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I

SU N D A Y EDITION

E v e n in g
75th Y ear, No. 115—Sunday, J a n u a ry 2,1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

H

e r a ld

E vening H erald— (USPS 481-280)— P rice 35 C ents

Subsidy May Cost Taxpayers $ 143,550

Herndon, County Near Accord; Old Pact Expires
By MICHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
A nine-month contract between Herndon Ambulance Ser­
vice,-Inc., and Seminole County will be considered by com­
missioners Tuesday.
The contract, which includes a $74,997 subsidy, calls for the
ambulance company to provide emergency service in
Seminole County through Sept. 30.
In addition to the base subsidy, the contract calls for an
additional $8,779 per month subsidy when an additional ad­
vanced life support (ALS) unit is placed In to service.
Terry Vann, Herndon operations manager, said county and
company officials met Thursday to negotiate the final terms
for the agreement.
The recommendation of the county staff is to approve the
contract.
Vann said the company hopes to put the fourth ALS unit into

service by Feb. 1. The A1S units are provided by the county
and are currently in service from stations- in Sanford,
Casselberry and Altamonte Springs. The fourth unit will be
placed at Seminole County Fire Station 23 on Howell Branch
Road.
The proposed new contract may cost the county at least
11431550 in subsidy. ‘
Vann said the company will continue to operate in Seminole
County for the next few days even though they are technically
without a contract.
Herndon has been operating since Sept. 30 with an extension
of the fiscal 1981-82 contract. That extension expired at mid­
night Friday.
“ We will continue to operate, that’s our business," Vann
said. "We’re not going to leave anybody without ambulance
service."
Vann disagreed with comments made last week by the

A g e 21 Proposed

V ie w s M ix e d
O n D rin k in g
A g e In cre a se
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Bar owners, ministers and law en­
forcement officials have mixed feelings
about raising the legal drinking age back
to 21.
People between the ages of 16 and 24
account*! for about 35 percent of last
year's 25,000 drinking-related motor
vehicle deaths In the United States,
according to Florida Insurance Com­
missioner Bill Gunter.
Gunter plans to ask the 1983 Florida
legislature when it convenes to raise the
drinking age from 19 to 21 years. Two
y e a r's ago, the le g is la tu re raised
Florida's legal drinking age from 18 to 19.
Gunter called the compromise action a
"half step."
&gt;
Would raising the legal drinking age
hurt the business of Seminole County
taverns? Would it reduce traffic ac­
cidents? Opinions here vary.
"Woogie" Badger, owner of Woogie's
Pubs in Casselberry, Longwood and
Sanford, does not fear raising the legal
drinking age to 21.
"The average age of our customers is
24-25 and they are respectable people,
more m ature adults," he said. "We don't
' have many 19-20 year-olds. But those that
do come in tend to be mature for their
age.
“ It's how you establish your business.
Some places cater to the 19-20 year-olds,
some owners let the kids make noise and
act up," Badger said.
Nick Rizzo, manager of the lounge at
the Cavalier Motor Inn in Sanford, said
the lounge attracts a young clientele
because he always features a live band.
He said raising the drinking age would
hurt his business. Patrons are required to
have proof of age, he said.
Jay Murphy, m anager of The Bam, a
country-w estern them e b ar and
restaurant in Sanford, said, "Naturally,
I’m not In favor of It (raising the legal
drinking age). I feel if the kids are able to
vote, they arc able to make the decision
whether or not they want to drink. If they
make them go to war a t 18 and they can
get m arried even younger, why not U4
them drink If they want to?"
As for hurting his business, Murphy
said, "We only have a smattering of
young customers and it wouhki't hurt us
tremendously. H they don’t have proof of
age, they don't gel in. We have even
turned away 30-year-olds without their
ID. Our waiters and waitresses have a
free hand to do a random check at any
time they suspect someone ordering a
drink is under age."
"We are a restaurant and we allow
children with their parents until 10 p m
when they are asked to leave," he added.
" I ’m not going lo b s a hypocrite,' a i d
,Seminal* County Sheriff John Polk. " I ’ve
always believed if a person la old enough
to go to war he's old enough to buy a
drink if he wants one. Some can’t handle
it; they're not m ature enough, linking
over the DUI (driving under, the in­
fluence) arrests, there are a lot more
drivers over 21 than there are under. It
really depends on the person."
"According to stale records there are
more fatalities among teenage drunken
drivers and if that's true maybe they
ought to raise the drinking age," Polk
added. "But th at's not going to atop those

