d , f ly p ro o f
in s id e , o u tsid e ru n s
F a n s.
A ls o A C cages. W e c a te r to
y o u r p e ts. P h. 122 1712.

Sundown Dog
Training
Obedience tra in in g in
home and group. 321-6731

PA i N T I N O a n q re p a ir p a !.o and
s c re e n
p o r c h b u il t
( an
a n y tim e 373 9481

Draperies
D R A P E S B Y D E B B IE
R e a s o n a b le ra le s
311 1290
C U S TO M M A D E In o u r Shop
T ra v e rs e R o d s
in s t a lle d .
D o ro th y 8 V in c e n t B lis s 149
1471

Excavating Services

Personal Income Taxes, open
evenings.

B r k fc tB lo d c

StonaWbrfc
P IA Z Z A M A S O N R Y
Q u a lity W o rk A t R e a s o n a b le
P ric e s . F re e E s tim a te s .

Ph 149 ijoo.

Carpentry

V E IN O E X C A V A T IM O
4 M C is g B sc k h o c L o a d e r w
e x te n d e r h o e . 9 y d . d u m p
tru c k lo w b e d s e rv j j j j a i l .

Firewood

F IR E W O O D *4 0 8 u p . T re e
t r i m m in g , r e m o v a l T ra s h
h a uled F re e e s t., 322 9410

Handyman

A LL
P h ,m *s u* P 'A ^ t f n n y
P lA S tff in q rrp e i.r Mu&lt;CO. h a r d
r r »te S irn u h ititlib rx fc 37! VW1

S E A M L E S S a lu m in u m g u tte rs,
c o y e r th o s e o v e r h a n g s ' wa lu m in u m s o lid 8 la s c la (1041
715-7090 c o lle c t. F re e est.

Remodeling

C O L L I E R 'S
H um e
R e p a ir s
c a r p e n t r y , r o o t in g , p a in tin g
w in d o w r e p a i r J2 I 4472

Rem odeling Specialist

G et C a sh B u y e rs lo r a s m a ll
in v e s tm e n t P la c e a lo w cost
c la s s ifie d a d lo r re s u lts 322
2611 o r 831 9993

B. E. Link Const.

W e H a n dle The
W h o le B a M O l W ax

322 7029
F in a n c in g A v a ila b le

W IN D O W S , d o o rs , c a rp e n lry .
C o n cre te s la b s , c e ra m ic 8 llo o r
tile M in o r re p a ir s fire p la c e s .
in s u la tio n L ie B ond i l l g t l l .
CAR P E N T E tt 33 yrs e x p S m all
re m o d e lin g iobs. re a so n a b le
ra le s C h u c k 373 9645

Roofing
A

&amp;

B

R O O F IN

M a m te n a n c e o l a llty p e s
C a rp e n tr y , p a in tin g , p lu m b in g
8 e le c tr ic 37 3 6018

21 y r * . e x p e rie n c e . L ic e n s e d 8
In s u re d
F re e E s tim a te s on R o o tin g ,
Re R o o tin g a n d R e p a ir* .
S h in g le s , B u ilt U p and T ile .

L aw n Service

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

* A-l LAWN SERVICE *

3 2 2 -9 4 1 7

M ow . w ie a 'r i m . h a u l R e g u la r
5 c ry .e e I tim e c le a n up u
h r* , b e s t r a le * , 621 *631.

N E W rerooling , and
re p a irs t i Y r s E *p
333 1926

SHAMROCK
Landscape
C o m p le te R e s
8 C om m
S e rvice . S p r in k le r s y i. , re p a ir,
w in te r c le a n u p . 121 0576

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. LEE INC.

Lawn Mowers
Secretarial Services
. F i x l l Joe M c A d a m s
m ill r e p a ir y o u r m o w e rs at
j o u r h o m e C a ll 322 70S!

m is t e r

M ajor Appliance

S E C R E T A R IE S N E E D E D F O R
T e m p o r ir y a n d p a rr t im e
p o s it io n s
E x c e lle n t s k i l l s
n e c e s s a ry In te rv ie w b y a p
p o ln lm e n t o n ly 212 5*49

Repair
J O H N N IE S A p p lia n c e s . W e
s e rv ic e r e fr ig e r a to r s , wash
e rs, d r y e r s , ra n g e s
Reas
ra te s 323 *1 3 *

Nursing Care

n o o lr fr u p ln g

O e O a rm e a u B o o k k e e p in g le r .
32 2 2 207

S P E N C E R PEST C O N T R O L
C o m m , R osd , L a w n , T e r m it e
W o rk 171 8143 Ask lo r C h a m p

Home Repairs

Appliance Services
C L A R E N C E 'S
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
W e s e rv ic e a ll m a jo r b ra n d s
R eas ra le s , 11 y rs e x p 323 0331

Pest Control

Ceramic Tile

Child Care

H A Y 12 00
a t b a rn
322 0411 o r 1211400

cm

Carpet C leaning

Aloe Products

EXPERT
d r e s s m a k in q ,
a lte ra tio n s A s la n C le a n e rs .
3844 H w y 17 93, L a k e M a r y
B lv d , 331 4996

.a n d p la n to budd in .

MbMto: HALLMARK BUILDERS, INC PO. B o x » fl • Uxigwocd, FI 32750

S om ebody IS lo o k in g lo r y o u r
b a rg a in . O ffe r It to d a y In th e
C la s s ifie d A d s

80—Autos lo r Sale

Z E R O X M a c h in e 3100 c o p ie r in
good w o rk in g c o n d itio n 1850
133 3012

AUCTION

C *y -

1983 D a ts u n p ic k u p tr u c k , 4 sp
a ir co n d M u s t s e ll b e st o tte r
321 6928

60—OHice Supplies

HISS. French

Street.

79—T rucks- T ra i lers

i ■» - ! * L

F O R E S T A T E . C o m m e rc ia l o r
R e s id e n tia l A u c tio n s 8 A p
p ra -s a is C a ll D e li's A u c tio n
311 1420

C all Collect (305) 327-0000

TOP D o lla r P a id to r J u n k 8
Used c a rs , tr u c k s 8 h e a vy
e q u ip m e n t 322 5990

P ARKI NS r

B e ilu T y O u t 1

B U IL D E R S . INC.

BUY J U N k C AR S 8 TR U C KS
F ro m SI0 4o SSO o r m o re
C a li 322 162*

A D V IC E !

A N A U C T I O N : 140 A n t iq u e
F ir e a r m s
S w o rd s
C o in s . In d ia n A r t ila c t s : Sun., J i n . 22,
5 p m . H o w a rd Jo h n s o n 's
M o to r L o d g e . I 4 a n d R t 121 A ,
O rla n d o , F L In s p e c tio n 4 5.
C ash, V IS A , M C . A m . E x
p re ss . C o n s ig n m e n ts w a n te d .

Palm breeze— Lovely California inspired 3 bedroom,
2 bath home with double garage, cathedral celling,
breakfast area and 1,666 sq. ft. under roof— $43,500.

W E P A Y to p d o lla r to r
Ju n k C a rs a n d T ru c k s
CBS A u to P a r ts 293 4505

the m a j o r s

72—Auction

Exampte of tan mocMa to choo** from.

77—Junk Cars Removed

A ~TE R T A k i N'

W A S * K (3 R

^ u n d a y , Ja n . 1 1 ,1 9 8 3 - 9 B

80— Autos fo r Sale

D e B a ry A u» o 8 M a r.n e Sales
a c ro s s th e r iv e r la p o l h ill 174
H w y 1 ' 97 O e f la r , 66* ****

76—A u to Parts

5P00K&gt; APAM S
&lt;SO T 3 0 P A " S

53—T V Radio-Stereo
G ood U se d T V 's 825 1 up
M IL L E R S
2419 O r la n d o D r
P h 32 2 0152

B U Y F a c to r y O ire c v L ig h t
w e ig h t, f ib e r g la s s S c a m p 13' &amp;
14' t r a v e l t r a il e r s i n e w 19' 5th
w h e el C a ll n o w t o ll tre e I 800
144 4962 t o r fr e e b ro c h u re and
ta v e i____________________________

71 D odge C o lt e n g in e . 76 C hevy
e n gine 310. T o y o ta e n g in e
123 4042

r ~ &amp; -

I*', v * ” )

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

75—R e creational Vehfcles

A y . s* -

—

JU ST re c e iv e d s h ip m e n t o l good
used r e fr ig e r a to r s
30 D a y
g u a ra n te e S a n to rd A u c tio n .
1715 S F re n c h , 121 7140

SUN.
1 :0 0 -1 :0 0

S O M I P L A C IS H A V E
|
A L L THE FUN!
~ N e w 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.

Financing
to suit you I

speak

P O O L T A B L E , 1450
P o o llig h tlS O

1100 W est F ir s t S tre e t — S in lo r d , F lo r id a 12771 — (105)321 4120

M O N .-F R I.
9 :0 0 -S :0 fi

JUD&lt;5E, jY0UR WNOR.VrtAY \B.MUFF. REV*3\= THIS L'
&lt; APPEARS T C BE Jf&gt;\ AN' -NLY l.\"w''ERS&gt;
W ANT A A SIMPLE CASE &lt; SPEAK iN MY ^ U K T !
MAJOR CF ASSAULT ANP/~~- n
~
&lt;*
hoc? l€'J pestruc : t ic n r
t J " ( t ^at ll be a
TO 4 OF PROPERTY )
ANP COSTS-

F a tig u e a n d P a in te r p a n ts
A R M Y N A V Y SUR PLU S
110
S a n to rd A ve ,
322 1791

V

i
i

with Major Hoople

4 c h a n n e l a m f m s te re o . I tr a c k
s y s te m , 4 s p e a k e rs , tik e n e w
1115 323 3240 7 p m | | p m .

47— Real Estate W anted

___ F orS ate

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

50—M iscellaneous lo r Sale

W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
l i t U S E F IR S T ST
713 5413

44B— Investment
Property

MERRILL LYNCHREALTY

\

WE B U Y e q u ity in H ouses,
a p a rtm e n ts , v a c a n t la n d and
a c re a g e
LUCKY
IN
V E 5 T M E N T S P O Bo« 2500,
S a n to rd . F la 32771 323 4741

43—Lois-A creage

LO G h o m e on Ig c . lo t, 2 s to ry
e n e rg y s a v in g fe a tu re s . 14 ft.
h i. c e ilin g , n a tu r a l w o o d in s id e
a n d o u t, fir e p la c e a n d la m .
ro o m . Sfi.SOd.

R e a lto r

R eal E state W anted

321 5474

W ANTEDTO BUY
R e ce n t m o d e l. 3 2 On
fa m ily lo t 1471119

P R IM E c o m m e rc ia l lo c a tio n
N o w used a s p a in t &amp; boay
shop. In c lu d e s la n d , b ld g ,
w it h n e ce ss a ry e q u ip m e n t A ]
b r. a p t. fo r re n ta l.

17

L O V IN G H O M E E x c e lle n t ca re
8 c o m p a n io n s h ip lo r e ld e rly
w o m a n . 371 *301

N u rsm q Center
O U R R A T E S A R E LO W E R
Lakeview N u rs in g C e n te r
719 E S e c o n d St . S an lo rd
172 *707
W ill c a r e t o r e ld e rly
in m y h o m e
321 5175

Oil Heaters
Cleaned
O IL H e a le r c le a n in g
a n d s e rv ic in g
C a ll R a lp h 111 i l l ]

Painting
H O U S E p a in tin g t » 0
a h o u s e A n y s ite .
433-1034. 43 5 4009

Steam and
Pressure Owning
S T E A M * n d P re ssu re C le a n in g
( M o b ile H o m e s . H ouses a n d
R e a d ) H ouse p a in tin g , a n d
m in o r c a rp e n te r re p a irs . A ll
w o rk
g u a ra n te e d
F re e
e s tim a te s 121 *704 o r 111 4721

TV Repair
Sun TV Service Center
S e rv ic e c h a rq e 17 91 p lu s p a r ls
A ll m a k e s 78* 171*

Tree Service
T R I C o u n ty T re e S e rv ic e T r i m
re m o v e ,
tr a s h ,
h a u lin g ,
fir e w o o d F r E sI 123 9*10
S T U M P S g ro u n d o u t.
R e a s o n a b le , I r e * is tlm a te s .
7**0841

JO H N A L L E N YA R D 8 T H E E
S E R V IC E . W e'll remove pine
trees. Reas, price 32113*0.

Tree 8 Slump Removal. Hedges
1 »hrub* cut back. Sell
employed Rem Tree Service
» 9 4291.

Upholstery
B IL L ‘ S P «-.IN TIN G

C A R P E N T E R r e p a ir s a n d
a d d itio n s . 20 y r s e x p
C e ll 127 1317.

H A N O Y M A N S e rv ic e s P a in tin g ,
. r e p a ir * , e t c
R e a s o n a b le
g u a r w o r k * 3 5 U S 1 . 677 4711

I n te r io r E x t e r io r p a in tin g . L ig h t
c a r p e n t r y ' H o m e s p re ss u re
c le a n e d
B u s in e s s 111 1*33.
H o m e 111 S i l t B ill Sterner

L O R E N E 'S Upholstery F r e e
p ic k u p , del 8 eel C a r l boat
seats F u rn 131 1131

�10B— Evening H erald. Sanlord. FI.

■■

Sunday. Jan. 13,1M3

L

mas good

ALL THE FUN S EXCITEMENT BEGINS TODAY
WITH W1NN-DIXIES NEW GAME!

WIN UP TO *2.000 IN CASH!

JAN. 23-16, 1983,

OVER &gt;490.000 IN PRIZES AVAILABLE!
IT'S EASY TO WIN!
i
i Phi I
» « d tr f a tio * «a*d
fort*, B M O O and O T N 1 t OOO | 1 0 0 t ' 0 s * d

|V ttrrl
4 fOOM AS ard MHN 17 OOf)
1700 170 and I TO* TV*,%*rvfe pi r'ltarH 1 1 (10
am no t

* « &gt; ■

... -

W e re giving away 10 In p s to r tw o to the
or H aw aii It you . . .
G re a t W e nil. uGreat
n m L a k e s» «*•
o b ta in a game m arker w h ic h s a y s You Qualify
fo r G reat Trip D ra w in g ." y o u a re ehqiWe for
e a c h o f the tw o d ra w in g s J u s t sub m it
q u a lifie r m arker to s to re o ffic e and fill out a
T rip E ntry Form All e n tn e s re c e iv e d by
F e b ru a ry 9. 1983 will b e e lig ib le for the&gt; first
I

WIN AGREATTRIP
VIA UNITED!

■- t

o*

IO D C n e ia a p u f u iH iid t O ly

» •*r - - • • •

game ends. Five G reat T n p s w ill again be
awarded at this tim e S e e c o lle c to r card lor
details of tnp p ru c .

SUPERBRAND G RADE

r
S T A R K IS T L IG H T C H U N K
IN O IL O R W A TE R

JIF
S M O O T H OR C R U N C H Y

TUNA

PEANUT BUTTER

6V a-oz.
CAN

4-ROLL
PKG.
(T T )
^

LARGE EGGS

, • •- 4 v I A / .

Star-KfetJ

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JANUARY 23-26. 1983
I

29c

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RC 1 0 0 , RC D IC A F IN N A T ID ,
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PACK
1 6 -o z.
BTLS.

3 2 -O Z .

BTL.
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JANUARY 23-26. 1983

It w o r k s !

ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
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1 2 -o z .
PKG.
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g el 1 Super Bonui Coupon for every

Pick up free Super Bonus CertrftcaAee
at our checkout counters,

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
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ou ipend. Pi '

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                    <text>751h Y ear, No. 154—W ednesday, F eb ru a ry 16, 1983—Sanford, F lorida 32771

Evening H erald—(USPS 481-280)—P rice 20 Cents

Sanford Joins Request For SR 436 W ork A t Night
The city of Sanford has Joined with
Altamonte Springs in asking the state
Department of Transportation to con­
centrate the reconstruction of the section
of State Road 436 from Boston Avenue to
Douglas-Wymorc road during night
hours.
The state project calls for the widening
of Altamonte Springs' main highway
from four to six lanes over the stretch
designated.
Construction is to begin around Labor

Day and it is expected to take 18 to 24
months to complete.
The city of Altamonte Springs, which
made the original request to DOT for the
night construction to ease traffic tie ups
during business hours, has since been
Joined in the request by other cities in
Seminole County and by the Council of
I/&gt;cal Governments in Seminole County.
In other action, the commission in­
structed City Manager W.E. "Pete"
Knowles to inform state Sen. Toni Jen­

nings, D-Orlando, that the city has been
able to work well with the St. Johns River
Water Management District.
Knowles said the city staff has found
the district rules and personnel open to
input, objective in approach and more
free of political pressures than any
sim ilar state agency providing
regulation of water quality.
"The city staff prefers to work with the
district personnel and while not always
agreeing on specifics, the discussion

been on a professional level," Knowles
said.
Miss Jennings wrote Knowles, advising
that the city of Jacksonville wants to be
excluded from the 19-county district and
asked Knowles' opinion of the district
operation.
"If Jacksonville leaves the district, it
would be a pity," Knowles said.
The Commission also approved
spending $5,300 from the city’s "contreated materials account ".tp.oim-hase

2 A lte rn a tiv e
D is c h a rg e

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer

Sites O ffe re d

The Trailways bus station at 1002 S.
French Ave., at the southwest comer of
10th Street may be closed by the city of
Sanford.
The
City
Commission
voted
unanimously earlier this week to give
John Root, depot owner 30 days to pave a
parking lot at the station or be faced with
the city removing his occupational
license.
City Commissioner David F arr said he
discussed the issue with Root and warned
him that the city might "lift his license"
if he didn't comply with city
requirements concerning the paving.
Some months ago Root appeared
before the City Commission to get a
waiver to allow the bus depot, then
already in operation, to continue at the
site.

Commissioner Eddie Keith voted with
his colleagues to grant the 30 days for the
improvement to be done,. But he said,
"T hat’s not a place where a bus station
ought to be. The building and site are not
adequate."
In other action, the commission:
—Gave final approval to an ordinance
permitting memorial gardens for the
burial of "crem ains" adjacent to the
churches.
Holy Cross Episcopal Church asked for
the ordinance to permit creation of the
memorial garden. The new law allows
any church to develop such a memorial.
The cremains are to be buried in
biodegradable containers.
—Transferred some |78,029 of the
money budgeted for gasoline, diesel fuels
and lubricating products from the
general government, refuse department
and utility departments budgets into the
various departments contingency ac­
count. Knowlei said with the lower costs
of fuel, that much money will be saved by
the city during the next fiscal year.
—Authorized Jack Kaplan, owner of
Weiners on Wheels, to move his stand
from Second Street at French Avenue to
2623 Orlando Drive. The Commission also
waived the city requirement that Kaplan
move his aland every two hours to a •
different location.
—Voted to Join the state, SUNCOM,
telephone network for long distance
calls. The commissioners also agreed to
authorize the telephone company to
install the equipment at city ball at a cost
of $485. Knowles said the d ty by being in
the state network will save 81,675.56 in
long distance tolls this year.
—Approved the purchase of a portable
mosquito fogger, at $1,531.63, for use at
the city's sewer and water plants.

and run until December.
Mayor Lee P. Moore said the planned
program is a good training one, adding
that good training is the basis of good lawenforcement.
Among the Instructors will be assistant
state attorneys Steve Brady, Ralph
Erikkson and Buzz Patterson, Sgt. W.R.
Bemosky, assistant to the police chief
Herb Sliea and Assistant City Manager
Steve Harriett.
\ l '.’
— DONNA ESTES

For Plant Sewage

Sanford
M a y Close
Trailways
Bus D epot

The waiver was granted contingent
upon his enlarging the waiting area at the
French Avenue building, removing old
cars from the property and paving the
parking area.
City Manager W.E. "Pete" Knowles
told commissioners that Root said he is
trying to arrange a loan for the paving.

new Smith &amp; Wesson stainless steel
firearms for the 46 sworn personnel on
the police department.
The special account contains proceeds
from property confiscated from persons
in the commission of a felony.
In another police matter, the com­
mission authorized the spending of $3,050
for eight films for a police training
course for department personnel. The
training course usinv th* film*- and
various instructors will begin this month

VOLUNTEERS
»
. . .
' •

H *fiM putt* by T»m

-

.

,,

«

Community Resource Volunteers in Seminole
County sch ools shared th eir ex p erien ces
Tuesday at the Sanlando Methodist Church in
Loiigwood. Marie Eggars, right, gave a
presentation on miniatures to members of the

group Including Superintendent Robert
Hughes, left, and Andy Shearer. Shearer is a
community resource volunteer who gives talks
on computers.
.

By City Of Sanford

Second Black Firefighter Hired
The next opening on the Sanford Fire Department will be
filled by the city's second black firefighter.

about $11,000 annually as an equipment operator and will be
paid at least $3,000 annually more when he Joins the fire
department.

City Manager W. E. "Pete" Knowles told the City Com­
mission Monday night that Thomas White, an equipment
operator with the city for the past two years, has qualified for a
firefighting position.
After seven months of going to classes at Seminole Com­
munity College, White has received his state certification as a
firefighter and emergency medical technician, Knowles said

Knowles said the d ty has been adlvely trying to recruit
minority persons in the public to apply for city positions. When
this proved Impossible, Personnel Director F rande Wynalda
sent letters to current d ty employees urging them to take
advantage of various dty-sponsored programs to upgrade
their Job opportunities.

Knowles said the city paid White’s expenses for the training
out of the d ty educational program.
He said that White will be eligible for the next opening in the
fire department. He added that White is currently earning.

White stepped forward and received the training.
White will become the d ty 's second black firefighter. The
other, Hezekiah Ross, has been with the fire department for 11
years. - DONNA ESTES

Board Considers Financing

TODAY

For New Industrial Building
Financing for a new building at the Port of
Sanford was on the agenda for today's
Seminole County Port Authority meeting.
Dennis Dolgner,- director of the port
authority, said Robert Chilton of Chilton
Construction Co., the Cocoa firm that will
construct the building, will be at the 4 p.m.
Wednesday meeting to tell board members
what financing arrangements have been made
for the facility.
Chilton has built three other facilities at the
port complex west of Sanford. In two of those
buildings, the company splits the profits with
the port authority.
Dolgner said the term s of the financing for

this building will be similar to the other two
agreements.
The port facility's buildings are now filled
and the new building is needed to meet ex­
pected industrial growth in the area, Dolgner
said.
Under terms of the port authority's contract
with Chilton, the construdlon Arm will build
this building and one more at the port. Chilton
and the port authority signed an agreement
following construction of the first building at
the port for the company to build four more.
Construction of the building is expected to be
completed within four months.
— M1CHEALBEHA

Action R eports....... .......... 2A
Around The Clock .. .......... 4A
Bridge ............ — .......... 4B
Calendar................. ..........5A
Classified Ads.................6,7 A
C om ics..................
Crossword..............
Dear A bby.............. .......... SB
D eaths..................... ........ 12A
Dr. L am b ............... .......... «B
Editorial................. .......... 4A
F lo rid a ................... ........ 12A
Horoscope ............ .......... 4B
H o sp ital................. .......... 2A
N ation.....................
People..................... .......1,8B
S p o rts ..................... 10.11A
Television ............

By MIC11EAL BEHA
llrrald Staff Writer
Plans to use Elder Road Canal as a
discharge site for an expanded lak e
Monroe Utility sewage plant have been
diverted by two proposals submitted by
County Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff.
The state Department of Environ­
m ental Regulation already has
established waste load allocations and
other restrictions for an expansion to
75,000 gallons from 50,000 gallons per day
of the plant's treatment capacity.
But residents along Elder Canal told
DER representatives at a meeting
Tuesday night at the Seminole County
Courthouse that increased flow from the
sewage plant would create flooding in
their yards.
To allevtata that situation and to
eliminate a possible source of pollutants
on Elder Canal, Kirchhoff recommended
that DER and the utility examine the
Smith Cana) and an unnamed Depart­
ment of Transportation easement near
Interstate 4 as possible recipients of the
discharge from the plant.
Of the plans to use the Elder Canal for
the discharge, Kirchhoff said, "What
we've got is a county drainage ditch
that's taking runoff that also carries
effluent."
"We as a county would rather see the
effluent going into Smith Canal than the
Elder Canal," he said. "It would help the
county if all of this went into the Smith
Canal. If it can t we'd prefer that it not go
into the Elder ditch."
He said the DOT'S casement adjacent
to the Interstate 4 Industrial Park would
make an ideal discharge site because no
residences would be affected.
Greg Drummond, representing Dr. J.
W. Hickman, owner of the industrial park

and the sewage plant, said the company
would not object to discharging into the
Smith Canal. And he supports
discharging into the DOT easement but
warned that state and federal officials
might not give approval for the plan.
Randy Armstrong, water analyst from
the DER’s Tallahassee office, said
neither Elder nor Smith canal meets
state standards. With Improvements to
the sewage treatment plant, the water
quality in Elder Canal will meet state
standards.
Armstrong said the DER is not con­
sidering granting approval to the facility
as it is now. Lake Monroe Utilities must
develop "sophisticated, well-operated
treatment to meet standards. But I don't
doubt you’ll find violations In this ditch
and others, particularly after a heavy
rain."
It is periods of heavy rain that concern
Elder Road residents. They showed the
DER representatives pictures taken
after heavy rains when water is the canal
flowed into their yards.
During heavy rains the "living filter"
system used at the plant also fails to
function as it is designed. Excess water
sends the effluent into the ditch before it
is completely treated, Armstrong said.
Kirchhoff said if either Smith Canal or
the DOT easement is used, the excess
water will not affect residents. And Paul
Porter, a consulting engineer working for
Hickman, agreed that Smith Canal
seems to be a logical discharge site.
Armstrong said Smith Canal already is
polluted.
By law, DER has until March 15 to
grant or deny a permit for the plant. But
Drummond said Hickman will waive the
deadline if DER will consider the
alternative discharge sites.

Jeno Paulucci's
M other, 89, Dead
Michelina Buratti Paulucci, 89, of Bal
Harbour, mother of Elizabeth Paulucci
Helfrich of Sanford and Jeno Paulucci of
Sanford and Duluth, Minn., died today in
a Miami hospital following a brief illness.
Bom Dec. 23,1893, In Belllsio Solfare,
Italy, she emigrated to Minnesota’s Iron
Range with her husband, EUore in 1911
settling in South Hibbing. The family
moved to Aurora, Minn., before 1918,
then returned to North Hibbing in the late
1920s where they opened Paulucci's
Grocery in 1922 operating the store for
more than 20 years. Ettore Paulucci
preceded her in death on Sept. 18,1951.
A former resident of Hibbing and
Aurora, Minn., Mrs. Paulucci main­

tained a seasonal home in Hibbing and
has been a frequent visitor to Sanford.
Other survivors include three grand­
children, Michael J. Paulucci of Duluth,
Cynthia Paulucci Soderstron of Duluth
and Sanford and Gina J. Paulucci of
Minneapolis; four great-grandchildren,
Tiffany and Brittany Soderstron of
Sanford; Jeno M. and Angela Noelle
Paulucci, both of Deluth; and a nephew,
Celso Paulucci of Belllsio Solfare, Italy.
Dougherty Funeral Home in Duluth is
in charge of arrangements. In lieu of
flowers, the fam ily has requested
memorials be made to the Church of
Madonna del Sasso, Belllsio Solfare,
Italy.

In Florida, Rep. Selph Advises

Automated Telephone Calls Illegal If Unsolicited
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Jnsolldted telephone calls placed by automated systems
h a recorded sales message, which seem to be an in'
•asingly popular marketing tool, is not only an annoyance
; it is also against the law.
According to state Rep. Carl Selph, R-Casselberry, Florida
-eady baas the solicitation method.
A recent article in the Evening Herald which told of local
lephone subscribers who had received calls from a computer
at asked questions and responded to answers or lack thereof
omfVwt s d p h to check the state books.

Selph quotes the Florida law regarding automated telephone
solicitation:
"No person shall use a telephone or knowingly allow a
telephone to be used for the purpose of offering any goods or
services for sale or conveying information regarding any
goods or services when such use involves an automated syAem
for the selection and dialing of telephone numbers and the
playing of a recorded message when a connection is completed
to the called number."
However, the law does not prohibit the use of automated
telephone systems with recorded messages when the calls ere
made or messages given solely in response to calls initiated by

the person to which the automatic call or recorded message is
given, the law adds.
Persons violating the law are guilty of a second-degree
misdemeanor punishable by up to 60 days In Jail and a $500
fine. The attorney general or any telephone company servicing
an area to which or from which automated calls a re made may
seek injunctive relief to enforce this section of the lew. Selph
For anyone anroyed by one of these calls, Selph suggests
they contact the merchant or firm on whose behalf the call was
made and inform him of Florida Statute 365.165.
"In most instances I feel the merchant will then reevaluate

his marketing strategy," said Selph, since most merchants
who use outside telephone solicitat ion are unaware of the
prohibition.
"Secondly, contact your telephone company and inform
them of this prohibited marketing practice.
"Automated dialing la Illegal under the law," agreed Jim
Schnell, community relations manager tor United Tel of
Florida,’’‘and there have been a few such cases we’re aware
of, but when the individuals were advised what they were
doing was against the law, they stopped immediately.
"We have had no complaints recently," Schnell added.
"When the lew first passed, we had one or two complaints."

�7A — Evening H e n Id . Sanford, FI.

W cd nttday.F eb. U , 1H3

NAnON

B u s in g

Has

IN BRIEF
Police Storm Farmhouse
But Murder Suspect Gone
HEATON, N.D. — (UPI) — An anti-tax zealot ac­
cused in the deaths of two U.S. marshals who tried to
arrest him, eluded police today despite a tear-gas siege
on his farm and a massive manhunt in four states and
Canada.
Gordon W. Kahl, 63, a leader of the extremist antigovemment group Posse Comitalus and considered a
local war hero, apparently disappeared in a shroud of
fog Tuesday while police staked out his family farm for
hours, then stormed it after firing tear gas inside.
Kahl’s wife and son are in police custody and neigh­
bors indicated there was a possibility he was still
hiding in the area with frier.-cu ulLur memberj of hi#'
group. There was no confirmation on the Information
from police.

Killer Stabs Killers
CHESTER, III. - (UPI) - A convicted killer with a
“ lust for m urder" may have stabbed mass sex slayer
John Wayne Gacy and another death row inmate in
hop^a of postponing his own date with the electric
chair, authorities say.
The Marard Correctional Center was placed on lockdown status Tuesday after Gacy, 43, killer oi 33 young
men and boys, was stabbed once in the upper left arm,
said Nic Howell, state Department of Corrections
spokesman.
William Jones, 2ft, Mount Vernon, convicted last year
in the stabbing death of an elderly woman, suffered
superficial wounds to the head in the indlcent, Howell
said.
Howell said the attacker, Henry Brisbon, 27, con­
victed of four murders, including the death of on in­
mate, broke away from a security officer who was
accompanying him to the law library on the second tier
of the death row unit.

Reagan To M eet The Press

United Press International
A decade after cross-town busing integrated most Southern
schools, some educators believe the practice has “outlived its
usefulness" and caused problems that must be corrected by
"Storing “ neighborhood schools."
Civil rights leaders, meanwhile, are greeting attemps to nod
busing with a weary de Ja vu, saying neighborhood schools are
segregated schools.
School boards in Nashville, Tenn., and Norfolk, Va., rekin­
dled the busing controversy by proposing lo reduce or elimi­
nate it on grounds it has lowered academic achievement,
caused a "white flight" and is too costly.
The U.S. Supreme Court shot down Nashville’s effort, but the
Norfolk school board voted this month to eliminate busing in
favor of "neighhood schools."
The Norfolk plan, developed by Board Chairman Thomas.
* 'Julmson, woiifa* establish 2£ neighborhood schools — 10 that
would be 95 percent black, and six that would be 70 percent
white.
“ Now we go to court," Johnson said.
Alabama school superintendent Wayne Teague agrees with
Norfolk's assessment of busing.
"The cross-town busing idea really created a monster that
was self destructive,’’ Teague said.
" It’s easy to look back nn history and see the r.drtakcs wc
made. If the court had said we have a freedom of choice and
strictly enforced it, we would have had a lot more integration
than we have today," Teague said.
Nashville’s effort to reduce busing with a neighborhood
schools plan was thwarted in January when the nation's
highest court refused to review the 1971 federal court order
mandating cross-town busing.
School officials in Nashville and Norfolk Insist there are no
racial overtones in their efforts to eliminate busing.
Kent Weeks, chairman of the Metropolitan Board of Educa­
tion in Nashville, says the city’s neighborhood schools plan
was intended to upgrade education by shifting the money
needed to buy and operate buses to new buildings and
programs. Busing, according to Weeks, "is a tool."
"The issue comes over the extent of busing and whether
there are some alternatives," he said. "Hie goal of this
(proposed system) is quality, integrated education. Tran­
sporting can be useful, but so can programs."

ItOutlived Its Usefulness?
Johnson says busing has actually resegregated Norfolk's
schools by prompting while families to move out of the city.
"The Norfolk school system over the last 10 years appears to
be resegregating in and of itself," Johnson said. "By that I
mean the school system is gradually losing its middle class. If
you sit there and do nothing, you're going to end up with a
racially identifiable school system (with busing)."
NAACP general counsel Thomas Adkins disagrees and
called the Norfolk plan "fraudulent."
"It is an attempt to deceive the public into thinking they’re
going to get something that they will not," Adkins said. "It is
not a plan that will save money. It Is not a plan that will move
Norfolk forward. It will move the school system backward. It
will resegregate the schools. It will divide the community."
Other Southern school administrators admit busing creates
# problems, but say it is neecsspryjn achieve dpto? creation
The U.S. Supreme Court sanctioned cross-town busing as a
practical way to achieve school desegregation in 1971 in a case
against North C arolina’s Charlotte-M ecklenburg school
system.
Twelve years later, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Superintendent
Jay Robinson says there are no plans to abandon busing.
"If we abandoned our busing and had no busing for racial
integration purposes, we would have a tremendous resegrega­
tion In our school-," Robinrcn said. "Our community has
worked too hard, too long In making this plan work to turn
around and discard It now.
"I think it will take several mo. o years to sec it through to
the point that busing will not be necessary in order to eliminate
the problems that were caused by having a segregated school
system," Robinson said.
North Carolina Superintendent A. Craig Phillips sayH busing
is a necessity caused by continually shifting housing patterns.
"I don’t think we ought to change the system, and I don’t
think we should change it," Phillips said.
Norfolk and Nashville administrators claim that students
who arc bused to achieve racial integration suffer
academically.
Thomas Tocco, superintendent of the mostly all-white Cobb
County, Ga., system, disagrees. He says there is no "direct
link" between a decline in academics and busing.
"There are a number of black school systems that have
demonstrated they can perform on or above the national

WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Reagan takes
the Environmental Protection Agency controversy and
his jobs program into the spotlight tonight with a news
conference.
The conference, to be held at B p m . in the East
Room, is Reagan’s first formal quiz session with the
While House press corps since Jan. 5.

STOCKS
Thwe quotations provided by
members
of
the
National
Association of Securities Dealers
are rep rese ntative in ter-dealer
prices as of approsimateiy noon
today. In ta r-D e a le r m arkets
c h a n g e throughout the day. Prices
do not Include retail markupmarkdown.

Bid Ask
Atlantic Bank.......... 32V* 324
Barnett B ank...........294 294

Flagship B anks.......224 23
Florida Power
&amp; L ight...................374 374
Florida Progress ...1 8 4 184
Hughes Supply..........3 3 4 34
Morrison’s .............. 184 184
NCRCorp.............1014 1024
Plessey............... 93 no trades
S co tty 's...................19 194
Southeast
204 unchanged

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: A mid-winter thaw whittled high
snowdrifts on the East Coast, thunderstorms and hail pelted
Texas, and rain from the Midwest to the South sent rivers
surging above flood levels today in Georgia. The mercury
soared Tuesday in eastern cities that were buried under up to 3
feet of snow by a weekend storm blamed for at least 71 deaths.
Washington warmed to 51; Baltimore and New York hit 50, and
Philadelphia reported 41. In Georgia, flood warnings were
posted for the Flint River, where the runolf from recent rains
is forcing the river to a crest of 3 to 4 feet above Rood stage.
Freezing rain glazed North Carolina streets.
AREA READINGS (9 a.OL): temperature: 63; overnight
low: 53; Tuesday high; 71; barometric pressure: 29.94;
relative humidity: 84 percent; winds: east at 10 mph; rain:
none, sunrise 7:03 a.m., sunset 6:16 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs. 10:42 a.m.,
11:03 p.m.; lows, 4:11 a.m., 4:35 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 10:34 a.m., 10:55 p.m.; lows, 4:02 a.m., 4:26 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 3:35 a.m., 3:58 p.m.; lows, 9:54 a.m., 10:31
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 M iler A small craft advisory is in effect. Wind easterly 10
to 15 knots becoming southeasterly and increasing to around 20
knots early today and 25 to 30 knots by tonight. Wind becoming
south to southwest 25 to 30 knots and gusty tonight then west to
northwest near 20 knots Thursday Seas 3 to 4 feet increasing to
6 to 9 feet by tonight. Becoming cloudy with scattered showers
and thunderstorms by late today and storms by late today and
tonight.
AREA FORECAST: Becoming cloudy today with showers
and thunderstorms likely by afternoon. Chance of locally
heavy rain. Highs mostly low to mid 70s. Southeasterly wind
increasing to around 20 mph and gusty hut stronger near
thunderstorms. Rain chance 70 percent. Tonight showers and
thunderstorms ending becoming partly cloudy breezy and cool
by rooming. Lows near 50 to mid 50s. Wind becoming south­
westerly around 20 mph and gusty. Rain chance 50 percent.
Thursday generally fair and cool with highs in the 60s.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hospital
Tuesday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
David D Chacay
Thelma Z. Franklin
Calvin C Haig
Robert J. Hickson Sr.
Eddie R. Luster
Barbara J. Parlier
Esther M Ward
DISCHARGES
Sanford:

E v e n in g lle m ld

Alpnonse Am.ro
Herbert H. Dyktman
Melee la F. H ill
M artha M. Wilson
Paul H. Yount
Grace F rills , DeBary
Clara Reich, DeBary
Susan L. White, DeBary
John E. Ward Jr., Dei.and
Norma M Best. Deltona
W illis R. W illiam s, Deltona
Marshall O. Smith, Sorrento
Carmen M Jimenei and baby
boy. Lake M ary

«&gt;&gt;“ &gt;

Wednesday, February u , im -V o l. 7S, No. 154
Published Daily and Sunday, aacapt Saturday by The Sanford
Herald. Inc., M l N. French Avo.. Sanford, Flo. l l t t l .
Second Class P e ita tt Paid al Sanford. Florida i l t l l
Ho.no Delivery; Week. II.M ; M axtk. U .M ; S Months, I H t t ;
Tear, S41.M. By M all: Weak S 1 .lt; Manlh. S H I ; S Months,
iM M ; year, 1ST.—____________________

H trsld Photo by Tom V ln ctn l

O n c e r e g a r d e d a s th e b e s t w a y to i n t e g r a te
s o u th e r n s c h o o ls , b u s in g is n o w c o m in g u n d e r

in c r e a s in g a t t a c k b y th o s e w ho w a n t to go h a c k to
th e “ n e ig h b o rh o o d s c h o o l" c o n c e p t.

level," Tocco says. "I don’t buy the perception that more
blacks or busing lowers standards."
Robinson also disputes the "lower scores" argument, saying
students in Charlotte-Mecklenburg now perform consistently
above national averages on standardized tests.
"We never did that before," he said. "There is clear,
unquestionable, documented evidence that children in
Charlotte-Mecklenburg are achieving at the highest level in
the history of the system. It would be very difficult to make a
case that academic achievement has suffered in our com­
munity because of busing."
Southern school administrators also disagree on the extent
of "white flight."
Norfolk commissioned a $60,000 study by sociologist David
Armor, a vocal busing opponent, and he subsequently reported
that whjtp p«r(Tj)3 wU,b.V-lpSr.*r hool children will etth e rjn ia a .'r
send their children to private schools to avoid busing.
"There’s been no doubt that some whites have left the school
system because of Integration," Robinson said. "I think the
problem has been minimal in Charlotte. There are not a high
percentage of students attending private or parochial
schools."
Cal Admson, Georgia’s assistant state superintendent, says
there has been some white flight, " tu t I think they are coming
back."
“There arc several reasons for white flight," Admson said,
"but one of the reasons students are coming back is the
economy and the improvement in school systems. There were
some 4,000 fewer students in private sdiools this year than
last."
In Dade County, Fla., school spokesman David Arnett said
administrators "diffused" opposition to busing by providing
“people with an outlet and somebody to look Into their case."
"Busing has not been a hot Issue, though there arc still areas
of discontent that we are addressing," he said, but added
busing has not outlived its usefulness and the school board is
"committed" to maintaining the desegregation of Miami-area
schools.
Superintendent Ronald McWhirt of the Charleston County
system in South Carolina says he believes systems should
spend more money on programs and teachers, not on busing.
"I don’t think busing has really contributed that much to
improving education," McWhirt said. "A lot of places across
the country have just resegregated. You constantly have that
problem with people becoming more mobile.
"Busing is not necessary to achieve better education for
whites or blacks. In Charleston County our need Is to spend
more time on improving the quality of our teachers and their
resources.”
McWhirt agreed with Johnson that taking children away
from a neighborhood school reduces parental support for
schools.
With busing, McWhirt said, "there Is a drop in the general
confidence in the school system with the public not being able
to identify with the school closest to them. If you don’t have
strong neighborhood community support, you are not going to
have a good school, whether it is predominantly white or
black."
School officials, meanwhile, will undoubtedly keep close tabs
on the Norfolk and Nashville plans as they go through the
courts.
A 1 1
"If the Norfolk plan Is upheld by the courts, I think there will
be many efforts to establish neighborhood schools," Teague
says. "I think parents of all races don’t want to see their little
children sent out of their neighborhoods."
Says Johnson of the Norfolk plan:
"Busing started out as a remedy, and the Supreme Court, in
its own word, said that was an interim remedy. Norfolk has
been declared by the court as a thoroughly, legally
desegregated school system, and that’s what sets Norfolk
apart. We’ve cured and remedied the constitutional violations
In our system, and now we’re struggling to maintain a stably
desegregated school system, not to resegregate our schools."
To which the NAACP’s Adkins replies:
"Nothing is unique in Norfolk. They simply want to
resegregale a school system. That’s not new anywhere in the
country."

F a c in g D e a t h , D e p u t y L e a p s I n t o
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Writer
When a man pointed a gun at Seminole County deputy sheriff
Wayne Murphy and said he was going to blast him, Murphy
sprang on the gunman and disarmed him.
According to Murphy's report, this is what happened:
Murphy had been called to 240F Lake Howell Apartments in
Casselberry after someone had reported hearing gunfire at the
apartment complex about 11 p.m. Tuesday.
Murphy knocked on the door of the apartment and was told
to come in. Instead, he asked the occupant to come outside. But
the man said no and added that if Murphy wanted him, he was
going to have to come (n and get him.
Murphy drew his service revolver, hid behind a wall and
pushed open the door.
Sitting on a couch inside was 36-year-old David Taylor
/ Ledford who told Murphy, who could see bullet holes in the
glass door, that someone had been shooting at the apartment.
Murphy, however, noticed two shells lying on the floor and
asked Ledford If he had a gun and Ledford said no.
By this time, Murphy had bolstered his revolver and asked
Ledford a second time If he had a handgun, and he again said
no.
Suddenly, Ledford pulled a gun from a zippered pouch which
had been hidden behind his back and pointed it at Murphy.
Murphy was only three feet away from Ledford and jumped
toward him and wrestled the gun away.
"Murphy had his gun In his holster and couldn’t reach it In
time and he knew what the outcome would be if he didn’t
disarm the man, which he did," according lo spokesman for
the sheriff's office.
Ledford was arrested and charged with aggravated assault,
improper exhibition of a firearm and discharging a firearm in
a public place. He was released from the Seminole County jail
on $5,000 bond.
TRAILER BROKEN INTO
A trailer belonging to Thomas Plyer of Casselberry was
broken into and power wrenches and tools worth $1,500 stolen
between 3 p.m. on Friday and 7 a m . Tuesday.
Entry was made by forcing open the door with a
screwdriver, deputies said. The trailer was parked on a con­
struction site nesr Sanford Auto Sales on State Road 46.
THIRSTY THIEF
A cheeky thief walked into the 7-11 convenience store at 3650
Howell Branch Road, Winter Pork, at 11 a.tn. Monday, calmly
walked up to the beer cooler and took two cases of Coors beer
worth $30.
As he walked out of the door, he said, “See ya, later," gut
into a car and drove off, Seminole County sheriff's deputies
said.

Action Reports
★

F ire s
★ C o u rts
★

P o lic e

COOLER AND TELEPHONE DAMAGED
Vandals smashed 34 panes of glass in the office doors of the
Sanford State Farm ers Market, lore a water cooler off its
mounting and smashed a telephone, causing $900 in damage.
The water cooler was thrown on a platform as the vandals
made their way along the north side of the office building
between 11 p.m. on Friday and 7:45 a.m. on Saturday.
CASHSTOLEN
Cash amounting to $700 was stolen from a van parked on
South French Avenue between 7 and 8:50 p.m. on Friday.
Police said the cash belonged to George Voeel of Sanford.
DOORS DAMAGED
Six doors leading to new condos being built on Canterbury
Drive, Lake Mary, were kicked in and about $1,800 worth of
■damages done.
The incident occurred between 6 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 a.m.
Monday at the Cardinal Industries construction site, deputies
said.
DUI ARRESTS
The following persons were arrested in Seminole County and
charged wilh driving under the influence of alcohol or dnigs:

A c t io n

— Thomas Grady Yawn, 27, 851 Onora Road, Sanford, wai
arrested and charged with driving under the influence ol
alcohol after being seen by police swerving across the road or
County Road 427. He also was charged with reckless driving
— Karen Ann Gorman of Orlando kicked and spat at r
sheriffs deputy after she had been arrested for driving undei
the influence of alcohol, according to Seminole County sheriff!
deputies.
She had been sitting in her car, which had been driven into u
post on the parking tot of Fern Park Station at 2:10 a m . or
Sunday, police said. A number of men were pushing her cat
away from the post when the police arrived. When she wai
arrested, she hung onto the steering wheel of the car ant
kicked out at the police. When she was being taken to the
Seminole County jail she kicked at the door of the cruiser ant
spat over the back seat, deputies said.
She was charged wilh driving under the Influence of alcohol,
careless driving, driving with an invalid license, disorderly
intoxication and resisting arrest without violence.
Jam es Alan Todd, 22, of Osteen, was a rre te d at 3:02 a m .
Tuesday after his car sped out of the Cavalier Inn on U.S.
Highway 17-92, Sanford, and then weaved across the road. He
was also charged with failure to maintain a single lane.
—Joseph Anthony Cecot, 56, of 978 Olive Drive, Casselberry,
was arrested
Tuesday on
Winter
Park
Drive
after his car was seen weaving across the road.
— Lawrence John Leonard, 20, of 1960 Derbyshire Road,
Maitland, was arrested at 11; 59 p m . Monday after he failed to
stay in a single lane as he was drifting down Tuscawills Road
in Winter Springs.

A Miracle! Crippled Grandmother
Walks To Save Grandson From Fire
APOPKA, — (UPI) — A woman
crippled with arthritis threw down her
crutches and curried her disabled 12year-old grandson to safety from a fire
that broke out In their home.
Her physician called It a miracle.
"It Is certainly a miracle," said Myrtle
Ricketaon, 77, who carried the 70-pound
youngster out of the house into the yard
Monday. "I couldn’t pick up that child for
two years.
"I was certainly praying that the Lord
would give me strength‘to get him out —
and he did."
Craig Ricketaon, who suffers from

cerebral palsy and Is confined to his bed,
was listed in serious condition Tuesday
from amoke inhalation at F lorida
Hospital In Orlando. Mrs. Ricketaon was
treated al the scene for a cut on her leg.
Mrs. Ricketaon suffers from "terrible"
arthritis and has used crutches to walk
during the past two years, said Dr.
Armando Rego, her physician.
"I never would have expected her lo do
that," said Rego. "1 guess she had a lot of
adrenalin in her system. That really was
1 miracle. Incredible."
Mrs Ricketaon said she was napping in
the living room of their home in the

Orlando'suburb when she awoke to tl
smell of smoke. Using crutches, si
cnecked for fire and saw smoke biltowii
from under the door of her grandson
room.
She said she dropped her crutch*
rushed 20 feet to the bedroom, dosed h
eyes, held her breath and felt her way
the boy's bed. She gathered tl
youngster In her arms, stumbled Into tl
living room, then outside to safety, si
recalled.
Fire offidals said a small, elect:
heater near the boy's bed apparent
short-circuited and ignited his mattrcj

�I

* *r+m

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. H , 1 M J -J A

ENTIRE STOCK OF
SWEATERS BY ARROW
JACKETS

BY ENGLISH SQUIRE

LO N 0.&amp; SV E

.i:&gt;..... ,

S P O R T S H IR T S
D R I V E

H tn ld p im Ioi br Tom VlntM

by a r r o w

FALL

In the photo at left, Central Florida Regional Hospital employee Jeanette
Messer writes In another donor on the back of a sandwich board worn by
hospital blood drive captain John Lake. Above, Lake solicits blood from
Sandy Milis as nurse Doris Ott hands her a f»-ee box of iron-rich raisins. Blood
donors can receive a free pass to the Central Florida Fair which runs through
Feb. 28 by giving blood at the Sanford branch of the Central Florida Blood
Rank at 1202 F. Second SI

PAN TS

BY HUBBARD

ch &amp; * u 'W £ a / L

Langley A ll For Saving River,

JW E A S T F IR S T ST.
D O W NTO W N S A N F O R D

'But D on't Use Property Taxes
Legislation Introduced by Sen.
Richard Langley, R-Clermonl, could
gut St. Johns River W ater
M anagem ent D istrict plans to
acquire over the next 10 years the
wetlands properly necessary to
increase the river's flow during the
dry season and solve its pollution
problem.
Langley's proposed legislation
forbids the use of property tax
money for a water management
group to acquire property.
Langley said he admires the St.
Johns district program's goals, but
he doesn’t admire its source of
revenues.
*Tfti not against funding the
purchasing of land," Langley said.

"And I'll gladly vote to fund it from
som ewhere else (other than
property taxes). It’s a great idea."
The St. Johns District raised
property taxes during the current
fiscal year to get sufficient money to
purchase some $9 million worth of
flood plain land this year. The
wetlands are to be used to store
water during rainy seasons and
release it into the river during dry
seasons.
The state source of funds for
acquisition of lands came to less
than I t million for the district this
year. The balance of more than $5
million will come from property
taxes.
The state increased by &amp;cents per

ERA May Succeed
This Time Around
TALLAHASSEE (U P I)—Senate P resident Pro
Tempore Jack Gordon plans a parliamentary maneuver to
show Congress that one of the states instrumental in
rejection of the Equal Rights Amendment last year will
ratify ERA II.
This message out of Florida or other states that were final
battlegrounds in the ERA fight might speed up
congressional approval of a second amendment and bolster
the chances for national ratification, he believes.
Gordon, a retired Miami Beach banker who has been the
amendment’s chief Senate sponsor over the years, wants to
get the majority of the Senate to sponsor a resolution asking
Congress to approve the amendment once again and send it
to the states.
He circulated the resolution while senators were in town
for interim committee meetings last week and got twenty
signatures, one less than a majority. He is confident of
getting more signatures and believes that the current
Senate is pro-ERA, a sharp break with its predecessors.
Gordon Intends to formally file the resolution for con­
sideration during the 1983 regular session beginning in
April, but he probably won't try to get it passed.
"The point will be made if the majority of the people
sponsor it and it Is filed," Gordon says. "It will show that
the Florida Senate' will pass the ERA if given the chance."
Florida NOW conducted a survey of the Senate following
last November’s elections and concluded that the ERA
would pass 25-15 if a vote were taken today.
The last time a vote was taken, only days before the
national deadline for ratification last summer, the Senate
rejected the amendment 22-16. Florida was one of the states
targeted by pro-ERA strategists and the setback ap­
parently ended the chances for national approval.
The Florida Senate defeated the ERA several times over
the years, while the House always passed it.

$100 the cost of docum entary
stamps, which must appear on every
sale of real property. But with the
economy down, revenues from the
source are down, necessitating the
use of property tax funds.
tangley said the state insists that
water is a state resource and thus all
the people of the state should pay the
costs of saving the St. Johns River,
not a select few — the property
owners in the 19 counties Included in
the St, Johns R iver W ater
M anagem ent D istrict including
Seminole County.
Some district boards composed of
non-elected officials are abusing
th eir property taxing powers,
Langley said. He said a, county

REP. RICHARD LANGLEY
...has proposed a bill which
would forbid the use of
property taxes for acquiring
land to ease pollution in the
St. Johns River.

water authority in Lake has run out
of locks to build with property tax
money and is now looking toward
using property tax funds for
recreation and for putting a deputy
in a speed boat on the lakes in his
home county. — DONNA ESTES.

For Artistic Excellence
Kelly Jo Stewart of ta k e Brantley High
Gold Key Awards, the highest regional
School and Jere Moore of Seminole High honor, also went to the following
School are among the Central Florida Seminole County high school artists:
students chosen to compete nationally in
ta k e Brantley: Tom Ardillo and Steve
the Scholastic Art Awards contest.
McClure; ta k e Mary: Jerri Fockler,
Their work and that of other Seminole, Debbie Franklin (2), Sean Kane, Jen­
Brevard, Orange, and Osceola County
nifer Martius, Dave Noell, Stephen
middle and senior high students is Parsons, Richard Sanborn, Michelle
presently on display at the seventh an­ Sawyer (2), April Smei, Brian Webb, and
nual Central Florida Regional Scholastic Willie W illiam s; Lakevlew Middle
Art Awards Exhibition in Robinson's at School: Ana Martinez; Lyman: Michael
the Fashion Square Mall Store in Orlando S. G eric, Wendy K afka, M argaret
through Feb. 27 during store hours.
Knapp, and Sheryl Sidman (2).
A 17-year-old resident of Altamonte
Blue ribbon finalists, which will be sent
Springs, Miss Stewart is a senior at Lake to New York for consideration by the
Brantley.
national judges were submitted by the
Her portfolio was one of 10 selected by following students: ta k e Brantley: Hiwa
regional judges to be sent to the national Kaneda and Kelly Jo Stewart (3); tak e
scholarship com petition. She also Mary: Em ery Berger, Brian Cook, Carol
received three gold key awards for other Franklin, Debbie Graham, Jim Helser,
works.
Lori tan ier, John Norton, Michelle
Miss Stewart’s art work received a Sawyer (3) and Ariquenette Whack;
Hallmark Seal and she Is a candidate to Lyman: Kimberly Fennell, Dcna Moore,
be Judged at the national level for a Terri Rosenthal, Sheryl Sidman, and
Hallmark Honor prize of (100 for her Michelle Waters.
acrylics.
Honorable mentions went to Alan
The color photography entry of Jere Flynn, Jackson Heights Middle School;
Moore was awarded a Kodak Seal and Ashley Harvey and Joseph W. Hirsch III,
will be judged nationally for a Kodak ta k e Brantley: Fianna Lane, takeview
Medallion of Excellence as well as a cash Middle: Carol Butera, Terri Rosenthal,
award. Miss Moore is a 17-year-old senior Sheryl Sidman (2), and Frank Watts,
and the daughter of Sanford Mayor and Lyman High.
Honorable mentions were also given to
Mrs. Lee P. Moore.

the following from ta k e Mary High:
Yashpaul Dogra, Becky Durak, Amy
Fluet, Carol Franklin, Sandy Glatting,
Sean Kane, Matt Paulumbo, Cathy
R ussell, R ichard Sanborn, M arkus
Siebmann, and Gary Zuyus.
Grady Kimsey, professor of art at
Seminole Community College, was one of
the seven Judges.
Entries were submitted to Robinson's
in January by art teachers in both public
and non-public secondary schools as the
best work by their students. A panel of
outstanding artists and photographers in
the Orlando area, serving as judges,
selected winners for inclusion in the
regional show.
The national exhibition of winning art
work will be held June 2-19 in the Cor­
coran Gallery in Washington, D.C.
Winning photography entries will be
exhibited in New York City Sept. 14Oct.l.
Recipient of the Best of Show Award is
Nancy Januzzi of Winter Park High
School (also a Hallmark Honor Prize
candidate). Her entry was selected by
the regional Judges from among 350
entries comprising the exhibition.
The aim of the Scholastic Art Awards
program is to encourage and recognize
talent in art among secondary school
students.

New Business Class Challenge
To First Class Airplane Travel
NEW YORK (UPI) - "The age of the passenger
airline has enormously Increased both world trade
and domestic trade in major countries," says
Jacobus J. Dekker of KLM Royal Dutch Airlines.
American companies alone are believed to spend
(20 billion a year on air travel, said Dekker, KLM’s
vice president for U.S. operations. How much is
■pent worldwide is impossible to calculate but most
of It is d early justifed, Dekker said.
"Back when businessmen had to travel by train
and steamship and take days or weeks for trips that
now take hours, the total volume of trade and of the
indiutries that depend on trade, were tiny com­
pared with now. I don’t have the figures to prove it,
but I'm convinced the correlation la real," he said.
Rationalists may argue that business could be
conducted more quickly by long distance telephone
and two-way closed circuit television and picture
phone circuits. Dekker said, however, like so many
rationalist theories, that flies in the face of in­
tractable human nature. It also flies In the face of
long-eslabliahed and unbreakable custom s,
especially In regions like the Middle East, where so
many o t the biggest trade and industrial op-

port unities lie today.
"There Is a place in business for teleconferencing
and the long distance telephone gets cheaper and
better all the time but they never can really replace
the personal relationships created b; face-to-face
meetings," Dekker said.
Nevertheless, the high cost of business travel is
forcing changes in the airline business, Dekker
added. Ever since World War II, a large proportion
of business air travel, both domestic and in­
ternational, has been first class. That seems to be
coming to an end.
The world's airlines have been establishing a new
“ business class" accommodation offering many of
the first-class amenities at about half the price. This
has been so successful on both international and
domestic routes that Dekker predicted first class on
domestic routes in Europe may be a thing of the
past and first class sections on international flights
will be reduced.
At present, he said, about 80 percent of first class
w ats are sold for business use. Tomorrow, most of
them may be sold only to wealthy persons paying
their own way rather than traveling on expense
accounts.

/

The growth of business travel has been ac­
celerating.The Airline Passenger Association says it
grew by 28.3 percent in 1977,35.5 percent In 1979 and
36.2 percent in 1981, for example. Airline travel for
vacations and personal reasons grew only 4.85 to 5.4
percent during the same year.
A recent survey by Runzhemier it Co., the
Michigan-based travel research bureau, said more
than half of all North American corporations now
send employees on plane trips in business class
instead of first class or the cheaper tourist classes.
The Airline Passenger Association study con­
firmed that business class fares are taking business
from the economy classes as well as from first
class. It also said that at least 40 airlines around the
world are offering business class fares, including,
jomewhat surprisingly, the airline of the People’s
Republic of China.
What is business class?
It’s a special section of the plane, the size varying
with the configuration of the plane and its route. It
and greater reclining ability, facilitated check-ln
and special airport lounge privileges, a greater
choice of meals aboard the plane, aitd free drinks.

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�* t

E ve n in g H erald

Winter Park Telephone Company la no more
and they’re calling it the "end of an era." The
passing was duly noted last week when the
former corporate headquarters was renamed
the Galloway Building in honor of the founding
family responsible for this truly American
success story.
Winter Park Telephone became a part of
United Telephone Company of Florida on Jan. 1,
along with other affiliates. United Telephone
System purchased the company and its two
subsidiaries in 1979.

IUSPS 4*1 1(0 )

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
W ednesday, F e b ru a ry 16, 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 Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

The Retreat
O f The ABA

By JANE CASSELBERRY

Tlie American Bar Association has sounded a
shameful retreat from the legal profession’s
ethical responsibilities. It recently rejected
guidelines that would have encautaged .aUornf‘y&lt;;
to biow the"Whistle on law-breaking by their
clients.
Not only did the ABA House of Delegates refuse
to approve the badly needed new guidelines, but
shockingly voted to weaken the current ones that
permit an attorney to disclose a client’s intention
to commit a crime.
H ie inconsistent logic of those trial lawyers who
led the successful opposition to the proposed
guidelines permits attorneys only to disclose a
client's intention to commit a crime involving the
possibility of “imminent death, or substantial
bodily harm.”
The trial lawyers lose their credibility when
they invoke the sanctity of client relationships
involving white-collar crime, but are willing to
violate a client confidence dealing with a crime of
violence.
Is any less candor from a client needed for an
attorney to prepare a defense to a murder or
assault charge than to defend against a charge of
fraud or dealing in narcotics?
The delegates also showed an appalling
disregard for the corrupting influence of whitecollar crime by rejecting a separate guideline
that would have broadened the ethical obligations
of corporate attorneys.

For it was in Maitland that the Galloways first
got into the telephone business in 1910. Carl H.

ROBERT

China Connection
Secretary of State George P. Shultz had barely
left Peking when the official Chinese news agency
delivered a commentary sharply critical of U.S.
policy in Asia. This would be surprising only if we
expected more of the Chinese connection than it
could possibly deliver.
Ever since former President Nixon made his
historic trip to China in 1972, it has been obvious
that the relationship between our two countries
would be limited by the divergence of our at­
titudes toward Taiwan. That divergence has been
papered over for the sake of making a relation­
ship possible at all.

The nation's commercial banks are com­
peting for car loans and money market
deposits, but Rector isn’t interested In at­
tracting that kind of business. Instead, he and
his staff involve themselves with the day-today operations of their clients' businesses.
Rector believes that if he can help his clients
make more money, the new bank will also
prosper.

It is reasonable to assume that Shultz let the
Chinese leaders know that the Reagan ad­
ministration’s statement last year promising to
discontinue arms sales to Taiwan at som e future
date is the most they can expect. Peking wants the
United States to be more specific about cutting off
support for Taiwan. Quite properly, Mr. Reagan
is refusing to go beyond the 1982 committment.

BERRY'S WORLD

(A lim a CEMENT

.
V

'■•4

Rector cites the example of a woman who
came to the bank shortly after her husband
died and left her with a small manufacturing
business.
"She didn't have the slightest idea how to
run the business," he says. "We went in,
found new outlets for her product, helped her
develop a marketing plan and found her a
general manager to run the business."

HOCKS AND J

t

Strength
Rests On
Weakness

JEFFREY HART

Reflections On Gandhi
This is not a movie review, and I have
deliberately chosen the title of George
Orwell's famous essay on Gandhi’s politics
for this column.
But it would be boorish not to celebrate first
of all the aesthetic beauty of the movie
"G andhi;1 which Is non* playing at theaters
around the nation. The Indian landscapes are
breathtaking, and the movie reminded me of
K ipling's g re at novel ‘'K im '' in Us
representation of the density and rich texture
of life in that country. Ben Kingsley will
surely be a strong candidate for an Academy
Award for his performance in the title role.
But let's talk about Gandhi and politics.
The movie is honest enough to raise Orwell's
question, but it allows the Mahatma to slide
off it with a single sentence equivocation.
Asked whether his techniques of non­
violence would work against Hitler, Gandhi
replies that, of course, his movement would
Buffer defeats.
"But,” he goes on, "haven’t we suffered
defeats here?"
I’m afraid that I have to agree with Orwell.
As the movie makes clear, Gandhi operated
in the context of a British administration
which, however incidentally brutal, believed
in the integrity of law. Gandhi, himself a
lawyer, knew that and played off it brilliantly.
Gandhi espoused a Hinduism which closely
resembled Franciscan Christianity in its
optimism about the effect of example upon
human nature. The British shared much of
that religious orientation, at least to the ex­
tent that they regarded some forms of mass
violence as unthinkable.
When a British officer orders his troops to
fire into a crowd of Indian demonstrators,
killing more than a thousand of them, he is
hauled before a board of inquiry which asks

him incredulously whether he was aware that
there were women and children in the crowd.
It asks, incredulously, whether he would have
used a machine gun on the civilians if he had
been able to do so. His affirmative answers,
we infer, ruin his military career. Gandhi
triumphed over the British empire, but only
because he and they shared a great many
values.
But, as Orwell points out, llie situation
would have been entirely different if Gandhi
had been opposing Hitler or Stalin.
Hiller believed in a creed of superior
strength, and he
would have regarded
Gandhi's tum-the-other-cheek philosophy as
a certain sign of weakness and inferiority.
Nor would Hitler have hesitated one minute to
slaughter Gandhi and as many millions of
Indians as it took to secure his rule.
It is a chilling thought that Hitler indeed
had his eye on the conquest of India. Had he
secured his empire in the West, and had
Rommel prevailed in Egypt, nothing stood
between the SS and the Mahatma, who would
not have had another cheek to turn.
The same is true of Stalin, who ruthlessly
eliminated all opposition, the toll running into
the tens of millions. Gandhi would have
disappeared into the cellar of the Lubianka
prison, where several times a day custodians
washed the gore off the walls with hoses.
Mohandas K. Gandhi was no doubt a great
man, but he was a 19th-century man, really,
battling 19th-century gentlemen who were
running a 19th-century empire.
The danger of the movie "Ghandhl,"
magnificent as it is, is that audiences will
leave imagining that Gandhi’s tactics are
somehow applicable to, say, the men who
built and guard the Berlin Wall.

The Saudis appear to be on their way to
winning another one.
They were uhable to persuade —or trick, as
some reports interpret maneuvers at the
aborted January’ meeting of oil ministers in
Geneva — their OPEC partners into ac­
cepting lower production quotas to bring the
world oil glut and sagging price structure
under control. But their own massive
production potential still gives them the
power to twist enough arm s roughly enough to
pretty much get what they want.
Getting their own way in these matters is
something that by now they’ve become ac­
customed to. And if they arc the realists that
few would question they are, something they
should be getting worried about.
For each of their victories leaves them in a
more exposed position—exposed to the rising
resentment of their external rivaLi and to
Internal forces they may not much longer be
able to control.
The Saudis, for all their economic strength
. and manipulative political skills, are dealing
from a position of inherent weakness. And it's
getting worse.
Consider this: They rule a territory —
nation is not quite the word — of almost a
million square miles, more than a quarter the
size of the United States, with a population of
a few millions.
Exactly how many millions la open to some
question. The Saudis, who do not like to
discussthc subject at any length, claim in the
neighborhood of 10. Non-Saudi expert
estimates go as low as five.
What is certain is that several million
residents of Saudi Arabia are not Saudis.
They are guest workers, brought In to con­
struct the facilities, operate the services,
teach the skills and do the dirty jobs of the
advanced society the Saudis are trying to
build.
They Include the usual exiled Palestinians
and expatriate Egyptians, skilled mer­
cenaries found everywhere in the Arab lands.
Also as many as half a million unskilled
Yemenis, And also large contingents of
Pakistanis, Indians, Thais, Filipinos and
Koreans.
The initial idea was that once a Saudi work
force had been introduced to modem ways
and was ready to take over, the foreigners
would be sent packing.
It hasn't worked out that way. The local
Bedouins have largely chosen to remain as
they are, the harshness of their nomadic
lifestyle eased somewhat by services and
subsidies provided by the government.
Urbanized Saudis, meanwhile, have taken
to the comforts of the new society but are
disinclined to do its work. The guest workers,
therefore, would appear to be settled in for a
long visit. And in increasing numbers.

Mini-Movie Shot Down By Interior
WASHINGTON - lik e Soviet historians
who rewrite the past every time the
Kremlin's political wind shifts, officials of the
In terio r D epartm ent have been trying
desperately to eradicate all trace of a
documentary film produced during the Carter
administration.
Fish and Wildlife Service employees were
ordered to turn in all copies of the film and
sign statements attesting that they had
complied with the confiscation decree. An
environmental group that had obtained a
copy quite legitimately was accused by an
Interior Department vigilante of having
rtulen it.

Tliere are two kinds of shot on the market —
lead and steel. Some hunters prefer lead shot.
They say it goes farther and truer, and
doesn't chew up their gun barrets the way
steel shot does.
But conservationists — including many
hunters — say there’s a serious problem with
lead shot. It pollutes the environment.
Most of the pellets shot into the air miss the
ducks or geese they're aimed at. Unlike
Longfellow's arrow, they fall to earth we
know just where — In the marshlands where
the waterfowl feed. Some are inevitably
ingested in the birds’ food; if the pellets are

S N IP tIT S /

DON GRAFF

JACK ANDERSON

Why all the uproar? Technically, I guess
you could call the documentary film "ex­
plosive." It dealt with the kind of shotgun
pellets used by the nation's nimrods.

rcmoH\

His son, Joe, went to work in 1926 as installer
repairman for the Winter Park Telephone Co.,
which listed Carl as general manager and I&gt;cna

WAGM~

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. INEA) - Today’s
typical bank is big and plastic and is located
cither on the ground floor of a building or in a
shopping center, convenient to parking and
foot traffic.
But the First National Bank of Beverly Hills
is vastly different: It’s located on a top floor
of a nondescript office building whose ground
level is occupied by branches of a major bank
and a savings and loan, and there are no signs
outside to indicate First National’s presence.
First National is dedicated to a very dif­
ferent style of banking — and it might well be
the most successful new bank ever opened in
California, which sees dozens of new banks
start up annually.
The First National Bank of Beverly Hills is
a throw-back to the old European merchant
bank, and its offices look like the California
version of a fine Swiss bank. But it’s a mer­
chant bank with a difference, for it uses all of
the electronic tools of the ’80s to implement a
centuries-old concept of banking.
The bank's method of operation is the
brainchild of its president, Richard Rector,
who has been in banking for 25 years. Before
accepting his present post, Rector headed
suburban Los Angeles' West Valley Bank,
which he helped found in 1978. The investment
firm of Wedbush, Noble and Cooke — an
expert in banking stocks — says that West
Valley has been Calilomla's most profitable
Independent bank.
"I began to do some of the things we are
doing here at West Valley," says Rector, "but
West Valley was still a commercial bank
geared to the Individual depositor. I saw in
this new bank a way to move away from that
concept and into a merchant-banking con­
cept."
Rector says First National is organized "to
meet all the financial needs of businesses with
sales between $250,000 and $100 million a
year. We are offering the small-und mediumsize business the kinds of financial services—
and more — that a Bank of America or Chase
or Citicorp offers only to its beggest clients."

We cannot believe the votes of the ABA
delegates represent a consensus of attorneys
throughout the country. The nation’s attorneys
should revolt at the callous ethical indifference
displayed by their profession’s representatives.

Both Shultz and his Peking hosts spoke of the
importance of a “stable and enduring relation­
ship" between the two countries. Stable and en­
during, yes, but given the magnitude of some of
the issues that separate us, not particularly close.

When the grocery store partnership was
dissolved in 1915, C.H. Galloway began charging
for the service. TVo years later the central office
moved from Maitland to Winter Park. The
company was formally incorporated in 1921. The
operation was handled by the Galloway family,
which lived upstairs in the telephone building at
128 E, New England Ave. Carl’s wife, Lena,
served as telephone operator while taking care
of her three sons, Joe, 11, Al, 7, and Carl Jr., who
was bom that year.

as secretary-treasurer.
In 1933, Al Galloway began work as installer
repairman for the company. Joe’s telephone
career was interrupted in 1940 when he joined the
U.S. Navy to serve during World War II. He.
remained on active duty for seven years at­
tainin'; the rank of commander.
The company went public with sale of stock in
1956. At that time C.H. Sr., was president and
chairman; Joe, executive vice president; Carl
Jr., second vice president; Al, vice president,
plant; and Lena, secretary-treasurer.
Carl H. died in 1959 and Joe was elected
president. In 1967 Joe was elected chairman of
the board and Russell P. Hulbert was elected the
first non-family member president.
Carl Jr., also a World War II Navy vet died in
1971. In 1978 Joe retired in March and died in
October. Hulbert was elected chairman.
Winter Park Telephone moved its corporate
headquarters to the seven-story building on State
Road 436 in Altamonte Springs in 1976.
Customers in Uniled’s Winter Park and South
Seminole areas will be served from ground floor
office in the building.

N ew Bank,
New Twist,
Big Gains

This would have provided a necessary incentive
for corporate attorneys to inform stockholders
and prosecutors when an executive illegally
enriches himself at corporate expense.
Inasmuch as the actions of the delegates do not
become final until ratified by a future ABA
convention, there is still some hope for guidelines
to protect the public.

The tone of the Peking commentary may have
been intended to make clear that Premier Zhao
Zivang is not satisfied with U.S. policy toward
Taiwan regardless of any positive developments
that may flow from Shultz's visit. With reports
coming out of Washington that Zhao plans to visit
the United States later this year, Peking does not
want to suggest that it is backing off from its
demand that the United States end all assistance
to Taiwan.

The last of the Seminole County family active
in the management of the Winter Park
Telephone was AI Galloway, last surviving son of
the founder, Carl Galloway. Al retired in
January 1981 and died in December of the same
year. During his 46-year-career, he had moved
up the ranks from installer-repairman to senior
vice president. He was founder and major
contributor to the telephone museum of the
Maitland Historical Society.

Galloway in partnership with his father, B.A.,
opened the Winter Park-Maltland Telephone
Exchange in the back of his father’s grocery
store in Maitland. He invested $60 in 10
telephones, a magneto switchboard and wire. He
strung the wire on trees and fences and installed
the phones free of charge to the grocery store’s
larg est custom ers. When these custom ers
learned they could call each other, the demand
for the telephones grew and so did the exchange.

i■&lt;■»e

*

**

lead, the game birds can die of lead poisoning.
Thousands reportedly have met this fate.
In hopes of weaning hunters away from
lead shot, the Fish and Wildlife Service
assigned one of its ballistic experts to make a
movie showing that steel shot — which
doesn't poison the waterfowl — is just as good
as lead shot.
The little movie was produced by an Oregon
firm, Dan Biggs Productions, at a cost to the
taxpayers of $28,500. Bui by the time U was
completed, G. Ray Arnett, a Reagan ap ­
pointee, was the Interior Department official
who oversees the Fish and Wildlife Service.
Arnett is an enthusiastic hunter. Sources
told m y associate Vicki Warren he's a
trad itio n alist—a lead-shot m an. Arnett
himself would not answer questions on the
subject.
In any case, the confiscation order was
luued. But the film hunters learned they had
missed one copy of the film. The National
Wildlife Federation had it.
A Fish and Wildlife minion was dispatched
to retrieve the film. He accused the en­
vironmental group of stealing it, but the
federation produced a bill of sale from the
producer.
Meanwhile, (lie ballistics expert lost his job
In a reduction-in-force. He's now pushing
steel shot through the Wildlife Federation and
other environmental groups.
Footnote: Dan Biggs resents the fact that

taxpayers won't be able to see the film they
paid for. He's thinking of making another
documentary — about the first film and the
administration's efforts to shoot it down.
PIE IN THE SKY: The love affair between
President Reagan and corporate America is
an open secret. Now he wants to turn over the
weather to the big corporations.
Specifically, he is considering a plan to
deliver the government's land- and weathersatellite systems to commercial firms. The
excuse is that this would cut down on the
public funds that are now spent putting the
inform ation-gathering satellites up into
space.
Unfortunately, it's not at ail clear whether
the government would wind up paying the
private satellite operators more for the in­
formation it wants than it now spends to run
its own satellites. And because the issue
hasn't exactly caught fire on Capitol Hill, no
definitive cost comparisons have been made.
One of the few members of Congress who
has taken an active interest in the scheme is
Rep. Jam es Scheuer, D-N.Y.
"Currently these programs cost the tax­
payer less than $200 million per year," he told
ray reporter Carolyn F arrar. "The only
serious proposal for transfer (to the private
sector) would cost well over $300 million per
year."
, Scheuer’s uneasiness over the cost question
got what might be unintended support from b

leading proponent of satellite privatization:
COMSAT General Corp., which is practically
salivating at the prospect of taking over the
weather satellites. COMSAT evidently thinks
it will make a bundle on any transfer.
In fact, COMSAT's big worry Is the federal
procurement law that forbids the award of a
government contract on a non-competitive
basis unless only one company is qualified to
handle the job.
Severs] other companies have shown an
interest in running the satellites. So COM­
SAT’S law yers wrote the Commerce
D epartm ent expressing hope th a t the
bothersome regulation could somehow be
evaded.
"In developing a ... plan to accomplish
these (transfers), it is essential to avoid the
Inflexibilities which result from excessive
reliance on procurement law precedents,"
the memo said. It described the competitivebid process as "utterly unworkable, un­
necessary and inappropriate in this case."
Critics of the transfer plan have voiced
other concerns besides cost. One. involves
national security. As a congressional aide put
it, "Will the military trust private industry
enough not to send up duplicate satellites?"
Sen. Larry Preaaler, R-S.D., has sponsored
legislation to require congressional approval
oefore the government luma the satellite
business over to private Industry. Rep.
Scheuer has scheduled hearings for next
month.

�*

Q uock W alker's Legacy

Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. 1 4 ,1 M J -5 A

.

He Was America's First Freed S

EDITOR’S NOTE: Today, the Herald publishes
the following article on Quock Walker In recognition
of February as Black History Month.

eventually died herself, and Jennison claimed
control of the slaves. That did not sit well with some
of the woman's other heirs, principally a son and
BARRE, Mass. (NEA)—The year 1983 was In­ local politician named John Caldwell. He didn't
troduced with familiar routine In this well- think Jennison deserved the slaves, and lie set out to
preserved New England community. The mer­ get them back.
It's clear what motivated the latter Caldwell in
chants held post-Christmas sales, the residents
wished one another good health and prosperity, and the pursuit. He is said to have hated Jennison, and
thus he may have acted for malicious revenge. Then
the streets were once again frosted with snow.
again, there arc some indications that he was
But there Is one thing different about 1983 here.
simply and genuinely Interested in attacking the
It’s the 200th anniversary of the Quock Walker case.
Inhuman evils of the slave trade.
You’ve never heard of the Quock Walker case?
In any event, Caldwell asked Quock Walker to run
Neither has everyone in Barre. Yet the anniversary
away from Jennison in 1781. He told the 28*year-old
is worth remembering Just the same. Walker, a
local slave, was the first black man in America to man that he was being held in servitude illegally.
He said Quock still belonged to the Caldwells, and
ask for and receive a courtroom declaration against
they were going to grant him freedom and provide
the institution of human bondage.
him with a wage earning Job. When Jennison found
The particulars of the m atter are kept in the files
of the Enrre Hirtorical Society. It should bt-M ird. out he was furious. He wenLLoJhe Caldwell farm
and found Walker working on the crops. Reportedly,
they are incomplete. Some of the facts have been
he beat the black man with the handle of a hoe, and
lost in time, others have been bent by conjecture. In
dragged him back to his own holdings. Later he
general, though, the whole thing is thought to have
threw Walker into a shed, and locked him there for
begun sometime In 1754.
several hours.
Slavery existed all along the Atlantic coast then.
When Walker got out of the shed he fled again, this
And in that year a Barre land-owner named James
time to the law. And thereupon the case was given
Caldwell purchased three Negroes for 168 pounds,
British currency.
over to the courts. Encouraged by Caldw.ll, Quock
Walker sued Jennison for assault and battery, and
A few years later Caldwell was killed by an ac­
Jennison, in turn, filed a counter charge that
cident. The story is that hr was struck by lightning
Caldweli had stolen away his property.
in a field. Therefore his property, the slaves in­
The litigation took more than a year, and the
cluded, was given over to his wife, who, following a
decent interval, then married another Barre lan- arguments were heard in the county, the superior
owner, one Nathaniel Jennison. Alas, the woman and the state supreme courts. The lower courts

Central Florida A Rising
Star In The Movie Industry
Special To The Herald
Ranked third in film production behind
California and New York, Florida, specifically
Central Florida, is the up-and-coming "object
of affection" of over 1,000 movie and television
commercial producers.
The ever-increasing number of producers
coming to Florida marks a significant trend
towards the state becoming the film capital of
the world. Experts predict this could happen
by year 2,000, possibly sooner.
And with Florida's increasing popularity as
a filming location comes a great deal of
money, according to the state Commerce
Department's Motion Picture and Television
Bureau.
From January, 1979, lo December, 1982,
over (250 million was invested in Florida's
film production, and $214 million in television
commercials.
In 1982 alone, approximately 32 films were
produced at a coat o f.$78 million. And the
production of over 700 cbmmcrdals and
training films during the same period brought
in another $64 million, the department says.
Taking Into account the vast amount of
money associated with the movie Industry and
the fact that 60 percent of a film's budget
(which averages $5-|7 million) stays where the
film is shot, many Floridians no doubt would
like to see state predictions that Florida will
soon become the star of the entertainment
industry come true.
Florida's rise to stardom can be attributed
to the state's wide variety of terrain, its yearround warm climate and, according to Ray
Quinn, a senior representative with the Motion
Picture and Television Bureau, "the fact that
we have competent people who come in on
time and on budget."
And the state’s geographic center —
Orlando—Quinn added, “ has the potential to
become the center of the movie Industry’s
increasing activity in Florida." Easily ac­
cessible to other portions of the state with an
abundance of talent and facilities, Orlando is
ideally located, and has the airport and In­
ternational services necessary to film crews.
Production in Orlando is off to a good start
for 1983. J AWJWD, the third sequel to JAWS, is
currently being filmed at Sea World, starring
Dennis Quald, Bess Armstrong and I^ou
Cosset, Jr, Quinn said.
A London film named The Creative Part­
nership is scheduled to film two commercials
for a cosmetic line in Orlando at the end of
February, he said.

O n The Run
MINEOLA, N.Y. (U P I)-A
man said he forced 15 cars off
the road, careened onto
railro a d
tru ck s
and
assaulted two police officers
because he was scared of
getting a traffic ticket,
authorities said.
Donald Douglas, 33, of
H untington pleaded guilty
in Nassau County Court to a
se c o n d -d e g re e a s s a u lt
charge.
"I was driving with a
suspended license, and I took
off because I was scared
about being in trouble again,"
Douglas told Judge John
Thorp.
, Authoritier said police saw
Douglas ru.i a red light last
November in Oyster Bay.
• As they chased him,
Douglas's auto forced the IS
cars otf the road, police said.
He then drove 100 yards on a
Tailr-jad track before coming
,to a halt.
When officer William
Maihieson reached the car
,and tried to remove the
f)gnitlon key, police said,
.Jkmgias started the vehicle
Again and dragged the
.policeman for 15 feet.

made their judgments in 1782. They found that the
defendant was not properly a slave, and they
awarded 8 pounds in damages for the assault.
Then, in 1783, the supreme court weighed in. And
history was made. Not only was Walker a free man,
the court said, but the laws of the commonwealth
clearly declared that every citizen of the state,
regardless of his race, was "entitled to liberty and
to have it guarded by law."
Thus Massachusetts became the first state in the
union to abolish slavery. And that encouraged other
Jurisdictions to follow the example. Every slave in
Massachusetts was set free by the end of the
decade, and, by the early 1800s there were no slaves
remaining in any northern state.
Interestingly, Quock Walker more or less
disappeared along with the custom. No one seems to
have any records of the man following the trials. He
may have returned to Barre, or he may have moved
elsewhere lo escape possible repercussions. Nobody
even knows when the former slave died.
And no seems to care a lot, either. Not at least in
his hometown. Today Walker is all but forgotten in
Barre. Many people don't know the name at all.
Helen Connington, a local historian, says there is
not so much as a plaque in the park to note the
events of twu centuries ago.
Yrt nevermind the lack of memorials. Mrs.
Connington says the important thing is that Quock
Walker’s legacy is still strictly commemorated
here. There are now 4,000 people in Barre, she says,
and three of them arc black, and every one of them,
and color notwithstanding, are free.

A M ER IC A S FAMILY D IJU G STORE

TOOGOODQ A I Cl
TOMISS dALES

ECKE
t

F
■

&lt; v t:

11Htl•1
jij

i

EVEREADY

SUPER HEAVY DUTY

JE R R Y B A R R E TT
Efforts to promote Central Florida as an
attractive location for filming are currently
underway by the Florida Motion Picture and
Television Association’s Central Chapter. In
addition to actively recruiting production
companies to scout the area’s locations and
facilities, the FMPTA is sponsoring the
publication of a 250-page inform ational
directory for producers.
"The directory will be an exceptionally
useful tool for producers who have expressed
an interest in coming to Central Florida,"
explained Jerry Barrett, president of the
FMPTA’s Central Chapter who is a stuntman
and frequent stand-in for Paul Newman.
"It will be a comprehensive guide to the
area's facilities, talent, support services,
available equipment and locations.
"And it will save these producers big bucks
by eliminating much of the work they have to
do In the pre-production stage of filming."
The demand for a sourcebook of this type is
evidenced by over 1,000 requests from
producers and production companies across
the nation for information on Centra) Florida.
The directory’s publication date is set for late
spring.
"This directory will bring more filming to
Florida," Barrett said. "And that means more
work for everybody, more money for
everybody."

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17
Free Income Tax Aid for the Elderly, B a m. to 1
p.m., Hacienda Village, State Road 434, Winter
Springs.
Casselberry Alcoholics Anonymous,
8 p.m.,
Ascension Lutheran Church, Overbrook Drive.
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m., Florida Power and
Light building, Myrtle Avenue. Open discussion.
Seminole Halfway House AA, 8 p.m., speaker, Lake
Minnie Road, Sanford.
Lake Mary Rotary Club, 8 a.m., U k e Mary High
School.
O vereaten Anonymous, open, 7:30 p jn ., Community
United Methodist Church, Highway 17-92, Casselberry.
Sanford-Seminole Jaycees, 8 p.m., Jaycee building,
French Avenue.
O vereaten Anonymous, (open), 7:30 p.m., Com­
munity United Methodist Church, Highway 17-92,
Casselberry
Winter Springs Sertoma. 7:30 a jn ., Big Cypress.
Ssnford Toastmaster, 7:15 a.m ., Sanford Airport
Restaurant.
Sanford Rotary Club, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford AA Women's Group, 2 p.m., 1201W. first St.,
Sanford.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY II
Jewish Community Center Couples Group annual
Purlm Old TV Show Costume Party, 8 p.m., JCC, 851N.
Maitland Ave., Maitland. Call 862-2214.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., (open), Florida
Power It Light Co., 301 S. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.

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Sanfcud P lus
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49? US Hwy 17-92 At SR 434
434 C»n:#f 949 s n 434
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484 E Altamonte Dr
974 W SR 436

ORANGE CITY

foui I owne* Shopping Cent*f

■■'

�* A — Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. i* . 1913

ey Fas
Casual looks
for misses.

FREDDIE HOWARD
Pvt. Freddie Lenar Howard, ton
of Bruce Brown ol Orlando and
Mrs Betty Ann Howard Ol 114
Anderson D riv e In Sanford,
recently returned home on 1/ days
leave from P a rrit Island, s c ,
alter completing 11 weeks ol
recruit training.
O urlng
tra in in g ,
Howard
received formal Instruction In first
aid,
physical
fitness,
m arksm anship, dose combat
.. technioues. Marine Corps history.
t r t t t m i • irri! cl y, drill', ana
nuclear, biological and chemical
warfare.
Following h it leave, Howard w ill
report lo Marine Corps Base.
Camp Leleune. N.C., for formal
instruction In the infantry.
There he w ill t« Instructed w,
the varied duties ol rifleman,
reconnaissance man machine
gunner, mortar man. assault man.
anti tank assault guioed missile
man and Infantry unit leader.
Howard Is a i m graduate ol
Seminole High School.

ROBIN RUNION
A irm a n Robin R.
Runlon,
daughter of Ernest C. and Helen 0.
Runlon ol IQS Aiaiea Lane in
Sanford has been assigned to
Keetler A ir Force Base. Miss.,
altar completing A ir Force basic
(raining.
During the Six weeks at Lack,
land A ir Force Bate, Texas, the
airman studied the A ir Force
mission, organfiation and customs
and received special training In
human relations
In addition, airmen who com
plate basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree In
applied science through the
Community College ol the A ir
Force
The airman w ill now receive
tp e c fa liie d Instructio n In the
administration fie ld .,
She Is a 1992 graduate of Dun.
nellon High School.

THOMAS SCARPELLO

Save 25%

Our Par Four* match-ups greet spring
with all the wit and charm it deserves.
Casual skirts, jackals, tops, shorts and
pants in a rainbow of solids and stripes.
Great accents for good looks all season
long. Misses' sizes.

Sale $18

A. Reg. $24. Candy stripe jacket with %
length cuffed sleeves and two side
pockets.

Sale $9

____

Reg. $12. Short sleeve solid color top with
four button placket collar.

Sale 15.75

Reg. $21. Solid color sxirt with contrasting
belt, four pockets and fly front. Poly/
cotton twill.

Sale 10.50

B. Reg, $14. Cotton/polyester short sleeve
stripe shirt Assorted stripe colors.

Sale 1725
Reg. $23. Man-tailored pant with
contrasting belt and front and back
pockets. Poly/cotton twill in solid colors.

Sale 10.50

C. Reg. $14. Short sleeve stripe shirt of
cotton/polyester. Contrasting collar and
sleeve band. Assorted stripe colors.

Sale $15

Reg. $20. Solid color bermuda shorts with
cuffed legs, front and back pockets. Belt
looped waist. Assorted solid colors.

Thomas Joseph Scarpello. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W illiam
Scarpello of 44S E. Alpine St.. In
AltanTonte Springs, hat entitled in
the U S. Marine Corps.
Scarpello w ill leave Jan. 10 for
11 weeks of recrulh training ai the
M arine Corps R e cruit Oepot,
Parris Island, S.C. Upon com­
pletion ol recruit training. Scar
pello w ill be home for a 10-day
leave before going on for further
technical training In a form al
ASarlne Corps school.
Scarpello entitled for four yean
with a guaranteed assignment in
Aviation Electronics.
Scarpello I t a senior at Lyman
High School.

0

on all casual tops and shorts.
Tees for tops,
makes short stories.
Great sports deserve great looks like
these for spring fun. Terrific lees with
stripes or trimmed with a scalloped edge.
Shorts that are cool and kicky in cotton
or poly/cotton.

S ale *6

A. Reg. $8. Scallop too icp in assorted
colors for misses' sizes.

6.37
Reg. 8.50. °oly/cotton fennis shorts
with side poc.iets. Assorted solids in
misses' sizes.

S ale 6.75
B. Reg. $9. Striped top with shoe string
shoulder ties and cropped bottom.
Junior sizes

Sale 8.25

Reg. $11. Solid color shoe string waist tie
short. Assorted colors for junior sizes

S ale 7.50
C. Reg. $10. Pull-on boxer style short
features snap sides. Solid colors for
junior sizes.

S ale 7.50
D. Reg. $10. Dove short with contrast
piping and side pockets. S,M,L sizes.
Assorted solid colors.

WILLIAM COX
W illiam Jamas Cox, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Noel Cox of 40f E.
Ridgewood SI. in A ltam onte
Springs, has enlisted in the U.S.
Marine Corps.
Cox w ill leave Jan. 10 for 11
weeks of recruit training at tha
M arina Corps R tc ru lt Depot,
Parris Island, S.C. Upon com
pietion of racrult training, Cut
w ill ba home for a 10 day leave
before going on for fu rth e r
technical training In a formal
Marina Corps school.
Cox enlisted for four years with
a guaranteed assignment In the
M arine
Corps
M echanicalE le d rlce l Program
Cox Is a senior at Lyman High
School.

KELLI LUDWIG
Marina Pvt. Kelli L. Ludwig,
daughter of Judith A. Long of 125
Boreda Road in Sanford, has
completed recruit training at the
M arine Corps R e cruit Depot,
Parris Island, S.C.
During the tig h t week training
cycle, she was introduced to the
typical daily routine that she w ill
experience during her enlistment
and studied the personal and
p r o f e s s io n a l
s ta n d a rd s
tra d itio n a lly
exh ib ited
by
Marines.
She participated in an actlva
physical co n ditioning p ro gra m
and gained prof iciency in a variety
ol m ilita ry skills Including close
order d rill and t in t aid. Team
w o ik and le lf 'd it c ip lln e w a r*
em phaslted
throu gh ou t
tha
training cycle.

JOSEPH URBAN1AK
Pvt. Joseph T. Urbenlek III, son
of Josapn T. Urbenlek Jr. ol 1411
W. Stanley St , in Longwood and
Linda S. Rotecreni of AST Fenton
Place In Allam onla Springs, has
completed bask training at Fort
Jackson, S.C.
During the training, ha received
In stru ctio n
In
d r i ll
and
cerem onies, weapons,
m ap
reading, tactics, m ilita ry cour­
tesy, m ilita ry lu stke , firs t aid. and
Arm y histary and traditions.
The private i t a IM2 graduate of
Lyman High School tn Longwood.

DOUGLAS IRLANDI
Airm an Douglas A. Irlandl, son
of Bobbe A. Irlandl of IM lo llg e tt
T rail in Longwood and Santo A.
Irlandl of at O verhill Road In
W illia m s p o rt, P a., h a t bean
assigned to Keasier A ir Force
Base, Miss., attar completing A ir
Force bask training.
O urlng tha s i* weeks at
Lackland A ir Force Base. Texas,
the eirm en studied the A ir Fore*
mission, organization and customs
and received special training in
j human relations.
• In addition, airm an who com
.pieta bask training earn credits
toward an associate degree in
applied science th ro u g h the
Community College of the A ir
'.Force
The airm an w ill now receive
sp e cla llia d In s tru c tio n In tha
adminislration field.
I triandl it a i f f * ow Suttit of
Lake Brantley High School in
Forest Ctty.

Save
oncasual
appliqued
Sale

9 .7 5 e a

Reg. $13 ea. Play it cool with sizzling 25%
savings on colorful appliqued tops. Spring
and summer fun tops in assorted colors and
designs. Misses' sizes.

25%off
great-looking
skirtstoo.
Sale

1 5 7 5 .

Rag. $21 ea. We've got the skirts to
match. All with pretty appliques to
coordinate with our tops. Choose from
assorted styles and colors, with prices
to make you smile. Misses' sizes.

Sat.

Save on our
entire line of
swimwear.
Our fashion swimwear is some of the
prettiest under the sun. And prices are
taking a dive. Splashy swimwear to suit
your kind of fun, with styles, colors, and
materials to brighten-up your day. For
misses and juniors.

Sale 16.50

A. Reg. $22. Two piece string bikini in
assorted colors. Junior sizes.

Sale 21.75

B. Reg. $29. One piece spaghetti strap
bandeau suit with colorful stripes.
Misses’ sizes.

Sale 19.50

C. Reg. $26. Two piece black and striped
suit of nylon/spandex. Junior sizes.

Sale 19.50

D. Reg. $26. One piece striped suit with
tie waist. Assorted striped colors for
junior sizes.

Sale $24

E. Reg. $32. One piece black and striped
suit with tie waist. Junior sizes.

Mon. thur Sat.
10 to 9 PM
Sunday 12:30 to 5:30

�.V .W .’W M W .W W .

E vening H erald, Sanford, F I.

Wednesday# Feb. U , i f U —7A

M an y Farm ers
In Panhandle
Can t Pay Loan
Save on
shirts too!

Sale 7.49

A. Reg. 9.99. Hawaiian look, print shirt
of easy care fabric. Full button front with
chest pocket in assorted colors.

Sale 11.99 - ■

Reg. $16.100% cotton, active short. Half

elastic waist, button closure in front, cargo
pockets, one rear patch pocket with button
through closure. Assorted colors.

Sale 13.50

B. Reg. $18.2 plus 2 * knit pullover. 100%
polyester, with knit collar and sleeve band.
Available in assorted pocket and piping
treatments.

Sale 11.25

Reg. $15. Polyester and cotton oxford
weave walk short with one back patch
pocket. Elastic back waist and extension
tab waistband.

. Sale 11.25

C. Reg. $15. Polyester and cotton Par
Four8 sportshirt with knit collar and rib
cuffs. 3 button placket style in wide and
narrow stripes.

Sale 13.50

Reg. $18. Par Four8 shorts with matching
belt. Polyester and cotton oxford cloth in
assorted colors. Men's sizes.

Sale 24.99

D. Reg. $32. Our traditional boat shoe
moccasins. Featuring durable leather
uppers, flexible squee-gee soles with
traction bottom, and rawhide laces. In
brown and tan. Men's sizes.

Save on casual shirts and slacks.
Sale 11.99

A. Reg. $16.60% polyester/20% cotton
short sleeve shirt. Cotton on the inside
for comfort, the polyester on the outside
for durability Assorted styles and colors

S ale17.25

Reg. $23. The Sport Slack™ of 100%
texturized polyester. Matching coordinated
belt and reinforced waistband. Assorted
colors.

B. Reg. $15. Polyester and cotton stripe
golf shirt in flair collar style. Sutton chest
pocket and cuffed sleeve.

Reg. $25. Par Four' slack of polyester
and cotton duck cloth. Matching belt with
leather tabs. 2 back pockets.

Sale
18.75
Reg.

C.
$25. Hunt Club™ 100% cotton
stripe pullover. Soft interlock knit with
ribbed cuff. Fashion colors
Hunt Club™ solid. Reg. $22 Sale 16.50

Reg. $36. Hunt Club™ slack of 60% cotton
40% polyester. 2 back pockets, matching
belt with leather tabs

2 5 T o 4 0 % O f f A ll O u r A u to m o tiv e
2 5 %

O ff

E v e ry L a s t T ir e

Men’s Clothing Sale
Ends Sat. Feb. 19th

4 0 %

O ff

Every Last Replacement Part
Shocks
Brake Kits
Tune-up Kits
Filters

JCPenney

2 5 %

O ff

E v e ry L a s t B a tte ry
i
While Supply Lasts
No Special Orders
No Lay-A-Ways

PENSACOLA (UPI) - - At least 50 percent of the fanners in
the Florida Panhandle are unable to repay loans for operating
expenses and capital Improvements because of the current
recession, bank officials say.
"It's Just a crying shame that they are working as hard as
ever and producing as much If not more than ever, and yet,
they are still getting further and further behind on payments,"
Jerry Jackson, vice president of the Escambia County Bank in
Flomaton, Ala., said Monday.
Officials with banks and loan companies estimated 50 to 75
percent of the farm ers In the Panhandle and south Alabama
are behind on loan payments. They expect it to take at leart
three years before commodity prices Increase enough for
farm ers to make b profit.
"We carry forward — It seems like every year — a few more
farm loans from the past that have not been paid on," Jackson
said. "It used to be very much the exception but now it's sort of
tb? n te &amp; c tc a o s t of your fanners do tend to carry ovor iAftio
of their debts from prior years."
Although many are behind on payments, officials said they
usually allow farm ers to restructure their debt payments and
make few foreclosures on farms.
"We are trying to hold foreclosures to a minimum," said
Wade Hayslipof the Panhandle Production Credit Association,
a farmer-owned cooperative. "That’s a last means of collec­
ting a b a n — something for after all eLae fails. We are not out
to take a m an's farm .”
Farm ers said the low selling price for com and soybeans, the
two major crops In the Panhandle, make it Impossible to earn
a profit.
Com sells for (2 to $2.50 a bushel but costs more than $3 a
bushel to produce. Soybeans bring about $5 a bushel and cost
nearly |7 to grow.
"There's no way this year that a farm er can plant a crop and
cover his costs In the Panhandle of Florida or south Alabama,"
Marion Tidwell, a Santa Rosa county farmer, said.

Oil Companies
Pay Billions
For Innocence
By Association
NEW YORK (UPI) — If people are capable of perceiving
such a thing as guilt by association, then it only follows that
Innocence by association should be equally viable, which Is
why the Gulf OU Co. so far has sunk more than 130 million In
the National Geographic specials on PBS.
Everybody picks on oil companies. They are variously ac­
cused ot orchestrating everything I r a n " o b s c e n e p r o &amp; t s " and
consumer ripens to envtommental exploitation, pollution and
national resource banditryEdward Aduss, m anager of corporate advertising for Gulf,
says it Isn't so, but he admits that the allegations — fueled by
emption, not gasoline — sometimes outrun anything the oil
companies can put on the track by way of refutation.
"It is a very difficult image which I think not only Gulf but
the entire Industry faces — not only the oil Industry, but the
chemical industry and the timber industry as well," Aduss
said In a telephone interview from his Pittsburgh office.
"People enjoy all the things... that these m ajor corporations
and industries provide, but they don't like to see them
destroying the environment, and I certainly can appreciate
that. I live in the enviomment too, and I want to see it kept
Intact and preserved."
Gulf's answer to all the bad press and gossip whispers is, and
has been for years, a venture called “ Partners In Discovery,"
by which Gulf has managed a respectable “m arriage" to the
National Geographic Society.
Who, after all, could hate National Geographic? Only a
cultural cretin could growl at such brilliant PBS specials as
"Polar Bear Alert" or "The Sharks."
They constitute the most watched and critically acclaimed
fare on public television — "The Sharks" being No. 1 after
bumping a 1975 masterpiece called "The Incredible Machine"
out of the lead last year.
The Importance of such popularity could scarcely be lost on
any businessman, which is why Gulf now is entering its eighth
season as an underwriter.
"The National Geographic specials and the National
Geographic Society embody what we believe are the same
objectives that we, as a corporation, like to embody — our
concern for the enviomment and our desire to present really
high quality alUemative television programming,” Aduss
said.
"The majority of National Geographic specials tend to deal
with envlommental m atters — the preservation of animals or
land and things we have to be careful as humans to preserve
and share the earth with.
"We don't want to have people think that we're providing
them with the energy they need while simultaneously de­
stroying the environment."
The public can only be grateful for Gulf’s multimillion-dollar
concern over Its Image. Because of it, they have two more
breath-taking specials Immediately on tap.
On Wednesday, the National Geographic cam eras go to
Australia to bring back everything from cuddly koalas and
wooly wombats to ill-tempered Tasmanian devils and patently
Impossible platypusses.
Thereafter, National Geographic will attempt to "Save the
Pandas," with footage shot in China.
Exxon, the biggest underwriter, spent $5.5 million, Mobil
forked over $45 million, Chevron anted up $35 million, and
four other firms Joined with leaser amounts to bring the total
oil company tab to nearly $30 million.

Bar Association
Eiects Officers
The Seminole County Bar Association's officers for 1963,
elected at the annual meeting recently, Indude: Richard
Mamele, president; Jam es Barks, vice president; Gary
Shader, treasurer; Charlene Kelley secretary; and Thomas
Speer and Robert Fisher, directors.
Also elected were the following officers for the Seminole
County Bar Association Legal Aid Society: Larry Solodky,
president; Stephen Coover, vice president; Harry R dd,
secretary-treasurer; and William Stem, Harvey Alper and
Terrence Ackert, directors.
%

�«

»A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Feb, n , i»t3

For Southern Business

H o n e y B ee Is Im p o rta n t Econom ic Link
WIMAUMA, Fla. (UPI) — The hard-working honey bee that
few people notice unless they are stung is one of the most
beneficial insects to man and represents an important place in
Florida’s economy.
Florida and California run neck-and-neck In the production
of honey with the leader in any given year determined by
weather and crop conditions.
But the production of honey is only the most visible benefit of
the honey bee.Its real value to man is as pollinator of plants.
IJoyd B. Shearman Jr., who maintains 1,500 colonies of bees
at his rural home in Hillsborough County, said honey
production nationally is a 1100 million-year industry, but said
bees pollinate many other crops.
"For some farm crops it (bee pollination) is a necessity,"
Slieai man said, "melons are completely dependent on bees. So
are a lot of seed crops such as alfalfa. And hybrids are
dependent on honey bees.”
. .nnnn maintains a stationary optiStWii, setting otu nis
1,500 hives within a 20-mile radius of his home, bringing the
honey-filled hives back to his own "honey bam " where the
particular season is over.
Many other beekeepers are transient, following crops much
like the migrant labor crews that will follow later when crops
arc to be harvested, going into areas where crops are going
into hW m

The general rule of thumb is to place one hive for every acre
of crop to be pollinated.
"The price the farmer is charged varies," Shearman said.
"There is a lot of competition and I generally charge $20 a hive
for the length of the blossom time."
Both methods have their strong points and their weak points.
By being stationary, Shearman cuts down on the tran­
sportation overhead which can be tremendous for the traveling
beekeepers. But when weather conditions cut back on the
available bloom, he suffers.
"With freezes two years in a row, it has been a total disaster
in Florida," Shearman said. "We had been making good
profits but the last two years we have lost money. I’m fixing
some pallets so I’ll be able to move again if I have to.”
But moving hives is not without its own perils.
Elvin Oakes was cn route from North Dakota to a wintering
sit* in Hahira, G a.,in September when he. hit a curb in I-ari­
sing, III. The impart knocked his load of hives to the ground,
freeing an estimated 10 million agitated bees.
Beekeepers were called in to the south Chicago suburb to try
to round them up but as dawn neared and the possibility grew
that the sunlight would cause the bees to swarm, the decision
was made to kill the bees.
Those already banded together in small swarms were
doused with gasoline and burned a id the others were killed

when they were attracted to the fire. The loss was estimated at
$60,000.
Two-legged thieves pose as much a problem to beekeepers
as to the natural four-legged predators.
"Theft is getting to be a problem," Shearman said, "For 30
to 40 years the wholesale price of honey remained constant at
12-15 cents a pound, while the cost of production was going up
500 per cent. Then, In 1969, there started to be a shortage as
people became more health food conscious and exports,
particularly to Japan and Germany, increased.
"That’s when theft really became a substantial problem,”
he said. " It’s almost impossible to get a conviction. The hives
are branded but the thieves Just take off the brands. You’ve got
to catch them loading the hives on the truck almost."
That’s Just what happened last August in the small com­
munity of North Port, south of Sarasota.
A utbw ykj tracing a license number given for z man seen
stealing hives from groves in the orea located the truck and 57
stolen hives and arrested Alan Brady Whlscnant of Rubino on a
charge grand theft.
The hives and their estimated 3i million bees still are Im­
pounded at the North Port Police Station. Police said the hives
belonged lo three major bee companies which had set them out
in the groves.
The major iour-legged predator, particularly in Florida, is

What Is Sen. Howard Baker Up To ?
can be pursued outside the confines of Capitol Mansfield n little over and Scott a little under
— when retirem ent becomes an un­
Hill.
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, derstandable option.
Baker is 57. That makes him a virtual
who held that post for 16 years, did just that in
1976 and immediately became U.S. am­ adolescent in the Senate, where members go
on and on — in the cases of Jennings Randolph
bassador to Japan, where he still reigns.
And Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott, of West Virginia, John Stennis of Mississippi
the Republican leader for part of that lime, and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina Into
also stepped down, although under con­ their 80s.
Moreover, Baker is at the peak of his powers
siderable pressure from his state.
But Mansfield and Scott were around 70 — — rated by Republicans and Democrats as
possibly the most effective majority leader
since the legendary days of Lyndon Johnson.
To begin with, consideration has to be given
to the reason Baker gave for not seeking a
fourth-term. To do so would be Impolite and,
James P. Costello, D.D.S.
for all anyone but he and his closest aides
know, the absolute reason he is bowing out.
As he expressed in his statement at an
airport news conference in Knoxville, Tcnn.,
and in a letter to the state party chairman,
Baker never meant to make the Senate a
"lifelong career."
Or, as he is supposed to have said in what
18 0 6 S. FRENCH AVENUE
could be an apocryphal story, he did not want
SANFORD, FLORIDA
to stay in the Senate forever and then, as his
(17 92 NEXT TO SANFORD MIDDLE SCHOOL)
reward, lay in state in the Capitol rotunda.
There is reason to take him at his word.
C O M P LE TE O N E -S T O P FAMILY D EN TA L CARE
Baker
has made no secret of his utopian
DIAGNOSTIC
CAPS tnd CROWNS
I I.H
Cipt andOma*1(*, Ijoc,
5140.00
concept of a "citizen legislature" with
x s*. -vrykt Umi
160
11.00
C»r*M*SMe*
ftA A W I tlntg.
H.M
1100
Odd C.ovni

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Now that he has
made public a badly kept secret, the only
question that remains is — Why did Howard
Baker decide not to seek re-election to the
Senate In 19847
Now, despite prevailing opinion, senators do
retire. For many more of them, however, the
decision to retire is made by the voters on
election year.
Nor is it unknown that a Senate leader, as
Baker is, decides there are other interests that

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ANN
ARBOR.
Mich.
(UPI)—Gluttony Is a deadly
sin, say U niversity of
Michigan researchers.
laboratory rats allowed to
gorge themselves lived only
half as long as identical
rodents fed a selective,
restrictive diet according to
Professor
R ichard
C.
Adelman, who directs the
university’s In stitu te of
Gerontology.

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Don't Be
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members serving the public for short periods
every year while on leave from their normal
employment.
This concept, coupled with the fact that
Baker at least considered the option of not
running again, before his 1972 and 1978 races,
lends credence to his reasons for leaving.
Yet, there are lingering doubts — fueled by
his undisguised desire to someday be
president. For him to leave the Senate now —
at the height of his political power and in­
fluence — is as easy to accept without question
as would be the retirement of basketball’s
Julius Erving, baseball's Reggie Jackson or
football’s Tony Dorsett.
What are some of the other possible reasons:
Money — Certainly not a pauper, Baker,
nevertheless, is not wealthy by Senate stan­
dards. His political activities have dug Into his
savings and there are mega-bucks waiting for
him in the private sector.
Bum out — The position of Senate majority
leader, despite's Baker's uncommon ability as
a negotiator, conciliator and persuader, may
be untenable. There were some indications
that Baker was close to "bum out" stage
during the "lame duck" session.
Re-election — Baker, Tennessee's first
Republican senator, has never won by big
margins.
. ..... *
i /. i a i
:i"S

the black bear which will ignore bee stings and devastate a
hive to get at the honey.
. .
"One bear can cause thousands of dollars In losses in one
night," Shearman said.
,,,
.
...
A lesser problem is the skunk which will remain outside a
hive and catch and eat bees entering or leaving, but It leaves
the honey alone.
But In other areas of the country, raccoons are major
villains, particularly in the Louisiana and Texas areas where
production of queen bees and package bees to create starter
sets is a major Industry, according to Frank Robinson,
secretary of the American Beekeeping Federation In
Gainesville.
Bees produce honey anytime there are blossoms available
and Robinson said in a good year, a strong colony will produce
between 125 and 150 pounds of honey.
Prime
in Florida are citrus trees, palmetto thickets,
the gallberry, a plant that resembles holly and grows In p ix . ■
woods, and in West Florida, the tupelo, a small tree that grows
In swampy areas.
Robinson said the area around Apalachicola is the only place
In the world where the tupelo Is found In concentrations enough
to be commercial and the tree’s blossoms produce a premium
honey which brings 3M0 per cent higher prices that the other
strains.

A K i: M A R Y • L E IS U R E T IM E

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Feb. 1*, lta j-» A

C ollege O ffe rs

-

No-Show Jones Says The W hite House
He Is
'Going Straight'
Vs. The Real W orld

Free Tuition For
Kids O f Jobless
By DENNIS O'SHEA
UPLAND, Ind. (UPI) — A few months ago, Brian Venderford, a bright high school senior with a solid academic record
and enough credits for early graduation, abandoned all hope of
going to college.
A failing economy dashed Brian’s dream of a college degree
In elementary education. His father was laid off in December
after 18 years with International Harvester and, suddenly,
money was tight.
“I was really looking at colleges until Dad got laid off,” said
Brian. "Then I decided, well, the miltary’s always been in the
back of my mind.”
But when Brian heard about Taylor University’s offer of free
tuition to the unemployed or their children he knew that was
the path he wanted to follow.
" It’s a lot of money,” the 18-year-old from Fort Wayne, Ind.,
said of the 82,212 no-strings deal, "I'd still be in high school if it
wasn’t for this program, and next semester I probably
wouldn’t have bee" ‘n College." - *
.......
Brian is one of 15 new students from five stales taking ad­
vantage of Taylor’s non-govemrrient version of unemployment
compensation. Another 19 students already enrolled at the
university, sons and daughters of unemployed parents, also
signed up.
The college estimates almost half of them might have
dropped out without the break on tuition.
“ We have resources we can use to be cf assistance to those
| who have some needs, and we want to help," said Ronald L.
Keller, dean of admissions at the evangelical Christian college
located between some of Indiana’s worst pockets of unem­
ployment.
"From the standpoint of one Christian to another, it certain­
ly fits into New Testament theology. Everything’s theory and
we all know what the theory is, but let's see practice."

Only 20%

By CATHY KEIM
United Press International
.It’s not really news any more when
country singer George Jones fails to show
up for a concert. In fact, the Ralnsville,
Ala., Civic Center was only two-thirds full
for Jones’ scheduled performance last
week, since so many of his fans have been
victimized by his noshows in recent
months. But Jones not only arrived on time,
he told the audience: "Honest to goodness,
I’m straight tonight and I’m going to keep it
that way." Jones has been In and out of
trouble Involving drugs and alcohol over
the past year.

Grandma loves the Pack
Fannie Bell, like m any 82-year-old
widows, knits to pass the evening hours, but
only when North Carolina State isn’t
playing basketball. During the home
gomes, look for her among the crowd at

A* c , AMERICA'S l a r g e s t w in e a n d s p ir it s d e a le r h a s t h e l o w e r

The AGP for many years
has recom m ended th at
persons over 65 and those with
chronic diseases, regardless
of age, be immunized against
the flu. The only departure
from that policy occurred In
1976, when the CDC launched
a 1135 million national effort
to vaccinate 20 0 m illion
Americans against an ex­
pected onslaught of swine flu.
That program was quickly
halted after reports surfaced
that the swine flu shots could
cause G uilllan-B arre syn­
drome, a sometimes fatal
paralysis.
In 1978 and 1979 Congress
funded a modest $8 million
effort to provide free flu shots
to high risk groups. But there
was no rush to gel the vaccine
and with a tightening of
federal purse strin g s the
program was stopped.
H ealth officials offer
various reasons for the
disenchantment of Americans
with flu vaccinations. Some
d te the swine flu vaccine and
its statistical connection with
an outbreak of Gulllaln-Barre
disease; others mention the
high cost of the vaccine, now
ranging up to |20.
And Kappus la id some
physicians, although ap­
parently aware of of the CDC
recommendation, don't urge
their susceptible patients to
get the shots.
Last year, 19,825,776 dose*
of
flu
vaccine
were
distributed, down 9 percent
from the previous year.
The vaccine administered
to high-risk individuals is
much le u than the number of
doses d istrib u ted , health
officials skid.

e v e r y d a y p r ic e

L IQ U

--

c o m m en ta r y"
"Does the public perception that things are
bad come first? or is it that the public only
thinks things are bad come first? or is it that
the public only thinks things are bad after
they've seen the bad news night after night?
Think about it before you talk to your next
caller from a pollster."
This administration is no exception in
want in? to play down somo of It* defeat* It
was ever thus. It appears thal 'in all'tilings- ' '
economic, the administration still Is prepared
to blame President Jimmy Carter and some of
his predecessors.
Not only are reporters expected to report
only the upbeat news, from Speakes point of
view they are also expected to ignore
presidential remarks or to assume that he
didn't mean what he was saying.
Such was the case when Reagan said he
knew he was going to “kick m yself' for saving
that the corporate Income tax should be
abolished and went ahead and said it anyway.
The next day, instead of trying to cut the
losses, Speakes accused the press of “Jumping
up and down, clapping your hands and licking
your chops over this statement."