S H E R I F F JO H N P O L K

county's emergency medical services manager, Barbara
Smith, that Herndon has some problems in main­
taining adequate staff.
"The problems are a m atter of perception," Vann said.
1j s t week, Mrs. Smith complained that Herndon had left an
ALS unit without personnel qualified to operate it, causing
problems for Winter Springs since its paramedics had to leave
their posts to travel with llie AIJ3 unit.
But Vann said the staffing shortage occurred only on a
couple of days around Thanksgiving. Several married
paramedics were given the holidays off. The problem occurred
when a shortage of relief personnel developed.
Vann said one relief paramedic was ill and a second was
confused about work schedules and didn't show up. Calls to the
firm’s list of 35 relief paramedics failed to correct the problem.
But Vann said all emergency sendees have staffing
problems, particularly on the holidays.

“ We tak? the stance that there are no serious problems. We
deliver excellent sendee by anybody’s standards. We tran­
sport 6,000 to 7,000 people a year in Seminole County and get
very few complaints."
Herndon had a competitor for the county subsidy in Sep­
tember when Aero Products, Inc., a long wood firm, submitted
a proposal for service.
Aero asked for a $257,340 subsidy while Herndon submitted a
proposal asking for $100,000. But a fourth A1JS unit included in
the Aero proposal would have cost another $105,000 under the
Herndon proposal.
But detailed analyses of the two proposals were not available
and an extension was granted to Herndon while commissioners
studied the two bids.
Aero withdrew its bid in November and staff officials are
still studying the Herndon proposal to determine exactly what
portion of the company’s business is derived from emergency
sendee.

Long Distance
Subers Hold Identical Posts, But Miles Apart
ByDONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Joyce Williams of Gulf County and
Bill Suber of Seminole County made
history in Florida on Nov. 16, 1981.
On that date they became the first
elected property appraisers in the
state to get married and retain their
respective offices.
Joyce, a Democrat, works Monday
through Friday in her courthouse
office in Port St. Joe.
Suber, a Republican, is on the Pb
five days a week at the Seminole
County courthouse in Sanford.
On weekends and holidays, they are
together in cither his or her home. As
they arc into their 13th month of
m otrim ony, the arran g em en t is
working out well, they say.
Suber calls his bride every night to
check on how she is and how her day
went.
•
"Wc knew it wouldn't be easy, being
apart, but It's not that bad," Joyce
said. "Wc arc both so involved in our
work during the week. We’ve done
wonderfully well."
While they discuss their respective
work, Joyce says they never give each
other advice. "We keep our offices
entirely separate. He never gives me
advice on how I should do things in my
county and I never tell him. We do
discuss the laws on reappraisals.
"His county is 10 times bigger than
mine and I feel he's 10 limes as smart
as I am. We are never bored with our
discussions and we try to think up
ways the laws could be changed,"
Joyce said.
The green-eyed brunette says her
husband's ca re e r "com es before
mine. He comes first in my life," she
said!
Suber says the marriage seems to
be doing fairly well. "It has its
moments," he said. "And I miss her
cooking during the week."
Joyce was elected property ap­
praiser in Gulf County in 1980, the first
woman ever elected to the office from
that county of 10,000 people.
But she had virtually been property
appraiser without the title and without
the power to modernize the office for
13 years previously when she served
as the only employee of Sammy
Patrick, the dean of property ap­
praisers in the state. Patrick had the
record for serving in that elective
office in Florida and had been on the
job for 48 years when he died in I960.
Known to be eccentric, Patrick

H tratd Photo by Oehn* l i f t s

J o y c e a n d H ill S u b e r h o ld th e s a m e p o sitio n in
d iffe re n t c o u n tie s a n d a r e u n a h le to h e to g e th e r
would come to work in old clothes —
he never bought new ones, Joyce said.
In his later years, Patrick wore his
pajamas under his clothes and wore
bedroom slippers to work. Among
Joyce's duties as his assistant was to
shave him every morning at the office
and to cut his hair.
Patrick, known as a man who never
said an ill word about anyone, had a
unique method of appraising property
for tax purposes, Joyce said. He set
the values of property based on what
their owners could afford to pay and
the state pul up with his lax rolls,
approving them year after year
despite deficiencies.
' Joyce tried to bring innovations into
the office during those 13 years,
changing as many procedures as
Patrick would allow to bring the office
into compliance with the law.
In May 1980, Patrick died. It was six
weeks before Gov. Bob Graham ap­

a ll w eek . H u t t h e y 'r e d e d ic a te d to s e r v i n g th e
p u b lic a n d to m a k in g t h e i r m a r r i a g e w o rk .

pointed a replacement, a retired Air
Force colonel with no experience in
property appraising. Appointed the
latter part of June, C. W. Brock was
supposed to have his first tax roll
completed by July 1.
Patrick had been hospitalized for 45
days before his death and Joyce kept
the office functioning during the
weeks when the property appraiser’s
office was vacant. The newly ap­
pointed appraiser kept Joyce on and
declined to run for election.
In the final hours before the can­
didate qualification period ended,
Joyce made up her mind that she
would seek election to the office. She
had two Democratic primary op­
ponents.
Her father lent her the money to pay
the qualifying fee for the $33,000annually salaried office "and I prayed
about it before making the final
decision," she said.

With her very limited knowledge of
election campaigning, she sent out no
literature to the voters and began
walking only two neighborhoods
before the preis of the Job kept her off
the campaign trail. Having no ex­
perience as a public speaker, she
nevertheless spoke at public functions
and seemed to get her message
ucross.
On election night, she found she
garnered more votes than her two
opponents combined and carried all 13
precincts in the tiny county.
The trouble began when she took
office after the election. The tax roll
for Gulf County submitted by the
appointee was turned down by the
state for the first lime and a countvwirie reappraisal wax ordered.
She had no computer system to
help. Each property had to be inSee SUBERS Page 2A

Per Capita Figures Compared

TODAY

Sanford Taxable Value Low
By DONNA ESTES
Herald StsH Writer
While the city of Sanford is the largest city in Seminole County in
term s of population, it has the lowest '‘taxable value per capita" of
the seven Seminole cities and the unincorporated area.

REV. LEO KLNG
who want it from getting it. It may stop
those who drink because they know they
con.
"It's no bigger problem in Seminole
than any other area," said Polk.
“ I'm all for it," said Herb Shea,
assistant to Sanford Police Chief Ben
See DRINKING Page 2A

Sanford CUy Manager W. E. "P ete" Knowles developed statistics
aa taxable value per capita in the cities and unincorporated areas
and lias passed these statistics on lu the City Commission for
reading.
• Knowles said while the coaunission struggles in the new year to
prepare its budgri, the statistics "wiO shed light on tsfay it is difficult
to meet growing expenditures for a growing population plus
•( illustrate 1a reason why Sanford must work harder to keep a low tax
rale.
,
“ A low taxable value per capita means you have that much le u to
work with to meet expenses. It also points up the importance of

expanding the local tax base through non-homestead valuation,"
Knowles told the commissioners In a memo.
The manager said when the full impart of the $25,000 homestead
exemption hits in 19(3, all these figures will drop. "This does not
allow pleasant dream s while preparing for the coming year’s ex­
penses," he u id .
Knowles' statistics show that Altamonte Springs, the second
largest d ly in the county with a population of 22,792 compared to
Sanford's 23,774, h u the highest taxable value per capita .at
$26,798.90. Sanford’s taxable value per capita is $10,551.23, or 2 4
times le u than Altamonte.
While Altamonte Springs properties have a taxable value of
$610,M0,410, Sanford's Is $250,845,059. Knoles h u noted in the past,
that nearly half of the city's property values have been removed
See TAXARLE Page 2A

Action Report*
........ 8A
Around The Clock ... . ........ 4A
B rid g e........................ ........ IB
B usiness............................1IA
C alendar............................. 7B
Classified A d s........... . . . M B
C o m ic s..................... .........IB
C rossw ord................ .........IB
Dear A bby................ ...... 2B
D eaths....................... ......... 2A
E ditorial................... ......... IA
F lo rid a .....................
H areoeope................ ........ IB
H o o p tta r ... . . . . .
2A
N a tio n ...................... .........!A
O pinion.....................
P e o p le ...................... .M B
Religion ............ «...
School M e n u .......... .........7B
S ports........................ ...MIA
Tele vision ................
Weather ................. .........2A
World
.................. . . . . . . IA