SAVE UP TO 4 0 %

AS MUCH AS $ 3 A BOTTLE |

LESS,

FOR

—■ ?—’ 1

spective.
"It seems that 10.8 percent unemployed is
big news, while 89.2 percent of the Americans
who have jobs and enjoy the highest standard
of living in the world is not news," Speakes
said.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - TTic Reagan White
House wants reporters to focus on what Is right
with the country, not what is wrong.
The most vocal on the subject has been
White House spokesman Larry Speakes, who
says that reporters should be more "upbeat"
and spotlight the "good news" in the economy.
"My question Is, have we now arrived at the
journalistic standard where good news is no
news?" he asked In a pep talk to the National
Association of Government Communicators.
An administration naturally wants to em­
phasize any gains and trends It sees In the
economy, but resents a reminder of Its
failures.
When the gross national product showed a
slight Increase, reporters were treated to a
briefing by Martin Feldsteln, chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisers. And when the
unemployment Lgurto uVu^ped a few teni.ii* uf
1 percent, President Reagan made an
unheralded appearance in the press room to
proclaim a triumph and an America "on the
mend."
And when the figures are bad, reporters are
given one or two sentences by Speakes that an
Improvement is expected In the coming
months or year.
Speakes has a printed slogan on his desk:
"You don't tell us how to stage the news and
we don’t tell you how to cover it."
That Is only half true. There is no question
that this administration controls and manages
the news to the best of its ability. The problem
is it aLo wants to cover it by denying reporters
the responsibility of putting things in per­

Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh cheering on
the Wolfpack. Mrs. Bell’s late husband was
a Wolfpack fan and the couple attended
hundreds of games through the years. Her
family treads lightly when the subject of
basketball comes up. "I got a son who's a
Carolina fan...and I got a son-in-law who’s a
Duke fan, but we don't mention basketball
at all," she said. "That’s a sore subject."
Head ’em Up
Cowboys are a breed ap art—just ask Joe
Sltton. Sltton manages a 1,000 acre farm In
Verona, Va., and says it's easy to tell the
real thing from the trendy urban cowboy.
“ A lot of people buy hats and pickup trucks,
but most of them ain't got sense enough to
saddle a horse and get it In the right
direction," according to Sltton. He says a
—
cowboy has long jc a n rira y r! '5t the
bottom from chafing the saddle and
dragging the ground. Cowboys go to work
before the sun goes up and quit after it goes
down. Sltton's cowgirl wife loves the
lifestyle, too, even If It means getting tossed
30 feet across the pasture by an angry cow.
That happened to her, she said, adding "I
don't remember the flight but I remember
the landing.”
Cattlemen proud of their livelihood
Farm ers are said to be among America’s
proudest people, and among those in the
agriculture Industry cattle ranchers may
take more pride in their profession than
most.

Marathon mom
Lucia Geracl ran her first mile 24 years
ngo-No*** the .*w-year-old mother of t r o has.
set her sights on qualifying for the first'
women’s marathon in the U.S. Olympic
trials. Her coach is Brnji Durden, the
lending money-winner on the Association of
Road Racing Athletes. Geraci has run the
26.2-mile marathon in 2:50 and Durden
believes the diminutive Stone Mountain,
Ga„ runner can earn n starting position at
the trials next spring in Olympia, Waj&gt;h.

Now Get
Flu Shot
ATLANTA
(U PI)
[Federal health officials say 42
illllon Am ericans run a
[reater-than-normal risk of
[dying from a bout with inluenza, but only 20 percent of
get flu shots.
"Twenty percent Is a good
illpark figure," said Dr.
lari Kappus of the Centers
[or Disease C ontrol's inluenza surveillance branch.
"That figure seems to have
&gt;n pretty steady through
the years," Kappus said, and
it has public health officials
wondering what can be done
to m ake influenza v ac­
cinations more popular. .
Dr. Stephen Schoenbaum of
Boston, Mass., a member of
k. the CDC’i Advisory Com­
m ittee on Im m unisation
P ractices, told a recent
com m ittee m eeting: " I
wonder whether, in fact, our
influenza policy is sensible.”
Schoenbaum suggested the
com m ittee re-exam ine Its
lo n g sta n d in g
in flu en za
recommendations "to come
up with something that is
implementable."
Schoenbaum said the
com m ittee m ay re-define
those who are at greatest risk
of death or serious com­
plications from an influenza
infection.

■■■ -- - 1

--' ■■■

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SPO RTS
M itc h e ll's 25
Lifts Tribe
To 20th W in

Seminoles Sink
Spruce Creek
By GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sporti Writer
Seminole’s soccer squad successfully
«• completed its first District 4A-9 match
Tuesday afternoon as it pressured the
Hawks of Spruce Creek en route to a 3-1
victory at Seminole High School.
The Tribe came on as the hungrier
team of the two, and limited Spruce
~Ci«xk UTi&amp;u Ilian 10 shots on ^oal tht
entire game. Right from the beginning,
Seminole took complete control of the
ball, and refused to give up its ad­
vantage.
Spruce Creek put a scare into the
'Noles, but alert defensive play by Stan
: Bacon and goal tender Dean Shoemaker
•' averted two sure Creek goals. From then
• on, the Hawks were hard pressed to
‘ penetrate Seminole territory.
After a shot on goal by Seminole Paul
Griffin, he and Rick Nooney became
painful thorns in the sides of the Hawks.
They, aided by strong clearing kicks by
Brian Nulty, and solid heads-up play byJuan Falcon, managed to put the Tribe
on lop with Nooney’s kick over Spruce
Creek goalie Mike Kaye.
Nooney followed his score with a soft
shot over Kay's outstretched arms, only
to have ft bounce directly off the right
goal bar. Kaye made a better save of a
close Tribe shot on goal shortly atj terwards.
Eri Moreno threatened to make a
second Tribe goal before the end of the
first half, but failed to increase

Prep Soccer
Seminole’s 1-0 lead.
The second half began exactly as the
first, with Creek pressure on Seminole’s
net, followed by a long run by Griffin,
whose resulting kick sailed just to the left
.
..........................-Spruce Creek then proceeded to tie the
game with its only goal of the game.
Unfortunately, none of their players
scored it. Rather, n Seminole player
mlscued, and sent the ball past
Shoemaker, ironically deadlocking the
game although Seminole’s number of
shots on goal greatly eclipsed the number
of tries against the Tribe.
But, Seminole allowed no further Creek
threats. Instead, the Tribe sealed its hard
eamed-win, with goals by Nooney and
Falcon. After Falcon's goal. Scott Meek
shocked the Hawks with two crisp kicks
out of Seminole ground, enabling Griffin
to make yet another of his hard drives
towards a score.
Seminole's victory moves it into the
*Wni-finals against Lyman, a 3-0 winner
over Lake Brantley at I^ongwood. Game
time is Thursday at 7 p.m. at Lyman.
Coach Tom B arnes’ Greyhounds
received two goals from Jim Gray and
one from Kevin Hines to oust the
defending district champions.
Gray broke the ice 29 minutes into
game on a nice pass from Keith Young

Hefsld Photo by Tom Vlnconl

Juan Falcon, Seminole booster, moves toward a
second-half goal against Spruce Creek. Team­
mate Ricky Nooney kicked two more scores to
complement Falcon’s one as the ’Noles topped the
for a 1-0 edge. Twelve minutes later,
Gray scored again and Lyman took a 2-0
edge into halftime.
In the second half, Hines added his goal
on a pass from David Dangel for the 3-0

Johnson leads the Lilly Hawks with a
13.7 scoring average followed by Cindy
Blocker (10.9) and Mary Johnson (8.6
points and 6.2 assists).
Underneath, Lake Howell has Christy
Scott (11.7 rebounds, 6.1 points) and 6-3
center Janenc Brown who has (tiled in
well for Miller.
The number-one seed. Deland, will
take on the hapless Spruce Creek Hawks.
DeLand boasts a 13-1 district record, its
only loss was to Seminole, while Spruce
Creek is 1-13. Sophomore Bridgette
Gordon leads Detand with a whopping
25-point-per game average.
The winner of the DeLand-Spruce
Creek game will play the winner of the
ta k e Branliey-Malnland Gome.
Both Brantley and Mainland wound up
with 7-7 district records. Mainland was
at its best earlier In Uic year while the
tad y Patriots have had better success in
the late part of the season.
Seniors Rhonda Vazquez and linda
Trimble are Brantley’s top scorers.
Vazquez averages 13.6 points per game
while Trimble carries a 12.6 average.
The survivor of the Seminole-take
Howell game will go up against the
winner of the Lyman-Apopka matchup.
Lyman already owns two victories
over Apopka this season'but Apopka can
be surprising as it was in two victories
over ta k e Mary'* Lyman's leaders in­
clude Pam Jackson (14.1 scoring
average) and Vikkl McMurrer (10.6
points, 13.4 rebounds) along with point
guard Kim Goroum (3.6 assists, 3.0
steals). Katie Rowland and Kim Gilliam
complete the starting lineup.

final.
Goalie John Pinkley turned in four
excellent saves among his 10 stops.
In other first-round action Tuesday,
ta k e Howell upended Mainland, 2-1, as

Brad Chmiclewskl and Tilo Martorell
kicked goals. The Silver Hawks will play
DeLand, a 3-2 winner over Apopka,
Thursday at D etand. Game time is 7
p.m.

Lady Rams Open
3A With Bulldogs

Lady Seminoles
Play Lake How ell
Parity might be the word to use when
describing this year’s 4A-9 district girls'
basketball tournam ent at Daytona
Beach's Mainland High School.
Five of the eight team s In the tourney
have had an above .500 record had It not
been tor th e U tortetts. DeLand,
Seminole, Lyman, Lake Howell, la k e
Brantley and Mainland are all capable of
winning the tourney while Apopka and
Spruce Creek aren’t given much of a
chance.
Seminole compiled a 1(W district
record, the same as Lyman’s LadyGreyhounds. So, a coin flip was won by
Lyman who will play lowly Apopka while
Seminole will tangle with Lake Howell in
what should be the best first-round game.
The Lady Seminoles are led by- the
county’s top point producer, sophomore
: Mona Benton, who scores 21.4 points per
game, and the tough inside game of
center Diedre Hlllery (13.5 points, 13.3
rebounds per game).
Joining Benton and Hillery in the
starting lineup are Arlene Jones (7.4
points), Maxine Campbell (8.7 points)
and Genene Stallworth who Merthie said
is filling in nicely underneath after the
loss of 6-1 freshman Patricia Campbell to
i grades. Bench strength comes Tammy
Pringle.
Lake Howeli has been on a hot streak
lately and won its last five district games
In a row after Chiquita Miller was
declared ineligible and the Lady Hawks
forfeited the 19 wins. The last time
Seminole and Lake Howell met, the
Hawks Tammy Johnson connected for 32
points to lead Lake Howell to victory.

Hawks, 3-1. Seminole plays Lyman, a 3-0 winner
over Lake Brantley, Thursday night in the
District 4A-9 semi-finals at Lyman. Game time is
7 p.m.

M E R T H IE

M OORE

District

Basketball
at LaktMary

Lake Mary
Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

St. Cloud
Eustis
Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.
Bishop Moore
Oviedo
Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
Jones
Osceola
Thursday, 8:30 p.m.

Leesburg
At Daytona Beach

DeLand (13-1)
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
Spruce Creek (1-13)
Mainland (7-7)
Thursday, 8 p.m.
Lake Brantley (7-7)
Apopka (3-11)
Wednesday, 6:15 p.m.
Lyman (10-4)
Lake Howell (5-9)
Thursday, 6:15 p.m.
Seminole (9-5)

behind Robinson’s 16.5 scoring average,
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
the next highest scorers arc Natalie
It’s not often that a team can go Into its Barth with a 6.0 average and Stephanie
district tournament with a 10-0 district Nelson, 5.8.
record, having beaten five of the teams In
The winner of the Ovicdo-Jones game
the tourney twice during th« season, be will go up against the winner of the
seeded (trot, be the host team , and atilt be Oaceola-Leesburg game.
considered an underdog.*
The ta d y Rams are opening the
tak e Mary’s tad y Rams have all the tourney Wednesday night against St.
credentials to be a district champion, but Goud's ta d y Bulldogs, tak e Mary has
coach Bill Moore’s squad will have a all ready beaten St. Goud twice this
tough task in knocking off the tour­ season, the scores were, 70-33, and, 72-34.
nament’s favorite, the Jones Tigers who
"We had a lot of success with our press
didn't play enough district games to be against St. Goud," Moore said. "We also
seeded, ta k e Mary and Jones didn't have more size than they do."
meet during the regular season, but,
St. Goud's tallest and best player is 5barring any upsets, the Tigers and Rams 11 Kim King. On the other hand, tak e
should meet for the district title.
Mary has the 6-2 Glass Towers, Laura
"Jones Is the definite favorite," tak e and Peggy. The last time tak e Mary met
Mary coach Bill Moore said. "They St. Goud, Laura poured fn 24 points and
played an extremely tough schedule and Ffeggy added 15. Both Laura and Peggy
have some of the best talent around."
Glass averaged over 10 points per game
The ta d y Tigers come in with a 22-4 this season while ta u ra averaged 12
record, ranked seventh in the state's 3A rebounds and Peggy nine.
poll. Of its four losses, two were to
Also in the starting lineup for the tad y
second-ranked (4A), Evans, one was to Rams are lis a Gregory (4.6 assists, 5.3
third-ranked (4A) Satellite Beach, and points), Kim Averill (8.0 points) and
the other was to eighth-ranked (3A) Michelle Swartz (6.7 points). Bench
Ocala Vanguard.
strength comes from Courtney Hall,
"T hey have the quickest guards Andrea Johnson and Andrea Fcnning.
around," Moore said. "Their best player,
The winner of the ta k e Mary-St. Goud
Washington, averages 27 points per game will meet the winner of the Eustisgame. It will be extremely lough for Bishop Moore game In Friday night's
anyone to beat Jones."
first game.
The team that will meet Jones In the
Saturday's final Is 8:30 p.m.
opening round Is Oviedo's tad y Lions.
It will be preceeded by the junior
Oviedo has one of the top scorers and
varsity championship between Eustis
rebounders In the area in junior center
and Osceola at 6:30 p.m. A coin toss put
Fayetta Robinson. But the ta d y Lions
Osceola’s JV in the title game ahead of
don’t have the quickness of Jones, and,
tak e Mary's JV.

Lake M ary'Rips
Barracudas, 9-0
ta k e Mary's Marcus Siebmann scored r carier-high four
goals Tuesday night as the Rams smashed New Smyrna
Beach, 9-0, in the first round of the District 3Aid soccer playoffs
at Lake Mary.
j
The victory moves the Rams to the seinj-fiijal round against
top-seeded Daytona Beach Seabreeze, the foarth-rarked l,eam
in the state. Seabreeze had a bye Tuesday. C arte tin t* is 5 p.m.
Daytona Beach Father Lopez, an easy winner over Fla’Jer
Palm Coast, plays second-seeded Ovfec* at 7:30 y .m. lirth
games are at Lake Mary.
\
It took the Rams 20 minutes to get started Ti esday, but thm
it was all over. "We were all over the gcal the first 20 minutes
but nothing went in," said first-year cotch L irry MitCorkle.
Andre Sanders put the Rams up, 1*0, with a xie-on-une goal
22 minutes Into the half. Siebmann notef ed his first poa! six
minutes later on a pass from Mark Volchko. Si tbrnann added
a solo effort a minute later to give the .ta n s a 3-0 imlftime
lead.
Eight minutes into the second half, Volchlat toe-peked a
score for a 4-9 lead. Siebmann scored on ;inoth&gt;Jn' solo for a 54)
edge two m inutes later before Paul Holme i and Sanders
scored a minute apart for a 7-0 bulge.
j
Siebmann booted In his fourth score from 20 vards away two
minutes later and Volchko kicked h i second o complete the
•coring 27 minutes Into the final hilf.
“Since we lost (leading scorer) Lonald Kelly (broken leg),
we're not so much of a one-dimen sic nal team .ziy more," said
McCorkle. H ie Ram s outsbot the tarracudas, 4841.

;
soys *
L A K E M A R Y * .E V A N S S
Staglos: V ie w S. T unstill I l f
M cN eill d. Cal S 0. M. MacDonald
d biocaw • T (it); Grafting d

B ir erm onte* t, t MacOcnald a
Zp i n a t .
' C avM at— Viner M MacDonald
a .u n tlill BtocXrr I ). Jconvon
Sn. car d H endru E u ta rt.i a a

By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
APOPKA - Willie Mitchell burned up
the nets here Tuesday night, hitting 12 of
14 shots from the field, and pouring in a
career-high 25 points as Seminole High's
Fighting Seminoles breezed to a 72-55
victory over Apopka’s Blue Darters.
“ If Willie and 'Klki' (Calvin Bryant)
keep playing like they did tonight, we’re
going to be iougii in the district -tcur ■
nament," Seminole coach Chris Marlette
said.
Behind Mitchell’s 25 points, Bryant
tossed in 22 as the Tribe raised its record
to 20-9 overall and 12-3 in the Five Star
Conference. Seminole hosts Daytona
Beach Seabreeze in the last game of the
regular season on "Parent's Night" at
Seminole High. DeLand, however,
clinched the conference by edging
Seabreeze, 55-53.
"Twenty victories was our goal this
season," Marlette said.
Seminole came out blazing in the first
quarter as the Tribe hit 7 of its first 10
shots to take a 15-ti lead with 2:56 left in
the quarter. The 'Noles led by just three
after the first quarter, 19-16, as Apopka's
Spencer Bridges kept the Blue Darters
close with 12 points.
But Bridges, and all the other Blue
Darters, threw up a lot of bricks in the
second quarter as the Tribe went on a
rampage and outscorcd Apopka, 22-6, In
the second quarter to take a 41-22 half­
time lead.
Seminole put the game away early in
the second half by scoring 10 straight
points to take a commanding 51*25 lead.
The Tribe led. 59-33, after the third
quarter.
A bank shot by Bryant gave the 'Noles
a 62-33 lead early in the fourth quarter
and Marlette then flooded the floor with
reserves.
Vernon ta w shatttered a Seminole
High record for assists as he handed out
10 and now has 237 for the season. Keith
Whitney held the old m ark with 230 in
1980.
SEMINOLE (72)
ta w 10-0 2, Wynn 1 (V0 2, Mitchell 121-2
25, Bryant 11 (V0 22, Gilchrist 2 1-2 5.
Stiffey 1 2-2 4, Holloman 2 0-0 4,
Alexander 1 0-0 2, nobtnson 1 OO i,
Walker 1 0-1 2. Totals: 34 4-7 72.
APOPKA (5S)
Bridges 8 00 16, McMUJer 3 00 6,
Hughes 30-06, Pitts 11-23, Fountain 3 3-3
9, Elmore 1 00 2, Jackson 3 0-1 6,
Peterson 21-3 5, Jones 2 00 4. Totals: 25 59 55.
Total fouls: Seminole 13, Apopka 8.
Fouled out: none. Technicals: none.
In junior varsity action, Seminole
trailed by just one point with about two
and a half minutes remaining, but
Apopka scored four unanswered points
and held on for a 57-52 victory.
Kenny Gordon led Seminole with 22
points while Jam es Rouse added 16.
At Lyman, the Greyhounds let a fivepoint halftime lead slip through their
hands as the Spruce Creek Hawks
claimed a 61-59 victory.
Willie Cooks had 17 points and Rod
McCray tossed in 15 as the Hawks im­
proved lo 17-8 overall and 1(V5 in the Five
Star Conference. Lyman, 11-11 overall
and 8-7 in the conference, got 16 points
from Alexis Geveland and 13 from
Jam es Pilot while Greg Pilot and Rod
Hillman chipped in eight points apiece.
Elsewhere, Ronnie Murphy poured In
32 points and BUI McCartney added 11 as
Oviedo's Uons edged the Wymore Tech
Bobcats, 65-63.

H o ffm a n 's 3 1 P o in ts
Too M u ch Fo r

R am s

By BRENT SMARTT
Herald Sports Writer
Carried by senior center Paul Hoffman's 31 points, tak e
Brantley’s Patriots, now 7-16, upended cross-town rival tak e
Mary, 82-72, In an emotion-packed contest at Altamonte
Springs.
"It’s a game of spurts and we (ta k e Brantley) Just con­
centrated on playing the whole game without any negative
spurts and to get out early," said Brantley skipper Bob
Peterson.
And the Patriots did get out early, opening a 10-2 lead early
in the first period. Coach Willie Richardson's Rams soon
awoke though, knotting the score at 14 on three Billy Dunn
long-range Jumpers.
In the second quarter Brantley again got out fast opening a
23-16 advantage. Dunn and the Rams, nevertheless, bounced
right back, aided by two Brantley technical fouls to pull even
midway.
Playing at an even faster-paced speed tilt. Brantley again
gained^command late in period, taking advantage of Lake

\Lake Mary's Robyn Finnock, the Rams' no. 1
.singles player, returns a forehand while
Warming up for Evans. The warmup htlppd as
Winnock dropped Sharon Tillman, 8*3, to lead a
V-0 victory over the Trojans Tuesday. Other

Ram winners were Grace Roegener, Rae
Ryerson. Gina Caputo and Mickey Reynolds.
Finnock-Ryerson and Roegener-Caputo also
claimed doubles wins.

T * . 1 th
shooUn« &lt;9 of 12 In second
period) to take a 39-32 halftime edge.
After halftime, both clubs squared off in an even third
quarter. Brantley s bullish Hoffman continued to control the
points In the quarter to hold the Pats lead
at 56-49, heading Into the fourth.
Richardson's Ram’s scratched and clawed their way back to
wlthhi one at 64414 at the 2:13 mark but Brantley would meet
off four straight buckets, two by guard
M
Garriques, Peterson's Patriots pulled away for good.
’ We ve been playing all our games in spurts. After they
(ta k e Mary) got close I Just told them they’d played 30
minutes and they can’t let it get away now," explained
Peterson.

See HOFFMAN, Page HA

�Evening H erald, Sa nford, Ft. W ednesday, Feb. 1 4 ,1 W 3 -1 IA

SPO
RTS
IN BRIEF
Raiders' Bats Come Alive
In

9-2Rout O f Rollins 'B'

Seminole Community College had its most successful
day at the plate Tuesday as the Raiders struck for 14
hits in a 9-2 rout of the Rollins College “ B" Team.
Bryan Holzworth had three hits In four trips to the
plate including his first homer of the season while
designated hitter Stephen Page ripped a pair of hits
and knocked In four runs.
For SCC, 2-4, Alan Soyer, Jody Ryan, Mike Dunlap
and Ron I^azicr combined for a six hitter with Dunlap
getting credit for the victory.
After a scoreless first three innings, SCC struck for
two runs In the fourth, and three In the fifth to take a 5-0
lead. Rollins scored its two runs in the sixth.
The Raiders host Brevard CC today at 3 p.m. before
an ekeursicn-tc MlcrrJ on Filch.,
fui a
three game series with Mlami-Dade South.
Rollins “ B”
000 002 000-2 6 4
Scc
000 230 22x-9 II 3
Brovllz, Meyer (6) and Gordon. Soyer, Ryan (3),
Dunlap (5), Lcatier (9) and Holzworth. Hitters: SCC,
Holzworth 3-4, Page 2-3, Barker 2-5, Rollins. B. Partin
2-4.

Winter Park Blanks Tribe
Winter Park struck for two runs in the first inning
and held Seminole to only four hits Tuesday night as
the Wildcats breezed to a 8 0 shutout of the Tribe at
Sanford Memorial Stadium.
Seminole, 0-1, used three different pitchers but
couldn't stymie Winter Park’s attack as the Wildcats
scored single runs in the fourth, fifth and seventh in­
nings.
Winter Park
200 n o 1-5 7 2
Seminole
000 000 OH 4 3
Abel and Howard; Hill, Griffith (5), Hersey (7) and
Dennis. Hitters: WP,
3-4, Beavin 2-4 HR.
At Titusville Astronaut, Oviedo got to Astronaut's
pitchers early and took a 9-0 lead after three innings
and coasted to a KM) victory.
Dwayne Johnson hurled a one-hitter for the Lions
who now stand 3-0 for the season. Brett Theyer ripped
two hits including a homer and knocked in two runs to
pace the eight-hit Oviedo attack.

Lyman Netters Top Tribe

BOBBY LUNDQUIST
... Tribe manager

ANDY GRIFFITH
...hard-hitting Seminole

STEVE DENNIS
...Seminole catcher

D . Tim Olson, 7*. J O lt; 34. Mike
Kelly.77X, 20.44; 15. Phil Dorman.
56. 7041; 14 B u tty Berry, II,*
AtSanlord-Orlandd
70 41; 37. Jim Ownby, 54, 70.74; I I
Tuesday nlflht re tu lti
Harold Johnson, 74. 21.37; 1*.
F lrs lra c e — $-14, 8 : 11:54
Floyd M iner, *, 71.1*; 40. David
I Wash Barb
1100 3 40 7.40 Collins. 1. 71.07; 41. Phil Welpert,
1 Brave Bull
7.40 7 40 X . 77.70 ; 47. M ike Romac, 45,
6 PC's Annie Mac
160 71 51; 41. Jack Hackney, 1], 2*47.
0(1 -1 ) 10.M P (S -I) 11.40 T (40.
F irst heat (10 lapsl-1. Frank
*) isf.io
Wood.
Second race — S-lt, C: 11.40
Second heal (ID laps) ). A rt
4 Alius Klckln
14 00 14 00 4 40 Sommers.
ISumdog Jerry
S 00 4 40
Consolation (17 lapsl-1. Spike
1 Oldebitecha
•
140 Lindley.
0(1-4) *4.40; P (4-1) 101.10; T &lt;4F eatu re (25 laps) 1. M a rk
1-7) 407.40; D.D. (0-4) 111.70
M alcull; 2. M ike Eddy; 3. Junior
Third ra te — 0-14, M : 71.40
Hanley; 4. Dick T rickle; S. Bob
1 Cheerful E rin
IS 70 1 00 1.00 Keselowskl; 4. A rt Sommers; 7.
4 Odyssey Opposed
4.00 1.00
Jack Cook; I Frank Wood; f. Lee
5 Rambling Oarcle
S.10
Faulk; 10. Randy Slack; I I. AI
0(1 -4) 71.00; P (1-1) *1.40; T (1- Schill; 11. Richard Coffin; 11. Pete
Weiss; 14. Jim Tuning; IS. Dave
0-1)401.00
Fourth race-S -14, D; D J I
Wettmeyer; I t . Steve M urgic; 17.
a Manatee Lass 14 40 0.70 5 00
Perry Lovelady; I I. Rick C erelll;
4 Fashionable G irl
10 40 5 40 t*. Richard Hlxon; 70. Marc
Biackner; 11. Joe M lddlaton; 23.
1 Dealer’s Dream
1.40
O (4 4) D I M ; F (4 4 ) 177.40; T Robin M cCall; 21. Bruce Gaskins;
74. Duke S outhard; IS. Lee
(44-1) 1.1SI. TO.
Schuler; 74. Chris Dellarco; 77.
F illh ro c e — S-14. C: 1I.4S
SOry blend
37.70 14 40 5 00 Cert B utt; 70. Mike K elly; 2*.
1 Richochet Pound
10 00 0.00 Robert H lxon. L a p Le a d e r:
I Jin ny Scott
J OO M alcull: 1 25.
THUNDERCARI
Q ( I S) 114.00; P (S-l) 111.40; T
" A ” Feature (20 laps)-!. Danny
(S-14) 7.001.00
Knoll. " B ” main (17 laps) !.
Hath race — S-14, C; 11.70
7 Dragon Ship
17.70 7.40 4.40 Randy Smathers.
M O D IF I E D !
7DlntcyDog
170 1.00
Time Trials (Showing driver,
I Skid Row Frankie
4.00
O (7-7) 21.00; P (7 1) 02.40; T (7. car nu m be r, I lm e H . R lchla
Evans, 41, 17.07; 1. Georg* Kent,
24) 401.10
24,10 05; 1. Doug H #w ill, 52, 11.07;
Seventh raco — S-14, A-. S I.II
4. Reggie Ruggerio, 44, M.1S; 5.
I ML Cap
74.40 * 00 1.40
4 Free Spirit
4.40 4.70 Jamie Tomelno, Of, 11.20; 4. Tony
5 Great A lly
4.10 Hlrshman, 40, 11.23; 7. Mika
0 (4 4 ) SI.10; P (04 ) 741.40; T (0- McLaughlin, Z-0, 10.71; I . Ken
Bouchard. 00, 1 l.» ; f . Bob Riley,
4-S) 745.70
44, 10.42; 10. Earl Schloder. 44.
E lflh lh ra ca — S-14, D; 11.41
10.40; I t . Tom Baldwin, 7, 10.51;
7 KISS Mo Good.
17. Gomer Teylor, (D. 10.40; 13.
by*
14 00 7 00 4.10
1 Kodell
4.00 140 Butch Perry, 7, 10.74; 14. Corky
0 Awful Company
140 Cookman. 04, 10.75; IS. Alan
Q (1-7) 11.40; P (7-1) 74.00; T IT- McClure, 10,01; 10. Doug Heveron,
1 ,10.04; 17. G all Barber, 0 1 ,10.*2;
14) 114.40
10. J im McGraw, 4f, 1 l.fl. 1*.
M oot* Hewttt, 1*, 1* 04; TO. Greg

Dog Racing

Auto Racing

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor

L«ke Mary Prospectus
1982 Record: 12-9

Prep Baseball

1982 Five Star Finish: sixth
Returning lettermen: five
Returning starters: two
Promising newcomers: three
Strength: hitting
Weakness: pitching
Seminole baseball coach Bobby Lindquist
hopes first impressions aren't lasting. After
viewing his 1983 baseball team against the
alum ni S aturday, the personable Tribe
skipper came away unimpressed.
“Judging from Saturday, wc didn't look too
good," said Lundquist about the 10-1 loss. “Our
pitching was terrible. (Greg) Hill wasn't loose.
(Jam es) Hersey was everywhere. Andy
Griffith looked about the best."
Pitching, as most baseball prople know, is
the key ingredient oLany team and Lundquist
feels he needs key performances from Hill,
sophomore Hersey and Griffith. Southpaw
William Wynn will help but not until basketball
ends.
Hill had an excellent sophomore season two
years ago but faltered somewhat last year,
although he did pitch a no-hltter. The 6-5, 220pound right-hander always works the most
innings on the staff and has good control.
Hersey is an untested 10th grader with a live
arm while Griffith is a steady senior.
Lundquist is counting on the trio to replace
graduated seniors Fred Howard and Tracy
Walker. The 'Noles also lost Greg Register.

Prep Baseball

... . . pMiijtriina leUerioeo: eijjR.

rT g fiiu ig S em iuo ies rro s p e c iu s

Alton Davis (SCC), Brett Von Hcrbulis, Jeff
Litton and Bill Burgess.
Griffith, who had an excellent summer with
the bat play mg American legion, takes over
at first base while Junior Kevin Smith handles
second. He’ll be challenged by Paul Griffin
when soccer ends. Brian Rogers will open at
shortstop but will move to third base when
Bruc-c Franklin or possibly Vernon Law comes
out after basketball season ends. Sophomore
Tony Cox will play third base.
Junior Jeff Vanzura opens in left field with
senior Terry Russi in center and either Hersey
or Greg Carter in right. Carter has been
slowed by a broken hand.
Hill will get the opening nod for Thursday’s
Seminole County Preseason Tournament
against Lake Mary with Junior Steve Dennis
handling the duties behind the plate. Game
time is 3:30 p.m.
Right-hander Chad Braden and left-hander
Chris Colon complete the mound staff,
liasketballer Steve Alexander will fight for an
outfield spot while Junior Jim Smith will
supply depth in the infield.
“ I can’t foresee us burning it up at the
beginning of the season," said Lundquist.
"Once we get all the basketball players out we
should come on strong late In the season.
"But it's the same old story, we’ve got to get
some pitching. Maybe we’U get some sur­
prises."

Hanley, Sacks
Post 2nd Wins
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Defeating full fields of stars and
c a n , Junior Hanley and Greg Sacks both scored their second
victory of the World Series on Tuesday night at New Smyrna
Speedway. Danny Knoll remained the class of the 100-plus
thunder car field by winning the “A" main for that division.
The "B " feature went to Darryl Shclnut.
In the runner-up spot on lap one of the late model feature,
behind fast tuner Malcuit, Dick Trickle, still getting used to his

Sacks, ). If.O f; 21. Tom Druer, 17,
I f .45; 72. Ross Holmes. 0-Y, 19.47;
21. Tom Ulrich, 75. 1* 44; 24. Bob
Shannon, 90, 1*.44 ; 25. Roy Smith,
S4, 20.12.
First heat (10 lapsl-1. Mike
McLaughlin.
Second heat (10 laps).I. Kenny
Bouchard.
Feature (15 lapal-1. E vent; 2.
Kent; 1. D. H ew itt; 4. Tomalno; 5.
H lrsh m a n ;
4. Sacks;
7.
McLaughlin; 0. Cookman; *. K.
B ouchard; 10. T a y lo r;
11.
M cLure; 12. R iley; 11. Baldwin;
14. Schloder; IS. Heveron; 14.
Wynn; 17. M cG raw; I I. Barber;
1*. M. H ew itt; 70. D ruar; 71.
Shannon; 77. Holmes; 21. Rica; 74.
W arren; 75. P erry; 24. U lrich; 27.
Smith; 71. David Simpson.

Returning starters: six
Promising newcomers: three
Strength: defense
Weakness: pitching
Like just about every other county coach,
Lake Mary’s Don Smith is looking for someone
to throw the ball over the plate this spring.
"We don’t have anybody who can get it
across," said Smith while preparing his team
for the opening round of the Seminole Countv
B aseball Tournam ent against Seminole
Hmrsday at 3:30 p.m. “ I’m not crying the
blues, that’s a fact.’’
The Rams return everyone from last year's
team, the first year of the school, except Paul
Alegre who transferred to Lyman to take a
refrigeration course.
Smith plans to start either junior B any
Hysell or junior transfer from DeLand Glno
Fontana against Seminole. "We’re going to
throw everybody to see what we’ve got,” said
Smith. Along with Hysell and Fontana, Smith
has lefty Mark Chasey, Junior Mark Clothier,
Melbourne transfer Greg Rue and freshman
Mike Schmit. Schmit has been a standout for
Altamonte’s 12 and 13-year-old leagues the
past two years.
When not on the mound, Hysell will anchor a
strong infield from his shortstop position
which includes Chasey at first base, reluming
starter Kevin Hill at third and Ft. Myers
transfer Ron Natherson at second.

brand-new Hanley-built machine, moved up right against the
back stretch wall, and when he entered turn three, he was
leading the race.
On lap 19, Hanley, who had kept his front spoiler stuffed
under Trickle's rear deck lap after lap, dove low around turn
three and four, blasted off the comer in first place and went on
to win, followed by Trickle, Malcuit, Joe Shear and Artie
Sommers. Heat winners were Sommers and Schill. C.G.
Williams won the consy.
Ilcggte Ruggiero led the first tour of the modified finale,
until Sacks applied pressure and used a sling-shot move, low,
off turn four, to take the lead on lap two.
Sacks continued to show his winning Defending Champion
style by holding off the extremely tough opposition of Ruggiero
and B ud welser Series Champion Richie Evans.
Heat winners were Doug Heveron and George Kent.

SPI NAL F X AM I N A 1 ION

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TERRY RUSSI
...center field

Rams, Seminole M eet In Tourney Opener

Scorecard

LATE M O O ILS
Time tria ls (Showing d rive r, car
number, tim e) — 1. M ika ddy. M,
11.74; 2. M ark M alcutl. 70,11.11; 1.
Junior Hanley, 72, 11.41; 4. Dick
Trickle, f f , 11.47; S. Jack Cook, *4,
11.4*; 4 Bob Keselowskl, I f . 11.07;
7. Frank Wood. 11. 11.11; I . Lee
Faulk. 71. l l . t l ; *. Ai Schill, 14,
IM S ; 10. LeRoy Porter, 7, I0.t0;
I I . Dave Wettmeyer, 14. 1*07. 12A rt Sommers, 10, l*.07; 13. Pete
Welts. 04. 1* 04; 14 Randy Slack.
3, 1*0*; 15. Robin McCall. 7X,
1 t.1 l; 14. Richard Collin, 17, I t . l f ;
17. Slav# M urgic. IK . 1 *.l*; II.
Paul Garrison. 5*. 1* 21. 1*. Jo*
Shear. 14. 1*2 0 ; 20. G ayle
Lovrlady. 70. 1*41, 21. Rick
CarelM, 4 1* M ; 22. Joe MWdlalon,
71. 1*.H ; 21 Bruce Gaskins. J,
l» 51 , 24. Perry Lovelady. 77,
If.J t; 25. Dave K iln*. 41. 1* 70 . 24.
Chris Dallarco. 17, I* W. 27. Marc
Bierkner, SO, 1*.00; 20 Spike
L ln d lty , Z -t. IM » / 2*. Duke
Southard. OS, i( . * l&lt; 10. Lee
Schuler,41/2000. ll. C a r l B u tt.fl.
70 25 . 52. Robert Hlsun 1*. 70 11;

BRIAN ROGERS
...shortstop

“ Natherson is an extremely hard worker
and a spray hitter," said Smith about his
newcomer. "Chasey and Hill helped them­
selves In our fall program."
Lake Mary’s outfield should be its strong
point. Left-handed hitting centerflelder Scott
Underwrood had a tremendous summer season
for the Altamonte 15-year-olds who finished
second In the state. Underwood showed good
power and was the team’s main RBI man.
He is flanked by Altamonte teammates
Keith Wallace In left field and Kyle Brubaker
in right. All three swing good bats and
Underwood, a sophomore, hit .321 last year.
Steady catcher Rod Metz returns to handle
the pitchers. Metz also swung a big bat for the
Altamonte squad last summer.
“ Rod did a fine job late In the season last
year," said Smith. “He's starting to sting the
ball and has begun to develop leadership
qualities."
The Rams have depth with Infielder Scott
Sienkiewicz, and another Melbourne transfer,
utility man John Gerry.
"Eleven of these 14 players were together
last year when we won 12 games (out of 21),"
said Smith. "That should help us experiencewise. We are still pretty young (eight
sophomores and one freshman). Our defense
and hitting will have to offset an Inexperienced
pitching staff."

\

Seminole's girls tennis team doubled its pleasure
Tuesday against Lyman, but the singles killed it.
The teams of Susana Huaman and La Dona
Merrificld along with Tracy McNeill and Britney ly re
took doubles victories but the Lady Greyhounds had
already built an insurmountable lead for a 4-3 victory.
In singles, Lyman's Kim Faulkner topped Huaman,
8-1, Gina DcFrancisco whipped McNeill, 8-3, Grace
Ceppola tripped Merrifield, 8-3, and Amy lis te r blitzed
Beth Nelson, 8-0.
The Tribe's lone singles' win came when Tyre nipped
Jam ie McNamee with a tiebreaker, 5-4.
Lyman Is 2-0 while Seminole is 0-1.
The boys match was no contest as Lyman rolled to
seven straight victories.
The Lyman boys are 2-0. The Tribe is 0-1.

Monday ntghtretuiti

GREG RILL
.workhorse Tribe hurier

W IN N E R S IX IN
A ROW AND
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OF DOLLARS

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Continued from 10A
Backing up Hoffman’s 31-polnt barrage was Richard Zullo
who totaled 16 off the bench including 8 of 6 from the line.
Garriques also had 14. Lake Mary's Dunn, a Junior, led the
Ram's with 24.
Making It a sweep for the night, the JV Pats held on for a 5351 victory.
LAKE MARY (72)
M iller 5 8-110, Counts 41-34, Merthle 6 W 14, Reynolds I M

2, Grayson 4 8-18, Jackson 10-0 2, Anderson 10-0 2, Dunn C8-10
24, Totals 30 12-22 72.
LAKE BRANTLEY (82)
Garriques 7 0-014, Shorey 2 2-2 8, Evans 134 5, Tram bo 2 4-6
8, Groseclose 1M 2, Zullo 4 W 18, Hoffman 127-1531, Totals 29
27-35 82.

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DEPARTMENT
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FEB. 19-26 - Most Domestic Cars

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Total ’ 14” plus tax

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I

�Sale Approved,
Bank Reopens

12A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Fab. U , j j l l

FLORIDA

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (U PI)-N ow owners of United
American Bank reopened the bank Tuesday, ending a financial
scramble that saw flamboyant Tennessee politician Jake
Butcher lose control of the insolvent institution.
The bank, trapped with bad loans estimated at more than ISO
million, was bought by Tennessee’s largest bank ho ding
company late Monday, just 16 hours after it was declared
insolvent in the fourth largest bank failure in U.S. history.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. selected First Ten­
nessee National Corp. of Memphis after “ intense negotiations
with 32 banks that sought to take over the centerpiece of
Butcher's financial empire.
“ We’re opening for business as usual and we re very excited
about It,” Armistead Smith, the new chairman for the merged
banks, said after the sale was approved early today by Knox
County Chancellor David Cate.
The new bank will be known as First Tennessee BankKnoxville.
, ..
Butcher, a silver-haired former gasoline truck driver who
wheeled and dealed his way to the top of East Tennessee
banking, lost his stock In the hank aiid ended up barred by the
f DIC from his office atop the gliUerin? 27-story UAB tower in
downtown Knoxville.

IN BRIEF
Education Plan Draws
Fire From Businessmen
TALLAHASSEE (U P I)-A controversial report
calling for a de-emphasis on vocational education and
the implementation of statewide standards for
graduation from high school has run Into opposition
from school administrators and businessmen.
Administrators said implementation of the plan
could result in a doubling of the dropout rate among
high school students, while businessmen said cutting
vocational education programs could hurt the state’s
push for high technology industry.

■*
1*
i

vj

TTie_j«£Wl—prcpBred by the Governor's Coni'
if e t m * o jr * 6 ci'O ndary

w a p - tn ;

powerful supporters, however.
Senate President Curtis Petu\wr. Tried, the varying
graduation requirements in Florida’s 67 counties and
said such decisions should be made on the state level.
Peterson said the Senate would address a com­
prehensive plan called the "Raise bill" aimed at
standardizing graduation requirements, implementing
a 6-perbd s d .v J day statewide, providing additional
training for one-third of the state's teachers each year
and extending the school year.

Alcohol Linked
To Many Accidents
No. the picture isn’t upside down. It’s just one of
the many zany flyers who will be performing at

Jetliner Lands Safely
MIAMI (UPI)—Passengers aboard a Jetliner that
scraped up a shower of sparks in an emergency belly
landing say they “saw doom’’ before the pilot brought
his Boeing 727 down in a safe, screaching slide the
length of the runway.
Eastern Airlines Flight 194, en route from Palm
Beach, to New York with 67 passengers and a crew of
seven, turned back to land at Miami International
Airport Tuesday night when ore of the plane’s landing
gears Jammed.
After attempting to free the stuck landing gear with
a "touch and go" brush of Runway 9-right, pilot R.R.
Curti decided to land the Jetliner on its belly.

E very M arch, sport aviation en­
thusiasts converge on Lakeland to launch
another season of recreational flying.
This year marks the ninth annual Sun ’N
Fun Fly-In.
For the week of March 13-19, pilots
from distant points like Vancouver,
British Columbia, Houghton, Maine, and
Mexico will converge on Lakeland
Municipal Airport for an action-packed
celebration of flight.

IN BRIEF

Every day from 2 to 4 p.m. there will be
a major airshow featuring this country's
lop barnstorm ers. E ipper A ircraft
president Lyle Byrum will be making his
first appearance in Florida with his
Quicksilver MX Super, a 260-pound,
open-cockpit, ultralight aircraft that was
designed specifically (or aerobatics.

Israelis Defy Lebanese ;

V

Roadblock

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) An Israeli patrol today
ran a Lebanese roadblock In east Beirut in a new
d la p ie a day alter Lebanese troops took control ot the
Christian sector to r the th a t time In eight years.
In Jerusalem, the government of Prime Minister
Menachem Begin, still reeling from the Beirut
massacre report, faced three no-confidence votes in
Parliament today amid new outbursts of violence on
the occupied West Bank.

Sharing the (light Une with Byrum wtU
be the Coors Beer Silver Bullitt, the
world's smallest jet aircraft, piloted by
Bobby Bishop. Coors will also have their
Lear jet on display and will sell chances
for rides in the plane (the proceeds will

go to charity). Miller's will alternate
with Coors, presenting th eir com­
puterized skywriting squadron of T-6's on
Friday and Saturday. Republic will fill in
the small jet vacancy on Friday and
Saturday with their BD-5 Jet and a DC-980 transport that will be open for tours
when it is not flying in the airshow.
Also included on the roster is the
Aerosport Flying Circus which stages
landings on the world's smallest air­
port—a platform mounted on top of a
pickup truck. They follow up with a
chained airplane formation flight, in
which two planes, a Great Lakes Trainer
and Bucker Jungmeister biplane are
locked together with a steel chain.
Members of the U.S. Aerobatics Team
will be flying each day in the most
refined example* of aerobatic aircraft In
the world. They’ll be joined by the Rosie
O'Grady Flying Circus and a perennial
favorite, Ken Brock in his KB-2
KvroDlane or "Flying Chair’’.

After Tuesday, March 15, there will be
educational forums running from 9 a.m.
up to airshow time in three different
tents. Every day there are commercial
exhibits to visit and flying enthusiasts to
meet from all over the nation and at least
two dozen foreign countries.
The Sun 'N Fun Fly-In is open to the
public. Daily admission is $6. Access to
the Right line is restricted to pilots and
members of the Experimental Aircraft
Association and their families.

C a s h

brothers, Jam es Robert of
Jonesboro, Ga., and Paul
Hollin of Atlanta.
Gramkow Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS. ANNIE L. TUCKER
Mrs. Annie Laura Tucker,
80, of 409 Lillian Drive in Fern
Park died Monday at her
home. Bom Dec. 13, 1902, Ip
B allard County, Ky., she
moved to Fern Park from
Kentucky In 1982. She was a
homemaker and a member of
LaCenter Baptist Church.
Survivors Include her

daughter, Mrs. Howard Elrod
of Fern Park; a son, Frank of
West Lafayette, Ind.; six
grandchildren; and three
great-grandchildren.
S e m o ra n -B a ld w in -F a irchlld
F uneral
Home,
Altam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
IRA D. JACKSON
Ira D. Jackson, 70, of
Palmetto Avenue, Sanford,
died Monday at Florida
Hospital-Orlando. Bom in
Kenton, Ky., Nov. 15,1912, he
moved to Sanford in 1959. He

was a retired carpenter in the
construction industry and an
elder and board member in
the First Christian Church in
Sanford. He was a member of
the B radford Lodge 123
FitAM In Independence, Ky.,
and the Sanford Masonic
Lodge 62, the Scottish Rite of
Orlando the Order of the
Eastern Star Chapter 2 In
Sanford, the Sanford Scottish
Rite Club, Sanford Senior
Citizens Club and a past
member of the Carpenter's
and Joiner's Local in Sanford.
He Is survived by his wife,
Louise; a daughter, Mrs.
Bonnie J.Rutledge of Jackson,
Miss; a son, Eugene D.
Jackson, El Paso, Texas; a
sister, Mrs. Marietta Ishmael
of Kenton, Ky., three grand­
children and one g re a t­
grandchild.

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r o o f ...

*

☆
*
*

Revised booklet of Veteran benefits recently published by the *
Veterans Administration now available to honorary discharfed &lt;r
Veterans at no cost.
*

☆

.

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FIS sad M S ts:

OAKLAWN’S VETERANS DIVISION
Route 4, Box 244
Sanford, Florida 32771

n e e d

a n d

i t ’s

rig h t n o w

State

w ith

y o u r

h o m e -g r o w n !

E q u ity

F i r s t F e d e r a l ’s
L oan. R ake

in

t h a t e q u i t y . B u n d l e u p a l l t h o s e p a s t - d u e ______ _
b ills . P l a n t t h e s e e d o f k n o w le d g e ... s e n d y o u r k id s t o c o lle g e .
P lo w

u n d e r a ll t h o s e m e d i c a l b ills . R a is e t h e r o o f o r g e t
a new

c r o p o f c a rp e tin g . O r w h y n o t ju s t re a p th e

re w a rd s o f y o u r h a rd

w o r k ... ta k e a v a c a tio n .

f T h e r e ’r e b u s h e l s o f w a y s t o u s e t h e e x t r a
ca sh . T ry y o u r h a n d
a b o u t o u r E q u ity

Ph.

_

Address____________________________
City____________________

a ll

r ig h t u n d e r

T h a t m e a n s e q u ity y o u c a n h a rv e s t

ta k e u p to

Name _______________________________

is

Y o u r h o m e s p r o u te d in v a lu e o v e r th e y e a rs.

H o m e -G ro w n
JACKSON, MR. IRA D. Funeral servlet* lo r M r. Ira D.
Jackson, 70, ol Palmetto Ava.,
Sanford, who died Monday, w ill
be at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Stephen
B alda uff
F une ral
Chapel, Deltona, w ith th# Rev
Edw ard Johnson o l F irs t
Christian Church, Sanford, of­
fic ia tin g . M asonic gra veside
services w ilt follow at Oak lawn
M anorial Park. Viewing 7 4 and
AS today. Stephen R. Baldauff In
charga.

o n

M oney

Funtral Notices

V E T E R A N S

i n

Y our H om e-

Stephen
R.
B aldauff
Funeral Home, Deltona, Is in
charge of arrangements.

j

In the past, public concern lias focused on the relationship
between alcoholism and highway injuries, but what is “ less
generally recognized is alcohol’s association with other
injuries," the CDC said in its Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report.
Tne studies cited were conducted in Washington, Mas­
sachusetts, California and Maryland in addition to New'
York City and showed the high percentage of non-highway
deaths and injuries related to alcohol.
A study of adult drownings In Baltimore showed high
levels of alcohol in the blood of 21 of 45 victims, the CDC
said.
A New York City study revealed that that 41 percent of 54
fall victims, 46 percent of 28 fire victims and 53 percent of 19
drowning victims had alcohol blood concentration ratings
of 0.10 percent or higher. A spokesman for the CDC said a
0.10 percent level was a common definition of intoxication
used by law enforcement agencies in drunken driving
cases.
In the Washington state study, alcohol use was found in 10
percent of 1,740 persons with fall injuries reported at a large
hospital emergency room. Alcohol was found in 22 percent
of 76 of those fall victims who sought medical care for more
than one injury during the one-year study.
The Massachusetts study, based on hospital emergency
room visits, showed alcohol blood readings of 0.01 percent
and higher among 22 percent of 620 persons treated for
iniuries in the home.

One of the highlights of the Sun 'N Fun
Fly-In is th t wide assortment of display
aircraft that show up. There will be
hundreds of hom cbuilts, antiques,
w arbirds, ro to rcraft and ultralight
airplanes. John Monnett, of Momjett
E xperim ental A ircraft in Oshkosh,
Wisconsin, will be bringing in two new
homebuilt designs and the Monerai
which was featured recently on the cover
of Popular Science magazine. There
snould also be over a dozen new
ultralight configurations to look at.

AREA DEATHS
JOHNT. ELLIS
John Thomas Ellis, 43, of
816 Cherokee Circle in San­
ford died S aturday in
Longwood. Bom March 30,
: 1939, in Miami, he moved to
Sanford 10 years ago from
Winter Haven. He was a
carpet installer and a Baptist.
He is survived by his wife,
Jewel C., two sons, John
Thomas J r. and David
Wayne, both of Sanford; two
sisters, Laverne Ford of
W inter Haven and Faye
R oberts, Bellevlew; two

ATLANTA (UPI) — Fedcril health officials say the
excessive use of alcohol is becoming n major cause of not
only traffic deaths and injuries, but non-highway accidents.
Citing studies conducted in several states and New York
City, the national Centers for Disease Control said the find­
ings should encourage doctors in hospital emergency rooms
to test injured persons for alcohol blood levels.
Such action would both ensure appropriate medical
management of injuries and serve as an inlitial step in
treating problem drinking or alcoholism.

9th Sun N Fun Fly-In Set
For March 13-19 In Lakeland

W O R LD
C r a s h T h ro u g h

the annual Sun ’N Fun Fly-In at Lakeland next
month.

are

you

re p a y m e n t.
w a itin g

fo r! C o m e

a t o u r till. A s k
L oan

an d

15 y e a rs fo r
S o w .,
in

w h at

to d a y !

Zip

For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1,1955 Q ]
For Veterans with military service since Jan. 31,1955 Q
Year of Discharge_______________________ A g e ________

S E M IN O L E

Type of Discharge_____________________________________

SANFORD« LONGWOOD • FORF.ST CITY • OVIEDO • APOI’K V
O R A N G E C IT Y • D i-B A R Y • W IN T E R P A R K • SOUTH-EAST ORLANDO

U n it e d Wfeg

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\

PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. It, I98J—IB

Cook O f The W eek

For Fourth Year

Club 'Most
Outstanding'
In District

Florida Cukes Ideal
For Bread- Butter Pickles
By LOU CHILDERS
Herald Correspondent
Edie Greathouse halls from Illinois but now makes her home
in Chuluolo. Edie and her husband Jam es and son Frank
moved to Florida last July after only two vacations to the
Sunshine State.
Edie says she grew up In rural Illinois In a little town called
Christman where she learned homemaking skills from her
mother." Mother would cook and can everything ftom m usage
to green beans." Edie says she has canned ever since she was
old enough to know what vegetables arc.
Since moving to Florida, Edie has canned Bread-'N-Butter
Pickles. “ I like to start canning pickles when they are ready
for the first picking," she says, "when the cukes arc about four
or five inches long."
Once Edie's garden produced a bumper crop of mangoes
(green peppers) so she decided to pickle a few quarts. Site used
the same vinegar solution as for her bread-’n-butter pickles.
And. In preparing the peppers, she removed the caps and
seeds, quartered them and packed them loosely in sterilized
Jars. Then she poured in the hot vinegar and spices, sealed the
jars with boiled caps and seals and stored them upside down.
Since, Edie spent quite a few years working at the Zenith
Radio and Television Corp., she has a lot of recipes for use with
her microwave. "After you’ve spent eight to 10 hours away
from home working, it sure is nice not to have to spend a lot of
time in the kitchen when you get home."
Edie and her family are especially fond of Microwave
Mealloaf, and through a little experimentation, Edie has found
that using tomato soup in place of any other tomalo product
results in a moist meatloaf.
Another “ secret" that Edie and her husband discovered one
time when baking a turkey in the microwave is that basting the
bird with butter several times during the cooking time, and
turning it over twice will produce a turkey thAt is evenly
browned on the outside, and equally as tender as it is good
looking. Edie always uses her own special dressing when
baking a microwave turkey.
Do you ever get frustrated when it comes to finding
something new to cook with ground beef? Edie Greathouse has
a dish that uses canned biscuits, cheese, tomato sauce and
diced onions layered in a casserole.
Edie says when it comes to desserts, her all-time favorite
has to be Peanut Butler Pie.
BREAD-’N-BUTTER PICKLES
3 large onions, cut and pushed into rings
4 bushel medium cukes, sliced 4-inch thick
4 cup salt
3 gallons cold water
Soak cucumbers and onions overnight in cold salted water.
The next day, drain well.

In a large saucepan, bring to boil 4 gallon vinegar, 3 cups
sugar, 2 teaspoons each of allspice, pickling spices and whole
cloves.
Pack cucumbers and onion rings loosely in sterilized jars.
Cover with vinegar while still hot. Place boiled caps on jars
while caps arc still hoi to form a tight seal. Pul rings on and
turn jars upside down to store. Yield 10-12 quarts.
MICROWAVE MEATLOAF
1 puurcCJteBn ground neef
___
1 medium onion, chopped iine
1 egg
1 cup crushed cracker crumbs
4 can of undiluted tomato soup
Salt L pepper to taste
Mix a 11ingredients well and place in a glass loaf pan. Bake 20
to 30 minutes watching closely at end of cooking time so as not
to bum edges of meatloaf.
dlCKOWAVF.TURKEY AND DRESSING
Prepare dressing by combining the following ingredients
and mixing well:
4 cups toasted bread crumbs
3 cups chicken broth
2 eggs
1 medium onion, chopped
1 cup chopped celery
6 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoon losely at end of cooking time so as not to
14 teaspoons salt
4 teaspoon pepper
Wash a 10 to 12-pound turkey well. Salt ins de of cavity and
brush inside and outside of bird with melted butter. Stuff
turkey with dressing and close cavity. Place in shallow glass
pan and microwave for 30 minutes. Turn turkey over, brush
liberally with melted butter, and microwave an additional 30
minutes. Turn bird over again and brush with a final coaling of
melted butter. Microwave for 40 minutes. Turkey should be
tender. If additional cooking is required, microwave for 10
minutes and test for doneness.
HAMBURGER CASSEROLE
2 cans of biscuits (10 count each)
2 pounds lean ground beef
1 pound sliced American cheese
1 16-ounce can tomato sauce
4 cup diced onion
1. Fry ground beef adding 1 teaspoon salt and 4 teaspoon
pepper. When nicely browned, drain meat and set aside.
2. Roll 5 biscuits out into a very thin layer and place in
bottom of a casserole dish.
3. Cover biscuits with a thin layer of cooked ground beef.
4. Spread on a thin coat of tomato sauce, and sprinkle this
with diced onions.
5. Place 3 to 4 slices ot cheese on top o( other Ingredients.
6. Repeat layering, ending up with thinly rolled biscuits on
top.
7. Bake for 25 minutes in a 350 degree oven.
Optional: Additional seasonings may be added when
browning ground beef such as Italian, garlic, or chill powder.
PEANUT BUTTER PIE
5 eggs, well beaten
1 cup sugar
4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 cups milk, scalded
4 cup peanut butter
Combine all Ingredients except peanut butter In top of a
double boiler. Stir and cook until thickened. Remove from heat
and stir In peanut butter until mixture Is creamy and smooth.
Pour Into two 9-inch pie shells. Bake for 10 minutes at 425
degrees and 40 to 50 minutes at 375 degree until pies are done.

Publicity Procedures

t

(
H traM M w * »V U K dU M ar*

Edie Greathouse says she has canned over since
she was old enough to know what vegetables are.

The Herald welcomes organization and personal
news The following suggestions are recommended:
Releases should be typed (lower and upper case),
double spaced, and written narrative style (third
person).
Do not abbreviate.
A contact person's name and phone number is
necessary.
Keep releases simple.
Organization releases (the program should lead the
meeting account) must be submitted no later than two
days after the event.
Advance notices should be submitted one week prior
to publication date.
Requests for a photographer should be made one
week in advance, after 2 p.m. daily.

BUY TODAY
AND SAVE!

FINAL CLEARANCE

QUALITY BUILT
FILTER-FLO*
WASHERI

Save up to

■ Two eyelet-*agutir ind
permanent preti
• 3 * a * h / n n * a t a m p e r a tu ia

50% Off

t e ie e iio n t .
• T h r e e w a te r le vel
M ie c t r o n t

Selected Winter Robes, Slippers, Shoes,
Sweaters, Suits, Skirts, Dresses, Hats,
Purses.
1
All Sales Final— No Returns

hTk
W W A5SOOO

Limited
Quantity

ONLY

Moytog-Jonnair
Kitchen Aid

HOME APPLIANCE
Senlord

Phone

m in i

l» W W .F |R * T !T R E R T
SANFORD

Servicing All Motor Brondi

DeLend A
Del tone
Phono

MISIO

H traM Photo* by Jana C oitotborry

Displaying awards the Junior Woman's Club
of Sanford Inc. won at the District VII Junior
Award Night are, from left, Pam Tucker,

Sanford's Most Unique Boutique
LOIS DYCUS-OWNER
Ph. 323-4131
210 E. First St., Downtown Sanford

Carol Larson, Carole P egram , B everly
Huffman, Bonnie Albers, Meg Newman,
Nancy Crawford and Debt Shannon.

Post Sets O pen House
For Potential Explorers
Fire Explorer Post B40, sponsored by the I-ake Mary
Volunteer Fire Department, like the U.S. Marines, is looking
for a few good people, according to Post Advisor Lake Mary
Assistant Fire Chief Bob Stoddard.
The explorer program, geared for young men and women
between the ages of 14 and 21, Is designed to provide the op­
portunity to explore all facets of a given profession.
Post 840 is open to all Seminole County residents within that
age group who are interested in the fire-rescue service and
who would like to participate in fire training and have ex­
posure to actual fire and rescue situations.
Business meetings take up very little of the explorer’s time.
“They want action," Stoddard said, "and it’s action we give
’em."
Quickly vetoing an original training schedule of two hours
per month.
Training drills are not limited to lecture sessions. All post
members receive "hands-on" training in hose evolutions,
apparatus panel operation laddering techniques, and other
related activities.
AU post members hold current certifications in CPS, with
standard and advanced First-Aid courses currently being
taught to those not already certified.
"They get tired, they gel wet and they get dirty," Stoddard
commented, "and still they come back for more." Drills are
conducted under the supervision of post Associate Advisors,
LL Dave Dovan and fireflghter-EMT Don Cook, training of­
ficers.

While post members are trained in all phases of fire fighting
they are used in limited capacity on actual fire scenes. “ We
See EXPLORERS, Page SB

IO W A
M EATS
w E
eD
d .EttShh°r “u —
D
W

5AT'

U.S.D.A. Choior Naturally Aged

HIND QUARTER
Cut • Wrapped And Frozen

Lb.

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U.S.D.A. Choice

FRONT QUARTER
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| GROUND CHUCK
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T N I H O W T O FO R O O IT Y O U R S E L F P R O J E C T !
REPRESENT NOCOMPANY
SELL N O P R O D U C T

DECORATING CONSULTANT

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Georgia Grade *A*

HOME DECORATING

FOR INFORMATION CAJ.L

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U.S.D.A. Choice NitYTRlIy Aged

N E W C O N C E P T IN

DO A LITTLE. DO A LOT
DO IT NOW OR DO IT LATER
COMPLETE COLOR COORDINATING
EFFECTIVE USE OF ACCESSORIES
NEW LOOK FOR OLD FURNISHINGS

N a tu ra lly Aged

W«t»rw B—t

WE WILL NOW BE CLOSED EVERY MONDAY

-C L IP AND SAVE*

Avoid Expensive Mistake*.

$368°°

Oenefel Electric
F rlfid e lre

Honnic Albers, immediate past president of
the Junior Woman’s Club of Sanford Inc.,
bolds coveted silver tray the club received as
"Most Outstanding in District VII, Florida
Federation of Women’s Clubs.

The Junior Woman’s Club of Sanford, Inc., was
represented by 18 members attending the annual District
Seven Award Junior Night and Arts and Craft Festival.
The club is a member of the Florida Federation of
Woman's Clubs. Junior Sorosls Club of Orlando hosted the
event.
Awards were presented after judging by the Junior
District Director Mrs. Nancy Arnold. The nine Junior
Gubs in district Seven submit annual reports on all
aspects of Gub work. The awards are determined by
these annual reports.
The Sanford Juniors won awards in eight of 12
categories. First place awards were given to the GFWC
Jr. Project-Alcohol-Drug Abuse, leadership, Memliorship and Public Affairs.
Second place awards went to Education, Programs and
Public Relations-Communication.
The Arts Department received a third place award.
The reports will now be sent to state officers and
chairman to determine awards to be given at the State
Spring Convention in April.
Junior Night is a time to be recognized for community
service and involvement. The dedication and hard work of
the Sanford Juniors was evident as once again, the Gub
received the coveted silver tray recognizing them as the
"Most Outstanding Junior Gub” in District Seven.
Eve Crabtree, Nancy Julian, Nancy Crawford, and now
Bonnie Albers have had the honor of accepting this award
for the club.
Ribbons were also presented in the Arts and Crafts
Festival. There were four first place, six second place and
three third place ribbons awarded to the Sanford Juniors.

3 2 2 -9 2 0 8
IF NO ANSWER CALL
322-8288

1

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1
1

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All Meat

WIENERS
2108

. 0 .^ * 1

1”

*1I4?.

S. FRENCH A V L ( 1 7 - 9 2 )
NEXT TO MR. C'S CHICKEN

§
|

I PHONE ORDER AHEAD

0 o 0 A tO Q 1

1 It's Ready When You're Ready

£ £ * 3 a* t D X O 1

0

�2B — Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

W ednesday, Feb. 1ft, 1W3

V ersatile Bean Basis For
Dry beans have long been
Known for their low cost and
high nutritio n al value. A
pound of beans, when cooked,
will make about 9 servings,
compaied to 5 servings per
pound or cheese and up to 4
servings per pound of meat,
poultry or fish. Including
cooked or canned beans in a
m eal, stre tc h e s the food
dollar and adds a nutritional
bonus.
A cup of cooked dry beans
supplies about 225 kilocalories
as well as significant amounts
of fiber, protein, calcium, iron
and thiamin. There is no
cholesterol and only a small
amount of fat.
Protein comes from two
sources in the food supply,
animal and plant. Protein
from animal sources (meat,
fish, poultry, eggs, cheese,
milk) is "complete protein,"
since it has all eight of the
essential
am ino
acids
(building blocks) present in
the proper proportions for life
and growth. Plant protein is
"incomplete protein,” since
one or more of these amino
ad d s are missing or in short
supply.
Plant protein comes from
th ree classes of foods:
legumes, seeds, and grains.
Dry beans belong to the
legumes class, along with dry
peas, lentils and peanuts. In
o rd er for the incom plete
protein in dry beans to
become complete, they must
be combined with another
protein source, from another
class of foods, such as seeds,
grains or animal protein.
Many recipes using dry
beans also call for small
amounts of meat or cheese, or
for accompaniments such as
rice, bread, tortillas or pasta.
These "combination dishes"
are high in protein and low incost. The following recipes
are good examples of com­
bination dishes. Some are
universal favorites and others
a re regional sp ecialties.
You’ll find the versatile bean
provides the basis for new
menu ideas and a change of
routine.
HOT TIME SPREAD
1 can (1 lb.) baked beans in
tomato sauce

' 1 can (7 ax.) deviled ham
] tablespoon horseradish
1
tablespoon
Wor­
cestershire sauce
G enerous dash of hot
pepper sauce
4 medium onion, finely
chopped
Combine ail ingredients in
blender Jar. Whirl until
smooth. Remove to serving
dish and chill.
VARIATION: Add about 4
cup cooked crumbled bacon in
place of deviled ham. Makes
about 3 cups.
RIO GRANDE DIP
1 can (1 lb. 12 oz.) pork and
beans, sieved or pureed
1 cup shredded sharp
Cheddar cheese
1 teaspoon garlic salt
14 teaspoon chili powder
4 teaspoon salt
Dash ground red pepper
2 teaspoons vinegar
2 teaspoons Worcestershire
sauce
4 teaspoon liquid smoke
4 slices cooked bacon,
crumbled
Combine all ingredients
except bacon. Heat in chafing
dish or double boiler. Top with
crumbled bacon, serve hot
with com chips or crackers.
Makes about 4 cups.
CREAMY BEAN DIP
1 roll (6 oz.) processed
cheese food
1 can (104 oz.) bean with
bacon soup
1 cup dairy sour cream
4 cup finely chopped green
onion
4 teaspoon hot pepper
sauce
Mix soup and cheese and
m elt
slowly.
Add
all
remaining ingredients except
sour cream . After mixture is
cooled, add sour cream. Serve
with com or potato chips, or
raw vegetables. Makes about
3 cups.
BRANDIED BEANS
1 can (1 lb. 14 oz.) baked
beans
1 can (1 lb.) peach halves
Whole cloves
4 cup Drandy
Pour beans into 14 quart
casserole and top with peach
halves, studded with cloves.
Pour brandy over peaches.
Bake at 350 degrees F. about
30 minutes. Makes 4-6 ser­
vings.
OLD FASHIONED BAKED
BEANS
1 lb. dry navy beans
6 cups water
1 4 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon dry m ustard
4 teaspoon pepper

4
4
4
4

Wash and sort beans,
Combine beans, water and
salt and let stand overnight,
OR Combine beans, salt and

cup chopped onion
cup molasses
cup brown sugar
lb. salt pork, cubed

teraio Regional M e n u Ide
In
,

w a te r in larg e saucepan.
Bring to a boil and cook 2
minutes. Remove from heat,
cover and let stand one hour,

After soaking, cook beans
until tender 14-2 hours, adding water if needed. Drain,
reserving liquid. Mix with

remaining ingredients. Pour
into 2 quart casserole with
tight-fitting lid. Add enough
bean liquid to cover beans,

Bake covered, at 300
F. about 34-4 hours,
occasionally. Add
w ater as needed

degrees
stirring
boiling
during

baking. Makes 6-6 servings.
CURRIED BEANS
\ lb. dry navy beans
See BEANS, Page 3B

t t r Golden Ripe
B
A
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cPtide SAVE 10 c PER LB
P R IC E S E F F E C T IV E W E D ., F E B .
1 6 T H R U T U E S ., F E B . 2 2 , 1 9 8 3 .
EVERYDAY
LO\PRICE

PILLSBURY
CAKE MIXES
A L L V A R IE T IE S

COM PARE |

F R E S H C R IS P

FRESH

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FLORIDA
CARROTS

ICEBERG
LETTUCE

FLORIDA
ORANGES

GROCERY

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EVERfCMf

OUTSTANDING PRODUCE BUYS!

SAVE

FRESH
C O C K T A IL P E A C H E S , PE A R S
o n C H U N K Y M IX E D FR U IT

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Gala Towel .«r~ 69 *

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APPLE
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1

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save

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139

$

66 PPAACCKK
12or CAN

DETERGENT

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16oz CAN

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with

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w r m T H B C O U P O N OO O O I
TH R U W ED., F E D 2 3 . 1 9 9 3 . |

�1 3-ounce package lemon-flavored gelatin dessert
2-3 cup boiling water
2-3 cup cold water
1 8-ounce carton unflavored yogurt
1 cup strawberry halves
Vi cup strawberry preserves, mixed well
For crust: Place cereal in large greased bowl. Melt together
marshmallows and butter in heavy saucepan over low heat.
Pour over cereal; mix well. With greased hands, press mix­
ture evenly onto bottom and sides of greased 0-lnch pie plate;

A dessert that Is relatively easy to make and takes little time
fits into today’s busy schedules.
A lemon yogurt pie fills the bill and a piece fits into lunch
boxes for school children and adults.
LEMON YOGURT PIE
Crust:
2 4 cups 100 percent natural cereal
2Vi cups miniature marshmallows
V« cup butter or margarine
Filling and Topping

Flavorful Pie
Fills The Bill

E vening H e ra ld , Santord, F I.

W ednesday, F pb .1*» 1H 3—3 fr

chlU.
For filling and topping: Dissolve gelatin in boiling water in
small mixing bowl; stir In cold water. Oiill until slightly
thickened. Add yogurt; beat at high speed on electric mixef
about 14 minutes until mixture is light and fluffy. Pour into
prepared crust; chill about 4 hours or until firm. Combine
strawberries and preserves; spoon over filling, CJiill. Thif
kitchen-tested recipe makes one 9-lnch pie.

999

SHANK PORTION

SM O K ED
H AM S

BONUS
BUY

py~
cPride

LB
SAVE 4 0 c PER LB

BUTT PORTION 8 9

«
P R IC E S E F F E C T IV E W E D ., F E B .
1 6 T H R U T U E S ., F E B . 2 2 , 1 9 8 3 .

LB

S A V E 3 0 ° P E R LB

B LA D E C U T BEEF

U .S .D .A . G R A D E A
F A M IL Y S IZ E P A C K A G E S

CHUCK
ROAST

B LA D E C U T

CHUCK
STEAK

FRYER
T H IG H S - D R U M S T IC K S

C O M B IN A T I O N P K G S .

PER POUND

$ T |9
A
S A V E 60°
PER LB

COMPARE

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

LARGE MEATY

SAVE
PER LB

CHECK
T H ESE

COMPARE

COMPARE

SAVE

PW CES

PANTRY PRIDE SLICED,

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Turkey Drumsticks AVQ PKO. ■ LB 3 9 * 0 « B R S w l.« *r0
Owaltney’simibiLB1!** 0
Market Style Bacon AVa/pKO. ■ LB I
SMOKED
Mr. Turkey ^u*ao« lb*1 L£°J
Turkey H a m ...................B$1“
Lykes Ham . . JS *17B lid
$17 9
California Steaks
Oscar Mayer •p*a I
On Cor Breaded Patties
8 LB

SLICED, VAC PAG

A

0

SLICED COOKED

*^ T O

BEEF, M EAT OR CHEESE
SKINLESS FRANKS

*

I

]

U.S.D.A. CHOICE UNDERBLADE

ROASTS

a

LB

■

COOKED, HEAT &amp; SERVE BEEF, PORK OR CHUCKWAGON

3 LB

$ ^ 2 9

avo.

RAGU H O M ESTYLE

Q

YoptaKYogurt2/89*

ChoMHBPride . ^*1'**
Flefscfimann’s ^ 7 9 0
M PO H TED O R A TED . B o* PKO.

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SNO W CROP’S FRUIT BEVERAGE.
CHILLED IN THE DAIRY CASE HALF
CkAL.
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Five Alive . .

|

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$^29

FR E S H LY B A K E D

GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR

SPAGHETTI
SAUCE

WAFFLE
SYRUP

. . .

SAVE

PWCea OOOO ONLY M SCMMXE COUWTY IX * TO OUR LOW l»»crs WC RESERVE TV* nOMT TO UMTT OUAHTTTWS
MOH* «OU) TO DCALXRa. NOT W W J FOR TYPOOWHCX DWOWB

PKO. L B

M O U N T A IN LODGE

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

DA IR Y

ITALIAN
BREAD

(&gt;| AIN O H SJ I I R ISIN G

W IT H M U S H R C X 3M S PLA IN O f I W IT H M E A T

IN THJ 1&gt;[IJ HAKEFT’i ' S T O U T S O N I V

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24oz
BTL

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s a v e ib

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t ^ l

SAVE 2CT

BUTTCRLOAF

20oZ

1 6 4 1 0

a

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l 19

SAVE 10*

100 COUNT

VITA FRESH

$ J2 9

DAILY MULTIPLE

PANTRY PRIDE

TE A
BAGS
JENO S
PIZZAS

16 o z
LOAF

SAVE 6

S A V E 10

PANTRY PRIDE U ~U 20oz LOAVES

PANTRY PRIDE

8 9

5 LB
BAG.

16 o z
JA R

SAVE 26

SAVE 40*
1 0 0 ‘B

BAAtRY STORES ONLY

TURKEY
ROLL

$J 4 9

VITAMINS
W ITH IRON

SAVE 80' PER LB

ALL WHITE M EAT

g r :

$

MAYBELUNE l

$ }9 9

M O ISTURE WVdP

0R6AUSAOC

FRIED
CHICKEN
DINNER

SAVE BO*

GLOSS STICKS

eXX.I*»AT10H
POW CN

|

4

9

SAVE 30'
ft THf OCL*
BAACRY fcTORtS ONLY

C O UN TR Y PRIDE

SAVE 28*

10.3oz FROZEN

*

HALF POUND

$

^

6

9

WITH 2 VfO A A ROU.

ASSTD. SHADES

IN TH E D ELI-B A K ER Y S T O R E S O NLY
even YDAY

COMPARE

6 A K I NY

PANTRY PROE10ox STICK

A

low

P»CI

SAVE

PECAN

1201 FROZEN-POUNDCAKE

0

PANTRY PRCC

____ _
A

EVERYDAY
LOW

« «

Oovertaafmu -a. 69* 0
ITALIAN UN8UCED BREAD
A A A Famous ., 9 9*

COMPARE

u&gt;w

C o ie s m
FROZEN W HIPPED

Topping

.........so.99

Vidal Sassoon
REGULAR MENTHOL.
UM E OR APPLE

30'

Colgate

Q Q C

20*

pant ito&lt;9 9

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FLOATS OR

|

5
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CHERRY BOSTON

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.

.

S2 M

KITCHEN FRESH

Cole Slaw •

•

9 • ui

SAVE 9*

* w * # #

I

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. 2 / 8 9 * Lid

.

3 / $I
\

SAVE

nr $159 0

A I A A a i

7.2BOZ BOX

ytlTHVv'

\

tow

PMCI

_____

Turnovers

I

. .

MACARONI
&amp; CHEDDAR
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I GODS

Boi
Boiled
Ham

149

Kotex SEES . . . -.‘ I ”
M O UTHW ASH
I I a I jlr J m

COMPARE
LEAN

REGULAR OR SUPER
PANTRY

SAVE

GOLDEN GRAIN

COCA
C O L A ,!
METCOKE, TAB, BFlinZ- te
TWO LITER

BO*

FROZEN

S A V E 30* C A S H « a

YOU PAY 79* W ITH THIS
CO UPO N OOOO THRU
WED . FEB. 2 3 . 1983.

EVERYDAY

SAVE

*

Oregon Farms . 9 9 *

Cinnamon twiu . 2/s1

PARTYFLAKE OR

I H O /1 N

SHAM POO G E N U E OR REO.

lE J in O

French Bread 21*1°*

PANTRY
8 PACK

COMPARE

79'

30*

Beans

(Continued From Page 2B) ■
6 cups water
1 teaspoon salt
2 medium yellow Delicious
apples, peeled and diced
'
4 cup golden seedless
raisins
1 onion, chopped
one-third cup sweet pickle
relish
two-thlrda cup brown sugar,
packed
1 tablespoon prepared
mustard
1 teaspoon curry powder
Combine beans, water and
salt. Let stand overnight.
Simmer 2 hours, adding water
If needed. D rain beans,
reserving liquid. Combine
beans
with
rem aining
ingredients. Pour into 2 4
q u art baking dish Add
enough bean liquid to cover.
Bake at 300 degrees F. about
14 hours, adding more liquid
if necessary. Mokes about 8-10
. servings.
RAGOUT (RAH-GOOD)
1 lb. stew beef or round
steak cut into cubes
2 tablespoons shortening or
oil
4 medium onions, peeled
and quartered
1 green pepper, seeded and
cut into strips
Salt and pepper to taste
4 teaspoon sugar
2 cans (1 Ib. each) beans in
tomato sauce
1 can (12 oz.) beer
Brown meat In shortening
in fry pan. Add onions and
green pepper and continue
cooking until vegetables are
slightly
browned.
Add
seasonings. Combine meat,
vegetables and beans in a 2
quart casserole. Pour half the
beer into trying pan and stir
into meat Juices. Pour over
bean mixture and stir. Cover
and bake at 350 degrees F.
about one hour. Remove
cover and bake another 30
minutes. Add remaining beer
U mixture seems to be getting
dry. Makes W servings
FHTTTATA (TOEE-TAH-TA^
6 eggs
1 can (1 lb.) pork and beans
In tomato sauce, drained
1 cup cubed Provolone
cheese
2 oz. thinly sliced Pepperoni
1-2 cloves garlic, minced
4 cup chopped fresh par­
sley
1 teaspoon basil
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons b u tter or
margarine
In large bowl, beat eggs
thoroughly. Add all other
ingredients, except butter.
Mix well. Melt butter in large
fry pan or medium-high heat.
Pour In egg mixture, cover.
During cooking, occasionally
remove cover and slip spatula
under cooked portion to allow
uncooked egg mixture to flow
to the bottom. Cook until eggs
are set and puffy around
edges, about 10 minutes. Cut
in pie-shaped wedges. Makes
6 servings.
PASTA E FAGIOLI (FAHJO-LEE)
14 cups dry navy beans
6 cups water
14 teaspoons salt
2-3 cup oil
1 bay leaf
2-3 cloves garlic
3 carrots, diced
2 stalks celery, sliced
1 large onion, chopped
3 tablespoons oil
1-2 garlic cloves, crushed
1 teaspoon dry oregano
4 teaspoon dry basil
Salt and pepper
6-7 tomatoes, peeled and
chunked
4 lb. shell macaroni
Combine beans, water and
salt. Let stand overnight In
cool place. Add salt, 2-3 cup
oil, bay leaf and whole garlic
cloves. Simmer gently until
beans are tender, 2-3 hours.
Drain, reserve liquid, discard
bay leaf and garlic. Heat 3
tablespoons oil In large
frypan; add carrots, celery
and onion and cook until onion
Is soft. Add crushed garlic and
seasonings and simmer X
minutes. Add tomatoes and
cook another 10 minutes. Cook
macaroni in boiling salted
water until just tender. ’
Combine beans, vegetables
and drained pasta, along with
14 cups bean liquid. Cover
and sim m er another 10
m inutes,
stirrin g
occasioRelly. G arnish with
chopped parsley end serve
with
g rated
P arm esan
cheese. Makes 6 4 servings

�t

B L O N D IE

4B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Feb. U , 19 B3

D A G W O O D /^

B E ETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker
T R U T H IS A

V

CONPITlON EASILY
ALTER ED BY

CIRCUMSTANCE
a n p m a n 's ,
RATIONALE

EVASION
is

No t

ALW AYS
PREYARI-

I L IK E TO ASK H IM T H IN G S
LIK E THAT TO HEAR H IM
.T A L K FUNNY

CATION,
" HOR...

46
47
48
49
St
55
56

ACROSS

by Chic Young

1 Definite

2

3

4

10

n o n

18
23

26

"o t T n

□ P O P

7

8

9

12

13

16

■
9
r
r
■
■
L
r
■F 31F
i1 j
■
J■
J
■ ■

17

20

28

29

30

35

32

33

34

53

54

36

37

41

6

15

by Art Sansom
22

5

11

14

V

Answer to Previous Purrle

i M u
i n A
11 k i E
article
V f N |
t O N
0 [a R Z]
4 Mao
s
t
n‘
S A M 1 s EIN
lung
7] j y m
u .fi i
7 Haul
c U R
A R s
c' * 0
ro
10 Wine (Fr)
ui
SI 11 A □
E R A
■ u x T
11 Cooking fat
57 Aetern
u N■ T A U
0 A D O
12 Jacob's tw&gt;n 58 Spanish river E L ■ 1 w n \ U N
-1 C O R N
14 Between
59 Recent (prefu)
1
&gt; r 0 ■ T A R1
16 Star (prefu)
60 Our (Fr)
C [ I V 1 T L v ■ a _r P s V
18 Genetic
1 D E E [ i M Ml A
E T A
material
DOW N
N o O S
S A w
[a C ? | R
19 Month (abbr)
O N s
t l A T
N A 's i A
21 Thick black
1 New Oeal
39 New Vork
liquid
project (abbr.) 22 All (Span)
22 Not wild
2 Pronoun
23 Vast period of river
24 Three (prefii| 3 Vast
time
4 t in addition
25 City in
4 Draped
24 Bushy clump 42 Communists
Norway
garment
(Brit)
43 Command
26 Poverty-war
5 Family
25
Court
cry
45
Dress style
agency (abbr)
member
27 Catches
(si)
27 Tairly Urge
6 The bull (2
28 Regan's father 47 Inexperienced
29 Poured upon
wrls .Span)
30 Oore
48 Edible root
31 Macabre
7 Nipple
35 Beginning
8 CIA
32 Of living near 50 Flower
36 Stupefying
forerunner
river
garland
37 Old Testament 9 Los Angeles 33 Cross
52 Day of week
book
area
(abbr)
inscription
40 Favoring
13 Russian river
34 Self-esteem
53 Flying saucer
41 Too much (Fr) IS Compass
(abbr)
(PH
44 Gallic
point
36 Of God (Lat) 54 Mountains
affirmative
17 Gold (Sp)
(abbr)
45 8 u t(F r)
20 Spanish hero 38 Shoe part

1

THE BORN LOSER

Over (poetic)
Spread to dry
Crag
Strangely
Coliseum
Prophet
Belonging to

42

43

46

38

39

44

45

47

49

50
55
58

48

51

52

56

57

59

60
4

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOI,

For Thursday, Feb 17, 1983

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

111 NAVE ON£OP\OJf2 -!\E. MEC2ES &gt;OUE
BJN .GW5URSEUSW
B A B B IT B U Y E R S ANP P K IE S ..T H E R E E

THERE ARE TIMES VVHEMX WISH T
F5V3TPDOP WASn T S D
P A 9 T. v \ p

YOUR RABSIT

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

IF THo*e A fiE THE
ULT//AATE ANSIn E^S TO

YOUR BIRTHDAY
February 17,1983
This coming year you will
add to your prestigious
acquaintances and contacts.
Good things will happen for
you by knowing the right
people.
v.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) It you follow through on
hunches today you should
succeed despite the doubts of
others. Move along the lines
which your intuition dictates.
Order now: Hie NEW AstroGraph M atchm aker wheel
and booklet which reveals
ro m a n tic 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.
Mail $2 to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Send an additional SI
for your Aquarius AstroGraph predictions for 1983. Be
sure to give your xodlac sign.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You'll do well competitively
today, but keep something In
reserve, Just In case. It may
not be needed but, to be safe,
have it available.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Your sphere of influence Is far
more extensive today than
you may realize. Persons of
whom you’re not even aware
will be watching you for
signals.
TAURUS (April 20-Mary
20) Have definite terms and
conditions in mind today in
your commercial dealings.
You’ll strengthen
your
position if you know exactly
what you want.
GEMINI (Mary 21-June20)
A greem ents m ade today
based upon an idealistic

premise should work out well
for both parties. Maintain
high standards.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The rale of your return will be
predicated upon the quality of
your perform ance today.
Striving to do your best will
pay off in prestige as well ns
in dollars.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
have a way of dealing with
those younger than you today.
They’ll take to heart things
which you tell them that arc
for their own good.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Put to |£se today your talents
for transforming outmoded
things into something better.
You’ll be especially suc­
cessful if it’s for the good of
others
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Valuable inform ation may
filter down to you today
through mysterious channels.
Heed it, even though you
might be dubious about the
sources.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Conditions will be stirring
today which could contribute
to the security of you and your
family. However, all will have
to pull together to make It
work.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) You can get your
points across to others today
in a way that will be
remembered if you season
them with a pinch of
theatrics. Curtain up!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Persons who like you will
be willing to help you today,
but they can’t guess your
needs. Speak up if you require
a favor.

Decrease Calories
Take Fewer Pills

DEAR DR. IJIMB - When
is It time lo switch doctors? I
am taking six pills daily for
high blood pressure. About six
years ago, when my blood
pressure1was 150 over 95, he
put me on one pill daily. That
was all, for three years.
I gained some weight, about
10 pounds, and my pressure
increased. Since then he has
been steadily changing and
increasing my medicine. Now
I am taking Apresoline,
Lopressor
and
hydro­
chlorothiazide.
My pressure varies a lot.
Whenever it gets over 145 over
90, he’s not pleased. Well, I’m
not pleased to be taking six
pills n day cither.
After my last lest, he said
my potassium was down, and
he's thinking of adding
potassium . I rem em ber
reading in your column that
low potassium could be from
m edicines draining your
system.
DEAR READER - You
hod better keep that doctor. It
sounds as if he Is interested in
helping you, so count yuur
blessings.
Your story is a good
example of what weight gain
does to blood pressure. It has
been well demonstrated that
many people with high blood
pressure can decrease the
amount of medicine they take
if they lose weight. So, if you
cut down on calories, maybe
you will be able to cut down on
pills.
Get rid of every extra pound
of fat you possibly can and
start a walking program to
help improve your physicalactivity level. If you smoke,
stop. If you use coffee, tea or
colas, stop those habits, loo.
As discussed in The Health
le tte r number 15-0, Your
Vital Blood Pressure, which I
am sending you, it is im­
portant to tre a t mildly
elevated blood pressure. We
accept 145 over 90 as normal,
but people who have pressure
of 115 over 75 are less likely to
have strokes, heart attacks
and other medical problems.
Others who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
■tamped,
lelf-addressed
envelope for it to me, In care

of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
You are lucky to be taking
only six pills. You may be able
to avoid taking potassium by
including enough fmll and
fruit juices In your diet, but
try to get rid of those extra
pounds.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
an U-year-old girl, and I have
a bump under my knee cap.
My mother took me to a
doctor about it, and he said
it's because I’m too active and
hit it on something. He said I
had to stop being so active.
My mother asked If I would
ever get better, because even
if I kneel down it hurts so bad.
The doctor said I would
always have the bump but
when I stopped growing the
bone would harden and it
wouldn’t hurt anymore. He
said all he could do now was to
put it In a cast to stop my
being so active.
My mother didn’t think that
was a good idea. What do you
think?
DEAR READER - You
must be describing Osgood
Schlatter’s disease that oc­
curs in adolescence. The most
accepted view is that it Is a
minor Injury in which the
kneecap tendon inserts into
the top of the shinbone. This
area is not calcified at that
age and the strong pull when
the knee is straightened In­
duces the injury. That is why
the doctor said you should be
less active.
Some doctors believe in
casts. Others just suggest
re strictin g activ ity , p ar­
ticu larly th at involving
straightening the knee as in
knee bends, football, going up
stairs. Avoid any knee-bend
type of activity. Most knees do
heal in time, near the end of
the growth phase, with the
calcification of the bone arda.

WIN A T BRIDGE
NORTH

M ill

♦ S6 3
♦ A 94

♦ AQJ 6
♦ K9 6
WEST

EAST

♦A
VQJ I 0 7

+K2
V K863

♦ 98!

♦ 7 &amp;4

♦ A 7J 32

♦ J 10 8 4

SOUTH
♦ QJ 1097 SI

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♦ K 103

*Q
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
W «l
Norib East South
!♦
Pass
4*
Pus
Pass
Pass
Opening lead:

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
South had three reasons
for his four-spade bid. The
first and most important one
was that he thought it would
be the right contract.
The second was that he
wanted lo discourage com­
petition by his opponents It

is mighty hard to get into the
act at the five level, even
though you are not vulnera­
ble
The third reason was that
if North held the right kind
of strong hand. North could
go un to six and South would
make that contract.
West opened the queen of
hearts South took dummy's
ace and was looking at four
losers, two in trumps and
one each in hearts ana clubs.
Of course. West had found
the best lead Over the years
It is noteworthy that oppo­
nents usually do find the
best lead.
Then South saw that he
had a pretty good chance to
make his game. All he had to
do was to lead diamonds and
prapr
The first part of the pray­
er was answered promptly.
Both opponents followed to
the tin t three. Then he led
dummy's last diamond. E sit
thought a while and discard
ed a heart.
South discarded his one
remaining heart and it was
West's turn to think. Not that
he could do his side any
good Whether he ruffed or
not and whether East had
ruffed or not the defense
would only get two trump
tricks and South's heart
loser had disappeared into
the land of no return.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

by Jim D avit

G A R F IE L D

OH.HOI TH E LION R A N „
. OOWN ANOTHER V IL LA G E R /

THe fZiDM-E oF THE
UNIVERSE, WHY APB TH E Y
IN A

TU M B LEW EE D S

I- o o ^ E - L E A F

B iN D E * ?

by T. K. Ryan

by Leonard Starr

A N N IE
SURE/hES
VITAL TO TH(5
OPERATION/
IN FACT-(€ 5
FLYING THE
PLANE/

BETTERGET!H YOUR
SEATSAH' FOSTER TOUR
SAFETYBELTSUAtfPUT
OUT THATCt0A/t,
mBUCHSf

I

�r -r

9

9

»

t

Looking Back On Little Rock

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

O rval Faubus Has No Regrets
By TOM TIEDE
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (NEA)—II seems like only yesterday
that segregation was stm In flower In the South, and In­
transigent governors such as lis te r Maddox, George Wallace
and Orval Faubus were confusing black people with pestilence
and preventing them from sharing the nation's opportunities.

Faubus is now 73. His neck is wrinkled and his eyelids sag.
But he seems almost as defiant as ever. When he talks of his 12
years in the Arkansas statehouse, and his relationship with the
civil rights turmoil of the time, he lights a cigarette, lifts his
chin, apd doesn’t yield at all.
"L et's remem ber," he says, “that I wasn't completely
responsible for what happened in UtUe Rock. I have never
hated black people. I did not enjoy segregation. But I was the
governor of the s'ate, and I had to make the hard decision.
Actually, I was a victim of circumstances."
The circumstances began in 1954, when the U.S.Supreme
Court ruled that racial segregation in public schools was
unconstitutional. So Ultle Rock, like most Southern com­
munities, stood in violation of the law, and was placed on
notice to integrate its classrooms quickly.
And the city complied. Or at least it tried to comply. The
little Rock School Board voluntarily fashioned a plan to
gradually desegregate the schools, 25 years ago. The plan
called for a measured Integration of Central High School
starting in the autumn term of 1957,
One day before the high school opened, however, Gov.
Faubus called up the National Guard. The next morning the
troops were posted on the downtown campus. Nine black
students were supposed to begin classes, but none did. The
soldiers and a host of jeering whites prevented the integration.
The defiance continued lor three weeks. But before Faubus
capitulated, in the face of federal resolve, he had become a
symbol of steadfast Caucasian resistance. The media con­
demned him editorially. Arkansas whites were more sym­
pathetic. He went on to serve as governor through 19G6.
He went on to less impressive fates as well. In recent years,
Orval Faubus has seen bad and bitter times. When he left

WEDNESDAY

11.00
0 &lt; 1 ) 0 ) 0 (7JO news
it! (39)SOAP
*D (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PREBENTS

6:00

0 4 s O i l QNEW S
&gt;11 (39) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
0 3 (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

O R V A L FAUBUS

...fo rm er A rkansas
governor
was
a
leading segregationist
back in the late 1950s
and 60s and remains
convinced that what he
did was correct.

Faubus is the former governor of Arkansas. And he may be
the last of the segregationists of yore and lore to refuse to
apologize. He once ordered the National Guard to prevent the
integration of a IJtUe Rock high school, and he believes to this
day that he did the correct thing.
“Sorry?" he says.
He shakes his head.
"Hell, no, I’m not sorry,"

TO N IG H TS TV
EVENING

Now most of the aging leaders have repented. Maddox has
repudiated his racist past In Georgia. Wallace has discovered
the Negro constituency in Alabama. And Faubus?
Well, let's talk about Faubus.

office he wrote a couple of books, neither of which was suc­
cessful; he also divorced his wife, remarried, lost a son to a
drug overdose, and had heart surgery.
And he went broke. Or very nearly. Faubus ran an
amusement park for a while CDogpatch, U.S.A.") he
squandered funds on a pair of unsuccessful gubernatorial
campaigns, and a few years ago he hit bottom when he took a
job as 3 window teller in a rural hank; the job paid (5,000 a
year.
Yet he f-tys the skids did not break his spirit or his con­
victions. He still says he was right at Little Rock. He maintains
he had no other choice: "People were not ready for integration
then. There was blood in their eyes. I had to bring up Die troops
to preserve the peace."
So Faubus savs his defiance was humanitarian. He claims he
prevented wholesale violence and potential slaughter. He lets
his cigarette bum down to the worn skin of his fingers, and he
boasts that his controversial action may have saved lives and
made eventual integration possible.
Some people on the scene at the time doubt that. Thus many
black people in Arkansas still resent the Faubus defiance.
Director of the stale's veterans affairs department until Feb.
15, he is occasionally heckled, or even blasphemed, as he
carries out his later life responsibilities.

111 (in

11:05
I I (IT) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:30

6:05

D
&gt;4 TONIGHT Host. Johnny
Carton Guests Bob Nawhvt. LA
Frymire, who makes weather and
other predictions
I Q MARY TYLER MOORE
&gt;) Q ABC NEWS NtQHTLINE
ill (39)THEROCKFOROF1LE8

CAROL BURNETT AND

FRIENDS

6:30
Q 4 NBC NEWS
1 5 OCBSNEW 8
(F O ABC NEWS p
ED (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

11:35

6:35

l] (IT ) MOVIE
Rancho Notori­
ous'' (1952) Marlene Dtelnch. Mel
Farrar

&gt;11 (IT) BOB NEWHART

7:00
0
4 LIE DETECTOR
1 5 n P M. MAGAZINE
IT O JOKER'S WILD
I I (39)THE JEFFERSON3
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

1 i O

Still, he adds that he's never been afraid to stick by his
judgements, either. I.et Maddox and Wallace confess all they
want, maybe they have good reasons. But Orval Faubus looks
back with pride rather than regret; he may not convince
history he was right, but he has convinced himself.

It's something to be

12:00

MART TO HART
IT Q THE LAST WORO

12:30
0
4 LATE NIOHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests Jane Pauley.
Billy Crystal
HI (39)NEWS

7.05
11 (IT)GOMER PYLE

7:30

1:00

Q 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
5 O TIC TA C D O U O H
7 Q FAMILY FEUD
II (39) BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) UNTAMED WORLD

1 7 O MOVIE Frankie And John­
ny” ( I96C) Elms Presley. Donna
Douglas
IS O MOVIE
Topper” (1979)
Kate Jackson. Andrew Stevens

7:35
11 ( IT) ANDY GRIFFITH

8:00
0
4 REAL PEOPLE
5 O SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN
BROTHERS
'
O DOM DELUISE AND
FRIENDS M«l Brooks. Angie Diebunwm. John Fi.jythe, Cw.„ Kelly.
Dean Martin. Burl Reynold! »nd
Orion Welles |oin Dom Deluise lor
4n outrageous comedy special
i i (33) MOVIE
Cinderella Liber­
ty'' (1973) James Caan, Marsha
Mason A sailor fails in love wtih a
Sealllo prosbtute he won lor a mghl
•n a pool game
(D (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
8PEC1AL The Thames A lrip lak.
en along the Thames River docu­
ments ihe massive clean-up thal
has restored its waters lo a new
vitality ;;

1:30

0

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
12 (IT) MOVIE
Behave Yourself'
(1951) Farley Granger. Shelley
Winters

2:30
0 a FNTFRTA'MMENT TONIGHT
S O CBS NEWS NIQHTWATCH
7 O MOVIE
Monkey On My
Back (1957) Cameron Mitchell.
Jack Albertson

3:00

O

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

3:10
t l (IT) MOVIE
King s flow"
(t9 4 t) Ronald Reagan, Ann Sheri­
dan

CD (10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRT)

8:35
(12 (IT) THAT GIRL
9:00

200

Q 4 RICHARD SIMMONS
IS O DONAHUE
( 7 ) 0 MOVIE
(11 (39) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD (10) SESAME STREET Q

9:05

2:35

10:00
4 THE FACTS O f UFE(R)

5 O MORE REAL PEOPLE
(II (39) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

10:30
0 .4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
l» : O CHILD’S PLAY
ill (35)DORIS DAY
CD (10) 3-3-1 CONTACT (R) Q

11:00

3:30
II
(19) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

11:05
12 (IT) PERRY MASON

3:35

11:30

0

III (IT)THE FUNTSTONES

4 HITMAN
111 (39) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS
AFTERNOON

12:00
0 4 SOAP WORLD
15
O
CAROLE NELSON AT
MCCfJ
ir O NEWS
l l (35) BK) VALLEY
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE

(TUE)

CD(10) UFE ON EARTH (WED)
CD (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (THU)
CD (10) TEACH LIFE (FRI)

12:05
13 (IT) PEOPLE NOW

12:30
0 4 NEWS
5 O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN S HOPE

THURSDAY

1:00
4 D A YS O F O U R LIVES
ALL M Y C H ILD R E N
11I (35) MOVIE
CD (10) MOVIE (MON. TUE)
CD (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WEO)
CD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)
0

MORNING

O 4 THE FACTS OF LIFE
5 O 60LID GOLD SPECIAL
"Countdown 82" Hosts Re»
Smith. Marilyn McCoo Guests Air
Supply, Joe Cocker and Jennifer
Warnes, John Cougar, Shevna Eas­
ton. Daryl Mall and John Oates
Michael McDonald Melissa Man­
chester. the Go-Go s, Olivia Newton-John, Lionel Richie. Rick
Springfield. America. Paul Oavis.
Huey lewis a The News. Men A!
Work. The Molels, Juice Newlon.
Ray Parker Jr and Survivor
7 U THE FALL GUY
fD (10) TITANIC: A QUESTION OF
MURDER British |ournalisl Peter
Williams presents (he first full-scale
television inquiry mlo me sinking of
the Titanic, and interviews some 01
the last remaining survivors

O

5:00

4 N B C N E W S O V ER N IG H T
(T U E -F R I)

5:20
13 ( IT ) W O R L D AT LA R G E (M O N )
13 (IT) RAT PATROL (TUE)

7 O

10:00
4 QUINCY
*
o
dynasty
.11 (39) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
(D (TO) FREDERICK DOUGLASS.
SLAVE AND STATESMAN Actor
William Marshall portray! Frederick
Douglass -- writer, abolitionist lead­
er and trusted advisor lo President
Lincoln - in a dramatic evocation of
the spun and philosophy of the
great black leader

6.30
0
4 E A R LY TO D A Y
&lt;]
O
C S S E AR LY M O R N IN G
NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

6:45
7 a NEWS
£D (10) A.M. WEATHER

7:00
0 4 TO D A Y
$ O M O R N IN G N EW S
1 O O O O O M O R N IN O A M E R IC A
11 (351NEWS
CD (TO) TOLIFEI

10:05
I I (IT)NEWS

10:30

7:05

n (39) MAOAME'S PLACE

4:35
11 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5:00
0
4 LAVERNE 9 SHIRLEY A
COMPANY
5 O THREE'S COMPANY
•7 O ALL IN THE FAMILY
M (39) EIGHT IS ENOUOH
CD (10) MISTER ROOERS (R)

5:05
11 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30
O 4 PEOPLE'S COURT
.5 Q U ' A ' S ' H
7 O NEWS
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

5:35
17 (IT) BEWITCHED (TUE-FRI)

B n T n o y d T b a sfrw H B

AS THE WORLD TURNS

ANNE BONNIE'S
TAVERN
*
AND
CRAB BAR

6:00

4 2 '8 C O U N TR Y
1} O
C B S E AR LY M O R N IN G
NEWS
• 7 O SUNRISE
it I (3 6 ) J IM B A N K E R
&gt;11(171 H E W S

0

4:30
l l (35)3COOBYDOO

5:30

5:50

O 4 FAMILY TIES Mallory is torn
between a popular school hero and
her shy Trench tutor

m uw sttrs

1:30
5 0

13 (17) W O R LO AT LA R G E (TUE)

O

4:05
t : &lt;iT) t h e

12 (17) MOVIE

4 NBC NEWS O V ER N IG H T
(TU E -FR I)
13 (17) IT’S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

9:30

4:00
0
4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
&gt; 5 0 HOUR MAGAZINE
&gt;7 O MERV OniFTTi
III (39) TOM AND JERRY
CD (10) SESAME STREET Q

1:05

5:25
7 Q HOLLYWOOD AND THE
STARS (MON)
13 ( I T ) R AT P A TR O L (FRI)

O

3:00
0
4&gt;FANTASY
19 O GUIDING LIGHT
® O GENERAL HOSPITAL
III (39)CASPER
CD (10) COOKIN'CAJUN (TUE)
CD (10) ENTERPRISE (WED)
CD (10) WILD AMERICA (THU)
CD (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)
11 (IT) FUNTIME

4:10

11 (IT ) NCAA BASKETBALL
Rutgers vs Temple

ill (IT) WOMAN WATCH (THU)

3:05

0 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
15' Q THE PRICE IS RIGHT
1 o LOVE BOAT (R)
01) (19) 39 LIVE
CD (10) OVER EASY

7 O MOVIE
Frisco Kid ' 1 1935)
James Cagney, Margaret Lindsay

8:05

2:30
t» OCAPITOL
(WED)
CD (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

9:30
0 4 IN SEARCH OF...
it I (35| FAMILY a f f a ir

0

0
4 . ANOTHER WORLD
17 0 ONE UFE TO LIVE
CD (10) 8URVTVAL (THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRT)

CD(10) WERE YOU THEM ? (TUE)
CD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY

&lt;13 (IT) MOVIE

1:10

9:00
Faubus says that he ignores the lingering criticism. He
thinks It comes from the grossly misinformed. He says that he
has served both black and white people all of his life, first as a
young country postmaster, now as an old soldier, and he insists
that he has never been a bieot.

Wednesday, Feb. 16, m i —5B

12 (IT)FUNTIME

7:15

Crab Hour S:M - 4:18
Garlic C ra b llc Each
' Roasted Oysters 10c Each

"

OUR HAPPY HOURS
H :ie a m . Te i.s e e.sa.’
r t h M .- t ii c m w r
T Far I All HrahOaNs
And Matt Cerktaili
Leralee inner

JJaJwinai

MOVfELANlJjl
Hey t r iy s

ISM Freer* Are.
(H W V I 7 .N I

EX

lAlHA-J tHKLAlHlAL

J

Senfere

1271714

CREEP SHOW
WOLFEN
x i,44

DISCOUNT COUPON USERS!
DON’T THROW MONEY AWAY!

CD (10) A M. WEATHER

7:30
11 (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
CD&lt;10) SESAME STREET Q

7:35
,12 (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00
ill (35) FRED FUNT8TONE AND
FRIENDS

SAVE hundreds ol do'U'i a ,ra ' on ycu* toed «T'J hriuien&lt;.i‘J CuJgel1
Pecrite the * anted discount coupons on brand names of you» choice
Murry* You must enclose a stamped sell adJiesced enselope lo* easy
details on hoe lo sa&gt;e money .it you' local slo»e

UNITED COUPON CLUB
6915 W a il Capitol Drira
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53216

‘ Enclose a stamped, sell
addressed envelope lor
delplls

8:05
Virginians held the Presi­
dency for 32 o f the first
36 years of this nation's
existence.