�-- '
2A—Evening Htritd. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Jan. a, ifl)

NATION
IN BRIEF
National Death Toll
For Holiday Spirals
United P m s International
The nation’! traffic toll spiraled Saturday with rain,
Ice and too much liquor marring New Y ear’s Eve
celebrations across th e country.
Police patrolled in force to guard against th e annual
rash of drunken'drivers. Some cracked down on the
highways, while others offered free rides home to keep
over-bnblben away from their automobiles.
The National Safety Council estimated between 300
and 400 people will die and 14,000 to 19,000 will suffer
disabling Injuries d’uing the long holiday weekend
which began Thursday at S p.m. local time.
A count by United Presa International a t 1 a.m .
Saturday showed a t least 90 dead.
Safety experts estim ated the majority of weekend
traffic* deaths will be linked directly to drunken
drivers.
Free rides from police, transit and taxi companies
were offered to drinkers in various communities New
Y ear's Eve.
And, as 190 rolled in, a stiff drunken-driving law
went into effect in Louisiana. A first offender can be
fined up to $500 and spend up to six months in Jail. All
will lose their licenses for 60 days.

...Taxable Values
In Cities Compared
Continued From Page 1A
Iran th e tax rolls by homestead exemptions and tax
exemptions for buildings owned by various governments,
fraternal organisations, churches.
Seminole's second highest taxable value per capita goes
to the county's smallest city, Lake Mary, which has an
official population of 3,029 while It has a taxable value of
real property at 160,135,527, for a taxable value per capita of
126,456.10.
The o th er governmental units and values in order are:
- W in te r Springs with 11,543 residents, and taxable value
of $219,705,065, for a taxable value per capital of $19,033.62.
— Unincorporated areas of Seminole County with a
population of 96,078 and an average taxable value of $1.78
billion, for a taxable value per capita of 118,414.97.
- Longwood with a population of 10,605 has a taxable
value o f $178 million for a taxable value per capita of
118,818.47.
-C a sse lb e rry with 15,239 residents has a taxable value of
$242,687,617 for a taxable value per capita of $15,925.43.
- Oviedo with 3,151 residents and a laxable value of
$49,063,785 for a taxable value per capita of $15,570.86.
Seminole County has a total population countywide of
188,840 and a taxable value of $3.4 billion for a taxable value
per c ap ita of $18,264.05.

•

9

. Drinking A ge Opinions

Continued F r a n Page IA
Butler. “And I think most police officers
are. Driving and drinking is n big
problem. It is bad enough if they go out
and kill themselves a t 21 without doing it
at IBor 19. The law probably should have
never been changed in the first place.
“We have a big problem with leenage
drinking here, but I'm not sure raising
the drinking a g e is going to stop it," said
Shea. “The problem is now we have 19year-old high school students who can
legally buy b e e r and alcoholic beverages.
But by moving the ag e back toll, we can
at least remove that aspect and assist in
keeping il out of the high schools. It Is a
difficult law t o enforce.
“ We In v estig ate comphlnts th a t
someone is selling to Juveniles, but we
don't send out undercover young people
to see if a business will sell alcohol to
them," Shea continued. "In most cases
when we find they a re doing it we report
it to the beverage department. They
could lose th e ir license."
The Rev. D ave Bohannon, pastor of
First Assembly of God Church In San­

The Rev. Leo K ing, pastor- of First
United Methodist Church of Sanford,
said, "1 think that &lt;raising the drinking
age) t e a step th a t should be made
because a young person by the time they
are 21 have developed considerable
maturity compared to 18. The drugalcohol problem is la rg e r than we like to
admit. A larger percentage oi young

HERB SH EA
people are using them th a n we care to
ad m it. We need to help th e m by having
regulations and support the law en­
forcem ent people in helping curtail this
th in g ."

Heathrow Suit, New
Charter Made Top News

United P ress International
From New York’s "crossroads of the world" to the
quiet suburban streets of Pasadena, Calif., millions of
Americans said farewell to 1962 in public celebrations
that continued a tradition as old as Western society.
Events generally were peaceful and without in­
cident, but 40 people among an estimated 290,000
revelers In Times Square were arrested during
New York’s 76th New Y ear's Eve’celebration.
In Times Square, a bright-red electronic "Big
Apple" dropped down a 70-foot pole and th e crowd
counted down the last seconds of 1962. The crowd sang
waved, screamed and hugged each other.
"Everyone had a good tim e," a police officer said.
"Yes Lindsay, I’ll M arry You," one sign In th e crowd
read.
At the Waldorf Astoria, where the late Guy Lom­
bardo and his Royal Canadlens orchestra ran g in 49
new years with "Auld Lang Syne," the traditional show
featured the rock ‘n’ roll of Jerry Lee Lewis.