I I (IT) MY THREE SONS

8:30
&gt;11 (35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

W A D E 'S

OL D F A S H I O N E D M E A T M A R K E T
PRI CES GOOD T HR U T U E S D A Y . F E B 22
Q U A N T I T Y RI GHTS R E S E R V E D

PORK

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�«B--Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Handicap
Can't Stop

Wednesday, Feb. 16, 1983

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

Legal Notice

16—Help Wanted

30-Apartments Unfurnished

40—Condominiums

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND
LU XURY
apartm ents
FOR RENT
2 bdrm., 3 bat/i
BUSINESS 1s greatl We nerd 4
FOR SEM INO LE
COUNTY,
F a m ily 8 A d u lt* section
condo. Ground flo o r conVi
experienced
re a l
estate
FLORIDA
Poolside, 7 Bdrm*. Master
ple le ly redecorated. Sari*,
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
associates to help us market
Cove Apts 113 7900 Open on
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CASE NO. 87 7)09.CA 09 O
da Iwood, Airport Blvd. NO;
our
many
saleable
listings.
weekends
children No pets. Lloyd An&gt;*
CIRCUIT SEMINOLE COUNTY, LEWIS GLASS and CHARLOTTE
Top
com
m
issions.
W
ith
I GLASS, his wife.
322-2611
8 3 1 -9 9 9 3
FLORIDA
derson, Orlando off. 30* 194.
Number
1
Century
21.
you're
Plaintiffs.
CASE NO. IMTS-CA-tT-E
1731 res 894 804*
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
ahead all the way. Let s ta lk l
v.
JUDOE: DOMINICK J. SALFI
DOAROS ARE G R E A T t a l l June Portlg at Century 71
CROCKETT R. SMITH and
IN RE: FORFEITURE OF A I9S0
C LA S S IFIE D
ADS
ARE
June Portlg Really
l lime
S4caline
Want Ads Get People Together
CHARLOTTE E SMITH, his wife,
CAD ILLAC COUP O E V IL L E
EVEN BETTER___________
327 8478
Realtor
3 consecutive limes S4c a line
— Those Buying And (hose
and POOLS BY MAX, INC.,
A U T O M O B IL E
V E H IC L E
Selling. 177 7*It or 831 9993
Oelendants
7 consecutive times 44c a line
GEOROIA
ARM*
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B:30
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ID
E
N
T
IF
IC
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NUMBER
CRUISE SHIP JOBS!
McCLELLANVILLE, S.C.
NOTICEOF SALE
10
consecutive
times
43c
a line
Applications
now
being
taken
for
40474A9I14744
MONDAY th ru FRIDAY
G reat incom e p o te n tia l. A ll
Notice is given that pursuant to a
(UP!) - After Waring Hills
*7.00 Minimum
beautiful, new 1 and 7 bdrm
] b d r m , 1 story condo, *400 mo*
NOTICEOF FORFEITURE
occupaton*. For Information
SATURDAY
9
Noon
final judgment dated February 11,
3 Lines Minimum
apts. Central heat and air, wall
lost his right arm and leg In a
1st &amp; last includes main
PROCEEDINGS
call
(317)
741
9780
EXT.
7330
1983. In Case No. 83 7309 CA 09 G of
to w a ll carp etin g, color
lenance. pool and tennis
train accident 10 years ago, TO: Angel Perei
the Circuit Court of the Elghteenlh
BABYSITTER wanted. Mon F rl.
coordinated appl., stove and
295 Ft. Washington Aye
courts. 177 8311
DEADLINES
Ju d icia l C irc u it •« and lo r
the first question he asked
in my home. Rc(. 321 4449 or
trost tree retrlg and custom
New York City, Manhattan. NY
Noon
The
Day
Before
Publication
Seminole County. F lo rid a , In
831 8787, Ask lor Frank.
doctors was whether he could OR
drapes. Applications available
which LEW IS
GLASS and
It you ere having difficulty,
Sunday • Noon Friday
1150 North St.
al site: 2*00 Georgia A v e ,
go fishing again.
CHARLOTTE I. GLASS, hi* wife
A F U N JOB
finding a place, to live, car to
near Seminole High School
Longwood. Florida
Monday
■
5:30
P.M.
Friday
are
the
Plaintiffs
and
CROCKETT
Money
Travel
we
have
“ Nobody knew,” the 44drive, a job, or some service
Rental Assistance Available
Frank Walden. Esq
R. SMITH and CHARLOTTE E
openings lo r guys &amp; gals tree
year-old retired railroad
you have need ol, read a ll our
Equal Housing Opportunity.
355 E. Semoren Blvd.
SMITH, hi* wife and POOLS BY
to travel U.S. with young
want ads every day.
Altamonte Springs, FL
worker recalled. “They said if
MAX, INC., are the Defendants, I
group Trans, furnished. Cash
BAMBOQCOVE APTS
all others who claim an in- w ill sell to the highest and best
when you start. We train you
I really wanted to fish, I'd find and
300 E Airport Blvd
tereit in the following properly:
6—Child Caro
1—Card of Thanks
bidder lor cash In the lobby at the
on job See M r*. Landis, F rl.
41—Houses
a way. I found a way."
I &amp; 7 Bdrms
From *730 mo
a.) One 1980 Cadillac Coupe West door ol the Seminole County
11-4 only. 979 State Rd. 434.
Phone 323 *470
Hills, whose former boss D eV ille Autom obile, Vehicle Courthouse In Sanford, Florida al
Golf Haven Shopping Mall.
BABYSITTING
myhome,
rro m the fam ily ol the late J.
Id e n tific a tio n
N um ber
11:00 a m on March 14, 1983, the
Longwood.
Hr* 8. days. Ilex. Ralesneg
called him “ C reckm an" 4D474A9I14744
LAKE MARY
5 BR. 1 Bath
Woodrow Moore;
LONGWOOD 2 bdrm. kids. pets,
following described property set
Gail 371 1177
Home on 17 acres, Lakelront.
because he was always
We
can't
express
In
words
how
JOHN E POLK, Sheriff ol
GOVERNMENT JOBS
carpel *775 Fee 339 7700
lorfh in the final judgment:
Zoned Agriculture with hup"
much your thoughtfulness has
Various positions a va ila b le
Sav-On Rentals, Inc., Realtor
fishing on his days off, lives Seminole County, Florida through
Lot 3. BEAR LAKE FOREST,
Barn. Shop 6 Kennels * *
I AM A Mature lady who gives
meant to us Thank you all for
hi* duly tw orn Deputy Sheriff*, according to the plat thereof as
through
local
governm
ent
near Tibwin Creek and fishes seired the de*cribed property on
Owner fin a n c in g . P riv a te
excellenl child care In my
your kindness and it couldn't
-urnished apartments tot Senior
agencies. 170,000 lo 150,000
recorded in Plat Book 73. Pages 70
Estate with lots of T rees In the
home. 323 8359.
the Intracoastal Waterway in the 79lh day of December, 1917 at and 71, of the Public Records of
be appreciated more.
Cititens 31* Palmetto Ave , J
potential. Call (refundable) I
pathway ol progress. Partially
or near State Road 400 and State Seminole County, Florida.
Cowan Ns phone calls
his 20-foot outboard boat.
(4191 549 8304 dept FL17I for
WILL babysit in my home days
platted tor future develop
Road 434, Catielberry, Seminole
your 19*3 directory. 24 hrs
DATED February II, 1983
Through trial and error, Counly,
ment Owner 377 4812 a ll. 4.
4—Personals
and eves
F lo rid a . I t p re ie n tly
NEW 1 &amp; 7 Bedrooms Adjacent
(Seal)
321 &gt;815
Hills fashioned a rod holder to holding *aid property, and w ill
ARTHUR H BECKWITH JR.
to Lake Monroe Health Club,
appear before the Honorable
IMPROVC YOUR FUN LIFE
use with his artificial arm.
S3.50 hr.
C LERK OF THE CIRCUIT
Racquetball 6 Morel Sanlord
TYPIST
Dominick J. Salfl Judge of the
I w ill do babysitting in my home
COURT
Companions for all occasions
Landing S R . 44. 371 4770
"Holding the rod was a real Circuit
Typing Insurance reports, some
Court, Eighteenth Judicial
o il Lk M ary Blvd (fenced
By. Patricia Robinson
Call 331 9377
pickle to start with," he said. C ircu it, Room 317, Seminole
phone work, use transcriber.
As Deputy Clerk
yard! Call alt S, 373 8491.
31—Apartments Furnished
Excellent oppt. Needs now.
" I have no slde-to-side County C ourlhouie, Sanford, Publish: Feb 14. 33 196)
AAA EMPLOYMENT
5—Lost
&amp;
Found
Florida, on the 14th day of Marcn,
OEE
t
i
l
movement with the artificial 1913 at 9.00 A M, for the purposed
1917 French Ave.
123-5)7*
1 BDRMFURN.
4A: Health &amp; Beauty
arm, only up and down, and requeuing and filing a Rule to
Aoullsomy. No pets 1185
JUNE PORZIG REALTY
NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS
S E C R E T A R Y t y p is t
and
.
172 2794
the weight of a fishing rod Show Cause why the dnscr'heo FOR I Mb VACATING, ABAN­ LOST while Irinale M alinule
NEW LISTING!
wearing a brown collar An
property should not be forfeited to
general office work tor elec
hampers dial.
DONING,
DISCO NTINUING ,
TRY
DAVIS Q uick re lie f
Spacious. 3 bdrm., 7 bath home
7 BDRM . kids, porch, air,
swers to F rosty Contact
the use of, or sold by the Sheriff
Ironic manufacturer. 2 yrs.
AND
CLOSING
OF
RIOHTSOFliniment
tor
your
aches
and
"I have to hold the rod at
In the country, yet close to
carpet *80 wk. Fee 139 7700
Humane Society. Reward
upon producing due proof that
Community College, 5 yrs
WAY
OR
DR AIN AG E
pains. None better. *30 5494
everything! Idyllwilde school
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
337 8801
same was being used In violation
the foregrip with the hook and
experience Contact 373 7750.
EASEMENT
lor the kids 2 plus acres. plu»
ol Florida Laws dealing with
place the butt in a holder
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
SANFORD
very Ig workshop. A real buy ■.
contraband, all pursuant to Sec
YOU
WILL
PLEASE
TAKE
12—Special
Notices
attached to the forearm of my
Lovely 1 Bdrm. In town,
at *47,500
lions 933 701 .704, Florida Statutes
NOTICE lhal the Board ol Counly
1 886 4871
COOK ................. $4.25 hr.
artificial arm.
(1981). If no claimants appear, a
Commissioners of Seminole IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
MLS
REALTOR
SPAGHETTI Supper Complete
request
w
ill
be
made
for
an
Im
THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL
W
ill
train
clean
cut,
mature.
County, Florida, at 10 00 o'clock
"The elbow juinl is locked
LG 2 Bdr., turn., Sanford. Max.
802 S French Ave.
Congregational Church, 240)
mediate hearing and Final Order
C
IR
C
U
IT
IN
AND
FOR
Flexible
hours,
last
growing
a m ontheSIh dayol March, A.D ,
*150 Agree lo live w llh tingle
into position about 10 to 20 of Forfeiture
Park, Sanlord. Sal., Feb 19, 5
co
19B3. In the County Com­ SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
male tenant. 372 2744
to 7 p m Adults 13.00; Children
degrees straight up and out in
LINDA R. MCCANN
CASE
NO.
(7
2JW
CA
09
G
AAA
EMPLOYMENT
missioners' Meeting Room at the
I
t
50.
Under
6
Free.
Assistant
State
Attorney
THE
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
1917
French
Ave.
113-5174
LOVELY 7 bdrm., I bath apt
front," he said. "This lets me
County Courthouse in Sanford,
Seminole County Courthouse
with screened porch, turn *80
Florida, w ill hold a Public Hearing OF A T LA N T A , a N a tion al
work an artificial bait, set the
JOIN
Number
I
beauty
com­
Sanford. Florida 37771
IB—Help
Wanted
wk , plus *200. Sec. Dep Call
loconsider and determine whether Barking Association,
hook and lean back to fight a
pany.
Sell
Avon
In
open
005 ) 372 7534
P
laintiff,
373 7749 or 37) 1403
or not the County w ill vacate,
territories. 371 0419; 113-1018;
Publish: Feb. 9, 14, 1983
fish."
abandon, discontinue, close, w
GOVERNMENT
JOBS
127
5910
DEE 58
renounce and disclaim any right ot JOHNNY W ALKER. MARTHA V
Although the artificial arm
31A—Duplexes
Immediate openings Overseas
ihe County and the public in and to ORRELL, as Trustee of the Jomer
and domestic *70,000 lo *50,000
m akes some aspects of
ACCOUNTING
” $200
the fo llo w in g rig h ts o l way or Trust, STERCHI BROS STORES,
DANIEL AND WOHLWENDER
Plus a year Call 1 1317) 931
SANFORD. 7 bdrm, kids, lenc
angling difficult, Hills said it
drainage easement
running INC., a Florida corporation and
CLERK ................... wk.
7053 Ext t746A
ed, *750 Fee 339 7300.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
IN
THE
CIRCUIT
COURT.
EIGH­
through
or
adjacent
to
the
also has a few advantages.
Some college helpful, good ac
GENEVA 2 Story 4 I near Lake
5av On Rentals. Inc Realtor
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
described property, lo wit
A ll DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL
counting background, a c ­
Hamey. New paint, siding,
"Actually, the hook that I TEENTH
S145
SALES
IN
AND
FOR
SEM INO LE
that Part ol Orange Street as REVENUE SERVICE.
curate
and root, fam ily room, la rge .,
Defendants
use is in many ways better COUNTY.FLORIDA.
SANFORD.
3
bdrm,
1&gt;i
bath,
Shown on the plat ol SANLANDO
AAA EMPLOYMENT
wk.
PERSON
garage, fenced yard, reduced
NOTICEOF SALE
*375 mo. first and sec. All appl
SPRINGS Tract No 47, according
than a real hand and arm, and CASE NO. SJ J07-CA 09 L
1917 French Ave.
371-5174
to 150.000
PURSUANT
TO
CHAPTER
45
Attractive,
outgoing
W
ill
tram
including washer dryer.
the plat thereof as recorded In
I think in some wavs I'm a FRANK E PARADISO. Plaintiff, to
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
Excellenl
comm.
5
car
ex
JANDY WISDOM
830 4041
EARN *3751 r ) working part
Plat Book 4, Page 45, ol the Public
pence account
better fisherman because of vs.
time weekly. Several positions
Records o l Seminole County, pursuant to an Order or Final
AA EMPLOYMENT
available immediately in Fla
it," he said. "I use it like a JAMES RICK HOLLOWAY and Florida lying West ol the West judgment ol foreclosure dated
1917 French Ave
371-5178
32—Houses Unfurnished
Line ot Lot 17, Block F, said February 10. 1983, and entered in
area For details and ap
PAULINE C HOLLOWAY, Ms
vise while I'm tying on lines, wife,
Case No 17 7384 CA 09 G of Ihe
5ANLANOO SPRINGS Tract NO
and W IN FIELD INVEST
plication send Stamped, sell
hooks and swivels, and it’s MENT COMPANY.
47. Subject to an easement tor Circuit Court ol the Eighteenth
IN DELTONA
addressed envelope to: CL Box
WANTED oyster
Utilities over Ihe North 15 feet Ju d icia l C irc u it In and lo r
9O0W. Ithaca. N Y 14853
Defendants
LARGE Lakelront home, 3 BR,
great for removing the barb
shuckers,
w
ill
thereof. And Also Subject lo a Seminole County. Florida, wherein
7' 1 bath, otlice, form al OR,
iil REALTOR, MLS
________ tram 377 7807________
from a fish's mouth or for TO NOTICE OF ACTION
casement for drainage over the THE FIRST NAT ION Al BANK
GENERAL
$165
LR. Earn Rm huge garage
7781 S French
OF
A
T
LA
N
T
A
a
N
ational
holding it while you operate W IN F IE L D
north
25
teet
ol
the
East
75
leet
IN V E S T M E N T
Suite 4
OFFICE ..................wk.
SMALLER fam ily home, 3 br. 7
Banking
Association,
is
Plaint
ill.
thereof
LABORERS
No
experience
COMPANY
with the other hand."
Sanlord. Fla
Light office skills, work with
bath, LR. DR. dble garage
and
JOHNNY
W
ALKER.
MAR
needed
Full
lim
e
good
pay.
PERSONS INTERESTED MAY
elderly. Excellent bonus.
o Robert Scott
Hills said it is easier for him
7 Townhomes, 3 BR, H j bath,
THA S ORRELL. as Truslee ot the
Start right away. 679 4094
APPEAR AND BE HEARD AT
13 Chartrey Cf.
AAA EMPLOYMENT
LR, dining area, screened
Jomar
Trust.
STERCHI
BROS
to use spinning tackle since he Lake Sf. Louise, Missouri 41347
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE
1917
French
Ave.
373
)174
porch
STORES. IN C . a Florida cor
SPECIFIED.
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
h a s trouble casting and
DAYS 574 14)4
poration and UNITED STATES
BOARD OF COUNTY
CONSTRUCTION WOHK. A ll
PART
TIME
Work
Irom
home
NO
TIFIED
lhal
an
action
lo
reeling.
OF AMERICA. DEPARTMENT
EVES 789 4151
COMMISSIONERS
phases. Immediate work, good
KISH REAL ESTATE
foreclose c e rta in A rtic le s ot
Phone Program Earn 875 8100
Hills said he climb* Into his Agreement on the fo llo w in g
IN T E R N A L
REVENUE
OF SE M IN O LE
COUNTY. OF
pay. 419 4094.
per week. Flexible hrs. Fuller
S E R V I C E . or* D o tm te n ts . I w ill
SPOTLESS 7 I, Good tees*,
371 0041
REALTOR
fishing host "Ju st like pro p e rty In Seminote County. FLORIDA
Brush
se!l to the highest and best bidder
BY Arthur H, Beckwith Jr
terms, no pels. Near Hosp
A lter Hrs. 311 744* 617? 4952
Florida, lo w it:
Call 894 7704or 831 1097
anybody else."
EXP.
plumbers
wanted,
apply
at
for
cash
at
the
West
Front
door
ot
CLERK
830 547)
The West '* of the NW'* ol N W .
Republic M cch, 1701 Silver
the Seminole Counly Courthouse,
"I crawl over the side," he of Section 79. Township 71 South, Publish February 14, 1983
Lake
R
d
,
Sanlord.
171
7375
HAL COLBERT REALTY
21—Situations
Wanted
Sanlord, Florida at 11:00 A M. on
WASHINGTON OAKS spacious 4
explained. "If I can get my Range 31 East (less the North 30 OEE 108
REALTOR
bdrm, 7 bath, In good neigh
the 31st day ol March 1983, the
Have some camping equipment
feet
(hereof
for
road,
u
tility,
and
hand on the boat, I can get in
797 E. 7*th *9.
113-7*11
following described property as
borhood. Central Heal, all
you no longer use? Sell II all
LPN s p e c la lllin g in Home
drainage purposes), Seminole
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, FOR
appl , *375 mo 830 4401 or *94
— not very gracefully, but I County, Florida
set forth In said Order o r Final
with a Classified Ad in The
Health Care Reas, rates 377‘
19*7 Ask for M r. Jess.
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
Judgm ent the re a l p ro p e rty
Herald Call 327 2*11 or 831
get In.”
S7*a Lk M ary *■ Sanford area
has been tiled against you and you
BATEMAN REALTY
PROBATE DIVISION
described in Exhibit " A " which is
9993 and a friendly ad visor
References before* p m 177
The Creekman agrees with are required to serve a copy ol Case No 81-73 CP
I BDRM ,1150 mo ,
Lie. Real Estate Brokew
ill
help
you
altached
hereto
and
made
a
part
01
It.
377
7744.
44
*
soeI
your written defense*. It any to It
plus deposit. Inquire at
7440 Sanford Ave.
the adage that 10 percent of on MARK A. KOTEEN. Esquire. IN RE ESTATE OF JAMES her col by reference.
Casa Mia P in e rla
100? W 10th SI
L E E .J R
EX H IB IT " A "
the fishermen catch 9 percent
P laintiff's attorney, whose ad
Waitress warded. Apply In
deceases)
COMMENCE a l the NW corner
DON'T HESITATE Call today.
24—Business Opportunities
person 3731004
of the fish. But, he added, dress is 3100 Clay Avenue, Suite
NOTICE
GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
o* theSE &gt;4 ot Ihe NW '* ol Section
Make oiler on these
177, Orlando. Florida. 37804, on or
NOTICE is hereby given that
14, Township 7t South, Range 39
FORAFRACTIO NO F THEIR
those 1 percent spend 90 before the 7th day ot March, 198).
COUNTRY 17 with acreage
pursuant lo Section 733 814 Florida
SANFORD Women's Apparel
East, Seminole County, Florida;
COST FROM TODAY S WANT
HELP wanted in office F ull
asking *59,900
percent of their time fishing.
and file I he original with the Clerk
ADSI
Shop, h ig h ly regarded lo r
Statutes the sum ol *129 98. One
Ihence run S 00 degrees 18 minutes
tim e No experience need-d
CITY nice neighborhood, l-U y
of
this
Court
either
before
service
Hills, who has lived on
quality fashions. Best location
Hundred and Twenty Nine Oollars
31 seconds W, along Ihe West line
Call
479
4094
BLK Fam ily room. Cent HA,
on P la in tiffs attorney or Im
Wm Maiicrowskl Realtor
and Ninety Eight cents, has been
ot the SE '4 ol the NW '4 of said
railroad disability checks
NICE 3 bdrm. I bath, home *375
enclosed garage, fenced back.
mediately thereafter; otherwise a deposited with the Clerk ot the
377
79*3
mo
F rull trees, asking 144,900
since a train hit him while he default w ill be entered against you Circuit Court in and lo r Seminole Section 14. 141 49 leet to Ihe in
DELIVERY Work W ill train.
tersection with the Southerly right
PAOLA 5 Acres high and dry.
lor the rellel demanded In this Counly. F lo rid a by Beatrice
JUNE
PORZIG
REALTY
was working as a flagman,
Good
starting
pay.
Immediate
otw ay line ol S R. No. 4)4. said
Complaint.
2&amp;—Apts. &amp; Houses
work Call 429 4094
REALTOR
LEASE Option 4 2 large fam ily
point of intersection being the
Brown, Personal Representative
has supervised the South
WITNESS my hand and the seal ol the above captioned estate. This
CENTURY 21
377 *47*
room, carpeted. CHA. fenced
To
Share
Point of Beginning of the tract
Carolina P orts A uthority’s ot this Court on the 78th day ol I* the distributive Share ( Bequest)
beck, nice neighborhood
about lo be described; thence run
January, 198)
GIRL
FRIDAY
lor
I
g
irl
office,
*54,900.
annual fishing tournaments
due THOMAS LEE, JR
SUNLAND Available Feb 14. 3
S89 degrees 42 minutes 44 seconds
COUNTRY Home to share, non
(SEAL)
typing
and
some
bookkeeping
For further information relative
HAN DYM AN'S N ig h tm a re .
E along the said Soulherly right of
bdrm ca rp o rt corner lot,
for several years. But he
smokers, references Split util.
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
s k ill*. Good sa la ry and
Country, 3 stories, 4 BR, I
to the above described sum due
way line. 210.0feel; Ihence run S 00
convenient to everything. *400
&amp; rent. 305 448 4014.
never enters such contests.
benefits.
123
1490
Clerk of the Circuit Court
mo 177 4238
said claimant, refer lo Probate
degrees I* minute* 31 seconds W,
lirepiaces, plus 1 acres. Best
By:
Eve
Crabtree
"The biggest fish is always
Otter.
Court File No. 87 72 CP in Ihe
522 97 feel to (he South line ot the N
2 Bdrm.. 7 Bath apt to share 1?
Deputy Clerk
office of the Probate Division cl
1 1 of Ihe SE &lt;4 ot me NW '4 ol said
ELDERLY lady lo live in with
caught by luck," he satd.
1
BDRM,
1
beth
*300
mo
rent,
&lt;i
utilities.
Call
171
5979
Publish. Feb 3, 9, 14. 33, 1983
321-0759 E V E . 322-7643
the Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Section 14, Ihence run N 89
elderly gentleman as a house
llOOsec *150damage.
"W hen you catch large
or 371 157*
DEE 17
Seminole
County,
Sanford,
degrees S5 minutes 31 seconds W,
keeper prater someone who
372 79*1.
numbers of fish, that's skill."
Florida
along the South line ot the said N ' i
can drive 373 1410.
Dated al Sanlord, Seminole
ot the SE &lt;4 Ot the NW &lt;4. 710 0
A good fisherman must be
County, Florida this 14th day ot
feet; thence run N 00 degrees 18
29—Rooms
Security Guard Needed
patient, innovative, have the
33—Houses Furnished
February, 1983
minutes 31 seconds E, along the
1 Openings Now
OF PROCEEDINGS
ability to recognize telltale NOTICE
ARTHUR H BECKWITH, JR
West line of the said SE Ve of tha
__________ 173 87*7
FOR THE VACATINO, ABAN
CLERK OF THE C IRC UIT
NW &lt;4, 523.75 feet to the Point of
signs of fish and be a sneak, DONINO, DISCO NTINUING ,
F U P N IS H E D Rm. p riv a te
DELTONA, LG . i bdrm, LR,
Beginning.
COURT
Housekeeping Experienced
entrance, kitchen facilities 150
AND CLOSING OF RIOHTS-OFdining area, kitchen, screen
Hills said.
By: Betty M Capps.
Pellable
own
Irensporteilon
DATED
et
Sanford.
Florida
this
wkly
Lady
preferred.
32?
OR
O RAINAO E
porch, landscaped yard,
“ If you're not sneaky, you WAY
Deputy
C
ltrk
7*79.
lath
day
of
February,
1983
373
08)7
EASEMENT
available now *740. 1st, last,
Probate Division
(Seal)
are not going to be able to fish TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
*100 Sec. Dep , No Pet*
Arthur
H.
Beckwith
Ji
Publish:
Feb
14.
March
14,
1983
KITCHEN facilities *50 Wkly
YOU W ILL PLEASE TAKE
a good drop because of other
GENERAL OFFICE
DEE
113
Cierk
of
the
Court
574-1040
Lady preferred.
NOTICE that Ihe Board of County
Light typing
people who have seen you Com
By Patricia Robinson
17?
7829
m issioners of Seminole
Fun boss
Oeputy Clerk
there," he said.
_____ County, Florida, at 10 00 o'clock
Publish: Feb 14. 73, 19*3
WORKFINOER
34—Mobile Homes
a ,m .o p th e lth day ol March, A.O ,
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SANFORD, Reas w eek ly &amp;
2413 French Avenue
_£Efi l.'l
Sanford's Sales Leader
1983, in the Counly Com
SEMINOLE COUNTY.FLORIDA
monthly
rates
U
til
inc
etl
500
(
In
Sobiks
Build
ingi
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
miss loner*’ Meeting Room at the
PROBATE DIVISION
Oak
Adults
1
841
7181
W ELIST AND SELL
___________171-5743___________
Notice is hereby given that a
County Courthouse in Sanford,
CASSELBERRY 7 bdrm., turn,
CASE NO: IM t-C P
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF Florida, w ill hold a Public Hearing
MORE HOMES THAN
Public Hearing w ill be held by the
kids,
pets,
yard.
prlv.
lot.
*775.
IN RE: THE ESTATE OF
SANFORD furnished rooms by
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
ANYONE IN NORTH
Planning and Zoning Commission
NURSES AID
$$$
lo consider and determine whether
Fee 139 7700
MARIANNA B KIM BLE,
the week. Reasonable rates
SEMINOLE COUNTYI
CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, SEM­ or not the County w ill vacate,
in Ihe City Commission Room, C lly
Sav-On
Rentals,
Inc..
Realtor
Two Shuts Available
Deceased
M aid service, ca te rin g to
IN O LE CO UNTY. F LO R ID A . abandon, discontinue, close,
Hall, Sanford, Florida at 7:39 P.M
Experience Helpful
NOTICEOF ACTION
working people Unfurnished
CIVIL DIVISION
on Thursday, March 3, 19*3 to
JUST LISTED 3 Bdrm. 1 Bam
renounce and disclaim any right of
WORKFINDERS
TO
Anson
B
Kimble,
and
all
apartments 1 and 2 bedrooms,
CASE NO. H-277I-CA-20-P
consider the following change and
home with a one Bdrm. garage
the County and the public in and to
1411 French Avenue
37—Business
Property
parlies
who
claim
by.
through,
373 4507, 500 Palmetto Ave
IN THE MATTER OF THE A the fo llo w in g rfg h ts o f-w a y or
amendment to the Zoning Or
apt.t Many axtrast New real,
(In Sobiks Building)
under or against Anson B Kimble dmance of the City ol Sanford.
DOPTION OF:
lu st painted, washer and
drainage easement run ning
__________ 111*7*2
COMFORTABLE 1 bdrm, no
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a Seminole County, Florida
JENNIFER OEE MORRIS and through or adjacent to the
OFFICE SPACE end or
dryer, microwave and lurpets.*70 wk. plus util. * 100sec,
probate
proceeding
has
been
Reronlng Irom AD. Agricultural
JULIE ELAIN E MORRIS
retail best location
nilure. neg *48.9001
described property, to wit;
dep Call 32) *947.
ATTENTION
in itia te d In the above en titled
District
NOTICE OF ACTION
2*44 French Ave. 322 4401
CENTER
STREET
In
estate
wherein
you
are
e
To lhal ol SR IA, Single Fam ily
TO
RETIREES
DEWEY'S COVE REPLAT, ac
JUST FOR YOU, 3 Bdrm., 7
beneficiary of the decedent, and Residential Dwelling D islrlct
30-Apartments Unfurnished
REXFORD M. MORRIS
cording lo the Plat Ihereot as
Bath brick home on a beautiful
SECURITY
GUARD
said
proceeding
involves
the
right*
W-B—Rental Offices
Thai property described as Sec
Last known m ailing addresses: recorded in Plat Book 13. Page 18.
•ol. Cent. HA. wall-to-wall
in and to the following property in 31, Twp I9S, Rge 31E, N E o f SE
(a) 189 Wyoming Drive
1 Shills Available
Public Records. Seminole County.
carpel, eel In Kitchen, screen
7 BDRM on quiet St. *770 Mo.
Seminole County, Florida:
* 4 1Less the M 32 9) acres 6 ihe W
Concord, North Carolina
Florida
WORKFINDERS
P R IM E
O FFIC E
SPACE*.
perch, paddle tans, and m a rtiplus *770 security Drp No
N 775 ft. of the S 708 ft. of Ihe E. 70 ft.)
(b) Rt. J. Lot No 19
*44,900.
2435 French Avenue
PERSONS INTERESTED MAY
Providence B lvd ., Oeltona.
pets 177 9402 or 349 5144
778 It. ol the NW &gt;4 of I he SE &lt;4 ol
Being more generally described
(Windsor Park)
(In Sobiks Building)
APPEAR AND BE HEARD AT
J U tS q FI. Can Be Divided,
Section
10
,
Township
21
S,
Range
as
located
A
portion
ol
the
Spencer Mountain, North Carolina THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE
111-57*1
w ith Parking. Day* 159 574
NICELY furnished I Bdrm apt.
EXTRAS OALOREl 3 Bdrm., t
31 E
property lying N ol the abutting
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a SPECIFIED
bath home In lunland Estate*,
UJ4 Evenings 6 Weekends
carpeted, panelled, all utilities
and
E. 7419s St. and between Summerlin
EARN Extra money tor
BOARD OF COUNTY
Petition for the Adoption of the
904 719 * 251
with spacious living and dining
fu
rn
lih
e
d
,
3
Blocks
Iro
m
N 145 5 ft. Of the 5 31704 It. Of Ave and the NLY extension ol the
COMMISSIONERS
above minor children has been
your grocery receipts.
downtown. Single only, no pets
roams, large fam ily room,*.,
theE 788ft o tth e N E 'e O f the NW ELY boundary ol Bik 14, Wyn
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY.
filed against you by Albert M
Call 373 1702 or 32) 0841
1400 Sq It olllce, 115 Maple
or children *275 Mo , 107 Oak
den,
kitchen
and B a th '
newood.
•
4
of
the
5E
'«
of
Section
10,
FLORIDA
Ziffer, and you a r t required lo
Ave , Santoro Avail, im m td
Ave aft 5.
redecorated, fenced yard, and
Township
J
1
S,
Range
31
E,
The
planned
use
ol
Ihe
property
BY Arthur H. Beckwith Jr.
serve a copy of your writtan
Broker Owner 37? ;?09
• lots morel *43,000.
PART Ti m e Pressman, ex­
Seminole Counly, Florida
Is Single Fam ily dwellings
CLERK
defenses, if any, to said Petition on
perienced on AM IJ50W. call
has
been
filed
against
you
and
you
The
Planning
4
Zoning
Com
M
ariner's
V
illageonLake
Ada.
I
ROBERT H
ROTH, ESQ . Publish February 14. 1883
BEAUTIFUL I Bdrm., i Bath -I
Ralph Jenson 377 00/4 lo r app
mission w ill submit e rtcom
are required to frrv e a copy uf
bdrm from *765. 3 bdrm Irom
OEE 103
tfC-For Lease
P la in tiffs attorney, whose ad
Lakelront Kama an L a ka ? '
mendalion
to
the
City
Commission
1300
Located
17
97
just
south
your written defenses, if any. to It
dress is 701 N. Palmetto Avenue.
Hayes near Ovltdal every T*
Cook
ot A irport Blvd. in Sanford. A il
on DAVID LEE HART, P la in tiff'* in lavor ot, or against, the
P.0 Boa 1417, Orlando, Flcrida
eature im a g in a b le ! En|ey *;
For tine dining experience only.
Adults. 3131670
PROFESSIONAL O tlice space
attorney, whose address Is 1518 requested change or amendment
37807, on or before March 1, 1903,
fishing, beating and iw lm - v
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Swing shift. Apply in person 2
lor Lease, on 17 92. ideal
West Broadway Street, P O Boa The City Commission w ill hold a
and file the original with the clerk
"&gt;!"«■ (118,100.
Notice is hereby given that I am
5 p m Deltona Inn
location to downtown area. 705
337, Oviedo, Florida 37785, on or Public Hearing In the City Com
1, 3 AND 3 BDRM From *770
of fh ii court either before service engaged in business at 47t W Lake
S.
French
Ave.
or
call
277
J170
before March 7lh. 1983, and tile the mission Room in the C lly Hall,
Ridgewood Arms Apt. 75*0
MAYFAIR VILLAS! 1 6 3 Borm.i*
on p la in tiffs attorney or im
Mary Blvd.. Suite 4, Lake Mary,
original w ith Ihe Clerk of this Sanford. Florida at 7:00 P M on
SECRETARY Receptionist.
Ridgewood Ave 3716470
1 Bath Condo Villas, next lot*
mediately thereafter, otherwise a Florida Seminole County, rio no a
OFFICE
SPACE
March
78.
1983
to
consider
said
Court either b rfo rr service on
Experienced tor busy Sanford
M *yla ir Country Club. Select;■
default w ill be entered against you under the llc lit lo u i name 4&gt;f
FOR
LEASE
recommendation
P la in tfM 's a tfo rn e y o r im
oft lea Heavy typing, using
Park Ave , 1 bdrm. garage, pets.
your lot, lioor plan 6 interior-*
io r ihe relief demanded In the EDIBLE PRODUCTS UNIQUE,
810 7771
A ll p a rtie s m Interest and
mediately thereafter, otherwise a
Wang
word
processing
Kids *250 Fee 319 7700
decor! Quality constructed bytpetition
and that I intend to register said
default w ill be entered against you citizens shall have an opportunity
equipment, tiling, and olhar
*a v On Rental*. Inc. Raattgr
Shoemaker ter *47.900 A u g K
DAT ED ai Sanford, Florida, this name w ith the Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
for the relief demanded in the lo be heard at said hearings.
general office duties Equal
37D- Industrie I
34th day cf January, 1983
Court, Seminole County, Florida in
ENJOY
country
living?
J
Bdrm
By nrder of Ihe Planning and
Complaint or Petition
Opportunity Employer Phone
(SEAL)
accordance w ith me provisions ol
Duplex A p ts , Olympic w
for Rent
DATED on January 31st, 1913. Zoning Commission ot the City of
CALL ANYTIME
177 4841 or furnish resume to
Arthur H. Beckwith
the Fictitious Name Statutes, To
pool Shenandoah V illag e
Sanford,
Florida
this
llt
h
cay
of
ARTHUR H BECKWITH, JK
P-O. Drawer 1974 Sanlord.
tu t
W it: Section 845.0? F lo rid a
0-,en
9
lo
4
J73
7970
Clerk of Circuit Court
F
eb.
1*83.
Fla. 17771.
As Clerk ol the Court
F IV E point* area industrial
Per*
By Eve Crabtree
Statutes 1*57.
J Q Galloway, Chairman
tu n in g b e h in d
P re s tig e
BY Betty M. Capps
:: [
GENEVA
GARDEN*
Deputy Clerk
S*g. M ark W. English
City ol Sanford Planning
As Deputy Clerk
L u m be r, New warehouse
TELEPHONE Office Trainees
I Bdrm Apt*. *745 Mo
‘, N °E R 1 1 ii w o o » n
:*
Publish Jan U. Feb 3, *, 14. 1983 Publish: Feb i. 9, 14. Z3. 1983
and Zoning Commission
space available irom 1500 sq
Publish: Feb. 7, *, 16. 73, 1983
needed. S ta rt rig h t away.
Mon thru F rl. 9a m to ip .m .
bdrm opt: house Affordable**
Publish: Feb 14. 73. 1913
DEO I I I
DEE-14
H. 10 15,000 sq II. Cays 123
OEE I f
Good pay. F uli time. 879 4094
m onthly p *rmenl*
C a tl- l
1505 W ?5fh SI
177 7090
OEE HO
5*42. evening'. 111 7759

Sem inole

This True
Fisherman

O rlando - W inter Park

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

RATES

Legal Notice

322-8678

869-4600 or 349-5691

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

24 HOUR (B 322-9283

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

Legal Notice

322-2420

Owner Broke*

r,;r*g|r,«

■

•***#:*

• ^

jji

v

i6u

�41—Houses

41—Houses
3

INC. 0 REALTORS

; B e Ltfwe

CaW

WELL maintained. 3 b d rm ,
carpet, drapes, appliances,
new
root,
new
pa in t
throughout, priced right to sell
Immediately, 333 4744

Keyed

• 549 W .Laka M ary Blvd,
Suite B
L ik e M ary. FI*. 3774*
111 -1 X 0

3-7 HOME in nice area. Larga
great room, with gofgaous
Rock fireplace and paddle
tans. Split plan. Obi lot with
huge oeks. *44,500.
The W ell St. Company
Realtors
331-1005

zEqual
----------------- \
Professional

Service

VALUE! 3 1 Cash to m rtg. or
OWH W reas. down. M id
*30's 831 I486 Owner Assoc.

'■■.A.tC
SEMINOLE COUNTY
BOARO OF
REALTORS

WHY SAVE IT . .
SELL IT
QUICKLY with a Fast Acting,
Low Cost Classified Ad.

IM * Shaehare Raa*

Winter Sprint*' Fla. J»M

LG 3 bdrm, 2’y bath In Sanford
Lg fenced yard, tru lt trees,
many other extra*. 30 \ down,
owner finance balance t i t , 900
33t 0770.
NEW LISTING! 3 bdrm. 7 bath,
lam room, nlca cond. Includes
washer and d ry e r. Below
market value. S3S.040.

only *55,000
INVESTO R 'S S P E C IA L! 3
bdrm, l'» bath CHA tiled
Florida room, garage, nice
yard, walk to ito re t, creative
financing ONLY *42,900
*■t .V
FHA VA SPECIALI Why rent
when you can own nowl SI.ISO
down payment! 3 bdrm home
on fenced lot. large oak and
cilru* tree* Good location!
Only *343 mo. Princ and In
tere*l 13 30 year* Price only
136,500
CUSTOM
B U ILT
CEDAR
HfO
t ME
Energy
t lllc it n l
custom throughout. T errific
owner financing. P ote ntial
guest home In rear. 13 citrus
tree*. Load* ol storage Take
44A Bast to left on Rl. 411. J
haute* on rig ht past Osteen
Post Office. Only tat.sae.
WOULD
YOU
B B L I6 V E I
A lm ost
new
1
story
"B E A U T Y ." 4 bdrm. 3 bath
CHA. kitchen equipped plus
microwave, privacy fenced.
Unbelievably huge bedrooms
and work shop! E ice lle nl
terms. Only 1*4,900.
CAN’T BE BEATI 1 bdrm.
fa m ily room, screened porch.
CHA, double carport, double
sited yard, SHOO down pay­
ment, *314 mo. Princ. and
Interest bated on current FHA
ra t* I3*» I I year*. Call us
quick! Only 131,100.
HUOE CORNER LOT! Priced to
sell la s fi 3 bdrm, fam ily rm.,
CHA, fenced yard w -w tll and
S p rin kle r systems, m ature
citrus tress, double site patio
under sp ra w lin g cam phor
fra*. Large assumable low
interest mortgage. Call lodayl
Only *43,*00.
T E R R IF IC LOW IN T E R E S T
ASSUMPTION Nice 3 bdrm
J w m t with large private yard,
Hhady oaks, across from Park.
F re n ch door* to screen porch,
sunken F am ily Room, paddle
dans, new carpet, and much
jjnaral Only *3t,SM.

WE WEED LISTINGS!
: CALL US NOW! Ill

; 323-5774
3*04 HWY. I7-T3
FEELS LIK E HOME
D riv e by 1907 M o llo n v llla .
Delightful 3 bdrm. home for
your fam ily In a groat neigh
borhood. Generous lot. bearing
citrus, pretty shrubs New
roof. F le x ib le fin a n cin g .
Priced SS4.7S0 for Immediate
tale.

CallBart
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR, 333 7411
Kids outgrow tha swing sat or
small bicycle? Sail these idle
Items with e want ad. To place
your ad, cell your Irlendly
Classified gal at The Herald,
1311411, or 131 ttt3 .

£3

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
ORFSSER X In., 4 drawer, with
big m irror. SX. Double bed with
box springs and frame. *70 . 371
4311.

42—Mobile Homes

TEN Piece pit group, dark
brown velour good cond. S400.
Trombone *75. 332 5597.

43— L o t s - A c r e a g e
ST JOHNS River Ironfage, Hy
acre parcels, also Interior par­
cels with rive r accaaa f 11,900
Public water. 30 min. to Alta
monte M a ll 13x4 30 y r ,
fin a n cin g , no q u a lify in g
Broker 431 4033
10 ACRES Nice high pasture In
teed grasses, p a rtially fenced.
Private road entrance. 440 Ft.
off M aylow n Rd., Osteen
Good water, at about 00 and
170 ft Homeslte or Mobile
home
approved.
T erm *
available. IS y rt. at 1 0 / in
terest. 14,000 down. S7S7.VO per
mo Price S30.000 373 9040.

47 Real Estate Wanted
WE BUY equity In Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
VESTMENTS P O Box 7500.
Sanlord. Fla 37771 377 4741 (
N EED to sell your house
q u ic k ly l
We can
o tte r
guaranteed sale w ith in 30
days Call 331 1411.

47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp;Sold
WE PAY cash tor 1*1 &amp; 3nd
mortgages Ray Legg. Lie
Mortgage Broker 7*4 3591
It you d o r'. Relieve that want ads
bring results, try one, and
listen to your phone ring. Dial
377 7411 or 1311113.

49-B—Water Front
_______Property
ST JOHNS RIVER
FrautitUI J bdrm, 3 bath, trpi ,
LMA Seawall, dock, lenced
yard. Good fishing *115.000
Charlene Wight Realtar
130 wot att. hr*. ) l) - 4 ttl.

50 —Miscellaneous

SEARS Rototiller like new I
horsepower w ith plows &amp;
cultivators. 323 *7(1.
25" CONSOLE Color Zenith TV
good condition SIM
__________323 S3J4____________

so Wanted to Bu\
.
Need Extra Cash?
KOKOMO Tool Co., at 111 W.
First SI., 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:
371 1100

goal *73, 2 kids, I male,
1 female, S3* ea R ebbits S3 e*
Osteen area 332 0001
BUY SELL TRADE
Florida Trader Auction
Longwood, Fla. 131 111 *

71—Antiques
CENTRAL FLORIDA
ANTIQUE MARKET
SHOW AND SALE
DELAND, FLORIDA
FEB. 19-20,1983

EXTRA W IDE 71"
Wheelchair Wanted
373 4347 or 373 3197.

50-A—Jewelry
BEAUTIFU L ,.‘i carat Marquis
S o lita ire valued at 13,000.
Asking 11,000 Call before 4
p m. 373 4174.

51-A—Furniture
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
311 31* E FIRST ST
&gt;17 5433

AUCTION
SAT., FEB. lifts I p.m.
Benefit VFW Post 10109 at the
Log Cabin neM to City Hah.
Col. D elarco A uctioneer.
Refrigerator, bicycles, adult
tric y c le and o in r r m isc.
merchandise

Kenmoreparts, service, used
washer* 333 0493
MOONEY APPLIANCES
Make room in your attic, garage.
Sell Idle Item s w ith a
Classified Ad. Call a Irlendly
ad taker at 332 341 to r 131 9993.

53—TV-Radio-Stereo

i

WE POSSESS
COLOR TVS
We sail repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consol**, and portables.
EXAM PLE: 1 RCA 35" color
console original price over
*700 balance due *177 cash or
payments 117 mo I Zenith
color portable. *155 cash or
paym ents.
NO
MONEY
DOWN. Still In warranty. Free
horn* tria l, no obligation. Call
71*1 Century Sale*. (62 5394
day o r n it*.

76—Auto Parts
71 Dodge Coll engine. 74 Chevy
engine 150. Toyota engine
371 4041

S135
*115

Good Used TV'S S75 &amp; up
M ILLERS
3419 Of Undo Or
Ph 337 0353

54—Garage Sales
PEUG EO T, 10 speed bike,
stereo, wood lawn turn Hurt,
various household Hams, sea
at ITS Hidden L a k a D r.4 1 p m .
weekdays o r 7 13 a m .
weekends

ANTIQUE Upright Plano, ex
cel lent condition, *750 or best
otter. 333 1441.
STEINWAY Grand Piano
good condll Ion * 5,000
S314770

WE PAY *op dollar lor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto Parts 311 4X 5
3UY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From HOtolSO or more
Call 372 1474.
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment. 323 5110

SO M E PLACES H A VE
£3
A LL THE PUN!
lM
N ew 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
Clubhouse w health club, on Site Lake
Tennis, Racquetball, Volleyball. Jogging Trail,
.Swimming, Salt-Cleaning Oven, Icemaker &amp; Mora.

Alteration &amp; Tailoring

EXPERT
d r e s s m a k in g ,
alterations Asian Cleaners,
3844 Hwy 17 91, Lake Mary
Olvd , 331 4914

VERY Clean, Beautiful blue
over white ‘t l F100 Ford
Explorer. V I PS. PB. AC, AM
FM stereo cassette. AT with
o v e rd riv e . D ig ita l clock,
gauges, tach. tilt wheel, cruise
control, dual tanks, and top
per. Call Nowl 372 1441
FORD 1177 Pickup.
t l .000
305 377 3243

DAYTONA AUTOAUCTION
Hwy 42, 1 m il* west o( Speed
way, O it tw u Beach w ill hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday 8 Wednesday at
7 :X p m It's th# only one In
Florida. You sat th# reserved
price. Call 104 755 (311 for
further details.

Mwy. *3. Daytona Beach,
9*4 1**411 1
STOR.NG IT MAKES WASTE­
SELLING IT MAKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AO
NOW. Call 1 » M il or M l 9911.

Home Improvement

FORD, 3 ', Ton
St,400
1M27Z 2242

GARAGE
SALE
1975 Honda Civic

*1495

ALL TYPES CARPENTRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, pa ne lling , shingles,
reroofing For fast service.

call 323-4917,365-2371
Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms

'SI CADDY. Runt good.
S400 Cash.
333 1640
74 DODGE pickup, 111 Auto,
good condition, 191 an. Cash or
trade, 3J9 9100 114 4405.

Appliance Services

SEAL lo n c r r tr I mart quality
operation patios driveway*
Days H i 7)11 Ev«* 317 1131
SWIFT CONCRETE worn all
types. F ooters, d rive w a ys,
pads, floors, pools, complete.
Free est 327 7101

CLARENCE'S
APPLIANCE SERVICE
We service a ll major brands
Reas rates ISyrs exp 323 0131.

Draperies
ORAPESBY DEBBIE
Reasonable ra te i
111 5390

Little want ads bring big. big
results. Just try one. 372 74H
or 131 9113.

Brick &amp; Block
StoneWork
PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices Free Estimates
Ph 149 5500 A ft. 5 p m,

Maintenance ol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
4 electric. 333 4031
P A iN t iNG and repair, patio and
screen porch
c a ll
anyiime 373 9411

Income Tax

Electrical

Lawn Service
Litton Lawn Servica
Commercial and Residential.
Winter Clean up. 371 « 4(.

+ A-1 U W N SERVICE *
Mow. wt-eo. -rim . haul Regular
Service l tim e clean up 141
hr*, best rates, 021.6436.

MISTER. F ix It JO# McAdams
w ill repair your mowers at
your home Call 337 70SS

Major Appliance
Repair
JOHNNIES Appliances. We
service refrigerator*, wash
ers. dryers, ranges Reas,
rales. 373 I33i

N ursinq Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakrview Nurs.ngCenter
719 E Second Si . Sanford
177 4707

Excavating Services
'V E IM 9 8 T C A V A T IN B
*aO Casa Back hoe Loader wextender hoe. 9 yd. dump
truck low bed serv 1315175.

Fencing
FENCE Installation Chain link,
wood post 4 ra il, 4 farm fence
License 4 insured. 1714191.

II

you are having difficulty
lindmg a place lo live, car to
drive, a job. or some service
you have need ol, read all our
want ads every day.

LOVING HOME. Excellent 74
hr. care 4 companionship for
elderly. 171 4305.

P ainting
HOUSE painting *500
a house. Any t il* .
471 1014,475 4009
BILL'S PAINTING
Interior Exterior painting. Light
carpentry. Homes pressure
cleaned Business M l 3411,
Home (11 5114 B ill Steiner

Pest Control
SPENCER PEST CONTROL
Comm , Resd.. Lawn, Ttrmlte

HANDYMAN Servlet* Painting,
re p a irs , ate. Reasonable
guar work. 4U465I. 47/-47I1,

Home Improvement
• TRIPLE A * '
Price spaclat SI4.1S for
Fam ily or Living Rm. M3 77*0

Ceramic Tile

ROOM Addition*, remodeling,
d ry w a ll
hung,
ca llin g s
sprayed, fireplaces, roofing.
1214*12.

MEINTZER TILE Exp Since
ttS l. New 1 old work comm 4
rend Free estimate 5491547

SEAMLESS aluminum gu tltrs,
cover these overhangs waluminum selfit 4 fascia. (9*4)
J75 791# called. F re t est.

JEEP

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle The
Whole Ball Of Wax

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

Roofing

A &amp; B ROOFIN
11 yrs. •iperience. Licensed 4
Insured.
Free Estimates on Roofing,
Re-Rooling and Repairs.
Shingle*. Built Up and T il*.

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON
Morrison Rooting Co
S pecialising in shingles and
build-up. Low Low Rates, 14
hr. service. 7*t 2J73
NEW reroofing, and
repairs. IS Yrs. Exp
322 112*

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 323-1936.
JAMES E. LEE IN C
Secretarial Services
PERSONNEL U N LIM ITED
Continuing secretarial services
available inour office.
372 5649

Sprinkler Systems
And Repairs
SANFORD
Irrig a tio n
&amp;
Sprinkler Systems Inc. Free
est. 373 0767 . 75 yr*. exp.

Steam and
Pressure Cleaning
STEAM and Pressure Cleaning
(M ob il* Hamas, Houses and
Roofs) House painting, and
minor carpenter repairs. A ll
work
g u a ra n ta td .
Fra#
estimate* 11).4704 or U1-4T31.

A ll brick, block and stone work.
Fireplace specialist. 311 4940
aft J . ________

Temporary Services
PERSONNEL U N LIM ITED
A variety of temporary services
available 372 S649

TV Repair
Sun TV Service Center
Service Charge $7 IS plus parts
Atl makes 711 17St

Tree Service

Work. 1311145. Ask for Champ

Pi* staring
ALL
Phases o* Plastering
Plastering repa r. stucco, hard
trite, simulated brick l i t 5991

Piano Lessons

Carpet Cleaning

it

A ll home Improvement.
Fireplace specialist.
331 *940 after 5

Stonework
M ASTER
E le c tr ic ia n .
Registered contractor. Comm.
4 Res. Quality home service.
Free Est. James Paul 321 7S59.

Handyman
CARPENTER repairs and
additions X y r t exp
Call 177 1157

SANFORD
Irrig a tio n
4
Sprinkler Systems. Inc. 24 hr.
Serv 25 yrs. exp. 373 0747.

3 1 1 -9 G 1 7
D.B.F.S. Inc. ITCS French. Bus)
ness 4 Individual incoma tax
19 M F. 9 12 Sal. 121 t i l l .

Carpentry

*4995

531 S F re n c h Ave
133 4J82

|DRYWALL
Plaster 6 Celling
* repairs "A ll work guaran
teed." Lie. 4 Ins. Drywall
Specially Serv., Inc. 7119112.

DeGarmeau Bookkeeping Ser.
127 7X7
Personal Income Taxes, open
evenings.

197S Hat Spyder

AM C

Drywell Repairs

TLC WITH "R U T H "
Dog grooming, small Breeds t(.
Free pick up, del. Longwood
area 7 days. 811-1931.

*1295

SANFORD
MOTOR CO

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES
Traverse Rods Installed.
349-S42S
^ o r o ^ Mi B lits

TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H arriett's Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st St . 173 5/47

Bookkeeping

CARPENTER 2S yr* exp Small
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 1711445

Lawn Mower?

C LA S S IFIE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS ol merchandise
every day.

ANIMAL Haven Boarding and
G room ing Kennels healed.
Insulated, screened. Ily proof
inside, outside runs Pans
Also AC cages We cater lo
your pets Ph 323 5757

PORCHES, bathroom floors,
rotten wood replacement, all
small jobs welcome 371 0S71.

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ceramic 6 Hoar
tile. Minor repairs, fireplaces,
insulation. Lie. Band 127 1121.

C oncrete WorK
15 years Reliable Service.
Repair A-c, retries., Ireeiers,
ranges, d w, wash-dryers,
(11- 0449 311 (7*7.

Home Repairs

A M. Kelly cleaning service.
Speclallilng in restaurant 4
office buildings. 412-0351.

HAPPY ELVES
QUALITY Child Care 4 Pre
school P a rt tim e and fu ll
time. Lake M ary Elementary
alter school care. Individual
attention and TLC a speciality.
Slate licensed. I X E Crystal
Lake Ave. Lake M ary.
321 23S4

Pump Sales Serv.

Rem odeling

C O LLIE R 'S Home Repairs
carpentry, rooting, palming
window repair 321 4423

* WE CARE A T *
SEMINOLE CHILDCARE
2*9 Seminole Dr. Lake Mary.
Children are our spec'slty! We
are State licensed and cer­
tified for teaching and caring.
Low fam ily rates Call 377 1950
(or Inform ation.

ALU M IN UM Siding, vinyl tiding
soltlt 4 fascia. Aluminum
sutlers and down spouts.
F r .E tt 30S14S SM1.

Carpentry by " B IL L "
WOOD Artesian General car­
pentry, screened room door*
etc. Reas. Rates. 327 26X.

FOR efficient and reliable Home
Cleaning. Call Palty's Home
Pampering Service 331 35*6

CNId Care

O te ro k M

*4995

ins

Cleaning Services

BATHS, kitchen*, fooling. block,
concrete, windows, add a
rogm. tree estimate* 173 1443

1975 Bukk 2 dr HT

CONVERTIBLE
LOW MILES

COODV A SONS
Tite Contractors
121 0tS3

Let a Classified Ad help you find
more room to r storag e,'
Clatsilled Ads find buyers
last

Additions &amp;
Rem odeling

71 FORD RANGER
Pick Up. *700
1314141.

”

Daytona Auto Auction

t,ic

CB, Stereo Installation Repair
i f n Auto SoundCenter
A j L 7109 French Ave
377 411S

Equipment ’

Sat. Fail. I t , 10
F a rm tra c to r* , tru c k * and
equipm ent.
Consignments
accepted daily.

Ceramic Tile

Auto CB Stereo

Boarding &amp; Grooming

42—Lawn-Garden

Equipment Auction
SUN.

77 OATSUN FIO, 5 speed, air. 4
c y lin d e r tp o rt coupe. 199
down. Cash or trade, 139
9100 (14 4405

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

f k '. iu t y C / r p

59—Musical Merchandise

1310 Wast F irst Street - Sanlord. Florida 33771 - (305)1114130

l l i M- l tO O

IMS Mustang exeat tent
*3549 or Best otter, j
311-5117
*

To List Your Business-

77—Junk Cars Removed

1 9 7 8 je e p

SAT.
ll:90-Jt*0

M

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

79—Trucks-Tra i lers

F IL L O IR T A TOPSOIL
YELLOW SANO
CUrk A H lrt 333 7540.131 2*23

MON.-FRI.
9:00-4:00

CARS sell for SUMS (average).
Also Jeeps. Pickups. Available
at local Gov't Auctions. For
Directory call (05 4(7 400 Ext.
(414. Call refundable.

CONSULT OUR

FOR ESTATE. Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
praisais Call Dell's Aucficvt
371 5470

52—Appliances

;—

SAT.9-Jp.m., SUN.10 5p m.
FREE ADMISSION
OVER 100 DEALERS
HWY. 441'« M l. E. OF 1-4)
VOLUSIA COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS
GLASS RESTORATION

72—Auction

L A R R V -j Furniture M art,
715 Sanlord A ve . 377 4137
Sell and 5erv.ee ve ry best
portable kerosene heaters

M -A — Farm

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Easy Terms
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1170 Sanlord Ave.
371 4075

DeBary Auto A Marine Sales
across the river too ol h ill 174
Hwy 1713 OeBary 444 **«*
______ 1_____________________

WANTED to buy
German Split Dog
373 3394

1947 CAREFREE 33 It sell
contained, twin beds, air, patio
door, roll out Awning, large
rctg, twin holding tanks and
more. Tysun Lane Mobile
Park. Rts No. 17 97. South
DeLand.

TELEVISION
35" Color Consol*
19" Color Portable
142 1194

1910 Chevy pickup C-tO AmFm,
a ir, auto, ps axe. cond.
whole** la price call 323 5544.

S3 X Bale. 133 74*5 or eves.
__________ 331 4404___________

(or Sale

nanny

'71 OR ANAOA.t cyl .
171 down w ith credit.
M artin Motors 313.7134.

GOOD HAY
FOR SALE

Salesman needed.
STEMPER AGENCY INC.
331-4911

1900 MANATEE 61x14 3 bdrm. 3
bath. S i500 down take over
payment call aft. I 333 4473 or
373 7593 anytime

DODGE Omni 14(0,31.00C Miles.
4 Dr Hatch Back. FM tape
stereo A C P S Ex. cond. (M utt
sell) Call 149 5944

65—Pets-Supplies

W HEELCHAIR.
water bed. etc.
3313(5)

LEV I Jeans and Jackals.
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave.
332 5791

1901 SKYLINE Mobile Home.
34x57 ft. screen enclosure
porch, u tility shed. Cent. HA. 3
Bdrm. 3 Bath. Lot Site IS
50x100. Can be seen at 170
Leisure Dr North DeBary,
Florida in the Meadowlea on
the River Mobile Home Com
munity please contact Tom
Lyon at 373 1743 lo r additional
information

ONE PHONE CALL STARTS A
C L A S S IF IE D AO ON ITS
R E S U LTFU L END . THE
NUMBER IS 337 2411._______

HAY S3 50 per bale,
35or more tree del.
Other feeds avail, 349 5194.

15' FIBERGLASS boat and tilt
tra ile r good cond. 1375 3 wheel
bicycle *75 35 mm camera *10.
332 4431.

PREOWNEDHOMES
14x57 A d'lll Park
S17,900
14x70 Family Park
t i l , 500
14x70 Family Park
114,900
14x70 Fam ily Park
133,500
Gregory Mobile Homes
333 5300

72 CHRYSLER Stallon Wogon.
PS. PB till wheel. AC, AM FM
I track 1750. 333 (314.

67A—Feed

FOR SALE
Pigs and 300 Lb. Hogs.
Call 34. 5511

80—Autos for Sale

80—Autos for Sale

ABOVE overage prices paid lo r
clean c a rt, trucks and travel
trailers. Jack M artin 1317100

Wllco Salat Hwy. 44 W. 113.4170
Baled shaving* S4.St. Straw
S3.$0. Quality name cat and
deg leads. Including A.N.F.
Aviary Supplies.

BUILD your own . cypress clock
wood clock works - lln lth ts .
Free into. 321 4713.

Wednesday, Feb. M, l t l J —7B

80-r-Autos for Sate

1 -/6

•

LOTS OF EXTRAS! Oo w ith this
pretty 3 bdrm, 3 bath home In
firs t class cend. *41,000.

1900 MOBILE Home 14 x40' set
up in adult sedion of mobile
pars Day 111 3473
E venings*)! 5114

IL L
HAVE TO
ANALYZE
THE
VARIABLES

VO WHAT?

Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI,

60—Autos for Sale

Don't Despair Or Pull Your H air
— Use A Want Ad 377 34lt or
•31 1193.

ft

//i

.r l'

FOR SALE by owner — 2 bdrm,
1 bath. Fla. room, scr. porch,
fenced yard, assumable t \
mortgage S34.900. 373 4131.

323-3200

{•V A L E N T IN E S S P E C IA L ^
Stone fire p la c e "S e t* the
| .fnood" lor Ihl* J bdrm . 3 bath
gem) Oen, CHA. separate
entrance to t bdrm and bath
Huge lot and ma|e*tlc trees'

with Major Hoople

IF CANDIDATES ,
HE’LL BE V AWPF— '
VlTM FOUR'. T h e a s s s t p i s m t o i n t e p J
SYLLABLE
dLlY SINCE SPOCKYy PURELY
NAMES A R E
ADAMS JOINED A ) yOO PON T
$URE WINNER*, COMPUTER DATlNV EXPERT ME
WHERE'S X3UR Cl U2&gt; AND GOT V TO WAGER CU
MONEY &lt;?N
M ATCHED
} ( AN ELECTION
REcStSlE
W IT H HIS
UKE SOME
SPENDER?
EX-WIFE M , ( GAME OF
IS 1 c h a n c e !

YOUNG 3 Bdrm home Can be
used as residence or professional
offices or commercial. Only
*17,000 down S413 Monthly. Call
Broker. Owner 331 1411.

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

m

., 7 Bath, Fireplace,
Dbl. garage, 300x150 Ft. lot.
Close In. S49.900, 355 Wlldmere
Ave., Longwood.
bdrm

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

GIVE yourself or your children
the priceless opportunity of
professional piano lasson*.
Glean by a licensed teacher In
your
own
hum s
Vary
reasonabi* rata* No milaaga
charge Bast technique* lor
r t a lly
successful
piano
p la yin g . W ill w o rk lim a
around your schedule For
c o m p u te In fo rm a tio n c a ll
M rs. Jenkins at 111 1700
anytime t l no answer please
try again.

TRI County Tree Service. Trim
rem ove,
tra sh ,
hauling,
firewood Fr. Est. 332 9410
STUMPS ground out.
Reasonable, tree estimates.
___________ 7440641___________
JOHN ALLEN YARD 4 TREE
SERVICE. Wa’ ll ramove pine
tree* R ta*. price l i t SM0.
Ugly T reelhim p ?

Remove t l Inch dUmafar
R am Tri# Service 139 4191

Upholstery
L O R E N fS Upholstery
Free
pick up. del 4 est Car 4 boat
teat* Furn M l - m i
Custom Upholstery 4 Drape*
FREE est pickup and delivery
Call Sharon, m 2140

�BB— Evening H erald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Feb. 16. 1*83

SCC Leisure Time Classes To Begin
Quilting • B eginners through advan­
ced (evening class)—The following patterns
will be taught: Cathedral Window, Log Cabin,
Grandmothers’ Flower Garden, Sunbonnet
Sue, plus many more. The patterns may be
used to make pillow shams, wall hangings, and
full size quilts. Students are asked to bring
scraps of cotton fabric to the first class
meeting.
Drawing and Sketching (evening class)—
Em phasis on fundam entals of charcoal
sketching in preparation for painting and
working in color. Students will work from still
life, landscapes and live models. Students will
furnish their own supplies.
Working with Wood(evening c la ss)—

The following classes under the Leisure
Time Program at Seminole Community
College begin during the last week of February
and the first week of March. "These classes
are self-supported by student fees at no ex­
pense to the taxpayer," according to coor­
dinator Fay Brake. For Information call SCC.
Jazx Dance-Exercise (morning, afternoon
and evening classes)—A total form of dance
and exercise in which you are taught proper
body alignm ent, coordination, discipline,
flexibility, and rhythm. You accomplish
muscle toning, stamina, poise and confidence
in yourself along with appreciation for music
and total enjoyment.

Students will learn how to manipulate hand
and power tools and build shelves, cabinets,
flower benches or any other item of wood.
Students will pick their own projects and
furnish their supplies.
Wu Shu Hung Fufevenlng class)—One of the
oldest known m artial arts. The purpose of
Rung Fu is not only self-defense, but also
physical and mental discipline.
Advanced Wu Shu Rung Fufevenlng
class)—Before a student joins this class, heshe must have taken beginning Wu Shu Rung
Fu. Advanced techniques will be taught.
Oil Palntingfmoming class)—A scries of
lessons which will teach the beginner step-bystep approaches to oil painting. Students will

furnish their uwr. supplies.
W ntcrcolors and Oil P alntlngfcvenlng
class)—Designed to instruct the student in the
basic concepts of watercolor or oil painting.
Advanced students are welcome, and will be
taught more advanced techniques.
Make your own magic carpet (evening
class)—Students will become proficient In the
use of the tools and m aterials to make a plush
oriental style rug. Students may choose bet­
ween Turkish, Persian or Chinese style rugs.
Students must furnish their own supplies; the
cost will depend on the style and size they
choose.

Inhibited Friend M ay
Learn To Grin And 'Bare'

M c ltii*

M cN am ara

ace

at

DEAR ABBY: Since my early
childhood I have been going with my
parents to a beautiful nudist camp that
caters to families.
My problem is that I have met a very
nice man who has proposed marriage,
hut he refuses to Join me in going to the
nudist camp. I love him very much, as he
has many tine qualities. However, I don’t
think I could live without those wonderful
outings in the sun at the camp. I would
feel deprived, imprisoned and depressed.
He insists that ho is too inhibited to feel
comfortable in the presence of unclothed
strangers. He’s also afraid it might be
sexually stimulating.
I want to m arry this man, but 1 need to
convince him to join the camp. Can you
help me?
M. IN OTTAWA, CANADA
DEAR M.: Inhibitions of this kind are
difficult to overcome. But if you persuade
him to visit the family-type camp just
once, he may realize that It’s a healthy
family experience and there Is nothing
sexy about It And If he really wants to
m arry you. he may decide to grin and
bare it.
DEAR ABBY: For years I have been
scolded by my husband for picking my
teeth with a toothpick in public. Just how
much of a breach of etiquette is that? He
says I em barrass him. He is 71 and I’m
69, and we’ve been m arried almost 69
years.
We’re at a winter resort now.
Yesterday we had dinner with friends,
and 1 picked at my teeth at the table.
Seeing no place to discard the toothpick, 1
chewed it up into small slivers and put
the remains In my dinner napkin. I did all
this very inconspicuously.

#7.

H appy Birthday
Hettie McNamara, who has been a resident of
Longwood for 87 years, turned 87 on Feb 10.
Although she was in the hospital for 10 days in January
due to a heart attack and pneumonia and is feeling a bit
weak, Hettie is as bright and charming as ever.
She was a school teacher for 68 years and finds en­
joyment in crocheting slippers and rugs, which she gives
to her friends.
Hettie also likes to do crossword puzzles and writes to
several nen pals across the country.—KAREN WERNER

C O O K O F THE WEEK
The Herald weteemts n u H t t m tar Cook CMThe
Week. Do you know fomeone you would like to see
featured in this ipot? There it something for everyone
in the line of cooking.
Novice cooki, a t well a t m atter chefs, add a dif­
ferent dimention to dining.
Plea** contact PEOPLE Editor Dorlt Dietrich about
your newt and viewt on cooking.

|$C n n

^

Ruby Yvonne Darling and
Alfred Jerome Willingham

™ "m
zzr “1
Dog 6 m . I CM M

EXAM

Aflilul I got my Designer
Eyeglasses r r -’e to my
prescription in only 1 hour
and at 30 to 50% Lett.

*25.00

CA LL F O R A P P T .
339-3937

CONTACTS* 7

9

. 0

0

Single
Vision Only

P r.

E X T E N D E D W E A R O V E R N IG H T L E N S E S A V A IL A B L E

ALTAM O N TE MALL
L o c a t e d u p p e r le v e l b y

3 3 9 -3 9 3 7

jBatafr*nirift§hop)
Wlan ytu Save up la 50% an Tap Qualify Braid A Oka
B R E A D IS F R E S H L .F R E S H B R E A D !

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★ A s s o rte d
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BOXED CAKE DONUTS
lo o z - im o z . A
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ASSO R TEO LARG E
S W E E T R O L L S , • PA C K

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3

Pound C ake

|

announce th eir m arria g e
today. They were m arried
Dec. 18, at 3 p.m. on the lawn
at the home of her parents.
The Rev. E m m itt Mack
performed the double ring
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
M rs. E lizabeth D arling,
Longwood Drive, Osteen, and
the late Mr. Tony Darling.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mrs. Mary Alice Willingham,
Sanford.
Given in m arriage by a
family friend Joe Jordan, the
bride chose for her vows a
formal satin gown trimmed in
lace. She carried a bouquet of
white carnations mixed with
blue baby's breath.
Miss Gwen Golden, sister of

the bride served as maid of
honor. She wore a blue knit
dress and carried a bouquet of
blue carnations and baby’s
breath.
Bridesmaids were Tina and
Grace Darling, sisters of the
bride. T heir d resses and
flowers were identical to the
honor attendants.
Johhny Ixe McKinney, a
friend of the bridegroom,
served
as
best
m an.
Groomsmen were Tommie L.
Campbell Jr. cousin of the
bridegroom, and William F.
Lewis III, friend of the
bridegroom.
Sharon Willingham, sister
of the bridegroom, was flower
girl. Joseph Darling, brother
of the bride, was ring bearer.

AZ

99A LAAC
—

The reception was held at
the hom e of the b rid e's
mother. The newlyweds are
living in Sanford.
-MARVA HAWKINS

The 31st annual Chautauqua County (N.Y.) Picnic of the
Chautauqua Reunion Association will be held on Sunday, Feb.
27, at the Gulfport Community Center, 5730 Shore Blvd."South,
in Gulfport, Fla. beginning at noon.
All residents and former residents of Chautauqua County are
welcome to attend. Picnickers should provide their own picnic
lunch and beverage.
Officers for the 1983 event are: Arnold W. Hanson,
president; Arnold S. Haglund, Harley Dennison and Emmett
Eckman vice president, and Gust W. Rundqulst, secretarytreasurer and m aster of ceremonies.
For information write or call Gust W. Rundqulst, 11063 101
Av. N., Seminole, FI. 33542, Phone (813 ) 391-5537.

| 6 9

FR EE
TAKE A

FLORIDA

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CAKE

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HEAT PUMP

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HOURS
M o n - F r l • 9 A .M . - 4 P .M .
S a tu rd a y * 30 A .M . • 5 P .M .

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plumbing s

9 V M L I H E A T IN G INC
I00&gt; &gt; tA N F O R O AVE
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SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
DR T HOMAS 1 A N D E L L
C t u r o p r t f d ii P h y iic ia n
7017 F R E N C H

AVE

SANFORD
3 2 3

5 7 6 3

... Explorers
Continued From Page IB
are not ready to commit explorers to a high-risk exposure
situation," Lake Mary Fire Chief Jim Orioles explained,
"However there are plenty of non-hazzardous jobs on a fire
scene which we can assign to explorer personnel, thus
releasing senior fire department members for actual fire­
fighting assignments."
Other activities planned for post members include field trips
to other area fire departments and a possible trip later to the
state fire college In Ocala. Also in the planning stages are
several social events, Including a picnic and a possible record
dance in the fall.
All explorers are recognized as regular Junior members of
the I^akc Mary Volunteer Fire Department Association and
are entitled to All the benefits of such membership.
Post meetings are held on alternate Sundays from 2 to 6 p.m.
at the Lake Mary Fire Station. Anyone interested in additional
information can contact Assistant fire Chief Bob Stoddard at
323-7029.
The Post is also holding an open house in connection with its
first anniversary. It will be held Tuesday, Feb. 22 at the Lake
Mary Fire Station beginning at 7:30 p.m. All potential ex­
plorers and their parents are cordially Invited.

CHICKEN
BACKS

GOLD KIST
GRADE A

FRYERS
Chicken

5a».

COO KIN' GOOD

LEG QUARTERS

48C .

PORK

,

Turkey

58c

Wings

Grade A Assorted

Chitterlings

Pork Chops

SAVi *2.00 on 10 b . f c d u t

GREAT DOGS

«1 «

OwAltrwy

1

USOA Chent M..tf

1

O x T a il

*

1

B e e f L iv e r

6 9 1

1

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s h o u ld e r P ic n ic s
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U.S.O.A Ctwic.

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SAVINGS ON CANNED GOODS!

f
HERITAGE BRAND
I Mixed
MS
1 Vegetables
can
3
I Pork ’N’ Beans
1 Cream Style Or
1 Whole Kernel Corn

301
can

Chuck Roost

DAIRY

*1
Dutch HolUnO

Ml
Ml
can

3

*1

3

*1

3

*1

Ice

Paper Towels

2

|wmbo
rolls

89*

Bathroom Tissue

4

pak

79*

A r m ix
S h o r te n in g O

3 FOR
TOMATOES $ 1

TilCKT farms
CANNED

Enriched Rice ..........5 u. $ u s
M artha White
Self Rising F lo u r.......... 5 u. 99c
Cverlreth
Bread W hite............... 3 *-eei $1.00

303 s iz e

•

PRODUCE
Old Milwaukee Beer » k$1.99

D*Ncf«*

icum
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i n«k&gt;. r *»M «

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Jill Tlionias. 20, of Longwood, was the winner of
the Modern Miss USA Central Florida, pageant
held at the Altamonte Civic Center. Miss Thomas
is a make-up artist and model. She has been
employed by Merle Norman and Houston Beauty
Schools. Her sponsors arc;Sammons &amp; Mauro
Body Building Center and On Stage Hair and
Make-Up, both of Longwood, and Smokey of the
I-ongwood Police Department.

Chicken
Wings , 6 9

Sweet Peas Or
Cut Beans

Some iay potatoes planted on a rising tide will swell
with the tide.

#MODERN MISS'

COOKIN’ GOOD

Chautauqua County Reunion

o

400 N . H W Y . 17-93-3 B lo c k s N . O f 4)4
—

2

.1 9

* e
?

A S S O R TE D F L A V O R S
A p p ro x . 7 Doz. to a box

EVERY TUESDAY...
BUY ONE — GET ONE FREE!
N t x t To S o b ik* R o st.
. L o n g w o o d , F i. 13750

Every teen-ager should kuow the truth
about drugs, sex and how to be happy.
For Abby’s booklet, send |2 and a long,
stamped (37 cents), sell-addressed en­
velope lot Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Boa
38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

79*

pkgs.*1

OLD DUTCH BAKERY

por

something to me.
I completely reformed myself. I no
longer feel the urge to steal anything. 1
feel much better about myself and 1 know
I’ll never take another thing. Actually, I
would like to give the person who

lb . W h e a t B r e a d s .................... 2 ►or * 1 . 5 5

★ R a i s i n - C n n a m o n S w i r l ........... 1 LB .. ...................................* 1 . 2 9

4

DEAR ABBY: I have started dating an
older man. (I am 22.) He has been
When we got home, my husband gave m arried twice and says he wants to
me a scolding. I don’t think I did anything m arry again, but good sex is important to
so terrible. All my other manners are him und he doesn't wont to make the
same mistake he made before, so this is
good. What is the verdict?
Is my husband a nitpicker? Or am I a his proposition:
He wants me to go away for a weekend
slob?
with
him so he can see how I measure up.
VACATIONING
DEAR VACATIONING: Your husband He wants to "grade" me on my sen­
is not a "nitpicker" — neither are you a sitivity en d urance, responsiveness,
slob. However, it is considered Inelegant willingness to explore, etc. He is by far
to pick one’s teeth in public. And chew lag the most attractive man I have ever met,
up the toothpick is another no-no. You and I would very much like to be his wife,
but this "trial weekend" he suggests
could pick up Dutch elm disease.
turns
me off.
DEAR ABBY: I am writing this in
I
have
not had sex with him, and
order to save some other person from the
same predicament I found myself in. I’m although I am not a virgin — a fact he
a high school student, living in a small knows because I was completely honest
town. I don’t do drugs, I don’t drink and with him — I do not want to be graded
like a side of beef.
my grades are very good.
How can I let him know how I feel
I had one weakness. I was a com­
pulsive shoplifter. I couldn't go into a without losing him entirely?
PRIME
store without coming out with at least one
stolen object. This went on for quite a
DEAR PRIME: It’s my guess that if
while until one day I was caught.
Man, talk about the biggest scare of you don’t take his "lest" you will lose
your life! I was let go and only banned him — which is probably the best thing
from the store, but that scare did that could happen to you.

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

G r o s s in g e r R y e &amp; P u m p e m i c k l e .......«*oz.

SMACK CAKES

DEAR REFORM ED: You were
luckier than m ost One good scare is
sometimes more effective than a hun­
dred sermons. Thanks for writing.

Blu* ParWn0 Entranc#

DOLLY MADISON

FRESH B R E A D L O U R

M .

Dear
Abby

Dar/ing-W il/ingham W edding

OFF COM PLETE EYEGLASS PURCHASE

eye "

reported me a great big kiss!
REFORMED STICKY FINGERS

Bananas

3 *

*1 °°

P o ta to e s

3 *

99*

5 -

89*

While

P o ta to e s

TIP-TOP
S U P E R M A R K E T '

Detergent £ ................. $1,29
Com Muffin
p?... 4 $1,00
JMtr M i.

1100 W ait 13th St.
Sanford

Quofif/f ServiceI SavingsI
FOOO STAMPS WELCOME

tntm .,1 m.
P R IC K S
OOOO T H R U
F e b . l l , -s j

i

�Evening Herald, Sanlord, F I.

GOOD THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY FEB . 1 7 To 19
FROZEN FRESH

FILL YOUR FREEZER, PARTNER!

AVERAGE W E IG H T 1 5 0 LBS
Cut A Wrapped
For Yeur F r t e it r
At Ne Eatra Cost
Sirloins, T-Bone
Porterhouse
Round Steaks

Sirloin Tip
Rump, Bottom
Ere Round
Ground Round

BARBECUE SAUCE
ROYAL OAK 20 LRS. BAG

MOONLIGHT MADNESS SALE!
EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
10 PM To MIDNIGHT

UNDER THE BIG TENT!
FRESH PRODUCE AND PLANT SALE

CABBAGE

POTATOES

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
LETTUCE

EXCELLENT VARIETY O f

2

WINTER SPRINGS

SANFORD

THURS. &amp; FRIDAY

THURS. &amp; FRIDAY

SQUARE DANCING!
“ Whirl A Twirl Square Dancers"
I PM • M O PM

CLOGGING!
"Rainbow Eipress C touers"
I PM • 0:30 PM

SATURDAY AFTERNOON

JOIN US DURING FAIRWAY’S
GOOD WESTERN DAYS ALL
DAY SATURDAY!

WINTER SPRINGS PARKING LOT
Beth Groups At 2 PM to S PM

Wednesday, Feb. 14, I t M - I C

�JC— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wedneiday, Feb. H , 1MJ

Try Family Lamb Suppers
With A European Flair
The French and Belgians have raised the braising and
stewing of meat to an art form. Hearty and satisfying dishes
are a feature of their cuisines, with the Bretons in France and
the Flemings in Belgium particularly adept at this style of
cookery.
Lamb, in particular, Is appreciated in these regions. The
recipes featured here use .datively economical and always
available New Zealand Spring lamb shoulders for family
dinners with a continental touch. Flash frozen at the peak of
tenderness, the shoulders are from lambs that were milk-fed
and grass-finished, grazing in the magnificent New Zealand
; pasture lands.
The Bretons have been combining lamb and beans for
centuries, braising the succulent meat with their region's
; characteristic small white haricot beans. Brasied Shoulder of
. Lamb Bretonnc is a sbnpllfied variation of the classic, calling
for any small, dried white bean.
It will be a delicious as the original produced by the hardy,
individualistic Bretons, for the flavors of onion, garlic and
basil combine beautifully with the meal. The slow braising
results in a tender shoulder that will be perfect for an Informal
dinner on a chilly night.
An alternative for a wonderful family supper In New Zealand
Carbonnade, borrowed from the Flemings of Belgium. The
Flanders region is famous for Vlaamse Karbonaden — a rich
stew of meat and onions braised in beer. Lamb complements
this distinctive combination, enhanced by sage and bay leaf.
Both dishes are nutritionally sound as well as delicious.
Lamb has less saturated and internal fat than any other red
meal and fewer calories, too. Also present are ri vitamins —
niacin, thiamine and riboflavin — and iron. The addition of a
green salad, and with the Carbonnade, noodles or rice, ijill
bring to your dining room table the perfect, antidote for cold
w ith e r.
BRAISED SHOULDER OF LAMB BRETONNE
4 pound small, dried white beans
4 4 to 5 pounds frozen shoulder of New Zealand Spring lamb,
thawed
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 medium onions, chopped
2 cloves garlic, mashed
4 cup flour
4 cup water
1 can (16 ounces) whole tomatoes, undrained
1 beef bouillon cube
1 teaspoon dried leaf basil
Place beans In large bowl, cover with water, let soak at room
temperature 12 hours or overnight. Drain; reserve. Season
lamb with salt and pepper. In a Dutch ovem or large, heavy
kettle, heat oil; brown lamb on all sides. Remove and reserve.
Saute onion and garlic until golden. Stir in flour; cook, stirring,
2 minutes. Mix in water until smooth. Add tomatoes, bouillon
cube; basil, reserved beans and Iamb. Cover. Bring to boiling,
reduce heat, simmer 3 to 34hours, or until meat is tender and
pulls away from bones. Yield: 6 servings.
NEW ZEALAND LAMB CARBONNADE
4 4 to 5 pounds frozen shoulder of New Zealand Spring lamb,

Chinese Fare
W hets W inter
Appetites
To help you welcome the year 4681 (in the Chinese calendar)
I .a Choy home economists have planned a dinner feast sure to
spark mid-winter appetites. The highlight of the menu is
Braised Spiced Pork, a dish fragrant with the flavors of
tangerine, ginger, anise and cinnamon. Serve it with
homemade Chicken and Water Chestnut Soup and hot cooked
rice. To round out the dinner, serve Chinese Vegetables, a
delicious medley which includes bean sprouts, pea pods, water
chestnuts, red peppers, Chinese cabbage, bamboo shoots and
spinach. Available frozen in supermarkets.
BRAISED SPICED PORK
2 pounds lean pork, cut in 1-inch cubes
3 tablespoons cooking oil
1 cup sherry
4 cup Im Choy Soy Sauce
4 teaspoon powdered anise seed
4 cinnamon stick
4 whole cloves
4 teaspoon salt
1 cup water
2 pieces fresh tangerine peel, about 1 inch square
2 green onions, sliced thin
1 tablespoon minced fresh ginger or prepared ginger
Tangerine sections for garnish
Heat oil in deep saucepan or Dutch oven. When oil is hot,
brown pork cubes quickly on all sides, stirring often. Add
sherry, soy sauce, anise, cinnamon, cloves, salt and water.
Bring to boil. Add tangerine peel, green onions, and ginger.
Reduce heat, cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, about
14 hours or until pork is tender.
CHICKEN AND WATER CHESTNUT SOUP
6 cups chicken broth
1 whole chicken breast, skinned, boned and sliced thin
1 can (8 oz.) La Choy Sliced Water Chestnuts, drained
4 pound fresh mushrooms, sliced
1 teaspoon cornstarch
2 teaspoons cold water
1 tablespoon sherry
Salt to taste
V* teaspoon Oriental sesame oil (See Note)
In large saucepan, bring chicken broth to a boil, Add
chicken, water chestnuts and mushrooms. Reduce heat to low;
cover pan and simmer 5 minutes.
Meanwhile, blend cornstarch and cold water. Add sherry
and cornstarch mixture to soup. Cook over medium high heat,
stirring constantly, until soup thickens slightly. Stir in sesame
oil.
NOTE: Oriental sesame oil, available in large supermarkets
and Oriental food stores, has a pleasant nutlike flavor. U may
be omitted if it is not readily available.

TAKE

A

F L O R ID A

thawed
4 teaspoon salt
Y« teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
4 medium onions, sliced (3 cups)
One-third cup flour
1 can (12 ounces) beer, room temperature
2 beef bouillon cubes
1 bay leaf
4 teaspoon dried leaf sage, crumbled
Season lamb shoulder with salt and pepper. In a Dutch oven
or large, heavy saucepot, heat oil; brown meat on all sides.
Remove meat; reserve. Saute onions until golden. Add flour;
cook 1 minute. Blend in beer until smooth. Add bouillon cubes,
bay leaf, sage and reserved lamb. Cover. Bring to boiling;
reduce heat; simmer 3 to 3 4 hours, or until meat is tender and
pulls away from bones. Yield: 6 servings.

A touch of France pervades this delicious lamb dish.

:where shopping is o pleasure—

III

k

Publix

PUBLIX'

ITALIANFOODFESTIVAL

iw Enjoy the First Big Week
m
Ifs the besl tim e of year to slock up on your favorite Italian
foods from Publix. You'll find special values on all the
ingredients you need to bring the taste of Italy hom e tonight.

fc a tl

‘ IDAHO POTATO DAYS”
BAKE OR FRY THESE
GENUINE (SIZE A)

FRESH

G round
C h u ck

Idaho
Potatoes

per lb.

1° * | 5 9
bag

■

Selected Size - 5 to 10-oz.

.&lt;

Idaho Potatoes.. 4 «&gt;, 6 9 (

U.S.D.A.

A U .S .D .A . CHOICE
r BEEF BONELESS

B ottom
Round

[3 Fresh Produce

^ ______________________
Made From Concentrate.
Tropicana Brand Chilled

D a ir y

Orange J u ice ...... Si!' *12»
Full of Juice! Florida Sweet

Valencia
Oranges.............5

99c

For Pie, Sauce or Baking

[3 D a ir y

Hot from the Deli!

Macaroni A
C h eese................. Z *179
Lasagna................ «!.' •2 ”

For Your Cooking Needs!
Zosty, Yellow

Armour Star Breaded
(Heat &amp; Serve) Pork or Beet

Margarine............... IZ. 79*

P atties.................. Z »179

Pillsbury Hungry Jack
Buttermilk or Buttertastin*

Swift Premium (All Varieties)

Salad Perfect Florida Medium Size

Tasty Tom atoes.. Z. 49®
For Your Tossed Salad
Florida Crisp

Romaine, Endive or
Escarole............... Z 49®
Excellent Steamed Fresh, Tender

Brussels Sprouts. Z. 79®
Sun World Brand Zesty

Green Onions.... .. P*9 59®
Ruskin Brand Greens

Turnip or
M ustard................ ’&amp; 1 79®
Spicy-Gee Brand

Garlic...... \V9 69® ’&amp; * 29®
Naturally Fresh Spicy Oil and
Vinegar or Italian

Dressings.............V * 1 «

Brown ’N Serve
Sausage.................. %£ »1&lt;9

*149

Breakstone Temp-Tee Whipped

79®

Eye Round
R o ast.................... Z , 2 79
Beef Cube
Steaks....:............. Z *279
Hostess H am ...... *£ MO90

Butter..................... iin. *1 »
49®

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Swift Premium Boneless

Sweet Cream

Serve With Hollandaise Sauce
Fresh, Tender

Meat [3 Meat

Mazola Twin-Pack Diet or
Quarters ot Unsalted Corn Oil

Biscuits................3
Rome Apples.... 3 IU 7 9 c Land O Lakes Lightly Sailed

Broccoli................ a

Macaroni Salad.... ib" 79®

Kaiser R o lls ......... XI 85®

Uniform Size, Selected
Especially For Baking

b ig

[3 Deli

Delicious

Idaho Potatoes.. 5

Cooking
Onions...............3

D eli
Zesty-Flavored

$159

n K m iM M N ra u n n

TH IS A D E F F E C T IV E :
T H U R S D A Y , F E B . 17
TH R U W E D N E S D A Y
F E B . 23, 1983 . . .
CLOSED SU N D A Y . . .

[ 3 Frozen Foods

Mrs. Smith Natural Juice

Mozzarella or
Cherry Streusel.....4P\T * 2 "
Sharp Cheddar......X': *129 Ore-lda Crinkle Cut
Wisconsin Cheese Bar
Potatoes.................poS,b*g®279
Individually-Wrapped Cheese
Winter Garden Fordhook
Sliced American....
*138 Lima B eans....... . . . . polfbag 99*

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sharp or
New York Sharp

Cooked S alam i.... ES: *169

Earth Grain

Cream C heese.... .. pAg 99* Garlic Bread...........X ’ 99*
Dairi-Fresh Assorted Swiss-Style
Morton
Yogurt.................. 3 cup* 87* Jelly
Donuts...........VW 89*
Roddi-Wip Cream
W eaver’s Dutch-Frye
Whipped Topping..
*1 19 Thighs &amp; Drumsticks
Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Chicken.................. T 9 *1 "
Cheese Spread
Patties, Sticks or Nuggets
Sliced Velveeta.....5°.* *229 Banquet Chicken .. '2iV. $229
Wisconsin Cheese Bar Shredded

Swift Premium Regular, Garlic, or
Beef Sliced Bologna or

Chef Saluto Pepperoni or Deluxe
(2 0 4 to 2 0 4 -o z.)

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF
(WHOLE IN THE BAG)

Tenderloin
per Ib.

$399

Cheddar Cneese... fo* *129 Deep Dish Pizza.... XI *279
Breakstone Cucumber Onion. Clam
or French Onion Assorted

Dips.........................tSi 69*
Breakstone Tangy or California
Style or Smooth &amp; Creamy

Birds Eye Regular or Extra Creamy

Cool Whip...............iwi 69*
Mrs. Smith

Cherry P ie............. 3ZV *14B

Liner
Cottage Cheese.... 'EF $119 High
Cod Fillets............. '5? »1«
/

Swift Premium Beef, Corned Beef,
Ham, Turkey or Chicken

Deli Thin Meats

.Vt? 49®

Sunnyland Meat or Beef

Jumbo F ra n k s .... IZ •1 69
Lykes Sliced

Cooked H am ........

PERFECT FOR.
SNACKS OR
SALADS, CRISP, JUICY

led Delicfou
A p p le s

*309

Oide Smithfield Mild or Hot

Pork Sausage.......

!S M “

Kahn's (No Sugar Added)

Sliced Bacon......... ES*2 14
Louis Rich Smoked

Turkey Sausage..

M SB

Ball Park

Franks or Beef
Knockw urst.........

*17&gt;

Seafood Treat, Frozen

Trout F illets ..........

Z »1«

Seafood Treat, Frozen

B B EAK

Scallops..................

Z *5 19

Seafood Treat, Hickory Smoked

M ullet......................

. . . . . . . . . .

z *2°»

( .

�Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

"E at your vegetables" is a phrase most of us recall
from our childhood.
Perhaps many children grew up not liking vegetables
because first, the vegetables had very little color; the
color loss was due to over cooking with too much water.
Second, the vegetables were so soft they were often
mushy; and, of course, the over cooking piescnted a
product where flavor and some nutritional value was
leached or damaged by heat. Use your microwave to cook
any vegetable.
You and your family will be pleasantly surprised by the
bright characteristic color of the vegetable and the
enhanced flavor and tender — crisp texture of any
vegetable properly microwave cooked.
For fresh vegetables, the rules concerning cooking in
the microwave are as follows:
Cover the vegetables with a tight fitting cover or plastic
wrap, use 100 percent power, allow 6-8 minutes per pound
of vegetable, allow 5 minutes standing time. Use little or
no additional water.
Although there is little research that is conclusive, some
findings have been published that indicate there is less
nutritional value loss by microwave cooking than by
conventional methods.
Carrots can be microwaved resulting in a good quality,
(texture and flavor wise) entree accompaniment.
When purchasing the carrots look for firm, well-formed,

M icrowave M agic

CookCarrots
To Peak O f
Perfection

SARA LEE RECAN.
APPLE, CHEESE OR

so*m »
w w tt on ASSORUO

cinnamon raisin

Towels
♦

Danish

lesg* roM

1

7$-oi P*9

Will* On* £1*4 £«•&lt;"*
Pm *
Cp'Mwpi*

WM* O * MM
ISftf CtPtifKHit

RATH BLACKHAWK
REGULAR OR THKK

GRADE A FLORIDA

Large
Eggs

STOKELY ORANGE
OR LEMON LULL

Sliced
Bacon

Gatorade
32-01 bot

\ tb pig

pat dot
Wit* On. SIM Stan*
N x i li.a r Cart.!,, at*

Mycoff
Home Economist
Seminole Community College

smooth ones with bright color. Small to medium carrots
have the best flavor. Trim the tops but do not wash before
storing. Good quality carrots can be stored in the
refrigerator for several months.
To spark your families interest in carrots, try cutting
them in different ways: Julienne style (long, lengthwise
cuts) diagonal cuts and course shredded may be more
interesting than the usual rounds.
The size of the carrot pieces does determine the cooking
time.
Small fresh carrots about 12-16 oz. require 6-8 minutes
microwave time and 2 tablespoons water.
Two inch cuts about 16-12 medium carrots, require 6-8
minutes.
One-fourth inch slices, 2 cups, require 4-7 minutes and 1
tablespoons oi water.

SOfTPlV

UPTON

Dathroom
Tissue

Tea
Bags

Ketchup

100 cl pkg
W.U On* SAMStamp
PNC* Sflvar Carlilical*

Wfth On* SAMSlamp
P.Kt la*** C*rtif*ciU

4 10*1 pkg

Wilh On* SIM sump

With On* SSK sump
Kim t . ' l ' C.-IrtKlI.

Midge

MMt* On* £AMSlump
Pm # Save* C«f

pint•£#*•'C**!»f*cai*

Wednesday, Feb. H , lf S I- 3 C

GLAZED SMALL CARROTS
12 oz. fresh small carrots
2 tablespoons water
Prepare according to previous microwave directions.
GLAZE
14 tablespoons butter
14 tablespoons brown sugar
4 teaspoon cinnamon
4 teaspoon ground cloves
4 teaspoon salt
In a small bowl, microwave butter-for 45 seconds. Stir in
brown sugar, cinnamon, cloves and salt. Drain carrots,
pour glaze over and stir to coat. Microwave 100 percent
power for 20-50 seconds to melt brown sugar.
CARROTS WITH SOUR CREAM AND DILL
6 medium carrots, peeled and cut into Julienne strips
2 tablespoons water
4 cup chopped green onion
4 cup sour cream
1 tablespoon brown sugar
4 teaspoon dill weed
In a 2-quart casserole combine carrots and water. Cover
and microwave at 100 percent power for 7-8 minutes.
Drain. Reserve 1 tablespoon liquid.
Stir remaining ingredients and reserved liquids. Caver
and microwave at 100 percent power for 1-2 minutes.
Next week’s column: Greens.

HUNT S TOMATO
32*01. Lot

Special F u r c h * * * U m llr d Q u .n lK te

Orange, Lake, Seminole,
4 Osceola Counties Onlyl
PLUS TA X A DEPOSIT
IN 1B-OZ.BOTS.,
DIET RITE, R C 100,
DECAFFEINATED OR REG.

Hellm ann’s
M ayonnaise

EkcoEterna

32-oz. jar

R C Cola

$1

eight-pack
S - J 4 9
IN 12-OZ. CANS

Tableware
20-piece set

19

99:

19

(Limit 1 Please, With Other
Purchases of S7.50 or More,
Excluding All Tobacco Horns)

Budweiser
twelve-pack

■ IH H H P iL Spa p -

Includr* 4
fivepiece pUc*

prnmgi

C a r a m e l N u t P ie is s p e c ia l t r e a t .

km«* cVtnrr xnd uiid
Nykl soup *nd tcatpoonf

200 ^G'Smps^
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S 2.5-or. can. Suddenly Sassy.
i
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• or Dehghlhjlly Damly

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• Impulse Body Spray
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Allractive Accessories also available

Assorted Publix Premium
Assorted Hall's

Ice Cream

Cough Drops.........

Publix Dry Roasted

Kraft

Marshmallows......

Peanuts...........

Kids Love em!

Van Camp

Cracker Jacks......

Pork A Beans.....
Jif Crunchy or Creamy

Peanut B u tter..... 1X *
(50c Off Label),
Laundry Detergent Powder

ASSORTED
Sealtest Plain or Crunchy

Polar B’a rs ...........X

*1”

Tom's Puffed Cheese, Nacho
Tortilla Chips or Great American
Rippled Chips or (7 4 to 8-oz.)

Potato Chips....... X I 8 9 e

100

(20c Off Label).
Dishwashing Detergent

|7MSmps(3

Palmolive Liquid .. ” 5* *1 l9j

140-ct. pkg.

Woolite Uquid

Ajax Cleanser... 2 * X 7 9 cj
Buy 3 Bars &amp; Get 1 Bar Free!,
In 4-bar Pkg., Yellow or Green
(5-oz. Bars)

Nabisco Crackers

Irish Spring..........X ' *16a

W heatsworth...... 1'Xl‘%1I08

m

4 i FMk Ii m Fm t i l l 1M1|
................... A

Carnation Hot Cocoa Mix With
or Without Marshmallows,
or 70 Calorie

►!*»**•*“ *

100 jw G re e n lta m ^ ra
;

B-oi. can. Requljr or Lemon

Easy-Off Oven Cleaner
! . . . . . .

Hot Cocoa Mix..... 7 £ M «

_____j
............................................

Contadina
Bonus Pack

' a s s o r t e d s o f t -p l y

Contadina

Glamorene
i Green Giant Kitchen Sliced Green
iBeans, Nlblets Corn, Cream Style
ICorn or Sweet Peas (7 to 8 4 *o z .)

Buffet

■Vegetables..........3

200»ct. pkg.

59

O

Breakfast Bars

Pancake M ix ....

X: *1”

Aunt Jemima

Syrup................

24-01.

bol. *«|89

Quaker
X ' M ”

Sunsweet

S ilver F lo s s
79®

•j Health &amp; Beauty
Extra Strength Tablets

Tylenol................... bo. *2B9
(15C Off Label) Regular or Mini

Aim Toothpaste.... mi 99*

Musselman’s
Butter
, K.
K—
- Apple
—K t-Iv —
— ,

6-pk.

pAfl
Carnation Coffee Croamer

t&amp;ECJ
imtili* C o ffee-m ate....

S ^ S 9 { b IIUtCtiM»*b ti ll I941t

16-01 $ 4 7 9
)jr
»

Carnation Tall Can

*1

Aunt Jemima Buttermilk

Life C e re a l......
” r

Carnation Assorted

J w G re e n S ta m p s W
------ -------- —
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1 can (6 oz.6 pecans or 1 can (8 oz.) walnuts
1 unbaked 9-lnch pie shell with a high fluted edge
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Perfect End
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RIPE OLIVE STUFFED PEPPERS
3 large green peppers
4 pound ground chuck
4 cup long grain rice
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup water
2-3rd cup pitted ripe olives
4 cup chopped onion
1 tablespoon oil
14 cups canned tomatoes
1 tablespoon tomato paste
4 teaspoon basil
Dash pepper
4 teaspoon salt
4 cup grated Cheddar cheese
8 whole ripe olives for garnish
Cut peppers In halves lengthwise; remove seeds. Parboil for
5 minutes. Drain, and place In shallow baking dish. Brown beef
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Makes 6 servings.

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�«C—Evening Hcrild, Sanlord, FI

Wednesday, Feb. 16, 1983

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ftI •

SUNDAY EDITION

Evening Herald
75th Year, No. 175—Sunday, March 13, 1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(USPS 481-240)—Price 35 Cents

City Settles 1 Land Purchase
By Donna Estes
Herald 8taif Writer
The Sanford City Commission has
authorized a settlement in one of two
condemnation suits, scheduled to be
tried In the Circuit Court In Sanford
beginning Monday.
The suits Involve a total of more than 5
acres of land needed by the city for
future expansion of Its Poplar Avenue
sewer plant.
City Attorney Bill Colbert, who with
assistance from his law partner Kenneth
McIntosh is representing the city of
Sanford In the cases, recommended
during a special meeting Friday that the
c ity agree to pay $60,000 for a
2.104-acre parcel fronting on U.S.
Highway 17-92 at the lakefront of Lake
Monroe.
This parcel Is owned by Frank J.
Forrle Jr. of Ramapo Lane. Stroudsburg.

Pa. Forrle's attorney agreed to accept the
sum.
The second parcel of 3.174 acres,
directly behind the first and fronting on
Fulton Street, will continue to be negoti­
ated for in the courts, Colbert said. He
estimated the condemnation trial on the
second parcel to begin Monday will
probably last two or three days.
The owner of the second parcel. Gary
C. Warner of Evergreen to Evergreen.
4450 142nd St. S. E.. Bellevue. Wash., is
being represented in Circuit Judge
Robert McGregor's court by George
Algernon Speer Jr.
Colbert said he and Speer are as much
as $ 100,000 apart in a sales price
settlement.
The city filed the original condemna­
tion suit In December 1981. Originally,
John Sauls, the city's appraiser. Judged
that the first parcel was worth more than
$20,000. Colbert said McGregor ruled.

however, that one component In Judging
the value of the. land would be the sales
prices of land In the vicinity subsequent
to the filing of the condemnation suit.
This ruling meant that the purchase of
land for the new Central Florida Regional
Hospital had to be considered in the land
value. C ity M anager W.E. “ P e te "
Knowles said.
Knowles said the Evergreen property
isn't nearly as valuable as the Forrle
parcel because It does not front on the
highway.
The commission authorized City Clerk
Henry Tamm to prepare the $60,000
check lor the purchase of the Forrle
property.
Knowles said expansion of the sewer
facilities Is delayed while the city
attempts to resolve its debate with the
state Department of Environmental Reg­
ulation over a waste load allocation from
its present plant. DER has refused to

reissue a permit to the city to allow
continued effluent discharge into Lake
Monroe, requiring Instead that the city
prepare tr dispose pf effluent from the
plant through a land spreading process.
Knowles has estimated that the costs of
purchasing property, piping and other
expenses to go to the land-spreading
method will cost millions of dollars.
The city while battling with DER a
couple years ago over the method of
effluent disposal abandoned a plan
whereby the Sanford sewer plant would
be expanded Into a regional facility to
serve not only Sanford, but also Lake
Mary and the unincorporated aieas In
north Seminole County.
Knowles said Friday that he has
received a new letter from the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency ask­
ing how plans arc conning along on the
regional sewer plan concept.

S tra n d e d ?

Winter Springs Couple Seeks Bus Transportation
By MICHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer

Federico M. Dlmas-Arutl has faced
a lot of challenges in his 84 years. He
faced the rigors of New York on his
own at age 11. He was In the U.S. Air
Force for 28 years. He was shot at In
Puerto Rico.
But none o f those situations
frighten Dimas-Arutl as much as the
challenge he now faces. He's trying to
get transportation from his home In
Winter Springs.
.
Dlmas-Arutl and his felfe. Collta.
live at 415 David St. Their home is on
a nice residential street Just one block
ofT of State Road 434.
They moved there from Orlando
where they had lived for three years
.and thought Winter Springs was a
place they could spfnd the real of
their Uvea.
But their happiness has been mar­
ried by a problem which Is making
them reconsider their decision to
move there.
The couple is virtually stranded.
Dlmas-Arutl owns a car but doesn't
drive because of an eye problem. He
claims to bcc well enough to drive
•'but is afraid for the other guy."
Winter Springs Is not served by the
buses which serve Seminole. Orange
and Osceola counties. A van Ib
available from the Federation of
Senior Citizens office In Altamonte
Springs but that only serves the area
several days each week.
"W e love this house but we're
seriously thinking of moving.” Mrs.
Dlmas-Arutl said. "M y husband faced
a serious Illness a few weeks ago. 1
thought he was going to die. We had
to call an ambulance."
But except for the ambulance, the
couple has no way to get out of the
house unless they call for the senior
citizen van at least a day in advance
or ask a neighbor to take them
somewhere.
Officials with the senior citizen

group said their vans arc available to
elderly people In the south end of the
cou n ty on sh op pin g trips and
doctors' appointments.
The rest of the week the buses run
from Longwood and the northern
part of the county.
The group also has a medical van
which can carry wheelchair patients
anywhere In the county. But that Is
only available on two weeks notice.
The buses come nowhere near
Winter Springs. Officials with the
transportation authority said the
‘ nearest stop to the area is at Aloma
Avenue and State Road 436. which Is
several miles away.

:W

Winter Springs ofTlclals said they
don’t have the money to finance bus
routes through their community.
"T h e only way for us fo get
somewhere Is by taxicab." Mrs.
Dlmas-Arutl said. "And It's a $15 cab
ride to Orlando."
The couple spends most of their
time at home, writing, sculpting,
painting or Just talking. After 28
years of service In the Air Force.
Dimas-Arutl has a whole room full of
medals, momentoes and souvenirs,
Including a $15,000 suit of armor
that was given to him by former
Spanish dictator Francisco Franco.
Dlmas-Arutl left Puerto Rico at an
early age for New York. From there
he went to Ann Arbor. Mich., and
then to the University of Maryland,
where he graduated from dentistry
school In 1922.
Having no money and no practice,
he Joined the Air Force and spent ihe
next 28 years traveling, mostly
around Europe. But he was later
stationed In Puerto Rico where he
made the mistake o f letting his
address be known. One day a
gunman tried to assassinate him. The
next day Dlmas-Arutl decided to
leave Puerto Rico.

M r . a n d M rs . Federico M . D im a s -A ru ti

Lawmakers Giveth, Taketh Away Gas
Tax Exemption For Local Governments
The Florida Legislature giveth and the Florida
Legislature taketh away.
But very seldom does one expect the legislative body
to give something in the first few pages of a bill and take
the same thing away in the same bill.
On first blush. It looked like the Florida Legislature
gave something to local governments — cities, counties
and school boards — during Its special session little
more than a week ago.
For many years cities were exempt from paying the
state's gas taxes and when they did pay the tax the state
would refund the money.
.
...
When the Legislature repealed the first 4 cents of the
Has tax from which the cities had been exempt, it
appeared to take care of the loss of funds to the cities by
exempting them from the new 6 cents in sales tax which
they would have had to pay.

An Eggs-Act Science
It was 'eggs away' for PJnecrest Elementary
School teacher Don DePlerro as he dropped eggs
from the school roof recently to test protective
packaging done by various students in conjunction
with the school science fair. But this test carton
didn't do too well, smashing on the sidewalk
below. The yolk's on contestant Tansy Grant, 8,
who reacts with "Yuk, It broke." Meanwhile,
Jason Middleton, 7, and Sammy Mendoza, 8,
celebrate sucessful landings and unbroken eggs
with smiles In the bottom photo.

current budget year expected to save $5,695 because ol
Its gas tax exemption. But If the exemption Is repealed
and considering the 2-cent increase In state taxes on
gasoline, it will pay the state $8,400 In those taxes in
fiscal 1983-84.
While state officials Insist the sales tax will total 5
cents plus a fraction per gallon. It will actually total 6
cents per gallon.
The mathematics is as follows: with the repeal of the
first 4 cents of the gas tax and keeping in place lhc
second 4 cents. 3 cents of which is used by county
governments and 1 cent o f which goes to city
governments — the actual increase In taxes on gasoline
is 6 cents minus 4 cents or 2 cents per gallon.
The city of Altamonte Springs In fiscal 1983-84.
instead of saving $3,500, will be paying the state more
than $5,000 while Casselberry, instead of saving
$3,000, will be paying the state $4,500.
.
The Florida League of Cities went before a legislative

In addition, the Legislature In the 79-pagc bill also
exempted counties and school boards from the tax.
The provision was Included In Section 212.92.
subsections C and D on page 20 of the legislation. Thenew sales tax goes Into effect on April 1. However, three
pages from the end o f the bill. In Section 62. the
provision granting this exemption Is repealed as of Oct. Action Reports....... .......2A
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Comics..................
So. the Florida Legislature granted an exemption in
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Crossword.............
one section and took it away in another, all In the same
___ _
__

—

—

— —— — —

TODAY

bill.
Now. what does that mean?
It means simply that the city of Sanford during the

Religion
5B
Dear
Abby....................
2B
........2B
Dear Abby............
Deaths................... ......10A
Dr. Lamb............. ........AB

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Florida..........................3A
Hosoital
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Nation...........................2A
People.. ..... ................. IB
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committee lobbying for all it was worth to retain the
exemption for the cities during the special session. The
story goes that from that point the state county
commission association and state school board associa­
tion lobbyists went to work to get the same thing for
their constituencies and put the pressure on legislators
to get the tax exemption. When the legislative
committee got fearful, so the story goes, that the two
powerful associations might kill the legislation, the
section was Included granting the exemption to those
bodies as well. Afterwards, the repeal section was added
at the end of the bill.
Sanford City Manager W.E. "P e te " Knowles, who has
worked with the Florida League of Cities for years, said
Friday that the FLC will be In Tallahassee during the
upcoming regular session In April to get that exemption
back.
Altamonte Springs Mayor Ray Ambrose said that
certainly the cities will be talking to as many legislators
us possible on the exemption.
Only two of Seminole County's legislators voted for
the tax bill — State Reps. Tom Drage of Orlando and Art
Grtndle of Altamonte Springs. The others. Reps. Carl
Selph. Bobby Brantley and state Sens. John Vogt.
Richard Langley and Toni Jennings voted against it.
Brantley noted that the legislation was adopted so
quickly, most of the legislators did not have enough time
to read the bill.
Selph has said that he will be filing legislation during
the regular session to repeal the repeal of Ihe lax
exemption to cities, counties and school boards. And he
said that Miss Jennings has promised to sponsor the
legislation in the state Senate.
— By Donne Bate*

�7A— Evening H erald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, M arch 1J, 1713

NATION
IN BRIEF

S enate Struggling
Still W ith Jobs Bill
WASHINGTON (Uf*l) — The Rcpubllcan-lcd
Senate Is taking a lot longer than planned to
pass an emergency Jobs and recession relief bill,
and the showdown may come Monday.
With no apparent way to block Sen. Robert
Hasten. R*Wls., from calling up an amendment
to repeal the 10 percent tax withholding on
Interest and dividends, the Senate leadership Is
working over the weekend to line up opposition.
Senate Republican leader Howard Baker has
conceded Hasten has the votes to attach the
repealer to the Jobs bill, but he Is looking for a
way to make the Issue a procedural one on
which he can get support for a parliamentary
maneuver.
Hasten predicted he will have enough votes
not only to win repeal, but to stave off any
procedural moves as well.
President Reagan threatened to veto the S3.8
bipartisan bill If Kasten’s amendment is at­
tached.

For Discriminating Against Americans

U.S. Retaliates Against Oil-Rich Kuwait
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United
Slates Is retaliating against one of the
richest OPEC nations, Kuwait, for "dis­
criminating against U.S. citizens and
corporations" seeking petroleum Inter­
ests In the Persian Gulf country.
In announcing the decision. Interior
Secretary James Watt said the U.S.
government will stop Kuwait from buy­
ing U.S. oil and gas interests on federal
land, and will Investigate whether the
Arab nation can keep Its current
holdings.
The decision by Watt declares Kuwait
a "non-rcclprocal nation" under the
federal Mineral Leasing Act because It Is
discriminating against U.S. business
interests that want to hold petroleum
concessions in Kuwait.
While Kuwait in the 1970s forced out
U.S. firms from holding Interests In Its
e n e rg y resou rces, the m ajor oil-

producing country has not nationalized
such concessions held by Japanese,
British. Dutch and Spalnlsh interests.
Watt said.
"Because we arc committed to free
trade that works In both directions, we
cannot condone a practice which shut
out Americans while allowing access to
citizens and corporations of olher na­
tions.” he said at a news conference.
Watt’s action means no Kuwait citi­
zens or corporations may acquire new
Interests In "onshore" federal oil or gas
leases under the mineral leasing law. He
said his agency and the Justice De­
partment also will determine whether
Kuwait "can continue to hold the lands
they now have."
Kuwait Petroleum Corp., a state-owned
company, was involved In the largest
Investment ever by Mideast Interests In a
publicly traded U.S. corporation.

N o Bank W itch H u n t'
W ASHINGTON (UPI) Senate Finance
Committee Chairman Robert Dole says he Is not
conducting a "witch hunt" against financial
institutions In retaliation for their Intensive
lobbying campaign against the new withholding
tax.
But, Dole, R-Kan., said It Is time to "question
whether commercial banks, thrift Institutions
and credit unions are bearing their fair share of
the Income tax burden."
As he opened hearings on the tax treatment of
financial Institutions Friday, Dole suggested
that major banks should pay a user fee to ofTset
the cost of government participation In the
International Monetary Fund.

WEATHER
NA TIO N A L REPORT:Raln. snow' and gale-force winds
coated power lines with a thick crust of lee that blacked
out hundreds of homes In the Northeast and tempera­
tures plunged to record lows In the South. A school bus
crash on a snowy Pennsylvania road Injured 19 people.
Light snow Friday coated the Appalachians, the Ohio
valley and the lower Great Lakes. Blnghmanton. N.Y..
reported 5 Inches of snow and a light coating In Buffalo,
warmed by temperatures In the 70s earlier this week,
made driving perilous. "It's winter again." one deputy
said. A school bus and a car hit head-on on a snowy road
near Mount Pleasant. Pa., slightly Injuring 18 children.
The driver of the car was seriously injured. New Orleans
and West Palm Beach set low temperature records for
the day with readings of 36 and 44. respectively, but
temperatures hit the 70s In Montana. "Most of our
weather Is coming olT the Pacific, and this Is warm air”
in contrast to the normal Canadian air the region
receives, said Max Baumgartner of the National Weather
Service in Helena. Gale-force winds lashed the Northeast
coast and flash flood advisories were posted. In
Ice-coated Massachusetts, about 500 homes In Berkshire
and Franklin counties were blacked out Friday. More
than 100 utility crews — half of them called In from
their affiliate Connecticut Light &amp; Power Co. — worked
to resiling snapped lines for the third day Friday.
A R E A R E A D IN G S (9 a.m .):Tcm pcraturc. 47.
overnight low: 40; FRIDAY high: 53: barometric
pressure: 29.97: relative humidity: 62 percent; winds:
northwesterly at 18 mph: ratn: none; sunrise 6:40 a.m.:
sunset 6:31 p.m.
SUND AY TIDES: D AYTO N A BEACH: highs. 7:23
a.m.. 7:36 p.m.: lows. 12:44 a.m.. 1:13 p.m.: PORT
C A N A V E R A L : highs. 7:15 a.m.. 7:28 p.m.: lows. 12:35
a.m.. 1:04 p.m.: B AYPO R T: highs. 12:30 a.m.. 1:26
p.m.; lows. 7:16 a.m.. 7:26 p.m.
BO ATING FORECA8T:St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — A small craft advisory is In effect. Wind
northwest 20 to 25 knots Saturday decreasing to around
15 knots Saturday night becoming variable mostly
northerly 10 knots Sunday. Seas 3 to 5 feet near shore
and 6 to 10 feet offshore subsiding some offshore by late
tonight. Partly cloudy.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C « n tr * l F to r MU R e g io n ,! t t o ip it * !

FrM*1
A D M I t t lO N I
S en io r d
W illia m R o u n d trM

BIRTH!
K t v ln a n d C h a ry l D
b a b y j l r l , San lo r d
D IS C H A R G E S
S a n fo rd :
A n lita b a lfi R . B a k a r
E a ta R . H a n io n

M a r io * , l

Evening Herald

Carrto P. Jnekton
BavartyJ Smith
Dally B. Walden
FtoranoaM York,DaBary
JovrphBatot. Daliona
Earto J. Palpa. Oallona
Farn E, Banadlct, LakaMary
Pamala J. Dalong and baby boy.
Sandra K. Laclair and baby boy.
Winter Spgt

(uipt mim

Sunday, March I), Ifll-Vol. 75, No, 175

PubJHiitd Dally and Sunday, aacayt Saturday by Tha Sanford
Htrald, Inc., 100N. Frtncfi Avo., Sanford, Fla. JIF7I.
Second Clan PattOH Paid at Sanford, Florida i l l n
H o m a D a t lv o r y i W e e k . S 1 .N ; M o n th , U .U i « M o n th s , l i t I t ;
Y a a r. H I M
B y M a i l: W a a k l l . l l j M o n th , t i l l , a M o n th s .
U t . N i Y o o r . SSJ.00
_______________________________ _______________

Gerald Ford, voted unanimously In favor
of the acquisition.
The Securities and Exchange Com­
mission soon afterward announced It
was investigating allegations o f "Insider
trading" In Santa Fe stock and options.
In connection with the Kuwait deal.
The SEC charged that transactions
acquiring Santa Fe's common stock were
illegally based on confidential Informa­
tion. and that some people with the
Information collectively profited more
than $5 million.
The commission eventually took ac­
tion against a Kuwait Investor and a
number o f financial Institutions as a
result o f the allegations o f Insider
trading. In December 1981, the Kuwait
acquisition of Santa Fe was completed,
after the Justice Department and a
federal review group announced they
would not oppose the takeover.

Q u ick , Foolproof Test
For G laucom a D eveloped

Sea Laws Proclaim ed
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan has
extended U.S. mining rights to a region covering
about 4 million square miles of ocean by
declaring an exclusive economic zone of 200
nautical miles.
Some conservative senators said they will
Introduce legislation to extend that Jurisdiction
to Include fishing.
The proclamation stakes out U.S. rights to
explore and mine all minerals In the zone,
Including oil and gas. It docs not directly affect
fishing rights, which vary according to the
species Involved, or territorial waters, which
remain at 3 nautical miles off the U.S. coasts.
It declares the waters adjacent to the United
States, Puerto Rico and all U.S. overseas
territories. Including the Pacific Trust ter­
ritories. arc an exclusive economic zone. The
proclamation took effect Immediately upon
being Issued Thursday.

In 1981, It bought Sante Fe Interna­
tional Corp. for $2.5 billion. Santa Fe,
based In Alhambra. Calif., Is a major
petroleum drilling and exploration firm.
Watt said only $9 million of the $2.5
billion Santa Fe deal Involved federal
energy leases. But he noted. "Th ey were
seeking to acquire other leases.”
Sante Fe Chairman E.E. Shannon
charged, however, the government ac­
tion will force his company to abandon
some "$50 million In energy Investment
in this country which would have
created additional employment In the
United States."
Shannon also argued Kuwait is not
d iscrim in atin g against Am ericans,
"since Kuwait moved In an orderly and
fair manner to end all foreign ownership
In the 1970s."
The 1981 Kuwait deal was reached
after Santa Fe’s 13 directors, Including

BAL HARBOUR. Fla. (UPI) - A quick,
"sim ple" method o f testing people for
glaucoma by examining their peripheral
vision can detect the disease before
symptoms develop, a medical researcher
says.
The tcsl takes Just five minutes and
has proven to be 100 percent accurate In
diagnosing patients who are glaucomafree, said Dr. Maurice E. Langham of
Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine.
Langham detailed his glaucoma test
for opthalmologists with the American
Society for Contemporary Medicine and
Surgery who met this week in Bal
Harbour.
Glaucoma, a disease of the eye charac­
terized by increased pressure within the
eye and hardening of the eyeball, leads
to a gradual Impairment of sight and can
result In blindness.

A ll Aboooaaaaarrd
The Air "Force Reserve Band from Warner Robbins, Ga. will perform In
concert at 7:30 p.m. March 23 In the Sanford Civic Center. The concert will
be free of charge and Is co-sponsored by the Evening Herald and the City
of Sanford. The band features a Dixieland jazz band whose members here
are shown boarding an Amtrak train for the ride south.

Langham told the conference when
pressure builds up Inside the eyeball,
patients experience a loss of vision In the
outer edges of the eye. The first step In
Langham’s test Is to measure this
peripheral vision.

Then, pressure Is applied briefly to
outer surface o f a patient's eye. People
who arc free o f glaucoma do not lose
peripheral vision, Langham said, but
those who arc susceptible to the disease
realize an Immediate but temporary loss
of vision.
The lest was administered to 100
patients. 50 with the disease and 50
without. In every case, the diagnosis was
accurate, Langham Bald.
Once the new test determines that a
patient is susceptible to glaucoma,
further testing Is necessary to pinpoint
the stage and severity of the disease.
If testing reveals no signs of glaucoma,
patients identified os susceptible would
be carefully followed. At the first signs of
disease, treatment would begin to keep
the problem from progressing to the
point that eyesight could be completely
lost.
Langham said research by Ills team of
doctors, combined with new methods of
looking at the circulation o f blood within
the eye. may provide new clues to the
cause of glaucoma.

G e n e ra l A t O dds With Reagan

Nuclear War In Europe Can't Be Contained
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The head of U.S. armed forces
In Europe seems to be at odds with President Reagan
over whether a nuclear war could be limited, a debate o f
vital concern to Western Europeans.
Gen. Bernard Rogers, commander In chief of the U.S.
European Command, told the House Armed Services
Committee that a nuclear exchange In Europe would
spill over to the United States, but that such a threat
could be diminished by building up conventional forces
on the continent.
"W e are not going to contain a nuclear war In Western
Europe." the outspoken general declared.
" A nuclear war in Western Europe Is going to escalate
to a strategic exchange." he said. "I feci the war would
escalate qutckly.”
It was believed to b e ih e first time Rogers has made
such a statement publicly and It appeared to contradict
his commandcr-ln-cnlef. President Reagan, who has said
a nuclear war would not necessarily spread.
Speaking to a group o f editors Oct. 16. 1982. Reagan
said: "I could see where you could have exchange of
tactical weapons against troops In the field without It
bringing either one of the major powers to pushing the
button."

The statement was widely reported throughout
Europe and became a focus o f the nuclear freeze
movement In many countries. Some European ofTlcials
questioned whether the continent could become a
nuclear battleground In an escalation of, tensions
between the United States and the Soviet Union.

our goals."
The Soviet Union must be convinced that NATO Is
determined to deploy Pershing 2 -and cruise missiles In
Europe _ beginning In December for It to negotiate
reductions In Intermediate-range nuclear weapons, he
said.

Rogers made the declaration to press his case for the
continued modernization of conventional forces in
Europe. Am ong other things, he is seeking the
equipment for two more divisions — four equipped
divisions are now stationed In Europe — so the
hardware would be In position should more U.S. troops
be needed In a conflict.

"It may be that It won’t be until she (the Soviet Union)
sees those Pcrshlngs and (cruise missiles) on European
soil that she'll begin to negotiate.” he said.
Rep. William Dickinson, R-Ala., complained Informa­
tion that could be used to persuade the people of
America and Europe of the Soviet threat and the need
for U.S. nuclear weapons In Europe is classified.

The general said he was promised the equipment
when he took over as European commander June 29.
1979, but has yet to see It.

“ You're not going to sell your position without
producing Information." Dickinson told Rogers.

"I figure the Army owes me two sets of equipment,"
he said. "Th e quicker 1 get those over there, the less
chance I’d have to use nuclear weapons."
Rogers said a resolution to be considered by the House
next week calling for a mutual and verifiable freeze on
nuclear arms is "a mistake. It’s counterproductive to

But the genera] said his superiors have turned down
his request for release of seven satellite photographs
showing sites of Soviet SS-20 missiles.
"You can’ t get anybody In Western Europe to believe
line drawings of an SS-20. They’ve got to see the
picture," he said. " I have been singularly unsuccessful
In my endeavors."

Sh e riff Says 40-50 D ep u ties Not Involved In Probe
Seminole County Sheriff John Polk has flatly denied
allegations that as many as 40 to 50 of his officers could
be Involved In thefts of property from evicted persons.
Polk, who asked Gov. Bob Graham to appoint an
outside investigator to probe allegations that some
deputies may have been Ir.volvcd In the theft o f evicted
people's property, said: "There Is no way they are going
to find that number.”
There are around 130 deputy shcrifTs under Polk. The
sheriff had asked for an Independent Investigator to look
Into the allegations because he said he wanted to "avoid
the appearance of a whitewash."
The investigation, which could take about two
months, will be carried out by Alachua County State
Attorney Eugene T. Whitworth.
The probe arises out of a complaint by a South
Seminole man. Randal Brisler. who was evicted from his
home in December 1980. Shortly afterwards he found
that a $700 stereo had allegedly been sold by former
deputy sherlfT Aaron Sanders, who was fired after
refusing to take a polygraph test when he was
Investigated.
Polk says that at the time there was no evidence that
Sanders was involved In alleged wrongdoing but after
Brister had complained about him not being charged,
case papers had been sent to Orange County, where the
stereo had been sold.
State Attorney Douglas Cheshire could not be reached
for comment.

DU1 ARREST

Action Reports
★

F ir e s

A C o u rts
★

P o lic e

and was knocked unconscious. He was treated for a
broken nose and minor concussion at Florida Hospital.
Apopka.

THIEVES STRIKE HALF-BUILT HOMES
Houses under construction have again become the
target o f thieves who arc stripping out hundreds of
dollars worth of equipment.
The latest firm of home builders to fall victim to the
thieves is Sabal Point Properties, o f Winter Park, which
discovered a $1,100 Litton microwave oven had been
removed from a range thieves had to dismantle at a
half-built house at Winter Ridge Road. Longwood.
The theft happened between 5:30 p.m.Monday and 2
p.m. Tuesday.
In the second theft, a pool pump worth $225 was
stolen by thieves from a house being built at Grace Lake
Circle, Longwood, Thursday. The pump belonged to
Altamonte Springs builder Clarence Brent Allen.

JUKE BOX CASH STOLEN

Donald Frank Field o f Orlando, was arrested and
charged with driving under the Influence o f alcohol after
his car was seen weaving across U.S. Highway 17-92,
Fern Park, at 9:30 p.m. Thursday. He was ulso charged
with driving with a revoked drivers license.

A ba containing $85 In quarters from a Juke box was
stolen ,rom the Deluxe Bar, Southwest Road. Sanford,
between 9 and 9:50 p.in. Thursday. The money
belonged to the pub owner, Reglno Alexander.

MAN ATTACKED

Three guns worth $750 were stolen from a house and
two pick-up trucks belonging to Willard Ainsworth.
2860 S Cameron Avc.. Sanford, between 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday and noon Thursday.
The thief stole a 20-guage pump action shotgun worth
8500 from the back bedroom of the house and
semi-automatic .22-callber ride from one o f the pick-up
trucks parked outside the house. A third weapon, a
.22-caliber rifle, was stolen from another pick-up.

A man was treated for a broken nose and minor
concussion after being knocked out when he was hit
with a stick Wednesday night while trying to protect his
girlfriend.
According to a Seminole County sheriff's report. John
William Oat. Bay Oak Court. Orlando, was travelling
with his girlfriend. Beckl Lynn Burton, of Orlando, in
separate cars to Hunt Club Boulevard at about 9:30 p.m
when three men In a pickup truck started harrasslng
Ms. Burton.
Ost stopped his vehicle, got out and was hit will: what
his girlfriend described as "tw o sticks taped together"

GUNS STOLEN

p.m. Thursday. Entry to the house was made by forcing
opena door.

OFF-DUTY POLICE C A N T CARRY GUNS
Casselberry Police Chief Fred McGowan has bluntly
told his officers that they can’t carry their guns outside
the city limits when olT-duty.
" I don’t allow It. It Is against the law," said McGowan,
who did not want to discuss a petition submitted by
Casselberry officer Paul James for permission to carry
weapons while In uniform as they traveled to and from
work.
" I don’t want to get Into the middle o f a controversy. If
the law Is changed then that is a different matter." said
McGowan.
McGowan maintains that once ofT-duty and outside
the city limits, officers are civilians.
Some Casselberry officers have expressed concern
that they could possibly run into trouble on their way
home and would need a gun.
They are supported by Assistant Seminole County
Attorney Bob McMUIan who says that "all full-time
olficers have the right to carry concealed weapons
during off-duty hours at the discretion o f their
supervisors."
In a memo sent by McMillan to County Administrator
T. Duncan Rose, McMillan says that under state law,
police officers do not need a license to carry a concealed
weapon "when acting at any time within the scope and
course of their official duties or when acting at any lime
In the line of or performance of their duties."
McMillan said the disagreement would have to be
resolved by Casselberry officials.

SPEAKING OF MACHO...
A macho man" who pulled a gun In an argument
rather than back down was told by a Seminole Circuit
Judge that as part of his sentence he could give talks on
the problems of macho men.

SHOTGUN STOLEN

The unusual sentence was handed down by Judtfe
Dominick J. Salfl Wednesday to 25-year-old Wayne
Derrick Musselwhlte of Longwood. He was told that as a
condition of his one-year probation he could make
speeches on the problems of macho men Instead of
spending bIx weeks In Jail.

A 12-guagc Remington shotgun worth $75 and and a
.22-callber rifle were stolen from Lefears Jackson. 125
East Street. Altamonte Springs, between 2 and 2:30

Musselwhlte’s attorney, Richard Rhodes, had argued
that hla client had reacted the way he did as a result of
being brought up In a strong macho environment.

�Evening H erald, Sanford, El.

Sunday, M arch 1), I f t l - I A

Coalition Charges Reagan Jobs Bill Ignores Women

FLORIDA

IN BRIEF

Eastern A irlin es S trike
M a y Be A vo id e d Sunday
MIAMI (UPI) — Federal mediators, reporting
"some progress," kept negotiators for Eastern
Airlines and its machinists union working In
around-the-clock sessions Saturday In hopes of
averting a strike scheduled for midnight.
Robert Harris, chairman of the National
Mediation Board, Is directing the talks at the
Diplomat Hotel In nearby Hollywood.
"On balance, we arc going forward. On
balance, we arc settling issues that weren't
settled." Harris said at a news briefing Friday
afternoon. "At this point In lime. 1 have no
reason to think that we‘II need to go past the
deadline."
Charles Bryan, leader o f the International
Association of Machinists bargaining commit­
tee, didn't appear as optimistic.
"W e ll keep talking, but I hnven't seen any
change In the com pany's position in 18
months." Bryan said.
Even If the talks extend beyond the deadline.
Bryan said, the strike will begin at 12:01 a.m.
Sunday.
Eastern, which claims It carries more passen­
gers than any other domestic airline, brings
more visitors to the area than any other carrier.
It also is one of the major transporters of visitors
to and from Disney World, near Orlando.

M easles Coming South
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Health officials antic­
ipating the arrival of vacationing Indiana
University students who may be carrying
measles arc warning hospital emergency rooms
to be ready.
The measles outbreak at the university In
Bloomington has so far resulted In 181 reported
cases. State officials have warned health
authorities in Florida and other parts of the
country to be on the lookout for Indiana
students taking their spring break.
"W e've alerted the county health officials that
are likely to receive Indiana students that it is
possible some measles Importation may occur.”
said Dr. Jeffrey Sacks, acting director of
Epidemiology for the Florida Health Department
In Tallahassee.
He said college-age residents In Florida should
be vaccinated quickly because they arc suscep­
tible to the disease.
Health officials In Florida may set up
vaccination clinics, but there arc no plans to do
so unless several measles cases arc reported
there. Sacks said.
In the last year there have been several
measles outbreaks in Florida, concentrated
mostly among high-school students and young
children in south Florida.
Students who become 111 In Florida and fear
they have measles should phone the nearest
emergency room before receiving treatment to
prevent spreading the disease. Sacks said.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF

N o n -A lig n ed Sum m it
Ends; N o Peace Plan
NEW DELHI (UPI) — The non-aligned mov­
ement. torn by internal disputes, ended Its
seventh summit Saturday without a peace plan
for the Iran-lraq war and In disagreement on
where to hold its next meeting.
The 101-member movement extended Its
(Ive-day meeting by an extra day In Its efforts to
find a Gulf war solution but agreed to harshly
condemn American and Israeli actions In the
Middle East.
Originally scheduled to end Frldny, the
conference wound up Its business Saturday with
a plea for an end to the 30-monlh-old war
between members Iran and Iraq and a general
call for nuclear disarmament.
"W e appeal to Iran and Iraq to bring an
Immediate end to the war. It Is the universal
desire that the fighting must stop at once and
the two sides come to an honorable, just and
enduring peace through negotiations and peace­
ful means." the final statement said.
Although Iraq offered ut the summit to submit
the dispute to binding arbitration by nonaligned leaders. Iran demanded condemnation
of Baghdad us the aggressor and insisted on
reparations for loss of life and property.

CALENDAR
SUNDAY, MARCH 12
Seminole Halfway House AA. 5 p.m., off U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford. Open.

MONDAY, MARCH 13
Altamonte Springs Alcoholics
Anonymous. 8 p.m.. closed. Altamonte Springs Com­
munity Church. State Road 436 and Hermits Trail.
Sanford Al-Anon. B p.m. First United Methodist
Church. Park Avenue and Fifth Street.
League of Women Voters of Seminole County. 7:45
p.m.. 114 Live Oak Lane. Altamonte Springs. Program
on election laws.

TU ESD AY, MARCH 15
Overeaters Anonymous, open, 7:30 p.m., Florida
Power &amp; Light. 301 N. Myrtle Ave.. Sanford.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16

League o f Women Voters o f Seminole County. 9:30
a m.. Westminster Presbyterian Church, Red Bug Road.
Casselberry. Program on election laws.
Sanford KlwonlsClub. noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Serenaders Senior Citizens Dance. 2:30 p.m..
Sanford Civic Center. Sanford Avenue and Seminole
Boulevard.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St., Sanford. 8 p.m.. open.
West Volusia Stamp Club. 2 p.m.. Jane Murray Hall.
United Congregational Church. West University Avenue.
Orange City.

WASHINGTON (UPI) A 57 -member • coalition
of groups, ranging from
the
League
of W o­
men Voters to the Lu­
theran Council, Is pre­
ssuring Congress to pro­
vide more work for women
In emergency Jobs bills.

proposal totally Ignored
the existence of 43 percent
o f th e l a b o r fo r c e
(w o m en )," said Nanine
Mclklejohn, a lobbyist for
the American Federation
o f S ta te, C o u n ty and
Municipal Employees.
The House has approved
a $4.9 billion bill and the
Senate was working on a
$3.7 billion version. The
coalition believes their
work has resulted in better
bills.
"Both bills more directly
a c k n o w led g e w o m en 's
needs." Ms. Mclklejohn
said.

The groups say Presi­
dent R eagan's original
$4.3 billion bill, focusing
on the repair of public
buildings, veterans hospi­
tals and public facilities,
failed to take women into
account.
"T h e

administration's

DES, Cancer
Linked In Men

But Dec Jcpsen. White
House llason for women's
affairs, said Reagan's orig­
inal Jobs bill would employ
women as well.
She pointed to the large
n u m b e r o f m a r r ie d
women. "When males go
back to work, women
benefit." she said.
L a b o r D e p a rtm e n t
statistics show that one In
three female-headed fami­
lies live at the poverty
level, compared with one
in 18 male-headed fami­
lies.
Members of the coalition
say their lobbying on Cap­

itol Hill has resulted In
changes In the Jobs bill
that place ah Increased
e m p h a s is on s o c ia l
services — an area where
w o m e n can c o m p e te
equally with men.
Social service money
affects women directly by
creating Jobs In such fields
as health care and Indi­
r e c t ly by p r o v id in g
services like day care that
many women need to lake
a Job outside the home.
The coalition contends
Reagan's proposed Jobs
program would create an
e stim a ted 3 00,000 to

600.000 Jobs — mostly for
men.
The Senate Appropria­
tions Committee Monday
doubled social service
block grants, contained In
the Jobs bill, from $150
million to $300 million.
Hut It set a 50 percent cap
on social sen-ice spending
In another provision o f the
bill — community devel­
opment block grants.
Earlier, the full House
allocated S740 million for
all social service pro­
grams. Including social

service block grants.
"Th e House version Is
going to provide a lot more
Jobs for women than the
original package," said
Sally Laird, legislative
director for the League of
W o m e n V o te r s . " W e
wanted to focus on pro­
grams women are quali­
fied to step Into."
Ms. Laird said one lobby­
ing tactic the coalition
u sed w a s to r e m in d
legislators, "L o o k , you
didn't do anything for us
last time."

Shop O rla n d o d a lly 9 :3 0 • 9 :3 0 Sun. 12-6. Shop la n fo rd d a lly 9 :3 0 • 9 Sun.
12-6. Ih o p L o o ib u rg , D o la n d , K lt ilm m * * d a lly 9-9 Sun. 11-6.
Shop M l. D ora, C lo rm o n l
d a lly 9-9 Sun. 12-6

C H IC A G O ( U P I ) Doctors are reporting the
first documented cases of
testicular cancer in young
men whose mothers, dur­
ing pregnancy, took DES
— a synthetic estrogen
already linked to cervical
cancer In daughters.
D
E
S
, o
r
d le th y ls tllb e s tro l. was
widely used In the United
States from the early
1940s to 1971 to prevent
spontaneous abortion and
oth er pregn an cy c o m ­
plications.
"A s many as 4 to 6
million mothers, daugh­
te rs and son s w ere
exposed to the drug," Dr.
Gene R. Conley of Boston's
Tufts-New England Medi­
cal Center wrote in the
latest Journal of the Amer­
ican Medical Association.
The first male case was
published In the Journal
by Conley and colleagues.
"A 28-ycar-old man was
first seen with a large,
painless scrotal mass that
had s lo w ly d evelo p ed
during one year. Ante*
nalally (before birth), the
mother had taken DES
from4the first to the third
trimester. In amounts up
to 105 mg per day." they
said.
The doctors since have
seen a n o th e r case o f
seminoma, a malignant
tumor In the testes. In a
27-ycar-old man exposed
to DES while In the womb.
He also has five DESexposed siblings — two
sisters and one brother
have gen ital tract ab ­
normalities.
"Multiple genital tract
abnormalities have been
reported in female and
male offspring exposed to
DES in utero." the doctors
said. "The association of
m aternal DES therapy
with tumor appearance In
young women is wellknown.”
DES has been linked to
vaginal abnormalities that
can lead to a rare form of
cervical glandular cancer
c a lled clea r cell
adenocarcinoma. Left un­
treated. the cancer can
result In the partial or
complete loss of female
reproductive organs.
In laboratory tests, adult
male rodents exposed to
DES while in the womb
developed testicular and
renal tumors.
The doctors said that
while the possibility of
cancer in DES-exposcd
males was considered a
p o s s ib ility . " T o our
knowledge, until now no
case of testicular cancer
has been documented In a
person exposed In utero to
DES."
The doctors said there
are three possible reasons
for the lack of previous
fin d in g s o f te s tic u la r
cancer In DES-exposed
men.
"F irs t, patients with
testicular tumors are not
usually questioned about
antenatal DES exposure
and. If questioned, may
not know." they said.
"Second, the peak in­
cidence o f seminoma oc­
curs In 30-ycar-oldB and
since DES exposure was
m ost c om m o n In the
1 9 5 0 s . th e g r o u p at
greatest risk would be
expected to be seen in the
1980s. Third, the associa­
tion may not exist."

The Saving Place'

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�Evening Herald
(U S P S 4I1-2C0)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 631-9993

-

Sunday, March 13, 1983 — 4A

Waynt 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.

Let's Make Hay
With Alaska Oil
It’s about tim e C on gress lifted 10-ycar-old
restrictions against the sale o f Alaskan crude oil
and natural gas to foreign nations.
T hese restrictions were enacted at the beginning
o f the Arab oil em bargo. Congress feared the
nation would be dependent on oil from Alaska, and
if it w ere sold to foreign countries our national
energy security would be undermined.
These fears proved groundless. Demands for oil
fell w ay off, partly because prices increased from
S 1.80 to $34 per barrel during the last 10 years.
Now the W est Coast has a glut o f Alaskan oil and
It Is discouraging additional oil production from
Alaska.
If export controls w ere lifted today, the United
States could slice alm ost $2 billion a year from Its
budget deficit, reduce its annual trade deficit with
Japan and the Far East about $20 billion annually
and abort plans for construction o f a $2 billion
pipeline from Puget Sound to Wisconsin.
The Alaska export restrictions arc bad enough
by themselves. H owever, when coupled with the
1920 Jones A ct (which requires that all shipments
between U.S. ports must be made in Am erican flag
vessels with Am erican crews), the negative aspects
arc multiplied.
At present, all the crude oil and natural gas that
leaves the southern Alaskan port o f Valdez must
cither be delivered to the W est Coast or varried via
the Canal Zone to the G u lf Coast by Am erican
vessels. T his is high-priced transportation over
long distances.
It would be far cheaper to sell Valdez crude to
Japan, replacing It at G u lf and Atlantic ports with
im ported oil from Venezuela and the east coast o f
Mexico. Millions o f dollars in shipping costs could
be savefl
Alaskan producers could develop m ore oil for
export, possibly as much m ore as one m illion
barrels a day. from Helds that contain 19 billion
barrels o f oil and 26 trillion cubic feet o f natural
gas.
T h e re w ou ld be oth er Im m ediate benefits.
M exico's present financial crisis would be reduced,
with increased oil sales to the United States. Japan
would find Itself not nearly so dependent on oil
d eliveries from the Mideast. And the OPEC nations
would find them selves facing stiffer com petiton.
Yes. the Alaskan petroleum sales restrictions
should be revoked by Congress, and soon.
T h e re w ill be h e a v y op p osition from the
m aritim e interests, but com m on sense must
prevail.

Tax Cut: Revenues
E ver since Congress vdlcd to cut taxes across
the board in 1981. critics have com plained the tax
cut was tilted unfairly to the benefit o f the rich.
W hile tax rales in general were to be cut by 25
percent in three steps, the m axim um tax rate was
cut from 70 percent to 50 percent in one step.
Supply-side econom ists argued that the go v­
ernm ent would wind up collecting more taxes
rather than less from the higher Incom e groups,
and data com in g in suggests they were right.
T h e m agazine Forbes reports that taxpayers
filin g quarterly estim ates o f incom e tax—generally
those in the high er brackets—paid $85 billion in
incom e taxes in 1982. up 10 percent from the
previous year. T h eir taxes represented 29 percent
o f the total collected, com pared to 27 percent a
year earlier.
Rep. Jack Kem p. R-New York, has been quick to
trumpet these prelim inary results o f the tax cut he
cham pioned. "L o w e rin g the top tax rates has
lured high-incom e taxpayers out o f tax shelters
and into m ore productive, Job-producing—and
taxable—Investm ents. R evenues are up. not down,
as a resu lt."K em p says.
Critics o f supply-side econom ists have poohpoohed the idea that a dram atic cut in Incom e tax
rates could produce an Increase in tax revenue.
T h e y w ere not Impressed by the experience with
such a tax cut during the K ennedy adm inistration.
M aybe the results o f the Reagan lax cut will bring
them around.

BERRYS WORLD

By Doris Dietrich

Jean Norris Is a gracious lady with an
eye for beauty. She's known around
Sanford as the plant lady.
Jean frequently lectures to school
children as well as various organiza­
tions.She says that the younger school
children arc always entranced with her
onion story and how the plump, robust
onion gives birth to baby onions.
The plant lady was brought up under the
eyes of a loving mother who Instilled good
manners In Jean, Just ns most mamas did
back then. Those were the days when kids
said, "yes ma'am, no ma'am, please,
thank you and I'm sorry.”
Jean learned that mannerly people (
some as poor as Job's turkey as the old
saying goes) answer formal wedding in­
vitations, write sympathy notes, send
thank you notes and alwnys return
borrowed items.
Hut when the "m e " generation reared
Its ugly head, politeness stepped aside to

naturalness. The "In ” thing
was for
people of all walks o f life to do as they
please, so to speak, and be completely
natural In dress, conversation, eating
habits and the like.
But being natural is not necessarily
beautiful or comfortable. Jean says. "E ver
watch a small child slurp up food? It's a
mess and not too appetizing. But it's
natural." she laughs.
Jean Is concerned that morals have gone
astray and many people have no selfrespect to say the least o f respect for
others. She wonders why educated people
have to pepper their conversation with
gutter tnlk. "A re they so Insecure that they
need attention that badly?" she asks in
dead seriousness.
The plant lady recalls when girls were
sent to fancy finishing schools to learn
charm and grace. Sure, these same girls
probably
used four-letter words In
private—but rarely ever in public. "Ladies
never used profanity publicly back then."

Jean says.
With attitudes so contagious, Jean Is
concerned that profane language Is crop­
p in g up p r o fu s e ly as a m ean s o f
expression, even among the highly edu­
cated."Gutter talk Is not necessarily con­
fined to lower economic persons, "she says.
"A n d It's sad."
Jean went on to say,"W e have govern­
mental employees to clean up streets,
highways, the air and sewage systems, so
why don't we have someone to enforce
cleaning up language? Thank goodness,
though, that most self-respecting folks
don’t air their dirty laundry or dirty
language publicly."
The plant lady would have the world as
beautiful and lovely as the flowers sur­
rounding her dally. But they don't get that
way on their own. she admits.
And neither does beautiful language, or
much else, without a lot o f hard work and
self-dlsciptlne. Jean says.

f

JEFFREY HART

RUSTY B R O W N

Let's Stop
Scaring
The Kids
An outrage o f stunning stupidity is
being perpetrated In some American
elementary schools, a fact I learn from a
recent column by Ellen Goodman, who
revels approvingly in the outrage.
Goodman begins by describing the
traditional pictures and decorations on
the walls of the first-grade school room,
the same school. In fact, she attended as
a child. "But seated In a semicircle on
the floor of the room, a class of small
children spent an hour with the cam­
eras and sound equipment talking about
what one child called ‘ the nuclear.'
They were being (limed for a medical
research program to show us what, and
when, children know about nuclear
weapons In the world. The contrast
between the history on the walls and the
contemporary terror on the floor was
not as striking to me as It might have
been"—because Goodman, growing up
In an earlier phase of the atomic era,
had also been afraid as a child.
But she certainly seems to approve of
the child abuse she describes in this
column.
"One third-grader had heard about
'th e b u tto n ' so m u ch th a t she
envisioned buttons everywhere that
anyone could push. Another child
thought that nuclear bombs were small
enough to be carried around by any­
one...A third believed that -one bomb
alone could destroy the world.” The
overall theme o f Goodman's column In
this case can be summed up In one of
her sentences: " I tried to imagine what
kind of reassurance today's adults can
give." Her conclusion Is. not much. The
atomic monsten Is scaring the kiddles
silly with nightmares o f apocalypse.
About which, a few comments:
Those children did not get their
misinformation from each other. The
source was adult hysteria from people
perhaps Including Goodman herself.
The evidence Is accumulating and
persuasive that many classrooms are
being used today to scare the bejeezus
out of uncomprehending children about
the nuclear threat. The goal is to
mobilize anti-nuclear feeling, and the
children arc being exploited to that end.
Well, cut it out.
Children in the earliest grades arc not
capable of understanding deterrence
theory any more than they arc capable
of understanding calculus or the 12-tone
scale. Nor do the hysterical anti-nuclear
adults who are engaging in child abuse
have anything superior to deterrence,
pushing only chimerical "abolition" of
nuclear weapons.
Every educator knows that there are
stages in a child's growth when it is
possible and appropriate to deal with
different kinds of subjects. For some
topics, the tnlnd. the experience, and
the emotions require at least some
maturity.
As things are now going, however. I
regard as pathological and even crimi­
nal the emotional slaughter of the
Innocents, and the gross political
manlpuulatlon of babes, as described by
Ellen Goodman In her column.

A Home
By Any
Standard

JU L IA N B O N D

Who Likes Ya In 1984?
Who do you like?
Who has your support for president in
1984?
It Isn't always an easy question.
If you're a Republican you'll probably
say Ronald Reagan. The economy may
be in ruin and unemployment rates may
be climbing but lie's the best bet your
party has right now. Vice President
George Bush. Sen. Robert Dole (Kansas)
and Sen. Howard Baker (Tennessee) are
watting In the wings for a Reagan
withdrawal. But for the moment, most
Republicans arc willing to stay the
course.
If you're a Democrat the field Is wider.
You can choose among former Vice
President Walter Mondale, the present
poll front-runner; close-contender Sen.
John Glenn (Ohio): Sen. Gary Hart
(C o lo r a d o ): S en . A la n C ra n sto n
(California): Sen. Ernest Holllngs (South
C a r o lin a ): S e n . D a le B u m p e rs
(Arkansas): and former Florida Gov.
Reuben Askew.
Former and present Albania governor
and three-time presidential candidate
George Wallace may run as his state's
favorite sun In 1984.
Among Mandate's revised orthodox
liberalism. Hart's pragmatism. Glenn's
liberal moderation. Askew's moderate
liberalism, Cranston's liberal interna­
tionalism. Holllngs' conservative mod­
eration , B u m per's m oderate c o n ­
servatism and 1he raw activism of
Wallaclsm, there's u broad choice.
Each one o f the ab ove thinks
thatReagan's economic and interna­
tional program could stand adjustment,
from major to purely cosmetic surgery.
Each thinks the Reagan record presents
a window of vulnerability that can
topple the president In November 1984.
Each thinks he’s got a prescription that
will cure the Ills each blames Reagan for
creating.

But suppose you're a black Democrat.
Suppose you agree Reagan Is a
disaster, but don't think any o f the
Democrats speak to your special needs.
Suppose you think that none o f the
labels correctly describes the kind of
politics you want to sec Installed In the
White House In 1985.
What dp you do?
If getting rid o f Reagan was your only
desire you could pick the candidate with
u dart at 10 paces. Any except rerun
Oeorge Wallace would suit you fine.
But you're understandably worried
that no Democratic candidate seems to
have your agenda In mind. At least none
has said so. so far.
Oh. each one is In favor of human
rights. But a review o f public remarks
makes you think they mean human
rights In El Salvador and Afghanistan.
The Reagan program of weakening
the protection and narrowing the re­
medies available to the victims of
discrimination has escaped all the
Democratic candidates so far.
Or else they've decided that black
voters will — like other Americans —
Ignore the destruction of their liberties
and protections, and will choose from
among the candidates by applying
non-racial standards.
That's a luxury black voters can't
afford In 1984. unless all other Ameri­
cans agree to stop imposing racial
qualifications as well.
Since that's unlikely, black voters in
1984 may choose from the Democrats'
list of contenders with some reluctance.
Or they may insist that a candidate who
looks and talks like them Joins the race.
That might upset the plans of the
D em ocrats w ho hope to win the
nomination with the help o f black
anti-Reagan voters, but It should ensure
that the eventual nominee Is someone
who makes a place In his platform for
protections black voters need.

Most women are nesters... a behavior
that follows them wherever they go.
If I spend a week or more in a hotel
room, I find,myself unable to fight the
urge to make It "h om ey."
Ridiculous, I know.
First, I unpack totally, filling drawers
and hangers, then stashing away the
suitcases.
I spread the magazines we've brought
across the coffee table and put the books
on the table beside the bed.
In no time, I'm looking around for
flowers to float In the ash trays or I
assemble a wlldflower bouquet In an
empty pop bottle. Sometimes I put
together a fruit bowl, and I often take
along paper plates, napkins, cheese and
crackers for a hospitable touch if we
Invite new acquaintances to our room.
If the draw drapes are hanging ofT the
track (and believe me. they are In some
o f the finest hotels). I Invariably climb
on a chair to set the hooka aright. On
occasion. I've rearranged (he furniture.
1 can't help straightening up a bit
each day before the maid comes. I find
myself prodding my husband to pul
away his shoes and — for heaven's sake
— to take his undershirt off the door
handle. He. o f course, thinks my
nagging is absurd. "I thought this was u
vacation." he complains.
That's when I remind him that at
least I'm not as bad as an aunt who
always traveled with a can of cleanser
and Insisted on scrubbing out the tub
before she unpacked.
A friend o f mine has her own rituals.
She has an elegant travel mirror she
likes to place on the bathroom shelf. As
she and her husband frequently lake off
between Christmas and New Year's, she
always decorates for New Year’s Eve.
She hangs c o lo rfu l b alloon s and
streamers around the room and puts out
one o f those fancy paper centerpieces
from Hallmark.
She recalls. "Once we had. a travel
case that held a wine bottle and two
gold goblets. Wflth those, and a lighted
candle, our room was very romantic.
Unfortunately, we left the case behind
somewhere."
I've heard and read of other women
who personalized their hotel rooms
when traveling.
Gloria Vanderbilt, for example. Is on
the road a lot to promote her signature
Jeans, fabrics and wall coverings. She
packs a collection of scarves to recover
the lampshades and give the room a soft •
glow. She also carries scented candles, a
print throw pillow and a folding frame of
family pictures.
Another woman carries a small vase
for the (lowers she always buys and
takes a couple o f printed hand towels to
offset the bland bathroom.
A company president buys plants for
her room and gives them to the hotel
staff when she leaves.
And why not? Today’s room rales are
often as high as a monthly payment on
a mortgage.

JA C K A N D ER SO N

Why Are Feds Blocking Doc's File?
WASHINGTON - The Justice De­
partment has used outrageous stalling
tactics to deny Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald
his legal right to see the government's
files on .himself. After more than three
years of trying. MacDonald has yet to
receive a single page of the depart­
ment's 90.000-pagc file.
MacDonald was a Green Beret doctor
at Fort Bragg. N.C.. in 1970 when his
pregnant wife and two daughters were
brutally murdered In their home.
MacDonald claimed that a drug-crazed
"hippie group" killed hls family and
seriously wounded him. An Army In­
vestigation cleared him.
But the Justice Department, at the
urging of MacDonald's father-in-law.
pursued the case. Nine years after the
crime, the doctor was brought to trial.
Evidence that he believes could have
exonerated him was withheld, and he
was found guilty. He is now serving
three consecutive life sentences for
crimes he insists he did not commit.
Convinced that the government hud
informal Ion ihui supports his claim of
innocence. MacDonald requested his
tiles under tile Freedom of Information
Act in January I9HO. lie told my
associate Donald Goldberg he Itellcvcx

the files also contain prool ol govern­
ment misconduct that prejudiced his
ease.
The Justice Department pul him on a
walling list. Informing him that there
were 135 requests to be processed
ahead o f hls. Last June, nearly
two-and-a-half years after his initial
request, he got a letter from the Justice
Department — asking If he was still
Interested.
Despite the law's requirement .that
FOIA requests be handled as quickly us
possible, Justice assigned a single
employee to review the 90,000-[*ugc file.
Officials said there was no way they
could speed up the proerss.
MacDonald's attorneys offered to pay
for copies o f the file so that processing
could be done more quickly. The
Justice Department did not accept the
offer.
Rep. Don Edwards. D-Calif.. wrote to
Attorney General Wllllum French Smith
on MacDonald's Itchalf. "I would re­
quest that steps I k * taken to s|K-cd litis
process so as to achieve the purpose of
the Act In this case." Edwards wrote
"Given the significance of the statutory
rights Involved in the MacDonald case,
more diligent utlenlioii should be given

to fu lfillin g the D epartm ent's re­
sponsibilities ..."
MacDonald did a little better with the
FBI — but not much. He has received 39
o f the 1,148 pages o f documents on him
in the FBI files. However, the 39 pages
consist almost entirely of newspaper
clippings and press releases.
The FBI's reason for hanging onto the
rest of MacDonald's file Is confusing, to
say the least. The bureau admittedly
has no ongoing Investigation as such.
But according to FBI Director William
Webster. "T h is case remains In a
pending status, with the FBI currently
making inquiries as specifically re­
quested by the U.S. Department of
Justice."
Congressman Edwards questioned the
FBI's assertion in his letter to the
attorney general. "In light o f (he facts
that Dr. Macdonald was convicted In
1979 and that the Supreme Court
denied ... his final appeal." Edwards
wrote. "It appears that the position
taken by the Bureau ts In error, as well
as at odds with the position o f the
Department o f Justice."
In short, through unconscinnablr
stalling and specious reasoning, the
Justice Dc|&gt;artmcnl und the FBI are
keeping MacDonald from seeing his

files. What Is the government afraid ol?
SOME VAC ATIO N : Congressional
rules forbid a member's office staff from
working on a re-election campaign
except In their "free tim e." Yet some­
how. the halls o f Congress are virtually
deserted during the last week or so
before Election Day. as staff members
head back home to protect their bosses'
Jobs — and t heir own.
Are they violating the "free tim e"
law? Technically, no. These zealous
campaign workers Insist they're doing It
all on their own time: they’re on
vacation. Oddly enough, though, cam­
paign funds pay for their trips.
An aide to Rep. Beryl Anthony Jr..
D-Ark.. explained that though staff
people did do "a little b it" of campaign
work, their main reason for making the
trip back to the district at campaign
lime was lo take pan in the excitement
o f the electoral process. Last fall, she
said, the congressman's personal secre­
tary. office manager and administrative
asslstani all (lew home on varalion for
the caui|»aign windup.
To make sure hls staff has time for
more relaxing - i( less exciting vacations. Anthony glv&lt;-x them all 20
days' vacal Ion a year.

�OPINION
OUR READERS WRITE

Education System Is M ost Im portant
O p p o rtu n ity For Future O f Flo rid a
Today, the State o f Florida
stands on the threshold of national
prominence. The question now
before us Is whether we will step
up to the opportunity that Is ours
to create an educational system
commensurate with our state’s
distinction In other fields. Fortunatcly. we still have enough time
to do something about It. But. first,
some background.
Demographers now estimate
that Florida will become the fourth
most populous state by the end of
the decade. This Influx o f people
will obviously raise a number of
Issues having to do with the
quality of life In Florida, and no
strand of the social fabric Is more
critical to the quality of life In our
state than Its educational system:
— In order to continue a demo­
cratic form of government, where
the ultimate decisions rest with
the people, our people must be
well Informed.
— In order for our economy to
flourish and expand In the coming
age of technology and Information
science, we must have an In­
telligent and skilled population.
— In order for our people to
make creative use o f their leisure
lime, they must know how to
claim the great Intellectual and
cultural heritage that Is theirs.
The governor, the Legislature,
and the State Board of Education
have pointed the way: “ Educa­
tional achievement in the State of
Florida will equal that of the upper
quartllc o f states within five
years." What a simple, but elo­
quent goal for the entire state to
follow — from the smallest schools
In the rem otest parts o f the
Panhandle to the expanding In­
stitutions of higher education In
the urban areas.
T h e Board o f Regents fully
recognizes Its responsibility to
carry out this commitment to' the,
upper (fuartlle goal. Although the
Board Is now privileged to oversee
the operation o f nine good un­
iversities. we believe that, with
adequate support, these good in­
stitutions can be made to rank

with the very best public Institu­
tions of the nation by the end of
the decade.
Such a lofty goal will require the
c o o p e r a t i o n , e n e r g y , an d
statemanshlp of all parties con­
cerned. We already sense that the
teachers in secondary schools
throughout the state want to do a
better Job o f preparing those stu­
dents who wish to extend their
education beyond high school. We
have also begun to sec a renewed
c o m m i t m e n t to a c a d e m i c
achievement on the part of the
students and faculty members
now at work in the State Universi­
ty System.
The goal has been stated in
competitive terms: to be within the
"upper quartllc of states" — or to
put it In other words, our goal Is to
be demonstratively better Than 75
percent o f the states In the
country. Although our analysis
has convinced us that a university
contains important Ingredients
that are not capable of measure­
ment, we nonetheless have ac­
cepted the challenge to only reach
the level of quality that makes our
universities competitive with the
universities In the top quartlle of
the states.
The wisdom of Florida's com­
mitment is even more apparent
now than when the upper-quartlle
promise was made two years ago.
The state's business. Industrial,
labor, and professional leaders arc
now making a renewed call for
additional achievement as an In­
dispensable part o f a strong eco­
nomic future. Additionally, the
Implementation o f the promise
now means that It Is taking effect
at a tim e when the national
economy Is devastating the very
states that would have been more
difficult to overtake when times
were more prosperous.
The present moment is therefore
pivotal for Florida's educational
system. If the political and educa­
tional establishments can continue
to merit the support o f the people
o f the state, we will achieve the
upper-quartlle goal laid out for us

by the Governor and the State
Board of Education. Accordingly,
the Board of Regents recently
submitted to the State Board of
Education a list o f indicators
which can be accurately measured
across state lines to determine
whether we are among the top 25
percent of the country’s university
systems:
— The number o f National Merit
Scholars and other commended
students.
— T h e am ou nt o f m on ey
appropriated for each student In
Florida's universities.
— The salaries of our faculty
members.
—The holdings, facilities, and
stafis of our research libraries.
— Expenditures per student for
libraries.
— Research dollars generated by
our faculties.
in addition, we feel that the
other criteria, which are not capa­
ble o f measurement across state
lines, should be used by the
University System to secure a solid
foundation upon which academic
excellence can be built. The Board
of Regents therefore reaffirms its
commitment to these basic princi­
ples:
____
— The Institutions will continue
their affirmative actions ( 1) to
assure continued access to univer­
sity programs for women and
minorities and (2) to provide a
balance of minority and female
employees In all segments of the
campuses.
— Further, the universities will
offer an adequate breadth o f pro­
grams so as to provide their
students with a well-rounded un­
dergraduate education. The size of
classes will be reduced where
there Is the greatest effect on the
learning process. English, math,
and foreign lan gu age classes
should probably have no more
than 22 students, for example, and
before graduating, all students
should have at least one laboratory
experience and participate In at
least two small seminars in their
major fields.
— Those

program s

not yet

accredited, and for which accred­
itation Is deemed Important, will
seek approval from the appropriate
accrediting bodies.
In order to determine how secure
that academic foundation has
become, the Board of Regents will
also measure the performance of
Its students by the following,
methods:
— The universities will not only
administer the mathematics' and
the English skill tests to students
at the end o f the sophomore year,
but they propose to administer the
tests to incoming freshmen so that
a student's progress during the
first two years o f undergraduate
school can be assessed.
— The universities will use the
specific discipline sections of the
Graduate Record Examination to
assess the achievement of their
graduates. They will track gradu­
ates who win scholarships for
fu rther study, and they w ill
monitor results ol stale licensure
tests.
— The Institutions will report
the percentage ol their faculties
with terminal drgrees.
— Finally, we will encourage the
universities — and assist them
when asked — as they solicit funds
for endowed chairs under Florida's
pioneering "E m in en t Scholars
Program."
Clearly, ours Is a System to
watch. Wc are pleased to report
that we have begun to hear
comments from educators In other
parts of the country to the effect
that “ Florida Is on the move.” We
believe that to be so. We hope that
you will continue to support the
Stale University System and that
you will give us the kind of
backing necessary to catapult our
universities Inio the top guartlle In
the nation.
Sincerely.
Murray H. Dubbin
Chairman
Board o f Regents
Barbara W. Newell
Chancellor
Slate University System

Reform Sought For Bankruptcy Laws
Our current bankruptcy laws
allow many deserving Americans
to get a “ fresh start" but. at the
same time, they are making It far
too easy for many other individu­
als to escape their debts — when in
fact there are ways available for
them to handle their financial
burdens.
Some experts believe that more
than $1 billion o f the $6 billion In
annual bankruptcies can be paid
by debtors without hardship. In­
stead. however, we are all paying
for this (1 billion debt In a number
o f ways. Businesses slung by
Individuals who do not pay their
bills must In turn charge everyone
higher prices to recoup their
losses, and financed institutions
are forced to reduce credit avail­
able to those who are deserving
but have little collateral and are,
therefore, a greater risk.
T o correct this, we need to
reform our consumer bankruptcy
laws, and one good vehicle for this
Is " T h e C o n s u m e r D e b t o r
Bankruptcy Amendments Act of
1983"(H.R. 1800). o f which ! am
an original co-sponsor. This bill Is

designed to curb unnecessary
bankruptcies while at the same
time offer relief to those who really
need It.
Since the Bankruptcy Code was
revised by Congress In 1978 and
enacted in 1979, we have seen a
d r a m a t ic r is e In p e r s o n a l
bankruptcies. During this time,
there have been about 450,000
each year, which Is 200 percent of
the rate for the 12 years preceding
the enactment o f the new Code.
Our economic conditions have
been rough during these years —
and have been an Important factor
in the rise in bankruptcies — but
the fact remains that the Code has
offered individuals a relatively
easy way to free themselves from
their financial obligations.
T h e le g is la tio n I h ave c o ­
sponsored seeks to curb these
unnecessary bankruptcies In a
n u m b e r o f w a y s . M ost im ­
portantly, It provides that con­
sumer debtors receive counseling
regarding their options before
selecting a straight bankruptcy

plan over a repayment plan. The
National Bankruptcy Commission,
w h ich reco m m en d ed such a
measure, noted that many debtors
do not realize that there are other
alternatives available.
This bill also allows a Judge to
dismiss a bankruptcy proceeding if
he feels that to continue It would
c o n s tit u te an ab u s e o f the
Bankruptcy Code; currently, the
courts cannot stop a proceeding
even If the Judge believes that the
relief sought Is unnecessary. Other
principal provisions o f this bill
address the problems of "loading
up” by Borne debtors In anticipa­
tion of bankruptcy, create stan­
dards for courts to follow in
confirming repayment plans, abol­
ish the discharge hearing, and
eliminate other costly and cum­
bersome procedures which pre­
vent the efficient handling o f
bankruptcy cases. Federal exemp­
tion provisions would remain rela­
tively intact, but debtors In Joint
cases would be required to elect
between federal and state exemp­
tions, instead o f doubling up as is
now the case. The bill also con­

tains provisions to protect farmers
w h o s e c ro p s a re s to r e d in
bankrupt grain elevators.

The intellectual capacity o f some
o f these lawmakers and repre­
sentatives. as revealed by some of
their statements concerning politi­
cal economics, causes the situation
to become alarming and very
discouraging. They take up valu­
able time In preparation and pres­
entation o f a bill, which in turn
only exposes their absolute Igno­
rance ol the subject, and some of
these proposals are ghastly ridicu­
lous. If the politicians responsible
for the expenditure o f our tax
money had to earn it. I feel sure
they would seek a more Just way
in its procurement, using "William

* f» is

he

»i**

W

o f Occam's Razor," which Is the
p r in c ip le o f c o n tr o l and
parsimony, in spending it.

as they do not have to apply their
theory o f political economics to
reality in order to abstract a living

T h e dom in an t c o n trib u tin g
factor to the sad state o f affairs in
this state is the malfunction o f its
economic structure (tax system),
which can be traced to the poor
Judgment and predictions o f our
unqualified administrators, who
have been either elected or ap­
pointed to responsible positions of
authority without proper qualifica­
tions. It appears quite obvious, at
least as I see It. that what we see
reflected here reverts back to our
antiquated educational system,
b e in g c o n d u c te d by " I v o r y
Tow ered" hubris professors and
others who ore in such a deplora­
ble state o f content rigidity that
they have lost all contact with
reality. Their philosophy Is unoperatlonal, therefore It is false,
givin g (hem a false sense o f
security which they do not realize.

They depend upon our legislators
(whom they have indoctrinated)
through taxation, for their sup­
port.
There seems to be no greater
sanctuary for the Incompetent,
labeled, degree holder than our tax
supported public Institutions. We
send our children to school so that
they may learn to solve problems,
but they are being educated by
those who cannot solve their own.
Right here the unequivocal, un­
ambiguous fact becomes quite
apparent, and where this state Is
sadly dragging its feet Our in­
stitutions o f learning seriously
require a drastic overhauling be­
fore the caliber o f graduates with
administrative ability can be real­
ized. T h is I feel can be ac­
complished by teaching the prin­

United Press In tern ational
S prin gfield (Mass.) Union
If the American Conservation
Corps approved by the U.S House
gets the okay of the Senate — and.
less likely, o f the White House — It
will be a modern version of the
Civilian Conservation Corps of the
1930s. It won't be In the Army,
but the closest a civilian can come
to It and still be a civilian.
The CCC — widely known back
then, as "th e C 's " — gave a
reasonably good account of Itself
as the restorer and protector of
resources, manmade and natural,
on which the public depended for
some aspect o f living. In the
process. It provided work and
sustenance for thousands o f young
men who were Idled by the Great
Depression. Hard times, without
recourse to the welfare and Jobless
benefits available today, made the
CCC a palatable alternative to
going hungry.
The need for updating and
repairing public works Is as great
today as It was back then, and the
proposed American Conservation
Corps program could become a
n a t i o n
a l a s s c t .

Bankruptcy should be a last
resort for those with no other
options. Until we change our laws,
however, it will continue to be
abused by those who want the
easy way out — leaving the rest of
us to pay the price for their
freedom.
Sincerely,
Rep. Bill McCollum

ciples of Henry George's "Progress
and Poverty." which deals with
the use and misuse of taxation,
and Alfred Korzybald's “ Science
and Sanity," which deals with the
m a th e m a tic a l an d p h y s ic a l
sciences. These authors express
that they give no panacea, but
experience shows that when these
principles are applied the results
are usually beneficial on all levels,
stressing administration and man­
agement. law. business, education,
and all around good family rela­
tionship.
It is not so much what we must
learn, but what we must unlearn,
that ts requisite. Intellectual dis­
cipline Is necessary before any
form o f psychological maturity can
be attained. A word to the wise Is
sufficient, but only to those who
are wise to the words.
James A. Gorman
101 Anderson Circle
Sanford

...What should irritate us Is that}
aside from Rassias. few educators
arc effectively stating these truths
and the problem, which is of crisis
proportions, remains unresolved.
New York D ally News
Believe it or not. there's one
person In the U.S. who likes to get
Junk mall — William Conklin o f
D enver who has d elib erately
placed his name on so many,
computerized mailing lists that he,
needs a cardboard box to receive
the postman's dally delivery.
,j
Ah. but there's method to thq
fellow's seeming madness. Whaf
he's doing Is tossing alj that Junk
mall Into a wood stove to heat his
home. A master stroke, we'd say.'
In fact, If the Conklin method
catches on. it may lay to rest
forever the hot debate over which
Is better, oil or natural gas. They
both may lose out to the Postal
S
e
r
v
i
c
e
.

M anchester, N.H., Union Leader
Can there be a more Irritating
person than Dartmouth Professor
John Rassias, he of the colorful
but controversial style of teaching
languagues? We doubt It.
In fact, the highly oplnatcd
professor o f French and Italian was
at It again when in a paper Issued
recently he declared:
America's "learning ends at the
shorelines." Our foreign language
training Is "scandalous. Incompe­
tent and shameful." We suffer
from a "m ole mentality" and act
as though we "don't need the rest
o f the world." Our lack o f fluency
in foreign languages poses a threat
to our ability to conduct diplomat­
ic relations abroad ... In the Soviet
Union, there are more Engfish
teachers alone than there are
students of Russian In the United
States ... no one In the U.S.
Embassy in Somalia can speak the
native language...
But the very fact that many
people are Irritated by hearing
these observations demonstrates
that they need to be said.

E vansville (Ind.) Press
T h e F re n c h g o v e rn m e n t,
sponsored a big confabulation of.
intellectuals the other day In Paris,,
which still likes to think of Itself as
the cultural capital of the world.
Movie Btars and directors. Noble
Prize-winning authors and other
International notables gathered.
Not surprisingly. If you know
anything about Intellectuals. about
the only consensus that emerged
from what one reporter called
murky and highly abstract dis­
cussions was that the United
States Is guilty o f "cultural Impe­
rialism."
Speaker alter speaker arose to
denounce the projection of the
w o rst produ cts o f A m erica n
culture Into almost every home In
the non-communist world. And
the worst product of all. they
agreed, Is the television serial
"Dallas."
Imagine. With all the very real
evils abroad In the world, the one
thing that aroused the Indignation
of these supposedly great thinkers
was a sappy soap opera.
T o his credit. American novelist
William Styron pointed out that
"N o one forces anybody at gun­
point in this country to watch
• D a l l a s ' * * . . .

jt o Y o u S w a e i

MOWN* BUT M W
/ABO U T ^ o U R C U ^ T ?

There are other problems with
our Bankruptcy Code that Con­
gress is tackling at this time. In
1982, the Supreme Court ruled
that the 1978 reform law gave
bankruptcy court Judges too much
authority and not enough in­
dependence from the other bran­
ches o f government. Legislation Is
now pending in the House and
S e n a t e to r e s t r u c t u r e th e
bankruptcy court, though there Is
much disagreement over exactly
how this should be done. I myself
have Introduced legislation to
protect those who have Invested In
"llm eshare" vacation properties
from losses due to bankruptcy.

Public O fficia ls A re T ax Happy
It is appalling to read dally the
utter state o f confusion that our
elected and/or appointed officials
work themselves and those around
them Into trying to Invent new
ways, means and Ideas o f taxation
by which to satisfy the state's
tremendous, ever Increasing ap­
petite for revenue.

What Papers
Are Saying

/

M

7M X

STAA

*1 M 1 C * fl* r

Noteworthy Quotes
“ The attitude o f Secretary Haig
made no sense to me. I think If
Secretary Schultz, whom I know
and respect, had been secretary of
state, the United States might
have taken more positive action. I
really don’t understand his pre­
decessor at all."
— Jim m y Carter, criticizing
former Secretary o f State Alex­
ander Haig's response to Israel's
incu rsion Into Lebanon. T h e
former president said he would
have done "everything possible"
to limit the incursion. (Penthouse)
"A ll in all it has been a pleasure
to be able to help people."
— Dr. Barney Clark, recipient of
the first artificial heart, on his
contribution to medical science.
"W e understand the concern of
those who remember the specter of
V ietn am that the w ar in El
Salvador Is being 'Americanized.'
But Vietnam was 10.000 mlies
away. El Salvador is a contiguous
re g io n at our d oorstep . San
Salvador Is closer to Washington.
D.C. than is San Francisco."

— Nestor D. Sanchez, deputy
assistant defense secretary for
lnter-Am crlcan affairs, asking
Congress to provide an additional
(6 0 million In military aid to El
Salvador.
"I told Queen Elizabeth that I
was bom In England and left when
I was 4 years old. She said 'Thank
you so much.'
— Bob Hope, comedian.
"I took anthropology at UCLA
and it was only a few years ago
that I found out what anthropology
was."
— Swen Nater. San Diego Clip­
pers center, on the value o f his
college education.
"Soaps serve the same kind of
n a rc o tic escap e fu n c tio n as
drugs."
— D r. K e n n e t h H a u n ,
psych ology professor at Mon­
mouth College in New Jersey,
saying that watching TV soap
operas lessens a teen-ager's need
for drugs. (Seventeen)
"It's not whether you win or
lose, but who takes the blame."

v*- ■—- m* m
f*» m

‘

«

�* * T .E v tn ln g H trs ld , Sanford , FI.

Sunday, M a rch 13, 1»»3

BUSINESS

IN BRIEF

Scotty's Sales A re Up
For M o n th A n d 36 W eeks
Ray H. Cooney, president and chief operating
officer of Scotty's. Inc., has reported that sales
for the four weeks ended Feb. 2G were
S26.665.631. an increase of 19 percent over
sales of $24,129.098 for the corresponding four
weeks last year.
Sales for the 34 weeks ended Feb, 26. of
S212.629.116 increased 15 pcrcenl over sales
for the 34 weeks ended Fch. 20.
Cooney added that the dollar increase In sales
for February was approximately evenly divided
between the builder and consumer segments of
the market.
The 19 percent increase was achieved despite
unusually frequent and heavy rains experienced
in February this year compared with a normally
dry season last year. February sales since 1977
have increased at a compound rate of 23.5
percent. The year to date increase was due to
both builder and consumer sales Increases.
New stores are under construction in Tampa
and Margate. A replacement store was opened In
DeLand during February. New store construc­
tion is expected lo begin soon In the Gateway
Mall In St. Petersburg.

M ore Firm s A r e Learning

Company Real Estate A Ready Asset
By LeR oy Pope
UPI Business W rite r
NEW YORK tUPI) — Many small and middle-sized
private companies that need more operating funds often
are overlooking a ready asset, real estate with surplus
value, says a Chicago mortgage Investment expert.
In many cases it will pay these companies to sell the
land and huildlngs and rent them back In order to get
capital. Jay J. Strauss, president of Abacus Group, said.
Strauss said that Jusl as the home is the largest
financial asset of most families, so company-owned real
estate often is the largest asset of small manufacturers.
If the owner of the corporation can buy the real estate
and lease it back to the business, he may further benefit
because the land then becomes a personal asset on
which he can claim depreciation and other tax benefits.
Strauss said.
"In some cases." he said, "he can raise his salary with
the corporation enough to cover the interest payments
on whatever he borrows to buy the properly, but he
must be able to show that his new higher salary is not
excessive by the standards of the business the company
is engaged In."

Strauss told United Press International he believes
perhaps 25 percent of the small and middle-sized
corporations in the United States have real property that
has appreciated so In value or on which the mortgage
has been paid down so much that Its surplus value Is an
asset that is earning nothing for the company.
The remaining 75 percent of small and middle-sized
corporations rent practically all the real estate they use,
he said. An unincorporated business hasn't the same
opportunity to benefit by selling Its real property and
renting it back.
"A typical small American manufacturing company
today earns in the range of 15 to 22 percent on Its net
worth." he said. "When portions of net worth arc tied up
In real estate, particularly real estate which is earning
nothing, the company Is overlooking an important
source of revenue."
Strauss's interest In this situation Is that of finding
new mortgage investment opportunities for Ills clients.
When the owner or owners of small corporations
recognize the possibility of helping both the corporation
and their personal situation by such a property
purchase. Abacus Group will find thpm a mortgage loan.

Art Brown Pest Control of Sanford has
changed Its name to Spencer Pest Control and
added a new guarantee of on-time or no-charge
service, according lo Jim Daus, manager.
"W e will be Joining with other well-respected
pest control com panies in seven states
throughout the Southeast in making this
change to better serve our customers In the
Sanford area." Daus said.
Spencer Pest Control, headquartered In
Roswell. Ga.. will provide an umbrella of
professional expertise, marketing service and
technical counseling to its Independent mem­
bers. all of whom will maintain autonomy.
"The only thing we're changing is our name."
the manager said. "Our personnel, quality of
sendee and local control will remain the same.
"The main difference will be the addition of
our on-time guarantee." he said. "When we
make an appointment to sendee your home or
office, our representative will Ik * there within 30
minutes of your acheduled time, or the Job's on
us."

C atalin a Sales A re Up

Sun Bank Prom otes Two
Homer B. Lovvorn Jr., has been promoted to
senior vice president and Lory M. Durnmce was
elected vice president of Sun Bank. N.A..
according to Hans W. Tews, bank president.
Lovvorn. 50. Joined Sun Bank in 1081 as an
operations officer. He is also vice president of
operations services of Sun Banks of Florida. Inc.,
the parent bank holding company, and presi­
dent of its subsidiary Sunbank Service C'or|&gt;oratton. the operations and data processing center
for Sun Banks across the state.
He earned his undergraduate degree from
Georgia Tech, graduating Magna Cum Laudc in
Industrial Management. He attended the School
of Banking of the South at Louisiana State
University in 1970-72. Lovvorn holds the basic
and intermediate American Institute of Banking
certificates. He is 1983 chairman of the Bank
Administration Institute National Check Pro­
cessing Conference.
Durrance. 37. now serves as vice president
and managrr of the bank's Indiana Avenue
Office tn St. Cloud. He was formerly manager of
the Conway Office. Durrance has been with Sun
Bank for 12 years. He earned his bachelors
degree in business administration and econom­
ics at Rollins College. Durrance Is a graduate of
the School of Banking of the South at Louisiana
State University.

D ih h n n
K lU U O n

C u ttin a

Dennis Courson, chairman of the board of Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, left, assists Kathy Hibbard, owner and manager of Kathy's
Paperback Books, 107 Magnolia Ave., Sanford, In a recent ribbon cutting
ceremony attended by chamber members. The book store was one of the
new businesses which joined the chamber during Its membership drive.

Cardinal Industries Sets
Record Sales In 1982
Despite otic ol the worst re­
cessions in the housing Industry.
Cardinal Industries o f Sanlord and
Columbus. Ohio, registered record
sales of nearly $300 million in
1982 - a 24 percent Jump over
198 I s figures.
Tin* company — the country’s
third largest multi-family develop­
er w ith p ro je c ts throughout
Florida. Georgia and the Midwest
— produced more tlinn 5.300
modular livin g units (10.600
|2-by-24-foot modules) at its four
plan ts In O hio. F lorida and
Georgia, which accounted for
8295.9 million in sales.
T h e m o d u Ic s w e r e u se d
primarily for apartments, but also
were the basis for other Cardinal
products, including Knights hm
motels: a new adult congregate
housing com munity: c o n ­
dominiums: single-family homes
and commercial offices.
The year’s sales figures bettered
Cardinal's 1981 sales of S238.5

million by $58.1 million and sur­
passed the com pany's annual
growth goal of 20 percent. Cardi­
nal's actual growth sinre 1979 has
averaged 25 percent, and when
compounded, the company's sales
have increased 300 percent since
1979.
A breakdown of the company's
1982 sales report shows:
Multi-family apartment units —
S62.5 million
Motel units — $ 13.75 million
Rental Income and motel man­
agement — S82.4 million
Site construction — S I29.8 mil­
lion
C on dom in iu m s and singlefamily homes — S7.45 million.
D uring 1982. C ardin al In ­
dustries opened 76 new apartment
communities, bringing its total of
apartm ent developm ents con ­
structed to more than 500. The
company manages more than
18.000 a p a rtm e n ts w ith an
average occupancy rate of 97

percent.
With the addition of the nine
Knights Inns. Cardinal Industries
has 40 budget motels operating in
seven states. The chain averaged
an occupancy rate 20 percent
higher than the industry average.
Austin Gulrllngcr. founder and
president of Cardinal Industries,
said the company's continued
growth despite a dismal year for
the housing industry Is a tribute to
the c o m p a n y 's em ph asis on
"making a plan and sticking to it."
"Because Cardinal Industries is
a self-contained company, we're
able to control all aspects of our
growth." Gulrllngcr said. "W e are
Gulrllngcr predicts that by 1990,
Cardinal Industries will nearly
triple its annual output of modular
living units at its four existing
plants, plus add four new plants to
bring the company's annual out­
put to over 20.000 living units
(40.000 modules).

Gooding's
'Superstore'
Work Begins

In addition to the Sun Bank. N'.A. promotions
two officers have been relocated. Mike Kinsey,
assistant vice president, has moved from the
Central Park Office to become manager of the
Conway Office. Cesar Calvrt. formerly vice
president of oj&gt;crations. transferred to commu­
nity banking operations at the Main Office of
Sun Bank. N'.A.

Phone D irectories O ut
The 1983 edition o f the Southern Bell
Customet directory has been delivered to homes
and businesses in Seminole and Volusia coun­
ties.
With a mangrove scene on the cover the new
reference book on the telephone system is again
a reminder of not only the beauty of Florida bin
the continuing growth, local Southern Bell
Manager Larry Strickler said.
"Th e printing of the directory is an enormous
undertaking which many people Just take for
granted." said Strickler. "T h e 1982 Sanford
white pages look 92.231 pounds of pa|K*r. 800
pounds of glue, and 1708 gallons of ink. The
directory covers required 6256 poundsol paper.
This year's book features the community
services number pages, the handy customer
guide pages which help make telephone servier
much easier louse.
Dlretorles were delivered throughout the area
over a two-week |x*rlod usitig 50 people who
wrre hired especially for the task, which started
Feb. 11 and was Just concluded Anyone who
has not received a new book should call the Bell
business ol fire at 322-6701,

"A s a general rule. If the loan on the properly Is less
than 50 percent of the property’s value, it should be
looked at closely In terms o f refinancing." he said. " If
the loan to value ratio Is 60 percent or more it could be
left alone for a while other than to rearrange taxsituations."
When such a deal is made. Strauss said, the company
will pay rent at such a level that the deal probably will
have no appreciable effect on profit or loss. But the real
estate then becomes a personal asset which entitles the
owner lo lake advantage of depreciation and other
personal tax benefit writeoffs that the real estate may
offer.
Strauss also said the new federal tax laws make such
deals more attractive to the company owner who buys
the property because these laws allow much more
liberal depreciation on the buildings. A building that
formerly had to be depreciated on a 50-ycar basis now
can be depreciated in 15 years.

Stromberg
Installs
3 Systems

Com pany Changes N am e

Catalina Homes. Inc., posted $1.5 million In
new home sales during the second week In
February, according to Rodger Anderson, vice
president for sales and marketing lor the
developer.
The firm wrote contracts on 19 new homes in
six Central Florida subdivisions. Including six
contracts at Tuscawllla Forest. Catalina's luxu­
ry homes community in Seminole County.
"During the first" two weeks in January.
Tuscaudlla Forest ported $1.3 million in sales of
15 homes.
Anderson attributed I he high volume to a
combination of factors. "The HBA Parade of
Homes drew a lot of traffic." Anderson said, "as
well as publicity concerning our grand opening
at Tuscawllla Forest."

Strauss warned it Is necessary to proceed carefully In
making such a sale and leaseback.

The Greater Construction Corporation broke ground
Tuesday on the newest Gooding's "superstore" at
Gooding's Plaza at the intersection of State Road 436
and Red Bug Road in Casselberry.
The Greater Construction Corporation Is one of
Florida's largest construction companies in the residen­
tial building market, and is u leader as well In
commercial construction of shopping center and malls.

W inner
Christine Kozlowski, daughter of M r. and Mrs.
Chester A. Kozlowski of Longwood, was awarded
first place in the future Business Leaders of
A m erica's Advanced Shorthand contest for
Seminole County in January. In February she was
awarded second place in the district contest and is
now eligible for the state contest to be April 7-9 in
Orlando. She is employed by Flagship Central
Bookkeeping and attends Seminole High School
and Seminole Community College.

The family-run corporation Is headquartered In
Longwood. Its Orlando-area projects Include Summit
Plaza. Bay Lakes, the Greater Mall. Kensington Park and
many others. Greater owns Goodings Plaza and will
lease space to tenants through exclusive leasing agent
Fletcher Bright of Florida in Altamonte Springs,
The Gooding's Plaza will include 100.000 square feel
of commercial space, with Gooding's occupying approx­
imately 52.000 square feet. The remaining square
footage will be leased lo fashion shops and service stores
designed for one-stop shopping.
Completion Is expected In October or November.
The new •Gooding's store will offer about 30,000
competitively priced grocery items through Its special
departments.

fS

* *#■*

In a small Texas farming community cast of Austin,
the Colorado Valley Telephone Cooperative in Plum
recently placed In service its second System Century
Digital Central Office supplied by Strombcrg-Carlson
Corporation.
Equipped with the new Local Line Switch, the DCO
System has 1.500 lines and offers the community's
telephone subscribers a full line of custom-calling
features as well as pushbutton dialing. The first digital
switch for Colorado Valley Telephone was Installed in :
Warrcnlun. a few miles north of Plum.
For the third time In a year Strombcrg-Carlson
Corporation placed in service a System Century Digital •
Central OfTlce for the Eastex Telephone Cooperative In .
Coldspring. Texas.
Two other digital switches were installed for the
telephone company In Blanchard and Onalaska. Texas,
within the past 12 months.
The DCO System for the Coldspring office, which Is In a vacation resort area northeast of Houston, replaced an
XY Dial System. The new system has 1.327 lines and
oilers subscribers u choice of custom-calling features
and pushbutton dialing. With all three DCO System.
Eastex Telephone now* provides telephone service In
eastern Texas over a total of 5.500 digital lines.
One o f Strombcrg-Carlson Corporal Ion's first digital
switching customers, Northwest Telephone Co,, recently
placed in service Its sixth System Century Digital
Central Ofllcc.
This new. 4.000-llne DCO System serves the tele­
phone subscribers of DcForest. Wls.. with u Tull line of
custom-calling features, pushbutton dialing, and Local
Automatic Message Accounting (LAMA).
Northwest Telephone now provides telephone service
in Wisconsin over a total of 21.000 digital lines to
Boscobcl. Wild Rose. Tomah. Spooner, and Rlpon. as
well as DcForest.
The next system milestone will take place this,
summer In Neshkoro. Wis.. where a DCO System will be j
Installed for Northwest Telephone that includes the
millionth digital line ordered from Strombcrg-Carlson.
Slromberg-Carlson. a member of the Plessey Group. Is
a leading designer and manufacturer of telecommunica­
tions equipment with headquarters In Lake Mary.

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The Aged Blind Teach Kids To Read
And Themselves To Cope With Life

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

taner Brands Now
In Discount Stores

I

B y MAOOIE JACKSON

When she first approached the Maryland Board of
Education with the Idea for the tutoring program, they
weren’t enthusiastic. Later, she had to battle reluctant
teachers, skeptical principals, anil financial difficulties.
At the Stevens School, one of the District of Columbia
programs funded by the Morris and Gwendolyn Cafrltz
Foundation. Internal Light volunteers tutor students
one-to-one In a bright yellow room.
"T h e senior citizens have to have a lot of courage to
come here," says Juan Fcbles. coordinator of the
school's program. "I guess the students Instinctively
know this and respect them."
According to Feylshara Adclckan. 9. It doesn't matter
to her that her tutors arc blind since they still "have had
lots of experience In reading."
Besides, adds Gohar Babazadcn. 12. "It's fun reading
to someone jio l just to yourself."
"Th e children learn a great deal more from the
program than reading." says Leslie Chcpcni^k. director
of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program, which works In
conjunction with Internal Light In Maryland. "It lets the
children learn that handicaps aren't something to be
afraid of or ashamed of.
"It definitely changes the lives of the senior citizens,
too."
Most of the senior citizens lost their sight gradually
and late In life.
"A s well as blindness, they arc coping with aging
problems, like a change o f residence, or death o f a
spouse." Mrs. Salle says. "There arc horrendous things
happening at this time and then to lose your vision,
too."

WASHINGTON (UPI) — For three years. Lillian Miller
has visited a Maryland elementary school twice a month
to tutor slow students In reading.
Mrs. Miller. 83. Is blind.
"A t first. I asked. *How In the world can 1 help a child
to read when I can’ t even read myscll?"* said Mrs.
Miller.
"But they explained how I could listen to them read
out loud and help them when they hit a word they don’ t
understand."
Her visits to the Takoma Park School arc pan of a
unique program called "Internal Light." which helps
elderly blind people learn to cope with the loss of their
sight.
Not only do the children benefit from her visits, but
Mrs. Miller has learned that she has not lost her
usefulness.
" I t ’s as good for me as It Is for the children," she says.
"It’s a warm nnd friendly atmosphere."
Four programs now operate In Maryland, and another
satellite program was started in September In the
District of Columbia by Evelyn Salle, the real force
behind Internal Light.
" I want the senior citizens to realize that they can give
to the community, not Just take." she says. "Many have
had to depend on social services."
In 1972. Mrs. Salle, who is not a senior citizen herself
but whose husband Is blind, became director of a small
program at the Jewish Community Center In Rockville.
Md.. started by George Hurwltz. a philanthropist who
funds two programs today.

The majority o f blind Americans arc over 60.
according to Mrs. Salle, most of the having lost their
sight from Incurable diseases.
To help the elderly confront their "anger at being
blind and their fear o f living alone." Mrs. Salle Invites
professional counselors to lead discussions.
Mrs. Salle teaches them they can do anything that a
sighted person can. except drive a car. and they can lead
Independent lives.
In fact, the term "visually handicapped" angers her.
"Blindness Is not a handicap." says Mrs. Salle, whose
husband Isa labor economist. "It Is an Inconvenience."
Beneath the surface o f Internal Light runs the river of
her philosophies.
"Ten years ago. when I look over the existing
program." Mrs. Salle says. "They took me to a closet
and showed me beads and baskets."
"I said. If that's what you want me to do. I'm the
wrong person." she recalls Indignantly, as she brushes a
wisp of black hair from her face.

Sunday, M arch 13, l» IJ ~ 7 A

NEW YORK (UPI) — Consumers who want
designer brand products at bargain prices until
recently had to wait for sales at department stores or
specialty shops, which had exclusive rights to
certain merchandise*.
That's changing, says an article In a recent Issue
of Retailing Home Furnishings, a New York-based
trade newspaper.
"Now. discount stores are demanding and getting
upscale and exclusive merchandise*,'' the report
says.
It credits the change to a group of chains that are
upgrading their merchandise and expanding elcspltc
the economic climate.
One reason was cited by Harry Kolui. a sales
executive for Bradlees’, a 106-store Massachuset­
ts-based chain.
Kohn told the paper the discount shopper's "taste
level has been increasingly shown to be Identical to
that of customers shopping more traditional fashion
stores, although her budgetary restrictions may Ih*
somewhat greater.

SHS Students Strut Their Stuff
With Dean Shoemaker and Todd
Hlldcbran as the Masters of Cere­
monies. last Tuesday's talent show
was a big success.
There was a variety of enter­
tainers—musicians. dancers, and
singers. Including the Contempo­
rary Escmble—Ladona Mcrrlflcld.
David Goebclbcckcr. Mari Swlnford.
Miriam Hamilton. Tim Winkle.
Jennifer Cowley. Carol Ludwig.
Michelle Walton. Martha McIntosh.
Debbie Harvey. Jimmy Wright.
Steve Grey. Tommy StllTey. George
and Selena Alloway.
Also among the talented perform­
ers were Monica Kelley. Tracy

A round
SHS
By
Jill

Janak
Borawskl. Chrlsy Rufo. Penny
Morris. Dec Goebclbcckcr. Kaylyn
Wltherow. Jill Janak. Sheila Brown.
Mike Parks. James Bradley. Roger
Rlpp. Chuck Burgess. Murphy
Wolford, Tim Dycus, and Trlchellc
Taack.
With many well-rehearsed acts, it
was a really exciting show that

represented the varied fortes of the
students.
Held on February 25. the District
Conference at SCC enabled mem­
bers of our school's Future Business
Leaders of America to place In
different business categories.
In Steno II. Chris Kozlowski ob­
tained second place, while Jill
Morris got fourth.
In Business Luw. Tina Lalson
placed third. Debbie Ebcrly was able
to receive fourth place In Office
Procedures.
Chris. Tina, and Debbie are now
eligible to enter the state competi­
tion In April.
Congratulations!

'Marionettes' Win Big In Dance Pageant
Last week, the "Miss Florida Drill
Team Pageant" was held at Lake
Mary.
T w en ty-six d rill team s from
around the state travelled to LMHS
In hopes o f m aking good Im­
pressions on the Tcxasjudges.
The "LaRe Marionettes," as usual,
performed exceptionally well. They
e x e c u t e d t h r e e o u t s t a n d in g
routines: Jazz, pom pom, and high
kick.
As a result, the Marionettes at­
tained a Sweepstakes Trophy — an

A round
LMHS
By
Jolenr
B rrk lrr
honor shared by only four other
Florida teams.
In order to receive a special
Sweepstakes Trophy, a drill team
had to obtain superior markings on

each of three routines.
The day provided an exciting
array of sparkling routines and fun.
and the overall feeling was one of
extreme enjoyment.
Currently, the LMHS sophomore
class Is Involved .In a magazinerecord sale.
This fundraiser Is taking place to
try to boost the money In the
sophomore account. All profits will
go towards an elaborate senior
prom.
We can use your support.

A Way To Go

H e re te P h e l* b y T o m V in c e n t

The steering committee for the Sanford Christian matching funds to be matched by donations. The
Sharing Center building fund (from left) Phil center sponsored by many Sanford churches, |,
Roche, M artha Yancy, Vivienne Sweeney, Julian dispensed $21,720 to 2,392 needy clients last year
Stenstrom and K it Carson, public relations for such things as food, lights, rent, wafer,
U
director, have set a $50,000 fund raising goal In prescriptions, gas for heating and cooking and
d
order to build a permanent home for the center. housing.
The Santord Rotary Club has given $4,500 In
PASS NEXT GENERAL, BUILDING, RESIDENTIAL

REALTY TRANSFERS

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R C a lla h a n A w l E th y l. L o l 47. D eer
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B oardw alk, 400 N. A tla n tic.
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SPORTS

4A

8 A - E v « n ln fl H e ra ld , S anford, FI.

Sunday, M a rc h 11, 19M

A m azin g Boone G oes
A fter 25-0 Jackson;
O sceola Seeks 37-0
Peggy Glass, Lake
M a r y high lu m p e r,
sails off the bar during
c o m p e titio n In the
L y m a n In v ita tio n a l
F rid a y . Glass m ade
this attempt but could't
b e a t L y m a n 's L o ri
Carroll who won the
event with a leap of 5-4.
The Ly man girls
finished second to pow­
erful Edgewater while
the Greyhound boys
edged Seminole by 2Vi
points for the their first
Invitational victory.

Boys Basketball Tournament
at Lakeland Civic Center

Saturday'a garnet
2A — Pahokec (22-5) vs. Montlccllo JcfTcrson
County (16-9). 2 p.m.
3A — Osceola Kissimmee (360) vs. Crcstvlcw
(31-3). 3:30 p.m.
1A — Hastings (20-7) vs. Malone (33-5). 7 p.m.
4A •— Orlando Boone (23-8) vs. Jacksonville
Jackson (25-0). 8:30 p.m.

Friday's results
2A
3A
1A
4A

— Pahokec 67, Jacksonville Bollcs 66
— Crcstvlcw 71, Rockledge 43
— Malone 78. Miami Private 67
— Jacksonville Jackson 72. Miami American 41

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
LAKELAND — Around 10:30 Saturday night six
high school basketball coaches arc going to throw out
their chests and say to the guy next to him, "Well,
what do you know? I beat the state champion."
Or. if Jacksonville Jackson coach James Humphrey
has his way. lie’ll say. "How about that, slate
champions and 26*0. Nobody's better than we arc."
Which pretty much sets the 4A stage Saturday
night when the Boys Stale Basketball Tournament
winds up here with the amazing Boone Braves. 23-8.
taking on powerful Jacksonville Jackson. 25-0.
Jacksonville coasted into the final by thrashing
Miami American. 72-41. Friday night as senior
Ronnie Williams tossed in 17 points to lead five
Tigers in double figures. George Bcatom (15). Darrel)
Coleman (11). Dozier Barcous (10) (10) and super sub
Ronald Lucas (10) all Joined the fun.
Boone, which -stunned highly-regarded Fort
Lauderdale Dillard Thursday night, has lost eight
games this year, although coach Wayne Rickman's
saavy Braves have never lost two in a row. Three of
those losses came to Evans, one to Winter Park.
Edgewater and Oak Ridge and one each to Stuart
Martin County and Seminole.
The Braves have won nine straight and will need
another heady performance to get past Jackson,
which along with Kissimmee Osceola Is attempting to
become the first undefeated state champ since the
1975 Lake Weir squad.
The Braves rely on 17 points a game from Andy
Hungerford and Lcnnle Grace. Craig Matccr runs the
attack while Pal Lewis and Anthony Shorter arc the
role players, Grace, an excellent Icapcr, is hampered
by a possible broken finger while Lewis may have a
broken nose, according to Rickman.
The Braves won the stale tournament In 1977 and
reached the final four in 1978 but since then its been
a long dryspell for the Metro Conference which at one
point took three straight stale championships.
Saturday's 3A matchup should be a good one. too.
Osceola, featuring All-Americas Frank Ford and
Jimmy McCrlmon. is a highly explosive ball club
which can erupt at any minute. They combine for
almost 54 points per game. The Kowboys of Ed
Kershner love to run with the ball, but can slow down
and play that way. too.
Crest view, which topped Seminole by 13 In the
Kingdom of the Sun Holiday Classic at Ocala, has two
super players in 6-2 Kenny Siler and 6-5 Joe
Lawrence. Both average 17 points per game. Siler
takes his act inside while Lawrence prefers to bomb
away. He should be a good lest for Osccla's 3-2 zone
defense. Lawrence has already signed with the
University of Florida and coach Norm Sloan hopes
he'll be the answer to all of the zones the Gators
encounter.
in Friday's other games. 2A Pahokec tripped
Jacksonville Bollcs. 67-56. and lA Malone topped
Miami Private. 78-67. behind an awesome 42-point
explosion by Bruce "Action” Jackson.
Malone goes after Its fifth state championship in as
many tries against Hastings. The Tigers last won in
1981. Pahokec has been Just about as good. The Blue
Devils won last year and in 1977. They lost in thefinals in 1979.

CLASS A A A
C R E S T V I E W (71):
J. Lawrence 14. Siler 21. P. Lawrence 10. Grear 12.
Bethune 11. White 2. Hammonds 1. Totals: 27 17-23
71
ROCKLEDGE(43):
Wilcox II , Galloway 10, Perry 11. Gandolfl 0. S.
Fleming 7. McRoy 2. L. Fleming 2. Totals: 18 7-11 43.
Halftime — Crcstvlcw 30. Rockledge 17. Personal
fouls — Crcstvlcw 9, Rockledge 17. Technical fouls —
Wilcox. Grear. Records - Crcstvlcw 31-3. Rockledge
30-3.
CLASSAA

P A H O K E E (6 7 ):
PatiiCk 6 . Jackson 2. Wilson 5. Johnson 12. Jones
16. Brown 5. A. Smith 18. Berry 3. Rubio O. Totals:
20 27-4367.

J A C K S O N V IL L E B O L L E S (5 6 ):
Movsovltz 2. Terry O. Bohlke 14. K. Smith 12. Lastcr
5. Dent 2. Schur 0. Willie O. Berk 10. Gainer. Berk:
TEchnlcdls - Gainer: Records — Pahokec 23-4.
Bollcs 26-7.

CLASS A
T ayb r DE Floyd 6 . Hall 10. McArthur 3. Robinson 0."
MeCollough 9. Long 2. Glover 4. Rogers 0. Jackson
42. Totals: 30 18-27 78.
MIAM I PR IV A TE (6 7 ):
Corrales 7. Farinas 8. Quintana 8. Cintra 19.
Chambless 0. Castro 6. Rojas 0. Sanchez 15. Vidal 4.
Totals:299-1667.
., .
Halftime - Maloine 32. Private 19: Fouls - Malone
12. Private 23: Fouled out - Q uintana. Chambless;
Technicals — none: Records — Malone 33-5. Private
TL4

CLASSAAAA

J A C K S O N V IL L E A N D R E W J A C K S O N (72):
Barcous 10. Peatom 15. Bucholtz 2. Coleman 11.
Williams 17. Carswell 2. Gentile 3. Haynes 0. L.
Jones 2. Lucas 10. Totals 26 20-29 72.

H IA L E A H A M E R IC A N (4 1 ):

K&gt;1M V

Faulkner 4. Tlmpson 4. English 7. Carmona 2, Lee
15.Odom 2 .Rodriquez6. Pace 1.Totals 177*1741.
Halftime — Jacksonville Jacksonville 28. Hialeah
American 18: Fouls — Jackson 14. American 19:
Records — Jacksonville 25-0, Hialeah American 25-9.

I

B layney, N o t Sim kins
In Tuesday's Sports section, the softball picture of a
Lake Mary player sliding in at home plate was o f Terri
Blayney and not Lisa Simkins. Simkins was In the
picture, however, she was coaching first base.

H e r* Id P hoto b y T o m V in c e n t

MeBroom, Lyman Surprise Invitational Field
Friday's Lyman Invitational may havebeen loo cold for the Daytona Beach
Mainland boys and the Oak Ridge girls —
but Lyman boys coach David Huggins
felt like he was sltling In front of a
fireplace when the final returns rolled In.
The Greyhounds, sparked by an upsel
880 victory by Junior Doug MeBroom
edged Seminole. 54-50Mi. to take their
first ever Invitational championship.
Titusville was an easy winner In the girls
m e e t. 7 4 ,.t»-40'.*i, o v e r the L a d y
Greyhounds,
"Th e coaches had us finishing sixth on
paper." said an dated Huggins Saturday
morning. "B ut we got some great
performances. Some people really came
through."
Two teams which didn't come through
— Oak Ridge's girls and Mainland’s boys
— called Friday afternoon and cancelled
out. citing the cold weather conditions
for titelr decision.
“ It was cold." said Huggins.-"Bui we
made a provision that the athletes could
wear extra clothing to keep warm."
Despite tin- weather, the 880 finish
between MeBroom and Seminole’s Mike
Wooten was a heated affair. Wooten led
most of the race when with 180 yards to
go. MeBroom. more known for longer
distances, kicked past Woolen and held
on fora 10-inch victory in 2 01.7.
"MeBroom caught Wooten completely
by su rprise," Seminole coach Ted
Tombros about his talented senior who
has the county's best 880 time in 1:59.7.
MeBroom’s' previous best was 2:03,3.
"W oolen led most of the way, Inn
MeBroom caught him and il took Mike
about one-tenth of a second lo respond.
They really went at II down the- stretch

P re p T ra c k
hui that slight hesitation made the
difference."
There was no hesitation on the part of
the Tribe's Dion Jackson. Sanford's
springy senior continued his domination
o f (he Jumping events, taking the long
Jump in 23-P i and the triple Jump In
-12-4 Vt. The long Jump leap shattered the
old mark o f 23-Vt* by Edge-water's George
Freeman in 1979.
Seminole also won the mile relay In
3:31,6 as Torin Williams, Lace Mobley.
Clifton Campbell and Wooten turned In
an eight-yard victory. Seminole, which
has the best mile medley time in the
stale (3:38.2). lost some points in that
event when It was decided a week ugo
not to run to event to speed up the meet.
The 'Noles were 12 seconds faster than
their nearest county competition.
"W e were using this meet as ar\
experim ental m eet." said Huggins who
along with the other roaches Is trying lo
do something about the extraordinary
length of track meets. "Il cut about an
hour oft the meet."
Tombros didn't think a lack of the
medley severely hampered his team's
chances. " I thought we shoutd have won
anyway," said Tombros. "W e messed up
two handofts lu the 440 relay (fifth place)
and Rendcll Manley had an off day in the
hurdles."
Manley, one of the better hurdles in
the area, was sixth in the Intermediate
hurdles and didn't place in the 110s. He
was ranked second in the county honor
roll In the IMs prior to the meet and fifth

In the lows.
Other notable performances were a
double victory by Lake Howell's Kenny
Checscman in the mile and two mile, a
first place by Seminole sophomore
Campbell In the 440. a lop spot by
Oviedo's Danny Loll In the low hurdles
and the Intermediates along with first
places by Lyman's Jeff Fisher In the pole
vault and Lake Mary's Mike Rouse in the
high Jump. Rouse and Colonial's David
Sloekett tied with leaps of six feet.
Slockctt was the high-polnt Individual
for the meet.
For the girls. Titusville's Janet Mc­
Crary put on a one-woman show to help

L y m a n In v ita tio n a l
A T L Y M A N H IG H SCH O O L
G IR L S
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7 L e n gw o o d L y m a n I L ) 40.5: 1
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L y m a r 51 • 3 A p o p k a 51 I . 440 — 1.
C a ld w e ll IS ) 43 3 3 S h iv e rs IT ) 43 0

Titusville to an easy win. She won the
discus, shot put. helped the 440-relay
team to a win and was second In the
100.
Lyman's Lori Carroll took the high
Jump while Lake Mary's Fran “ Flash"
G o rd o n c a p tu r e d the 100. L a k e
Brantley's Kathryn Hayward was a
double winner In the 880 and mile.
Crystal Caldwell of Seminole grabbed
(he 440 while Lym an's Schowanda
Williams won her specialty, the 330
hurdles.
Spruce Creek’s Carmen Gardner set a
record in the two mile with a clocking of
11:32.3.- S A M COOK

3 W a lk e r (S ) 45 4 : 130 H u rd le s - 1.
W illia m s ( L ) 44 * . 3. F la n n e ry | T I
44 7 3 T h o m a s ID ) 4 4 4 : 440 - 1 .
H a y w a rd I L B I 7 :2 5 .4 .1. M a c k (T A )
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4:14 5 2. S e m in o le 4:14 4. 3. L a ke
B ra n tle y 4 70 4.
H ig h P o in t In d iv id u a l — Ja n e t
M c C ra ry . T itu s v ille .
B O YS
T e a m Scores: I. L o n g w o r t L y m a n
(L &gt; 54 2. S a n lo rd S e m in o le (S ) SO 5. 3
(tie ) O v ie d o &lt;01 41.J, H a in e s C ity
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(C ) 40 M a itla n d L a k e H o w e ll I L H I
40 7. A p o p k a (A ) 35 I . L a ke M a ry
I L M ) 73 * D a y to n a S e a b re e te (O S )
17 4 10 D tL a n d ID ) 14.3 I t . S pruce
C re e k (S C ) I I 12 A lta m o n te S p rin g s
L a k e B ra n lle y ( L B I 4.
D is c u s — 1. M ln e a r (C ) 1474. 2.
S h e p a rd (S C I 150 0 3 A lle n (L )
14* I I : Shot - 1 W e b ste r (H C ) 54 4
3 M ln e a r (C l 54 7. 3 A lle n ( L I 4 * 11;
L o n g J u m p — 1. J a c ks o n (S I 73 I k,
( r e c o r d l 3 W rig h t (D S ) I U 3 * . 3

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S m ith ( A ) 10 1. 2. S lo e k e tt (C ) 10.3. 3.
B lt k e (H C ) 10.3; 170 H u rd le s - 1.
B la k e (H C ) 14.4. 2. K im ( L H ) 1* 0. 2,
L o tt ( 0 ) 15.4. M ile — 1. C heesem an
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1. H u n te r ( L I 4:41.2. 440 R e la y — 1.
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S m ith ) 44 J . 2. O v ie d o 44 4. 2. D tL a n d
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Sy. S m ith ( A ) S2.4. 2 W illia m s (S )
57 4, 330 H u rd le s - 1. L o ti ( 0 ) 41.4.
2 K im ( L H ) 41.4. 2. T u rn e y ( L M )
42 0 MO — 1. M e B ro o m IL 1 2:01-7. 2
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3 04 4; 770 — I. H a d d e n (O ) 2 3 7 . 2.
S lo e k e tt (C l 23 0 2. W h a c k (S I 22.1)
2 M ila - 1 C h e e w m a n ( L H ) *:5 0 a.
2. T a n g e m a n ( L M )
10:03.3. 3.
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41 33*. 3. T o liv e r ID S ) 41 23*. P o l*
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(W o o le n ,
M o b le y .
C a m p b e ll.
W illia m s ) 3:33.2. 2. L a k e H o w e ll
3 :3 3 1. 2. H a in e s C ity 2:21.1
H ig h P o in t In d lv ld u e l — D a v id
S lo e k e tt. O rla n d o C o lo n ia l

Brewer's Double Duty Numbs 'Noles; Rams, Lions Lose
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports W riter
Up until the bottom of the sixth Inning
Friday night. Seminole High's bals were
as cold as the frigid temperatures at
Seminole Memorial Sladiutn. The Tribe
managed only one bit off Apopka's ace
lefthander Rodney Brewer. But. Brewer
was removed in the sixth inning and
Seminole Immediately Jumped on re­
liever Jason Miller for three runs in the
sixth and had scored three runs in the
seventh and had a runner on second
with only one out.
Unfortunalley for Seminole, however.
In high school baseball, once a pitcher is
removed, he can still re-enter the game.
Before things got out of hand, Apopka
went back lo Brewer who easily set doivn
Seminole's last two hitters us the Blue
Darters claimed a Five Star Conference
10-6 victory on one of the coldest nights
for baseball in a long lime.
Brewer silenced the Seminole bats In
(he early innings, striking out six o f the
first seven batters he faced. Meanwhile.
Seminole starter James Herscy was
Ineffective as the Darters Jumped on the
sophomore right-hander for five runs In
the lop o f the first Inning. Andy Griffilh
relieved Herscy with one nut in the first
and stopped Apopka from doing any
further damage.
Apopka took a 6-0 lead In the second
inning as Trey Brasscur singled and
scored on a wild pitch. The Darters
scored again In the fourth and two more
times in the top of the sixth to take a
commanding 10-0 lead.
In the bottom of the sixth, pinchhitters Scott Clayton and Tony Cox drew
back-to-back walks to pul runners jon
first and second with no outs. Pinch
hitter William Wynn then lifted a fly ball
to the right fielder, who relayed to the
Bhortstop who threw Clayton out at
third. Seminole didn't give In though as
Greg Carter knocked In Cux with a single
and took second on the throw home.
Carter came around to score on Brian
Rogers' single to left' and Rogers also

I
i

^

f

P rep B aseb a ll
took second on tile throw home. Sieve
Dennis then laced a single lo right to
drive in Rogers with the third run o f the
Inning lo cul Apopka’s lead lo 10-3.
The Tribe rallied again in the bottom
of the seventh as Andy Griffith led ofr
wilb a walk and Greg Hill reached on an
infield single. Griffith scored on Kevin
Smith's single and Hill scored when Paul
Griffin reached on a double error by the
shortstop. Jeff Vanzura's grounder to
second was thrown away and Griffin
scored to cut the Darters' lead to 10-6.
Apopka then went back to Brewer who
coaxed an easy grounder to second out
of Carter and struck out Rogers to end
the game.
Brewer struck out 11 and walked four
In picking up the pitching victory. The
only hit he allowed was a double off the
right field wall by Hill In the fourth
inning. Brewer also helped his own
cause will) a pair o f singles and one RBI
while Brasscur and Stevrn Hlnde had
two hits apiece for Apopka.
Seminole fell to 3-7 for the season and
1*4 in the Five Star Conference. The
Tribe travels to Lake Brantley Monday
for a 3:30 p.m. game and returns to
Sanford Memorial on Wednesday for u
7:30 p.m. game against Lyman.
In other games. Bishop Moore scored
four unearned runs In the first five
Innings en route to an 11-3 victory over
Lake Mary's Rams at Bishop Moore.
1 he Hornets took a 4-0 lead In the first
inning with Steve Bontell's two-run
single the big hit. Bishop Moore scored
two more runs when Mike McClaichy hit
into a force play but the relAy throw from
second wus errant. Hllowtng both runs lo
score.
Lake Mary, 2-5. cut the Hornets' lead
to 4-2 with single runs In the third and
fourth Innings. Kyle Brubaker singled in
the third, went to second when Scott
Underwood reached on an error and

advanced to third on Ron Natherson's
sacrifice bunt. Brubaker scored when
Harry Hyscll's grounder was booted by
the first baseman. In the fourth Inning.
Keith Wallace reached on a fielder's
choice and, with two outs, stole second
and advanced to third on Mark Chascy’s
single. Chascy then stole second and
Wallace*scored when the throw went
through.
Bishop Moore forged ahead by six
runs. 8-2. with a four-run fifth Inning.
Joe Sosa's two run single was thi* big hit
and two more runs scored when McClatchy’s reached on an error.
Lake Mary scored again In the bottom
o f the fifth lo cut the lead to 8-3. but the
Rams could get no closer. Bishop Moore
added three Insurance runs In the sixth
for the final of 11-3.
Mike Passllla went the distance on the
mound for the Hornets, allowing Lake
Mary seven hits while striking out four
and walking three. Mike Schmlt pitched
the entire game for the Rams, giving up
seven hits while striking out two and
walking seven.
"M ike pllched real well the first five
innings." Lake Mary coach Don Smith
said. "H e should have golten out o f the
fifth Inning better than he did."
The Rams host Oviedo on Monday at
Seminole Community College with game
time scheduled for 4 p.m.
At Oviedo, the Lions gave up two
unearned runs to Leesburg's Yellow
Jackets and it was all Yellow Jucket
pitcher Jimmy Gelv needed. Gelv gave
up only three hits to the Lions while
striking out 12 and Walking Just two as
Leesburg edged Oviedo, 2-1.
Oviedo. 8-5. took a 1-0 lead in the
bottom o f the second inning as Chris
Kesslngcr blasted a shot over the 340
mark in left field,
Leesburg responded with both of its
runs In the top of the third inning ns one
run scored w hen p itch er Dw ayne
Johnson balkrd with a runner on third
and another scored when a two-out
grounder lo third was mishandled.

JAMES
HERBEY
.roughed up

The Lions threatened again in the
bottom of the sixth as the bases were
loaded with only one out. Keaslnger
attempted a suicide squeeze bunt but
fouled it ofT and ended up popping out to
the catcher. Gelv kept the Lions from
tying the game as he fanned the next
batter for the third out.
Gclv's outstanding mound work over­
shadowed the performance o f Johnson
and David Butterfield who combined lo
allow Leesburg Just three hits. The
Yellow Jackets played flawless in the
field and didn’t commltt any errors.
Oviedo committed three errors.
In other conference action. Lake
Howell's Silver Hawks won their third
straight game as Junior Billy Lang
clubbed a home run and freshman Jeff
Poindexter ripped as the Hawks topped
Mainland. 6*4.
Junior right-hander Van Golmont
picked up the mound decision for Howell
which Improved to 3-2 In the conference
and 4-8 overall.
In Junior college play, Seminole Com­
munity College avenged Thursday's
setback to Merrlmac, Mo. by nipping the
visitors. 3-2, In 10 Innings. SCC moved
within one game o f the .500 mark with a
10-11 record.
Tim Barker rapped three hits and
drove In two runs for the winners while
team m ate S teve Page roped three
singles.

�'Killer Frogs' Leap
O ver Arkansas In O T
Call them the "Killer Frogs. "
T h e T ex a s C h ristian U n iversity
Homed Frogs lived up to their new
nickname Friday night by eliminating
No. 5 Arkansas from the Southwest
Conference tournament with a 61-59
overtime victory.
TCU moves Into today's SWC final
against No. 1 Houston. .The Cougars
crushed SMU, 75-59, earlier Friday
night.
Darrell Browder, TCU's all lime lead­
ing scorer, hit two free throws with four
seconds remaining In overtime to lift the
Frogs. It was their first victory over the
Razorbacks In the last 26 games — a
streak that lasted 11 years.
" I ’m really happy for the kids," said
TCU coach Jim "K iller" Kllllngsworth.
"D o n 't ask me how It happened.
Truthfully I thought It was all over when
they were up by seven with two minutes
left. But we can't think any more about
this game because (finals against
Houston) Is not that far away."
The victory raised TCU's record to
21-9, the Frogs second best victory total
ever.
TCU, down by 11 points with four
minutes left, sent the game Into overtime
when Ricky Norton and Darrell Walker
both missed shots In the final seconds of
regulation that would have brought the
Razorbacks a triumph.
In the overtime. TCU Jumped In front
by four only to sec John Snlvcly hit a
20-foot Jump shot with 16 seconds left to
tie the game 59-59.
Browder was awarded the winning foul
shots when Walker fouled him going for
a steal. Following his free throws,
S n lvely's attempt to tic the game
bounced off the rim.
Browder scored 22 points, hitting all
six of his free throw attempts, while
Razorbacks center Joe Klclnc paced the
Hogs with 19.
In other conference tournaments:
Alabama capitalized on a five-minute
stall and three late free throws by Ennis
Whatley to upset 10th-rankcd Kentucky
69-64 and knock the league's regulars e a s o n c h a m p i o n s out o f the
Southeastern Conference tournament.

E vening H erald, Sanford, FI.
¥ 4 :

Nicolette Not Packing
After Wind-Blown 72
Maintains Bay Hill Lead

T ^

C o lle g e B asketball
In other SEC quarterfinal action.
Tennessee, paced by 6-foot-7 senior Dale
Ellis who had 33 points In all. topped
second-seed Louisiana State 74-71 In
overtime: JcfT Malone and Terry Lewis
c o m b in e d fo r 57 p o in ts to g iv e
Mississippi State a 76-61 victory over
Vanderbilt: and Vcrn Fleming and
James Banks paced Georgia to a 69-55
victory over Mississippi.
In the Atlantic Coast Conference
quarterfinals. Matt Doherty and Michael
Jordan each scored 28 points and No. 6
North Carolina hit 14 field goals from
3-point range to rout Clcmson 105-79:
sophomore Lorenzo Charles sank a free
throw with three seconds left to give
North Carolina State a 71-70 victory over
Wake Forest: No. 2 Virginia, overcoming
foul problems by All-America center
Ralph Sampson, got 23 points from
Junior guard Othell Wilson to trounce
Duke 109-66; and Georgia Tech used
deadly free throw shooting by freshmen
John Salley and Mark Price to shock
Maryland 64-58 In overtime.
North Carolina meets North Carolina
St. and Virginia plays Georgia Tech In
today's semifinals.
In the Big East semifinals, Chris Mullln
scored 29 points and Billy Goodwin
added 23 and No. 8 St, John's surged
past No. 12 Vlllanova In the second half
for a 91-80 victory; and Michael Adams
scored 25 points and Jay Murphy
controlled the Inside for 23 to give No. 13
Boston College an 80-74 victory over
Syracuse.
In the Big Eight semifinals, Steve
Stlpanovlch scored 26 points and guards
Jon Sundvold and Prince Bridges com­
bined for 31 more to power No. 9
M issouri to a 69-63 v ic to ry over
Nebraska; and Leroy Combs had a
season-high 26 points and 15 rebounds
and Matt Clark chipped In 22 points to
deliver Oklahoma Slate Its first-ever
berth In the championship game with a
90-83 victory over Kansas.

ORLANDO (UPI) - Usually by this
time of the week, Mike Nlcolettc has
packed his bags and headed for the next
GEORGE BRETT
DON BAYLOR
stop
on the PGA tour.
...Steady stick
...Swinging hot bat
This week, however. Is a different
story.
Nlcolettc, who had survived only two
cuts on the golf tour so far this season,
finds himself In a strange position today
entering the third round of the $350,000
Bjr United Press International
Be.y Hill Classic — first place.
Jay Howell Is making a strong bid for the vacant
Nlcolettc, never a winner on the PGA
right-handed starter’s spot In the New York Yankees
tour In four years on the circuit, bogeyed
rotation.
four of the last six holes for a 1-over-par
Howell combined with three other pitchers orr a
72
Friday but still managed to escape
one-hitter Friday night to lead the New York Yankees
the second round of the wind-swept
to a 6-0 Grapefruit League victory over the Texas
toumame... with a 3-stroke lead over
Rangers at Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Bob Glider.
The 26-year-old Howell hurled the first four no-hlt
" I feel confident." said the 2G-ycarold
innings and has now given up Just two earned runs In
Nlcolettc, who tins never led a tourna­
eight Innings of spring work. Clay Christiansen,
ment after two rounds. "I'd be a liar 111
another right-hander who appears to be ticketed for
said I wasn't a little bit nervous. If 1had a
Columbus, was also Impressive although he gave up
10-shot lead on the last hole I'd still be
the only Texas hit of the game — a fifth inning bloop
nervous."
single to rookie Pete O'Brien.
Nlcolettc, the first-round leader with a
Don Baylor, who made his first base debut In a 'B*
66. stands at 138 after two rounds.
game against Texas In the afternoon, keyed the
Gilder Is 1-under for the tournament at
Yankee attack with a single, double and two RBI. The
141.
hot-hitting Baylor Is now S-for-14 with eight RBI for
Donnie Hammond Is four shots back In
the spring.
third place. Larry Nelson and Greg
Elsewhere, rookie outfielder Ron Kittle had two
Norman arc tied at 143. Jack Nlcklaus
home runs and drove in five runs Friday to lead the
and Tom Watson lead a quintet of
White Sox to a 20*5 Grapefruit League rout of the
players sitting at 144.
New York Mets at Sarasota. Fla.
Nlcolettc appeared headed for that
At West Palm Beach, Fla..George Brett singled
10-shot
lead he mentioned early In
home two runs to carry the Kansas City Royals to a
Friday's round. Despite 35-mph winds
41 victory over the Montreal Expos. Larry Gura.
and cold temperatures that allowed only
Keith Creel and Mike Jones each threw two shutout
one sub-par round Friday — Curtis
innings for the Royals.
At Bradenton, Fla.. Dave Parker smashed a two-run
eighth-inning homer to lift the Pittsburgh Pirates to a
5- 4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. Parker’s first
Jack N ic k ltu i
Gall Rttolli
S rrt B lllr t lt r m
•r Uoitod Prrtt IntomiUoail
homer of the exhibition season made a winner of
&lt;t*y Floyd
B t y Hill Clinic
right-hander Jim Blbby, who made his first pitching
Gtry Hiilbifg
At Orliodi, Muck I I
performance since April 1. 1982. Blbby underwent
V
j : 0 Grady
(Pirn)
Milo Nlcotatto
U 72—
IM Bill Roger*
shoulder surgery last spring and spent the year on
Bob G iidrr
7171-141 Bed Boyd
the disabled list.
Oonnir Hammond
« U-141 Dan Pori
At Coco Beach, Fla,. Tim Teufel snapped a 4-4 tie
Grog Norman
72)1-14) lu o A m i
L in y Holton
Andy B«n
72 71-143
with a slxth-lnnlng pinch hit grand slam homer to
J o t Inman
Gil V o rg in
44 71-144
lead the Minnesota Twins to an 8-5 victory over the
Tom W ilto n
7221-144 Jim Thorp*
Houston Astros.
M a rt McCumbrr
Jim C oibrri
4*25-144

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22 20 J i t t
D t ll t i
21 B 40* I
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14 41 I f f I5'1
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Houtton
PtciHc Dtvntan
41 t t 721 Lot A n g ttri
17 » J I7 1
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Portland
S titt I#
U I f .547 lilt
Golden Stair
» » M l 214
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21 *1 i n 21't
■clinched pUyeH berth
F r ld tr ’I R rtv lh
N t * Jertey N. Botton t l
S r tltlr 127,1n d ltn t 111
M lH a u k tt 100. K m u s City 100
U lth 111. D t ll t t 110
Son Dirgo 120. Chlctgo t a i l o i l
S a ta rd iy'i O tm ri
Portland I t N t* York. 7:20 p m
P h iltd tip h it t l W tthinglon. I 05 p m

»;

A lltn lt i t O ttro ll, I 05 p m
Goidtn Stol* t&lt; S tn Antonio. I M p m
P h o tn lu lH o u tto n ,I l i p m
Chlctgo *■ Lot A n g tltt, 10:20 p m
S w d ty 'i G tm tt
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Clev* land * t M llw oukt*. o il
S tn D u g o it D t llt t . *11.

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NATIONAL IA IK E T 1 A L L A550C.
E t l l t r a C e n te r****
Atlantic Dtvltion
W L Pel. 0 1

SPHINB SPECTACULAR
FR EE attachm ent of your choice when you
purchase's Snapper t9”or21”mower.

'.v

Gel your choice ol a Mulchenzer Snapper i/er
ot Bag-N-Blade Kit FREE The Mulcheruet
chews up clippings and deposits them back
into Ihe lawn lo become lawn food The
Snapperuer can save you lime this Fall as
an efficient leal shredder Finally ihetes
V lhe convenience ol ihe Bag-N-Blade Kit
So this year enioy our eificienl 19 or
i 21 mower with your choice ol these
4excellent FREE attachments Visit
your SNAPPE R dealer today
‘AiiuguU&lt;i«ta4pc«t

/

M ULC M U VU M
hhja Va\**

S N A P M W X tn

ffl Jr r*rpi. • *»o.ts

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i P h iltd tip h it
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N t * Jertey
N r * York
W ith Ing ton
C m tr il Diettlon

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S a tttl*
M llnaukat

H ockey
9
NATIONAL HOCKEY L tA O U I
W tltl C t t lt r t t t t
Patrick DtvtUra
W t T PH. OF OA
i Philadelphia
44 17 1 M MS I t l
o N T lilm d e n
25 V 1} n 114 M l
a W nhlngtan
12 ti 14 K H I »
a NY* R tn g m
N P 1 1) K) IN
N r * J tr tty
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P lttiburgh
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A d im D M iH a
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■Buffalo .
■Quebec
Hartford

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24 74
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40 225

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41 I I 1
■ M /nn rto t*
21 I I I I 17 M2 140
SI Leuil
21 U 14 1* &gt;10 271
Toronto
21 24 12 54 147 MO
O ttro ll
I I U IS U 227 1H
ta iy lh o DhrMon
i Edmonton
40 20 I I I I 171 M l
C llg ir y
M 11 M 41 M2 M l
Vmcouvor
U 12 I I t l 242 211
Wlrmiptg
M 24 I M 257 M4
Lot A n g tltt
24 U I I 51 251 n r
■ (H ncktd pUyoN H rlfc
(T ip H ot In t ic k ih r h lM ( M lify H r
l l m l n Cop p l i y i l l l . )
F r i d i f t R*wH
Edmonton 2. N Y R in g o rt 1
S tH r d iy 'i O u n tt
P h .ltd tlp h ii I t Botton. I : I I p.m.
W tthinglon i l N Y. It lm d t n . 5 05

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pm.

1 I m
1 i m
1 t m

0*1land

I 2 -MO
I J) 250
I 1 -250

F rM iy 'l R n irtti
C incinnati». Phi la d tlpM a )
P im b u rg h L 5 IL o u 4 |4
M ln n tto la L Houtton 5
K an ta tC Ily L M a n tro iJ I
L o t A n g tltt I k Botlon 4
Chicago ( A L I20. N t * York IN L ) 5
Toronto 11, O ttro ll 7
San F ra n d u o II. San DW gol
MJHaukao 4. C ltvtla n d 2
S *a ttltL O i1 la n d 4
Chicago (NL) 1. California 0
A lla n i* 1. B lllim o rt 1
N t * York (A L 1 1. T t i t t 0
S ilv r d ir 'i G m tti
Lm A n g tltt v t Houtton at Cocoa.
Fla , l: M p m .
PMIadtlphia n P ltttburgh at B rtd tn
ton. Fla . I :M p.m.
N o * York (N LI v t SI. L ouli al SI.
P tttn b u rg . Fla., I 20 p m.
Botlon n M on lro tl al W ttl Palm
Baach. F la , l:) 0 p m.
Atlanta vt. T t u t at Pompano. F la ,
1:20pm
C lndnnall v t Toronlo al Dunodln. Fla..
IM p m .
K a n u i City w Chicago (AL I al
Sarawta. F la . 1 10 p m

72 71-141
7175-141
7471-147
74 71-147
7174-147
74 72-147
77 7S-U7
7) 71—1*7
7175-U7
77 71-141
7171-141
7» 71-141
7 1 7 1 -M

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a

5
^

TR A N SM ISSIO N TUNE-UP

88

NEW &amp; USED
REPAIRS

mclodtii Nt* tranimlMlin
bind* Alinkt«o dCloanHgoti
A (Croon • Labor

wm at
Fortlgn Or
Dtmtiltc

BUY-SELL-TRADE
■

• S m l d i- W r a m n

• Coll • Huger

8 3 1 -5 3 7 7

g H *25
r Off
■

• R r m ln p lo n

107 Pram!** Drtat
H MH tmt Of M Oa
Staii Raid WUepwO

■

e 5 b ]p *

» Jr

775 N. HWY. 17-92, CASSELBERRY
l* M IL E N O rY

8 3 0 -9 9 2 3

i

T H R U 5AARCH

C A LL FOR A P P O IN T M E N T
A VOm
ID
r im
COSTLY
REPAIR S

5
■

h

I

OF DOO TR A C K R O AD

S
NEW HOURS: MON -FRI 8«0-S:30SAr.M
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■BBBBBBBBI

r/JKHIGH tech \RADIALS

TMi

miPGoodrich

AUDI QUATTRO
or PORSCHE 944
GRAND PRIZE:
1983 A U D I Q U A TTR O

FIR S T PRIZE:
10 SECOND PRIZES:
JT A

HIGH TE C H ‘ RADLALS

C om e m and en lei today! No
p o rc h a ie n o r e s s o r y b u t y o u r n u i l
b e o l I r a i l IB yea r i cs id and have a
driver s h ce m e lo e n t e r .

B F G o o d ric ti/P O R S C H E + A U D I

B o ilo n tlD tn v tr .lp m .
Birm ingham i l Oakland. 4 p.m.
M M d o r'tG M M
W tthinglon i t Lm A n g t lt t . I p m .
S it a r 4 iy . M t r .il
O tllm d i l M tchtgm . ( p m
LM A fig tH t t l A rtM M . 1 :M p.m.
S tn d iy .M ir.M
O ra to r i t C hlragi. I M pJn .
T im p t S t y llN r a J lc ttT - l * P m
W tthingtan a t Bantan. 120 p m
M M M a y.M a r.ll
PhUadMpMa at llrm in g h a m . I p ra .

Baseball
Chicago
San F ra n ctK I
Si Laud
San Dloga
C ln d m a ii
P ithhurgh
A lla n i*

7271-144 F u lly Z o tilff
7074-144 O A W tibrtng
7174-145 Gary Koch
7075-145 And, North
7174-11) Tom JrnAlnt
7174-ltJ V . t t WCCuilough
7471-141 Tommy V lltfilin *
7571-141 Bill B ritlra
7175-14* Gary McCord
7571—tat David Graham
7274-141 C la rtn c t Rm*
7) 7)—1*4 Woody Blackburn
7175-141 Jim Oral

1983 PO RSC H E 944

UNITED STATES FOOTBALL LEAGUE
A tU a tk D M tH a
W L T Pci. PF PA
Philadelphia
1 • 1 1 too 12 7
Bmtan
1 1 1 o n 17 11
1 1 • HO 11 M
N r* Jm oy
7 M
W nhlngtan
• 1 1 JH
Control O r ttir a
7
1 1 1 to o t M
Chicago
1 1 1 1000 21 17
Tampa Bay
0 7
) e i 1J H
Michigan
Birm ingham
1 1 1 004 1 0
PacIHc OrrikHn
1 i • I J U 24 •
Oakland
1 i • 1jo t a IS
L a t A ngitat
O ra v tr
1 i i .OH i 12
a i i JOO 0 14
Arliona
S tH r d iy 'i (H m ot
M /chigm i t T tm p i S ty . 7:20pm
C hicigo i t A ction*. 1 p m.
G llllt t
N t * J m t y #1 P hiU dH phii. I M p m

M onlrtal

2588 ELM. AVE.

N r * York
T r im
K a n in City

w L Pet.
5 01000
2 01.000
750
2
2 ./*
7J0
2
f
.571
2 407
2 2 400

"I made quite a few putts on the front,
but on the back side, I Just started
three-putting," said Nlcolettc. whose
best finish was a second at last year's
Doral Open. "The greens started getting
hard and crusty nnd the wind started to
pick up. Instead of being bold with my
stroke, I started to back off and that
didn't help matters.
"I hit the ball very well. Had I putted
well on the back side, who knows what I
could have shot."
Glider enjoyed a steady round of three
birdies and three bogeys.
"It was cold out there." said Gilder.
"It's a mental test of your patience. I’m
overjoyed with a 71."
Tournament host Arnold Palmer, who
owns the Bay Hill course, suffered
through the worst round of his career,
shooting an 85’and missing the cut.
Defending champion Tom Kite also
missed the cut. carding a 77 for a
two-round total of 153. A total of 74
players, who stand at 152 or better,
survived the cut.

D U N -R IT E T R A N S M I S S I O N
F U L L S E R V IC E AUTO R EPA IR
OPEN SATURDAYS

• HANDGUNS
• RIFLES
• ACCESSORIES

USFL

Njti—il I itpvt

A? PANTICIPATING DEALERS

CalItor n it
Ottroll

0 1 000
0 2 .000
0 2 000

M m n o to ll I I Outhoc. 7; 25 p m.
P ittib u rg h itH irH o rd .7 U p m
B u h iio i f V m c s w tr. • IS p.m.
N t * J i r t t y Pi M o n lm l. 105 p.m
N Y. R m g tn i t C llg iry , I lS p m.
C M c tg o llT o ro n to .I U p m.
O ttro ll *1 SI Lowit, 1 05 p.m.
S o a d iftO ia o t
Srnlon i t W tthinglon
Toronto llO o h o i I
B ir f lilo ti Edmonton
Chicago i l P ithburgh
W inniptg i t L o t A n g tltt

■ AO-N-SA. A D C H IT

OFFER ENDS SOON

SANFORD SAW AND MOWER

Hout Ion
P h iltd tip h it
N t * York
Am erica* lu g * *

S *4 t1 l**tK *n v « C lty .*l1
U lih t t Denver, l i t
P ortltn d i l N t * Jertey
O ttro ll t i l n d ltn t
W nhlngtan i t P h iltd tip h it

E ik lM tH a B a tik * II

vtL*■■
S M .S 5

SI range's 69 — Nlcolettc birdlcd five
holes on the front nine.
He stood at 8-under for the tourna­
ment at one pofnt and held a comman­
ding 7-stroke lead. But he struggled on
the back nine and drew closer to the
pack.

■■■■■■■■■■f y T T T m N N W
^
PRfttNT COUPONAT TIME OF t*LI

R e b e l

&lt;1-7 1)114 21
E ig h th r t c a — J / l t . B : ) l : »
2 H u k k e r C oal
20 tO 15 10 4 60
I P ro m lM A P o r tlt
0 1 0 4 00
1 B a il A c l r m
2 to
Q ( I t ) M . M l P (1 1 ) I2 7 .H ; T
( 1 + 1 ) S M .M
N in th r a r a — *», A t M /1 7
IB Iu a F Ira c t
IN
1 M 2 .H
2 I ’m C u re d
I N 140

Pro Q olf

H o w e ll H o p e s R ig h t M e a n s
M ig h t In Y a n k e e s ' R o ta tio n

SCORECARD
Dog R acing

Sunday, M a rc h 13, 1M3—f A

L Pci

1 Ml
2 500
1 500

I 500
I SCO
I 500
1 500

I 100
5 2M

1983SW EEPSTAKES

NIGHTLY 7*30
MATINEES

Belted ior strength
(toughness! BELTED T /A 70

An Imfnmiv* CombinationOf
TechnicalExpertiseAndAdvancedDetxjn

MON.-WED.-SAT.

1:00 P.M.
•
FLAY TMI1XCITINO

H

PICK-SIX

WINNER SIX IN
A ROW AND
WIN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS
•
ALL NEW CASHSELL MACHINES
•
TEIFECTAOM
IVEEY EACE
•
THUESDAYALLLADIES
ADMITTED FE BE I

/flHFORDOMPODO
KBYELOJUB
N. a ll

BFG oodrich Belted T/A' 70
On Price

/XT.
1.99

205/70815

74.95
81.95

2.48

225/70815

98.95

2.88

Sue
I75/70RI3

b i/ p

185/70813
205/70814
225/70815

O u t P ite r

39.95
45.95
49.95

FET

1.70
2.23
2.81

» Deep awrr-ii/v* Head lot excellent traction —
wet at dry
• Two liberylast belts lot strength and handling
• Stylish railed white letters lor high performance
hob

A O K T IR E M A R T
HOURS

• f

MON.

THRU

FRI. 8 - 5 : 3 0

SAT.

8-3:00

PHONE 322-7480

• H N w i IT U I

MStmTIORS-llHMQ
Sarry, EaOh IMa II

2 4 1 3

S .

■

F R E N C H

A V E .

S A N F O

R

D ^

�IQ A - E v tn ln fl H t r ild , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, M arch I I , m l

State OK Sought For Lake Mary High Stadium Plans

V.*
_
Claris for a $200,000 stadium at Lake Mary High 'ockerrooms, has not been considered yet.
School have been sent to state Department of Education
The School Board also approved the advertising of
officials In Tallahassee for approval.
bids for an auctioneer to hold a public sale of surplus
Seminole County School Board members approved the school board property. Purchasing Director Don Col­
plans this past week and forwarded them to the state eman said he had been working with a DeLand
office.
auctioneer In preparation for an April 16 public sale.
The 3.000-scat stadium will be funded by contribu­
Coleman said auctioneer Lou DeLarco approached
tions from the school's booster club and private him about auctioning off surplus property rather than
businesses and Is the second part of a three-phase putting price tags on merchanldsc. At an auction, higher
building program at the school. The first phase, prices might be gotten for some Items. Coleman said.
construction of a concession stand, already has been
He said the auctioneer would receive a fee of 15 to 20
approved. The final phase, offices, storage space and percent of the sales but not more than $3,000.

But board member Nancy Warren said she was
disturbed that no advertising was done to get proposals
from other auctioneers.
Board member William Kroll agreed. *’Wc should
advertise even If It means moving it back. Most of that
stuff has been sitting there for several months already."
No new date has been set for the auction.
Board Attorney Ned Julian said a surveyor has
completed work at Lyman High School. The survey
showed a sag o f 10 Inches in some of the beams In the
school gym's roof.
Portions of the roof gave way Feb. 13. letting water

Office Space At Issue

Wheelchair
Service For
County OK'd

Where Will
County Grow?

By MlchealBeha
Herald Staff Writer
Florida Wheelchair Transportation. Inc., of
Orlando has been granted a franchise to
transport whccichalr-bound Seminole County
residents.
Seminole County commissioners granted
the franchise this past week to allow the firm
to provide non-emergency transportation.
The sendee will provide transportation for
wheelchair-bound people at a base rate of S 10
plus $1 per mile, according to Grady
Strawdcr. president of the Orlando-based
firm.
"W e don't have one." said Bruce Fowle
who Is confined to a wheelchair and cannot
drive because he suffers seizures. "The only
thing we have Is Herndon's and they charge a
much higher rate."
Fowler’s wife, Virginia, said she Is often not
available lo take her husband shopping or to
the doctor's office. " I f this sendee Is available
It will be a great sendee to people like Bruce
and 1." she said.
Strawder said the company will provide
sendee 24 hours a day. However, sendee
between 10 p.m. and 5 a m. will cost an
additional $10. Herndon charges a minimum
of $40 for non-emergency wheelchair scnlcc.
Herndon President fdus Willis said the
sendee wdll not affect his company and he
welcomes the new firm.
The county got responsibility for franchis­
ing ambulances In October. Previously, the
state had been responsible for franchising
non-emergency and wheelchair ambulance
sendee

Seminole County Commissioner Sandra Glenn wheeled through the
Seminole County Courthouse as part of B arrier Awareness Day.

You do.
"Thank you." the car
says politely.
These were Just two of
many new and future
safety features described
Friday by auto Industry

of f i c i al s t e s t i f y i n g at
S e n a t e h e a r i n g s on
highway safety.
H ow ard K e h rl, v i c e
chai rman of General
Motors, told o f his comp a iy's research into how

to detect drunken drivers
before they hit the road.
General Motors, he said,
is taking advantage of a
device developed by NASA
and known as the "Critical
T r a c k i n g T a s k " as a

AREA DEATHS
MRS. ALICE P. STERN
Mrs. Alice F. Stern. 80.
o f 718 O sceola Drive.
Sanford, died Friday at her
home. Born Feb. 8. 1903.
in Barnesvlllc. Ga.. she
moved to Sanford from
Lake Wales in 1981. She
was a homemaker and a
member of the First Bap­
tist Church of Sanford.
S u r v iv o r s in clu d e a
daughter. Mrs. Glenyce
Mann o f Sanford; two sis­
ters. Mrs. Gladys Mann, of
D e B a r y . Mrs. G r a c e
Williams, o f Thomasvllle.

Ga.; a brother. Robert
F ran klin , of South
Car ol i na; tour g r a n d ­
children.
G ram kow Funeral
H om e. Sanf or d, is in
charge of arrangements.

MRS. LILLIAN K. WARD
Mrs.Lllllan K. Ward. 71.
of 688 Lake Villas Drive.
Altamonte Springs, died
Friday at the Winter Park
Care Center. Bom March
11. 1911. In Cologne.
Germany, she moved to
Altamonte Springs from

Greensboro, N.C., In 1954.
She was a homemaker and
was Jewish. She was a
member of Temple Israel
and the Sisterhood.
Survivors Incudc her
husband. Robert M.; two
sons. .H arvey Allen, of
Atlanta, and Robert C.. of
H u n t s v i l l e . A l a . ; si x
grandchildren: and one
great-grandson.
Baldwin-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

THOMAS S. HOWARD
Thomas Stephen How­
ard. 44. of 606 Martin
Ave.. Altamonte Springs,
died Thursday at Orlando
General Hospital. Born
M a y 1 1 . 1 9 3 8 , In
Bethlehem. Pa., he moved
to Altamonte Springs from
Germany In 1978. He wa3
a logistics engineer and a
Catholic.
Survivors Include his
wife, Bemadine; two Bons.
Thomas Jr. and Steven
Patrick; a daughter. Jen­
nifer Marie, all of Alta­
monte Springs.
Baldwin-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is in charge o f
arrangements.

WILLIAM J.
OLENDENINO
William Joseph Glend e n l n g . 39. of 200
G ran d view Place.
Longwood, died Wednes­
day In Venezuela. Born
D e c . 18, 1 9 4 3 . In

I VETERANSj

☆

*
*
*

*

Revised booklet of Veteran benefits recently published by the
Veterans Administration now available to honorary discharged
Veterans at no cost.

*
ns

*
*
*
*

mi m

H Ii :

.

OAKLAWN’S VETERANS DIVISION
Route 4, Box 244
Sanford, Florida 32771
Name ____________________ ___
Address______________________
City________________

Ph.