Bombs Maul Policemen
NEW YORK (UPI) - Four sophisticated time
bombs rocked government buildings — Including
police headquarters — and mauled three police of­
ficers Ir. s rash of explosions on New Year’s Eve, of­
ficiate said.

WEATHER

"However, a tew is only as good as the
people who back It up. "If we’re not
ready to enforce it, w hat good does it do?
We have a youth group of about 100 young
people and they know they say kids can
gel beer or alcohol In this community
whenever they want to ," he added. "That
is the key issue."

For Lake Mary

New Year Is Welcomed

A fifth bomb was found in front of a federal Jail and
aaltly defused.
‘ “
The Puerto Rican FALN terrorist group claimed
responsibility for th e attacks, four in Manhattan and
the fifth in Brooklyn. In a phone call to local radio
stations, a male caller said, "Free Puerto Kico and all
political prisoners,” Police Commissioner Robert
McGuire said today.

ford, is In favor of raising the legal
drinking age back to 21. “ Anything we do
to deter drinking b y young people is
better for society," h e said. "Morals in
this city are steadily declining and as
responsible citizens, If we can do
anything we should take every' step
possible. I d e fin ite ly support the
proposal.

ATTENTION

H triM P h o t* Or S r U * L o ftttr

S o o n m o r e sig n s will b e p o in tin g out W in te r S p rin g s . State H e p . C a r l Selph,
R - C a s s e lb e r r y , p o in ts o u t o n e ro a d sid e s i g n . B u t soon exit s i g n s a lo n g In­
t e r s t a t e 4 a p p r o x im a te ly o n e -q u a rte r m ile f r o m each of th e S t a t e R o a d 434
e x i t s a l s o will d en o te W in te r S p rin g s. H i e a d d itio n a l sig n in g w a s re q u e ste d
by W i n t e r S p rings M a y o r J o h n T o rcaso . S e l p h , DOT D is tr ic t E n g in e e r Bill
B e n e d ic t a n d D eputy D i s t r i c t E n g in e e r C h a r l e s S y lv ester w o r k e d o u t d etails
to s e c u r e th e sig n in g o n 1-4.

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff W riter
The resignations of two councllmen, the toss
of the Heathrow annexation lawsuit, the
passag e of a new charter a n d the firing of one
city attorney with the appointm ent of a new
cn e captured the headlines in Lake Mary in
1962.
T h e resignations of Councllm en Gene
McDonald and Vic Olvera, both In their third
y e a rs on the governing body, concerned city
officials In October. The C ity Cornell would
h av e had to jnctlon for the rem inder of
th e y ear with only three m em bers.
T he response from the th re e members and
M ayor Walter Sorenson w a s an Innovative
solution. The decision was m ad e to appoint to
th e vacancies experienced former council
m em bers who could take up the alack for the
rem aining two months In th e year.
N am ed were former councllm en Cliff
Nelson and Pat Southward. Both agreed to
serv e and neither w u interested In running for
election. The two participated In a total of lour
Council meetings.
McDonald resigned to accept a new Job for
th e Motorola Corp. in Tennessee white Olvera
resigned to run for m ayor. He was un­
successful.
L ast Spring, McDonald pulled a surprise it a
council meeting by urging Sorenson to dismiss
long-time City Attorney G a ry Massey, saying
M assey had become com placent In the Job.
McDonald’s move got the support of two other
council members and within a few weeks after