State

!For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1,1955 Q
IFor Veterans with military service since Jan. 31,1955 Q ]
Year of Discharge__________________ A g e______
Type of Discharge__________________ __________

* •

How’s Your
Hearing?
Chicago, III.—A free offer of
special Interest to those who
hear but do not understand
words has been announced
by Beltone. A non-operating
model of one of the smallest
Beltone aids o f Its kind will
be given absolulely free to
anyone requesting It.
It's yours for the asking,
so send for it now. It Is not
a real hearing aid, but It will
show you how tiny hearing
help can be. The actual aid
weighs less than a fourth of
an ounce, and It's all at ear
level, tr. one unit.
These models are free, so
we suggest you write for
yours now. Again, we
repeat, there is no cost, and
certainly no obligation. All
hearing problems are not
alike and some cannot be
helped by a hearing aid but
many can. Thousands have
already been mailed, so
write today to Dept. 50905,
Beltone Electronics Corp..
4201 W. Victoria St..
Chicago. Illinois 60646.

Naracalbo. Venezuela, he
moved to New York and
back to Ve ne z ue l a In
1974. He commuted regu­
larly to longwood from
there. He was an oil execu­
tive and a Catholic.
Survivors Include his
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William S. Glcndenlng of
L o n g w o o d : a sister.
Audrey, of New York; two
brothers, Sherman and
R ichard, both o f New
York.
Baldwin-Falrchlld
Funeral Home, Altamonte
Springs, is In charge of
arrangements.

But either of those plans would delay
the plan to move out of the courthouse
unless alternative temporary office space
can be found.
"A solution lo the longstanding pro­
blem of Inadequate courthouse facilities
may not promptly be forthcoming."
Davis said. "There Is substantial data
within the public record of Seminole
County regarding the problem of Inade­
quate judicial space."
County Attorney Nikki Clayton said
the order may be a prelude to a lawsuit
from the Judges. State Attorney Douglas
Cheshire has also threatened to flic suit
against the county If his office Is moved
lo the County Sendees Building, a block
from the courthouse. A suit filed by
Public Defender J.R. Russo was dropped
late last year when that office was placed
in the first floor of Sanford City Hall.
Ms. Clayton said Davis has a conflict
of Interest in the case since he would Ih*
one of the recipients of new office space
when the county finally completes Its
plans. She added that the order was
filed without giving the county notice
and scheduling a hearing to give the
county an opportunity to Impose Its own
order.
But the records on office space are
open. Commissioner Sandra Glenn said,
and Roscnbluth has access to them Just
as any other private citizen has.
A work session on the various space
issues Is slated March 22.

Seminole County's circuit and county
Judges have sent another volley at the
Seminole County Commission In an
ongoing dispute between the two groups
over office space.
This past week. Chief Circuit Court
Judge S. Joseph Davis Issued an ad­
ministrative order instructing commis­
sioners and Circuit Court Clerk Art
Bcckwdth not to destroy documents
concerning the county's plans for new
ofllccs.
The Judge also ordered that the
records be made available to Emery H.
Roscnbluth. the Orlando attorney hired
by the Judges lo expedite adoption of
plans to provide more space for the
judiciary in the courthouse.
Commissioners had declared their
Intention to move Into the old Seminole
Memorial Hospital building In Sanford,
freeing up the courthouse for use by the
judges and other court-related offices.
But this past week commissioners
voted to explore other alternatives,
including the hiring of a private com­
pany to build a new office building at the
county's Five Points complex. That plan,
proposed by Com m issioner Robert
Sturm, would have the private firm
construct an office building and the
county would then pay for It over 30
years.
Sanford city commissioners have also
gotten into the act. offering to construct
a building downtown to keep the county
offices downtown.

Cars Of Tomorrow Will Be Smarter, And Safer Than You?

uses — literally — to start.
By Elm er Lamml
Or you forget to fasten
WASHINGTON (UPtl Maybe you've had a few your seatbelt. No buzzer.
drinks too many and get No flashing lights.
Instead, your car talks.
Into your car lo drive
"Please fasten your scat
home.
Surprise! The car ref­ bell."

_ttii* ffirm dnnrllnrl #1
from heavy rains cascade Into the gym, flooding the
i0dor
*
In a personnel matter, Robert Lundrpdst was named
as dean of students at Seminole High School, replacing
Jacqullnc Pearson who was placed on unpaid leave last
month.
Mrs. Pearson was given a deferred sentence Feb. 22 for
shoplifting $10.73 worth of goods from a local store. As
part of her agreement, she received a leave of absence
from herjob.
Terry Woods was hired lo replace Lundquist as a
math teacher at Seminole.— Micheal Beha

means of providing a so­
briety test.
" I f a driver falls the trsl.
the car Is designed so II
w ill not start, or will
operate only at low speeds
or trigger an alarm system
to alert oilier drivers and
enforcement officials." he
said.
The tattle-talc device "Is
not for everybody." Kehrl
said, but has been turned
o v e r to the Na t i o n a l
Highway Traffic Safety
Administration for fieldtesting In Los Angeles
with drivers twice con­
victed of drunken driving.
The talking car already
is a v a i l a b l e , s a i d
C h ris to p h e r Ke nne dy .
Washington lobbyist for
Chrysler Corp.

— MlchealBeha

(r

D IA M O N D S
BY THE CARAT WEIGHT FROM

F R IE D M A N 'S
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YOUR PERSONAL CHARGE ACCOUNT INVITED

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F R I E D M A N ’S

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H u n t M o n u m e n t Co.

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Display Yard

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OPEN SUN D AYS 1 2 :1 0 -1 1 0
M O N .-S A T . tO l o t
S AN FO R D P LA ZA

Hwy. li-ti -F ern Park

Ph. 2JM M I

131-4070

G«rv* Hunt, Ownor
Brenie, MarfaIt ft Oranltt.

I llu ii rat ton* hrt Urged T o Show Detail

QuftntiimLimited-Quantity Right* Krvrtrd

Funeral Notice
ITERN.MRI. ALICE F.
— F u r w n l M r v l c t t to r M r l A lic e
F . S te rn, M , o f 711 O tc o o lo D r lv t ,

Sanford, who dftd Frlttey. will b«

a t 10 a m M o n d a y a t G ra m k o w
F u n a ra l H o m t ch a p a l w ith the
R t v . J . E . M u r r a y o f f ic ia t in g
F r la n d t m a y v is it th a fa m ily 1 S
p .m . S unday a t th a lu n a ra l h o rn *
B u r ia l w ill fo llo w In L a k a W a l* t
C a m a ta ry . G ra m k o w F u n a ra l
H o m a . San lo rd . In ch a rg e .

ASK
DR. SHARP
Q. u n nw that» roomnuri iui
ihocus out u* it mi utu

A L L IN S U R A N C E A C C E PT ED
FO R E X T E N S IV E
H E A L T H -C A R E T R E A T M E N T S
W IT H O U T A N Y C O S T
TO Y O U - E V E R !
(M edicare, Workmans Comp., P .I.P ., Personal, Group)

No co-insurance will be collected EVERI
No deductibles will be collected EVER!
Absolutely no out-of-pocket expenses to you EVER!

A. Given list ac(ion. it cm be
done. If the entire tooth-baby
or peimment-is intict and gets
a quick tup to the denfist, it cm
1 " put Kick m its socket.
Replaced promptly, it ha$ a good
chance of settling back in place
while the gums heal and re­
embrace it.
When the knpek-out happens,
put the tooth in a glass of water
me wit____
to Z hours after knock-out. me
sooner it's done the better
chance ol reestablishing the
tooth._____
Sincer____an
this is ------emergen­
*
cy situation, it rates a call to the
dentist at any time, even over
weekends « at odd hours. If
he/she can't he reached, the
local hospital emergency room
may have someone on call.
PttSHfflD AS A SERVICE
10 THE GOHMUIIIfT
IT KBIT M. SHARP D.M.O.
US «tn UU Nvr IM.
UU Mar,
PH. 12) Kt)
Oi 1)44414

DANGER SIGNALS OF
PINCHED NERVES:
1. Headache, dlnlness, blurred vision
2. Neck pain, tight muscles, spasms
1 Shou'der pain, pain down arms, numbness In
hands
4. Pain between shoulders, difficult breathing,
abdominal pain
5. Lower bade pain, hip pain, pain down legs

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2017

French

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Physician
A ve.,

PLEASE CALL FOR A N A P P O I N T M E N T

Sanford

3 2 3 * 5 7 6 3

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

Sunday, M a rc h 13, m 3 - 1 B

'It's d a rk a n d th e re's no
p la c e to g o . N o b o d y w ants
you. Even y o u r fa m ily
d o esn 't w a n t you. W h at
happens to w o m en lik e

bother

that?'&lt; asks Lucille C lone.
A re s id e n t o f The C o ttag e
s a y s ,'W e 're s ick ,n o t b a d .'

Administrator Lucille Clone comforts a woman having a crisis

C o tta g e
Halfway House For Women Alcoholics Needs Help
By Lori Drew
Special To The Herald
A green cottage sits alongside U.S. Highway
17-92 In Casselberry. No sign marks It as dllTcrcnt
from any other home In the area. So why should its
residents be marked as "different" from others In
the community?
Inside the two-bedroom rental house, the color
console television is in need of repair, Inn the six
residents who watch it seem oblivious to the
chatter of the actors. They are engrossed In each
other's conversation. They are friends, trying so
desperately to come down from the stage where
they have acted us average wife, mother or career
woman, when in reality, they were running head
on Into one of the nation's most common diseases
— alcoholism.
At The Cottage, these few women are on the road
to recovery, and on this two-way street where the
experienced give so others can gain, all are at least
halfway there.
The Cottage is a halfway house for female
alcoholics who. as the administrator there puis It.
"have nowhere else to go. Think about It — you're
a woman walking the street. It’s dark and there's
no place to go. Nutxtdy wants you. Even vnur

family doesn't want you. What happens to women
like that?"
Lucille Clone, registered nurse, clinician and
administrator of The Cottage, has seen what could
happen to women like that. Fortunately, her
experience of working with alcoholics, which
began in the 1950s as a U.S. Army nurse, has led
Iter to the project of the halfway house exlusivcly
for female clients.
She received the OK from her superiors at the
Seminole County Mental Health Center. Inc., and
The Cottage was opened in July of last year, meant
for helping female alcoholics In the tri-county area
readjust to living and working In society.
"Since we opened in mid-July." explained Helen
Crawford, alcohol therapist at the house, "w e've
had about 15 women through here. I can't recall
anyone coming In whom we haven't accepted. But
they haven't all made it."
Six women from various parts of Seminole.
Orange and Osceola Counties are still trying to
make it at The Cottage. "In the two-bedroom
house, one woman sleeps on the couch." said Ms.
Crawford, one of six staff members who work
together at both The Cottage and The Crossroads
— a halfway house In Sanford for male alcoholics.

"W e feci pretty strongly about not having the
houses co-ed," said the therapist who has worked
in the mental health field for 10 years and with
alcoholics for four. "Women need role models, and
we encourage them to develop female rela­
tionships. They arc encouraged not to become
emotionally Involved. It takes all their strength to
stay sober." Furthermore. Ms. Clone stressed her
opinion. "Women will always relate to men in a
sexual way because that's the only way they know
how. Women need to relate to other women on
female Issues."
"Accepting an alcoholic is hard." said one of the
early Cottage residents. "Even In families, we’re
put on a pedestal and not allowed to fall off." she
said about women In general. "It's strange." added
Ms. Crawford, "when a man gets intoxicated,
people Just go. 'Ha ha.* But women are thought of
as promiscuous — erroneously So."
During this battle against the stereotypes society
places on alcoholic women, they are fighting
spouses as well. "It's a fact." the therapist
continued, "that one alcoholic woman in 10's
husband will stay, whereas one woman in 10 will
leave an alcoholic husband."
Each day, the six undergo therapy at The

Therapist Helen Crawford chats with alcononc
who needs a friend.
Cottage. "I try to spend an hour with them." said
Ms. Crawford. "Sometimes it’s a 15- to 20-minute
chat If things are going well. We're dealing with
people who can get out and cam a living."
In most cases, the women are referred to the
center by the area’s detoxification unit or 28-day
program, according to Ms. Clone. "Our main detox
unit is MACO (Metropolitan Alcohol Council of
Orlando), a state-funded operation. We also get
women from Avon Park, which has a 28-day
program as well as MACO." She added that MACO
is part of a comprehensive alcohol treatment to the
tri -county area.
According to Ms. Crawford, the first step to
recovery for most of these alcoholics Is a detox
unit. There, they spend live to 10 days dealing
with overcoming the physical problems associated
with drinking.
"Then 1 like to use the 2H-day treatment," she

SMCA Presents Pianist
Pianist Janice Weber
will present the fourth
concert for members and
patrons o f the Seminole
Mutual Concert Associa­
tion at 8 p.m. Monday,
March 14 at Lake Mary
High School.

|
jk'** , l
w* 'w
,rrR
*

Miss Weber, who made
her orchestral debut at age
12 in New York's Town
Hall, has since performed
with such orchestras as
the New Jersey S y m ­
phony. the Chaulaugua
Symphony, the Bergen
Philharmonic, the North
Jersey Symphony and the
Boston Pops Orchestra.

M ary Green shows winning plaque made bv her sister,Linda Herndon

Ceramics
Winners

Tam m y Green Is all smiles over her winning doggie

Linda Herndon, 2004
Lake Avc. Sanford, and
her niece. Tammy Green.
8. a third grade student at
Sout hsi de El e me nt ar y
School and daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronni e
Grcen.2447 Sanford Avc.,
each placed third in their,
categories in the Florida
Ccwramics Show In Or­
lando. The annual event
uttracts ccramllcs buffs
from across the nation.
Mrs. Herndon took the
third place award In the
undcrglazed category. Her
entry was a wall plaque
depicting a Victorian set­
ting from a calendar.
"Competition was un­
real."she said."! feel really
good about winning even
third place. It was all good
work and I was up against
some excellent competi­
tion.**
Tammy has been into
ceramics since she was 5.
She won a ribbon for a dog
in the stained category,
ages 6-9.

A summa cum laude
g r a d u a t e o f Ea s t ma n
School o f Music. Miss
W eber presented frobt
memory the entire Well
Tempered Clavier Book I
during her sophom ore
year. ,
This season Miss Weber
w i l l be m a k i n g h e r
Chi cago debut in the
Dame Myra Hess concert
scries. She has recorded
an album of music by

Janice Weber made orchestral debut at age 12.
currently
egl ect cd

k e y b o a r d wo r k s wi t h -those of Swiss composer
particular emphasis on Emile Blanche!.

Pilot Club Scholarship Awards
The Pilot Club of Sanford presented vocational
scholarship awards at a recent meeting of the
Pilot Club and Anchor Club. In left photo, M ary Jo
Cochran, presents checks to Joan Buchanan, left,
and Judy Jones. The following day, Retha Nellis,

center, right photo, rei
Seminole Community Coll
ness classroom while Joa
Jones look on.

�3B —E vening H erald, Sanford, FI.
it

Sunday, M arch 13, m 3

In And Around Lake Mary

Engagements

Welcome Newcomers

Prude n -Brakeman
•
‘
l(

I

!

Cmdr. (USN.ret) and Mrs. Nell S. Pruden. 2200 E
Celery Avc. Sanford, announce the engagement of
their dnughtcr. Lori Sue. to Richard Craig
Brakeman. son of , son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Charles Brakeman. Branch. Mich.
Born In Orlando, the bride-elect is the maternal
granddaughter of Mrs. Loyd Brake. Sunbury, Ohio.
The bride-elect is a L977 graduate o f Seminole
High School where she was a member of National
Junior Honor Society, National Honor Society,
Kcycttes. and treasurer of Mu Alpha Theta, a math
honor society. She attended University of Central
Florida for two years and was graduated from
Humber College o f Applied Arts and Technology,
Toronto. Ontario In 1980 with honors In Equine
Studies.
Miss Pruden has made outstanding
accomplishments as an equestrian.
Her fiance, born In Kalamazoo. Mich., is a 1976
graduate of Portage Central High School. Portage.
Mich., where he was senior class president and the
recipient of the Fletcher Award (citlizcn-scholar
athlete).He was also captain of the swim team and
Student Council president in his Junior year. Mr.
Brakeman Is a 1980 gaduatc of Florida State
University where he was vice president of Pi Kappa
Alpha. He Is a veterinary student at the University
of Florida where he will graduate in 1984.
The wedding will be an event of April 30. at 6.30
p.m., at the First United Methodist Church.
Sanford.

Lake Mary has some newcomers
to the area. Naomi Wallace was
sworn In as Lake M ary’s new
postmaster at a ceremony held at
the post ofnee on March 1.
Naomi, past president o f Ihc
National League o f Postmasters,
currently a representative Inth state
legislative o f the league, says she is
excited about the challenge of being
Lake Mary's postmaster.
Included In the many nonorco
guests at the ceremony were: Mayor
Walter Sorenson, city commission­
ers Ray Fox and Russel Mcgonegal
with wife. Lillian, city manager
Philip Kulbcs. chamber of com­
merce president Dick Fcss, DcLores
Lash. Ci n d y Br o wn. Barbara
Gonnun, John Nor’den, Bob Ball,
Maty Terry. Barbara Warman and
Virglnlu Anderson, a former Lake
Mary postmaster.
Two beautiful cakes, frosted with
the post offlcc'9 red. while and blue
eagle Insignia were baked by post
ofnee employee Barbara Sherman
and husband. David. The cakes
along with punch, chips and nuts
were served lo the guests.

Lor) Sue Pruden,
Richard C. Brakeman

Buie-Piloian

Other newcomers to the area arc
the Rev. Jakie Nix. Ills wife, Har­
riett, and 2 -ycar-old daughter
Elisha. Rev. Nix has taken the
parsonage o f the Lakevlcw Baptist
Church.

Mr. and Mrs. William Buie of Umatilla, announce
the engagement of their daughter. Betsy Anne, to
Marc John Pllolan. son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Pllofan o f Longwood.
Born in Elmhurst. N.Y.. the bride-elect Is a 1979
grauatc o f Umatilla High School where she was a
member of the marching band. She will graduate
In May with a B.S. degree in nursing from
Vanderbilt University where she Is a member of
the marching band.
Her fiance, born In Sanford, is the maternal
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. John W. McKinnon.
Oviedo, and the paternal grandson of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Bedros Pllolan. Longwood.
Mr. Pllolan 'is a 1976 graduate of Lyman High
School Longwood. where he was a member of the
National Honor Society and the marching band. He
was graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1980
and was a member of the marching band there. He
is employed as a chemical engineer with the
Tennessee Valiev Authority. Knoxville.
The wedding will be an event of May 28. at 6
p.m.. at Community United Methodist Church.
Casselberry.

Rev. Ni x Is or i gi nal l y 'from
Balmbrldge. Ga.and lived In Or­
lando about eight years ago. At thal
time he felt a calling from God to
become a minister. He moved to Ft.
Worth. Texas where he attended the
South Western Theological Semi­
nary and attended the Blrchwood
Baptist Church where he later met
Harriett, an art teacher. In February
Jakie was oiJained a minister. This
will be their first church parsonage.
The Lake Mary Extension Home­
makers had an Informative meeting
on March 8. Police Chief Harrv

The Heart o f Florida
African Violet Society will
hold its Second Annual
African Violet Show and
Plant Sale March 19 and
20 at the Greater Sanford
Chamber o f Commerce
building. 400 E. First St.

High-Stepping Gaynor
Gives M arriage A Lift
when she comes over to
my house. Right away she
starts looking in my cup­
board: and closets. And
even my drawers!
I told her I didn't like It,
but she doesn't listen lo
me. Now I am thinking
maybe 1 should tell her
securities and uncertain­ that If she doesn't stop
ties about marriage are the inspecting my house she
same In Chicago, Houston, can't come over anymore.,
New York and San Fran­ but she is one of my best
cisco.
friends and I feel that It
The song says. "Woman would be hard for me to
needs a man and man tell her this.
must have his mate” —
CONFUSED (AGE 10)
well, girls, work at It! A lot
DEAR CONFUSED: You
o f marriages break up have a decision to make.
because people gel bored. I You can tell your friend
say. "Girls, get more In­ that if she wants to con­
t e r e s t e d In p a r l o r ,
tinue lo come to your
bedroom and bat 111" Love.
house, she will have to
M ITZI G AYNO R (BEAN) st op l o o k i n g In y o u r
DEAR M ITZI: With all closets, cupboards and
the letters I get from losers drawers. And If she docs it
in the marriage game, how anyway, stick to your
refreshing to hear from a w o r d a n d e n d y o u r
winner! Your letter made friendship.
my day.
Or. let her do as she
pleases and put up with It.
DEAR ABBY: I have a If you learn at age 10 how
neighbor who is very nosy to prevent people from
pushing you around and
taking advantage ol you.
you will have learned a
valuable lesson that some
people never learn. You
are within your rights to
demand privacy. Don’ t be
a softie.

D ear
A bby

DRY CLEANING

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I'll .120-3.115

just passed away, and I
was wondering If I’m a
widow now. or am I Jusl a
divorcee?
This Is very important to
me. My husband’s wife Is
still living If that makes a
difference.
D A LLA S
DEAR D A L L A S : You
are a divorcee. The woman
who was married to your
ex-husband at the the time
of his death Is Ills widow.
If you pul off writing
letters because you don't
know what to say. send for
Abby's compleie booklet
on letter-writing. Send $2
and a long, stamped 137
c e n t s ) , sel f -a dd r es se d
envelope to Abby. Letter
Booklet. P.O. Box 38923,
Hollywood. Calif. 90038

A c c o r d i n g to J e a n
Norris, the show theme Is
"Around the World with
African Violcts.’ T h e show
Is open to the public on
Saturday, 12 lo 5.30 p.m.,
and Sunday, 12.30 to 5
p.m.

'm iliixl

Invited are women from the
Seminole County area, as well as
members from other organizations.
You do not have to be a member of
Ihc Extcntlon Homemakers Club to
attend. They are Imping for a large
turnout. This meeting will start at
9:30 a.m. in the auditorium ol the
A g r i c u l t u r a l C e n t e r on U .S.
Highway 17-92.

Oilier business conducted during
the last weeks was to elect new
officers who will be Installed In
June. Dr. Bobby Sharp was elected
as president and David Mealor,
vice-president.
The club is also In the process of
designating one of the members as a
"Paul Harris Fellow," the highest
honor paid to a Rotarian.
|

Residents ol the Forest will cele­
brate St. Patrick’s Day with a
catered dinner on March 13. The
theme will lx- "Pot O’ Gold" and the
dinner will consist ol corned bee/
and cabbage.
J
The planning committee. Vera
and Kcrinlt Arnold. Jean anq
George Glenzlngcr. Marion and Bob
Muslcve, Jeanne and Herb Potter
and Betty and Wayne Thompson
have lined up live entertainment
and will handle the decoratingDinner starts at 2 p.m. In the
Starllte Room.
•

The Lake Mary Woman's Club
has announced plans to take a trip
to Tallahassee on April 28. Included
In the trip will be a six-hour lour of
the capital. They are planning lo
stay overhlght and spend two days
taking in the sights.

•

Not to lx- outdone, the Keenagers
Club at the Forest has planned a;
special St Patrick's Day celebration
ol their own. According to vice-,
president Ronald l.ullnskl. the
evening of March 14 will begin
festivities with the recreation of the!
legendary "Blarney Stone,” and an
old fashioned Irish slng-a-long with
music provided by the Forest Band.

The cost of the trip Is S I00 which
Includes bus fare, hotel accom­
modations. breakfast and dinner.
The trip Is open lo the residents ol
the Lake Mary area as well as their
guest. For Information contact
Helen Glatt at 323*9449.

The theme ol the evening (you
guessed It) Is "A Little Hit Of
Ireland." The Keenagers will meet
at 7:30 p.m In the Starllte Room.

The Lake Mary Rotary Club h a s
been doing some nice things in the
community during the I a s i few
weeks. The club raised $750 at their
recent flea market and this money
along with other available funds,
was put to good use as follows; $250

g r o w e r s wh o are not
members of the HFAVS to
exhib it their violet
p l a n t s . E x h i b i t o r s are
limited to three plants.
Entries can be made on
Friday. March 18. between
3 and 7 p. m. at the
chamber.
Mrs. Evelyn Briggs Is
chairman and Mrs. Wanda
Ross, co-chairman. For
Information call 322-1409.
322-3976 or 323-8969.

Other Forest News Is that the
monthly potluck dinner is set for
March 17. at 0:30 p.m. In the
Starllte Room. This Is a "bring your
ow n" eating utensils and a covered
dish.

Mrs. Norris says an African Vtotcl and Episrtn

plain sale will also be held
during (be show hours

SPECIAL
p

a

p

y

a

s is
LONG HAIR EXTRA

^CAROLJOHNiOlT

3 2 3 *8 9 5 0

503 FRENCH AVE

SANFORD

Card Party
Sanford Garden Club Is
sponsoring a card party on
March 17. from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m.
The party Is open to the
general public and players
should bring their own
cards. T he y may play
bridge, canasta, cribbage,
pinochle, scrabble or the
card game of their choice.
Tickets are $3 and In­
clude luncheon. For reser­
vations call 323-7324 or
322*3062 by March 14.

p it

PRESENTS

...A P O R T R A I T

in Living Color

ONIY$9-95

C u tc h th e f e v e r
O f S ir r in g I n G o
E v e ry w h e re
C o lo r f u l
C o - o r d in a t e s
B y K o rc t O f
C a lif o r n ia ,
S k ir ls ,
S la c k s ,
Tops-

■A Sprite|y
( o livet I o n ,
R e u s o n u b ly
P r ic e d A t . . .

G roups $ 1,00 E x tra Per Person

DATES

If the wedding must be
scheduled In the morning
In order to ensure the
sobriety of the groom, the
marriage Is in trouble from
the first "I do."
D E A R A B B Y : I was
married for 28 years, than
1got a divorce. He married
again but I never did. He

Benson gave an cnllghtnlng talk on
"finger printing" children.
On March 21 there will be a
special leader training meeting for
nil Seminole County Extension
Homemakers. Linda Paine of the
Lake Mary Police Dept, will lx
giving training and demonstrations
In the art of self-defense. This class
will give basic Information on how
to protect yourself.

There will be Horticulture
Mrs. Norris says there a n d a r t i s t i c e x h i b i t s
will be a section for hob­ Judged by a c c r e d i t e d
byists and other violet AVSA Judges.

HAWTHORNE. CALIP.
DEAR HAWTHORNE:

«*H WIN EXPIRES 3-2&lt;&gt;4U

31V » . I 3ili St.

DEAR ABBY: To settle
an argument. I am asking
for your opinion. In the
event of an evening wed­
ding. which seems to be so
popular these days, the
groom Is left with a full
day to do as he pleases. So
to pass the time, he has a
few (maybe five) beers —
tw o hour s b e fo re the
wedding is to take place.
Ab b y . do you think
morning wedding ceremo­
nies would solve the pro­
blem?

Karen
W arner

African Violet Show Set

Betsy Anne Buie

DEAR AB BY: A lot of
people think that If you're
In show business you stay
married for about an hour
and a half. Nuts’
To make a marriage
work, you have to have
more going for you than
Just "lo v e ." You have to
like and respect each
other.
In our case. Jack and I
arc best friends: we have
to be. We’ve been married
for 28 years and haven’t
been apart for more than a
few days.
In order to gel along
with your guy. you have to
play his game. If he likes
watching sports, start ofl
the game by silting on his
lap. If he likes to eat. learn
to be a good cook. If he
gcls sick, nurse him as
only you can. Instructions
and pr e s c r i pt i o ns arc
great, but he needs you.
For the past 16 years.
I've performed In over 60
different cities, a real cross
section of America, and let
m e t e l l y o u . t he in-

was donated to the Pony Baseball
League. $ 1,000 to the Community
Improvement Association for the
building of the community center
and $ 1,000 was donated to the Lake
Mary High School Stadium building
fund.

MARCH

210*220 E. FIRST 0T.
0ANFORD
PH. S22-3S24

15
16

DAYS

HOURS

TCJES.
W ED.

10 A M -4 :3 0 PM

L O C A T IO N M c C R O R Y
I M i l u u l ' m M i l,t« l IU&gt;
p

«m.
• I*

i Ha**#
t»tlk

ol

SANFORD
to* psmfcat# An*
I i kreilulK »tlund#d

�...T h e C o tta g e
Continued Prom Page IB
continued. It consists of nearly a month of
Intensive therapy. Including group therapy. Alco­
holics Anonymous meetings and In-depth alcohol
education. "T o carry on the therapy, they have to
be out working."
So the next step Is a minimum stay of 90 days at
The Cottage or similar halfway house. Unfortu­
nately for many, there are too few such places In
the tri-county area - two. counting The Cottage,
which arc equipped to handle women.
After referral to The Cottage, the administrator
and therapist Interview the prospective client.
Then there Is a two-week trial period, during which
time the new resident Is watched for motivation.
"W e expect our women to get a Job and help pay
the rent, said Ms. Clone. Just $9 a day covers
food, housing and counseling. "Th ey buy their
own lipstick, cigarettes and that sort of thing."
But more money is needed to make this fledgling
survive. According to Ms. Clone. MACO allots
$30,000 per year for detox services to Seminole
County. "W e have not used all of It. so we're
asking for $15,000 of it to be diverted to The
Cottage, with other funds going to a thrccquarterway house. If I don't get it. we may be in
Jeopardy." she admitted recently. She still does not
know ir her proposal will be approved, with funds
having to be matched by the Seminole County
Mental Health Center by three to one. "I
particularly have a special thing for The Cottage."
said the administrator and emergency therapist. "I
want It to succeed so badly I can almost taste it."
Its success may well be In reach as another
recent development with local hospitals signals the
growth The Cottage needs to help its residents.
An agreement between the Seminole County
Menial Health Center and Central Florida Regional
Hospital In Sanford was signed last week by that
hospital's administrator, James D. Tesar, and Ms.
Clone said she expects Florida Hospital. Alta­
monte, to do the same. "W e're making arrange­
ments with Central Florida Regional, the sheriff's
department and police department that when
alcoholic clients are found, between 5 p.m. and 8
a.m. if they are not being charged with an offense,
they will be brought to the emergency room at the
hospital. I will dispatch one of my staff to see the
member in ER." After the hospital clears the
patient medically, either Ms. Clone or her staff will
decide If the person needs to be cleared physically

Evening Herald, Sanford , FI.

o f th e In to x ic a tin g a lc o h o l.
But helping these alcoholics requires more than
the roor and therapy the halfway house provides.
"Not only do we encourage AA. we push it."
Those arc the words of the alcohol therapist.
"T h e first thing 1 say to a client is, ‘Go to a AA
meeting. Go to 90 meetings In 90 days.'"
In addition to their Jobs and household chores.
Cottage residents arc required to attend a
minimum of four Alcoholics Anonymous meetings
each week, according to Ms. Crawford. And each
meeting lasts one to two hours.
Age 19 to 56. the halfway house residents travel
by car. bus or feet to the meetings of their choice
with one mandatory AA meeting held In their
home once a week.
But to these special citizens, it docs not appear to
be a chore. "Actually. I'm eager to go to the
meetings," said one woman asking to remain
anonymous.
At these meetings, they discuss resentments,
honesty, family, feelings, laughter. "It all has to do
with living," one alcoholic said rather peacefully.
"Th e biggest part of the program is to help othcra
— to give something back. That's why it works."
Help is here. But The Cottage needs a little more.
"W e need community support. We need more of
It." believes Ms. Clone. "W e've begun the nucleus,
but we need to grow."
She continued. "W e need for women to know
we're here, to know there Is somewhere they can
go to be treated like decent human beings.
“ We're looking for service clubs to lake over the
electric bill for six months or the trash bill for a
year. The more community support we have, the
greater the program."
In treating six women,' the administrator
stresses, "W e haven't even touched the tip of the
iceberg." And one resident opined. "There’s a very
real need for a place like this. This Is a dream for
some people."
For people like this woman, The Cottage is a
dream come true, where people "are there when
you need them and there when you don't know
you need them."
Yes. Jhcse women are different — these women
who live in the little green cottage with the
damaged television and six toothbrushes In a
single glassjar.
But they are different In a positive sense. They
are fighting together against the odds of survival
for a female alcoholic.
Would you like to help? You can — by
remembering the words of one Cottage resident
still not ready to leave.
"W e're sick, not bad."

Sunday, M arch 13, l t U —IB

In And Around Sanford

Miss Sanford Pageant
This Weekend A t LMHS
It's hcrc-the Second Annual Miss
Sanford Scholarship Pageant Satur­
day. March 12 at Lake Mary High
School, at 8 p.m.
According to co-chairmen. Carole
Pcgram and Meg Newman, tickets
are available at the door. They
suggest to come early. Ticket prices
are adults. $5. and children under
12. $2.50.
Eleven pretty and talented con­
testants in competition for the
coveted title. Miss Sanford, will sing,
dance, play musical Instruments
and perform dramatic readings.
A panel ofjudgcs representing the
Miss Florida Scholarship Pageant
will Judge the beauties. The winner
will go on to compete for Miss
Florida.
Adding to the lively program will
be Ballet Guild of SanTord-Scmlnole
performing several dances.
^
Dr. and Mrs. Roger (Gall) Stewart
will entertain the judges at a buffet
dinner before the pageant. Follow­
ing the evening's festivities, a re­
ception will be held at the Skyport
Restaurant.
The pageant is sponsored by the
Junior Woman's Club of Sanford
Inc. with each contestant Individu­
ally sponsored by the business
community.

Mrs, Rick (Cindy ) Butler was the
guest of honor at a stork shower
Tuesday
night at the Georgia
Avenue home of Belinda Joiner.
Games, gifts, genial guests and
goodies highlighted the fun and
festivities
The shower was Just In lime. Two
days later, Ci ndy d elivered a
beautiful baby girl.

Although Lois Dycus of Lois'
Place Fashions, was "wiped out"
by smoke damage caused from a
fire In the adjoining restaurant,
according to her husband. Ron.
the show must go on.
Lois will still coordinate the fash­
ion show on Thursday. March 24. at

Congratulations are In order to
Kathl een Reynol d Is and June
McFadden. Kathleen will be In­
stalled as Worthy Matron of Order
o f Eastern Star No. 25. Sanford
Assembly. March 12. while June is
the new Rayal Matron of Seminole
Court No 59 Order of the Amaranth.

Doris /
Dietrich ■
PEOPLE
Editor

the First Uni t ed Mmct hndi sl
Church. Sanford, when the United
Methodist Women host the annual
luncheon.
Luncheon chairman Rubye King
says a western theme will be de­
picted in the decor and food. "Don
western duds."Rubye says, "o r
wear attire of your choice.'
UMW president Nancy Terwilleger
says tiskets are available from any
circle member, the church office.
Lois’ Place or Gifts by Nan. The
luncheon price Is $4.

Joan Madison, director of the
Retired Senior Volunteer Program
(RSVP) is excited that RSVP will
celebrate a decade o f service In
Seminole County at Tenth Annual
Recognition Luncheon, on Friday;
March 25. at the Sanford Civic
Center.
Joan says that 350 volunteers
will be honored for their 72.000
hours o f service in the county
during 1982.
Joan goes on to say that the
volunteers, all 60 or over, "have:
enriched the community by sharing
their years o f education, skills,
training and experience at Seminole
County's schools, health care facili­
ties. goovemmental agencies amd
nonprof i t c o m m u n i t y s er vi ce
prganlzatlons."
O f f i c i a l r e p r e s p e r s t i n g allSeminole will be on hand to share
the festivities with the deserving
volunteers.
Calling all former NAS Sanford
civilian personnel.
You. your spouse or friend are
cordially, invited to a mini reunion
on Saturday. March 26. at the
Sanford home o f Winnie and David
S c o t t , 4 3 0 W. C r y s t a l
Drive.beginning at 1500.
According to Winnie, those at­
tending arc asked to bring their own
beverages. For further information,
call one o f the following hostesses:
Winnie. 322-8303;Fannle Gordy,
323-1599: or Jeanette Klnlaw.
322-4704 Please RSVP.

81st A nniversary Sale

All boys’ suits and blazers.

Anniversary savings. Com e celebrate! These, and lots more.
Sale Starts
Sunday March 13
Open 12:30 To 5:30
• tH ) i C

* "*

JCPenney

Open
Mon. Thru Sat.
10 AM To 9 PM
Sale Ends March 26

�&lt;B— Evening H tra ld . S in ta rd , FI.

Sundny. M a rch u , i»aj
S

A d v e n tis t
THE SEVENTH OAY
AO yB N TlIT CHUECH

K tn n tfh B ry tn t

'*

Sabbath Schaal

Wfdnacdty Nt,ht
Pt*r*r Surv.ct

CHRIST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Tuckar Drlva, Sunland fita ta i
Rav Rabartw. Millar
Pattar
Sunday Schaal
tits a.m.
Mamina warthip
HiMd.m.
Sun. Evanlnt
warthip
Tittp.m.

HOPE OF OUR COMMUNITY,

p ....-

h r*IC H :

M eth o d is t

i l l l

' " * ,m
IM p m

Assem bly O f G o d

BRACE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Alrpari Bird. A Woodland Dr
William J. Boyar
Pattar
Church Schaal
tilia .m .
Warthip Sarvlca
lltM s.m ,
Youth Fallawthlp
liM p.m .
Tuatday BiMa Study
ll:Ma.m.
Nurtary pravldad tar i tarvlcat.

n iB IT ASSEMBLY O f OOD
Camay jrth A Uni
P*vt&lt; Bahannan
Patter
-Sunday Jchwl
U M a.m .

* » m n r W iry tth ( r t 4«
ya n h ip i » f »ic»

E n n ln * Wanhip
* »• * Family Niyht
W *i. llctithuvii Yavth
t a y a l E an *m A

M U ila a u ttu i

tl.Ma.m.
llN a n

I N yn

OURNATIONI

t :t f p.m.

EHEMA ASSEMBLY OF OOD
Camar « l Caunlry Club Sold
and Wilbur Avtnuu
Ltku Mary

aV’X

m.

m am

Rate# Bawtfl
MarMnt Sdfvlcd
Evaninf taralca

r a ib r
H am
1 am

CENTRAL RAFTIIT CHURCH
l l l l Oak Ava , laniard
III t i l l
Fraddia Imilh
bailor
lunday Schaal
«a | a m
Mam lny Wart hia
IIM am
Churtti Tramint
I 04am
Evanliif Warthip
IR p m
Wad Frayartarv
IH pm
COUNTRYSIDE RAFTIIT CHURCH
Caunlry Club Raad. laka Mary
AaaryM Land
Failar
Sunday tchaal
1:41 a m
Fraacfilnf A warth&lt;p.nf
I l ls a m
• .H i Study
I M pm
Sbarini A Fraoaiminy
I llp m
Wad FrayarMaat
f llp m
Nurtar y Funded

NEWMOUNTCALVARY
MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
l l l l Watt Itlh SI
Rav. Oaorpa W. Warren
Sunday School
M la m
MorninpSarvlca
II M am
Evaninp Sarvlca
Il l p m

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF LONGWOOD
1 Bib. Wait a4 I M l an Hwy 414
ISautharnl
Ra» JamatW Hammock
Failar
landaySchaal
llla m
Marmnd Warthip
I I I A i l l ! am
ChiMran‘1 Church
11:41am
Church Trairuna
141pm
Eoanind Warthip
Id p m
Wad Ertninp
ten
Frayar Saryica
I Np m

PALMETTO AVENUE
BAPTIST CHURCH
Ilia Palmatta Ava
Rav RaymondCrackar
Failar
Sunday School
f :41am
Marnmiwarthip
it M am
BaandotlttK Sarvicat
I M pm
Wad Frayar A dibit Study I M pm
Indapandanl Mituanary

FINECREST BAPTIST CHURCH
I IF W. Airport Bird.. Sanford

in i w

Mark F. Waarar
Failar
BiMa Study
1:41a.m.
Marmnd Warthip
IHMrnam.
Evtnlna Warthip
l:N p m
Wadnatday
FaHawthlpSuppar
I M pm
Nurtary Fravidad Far
AU Sarvicat

YOUCAN FEATURE
YOUR CHURCH
INTHIS SPACE FOR
tl IS PER WEEK
CALL 111 l i l t

Episcopal
HOLY CROSS
adi Park Ava
Tho Rav. Leroy 0 Sopor
Radar
Holy Communion
I Mam
Holy Communion
llMam
Church Schaal
ll:M * m .
HolyCammunian
II M am

SEMINOLE HEIOHTS
BAPTIST CHURCH
Dr Jay T. Catmato
Fatter
Sunday Sarvicat In tho
Laka Mary Hifh School
Auditorium
• tblo Study
1:41 am
Warthip
IIK i m
Youth Choir
t tdpm
Church Tralnin*
I fro pm
Warthip
IM p m .

FIRST IAFTIST CHURCH
I I I Farh Avtnuu, laniard
Ran FaulE Murphy, Jr.
Failar
Sunday Schaal
t:lla m
Marniny Warthip
ll.bOam
ChurchTralrHnf
I Hp m
Evamnf Warthip
ton pm
Wad Prayer Survlcu
4&gt;0pm

LAKE VIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
liaLahanaur. Lata Mary 111dlls
Sunday Schaal
1:41am
Warthip Sarvlca
II at am
Evaninp Warthip
l i t pm
Wad. Fraytr Sara
I M pm
Nurtary Fravidad

CONORBOATIONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
14*1 S. Park Ava
11MM4
Rav FradNoal
Pattar
Rav. Edmond L. Water Alto. Pattar
Sunday Schaal
tiMa.m.
Fallawthlp
ISiM-IIB.m.
Mamin* Warthip
M :M »m .
Wad. Frayar Maatln*
A RIMt Study
T:M p.m.

RAVENNAPARK
BAPTIST CHURCH
l t d Country Club Raad
Rev Oary DaButk
Pallor
Sunday School
f:4Sa m
Morrnnp Worthlp
H am
Church Tralnmt
t:10pm
Evanind Warthip
M lp m
Wed. Frayar Sarvlca
i-iap.m

Baptist

dORDAN IAFTIST CHURCH
IMUptaia Rd
Elfia Harntby
Pattar
Sunday Schaal
i l adam
Marninf Servlet
II H i nt.
Evanlni Sarylca
I: It pm
Wadnttday Sarvlca
M o pm
Old Truthplsr a New Day

C o n g reg atio n al

Baptist

EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF
THE NEW COVENANT
iriTuthawtiia Read
Winter Sprlnpi
Phono IT I d in
Rav. OredoryO Brower
Vicar
Sunday Bucharitt
IB H orn
Svndaylchaal
l am.

wadnatday Sarvicat at
Cavanant Fratbytarlan Church
Frayar A Bible Study
t:M p m
Adult Choir
t:4Sp m

N onD em onlnatlonal

Catholic
ALL SOULS CATHOLIC CHURCH
TllOak Ava, laniard
Fr. William Ennli
Pattar
Sal. Vl*4l Matt
1 pm.
Sun. Matt
1.11:11. II M
Cantaitlont. Sat.
. llpm

WINTER SFOl.COMMUNITY
EVANGELICAL
CONORBOATIONAL
I l f W idt Slrtil
Riv RiMvt Burnt
FPitir
SunddyScbddl
II H i m
Wtrtklp
II M l m

Christian

TIBSTHATBIND
■ VANOBLISTIC CENTER
BdBcdlll A v i. Sd. u4 SR M B
Full Odtpdl. Intetlaite
Sun WdnRIp E
ChrlittaR Crawte II:M l.m . A rp.m.
Frpypy B BIMd
Study WldnuMuy
1p.m.
Sllurdiy
4 :N p .«.

FIRST CHRISTIAN
IMIS, laniard Ava.
S. Edward Johnton
Mini liar
Sunday School
f :11a.m.
Mamin* Warthip
Il:d0 a.m.

SANFOROCHRISTIAN CHURCH
lit Airport Blvd
Phono III OtIO
Jor Johntan
Mimttar
Sunday School
I H am
WarthipSarvica
to M am
E vanin* Sorvica
ILM pm
PrayarMootlnd Wad
1 M pm

C h r is tia n S c ie n c e
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
culwuutwaltr Acaoamy
Eatl Laka Branllty Dnva
Land wood
Sunday Sarvlca
llNan
Sunday School
It Ma m
Wad Tammany
Moatlnp
I H am

Church O f Christ
CHURCH OF CHRIST
t i l l Park Avenue
Frad Bibvr
Evantrlut
If M l m
BiWt Study
Mamin* Warthip
11:601 m
IMpm
Evun.ni Service
L a im Bible Clan
llitt i.m .
Wrdnuvdar
IMpm
Wtdnrtdty B.blt Clnt
Wurthip Srrv.ct Ur
11 M am
Ihu Oral
l:**p m.

Church O f G o d
CHURCH OF GOD
M lW llndltroat
Rav. Sill Thomptan
Pallor
Sunday School
1:41a m
Marmnd Warthip
II M am
Evanaalulic Sara
IR p ffl
Family Enrlchmont
Sarvica
INpm.

—

—

W W W 11 I I I I I I l i M M —

0—

—

CORNERSTONE CHEISTIAN
CENTRE
H I Drlttwuud Vlllt**
W. Like M iry Blvd.
Full Odtpdl ■IMprldltb
MarMnt WartMp
UMim
BvtM a* WartMp
l:M p m.
HaFte* Sc te ll, Thun
Mfpm.

T"

M y s t e r ie s

lufharan

The words Themselves are m yslenoo to him — black squiggles against
The w hite page — but D addy m akes them sound very interesting

Miirk
ih ia - a s

Later he w ill begin to read lor him sell and a vast new w orld w ill be opened.

T i ic m IU'V

In it. however, other m ysteries will appear — other things that seem as
im possible as the black words against the w hite page But gradually these will
becom e clearer

W c i I iil ' m I uv

LUTHERAN CHURCH OF
THE REDEEMER
"Thd Lutheran Mdur“ tnd
T V T M t l t TM L. f i ­
l m O teA vl.
Rlv. ElmdrA. Bencher
Fdllur
lu M iy lc M
1:111.m.
WdrtMp Servlet
ttiMe.m .
Hindir*drtdR dnd Nurture

Murk

1.tik e

llliir.vdm
l.itkc
A M I

l;rkluy
&gt;

l.ttk c
!) :!()• 17

Suiiirtliiy
Luke

But this little boy ij lucky Although he doesn t know it yet. his parents will
see to it that he gets this education in the right place — in iheir house o l
w orship

0 0 0 0 SHEPHERD
LUTHERAN CHURCH
HtlOrlpndiDr. H-tl
I Lulterdd Church In An'Ht.ra)
Rdv.RUphl. tum id
I'lilp r
Sunddy Schuui
l: «S im .
Wurthlp
ll-.Mpm.
Nurture Frdvlddd

ST. LUKE'S LUTHERAN CHURCH
SRIldBRpd lu «R d .
Ovlddt I Stte ll |
(dvrin J. Ruttuw
Fiitur
Sundiy ScteF
liU t jn .
BMrtMp Semkdi
I MS lliM l.m .
Wd mildtiln a Chrtttltn Sctedl
KlnBdfBArtdd IhruuM Etthth Brada

Sciipu-Ul Muctad by Thu Amdxpn Bow Socwty

FIRST UNI TI D
METHODIST CHURCH
411 Park Avd
L «F .K Ir F llt lr
Jamil A. Thamn
Dirtcipr pIMulIC
Mirfitn* Wirihlp
1:11 A l l i m
Sundiy Schddl
1:411 m.
UMTF
t:M p m.
M tn'i F n y tr B r ilk llil
Ind A Ilk Thuridiy
I H im

COMMUNITY UNITED
METHODIST CHUECH
Hwy . IMS *&gt; PIMY R ldft Rd.
Clltul terry
Rtv. H. Wlphl Klrtlly
PnNr
Riv. Divtd h . Hudpvi
Ai k . F ittir
Murnlnp Wurthlp
l:H -lli.m .
Church Schuui
f.H -lli.m .
StrvICdt with c lltw t Hr III tput
FulluwtMp CulHu tetw iid turvlcti
JYF-iri
StMp.m,
UMVF
SiHp.m.
EvMlm Wurthlp
liM p.ld,
Wud. BlkH Study
?;M p.m.

N a ta re n e
FIRST CHURCH
OF THE NAZARBNE
. IM l SinMrd Avt.
Juhd J. It Intun
Sundiy Schuui
litSp.m.
MurrHnp Wurthlp
lltlSa.m.
Yuuth Huur
4:Mp.m.
■ vtnfufltl Survlcu
IMpm
MM wuuk Survlcu I Wtd I
T M p .m .
Nunury Fruvidud Mr I “

Eastern
O rth o d o x
Sit FrlurAFiul
Orthudut Fprlth
"HIM ■BytPnHnu"
11II Mipnull* Avt
Ruv. Fr. Anttedy Orpnt
FuMr
Otnnu Llturpy
II H i m

m-nn

Pentecostal
FIRST PENTECOSTAL
CHURCH OF LONB WOOD
*41 Drin*t Slrtdl, Lmpwiud
Ruv. BRul k Orpnt
Flttur
Sunduy Schuui
IINim
Murntnt Wurthip
II M am
Sundiy ■ vunln*
I Mp m
w id. RlbM Study
liM p.m .
Cunnuururi Muutldf Sundiy I M p m

P resbyterian

1

One o l these m ysteries is religion U nderstanding G od s m essage, le a rn ­
ing the m eaning o l faith — these vital subjects take a particular kind of e d u ca ­
tion and special study It will take the rem ainder ol his lifetim e, and yet m ore, to
lully understand the spiritual universe

C o o n gft 'S * l naute- Aevd'l'ltng Su&gt;v-et
and IV
* ir i icmdf ly il-'M S.-is-l
Irc
P C 6s&gt; »0?4 Cr»''uttdt. v VP 229GI

M u n ilm

S iln tL iv
M u rk '

1AHLAND0 UNITED
METHODIST CHUECH
St. E d.dH B M
LMBwted, Fid.
J im ri B. Ulmdrlr.
Sun. Ithull
111* B t:4t
WdCbMp
l:M , 1:41 B 1I:M
UMTF
S:M

FIRST FRE1BVTBRIAN CHURCH
Oik Avt. B Ird SI
B iv V lffll L. Bryant, Piilur
H U N 111 IUT
MurMndWurthip
I H im
Church Schuui
f : l &gt;pm
Murnlnp Wurthlp
IIMim
Nurtury

THE LAKE MART UNITED
FRISRTTRRIAN CHURCH
Wilhur A v t , Ltkt Mary
Riv. A.F. Sllvm t
Minttlif
Sunday Church Schuui
l:ilim
Mdlhlhf Wurthlp
l):Mp.th.
Yuuth Oruup
IMpm
Wtd. Ctelr Frpcllct
IMpm

'The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Pag# Possible1
ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

CELERY C ITY
P R IN TIN G CO., INC.

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter

ASSEMBLY OF 0 00
Firtt AuuwiWy ul Bud. IJHi B Elm
ih tiffl AttumMy tl Bad. Curitut ul CPuMfv Club Kuud m l
Wilbur A v t . Like Mary
Fruudum Aitumbly Ol Odd. ISIS W lib S I. SinMrd

• m ill

Antiuch Bdptlll Church. Oviudu
Calvary Bdptill Church. Cr vital Lakf A lrd. Laka Mary
Canal bur nr Bapiiii Church, n t Summala Blvd
Cunlrtl Baplill Church, l l l l Oak Avf
Chuluuta Firtl Baplill
Cliarwalur Mitimnary Baplill Church. Saulkwail Bd
CauntrytMt Baplill Church. CuuMry Club Baad Laky Mary
Vittary Baplill Church. Old Orlpnda Rd al Httttr A lt.
f i r t l Bepriti Church, i n Farh Ava
iFlril Daptitl Church ul Altamantt Sprinfl, El 414. Altamonte
Iprinit Firtl Baptitl Church ul Faratl city
Firtl Baplill Church at Curtail
F irtl Baplill Church pi Laka Mary
F irit Baplill Ch uck ul Laka Munrdt
Firtt Baplill Church P4 Lanfwuad I Bib W ill tl I M l an Hwy
. 4M
F u l l Baplill dl Oviate
F irtl Baplill Church at Sanlanat Sprinpi
/ i n i Baplill ChurchMWtnMr Sprirtft. IM Bahama Bd
F irtl Shllah Mittaaaary Baplill Church, I IBI Bk iHkSI,
Furuil Baplill Church al OlMah
^uuMaia HuPd Baptitl Church. Ovitda
-Oract BihM Church, taai S laniard Ava.
:&gt;drda« MJiaMnary BapHH CbwtB. IM Upsala Ed.
PMrlhtMo Biprili Church. ChWuald
MJnianarv Baplill Church. Narlh B d . EMarpriM
Mace dama MiotMn Baplill Church Oak Hill Ed . OtHtn
dArhint BMCi Baptitl Church. Otaava Hwi
Ml Mu,iah Frim ilm Baptitl. l l l l LfCuil Art.. SanMrt
M l Cflvt Mntippary Baptitl Church Sthlphda Sprmtt Ed .
inai M.itiana,? Baplill Church. 1164 jarry Avt
(■•a Mituanary Baptitl. Sipui Avt
BrlhuiMutiunarr Church 11h Si B Hickary Avt
tundanct Baplill M ill Civic Luafua SIB* . Laafwuad
Baain' Church. F l,lt? City Cammumly Cawtar. Faratl
Ml Calvary MiUianary BapHLI. IIC1W lirhSI
ialum Primrlivu Baplill Church. ItPIW UM SI
rtilam aM Baplill Church. Ouam, ina. Nurtn l in *w ad
Ml tIM Baplill Church. I1M Fair Avt

FLAGSHIP BANK
OF SEM INOLE and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.
GREGORY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE
500 Maple Ave., Sanford
H A R R ELL&amp; B EVER LY
TRANSMISSION
David Beverly and Staff
JC Penney
Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemann and Staff

KNIGHT'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight &amp; Staff

OSBORN'S BOOK
and BIBLE STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

L .D . PLA NTE, INC.

PANTRY P R ID E
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

Oviedo, Florida

THE M cK IB B IN AGENCY
Insurance

P U B LIX M ARKETS
and Employees

M EL'S
G U LF SER VIC E
Mel Dekleand Employees

SENKARIK GLASS
A PA IN T CO., INC.
Jerry &amp; Ed Senkarik
and Employees

SMITTY'SSNAPPIN'TURTLE
MOWERS, INC
2506 Park Ave.
Mike &amp; Connie Smith
STENSTROM R EA LTY
Herb Stenstrom and Staff
W ILSO N -EIC H ELB ER G ER
M O R TU A R Y
Eunice Wilson and Staff
WILSON M A IE R FU R N IT U R E CO.
M r. and Mrs. Fred Wilson
W IN N -D IX IE STORES
and Employees

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY1
Haw LiH Fulluwthip n i l E Lakt Drivu. Ctliuiterrv. Pi HIM
Bivunna Farh Baptitl Church l l l l w lein St
Fuupit’t Bapfitt Chapa* IMl W Firtl Strut!. Sanlurd
Fiattrttl Baplill Church. I l l W Airport Blvd
Prpirid Lakf Baptitl. Bidf* Ed . Fern Park
F rtftd it Mituonary Baptitl Church. Midway
sucand Stulch Mituanary duplitt Chyych W ilt Sanltfd
Irminuly Hatfbti Baptitl Church, Saw leal la LBkd Mary Hlph
Sctedl Auditartum
Smyrna Baplill Church, l i t Ovlrhraak Dr . Caitrlterry
Sunland Baplill Church. 1414 Faimnta
SI Jamil Mituanary Baplill Church. SI Ed III, Otltua
It Luka Mituanary Baplill Church *1 CamrraK Cily. Inc
Si Paul Baplill Church. I l l Pint Avt
Si Matthtwt Baptitl Church. Canaan H|ti
Iprmilitid Mituanarv Bapliit llth B Cedar
SI Jahn'1 Mittiunary Bapl ll Church 110 Cyprttl SI
Ttmpit Baptitl Church. Palm Sprinft Ed Allamanlt Ipnnit
William Chapal Mituanary Eaptitl Church Mark A William SI
Allamanlt Sprin«t
Iian Hapd Baplill Church I I ] Oranpr Ava
CATHOLIC
Chucch at Ihr Ntlivily. Lika Mary
All Stull Cathal.c Church. I l l Oak Avt . StnMrd
Our Lady Ovum ul Fuaca Cathalic Chapul. I ll S Matnulit Ava
SanMrd
II Ann'l Calhulic Church. Dufwuud Trail. DtBary
SI Aututlihi Cathalic Churrh. Ivnirt Or . near tv (tin Bd .
Cat i liter yy
SI Mary Maiadaimi Cathal.c Church, Maitland A v t ,
Allamanlt Sptm|t
Our Lady dlthuLaktt Calhulic Church, l l l l Maumilitn. OulHna
CHEISTIAN
Chntliaa Sciunct Stciuly. C O SwaHwaltr Acadumy. B ill Lake
I f iitfitv Of LsM »M d
Firs! Chrittitn Church IM l 1 laniard Art
Sanlurd Chrltliaa Church 111 W Airpurl Bird
NurlhiMd Chntlidn Church. Piundu Harm Or . Maitland
Lakyviuw Chritlitn Church. Budr Labi Bd at Jamitan
CHUECH OF CHBIS7
Church al Chr ul. l|l| I Park Avt
Church alChrtilal laka EHm. U I n i l . N Cttititorry
Saulh Summalu Church al Che ill. &gt;411L4M Hawtll Ed
Chur ch*IChriil4*dd Palm Sprinfl Dr Altamantt I P it

i

Church ul Chritt, Ountva
Church ul Chrut. Lundwuud
Church ul ClWHl. W lllh SI
Ntrthudu Church al Chrul. Fid Hdvlr. Or ,. Maitland
CHUECH OF 0 0 0
Church at Oud. M l Hicktcy
Church ul Odd. M l W llnd SI
Church ul Oud. Onud*
Church ul God Halintll. Laka Mnnraa
Church 1 Oud Miiiltn. EnlarprlM
Church at Ood IMl W lllh St
Church at Oud in Chrut. Ovmdd
Church ul Oud ul F rtfM cy.lM IS . Elm Art
Church tl Oud ul Prtphpcy. 11441 Furlimmun A rt
B iK u t Church at Oud ItMW lllh S t, SanMrd
Truu Church Ol Odd. IfM Ell t t w i t A v t , SanMrd
EAST KEN v i l h v w i
Eaildrn Or thud!« Church. Stt Faltr B Paul, 11II Mayntlit Av t ,
SanMrd. Fid
(d ilarn OrtteBaa Church. SI. OuurH *S* Sterwaad Ct..
Alramantt Sprmdl
E attiw Orthadci Church. St lttuan‘4 al O C A . SU Saulh S I.
Farh Fart
Eaittrp Orihadai Church, tl JdAn ChryMttam Chapul. U.l.
Hwy IM l. Ftrn Fark
. ,
CONOB EOATIONAL
Cun*rt*ai.anal Chnitun Church. IM l S. Fark A v t„ Sanlurd
■FISCOFAL
r u n t pal Church dl Ihd Naw Cavtnanl. (IS TdaUwllld Baad.
W.ntur Sprinft
Tht Church » l Iht Oddd Shephard Mai Hind, Jit Laka Ate.
AU Stmtl I f U n til Church. I OtBdry Art., EnftrprlM
Chntf Cpncapai Chucch. L a n iw il
Maly C.-ail Epucdpal Fark A v t , at Ilk If.. tdhMrd
Si Btchard i Church, l l l l Laka Hawaii E d . Wmftr F t 't
JEWISH
•a ft Am SynapUdvc mutfin* tf Infuriiftt Mall AHamaMt
Sprintl
LUTHERAN
AKrnuan Lvthuran Church. Ovwhrtuk Or . Cailflterry
Gaud Shuahurd Uniltd Lulhvran, J ill I Orlandd Or
luthuran Church al Fravidunci. Ouflana
Lutheran Church ai lha Eidaumur. M1W IMh Flact
Mufuah Lu'teran Chucch. Gulden Days Or A Hwy. I f . t l
Catniterry
II Lukai Lufharaa Church. Et 414. Sllrl4

SI. Hyphen Lutheran Church. 4M lull W ill M M. Lih|wn d
METHODIST
■arhutt United Mumurlal Church. I . DtBary Add., EnttrprlM
tear Laka Unttud Mtlt e diii Church
BuThul a m B. Church. Canaan M*li
Cattatharry Cimmunlty UMMd Mdttedli* Church. Hwy. IT t l ,
Flhdy Eidte Bd . CatIF terry
Canal Uwlad MHtedUl Church. Tuckar Dr., luMtnd ■ Haiti
OfBdrv Cammunify Mafhadltl Churck. W. Ml*hbdhki Bd.
^C||fy
Firtl UMMd MuThdditl Church, l i t Fart Aid. •
Firtl Maite d ill Churck t l Ovtada
Firtl Sauttern MaHMdHt Church. I4M SanMrd A n .
Ffdd MarhaMil Church. IM W. 4th t l
Flrai UMMd Mrthidlst Church a* Dandy*. Ot. t e i
Ddhtva Mated din Church. Ganava
ttracd UMMd Matetdul Church. Alrpari Blvd.
Grant Chapul A M . I. Church. Onadu
Oakaravt Matted! il Church. Orladi
OSMBh Matepdiilf C
l M#
Fddld WttMyan Mated D ll. El. 44 W. dl FddM
II. Jamat 4 M I tw *1 Cyprttl
M. Luhd M B . Church K Camaran City. lac., tear fall aH I.B. 44
I l Mary-1 AJH.I. Church. U. Et. i l l . OtMun
II. Fhurs Mate*dm Church, Ottaan ■*., EnterprlM
llalMrd Mumarlul Church, I. DtBary
SaManUa UatMd Matetdm Chawh. M 4J4 and 14. U n iwaai
Oatenn UMMd McnadM CBurcB. Car. M CBrptnltr DMurrsy SU
N A IAB IN B
Fint Church * ( Em N aur ana, m i lanMrd A n .
Oanu*a Church at Mu Naurana. I E. 44. Bdnuvt
U h t Mary Church ul tea NdWraau, U l I . CryilF Late A n ,

L ||if M iff

Markhaa* «M*da Church al « * MaiAran*. Id 44, J&gt;t Mua* W. *1
14 al « • waaiva a in r
Lu a a i i i Church *1 tea Naiaran*. waymaa a Jatiup A n ..
FNEIEVTEEIAN
Dalian* F 'lU ylw ia n Church. HaBand Bird * AutIM A n .
Dmlent
Laka Mary UMIad FitaByMrian Church
Firtl Frctbylarlaa Church On* A n . I M II.
Firtl PratByMrMn Church al Oalary. a. Hif M tnd
1 FraaByMrldn Church, j m I. Oriandt Or.

II. Aadrtwt Frathyitrian Church, 111I tear Lakt BB.
II. Marki FrttByMfian Churck, tail Film tprlnti Bd.
AHamanta lprm *i
Uptala Cammunity F rttb rltn ta Church, upuia Bd.
WttlMlMHtr Fratbytarlan Church, Bad But E d . C tiu iterry
Winur tprlnti FrateyMrlan Chaptt. m day Adrtniiii Church.
Mdtt Ed.. W INK Sprinfl
SEVENTH DAT ADVENTIST
Faratl Ltkt h ran Ik Day AdvtMlit Churck. Hwy. 414. Faratl
City
Stvmfh Day Adrunliil Churck. Maitland A n -. Altamantt Ip ti
SanMrd Stvtnth Ddy Advmiiil Church, n* B Elm
WiMar Sprinfl Itmnlh Ddy AdvtntiU Church. Id I Matt Ed.
Mdrt HIU I t ninth Day Ad v n n il Church. H i I Hid 11., fpnMrd
OTHIH CHUECNBS
litan's A.M B Church, Oliva A IHh
All F t in Chapal. Camp SamlnaM. Wtklrd Fark Ed.
•aardFl Avmut HFinuu Chapal, teardiu A n
ChFuFa Cimmunlty Church
Churchttjtsut ChrlctdtLdtar Day lam u. m s Fate A n .
Lute Mtnraa Ch*pF. Oranpu Bird , Laht Mnnraa
Kin*dpm HaN at JtBdrBh’s Witnau. U k a Man,a* UMt. m i W.
Firtl Earn Church at tea Lrln* Dad. Midway
First Church at Chrut. SCMntict, EIMm Bird, and Vann SI..
Ftadacastai Opan m m TaterM da. Bid*cw aa A n .. 0*1 Urn
t|pCilli
MlfR l d i » l
P in t PaatacatiM Church ul U n *M a&lt;
Firtt FanMcastai Church at Switurd
Putt Btedat Church al Gad U Christ. 1IH terry A n ., UhMrd
FuH Ompai Tabarnactt. IM l Caunlry Club
Ml. OUn HFinuu Church. Oak Hill Ed . Ottaan
SanMrd AUianca Church. Ittl I. Fark A n .
SaaMrd Bihit Church. MM SanMrd A n .
l i Hn l Cik B r iiit i n i l at Janavah i w itn ttm , lis t w. tte St.
T te SFrattan Army. IB* W. SNh St.
EFI.n* NUli Mf i v IM Church. SB 414. LFMWnd
Etteamm Marart tn Church. M l TncawUla Bd . W.nlar turUtei
UMtad Church at Chrut. AnamanU Cammuwty ChtpF.
iN M U it t lir iR fi
MFy Trimly ChurchF 0*4 in Chrul. 1114 MNwauttiM A n .
Tte Full O tipti Church *t o « r U r * Jaws Chrut. w t u muun.
n , Canaan City
■ 1 — UICF Can*rt*tllaaal. WuUf

�h

Briefly
S em inary Professor
Baptist R evival Services
Dr. Roy Fish, professor of Evangelism at South­
western Baptist Theological Seminary. Fort Worth,
Texas, will conduct revival services at Central
Baptist Church. 1311 Oak Avc.. Sanford, beginning
this Sunday and continuing nightly at 7 p.m.
through Wednesday.
He will speak to the men o f the church at a 7 a.m.
Sunday and In the regular worship services. A
noon-time service covered dish luncheon will be
held Monday through Wednesday with Dr. Fish
speaking on the Deeper Life them e.
Monday at 6 p.m. there will be a hot dog supper
for children grades one to six. On Tuesday at 6 p.m.
there will be a pizza snack for the youth. Dr. Fish
will meet with both groups.
Jack Thomas, minister of music at Central . will
direct the revival choir.

‘The Solid Rock ' To Sing
The musical group "T h e Solid Rock" of First
Baptist Church. Sherman. Texas, will present the
musical, "Hosannah" at 7 p.m. Wednesday at
Lakevlcw Baptist Church. 126 W. Lakevlew Ave..
Lake Mary. The youth choir has 16 members,
according to local pastor, the Rev. Jackie Nix.

M en's B reakfast S lated
There will lx* a breakfast meeting for the Baptist
Men and Iroys of Plnccrcst Baptist Church of Sanford
at 7:30 a.m. this Sunday In the fellowship hall.

Youth Directors C alled
On recommendation of Us search committee, the
congregation of Seminole Heights Baptist Church
has extended a call to Larry and Leslie Castle to
serve as youth directors effective June 1 on a
part-time basis. The Castles are currently serving as
adult advisors to the church's youth council.
Castle
Is employed as physical education
instructor and tennis coach at Seminole Community
College. He Is a member of the adult choir and
serves as a deacon at Seminole Heights. He received
a bachelor's degree from University of Kentucky and
Ills master's degree from East Tennessee State
College In l\jgh school administration, lie has been
coach of the year four limes In Florida.
Mrs. Castle teaches*tennis at SCC on a part-time
basis. She teaches grades four through six In the
church Sunday School and Is chairman of the
church decorating committee. She Is a member of
the nominating committee. They arc the parents of
a daughter. Kelly, 13. and moved to Sanford eight
years ago.
In the Irtterlm. the Youth Advisory-Council will
plan the youth program. A special fellowship Is
scheduled for this Sunday evening at which tnc
young people will make Ice cream sundaes with the
toppings they brought.

‘The Im a g e O f The Beast'
Friday March 18 at 7:30 p.m. the Youth Alive
fellowship at Trinity Assembly of God. 875 Elkcam
Blvd.. Deltona, will show n film, "T h e Image of the
. Beast." The 90-minute motion picture concerns the
anti-Christ. The film Is free to the public.

Youth W eek In O viedo
The youth of First Baptist Church of Oviedo will
be In leadership positions this Sunday, beginning of
the annual Youth Week. Young people from sixth
grade through 12lh grade will lead In worship and
Sunday morning Bible classes. Youth Week pastor is
Marty Fields, a sophomore at Lyman High School
and u member of the swim team. He has been a
church youth leader since he Joined In 1981.
The youth will be in full charge of the Sunday
evening service as well.

Christian Science Lecture
Charlcs-Etlcnne House C.S. of Paris, France, will
present a lecture entitled. "Follow Jesus Christ.
Today?" under the auspices o f First Church of
Christ. Scientist. Deltona, at 3 p.m. March 26 In the
Deltona Community Center on Lake Monroe. Houze
has been a member of the Christian Science Board
of Lectureship since 1967 and has lectured in many
countries Including Europe. Great Britain, and West
and East Africa. The lecture is free to the public.

Cloth-A-Thon G iv e -A -W a y
Operation CHURH (Christian Helpers United to
Help Humanity) will sponsor a "Cloth-a-thon
Glve-a W ay" on Saturday. April 2 beginning at 10
a.m. on the corner of 13th Street and Lake Avenue
In the Goldsboro area of Sanford. Clothing for
children and adults will Ik* available free o f charge
for those In need as a CHURH outreach project.
, ,
t • •t 4'**l •
.
V-'*
&gt;»?**;•'*

O p e ra tio n CHURH Service
OjKTation CHURH will hold another service at 3
p.m. Sunday at Second Shiloh Missionary Baptist
Church. 1925 Airport Boulevard. Sanford. The Rev.
Arthur Graham and his congregation will conduct
the service, which Is open to the public.

M in i Spring Festival
The Episcopal Church Women of H oly Cross
Episcopal Church. Sanford, will hold a Mini Spring
Festival following the 8 and 10 a.m. services on
March 20. Craft Hems on an Easter theme and
baked goods will be offered. The proceeds of the sale
will go to defray the balance on the redccorallon of
the lounge.

G olden Years Fellow ship
The monthly Golden Years Fellowship luncheon
will be held at noon Wednesday In the fellowship
hall of Community United Methodist Church of
Casselberrv. The program will be presented by Mike
Wells of the Nice House of Music at the electronic
organ.

Women Recognized For Service
The Women's Mission Society of St. Paul Baptist
Church. Sanford, the Rev. Amos C. Jones, pastor, at 6
p.m. Sunday, will recognize area women for their
contributions In several categories.
Recipients will be recognized for their dedication and
commitment In these service areas — : social service,
church leadership and related activities, music, com­
munity and education.
To be honored for social service, Juanita Adams
Golden, Rochester,N.Y.. has been Involved In Action for
Welfare Rights, health screening, medical program for
Public Assistance recipients 21 years and under,
providing transportion for children to shelter home and
placing children In shelter care.
Claudia Gregory after years of caring for migrant
children In her home without a fee. she opened Child
Development Center, Apopka, In 1974, financed by her
husband's salary.
To be recognized as founder, pastor and evangelist Is
Elder Carrie B. Bryant. Called to the ministry at 18 years
old. she served as an evangelist for 23 years. Ordained In
1978. she built, with 17 members, the Tabernacle of
Prayer for All People which was dedicated In 1980.
Angle B, Douglas Is an active member Df St. Paul
Missionary Baptist Church. She has served as president
o f the Deaconess Board, and presently Is vice president
of Deanconcss Board and Choir " 1.‘ Along with her
continued years of service In the church, she has
touched the lives of many young people In various
activities relating to Christian growth and development.
Mrs. Douglas is a retired teacher-counselor from the
public schools In Seminole County.
Anlca McLeod's Interest In church school started as a
child at St. Paul. This Interest was later turned Into a
career. She pursued studies at Columbia University
under the sponsorship of Abyssinia Baptist Church. New
York City and In-service courses given by the Christian
Education Dept, of that local church. Upon returning to
Sanford and reuniting with St. Paul she was given a
class In the Junior Department, where she Is actively
Involved.
During her 33 years of ministering music at the First
Presbyterian Church. Sanford, Louise Touhy lived up to
Psalm 100. an exhortation to praise God cheerfully—
"Make a Joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye lands." Louise
T o u h y ' s cont r i but i on has been I nspi ri ng and
noteworthy. She has given herself freely.
Lcsslc Braboy Weaver has the distinction of being the
first Black music supervisor In the Orange County
School District. Her music career spans years of
successful participation in school and community .
activities as organizer and coordinator o f youth and
adults groups, director of choirs, concert pianist and

Among those to be honored Sunday are (from left) Juanita Golden, Gloria
Williams, Barbara Givens, Angle Douglas, Claudia Gregory, Anlca McLeod,
Louise Touhy, Braboy Weaver and Ruth Church.
concert organist. She has served as an elected officer of
the State Vocal Association.
Barbara Givens dream of a Children's Choir Is a
reality. In 1980 she started with seven children at
Trinity United Methodist. The number has grown to 32.ages 8-21. She has shared her talents and has given fully
of her time and resources In building an inter-faith
youth group, known as Sanford's Interdenominational
Youth Choir, of which she is director.
Gloria Williams began her music career at age nine in
Chicago. III. and was playing piano for her church when
she was In elementary school. Her life has been devoted
to musical activities. She hns played for and trained
Sanford Community Singers. Seminole Community
College Chorale and Chnnsoncttcs. Also music in­
structor for Seminole Community College Leisure Time
Program-Congregate Meal. Presently she is playing for
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. Sanford.
Rudccn Frajicls has a special touch with children. She
is able to help pre-schoolers to make music that is sweet
and delights the hearts o f those who hear them at a
worship service at St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church.
The Children's Choir is called The Rose Buds. The group
Includes nursery through elementary grades.
Community Services — Lillie Bell Mcrthlc saw the
need In 1947 to provide n service for Black children.
Pre-school education was not available to them. Over the

years facilities have grown from an area in her home to'a
building that house the 99 enrollccs and a staff of 10.
She did not neglect her own training. She has done
continuing education course' In early childhood educa­
tion at area colleges and universities. Her Christian
background has been a main slay for community
Involvement and contributions. She Is active In the
churcfr school o f Mt. Zion Baptist. Sanford. Deaconess
Board and related auxiliaries.
Many Sanford residents may not have heard the
name. Ruth Church was a trallblazer. More than 25
years ago she organized the first Girl Scout troop for
Negroes. She traveled to Winter Park for training and
information and materials to carry out her duties as
troop leader. Ruth and her troop soon found themselves
Involved In projects that supported urgent needs and
calls made by the Salvation Army and other community
based agencies. When parents could not. or would not.
provide transportation for girls she bridged the gap.
Along with her scouting, she directed youth activities at
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. Sanford.
Education — Mary Dunn has a distinguished
background In the field o f education. She is the founder
of Pace School. Forest City. This facility was started with
a small enrollment and little or no equipment. Mary has
been honored locally and acclaimed nationally for
designing programs adapted to children's educability.

Defeat Enemy Within
The habit of hope as the secret of
winning Is my concern as 1 write these
words. We are never really defeated
except when we have a traitor within our
own ggtea^ .There ls,one^near to us. so
near that we hear mm as he keeps
whispering comments op all we have
done or plan. If he Is not the Devil, he is a
contemptible self. Do you hear what he Is
saying? ” 1 don't think you can win. The
enemy Is very strong. Better look for
some easy way out. You failed yesterday!
Remember last week! Last year!" And If
we listen long to him we are beaten
before we begin.
The fortress o f the soul Is never taken
except when a betrayer from within
opens the gates. He wins our consent to
his traitorous work by destroying hope
In us. He makes us think of our own
scant resources and rusty sword. He
reminds us of our paper armor and our
feeble right arm.

Pastor's Corner
By Dr. 3AYT. C08MAT0
SejitoekHetcMs

Baptist Church

persecutions. In distresses lor Christ's
sake and then he adds In verse 10. "For
when I am weak, then am 1strong." The
sense of this verse is that Christ becomes
strength within us.

It Is the work of the Spirit of God to
remind us that we are soldiers under
authority o f the king. God's Spirit bids
us look to him. He Is mighty. His sword
Is sharp. His armor Is shining and
strong. He Is able.

The following Is a verse upon which I
have sought to base my life since having
accepted the call to the ministry.
Philllpplans 1:6. "I am sure that lie who
began a good work In me will bring It to
completion." (My paraphrase). God lias a
purpose for me and for you. The habit of
hope will enable us to reach forth toward
the completion of the attainment of that
purpose. You can win. You can wlr. To
the Romans the apostle said. “ For we are
saved by hope but hope that Is seen is
not hope: for what a man sccth why doth
he vet hope for?" [Romans 8:24)

T h e re Is a st at ement wi t hi n a
catlchlsm o f one o f the major denomina­
tions which states. “ Christ executeth the
office of a king, in subduing us to
Himself. In ruling and defending us. and
In restraining and conquering all His and
our enemies." The apostle Paul says In 11
Corinthians 12 that he takes pleasure In
weaknesses, reproaches, necessities.

Cast the traitor out of your life. In 1631
a ship sailed from England to explore
dangerous and unknown regions. One of
the articles to which the crew swore
allegiance was that "no man shnll speak
a despairing word against the success of
the expedi t i on, or make a doubt
thereof." That’s the way you can win.

The Rev. Paul E. Murphy Jr., left, pastor of First Baptist Church of
Sanford,presents Robert "Bob” Duggar of Lake M ary with a certlficte of
license to the gospel ministry on behalf of First Baptist Church as his w ife/'
Amy, looks on. The service was held recently at Lakevlew Baptist Church, a
mission of First Baptist. Duggar plans to enter Stetson University to prepare
for his ministry in music.

Farew ell Fete
For McClains
Veteran OMS Interna­
tiona) missionaries Dale
and Polly McClain, who
h a v e b e e n l i v i n g In
Casselberry for several
years while he has been
s e r v i n g as s o u t h e a s t
director o f development,
are again returning to the
Held In Hong Kong.
They have been active in
Community United Mctho d i s t C h u r c h of
Casselberry during this
time and their friends In
the Christian Homemak­
ers Sunday School Class
wilt host a covered dish
dinner at 6 p.m. Saturday.
March 19 in the church
fellowship hall in their
honor. A special farewell
program will follow and all
of their friends are Invited
to attend.
Mrs. McClain was bom
In China to missionary
parents and the couple
s e r v e d t h e r e as
missionaries until forced
to flea by the Communists
In 1949. They later served
In India, Hong Kong and
Indonesia.

Mariners

Lent And The Sabbath
By George R. Plagenz
Tbe Third Commandment: Remember the Sab­
bath day, to keep It holy (Eaodus 20:8).
A Lutheran church in Michigan excommunicates
members who do not faithfully attend church*on
Sunday. Harsh as this seems. It has the effect of
restoring this neglected commandment to an Im­
portance it has unfortunately lost.
We all ought to be concerned about what the
exploitation of Sunday by commercialized entertain­
ment (and commercialism generally) Is doing to us. It
has given the quest for a good time and the quest for
bargains In the store precedence over the cultivation of
the spiritual resources by which man ultimately lives.
This lack of relaxation In our lives and our frantic
misuse o f leisure is also, some doctors say. exacting a
toll on our heart valves and aiteries.
Many critics of the state of modern culture are
Inclined, moreover, to trace the decline of the arts to
"the acceleration o f life and the loss of the capacity for
rest and reflection and that serenity of spirit which Is the
parent of creativity."

Center

Charlie and Betsy Craig, skippers of the Mariners of the St.Johns group from
First Presbyterian Church of Sanford, present a S775 donation to Kit Carson^
public relations director for the Sanford Christian Sharing Center, as Marlon
and Sue White, pursers, look on.

Youth Q uake
Set March 21
Country singer Dennis
Agujanian. billed as "T h e
world's fastest flat-pick
gultaHst." will perform at
Youth Quake II. Monday.
March 21. at 7:30 p.m. at
the Bob Carr Performing.
Arts Centre. Orlando.
S p o n s o r e d by t h e
Youth-Student Committee
o f the Central Florida Billy
Graham Crusade, sched­
uled April 10-17 In the
Tangerine Bowl. Youth
Quake 11will Ire free.

atten d
r e v iv a l

SERVICES
THIS WEEKEND

C.

H. Chamley

Sunday S c h o o l.........9:45
Morn. W orsh ip ____ 10:45
Even. W o rsh ip .........6:00

S a n fo , d C h u rc h O f G o d
801 W. 22nd S t

Sanftrd

�BLPND1E

» » —tvBmnfl nerno, xantord, H.

Sunday, March U, 1481

by

Chic Young

W H E R E W O U LD YOU
L IK E T O
EAT
T O N I G H T ^ ' 1'- * * * &gt;
•&gt;

B EE TLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker

Animal w iita
A n s w e r to P re v io u s P u rtle
chemical
1 Unit ol light
Medical
4 Gothic irch
picture (comp
9 Landing boat
wd |
12 Do wrong
Footrest
13 Mauler
Tibetan
14 Environment
gatelle
agency(abbr)
It is (contr)
15 Ocean
Horse doctor,
16 Savor
for short
17 Pinch
8 Build
18 Arbitrary
9 Part ol the
auerlion
eye
(colloq |
10 Rotissene
20 Social rank
skewer
22 Printer'*
53 City in Israel
31 Christs
meature (pi) 11 Measuring
birthday
54
Challenge
strip
24 Ideal ga*
(abbr |
19 Selenium
condition
32 Afghanistan 55 Chantable or(abbr)
symbol
gamtation
currency
25 Soldering
21 Chimps
33 Amorous look
(abbr)
piece
23 Slender
38 Electric fish
28 With (Fr|
24 Scratches
58 Hoosier state
30 Montreal
25 Play the first 40 Apart
(abbr |
world* (air
46 Ghostly
card
34 Self esteem
48
Myself
59
Coffee
26 Homely
35 Verne hero
49 Sole
27 Continue (2
container
36 Complacent
50 Liver fluid
wd*)
37 Lily genu*
60 Prior to
39 Italian money 29 Afghan prince 51 Recedes
41 Everything
T
9
1
4
9
10 11
)
•
2
42 Force unit
43 Very (Fr)
14
1?
U
44 Compel*
IT
19
IS
point
45 Southern
20 21
11
19
general
47 Aggregate
22
2)
24
49 Overweight
52 Lacking
21 22 ))
29
,0
71 29 2/
money
56 Bill
11
57 Glazed
61 Flee
.0
J?
&gt;•
62 Law degree
”
"
(abbr)
•2
63 Steel
41
*1
64 Curve
_
65 Affirmative re
19 •9 St
12
ft] 14 IS
Ply
66 Sharpener
•1
1*
ST 19 SI 10
67 Beverage
2

across

ft

■
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|
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■

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

| t o O - E E e ! I'D CALL THAT 6QW
£ lN P O F 6 f c E A T f f t R T Y l

|

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91

94

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HOROSCOPE
B y B E R N IC E B E D E OSOL

W h at The D a y W ill B rin g ...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
March 13.1083
Knowing how to avoid
problems o f the past will
assure success In your
chosen field In the coming
year. Because you learned
well the lessons of experi­
ence you’ll know how to
overcome many obstacles.

t ake on t oo h e a v y a
workload. Concentrate on
qdallty performance.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)11
you butt into situations
today where you
shouldn't, you could cause
serious complications for
yourself as well as f or «
others. Keep your dis­
tance.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Be on your very best VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept,
behavior today If you have
to deal with persons you’d
like to impress. Every­
t hi ng you do will be
viewed by critical eyes.
O rder now: The NEW
Astro-Graph Matchmaker
wheel and booklet which
reveals romantic combina­
tions. compatibilities for
all signs, (ells how to get
along with others, finds
r i s i n g s i gns, hi dden
qualities, plus more. Mail
$2 to Astro-Graph, Box
•189. Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
tional SI for your Pisces
Astro-Graph predictions
for 1983. Be sure to give
your zodiac sign.

22) Try to avoid domestic
d i s a g r e e m e n t s t oday.
Every one small squabble
could produce a chain
reaction.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Thls Is not a good day
to tackle tasks which re­
quire your full concentra­
tion. Your attention span
might not be up to its
usunl standards.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nor.
22) It's OK to pamper
yourself a bit today, but
not to the [joint of extrav­
agance or ovcrlndulgcncc.
Treat yourself kindly, hut
In moderation.

S A G I T T A R I U S (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Being too

ARIES (March 21-April b
e
n
t
19) Any obstacles or pro­ upon gratifying your de­

blems you might have to
contend with today arc apt
to be o f your own making.

TAURUS (April 20-May

by Larry Wright 20) In social repartee with
friends toduy. try not to
introduce controversial
topics. These could turn
lukewarm discussions Into
heated arguments.

GEMINI (May 21-June
20) Unless you clearly
define your objectives to­
day. you’re not apt to have
too much to show for your
efforts. Don't flounder.

CANCER (June 21-July
2 2 ) Even though you
might feel industrious to­
day. you’d Im- wise not to

sires today could cause
you to be less considerate
of others than usual. Get
back to your true charac­
ter.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) Normally you’re
pretty good about keeping
secrets, but today you
might talk about con ­
fidential matters which
you know you shouldn't.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) It might not
p
r
o
v
e
to your best advantage to
request f av or s today.
Those who comply will
probably expect a higher
return for their deeds.

W hat The D a y W ill B ring . . .
YOUR BIRTHDAY
March 14. 1983

NORTH

♦ K9B3
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♦ A 1076

PRISCILLA'S POP

by Ed Sullivan
f B E C A U S E O N C E S O M E T H IN G \ / / l
iM T n

IT

IT

M P \/P 5 ?

^

EAST

WEST
♦ AJ64
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♦ y 10

♦ K yj

Y y 73
♦ ft 5 4 3 2

♦ 9 J

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SOUTH
♦ 752
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♦9
♦ A K 1117442

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South

BUGS BUNNY
I AM/HOWVOU SAY, IN Y ^ WOULD UK£ ONE
LPVE W HH ZEE L IT T L E / DOZEN OP V 0J2 MOST
J

BOSES,

North

K ail

1JM
Pass

I ’a u
Pass

34
Paw

Souih
34
44

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl
Opening lead # K

THEY SM ELL SO
D ELIG H TFU L

WWrTF CATDOWN ZEE BSAOTPUL^"---- S
6 T R £ £ T . r— ^
'

Wr\ t

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jam es Jacoby

YOU
7 GO, DOC.

We are going to wind up
our week of duplicate hands
w ith another example of
luck It started w ith South
He had a tough hand to bid
He was a trifle strong fo r a
three-club opening, but he
did not want to open w ith
lour clubs and shut out a

SFL0QS1

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

possible Ihrec no-trum p. Of
c o u rs e ; he co u ld have
ssed, but South re ally
ated to pass. So he opened
w ith three clubs.
West wasn't going to be
shut out. He doubled fo r
takeout.
East responded three dia­
monds and N orth was lic k ­
ing his lips in anticipation of
doubling fo r real penalties.
Then South com m itted an
unpardonable sin fo r an
expert. He rebid his pre­
empt to four!
You just don't rebid pre­
empts on your own if you
want to play good bridge
There was little to the
play. West opened the king
of diamonds. South took
dum m y's ace and ruffed a
diamond South cashed the
ace and king of trumps.
Then he led a heart to
dum m y's ace, ruffed another
diamond and led a spade.
The fortunate position of the
spade king, plus the fact that
tne king, queen and ja c k of
d ia m o n d s had fa lle n .
allowed a discard of a losin
spade on the diamond 1
South made his contract
w ith an o ve rtrick fo r plus150

The score turned out to be
almost a bottom since most
North-South pairs were plus200 or more, but proper pun­
ishment fo r South's rebid­
ding a pre-em ptive opening
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

There will be consider­
able changes In your goals
and objectives, as well as
in your perspective this
coming year. These alter­
ations will make the dif­
ference that brings you
success.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Nothing very fruitful is
likely to result today If you
permit others to direct you
In situations where you
should be lending them.
Don't abdi ca t e from
command. 1983 predic­
tions for Pisces arc now
ready. Romance, career,
luck, earnings, travel and
much more are discussed.
Send $1 To Astro-Graph.
Box 489. Radio City Sta­
tion. N.Y. 10019. Be sure
to state your zodiac sign.
Send an additional S2 for
the NEW Astro-Graph
Matchmaker wheel and
booklet.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) This Is a good day to
begin a wecdlng-out pro­
cess to e l i mi nat e un­
productive situations so
that you cn start to use
. your time and skills more
effectively.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Don't build your hopes
too high today on things
you expect friends to do
for you. There could be
d e l a y s c a u s e d by
c i r cums t anc es beyond
their control.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Be Image-conscious today
If your Involvements bring
you before the public. By
t h i n k i n g y o u r mo v e s
through first, you'll avoid
embarrassing mistakes.
CANCER (June 21-July

22) Your memory could
prove to be an undepen­
dable ally today, so don't
rely too heavily upon It.
Make lists or notes to
which you can refer.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Joint ventures entered
into Impul si vel y today
might prove to be of dubi­
ous value. Be sure both
parties have assets which
complement one another.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Seek expert counsel today
before c ommi tt ing
yourself to any type of
binding agreement. There
could Ik bidden clauses.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Put forth your best efforts
today, but also take steps
to protect what you do so
that a coworkcr Isn't crcdl ied wi th y o ur uc •
compllshmcnls.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
2 2 ) Your expect at i ons
about things you deem to
be prestigious are slightly
exaggerated. Lower your
sights so you won't be
disappointed.
B A O I T T A R I U S ( No v .
23-Dec. 21) Displays of
m oodiness will cast a
shadow over your entire
household today, so be
careful not to put on a long
face if everything doesn't
go your way.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) There's a possibil­
ity there could be a brief
delay with plans you need
approved. Walt confirma­
tion before plowing ahead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb.
19) Be extra-careful with
your possessions today so
prized Items won't get lost
or stolen. You'll be angry
later if you fail to prevent a
mishap.

G A R FIE L D

by Jim Davis

X TH I/M k T H E -Y W C fK lL tp
"W O N p E fi? o p T H E W O £ L D "

T H E Y W TH E

ONLY *EV*N THING** EvEf*
^

/AApf W IT H °U T U S . A lP .
Tm A vJ I I-f3_
SUIfSl I n 1«N»

TUM BLEW EEDS

by Laonard Starr

by T. K. Ryan
A FIFTH OF V IP BUSHMILLS! A
SHILLELAGH, A PIECE O F THE
W-AKNEY'STONE, AM PA COPY OF l &lt;'t)iA W 7ULALI H ASSAM, j
THE WOTKE FAME FIGHT SOM&amp;. V 5ALT LAKE CITY, UT.^

-ONCE ANNIE TELL5 WAR0UCK5
ABOUT THOSE VIOLENT LE6ENPS
SURROUNPlN' TH' •LOST F t rrv 'i,
FIAMTOU,' IT AIN'T
LIKELY HE'LL LET HER
GO EXPLORIN'-.

A N N IE ?! H m
P hL J OH. RIGHT* SORRY!
mPH!
SHE COULP jT * STILL-TNEAE AIN'T
7u p

U

SOONER

nr

than
UEf

HAADl Y ANYTHING MAE
FUNNER AAV THANA
TREASURE HUNT. THERES
GOT T'SE SORE NAY~

NON ASOUT IT J
---------- 71.
M R BUCKS* 1 fW RE - JUST WAITING 1/
“ " T ^ S f OR w u f e l l o w s 11

r S m P P STOP 6H0UT1NS.
SAY
anything?

m
8

MW

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, M erch n , i n j —7B

TONIGHT'S TV
„

J SATURDAY

g ia n t p a n d a Is o b se rv e d in the
re m o le W o lo n g N a tu ra l R eserve In
C h in a a n d In zoos a ro u n d th a w o rk),
a n d th e h is to ric In te rn a tlo n tl e tto rl
lo h e lp th e m In th e ir fig h t to r s u rv iv ­
a l is e ia m in e d . g

afternoo n

2:00

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NCAA BASKETBALL
M is o o u ri V alia y C o n fe re n c e C h a m ­
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t D n o &gt; r r s E V E R V B O o rs b u s i ­

7:30

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2*35
92) ( I D M O V IE " M o u n ta in M a n "
(1 9 7 8 ) D enver P yt*. J o h n D ehner *

3:00

8:05
92 (17) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
H a w ks vs D e tro it Pistons
8:30

O 3 ) N C A A B A S K E T B A L L B ig
E ast C h a m p to n th lp G am e
“ O 8PO R T8BEAT
(1 0 ) PRESEN TE

3:30

Q © S IL V E R 8 P O O N S E dw a rd
gives R icky so m e " fe lh e rty " ad vice
th a t (u rn s th e b a s h lu l b o y In to a
s m o o th -ta lk in g R om eo (R)

P S A B O W LIN G Live c o v e r­
age o f th e 520 0.0 0 0 T o le d o T r u ll
N a tio n a l C h a m p to n th lp (fro m Im p e ­
ria l L a n e t In T o le d o . O h io )
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0

f f i G L E N C A M P B E L L M U S IC
SHOW
© O M O V IE Ja n e D o e " (P re m ­
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4:00

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S ch e d u le d c o v e ra g e o t th e W o rld
f ig u r e S k a tin g C h a m p io m h ip t
(fro m H a itin k I, Finla n d ), live c o v e r­
age o f th e A ca p u lc o C h a llen g e C up
C kM -D lving c o m p e titio n , lu g filrg h lt
o f th e M e n 't a n d W o m a n 't W o rld
C u p G ia n t S la lo m S kiin g (fro m Va,l.
C o lo )
( H U M ) IN C R E D IB LE H U LK
f D (1 0 ) FR E ED O M T O S P E A K A
H o u t# D iv id e d ' W illia m F. B uckley
Jr. h o t l t an a ia m m a lio n o f alavery
th ro u g h th e m ew * o t th o te fo r and
a g a m tt it n

9:30

0

(1 ) T E A C H E R S O N LY D n a a 'i
flu -h u s b a n d d u p e s her m lo le tllrtg
h im use h e r a p a rtm e n t lo r o n e ot
h is q u ic k m on e y schem es
O 3 ) M O N IT O R (P re m ie re ) L lo yd
O obyns a n ch o rs re p o rts on p e r­
sonal h a ra ss m e n t in A m e rica , a
g ro u p o t g yp sy flim -fla m a rlis ls
kn o w n as Ih e W illia m so n G ang, w hy
so m e w h ite s In L o u isia n a a re c o n ­
sid e re d lo b e b la c k because o l an
o b s c u re H a le s ta tu te , a n d Tula
Lake. C a M . k n o w n as th e " h o r ­
se ra d ish c a p ita l o l A m e rica ,*'
© O FA N TAS Y IS LA N D

f D (10) E NTER PRISE "W o o l M e e tt
E a it " F o u r e m p lo ye e s o t th e CeJilo rn ia -b a te d N a tio n a l S e m ic o n d u c ­
to r C o rp o ra tio n to u r Ja p a n to
o b se rv e h o w th e J a p a n e te are
riv a lin g a n d su rp a s sin g A m e rica n
in d u s try m a va rie ty o f f e ld t g

9 ! (35) IN D E P E N D E N T N ETW O R K
N EW S

4:35

10:20

9 2 (17) M IS S IO N : IM P O S S IB LE

9 2 (17) TO BE A N N O U N C E D

5:00

10:30

Q 9 P G A G O LF Bay H ill C la s­
t ic ' Live co ve ra ge o t th e th ird
ro u n d
© O W ID E W O R LD O F S P O H T 8
S ch e d ule d live co ve ra g e o t the
Ja im e G a m t M ik e A yala 1 0 -round
S uper B a n la m w e ig h t b o u t (Iro m
Las V egas. N ev ). sa m e -d a y c o v e r­
age o ( th e R io M ile (tro m R io de
J a n e iro . B ra tili
O f ( U ) D A N IE L BO O N E
f D (1 0 ) W A S H IN G T O N W E E K IN
R EVIEW

0 (35) S IS K E L 4 EBER T AT THE
M O V IE S

10:35
9 2 (17) NEW S

11:00

f D (1 0 ) W A L L IT R E E T W EEK " A
T ough W ay To M a k e A Living
G uest S te fa n D A b ra m s , c h a ir­
m an , S to ck S e le ctio n C o m m itte e

O '*
5 0 ( 1 ) 0 N EW S
i l l (35) B EN N Y H ILL
f D (1 0 ) B E A C H B O YS TOTH A N N I­
V E R S A R Y S P E C IA L T h e g re a t
m o m e n ts a n d triu m p h s o l Ih e le g ­
e n d a ry ro ck a n d rod b a n d in c lu d e
lo o ta g e o t ihew 1980 W a s h in g to n .
0 C c o n c e rt a n d e xclu sive in te r­
view s w ith th e g ro u p m e m b e rs
S pe cia l g u e sts G len C a m p b e ll.
A n d y W illiam s. D arytl D ra g o n

5:35

11:30

©

5:30

O 0 ) S ATU R D AY N IG H T LIVE
H o st B ru c e D ern G uest Leon
R e d bo n e
© O M O V IE
H e lle r S ke lte r
(P a rt 2) (1 9 7 5 ) S ie ve R a ilsb a ck.
G e o rg e D iC enzo
© O M O V IE
S p le n d o r In The
G r a s s ' (1 9 8 1 ) N a ta lie W o o d . W a r­
re n B e a lty
0 (35) M O V IE The C o lo ss u s O t
N ew Y o r k " (1 9 5 8 ) O tto K ru g e r.
M a la P o w e rs

(1 7 ) M O T O R W IE K ILLU S TR A TE VEN IN G

6:00

0&gt;© O N EW 8
(S S )K U N O F U
(1 0 ) TH E M A N W H O LO VEO
H enry F onda n a rra ta s th e
ito ry o f M a rty S to u tfa r s p e rso n a l
a n p en e n ce e w tin a b e a r w h ile livin g
e frugal M t m s w rite r in a re m o te
C o lo ra d o valley

11:35
92 (17) TUSHI "F a n ta s y
T G S h e p p a rd . The B ra in s
12:35

6:05
92) (17) WRESTLING
6:30

O © NBC NEWS
f f i O CBS NEWS
( 1 ) 0 NEWS

6:00

(3 5 ) M O V IE
N igh) M on ste r
(194 S) Beta Lugosi. Irene H ervey

1:00
1:40
©

O

M O V IE

"C a s tle K e e p "

By Dick Kleiner

You may have also seen
her In the feature film.
•' Excal l bur. ” playing
Guinevere.
And. chances are. you
will be seeing her more
o f t e n In t h e f u t u r e ,
because Cherie Lunghl Is
in California searching for
a new rung in her career
l

a

d

d

e

r

.

" ‘Excallbur’ Is the only
movie I’ ve done,” says
Cherie. "but It won’t be
the last. I have acquired a
Hollywood agent and I am
going after u Hollywood
career."
Seems so m c w ha I
strange, for a young lady
who has a lofty reputation
In England, as a member

SCHOOL MENU
MONDAY, MARCH 14
ENTREE
Flshwlch
Potato Pattie
Broccoli
Ice Cream
Milk

EXPRESS
Flshwlch
Taler Tots
Fresh Fruit
Milk/OJ

TUESDAY, MARCH IS
ENTREE
MANAGER S CHOICE
(Ground Beef)
-menu will vary by
school-

WEDNESDAY. MARCH
I S

ENTREE
Pizza
Tossed Salad
Green Beuns
Milk

EXPRESS
Pizza
Taler Tots
Fresh Fruit
Mllk/OJ
Orange Juice
(Secondary Only)

THURSDAY, MARCH
17
MANAGER S CHOICE
(Ground BccI)
•menu will vaiy by
schoolST. PATRICK'S DAY

FRIDAY, MARCH 16

12:00

12:30

®

O

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&lt; 1 )2 8 COM PANY

©

O TO D A Y 'S B L A C K W O M A N
(35) BEN H A D E N

0 &gt;M EE T TH E PRESS
W A L L S TR EE T JO U R N A L
REPORT
fD (10) M A G IC O F D EC O R A TIV E
P A IN TIN G

(7. O

7:05
92 (17) TH E W O R LD T O M O R R O W
7:30

12:35

®
O FIR ST P R E 8B Y TE R IA N
CHURCH OF O RLANDO

12 (17) M O TO R C Y C LE RAC IN G
"D a y to n a 2 0 0 " L ive co ve ra g e o f
th e 4 2 n d ru n n in g o l th e fa tte s t,
rich e st a n d lo n g e st m o to rc y c le ra ce
a n yw h e re is p re s e n te d

7:35
92 (17) (TIS WRITTEN

O

0 f f i O t (3 5 ) E. J. D A N IE LS

8:00

(4 )
©
(0
fD

O REX H U M B A R O
Q B O B JO N ES
(35) JO N N Y Q U E ST
(10) S E S A M E S TR EE T (R) g

«

(17) C A R TO O N S

8:05
8:30

1:00

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C O LLE G E B A S K E T B A L L
A C C C h a m p io n s h ip G a m e " (tro m
Ih e O m n i In A tla n ta . G a |
© O B IL L D AN C E O U TD O O R S
f D ( t0 ) M A G IC O F O IL P AIN TIN G

1:30

0 3 ) SUNDAY M ASS

(5) O

D AY O F D ISC O VER Y
© 0 O R A L R OBERTS
I T (3 5 ) JO S IE A N D TH E P U S S Y ­
C ATS

9:00
0 ' * TH E W O R LD TO M O R R O W
© O S U N D A Y M O R N IN G
© O S P E A K EASY
(D
(3 5 ) B U G S B U N N Y A N D
FR IEN D S
fD (10) LIV IN G LIFE FU LLY W ITH
L E O B U S C A Q L IA Dr Leo B usesg lia d e live rs a n u p liftin g ta lk o n the
im p o rta n c e o f livin g ea ch d a y lo Its
fu lle st

9:05

OX (35) YESTERDAY NEW8REEL

2:00

(4 O N C A A B A S K E T B A L L "B ig 8
C h a m p ,o n ship G a m e " (tro m K a n ­
sa s C ity. M o )
U (35) M O V IE "D a m e s " (19341
J o a n B lo n d e ll D ick P ow ell
fD (10) THE G R E A T W H O D U N ITI
W illia m C o n ra d is jo in e d b y Tom m y G rim es. G e ra ld in e F itzg e ra ld .
G ene B a rry a n d H o w a rd O u tt to r a
se rie s o t m y s te ry v ig n e tte s in w hich
th re e fa m o u s d e te c tiv e s in v ite
v ie w e r: t c h e lp th e m so lve th e ir
m o s t pu zzling cases

3:00

O

4 PG A G O LF Bay H ill C la s ­
s ic " L ive c o v e ra g e o t th e fin a l ro u n d
(tro m O rla n d o . Fla I

I I (IT )L O S T IN S PA C E

9:30
0

3 ) M O N T A G E : THE B LA C K
PRESS
© O D IS C U S S IO N
(U (35) TH E JE T S O N 3

fD 1101 A LF R E D H ITC H C O C K PRE­

10:00

3:35

O '*

HEALTHBEAT
©
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FIS H IN G W ITH R O LA N D
M A R T IN
11 (35) M O V IE
O ur R e fib o n s "
(1 9 3 6 ) S ia n L a u re l. O liver H ardy

fD (1 0 ) M O V IE

The M en W h o
C a m e To D in n e r" 11942) M o n ty
W o o lle y B e tte D avis

10:05
9 1 ( IT ) LIG H TE R S ID E

I
V

10:30
13 ) e m e r g e n c y
OJ lB L A C K A W A R E N E S S
) O FIR ST B A P TIS T C H U R C H

10:35
9 1 (1 7 ) M O V IE "S a n d s O f tw o
J im a " ( I9 4 9 | Jo h n W ayne Jo h n
A g a r The lo u g h tra in in g th a t a U S
M a rin e se rg e a n t gives h is re b e llio u s
re c ru its re s u lts in m e c a p tu re o l Iw o
Ju n e

11:00
© O

SEN TS

th e

n o te d

The F ig h lm g
J o h n W ayne.

4:00

(4
O 8PO R T8 8U N 0A Y
S ch e d u le d sa m e -d a y c o v e ra g e o t
th e W o rld F igu re S k a tin g C h a m ­
p io n s h ip s (Iro rn H e lsin ki, Finland).
Ih e N C A A B a s k e tb a ll N a tio n a l
T o u rn a m e n t S e le ctio n s live c o v e r­
a g e o l th e A c a p u lco C h a llen g e C up
C M IO v tn g c o m p e titio n , liv e c o v e r­
age o t Ih e N C A A 's a n n o u n c e m e n t
o t p a irin g s to r th e D ivisio n I M en s
B a s k e tb a ll C h a m p io n s h ip (fro m
K ansas D ly . M o ).
( t t (35) IN C R E D IB LE H U L K
fD (10) N A T IO N A L G E O G R A P H IC
S P E C IA L "S a v e The P a n d a " The
g ia n t p a n d a is o b se rv e d In the
'e m o te W o lo n g N a tu ra l R eserve in
C h in a a n d in zoos a ro u n d th e w o rld ,
a n d Ihe h is to ric in te rn a tio n a l e ffo rt
lo h e lp th e m in th e ir lig h t lo r s u rv iv ­
a l is e ia m m e d g

TH IR TY M IN U TE S

4:45

O 4 NORM 8LO AN
(1 O FAC E TH E N A T IO N
f f l O TH IS W E E K W ITH D AV ID
B R IN K LE Y

o f

3:30

12 (1 7 ) M O V IE
S ea b e e s
(1 9 4 4 )
S usan H ayw ard

In d o p o n d o n l
A lt o n t a , O a .

11:00

O r la n d o P u b lic
B r o a d c a t lin g S y ite m

ENTREE
Cheeseburger
TaterTots
Fresh Fruit
Milk/OJ
Tossed Salad
(Secondary Only)

” 1 said that was tny
name." she says, "and I
have al ways had that
name and I would stay
with that name, thank you
very much."

0

© VO YA G E R S) P hineas and
J e ffre y d is co ve r t h i l F ra n k lin D
R oosevelt h ss m is se d h is ca llin g In
p o litic s and has b e co m e a H o lly ­
w o o d M m d ire c to r
© O SO M IN U TE S
© Q S EA R C H Five e s p e rt c o m ­
m e n ta to rs . in c lu d in g Or M ic h a e l De
B ik e y and scie n ce w rite r W a lter
S ulliva n , lo o k a I how o u r live s are
a ffe cte d by Ih e fa sc in a tin g d is c o v ­
e ries th a t a re b e in g m ad e e ve ry
day.
0 (35) W ILO . W IL D W E ST
CD 110) THE S O U N D S O F LO VE
Dr Leo B usce g lia p re sc rib e s th e
m o il im p o rta n l In g re d ie n t fo r lo vin g
re lih o n s h tp s - ■ h e a lth y d o se o l
g o o d c o m m u n ic a tio n

7:05
0

©

8:05
92

(1 7 ) N A S H V IL L E A L IV E I
G u e sts Faron Young, B illie Jo
S pears. G ene W a tson . Terry M c M il­
la n B ill M on roe

8:30
C4' O G LO R IA G lo ria and C la rk
a re stra n d e d to g e th e r in an o u t-o lth e -w a y h o n eym o o n m o te l
0 (35) JERRY F A LW E LL

9:00

0

© M O V IE " N ig h lk ill" (19801
Jactyn S m ith. R o b e rt M itch u m
( 5 ( 0 THE JEFFER SO NS
© O M O V IE
"The C h in a S yn ­
d ro m e " (1979) Ja ck L e m m o n . Jane
Fonda
fD (lO )’PLE D Q E B R E A K R e g ularly
sc h e d u le d p ro g ra m m in g m ay be
d e la ye d due to p le d g e b re a ks

9:05
92 (17) WEEK IN REVIEW

9:10

fD (1 0 ) M AS TER P IEC E TH E ATR E
O n A p p ro v a l" T w o u n m a rrie d
c o u p le s sp end a m o n th lo g o f f * , lo
t,n d o u t it m a rria g e i t th a buss th e y
th in k n w o u ld b e . J e re m y B re n .
P en e lop e K e ith . H e le n H eyta and
B e n ia m in W h rtrow s ta r g
0

9:30

f f i FA N TA S Y
O G U ID W O L IG H T
O G E N E R A L H O S P IT A L
(3 5 ) C AS P ER
(10) FR E N C H C H EF (M O N )
CD (10) C O O K IN 'C A J U N (TUE)
CD (10) E NTER PRISE (W ED )
CD (10) TH E L A W M A K E R S (FRI)

0 f f i WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(4) O THE PRICE IS RJOHT
© O LOVE BOAT (R)

8

0 ( 3 5 ) 35 LIVE
CD (10) O V E R E ASY

11:05

5:35

(17) U N D ER S EA W O R LD OF
JA C Q U E S C O U S TE A U
E VEN IN G

6:00

O

© © O N EW S
111 (3 S IK U N G F U

6:30
0 ( 1 N B C N EW S
J O N EW S
0 O A B C N EW S

5:25
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H O L L Y W O O D A N D THE
8 T A R S (M O N )

5:30

92

(17) I T S
(M O N ) '

0

YOUR

B U SIN ESS

5:45
92 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (TUE)
6:00
0 © 2 *8 C O U N TR Y
0) O
C B S E AR LY M O R N IN G
N EW S
© O S U N R ISE
(35) JIM B AN K ER
(1 7 JN E W 8

6:30
0 ® E A R LY TOO AV
©
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C B S E AR LY M O R N IN O
N EW S
© 0 A B C N EW S THIS M O R N IN O

©QNEW S

6:45

f D (10) A M . W E ATH E R

7:00
0 ® TO D A Y
© O M O R N IN O N EW S
© O G O O D M O R N IN O A M E R IC A
0 ( 3 5 ) N EW S
fD (10) TO LIFEI

7:05
92' (17) FU N TIM E
7:15
f D ( 10) A M . W E ATH E R

7:30
1 1 (35) W O O D Y W O O D P E C K E R
fD (10) S E S A M E STR EET g

7:35
92 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00

0
(35) FRED FLIN TSTO N E A N D
FR IEN D S

3.35

A FTER N O O N

N B C N E W J O V ER N IG H T

(17) M IS S IO N ; IM P O S S IB LE

3:30
9 £ (3 5 ) B U 0 3 B U N N Y A N D
FR IEN D S
CD (10) E LE C TR IC C O M P A N Y (R)
0 2 ( 1 7 ) TH E F U N T 8 T 0 N 6 8

12:00
0 0 } S O A P W O R LD
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C A R O LE N ELS O N A T
NOON
© O N EW S
0 ( 3 5 ) B IO V A LLE Y
CD (10) M YS TER Y (M O N )
f D (10) M A S TE R P IE C E TH EATR E
(TUE)
CD (10) U F E O N E AR TH (W EO)
CD (10) N O V A (TH U )
f D (IQ ) RETURN O F THE OR EAT
W H A L E S (FRI)

12:05

4:00
0
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PRAIRIE
(4 ) O H O U R M A G A Z IN E (M O N .
TU E. TH U . FRI)

("4 O CBS LIBRARY (WED)
© 1 Q M E R V G R IFFIN (M O N . TU E.
T H U , FRI)
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1) (35) T O M A N D JER R Y
f D (10) S E S A M E S TR EE T g

4:05
9 2 (17) TH E M U N S TE R S

9 2 (1 7 ) PEO P LE N O W

4:30

12:30
O f f i N EW S
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THE YO U N G A N D THE
RESTLESS
© O R Y A N 'S H O P E

1:00
0 0 D AY S O F OU R LIVES
f f l O A L L M Y C H ILD R E N
0 (3 5 ) M O V IE
f D (10) THE O R E A T W H O D U N ITI
(M O N )
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(10) C LA R E N C E O A R R O W
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f D (1 0 ) TH E H ISTO R Y OF TH E S.S.
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f D (10) F LO R ID A H O M E G R O W N
(FRI)

1:05

© O A FTE R S C H O O L S P E C IA L
(W ED )
0 (35) S C O O B Y DOO

4:35
92 (17) LEA V E IT TO B EA VE R
5:00
0 © LA VERNE i S H IR LE Y 4
COM PANY
( J O THREES COM PANY
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5:05
9 2 (171 TH E BRA D Y B U N C H

5:30
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1:30
(5 O A S TH E W O R LD TURNS
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5:35

2:00
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' O O N E LIFE TO LIVE
f D MO) THE SO U N O S O F LOVE
(TUE)
CD (10) M A G IC O F O IL PAIN TIN G
(FRI)

U (17) ST A R C A D E (M O N )
(J (17) B E W IT C H E D (T U E -F R I)

2:30
0

O C A P IT O L

8:05
9 2 (1 7 ) M Y TH R EE SO N S

8:30
a x (35) O R E A T SPA C E C O A STE R
fD (10) M ISTE R R O O E R 3 (R)

8*35
92 (17) THAT GIRL
9:00
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© 0 DONAHUE
© 0 M O V IE
0 (35) LE A V E IT T O B EAVER
f D (10) S E S A M E S TR EE T g

92 (17) MOVIE

9:05

9 '3 0
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A N N K H O N N IK ’S

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AND
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OUR HAPPY HOURS
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10.00

O ® TH E F A C T S O F LIFE (RJ
O M O R E R EA L PEO P LE
(35) A N O Y O R IFFITH

TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.

92 (1 7 ) NEW S

10:05
10:30
11:00

0© © O N EW 8

fD (10) S N E A K PREVIEW S Neal
G a b ler and Je ffre y L yons p ic k Ihe
b e st tilm s o l 1982. (R)

92 (1 7 ) JERRY FA L W E L L

11:30

0

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E N T E R TA IN M E N T T H I8
W E EK Interview s w ith H elen R e d ­
dy. D o ro th y Lym an. Ja y n e K en n e ­
dy. S uzanne P le sh e tte . a lo o k a t the
p o rtra y a l o l poUca o n Ih e scre e n
(4 ) O S O LID G O LD

1)

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11:35
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12:05
(7 0 LARRY KING
,12 (17) OPEN UP C ues) comedy
s la r a n d h u m a n rig h ts a c tiv is t D ick
G re g o ry

0 0 ) M O V IE

12:30

The B ro ke n S ta r"
(1956) H o w a rd D u ll. L ila B aron
© O M O V IE "T h e Q la ss M a n a g ­
e r*
(1 9 7 3 ) K a th a rin e H e p b u rn .
Jo a n n a M iles
li t (35) IT S YOUR B U S IN ES S

1:05

92 (1 7 ) M O V IE

6:35
92

(PRO

15 (17) FU N TIM E

11:05

*
SPO R TSW O R LD
S ch e d u le d Ih o W o m e n s P ro fe s­
sio n a l W o rld C u p S u rfin g C h a m ­
p io n sh ip (l»om O ahu, H aw aii). Ihe
N H R A W o rld Funny C a r D ra g R ac­
in g F inals (tro m Ih e O ra n g e C o u nty
In te rn a l,o n a l R acew ay in Irvine.
C a lif |
H (35) D A N IE L B O O N E
fD (1 0 ) C LA R E N C E O A R R O W
S TA R R IN G H EN R Y FONO A H enry
F o n d a p o rtra y s ih e c o n tro v e rs ia l
d e le n se la w yer a n d h u m a n ita ria n m
an a w a rd -w in n in g o n e -m a n show

92

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3:05

11:30
O ' * ) H IT M A N
a X (35) IN D E P E N D E N T N ETW O R K
N EW S
f D ( 10) P O STSC R IPTS

5:00
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3:00
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N EW H A R T

11 ' (3 5 ) JIM M Y 8 W A O O A R T

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M O R N IN G

6:00

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(IX (3 5 ) H E A L T H M A T T E R S
"C o ro n a ry B yp a ss "
fD (1 0 ) LIFE O N E AR TH "T h e R u e
O f The M im m a lS " D avid A tte n b o r­
o u g h lo o k s i t p la typu se s. T a sm a n i­
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MONDAY!

CD (10) E M C A /
W O R K (M O N )
CD (10) M IR A G E (TH U )
CD (10) M A G IC O F D E C O R A TIV E
P A IN TIN G (FR I)

11 (35) JIM B AN K ER

O W ID E W O R LD O F 8 P O R IS
S ch e d ule d liv e co ve ra ge o f Ihe
J e tt C h a nd le r / Jose " G a b y " C am zaies 1 5 -ro u n d W GA B an ta m w eig h t
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Shakespeare Company
and as an actress wltii
many bright West End
credits to her credit.
"I feel," she says, "that I
have Just about exhausted
what England has to offer
to me, as an actress. There
are only really two TV
networks that do dramatic
things. And there are only
really two theatrical com­
panies of any stature —
th e R S C ( R o y a l
Shakespeare Company)
and the Nationul."
Stic says she has done
many things for both of
those TV networks, and
she spent two vears with
the RSC.
"And so now I feel." she
continues, "that It’s my
time to explore movies —
and today movies means
Hollywood, because there
Just Isn't that much movIc-nidklng In England."
She should do well on
the big screen. She is slim
and trim and has a softly
beautiful face, the kind
that writers of romantic
novels like lo call "haunt­
ing.”
She Is half-Ilallan and
hulf-Engllsh. and that may
have something to do with
her exotic beauty. But she
Is all-English In the way
she talks, thinks and acts.

J o h n a n d E vory J o rd a n , a re tire d
co u p le w h o te a ch k id s to m a k e a n d
Fly k ite s; C a lifo rn ia R e p re se n ta tive
to m L a n io s, th e o n ty H o lo ca u s t
su rv iv o r lo ba e le cte d lo C o n gress.
R o b e rt W a g n e r a n d S te p h a n ie
P ow ers, sta rs o l T V 's p o p u la r " H a n
To H a rt," w ho a re ra ia in g m o n e y lo r
the H e a rt Fund

92 (17) WRESTLING

© O U SFL F O O T B A L L New J e r­
sey G e n e ra ls at P h ila d e lp h ia S la r*
fD (1 0 ) FLO R ID A H O M E G R O W N
S p rin g G a rd e n "

1:50

Her name Is pronounced
Loongl. but she says it Is
alm ost al ways m ispro­
nounced. An agent once
suggested that she change
tt. but she said no.

Cheeseburger
Sliced Potatoes
Buttered Carrots
Milk

O

7:00

^English Beauties
IC ontinue Invasion
HOLLYWOOD Fol­
lowing on (tic well-turned
h e e l s o f B l s s e t and
Seymour and Down and
Ward c omes a new
English beauty. Her name
[ Is Cherie Lunghl. She Is as
beautiful as Jackie or Jane
or Lcsley-Annc or Rachel,
but she has something the
others never had — a solid
acting background.
You saw her (or. If you
didn’t, you missed some­
thing very good) in the
first o f the series of Agatha
Christie stories on the FBS
series. "Mystery!’ ’ It was
called "T h e Manhood of
Edward Robinson" and
Cherie Lunghl starred.

&lt;1! (35) LA U R E L A N D H AR D Y
A FTE R N O O N

O 0 1O P P O R TU N IT Y LINE
© O S P E C TR U M
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6:05
92(17| WEEK IN REVIEW
6:30

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C H A M P IO N S H IP FIS HIN G
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51. P e t t r i b u r g . b y t u n in g to c h o n n o l 1 ; tu n in g to c h o n n o l 11, w h ic h c o r r io s s p o r t i o n d th o C h r lit t o n
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8:00

2:30

2:00

0 3 ) NEWS

F L O R ID A 'S W A TC H IN G
O D D S )B A R N E Y M ILLE R

ness

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(1 9 6 9 ) B u rt L a n ca ste r, P eter Falk

(17) NICE P E O P LE F e a tu re d

A d v e n tu re s Ol
C a sa n o va " (1948) A rtu ro d e C o rd o ­
va. Turh a n Bey

Bring Your Family ft Friends To

Anne Bonnies Tavern
f Sunday Crab
&amp; Oyster Feast
^

Garik Crab 25* «4Ch
Roasted Oysters 10* •ten
Stnohed Mulet
45* Itt Doom Sofldooi t
•1.00 Hombonon For ti» kki«

HEADLINERS DOES IT AGAIN! 1
They brought home the Brooks Master Trophy (or the second consecutive year, along
w ith 3 other awards, from “ The Brooks Explosion o l Beauty 'B 3 " regional hairstyling
com petition held in Jacksonville February 20.

2 For 1 All Hi Balts
&amp; Mott Cocktaili 1
•y at. Giatt** ot Tea or Coke 45*
Imported Beer *1.00
j
Domestic Beer 75*
j
LOCATED IN S ID E

Sanford

LY N D A BEHRENS placed firs t w ith U S A PORZIG as her m odel. BO N N A FIT Z ­
GERALD won third place w ith M ONICA W ILLARD as her model. LYNDA also placed
third In "T o ta l F ashion" w ith LA U R IE BROWN as her m odel.
CAROLYN BETTS and GINNY STADIG made all o l the com petition costumes.
These talented "P rize W inning G irls " are g e tting ready fo r the atate show lo
held in O rlando in A p ril.

"Let O u r R eputation G o To Your H e a d "

I

Jakmil &lt;^5eJ
J508 F ren ch A ve. (H w y . 1 7 -tll

L » ft t o r ig h t ) B o n n e F lt s g a r a ld , M o n ic a W illa r d , I l i a P o a lg . l a u r l a B r o w n o n d
U n d o B o h ro n s

*

P H O N E 321-5851
2303 F R E N C H A V E
SANFORD

�I B - E v t n ln f l H tra ld , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, M arch 13, m i

Carter's
Motorcade
Is Stoned
RAM ALLAH. Israeli-occupied West Bank (UPI1 —
Palestinian protesters Saturday stoned the
motorcade of former President Jimmy Carter on
tour of the occupied West Bank. Police said no one
was Injured.
UP1 reporter Gerald Nadlcr said Carter was In a
motorcade of about eight vehicles led by two black
limousines when It came under a barrage of rocks
and stones hurled by Palestinian youths.
Israeli troops chased away the protesters and
authorities said no one In the motorcade was hurt,
although several of the cars were hit.
It was not Immediately known If the car In which
Carter was tiding was hit by the rocks.
The motorcade continued on Its trip without
slopping after the Incident.
Carter had gone Into Kamallah. a West Bank
town several miles north of Jerusalem, after
touring the Tomb of Samuel nearby. The city's
main street was had been blocked to local traffic in
anticipation of his visit.
Carter's private tour of Israel has been marked
with violence since in began earlier this week.
The protesters arc angry with' Carter because of
his role In the 1978 Camp David accords that led to
the 1979 Isracll-Egyptlan peace treaty and Carter's
failure to support an Independent Palestinian state.
In the old city of Jerusalem Saturday. Israeli
soldiers opened fire on rock-throwing Palestinian
demonstrators, wounding one Arab youth In the
leg.
Israel Radio said an army patrol fired at the
demonstrators after the windshields o f several cars
were smashed by rocks.
,
Military sources said Arab demonstrators at
Halhoul. near the West Bank town of Hebron,
threw' rocks that smashed the windshields of
several Israeli vehicles. One Israeli army officer
was Injured when hit by a stone.
On Friday. Jewish zealots armed with rifles,
pistols and shovels tried to storm Islam’s holiest
site In Jerusalem but were turned back by police,
who arrested 39 people.
Police, acting on a tip. stopped the protest before
the demonstrators got to the holy site, which
houses Al Aksa Mosque and the gold Dome of
Rock, one o f Jerusalem ’ s most prominent
landmarks.
Most of those arrested were soldiers who were
members of Rabbi Melr Kahane's nationalistic
Kach movement.

Help Offered Smokers
To Kick The Habit
A five-day plan to stop smoking will be offered at
Florida Hospllal/Altamonte. starting March 20 at 7:30
p .m .
,* A physlclan/counselor team will direct the sessions.
The physician will discuss how the body reacts to
smoking cessation. The counselor will prepare partici­
pants for the emotional side effects o f giving up the
habit.
Habits that reinforce dependence on tobacco will be
discussed as well as a plan to avoid weight gain — a fear
of many who want to stop smoking. A support group
will be organzled during the program in order that
participants may encourage each other.
Persons may call 897-1927 for more Information.

Kid-Proof Bottle Caps
Are Adult Proof, Too
WASHINGTON (UP!) — What America needs Is a
better medicine bottle — one that protects children from
accidental poisonings while also giving adults easy
access to medication.
That was the message voiced at a hearing Thursday
by the Consumer Protect Safety Commission on
proposed changes In the Poison Prevention Packaging
Act ori970.
Adults frustrated by child-resistant caps for poten­
tially hazardous household products pleaded for new
bottle tops that can be opened without a struggle — and
In less than a minute.
T he y compl ai ned that many el derl y people,
particularly those suffering from arthritis, are unable to
manipulate the safety caps used on products ranging
from drain cleaners to aspirin.
As a result, they said, many people do not close the
bottles once they manage to open them — effectively
nullifying the 13-year-old act that mandated the caps as
a way to prevent accldcn tlal poisonings o f children.
"American technology Is certainly advanced enough
to design caps that are difficult to open by young, yet
easily manipulated by adults." said Anne Averyt of the
Consumer Federation o f America.
Last month, the CPSC staff proposed changes In
testing procedures and standards for chlld-reslstant
caps.
Under the proposals, now under commission review,
the maximum allowable test time for an adult to open a
child-resistant bottle would be reduced from five
minutes to less than one minute.
In addition, elderly people would be placed on the
examination panels, which are now composed o f people
from age 18 to 45.
Commissioner Stuart Staffer, after hearing a bevy of
cap complaints, offered this observation: "W e 'v e
managed to put a man on the moon ... but haven't been
able to come up with a cap, for aspirins and oven
cleaners, resistant to children and accessible to adults."
Said Staffer. "You say we have to do a better Jobs. And
I say we will do a better job."
Representatives o f several drug packaging firms
endorsed the Intent o f the proposed revisions, but urged
l he commission to be careful not to make bottles too
accessible.
"There appears to be no way around It." Alexander
Perrltt, president o f Perrltt Laboratories Inc., of
Hlghtstown, N.J., said. "Chlld-reslstant packaging. In
order to be effective, is going to generate some level of
adult complaints."
The chlld-reslstant cap has been credited with
dramatically reducing accidental child poisonings.
Including a 83 percent drop in Incidents Involving
aspirin.
Witnesses testified that they believed poisonings could
be further reduced with broader use o f such caps,
provided a better one is developed.

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
E IO H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D F 0 R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y F L O R ID A
CASE NO. 92-401-CA-29-K
IN T H E M A T T E R O F T H E A D 0 P
T I0 N 0 F :
C H A D W IL L IA M K A N A I
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : M ic h a e l Boagn
( L o t K no w n A d d re s s)
R oute IS
Lebanon, M is s o u ri 45534
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D t b i t an
A c tio n lo r A d o p tio n h a t been Ilia d In
b e h a tl o l th e above s ty le d m in o r
c h ild and yo u a re re q u ire d to te rv e m
co p y o f y o u r d e le n te t. II a n y , to It on
K E N N E T H R. R O N E Y . P e titio n e r'!
a tto rn e y , w h o *# a d d r e tt I t M 3 N o rth
H ig h la n d A ve n u e. S uite 3B, O rla n d o .
F lo rid a 37103. on o r b e fo re A p r il 5.
1993. and file the o rig in a l w ith the
C le rk o f th is C o u rt e ith e r b e fore
•e rv lc e I t m ad e on th e P e tlllo n e r 't
a tto rn e y o r Im m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r;
o th e rw is e a d e ta u lt w ill be e n te re d
a g a ln tt yo u lo r th e re lie f d e m a n d e d
In th e p e titio n
W lf n c t t m y h a n d a t the C le rk of
th e la id C o u rt a n d the Seat th e re o f,
t h l i tO th d a y o f M a rc h . I t M
(S E A L )
A rth u r H . B e c k w ith . J r .
C le rk o l the C ir c u it C o u rt
S em inole C o u nty. F lo rid a
E v e C ra b lre e .
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h : M a rc h 13. 70. 37. A p r il 3.
ItM
D E F * 4 ______________________________
IN T H E C I R 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
C A S E N O . I3 -9 0 -C A -4 9 -E
D O U G L A S S P L U M B I N G , a Sole
p r o p r ie to r s h ip .
P la in t if f
VI.

W A L T E R A . B U R R IS a n d S A N
D R A L . B U R R IS .
D e fe n d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : W A L T E R A . B U R R IS a n d
S A N D R A L . B U R R IS
L a st kn o w n a d d re tt
300 S w e e tw a te r C lu b C ir c le
L o n g w o o d , F I 37750
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T I F I E D th a t a N o tic e o f L i t
Pendent and
C o m p l a in t
In
fo re c lo s u re h a t b e e n H ie d In th is
C o u rt a g a ln t t y o u , a n d th a t y o u
a re re q u ir e d to t e r v e a c o p y o f
y o u r w r it t e n d e fe n s e s . It a n y u p o n
th e a t t o r n e y . lo r th e P la in t if f ,
C A R M IN E M . B R A V O . P .A .. 1941
SR 434. S u ite IBS, L o n g w o o d , F I
37750 o n o r b e fo r e th e 7 3 lh d a y o l
M a r c h , 1913, o r ig in a l t o b e f ile d
w it h th e C le r k o l t h is C o u rt b e fo re
s e rv ic e u p o n s a id a t t o r n e y ,
or
I m m e d ia t e l y t h e r e a l l e r , o r a
d e fa u lt w il l b e e n te re d a g a in s t yo u
fo r th e r e lie f t o u g h l In th e C o m
p la in t.
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d t e a l th is
17th d a y o f F e b r u a r y , I9 M .
(S e a l)
A r t h u r H . B e c k w ith . J r .
C le r k , C ir c u it C o u rt
E v e C ra b tr e e
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h : F e b . 70 , 77, M a r c h 4, )3 ,
ItM
D E E 135
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 O 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 IO A .
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
CASE NO. 91*93 CP
IN R E : The E tla tc o l B E U L A H I.
O 'D O N N E L L . D eceased
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Th e a d m in is tra tio n o t th e E tta le of
B E U L A H I. O 'D O N N E L L , deceased.
F ile N u m b e r S3 097 C P I t p e n d in g In
the C ir c u it C o u rt fo r S em inole
C o u nty, F lo rid a . P ro b a te D iv is io n ,
the a d d r e tt o t w h ic h I t P o tl O ffic e
B o * " C " . S an fo rd , F lo rid a 37771. The
n a m e s a n d a ddresses o f th e P erso n a l
R e p re s e n ta tiv e a n d fha P tr to n a l
R e p re s e n la tlv a 's a tto rn e y a re set
fo rth be lo w
A ll In te re ste d p e r te n t a re re q u ire d
to tile w ith th is c o u rt. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N T H S O F T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N O F ’ T H IS N O T IC E
( I ) a ll c la im s a g a ln tt th e e sta te and
17) a n y o b |tc lio n b y an I n ltr e tte d
p e rso n to w h o m th is n o tic e w as
m a ile d th a t ch a lle n g e s th e v a lid ity o l
fha w ill, t h t q u a lific a tio n s o l the
P tr to n a l R e p r tta n ta llv * . venue, o r
lu r ltd ic tlo n o f th e c o u rt
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C T IO N S
N O T SO F I L E D W IL L B E F O R E V
ERBARRED
P u b lic a tio n o l th is N o tic e h a t
begun on M a rc h t . I9 M
A N N M . LEFFER T.
P e rso n a l R e p re s e n ta tiv e
1010 P r ln c t t t G a la B o u le va rd
M a itla n d . F lo r id a 37731
A tto rn e y lo r P erso n a l
R e p re se n ta tive
T E R R A N C E H D IT T M E R
M u rra h , D o yle . S e tte r A D lltm e r .
P .A .
too W est M o rse B o u le v a rd
P o tt O ffic e B o * 1371
W in te r P a r k .F lo r ld a 37790
T e le p h o n e : (3051*44 9901
P u b lis h : M a r c h * . 1 3 .19M
D E F 14
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T , O F
T H E E IO H T E E N T H J U O I C I A 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 A S E N O . M -S 7 0 -C A -M -E
IN R E : T h e M a r r ia g e e l
K E N N E T H A. H O R L,
H usband.
and
JO A N N B H O R L .
W ifa .
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : J O A N N B. H O R L
7251 H e ld e rb e rg T r a il
B e rn e . N e w Y o r k 17073
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D th a t a P e titk j i fo r
D is s o lu tio n o t M a r r ia g e h a t b e e n
tile d a g a in s t y o u a n d t h a t y o u a re
r e q u ir e d to s e r v e a c o p y o f y o u r
R e sp o n se o r P le a d in g to th e
P e titio n u p o n th e H u s b a n d 's a tto rn e y , A .A . M c C le n a h a n , J r . . 10*
5 P a r k A v t . ■ Su ite B , S a n fo rd ,
F lo r id a 37771, a n d f i t * th e o r ig in a l
R e sp o n se o r P le a d in g In th e o f f ic e
o f th e C le r k o f th e C ir c u it C o u r t, o n
o r b e fo re th e 31st d a y o f M a r c h ,
1 *M I t y o u t a i l t o d o so . a D e fa u lt
J u d g m e n t * w il l b e le k e n a g a in s t
y o u lo r th e r e lie f d e m a n d e d in th e
P e titio n
D a te d a t S a n f o r d , S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , t h is la t h d a y c f
F e b r u a r y , 1911.
(S e a l)
A r t h u r H . B e c k w ith , J r .
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y : P a t r ic ia R o b in s o n
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h : F e b 77, M a r c h 4. IJ . 70.
1993
D E E 194

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CALL TOLL FREE
l- 9 * * - 3 4 M U l

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Legal Notice

I N T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
C A S E N O . *3 4 3 9 C P
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
IN R E : T H E E S T A T E OF
ROSE H . H U R T .
deceased
N O T IC E T O C R E D IT O R S
TO
ALL
PERSONS
H A V IN G
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S A G A IN S T
THE ABOVE E STA TE :
W ith in th re e m o n th s Iro m th e lim e
o l ih e fir s t p u b lic a tio n o t th is n o lle *
yo u a re re q u ire d to t i l * w ith the c le rk
o l Ih e C lr c u ll C o u rt o l S em ino le
C o u n ty . F lo rid a . P ro b a ta D iv is io n ,
th e a d d re ss o l w h ic h Is S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y C O U R T H O U S E . S an to rd .
F lo rid a . 31771, a w ritte n s ta ttm e n l o l
a n y c la im o r d e m a n d yo u m a y h a ve
a g a in s t Ihe e sta te o l ROSE H .
H U R T , deceased
E A C H C L A IM m u l l be In w ritin g
a n d m u s t In d ic a te Ih e b a sts lo r Ihe
c la im , th e n a m e a n d a d d re s s o l Ihe
c r e d ito r o r h ls a g e nt o. a tto rn e y , and
th e a m o u n t c la im e d . II th e c la im Is
n o t y e t due. th e d a te a n d w h e n It w ill
b e com e due s h a ll be s la te d It the
c la im Is c o n tin g e n t o r u n liq u id a te d ,
th e n a tu re o l th e u n c e rta in ty s h a ll be
s ta le d II th e c la im Is s e c u re d , the
s e c u rity s h a ll be d e s c rib e d The
C la lm a n l s h a ll d e liv e r s u ffic ie n t
copies o f th e c la im to th e C lark lo
e n a b le I be c le rk lo m a ll one copy lo
ea ch p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e
A L L C L A IM S A N D D E M A N D S
N O T SO F IL E D W IL L B E F O R E V
ERBARRED
D A T E D D e ce m b e r 77,19*7.
J a m e s L . H u rt J r.
A s P e rso n a l R e p re s e n ta tiv e
o l E tla t a o l
ROSE H H U R T , deceased
C A R R O L L B U R K E . E S Q U IR E
A tto rn e y to r e sta te
*17 A tla n tic B a n k B u ild in g
S e n lo rd . F lo rid a 37771
P h o n t (305 ) 377 7*90
P u b lis h : M a rc h 13.19*3
D E F 44

IN T H E C I R 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 I C I A L
C IR C U IT S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C I V I L D IV IS IO N
C A S E N O . M -1 9 9 -C A -O f.P
F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L M O R
T G A G E A S S O C IA T IO N , a c o r
p o r a tlo n o rg a n is e d a n d e x is tin g
u n d e r Ih e la w s o l th e U n ite d
S la te s ,
P la in t i f f ,

vs,
FORREST
E. KASPER
and
V A L E R I E J. K A S P E R , h is w il e ;
a n d M A R Y J. D E L E M O S .
D e fe n d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO : F O R R E S T E K A S P E R .
V A L E R I E J K A S P E R , h is w ife
LAST KNO W N A D D R E SS A N D
R E S ID E N C E :
3414 W e b s te r D r iv e
P la n o . T e x a s 75075
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y n o t if ie d
lh a t a C o m p la in t to fo re c lo s e a
M o rtg a g e
e n c u m b e r in g
th e
fo llo w in g r e a l p r o p e r t y :
L o t IS , N O R T H C O V E , ac
c o rd in g lo th e P la t I h e r e o l as
r e c o r d e d in P la t B o o k 75. P a g e s 3
a n d 4, o l th e P u b lic R e c o rd s o t
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
h a s b e e n f ile d a g a in s t y o u a n d yo u
a re r e q u ir e d t o s e rv e a c o p y o l
y o u r w r it t e n d e fe n s e s , it a n y , to it
o n J O H N M M c C O R M IC K , A t.
to rn e y lo r P la in t i lf . w h o s e a d d re s s
is P o s t O lf ic e B o x 3373. 501 E a s t
C h u rc h S tr e e t. O r la n d o , F lo r id a
37901, a n d I I I * th e o r ig in a l w it h th e
C le r k o t th e a b o v e s ty le d C o u rt on
o r b e fo r e A p r il 4 .1 9 M ; o th e r w is e a
d e fa u lt m a y b e e n te re d a g a in s t "
y o u t o r r e lie f d e m a n d e d In Ih e
C o m p la in t.
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d s e a l o f
s a id C o u rt o n F e b r u a r y 74, 19*3
(S e a l)
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . J R
C le rk o f th e C ir c u it C o u rt
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
B y : E v e C r a b tr e e
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h F e b 77. M a r c h 4, 13. 70.
19M
D E E 1*5
C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y ,
F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC H E A R IN G
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N b y
Ih e P la n n in g a n d Z o n in g B o a rd o l the
C ity o t L a ke M a r y . F lo rid a , th a t said
B o a rd w ill h o ld a P u b lic H e a rin g on
T u e sd a y. M a rc h 77. 19*3. a t 9 00
P M , to
a I C o n sid e r
a re c o m m e n d e d
ch ange o l to n in g fro m R TA, S ingle
F a m ily R e s id e n tia l, to R 3. M u ltip le
F a m ily , as sa id c la s s ific a tio n s a r t
d e s c rib e d in th e Z o n in g O rd in a n c e o l
Ih e C ity o l L a k e M a ry , and a m a n d
in g I be la n d use e le m e n t o l Ibe
C o m p re h e n sive P la n Iro m M e d iu m
D e n s ity R e s id e n tia l to H ig h D e n s ity
R e s id e n tia l, on t h t fo llo w in g de
s c rib e d p ro p e rly ly in g w ith in Ibe
m u n ic ip a l lim it s o l L a k e M a ry .
F lo rid a , a n d m o re f u lly d e s c rib e d a t
fo llo w s ; to w it:
L e g a l S ection f . T o w n sh ip TO South.
R ange 30 E a s t. South 357 la e t o f E a s t
133 le e l o f S outhw est '■» o t S outheast
&lt;-« I Lass R o a d ) A N D N o rth 171 te e l of
W est 90 fe e l o l E a s t 137 f t t f o l South
501 te e t o l S outhw est 'a o f S outheast

U;

AND
L o ts 17 a n d 13 H a s t South 40 feet
to r ro a d ). H D D u ra n ts A d d itio n , a t
re c o rd e d in P la t B ook 3, P a g e 13. o l
th e P u b lic R e co rd s o l S em ino le
C o u n ty . F lo r id a ;
m o re c o m m o n ly kn o w n as
N o rth o t L a k e M a ry B o u le v a rd
ly in g b e tw e e n M y r tle A v e n u e and
P a lm e tto S tre et, c o n ta in in g I 47 p lu s
o r m in u s a c re s
The P u b lic H e a rin g w ill be h e ld a t
th e C ity H a ll. C ity o f L a ke M a ry .
F lo rid a , on th e 77nd d a y o f M a rc h .
1993. a l * 00 P M . o r a s soon
th e ra a la r a t po ssib le a t w h ic h tim e
In te re s te d p a rtie s lo r a n d a g a in s t Ih t
re c o m m e n d e d ch ange o l to n in g w ill
be h e a rd S aid h e a rin g m a y be
c o n tin u e d Iro m tim e to tim e u n til
lin a l a c tio n is ta ke n b y Ih e P la n n in g
a n d Z o n in g B o a rd o l th e C ity o l L a ke
M a ry
T H IS N O T IC E sh a ll be p o ste d in
th ro e (31 p u b lic p la c e t w ith in the
C ity o l L a k a M a r y . F lo rid a , a t the
C ity H a ll w ith in sa id C ity , and
p u b lis h e d In a n e w sp a p e r o l g e n e ra l
c irc u la tio n in th a C ity o l L a k e M a ry ,
one tim e a l le a s t fifte e n IIS ) d a ys
p r io r lo th e a fo ra s a id h e a rin g In
a d d itio n , n o tic e s h a ll b e p o ste d In ih e
a re a lo be c o n s id e re d a t least lilla e n
(IS ) d a y s p r io r to th a d a le o l th a
P u b lic H e a rin g
A ta p e d re c o rd o l th is m e e tin g is
m ad e b y Ih e C ity lo r Its c o n v e n ie n c e
T h is re c o rd m a y n o l c o n s titu te an
a d e qu a te re c o rd to r th e p u rp o s e s o l
a p p e a l Iro m e d e cisio n m o d e b y the
P la n n in g a n d Z o n in g B o a rd w ith
re s p e c t to th e fo re g o in g m a tte r A n y
p e rso n w ls n in g to e n su re th a t an
a d e q u a te re c o rd o f th e p ro c e e d in g s is
m a in ta in e d to r a p p e lla te p u rp o se s is
e d v ls e d to m a k e th e n e c e s s a ry e r
ra n g e m en is e l h it o r h e r o w n
expense
C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y .
F L O R ID A
C onnie M a jo r
C ily C le rk
D A I E D M a rc h 9,19*3
P u b lis h M a rc h 1 3 .1993
D E F 43

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando • W inter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 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

l t i m e ..........................5 * c a l l n e
] c onsecutive tim e s . 54c t line
7 c onsecutive t i m e s .. 44c a line
10 c onsecutive tim e s 42c a line
(2.00 M in im u m
2 Lines M in im u m

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

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care

21—Personals
• ABO RTIO N#
1st T rim e s te r a b o rtio n 7 12 w k t.,
S1S0 M e d ic a id 1130 ; 13 14 w k t
1700
M e d ic a id
11*5;
G yn
S e rvice s 175; P re g n a n c y te s t;
tre e co u n se lin g
P ro fe s sio n a l
c a r t s u p p o rtiv e
a tm o s p h e re ,
c o n fid e n tia l.
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 o lo n ia l D r.. O rla n d o
305 199 0971
___________ 1 900 771 75*9___________
IM P R O V E Y O U R F U N L IF E
C o m p a n io n s to r a lt o cca sio n s c a ll
33) 9377

23—Lost &amp; Found
B la c k a n d ta n sh e p h e rd p u p p y
L o st v ld n t y Sth A 17 97. 37) 3040
o r 371 4SO0 e x t. 704 A n r a tl#
L o s t p u p p y b la c k a n d w h lt t H u s k y ,
b lu e eyes 9 w k t o ld R E W A R D .
P lease c a ll 373 7*1* a ll 5 *31 3*37

25—Special Notices
N E E D C R E O IT H E L P 7
R e ce ive a M C o r V IS A , g d a ra n
teed N obody re fu s e d , to r tre e
B ro c h u re send S A S E to H ouse
o t C re d it. B o * 790S70. D a lla s T * .
75779 o r
c a ll
1 714 374 5944
A N Y T IM E

Legal Notice
IN T H E C I R C U I T 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 I R C U IT S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C I V I L D IV IS IO N
C A S E N O . 9J 505-C A -09-E
S U B U R B A N C O A S T A L C O R P ., a
N e w J e rs e y c o r p o r a tio n .
P la in t if f ,
vs .
ANDREW
J.
M IL A M
and
A U T U M N L . M I L A M , h ls w ile .
D e fe n d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO A N D R E W J M IL A M
A d d re s s U n k n o w n
LAST KNO W N AD D R E SS A N D
R E S ID E N C E :
109 D re w S tre e t
S a n fo rd . F l o r id * 37771
A U T U M N L M IL A M
A d d re s s : U n k n o w n
LAST KNO W N AD D R E SS A N D
R E S ID E N C E :
109 D r e w S tre e t
S a n to rd , F lo r id a 37771
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y n o tifie d
th a t a C o m p la in t t o fo re c lo s e a
m o rtg a g e
e n c u m b e r in g
th a
fo llo w in g r e a l p r o p e r t y :
Lot
12,
B lo c k
"C ".
W A S H IN G T O N O A K S , S E C T IO N
T W O , a c c o r d in g to th e P la t th e r e o f
as R e c o rd e d In P la t B o o k I * . p a g e s
9* a n d 17. p i th e P u b lic R e c o rd s o l
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
h a s b e e n f ile d a g a in s t y o u a n d yo u
a re r e q u ir e d to s e rv e a c o p y o f
y o u r w r i t t e n d e fe n s e s , It a n y . to It
o n J O H N M M c C O R M IC K . a l
to r n e y lo r P l e i n l i l l , w h o s e a d d re s s
is P o s l O ffic e B o x 3373, s o t E a s t
C h u rc h S tr e e t. O r la n d o . F lo r id a
37101, a n d l l le th e o r ig in a l w it h th e
C le rk o t th e a b o v e s ty le d C o u rt o n
o r b e fo r e M a r c h 74, 1913; o th e r
w is e a d e f a u lt m a y b e e n te r e d
e g a ln s t y o u lo r r e lie f d e m a n d e d in
th e C o m p la in t
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d s e a l o t
s a id C o u rt o n F e b r u a r y 17, 19*3.
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , J R .
C le r k o f th e C ir c u it C o u rt
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F l o r id *
B y C a th e r in e M E v a n s
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h : F e b . 20 77, M a r c h 4 . 13,
19*3

F ic t it io u s n a k i
N o tic e is h e re b y g iv e n t h e t w e
a re e n g a g e d in b u s in e s s a t 901
D o u g la s A v e . L o n g w o o d S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a u n d e r th e t ic
t lt lo v s n a m e o t 901 T R U S T , a n d
th a t w e in te n d lo r e g is te r s a id
n a m e w it h Ih e C le r k o t th e C ir c u it
C o u rt, S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a in
a c c o rd a n c e w it h Ih e p r o v is io n s o l
th e F ic t it io u s N a m e S ta tu te s , T o
W it:
S e c tio n
945 09 F l o r id a
S ta tu te * 1957,
S ig n a tu re
A m id H a b ib
R od M a r t Iga
B r a n im ir B o tic
Jo h n L lo y d L a ls h a w
P u b lis h : F e b . 17. M a r c h 4. 13, 20.
1913
D E E 147_____________________________
IN T H E C I R C U IT C O U R T , IN
A N D F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R IO A
C A S E N O . I3 -S 0 A C A 09 K
D O U G L A S S P L U M B I N G , a s o l*
p r o p r i t t o r s h ip ,
P la in t if f
vs
R IC H A R D O . H A N D Y ,
D e fe n d a n t.
T O : R IC H A R D D . H A N D Y
L a s t K n o w n a d d re s s
11274 C h u la V is t a A v e n u e
S an J o * * , C A 95113
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T I F I E D lh a t a N o lle * o t L is
P endans and
C o m p l a in t
in
lo r t c lo s u r a h a s b a e n I lia d in t h is
C o u r t, a g a in s t y o u , a n d th a t y o u
a r t r e q u ir e d lo s a rv a * c o p y o f
y o u r w r lt t a n d e fe n s e s , i t a n y , o n
p la in t ilt 't a tto rn e y , C A R M IN E M .
B R A V O , P .A ., 1143 SR 4 )4 , S u lla
105. L o n g w o o d , F | 377SO, o n o r
b e lo re th e 2 4 th d a y o f M a r c h , i f f ) ,
o r ig in a l to b t I lia d w it h C la r k o f
t h is C o u rt b e f o r t s e r v ic e u p o n th a
a t t o r n e y lo r t h a P la in t I I I , o r Im
m e d ia le ly t h e r e a lle r , o r a d e fa u lt
w i l l b e e n te r e d a g a in s t y o u l o r th a
r e t ie l s o u g h t in th e C o m p la in t o r
P e titio n
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d s e a l t h is
17th d a y o l F a b ., 19*3
A r t h u r H . B e c k w it n , J r .
C la r k , C ir c u it C o u rt
C a th e r in e M . E v a n s
D e p u ty C la r k
P u b lis h : F e b . 70, 27, M a r c h 4 , I ) ,
19*3

OEE ID

B A B Y S IT T IN G - m y h o m e H r *
A d a ys Ile x R a tes neg
G a ll 321 1177.
.W E CARE A T *
S E M IN O L E C H IL D C A R E
7*9 S em ino le D r. L a k e M a ry .
C h ild re n a re o u r s p e c ia lty ! W *
a re S late lice n s e d a n d c e rtifie d
lo r te a ch in g a n d c a rin g L o w
la m lly ra te s C a ll 372 1930 lo r
In fo rm a tio n .
B a b y s ittin g In m y h o m e .e n y aga
d a y o r n il* . 1 m e a ls a n d a sn a ck
a d a y . G ood r« 1 .373 53*4._________
B a b y s ittin g In m y h o rn * E x p e rt
enced m o th e r, h o i lu n che s
_____________ 377 9393.______________
W ill w a tc h y o u r c h ild a t n il * 5 y r
o ld lo p la y w ith . M o n F r l. 377
7 9 0 la ll. 4 o m N e a r 27th S tr.

33—Real Estate
Courses
B R O K E R C O U R SE
S ta rts M a rc h 79 B ob B a lt J r . School
o l R eal E t l a l* 373 4119

55—Business
Opportunities
It yo u e n |o y sp o rts , y o u 'll lik e th is
b usiness
Fun.
p ro fita b le ,
e s ta b lis h e d te r r it o r y , no co m
p e titio n . P ric e d r ig h t. P hone
904 393 790S a lte r 5 p m

63—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
W e P A Y cash lo r 1st A 2nd
m o rtg a g e s
Ray
L e g g . L ie .
M o rtg a g e B ro k e r 799 2599

71-Help Wanted
APP. SETTERS
A g g re s s iv e , good phone vo ice ,
b u b b ly p e rs o n a lity . W * w ill tra in .
S a la ry p lu s c o m m is s io n N eed,
s e v e ra l im m e d ia te ly
C a ll Jo
A N N 377 777*____________________
A P P L IC A T IO N S b e in g ta ke n , sec
r e la f la l, g e n e ra l L a b o r
Ap
p o ln tm e n to n ly 377 54*9_________

Appointment setters no experience
necessary S4 an hour So start.
Enthusiasm a plus 119 4444
B a rm a id s B a rte n d e rs f u ll a n d p a rt
lim e ro ta tin g s h ills , s a la ry p lu s
tip s . B onus .'to tp lla llta lfo n no
a ip e r lt n c e n e ce ss a ry. A p p ly In
p e rso n A B C L iq u o r i S e n lo rd
B U S IN E S S IS G R E A T I W * need 4
e ip e rla n c e d
re a l
e s ta te
a sso cia te s to h e lp us m a rk e t o u r
m a n y sa le a b le lis tin g s
Top
c o m m is s io n s W ith N u m b e r IC e n tu ry I t . y o u 're a h e a d a ll the
w a y . L e t’s ta lk ! C a ll Ju n e P o r ilg
a l C e n tu ry I t .
Ju n e P o r ilg R e a lty
377 1479_____________________R e a lto r
C L E R IC A L E x p e rie n c e d A c c u ra te
ty p in g
T a k e phone o rd e rs
P en sio n p ro fit s h a re a n d m e d ic a l
p la n s U n ite d S olve n ts 373 1400
C O N S T R U C T IO N
AND
T R A D E S M A N N eeded im m t d l
a te ly G ood p a y a ll phases C a ll

479 4094______________________
CO O KS FO R F IN E D IN IN G E x
p e n a n c e d o n ly . A M . F M . t h i l l
C a ll P o rtia lo r a p p o in tm e n t.
M o n d a y th ru F r id a y . 9 5 S74
*493______________________________
E s tim a to rs m in im u m 3 y e a rs a *
p a rla n c e , send re s u m e to V lena
tla n B a y C o n s tru c to rs In c . 1951
JA C B o u le v a rd N a p le s. F lo rid a
23947
Equal
O p p o rtu n ity
E m p lo ye r.
E x c e lle n t In co m e lo r p a r t t lm *
h o m e a s s e m b ly w o rk . F o r In ­
fo rm a tio n c a ll 504 441 9003 E x t
7940 O pen Sun___________________
E x p e rie n c e se a m stre s s or one
kn o w le d g e a b le
enough
a b o ut
sa w in g to le a rn g e n e ra l a lta r
a tio n s
A p p ly In p a rso n 113
P a lm e tto A v e
S a n to rd D ry
C le a n e rs.________________________

•*•***•#••*
FA S T FO O D O P E R A T IO N
W ill tr a in E x c e lle n t s a la ry a n d
b a n a tits . F o r In fo rm a tio n C a ll
333 3444

••••••a******

GASATTENDANT
s a la ry , h o s p ita lis a tio n . |
p a id v a c a tio n o v a ry 4
m o n th s F o r in fo rm a tio n c a ll
313 3443 b e tw e e n I 5 P M
e e e e e e e e e e a e e _________

G ood

G E N E R A L O F F IC E T R A IN E E S
N o e x p e rie n c e needed lu ll lim e
im m e d ia te o p e nin g s. 479 *094
G O V E R N M E N T JO BS
V a rio 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
ag e ncie s.
130.000 to 530.000 p o te n tia l C a ll
(re fu n d a b le ) 1 4 )9 149 9304 D e p t
F L I7 * fo r y o u r 19*7 d ire c to ry ,
li h r s

IM M E D IA T E
SALESOPENING SI
Show o u r n e w lin e o l C a le n d e rs.
P ans a n d A d v e rtis in g G ilts to
lo c a l f lr m l . P ro m p t, Irta n d ly
s e rv ic e fro m 74 y e a r o ld . A A A I
C o m p a n y. W a a k ly c o m m is s io n s .
Sat y o u r o w n h o u r* W r it * F ra n k
B u c k ta y .
NEW TON
M FC.
COM PANY,
Dept
A II4 I.
N n w to n , Io w a 5070*
In fe c tio n M o ld in g M a c h in e O p tra
to r. C a li 373 *714 w e e kd a ys o r
a p p ly
In
p a rso n
M o ld in g
T e c h n o lo g y In c l a In d u s tria l
P a rk
In je c tio n M o ld in g M a c h in e Sal up.
p a r t lim a e v e n in g * C a ll 773 *7*4
9 A M 9 P M w e e k days
L A B O R W O R K S ta rt w o rk in g r ig h t
a w a y . F u ll tim e , g o o d p a y
_____________ 479 4094______________
L O A D IN G
U N L O A D IN G
AND
S H IP P IN G F u ll t lm * w o rk , good
s ta rtin g p a y . C a ll *79 *094

M a n a g e m e n t T ra in e e . P o p p * J a y *
Is lo o k in g tor a g g re s s iv e fa st
food m a n a g e m e n t tra in e e s w h o
w a n t lo g ro w w ith c o m p a n y .
E x p e rte n e t In m a n a g e m e n t o r
Food s e rv l ce p re fe rre d , b u t n o l
n e ce ss a ry.
B e n e fits
In clu d e
G ro u p In s u ra n c e , p a id v a c a tio n s
a n d e x c e lle n t fin a n c ia l co m
p e n ta llo n
o p p o rtu n itie s . C a ll
377 9711 to t e l up In te rv ie w . 2501
S F re n c h A ve .___________________
M a tu re L e d y to g iv e lo v in g c a re to
m y 3 c h ild re n In m y hom e.
R e le re rtc e i re q u ire d . 3 7 1 A495

★ ★ *★ *★ ★ ★ ★ **

A

A

A

EM P LO Y M E N T

NEED TO GET TO WORK
CALL EARV MONDAY
OVER 100 JOBS
G E N E R A L O F F IC E .............S l*0 w k
L ig h t ty p in g c u s to m e r s e rv ic e , w ill
tr a in fo r p u rc h a s in g , to p co m
pany
W A R E H O U S E .......................... ItS O w k.
W ill tr a in , lig h t d e liv e ry , s h ip p in g
and
re c e iv in g
ra is e s
and
b e n a lllt
P B X ................................................t l . l l h r .
P a r t t lm * a n d lu ll lim e p o s itio n s
w ill Ifa ln . fle x ib le h o u rs, needs
now .
S E C U R IT Y .................................M .lJ h r .
P a rt t lm * w e e ke n d s W ill tra in lo
m o n ito r
s e c u rity
syste m s,
e x c e lle n t c o m p a n y .
L A N D S C A P E R ......................... M.SOhr.
W ill tr a in L a y sod, ca n do p la ce
w o rk lo r S9 an h o u r p e rm a n e n t.
D E S K C L E R K .........................U .*0 h r.
P a rt t lm * I . lu ll lim a open F le x i­
b le h o u rs good w ith fig u re s ,
p e rs o n a lity w in s
IN S T A L L E R ....... ......................Sl.SOhr.
W ill tr a in w ith lig h t c a rp e n try
b a c k g ro u n d , v a n o r p ic k u p
h e lp fu l, ra is e s a n d b e n a lllt
R E C E P T IO N IS T .................... l l . l J h r .
L ig h t o l l l c t s k ills , som a salts, ca n
m a k # e x c e lle n t bonuses
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E
A S S IS T A N T ...........................t ll J w k
A u to re n ta l b a c k g ro u n d D o c r e d it
ch e c ks a n d c o n tra c ts , c a r In su r
a n ce kn o w le d g e Top co m p a n y
D IS C O U N T F E E -T E R M S
12 00 R E G IS T R A T IO N F E E
F R A N C H IS E S A V A IL A B L E

TOO M A N Y TO LIST
1917 FRENCH AVE
323-5176
W'R-ASk'A'A'A'ft***
O F F IC E C L E R K S W ill tr a in B a sic
p h o ne w o rk , tilin g a n d ate. Im
m e d ia l* o p e nin g s lu ll tim e .

479 4094
O lfic e s e c re ta ry c le rk
A d d in g m a c h in e s k ill* , a n d ty p
Ing re q u ire d Som a e x p e rie n c e
n e ce ssa ry. C a ll 349 5570 lo r
fu rth e r In fo rm a tio n
R E C E P T IO N IS T G ood p a y m u lt
be a b le to tra n s fe r c a lls ra p id ly .
G ood p hone vo ice 479 &lt;09&lt;________
S e c re ta ry p e rm a m a n t p a r t t lm *
ty p in g e s s e n tia l, s h o rth a n d da
s lr a b k . J . T y so n *31 1 9 9 *_________
Salt A v a n ta r e x tra m o n e y , y e a r
o w n h a w rs.lu n |a b 173-1924 J225919 777-4459 327-911).
________
T ra d e s W o rk e r S ta rtin g s a la ry 9144
w e e k ly . H ig h sch o ol g ra d o r
tra d e
school
tr a in in g
In
A C /H a a tin g fie ld . 3 y e a rs e x p e rt
en ce
In
A C /H e a lln g
al
jo u rn e y m a n le v e l. V a lid F lo rid a
d riv e rs llc a n s * re q u ire d A p p ly
b y M a rc h 21.1991.
S e c re ta ry I I I S ta rtin g s a la ry 9117
w e a k ly . H ig h school g ra d . 7
y e a rs s e c r e la r la l/c ia r lc a l e x p *
H e n ce ,
ty p in g
aOwpm
and
d ic ta p h o n e tra n s c rip tio n . A p p ly
b y M a rc h 17.19*1
C h ie f o l S u rv e y * S ta rtin g s a la ry
9397 w e a k ly H ig h school g ra d , 1
y e a rs in d e s lg n /c o n s tru c tio n o f
p u b lic w o rk s p ro je c ts o r 3 y e a rs
tx p e r ie n c * a s H e ld s u rv e y p a rty
c h ia l to In c lu d e s u p e rv is o ry ex
p e rie n c e V a lid F lo r id a d riv e rs
lice n s e re q u ire d A p p ly b y M a rc h
I * . 19*1
S u rv e y P a r ty C h ie f S ta rtin g s a la ry
9354 w e e k ly . H ig h school g ra d 2
y e a rs o t tu b p r o lt s t lo n a l (la id
a n d o ll lc * e n g in e e rin g In c lu d in g
in ttr u m a n t
te ch e x p e rie n c e ,
V a lid F lo r id a o n v e rs lice n s e
re q u ire d
A p p ly
by
M a rc h
24.19*3
A p p ly S e m in o le C o u n ty P erso n n el
C o u rth o u s e N . P a r k A v e S an to rd
b y noon. A p p lic a tio n s g iv e n and
a cc e p te d M o n d a y th ro u g h F rid a y
9:3 0A M N oon. E q u a l O p p o rtu n i
ty E m p lo y e r M F H V
T R U C K D R IV E R S L o c a l o r long
h a u l o p e n in g s, r ig h t now

939 4094
W ill tr a in s a lt m o tiv a te d in d iv id u a l
w ith d e s ire lo m a k * m on a y
s a ltin g used c a r. No e x p e rie n c e
n e ce ss a ry J21 3050_______________

W O R K FIN D ER S
M E O IC A L R E C E P T IO N IS T ......IIS
Be f a m ilia r w ith m e d ic a l ta rm s .
g re a t b e n e fits
1*75 F R E N C H A V E N U E
I ln S o b lk * B u ild in g )
______________ 371 5743______________

97—Apartment
Furnished/Rent
F u rn is h e d a p a rtm a n ts to r S en io r
C ltlie n * . I l l P a lm e tto A ve . J .
C ow an No p h o ne c a lls .____________
3 B D R M ., k id s , p o rc h , a ir , c a rp a l
t lO w k . F M 139 7300.

SavOn Rentals, Inc. Realtor

99-A partm ent
Unfurnished / Rent
BAM BO O COVE APTS
300 E A ir p o r t B lv d .
113 B d r m !
F ro m 9730 m o.
__________ P hone 333 *430.__________
E N J O Y c o u n try H yin g ? 1 B d r m .,
D u p le x A p is ., O ly m p ic u . p o d .
Shenandoah V llla o * O pen * to *
_____________ 333 3930______________
GENEVAOARDENS
I 1 1B d rm . a p ts 5770 S330
M o n th ru FfP 9 A M . to S P M .
1505 W . 35th St.
333 3090
LUXURY APARTM ENTS
F a m ily A A d u lts s e c tio n . P o o lsid e ,
7 B d rm * . M a s te r C ove A p ts .
333 7900
Open on w eekends,________
M a r in e r's V llle g e on L a k e A d e . t
b d rm fro m S245, 2 b d rm fro m
1300 L o ca te d 17 93 | u t t so u th ot
A irp o rt B lv d In S e n lo rd . A lt
A d u lts . 313 *470.__________________
P a rk A v a . 3 b d rm . g a ra g e , pe ts,
k id s . 1250 Fee 2197300,
Sav-O n R e n ta Is. In c . R e e lto r___
S an to rd S pacious. I B d rm . p lu s dan
o r 2nd B d rm . F u rn itu r e . 5340
A d u lts 1 9417993________________
1.3 e n d 3 B D R M F ro m 1270
R id g e w o od
A rm s
A p t. 75*0
R id g e w o od A v e . 333 *430.________
2 b e d ro o m u n fu rn is h e d a p e rlm e n t
1335 e m o n th . N o p e ts. C a ll
373 430*

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
D e lto n a S a n to rd 1 B d rm . 3 B e lli,
fa m ily ro o m L a k e M o n ro * a re a .
1350. P lu s s e c u rity d e p o lst. 433
9450______________________________
IN D E L T O N A
L A R G E L a k t lr o n t h o rn *. 1 B d r.,
3 's b a th , o tfic * . fo rm a l D R ., L R .
F a m . R m . h u g * g a ra g e
S M A L L E R (a m ity h o rn * . 1 b r. 3
b a th . L R . D r . a b le g a ra g e
3 T O W N H O M E S . 7 B r., I t * b a th .
L R . d in in g a re a scre e n ed p o rc h
D A Y S 574 1434
E V E S 799 4751___________
S un la nd 3 b d rm 2 b a th A /C 9350
M O 1st, la s t p lu s d e p osit
323 0545 a tta r 4 P M _______________
J b e d ro o m I 's b a th in s id e u t ilit y
ro o m , fe n ce d y a rd , a v a ila b le
im m e d ia te ly
L e a s * 5175 a
m o n th 322 4343

105—DuplexTriplex/ Rent .
S A N F O R D .7 b d rm ., k id s , la n c e d .
1250
Fee 139 7300
S av O n
R e n ta ls. In c R e a lto r

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
C ASSELBERRY
3
b d rm .,
(u rn .k id s , p e ts, y e rd , p r iv . lo t.
1375 Fee 339 7300
S ev-O w -R entals. In c .. R e a lte r
F o rre s t H ills - O e le n d . 3 B d rm 1
b a th , u n i u rn I shed R e frig e ra to r,
stove N e a r L a k a M e c k .tI7 S a
m o n th p lu s d e p o t! 1.3 3 1 3050

117—Commercial
Rentals
FOR LE A S E
C o m m e rc ia l b u ild in g s to re Iro n l
1500 s q u a re le e l *19 W 1st S tr.
b e tw e e n N E W
h o s p ita l in
d o w n to w n S a n to rd I 941-9197.

121—Condominium
Rentals
C ondo S a n to rd 7 b e d ro o m s , j b a th
scre e n e d p o rc h , f u lly e q u ip p e d
w ith w a s h e r a n d d ry e r , n e w ly
re n o v a te d 9375 m o n th ly p lu *
m o n th d e p o sit 39* 6*90

123—Wanted to Rent
W a n te d L e a s * o r L e a s * w ith o p tio n
to b u y . 3 B d rm . p lu s , S a n to rd
a r e * 1350 D a y s 33101*9.

127-Office Rentals
O F F IC E S P A C E o n F re n c h A va .
S torage
spec*
at
S a n fo rd
A ir p o r t. 333 4403________________ _
P R IM E O F F IC E S P A C E
P ro v id e n c e B lv d .. D e lto n a 2144 Sq.
F t C an Be D iv id e d W ith P e r k ­
in g D a y s 305-374-1434 E v e n in g *
A W eekends.
____________ 904 7«9 4 IS I____________
P R O F E S S IO N A L O ffic e s p e c * lo r
te a s *, o n 17 93 Id e a l lo c a tio n to
d o w n to w n a re a . 70S S. F re n c h
A v e o r c a ll 333 1170

141—Homes For Sate

W O R K FIN D ER S
G A L F R ID A Y .....................................(IS
F u n |o b . lig h t o flic a s h ills .
1U 5 F R E N C H A V E N U E
( In S o b ik i B u ild in g )
311 5743

91—Apartment/
House to Share
L a rg e 7 b d r fu rn is h e d In S e n lo rd
M a x im u m 1150 m o n th It I o r 3
a d u lts s h a re w ith s in g le m a la
333 3744

9 3 - Rooms for Rent
B d rm w /b a lh , h o rn * p riv ile g e s cm
la rg e la k e g o o d lis h m g t i n m o
904 719 4909.______________________
R o o m w ith p r iv e t * e n tra n c e In a
p riv a te h o m e W o rk in g g e n tle
m e n p re te rre d 333 153*._________
S A N F O R D , R eas, w e e k ly A M o n
th ly ra te s . U til. In c e ll. 500 O a k
A d u lts I &gt; 4 )7 *3 3 . ______________
S A N F O R D fu rn is h e d ro o m s b y the
w eek. R ea so n a ble r a te * M a id
s e rv ic e , c a te rin g lo w o rk in g peo
p ie . U n fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t* I
a n d 2 b e d ro o m s . 331*507, 500
P a lm e liQ A v e ____________________

95—Room/Board
U r g e b ra n d n e w 2 b d rm 1 b a th
h o m e to sh a re w ith m a tu re
w o m a n . L o c a te d in se clu d e d D e
Ito n e /O s te e n a re a *700 m o n th ly
. ' i u tilitie s C a ll D a r t 373 *071 o r
333 3*00

M c w n c ju n m

Be Utoe
Cdl Keyed
FOR A L L YCHJR
R EAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
SUPER OUPER HOME
L o v e ly ) B d rm 2 b a th o n I s q
100x113 fe n ce d , a n d tre e d k
E q u ip p e d k itc h e n , n e w ly d o n
7 0 * 1 4 l a m l l y r o o m . 7 7 i1
s c r e e n e d p a t io . I m m a c u la l
th ro u g h o u t. A ll th is In Lake M a t
h ig h d is tr ic t. G c sd a ss u m a b
m o rtg a g e a ls o . A s k in g 154.90
C a ll lo r S a n d ra S w ift o r N anc
c t a l r R e a lto r A sso c ia te s E v e
*4 *1 4 3 3 13) 2144
B E T T E R T H A N N E W I 1 B d rm
b a th y e a r o*d h o rn * w ith F a m li
ro o m , liv in g a n d d in in g ro o n
T a s te fu lly d e c o ra te d w ith w *
p a p e r A ll th is p lu s a p p ro x im a ti
ly Vs a c re lo t. O n ly l m ile s to I
in D e lto n a 1*9.900 N a n c y C la
" • a h a r A s s o c ia te E ve s. )2
1*9 W. L a k e M a r y B lv J.
S uite B
L a k e M a r y , F la 23749
133 J3M

�A
'b s a

H I—Homes For Sale
KISH REAL ESTATE

3573 S. F R E N C H
| R EALTO R

OUR BO AR DIN G HOUSE

141—Homes For Sale

331 0041

[ N IC E ! I l k * n e w ] B d rm . 1 B a th
C u s to m d ra p e * P lu sh c a rp e t.
A lu m . o v e rh a n g O a ra g e , U t.9 0 0
| H O U S E lo r u l * I I I * P a lo m a A v * .
B e a u t ifu l 4 b e d ro o m 2 b a th
e m m a c u la ta b r ic k Iro n ! h o rn * In
lh * b e lte r ta c tio n o t th e c ity .
F e n ce d b a ck y a rd , s e v e ra l c itru s
tre e s . Y o u 'll lo v e it . O n ly 140.000
ALEXALEXAN D ER
R E A L T Y -R E A L T O R
_____________ A M -1133 ___________
| R e n t / S ale, L a ke iro n ). 3 B d rm 15
m il* fro m S an fo rd . (49.500. 1375
M o n th b y o w n e r 172 *3*7
SANFORD R EA LTY
[R E A L T O R
373 5314
A lt . H r * 371 4954,373 4345

L A K E F R O N T S + a c r e t on
b e a u tltu l L a ke J e s tu p
cle a re d
540.000 te rm s p o ssib le

BATEMAN REALTY
L ie . R ta l E s ta te B ro k e r
1440 S a n lo rd A v * .

3.5 a c r e s b e a u t if u l L a k e lr o n l
a p p ro n la m le ly ‘ s In b e a rin g o r
a n g e g ro v e , m a | * i! lc o aks on
w a te r Iro n ) g o rg e ou s h o m e s ite
517.500

1 d y llw lld e - 4 / 3 E a t - I n k it c h e n ,
to rm a l d in in g a re a . D en, JO a I I
scre e n ed p o rc h S ecluded fenced
b a ck ? c a r g a ra g e V A o r F H A
594,900

M A Y F A IR ! T h is 3 b e d ro o m , 7 b a th
w e ll k e p t h o m e h a t a b e a u tltu l
y a rd c o rn e r lo t. O n ly 54t.500 c a ll
us to d a y to see

HOW COME YOU'RE
1 5HOUIP HAVE REAU7EP THE
SEEINfi HO0PIE, MAYOR? *TIME5 ARE SO WEIRP THAT
YOU FlREP A SECRETARY , HOOPIE 15 A NATURAL LEAPER!
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5UP INTO THE OFFICE
BEFORE RE&lt;S&lt;SIE 5PENPER
PURIN6 y —j
WIN5 ANP m *&gt; ATC\TS HAUl
a fire J
y

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PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT MAR 126:30PM

3 2 2 -7 6 4 3

L O C H A R B O R , la rg e 7 le v e l, 4
B d r m . . 7 B a t h . 1 9 4 ,0 0 0 W
M a llc io w s k l. R E A L T O R , 777
1953 E v e 377 3311_____________

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

STENSTROM

R E A L T O R . M LS
7101 5 F re n c h
S u ite 4
S a n fo rd . F la .

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

24 HOUR H 322-9283

O v e r 3000 sq. f t . s ta g * tilte d w ith
fu rn itu re , b e d ro o m liv in g ro o m ,
d in in g ro o m eels, desks, w a ll
u n its , la m p s , a p p lia n c e s, toots,
t o la s A s le e p e r*, b rie a b ra e , e tc.
D A N IE L A N D W O H L W E N D E R

W -

S A N D Y W IS D O M

869-4600 or 349-5698
H AL CO LBER T R E A LTY
REALTOR
101 E .1 5 th St.
371 7113

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
MORE HOM ESTHAN
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

H AR O LD

HALL

R E D U C E O 4 B d rm 7 B a th In
e x c lu s iv e M a y fa ir. M a n y e x tra s ,
e v e r y le a t u r * Im a g in a b le
549.500
JU S T L IS T E D 4 B d rm 7 B a th
h o m e In P in e c re tl N ice a re a
G ood fa m ily h o m e . N ew ro o t, lo t*
m o re 545.900
S P L A S H IN T O S P R IN G 3 B d rm 7
B a th h o m e In P ln e c re tt. w ith
p o o l, a n d p a tio L a rg e lo t M a n y
e i t r a t . n ic e n e ig h b o r h o o d
554.500
B E A U T IF U L 3 B d rm 7 b a th hom e,
In R a m b le w o o d G re a t ro o m ,
fire p la c e , e a rth tone d e co r la rg e
la n d sc a p e d lo t a n d m o re . 515.500
A T T R A C T IV E 7 B d rm
I b a th
h o m e I n C yu le t a r e * n e a r
d o w n t o w n a n d L a k e
M o n ro * G re a t s ta rte r h o m e , n ice
e i t r a t Ih ro u q h o u t SM.900

CALL ANY T IM E

L o v e ly e x e c u t iv e h o m e n e a r
M a rk h a m W oods lo r th e m ost
d is c rim in a tin g b u y e r. 3 b d rm , 3
b a th w ith d re a m k itc h e n M u s t
s e e ll 5115.000
P re tty as m o d e l h o m e a lm o s t n e w
1/7 s p lit p la n . C e d a r &amp; stone
e x te rio r, up g ra d e s th ro u g h o u t.
L a ke M a r y schools M o tiv a te d
s e lle rs 541.000
O v ie d o 4/4 3 y e a rs Old 3440 sq u a re
le e t o f liv in g a re a , fire p la c e , e a t
In k itc h e n , p a n e lle d liv in g ro o m ,
o n liv e a cre s 1109.000

11U 5. P a rk

D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E
L a k e M a r y . F lo r id a 37144

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0

305-321-5005

U N D E R 51.000 D O W N
3 B d rm . d o ll house
A llo r d a b l*
m o n th ly p a y m e n t* C a ll O w n e r
B ro k e r 311 1411

REALTO R
3 2 3 -5 7 7 4 1
I 34 Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E

R E A L T O R S *

''C o u n try G e m " 3 b d rm m o b ile
h o m e a n d C B house c o m b in a tio n ,
w o rk s h o p . 7 c a rp o rts , fe n ce d
y a r d o w n e r f in a n c in g ! O n ly
514. » 0
St P a tr ic k 's D a y S p e c la ll Sunken
liv in g r m " s e ts th e m o o d " lo r
th is g o rg e o u s 3 b d rm 1 b a th , s p lit
p la n h o m e w /C H A A , d b l c a r
g a ra g e , c u s to m d e co r a n d fenced
c o r n e r to t In p r e s t ig io u s
R a m b le w o o d ! F a n t a s t ic
a s s u m p tio n ! N o q u a lllln g and
p ric e d to s e ll! O n ly 540.500
M a g n ific e n t L a k e tro n l 3 b d rm 7
b a th w / la m lly r m . c u s to m b u ilt
d b l sid e d se e th ro u g h lire p la c e l
E x t r a la r g e m a s te r b d r m
w / v a n lt y , k it c h e n e q u lp p e d l
P riv a c y fe n ce d , e n e rg y e ffic ie n t,
e asy V A a ss u m p tio n a n d w h a t a
v ie w I C a ll us q u ic k .

WE N E E D LISTINGS
CALL US NOW II

Y O U N G 1 b d rm h o m e C an be used
as re sid e n ce o r p ro fe s s io n a l ot
lic e s o r c o m m e rc ia l O n ly 513,000
d o w n 5413 M o n th ly . C a ll B ro k e r
O w n e r 111 1411

\
N (o jp c o u r s e — ------------ I l l i i ______ f l V I " n u . m i . 1 1 . 1 . ________

141—Homes For Sale
H O M E W IT H IN C O M E
L a rg e m o d e rn 1 B r f a m ily hom e
w ith C H A . e e l In k itc h e n , fa m ily
ro o m o ve rs iz e d g a ra g e . P lu s 2
lu l ly e q u ip p e d g re e n houses
g o in g b u sin e s s lo r (a m ity o r
re tir e d C0U|&gt;I*. O w n e r w ill tr a in
a n d fin a n c e 5110.000

CALL BART

REALTY, IN C I

S a n lo rd q u a d ra p le x on 7 lo ts good
c o n d itio n . W a lk to shops and
r e s t a u r a n t s . C o n c re te b lo c k
b u ild in g G ood a re a 515.000

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4
7606 H W Y 11 93

R E A L ESTATE
REALTOR

372 1499

151—Investment
Property/Sale
D U P L E X E S E ig h t to be b u ilt 3
B d rm . I b a th ea ch sid e . G ood
re n ta l a re a 10% In v e s to r fin a n c ­
in g P o s itiv e cash How. F H A e n d
V A f in a n c in g a ls o a v a ila b le .
569.000. F lo rid a A m e ric a n R e a lty
305 4411431.

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale
B y O w n e r 3 a c re s o n O ra n g e A ve .
n e x t to D a v id s o n 's T re e F a rm In
S a n fo rd Z oned A - t 140‘ fro n ta g e
n e a r W ils o n E le m e n ta ry School.
C a ll 445 3553_____________________
L a ke access to b e a u tltu l lit t le L a ke
M a r y . H ig h w o o o d e d lo t s ,
e x c e lle n t n e ig h b o r h o o d a n d
schools, tro m 11.500 D o n a ld G
Ja c ks o n In c R e a lto r o lllc #
_____________ 331 3793.______________
L o t lo r ta la
3 a o n i5 . In P a o la
____________ m i l t e t i i ____________
ST JO H N S R iv e r fro n ta g e . 2 's
a c r e p a r c e ls , a ls o i n t e r i o r
p a r c e li w ith r iv e r a ccess 513.900
P u b lic w a te r, 70 m in . to A lla
m o n te M a ll 1 2 \ 70 y r s fin a n c in g ,
no q u a lify in g . B ro k e r

___________ tit a n ___________

K A N fO R D

TTd

xANDINQ
NOW LEASING
SAT.
1 0 :0 0 -5 :0 0

SUN.
12:00-5:00

R EALTO R
* 0 1 S F re n c h A v e .

M LS

322-8678

S O M E PL A C IS N A V I
~
a l l THI FUN!
New 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
Clubhouse w /h e a lth clu b , on Site Lake
Tennis, Racquelbatl, V o lle y b a ll, Jogging T ra il,
S w im m in g , Self-C leaning Oven. Ic e m a k e r &amp; M ore.

m £A,

JUNE PORZIG REALTY

li e * W est F ir s t S tre e t - S a n lo rd . F lo rid a 11111 — tie s ) 111 a l l *

MON.-FRI.
9:00-4: 00

BATEMAN R EALTY
L ie R eel E s ta te B ro k e r
7440 S a n fo rd A ve
C o u n try t a c re b e a u tltu l b u ild in g
S it* llt . 5 0 0

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

&amp;
LIN D A M O R G A N

W a n t e d 1 -5 a c r e s w a t t o l
S a n lo r d N o R e a lto r s . P h o n e
377 4310a lte r 4 p m .______________
5 A C R E S . S ecluded V e ry w ooded,
w ith s tre a m , ttl.5 0 0 . P rin c ip a ls
o n ly A f t e r ! P M . 373 41431
3 50x111 Som e f r u it tre e s. 53100
e a c h . 5 m ile s S. o t S a n lo rd
415 9*4 9131 o r P .O . B o x 1511
M a ry v illa , T e n n . 37101.
* • a c re s O ste e n to r m o b ile h o m o
o r ho u se 570.000. 51.000 d o w n
51(7 41 p e r m o n th l i y e a rs a t
10%'. H a ll p a s tu re h a lt p ln e y
w oods 31190,0

VIC KY BASILA

G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S IN C .
A R E A S L A R G E S T E X C L U S IV E
S K Y L IN E D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
P a lm B each V illa .G re e n lta l
P a lm S p rin g s, P a lm M a n o r.
S iesta K e y
V A F H A fin a n c in g 303 373 3700
1911 S K Y L IN E M o b il* H o m e
74x31 t l. scre e n e n clo s u re p o rch ,
u t ilit y shed. C ent. H A 3 B d rm . 1
B a th . L o t t ir a i t 50x100 C an be
seen a t li e L e is u re D r. N o rth
D e B a ry . F lo r id a In lh * M e a d
o w le a on th e R iv e r M o b ile H o m e
C o m m u n ity .
P le a s * c o n ta c t T o m L y o n a t 313
1747 to r a d d itio n a l In fo rm a tio n .
71 A rlin g to n 11x40 v e ry good con
d lt l o n . 311 3 0 1 9, E v e s a n d
w eekends 55000__________________
I t L ib e rty 14xt4 a d u lt ta c tio n , b a y
w in d o w , g a t h a a t. a /c . I b d r
t x t r a s 53.000 d o w n . m o rt. a ts u m .
5149.377 4940.

1 5 9 -Real Estate
Wanted

1982

N A N C Y BUTLER

W IN N ERS C IR C L E
Each profession, as in sports, has cham pions •
Those, who by com petence and endeavor, qualify
to be acknowledged as cham pions. Such are
these A ssociates, whose outstanding sales
achievem ents and dedicated client service, have
earned them our highest honor. W e take pride in
announcing that the above Realtor-Associates
have once again attained their membership in the
Stenstrom Realty

“ MILLION D O L L A R C L U B ”
STENSTROM REALTY

iiiik u h S .A iia J fa *

Herbert E. Stenstrom
Realtor • Owner

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipment
C o ke m a c h in e h o ld s 10 o u n c e
b o ttle s good c o n d itio n 5225. la rg e
m e ta l d e sk 530 322 4*91 d a y tim e .
D e sk *, c h a irs , ty p e w rite r s , a d d in g
m a c h in e s , c a lc u la to rs , ta b le s ,
p h o to co p ie rs e tc. C a ll 221 3444.
^ it f e r ^ p ^ m ^ A lU f e y j x i e e k e r ^ r ^

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
F I L L D IR T A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAND
C li r k A H lr i 333 1500.323 2(13
F O R S A LE
G R A V E L Y T ra c to r w ith m o w e r,
14* 5521
C la s s ifie d A d s * r * th e s m a lle s t
b ig n e w s Ite m s y o u w i l l lin d
a n y w h e re .

195—Machinery/Tools
Equipment Auction
.
Set. M a rc h 1 9 10AM
F a rm tra c to rs , tru c k s a n d e q u ip
m e n t. C o n s ig n m e n ts a c c e p te d
d a lly .
D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
H w y , *7 D a y to n a B each
904 255 (111

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
F R E E P U P P IE S Itg to d h a m a T ™
S m a ll D a ch sh u n d ty p e dogs.
W e e kd a ys a lt e r 5 34549(4
F re e 6' i w e e ks o ld b la c k A w h it*
C o lli* a n d S h e p h a rd p u p p ie s
3 7 1 (5 9 7 __________________________
R A B B IT S : G ia n t L o p . M in i L o g ,
D w a r l. N e w Z e a la n d W h ite ,
F a n ta ll P ig e o ns (13 435 4490.
7 Y ou n g A m a io n P a rro ts w ith
sta n d s a n d caga. 1350 each

FLA TRADER
A U C T IO N P A L A C E
490 B A Y M E A D O W S R D .
L O N G W O O D . F L 379 31)9

D lr.-IW m iles north of Hwy 434 on
Hwy 411 Long wood____________

PUBLIC AUCTION
M ON. M A R .14 7 PM
W ic k e r b a b y b y g g y , sle ig h bed. o e k
ro c k e rs . 4 c h e rr y c h a ir* , m a h o g
a n y d ra s te r, m a h o g a n y b u tto n ,
o a k l i b r a r y t a b l a , w a ln u t
w a rd ro b e , w a ln u t c h in a c a b in e t,
o rie n ta l ra d io c a b in e t, a n d o d d
c h a irs .
N a w S o fa s a n d C h a ir s , w o o d
d ln a tte t ro c k e rs
C le a n u ta d lu r n l lu r a . 4 p ie c e
b e d ro o m s u it, w a ln u t g ra n d fa ­
t h e r s c lo c k , c o ffe e a n d e n d
ta b le t. 1 ch in a ca b in e ts , ta b la
a n d c h a ir s , d ro p le a l ta b le ,
b e d ro o m s u its , so la s a n d c h a irs ,
o d d d re s s e rs a n d chests, e n d
m ls c e lta n e u s h o u se h o ld Ite m s .
C o n sig n m e n ts w e lc o m e .
A u c tio n e e r B fen G ibson.

SANFORD AUCTION
1215 S.FRENCH AVE.
323-7340
215—Boats/Accessories
B oa t, m o to r e n d tr a ile r 13 hp
r u n t good. 5100 C e ll
373 5344
15‘ x l " 19 L u c re !!, 10HP Johnson,
P .T .T .. H e w g T .M .. D e p th fin d e r,
a H e rd in g G a lv a n iz e d l i l t t r a ile r .
U .000 371-9112.

217—Garage Soles
B ig S a l* S a tu r d a y M a r c h I I
b e g in n in g tO A M C an F le a 111 W .
71th A ve S a n lo rd ________________
S a tu rd a y M a rc h 12 9-4 lu r n ltu ro ,
good c lo th in g , odds a n d ends. M l
F a ir w a y R d. L o ch A rb o r

217—Garage Sales

231—C*r$

S tove, s ilv e r set. le w e lry , c e d a r
c h e tt. g la s s w a re , v io lin e tc . I
w e e k 441 59(9 H w y 11-91 D e B a ry
N e x t to K a ie m lfy ’t Lounge.

219—Wanted to Buy

181—Appliancies
/ Furniture
C a sh lo r g o o d u ta d lu r n llu r a .
L a r r y 's N e w A U se d F u rn itu r e
M a r t. 3tS S a n lo rd A v e . 377 4137
K e n m o r* p a rts , s e rv ic e , used
w a sh e rs. 373 0*91
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 H I E F IR S T ST.

321 sen

7 E a r ly A m e ric a n b ro w n s w iv e l
c h a irs 540 e ach. 2 T ra d itio n a l
c ru s h e d v e lv e t ro c k e rs a lm o s t
n e w 593 ea ch 222 1192.____________
3 P ie ce B d rm . sat. F re n c h , w h it* ,
g o ld . T w in b e d w / m e t t r e * 3.
s p rin g s . E x c . C o n d .U I-1 3 1 1 .
3 p ie c e k itc h e n ro o m t e l, 4 c h a irs
and le a l e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n 540
C a ll 2210044

183—Television/
Radio/Stereo
C O L O R T E L E V IS IO N
Z e n ith 2 5 " c o lo r T V m w a ln u t
co n s o le . O r ig in a l p ric e o v e r 5110.
B a la n c e d u e l i e * ca sh o r paym e n ts 519 m o . N O M O N E Y
D O W N . S till in w a rra n ty . C a ll
l i s t C e n tu ry S afes M 2 5394 d a y o r
n ig h t. F r a * h o m e t r ia l. N o o b ­
lig a t io n __________________________
G ood U ta d T V 'S U l A u p
M IL L E R S
2419 O rla n d o D r ,
P h 322 0352

187—Spoiling Goods
INDOOR GUN
RANGE
T u e sd a y S a tu rd a y 10-9
V u n d ijf 1 4
Shoot S tra ig h t P a w n a n d A u c tio n
C o m p a n y c o rn e r 441 a n d 434
A popka M t 0U 3

K O K O M O T o o l C o., a t 9 1 1 W . F irs t
S t.. S a n lo rd , I t n o w b u y in g g la ss,
n e w s p a p e r, b im e ta l s te e l a n d
a lu m in u m c a n t a lo n g w ith a ll
o th e r k in d s o l n o n - fo r r o u i
m o te ls . W h y n o t tu rn th is Id le
c lu tte r In to o a tra d o lla r s ! W * ( I I
b e n e fit tro m re c y c lin g .
F o r d o te lls c e ll, 123 11M
W * b u y A n tlq u e s .lu rn ltu r *
a n d a p p lia n c e *. C a ll
3211340.

223—Miscellaneous
DUY

SELL
TRADE
F lo rld a T ra d e r A u c tio n
L o n g w c o d . F le .2 3 f-3 tl9
C A M E R A S O ly m p u s O m -I w ith
ceso 1130 a ls o Pentax-KlOOO w ith
fla s h t ! 3 C a ll 3210044.____________
F u ll alias b e d w ith m a ttre s s and
s p rin g s , d r e t t a r , ch e s t, n ig h t
sta n d . G ood c o n d itio n . C a ll 322
( * 3 * a lt . 5 P M . ___________________
M an s s h irts s a lt, t l .99 each.
A R M Y N A V Y SUR PLU S
IIP S a n lo rd A v e ____________ 222 5191
S E W IN G M A C H IN E
M u s t t a c r lllc o S in g e r F u tu re t e w ­
in g m a c h in e . O n * o f S in g e rs ’ best
m o d e ls . D o e i e v e r y t h in g
a u to m a tic a lly . A lm o s t I lk * new .
W e t o rig in a lly 5499.00 b a la n ce
due 5214.70 o r need som eone to
ta k e up p a y m e n ts 514.00 p e r M o.
W ill la k e tra d a a t p a rt p a y m a n t.
C a ll t i l t C a n tu ry Safes 941-5194
d a y o r n ig h t. F re e h o m t t r ia l.
T a s k w ood C o tta * T a b le a n d tw o
a n d t a b la t , a n d tw o t w lv la
c h a ir* . 3 la m p s . ( I I I e n d S tereo
C a b in e t 145. C a ll 212 1447_________
U sed Bads. (35 sat. S an fo rd A u c ­
tio n . 171IS . F re n c h .
_____________ 321 1140._____________
3 H P . c o m p re ss o r. H ig h to rq u e
m o to r. 230 t in g le phase. L ik a
n e w . 1 Y e a r p lu s ta rv lc a w a r ­
ra n ty . P a id 51,000. A s k in g 1300.
321914*._________________________
3 P ie ce B d rm . t e l. F re n c h , w h ite ,
g o ld . T w in b e d w / m a t t r e s s .
s p rin g s E x c . C ond. (11-73)3.

231—Cars
CASH F O R Y O U R C AR
M A R T IN M O T O R S A LE S
1*1 S. F re n c h
121-1(34

D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
H w y t l . I m il* w e st o l Speedw ay,
D a yto n a B each w ill h o ld • p u b lic
A U T O A U C T IO N a v e ry M o n d a y
A W ednesday a t 1:30 p m . It's the
o n ly on# In F lo rid a . Y o u s a l tha
re s e rv e d p ric e . C a ll 904 355 (311
fo r fu rth e r (fe ta lis.

B a d C r e d it!
N o C r e d it!
W E F IN A N C E
N o C re d it C heck- E osy T e rm s
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E S
I IM S . S a n lo rd A v *
321-4011
D e b a r y A u to A M a r in o S a lts .
•c ro s s th e r iv e r to p o f h ilt 174
h a y I I 97 D e b a ry 44* *5 M
.
IS IT T R U E Y O U C A N B U Y
J E E P S F O R (4 4 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 TH E FACTS TO D A Y !
C A L L (3131 743 1143 E X T . I K
(O P E N S U N D A Y ).______________ ;
Selected sto c k cfe e n I o w n e r c e r t. •
W * In v ite yew r In sp e ctio n . J a c k
M a r tin 's 4 I( * 17.93 333-790*.
1973 D odge P o la r* 5500
314 W . 15th St.
__________ Phone 377-4119.__________ ;
1975 C O L T W A G O N . 4 speed, regu
le r gas, 35 M P G . G ood re lla b fe
c o n d itio n , 333-0155_______________
1914 C a m e ro 53000 M u tt
t e ll, ru n s p e rfe c t
___________ C e il 7117301.___________
1!00 O lds D e lla ( I R o y a l* D iesel
A /T , P /B . P /S 7134 m p g 554*3
E ves o r w eekends 904 175-4703.
44 F o rd C la ssic E-100 V a n 517.000
o rig in a l m ile s , new lir e * , c a m p e r
e q u ip p e d , e x t r a g o o d c o n d t) lon5973 373 7543.________________
14 T o y o ta P ic k u p a u to m a tic ,
c ru is e c o n tro l. 51195. N o m on e y
d o w n . 139 9100 ,(34-4405__________
15 C h e vy I t to n p ic k u p to ts th e n
50.000 m ile s w ith c a m p e r s h e ll
(M O O Cell a lte r 5 172 1*93.
I t F o rd L T D w a g on . 9 passenger,
lo aded. G ood c o n d itio n , (1*95. N o
m o n e y d o w n, 139 *100 ,(34 4405.
13 C h e vy M a lib u to k a o v e r p a y ­
m e n ts 5100 d o w n, 5135.15 m o n th ly
C a ll betw een 1 4 371 m e .

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories
I t D odge C o ll e n g in e . 74 C hevy
e n g in e 350. T o yo ta e n g in e
371 4047.

235—Trucks/
Buses / Vans
Bucket trucks
1911 F o rd F-J00 w ith 34 lo o t w o rk
log h e ig h t b u ck e ts c h o k e o l 17.
53.750 e a ch a t D e y to n a A u to
A u c tio n H w y . *7 D a yto n a B eech
*04 755(311.
I t D A T S U N p ic k u p . N eeds
bo d y w o rk . 51400
373 0740

243—Junk Cars
B U Y J U N K C AR S A T R U C K S
F ro m 510 to 550o r m o re .
___________ C a ll 177 1(24.___________
T O P O o lla r P a id lo r J u n k A Used
c a rs , tru c k s A h e a vy e q u ip m e n t.
377-5*90_________________________
W E P A Y to p d o lla r fo r J u n k C a rt
a n d T ru c k s C BS A u to P a rts
1914505.

CONSULT OUR

BUSINESS SERVICE US11NG
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

N E E D to t a ll y o u r tvousa q u ic k ly l
W * ca n o tte r g u a ra n te e d ta le
w ith in 30 days.
C a ll 111 1411

&gt;V

E s ta te fu rn itu re a n d a n tiq u e ta le .
A ll hew sehald H em s m u s t ga.
S a tu rd a y A S unday M a rc h 11A1)
9 a .m .- 5 p .m . 3441 S. S an te rd
A v * . C e ll M a r y M ille r m i n i
to r m e re In to rm a tto n .
---------------------- -------------------------------------

F O R E S T A T E . C o m m e rc ia l o r
R e s id e n tia l A u c tio n s A A p p ra is ­
a ls . C e ll D e ll’s A u c tio n
______________ 173 5470______________

S a lttm a n n e e d e d .
3 2 1 -0 7 5 9

S u n d a ^ M a r c h IU M M 1

N eed E x tra Cash?

R E N T W IT H O P T IO N 4/3 F a m ily
ro o m , C H A , c a rp e te d , fe n ce d
b a c k , n ic e n e ig h b o rh o o d . 5395

333-49*1

E vnlnp Herald, Sanford. FI.

211—Antiques/
Collectables

213—Auctions

340 C re st S a n lo rd 1/7 545.000

Sanford's Sales Leader

with M ajor H oopla

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

L o ch A rb o r W a te rfro n t
C o lo n ia l 7 s to ry 5 b d rm ] b th
a p p ra is e d 5111.000 A I c o n d itio n
b y o w n e r 373 3571

i- : l t A

141—Homes For Sale

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
D .B .F .S . In c . 1*0* F re n c h , B usiness
A In d iv id u a l In co m a la x 9 9 M F .

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
ALLTYPESCAR PEN TR Y
C u sto m B u lll a d d itio n s . P a tio s,
screen ro o m s , c a rp o rt. D o o r
lo cks, p a n a lln g . sh in gle s, rero o fln g . F o r la s t s a rv lc * . c a ll
323 4911.145 2311.________________
B A T H S , k itc h e n s , ro o tin g , b lo c k ,
co n c re te , w in d o w s . * d d a ro o m .
F re e e s tim a te s 331 (443_________

R tm odclinf Specialist
W * h a n d le The
W h o le B a ll o f W a x

B.E.Unk Const

322-7029

Bookkeeping
D e G a rm e a u B o o k ke e p in g S erv
377 7701
P e rso n a l
In co m e
T *x *t,&lt;
e v e n in g !_________________

C A R P E N T E R re p a irs and
a d d itio n s . M y e a rs exp.
_ _ _
C a lin r u J T ^ ^ ^

Carpet/Floor Coverings
19 Y rs . E xp . Safes, In s ta ll, re p a irs .
W a b u y d ire c t. F o r p e rso n a l
^ w r v le e ^ J T M W ^ a h ^ n s ^ h o n * .

Cleaning Service
A .M . K E L L Y c le a n in g ta rv lc a .
S p e c la lliln g In re s ta u ra n t A c l
lic e b u ild in g s . 477-0350___________
F O R e ffic ie n t a n d re lla b fe H o m e
C le a n in g . C a ll P a tty ’s H o rn *
P a m p e rin g s e rv ic e 321-134*.
• TRI PLE Ax

R oom
a d d itio n s , g a ra g e con
ve rs io n s
F IR E P L A C E
S P E C IA L IS T . Q u a lity A depen
d a b l* A lo w e s t p ric e s . A s k to r
D aw son 131 4940.

is P ric e s p e c ia l 514 95 fo r F a m ily
o r L iv in g R m . (42 2140___________
W in d o w
w a sh in g F lo o r
re ­
f ill Ish I ng C a rp e t c le a n in g C a ll
R a lp h a t B i l l ! C le a n 3214112.

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating

Electrical

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screened Rooms
A L U M IN U M s id in g , v in y l s id in g ,
s o ld i A fa s c ia . A lu m in u m g u tfe r t
a n d d o w n sp o u ts. F r . E ll .
305 365 5343

Appliance Repair
C L A R E N C E 'S
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
W a s a rv lc * a ll m a jo r b ra n d s Reas
ra te *. IS y rs . e xp . 373Q33I.
J O H N N IE S A p p lia n c e . W * s e rv ic e
r e f r ig e r a lo r t . w e th e rs , d ry e rs ,
ra n g e s R eas, ra le s .
_____________ 131(134.______________
23 y e a rs R e lia b le S e rvice . R e p a ir
A C , r e lr ig t . . Iro e z e rt. ra n g e s,
d w . w a sh d ry e rs
^ _ ^ U U 4 4 9 J 3 I« * J ^

Automotive
C B , S le re o In s le lle tlo n R e p a ir
A u to Sound C e n te r
3109 F re n c h A v * .
3314035

Blinds &amp; Drapes
C U S T O M N U D E D R A P E R IE S
T ra v e rs e R ode in s ta lle d
D o ro th y BUSS
34*5473

Boarding A Grooming
A n im a l H a v e n
B o a rd in g a n d
G rtw m ln g K a n n e lt h e a te d In
to ta le d , scre e n ed . Ily p ro o l In ­
sid e a n d o u ts id e ru n e . F a n s A lt o
A C cages W * c a te r to y o u r p e ts
P h 327 5157

ROOM
a d d itio n s .
re m o d e lin g
d r y w a il h u n g c e ilin g s sp ra ye d ,
lire p le c e s . ro o tin g .

a ll

Home Repairs

Carpentry

______ Financing Available______

A ir C o n d itio n in g a n d R e frig e ra to r
re p a irs a n d s e rv ic e C a ll fo r tre e
a s tlm a fe ^ J ^ W ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Home Improvement

C A R P E N T E R 35 y r * e xp . S m e ll
re m o d e lin g
lo b s ,
re a so n a b le
re te t. C h u ck 173 9445_____________
H o m e R e p a ir*
S m a ll |o b t w e i
c o m *. Sheet re c k , p a in tin g t id e ln . c a rp e n try , p a tio s A g e n e ra l
c a rp e n try , t l y rs , e xp e rie n c e ,
re a so n a b le . 323 41*3______________
M a in te n a n c e o l *11 typ e s
C a rp e n try , p a in tin g , p lu m b in g
A e le c tric 233-4839
P O R C H E S , b a th ro o m d o o rs, ro tte n
w ood re p la c e m e n t, a ll s m a ll jobs
w e k w rw J T IM T I^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Lawn Service
*A-1 LAWN SERVICE*
treed, t r im . h a u l. R a g u la r
S a rv lc * I lim e cfe e n up. 34 h r* .
b e st ra te s. 4 M 4439_______________
L itto n L a w n S ervice
C o m m e rc ia l a n d R e s id a n lla l.
W in te r C lta n up. 33I-S34*.

Masonry

M A S T E R E le c tric ia n
R e g iste re d c o n tra c to r. C o m m . A
R e t. O u e llty h o m e se rv ic e . F re e
E st J a m e s P a u l 373 1559

Fence
F E N C E In s ta lla tio n . C h a in lin k ,
w ood post A r a il. A te rm fence.
L ic e n s e A In su re d . 3134)91.

General Services
M IS T E R F in It. J o * M c A d a m s w ill
r e p a ir y o u r m o w e r* a t y o u r
_ h o m # C a ll 3 2 1 10JJ

Health &amp; Beauty

A ll b ric k , b lo c k e n d stone w o rk .
F i r * p la c e s p e c ia lis t
___________3314960 e t t i ___________
B E A L C o n cre te I m a n q u a lity ,
o p e ra tio n . P o lio s , d riv e w a y *
D a y * 331 1133E v e s 32M 321
P IA Z Z A M A S O N R Y
,
Q u a lity W o rk A t R easonable
P ric e *. F re e E s tim a te s .
P h .34* 5500 A lts r S p m
S W IF T C O N C R E T E w o rk a ll
ty p e * . F o o te r*, d riv e w a y * , pads,
d o o rs , pools, c o m p le te . F re e r s t
W
I O
^
^
^
|

Nursing Cart

T O W E R 'S B E A U T Y S A LO N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie tt's B e a u ty
N o o k. I l f E . 1st St. 233 5743
T R Y O A V IS Q u ic k r e lie f lin im e n t
fo r y o u r a ch e s a n d p a in s . N ona
b e tte r. (30 5494

L O V IN G E X P E R IE N C E D
C A R E . F o r y o u r e ld e rly lo v e d one
in m y h o m e . 323 (3 M .
O U R R A T E S A R E LO W ER
L o k o v te w N u rs in g C e n te r
91* E . Second St ., S a n lo rd
1114101

Home Improvement

Painting

C a rp e n try b y " B I L L "
W O OO
A rle s ia n
C e n tr a l
c a rp e n try , s c re e n e d ro o m d o o r*
e tc R o o t. R a f t 321 3410

I w ill p o in t a n y I s to ry

C O L L IE R 'S
c a rp e n try ,

H o rn #
ro o fin g ,

R e p a irs
p a in tin g ,

window repair. 371-4422

COMPLETE

CONSTRUCTION

N o jo b to s m a ll. M in e r A m a jo r
re p a irs L ic e n s e d A bo n de d
121-9121
P A IN T IN G a n d r e p a ir, p a tio a n d
K ra e n p o rc h b u ilt. C a ll a n y tim e
321*401
Q U A D T Y h o rn * re p a ir a n d
re m o d e lin g C o ll (311434
F o r tre e e s l! m o te s

house lor 5400
C o ll 111 5110.

P a st C ontrol
SPENCER PEST CONTROL
C o m m ., R e * d . L a w n . T o rm lto
W o rk . 277 *145 A s k to r C h a m p

Roofing

A&amp;B ROOFING
13 y r s e xp e rie n c e . L ice nse d A
In su re d .
F re e E s iIm e te t on R o oting,
Re R o o tin g a nd R e p a irs .
S hingles. B u ilt U p a n d T il*

JAMES ANDERSON
Gi. BOHANNON
322-9417
Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936
JAMES E. LEE INC.
M o rris o n R o o fin g Co
S p e c ia lizin g
In
sh in gle s
end
b u ild up. L o w . L o w R atos. 34 h r.

service 1(12312_____________
N E W re ro o fln g .a n d re p a irs
Y r * . E xp.
322 1974

15

Sewing
D R A P E S B Y D E B B IE
R oosonobio ra te s
______________331 5390______________
EXPERT
d re s s m a k in g ,
a lte r
• lio n s . A lla n C le a n e rs. 3(44 H w y .
I f 92. L o k t M a r y B le d
771 e m

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
Sprinklers/Irrigation
S A N F O R D Ir r ig a tio n A S p rin k le r
S yste m s In c . F re e e s t 3220761

Tile
C O O O Y A SONS
T i l* C o n tra c to r*
3310512
L ie . In c .

Tree Service
JO H N A L L E N Y A R D B T R E E
S E R V IC E . W e ’ll re m o v e p in t
tre e s R « o t. p ric e 3111300
S T U M PS g ro u n d o u t.
R ooso n o bio . I r e * e s tim a te s
______________ 1(00441______________
T re e s a a d t h r o b * re m o v e d , p ru n e d
e tc. S tu m p s re m e v e d a n y locot ie * . R a m T re e S e rvice 32*-471l.
T R I C a v it y T re e S a rv lc * . T r im
ra m o v a . tra s h , h a u lin g , ttro w a o d
F r. E s l. 333 9410.

T V &amp; R a d io R e p a irs

Plastering/Dry Wall
A LL
P hases
ot
P la s te rin g
P lo tte rIn g re p a ir, stu cco , h a rd
c o te , s im u la te d b ric k . 331 5993
D r y w a il P ia s te r A C a llin g R e p a irs
" A l l w o rk G u a ra n te e d " L ie A
In s D ry w a il S p e c ia lty S erv In c
1 (1 *31 1

Smi TV Wnflrt Ctniir
Ser ric e c h a rg e P .9 1 p lu s p a rts A ll
m a k e s m 1751

Upholstery
L O R E N E 'S U p h o 'iltr, Free p.ck
u o . d e l A e s t C a r A b o a t seats
F u rn H I 1130.

�,% *

10B— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

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Sunday, M arch 1), 1913

ALL THE FUN &amp; EXCITEMENT BEGINS TODAY
WITH WINN-OIXIES NEW GAME1

AT TRIP
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SERIES M W 4 2 IS
SCHEDULED TO END
MARCH 6 , 1983 OR
WHEN A ll BINGO
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Pick up free Super Bonus
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W - 0 B R A N D U S D A C H O IC E BEEF C H U C K
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75th Y ear, No. 153—T uesday, F eb ru a ry 15, 1983—Sanford, F lorida 32771

E vening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481-280)—P rice 20 C ents

Brantley Uneasy About Special Library Law
By M1CHEAL BEHA
Herald SUM Writer
Seminole County’s $7 million bond Issue may face a tough
time Wednesday morning when the county's legislators decide
whether they will Introduce It to the Legislature for validation.
State Rep. -Bobby Brantley, R-l/&gt;ngwood, chairman of the
legislative delegation, said he’s ’’not certain’’ how his
colleagues will vote on the Issue. But personally he said he's
been wrestling with the problem for several days.
Brantley said he's trying to keep an open mind on the issue
despite "the Intensive lobbying effort that’s going on on both
sides" by those for and against the library Improvements.
The bond Issue was approved In October by about 58 percent
of the 10,000 voters who cast ballots. But county officials
recently discovered that they had failed tn advertise the bond
Issue three and five weeks prior to the election.
To correct the error they have asked the legislative
delegation to submit the bond Issue tc *hc Legislature.
If the delegation votes to Introduce a special act It will be
Introduced to the community affairs committees of the House
and Senate. Then the Issue will come before the bodies on a day

for special local bills. The bills are usually passed at one time
by unanimous consent.
The most vocal opponent of the bond Issue Is Commissioner
Robert G. "Bud" Feather. Feather opposed placing the
referendum on the ballot and has opposed asking the
legislature for a special act.
Feather has sent letters to each member of the delegation
asking them not to approve the special act.
Brantley said the delegation's meeting at 9 a.m. Wednesday
In the Altamonte Springs council chambers could be an
emotionally charged session.
Brantley said he hopes to keep it from becoming emotional.
"The real Issue, after we boll down all the emotional and
philosophical arguments, is whether it’s proper to circumvent
state law In cases where the county violated U."
He said on the other side is the fact that voters went to the
polls and cast their votes for the referendum in good faith.
County commissioners, he said, “feel they owe something to
the people who voted In favor of the bond issue."
The delegation must decide where to draw the line on such
requests, Brantley said.

"It may not be a proper thing to do," he said. "The overage
citizen doesn’t have a legislative delegation they can go to
when they violate the law."
Rep. Carl Sclph also has wrestled with the issue. Unlike
Brantley, he has made up his mind to vote for the special act.
"It's not a simple yes," Selph said. “ I don't think we should
consider merits of the bond Issue itself. That should've been
considered by the county commission and the voters."
Selph said the main Issue will be to determine whether the
wording of the bond issue was misleading. If it’s not, he plans
to vote for the special act.
"The bond Issue got good coverage In the media," he said.
" I’m wrestling with the requirements for legal ad­
vertisements. I think the Intent was to ensure that you don’t
slip something by the voters.
"I think people were probably well Informed," Selph added.
For Brantley, the Issue Is not as clear cut. He has weighed
the choices available. In ado,lien to the special act, the county
could take the bond Issue to the state Supreme Court for
validation or could bold another election
• ' "My nuiid goes back and torthrOiK day I get up and say I'm

going to vote for it. Then five minutes later I change my
mind," he said. " It’s going to hinge on the cost of a special
referendum."
Brantley said opponents of the special act already have
threatened to flic a lawsuit if the legislature approves the
special act.
"If the costs of the special election are $25,000 or so that may
be the cheapest avenue," Brantley sdid. A lawsuit could tie up
the bond Issue, designed to build branch libraries In four arras
of the county, for several years.
Camilla Bruce, supervisor of elections, said a special
election would cost between $25,000 and $30,000.
Brantley said the special election would be the cleanest way
to solve the problem.
He’s concerned that the delegation won’t be unanimous even
it supports the special act.
"A problem usuclly arises when you have a situation where
you’re not unanimous," he said. One member of the delegation
can cause the measure to be defected
• I Just hope we can agree not to disagree," he said.

Sanford M ay
Buy Land Back
From Feather

I

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County Commissioner
Robert G. “ Bud" Feather will be told at
11 a.m. next Wednesday whether the
Sanford City Commission will force him
to resell to the city the property on which
he had planned to build a multi-milliondollar nursing home and apartment
complex for senior citizens.
It was clear Monday night that the
majority of the commissioners favored
either taking over control of the 6.5 acres
behind the Evening Herald Building and
fronting on the Lake Monroe lakefront or
requiring Feather to pay more money for
it. The additional money discussed was
$50,000.
Feather, looking drawn and disturbed
as his attorney, Edgcrlon van den Berg,
discussed the county commissioners'
options, said he would lose $270,000 If the
city repurchased the land for the agreed
upon $100,000.
F eath er su rp rised com m issioners
when he revealed he had paid Frederick
Rucker $300,000 for the land. The city
had sold the property to the Altamonte
Springs man for $117,000.
Iuist June as time was running out for
Rucker to begin construction under a
city-imposed deadline of a proposed
m ulti-story condominium ap artm en t
complex, Feather bought the tract from
the Altamonte Springs man.
Feather's time under a contract with
the city to begin construction of his
planned life-care facility will expire
March 1. The county official had
requested a year's extension of the
deadline and the right for another six
months' delay after that.
For that extension he promised to pay
the city a fee of $5,000. In addition he
pledged to pay the city $10,000 per year
for every year completion of the project
Is delayed after Dec. 31, 1986.
In an exchange, Feather asked that the
clauses giving the city the right to

H e ra ld P h o to * b y T o m V in c o n l

B L O W IN G IN
THE W IN D

TTie American nag that usually flies only over
Memorial Park across from Sanford’s City Hall
was flying far and wide Monday morning after a
line snapped, freeing Old Glory to flap over Lake
Monroe waters in the west harbor. A Sanford city
maintenance crew rescued the large flag. Butch

Strine climbed into the bucket of a maintenance
department truck, elevated himself and was able
to throw a weighted line over the nag’s cable.
'Maintenance department workers, along with
workers from the parks and street departments
pulled the nag down and repaired the lines.

Yards Along Canal May Flood

Sewage Plant s Discharge Increase Opposed
By M1CHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
A Lake Monroe man Is opposed to plans
to raise the capacity of the Lake Monroe
Utilities sewage plant because It will
bring more water Into Elder Canal.
T.C. Rabun said the permit being
considered by the state Department of
Environmental Regulation to Increase
the discharge of effluent from the plant to
75,000 gallons would flood the yards of
many residents along Elder Canal. The
plan Is to discharge effluent Into Elder
Canal from where It will flow Into the St.
Johns River downstream of Lake
Monroe.
"The county doesn’t do anything with
the ditches In regard to cleaning them
out," Rabun said. "Regardless of
whether It’s treated or untreated, we
can't stand the water.

The permit application Is the subject of
a public meeting set for tonight at 7
o'clock in the Seminole County Cour­
thouse in Sanford.
Rabun, who recently underwent open
heart surgery, said he's not certain
whether he will be able to attend the
meeting but said he expects many of his
neighbors to be in attendance. Rabun
sent county commissioners a letter op­
posing the permit application.
"After every big rain like the one we
got this weekend there's water standing
In our yards," he said. "We just can’t
stand another 75,000 gallons a day."
Rabon, who lives about a quarter of a
mile from the plant, said he has no
problem with the plant itself.
DER officials have said they have no
problems with the application filed by the
utility but decided to hold the hearing at

the request of Seminole County com­
missioners.
Ed Davenport of DER's Orlando office
said the meeting Is not a public hearing.
No hearing officer will be present and no
decision will be reached In the meeting.
Davenport said DER officials will
present information about the ap­
plication along with their opinions on its
impact.
Seminole County officials, who oppose
the plan, and representatives of the
utility, owned by Dr. J.W. Hickman, have
been invited to make presentations at the
meeting.
The temporary operating permit was
first sought in December 1961, according
to Greg Drummond, a public relations
consultant who works for Hickman. After
nine months the DER rejected that ap­
plication.

The original application for 100,000
gallons, was rejected because the facility
did not have the capacity to process
100.000 gallons a day, Davenport said.
A second permit was then applied for,
this time for 75,000 gallons a day. The
plant currently processes about 50,000
gallons of sewage per day.
Davenport said the operating permit
will allow the plant to treat and discharge
75.000 gallons of sewage each day.
According to the application, 25,000
gallons of effluent Is sprayed on nearby
fields and the remaining 50,000 gallons
are treated by a "living filter," an area
filled with plants and soil which ef­
fectively treats the effluent before It Is
discharged.
The sewage plant serves the 1-4
Industrial Park and the Pert of Sanford.

repurchase the property, If certain
deadlines weren’t met, be stricken from
the contract.
Feather had planned to build a 60-bed
nursing facility and a 240-unlt apartment
complex for seniors on the site in the first
phase.
Nearly three weeks ago the state
granted Feather a certificate of need for
the nursing home beds — 30 for residents
of the complex and 30 for non-residents.
During the discussions Monday night,
Mayor 1/% P. Moore said the money that
Feather was offering for the delay was
not enough. Feather responded by upping
the ante for a delay in construction
completion until Jan. 1, 1985.
"On Jan. 1, 1985, If 240 units are not
there, I'U pay $25,000," he said. “ I'm
asking, please, let me proceed. It will
succeed, I know it will. I’ve done
everything I said I would, except com­
municate.
"With the certificate of need and the
economy on the up, I'm sure I’ll succeed.
Please work with me on this," he said.
Van den Berg Insisted the city's
" re v e rte r clau se s," the right to
reacquire the property, makes it Im­
possible to get financing for the project.
Moore reminded fellow commissioners
that Feather is "a leg up" on the project
by having the certificate of need.
Commissioner David F arr said the city
had placed Feather in an untenable
position with the clauses in the property
sales contract. He suggested the city take
back the property, then establish a fair
market price without reverter clauses
and then sell the property.
Commissioner Ned Yancey echoed
F a rr’s comments.
F arr said the property was sold at a
lesser price — $117,000 — as an Incentive
to get it developed and placed on the tax
rolls.
Commissioner Milton Smith stressed
that the Commission's first responsibility
See FEATHER Page 2A

TODAY
Action Reports......................................2A
Around The Clock................... .......... 4A
Bridge....................................... ............6B
Calendar .................................. ............3A
Classified A d s .......................... . . . . 4,5A
C om ics.................................... ............«B
6B
Crossword...............................
Dear Abby ................................ ............IB
2A
Deaths......................................
6B
Dr. Lam b................................

Editorial......................................... —
Florida........................................... .
Horoscope......................................
Hospital ......................................... ...
Nation............................................. —
People.............................................
Sports.............................................
Television......................................
Weather.........................................
World....................................

4A
3A
6B
2A
2A
IB

2A
3A

State Law m akers To Join Local Officials

VIP Volunteers To Serve In Seminole Schools
By M1CHEALBEHA
Herald SUM Writer
State and local officials, school board personnel and ad*
ninistrators will serve as volunteers in Seminole County
ehoola on Friday.
.
The special volunteer program will cap Seminole County's
ibservancc of Florida School Volunteer Week.
Tho school district is honoring its volunteers in the Dividends
irogram. Dignitaries have been invited to serve one day as a
-olunteer to highlight the program and make the public aware
if the service the volunteers provide.
Included in the list of dignitaries are state Sen. Toni Jenlings, who will work at Lake Orients Elementary School; state
leps. Bobby Brantley, who will visit Lake Mary High School;
Lit Grindle, who will visit Lyman High School, and Carl Selph.
rho will work at South Seminole Middle School.

Others who will serve as "Dividends for a Day" include:
County Commission Chairman Sandra Glenn, Spring Lake
Elementary School; County Commissioner Barbara
Christensen, Sterling Park Elementary School; County
Commissioner Robert Feather, Lake Brantley High School;
County Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff, Midway Elementary
School and County Commissioner Bob Sturm, Oviedo High
School.
School Board Chairman Roland Williams, Seminole High
School; School Board Vice-Chairman Nancy Warren, Wilson
Elementary School; School Board Member Jean Bryant,
Geneva Elementary School and School Board Member Pat
Telson, Eastbrook Elementary School.
Mayor Ray Ambrose, Altamonte Springs, Altamonte
Elementary Set tool; Mayor Charles Glascock, Casselberry,
Lake Howell High School; Mayor Walt Sorensen, Lake Mary,

Lake Mary Elementary School; Mayor June Lormann,
Longwood, Longwood Elementary School and Mayor John
Torcaso, Winter Springs, Winter Springs Elementary School.
School Superintendent Robert Hughes, Jackson Heights
Middle School; Assistant Superintendent Dan Dagg, Saba]
Point Elementary School; Director of Elementary Education
Marion Glanninl, Goldsboro Elementary School; Director of
Exceptional Education Don Ricci, Rosenwald Exceptional
Child Center; Coordinator Clem Boyer, Math, South Side
Elementary; Coordinator Charlptte Geyer, Secondary
language Aits, Rock Lake Middle School; Coordinator Myma
Walters, Elementary Reading, English Estates Elementary
School; Coordinator Bettie Palmer, Science, Woodlands
Elementary School; Coordinator Brenda Griffin, Kin­
dergarten-third grade, Goldsboro Elementary School;
Coordinator Jim Elliott, Social Studies, Casselberry

&gt;

Elementary School and Coordinator John Blair, Fine Arts,
Lakeview Middle School.
Additionally, the district is holding its second annual sharing
session for community resource volunteers today at the
Sanlando Methodist Church in Longwood.
Community resource volunteers are people who have talent
in specific areas but do not have time to work in the schools on
a regular basis.
*
Included in the session are talks by Jeff Butler, assistant
professor of communications at the University of Central
Florida; Tom Hale, staff metorologlst for WCPX-TV in
Orlando, and Marion Eggers, who collects miniatures.
Additionally, Fuperintendent Robert Hughes addressed the
group and wftool officials gave their feelings about the
volunteer pi ograms.

f

�JA— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, F I,

Tuesday,Feb. IS, 1983

NATION
IN BRIEF
W histle-B low er Giving
Congress EPA D ocum ents
^WASHINGTON (UPI) — Environmental Protection
Agency "whistle-blower" Hugh Kaufman is giving a
House subcommittee boxes of documents on the em­
battled agency’s toxic waste cleanup activities.
Kaufman, a hazardous waste specialist and out­
spoken EPA critic, began turning over the files shortly
after agency officials made a deal with him Monday
that averted a potentially embarrassing hearing on
their alleged efforts to fire him.
A House Science and Technology subcommittee is
one of several congressional panels investigating the
growing controversy over the Reagan administration's
handling of "Supcrfund," the $1.6 billion law aimed at
cleaning up the nation's worst toxic waste dumps.

'Squeal Rule ' Blocked
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Teenage girls can continue
to get birth control prescriptions from federally funded
clinics without fear their parents will be informed, at
least until a trial is held on the so-called “ squeal rule."
A federal Judge in New York Monday temporarily
prohibited the Reagan administration from requiring
clinics to tell parents when their teenage daughters ret
birth-control pills or devices, saying the rule actually
would increase pregnancies.
The controversial regulation cowering health clinics
that get federal funds was scheduled to take effect Feb.
25, but U.S. District judge Henry F. Werker enjoined
the Department of Health and Human Services from
enforcing the rule until a trial is held.

G M , Toyota Team Up
DETROIT (UPI)
General Motors Corp. and
Toyota Motor Co. — the world’s No. 1 and No. 3
automakers — say their $300 million deal to build
subcompact cars is a landmark in industrial
cooperation but auto workers are cautiously optimistic.
The two automakers announced simultaneously in
Detroit and Tokyo Monday an agreement in principle
to produce autos at GM’s vacant -til-acre Fremont,
Calif, plant under joint management.
The two companies will jointly build 200,000 cars a
year for up to 12 years to be marketed by Chevrolet
dealers, replacing the Chevette. The price of the socalled T-cars would be around $6,000.

STOCKS
These q u o ta tio n * p ro v id e d by
m e m b e rs
ol
th e
N a tio n a l
A s s o c ia tio n o l S e c u ritie s D e a le rs
a re r e p r e s e n t a t iv e In te r d e a le r
p ric e s as of a p p ro x im a te ly noon
to d a y
I n t e r D e a le r m a r k e ts
c han ge th ro u g h o u t th e da y P ric e s
do no t In c lu d e r e ta il m a rk u p
m a rk d o w n .

Bid Ask
Atlantic B ank........ 32
32‘*
Barnett B an k ------ 29l» 29*4

Flagship B anks___ 23 23l«
Florida Power
Sc l i g h t ............... 37Ta 37*a
Florida Progress . 18*4 18Ta
Hughes Supply.......33W 34
Morrison's ..........
18Ta
NCR Corp..............103Ta KM*.
Plessey................. W
92H
S co tty 's................. I?1* 20
Southeast Bank . .. ,20*. 21*»

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Rain driven by 50-mph winds bat­
tered the Virginia coast and plunged thousands into darkness
in Washington D.C. But an ice storm spared the Northeast, still
reeling today from the Blizzard of 'R3 that was blamed for at
least 71 deaths. Authorities said it would cost millions to clean
up from the region's worst wintry assault in 40 years. Heavy
thunderstorms today pounded Texas, dumping an inch of rain
an hour near San Antonio and Austin. Violent storms whipped
up the Southeast Atlantic Coast today and gale warnings were
posted from North Carolina to Maryland. Melting snow
Monday knocked out power for about three hours to about 3,600
customers in Washington's fashionable Georgetown section,
plunging the Watergate complex, the Kennedy Center and
Georgetown University into darkness.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 54; overnight
low: 43; Monday high: 62; barometric pressure: 30.06;
relative humidity: 82 percent; winds: north at 10 mph; rain:
none; sunrise 7:04 a.m., sunset 6:16 p.m.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 10:10
a.m., 10:24 p.m.; lows, 3:31 a.m., 3:58 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 10:02 a.m., 10:16 p m.; lows. 3:22 a.m.,
3:49 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs, 2:56 a.m., 3:32 p.m.; lows, 4:26
a.m., 9:51 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Mile*: A small craft advisory remains in effect. Wind north­
westerly near 20 knots becoming north to northeast and
decreasing to 10 to 15 knots today and east to southeast 10 to 15
knots tonight. Wind Wednesday southeasterly increasing to
near 20 knots by late afternoon. Seas 6 to 8 feet offshore and 3 to
5 feet nearshore decreasing to 4 to 6 feet offshore by tonight.
Mostly fair through tonight.
AREA FORECAST: Sunny and mild today. Highs mid 60s to
around 70. Wind mostly north to northeast around 10 mph.
Tonight mostly fair and cool. Lows near 50 or low 50s. Wind
easterly 10 mph or less. Wednesday becoming mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers or possibly a thunderstorm mainly in
the afternoon. Highs in the low to mid 70s. Rain chance 40
percent.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C t n l r i l F lo r id * R t f i o o i l H o s p ita l
M onday
A D M IS S IO N S
S a n fo rd :
D o lo re s R C a sh n a r
R o b e rt R . D o n le y
S an dra L . K lm b e r
E d w a rd O . L a g e r
A lb e rta H . L y o n *
M a ry H M ille r
G eneva H . O w e n
G lo ria J. R o b in s o n
M ic h a e l D . Y a te s

E v e n in g H e r a ld

W a lte r T a y lo r J r., D e lto n a
F e rn E . B e n e d ic t, L a k e M a ry
A ra J. H o llis te r, O ra n g a C ity
F lo re n c e S u tto n , G ite e n
D IS C H A R G E S
S a n fo rd :
L a w re n c e B ae ton Sr.
N o ra L . C o tto n
P a m e la M . P o rte r
L in d a H . W est
E liz a b e th W . C o rry , D e B a ry
C a ro ly n J. B iv e n s , O e lto n a

iu iri «i-m i

Tuesday, February IS, 19IJ—Vol. 7S, No. IS)
P u b lis h e d D a ily an d S unday, e x c e p t S a tu rd a y By T n * S an ford
H e ra ld . In c ., )D 0N F re n c h A v c .. S an fo rd . F lo . M 7J 1.
Second C loss P ostage P a id a t S an fo rd . F lo rid a II7 7 I
H o m e D e liv e ry : W eek, l l . M ; M e n fb , t 4 . « ; * M o n th s , S I4 .M ,
Y ta r , S45 M . B y M a ll: W t o i S M S ; M o n th . S M S ; t M o n th s ,
u a a * . r o a r . U f a*

I

Local Opthalmologist To
Receive N ew Y AG Laser
A DeLand ophthalmic surgeon will be
among the country’s first to obtain the new
YAG laser, a surgical laser developed for use
In cataract operations to make them easier,
safer and quicker.
Dr. Albert C. Neumann, founder and
medical director of the Neumann Eye
Institute, 650 W. Plymouth Ave., DeLand, Is
scheduled to receive the YAG directly from
Germany by the end of the month. The
surgical laser was recently Introduced at the
Am erican Academy of Ophthalm ologists
conference in San Francisco by French
surgeon Danielc Aron-Rosa who developed the
instrument.
The YAG, «n acronym for yttriumalumlnum-gamet, laser works in an infrared
wavelength. It is used in the first step of the
cataract surgery to open the membrane en­
closing the clouded human lens.
It also will benefit patients requiring
secondary cataract surgery, almost 25 percent
of the total number undergoing the new extracapsular cataract technique. This “cold"
laser can take the place of surgical knives or
needles to "cup away" membranes that have
become opaque after the lens is removed.
Neumann explains that the procedure
performed the conventional way has taken up
to one hour and, in me past, the patient was
usually hospitalized.
“ Because the YAG is a non-lnvasive way to
remove citaracts, and eacli laser pulse only
takes a trilUnnth of a second, the patient
remains In street clothes," says Neumann,
adding that it also relieves much of the anxiety

associated with surgery of any kind because it
does not require hospitalization.
Dr. Neumann explains that the laser,
working In the infrared range, is invisible to
the human eye, therefore a red aiming beam
of neon helium Is used to mark the YAG's
exact position.
“ Whereas the cataract operation is con­
sidered one of the safest surgical procedures
performed today, the YAG laser will Increase
even more the safety and control the surgeon
has in the operation," says Neumann, pointing
out that the cataract operation is also the most
commonly perform ed eye procedure.
Neumann said he averages more than 12 such
procedures a week.
This recent stride in the cataract operation
is one of the many ophthalmic procedures
pioneered at the Neumann Eye Institute.
Neumann is well known for his work In such
outpatient procedures as Radial Keratotomy,
the surgical procedure to correct near­
sightedness, and Intraocular Lens Implan­
tation, the cataract procedure for Inserting an
implant in place of the eye’s original lens.
Neumann also travels worldwide to study
with some of the masters in ophthalmic
breakthroughs for use at the Neumann Eye
Institute which serves as a private research
and training facility for ophthalmic surgeons
nationwide.
This activity has resulted in the stepped up
completion date for the Instittf.e’s l6,WCVsq.„
foot expansion, scheduled for spring of this
year, he says. This new facility will feature the

New YAG laser will make cataract surgery safer and quicker.
(irrt licensed Eye Ambulatory Surgery Ceple^,. walk out a half hour later to return home.
In the stale of Florida. This will allow patients
Many patients m ay return to work several
to walk in, have cataract Implant surgery and days later.

. . , Feather Must Wait For Decision
Continued from Page 1A
is to the taxpayers of Sanford and to
Feather secondarily.
Ixtoking at van den berg, Smith said It
would cost Feather to have the t'everter
clauses removed from the contracts. He
also favored the city taking the property
back, determining its fair market value
and again placing it on the market with
Feather being given the right of first
refusal on reacquiring it.
Moore warned his colleagues that a
possibility exists that an appraisal of the
former city landfill tract will show its
value to be less than the $117,000,
originally paid the city by Rucker.
As the discussion concluded after 90
minutes, van den Berg noted “ from the
signals we're receiving, we will be
considering whether Bud should come in
and get a building permit and start the
project before March 1."

'I'm asking, p le a s e , le t m e p ro c e e d . I've done
everything I said I w o u ld e x c e p t c o m m u n /c o fe .'
— Bud F e a th e r
Earlier in the meeting, van den Berg
said in his opinion that beginning con­
struction could mean "disturbing the
earth" through excavating a foundation
as an example.
Moore responded to the attorney’s
suggestion that Feather might apply for
a building permit by saying that building
a "2 by 4 office doesn’t meet the criteria
the city expects” for beginning project
construction.
"It’s devious, in my opinion,” Moore

said, adding, “ I would not take kindly to
it&gt;
Just moments earlier, at Moore's
suggestion, a motion to call for the
property to revert to city ownership on
March 1 was tabled until the special
Monday meeting.
Van den Berg said the commission's
action tabling the decision was generous
and he said he knew the mayor wouldn't
take kindly to his suggestion. "I don’t
want to do it," he said.

Arrest May Crack Burglary Ring
The arrest of an 16-year-old Longwood man in connection
with the burglary of a Sweetwater home may lead to the jailing
of other members of a ring suspected of a series of break-ins in
the Sweetwater and Wekiva areas.
Anthony Raponi of 201 Green I^ike Circle was arrested
Sunday and later freed on $5,000 bail.
According to a sheriff’s spokesman, Raponi may be involved
in at least eight other burglaries which were allegedly com­
mitted along with two teenagers.
Further arrests are expected, the spokesman said.
FIRE CALLS
Sanford Fire department responded to the following calls:
Sunday
— 8:29 a.m., 906 Bay Ave., rescue.

Action Reports
★ . Fires
* Courts
* Police
— 3:44 a.m., 719 Laurel Ave., rescue.
— 7:44 p.m., 2103 Palmetto Ave., rescue.
— 7:46 p.m., 2507 Park Drive, power line down.