.». Subers Have Similar Notes

NATIONAL REPORT: Record snow shut down parts of the
Southwest New Y ear's Day and near-record flooding had the
Bl 39 and is one of the youngest women
Joyce called a friend, Wyvonne
P age IA
governor of Louisiana asking for help "from upstairs" to halt
Hattaway, who is the secretary to the
dlvidually appraised and the in­
lo hold countywide olfice in th e state.
rains that left 10,000 homeless. As much u 18 Inches of snow
Judge in Gulf County and a notary,
form ation taken down manually.
Her staff now Includes h e r chief
accumulated in Michigan's upper Peninsula New Year's Eve,
She spent February and March of
and Bsked th a t she perform the
deputy, a m an who does field work; a
and nearly half a foot fell along the Lake Michigan shore In
ceremony. T he ceremony w u held at
woman who helps with the d a ta entry
1981 doing the reappraisal for 1960 and
northern lower Michigan. The National W eather Service
h a d lo work on the 1961 roll im­ processing; and a woman w ho works
Joyce's Port St. Joe home.
estimated another 3 inches of rain would fall overnight on
m ediately thereafter. Again a new
Her notary friend and husband
(our days a week as her secretary.
southern and central Louisiana. An ertimated 10,000 people are
reappraisal was ordered. By tax roll
arrived at th e home in pajamas and
While all this activity was going on,
tim e of this year, her appraisals for
bathrobes. H e had a bottle of cham­
homeless because of floods caused by heavy ra in s which began
Joyce and Suber met at a statew ide
Christmas Eve. A flood-watch remained over southeast Texas,
1982 received the state’s blessing.
pagne, saved for such an occasion in
meeting of property appraisers In
where water 4 feet deep drove 90 families from their homes in
hand and the friend was carrying her
During her trials and tribulations
1981. During the early summer, Joyce
notary seal. And the marriage was
w ith reappraisals, the Gulf County
and her son, Jamie, now 17t Joined
i. Deneyvllte near the Louisiana border. Floods have been
common in Lake Charles, La., most threatened by the latest
performed.
Board of Commissioners decided to
Suber and a group of friends on a
Joyce readily says aha will run for
heavy rains. But forecasters said these could be the worst on
withhold funds to operate her office
fishing expedition. By October the
record. R e tt officials said a t least 1,999 people in the U ke
re-election In 1984 and quickly reveals
a n d she wenl to court, retaining and
couple w as involved In a rom ance.
Charles area were forced from their homes. In Mississippi, the •
paying for her own attorney.
her political philosophy.
On Nov. 16,1981, on the way back to
Tombigbee River created 14 feet above flood level after
The court ordered the county
“I ain't one of the good ole boys nor
Port St. Joe after the two attended
flooding an MUmated 1,000 homes and 990,000 acres of land.
commission to release the operating
one of the good ole girts either. I have
in d ividual
conferences
In
funds lo Joyce's office.
I h t Is * M om of M 2 dumped a December record of 7 Inches
a good rapport In the courthouse b a t
Tallahassee, the couple, who had had
• of snow on El Paso, Texas.
,
One of only three women property
when I say I*m going to do something,
their m arriage license (or weeks,
. AREA READINGS &lt;8 a a ) i temperature: 65; overnight
ap p raiser! elected in th e state, Joyce,
people pay attention," she said.
decided they would get m arried.
• low: Mi Friday high: 79; barometric pressure: 30.11 and
■ rising; relative humidity: 100 percent; winds: north at I mph;
! rain: 0; sunrise 7:18 so n ., sunset 5:40 p.m.
SUNDAY TIDES; DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 10:)$ am .,
. 18:81 p m .; lows, 3:41 a m , 4:31 p m ; PORT CANAVERAL:
Vemice; two daughters, Mrs.
WILLIAM M. BOGGS
•• highs, 10:11 a m , 10:43 p m .; lows, 3:33 D m ., 4:33 pm .;
W illiam M. Boggs, 57. of 883 Pamela Joy Groover, of Palm
) n i8AYFORT; highs, 2:18 a m ., 2:17 p m ; lows, 0:45 a m ., 9:39 N. W inter Park Drive, in Bay, and Miss D eborah Jo
' ppm .
A ltam onte
Casselberry, died Thursday Conrad, of
BOATING FORECAST: S t Aagwtiao te Ju p iter talet Oet $9 a t
Springs;
a
son,
H arry Lee
F lorida
Hospital*
U.S.
Census
Bureau
■ at: Small craft should exercise caution north of Cape
Altamonte. Born Feb. 1, ltf5 , Conrad, of Burlington. Vt.; Director Bruce Chapman will
C u av w aL North part wind northeast to east around 15 knots .in OUve Hill, Ky„ be moved to his tether, Harry M. Conrad,
speak W ednesday at (ha
-g day then easterly-10 to 18 knots by tonight and southeast
C asselberry from there In nf Silver Springs: a slater.r Unnw m j urcwtnr iwptt
•a.'
Sunday. Si m Mo I fast tonight and 3 to 3 faot by tonight. South 1167. He was a retired In­ Mrs. Joy Davis, of St. CUlrt
MitasRorty wind 10to 19knots through tonight-and southeast surance agent sod w as a Shores, Mich.; a n d th ree on m e rg in g social and
economic issues and the rifact
Sunday. Srm IU 5fast. Cloudynorth with periods of rain and m em ber of First Christian grandchildren.
on public policy.
vtetbUitykcally below1 miteIndenae(og. Putty cloudysouth Church in Sanford. He w as a
Scmoran Funeral Home,
The 2 p.m. public presen­
m em ber of the Fleet R tserv e,&gt; Altamonte S p rin g e, la In tation w ill be In Room HI of
ARBAFORKAIYj HosUy cloudy Sunday with a 40 percent
V eterans fit Foreign W ars charge of arrangem ents.
Phillips H ijj on the Joint in­
chance of shower*. Highs In mid to upper 70x
P o s t , 8287 in Longwood,
vitation of the CoUsge of
LEONIDAS H. YORK
A m erican Legion Pod 93 and
Bu t a n Admfatetratloo and
Leonidas H. York, 8% of 799
Um M oom Lodge 1151, both of
UwUCF Library.
Brtarwood Drive In Winter
Springe died F r id a y at
in October 1181 after w ring
H e le n ; a son, John, of Florida H 'ltpH iM H w iw ilt State of WaMUngton secretary
DIICMAMH
Born
Sept.
19,
IMS,
in
Louisa,
DeRooa; a brother Jam es, of.
of date. H a la n 1IQ graduate
Frttay
••Hy
R.
Edwarto
O h io ; a n d three g ra n d ­ Ky., he. moved to Winter of H arvard. He is the author
ADMISSIONS
Springs from In ra in , Ohio, in
aster R. Hobbs
children.
of several books, and pee an
Am D. Realms*
1977. He w u a re tire d steel
J. Mertt
O
ram
bow
Funeral
Home,
editorial w riter for the New
Rrysn
H.
TbswUsy
I . RMntorrv
S a n fo rd , U in ch arg e of inspector and a m em ber of York H e ra ld Tribune.
***** R. Comtfly, OsBsry
Mary *. CwHen.
the Community M ethodist
WMSi R. Hoes*. Detery
i Rile I . Lutwnto. '
Evelyn o . w etierun, Deltena
j n m f . oeeweav.;
RflSERTV. CONRAD
*.*&gt;1.
m1
\
Hebert W, Coared, W of 918
Survivors Include M i wife,
l U l f l MI-MI)
D arb y Drive In AUmdooU Grace H ; a eon, Charles- T„
9l
7 14 4# I I t A
flponpv chmq f rtOBjr. o o m in Lorain; a daughter, Mrs.
Sunday, January t M M M . 71. NO u s
Joyce E U e n b e r g e r ,, of
A H am eo ie Springs fro m BlountviUe, T e n n .; four
M H M BMV sad iM dlv.
m .a n i.
Caaaalberry In IttL He wrasa
M r* * , las., N » N .f » « « * * •
.
re tire d d riv e ter Orange- grandchild.
u rn
Sem taole-O sceela T ra n sit
Atffcwfty and a member of . Bakhrio-Fairchild Funeral
um j n r
f\ntabirfyBayta.^hurg. Home, Akamoate Springs, is
in charge of arrangem ents.

AREA DEATHS

review ing numerous applications Sorenson
appointed Robert G. Pctrec. a resident of the
com m unity.
P e tre e is a member of th e Orlando law firm
of B ernstein, Petree, Brooks, Cooper &amp; Marks.
S orenson said the most negative event in
L a k e Mary city government in 1982 was the
loss of th e lawsuit lo the county on the an­
nexation of the Heathrow planned unit
developm ent's 1,200 acres.
T h e county filed suit ag ain st Lake Mary's
annexation of the property n o rtl\o f U k e Mary
B oulevard and west of In terstate 4 in 1977. The
c ity appealed to the Fifth D istrict Court of
A ppeal th e three-judge c irc u it court panel’s
decision overturning the annexation.
W hile th e appellate court In Daytona Beach
left the c ity a slight opening to appeal the case
to th e sta te Supreme C ourt, Petree told the
b o a rd It didn't have a ch an ce of winning and
the council let the m atter die
I f the annexation had stood, the city's
geographical sixe would h a v e increased by
one-tldrd and its population would liave
quadrupled in this decade.
Sorenson sees asa m ajor positive happeningi
in Lake Mary the voter approval of a new
c h a rte r. "That will be felt in a million little
w a y s over the years," Sorenson said.
T h e new charter to becom e effective when
certified by Secretary of State George
F ire sto n e calls for a num ber of changes in the
c i t y government.
A m ong those changes a r e the renaming of
See LUCE MARY P ace IA