AREA DEATHS
ROBERTSTEPHENS
Robert Stephens, 92, of 3000
20th St. In East Sanford died
Friday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Bom April
17, 1890, in Climax, Ga., he
had been a resident of Sanford
for more than 70 years. He
was a retired laborer and a
Baptist.
Survivors include one
daughter, Mrs. Cora Lee
Thomas of Rochester, N.Y.;
one sister, Mrs. Beulah Mae
Wooten of Sanford, N.C.; a
niece, Mrs. I^eola B. Sheffield
of Sanford; two grand­
children; step-grandchildren;
and one great-grandchild.
W ils o n -E lc h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
WILLIE LEE CAULWELL
Willie Lee CaulweU, 69, of
1600 Gayle Ave., Titusville,
died Friday at his home. Bom
Dec. 25, 1913 In LaFayette,
Ala. he had been a resident of
Titusville for 46 years. He was
retired from P atrick Air
Force Base as a motor vehicle
operator after 17 years of
service. He was a Baptist.
Survivors include his wife,
Mae Julia of Titusville, two
daughters, Mrs. Hattie Smith
of Daytona Beach and Mrs.
Betty
M.
M orris
of
Douglasville, Ga.; a son, the
Rev. C .J. Caldwell of
Williaton;
four
step ­
daughters, Mrs. Celia Mae
Teamer of Houston, Texas,
Mrs. Ruth Hutchinson of
Orlando, Mrs. P atricia
Robothan of Orlando and Mrs.
Ruby Rose of Los Angeles,
Calif.; two step-sons, William
Hutchinson of Las Vegas,
Nev., and James H. Hut­
chinson of Orlando; a sister,
evangelist Edna I. White of
T itusville; th ree brothers,
Jimmy L Caldwell. Robert L

f

Caldwell and Wesley J.
Caldwell, all of Titusville; 32
grandchildren and 13 great­
grandchildren.
W ils o n -E ic h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
JAMES O. DICKINSON
Jam es Oscar Dickinson, 48,
of 61 S. Edgcmon Ave. in
Winter Springs died Sunday at
his home. Born May 18, 1934,
in Panipa, Texas, he moved to
W inter
Springs
from
Robertsdale, Ala., In 1969. He
was a restaurant manager
and a member of the Church
of Christ in Sanford.
Survivors include his wife
Carolyn; five sons, Brian of
Winter Springs, Jam es M. of
Seattle, Jam es O. of Orlando,
S. Craig and E. Brent, both of
S ilverhill,
Ala.;
three
daughters, Amy and Mrs.
Karen Sw&amp;nnsack, both of
Winter Springs, and Mrs.
Dianna Sandell of Falrhope,
Ala.; his mother, Mrs. Latrice
Dickinson of Alpine, Ala.; a
sister, Mrs. Martha Shuessler
of Alpine; a orother, Richard
M. of La Crescenta, Calif.',
and three grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
HOMER LEE DAVIS
Homer Ijee Davis, 71, of 906
Bay Ave., Sanford, died
Sunday at his home. Bom
Aug. 13, 1911, in Nashville,
Ga., he has been a resident of
Sanford over 30 y ean. He was
retired from the Seminole
County Sheriff’s Department
as a crossing guard after six
years of service. He was a
m em ber of Mt. Sinai
Missionary Beptlrt Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Gladys Davis of San­
ford; three daughters, Mrs.
S arah
W ilkerson,
M rs.

Barbara Green and Ms. Linda
Davis, all of Sanford; seven
grandchildren; three sisters,
Mrs. E thel Sinclair of
Vineland, N.J., Mrs. Olivia
Rockmore of Mt. Dora and
Mrs. I&gt;aura
Lewis of
Alpharetta, Ga.; and one
brother, Malicht Davis of
Sanford.
W ils o n -E ic h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge of
funeral arrangements.

Funeral Notices
C A U L W E L L , M R . W IL L IE L E E
— F u n e ra l s e rv ic e s lo r M r.
W illie L e e C e u lw e ll, *9, w h o d ie d
F rid a y , w ill b e h e ld a t noon
S a tu rd a y a t St. J a m e s A .M .E .
C h u rch , c o m e r o l D u m m ltt an d
South S tre e ts , T itu s v ille , w ith
th e R ev. E d o ra s P age, p a s to r, in
c h a rg e . C e llin g h o u rs lo r frie n d s
w ill be fro m noon u n til * p .m . at
t h t C hapel a n d lr o m 10 a m . u n til

fu n e ra l s e rv ic e s a t th e
S a tu rd a y . B u ria l to
O a k rtd g e C e m e te ry ,
W ilso n E ic h e lb e rg e r
in c h a rg e .

c h u rc h on
lo llo w in
T itu s v ille
M o rtu a ry

STEPHENS, M R. ROBERT F u n e ra l s e rv ic e s fo r M r . R o b e rt
Stephens, 91. o l 3000 70th St.,
S a n fo rd , w h o d ie d F rid a y , w ill
be at 1:30 p .m . S a tu rd a y at
E ic h e lb e rg e r'* C h a p e l. 1110 P in e
A v e ., S a n fo rd , w ith th e R ev.
C lif f o r d M a n le y In c h a rg e .
C e llin g h o u rs fo r frie n d s w ill be
fro m noon u n til V p .m . e l th e
C ha pel. B u ria l to fo llo w In
R e s lla w n C e m e te r y . W ils o n
E ic h e lb e r g e r M o r t u a r y
In
c h a rg e .
D A V IS . M R . H O M E R L E E F u n e ra l s e rv ic e s fo r M r . H o m e r
Le e D e v i* , 71, of 90S B e y A v e .,
S an fo rd , w h o d ia d S un da y, w ill
be h e ld a t 3 30 p m S a tu rd a y a l
F ir s t S h ilo h M . B. C h u rc h , 1101
W . 13th S t., S a n fo rd , th e R ev.
H E . W h ite , p a s io r, a n d lh a R e v .
L .R . M y e rs w ill be p re s id in g .
C e llin g h o u rs fo r frie n d s w ill be
fro m no on u n til f p .m . F r id a y a l
th e C ha pel. B u ria l lo fo llo w In
R e s tla w n C e m e te r y . W ils o n
E ic h e lb e r g e r M o r t u a r y
in
c h a rg a .

Mixson, Mantle
To Open Vorwerk
IX. Gov. Wayne Mixson
and
baseball
legend
Mickey Mantle will join
Vorwerk USA at a luncheon
news conference Wed­
nesday in AJlamonte
Springs to announce the
opening of the company’s
new headquarters at 500
N o rth la k e
B o u lev ard
South.
Other special guests for
the event will be state Sen.
Toni Jennings, R-Orlando,
and Altam onte Springs
Mayor Ray Ambrose.
Vorwek, one of the
L T .G O V . W A Y N E
larg est privately owned
M IXSO N
corporations in Europe, is
enjoying rapid growth in Florida and the Southeast.
Mixson will speak about the impact of foreign cor­
porations establishing headquarters in central Florida,
Levine will discuss Vorwerk's unique approach to the
unemployment problem and Mantle will host a special
event lo kick-off Vorwerk’s local community service
program.
"A key element in Florida’s economic development plan
is attracting foreign corporations to establish headquarters
in the state," said Vorwerk's spokesman Glen Undine,
"Vorwerk is planning for rapid expansion in Florida In the
coming years," he added.
A German-based multi-million dollar company, Vorwerk
has been selling its products In Europe since the 1880s. The
firm manufactures and sells a variety of products, in­
cluding carpet cleaners, carpels, carpet cleaning products,
prefab homes, modular kitchens and computer software.
Now it is only marketing vacuum cleaners In the United
States. The products are manufactured in Germany and are
sold door-to-door.
The firm has had a temporary office in Altamonte
Springs for almost two years. It has 20 branch offices In
Florida, including Sanford, and 33 in the United States, By
the end of this year the firm expects to have 30 offices in the
state and 100 nationwide.

Stetson U. Gives Wheeler
Distinguished Service Award
B. Frank Wheeler, president of Nelson and Co. in Ovied
was presented the Distinguished Service Award by Stetso
President Pope A. Duncan on behalf of the Alumni Asaociatloi
The award was presenled Saturday night at the Annul
Alumni Dinner during the school’s Homecoming celebratloi
"Mr. Wheeler is an alumnus, trustee and devoted friend c
Stetson University," said Nestor de Armas, immediate paj
president of the Alumni Association.
A 1943 graduate of Stetson, Wheeler joined the board in 1M
and served as vice chairman for four years. He was electe
chairman in 1981.
Wheeler Is part president of the Florida Celery Exchange i
Orlando and president of the Growers Container Cooperativ
in Leesburg. He is chairman of the board of B 8t W Canning 1
Groveland and also chairman of the board of the Citizens Ban
of Oviedo. He was bom In Oviedo and is active in the Flri
Baptist Church of Oviedo.

PRE-ARRANGEMENTS
The funeral serves a w ide range of pur
poses, w ith religious, psychological and
physical significances. There are m any
aspects and details lo Ihe meaningful funeral
that are arranged w ith the assistance of the
professional funeral director, usually at the
tim e of need However, some people prefer
counseling prior to need
We offer complete inform ation on pre
arrangem ents and pre financing, available
without cost or obligation of any kind. Fee)
Tree fo contact us at your convenience.

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME P.A.
322-2131

905 Laurel Ave.f Sanford
Robert Brisson, Director

�T uesd ay, Feb. 1J, 1 M J -J A

E vening Herald, Sanford, FI.

FLORDA

HandgunContro!
Group Preparing

IN BRIEF
O ops I Police G ra b W rong

For A Showdown

W om an In N arcotics Probe

United Press International
Handgun Control Inc. has started building a resources bank
of up to $200,000 to fight for tighter handgun laws in targeted
states such as Florida, Virginia and Ohio.
"Our plan is to develop a war chest to be used in local or
stale fights for handgun control," Charlie Orasln, executive
vice president for the Washington-based group, said in a
telephone interview Tuesday.
"Right now, we're working in southern Florida. Florida is
notorious for its very weak control law and its handgun black
market. That is why Florida is a target state."
Orasln said his group was successful last month in getting
the Broward County commission to vote 6-2 for an ordinance
requiring anyone purchasing a handgun to wait 21 days while
the sheriffs department checks out the buyer's background.
The group said it was the first handgun control ordinance in
the South in the past few years.

MIAMI (UPI) — The Drug Enforcement Agency's
No. 1 female fugitive is still at large, officials an­
nounced after fingerprinting a woman who was
arrested by mistake as the matriarch of a Colombian
cocaine ring.
A fingerprint comparison Monday revealed that a
woman federal agents had identified as Martha Libya
Cardona, 38, the alleged head of the 70-member dc
Gabiria crime network, was actually Ulia Reyes, 38.
Mrs. Reyes was wanted by state officials on unrelated
cocaine trafficking charges.
DEA agents arrested Mrs. Reyes Saturday In a Little
Havana restaurant after her ex-boyfriend, Mario
Estevex, pointed her out as the fugitive Ms. Cardona.
But DEA spokesman Brent Eaton said that Estevez,
who Is under the witness protection program because
of his testimony In another case, apparently had been
fooled by Mrs. Reyes Into believing she was Ms,
Cardona.

Special Tax Session ?
TALl-AHASSEE (UPI) - Gov. Bob Graham intends
to decide today whether to bring the Legislature Into a
special session next month to raise the gas tax or wait
until the regular session In April.
Graham has established several deadlines for set­
tling this sticky question and missed them all, but aides
Insist the current deadline will be met.
Under a plan by Senate Finance and Tax Chairman
Gwen Margolis, the sales tax exemption on gas would
be lifted, which would result in a nickel boost in the tax
on fuel selling for $1 a gallon. But the current 8-cent-agallon tax would be reduced by as much as four cents,
keeping down the overall increase.

Leaking Like A Sieve
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — The space shuttle
Challenger's delay-plagued first mission will be
postponed until at least the middle of March while
technicians replace another engine, space agency
officials said.
A leaky inlet in a replacement engine forced the
latest delay in the maiden launch of America’s newest
rocketship, said a spokesman at the Kennedy Space
Center.
The Challenger was scheduled to be launched Jan.
20, but a hydrogen leak in one of the spaceplanes's
main engines pushed the blastoff date to March 7. The
discovery of a leak in the replacement engine will
delay the launch by at least another week, said Jim
Ball, space center spokesman.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Lebanon D elays M o v e
Into C h ristian B eirut
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) — President Amin
Gemayel Issued a sweeping presidential decree giving
the liebanese army power to reassert national
authority today In Christian-controlled east Beirut for
the first time In eight years.
Senior officers and government officials said
Monday, 3,000 troops were poised to enter the
stronghold of the Christian Phalange militias as of
midnight local time, but the hour passed with the
streets deserted. There was no explanation for the
delay.

Fumes K illed M o vieg o ers
TURIN, Italy (UPI) — Poisonous fumes emitted by
burning plastic seat covers turned a movie theater into
a "spectacular gas chamber" that choked to death
most of the 64 victims of the cinema blaze, in­
vestigators said.
The state prosecutor's office named a six-member
panel to begin a full technical Investigation of the blaze
on Wednesday.
Despite initial reports, none of the victims* bodies
was charred in the region's worst post-war disaster,
officials said Monday.
Most of the victims were asphyxiated by dense, toxic
smoke, much of it given off by burning polyurethane
seats and other plastic materials, officials said. Some
were trampled to death in a frantic search for exits.

H tr a ld P ho to b y T o m V in c e n t

"Ohio has a very weak handgun law. We will be working to
pass a statewide licensing and registration law," Orasln said.
"Pennsylvania is one state we are going to have to go into
soon because of its pre-emption law. Philadelphia can’t pass a
handgun law because it is preempted by the state."

Proposed State Budget Includes Tax H ikes
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Gov.Bob G&amp;ham
submits his new budget to the Legislature this
week and he will recommend tax increases to
enable stale government to get by as Florida
eases out of the recession.
Graham has an extra $560 million to spend
from existing tax sources during the 1963-84
fiscal year that begins July 1, nearly a 10
percent increase, but he isn’t free to do
anything he wants with this money because of
the severe budget problems the state has faced
this fiscal year.
So he will have to propose new taxes to get
the money for teacher and faculty pay raises
and other increases necessary under the
Cabinet’s five-year plan to make Florida the
12th state in the country in education quality,
and to continue his law enforcement, economic
developm ent, transportation and en­
vironmental protection initiatives.
He already is committed to seeking in­
creases In transportation taxes to generate an
extra $250 million a year to repair roads and

bridges. But other tax increases — to produce
as much as $500 million - are likely to be
recommended when he releases an $11 billion
1983-84 spending plan.
Graham is required by state law to submit
his budget by Feb. 19, 45 days before the
beginning of the regular legislative session.
But budget director Tom Herndon says the
document will be mailed to legislators as early
as Wednesday
He will release his recom m endations
publicly In a series of announcements that
could begin early this week, Instead of
outlining all of them In a single news con­
ference, his practice in the past.
The governor likely will propose an increase
in the required local effort for public schools,
which would force many school districts to
raise their property taxes. He has been
studying a wide range of state tax options,
including removal of some sales tax exemp­
tions and increasing the corporate profits tax.
Education clearly will be the top priority in
his new spending plan.

The most important thing his administration
can do to attract high technology industry and
enable Florida to emerge as a leading state in
the nation Is to improve the quality of its
schools, colleges and universities, Graham
has said in most of his public addresses in
recent weeks.
He already has announced his intention to
propose programs to improve high school
instruction In math and the sciences.
He will recommend the additional funding
required for step three of the five-year drive to
raise teacher and faculty salaries to the top 25
percent in the country. Florida wants even­
tually to become at least state number 12.
This requires $268 million for the public
schools and kindergartens and means in­
creases of about $1,900 per teacher, and $12
million for the community colleges, a $2,300
per faculty member increase. The university
system would get an extra $22 million. The
average raise per faculty member hasn't been
calculated yet.

Graham will recommend other increases for
the public schools to meet other goals in the
five-year plan, Including Florida’s becoming
the number 12 state in the amount of money
spent per student.
He will propose a pay raise (or state em­
ployees — probably 5 percent; appropriations
to build new prisons and expand existing ones,
although not the $155 million requested by
Corrections Secretary Izmie Wainwright; an
increase in Aid to Families with Dependent
Children payments; continued emphasis on
programs for the elderly; and increases for
law enforcement, alttiough not the big boosts
of the two previous years.
The Legislature passed the biggest tax in­
crease package in decades to fund the current
budget — a penny sales tax increase that was
supposed to generate more than $700 million a
year.
I/wal governments got half of the money,
with the stipulation that much of their take go
to cut property taxes.

Housing To Lead The Recovery? IT ’S THE TALK
Economy Not Out Of The W oods' OF THE TOWN

• M

MR. C 'f SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN...

United Press International
An administration representative painted a rosy picture for
Congress of an economic recovery led by housing sales, but
those outside the government are slower to forecast a strong
housing industry.
"All indicators tell us the housing industry is back on course
and headed for full recovery," Housing and Urban Develop­
ment Secretary Samuel Pierce told the Senate Banking
Committee Monday. He said it was leading the nation into
recovery.
Pierce lorecasl an increasing demand for housing
throughout the 1980s as 4) million Americans reach 30, the
peak period for buying a first home.
But Harry Prydc of the National Association of Home
Builders characterized the recovery as "fragile," and said it
could be endangered by higher interest rates or federal
budgets that remain high.
Henry Schechter, of the AFL-CIO, said interest rates will
have to come down even further to sustain a housing recovery.
Whether or not the government is too optimistic about
housing is not yet clear, but new figures show government
economists who found the nation’s economy just barely top­
ping the $3 trillion mark in 1982 apparently were a little too
optimistic.
On Jan. 19 the government said, before inflation GNP
reached $3.06 trillion for all of last year.
Government economists have checked the economic
reservoir represented by inventories and found the level lower
than they estimated when reporting the nation's gross national
product — the broadest government measure of the economy.
Business inventories dropped 0.6 percent in December
despite a 0.9 percent drop in sales.

Nobody Likes Malpractice Reform
The sharpest conflict Is between the doctors
and lawyers, a conflict that spawned oc­
casional outbursts of sharp rhetoric about
greedy lawyers and incompetent doctors
during the eight months of task force
, meetings.
Dr. Paul Baxt of Hollywood, one ol the most
outspoken of the doctors last summer, said
Gunter had created "a giant pie in which the
trial attorneys can stick their thumbs and pull
out as many dollars as possible."
Dr. Arnold Tanii, president of Florida
Physicians United for Health Cost Reform,
termed Gunter’s recommendations an em­
barrassment that will limit health care in the
free market only to the wealthy.
Ronnie Book, a Miami attorney representing
the doctors, said the doctors had hoped for
some form of mandatory arbitration to settle
claims, a limitation on pain and suffering
awards by Juries and a limitation on attorney
fees.
Gunter's recommendations contained none
of that, although he did call for voluntary
arbitration.
Die academy of Florida Trial Lawyers was
Gunter's recommendations announced last
less
harsh and applauded parts of the Gunter
week seek to balance the competing claims by
plan,
but was critical of proposals that would
striving for early settlement before resorting
separate
malpractice trials into liability and
to the courts, doser scrutiny and disdpline of
damage
phases
and would allow for structured
bad doctors and a fiscally sound insurance
payouts on claims.
pook
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - When Insurance
Commissioner Bill Gunter appointed a task
force last summer to solve Florida’s medical
malpractice insurance problem, he told the
new members their job was to make
everybody a little bit mad.
Eight months later, Gunter's legislative
recommendations have done Just that —
doctors, trial lawyers and the insurance in­
dustry can each find something in the
proposals to be unhappy with.
The 3,500 south Florida doctors who brought
the crisis to a head when they, staged a work
slowdown last summer are the most unhappy.
Spokesmen for the doctors Immediately railed
■gainst Gunter’s proposals as an em­
barrassment that will do nothing to reduce
frivolous lawsuits.
A spokesman for trial lawyers criticized
Gunter’s proposed legal reforms and said they
will do nothing to alleviate a problem caused
by bad doctors.
The insurance Industry Is unhappy about
being the "deep pocket," the ultimate
financial backstop for the entire system.

reduce swelling in tissue and promote healing for
sports injuries. Terwilleger said the equipment
cost “ about $1,000“ and was purchased by the SHS
Boosters Club.

Seminole High School athletic trainer James
“ I)oc" Terwilleger demonstrates newly-acquired
Galvinameter equipment on school wrestler
Vince Clark. The high voltage galvanic current
generator ir. used every day, Terwilleger said, to

Also under the Broward ordinance, a gun that is lost or stolen
must be promptly reported to authorities; and if a handgun is
used in a crime it must be destroyed. It is also illegal to buy
more than five handguns in a 90-day period'

Commerce Department chief economist Robert Ortner, re­
flecting on the latest figures, said:
"The economy is not out of the woods yet."
Treasury-bill yields climbed slightly at the government’s
auction, the fourth consecutive weekly increase.
The government sold $6.2 billion of three-month bills at an
average discount of 8.256 percent, up from last week's 8.252
percent.
The government also sold $6.2 billion of six-month bills at an
average discount of 8.389 percent, up from last week's 8.345
percent.
On Capitol Hill, Treasury Secretary Donald Regan at­
tempted to persuade Congress — in a time of domestic budget
cutting — to approve $8.4 billion in increased U.S. financial
pledges to the International Monetary Fund to help it deal with
the $500 billion debts of the world’s poorer nations.
Regan said, unless they can solve their debt problems,
developing countries will have to reduce their imports, includ­
ing those from the United Stales.
U.S. exports, Regan said, account for 5 million American
Jobs, and nearly 30 percent of this country's exports go to nonoil-producing developing nations.
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average climbed
10.60 to 1,097.10, the highest level in its 87-year history.
The closely watched average, which surpassed its old record
of 1,092.35 set Jan. 10, failed to crack the 1,100 level that many
analysts said has become a psychological barrier. It crossed
that line briefly on Jan. 12.
The Dow average of 30 bluechip stocks, catching up with
other market barometers that set new marks last week, has
gained 320.18 points since the historic rally began last Aug. 13,
including 8.59 last week.

CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY IB
Free community seminar on "The Aging Eye"
presented by Dr. Robert Serros, 7-9 pmi., Winter Park
Memorial Hospital Medical Library' Building, 200 N.
Lakemonl Ave. Free glaucoma screening. For
reservations call 646-7583.
"How to Start or Improve Your Own Business" twonight workshop, sponsored by University of Central
Florida Small Business Development Center 6:3641:45
p.m., 301 W. Amelia St., Orlando. To register call 2752796.
Sanford AA, 1241 W. First SL, Sanford, I p.m., open.
West Volusia Stamp Club, 2 pun., Jane Murray Hall,
United Congregational Church, W. University Avenue,
Orange City.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17
Free Income Tax Aid for the Elderly, 9 a m. to 1
p.m , Hacienda Village, State Road 434, Winter
Springs.
Casselberry Alcoholics Anonymous,
8 p.m.,
Ascension Lutheran Church, Overbrook Drive.
Santord Big Hook AA, 7 pun., Florida Power and
Light building, Myrtle Avenue. Open discussion.
Seminole Halfway House AA, I p.m., speaker, Lake
Minnie Road, Sanford.
Lake Mary Rotary Club, 8 ami., Lake Mary High
School.

Every Wednesday

SPECIAL
3 PIECE INDIVIDUAL

CHICKEN DINNER
Includti

SPECIAL

Ch0it*O**n» 1 —
• F f f n t h F r it ,
•M iiM

Potttot,

• C o lt iU « *

• B tkrd Boom
And Hoi B oll

$1 99

R EO . 114*

c

W E USE O N L Y
TO P Q U A L IT Y C H IC K E N

AR Foods Cooked In
P u n Peanut Oil

Southern

2100 S. French Ave.

FRIED CHICKEN |

Hw y. 17 n - Sanford

Al Constantine-Owner

l i i J t ' IL T J '
COLONIAL
ROOM

specials

EACH
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SERVED FROM
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TERIYAKI STEAK

R[G

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Tuesday

FRIED CLAM STRIPS

3.25
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SPECIALS
$ J 9 9

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fR IR U SPECIAL

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DELM0NIC0 STEAK
Th u r s d a y

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FRIDAY

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OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. • 7 P.M - CLOSED SUNDAY
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Enter Thru Twchton Drop

�Evening Herald

Coach Howard Hawkins' Fighting Seminole
soccer teams begins District 4A-9 play today at 4
when it hosts Spruce Creek at Sanford Memorial
Stadium.
The Tribe, 6-9, started the season slowly but
picked up momentum toward the end and
finished with a 9-1 victory over New Smyrna
Beach on Friday.
The Seminoles played their best against the
stiffest competition, knocking off two stateranked powers — Lyman and Trinity Prep —
during the regular season.
A Seminole victory Tuesday and a Lyman win
over ta k e Brantley in Longwood (7 p.m .) will set
up a Thursday night rematch between the Tribe
and coach Tom Barnes' Greyhounds at Lyman.
"If we play with the consistency we did Die
first eight or nine games of the season, we’ll be
all right," said Bamcs Monday. "We have to
avoid our defensive lapses."

(u s ps a u m

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611or 831-9993
Co

T u e s d a y , F e b r u a ry 15, 1983— 4A

-

W ayne D. Doyle, Pu blliher
Thomas G iordano, M anaging Edltor
R obert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation D irector

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.

Crucial West
German Election
Fifty years after Hitler assumed power, the
West German government faces the most difficult
| election in postwar history.
TTie parliamentary election on March 6 will pit
the ruling Christian Democrat party against the
former ruling party, the Social Democrats. But
1 what mtiRes this election Gifterent is “ tfie
• emergence of a pacifist-environmentalist party,
j the Greens, as a force that may carry the swing
; vote.
• In the short term, this is a referendum on
j sausages and missiles. In the long term, it is a
| choice betw een the NATO a llia n ce and
| neutralism. And finally, it will test whether West
j Germ an d em ocracy can w eather internal
] divisions and external pressures — or full victim
j to extremism.
; Germany has tumbled from the height of its
: postwar economic boom. It no longer imports
• foreign workers. On the contrary, 2.5 million are
; out of work in West Germany, the highest
1 unemployment rate since Hitler recruited his
; followers from the jobless masses in 1930-32. The
: world recession, exacerbated by high interest
• rates in the United States, has hit West Germany
; hard. Economic vitality — sausages — is
j probably the biggest issue for the majority of
| German voters.
But the most explosive issue facing them is the
j deploym ent of U.S. Pershing-2 m issile s,
1 scheduled for December. These missiles open a
Pandora’s box in German politics. They trigger
; resentment against the United States and fear of
! nuclear blackmail by the Soviet Union. The
j conservative Christian Democrats, led by Prime
: Minister Helmut Kohl, support deployment. In the
Geneva arms talks, they support President
• Reagan’s zero option to cancel deployment of the
Pershing-2 m issiles in return for the Soviets
; dismantling all Soviet medium-range missiles.
The Social Democrats, even though former
i Chancellor Helmut Schmidt recommended the
{ missile deployment, are now wavering in their
! support.
The Greens want no nuclear weapons and want
1 Germany to become neutral.
The fear in Washington is of a Social Democrat• Greens alliance, in which the radical party pushes
! the liberal Social Democrats to the left — away
from NATO and toward neutralism.
The Soviets are politicking for just such an
! eventuality. On a trip to West Germany, Soviet
j Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko said: “The
i implementation of this (NATO) program will
mean a years-long nuclear confrontation with all
j the consequences."
French and British leaders are concerned about
German appeasement before the Soviet threat.
And they fear anti-NATO, anti-nuclear, proneutralist forces building in their own countries.
In a historic address to the German Parliament
in January, French President Francois Mit­
terrand said: “Anyone gambling on uncoupling
the European continent from the American
continent would, in our view, jeopardize the
balance of forces and therefore maintenance of
peace. I think, and say, this ‘uncoupling’ is in
itself dangerous, and I fervently hope that the
Geneva (arm s) negotiations succeed. ... This is
why the Atlantic Alliance members’ common
determination and solidarity must be clearly
j confirmed so that the negotiations come to a
! conclusion, a necessary condition for not int - stalling the (Pershing-2) weapons ..."
Mitterrand is saying, bluntly, that the best way
for Germans to prevent Pershing-2 m issiles from
being deployed is to stand steadfast with America
at the Geneva negotiating table. If the Soviets
understand they cannot intimidate Germany with
• threats, they will make real concessions in the
' arms talks.
•' It is as impossible to predict the Soviet behavior
as to foretell the outcome of the West German
' election. But we urge American officials to show
increased flexibility in Geneva. The Germans
must be convinced that security from nuclear war
can be found in arms negotiations, not by
breaking from the NATO alliance — or embracing
extremism.__________________________________

BERRY'SW ORLD
&lt;•

V&gt;HAC«

V J Io ^
By SAM COOK

Top-seed D etand hosts Apopka while Daytona
Beach Mainland entertains tak e Howell in other

ROBERT WALTERS
»»«

L o o k s L iK e
O P e c l§ •
---------- -

fa L tW a P ijR T i'

*

St

"Don't ever say 'M X ' again.
KEEPER! PEACEKEEPER!"

Girls basketball takes center stage Wednesday
through Saturday when district tournament
action gets underway at two sites.
Coach Ron Merthie's Seminoles travel to
Daytona Beach for the 4A district involving top
seed D etand, Lyman, ta k e Howell, Apopka,
Spruce Creek, ta k e Brantley and the host tad y
Bucs.
Closer to home, tak e Mary and its top-seeded
tad y Rams will host the 3A district which in­
cludes Oviedo, St. Cloud, Bishop Moore, Jones
and Osceola.
There are still some tickets available for the
Jack Billlngham Roast and Toast at the
University of Central Florida Saturday at 7 p.m.

N o ,T H a T c ) P a P !

MaNY
-EaFfeNP AM-2-H IG H -

O iL P R iC e .

Tickets for $20 are available at the UCF ticket
agency.
Darrell Chaney, Atlanta Braves’ announcer,
will emcee the event with Detroit Tiger manager
Sparky Anderson, ex-Baltimore Oriole Dave
Johnson, new UCF football coach Lou Saban,
UCF baseball coach Jay Bergman, Rollins
College baseball coach Boyd Coffie and Orlando
Sentinel sports editor ta rry Guest as the
roasters.
Tickets Include dinner and door prizes. The
money will benefit UCF baseball. Call 275-2139 or
275-2729 for tickets.
Coach Mike Gibson of the tak e Mary Rams’
track team held his season opener Saturday. The
showers fell all day long but Gibson was en­
couraged by some of his girls’ times and jumps.
Fran "Flash" Gordon won the 100-yard dash in
$1.8 and took the long Jump in 16-feet-9. Gordon
was also third in the 220-yard dash.

M o, T H a T ’S G 0 o p !
jT’LL LOWeR P R ic e S
a w S fe e c rR tf

Money
Crunch
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (NEA) - The state
widely acclaimed (or derideo; as Uie nation’s
trend-setter has produced a new fad ideally
suited for the economically calamitous 1980s
— a substitute for money.
It's called the registered warrant, and if
California's state government cannot quickly
find a more conventional menas of resolving
its fiscal problems, officials here could begin
distributing thousands of them late this
month.
Registered warrants are state-issued IOUs,
representing a promise on the part of the
state government to pay its debts to suppliers,
employees and others — if and when it
scrapes together enough real money.
Currently spending $4 million more every
day than it is collecting, California is
estimated to be $1.5 billion to $2 billion in debt
— and similar financial hemorrhaging now is
underway in dozens of other states.
Although virtually all states are
theoretically required by law to produce
balanced annual budgets, a survey recently
conducted by the National Conference of
State Legislatures found that 19 states are
projecting deficits in their general fund ac­
counts at the end of the current fiscal year.
In that category are Connecticut, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, New
York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin,
Iowa, M innesota, Louisiana, Virginia,
Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Idaho, Utah,
California and Washington.
Another 12 states expect to barely escape a
deficit by having year-end balances of 1
percent or less of their annual general fund
spending while only six states project a
balance of more than 5 percent, the level
traditionally regarded as the minimum for
prudent fiscal operations.
A similar survey conducted by the National
Governors' Association showed that budget
officers in 41 states are forecasting a
collective year-end budget deficit of almost $2
billion. "As bleak as these totals are," said
the NGA, "the fiscal situation in the states is
probably worse then portrayed" in its survey.
In recent years, states confronted by a
fiscal crisis generally sought to alleviate their
problems through measures which involved
reduced spending — selective or across-theboard funding cuts, employee layoffs or
furloughs, hiring freezes and trav el
restrictions.
In recent months, however, a growing
number of states have been forced to resort to
the action despised by politicians and citizens
alike — tax Increases. "Tills is probably a
harbinger of things to come," the NCSL has
warned. 'T a x increases are likely to play a
much larger role in budget adjustments than
they have in many years."
The Minnesota legislature, for example,
last year initially imposed a 3.5 percent
surcharge on the state's personal Income tax
rates, then met in a special session in
December to add another 3 percent sur­
charge.
In the final months o.' 1982, state
leg islatu res in Indiana, M ississippi,
Nebraska and New Jersey convened in
special sessions to Increase both state sales
tax and state personal Income tax rates.

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

B ew a re

Of The
’Facts'

■OUR READERS WRITE

Senator Is Interested
I read with interest the comments of
your reporter, Donna Estes, wherein
she states that Senator Jennings and I
seemed to be bored and disinterested
during the last Seminole County
legislative delegation meeting.
It’s very hard for me to understand
how Ms. Estes knows my feelings about
any m atter. She has never taken the
time to Interview me, neither after the
two delegation meetings we have had,
nor by telephone.
To say that I am "bored" with the
needs of Seminole County is far from
the truth. The voters of Seminole
County overwhelmingly placed their
trust in me, and although I am
representing this area for the first time,

it represents thirty percent of the
population in my district, and 1 am Just
as interested in your area as any other.
I have a district office at Post Office
Box 697 in Clermont, zip code 32711, and
the phone number there is 904-394-6000.
Please call me collect there at any
time. I also have and Orange County
line and the number there is 656-7544.1
want to be responsive to my con­
stituents in Seminole County, and hope
that everyone in the 11th District, in­
cluding Ms. Estes, will contact me if
they have any questions or problems
concerning their state government.
Richard H. tangley
Florida Senate
District 11

K e e p A th le tics S e p a ra te
According to an article in this Sun­
day’s Florida Magazine, Florida has
had decreasing state rankings of 38,39,
and 40, in the last three years.
I believe that athletics are extremely
important as an extra curricular ac­
tivity of students, in that they teach
team work, competitiveness, rewards
of personal sacrifice and the fact that
one can come back to win after defeat.
B u t, they should and must be be always
secondary to education. Education has
to be first, as our students will have a
distorted idea of the real world in our
increasingly complex, competitive, and
computerized society. The person who
is less educated is automatically left far
behind his peers. I think it is a
ridiculous situation when low academic
standards are set for participating in
athletics and congratulate the Felters
at Lyman High for taking their sons out

of the athletic program at Lyman,
which in the long run will be of
educational benefit to their sons.
Harry C. Stone, M.D.
Orlando

Festival Thanks
The Mount Dora Art Festival Com­
mittee wishes to thank you for your
generosity in helping us promote this
fine cultural event in and for tak e
County. Although Sunday was a
disappointment because of the rain,
Saturday was a great event for all.
Thank you again for your help in
promoting this fine event.
Harlow C. Middleton,
Co-Chairman

NEW YORK (NEA) - The current nap
over the scientific validity of the work of the
late Margaret Mead raises questions about
the impact of science on our society far more
important than most of the events crowding
the headlines these days. They deserve the
consideration of every thoughtful person.
Margaret Mend was only in her 20s herself
when, as a graduate student in anthropology
at Columbia University, she went to Samoa in
1925 to do field work there on the subject of
adolescence. Her ensuing book, “ Coming of
Age In Samoa," had an impact far beyond
anthropological circles. Those were the
Roaring Twenties, the era of the "flapper,"
when postwar America was genially evading
the Prohibition laws and Hollywood was
leading the way in exploring the heights (and
depths) of hedonism. To a country hungry for
excuses to abandon moral restraints that had
come to seem unbearably burdensome,
Margaret Mead brought wonderful news of a
South Sea island society that (to quote a
recent article in The New York Times)
"condoned adolescent free love," as a result
of which "adolescence in Samoa was without
the turmoil or stress that accompanies
adolescence in the United States and
elsewhere."
"Coming of Age in Samoa" ultimately sold
millions of copies, and — in the words of
Sherwood Washburn, a past president of the
American Anthropological Association —
"influenced the way people were brought up
in this country."
It was, in fact, a major factor in that decline
of our value system that is now so obvious and
so widely deplored. What deserves to be
stressed, however, is that Mead's work was
peddled as rigorously scientific. Ever since
the 18th century Enlightenment, Western
civilization has accorded vast respect to the
pronouncements of "science." And certainly,
measured by what it has achieved for
mankind in many fields, it deserves our
respect. In our deference to science, however,
we have tended to forget that while "figures
don’t lie, liars can figure."
Margaret Mead was no liar. But, according
to a book to be published in April by the
H arvard University P ress, entitled
"M argaret Mead and Samoa: Hie Making
and Unmaking of an Anthropological Myth,"
by Derek Freeman, professor emeritus of
anthropology at the Australian National
University of Canberra, she was biased,
careless in her research techniques and
fundamentally wrong about Samoan society.
In the matter of that Samoan predilection for
free love, for example, Professor Freeman —
who has spent a total of six years in Samoa
since 1940 — asserts that on the contrary "the
cult of female virginity is probably carried to
a greater extreme (in Samoa) than in any
other culture known to anthropology."
It is far too late to undo all the social
damage done in the name of "science" by
Margaret Mead, who died in 1978. But it is not
too late to point out that even today a lot of
real and alleged "scientists" with strong
political opinions a rt not above using their
professional prestige in an effort to impose
some extremely dubious views on the rest of
us.

JACK ANDERSO N

AID Mars Move To Thwart Sandinistas
WASHINGTON The Reagan ad­
ministration has made no secret of its earnest
hope that the leftist regime in Nicaragua will
somehow dry up and blow away. Meanwhile,
it is turning up the heat by stirring up op­
position to the Sandinistas and holding Joint
military maneuvers with Honduras near the
Nicaraguan border.
But one of the administration's moves in
Honduras has run into an almost literal
roadblock thrown up by conscientious of­
ficials at the Agency for International
Development.

J

-•

first-round games. The Detand-Apopka winner
plays the Howell-Malnland winner in Friday’s
other semi-final game. The championship will be
Saturday.
tak e Brantley is the defending champion.

The controversy Is over a $7.5 million, 150kilometer road the State Department wants to
help Honduras build to the Nicaraguan
border, through a rain forest inhabited by
Miskito Indians. Ostensibly, the road would
be built to give the Indians a means of getting
their crops to market. So the State Depart­
ment has asked AID to put up the money.
Bid AID officials don't buy the agricultural
argument for the highway. "It’s a goddamn
tank road," an agency source told my
associate Bob Sherman.
My sources say the road's real purpose is to

make it easier for the Honduran army to
move troops and supplies to the isolated
Miskito lands, which Nicaraguan opponents
have been using as a staging area and sanc­
tuary for raids on Sandinista outposts across
the border.
Put simply, AID officials arc tired of using
economic-development funds for largely
political objectives, particularly when there
are needier candidates for the limited amount
of money. So AID has thus far refused to build
the road.
Numerous sources offer three arguments
against the project:
— The road construction would disrupt tne
fragile ecology of the virgin rain forest.
— The Miskito Indians don't want the road.
They see it as a means of opening up their
ancestral home for development, which will
ultimately lead to the theft of their tribal
lands.
— A wealthy Honduran businessman, who
was once accused of torturing and mur­
dering several persons, including a U.S.
missionary, stands to make a bundle from the
road project. He owns land through which the

road would run.
An AID spokesman said the agency will
provide no funds for the controversial road
either this year or next. He said AID will not
even become involved in preparations of an
environmental-impact statement during this
period.
But my sources say the State Department
will continue trying to bully AID into putting
up the money for the road. A cable last
November from UJ5. Ambassador John
Negroponte in Tegucigalpa formally
requested AID funding.
The debate over the Honduran road reflects
a broader controversy that has arisen in the
past two years: the increasing politidxatjon
of AID funds under the Reagan ad­
ministration. AID officials generally argue
that their assistance money should be doled
out on the basis of need, not politics.
I reported yesterday that AID is going
along with a questionable plan to help
Nicaragua’s southern neighbor, Costa Rica,
move thousands of settlers into land along the
border as a way ol thwarting Sandinista in­
cursions.
The Costa Rican project at least has the

flavor of a defensive measure to justify it; the
Honduran "tank road" has not. At any rate,
AID officials have evidently decided to stand
and fight on this one.
TIMBER-R-Rlll: As I predicted last
December, the Justice Department has
dropped its anti-trust case against the
tauisiana Pacific Corp. for fixing prices and
rigging bids on federal timber in Alaska.
Forest Service chief John Crowell was the
giant lumber company’s general counsel
when some of the alleged violations occurred.
Neither the Justice Department nor the
Forest Service has given Congress the results
of their year-long investigation of Louisiana
Pacific and a Japanese logging firm.
"Despite evidence of past anti-trust violations
by the two companies, there is at this time no
realistic prospect of obtaining effective and
meaningful Injunctive relief," deputy
Assistant Attorney General Helmut Fui^h
wrote the Forest Service last month.
Furth cited statute of limitations problems
and difficulty in gathering proof of collusion,
but added that the Forest Service could still
pursue damage claims based on fraud
charges rather than anti-trust violations.

f

�SPORTS
Ford Rebounds, McCrimon Shoots,
But Oviedo’s Murphy Can Do It All

H t r a ld

P h o to by T o m V in c t f il

Phil Fausnlght, Seminole netter, returns a shot while practicing for today’s opening match.

Netters Play Greyhounds
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sporti Writer
Although the Seminole High girls
tennis team has only one senior among
Its top five players, the Lady Scmlnolcs
should be strong contenders to win a
second straight district title.
“ We will win our share of matches, but
will also gain much experience by the
end of the season," Seminole coach
Donalyn Knight said. "Several of the
girls will by playing tournaments that
will lead to a state ranking."
At number one singles, the Lady Tribe
will go with junior Tracy McNeill, who
Knight said should be ranked In the state.
The number two and three players,
Susana Huaman and Britney ly re are
also juniors and should help keep
Seminole in the running for the district
crown. Huaman won the number three
singles at the district last year.
The only senior in the top five Is
number four singles player LaDona
M errlfield who adds experience to

Prep Tennis
Knight's squad. And, at number five
singles is sophomore Judy White who will
help the team and gain experience along
the way.
Of the five remaining members of the
team, four are sophomores and should
play an important role In the future of
Seminole's tennis program. The fifth Is
senior Trichel Taack who was a standout
on the volleyball team but doesn't have
much experience playing varsity tennis.
The four sophomores include Beth
Nelson, Dana Ray, Melanie Boyd and Ida
Heaps. .. “It should be an exciting
season," Knight said. “The team ’s at­
titude is great and I really enjoy working
with this group."
The Seminole High boys team had its
share of ups and downs last season,
unfortunately, most were downs as the
Tribe won only one match.

Seminole has the experience this year
though, with four of its six members
being seniors and two juniors.
“ The boys team s'hould be much im­
proved over last year," Knight said.
“They will gain much experience and
will be surprising."
At the number one singles spot, the
Tribe will go with junior Robbie Jasa
while Chris Calloway, Toai Doan and
Jerry Martin, all seniors, fill In the two,
three and four spots. Junior Sam Patel is
the number five player and Phil
Fausnlght, a senior is also expected to
see a lot of action.
Possibly after the soccer season ends,
the Tribe will be joined by Bobby Gon­
zalez and Robert Rutherford.
Seminole's boys and girls open the
season this afternoon at 3 p.m. at Lyman.

If Osceola’s Frank Ford and Jimmy
McCrimon are All-Americans, then
what is Ronnie Murphy? How about
All-World? Murphy, Oviedo's 6-4
jumping jack, is a better player than
either.
After watching the antics of all
three for four years and seeing them
go head-to-Mad twice this year, it was
obvious that Murphy is the better allaround player.
Oviedo coach Dale "D ig g er"^
’ Phillips, of course, concurs.’ 3d docs'
Seminole
Community
College
assistant coach Terry Woods who saw
too much of all three while coaching at
St. Cloud High School.
Osceola coach Ed Kershncr won’t
commit himself. “They play different
positions," Kershner said. “ It’s tough
to compare them."
Not that tough. Murphy’s biggest
asset Is his fluidity. Hu never
struggles on the court. He dribbles,
shoots, passes and rebounds with the
grace of an antelope.
Murphy jumps better than either
Ford or McCrimon. Murphy shoots
better than Ford. Murphy passes
better than McCrimon. The Oviedo
senior plays on a less-talented team,
yet, he led the Lions to a stunning 62-61
upset of the No. 1-ranked Kowboys
last Tuesday. It snapped a 26-game
winning streak.
"I've felt all along Ronnie was the
best player," said Phillips. “It's Just
that he hasn't had the support
(team m ates) that
Ford and
McCrimon do."
Ford Is a better rebounder because
he is stronger and more aggressive,
especially on the offensive boirds.
Fourteen of his 28 points came on

SCORING
Ronnie Murphy (OV)
Paul Hoffman (LB)
Alexis Cleveland (LY)
Calvin Bryant (SEM)
Darryl Merthle (LM)
Efrem Brooks (LH)
Fred Miller (LM)
Billy Dunn (LM)
William Mitchell (SEM)
BUI McCartney (OV)
Gene Angel (OV)
Rod Hillman (LY)
Skip Gordon (LH)
Eric Trombo (LB)
John Hamrick (LH)

G
22
23
21
28
19
16
22
14
28
23
22
21
22
23
22

The boys first home meet will be Wed­
nesday, Feb. 23, against Trinity Prep.
Both the boys and girls will be home
Thursday, Feb. 24, against Spruce Creek,

Yarborough turned the two and a half with Geoff Bodlne sitting on the out side
mile oval at 200.503 mph.
pole.
On Yarborough's second lap, the
Ferrel Harris, the Pikeville, Ky. coal
Hardee's Chevy was moving even faster miner, won the ARCA 200 with an
when it broke traction on the rear wheels average speed of 144.202 mph. Elliott
and went Into a slide in the fourth turn. Forbes-Robinson m anaged to finish
As the car dipped to the bottom of the second. Scott Stovall, the 1982 ARCA
track, the wind flipped the car onto its
point champion, finished third in the 80top and it slide into the wall, then flipped lap event.
It back onto its wheels.
The Fifth Annual Busch clash was
Yarborough’s crew, after checking the won by Neil Bonnett as he slipped under
car determlnined that It could not be Darrell Waltrip in the third turn of the
fixed and that he would have to run a last lap. Terry Labonte made a move
back-up car. Because of changing cars, that did not work as he tried to take
he will lose the record as well as the pole Waltrip and Bonnett on the outside of the
position. Rudd will now be on the pole third turn and crashed.

Sports Editor

rebounds. Tuesday.
He Is listed at 6-4, but Is an inch
shorter than Murphy who is G-t or^G-^
4W, Ford and Murphy play"wltK great*
basketball sense. McCrimon, who Is a
better shooter than both, Is sometimes
a little out of control. All three are
excellent clutch perform ers with
maybe an edge (very slight) to
McCrimon over Murphy. The 6-0
guard’s four Jumpers, with people all
over him, down the stretch almost
pulled out the game.
Ford, though, is devasting on the
boards. Will he be that devastating
when he goes to Auburn next year?
Probably so. Some players just have
that innate ability to go to the ball.
Ford Is one of those players.
"I Just hang around the basket,"
said Ford about his offensive
rebounding prowess. “When the ball
is in the air, I sort of have a knack of
knowing where it is going to bounce."
Ford may have to play guard in
college. “ He does have to work on his
ballhandling," admits Kerarher. “ But
when McCrimon was in the hospital
once with 103-degree temperature,
Frank took over ballhandling and
scored 45 points."
Murphy has already signed with
Jacksonville. McCrimon is struggling
to reach predictability so he can go to
a major college. "Jimmy needs all A's

MR, BAS.'lETBALL—David Stir.,
publisher of Gator Bait, the school
newspaper at Florida, sent out ballots
to procure nominees for a “Mr.
Basketball" award.
The honor, which is quite an
achievement in Indiana, Kentucky,
Ohio and Illinois, picks the best
basketball player in the state
regardless of year in school.
There's nobody better than Murphy.
COLLEGE BEAT—Fbrmer Lake
B rantley football standout F red
Baber was named the most valuable
junior varsity player at Furman. ExPatriot Kyle Davis also plays for the
Paladins. Both are freshmen.
Patti Edgemon, a key Ingredient
on Sem inole’s d istrict champion
tennis team of last year. Is playing
this year for the Stetson Hatters.

County Basketball Leaders
Fg.
236
180
150
196
118
87
133
74
153
95
93
76
90
82
69

FL
114
140
64
85
27
45
38
41
68
52
40
56
27
45
56

Pts.
586
500
364
477
263
219
304
189
374
244
227
208
207
209
194

Ave. High
26.6 37
21.7 31
17.3 32
36
17.
13.B 26
13.7 26
13.8 23
13.5 27
13.4 22
10.6 19
10.3 27
9.9 21
9.4 22
9.1 18.
8.8 25

W
Seminole (SEM)
19
Oviedo (OV)
17
Lyman (LY)
12
Lake Brantley (LB) 5
Lake Howell (LH)
2
Lake Mary (LM)
I

Crash Costs Cale Record, Pole
By CARL VANZURA
Motor Sports Writer
DAYTONA BEACH - A record that
was, but now is not, moves that worked
and moves that did not, and all the ex­
citement one person could stand hap­
pened Monday at the Daytona Inter­
national Speedway after racing finally
got underway after Sunday’s all-day rain
canceled the action.
Qualifying for the 25th Annual Daytona
500 started the day off with Ricky Rudd
surprising everybody with a recordbreaking run of 190.864 in the Piedmont
Airlines Chevrolet. The record that was,
but now is not. came about when Cale

Sam
Cook

and B 's," said Kershner. “ We'll just,
have to wait and see."
If McCrimon doesn't predict, he will
go the junior college route.
McCrimon said he would like to stay \
close to home (which would make SCC'
coach Bill Payne very happy), but
Kershner said he Is being over-?
whelmed with J.C. offers from out of'
state.
One thing that can't be argued Is
that all three ere'./e rl* ?"* It’s •'
doubtful that Florida high school 1
basketball has put th ree b e tte r '
players on the court at the same tim e .,
They may get together again In the ,
district at Bishop Moore this week.
Ar.d If they do-you better not miss it.
You wouldn't see another Ronnie
Murphy around Seminole County for a
long, long time.

L
9
9
9
17
20
118

FREE THROW ACCURACY
Calvin Bryant (SEM)
Dennis Groseclose (LB)
BiUy Dunn (LM)
Rod Hillman (LY)
Ronnie Murphy (OV)
Mike Garriques (LB)
R kk Zullo (LB)
Eric Trombo (LB)
Vernon Law (SEM)
John Hamrick (LH)
Alexis Cleveland (LY)
Gene Angel (OV)
William Mitchell (SEM)
Paul Hoffman (LB)
Eddie Norton (LH)
Coni.
11 3
4
4
6
6
3 11
1 13
-

Game’s Tonight
Seminole at Apopka
Lake Mary at Lake Brantley
Spruce Creek at Lyman
Mainland at Lake HoweU
Oviedo at Wymore Tech
J
O v ie d o 's
Ron
Murphy leads the1
county in scoring, re­t
bounding and steals.t
1
He has also blocked1
66 shots this season.»

STEALS
Ronnie Murphy (OV)
Darryl Merthle (LAI)
Gene Angel (OV
Rod Hillman (LY)
BiU McCartney (OV)
Vernon Law (SEM)
William Wynn (SEM)

G.
22
19
22
21
23
28
28

SUs.
90
68
62
59
45
51
48

4.1
3.6
2.8
2.8
1.9
1.8
1.7

Ftm.
85
54
41
56
114
29
25
45
51
56
64
40
68
149
42

Fta.
109
75
57
79
162
42
37
67
78
84
97
62
108
225
69

P et
78.
72.
71.9
71.
70.4
69.
67.6
*7.2
67J
66.6
66.
64.5
63.
62.2
60.9

REBOUNDS
Ronnie Murphy (OV)
Paul Hoffman (LB)
WiUlam MttcheU (SEM)
William Wynn (SEM)
Fred McNeil (LH)
Calvin Bryant (SEM)
John Hamrick (LH)
James PUot (LY)

G.
22
23
28
28
17
28
22
21

Rebt.
342
254
237
194
104
164
116
110

Avg.
15.5
11.0
8.5
6.9
6.1
5.9
5.4
5.2

ASSISTS
Vernon Law (SEM)
Skip Gordon (LH)
Gene Angel (OV)
Rod Hillman (LY)
Mike Garrigues (LB)
Ronnie Murphy (OV)
Mike Evans (LB)
Eddie Norton (LH)

G.
28
22
22
21
22
22
21
19

Asti.
227
92
83
75
78
75
71
63

Avg.
8.1

U
3.9
3.6
3.5
3.4
3.4
3.3

— COMPILED BY GEOFFREY GIORDANO

Pantelias Looks For 1-4 Raiders To Come Around

j

#

«

Htrald Photo by Tam VUciM

•

Jody Ryan, hard-throwing SCC right-hander, let* fly with a high,
hard one.

By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
You don't have to try and think of any
profound conclusions as to why the
Seminole Community CoUege baseball
team is off to a slaw start. “ We just
haven't been hitting anything," Raiders
coach Jack Pantelias said of SCC’s 1-4
record. "The pitching has been great, but
we aren’t getting any timely hits."
Of SCC's four losses, three have been
by two or less runs, and in aU three cases,
the pitching staff performed as well as
can be expected this early in the year.
In the season opener, SCC lost an 11-8
slugfest to South Florida Junior CoUege.
Unfortunately, the Raiders best offensive
production came on the pitching staffs
worst day.
The Raiders only victory was a 1-0
blanking of Manatee JC in which
sophomore hurlrr Alan Soyer tossed a
three-hit shutout. SCC had only four hits,
two by freshman Mike Sims.
SCC is in the midst of a three-game
losing streak in which it lost to South
Florida, 2-0, Indian River, 5-4, and Indian
River again, 3-2.
“ We lost two, one-run games that we
could have won if the hitting was there,"
Pantelias said. "We need to get a few
more games under our belts and keep
taking batting practice."

1st base — Bobby Thigpen and James
Eldrtdge. Thigpen is another returning
sophomore who made a big contribution
to last year’s Mid-Florida Conference
champions. Thigpen also plays In the
o&lt;itfield. Eldredge is a freshman out of
Orlando's Boone High.

Pitchers — The area that PanteUas is
the most pleased with, the starters for
the first five games are all sophomores.

Pantelias is hoping the bats will come
alive within the next few weeks. Ihe
Raiders still have 12 more games before
the Mid-Florida Conference title race
begins.

tud base - Tim Barker and Bruce
Parker. Both saw a lot of playing tune as
freshmen a year ago. Parker also plays
shortstop.
Shortstop — Parker and Mike Sims.

Jody Ryan, out of Crystal River High,
started the first and fifth games and
pitched weU but doesn't have a win to
show for it. Soyer started against
Manatee and went the distance with a

J.C. Baseball
“ I'm not too worried about it at this
point," PanteUas said. "AU the guys
have the abUtty to converge and start this
thing rolling. I just hope we’U be ready by
March 3 for the first conference game."
The Raiders first conference game is
against Central Florida CC at SCC. SCC
has home games this week on Tuesday
and Wednesday. Tuesday at 2 p.tn., the
Raiders host the Rollins CoUege “ B"
team and Wednesday Brevard CC comes
to Sanfoid for a 3 p.m. game.
In the early going this season, the
following players have seen plenty of
playing time for the Raiders.
Catcher— Bryan Holxworthand Mike
Conway. Lyman graduate Hotiworth Is a
reluming sophomore who played behind
standout Jimmy Mee a year ago. Gonway
Is a freshman out of Winter Park High.

Sims is a fine prospect, according to
PanteUas. A freshman from Brooksville
Hernando High, Sims had two hits In the
Raiders only victory and is steady with
the glove at shortstop.

three-hit shutout. Pete Frantzis, out of
Springstead High, saw limited action a
year ago but has developed Into one of the
top hurlers on the staff. Frantzis is the
only southpaw in the starting rotation.

3rd base — Eddie Loopcr. Another
freshman from BrooksviUe Hernando,
Looper Is also adept in the field and has
the potential to be a fine hitter too.

“ He pitched weU enough to win against
South Florida, but an error took us out of
the game," PanteUas said. David Rettig
and Winter P ark's Greg Stake are also
top pitchers for the Raiders this season.

Outfielders — Sanford's Alton Davis, a
freshman out of Seminole High, Is
coming along weU after a broken leg kept
him out for most of his senior year in high
school. Davis covers a lot of ground In
center field and Is a switch hUter with
both speed and power. Another Seminole
County prep star, Sammy Duda, starts in
left field for the Raiders. Duda Is a
sophomore out of Oviedo High. Speedy
sophomore Joe Patitucci alternates with
Thigpen In right field. Patltucd Is one or
the fastest players on the team and he
also played a lot on last year’s team.
Designated hitter — Stephen Page.
Out of Oneonta, N.Y., Page is one of the
few left-handed hitters cn the team.
PanteUas Is looking for a lot of produc­
tion from Page this season.

From last year's conference cham­
pionship squad, SCC lost starters Bob
Parker, who went on to Mississippi State,
Tony Sowers, Jeff Blanton, Jeff O'DeU
and Mee along with pitchers Steve Birchmeler, Brian Rice, Rick MarceUo, Jay
Williams and John Thompson. Mee has
moved Into the starting catcher's job for
Division II powerhouse Florida Southern.

FT

�6 A -E v e n in g H era ld , Sanford, F I.

Tuesday, Feb. IS, 1913

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
M e d lo c k Back To S em in ole;
Lake M a ry Forfeits 10 Wins
The Lake Mary boys basketball team will forfeit 10
basketball games it won while playing Reginald
Medlock, according to Lake Mary Principal Don
Reynolds/
Medlock, a Junior who attended Seminole High'
School last year, was found to be still living in the
Seminole school district. He started at guard for coach
Willie Richardson’s cagers.
"He (Medlock) was living out of the district and he
gave an address which was in the district," said
Reynolds Monday.
Medlock withdrew from classes Friday at Lake
Mary and was supposed to attend classes Monday
morning at Seminole, according to Reynolds.
--------- SAM COOK

Lyman, H o w e ll C la im W in s

Hadden , Gordon Outrun
Rain For Point Trophies
Oviedo’s Bernard Hadden won the 100
and 220 and 330 dashes to pace the Lions
to an easy victory in the Lake Mary Open
Boys Track Meet Saturday at Lake Mary
U N RUN
High School.
1. W ooten (S H S )
The Lions totaled 88 points to out­
2. M c B ro o m ( L Y )
distance Lake Mary and Lyman which
3. S c h n tll ( L M )
tied for second with 71. Seminole (58), US RUN
1. w o o le n (SM S)
Lake Brantley (45), Bishop Moore (43)
2. L o tt (O V )
and Luther (0) were next.
1. L in g e rs (O V )
In the girls meet, Daytona Beach D IS C U S T H R O W
1. A lle n ( L Y )
Father Lopez edged Seminole 67-60. Lake
3. H o p k in s [ L M )
Brantley (54), DeLannd (39), Lake Mary
1. N a p ie r (L B 1
(33), Lake Howell (30) and Bishop Moore P O L S V A U L T
1. N a p ie r ( L B )
(24) followed.
3. W lllla m io n ( L Y )
Lake Mary's Fran "Flash" Gordon
1. P h illip * ( L B )
won the 100 dash and the long Jump. M IL E R U N
1. P *S ha ( B M )
Seminole was led by Crystal Caldwell
2. S hreve IB M )
who captured the 220 dash and 440 dash.
J. M c B ro o m ( L Y )
Sharon Lawrence took the shot putt for U N IM M LH
the Lady Semlnoles.
1. L o tt (O V )
P re lim . (42.1)
Hadden won the high-polnt trophy for
3. T u rn e y ( L M )
the boys with 21 points while Gordon
1. K ir k IB M )
paced the girls wilhSk--------218 D A S H
---------------- --

M A IN L A N D U S )
H lc k le y 4, H a ro ld 74, A b n e y 1, K . Johnson 10. M . G reen I I ,
L e w is 1). M e a g le y 2. T o ta ls : 77 11 31 15.
L A K E H O W E L L [73)
B lo c k e r 12. B ro w n 15, D ie tric h 0, C. G reen A, M . Johnson 5. T.
Johnson I I , L o w e I , M c N e il 1, M c P h e a rs o n 3. Scott J, J.
Johnson 0. R ae 0. T o ta ls : 22 14 72 72.
H a lftim e — L a k e H o w e ll J», M a in la n d 35; F o uls — M a in la n d
23, L a k e H o w e ll 20; F o ule d o u t — H a ro ld M . J o h n so n ;
T e ch n ic a ls — M a in la n d bench.
S P R U C E C R E E K (40)
L ip e 1. L . M o r ia rty 5. F ro s t 20. H ughes 0. C. M o r la rty 7,
Zablo 2, T o ta ls : 11 8 IS 40
L Y M A N (131
M c M u rre r I I , F o rs y th 14. Ja ck s o n 13, N e a ry 2, G lg ic o s 2,
G o ro u m 13. W illia m s 2, R o la n d 2, Lu e b b e 3. G illia m 2. T o ta ls :
21 11 22 13
H a lllim e — L y m a n 41, S pruce C ree k 17; F o u ls — L y m a n 14,
S pruce C ree k 17; F o u le d out — none: T e ch n ic a ls — S pruce
C ree k bench.

Tribe, Rams O pen D istrict
District soccer action opens tonight for Seminole and
Lake Mary. Both squads will open at home.
Coach Howard Hawkins' Semlnoles, seeded third in
the District 4A-9, entertain Spruce Creek at 4 p.m. at
Seminole High School. A victory throws the Tribe, 6-9,
against the winner of the Lyman-Lake Brantley game.
Kickoff is 7 p.m. at Lyman.
Other district matchups are DeLand hosting Apopka
and Daytona Beach Mainland entertaining Lake
Howell. The winners meet Thursday on the field of the
higher-seeded team. The final two play for the
championship Saturday.
Lake Mary, meanwhile, entertains New Smyrna
Beach at 7 tonight. The Barracudas were murdered by
Seminole, 9-1, Friday.
Daytona Beach Father Lopez takes on Flagler Palm
Coast in the other District 3A*6game while top-seeded
Seabreeze and Oviedo have byes.
The Lake Mary-NSB winner plays Seabreeze at Lake
Mary Thursday at 5 p.m. The Palm Coast-Father
Lopez survivors plays Oviedo at 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
also at lak e Mary.
The championship game will be Saturday at Lake
Mary.

W hite C aptures S arasota
SARASOTA (UPI) - Donna White, after failing
to make the cut last week for the first time in her
seven-year-career, decided to relax and have fun at the
Sarasota Classic.
How much fun she may have had in the rain-plagued
tournament is questionable:, but — she won the tour­
nament.
While front-runners Beth Daniel and JoAnne Gamer
ran into trouble in Monday’s rain-delayed final round,
White put together six birdies and two bogeys for a 4under-par 68 and won with a 4-under-par 284.
One stroke back at 285 were Nancy Lopez, who had a
final round 68, Alice Miller, 70, and Carrier, 73.

Evans Takes 2 In A Row
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Current NASCAR
national modified champion Richie Evans made it two
wins in a row on Monday night as the 17th Annual
World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing continues at
New Smyrna Speedway.
Mark "Captain Sizzle" Malcuit, driving the fastest
late-model so far in the 1983 series, held off 1977 Series
high point man Mike Eddy who has scored one win and
two runner-up finishes at this point.
With Greg Sacks sorting out his new car, after the
older machine met with the outside retaining wall
during time trials, Evans led all the way, but had to
sustain extra strong challenges from Kent, then
Reggie Ruggerio, extremely aggressive and hungry
for a win.
But again, for the second night in a row, Ruggerio
ran over some debris which punctured a tire, and he
had to settle for fourth. Evans, Kent, Doug Hewitt and
Jamie Tomaino rounded out the top five. Heat winners
were Mike McLaughlin and Kenny Bouchard.
On night number one, only Qve late models were in
the 18 second bracket, but now, no less than ten teams
are also up in that range.
Tbe last two laps of the main were quite hairy, as the
lead quintet, formed by Malcuit, Eddy, Junior Hanley,
Trickle and Bob Keselowski, had to contend with extraheavy slower car traffic, almost blocking the track.
But they finished in that same order, with Malcuit’«
margin of victory reduced to less than half a car
iength. Frank Wood. Art Sommers and Spike Undley
were the heat winners.
See Wednesday’s Evening Herald for Late Models and
&amp;odifkds results)

C o r r e c t io n
Bishop Moore did rvd lose to DeLand as reported tn la*
Thursday’s Evening Herald- Bishop Moore beat DeLand in
overtime.

i l l HH
1. L o tt (O V )
2. T u rn e y ( L M )
1. R ouse ( L M )
330 D A S H
1. H ad den (O V )
2. W h a ck (S H S )
1. L ln g a rd (O V )
M l RUN
1 T a n e a m a n (L M )
2. S lo v ln (B M )
1. S e h m a lm a a c k ( L Y )
2 M IL E RUN
1. Pasha (B M )
2. T o n g o m a n (L M )
1. S hrove (B M )
LO N O J U M P
1. Ja ck s o n (SH S)
2. s ta p p ( B M )
3. M u r r e y ( L M )
T R IP L E J U M P
1. J a ck s o n (S H S )
2. M u r r a y IL M )
1. L ln g a rd (O V )
tOO D A S H
t. H adden (O V
P re lim (10.3)
1. Y a rb o ro u g h (O V )
P re lim (10.1)
3. J e ffe rs o n (O V )
440
).
2.
1.

D ASH
W illia m s (S H S )
G e rm a n e ( L Y )
L ln g a rd (O V )

1S.4
14.5
UJ
38.4
37.1
17.1
l: * . !
2:09.7
2:11.1
10:00.8
10:04.1
10:14.7
2 1 '» "
1*7V *"
1 *7 "

&gt;

4 3 7 V *"
3 r i0 "
1 *7 "
10.5
tO .5
&gt;0 8
53.7
S IS
S3.4

3:33,1
3.28.2
3:42.5
1:33 8
1:11.8
1:31.*
u n r
124' 1 "
113' 1 "
I2 '0 "
IV * "
ll 'O "

.

t. H ad den (O V )
P re lim (22.S)
2. W h a ck (S H S )
3. J e ffe rs o n (O V )
H IO H J U M P
1. P a tto n o n ( L B )
2. L e w d ( L B )
3. R o u te ( L M )
SN O T P U T
1. A lle n ( L Y )
1. D lu r a s ( L B )
1. D e v ie o n (L B )
O tR L S R E S U L T S
I t * LH
1. Thom aa ( D E L )
P re lim (15.7)
2. S p e a rm e n ( L H )
1. B u rto n ( F L )
m DASH
1. G reen ( F L )
3. G ra d in g ( L B )
3. S m ith (S H S )

4:32.8
4:34.0
4:15 2
43.0
4 ).f
44.0

Dion Jackson, Seminole long
jumper, leaps 21-feet-8 during
the Lake Mary Open Track Meet
Saturday. Jackson, a senior, also
won t h ? triple jump.

23.4

*

an r u n
1. S t u f f ( D E L
3. K . H e y w a rd ( L B )
1. B e e rd tle e ( L M )
1 M IL ! RUN
1. L u C A t( L H )
2. B eg in ( F L )
1. B o u ch a rd ( F L )
LO NO J U M P
I . G o rd o n ( L M )
3. M e d lo c k (S H S )
J. B u rto n ( F L )
10* D A S H
1. G o rd o n ( L M )
1. G reen ( F L )
1. M u r r a y ( L B )

44* D A S H
I. C a ld w e ll (S H S )
23.1
I . S teed ( F L )
34.3
3. G o rd o n ( L M )
U N RUN
87"
t . J. H a y w a rd (L B )
8 -0 "
3. G o tt h la t( B M )
8 0"
3. B a rn h ill ( L B )
M * RUN
4S‘ 4 "
1. B a u e r ( D E L )
4 0 '1 "
2. K . H a y w a rd ( L B )
2 t'5 "
3. Steed ( F L )
O fIC U S TH T-O W
1. P ric e ( F L )
2. L a w re n c e (S H S )
18.1
1. D u ra k (L M )
18.1 M IL E R U N
1. L e w is (B M )
18.8
3. J. H a y w a rd ( L B )
2. G oe thla s (B M )
45.1
338 D A S H
48.3
1. T h o m a s ( D E L )
48.S
/ P r e lim (S0.2)
2. M e d lo c k (S H S )
3:31.2
1. S p e a rm a n (L H )
2:1*.7
2:37.0 110 D ASH
1. C a ld w e ll (S H S )
2. W a lk e r (S H S )
12:38 3
3. G o rd o n ( L M )
13:03.4
P re lim (27.3)
13:18.7
H IO H J U M P
1. S m ith (L B )
18*
3. B a u e r ( D E L )
18’* "
3. B u rto n ( F L )
U 'O W "
SHOT P U T
1. L a w re n c e (S H S )
11.1
3. S la te r ( F L )
11.*
3. M a tte y (O V )
13.1

82.1
83.8
84.3
4:11.S
4:13.7
4:28.7
1:41.S
1:48 0
1:30.2
87 T *
* * '» "

71‘0"
5:33 0

5:3*5
5:44.0
51.0
52.8
54.0
27.8
27.8
28.0
S '0 "
4*10"
4 '8 "
35*10"

2*V**VV'
ITJW"

Blake, Daviero Expect Good Year
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
The Seminole High boys track team la
expecting great things from seniors Mike
Wooten and Dion Jackson this season.
But if the Tribe is going to compete for
tbe conference and district titles, it is
going to need big contributions from the
entire team.
Wooten and Jackson both placed first
in two events Saturday at tbe Luke Mary
Opener and combined for 24 of
Seminole's 58 points. The Tribe finished
fourth in the meet. Wooten, a standout for
the Tribe last year, won the 660 run with a
time of 1:25.6, six seconds better than the
second-place finisher. Wooten also won
the 1,320 run with a time of 3:25.8.
Jackson, an outstanding ieaper, posted
first places in the long Jump with a 21feet-7^ leap, two feet better than the
closest competitor, and the triple Jump
with a 43-feet*7ti, nearly four feet better
than the second place finisher.
Seminole is also depending heavily on
Marvin Pringle In the discus and shot
put and sprinters Torln Williams Joe
Whack, andDeron Thompson.
Pringle, also a senior, placed fourth at
Lake Mary, tn tbe discus 107-feet-l and in
the shot put 36-feet-lO.
Williams had the Tribe's only other
first place as he won the 440-yard dash tn
52.7. Whack, another senior, placed
second in the 330 (37.2) and in the 220
(23.6). Bass ran a 10.6 in the 100 for fifth
place and was fourth In the triple jump
with a leap of 39 feet.
Seminole's girls team lost one of the
school's best ever, Tony Hardy, to
graduation, but coach Emory Blake feels

PrapTrack
he has the depth to make up for Hardy’s
loss. The Lady Tribe will have to make
up an average of about 20 points per
meet.
“We should be able to do a lot of the
things we did last year," Blake said. "We
have three or four girls who can make up
for the points Tony scored."
Besides Hardy, Seminole lost only
Revonda Caldwell to graduation. Eight
members from last year's squad are
returning and only two are seniors. The
Tribe also has two newcomers who Blake
said should add to the team right away.
In Saturday’s Lake Mary Opener, the
Lady Semlnoles placed second behind
Father Lopez, 87-81. "Of the 61 points, 53
were scored by four girls, " Blake said.
"And two of our top girls aren't out yet
because of basketball."
Crystal Caldwell, Chants Medlock,
Sharon Lawrence and Katrina Walker all
turned in impressive performance! at
the Lake Mary opener. Trad Brown,
Jackie Fort, Lisa Grant, Wanda Fisher
and basketball players Arlene Jones and
Sharon Jenkins will make the Semlnoles
one of the strongest teams in the dlstrid.
"We hops, barring injuries, we can
make a good run again this year," Blake
■aid. "We have a good nucleus and have
pretty good depth."
Caldwell, a Junior, scored 16 points at
Lakq Mary Including first place finishes
in the 440-yard dart) (811) and tbe 220yard dash (27.8). She also recorded a
sixth place finish in the 860 (1:53.8).
Sailor Lawrence scored 12 points for

the Tribe in the Lake Mary Opener in­
cluding a first place In the shot put (35feet-10) and a second in the discus (86feet-B).
Medlock, only a sophomore, posted 13
points at Lake Mary and is strong in both
the long jump and the hurdles. "Charlta
(Medlock) was a sprinter last year,"
Blake said. “But, I moved her to hurdles
this year to open up spots for the new
people. I was very pleased with her
performance Saturday." - ,
Medlock was second in the 330 low
hurdles (52.6) and fourth in the 110 low
hurdles (16.8), She also placed second In
the long Jump with a 16-feet-6.
Walker, a sophomore, emerged as an
outstanding performer in her first meet
as a Lady Seminole. Walker posted a
second-place finish In the 220-yard dash
with a time of 27.6 and fourth in the 440
(64.8). Walker is one of seven sprinters
who excel at the 220 for Seminole. "Our
strength Is in the quarter," Blake said.
"We have seven people who can run the
220 well and you can make a lot out of
that."
With Its speed In the 220, the Lady
Tribe should also be strong In the relays.
Fort, a senior, and Grant, a
sophomore, both placed In the Lake Mary
Opener. Fort was fifth In the 330 with a
time of 47.7 and Grant was sixth in the
1,320 (4:34.5).
Seminole trill be in a triangle meet
with Winter Park and Lyman today,
beginning at 3:30 at Lyman High. The
Tribe's fir* home meet will be Tuesday,
Feb. 22, in a triangle-meet with Lake
Mary and defending state champion Oak
Ridge.

Hanley Drives Firebird To Late-Model Victory
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - After
Saturday night's events were washed out
by continuous heavy rains, Sunday
turned out to be the "Night of Cham­
pions," with 1960-81 Series titllst Junior Slack and Artie Sommers were the heat
Hanley driving his Hoosler-shod* winners.
Prototype powered Firebird to victory in
Consolation race winner was Spike
the late model finale, and 1977-79-80 and Undley.
1981 World Series’ modified king Richie
In the modified feature, Evans, George
Evans notching his first win of M S in tbe
brand-new B.R. Dewitt’s, Ron Hotter- Kent and Greg Sacks were definitely
"hooked up," with Sacks making some
powered, Goodyear Eagle-shod 1913
wild but calculated moves, often coming
ClV|li£f«
Danny Knoff notched hia second "A" off the tu rn tidewaya In all-out, gutsy
efforts to get by Kent.
thunder cat main in a row. He was
protested and found perfectly legal. "B ”
Jamie "The Jet" Tomaino and Reggie
feature winner was South Florida
Ruggerio soon joined the lead trio, with
charger Cocoa Begtrup.
these top five c a n flying low in tight
Just like he did on opening night, pole formation on the steep banks of
sitter Hanley out-powered the com­ pavement.
petition as be moved under the green.
On lap 16, a left rear flat tiro on the
But outside front row atarter Mike Eddy
Demy's
Market No. 44 of Reggie
stayed right up with the leader, applying
Raggerlo
triggered a front atretch
extra-heavy pressure, lap after lap. D id
skirmish
also
involving Corky Cookman
Trickle and "Captain Zbxle" Malcuit
soon joined the high-speed, bumper to and Bentley Warren.
A three-way battle for the top spot
bumper "flyin' freight train," with all
four cars belching flames as their pilots highlighted the ckwing la p , with Evans,
got off the loud pedal going in the turns. Kant and Sacks creasing the line first,
followed by Jamie Touakio, In fourth
Once again, Randy Slack, A1 Schlll and place Just like on opening night, and
Dave Weltmeyer ware victim of the
lough middle of the pack infighting and
Ruggerio m d Cookman.
ended up in the pita long before the end of
LA TI MODULI
the race.
(Ho time trials became of earn* trees.)
The top five finishers were Hanley,
Fiat Met ns tap*M. RS«*v Slack; S. Frank
Eddy, Trickle, Malcuit
.............................
and Jack.....
Cook.
Weed; 3. Slava BureM; 4. Mika Kally; S.

Auto Racing

A 4 ) 1,5*1.44; p ic k i l l 0 - M - 1 - 4 O S
of 4 p a id 1 w in n e r S 4 t . lt ; la c k p o l
c a rry o v e r 7,14*.

Prep
Basketball

Prep Track

BO YS R E S U L T S

Lyman’s and Lake Howell’s girls basketball teams
tuned up for Wednesday’s district tournament and
concluded their regular seasons in fine form Monday
with a pair of wins.
Coach Dick Copeland’s I^ady Greyhounds used
double-figure scoring from four players to topple
Spruce Creek, 63-40, at Lyman. The ’Hounds finished
l"-6 °ml 11-5 tn Copeland’s first year back as a head
basketball coach.
Lake Howell, meanwhile, received solid scoring
from Tammy Johnson (16), Janene Brown (15) and
Cindy Blocker (12) to drop Mainland, 72-65. at Lake
Howell. The Lady Hawks finished 5-20 and 5-11.
Wednesday’s district will be held at Mainland In
Daytona Beach.

Scorecard

S lava M u rg lc ,
Second h e a t &lt;10 lo p t ) - l. A r ils S o m m t r i; 1.
Joe S lte a r; J. J im T u n in g ; 4. A l S c h lll; S. R ic k
Ca r e ill.
C on so la tio n ( I I la p s ) I . S pike L ln d te y , Z - l; J.
B ru c e G a s k in s . 5; 1. Jo h n P a s se tt, l i t ; 4. D uka
S o u th a rd , 05; S. B uzzy B a rry , I I .
F e a tu re (IS la p s ) 1. J u n io r H a n le y , 71; 2.
M ik a E d d y , M ; ) . D ic k T ric k le , « f ; 4. M a r k
M e tc u ll, 70; S. J a c k C ook, * 8 ; 8. A r t S o m m e rt,
10; 7. J im T u n in g , I I ; I . L e R o y P o rta r, 7 ; *.
P a l i W il is , 84; W . R ic h a rd C o ffin , 171; 11.
R ic k C a re lll, 8 ; 11. S tave M u r g lc ; I I . F ra n k
W ood, 11; 14. J o a M id d le to n , 71; I I . J o e S he ar,
18; M . M a rc h B la c k n a r, 50; 17. L a e S c h u le r, 81;
t l . B ob K e s e lo w s k i,2 *. t f . C h ris D e lla rc o , i r ;
N . L e a F a u lk , I I ; I t . A l S c h lll, 14; n . R a n d y
S la ck , 1; I I . S ta ve B u rg e s s, I I ; I * . M ik a K a lly ,
77; 15. D a v a W e ltm e y e r, 18; 28. P a rry
L o v s la d y , 77 ; 17. H a ro ld John so n, 18; IS . E d d la
H a rt In, 25; I f . G a y I * L o v a la d y , IS . L a p
L a a d a r: H a n le y : M S .

M O D IP IID S
(N o tim e t r ia ls be ca use o f d a m p tr a c k )
F ir s t h a a t (10 la p s )-!. R a g g la R u g g a rlo ; 2.
Bant la y W a rre n ; 3. E a r l S c h lo a d a r; 4. T o ny
H lre h m a n ; S. M ik a M c L a u g h lin .
Sacond ha at (10 la p a l- l. C o rk y C o o k m a n ; i.
B ob R ile y ; 1. G a ll B a rb e r; a. B u tc h P a r r y ; 5.
J e ff R ica.
F e a tu re (IS la p a l-1 . R ic h ie E v a n s , I t ; I .
G e o rg e K a n t, 18; 3. G re g S acks. S; 4. J a m ie
T o m a in o , &lt;7*; S. K a n B o u c h a rd , 00; A E a r l
S ch to d a r, 48; 7. T o n y H lre h m a n , 10; 0. J im
M c O ra w , 4V; * . J a ff R ic a , I ; 10. M ooaa H t w lt t ,
I * ; I l . T o m D r u a r , 37; 1 i. B o b S ha nn on, * 0 ; I ) .
B ob R ile y , 81; t4 . D ou g H e w itt, S I; IS. R oy
S m ith , 54; l i . R e g g ie R u g g a rlo , 44; 17. C o rk y
C o o km a n , 04 ; IB. B a n t la y W a rre n , 17; 1*. T o m
U lric h . 75; 70 G a ll B a rb a r, 01; t l . M ik a
M c L a u g h lin , S B ; I t . B u tc h P a rry , 7 ; n . R o w
H a lm a a . Y-O; 14. D a v id S im pson , si. L a p
la a d a r: E v a n s : M S .

TH U N D ER CARS
" A " F e a tu re (20 le p t M D a n n y K n o ll; 2 Joe
C oupes; 2. B ru c e L a w re n c e .
" B " F e a tu re (IS le p tl- 1 . C ocoa B e g tru p ; 2
L o n n ia S trld U a n o ; 1. B ria n H o rn

llt h r e c e - A U . O , S in t

O IR L I
F IN A L P O L L
C LASSAAAA
t . F o r) L a u d e rd a le D i l l a r d .. 23 0
2. O rla n d o E v a n s ......................IS 0
3. S s t e li lt e . . . .............................. 23-1
4. P in e lla s S e m in o le ............... 20 2
5. J a c k s o n v ille R ib a u lt .........23 2
4. M ia m i N o r th w e s te r n ..........24 2
7. M ia m i S o u th r ld g e ................22 1
I . B ra d s n to n M a n a t e e ........... 22 2
f . J a c k s o n v ille F le tc h e r . . . . 17 4
10. C le a rw e te r...............................18 5
H o n o r a b le M e n tio n :
Lake
W o rth , P a n a m a C ity M o se le y,
F o rt W a lto n B ea ch , V e ro B each,
S outh P la n ta tio n ,
C LA S S A A A
1. St. P e te rs b u rg B oca C leg a 24 0
2. M a r ia n n a ............................... 221
2. F o rt L a u d e rd a le S tra n a h a n 23
1
4. N a p le s B a rro n C o llie r . . . . 23 1
5. P e n sa co la W a s h in g to n
23 2
8. M ia m i E d is o n ....................... 73 1
7. O rla n d o J o n e s .......................22 4
8. O ca la V a n g u a rd ................ 77 J
f . B ra d e n to n S o u th e a s t.........22 1
10. L a k e W ales ........................... I f I
H o n o r a b le
M e n tio n :
T a lla h a s se e R ic k a rd s , D a ri
P a lm B ea ch N o rth S hore, B e lle
G la d e G la d e s C e n tra l, W . P a lm
B e a c h C a r d in a l N e w m a n , S t.
P e te rs b u rg G ib b s. J a c k s o n v ille
B is h o p K e n n y , O v ie d o , F o r t
M y e r s , N lc e v llle , C r e s tv ie w ,
G a in e s v ille . T itu s v ille . C ocos.
H ig h schools
BO YS
C LAS3AAAA
). J a c k s o n v ille J a c k s o n .........11 0
2. M ia m i J a c k s o n .....................28-2
3. W . P a lm Beach
T w in L a k e s ............................... 22 2
4. S lu a rt M a r tin C o...................24-1
5. C le a r w a te r .. ....................... 20 4
8. M e r r it t Is la n d ....................... 21 3
7. F o rt L a u d e rd a le D illa r d .. 28 1
I . O rla n d o O ak R id g e .............1* 8
* . J a c k s o n v ille R a in e s ........... 20 3
10. L a k e la n d K a th le e n .&lt;.......... t f 2
H o n o ra b le M e n tio n ;
M ia m i
S en io r, C o ra l G a b lts , S a ra so ta ,
B ra d e n to n M a n a te e . N ew P o rt
R ic h e y H u d s o n , J a c k s o n v ille
R ib a u lt, O rla n d o E v e n t, W in te r
P a rk , P e n sa co la P in e F o re s t,
S outh P la n ta tio n .
C LASS A A A
1. K lis lm m e e O sceola ............. 271
2. M i l t o n ....................................... I f 2
3. C r e s tv ie w ................................ 22 3
4. T a lla h a s se e G od by
25 3
5 Q u in c y S h a n k s ......................23 2
4. R o c k le d g e ...............................23 2
7. L a k e W a le s .......................... 30 3
I . T a m p a C a th o lic . . ................23 4
f . R lv e r d e le ................................ 22 4
10. S t. P e te rs b u rg G ib b s ____ 20 3
H o n o r a b le
M e n tio n !
S p r ln g s te a d , O c a la V a n g u a r d ,
O ca la F o re s t, B a rlo w , B e lle G la d e
G lades C e n tra l, St. P e te rs b u rg
Boca C le g a . W . P a lm B ee ch N o rth
S h o re . G a in e s v ille E a s t S id e ,
G a in e s v ille B u c h h o it, G a in e s v ille ,
J a c k s o n v ille B ith o p K e n n y , F o rt
M y e rs . C yp re s s L a k e s , K e y W est,
M ia m i E d is o n , F o rt L a u d e rd a le
St. T h orne s A q u in a s , O keechobee,
H a lla n d a le , P e n sa co la . P a la tk a .

J. C.
Basketball
F lo rid a lu c e
t
t . L a k a d t y ( l ) ........... 25 3 '
1. F lo rid a C o lle g e
25 3
1. M ia m i D ade
N o rth ( t ) ....................... 2 1 1
4. N o rth F lo rid a ( t )
20 7
5. G u ll C oast ............... I I 4
8. M a n a te e ................... 22 5
7. S e m in a l* ............
17-11
I . M ia m i D ad e S ou th 187
f . D a y to n a B e e c h .......... 207
10. P e n s a c o la ..........
1711

tl
18
S3
85
SI
45
21
78
24
14

Baseball
H l( h School
W ESTO RANOE tl, LAKE
HO W ELL 2
W est O ra n g e
L a k e H o w e ll

40 1 40 — t l
1)0
2

tl i
1 4

Johnson, C ro w (1 ) a n d R o b in ­
son, S la c k a n d L a n g . H itte rs —
W est O ra n g e : O w e ns 1 2 , M e
C le lla n 1 1 ; L f llo 3 4, 4 R B It. H R ;
H on or 2 2 ; P e lle g rin o 1 3 . R e c o rd s
— L a k e H o w e ll 0-1, W est O ra n g e 10.

Dog Racing
A T S A N P O R D -O R L A N D O
M o n d a y n ig h t re s u lts
P i n t ra c e — S-18, B : 31:14
I W rig h t A lle y
1.40 2.40 3.10
I PC ’s G old en B oy
4.40 1 0 0
1 P re c is io n D a n c e r
3 oo
O lt - 3 ) 11.8* P ( M ) 81.8* T ( M 1) 82.N
Second R ace — S t,C t i f : * #
I T in y G ra in s Of 1100 S OO 4 10
3 E x c e p to
4.20 4.40
T K a e n d a llg h t
6 20
0 0 3) M .ie P (1 -3 )4 5 .4 1 T &lt; I *.
7) S it .8# 0 0 0 - 1 ) 41.11
T h ir d r a c a — S -1 t,M : 21:81
4 P W 't B o o m e r
11.20 8.00 S00
IW a ld y S cott
8.40 8.00
5 C o u n te ra c t
i 40
0 ( 1 - 4 ) 14.11 P (4 -1 ) 1*4.H T (4-1S) 84f . 4#
F o u rth ra c e — S-Ti, D t I I :8 !
I R u n llk e th a d a v il 14.20 8.00 1.20
8 Tank Top
/ .oo 4 .40
I B a a u t y P lu t
j.o o
Q O -4 ) U .4 0 P ( 1 4 ) 4 1 . M T ( t-4 I I 27 4.N
P lf t k ra c e — S-18, C : 11:24
1 S c a tte r le n t
11.80 8.00 2.40
2 A l t S ole S a ra
4.00 3.40
4 R E 't Spot c a sh
610
O O - l l 1 7 .N P ( M ) 18.11 T (1-24) 2*2.8*
S iit h r a c e — 1- 0 , C ; l l i t i
1 W rJgM D e ify D ill 1 00 3 00 1.20
S T e s t's C h a rg e r
*.40 4 so
4 T a cco B e ll
j jo
O O -S ) 34.84 P ( M ) 11.8* T O-S4) I 7 t . l t
S e v e n th r a t e - - H . A : l | : 4 t
I D J G II d ln O n
5.80 2.10 2 4 0
2 B ig B jb to a S m ith
4 00 1.80
5 O c to b e r G o ld
3.00
Q O -2 ) I A H P ( M ) I t . * * ; T ( ! • ] .
I ) 144.1*
E ig h th r a c e — A I A D ; i n n
3 M is ty P a lly
1.40 j 00 4.S0
1 T a n l#
3.40 3.00
4 S K 'iS * n d y
3.30
Q 0 - 1 ) U h l P ( H I 41.41; T (3M l 111.2*
N in th r e c * — S -IA B : t i l l *
2 S to rm y R h ln a h a rt
12.40 1.40 4.40
S T Iz S o S u *
10.10 *.00
2 T r l G e r tr u d *
4 30
O (1-4) 7 l . N i P ( 1 ! ) 14.84; T (2A l ) 2,447 I I
le th r e c e — M * . D i H 117
4 C a h ill's R e ld e r 1740
* . » 4.40
7 D u n k ir k
7.10 i n
S D e re k , T h e D a s h e r
s .40
0 ( 8 - 7 ) M A 4 ; P ( A 7 ) 148.44; T ( A
7 0 721.41
O th r4C 4 — A t A A : 11:11
I D og W illia m s
11 00 11 00 8 40
S T o y M o n s te r
a 40 2.40
4 N a ie u B e t ly
8 80
0 I S O 44.44; P I A S ) 1 N .8 4 ; T ( A

4 R E 'S E lo u ls e
1.80 2.80 2.40
2 R honda'S J o h n
4.40 2.10
1 S um m er Tune
3.40
0 ( 1 4 ) 11.00; P ( A l ) 17.14; T ( A
2 0 4*.14
l l t h r e c e — * * , D : 11:11
1 G o ld e n ro d C a m e o 4.10 2.10 3.80
2 R K 'S G lo ry Jones
15.10 7.10
5 S ta rt S iz z lin g
1.40
Q 0 - 1 ) 10.40; P ( M ) 20.44; T ( | .
2 0 100.00
A - 2184; H a n d le I2I0.0S 7.

Hockey
N H L S ta n d in g s
B y U n ite d P ress In te rn a tio n a l
W a le s C o n fe re n ce
P a t r ic k D iv is io n
W L T PIS.
P h ila d e lp h ia
36 14
7 7*
N Y Is la n d e rs
301*
f 8*
W a s h in g to n
7117
t ] 6*
N Y R a n g e rs
24 IS
I 56
N e w J e rs e y
1115
12 14
P itts b u rg h
till
7 33
A d a m s D iv is io n
B oston
31 10
I 14
M o n tre a l
31 17 10 73
Q uebec
26 23
f 61
B jlf a lo
3 * n v .;i
H a rtfo rd
tS 36
4 16
C a m p b e ll C o n fe re n ce
N o r r is D iv is io n
W L T P ti.
C hicag o
36 )6
7 7*
M in n e s o ta
2 * 15 11 7)
St. L o u is
1 *2 *
11 4*
D e tro it
14 11
12 40
T o ro n to
14 10
to J l
S m y th e D iv is io n
E d m o n to n
1) 17 10 77
C a to a ry
IM S
f 57
W in n ip e g
12 2*
7 SI
V ancouver
1127
11 47
-Los A n g e le s
1 *2 *
I 46
M o n d a y 's R e s u lts
M o n tre a l 4, E d m o n to n 2
St. L o u is A B u ffa lo 4
T o d a y 's O a m e s
( A ll T im e t E S T )
Los A n g e le s a t H a rtfo rd . 7:15
p.m .
N Y is la n d e rs a l Q uebec, 7:15
p .m .
D e tro it a t P itts b u rg h , 7:15
p .m .
M in n e s o ta a t N e w
J e rs e y ,
7:35 p m .
V a n c o u v e r a l W in n ip e g . * :0 5
p .m .

College
Basketball
N E W Y O R K ( U P I) The
U n it e d
P ress
In te rn a tio n a l
B oa rd
ot
C oaches
Top
20
co lle g e b a s k e tb a ll -a lin g s ( fir s t
p la c e v o te s a n d re c o rd s th ro u g h
Feb. 11 In p a re n th e s e s ':
1. In d ia n a (1 ) ( I t 2)
557
2. N ev. L i V g s ( 7 l) ( 2 ? 0)
552
I N o rth C a ro lin (5 )(2 1 4)
502
4. H ou sto n (4 ) (20 2)
4fS
5. V ir g in ia (1) ( I t 3)
444
A St J o h n 's (1 ) (70 2)
417
7 A rk a n s a s 120 1)
380
I . L o u is v ille ( 2 ) 1 )
30«
t . V illa n o v a (17-41
305
10. M is s o u ri ( i f 4 )
1*5
II. U C LA 0 7 1 )
]J3
17. K e n tu c k y ( U S )
171
11. M e m p h is St. ( I I 1)
Ilf
14. G e o rg e to w n 0 4 4)
84
tS. Io w a 0 5 0)
41
16. Tennessee (1 5 7 7
27
17. S y ra c u s e 0 6 5)
II
I I B osto n C o lle g e 0 7 4)
14
1*. T e nn C h a ttin g (1 7 1 )
II
70 O k la h o m a SI. 0 7 4)
10
N e ta : B y a * re e m a n t w ith the
N a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n a l B asketb a il C oa ch es o f th e U n ite d
S to tts , lo o m s o n p ro b a tio n b y
th e N C A A e n d In e lig ib io to r the
N C A A T o u r n im o n t a re In o llg lM o fo r T o p N a n d n a tio n a l
c h a m p io n s h ip c o n s id o ra tio n by
th e U P I B o a rd o l Coaches.
Those such lo a m s fo r th e m i ­
l l season a r t : O k la h o m a C ity ,
St. L o u is a n d W ic h ita S tate.

Deals
S p o rts T ra n s a c tio n s
B y U n ite d P ra ts In te rn a tio n a l
M onday
F o o tb a ll
B o s to n ( U S F L ) S ig n e d
d e fe n s iv e b a c k D ic k J o u r on.
B u lfo lo — N a m e d B ob Z o m o n
d e fe n sive c o o rd in a to r.
Los A n g e lo s — N o m a d John
R o b in so n coach.

V

m
mint
NIGHTLY 7:30
MATINEES

MON.-WED.-SAT.

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

PICK-SIX
W IN N E R S IX IN
A ROW A N D
W IN T H O U S A N D S
OF D O LLAR S

•
ALLN EW C ASH S E L L M A C H IN E S
•
T R IF IC T A O N
E V E R Y RACE
| THU RSD AY A L L L A D IIs |
A D M IT T E D F R E E !

/DWORDORUV1DO
K am a club
■ tfOrteodo Am
wtttwf 17 12 laagweed
ftd itv A iio ia -n i 1100

Sorry. No Oat lladti | |

I
(

�A
#

A*

PEOPLE
Evening H era'd, Sanford, F I.

Tuesday, Feb. 15, m i —IB

Miss Fleming,
W.D. Jacobs
Repeat Vows

TONIGHTS TV
C ab le Ch.
EVENING

6:00
O '4 ' i ) l O ( | . ) Q NEWS
(I Ij (38) C H ARLIE'S ANQELS
ED(10) UNDERSTANDING H UM AN
BEHAVIOR

Susann Marie Fleming and Walter Dean Jacobs were
m arried Jan. 22, at 4 p.m., at the Community United Methodist
Church, Casselberry. The Rev. Dwight Kirtley performed the
double ring ceremony,
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Patricia Fleming, Winter
Springs, and Kenneth Fleming, Deltona. The bridegroom's
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Jacobs of Oviedo.
Given in m am age by her father, the bride chose for her
vows a formal bridal satin gown accented with appliques of
Venise lace. Her veil of illusion was secured to a corvnoV-r*
fresh roses, tillRir-tii^vauey and ivy.
Londa Denton attended the bride as matron of honor. She
wore a metallic blue gown and carried three white rosebuds
with blue baby's breath. She wore a spray of baby's breath In
her hair.
Bridesmaids were Carol Harris and Nancy Beaudion. Their
gowns were identical to the ho: i r attendant’s ami each carried
two white rosebuds.
Robert Jacobs served the bridegroom as best man. Ushers
were Don Jacobs and Dan Sharron.
Autumn Denton was the flower girl and Scott Evans was
ringbearer.
Following a reception at the Highlands Clubhouse, Winter
Springs, the newlyweds departed for a wedding trip to Walt
Disney World.
They are making their home In Oviedo where the bride is a
finance clerk and the bridegroom is a builder.

6:05
111 (IT ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

The Longwood Sertoma CTub meets
every Tuesday at noon at Quincy
Steakhouse on Douglas Road.
Special guest Jay Bergman, the head
baseball coach at UCF, spoke to the
members about this upcoming baseball
season at the meeting today.

O rla n d o

® (17)
(10) ®

In d e p e n d e n t
A tla n ta , O a.
O rla n d o P u b lic
B ro a d c a ttin g S ystem

In a d d itio n lo th o ch a n n o la lis te d , c a b ltv la lo n tu b ic r lb a r a m a y tu n a in lo In d e p e n d e n t c h a n n e l 44,
St. P e te rib u re . by tu n in g to c h a n n e l I ; tu n in g lo c h a n n e l IJ , w h ic h c a r r le i a p a rt* a n d th * C h rla tla n
B ro a d c a s tin g N e tw o rk (C B N ).

KIT ‘N* CARLYLE,M

by Larry Wright

2:35
U (IT ) W O M AN W ATC H (THU)

3:00
0 4 FANTASY
IS O GUIDING LIGHT
1 7 O OENERAL H O SPITAL
II I (3 8 )CASPER
CD (10) C O O KIN ' C AJU N (TUE)

7:00
F I * LIE DETECTOR
! } C F J U .-k is U iA E A ii— ■•»»&gt;
0 o JOKER S W ILD
1)1 (JS) THE JEFFERSONS
ED (10) M AC N EIL / LEHRER
REPORT

CD (10) ENTERPmaE/WFnV
CD (10) W1LO AM ERICA (THU)
CD (10) THE U W M A K E R S (FRI)

3:05
I I (IT )F U N T IM E

7:05

3:30

12 (17)O O M E R PYLE

'll
(38) BU G S B U N N Y A N D
FRIENDS
CD (10) ELECTRIC CO M PAN Y &lt;R)

7:30
0 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
1 ) 0 TIC TAC DOUGH
I ) o FAM ILY FEUD
a t (38) BARNEY M IIL E R
ED (10) UNTAMED W O RLD

3:35
I I (IT )T H E FUNTSTO NES

4:00
0

4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
U O HOUR M AG AZINE
(Z O M ERV GRIFFIN
l l ) (38) TO M AN D JERRY
CD (10) SESAM E STREET Q

7:35
i l l (IT ) ANDY GRIFFITH

8:00
0
4 THE A-TEAM The A-Team
art, hifao 10 pro tact a veteran
p o :.c e m in who i t convinced th at ha
i t 1h« target o l a SW AT team made
up o l c orrup t (allow otlicere
1 O W ALT DISNEY "T h e Hunter
A nd The Rock S ta r" A teen-age
r o c k Id o l IT im o th y H u tto n )
b e ln e n d t a Bengal tiger tla te d lo r
d e ilru c tio n by a ru th ia tt hunter
(Kan Sw oftord)
&gt;1 O HAPPY DAYS
&lt;11 (38) MOVIE
High P la in t
D rifte r" 11073) C lint E attw ood . V ar­
na Bloom
ED (10) NOVA "T he M iracle 01
L ila " The t in t lilm ever made do cu­
m enting the in cre dib le chain o l
e v a n tt which tu rn a tp a rm and an
egg in to a new born baby n present­
ed g

M R . A N D M R S. W A L T E R D E A N JA C O B S

Karen
W arner
The baseball season begins Feb. 19 and
the first game to be played will be
against Rollins College.
If anyone would like more information
about the Longwood Sertoma Club, they
may contact: Linda Tomlinson 869-4634.
The R etired Seniors Volunteer
Program (RSVP) is looking for persons
60 years or older who would like to give
some of their time and wisdom to helping
others.
RSVP is a non-profit program, funded
by federal grants and contributions by
concerned civic organizations and the
Seminole County Commission.
Last year a total of 72,000 hours of
volunteer work was recorded by the
seniors in this program. In March, a
special recognition luncheon is planned
to honor all the volunteers of Seminole
County.
Volunteers are needed to assist as
substitutes in the Sheriff's Department,
courthouse, schools, health care clinics,
community service organizations and
Red Cross. Also needed are those who
could help other adults to read.
For any person, 60 years or older who

9:05
I I (17) NBA BASKETBALL A tlanta
H aw ks vs H ouston R o c ke tt

9:30
7 O 9 TO 8

10:00

«

5:00
5:20
U (IT)WORLOATUROE(MON)
II (IT) RAT PATROL (TUE)
5:25
ID O HOLLYWOOD AND THE
STARS (MON)
lJ2(1T)RAT PATROL (FRI)
5:30

a

1 7
MART TO HART
II I (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ED (10) TEACH LIFE Dr L *o Buscegiia locuses o n ways lo teach
children lo have a positive a ltitu d e
to w a rd life and love

6:00

6:45
7:00

&lt;J Q M ' A ' S ' K
(fj O NEWS
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

5:35

Vi

H.y t i l l m is t) n r t n
ALL SEATS

PLAZA

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

C ra b H o w r S :M - t:1 0
G a rlic C r a b lJ c E a ch
R oa ste d O y tlc r s 10c E a c h

7:05
&lt;12 (IT)FUNTIME
7:15
w eather

'OUR HAPPY HOURS

7:30

"

(11 (38) W OOOY WOODPECKER
CD(10) SESAM E STREET g

7:35
111 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

11:14 A M T e 4 : M P M .'
I* P .M . 'T il C lo tin f
1 F a r l Ail H i| t iS s iii
A » 4 M o tt C a c k t illt
L e c jtM l In tld t

12 (IT ) M Y THREE SONS

Ha, i7ms lijijis

TUESDAY CARLOAD
NITE

j '1

CREEP SHOW

... W O L F E N

6:30

W ednesday

B:00
O &lt;4 RICHARD SIM M O NS
(2 O DONAHUE
• 7 O MOVIE
n (36) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD(10) SESAM E STREET g

Special

9:05
9:30

0 2 (IT ) MOVIE
B lood On T h *
A rro w " (1964) Data R obertson.
M a rtha Hyer

12:30
O 4 U T E NIGHT W ITH DAVID
L E T T E R M A N G u e st c o m e d ia n
J o * l H od geton
i l l ! (38) NEWS
Q i O MOVIE ' B irdm an Ot A lcat r a i" (1961) B urt Lancastar. Kart
M aiden

1:10

O
M C M IL U N X WIFE A
sports car ratty th a t M ac and Sally
ara p a rticip atin g tn Is plagued by
pra nks and traak accidents (R)

1:30

O 4 IN SEARCH OF...
I l l (38) FAM ILY AFFAIR

10:00
B ■4 &gt;THE FACTS O F U FE (R)
111 o MORE REAL PEOPLE
1 (38) ANDY GRIFFITH
I (10) ELECTRIC COM PANY (R)

10:30
a 4 SALE O f THE CENTURY
l i t O C H ILD 'S P U Y
(II (38) DORIS DAY
CD(10) 3-3-1 CO N TAC T (R ) g

11:00
&lt;fi|t|M'&lt;l

0 (4 ' W HEEL O F FORTUNE
1 J ) O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
( D O LO VE B O A T |R )
I) Ij (38) 38 LIVE
CD (10) OVER EASY

Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!

11:05
&lt;12 (IT ) PERRY M ASO N

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

11:30

2:15
0 2 (IT ) MOVIE "C lo u d s O v*r
E u ro p e " (1939) Laurence Olivier,
Valeria H obson

2:30
4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
(y o CBS NEWS NIQ HTW ATCH

0 4 H IT M A N
H I (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS
AFTERNOON

0

3:00
O i l N BC NEWS OVERNIGHT

3:30
(Z ) O MOVIE ' Death Ridas A
H o ra e " (1969) Lea Van Ctaet. John

12:00
0

4 SOAP WORLD
ID o
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
( D O NEWS
in (36) BIG VALLEY
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE

*

3 pieces of golden brown F a r ^ W Recipe
Fried Chicken mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits

VOICE OF JUNIOR YOUTH
"The Great Aqua Lung Discovery'
Fab. 16. 1 9 8 3
in c lu d e s

.

(111 (38) OREAT 8 PACE COASTER
CD (10) MISTER ROOERS (R)

&lt;12 (IT ) MOVIE

12:20

I

P E R CAR
7 IS

8:00
ISM Frsnch t «
IH W Y 1 l.fl)
Santera

H

tx

ANNE BONNIE’S
TAVERN
AND
CRABBAR

0 &lt; 4 TODAY
l » O MORNING NEWS
( 7 O G OOD MORNING AMERICA
111 (38) NEWS
CD (10) TO LIFEI

11:30

0

5:30
4 P E C P tr S COURT

( D a NEWS
CD(10) A .M . W EATHER

8:35

12:00

0

/ ((PLAZA T W IN !—l

4 ANOTHER W O RLD

&lt;i . o CAPITO L
CD (10) W ERE YOU THERE? (TUE)
CD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TOOAY
(W ED)
CD (10) M AG IC O F DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

|»2 (IT ) THAT GIRL

QUINCY
t h e LAST WORD

5:05
1* 117) THE BRADY BUNCH

2:30

6:30

11:20
0
4 TONIGHT Host Johnny
C arson G uests Glen C am pbell.
D om DeLu.se
$ O M ARY TYLER MOORE
1 D Q ABC N EW 3 N IO HTUNE
n I (38) THE ROCKFORD FILES

O
4 U V E R N E 8 SHIRLEY A
C O M PAN Y
J O THREE'S COM PANY
7 O A LL IN THE FAM ILY
M (38) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
ED (10| MISTER ROGERS (R)

' 7 Q ONE LIFE TO LIVE
C D (1 0)8 U R V IV A L (T H U )
CD (10) M AG IC O F O IL PAINTING
(FRI)

8:05

I I (17 )N E W 8

i) i

2:00
0

O '4 EARLY TODAY
ID O
C BS EARLY MORNING
HEW 8
( D O A B C NEWS THIS MORNING

11:00
0 4 J O t O NEWS
' l l (3 8 )SOAP
ED (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

o

1:30

Q 14J 2 '8 COUNTRY
Ij
O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
CD O SUNRISE
(1) (38) JIM 8AKK ER
'12 (IT ) NEWS

4:35

1) (17) BEW ITCHED (TUE-FRI)

1:05

1 } a AS THE W O RLD TURNS
CD (10) THIS O LD HOUSE (FRJ)

(38) FRED FLINT8 TONE AND
FRIENDS

i l l (3 8 )M AD AM E'S P U C E

7

I I (17) MOVIE

5:50
(12 (17) WORLD AT URGE (TUE)

(U

10:30

til a

1:00
0 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
(7 O A LL MY CHILDREN
III (3 8 )MOVIE
CD(10) M O VIE (M O N. TUE)
CD (10) M ATIN EE AT THE BUO U
(WED)
CD(10) SPORTS AM ERICA (THU)
CD (10) FLORIDA HOM E GROWN
(FRI)

O
4 NBC N EW 8 OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
(E l (17) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
(M O N )

4:30
n (38) SCOOBY DOO

5:00

12:30
O 4 NEWS
V O t h e Y O U N a AND THE
RESTLESS
'7 O R YAN ’S HOPE

0
4 j NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRJ)

4:05
H ( IT ) THE MUNSTERS

1 2 (1 7 } LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

I I (IT ) PEOPLE NOW

MORNING

C D (1 0 )A .M .

1:00

What Is tne object ol sucti a shower?
APPALLED IN OHIO
DEAR APPALLED: Tbe object of such a shower Is to soak
as many people as possible. Since you barely know the bride,
and tbe hostesses are strangers to you, your only obligation Is
to send your regrets.
DEAR ABBY: Keep hammering away in your campaign to
encourage adults as well as children to expose anyone who
attempts to sexually molest them.
My sister's husband sexually assaulted women and children
for 90 years before I got enough information to present to my
sister. His victims included two of my sisters, my daughter,
three cousins, two nieces, a sister-in-law, his own daughter, as
well as his daughter-in-law.
Only one child reported it to her mother. Then her mother
kept it a secret without even confronting the molester! My
daughter told me only after she had grown up. I began asking
women in the family, and only then did the victims tell. I'm
sure there are many other cases where the victims don't tell
because they think theirs is just one isolated Incident, and they
don't want to cause trouble in the family.
It wasn't easy to get the facts about my brother-in-law. 1 felt
like a gossip and tattletale, even though I knew I was doing the
right thing.
Secrecy is on the side of the molester.
WITH YOU ALL THE WAY

W EDNESDAY,

9:00

Rotary will meet tonight at Cassidy’s
Restaurant on Markham Road, at 7:30
p.m.

Dear
A bby

12:05

U V E R N E A SHIRLEY

Q 4 BARE ESSENCE | Prem iere)
Tyger Hayes I t m a rried to Chase
M arshall, playboy and hair apparent
to a vast conglom erate th at h a t
go tte n in to lh a perfum e industry
i ) O MOVIE "M urder in Coweta
C o u n ty " (Prem iere) Johnny Cash.
Andy G riffith A coun try sheriff sate
ou t to prove that a successful and
pow erful businessm an m urdered an
e m p lo y ** w ho,had do ub t*-crossed
Him
Q - THR EE'S • -COMPANY
CD (10) AMERICAN -P U Y H O U S E
" T h * FU* On JiM Match 1*431948" The courtship end subse­
quent m arriage o t a black G I (Joe
M o rto n ) and a w h ile Englishw om an
(Frances Tom etty) d u ring W orld
W ar It I t recounted (Part 1) g

At the Feb. 8 meeting of the Umgwood
Rotary G ub Iinda Partin, a CPR In­
structor from Orlando Regional Medical
Center, gave information and procedures
on how to give assistance to either a
drowning or choking victim.

David is endeavoring to get firm
commitments from various groups in
order to finalize the plans so they may be
brought before the city commission for
approval.
The location site for the proposed
community center is on West Street,
across from Christ Episcopal Church.

O d NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(IJ (17) MOVIE
The Scarf ace
M o b " (1961) R obert Stack.

6:30
7 O

(TUE)
CD 110) UFE O N EARTH (WED)
CD (10) N ATIO N AL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (THU)
CD (10) TEACH U FE (FRI)

4:00

8:05

The l&gt;ongwood-I.ake Mary Lions and
lioness meet tonight at the Quality Inn,
Ijongwcod, at 7 p.m.
The lioness will be discussing their
upcoming "No-Bake" Bake Sale and the
planning of a St. Patrick's Day dance. ,

Longwood city administrator David
Chasey has outlined a plan for the
building of the Longwood Community
Center. He has received a go-ahead from
the city commission to contact local
clubs and organizations to obtain their
financial support.

P hillip Law.

l ) (17) B U C K HISTORY: THE
C O N TE M P O R A R Y C H A P TE R A
celebration o l B la rk H istory M onth
and a special trib u te to to m e ol
to day's outstanding black A m e ri­
cans i t presented.

wishes to do volunteer work, but has no
means of transportation, pick-up service
will be provided.
For information, contact RSVP, 8346550.

Man's One-Night Romance
Causes Wife Daily Pain

4ft-

(C B J ) O rla n d o

In d e p e n d e n t
O rla n d o

6:35

Lake MaryLongwood
Correspondent
323-9034

DEAR ABBY: Three years ago, my 50-year-old husband of
20 years had a one-night "romance" with a co-worker half his
age on the night before she was to move to another state.
I thought we had a perfect marriage, but evidently we didn’t.
Abby, the pain was terrible. I cant understand why he did it. I
thought If we talked openly about It and I knew exactly what
happened between them — in detail — 1 might be able to see
things from his point of view, but he refuses to discuss It.
He said he was sorry and it would never happen again, so in
time I forgave him. The problem Is, I can’t forget.
Not one day goes by that 1 am not reminded of this girl and
what went on between them. I feel her presence constantly
between us — especially at night. It's aa though she Is always
lying In bed between us. I keep telling myself that If this
happened once, it could happen again with somebody else.
I can't live the rest of my life feeling this way. Please help
roe.
DESPERATE
DEAR DESPERATE; People who say they can forgive bat
caa't forget have sot really forgfreu. Don't press your haaband
fa r a more detailed account of “what happened”; It would only
give you more to agonize about
Your inability (or unwillingness) to let go of this punishing
Incident Indicates that you need professional help to put these
destructive feelings to rest once and for alL
DEAR ABBY: Yesterday I received an invitation to a bridal
shower. II stated, "Anything for the kitchen or bath will be
appreciated." A "P.S." was included: "Check with one of the
hostesses to avoid duplicates."
In the first place, I am not a close friend of the bride-to-be. In
fact, I barely know her. And the three hostesses are total
strangers to met
I have no Interest in attending this shower but was told that I
am obligated to send a gift whether 1 attend or not. Can that
be?

(D O
D O

(□) (35)

(IT ) BOB NEW HART

Sertoma Honors Grindle
For 'Service To M ankind'

The Saba! Point Women's Club has a
special meeting planned for tonight.
World renowned makeup artist Douglas
Marvaldi, will show the members the
"how-to’s” of makeup.
Included will be a slide presentation,
and a makeover of one of the members.
Douglas is originally from New York and
has done makeup for stars of "All My
Children." Now that he is In Florida does
the makeup for Carol Nelson of Channel 6
News.
This meeting will be held at the Saba!
Point Country Club, beginning at 7:30
p.m.

® O

6:30
0 4 NBC NEWS
1)1 O CBS NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS Q
CD (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR

In And Around Longwood

At a special meeting of the Longwood
Branch of Sertoma Clubs, the members
had a special job to perform. They were
honored to present the club's most
prestigious award, the "Service to
Mankind" award for 1082 to Art Grindle
of Altamonte Springs.
Art, who Is well-known for his
dedicated community service and his
ability to inspire and encourage others to
better themselves, was given this award
by the club president Dr. Bill Armstrong.
Art Is now under nomination for the
Mid-Florida District award for his
"Service to Mankind."

1

C able Ch.
(A S C I O rla n d o

h e a lth

7 :3 0 PM
le c tu r e

Sanford Seventh-day
Adventist Church
7 0 0 Elm A v e .

You Maks Us Famous!
Op«n 10:30 a.m.-W p.m. Except Fri. A Sat. Closing 10:30 p m
SANFORD
ItOJ French Ave (H w y . 17 12)
3233480

CASSELBERRY
41 N . H w y. 17-02
•31-0180

,,

�2 3 — Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Tuetrtoy, T ib . IS. I5a.i

Mixed Cargo
For Ports
In Southeast
United Press International
The recession brought a mixed cargo to Southeastern ports
last year and the outlook for 1983 hinges on a general economic
recovery.
Phosphate and coal exports were torpedoed by the 1982
economic slump, but high-value container traffic Increased at
some ports.
While Charleston, S.C., had a 15.7 percent loss of general
cargo tonnage in the first six months of last year and had to lay
off 77 workers, the port in Jacksonville showed modest in­
creases in vehicle imports despite sagging auto sales.
"Traffic is down everywhere," said Rex Sherman of the
American Association of Port Authorities.
Southeastern ports tend to lag behind the general economy
and were buffered from the worst of the slump last year,
Sherman said, but better times for Dixie's docks are linked to
an improved economy.
South Florida’s Port of Miami and Port Everglades fared
____.better than mast because they have built-B.strong trade with
----- Cc/ilrah Alf/a
me Caribbean, Sherman s a l u r ”
Savannah. Ga.. and Charleston, on the other hand, are more
vulnerable because Sherman said they must solicit cargo from
as far away as the Mid-West.
Charleston's exports suffered as the recession put the
squeeze on the textile industry. For the last six months of 1982,
Charleston handled an estimated 445,000 tons of cargo, down
245,000 tons from the same period in 1981, according to the port
authority's Ann Molse.
About 260,000 tons of textiles were exported through Charles­
ton to China last year. That was down from previous years,
too, and Mrs. Molse said the Reagan administration's trade
cutback with China may hurt Charleston this year.
On a brighter note, Charleston is handling 1.9 million tons of
containerized cargo and is now the nation's 9th largest con­
tainer port.
"We think because of the recession, people are switching to
containers faster than they would otherwise," Mrs. Molse said.
Container tonnage at Wilmington, N.C., for instance, Jumped
to 503,000 tons last year, an increase of 76,000 tons. Bill Staver
of the North Carolina State Ports Authority credits
Wilmington's success to aggressive marketing and ship tur­
naround times of 6 to 8 hours.
I-ast fall, Wilmington handled 1,000 containers of tobacco for
Japan that in past years would have been shipped through
Virginia ports, he said.
Port Everglades handled 420,000 tons of container cargo last
year, up 95,000 tons, hut petroleum imports for distribution
throughout south Florida dropped 5 percent.
Port Everglades is a major port of call for ships from
Europe and the Mediterranean en route to Gulf of Mexico
points and spokesman Larry Dressier said the port is trying to
establish itself as a transshipment point for containers from
Europe to Central America.
Most of Tampa's cargo tonnage is phosphate products used
in fertilizer production and the port suffered from the con­
tinuing slump in central Florida's phosphate industry.
Tampa handled 45.3 million tons of cargo in 1981 — mostly
phosphates — and port spokesman Frank Clewis said unoffi­
cial figures show Tampa handled only 38 million tons last year.

U IO N O R T H H IG H W A Y 1 7 -tl
S O U TH O F F L E A W O R L D
F IR S T T R A F F IC L IG H T
____ N O R T H O F H IG H W A Y 4&gt;4 ACROSS F R O M H A N D Y W A Y .

S © NEW-USED F U R N IT U R E S
ANTIQUES
h
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LA YAW AY-W E DELIVER
O P E N 7 DAYS A W E E K 321-2063

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LA R G E POOL • A D U L T CLUB HOUSE
N E W IM P R O V E D L A U N D R Y F A C IL IT IE S
L IM IT E D LOTS A V A IL A B L E .
SR 427 SANFO RD, 2 M l. E. OF &gt;7-91
M O N .• F R I. f a.m . - 5 p.m. 323 8160

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H e r a ld A d v e r tis e r

BUSINESSON T H l MOVE •

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

Bostonians Scorn
Sleeping Pills
NEW YORK (UPI) — The view of some sociologists that
Americans are becoming more uniform in their tastes and
consumption habits is disputed rather startlingly by an expen­
sive survey done by Medlamark Research, Inc., of New York.
The study shows, for example, there are nearly twice as
many heavy smokers (nine packs a week or more) in New
York and Boston as in Washington; the consumption of hard
liquor in New York appears to be more than twice that of
people in Cleveland and Los Angeles, but New Yorkers don't
buy a lot of bourbon.
It also indicates that people in St. Louis are rather different
from most of the rest of the country. It's not Just that folks in
St. Louis eat only 43 percent as many kosher frankfurters as
the national average (New York eats the most, 353 percent of
the average) but the people in Mound City on the Mississippi
appear to be thrifty and conservative about everything. Only
Washingtonians are as conservative in their buying habits as
the St. Louis folk.
The jeans clothing fashion that has enthralled the nation for
the past two decades has had the least impact on both men and
women in St. Louis and Washington, although for men at least,
folks in Chicago, Philadelphia and Boston also seem to have
been less attracted to Jeans.
Alain J. Tessier, president of Medlamark Research, says his
annual survey 1s now four years old and runs to 20 volumes of
closely printed tables covering buying preference in most of
the markets in the country except in the deep South, and for
3.000 brands of 1,000 products.
The reason the South isn't yet adequately covered, Tessier
said, is that primary customers for the service have included
broadcast networks which own few stations in the South.
He said his firm used 550 interviewers and did more than
20.000 interviews last year. The survey, a wealth of
demographic and other marketing information, is sold to
advertisers, magazines and broadcasters with charges based
on advertising billings of the customers — perhaps $50,000 to
$200,000 for the biggest users.
Other curiosities revealed by the survey: Bostonians scorn
prescription sleeping pills; they buy only 27 percent as many
as most Americans. Bostonians also buy only 53 percent as
many Cadillacs as the national average while Washingtonians
buy 171 percent.
Many people think of Boston as a city with a huge Irish
population but it turns thumbs down on Irish whiskey, drinking
only 3(3 percent as much as the national average against 158
percent for New York. San Francisco would appear to be the
drinking capital of the country. It Is tops in consumption of
bourbon, gin, vodka and Irish.
Detroiters seem most involved in common stock investment
— 294 percent of the national average — residents of the
District of Columbia the least with only 50 percent. But
Washingtonians easily top the nation as investors in gold, other
precious metals or gems, 280 percent of the average, along
with Chicago. Again, St. Louis Is at the bottom in this category
with 40 percent of the national average.
Tessier told United P roa International he thinks, for both
advertisers and the media, the geographical differences In
buying preferences are far more Important than the dif­
ferences by sex or age.
Because the annual survey still is young, Tessier said it does
Ant yet reveal much in the way of year-to-year changes In
buying habits.
It sliould be remembered, he cautioned, that brand prefer­
ences are dictated to a very large extent by availability.
People can't easily prefer brand A In a city where it isn't
marketed much while Brands B and C are being pushed.

Business
Review

THE FURNITURE HOUSE

i

fo
n lo
v Umllip
ic tn
IL
M e n 's A nd W o m e n 's

Vera displays one of the attractive dresses to be found in her Vera's Attic con­
signment shop.

C om e To V e ra 's Attic For Bargain s
If you are looking for bargains in clothing for
the whole family come up to Vera’s Attic. It is a
new consignment shop located at 3816 Highway 1792 (at Lake Mary Boulevard) next to Winn-Dixie.
ITie owner-operator, Vera opened the store Nov.
4.1982 and already has more than 200 consignees.
A Sanford resident and homeowner Vera has a
large stock of quality new and pre-owned up-todate clothing at working girl’s prices, including
prelly formats for the prom.
She has a good selection of children’s clothing
from newborn to size 20 for both play, school and
dress.
Vera also has a large selection of famous brand
name dresses and new designer jeans for women
and men’s shirts, suits and ties. Expecting? Why
pay more, Vera has maternity dresses for less.
Vera’s Attic has the atmosphere of a small
boutique with a personalized touch. There is

MlE! JKL ENTERPRISES
L

Hail Cane

( D a ta Supplies D is trib u to r)
129 W A irp o rt B lvd S a n fo rd , F 1 323 -1416

A

3 x
4 x
4x
SX

f

[CATHY MOL LIC

PH. 3 2 2 -7 6 8 4

IS 16
1 7-16
MS-14
7-14

l-»Y X 11

Usings of p a ir
1411 F R E N C H A V E .

plenty of parking space.
Be sure to check out the special clearance racks
for blouses and slacks priced at $1.50 and up. She
also has women’s and children’s shoes.
Store hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday; 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.,
Thursday and Friday; and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
Saturday. For information call 321-2378. A
layaway plan is available.
Vera is always looking for new consignees with
clothing in current styles, being in "new” or "like
new” condition, from local individuals or
retailers.
Vera treats consignees right with no money
hassle. She offers consignees a 50-50 split, paid the
first five days of each month on items sold in the
month ending the 25th of the prior month.
After 30 days unsold clothing may be discounted
at Vera's discretion, but not necessarily.

••&gt;'1 x It

14-7, x 11

SA N FO R D

(Q uadt)
(S inglet)
(D oublet)
(S inglet)
(1 P e rl)
(2 P a ri)
(2 P a ri)

20,000-8*.
5,000. B *.
5,000-B l.
10,000-Bx.

S40.00-BX.
IS.OO-Bx.
35.00-Bx.
27.00-Bx.

3,500-Bx.
1,500-Bx.
1,500-Bx.

20.00 Bx.
2S.00 Bx.
32.00 Bx.

( W h ile Q u a n tit ie s L e s t )

CO U PO f
P H . ) ) 1-1004

G R A N D O P B N IN G

other

KELLY TIRE SALE

ROADMm ^ g
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l LUBE

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V
Arntrlun Cart |
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ithrlcatit* ana all
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PI,N *SH| | L
alia (kick Iran.
l *Cl UOiNG MAOS
tmittwi til.

$083

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83
ALIGNMENT

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FREE

*
1 PITCHER o f BEER OR SODA W ITH
.
'FOOD PURCHASE of *5“ OR M 0R Eo^ ( r i ,.V „ i
M . . . . . . . . . . C O U P O N .... . - . . . - 4
Allpn cattrr. cambtr
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includtd. Pnct cartri
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R&amp;E TIRE CO.

R o u t* 1. B o * 4)4. S o iilo rd , F lo .
On H w y . 1 7 - tt S outh o l F le a W o rld

N o t In
C o n ju n c tio n
W ith A n y
O lh o r Coupon

n o t Kmart
Plaia
Shopping
CW ltr
Sanford

2
323-1350

VOLKSHOP

SANFORD
SCHOOL OF
SELF DEFENSE

Specializing In S e rv ic e * Parts For
V .W .'s, Toyota and D a tiu n
(Corner 2nd A Palmetto)

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SANFORD
PHONE

STANLEY
STEEMER

321-0120

OPEN
M O N .. F R I. I f P . M .
I A T . 10 A M , . I J p . M

7 U W .1 ST ST.
S A N FO R D
^ 3 2 1 ,5 7 5 1

CLASSES FOR MEN
WOMEN CHILDREN

• SHAOLIN RUNG FU
• SELF DEFENSE
• M ARTIAL ARTS SUPPLIES
Brln® Thi* Ad for I FREE Latton

Telephone Systems

The carpet

P B X -K E Y -E L E C T R O N IC
Why Rent When You Can Buy?

cleaning
company

Y o u r S a v in g i O n Y e u r R tn t a l f a n P a *
v -..
|lm
T h a n 14 M o n th ..
F # f V o u r W H m In

women recommend.

Page Enterprises
Tele - Communications
331-2052

E tl. 1947

B u i lf l o f . . Tata phono P ro w lro
H o m o ■O tftc o ■A p V . C e m p lt i

Authorized

o liiftl L i k e T ill* &lt; io o tl O ld I h iy s

A p p tc a to r

Cell Todsyi
Sam lnola Co.
1
339-4969
Winter Parfc-MalUand 629-0202
O tter expires Feb. 2 8 ,1 9 8 3
O UR C O M M IT M E N T W e w ill Cleon a t m a ll m l ion
o4 jo u r d i r t i o t l c o rp o l o ro o II y o u a ra n o t c o m p to lo ly
ta h t f ie d , w e 'll le o v o , o f N O C H A R G E to you.

Connection
Antiques.

Collectibles . Crafts

ID Wttt kay Ant Lawpn ad. PI.
i SMand SlraH lawth Ot l on*wood Rail onto
Hawi: Taat. Sal It Aa* | PM (M llll

,/

�E vening H e ra ld S an f.ird, F l.

Business
Review

P re p a red by A d vertisin g D ept, of

E v e n in g H e r a ld

C

Herald Advertiser
A D V E R T IS IN G

NEW CONSIGNMENT SHOP!!
V » r« '» A t He. I l l * H w y 17 -n
C orner 1 M 1 A L i f c t M » ry S lv d . * *

SU C K S &amp; BLOUSES

*1

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M e s s y ' Is Best

CONSIGNMENTS
WEICOME
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LnTh« Winn Dixit Platt
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lb *

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&gt;

O h o m il l i t s O n le n o r s

Cj/ c .
F R E E Q U A L IT Y
C U SH IO N W IT H PU R C H A S E
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WE'VE MOVED!
OUR NEW ADDRESS IS...
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(10S) 110-4114

i

J

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERY
• FURNITURE * BOATS • CARS
Large Selection ol M aterial
Q uality Workmanship
Free Estim ates
Pree Pickup
And Delivery

490 N. 17-92
Next To Soblk's Sub Shop

LONGW OOD, FLA.
(305) 862-1600 .

Scnkarik Glass &amp; Paint, Sanford, has quality products and service.

Mon. ■ Fri. 8:00 A M - 4:00 PM

Senkarik Glass &amp; Paint
Is Fix-Up Headquarters
Let Senkarik Glass &amp; Paint Co. be your
headquarters for paint-up, fix-up time this Spring.
Located at 210 Magnolia Ave., Sanford, Senkarik
has been a paint and glass dealer here since 1943.
One of the most versatile paint and glass stores in
Central Florida, it has been synonymous with
quality and service in the Sanford area.
It specializes in all types of glass, including
table tops, custom residential glazing, mirrors,
glace replacement, storefront commercial and
auto glass. They also stock Plexiglas in four
thicknesses.
Senkarik carries a full line of nationally known,
and Sanford manufactured Pen Paints and
Benjamin Moore Paints for interior and exterior
jobs as well as all types of painting supplies,
brushes and rollers.
Jerry and Eddie Senkarik, who are carrying on
the tradition of service begun by their father and
store founder. John Senkarik, are always glad to

Dinger Signals ol Pinched Nerves:

give advice on painting and will be glad to
estimate the overall cost of materials needed to do
a job.
For any wood which must weather the outdoor
elements, they recommend McCloskey’s Man o’
War Ultra Spar Marine Varnish.
Do-il-ygurselfers will find the best of products
for easy furniture refinishing at Senkarik. You
can get a professional looking refinishing job or
restore old furniture, antiques and picture
frames.
Senkarik carries Benjamin Moore’s new latex
high gloss enamel, Impcrvcx. It is a tough durable
latex enamel designed for interior and exterior
use. It has excellent color and gloss retention and
is safe for children’s furniture and toys. Easily
applied with brush or spray it dries fast and has
no unpleasant odor. It stands up to hard wear and
repeated washings. Outdoors it can be used on
garden furniture and metal.

Med-Care Surgical
and
Respiratory Clinic
RENTALS &amp; SALES

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A tc r p trt f W illi f t . E m .
O ut O f Pocket Ee p en te t

©

Central Florida Wing Chun Kung-Fu Association
2415 Sanford Ave.
121 8455

322-3934

"T h e w a y y o u lo o k
£

us as It is to y o u ."

S a'e

.■e:

out**!*

W E N D Y W IL L IA M S

*heie
* * 0" . u reed
the-n f r.r./rs c erirt

S p e c ia l

6'ea*t“

o f th e M o n th

6

503 F R E N C H AVE.

HARDWARE

Phone OOS) 322-1155
505 E. First Street
Sanford, F la . 32771

S h o w u s a fe llo w w h o
d r e a m s o f a n o ld - fa s h io n e d ,
th r e e - d a y s n o w s to r m
and
w e 'l l la y o d d s h e w o r k s f o r
o n e o f ' th e h e a tin g g a s
c o m p a n ie s .

S P E C IA L IS TS IN
A U T O M O B IL E IN S U R A N C E
SR32's F IL E D

a &amp; H E I l f c ____________________ J B B I M

i [ OJ&amp; z 'L p a m /iz iz cl J2 o o k
n n A L in

GRAND
OPENING

r r-

r\
SECOND
ANNIVERSARY

P a m p e red Look

P a m p e re d Look

Consignment
Boutique

BEA U TY
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N e w A L ik e N ew
L in g e rie A S uits
Lo n g A S ho rt D resses
S w e a te rs
P urses
Shoes
A nd M uch
M o re

]S

»2250
Appointment
Not Always
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y u ,J IM LASH'S BUIE BOOK CARS

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E X P IR E S 1-1M 1

E v e r y o n e s h o u ld h a y e a
h e a rin g te st at le a s t on ce a
y e a r if th e re i t a n y tro u b le at
a l l h e a r in g c le a r ly . E v e n
p e op le n o w w e a rin g a h e a rin g
a id o r th o se w h o h a v e be en to ld
n o th in g c o u ld be do ne to r th e m
c a n fin d o u t a b o u t th e la te s t
m e th o d s o l h e a rin g c o r r tc
lio n s
T n t fre e h e a rin g te st w ill be
g iv e n M o n d a y th ru F r id a y —
th is w e e k a t th e C a s s e lb e rry
o ffic e a no M o n d a y a t th e
S a n fo rd lo c a tio n C a ll th e
n u m b e r b e lo w an d a rra n g e fo r
an a p p o in tm e n t, o r d ro p In a t
y o u r c o n v e n ie n ce

4114 Hwy. 17-92 Between Sanford &amp; Longwood
Call For Appointment

830*6688

M o n .F ri. I a m .-5:30 p.m. S at.la.m .-1 p m .

GO

Serving Sanford lor 27 Years
O P E N M O N .T H R U F R I.9 -5

B L A IR

PH ON E

323-7710 or 323-3866
2510A O A K AVE. SANFORD
Corner of $. Park Ave. A Oak

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321*0741

AREA

A n y o n e w h o h a s t r o u b le
h e a rin g o r u n d e rs ta n d in g is
w e lc o m e lo h a v e a te s t u sin g
th e la te s t e le c tro n ic e q u ip m e n t
to d e te rm in e h is o r h e r p a r
tic u ia r loss

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b y th e
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w ill b t a t th e se o ffic e s ' lo
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COLD W A V E
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^

NEW YORK (UPI) — Corporate slobs take heart. A dean
desk is not rtecessarily the sign of a tidy mind or an efficient
worker.
"The fact is it's a sign of a compulsive mind — one that’s
insecure if anything is out of place,” said Industrial psy­
chologist Krass Kestln.
Robert Kelly, senior vice president for Paul B. Mulligan &amp;
Co„ a management consulting firm specialising in white-collar
productivity, has been In hundreds of executive offices during
his career.
"There are very few clean, clean desks I've seen," he said.
"It's pretty rare to find that clean, clean desk — as opposed to
the organised but not clean desk and to the disorganized, un­
clean."
UJy desk Is "nut a p r a ^ u u i i e ' 'An produc­
tivity, said Dr. Theodore Niedegard, a psychologist at Cabrini
Hospital, who admits there's "a lot of stuff on my desk and it
pretty much stays that way."
"Someone who focuses on keeping the desk clean, every­
thing filed away, may not be focusing on getting the Job done,"
he suggested.
The ability to focus within apparent clutter may be one of the
keys to differentiating the productive pack-rat from someone
who has simply lost control of his or her surroundings, some
experts suggested.
"Have you ever taken a look ot tiie desks on police shews like
Hill Street Blues?" asked Kelly. “There's disorganisation, and
files that aren't important are on the desk. But they keep the
priority stuff in a little space perhaps 2 feet by 2 feet right in
front of them. That's what's hot today, what they're working
on. They're concentrating on one thing at a time.
"You can have several stacks pn your desks," Kelly added.
"They can be prioritized, or in disarray so you really don’t
know what the heck is important or what isn't."
Kelly is a stack person himself, going through his piles of
paper every Friday afternoon and reorganising them. "The
prioritisation runs from right to left — that's just a quirk of
mine because I’m lefthanded, I guess," he said. “The stack
toward the right would be the most important."
Kestin, a consultant to Emhart Corporation’s human
resources department, says a moderately messy desk is
nearest the norm. "What’s Important is to know where things
are, no m atter how great the clutter, so you don't have to waste
time looking for them," he said.
While having a clean desk may not be a priority for a
productive person, he or she also recognizes when the clutter
has approached the point of no return, Niedegard said. "Some­
one who's well organized knows where that point Is, and when
things get near that point, the priority of getting some things
off the desk moves up a bit."
Kelly admitted if he saw an entire department filled with
cluttered desks he might have a suspicion "of potential Inef­
fectiveness In the operation," but added, "you can’t look at one
desk and form an opinion."
"1 think on the ether hand, when you see the totally clear
desk you sometimes wonder whether that person has enough to
do," he said.
"Really and truly the appearance of a desk is not at all
always an indicator. Some people feel comfortable working in
that kind of (cluttered) environment. Others do it because they
don’t know what the devil they’re doing."
Kestin said creative people are particularly notorious for
desk clutter. "Other things are more Important to them than
appearances," he said. "That’s why some of them go around
looking like unmade beds."
With changing office technology, more and more paperwork
Is now being filed away electronically, suggesting the
possibility of a new office phenomenon — the cluttered com­
puter.
"If you’re disorganized you’re disorganized." warned Kelly.
"It doesn't m atter If you’re disorganized on the desk or
disorganized In a hidden place.”

U.S. Airlines
Turn To Foreign
Plane Builders
NEW YORK (UPI) — The growing commuter airlines are
turning to foreign manufacturers for planes American build­
ers are reluctant to produce.
An ever bigger share of the market Is going to non-U.S. firms
partly because the foreign manufacturers are governmentowned and are at least marginally subsidized, but more im­
portantly because some U.S. manufacturers don’t want to
gamble on the commuter lines' viability.
The foreign manufacturers are willing to take the risk
building aircraft In the 30-to 50-passenger range. With the
exception of Fairchild Swearingen of San Antonio, the
American makers, Beech, Cessna and Piper, prefer to stick lo
smaller aircraft that can be used either as private executive
planes or as smaller commuter liners, carrying up to 20
passengers, says Eliot Fled, an aircraft industry analyst for
Shearson-American Express, the Wall Street house.
Fried said these American companies fear the commuter
airlines are not well enough financed and the market will not
be large enough to Justify going into the bigger planes.
Nor do the American makers of big airliners seem inclined
lo drop down Into the commutcrplane field.
This leaves the narket for commuter liners in the 30-to 50passenger range to such firms as Short Brothers, Ltd., a
British government-owned manufacturer in Northern Ireland,
Canada's DeHavllandCo-.Fokker of Holland and Embraer of
Brazil.
Fairchild Swearingen has a joint venture with Saab of
Sweden to build a new 30-to 35-passenger airliner to compete
with the bigger foreign commuter planes. Fairchild also is
carrying the fight to Embraer. It has been vigorously pressing
a proceeding before the International Trade Commission
accusing Brasil of flagrantly subsidizing exports of the
Embraer 120 to the United States.
Shearson-American Express's Fried said the commuter
aircraft market is largely in the United States. The absence at
this time of a foreign market for such planes could be another
reason American makers are not very' Interested.
The current growth of the commuter airline business stems
front deregulation of the domestic airline industry. The
question is how long the growth will last and how viable
commuter lines using the bigger planes will prove to be.
Beech, Cessna and Piper obviously have their fingers crossed
and believe the smaller planes they are making might
ultimately be the best bet for the commuter lines.
But the more aggressive commuter airlines are buying the
foreign planes. They say they have no choice; they have been
unable to get the American firms to build them bigger planes,
h ied said it is obvious the foreign commuter aircraft are
subsidised to some extent — "They’re not going lo tell you by
how much."

27tlSe. Orlande Dr.
170 5a. Hwy. 17-fl
Casselberry
1)4 1774

t Diili.-uit Hieathmg
5 io*er Rack Pam
M.p Pam
t’ai" Do*n i eg*

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

...
•
l2 d -3 /O J

Tuesday. F eb. I J . J t S l - ^ B

IN S U R E D

SCOTCHOARD C AR P E T PRO TECTOR
F A M IL Y O W N E D A N D O P E R A T E D

S

�4B— Evening H erald, Sanlord, F I.

Tuesday. Feb. 1$, IV83

Pawnbrokers
Seeing Higher
Class Clientele

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

32— Houses Unfurnished

18—H elp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

S E C R E T A R Y t y p is t
and
U N IT E D S T A T E S D IS T R IC T
g e n e ra l o ffic e w o rk fo r elec
C O U R T M ID D L E O IS T R IC T O F
N AM E LAW
- Iro n ic m a n u fa c tu re r. 2 y r * .
F L O R IO A O R L A N D O D IV IS IO N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
C o m m u n ity C o lle g e , S y rs .
C O U R T N O : S t-4 4 9 -C IV -O R L -E K
th a t Ih e u n d e rs ig n e d , d e tlr ln g to
e x p e rie n c e . C o n ta c l 323 7750
U N IT E D S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A ,
en ga ge in bu sin e s s
u n d e r Ih e
P la ln lltr , v * C L - T O W N S E N D
fic titio u s n a m e o l B A R N E Y 'S
J O IN N u m b e r I b e a u ty c o m ­
and J O S E P H IN E T O W N S E N O .
BAR B Q a t n u m b e r 455 E a s t S ta le
p a n y . S e ll A v o n In o p e n
his w ile , a n d G L O R IA B R Y A N T ;
R oad 4 ) t, in th e C ity o l A lta m o n te
te r r ito r ie s . 323-0414; 223-1471;
and
GENERAL
F IN A N C E
Itlm e
................
54c a line
S p rin g s F lo r id a . In te n d s to
171-3414.
C O R P O R A T IO N O F F L O R ID A
3 consecutive tim es . 54c a line
re g is te r th e s a id n e m e w ith th e
D e le n d a n t(s ). N O T IC E O F
C le rk of th e C irc u it C o u rl o l
7 consecutive tim es .44c a lina
E A R N S 3 7 S (f) w o rk in g p a rt,
8:30 A .M . — 5:30 P .M .
S A L E — N o tic e Is h e re b y g iv e n
S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a .
10 consecutive lim es 42c a line
lim e w e e k ly . S e v e ra l p o s itio n s
th a t p u rs u a n t lo a S u m m a ry F in a l
M
O
N
D
A
Y
thru
F
R
I
O
A
Y
D a te d a t P a lm B e a ch , F lo rid a ,
a v a ila b le Im m e d ia te ly In F la .
(2.00 M inim u m
D ecree o f F o re c lo s u re e n te re d on
By CANDEE WILDE
S A T U R D A Y 9 - Noon
Ih ls 10th d a y o l F e b ru a ry , 194).
a re a F o r d e ta il! a n d ap
3 Lines M inim u m
D e c e m b e r 2, 1947 by th e a b o ve
BAR N W ELL D O YLE
EN­
United P re » International
p lic a tio n send s ta m p e d , s e lfe n title d C o u rt in Ihe a b o v e cause,
T E R P R IS E S , IN C . •
a d d re s s e d e n v e lo p e to : C L Box
The Reagan administration may be seeing signs of an
th e u n d e rs ig n e d U n ite d S ta tes
D E A D L IN E S
B Y : s B A B a rn w e ll
400W. Ith a c a , N .Y . 14IS3.
M a rs h a l, o r one o l h is d u ly
economic recovery, but Southern pawnbrokers are seeing a
T. G ra l B u c k e n m a le r. J r.
Noon The Day Before Publication
a u th o rlie d d e p u tie s , w ill s e ll th e
A tto rn e y lo r A p p lic a n t
P A R T T IM E W o rk tr o m hom e.
higher c I b s s clientele trading quality merchandise for quick
Sunday - Noon Friday
p r o p e r ty s it u a t e In S e m in o le
Saleeby R e n tie r, P .A .
P hone P ro g ra m . E a rn 4251100
cash.
C o u n ty, F lo rid a , d e s c rib e d a s : L o t
M
o
n
d
a
y
-5
:3
0
P.M
,
Friday
1ST S ou th C o u n ty R oad
p e r w ee k. F le x ib le h rs . F u lle r
)
,
W
A
S
H
IN
G
T
O
N
H
E
IG
H
T
S
,
‘i t might be getting better for the government, but its not
P a lm B e a ch , F lo rid a 114K)
B ru s h .
a c c o rd in g to Ihe p la l th e re o f as
P u b lis h : F e b IS, 22, M a rc h 1, «.
C a ll 844 7704 o r * 3 1 1097
getting any better for the people,” said Ellis Berlin, owner of
re c o rd e d in P la l Book 3, P ag e 37,
194)
Berlin’s Pawn Shop In Charlotte, N.C. "People are pawning
of th e P u b lic R e c o rd s of S e m in o le
= = 1
D E E 107______________
C o u n ty . F lo rid a a t p u b lic o u tc ry to
4— Personals
18-t H b Ip Wanted
stuff they normally wouldn’t pawn."
21—Situations Wanted
th e h ig h e s t a n d best b id d e r to r
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
Pawnshops offer a unique barometer of the economic
cash a t 17 o 'c lo c k noon on
F O R P E R M IT
IM P R O V E Y O U R F U N L IF E
L P N s p e c ia liz in g In H o m e
climate because they not only offer loans, they also resell
The S I. John s R iv e r W a te r T u esd ay. M a rc h t, 194) a l th e W est
T Y P I S T ..............$3.50 hr.
C o m p a n io n s lo r a ll occa sion s
H e a lth C a r* . R eas, ra le s . 377*
M a n a g e m e n t D is tr ic t has re c e iv e d do o r o l Ihe S em in o le C ou nty
merchandise used as collateral on loans that were never
c a ii)3 i9 3 j;
5744 L k . M a r y A S a n fo rd a re a .
A c c u ra te ty p in g , m u s t Ira n an a p p lic a tio n to r c o n s u m p tiv e C ou rtho use , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a
repaid.
R e fe re n ce s b e fo r e * p m . 312
s c rib e , Go re p o rts , so m e phone
D a te d J a n u a ry 1), 1983
w a te r use fro m :
0131. 372 7744. 44* 50*1
And to pawnbrokers, the heavy demand for loans and a
w « rk , ra is e s , e x c e lle n t c o m ­
R IC H A R D L C O X , J R .
1. M . L . M a r tin a n d B. F.
s—Lost &amp; Found
H a v e s o m e c a m p in g e q u ip m e n t
pany.
W h e e le r, J r., P. 0 . B o * 214,
U N IT E D S T A T E S M A R S H A L
generally slow resale of unclaimed goods indicate one thing:
you no lo n g e r u s *7 S ell It *11
AAA E M P LO Y M E N T
M ID D L E D IS T R IC T O F
O
v
ie
d
o
,
F
lo
r
id
a
J274S,
A
p
Times arje still tough.
_
w ith a C la s s ifie d A d In T h *
.« &gt; » F re n c h A v * ______ Y t v jt T *
*——
-pHcatiowr,‘iv. 28781 ara N o. atitta- . T-LCa IDA
When m cacy gwl*tig h t, low Income people arc the first *£- on J a n u a ry 1, 1977. The a p p lic a n t H U B E R T W. M E R K L E
-J22 24I1 o r *31
w e a rin g a b ro w n c o lla r. A n
4443 en d a fr ie n d ly a d v is o r
s w e r * to F r o s t y . C o n ta c t
proposes to w ith d r a w .415 m g d U N IT E D S T A T E S A T T O R N E Y
seek the loan services of a pawn broker.
C O N S T R U C T IO N W O R K . A ll
w ilt h e lp you.__________________
g ro u n d w a te r fr o m th e F lo rid a n M I D D L E
H u m a n e S o c ie ty. R e w a rd .
D IS T R IC T
OF
phases. Im m e d ia te w o rk , good
"I would say up until the last six months, the people were
A q u ife r v ia tw o I " w e lts a n d one F L O R ID A
272- 4401.
p a y . 474 4094.
lower to middle class,” said Martha Elland, manager of Bell
28—Apts. &amp; Houses
10" w e ll lo Ir r ig a te 110 a c re s o l P u b lis h J a n u a ry 2S A F e b ru a ry 1,
Street Pawn Shop in Montgomery, Ala. But for many of those
c llr u s In S e m in o le C o u n ty lo c a te d 4. IS, 194)
E X P . p lu m b e rs w a n te d , a p p ly a t
____
To Share________
6—Child
Care
In S ections 17 an d 18, T o w n sh ip O E D 4 J ___________
R e p u b lic M e c h ., 1701 S ilv e r
customers, making ends meet has been a losing battle that
21S. R an ge )7 E .
L e k e R d ., S a n fo rd . 371 2375.
C O U N T R Y H o m e to s h a re , non
N O T IC E
finally squeezed the frills from their lives, leaving them with
7. W h e e le r, M a r lin a n d E vans.
B A B Y S IT T IN G m y h o m e .
s m o k e rs , re fe re n c e s . S p lit u lll.
O F S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
nothing of value to offer.
P. 0 . B o * 214, O v ie d o , F lo rid a
H r * . A d a y s . Ile x . R a le s neg.
&amp; re n t. MS 444 4014.
F U R N I T U R E d e liv e r y m e n
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
32745.
A
p
p
lic
a
tio
n
s
N
o
78774
an
d
G
a
ll
371
1177
One shop owner said the poor are "pawned out."
lh a l by v ir tu e o f th a t c e rta in W r it
w a n te d .
E x p e r ie n c e
No. l i i l i . o n J a n u a ry I , .1971. The
ot E x e c u tio n issued o u t o f and
p re fe rre d . C h a u ffe u r lice n s e
But pawnbrokers aren't running short of customers. The
W IL L b a b y s it in m y h o m e d a y s
29— Rooms
a p p lic a n t p ro p o s e * to w ith d re w
u n d e r th e seal o f Ih e C ir c u it C o u rt
re q u ire d . 373 *372.
extended recession and rising unemployment have just altered
an d eves.
.1)0 m g d g ro u n d w a te r fr o m Ih e
ot S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a , upon
F lo rid a n A q u ife r v ia tw o 4 " /e lls
32i 5*15
the profile of today's pawnshop customer.
a fin a l ju d g e m e n t re n d e re d In th »
C asa M ia P i m r l a
K IT C H E N fa c ilitie s SS0 w k l&gt; .
to ir r ig a te SS a c re s ot c itru s In
a fo re s a id c o u rt on th e 14th d a y of
More and more frequently, new faces are finding their way
W a itre s s w a n te d . A p p ly In
L a d y p re fe rre d .
I
w
ill
d
o
b
a
b
y
s ittin g In m y h o m e
O rang e a n d S e m in o le C o u n tie s
J a n u a ry , A .D ., 194). In th a t c e rta in
3127*74
p e rso n . 323 3004
to the loan window — offering antiques, jewelry, cameras and
o ff L k . M e r y B lv d . (fe n ce d
lo ca te d in S e ctio n 4, T o w n s h ip 22S,
c a t* e n title d . A llr e d E llin g to n and
y a rd ) C a ll a tt. S, 373 *491.
R a n g * 37E , a n d In S e ctio n 33,
guns when they discover the checking account balance won't
A lic e W. E llin g to n , P ia ln lltt , -vsS A N F O R D , R eas. M e e k ly A
H E L P w a n te d In o ffic e . F u ll
T o w n sh ip 7IS , R a n g * 32E.
C h a lle n g e . In c . o l N e v a d a , at *1,
cover the bills.
m o n th ly ra le s U til inc e ft. 500
tim e . N o fx p e r ie n c * needed.
The G o v e rn in g B o a rd o f Ih e
D
e
fe
n
d
a
n
t,
w
h
ic
h
a
fo
re
s
a
id
W
r
it
"Our business is creeping up the economic ladder," said Ira
C e ll 429 4094
O ak A d u lts . 1 *41 781).
D is tric t w ill ta k e a c tio n to g ra n t o r
6A iH ealth&amp; Beauty
of E x e c u tio n w a s d e liv e re d to m e
deny th e a p p lic a tio n s on M a rc h I ,
Katz, owner of Southern Pawn Shop In Roanoke, Va.
as S h e riff o l S e m in o le C ou nty,
S A N F O R D fu rn is h e d ro o m s by
198) a t St. John s R iv e r W a te r
F lo rid a , e n d I h a v e le v ie d up o n th *
"There’s been more white collar people coming in," agreed
D E L IV E R Y W o rk . W ill tr a in .
TRY
D A V IS Q u ic k
r a lle f
th e w e e k . R e a so n a b le ra te s
M a na ge m en t
D is tr ic t
f
o
llo
w
in
g
d
e
s
c
r
ib
e
d
p
r
o
p
e
r
t
y
Good s ta r tin g p a y . Im m e d ia te
Alex Alper, owner of Alper's Loan Office in Chattanooga,
lin im e n t fo r y o u r ache s an d
M e ld s e r v ic e , c a t e r in g to
H e a d q u a rte rs , S tate H ig h w a y 100 ow ned b y D o u g la s L . B e e k m a n ,
w o rk . C a ll 479 4094.
p a in s . N one b e tte r. S30S494.
w o rk in g p e o p le . U n fu rn is h e d
W est, P a la tk a , F lo rid a , a t 5:00
Tenn. "The rent comes due and the electric bill comes due, and
said p ro p e rty b e in g lo c a te d In
a p a rtm e n ts 1 a n d 2 b e d ro o m s ,
p
m
.
S
hould
yo
u
be
in
te
re
s
te
d
In
they are short of money."
S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a , m o re
372-4507, 500 P a lm e tto A v *.
these a p p lic a tio n s , you s h o u ld
E
L
D
E
R
L
Y
la
d
y
to
llv
e
-ln
w
ith
p a r tic u la r ly d e s c rib e d a t fo llo w s ;
18—Help Wanted
Ms. Eiland, who said "almost anyone" is likely to be a
c o n ta ct th e S t. J o h n * R iv e r W a te r
e
ld
e
rly
g
e
n
tle
m
a
n
as
a
house­
Lo t 72, B L O C K A , N O R T H
C O M F O R T A B L E I b d rm . no
customer, added many are "embarrassed. They're willing to
M a n a g e m e n t D is tr ic t * t P. 0 . Box
k e e p e r p re fe r s om e on e w h o
O R L A N D O T E R R A C E . S E C T IO N
M A T U R E c a rin g la d y to be live p e ts . 870 w k . plu s u til. 1200 sec.
1429,
P
a
la
tk
a
,
F
lo
rid
a
32071
1479.
c a n d riv e . 377-1410.
take anything we offer. They tell us why they are doing this,
S o t U N IT 7, a c c o rd in g to th e P la t
In c o m p a n io n f o r e ld e r ly
dep C a ll 371 4447.
o r In pe rso n at Its o ffic e on S ta le
th e re o f, a t re c o rd e d In P la t Book
m o th e r: R o o m , b o a ra , s m a ll
like they have a utility bill to pay. We don’t require any ex­
H ig h w a y 100 W e s t, P a la tk a .
I* . P ages 9 A 10 ot th e P u b lic
s a la ry . M u s t d r iv e o w n c a r.
S H E E T M E T A L ..$ 5 hr.
planation."
F lo r id a , 904 )7 8 8 )7 1 . W r it t e n
30-Apartments Unfurnished
R e c o rd s o f S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Send re s u m e a n d re fe re n c e s to
o b lrc tio n to th e a p p lic a tio n m a y be
M u s i h a v e b lu e p rin t e x p e rie n c e ,
F
lo
rid
a
.
D
a
u
g
h
te
r
,
P
.O
B
o
x
44,
The only real requirement pawnbrokers have is that the item
m ade, b u t s h o u ld b e re c e iv e d no
la y o u t d u c t w o rk . M u s t use
D e B a ry , F la . 3771).
and th e u n d e rs ig n e d as S h e riff o t
7 B D R M . o n q u ie t SI. 4770 M o .
be of some value, so if the terms of the loan — typically $2S to
la te r th a n 14 d a ys fr o m th e d a te ot
b ra k e s a n d sh e a rs. E x c e lle n t
S em in o le C o u n ty, F lo rid a , w ill at
p lu s 4770 s e c u rity D ep N o
p u b lic a tio n o f Ih ls n o tic e . W ritte n
W
A
N
T
E
D
o
y
s
fa
r
(50, plus an average IS percent monthly Interest — are not
c
o
m
p
a
n
y
needs
noVv.
11 0 0 A M . o n Ih e 2nd d a y of
pe ts. 377 4407 o r 344 5444.
o b je c tio n s s h o u ld I d e n t if y th e
s
h
u
c
k
e
rs
,
w
ill
AAA E M P LO Y M E N T
M a rc h . A D. 194), o tte r fo r s a le
met, the money lenders can recover the cash by selling the
o b je c to r by n a m e an d a d d re ss , and and s e ll to th e h ig h e s t b id d e r, to r
(ra in . 377 7407.
1917 F re n c h A v e .
323-5174
N IC E L Y fu rn is h e d I B d rm . 4 p t.
merchandise.
fu lly d e s c rib e th e o b je c tio n to Ih e cash, s u b je c t to a n y a n d a ll
c a rp e te d , p a n e lle d , a ll u t ililie s
a p p lic a tio n . ( F i l i n g a w r it t e n
L
A
B
O
R
E
R
S
.
N
o
e
x
p
e
r
ie
n
c
e
G IR L F R ID A Y to r I g i r l o ffic e ,
e x is tin g lie n s , a t Ih e F ro n t (W e s i)
fu r n is h e d , 7 B lo c k s fr o m
Several of the pawnbrokers said the new, higher class
o b je c tio n does n o t e n title you to a D oo r a t th e steps o f th e S e m in o le
needed F u ll lim e go od p a y .
ty p in g a n d to m e b o o k ke e p in g
d o w n to w n . S in g le o n ly , n o p e lt
C
h
a
p
te
r
120,
F
lo
rid
a
S
ta
tu
te
s,
S
ta
rt
r
ig
h
t
a
w
a
y
.
479
4094.
customers are more likely to return for their belongings after
s k ills . G o o d s a la r y a n d
C ou nty C o u rth o u se In S a n lo rd ,
o r c h ild re n 4775 M o , 307 O a k
A d m in is t r a t iv e H e a r in g : o n ly
b e n e fits . 27 ) 1490.
F lo r id a , th e a b o v e d e s c r ib e d
several months.
A v e . a ft 5.
those pe rso ns w hose s u b s ta n tia l
R E A L p ro p e rty .
In te re sts a re a fle c ie d b y th e ap
G O V E R N M E N T JO BS
"The redempton percentage looks a little better," said
T h a t s a id sale is be in g m a d e to
M a r in e r 's V illa g e o n L a k e A d a . I
p lic a tio n an d w h o file a p e titio n s a tis fy th e te rm s of s a id W r it of
T h ousan ds o f v a c a n c ie s m u s t be
Alper. “It’s up 8 to 10 percent."
b d rm Ir o m 424S. 7 b d rm fro m
m e e tin g th e r e q u ir e m e n ts o l E x e c u tio n
tille d Im m e d ia te ly . $17,434 to
4300. L o c a te d 17 97 ju s t so u th
S e c tio n 28 5.701. F .A .C . m a y o b ta in
tSO,117.
C
a
ll
71*
147
4000.
John E . P o lk .
N O T IC E O F
ot A ir p o r t B lv d . In S a n lo rd . A ll
Chuck Murray, manager of Albert’s Pawn, Buy or Sale Shop
an a d m in is tra tiv e h e a rin g .) A ll
Ext. 7449.
S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
S h e riff
A d u lts . 373 *470
tim e ly tile d w ritte n o b le c ilo n * w ill
in Orlando, Fla., said his store "averaged between 80 and 90
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
S e m in o le C o u n ty, F lo rid a
be p re s e n te d to the B o a rd lo r Its P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 4, 1), 72. A th a t by v ir tu e o t th a t c e rta in W r it
percent" of reclaimed pawn tickets.
I,
7 A N D 3 C D R M F ro m 4770
S E C R E T A R Y ..$225w k.
c o n s id e ra tio n In Its d e lib e ra tio n on M a rc h 1 w ith Ih e sale on M a rc h 7, ot E x e c u tio n issued o u l o l and
R id g e w o o d A rm s A p r 7540
Ih
e
a
p
p
lic
a
tio
n
p
r
io
r
lo
th
e
P
o
e
rd
In s u ra n c e b a c k g r o u n d , t h o r
u n d e r th e seal o l Iha C o u n ty C o u rl
194)
"I think in the last few weeks it has picked up, with custom­
R id g e w o o d A v e . 37) 4420
ta k in g a c lio n on th e a p p lic a tio n . D E E SO
th a n d . e x c e lle n t ty p in g . 75
of S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo rid a , upon
ers picking their items up," agreed Ms. Elland. "For a while,
V ic k i W . C u rtis
w o rd s
a fin a l ju d g e m e n t re n d e re d In th e
P a rk A v e ., 3 b d rm . g a ra g e , p e ls ,
S enior R e c o rd s T e c h n ic ia n
it was real slow."
U N IT E D S T A T E S D IS T R IC T
AAA E M P LO Y M E N T
a fo re s a id c o u rl on Ih a 74th d a y o l
k id s . 4750. F e e 3)97700
D iv is io n o f R e cords
C O U R T M ID D L E D IS T R IC T O F
1917 F re n c h A v e .
*13-1174
D e c e m b e r, A .D ., 19*1, In th a t
4 a v -O n R e n ta ls , In c . R e a d e r
St. Johns R iv e r W a te r
Most people pawn small "disposable or personal" items, like
F L O R ID A O R L A N D O D IV IS IO N
c e rta in case e n title d , C a sce ito n
M a n a g e m e n t D is tric t
C O U R T N O ; 81 -41 1-O R L -C IV -E K
C o rn e rs, L T D ., a F lo rid a lim ite d
china, televisions, radios and stereos. But pawnbrokers see
E N J O Y c o u n try liv in g ? 7 B d rm ,
E A R N E x tr a m o n e y lo r
P u b lis h : F e b . IS, 194)
D E E -97 —
U N IT E D
STATES OF
p a rtn e rs h ip . P la in t iff, vs P A G
D u p le x A p t s , O ly m p ic s i.
their share of big ticket items, as well as an occasional glimpse
y o u r g ro c e ry re c e ip ts .
A M E R IC A . P ia ln llt t , - v s J A M E S
A s so c ia te d , In c .. D e fe n d a n t, w h ic h
p o o l S h e n a n d o a h V illa g e
C a ll 32) 1202 o r 37)0141
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
of the bizarre.
B E L L , J R . an d C L E M M IE M A E
a fo re s a id W r it ot E x e c u tio n w a s
O pen 9 to 6 J 73 7970
O R A N O E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
B E L L , h is w ife . D e le n d a n t(s ). — d e liv e re d to m e as S h e riff or
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
"I don't think a day goes by that we don’t get a call to take in
G O V E R N M E N T JO BS
N O T IC E O F S A L E — N o tic e is S em in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a , a n d I
O E N E V A OARDENS
F ile N u m b e r PR 13-144
V a r io u s p o s itio n s a v a ila b le
h e re b y g iv e n th a t p u rs u a n t to a ha ve le v ie d up on th e fo llo w in g
an automobile, which we can’t do," said Katz. "We had one
1 B d rm . A p ts . 4745 M o .
D iv is io n P ro b a te
th
r
o
u
g
h
lo
c
a
l
g
o
v
e
r
n
m
e
n
t
F in a l D e c re e o l F o re c lo s u re en
d e s c rib e d p ro p e rty ow n ed b y P A G
M o n . th r u F r l. 9 a . m . f o lp . m .
inquiry about pawning a burial plot."
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
a g e n cie s. 570,000 to SSO.OOO
te re d o n D e c e m b e r 10, 1917 by Ihe A ssocia tes, In c ., s a id p ro p e rty
ISOSW. 15th St.
317 7090
EVA N. PROUD.
p
o
te
n
tia
l.
C
a
ll
(re
fu
n
d
a
b
le
)
(ab ove e n title d C o u rt in th e above
be in g lo c a te d In S e m in o le C ou nty,
A Myrtle Beach, S.C., pawnbroker said he recently refused a
D eceased
(419 ) 549 *304 d e p t. FL 174 fo r
cause, th e u n d e rs ig n e d U n ite d
LU XU R Y
APARTM ENTS
F lo r id a ,
m o ra
p a r t ic u l a r ly
set of dentures from a cash-hungry customer. "We do buy
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
y o u r 1942 d ire c to ry . 74 h rs .
S ta les M a rs h a l, o r one o f M s d u ly
F a m il y A A d u lt s s e c tio n
d e s c rib e d as fo llo w s :
TO
A
L
L
P
E
R
S
O
N
S
H
A
V
IN
G
teeth that have gold in them, but not just a plain set of false
a u th o rlie d d e p u tie s , w ill s e ll th e
Pools&gt;de. 7 B d rm s . M a s te r
A s s o rte d B a k e ry E q u ip m e n t and
C L A IM S
OR
DEMANDS
p r o p e r ty s it u a t e in S e m in o le
C ove A p ts 17) 7900 O pen on
teeth," said Sonny White.
F u rn itu re ta k e n fro m th * de ten
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
SALES R E P .......... comm.
C o u n ty , F lo rid a , d e s c rib e d as T h *
w e e ke n d s
d a n t's p la c e o l b u sin e s s : G a llo
AN D A L L O TH E R PERSONS
N o rth 79 le e t o f L o ts I a n d 7. less
B r o th e r s O a k e r y , 1017 N o r th
Murray said his wife's phobia kept him from dealing with
A
d
v
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r
t
i
s
i
n
g
b
a
c
k
g
r
o
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n
d
,
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
th e W est 74 te e t o t L o t I S e m o ra n B lv d , W in te r P a r k ,
h e lp fu l, b u l w ill tr a in , ex
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
one customer.
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
W A S H IN G T O N H E IG H T S , ac
F lo rid a in c lu d in g b u t not lim ite d
c e tle n t m o n e y to b e m a d e . G as
BOARDS A R E
G REATN O T IF IE D
th a t
Ih e
ada llo w a n c e p r o v id e d , p e r"He didn’t pawn it, but a guy brought in a boa constrictor. He m in is tra tio n o t th e e s ta te ot E V A c o rd in g to th e P la l (h e re o f as to :
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
ARE
re c o rd e d In P la t Book 3, P a g e 37,
m o rie n t.
2 ea B a k e ry Show Cases, a p
E V E N B E T T E R _______________
N . P R O U D , d e c e a s e d . F ile
wanted (25, but we didn’t take it. My wife is paranoid when it
o( th e P u b lic R e c o rd s o l S e m in o le p ro * . 5 V x 4' x 2Vy*
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
N u m b e r PR 43 144 , is p e n d in g in
O E O R O IA A R M S A P T S .
C ou nty, F lo rid a a t p u b lic o u tc ry to
comes to snakes. Good thing she was in the back room."
I ea L a rg e C o o le r. B U IL T IN ,
1917 F re n c h A v * .
373-5174
th e C ir c u it C o u rt fo r O ra n g e
A p p lic a tio n s n o w b e in g ta k e n fo r
th e h ig h e s t a n d best b id d e r lo r
w ith c o o lin g u n it a n d lo u r g la s s
C o u n ty , F lo rid a , P ro b a te D iv is io n ,
b e a u tifu l, n e w I a n d 2 b d rm
cash a t 17 o 'c lo c k no on on doors
B U S IN E S S is g re e n W * ne ed 4
th e a d d re ss o t w h ic h I* P ro b a te
a p ts . C e n tra l h e a l a n d a ir , w a ll
T u esd ay. M a rc h 1 . 194) a l Ih e W est
e x p e r ie n c e d
re a l
e ita ta
1 ea L a rg e W ood 4, M e ta l
D iv is io n . O ra n g e C o u n ty C o u r­
lo w a ll c a r p e t in g , c o lo r
d o or o l th e S e m in o le C o u n ty
S h e lvin g Case, a p p ro x . 13' x 7 ' x
asso cia te s to h e lp us m a rk e t
thouse, P .O . B o * 1)4 ), O rla n d o ,
c o o rd in a te d a p p l., s to v e end
C ou rtho use . S an fo rd , F lo rid a .
o u r m a n y s a le a b le lis tin g s
2W
F lo rid a . 32801.
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N O T IC E TO P U B L IC
fro s t fre e r e f r lg . a n d c u s io m
D a te d : J a n u a ry 13, 194)
1 ea . A p p ro x . 1‘ x 11* x 7 'V
T o p c o m m is s io n s .
w ith
N o lle * i* h e re by g iv e n th a t i a m
N o tic e Is h e re b y g iv e n lh a t a
The p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e of
d ra p e s A p p lic a tio n s a v a ila b le
R IC H A R D L . C O X , J R .
N
u
m
b
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r
I
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e
n
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ry
31,
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M
ld
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M
a
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h
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ll
B
a
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e
ry
O
ve
n
engaged In business a t 3700 South
P u b lic H e a rin g w ill be h e ld b y the Ih e e s ta te Is A L IC E L E E C O M BS,
a t s ite : 7400 G e o rg ia A v * .,
U N IT E D S T A T E S
ahead a ll Ih e w a y . L e f t t a lk l
C o m p le te In v e n to ry a v a ila b le
O rla n d o A v e S a n fo rd S em in ole
P la n n in g a n d Z o n in g C o m m is s io n w hose a d d re s s Is P .O . B ox ))4 ,
n e a r S e m in o le H ig h School
MARSHAL
fro m th a C iv il D iv is io n o l Ih e
C a ll J u n e P o r iig a l C e n tu ry 71.
C n jn ty , F lo rid a u n d e r th e f ic ­
In th e C ity C o m m is s io n R o o m , C ity G eneva. F L 377)2. The n a m e and
R e n ta l A s s is ta n c e A v a ila b le
M ID D L E D IS T R IC T O F
S e m in o lt
C o u n ty
S h a r in '*
J u n e P o r tIg R e a lly
titio u s n a m e of B U C C A N E E R
ol
th e
p e rs o n a l
H a ll, S a n lo rd . F L a t 7:30 P M . on a d d re s s
E q u a l H o u s in g O p p o rtu n ity .
F L O R ID A
D e p a rtm e n t
377
*4
7
*
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lto
r
R E S T A U R A N T , and th a t I in te n d
T h u rs d a y , M a rc h ) , 19*1 to con. re p re s e n ta tiv e 's a tto rn e y a re set
R O B E R T W. M E R K L E
and th e u n d e rs ig n e d as S h e riff ot
B A M B O Q C O V E A P IS
lo re g lit e r la id n a m e w ith the
s k ie r th e fo llo w in g c h a n g e an d fo r th b e lo w .
U N IT E D S T A T E S A T T O R N E Y
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a , w ill a t
C le r k o f th e C ir c u it C o u rt,
300 E A ir p o r t B lv d
♦
F
in
a
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c
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C
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su
lta
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ts
*
a m e n d m e n t lo th e Z o n in g O f.
A ll p e rso n s h a v in g c la im s o r
M ID D L E
O IS T R IC T
OF
I t 00 a m o n th * 2nd d a y of
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a In ecI A 7 B d rm s
F ro m 53)0 m o
d in e n c * o f th e C ity o l S a n fo rd . F L de m a n d s a g a in e f th e e s ta te a re
F L O R ID A
M a rc h . A .D ., 1943, o tte r to r s a l*
*400 w k + B e n e fits . In s L ic e n s e
c o rd a n c e w ith th e p ro v ltlo n s of th e
Phone 373 4470
R e io n ln g
fro m :
R C -t, r e q u ir e d ,
W IT H IN
THREE
P
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b
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re q u ire d , o n 205 244 4445
F ic t it lo u i N a m * S ta tu te *. To W it
R e s tric te d C o m m e rc ia l D is tric t M O N T H S F R O M T H E O A T E O F
4. IS. 198)
cash, s u b je c t to a n y and a ll
S ectio n its * F lo rid a S ta tu te *
L O N G W O O D 7 b d rm . k id s , pe ts,
To th a t o f
G C 7, G e n e ra l T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
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19J7.
c a rp e t 4775 F e e 339 7700
C o m m e rc ia l D is tr ic t
T H IS N O T IC E , to f ile w ith th e
p
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c
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d
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A
M
I2SOW,
c
a
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D o o r a t Ih e step s o f th e S e m in o le
S ig n a tu re G u t W M kerton
S av-O n R e n ta ls , In c ., R e a d e r
T h a i p ro p e rty d e s c rib e d as L o t c le rk o t th e a b o v e c o u rt a w r itte n
R
a
lp
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321
0074
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IN
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C
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F
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C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e in S a n lo rd ,
P u b lis h ; F eb. 1, I , IS. 22, 19*}
4, A m e n d e d P la t o l o r a n g e s ta te m e n t o f a n y c la im o r d e m a n d
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
F lo r id a , t h * a b o v e d e s c r ib e d
D E E -14 _______________________
t-u rm s h e d a p a rtm e n ts lo r S e n io r
H e ig h t*, P B 4, P g S4
th e y m a y h a v e . E ach c la im m u tt
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
GENERAL
p e rs o n a l p ro p e rly .
$165
C itite n s 111 P a lm e tto A v e , j
U N I T E D S T A T E S D IS T R IC T
B eing m o re g e n e ra lly d e * c r I bed be In w r itin g a n d m u tt in d ic a te th e
F ile N u m b e r PR 43 434-CP
T h at s a id s a l* is b e in g m a d * to
C ow an N o p h o n e c e lls
O F F IC E ...
C O U R T M ID D L E D IS T R IC T O F
as lo c a te d . B etw e en 15th — 14th ba sis fo r th e c la im , t n * n a m e end
........wk.
D iv is io n
s a tis fy Ih e te rm s o f W r it o f
F L O R IO A O R L A N D O D IV IS IO N
a d d re ss o l th e c re d ito r o r his ag en t
St. on th e e a st o l F re n c h A y *.
L ig h t ty p in g , lig h t b o o k ke e p in g ,
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
E x e c u tio n
N E W 1 A 2 B e d ro o m s . A d le c e n l
C O U R T N O : ll- t9 * O r lC lv - *
The p la n n e d use of th is p ro p e rty o r a tto rn e y , an d th e a m o u n t
w o rk w ith S e n io r C ltlte n s ,
M A D E L IN E JO H N S O N B A R
Jo h n E . P o lk ,
lo L a k o M o n ro * H e a lth C lu b .
U N IT E D S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A
c la im e d . I I th e c la im I t not ye t
is : g e n e ra l c o m m e rc ia l u s *.
m
o
n
th
ly
bo
nu
s,
re
im
b
u
rs
e
tee.
B IE R I.
S h e riff
R a c q u e tb a ll A M o r a l S a n lo rd
P la in t iff, v * B O B B Y J L O W E
-A N D due, th e d a te w h e n II w ill becom e
A
A
A
E
M
P
L
O
Y
M
E
N
T
D eceased
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a
L a n d in g S .R . 44, 371 *170.
a n d C A R O L Y N L . L O W E , h it w ile
T o c o n s ld e r th e fo llo w in g chan ge d u e s h a ll be s ta te d . I f th e c la im is
1417
F
re
n
c
h
A
v
*
.
325-5174
AMENDED
P u b lis h F e b ru a ry 4, 15, 77, A
a n d C IT Y O F A L T A M O N T E
and a m e n d m e n t to Ih e Z o nin g c o n tin g e n t o r u n liq u id a te d , th e
M a rc h I w ith th e s a l* o n M a rc h 7.
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
S P R IN G S
O e fe n d tn t(t).
O r d in a n c e a n d a m e n d in g th e n a tu re ot th e u n c e rta in ty s h a ll be
'
C ook
T h * a d m in is tra tio n o l th e e s ta te
19*3.
31—Apartments Furnished
N O T IC E O F S A L E — N o tic e i t
F u tu re L a n d U s * E le m e n t o l the s ta te d I f th e c la im Is s e cu re d , th e
F o r fin e d in in g e x p e rie n c e o n ly .
ol
M A D E L IN E
JO H N SO N
D E E -4 4
h e re b y g iv e n th a t p u rs u a n t to a
C o m p re h e n s iv e P la n of th e C ity of s e c u rity s h a ll be d e s c rib e d The
S w in g s h llt. A p p ly in p e rso n 7b a r b i e R I,
deceased,
F ile
S u m m a ry
F in a l
D e c re e o f
c la im a n t s h a ll d e liv e r s u ffic ie n t
S an fo rd , F L
I BORM FURN.
F L O R IO A S T A T U T E S 147.244
5 p m D e lto n a In n .
N u m b e r PR 43 074 C P , I t p e n d in g
F o re c lo tu r e e n te re d o n J a n u a ry
c o pies o f th e c la im to Ih e c le rk lo
R e io n ln g fr o m : R M O I, M u ltip le
A d u lts o n ly . N o p e ts . 4114.
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
In th e C ir c u it C o u rt to r S e m in o le
e n ab le th e c le rk to m a ll o n * copy
Jl, m l b y Ih a a b o v e e n title d C ou rt
F a m ily R e s id e n iU I, O ffic e
377 7794
S E C R E T A R Y - R e c e p tio n is t.
FO R T A X D E E D
C ounty, F lo rid a , P ro b a te D iv is io n ,
to ea ch p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e .
In th e a b o v e cause, th e un
in s titu tio n a l D is tr ic t
E
x
p
e
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c
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to
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th e a d d re ss o l w h ic h I t S e m in o le
d e rs ig n e d U n ite d S ta te * M a rs h a l,
T o th a t o f: SC I , S p e cia l C om
A ll p e rso n s In te re s te d In th e
7 B D R M ., k id s , p o rc h , a ir ,
•h a i S U SAN L S H A R P th * h o ld e r
o t llc * . H e a v y ty p in g , u s in g
C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e , P r o b a te
o r o n e o l h i t d u ly a u lh o rite d
c a rp a l MO w k . F a a 319 7200.
m e rc ia l D is tric t
e s ta te to w h o m a c o p y o t th is
W ong
w o rd
p ro c e s s in g
o t th e fo llo w in g c e rtific a te s h a *
D
iv
is
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,
S
a
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.
F
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J7771,
S ay-O n R e n ta ls , l bc . R e a d e r
N o tic e o t A d m in is tra tio n h a s been
T h at p ro p e rly d e s c rib e d os
d e p u tie s , w ill t a li th e p ro p e rty
tile d s a id c e r tific a te * lo r a la x
e q u ip m e n t, tilin g , a n d o th e r
The n a m e s e n d a d d re ss e s o t I he
t i l u a l * In S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
L o ts f i a B in * . T r a e n d L o ts , B ik m a ile d e re re q u ire d , W IT H IN
deed lo be issu ed th e re o n . T h *
g e n e ra l o t llc * d u ll* * . E q u a l
p
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f
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*
SANFO RD
F lo r id a , d e s c rib e d a * ;. L o t 14.
4. T r 7. T o w n o l S a n fo rd , P B 1, Pg T H R E E M O N T H S F R O M T H E
c e r tific a te n u m b e rs a n d y e a rs o f
O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r. P hone
p e rso n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e 's a tto rn e y
L o v e ly 1 B d rm . In to w n .
O ra n g e E s ta te s , a c c o rd in g to th e
42
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
327-4441 o r fu r n is h re s u m e to
Issu ance, th e d e s c rip tio n o t th *
a re set fo r th b e lo w .
1 44 * 4471
P U t th e re o f a s re c o rd e d In P la t
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p ro p e rty , e n d th e n a m e s in w h ic h
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31 A—Duplexes
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S O F
F lo rid a a t p u b lic o u tc ry to th e
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m e rc ia l uses
re p re s e n ta tiv e , o r th e v e n u e o r
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5 A N L A N T A 3 R D S E C . P B 13 PG
a g a in s t th e e s ta te a n d (21 a n y
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m is *Io n w ill s u b m it a re c o m
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venue,
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F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
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ju r is d ic tio n o t th e c o u rt.
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OF
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A s P e rs o n a l R tp r e s a n ta llv *
A v e . S a n lo r d , F I * . S e m in o le
RO BERT W. M E R K L E
c o r d in g to la w th e p r o p e r t y
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D .
32—Houses Unfurnished
M a rc h 14, i n j to c o n s ld a r said
o f fh o E s ta te o f
U N IT E D S T A T E S A T T O R N E Y
C o u n ty , F lo rid a u n d tr Ih e tic P u b lic a tio n o t th is N o tic e h a s d e s c rib e d in s u c h c e r tif ic a te o r
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M c lN T O S H .
A r th u r H B e c k w ith J r.
b a th , L R , D R , d b lo . g a ra g e
R e p re s e n ta tiv e :
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S e c tio n 445 04 F lo rid a S ta tu te *
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C ity o t S a n fo rd P la n n in g
BY: THERESA M AC EK.
p o rc h .
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N O T IC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S

Seminole

Orlando - W inter Park

3 22 -2611

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

1 B D R M .. 4150 m o .,
p lu s d e p o s it. In q u lr e a t
1002 W . 10th St.
G E T T H O S E L U X U R Y tT 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
ADS)

RATES

N IC E 1 b d rm . 1 b a th , h o m e 4375
mo
J U N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y
R EALTO R
C E N T U R Y 21
3171471
S U N L A N D A v a ila b le F e b 14, 3
b d r m c a r p o r t c o r n e r lo t,
c o n v e n ie n t to e v e ry th in g . 4400
m o. 32 7 4 231.
) B D R M , 1 b a th 4300 m o.
4300 sec. 4150 d a m a g e .
372 7 4 *].
3 4 —Mobile

C A S S E L B E R R Y 2 b d rm ., tu rn ,
k id s , p e lt, y a rd , p r lv . lo t. 4771.
Fee 334 7700.
Sav-O n R e n ta ls , In c ., R e a lto r

37— Business Property
O F F IC E S P A C E a n d o r
r e t a il b e st lo c a tio n
254* F re n c h A v e 322 4403.

37-B -R e n ta I Offices
P R IM E
O F F IC E
S P A C E *.
P r o v id e n c e B lv d . , D e lto n a .
2 1 U -S q . F t. C 4n Be D iv id e d ,
w ith P e rk in g . D a y s 30SST41434 E v t n ln g i 1 W ee ke nd s
404 74442)1
1400 Sq It o ffic e . IIS M a p le
A v e , S a n lo rd A v a il, im m e d
B ro k e r O w n e r 377 770«

37C F o r Lease
P R O F E S S IO N A L O ffic e s p e c *
fo r L e a s e , on 17-92. Id e a l
lo c a tio n to d o w n to w n a re a . 70S
4. F re n c h A v * . o r c a ll 322 3170.
O F F IC E S P A C E
FO R LE A S E
*30 777)
w a n t A ds G et People T o g e th e r
— T h o se B u y in g A n d Those
S e llin g 372 2411 o r *31 999)

37D-Jndustrial
for Rent
F IV E p o ln t t a re a in d u s t r i a l
t o 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
space a v a ila b le Iro m 1500 sq
It. to 15.000 sq f t D a y s 37)
5447. e v e n in g s 131-7719.

40—Condominiums

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

0

Legal Notice

IRRWEAUV

DEE sa

Homes

FO R R E N T
3 b d rm ., 7 b a th
cond o G ro u n d M oor com
p le le ly r e d e c o r a t e d . San
d a lw o o d . A ir p o r t B lv d
No
c h ild re n N o pe ts L lo y d A n
d e rso n , O rla n d o o ft. 305 194
17)1 re s *94 *044
It

y o u a r e h a v in g d iffic u lty
fin d in g a p la c e , to liv e , c a r to
d riv e , a |o b , o r so m e s e rv ic e
you h a v e ne ed o t, re a d a ll o u r
w a n t a d * e v e ry d a y .

NOTICE
B IN G O

K N IG H T S O F
COLUM BUS
2504O ak Ave ,
S a n lo rd

T h u rs d a y 7:30
S unday 7:30
W in$25S)00

B IN G O

D IS A B L E D A M E R IC A N
VETERANS A UXI LI AR Y
711) Orlando D r.
Sanford
M onday nights
E a rly Bird 7:00 P .M .

Win *25**100

B IN G O

S a n lo rd V F W
P o s t 14101
B in g o M o n d a y A
W e d n e sd a y m g h l
e a r ly b ir d 7 :15
L a d ie s A u x ilia r y
B in g o
S un da y 1: 30 p.eei.
L e g C a b in
on Ih e L a k e tro n t.

WIN *25&gt;M00
U id you k n o w th a t y o u r
c lu b o r o r g a n lta tlo n c a n
a p p e a r in Ih ls lis tin g ea ch
w eek fo r o n ly S3 SO p e r
w e e k? T h is Is a n id e a l w a y
to in fo rm th e p u b lic o t y o u r
c lu b a c tiv itie s

It y o u r c lu b o r o r g a n iia tio n
w o u ld I l k * to be in c lu d e d in th is
lis tin g c a ll

E v e n in g H e ra ld
C L A S S IF IE D
DEPARTM ENT

ITT 7*11

�t

41— Houses

41—Houses
D E L T O N A Best a re a 1 B d rm ,
IV l b a th . C B S . T ile ro o t,
c a rp o rt C H A L ik e n e w , good

t nnncing. under tan.ooo
a * S a t]

INC 0 REALTORS

Be Utae
CaM Keyed
M f W . L a k e M a r y B lv d .
S u ite B
L a k e M a ry , F la . 3374*
111 1100
W H Y R a n t w h a n y o u ca n b u y l 11 n e w ly p a in te d (h a d e d to t.
F H A a p p ra ite d . O n ly ta ke s
IMSO d o w n . 1)9,000.
T h e W a ll St. C o m p a n y
R e a lto rs
11IJ00S

J U N E P O R ZIG R E A L T Y
7 B R A N D N E W L IS T IN G S !
16* C O U N T R Y C L U B C irc le
Y o u 'll w a n t to see th is lu sc io u s
7 b d r m ho m e w ith F a m ily
R m „ S it,9D 0
1S00 P A R K A V E
P in e c re s l
O w n e rs w ill ho ld m o rtg a g e on
th is lin e a B d rm , 7 b a th fa m ily
h o m e on b e a u t if u lly la n d
scap ed lo t A s k in g S41.SOO
M LS

322*867fl

D A N IE L A N O W O H L W B N O E R
G E N E V A 7 S to ry 4-1 n e a r L a k e
H a rn e y . N e w p a in t, s id in g ,
and ro o t, fa m ily ro o m , la rg e
g a r a g e .le n c e d y a rd , re d u c e d
to 150.000
S A N O Y W IS D O M

869*4600 or 349*5698

ROBBIE'S
REALTY
R E A LT O R . M LS
7101 S F re n c h
Suite a
S a n le rd . F la .

24 HOUR CB 322*9283
K IS H R E A L E S TA TE
111 0041
R EALTO R
A fte r H r* . I l l 7441A 177 4957
HAL COLBERT R E A LTY
R EALTO R
707 E . 35th St.
m -7 t!l

BATEM AN R EA LTY
L ie . R e a l E s ta te B ro k e '
1*40 S a n fo rd A v a .
L E A S E O p tio n 4 7 la rg e fa m ily
ro o m , c a rp e te d . C H A . fe n c e d
b a c k , n ic e n e ig h b o r h o o d .
154,900
H A N D Y M A N 'S N ig h t m a r e
C o u n try , 1 s to rie s , t B R , I
fire p la c e s , p lu s 1 a c re s Best
O tte r.

f

with M ajor Hoople

K Q l Q U K r t i y HE X
L A N P itlP E ) FlREP A
15 SO &amp; 0O P /C yW k\&amp; #
THAT H E ) WORKER
A { FOR ONLY
Z.CCO MJT£\ VOTING
' * M R 6 IN IN \ THREE

TRUE. LMOfLIPE LYNPONV1LLE
15 AN APE0UKTE 'JPTE'^ETfER!
BUT TrIAJ* PRECISELY WHY RE66IE
6PENPER WILL NEEP ALL MY5KILL5
f
To EMEP.AE
VICTORIOUS! j r j.\

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E 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 I T E O 1 B d rm . I B a th
h o m e w ith a an a B d rm . g a ra g e
a p t.t M a n y a x lr a s l N ew ra n t,
lu s t p a in te d , w a s h e r a n d
d r y e r , m ic ro w a v e a n d fu rn itu re , n e t H M M I
J U S T F O E Y O U , 1 B d rm ., 1
B a th b r ic k H om e a n a b e a u tifu l
lo t. C a n t. H A . w a ll-fa -w a ll
c a rp e l, e a t-ln K itc h e n , s cre e n
p a rc h , p a d d le fa n s , a n d m o ra l
E X T E A S O A L O E E I 1 B d rm ., t
b o th h a m * in lu n la n d E s ta te s ,
w ith s p e c t w t liv ln a a n d d ln ln t
ro o m s , l a n d fa m ily ro o m ,
dan,
k it c h e n
and
B a th
re d e c o ra te d , fe n c e d y a rd , a n d
lo ts m o r e l M I M C .

D e B a ry Auto A Marine S a le i
across the river too ol hill 174
H w y 17 91 D e B a ry * M M M

M A Y F A IR V I L L A S I 1 A 1 B d rm ,
1 B a th C ondo V illa s , n a i l la
M a y la ir C o u n try C lu b . S elacf.
y o u r le t, flo o r p la n B in te rio r
d e c o r) Q u a lity c o n s tru c te d b y
S h o e m a k e r la r *4 7 .tee A u p l*

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420

U N D E R K . W DOW N
1 b d rm . d o ll ho use A llo r d a b ie
m o r . lh ly
p a y m e n ts
C a ll
O w n e r B ro k e r 111 H i t

19*4 C h ry s le r N e w p o rt ps n e w
pb, new tire s , a .c ., 1 o w n e r,
*1.195 a lte r 4:30, 377 8119.

\ ^ 00 K5i LIKE A CHALLENGE, MAJCTK=

47-A—Mortgages Bought
___a Sold
W E P A Y C 4 th lo r 1st A J ,*}
m o rtg a g e s R a y Le g g , L ie
M o rtg a g e B ro k e r 7*4 1599
It you d o r '. R e lie ve th a t w o n t ads
b rin g re s u lts , t r y one, en d
lis te n to y o u r p h on e rin g . O la l
3111411 o r 111 9993

V A L E N T I N E S ! * E C tA L ^
S to n e f i r e p la c e " b e t s th e
m o o d " lo r th is 1 b d rm ., 7 b a th
g e m ! D en , C H A . s e p a ra te
e n tra n c e to t b d rm an d ba th .
H uge lo t a n d m a je s tic Ire e s i
o n ly (55.000
IN V E S T O R 'S
S P E C IA L I
3
b d rm , I 1. * b a th C H A tile d
F lo rid a ro o m , g a ra g e , n ic e
y a rd , w a lk to s to re s , c re a tiv e
fin a n c in g O N L Y 141,900
F H A -V A S P E C IA L ! W h y re n l
w h e n y o u c a n o w n n o w l 11,150
d o w n p a y m e n t! 1 b d rm h o m e
on fe n c e d lo t, la rg e o a k an d
c itru s tre e s G ood lo c a lio n l
O n ly $1*7 m o P ric e , a n d In
te re s t 17 30 y e a rs P ric e o n ly
$16,500

323-5774
740* H W Y . 17-91

C O U N TR Y 5 ACRES
F o r a lo w d o w n p a y m e n t an d lo w
in te re s t fr o m owner you c a n
o w n th is h ig h a n d d ry a c re a g e
east o l S a n fo rd , M o b ile h o m e
o k , w ith p e r m it, $77,500 fo r
q u ic k sale .

CallBart
R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R . 117 7491
LO C H A R B O R , la rg e 3 le v e l. 4
B d rm , 1 B a th . $9*,000 b y a p p t
W m . M a lic r o w s k i. R E A L T O R ,
373 7911 E v e . 333 3387.
K id s o u tg ro w lh a s w in g ta t o r
s m a ll b ic y c le ? S e ll th e s e id le
ite m s w ith a w a n t ad. T o p la c e
y o u r ad, c a ll y o u r Irie n d ly
C la s s ifie d g a l a t The H e ra ld ,
373 7*11. o r U l 9991
W E L L m a in ta in e d . 7 b d rm .,
c a r p e t, d r a p e s , a p p lia n c e s ,
new
r o o t,
new
p a in t
th ro u g h o u t, p ric e d r ig h t to te ll
im m e d ia te ly , 371 47*4.
Y O U N G 1 B d rm h o m e . C an be
used as re s id e n c e o r p ro fe s s io n a l
o f llc e t o r c o m m e rc ia l. O n ly
$17,000 d o w n . M i l M o n th ly . C a ll
B ro k e r. O w n e r 111 t i l l .
FO R S A L E b y o w n e r — 7 b d rm ,
1 b a th , F la . ro o m , s c r. p o rc h ,
le n c e d y a rd , a s s u m a b la 9$*
m o rtg a g e . $14,900 171 4171.

1910 M O B IL E H o m e 14'K*&lt;T set
u p in a d u lt s e c tio n of m o b ile
p a rk D a y 111 7471
E v e n in g s *11 s t t *
PR E O W N E D HOMES
14x52 A d u lt P a rk
S17.900
I4 i7 0 F a m ily P a rk
111,500
14*70 F a m ily P a ,k
114,900
14*70 F a m ily P a rk
171,500
G re g o ry M o b ile H o m e s
m sno
1911 S K Y L IN E M o b il* H o m e
7 4 *53 f t . s c re e n e n c lo s u r e
p o rc h , u t ili t y shed, C ent. H A . 1
B d rm , 7 B a th . L o t s ize Is
50*100 C an be seen a t 11*
L e is u re O r. N o rth D e B a ry ,
F lo rid a in th a M e a d o w lea on
th e R iv e r M o b il* H o m e C om
m u n ity . P le a s * c o n ta c t To m
L y o n a t 177 1741 fo r a d d itio n a l
In fo rm a tio n .

43—

Lots-Acreage

ST JO H N S R iv e r iro n ta g a . 7W
a c re p a rc e ls , a ls o I n t t r lo r p a r.
cats w ith r iv e r a c c e s s 4 1 J ,900
P u b lic w a te r, 10 m in . to A lla
m o n te M a ll 11 *
10 y r.
f in a n c in g , n o q u a l if y in g .
B ro k e r t n a a i].
« ^

49-B—W ater Front
_______ Property
ST. JO H N S R IV E R
F e s o M u i 1 b d rm . 1 b o th , tr p i
L H A . S e a w a ll, d o c k , le n c e d
.■aril Good fis h in g 1115.100
C h a rle n e W ig h t R e a lto r
(10 4401 a ft. h r * . 311,4991.

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
N A N N Y go at S 7 5 ,1 k id s . I m a le ,
I fe m a le . $15 ea . R a b b its S3 ea.
O steen a re a 117 0008

fe e d g re ts e s . p a rt ta lly fe nced
P riv a te ro a d a n tra n c s . 4*0 F I.
o f f M a y t o w n R d ., O s te a n
G ood w a te r, e l a b o u t 10 en d
110 f t . H o m e tlte o r M o b ilu
hom e
e p p ro v e d .
T e rm s
e v e lla b le . IS y r* - • ' »0 *e in
te re s t. 14.000 d o w n . *157.90 p e r
m o P r ic e *30.000 3719040

•17 Real Estate Wanted
W E B U Y e q u ity in H ouses,
a p e rtm e n ts . v a c a n t la n d an d
a c re a p e
LU C KY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 1500.
S a n lo rd . F la 11771 311 4741 .
N E E D t o s e ll y o u r h o u s e
q u ic k l y )
We
cen
o ffe r
g u a r a n te e d s a le w it h in 10
d a ys C a ll l i t 1411.

6 2 -A— F a rm

W H E E L C H A IR
w a te r bed, e tc.
113 3153
15' F IB E R G L A S S bo at a n d t i lt
t r a ile r good co n d . S 175.1 w he el
b ic y c le 175.15 m m c a m e ra 110
311 4431

B E A U T IF U L Vy c a ra t M a rq u is
S o lit a ir e v a lu e d a t S I.000.
A s k in g 11.000 C a ll b e fo ra 4
p m 313-4114.

51-A— Furniture
W IL S O N M A I EH F U R N I T U R E
111 U S E F IR S T ST

H i sail
F u rn itu r e M a rt.
715 S a n lo rd A v e , 173 4113
S e ll a n d S e rv .c e v e r y b e st
p o rta b le k erosen e h e a le rs
L A R R V 'S

52—Appliances
K e n m o re p a rts , s e rv ic e .u s e d
w a s h e rs 311 0697
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
M a k e ro o m In y o u r a t tic , g a ra g e .
S e ll id le
Ite m s w it h
a
C la s s ifie d A d C a ll a Irie n d ly
ad la k e r a t 111 1411 o r 111 9991.

53—TV-Radio-Stereo

tr-

Equipment

G ood U sed T V s 17$ A up
M IL L E R S
7419 O rla n d o D r
P h .J 7 1 0351

54—Garage Sales
P E U G E O T , 10 s p e e d b ik e ,
s te re o , w oo d la w n fu r n itu r e ,
v a rio u s h o u s e h o ld Ite m s , see
a t IIS H id d e n L a k e D r. 4 f p .m .
w eekday* o r
7-11 a .m .
w e e k e n d *.

59—M usical Merchandise
A N T IQ U E U p rig h t P la n a e x
cel le n t c o n d itio n , $750 o r best
o ffe r. 173 144*

61— Building M aterials
S T E E L B U IL D IN G S A LE S
W H IL E S U R P L U S L A S T S
S e v e ra l d e a rs p a n in s to c k 1100
to 50,000 s q . ft. fr o m 11.45 a sq.
ft. l » f 0757 f a m to * p .m

62—Lawn-Garden
9- i l l u i h I a- TO P M is .
YELLO W SAND
C la rk A H lr t 1 1 )7 5 0 0 .1 1 )1 9 2 1

'51 C A D D Y . R un s good.
$400 Cash
331 1440
76 D O D G E p ic k u p , 111 A u fo ,
good c o n d itio n . $ ** d n C a *h o r
tra d e , l l f f i o o 834 4405

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

J

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

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 CASH
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D
N OW . C a ll 177 3611 o r 111 999}

65— Pets-Supplies
w tlc e Sales H w y . 44 W . 333 4170
B a le d s h a v in g s S4 SO S tra w
SI SO. Q u a lity n a m e c a t and
dog fo ods. In c lu d in g A .N F.
A v ia ry S up plies.
67A — Feed
M A Y S3 50 p e r b a le ,
IS o r m o re tre e de l
O th e r feeds a v a il 149 5)94

Alteration &amp; Tailoring

EXPERT
d r e s s m a k in g ,
a lte ra tio n s A s ia n C le a n e rs,
184* H w y 17 97, L a k e M a ry
B lv d . 171 499*

S3 50 B a le 111 7485 o r eves
171 6404

o6 WiittU-d to Buy
N eed E x tr a C ash?
K O K O M O T o ol C o . a t 911 W
F ir s t S t., S a n fo rd , is no w
b u y in g g la s s, n e w s p a p e r, bi
m e ta l s te e l a n d a lu m in u m
cans a lo n g w ith a ll o th e r k in d s
ot non fe rro u s m e ta ls . W h y not
tu rn th is id le c lu tte r in to e x tra
d o lla rs ? W e a ll b e n e fit Iro m
re c y c lin g F o r d e ta ils c a ll
171 1100
W A N T E D to b u y .
G e rm a n S p itz D og
1771794

FO R E S T A T E C o m m e rc .a l o r
R e s id e n tia l A u c tio n s A A p
p ra sals C a ll D e ll's A u c tio n
111 5*70

AUCTION
Wed., Feb 16,11A.M .
O rder Sold By
General M edical
Group Inc.
A ll o l lic e f u r n it u r e , d e s k s ,
c h a irs , le le p o w e r poles, tile s ,
la t e r a l t ile s , ta b le s , c o p y
m a c h in e s , a d d re s s a g ra p h , and
p la t* m a k e r R o y a l SC 5.000
E le c t r ic t y p e w r i t e r , IB M
S e le c trlc T y p e w rite r, M ic ro
F in is h R e a d e rs , p h o to c o p ie rs
( IB M 1710 C onsole P r in te r
K e y b o a rd ) C o n fe re n c e ta b le ,
an d m u c h m o re .

B A T H S . K itch e n s , ro o tin g , b lo c k ,
c o n c re te w in d o w s a d d a
roo m , tre e e s tim a te s 17184*1
A LL TYPES C AR PENTRY
C ustom B u ilt a d d itio n s . P a tio s ,
scree n ro o m s , c a rp o rt D oo r
lo c k s , p a n e llin g , s h in g le s ,
re ro o fin g F o r fa s t s e rv ic e .

can 323-4917,365-2371

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
A L U M IN U M S id ing , v in y l s id in g
s o llit A la s c ia
A lu m in u m
g u tte rs and d o w n spou ts •
F r. ESI 105 MS 5141

Appliance Services

ONE 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 S U LTFU L EN D . THE
N U M B E R IS 1111411.

77—Junk Cars Removed

75 y e a rs R e lia b le S e rv ic e .
R e p a ir A -c . re frfg s ., fre e z e rs ,
ra n g e s, d -w , w ash d ry e rs ,
811-0449 111-8787.

S W IF T C O N C R E T E w o rx a ll
ty p e s . F o o le r s , d r iv e w a y s ,
pads, d o o rs , pools, c o m p le te .
F re e est 322 7101

Draperies

C U S T O M M A D E D R A P E R IE S
T r a v e rs * R ods In s ta lle d .
C ) o r o lh y B lls s » 4 M 4 1 5

T O W E R 'S B E A U T Y s a l o n
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie t t s B ea uty
N o o k SI9 E 1st St
377 S74?

Dryw all Repairs
D R YW ALL
P la s te r A C e ilin g
re p a irs " A l l w o rk o u a ra n
t e e d " L ie A In s. D ry w a ll
S p e c ia lly S e rv ., In c . 7*8*117.

Electrical
A N IM A L H a v e n B o a rd in g and
G r o o m in g K e n n e ls n e s te d ,
in s u la te d , s cre e n e d . Ily p ro o f
inside, o u ts id e ru n s
Fans.
A lso AC cages W e c a te r to
y our pets P h 327 5757

P IA Z Z A M A S O N R Y
Q u a lity W o rk A t R ea so n a b le
P ric e s F re e E s tim a te *.
Ph. 34* 5500. A ft. S p .m .

P A i N T i N O a n a r e p a ir p a i.o a n d

screen porch built
anytime 122 9481

Cad

Income Tax
O .B .F .S . In c . 190* F re n c h . B usl
ness A In d iv id u a l in c o m e ta x
9 9 M F , 9 13 S al. I l l 1911

Lawn Service
L itto n L a w n S e rv ic e
C o m m e rc ia l a n d R e s id e n tia l.
W ild e r C lea n up. l i t 5541.

* A - 1 LAW N S E R V IC E *
M o w .* w ie o - n m n a u l R e g u la r
s e rv ic e
tim e c le a n up 14h rs . b e st r a i d , 838.44)8.

fa

. F ix it Joe M c A d a m s
w ill re p a ir y o u r m o w e rs at
y o u r ho m e . C a ll 171 7015

m is t e r

M ajor Appliance
Repair__________
J O H N N IE S A p p lia n c e s . W e
s e rv ic e re frig e ra to rs , w ash
ers. d ry e rs , ra n g e s
Reas
ra le s 371811*

Nursing Contet
OUR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
L a K rv ie w N u rs m g C en ter
71« E Second St . S an lo rd
177 *707
L O V IN G H O M E . E x c e lle n t 74
h r. c a r * A c o m p a n io n s h ip to r
e ld e rly . 171 4105

Painting

Excavating Services
V E l&gt; ( O E ir C A V A T II iio
4*0 C ase B a c k h o * L o a d e r w .
e x te n d e r h o * * y d . d u m p
tr u c k lo w be d s e rv 1115875.

D e G a rm e a u B o o k k e e p in g Ser.
177 2707
P erson al In c o m e T a xe s , open
even ing s

Brick &amp; Block
Stonework

Fencing

H O U S E p a in tin g $500
a h o u $ *. A n y ilz * .
477 1034. 43 5 4009
B IL L 'S P A IN T IN G
In te rio r E x te r io r p a in tin g L ig h t
c a rp e n try . H o m e * p r r s s u r t
c le a n e d B u $ in * s * 111 2 * n .
H o m e 111 S i t * B ill S te rner

F E N C E in s ta lla tio n L h s „ ",sk ,
w ood p o st A r a il. A fa r m te n e t.
L ic e n s e A in s u re d 311*1*1.

if

you a r e h a v in g d iffic u lty
Im d in g a p la c e lo liv e , c a r to
d riv e , a jo b . o r som e s e rv ic e
you h a ve ne ed o f, re a d a ll o u r
w a n t ads e v e ry d a y

Pest Control
SPENCER PEST CONTRO L
C o m m ., R » d , L a w n . T e rm ite
W o rk 11118*5. A s k lo r C ha m p.

P lastering

Carpentry
Handyman

79— Trucks-Trailers
C A R P E N T E R re p a irs a n d
a d d itio n s 7 0 y rs e x p
C a ll 317 1351

V E R Y C le a n . B a a u tlfu l b lu e
o v e r w h ite *11 F I0 0 F o rd
E x p lo re r. V I PS, P B . A C . A M
F M s te re o c a s s e tte A T w ith
o v e r d r iv e . D ig i t a l c lo c k ,
ga u g e s, ta c h t i l t w h e e l, c ru is e
c o n tro l, d u a l ta n k * , a n d lo p
p e r. C a ll N o w l 1311441.

H A N D Y M A N S e rv ic a * P a in tin g ,
r e p a ir * , e tc . R e a s o n a b le
g u a r w o rk 475 0*51, 47747*1

P ha se s o* P la s te rin g
P la s te rin g r r p a ir . stucco , h a rd
rr.te ,S im u la te d b ric k 111 5991

all

Piano Lessons

Carpet Cleaning

Home Improvement
W

* T R IP L E A *
P ric e s p e c ia l. *14 .*5 to r
F a m ily o r L iv in g R m . 1 *1 1 7 *0

7) FO RD RANGER
P lC k U p 0700
3114143

C eram ic Tile

F O R O . I ' t Ton
*1,400
105 177 1141

M E IN T Z E R T IL E E x p Since
1953 N e w 1 Old w o rk c o m m A
r e d d f r e e e s tim a te 14*0561

W e H a n d le The
W ho le B a l lo t W ax

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029
F in a n c in g A v a ila b le

Roofing

A

&amp;

B ROOFIN

11 y rs . e x p e rie n c e . L ice n s e d A
In s u re d .
F re e E s tim a te * an R ee fin g,
R e -R e e fin g a n d R e p a irs .
S h in g le s , B u ll! U p and T il* .

JA M E S ANDERSOH
G. F. BOHANNON
3 1 2 -9 4 1 7
M o rris o n R oo fin g Co.
S p e c ia liz in g In s h in g le s a n d
b u ild up . Lo w L o w R ates. 1*
h r, s e rv ic e . 788 2371
N E W re ro o fin g , a n d
re p a irs . 15 Y rs E x p
H I-1916

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JA M ES E. L E E IN C
Secretarial Services
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
C o n tin u in g s e c re la rio l s e rv ic e s
a v a ila b le in o u r of fi ce
111 5449

Sprinkler Systems
And Repairs
SANFORD
I r r ig a t i o n
A
S p rin k le r S yste m s In c . F re e
est 171 0767. 15 y rs . e x p

Steam an)

S T E A M a n d P re s s u re C le a n in g
( M o b il* H a m a s. H ouses and
R e a ls ) H ou se p a in tin g , an d
m in o r c a rp e n te r re p a irs . A ll
w o rk
g u a r a n te e d .
F re e
e s tim a te s 111-47M a r tH -4711.

Stonework
MASTER
E le c tric ia n .
R e g is te re d c o n tra c to r. C o m m .
A Res. Q u a lity h o m e s e rv ic e
F re e E s t. J a m e s P a u l 371 7559

Som ebody i t lo o k in g lo r y o u r
b a rg a in . O tte r it to d a y In th a
C la s s ifie d Ads.

Bookkeeping

M a in te n a n c e o l a ll ty p e s
C a rp e n try , p a ln lln g . p lu m b in g
A e le c tric . 113 *011________

O R A P E S B Y O E B B IE
R ea so nab le ra te s
131 5290

Bz'.iut', C ite

Remodeling Specialist

C A R P E N T E R 25 y rs e x p S m a lt
re m o d e lin g jobs, re a so n a b le
ra te s C hu ck 373 9645

Lawn Mowers

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S of m e rc h a n d is e
e v e ry d a y

TO P D o lla r P a id lo r J u n k A
L'ced c a rs , tru c k s A h e a v y
e q u ip m e n t 111 5990

F O R D 1*77 P ic k u p .
13.000
305 777 1141

B E A L C on crete I m a n Q u a lity
o o e ra l on pat-os d riv e w a y s
D . y S 111 7111 Ev«S 177 t i l l

C L A R E N C E 'S
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
We s e rv ic e a ll m a io r b ra n d s
R eas ra te s tS y r s c u p 1710111.

W E P A Y to p d o lla r lo r
J u n k C a rs a n d T ru c k s
CBS A u to P a rts 191 4505
3U Y J U N k CARS A TRUCKS
F ro m S IO lu llO o r m o i e
C a ll 111 1474

W IN D O W S , doors, c a rp e n try ,
C o n cre te stabs, c e ra m ic A d o o r
file . M in o r re p a irs , fire p la c e s .
In s u la tio n , L ie . Bond 117-1121.

H A P P Y ELVES
Q U A L IT Y C h ild C a re A P re
s c h o o l. P a r t t im e a n d l u l l
tim e L a k e M a ry E le m e n ta ry
a lte r scho ol c a re .
In d iv id u a l
a tte n tio n and T L C a s p e c ia lity .
S ta te lice n s e d 120 E C ry s ta l
L a k e A v e . L a k e M a ry
171 7184

A ll h o m e im p ro v e m e n t.
F ire p la c e s p e c ia lis t.
331 *960 a fte r 5

P O R C H E S , b a th r o o m flo o r s ,
ro tte n w oo d re p la c e m e n t, a ll
s m a ll jobs w e lc o m e 371 0121.

A M K e lly c le a n in g s e rv ic e .
S p e c ia liz in g in re s ta u ra n t A
o ffic e b u ild in g s . 411015*.

COHC )• lO »Vork

Boarding &amp; Grooming

Home Repairs

C O L L I E R ' S H o m e R e p a irs
c a rp e n try , ro o tin g , p a in tin g ,
w in d o w re p a ir 321 *437

• W E CARE A T *
S E M IN O L E C H IL O C A R E
789 S e m in o le D r L a k e M a ry .
C h ild re n a re o u r s p e c ia lty ! W e
a re S ta te lice n s e d a n d ce r
tllie d lo r te a c h in g a n d c a rin g
L o w fa m ily ra te s . C a ll 327 1950
to r In fo rm a tio n .

SANFORD
I r r ig a t i o n
A
S p rin k le r S ystem s. In c. 24 h r.
S e rv 25 y rs exp. 37107*7.

Remodeling

FO R e ttie ie n t and re lia b le H o m e
C le a n in g C a ll P a tty 's H o m e
P a m p e rin g S e rv ic e 371 1544

ChildCare

H w y 477.

71 D o d g e C o ll e n g in e , 76 C hevy
e n g in e 150. T o y o ta e n g in e
1114041

Ins

C e rp e n try b y " B I L L "
W O O D A rte s ia n G e n e ra l c a r
p e n try , s cree ne d ro o m d o o rs
e tc. R eas. R a le s 317 2*10.

Cleaning Services

Remodeling

1W m ile s N o rth Ol H w y . 414 on

76—Auto Parts

C O O D y A SDNS
T .le C o n tra c to rs
371 0157

Pump Sates Serv.

Home Improvement

L e t a C la s s ifie d A d h e lp y o u fin d
m o re ro o m lo r s to r a g e . '
C la s s ifie d A ds fin d b u y e rs
fa s t

Additions &amp;

L ittle w a n t a d s b rin g b ig , b ig
re s u lts J u s t t r y one. 177 2*1)
or 111 9993

P R O W L E R .s e ll c o n ta in e d ,
re n t a &lt; r,s le e p s *
C a ll 37J 5764

i.iC

C B , S tereo In s ta lla tio n R e p a ir
AC/* A u ,° Sound C e n te r
3109 F re n c h A v e
111 4*15

Florida Trader
Auction Palace
490 Bay Meadows Rd.
Longwood, Fla. 339-3119

75— Recrealional Vehicles

Ceramic Tile

Auto CB Stereo

GOOD HAY
FOR SALE

18'
W E POSSESS
C O L O R TVS
W e s e ll re p o s s e s s e d c o lo r
te le v is io n s , a l l n a m a b ra n d s ,
c o n s o la t. a n d
p o r ta b le s .
E X A M P L E : 1 R C A IS " c o lo r
c o n s o l* o r ig in a l p ric e o v e r
*700 b a la n c e d u e *177 cash o r
p a y m e n ts *17 m o. 1 Z e n ith
c o lo r p o rta b le . *155 cash o r
p a y m e n ts .
NO
MONEY
D O W N . S till In w a r r a n ty . F re e
h o m e t r ia l, no o b lig a tio n . C a ll
l i s t C e n tu ry S ales, u i SW4
d a y o r n lta .

D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
H w y 91, | m il* w e s t o f Speed
w o y . O a rtd tta B ea ch w ill h o i*
a p u b lic A U T O A U C T IO N
e v e ry M o n d a y A W e d n e sd a y at
7 30 p .m . I t 's th e o n ly ona In
F lo rid a . Y o u set th a re s e rv e d
p ric e C a ll *04 355 1311 ,.,r
fu rth e r d e ta ils .

2 -/5 "

72—Auction

50-A—Jewelry

77 D A T S U N F I0 , 5 speed, a ir , 4
c y lin d e r s p o r t c o u p e . I * *
d o w n C ash o r tra d e , 13*
*100 IJ 4 440S

H w y . 91, D a y to n a B each,
9 0 4 - llM H t

L E V I Jeans and J a c k a ls .
A R M Y N A V Y SU R PLU S
310 S a n lo rd A v a .
111 5791
T E N P ie c e p it g ro u p , d a rk
b ro w n v e lo u r good cond. $400
T ro m b o n e $15 . 311 5597.

^

1*41 M u s ta n g a i c i lle n t
$154* o r B est o tte r, j l
311-5117

(feytona Auto Auction

mi

FO R S A L E
P ig s an d 700 L b . H ogs.
C a ll 345 5 531

m

CONSULT OUR

S al. F e b 19, 10 a m
F a rm tr a c to r s , tru c k s and
e q u ip m e n t.
C o n s ig n m e n ts
a c c e p te d d a ily .

D R E S S E R 10 i n . 4 d ra w e r, w ith
b ig m ir r o r . 110 D o u b le bed w ith
boa s p rin g s a n d tra m e . S70. I l l

M IC R O W A V E O ve n. B ra n d ne w .
used v e ry lit t le . M a k e o ffe r
111 1094

80—Autos for Sale

Equipment Auction

B U Y -S E L L TR A D E
F lo rid a T ra d e r A u c tio n
L o n g w o o d , F la 319 3119

B U IL D y o u r o w n • c y p re s s c lo c k
w oo d c lo c k w o rk s lin is h e s .
F re e In to . 311 4711,

T jeso ay, Feb **. '•*!■ 5R

F O R D G ra n a d a G h ia 74, 4 d r.
a u to m a tic , 4 c y l. a tr, po w e r
s te e rin g A b ra k e s , re g . gas.
O ne o w n e r, go od c o n d itio n .
17095 371 4137.

1980 C h e vy p ic k u p C-tO A m F m .
a i r , a u to , ps e x c . c o n d .
w h o le s a le p ric e c a ll 311-5544
B ad C re d it?
N o C re d it?
W E F IN A N C E
N o C re d it C heck E a s y T e rm s
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L C S
1110 S a n lo rd A v e
331 4075
*

Herald. S a n lo r d , M .

80—Autos for Sale

D O D G E O m n i 1910, 31.000 M ile s .
4 D r. H a tc h B ack F M ta p e
s tereo A c P S E x . co n d (M u s t
s e ll) C a ll 349 5944

A B O V E a v e ra g e p ric e * p a id fo r
d e a n c a rs , tru c k s a n d tra v e l
tra ile rs . J a c k M a r tin 3711900

10 A C R E S N ic e h ig h p a s tu re In

1 B a th
Lake
E v e ry
E n te r
s w im ­

D o n 't D e ip a ir O r P u ll Y o u r H a ir
- U$c a w a n t A d . I l l 1611 o r
*119991
'71 G R A N A D A .4 C y l ,
579 d o w n w ith c re d it
M a r tin M o to r ! 311-7*14

LUES

42—Mobile Homes

S a n fo rd 's Sales Leader

M r-Autos for Sahr

74 B U IC K A p o llo , 4 c y l. A u to ps.
pb. R uns go od , lo o ks good.
$1700 O B O 313 4 551.

ic o o v o t l ) t im e s

t= 1

3227643

STENSTRO
M
REALTY - REALTORS

k v e - t in g

80—Autos tor Sale

|0 /

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 c tin g .
L o w Cost C la s s ifie d A d .

IS4S
P a rk

t

tsaa Shepherd Read
Winter S p rin t*. Fla. 117N

W E N E E D LISTIN G S!
CA LL US NOW! H I

B E A U T IF U L 1 B d rm .,
L a k e fre o t ho m e on
H a y e s n e a r O v le d e l
f e a t u r e Im a e ln a b ie t
f (s h in e , hoe tin g a n d
m in g . S IM ,500.

9

Equal
Professional
Service

••-L A K E M A R Y
S D R , 1 B a th
' * * ’ Y iu in c on I ] a c re s . L a k t lio n r . "
Zoned A g r ic u ltu r e w ith h u p •
B a rn , Shop A K e n n e ls . * *'
O w n e r f in a n c ln u
P r iv a t e
E s ta te w ith lo ts ot T re e s In the
p a th w a y o f p ro g re s s P a r tia lly
p la tte d lo r fu tu r e d e ve lop
m e n t. O w n e r 171 i l l ! a ft. 4.

EVE

t

SEM IN O LE COUNTY
BOARD OF
REALTORS

323*3200

321*0759

I

OUR BO ARDING HOUSE

3 B O R M , j B a th , F ire p la c e ,
D b l. g a ra g e , 100x150 F t. lo t.
C lose In. $49,900. 7JS W lld m e re
A v e ., L o n g w ood,

FO R A LL YO UR
R E A L ESTATE NEEOS

R EALTO R
107 S F re n c h A ve

¥

R O O M A d d itio n s , r jm o d e lln g .
d r y w a ll
hung,
c a llin g s
s p ra y e d , fire p la c e s , ro o fin g .
I l l 4131.
S E A M L E S S a lu m in u m g u tte rs ,
c a v e r th e s e o v e r h a n g s w a lu m in w m s o ld i A la s c ia . ( M l )
7 /5 7094 c o lle c t. F re e est.

V

G IV E y o u r te ll o r y o u r c h ild re n
th a p ric e le s s o p p o rtu n ity o t
p r o fe s s io n a l p ia n o la s s o n t.
G iv e n b y a lice n s e d te a c h e r in
your
ow n
hom e.
Very
re a s o n a b le ra te s N o m ile a g e
c h a rg e . B est te ch n iq u e s fo r
r e a lly
s u c c e s s fu l
p ia n o
p la y in g . W il l w o r k t im e
a ro u n d y o u r s ch e d u le F o r
r n m p i e '* I n f o r m a t io n c a ll
M r s . J e n k in s a&lt; 311 WOO
a n y tim e . I f n o a n s w e r p le a s *
t r y a g a in

A ll b r ic k , b lo c k a n d ston e w o rk .
F ire p la c e s p e c ia lis t. 311 4940
a ft. I

Tem porary Services
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
A v a r ie ty of te m p o ra ry s e rv ic e s
a v a ila b le , i n s i s t .

T V Repair
Sun T V S e rv ic e C e n te r
S e rv ic e c h a rg e *7 *5 p lu s p a rts .
A ll m a k e s ; * * 1754

Tree Service
T n i C o u n ty T re e S e rv ic e . T r im
ra m o v e ,
tr a s h ,
h a u lin g ,
fire w o o d . F r. E s t. H I *410.
S T U M P S g ro u n d o u t.
R e a so n a b le , Ir e * e s tim a te s .
______________ 7110441_____________
JO H N A L L E N Y A R D A T R E E
S E R V IC E . W e ’ ll re m o v e p in *
tre e s R ea s, p ric e 131 5380
U g ly T r a * H u m p ?
R em ove $1 in c h .d ie m e te r
R e m T re e te r v tc a U M i t t

Upholstery
L O R E N Z ' S U p h o ls te ry
F ra *
p«ck u p . d e l. A est. C a r A bo at
seats F u rn 3 1 1 )7 7 *

Custom u p h o l s t e r y a Drapes
FREE est pickup and delivery
Call Sharon 13) 1M0

�A
\

43 - 1 venmg Herald. Sanlcrd. FI.

BLONDIE
N E X T YEAR I'LL RAISE
YO UR ALLOW ANCE
O N E D O L L A R .fc

V— /

Tuesday. Fco. 14. 1943

by Chic Young

A N D THE YEAR AFTER
T H A T Y O U 'L L G E T T
TW O EXTRA
DO LLARS

by M o rt W a lk e r

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

HE T R IE R TO

F lo w W a s

»

lt . f u z z 's

M AKE IT MORE

REPORT

IN T E R E S T IN G
BY WRITING IT
IN S T O R Y FORM

S O U N D S LIKE
A GOOP ID E A

by A rt Sansom

T H E B O R N LO S E R

* * * x * 4 Ax

ACROSS
1 Gloomy
4 Honey
produceri
8 Lager
12 Australian
bird
13 M ideiat
nation
14 Duatbowl
vievm
15 Long time
16 Evil giant
17 First word ol
Caesar's
boast
IS Hank
20 J ip in ts a
instrument
22 Depart this
life
24 Sepia
25 Antilles island
29 Engine parts
33 Fued period
ol geologic
lime
34 Entertainer
36 Tallow
37 Pedestel part
39 Keep clear ol
4 t Cross type
42 Omsmore
44 Mythical one­
horned animal
46 Body limb

'• 1 \

48 Thick black
liquid
49 Politely
53 T iig a n t
57 Idaa (Fr |
58 Jana A uitan
title
60 Graak latter
61 Falla aaleap
62 Maple genua
63 Cutting
implement
64 Mideaat
seaport
65 Space agency
(a b b r)
66 Elem entiry
particle lu ffia
(Pi)

\

Answer to Previoui P utile

[JTIC-UJ
□□□□

□ an a

MV INCOME TAXES APE
.G O IN G TO BE HUGE TH IS;
^ YEAg

B A R N E Y *;— P

c o n t w o e e y , f «?e p .
THE GOVE(?NM ENT HAG A
SO LU TIO N POt? REPUClNG
INCOME TAXES

11
□ □ □ ID

H
t
M
M
E

Reader Plagued By
Gallbladder Grief

o R E

DEAR DR. LAMB - A
ycut
ago l had tny gallblad­
c A L
□ □ HO
der btid sto n es removed. An
L L E
X-ray show ed one s to n r re
l L S
nnnn
nniriu b1A Y 8 m alncd. After five w eeks I
had
a
T -u in c
43 Moray
19 Actress
e h n la n g lo g ta m a n d (h e
Lupino
45 Call out
21 Beer glass
stone was gone.
47 Collect
23 Consumes
Now. on** y ear Idler. I am
gradually
25 Yield
DOWN
a g a in
h a v in g
slig h t
49
Movie
26 River in
g
allb
lad
d
er
a
tta
c
k
s
after After two years of treatm ent
50
Heathen
deity
Russia
Looks
eatin
g
laity
foods.
My
d oc­ w ith CDCA there w as no
51
Hindu
27
Radiation
Frenned state
tor su ggests m ore X-rays evidence of it decrease in
measure (p i.
literature
Ridge o l t in d
abbr)
Life
52 Charitable or­ a n d possible su rg e ry to sto n e size in 60 percent of
28 Hawaiian
electronics
rem ove th e stone. If found. eases.
ganization
island
5 Unit o l work
I do not wish to go th rough
M ore d e ta ils o n th e
(abbr)
30 Coupe, for
6 Organs ol
surgery
again.
He
said
I
g
a
llb la d d e r
d is s o lv in g
54
M
e
u
c
in
one
hearing
could also have a high acidi­ m edicines an d new co n ­
money
7 Big name in 31 Stern
ty problem or m aybe an ce p ts ab o u t su rg ery a re In­
32 Dare
55 Btsebeller
golf
35 Eitra small
6 Cows
ulcer but th e sy m p to m s are eluded In T he H ealth Letter
M u s ill
pup
9 Squeezes out
exactly like th e on es I had 20-6. Gall Bladder: S lones
56 Frim be sn
38 Slickest
10 One |Ger)
before surgery.
59 Intermediate
an d A ttacks, w hich I am
40 Mighty
11 Harness
(prefii)
Is It po ssib le lo have sen d in g you. O thers can
cataract
attschment
a n o th e r sto n e afte r o ne send 75 c e n ts w ith a long,
i
T l v . - a iY
5 * * 6*
3— J — ■;3_ •i »•
1
4
7
7r 1
h e a rd o il"! with stiiinpccT self-iichfflSsed
Hal Lir.den th at too m any envelope for It lo me. in care
14
13
12
people opt for gallbladder of th is new spaper. P.O Box
su rg ery w hen a lot of the
1551. R adio Cllv S tation.
17
15
16
tim e the sto n es can be New York. NY 10019.
treated with a d ru g called
DEAR DR. LAMB 21
18
19
CDCA. Do you know of this
Please explain th e reason
drug and Is It available?
for stool tests. Are they lo
22
23
DEAR READER - Yes. d eterm in e th e presence of
rarely new slo n es form In p arasites? If so. how does a
30 31 32
29
25 76 27
the bile d u c ts after gall­ doctor com e lo suspect their
bladder su rg ery . And som e p resence? My d o n o r says
3,
35
33
lim es a sto n e Is m issed al they a re ro u tin e for people
"
.0 1 1 4 '
s u rg e ry ev e n th o u g h a tny age. W hy?
39
37
38
careful exploration Is done.
DEAR READER - Yes.
45
And som e slo n es In the they an* done to look for any
42
°
duel can I k * dlsolved or ex ­ n u m b e r of p arasites or in­
46
tracted w ithout surgery.
fectio u s o rg a n ism s. The
Y o u r s to ry , h o w e v e r, m eth o d s of collection m ay
54 55 56
53
49 50 5 1
rem in d s m e of th e m any vary depending on what the
"
ra s e s of people w ith sy m p ­ d o n o r Is looking for. And If
60
59
57
58
to m s w h o a ls o h av e lie Is looking for bacteria or
gallstones. T he sto n es m ay |&gt;arustics it Is because a per­
63
61
62
he totally u n related to the son h as been ex p o sn l. as in
sy m p to m s so the sy m p ­ trave I to an area w here this
66
64
65
tom s | h *i slst or recu r after a Is a com m on problem , or
— 1
g a llb la d d e r
o p e ra tio n . m ost often becau se th e p a ­
T h e re is no re lia b le
tient has sym ptom s. A good
evidence th al fatty foods exam ple would he the p a­
cause gallbladder attacks or tient with d larth e a.
p ain , all h o ugh th is was
Hut y o u r com m ent about
o n ce a p o p u la r Idea In
age
sug g ests that your doc­
m edicine.
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL
tor is wisely cheeking his
And if you quoted Hal
p atien ts for blood In the
L
inden
correctly, he eith er
For Wednesday, February 16, 1983
stool. I keep m entioning
d id n 't do his research pro­ ib is because II Is so im por­
perly or d ld 't wall for all the
CANCER (Ju n e 21 -July
tan t. The second most com ­
YOUR BIRTHDAY
22) T his Is one of those days re su lts from the national
m on cause of cancer deaths
F e b r u a r y 16, 1 9 8 3
study. If so h r did the public
In the Industrialized nations
This (Timing year you will w hen lucky b reak s could
a disservice.
Is ca n cer of the colon. E ar­
be In a cycle w here hopes conic an d go In th e tw in k l­
CDCA w as studied on a
ly detection, often from
am t d ream s can be realized. ing of a n eye. To m ake the
sto o l e x a m in a tio n s for
However, you m ust Ik* j k t - m ost of th em , be prepared national basis for dissolving
gallstones. T he final r r |M &gt; r i
blood, is your best oppor­
slsie n l. O nce you begin to aei Im m ediately.
LEO (Ju ly 23-A ug.22| Is th al it is not very useful.
som ething, he su re to co m ­
t unity for a cure.
plete It.
D on't treat lightly creative
Idem* w hleh m ny (Insh Into
AQ UAR IUS
(J n n .
2 0 Feb. ID) Projects large hi y o u r m ind today. If they
sco p e m ig h t In tim id a te c a n 't Ik* used now. at least
o th e rs to d a y , h u t th e y jot th em down for future
should be your cu p of tea. reference.
VIRGO lAug. 23-Scpt 22)
He the one w ho show s them
and losers and “H" Ihc a ll­
how to m ake big Ideas tick. Don't be too h asty about
important "How can I make
1983
p r e d ic tio n s
lo r throw ing In the towel today.
or beat this contract?"
A quarians arc now ready. E v e n ts c o u ld s u d d e n ly
East analyzes the lead as
NORTH
MM)
fourth best. Review of the
Send SI to Astro-G raph. reverse th em selves to y o u r
♦ Q84
bidding shows that West can
4 1097
Hon 489. Radio Cllv S ta ­ adv an tag e. H ang in there
hold the king and jack of
♦ AQI4I41
tion. N.Y. 10019. He su re to and keep trying.
spades if South holds a 15♦ 10
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oet. 23)
state yout zodiac sign.
point no-trump A count of
WEST
EAST
PISC ES Goals and objec­ You could be ex trem ely
vour points and dummy's
♦ J 9 42
♦ A 10 6
tives w hich you m ay have lucky today In situ atio n s
leaves 19 for South and
9 654
4KQJ8
fell w ere out of y o u r reach w hleh require a collective
West.
♦ 93
♦ K5
can be achieved both today effort o r p a rtn e r. Y ou'll
The play of the 10 w ill
♦ J 8 76
49 532
an d tom orrow . Lady Luck know how to bring out th e
give you four quick spade
so uth
will help If you m ake an best In others.
tricks' in that case. On the
♦ K 73
other hand, if West doesn't
effort.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
4 A 32
have both those cards and
A R IES (March 2 1-April 221 If you think you arc on
♦ J72
you play the 10 spot. South
♦ AK Q4
19) C onditions In general th e tra c k o f s o m e th in g
w ill take his king or jack as
should show a m arked im ­ w hich could Increase y o u r
Vulnerable: Both
the case m ay be, take and
provem ent today. T his will e a r n in g s o r h o ld in g s ,
Dealer: South
lose the diamond finesse and
have a positive effect upon
ch an ces are y o u 're right.
wind up w ith at least three
South
Weil
North Eait
y o u r altitu d e . T he lough
S trike w hile you have the
no-trump.
I NT
gels easier.
Now look at your heart
Midas touch.
ra u
Pau 3 NT Pau
suit. You can take your ace
TAURUS (April 20-May
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov.
Pan
of spades, lead the king of
2 0 | It will Ik * difficult to fool
23-Dec. 2 1 1 Your m ost fun
hearts and have three heart
you today. Your perceptions
Is likely to com e today from
Opening lead 42
winners set up.
are especially keen an d
th in g s d o n e on a n im ­
Can thal play go wrong?
you'll perceive clearly what
pro m p tu basis. Keep your
Almost no way. If South's
re a lly lie s b e h in d th e
schedule flexible so th al
no-trum p was: somethin
facade.
you can flow w ith events.
like x-x-x. A-x. J-x, A-K-Q 7
By Oswald Jacoby
GEMINI (May 2 1-June
x-x. he could run off six
and
James
Jacoby
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22
20) You’re very effective to ­
clubs to develop a diamond
day at m aking fast deci­ J a n . 19) E v rn th o u g h you
The thought process on end-play against you.
m ay not have a s m uch
T hai is most unlikely, so
sions. so d o n 'l discount
defense is greatly simplified
direct control over situ a ­
w lial co m es easy. Even
if you refer to the acronym you should play ace of
tions today ns y o u 'd like,
Ideas out of th e blue will
"ARCH " “A" is analvio the spades and king of hearts
the
end
re
su
lts
should
lead "R " is review the and sink another contract
h a v e c o n s id e r a b le s u b ­
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |
prove*
to
y
o
u
r
adv
an
tag
e.
bidding
"C" count winners
stance.

■

IS E E ffn

□ (D ID

(3 E to n

■1
■

A R C H IE

*, ' •

■

■

□□□ a

9

■

■1
■

HOROSCOPE

by H ow ie S chneider

E E K &amp; MEEK
H W IU H H £ V E M X )5 L E I0 ',

I HAVEU'T SEEU Y U ARDUUD
FDR A WHILE

I'M THEVISITIIOS 'HAVE NOT'
CDWSULTAUTTD1HE 'HAVES'
DEPARIMEW ToriHE HARVARC
SCHOOL OF EOOWOMIC5...
^

WHAT DVA WAIJT FOR A
10USY DIME...HUMILITY?

----------------------- ^

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Ed S u lliva n

P R IS C IL L A 'S P O P
TM 6 0 R F V CARLVLE 1

V* l KNOW I S \ GOING

by S tolfel &amp; H e im d a h l

BUGS B U N N Y

WMAT5 N c 9 0 IN '
PAN C 'lN ABO U N P M AM ON
C N A S L IC E O F
B K EA PPn

S-

G A R F IE L D

by J im D avis

by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNEST

B XC U FH O f , / w A ’A M . . .
^ wE

W ERE

P A C IN O
HE
£

F Y , A N t&gt;

HEAFO y o u p

p E F P is E P A T b P O °o p

^va,

OPEN.
•NNMt x

Th K /|J 2 • $
by T. K. R y a n

TUMBLEW EEDS

^ H o o r -o u T A -r tw e

CLAUDE

S A U » N l-&lt; ? O IC K i

WHEHES A POCIGR.1?

V

(

UUJT

CLAY

ER-NHAT KINO O'
NO, N O -1 HAVE
RU6GEP COUNTRY TO 0VER5EE ONE
ARE WE 60tN' TO,
OF MY COPPER
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