O u r Sincere
Gratitude
to all our m a n y friends for th e ir prayers,
kind and co nsoling words and a c ts of kind­
ness, shown to u s during the r e c e n t loss of
our beloved husband, Dad a n d son-in-law.

|Hif Mid Stated

S U l Strata*. |K»
ftickldl S Matty S^taqiUoi,
B * t b M Goetyg (tfsttl.

U.S. Census

Chief To Talk
Wednesday

HOSPITALNOTES
■tetter*

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Evtnlng Htrald, Sanford, FI._______ Sunday, Jan. ?, 1 W - 1 A

Custom-Made Arm or Protects Everything From Bibles To Kings
FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) In a small test
chamber off the m ain office, adjacent to a cabinet stockpiled
with submachine guns and automatic pistols, there is a
dummy used for ta rg e t practice.
The dummy h a s a soft, clayfilled belly, and this vulnerable
spot - covered w ith a bulletproof vest — is what company
officials fire at to test their product.
"This clay will show us exactly what the ‘shock trauma' is to
the body,’ says H al Moore, spokeman for Custom Armor
Manufacturers.
The divet in th e body cavity, about the size of a golf ball,
*ould have left a m assive bruise, Moore says, and perhaps a
few broken ribs. B ut the m an behind the vest would have lived.
For Custom A rm or, that is the only m easu re of success.
The brainchild of former security consultant Richard
Medlin, Custom A rm or Is a company which produces "molded
armor," a copyright plastic-fiberglass hybrid th at fashion-fit

a n y surface.
“ One person iwho cam e in) truly believed someone was
going to shoot him In the back of the head. We m ade a skull cap
for h im ," says Medlin. “He w asn’t Jewish, he just wanted it for
th e back of his head.”
Another custom request' Medlin met was from a Texas man
w ith a $2.5 million Gutenberg Bible. "He wanted a terroristproof" case, which Custom Armor supplied, Medlin says.
T he sam e ability to custom bullet-proof vests h as led to
co n tracts with several South American police departm ents,
because "nobody before w as willing to make vests that fit
sm all, heavy South American police," says Moore.
T he mainstay of the business, however, is protecting the
presidents and kings of L atin America and the Middle East
fro m assaslnation or kidnapping.
“ This will resist any pistol, rifle or hand grenade known,”
sa y s Moore of the Chevy Capris, Ford LTDs and Cadillac

limousines the company armors. "You can roll a grenade right
under th e c a r and it won’t do anything.”
In o rd er to illustrate the claim , Custom Armor plays a
demonstration videotape — with Spanish overdub — showing
the effects of close-range fire on one of their cars. The cam era
films from inside the car, an unswerving observer of highpower rifle shells bouncing off the windshield, leaving behind
circular shatter marks.
,
Because Custom Armor does not use steel, Just 320 pounds
are added to the weight of cars they arm or — "the cquivilant of
a fat guy in the back seat," says Moore. And the cost is "one of
the few things actually going down in price these days," he
says.
"It brings the cost down from six digits - the $50,000*100,000
range — to between $50,000 and $30,000," for the standard size
cars, says vice-president in charge of marketing Kevin
Buckley.

According to Buckley, the company has built protection for
15 heads of state in the Middle East and Latin American, as
well as supplying cars to myriad foreign dignitaries, foreign
industrialists and officials of U-S.-based international cor­
porations.
"The business is very cyclical," he says. "It depends, really,
on political and economic unrest."
Buckley says the company hopes to jnanufacture for the
domestic m arket in the near future.
"I think it’s only a matter of time before your Fortune 500
companies realize there is a domestic threat (from kidnap­
ping) — especially In the nuclear, petroleum and banking
businesses."
In the meantime, Custom Armor will market to the Latin
American nations where company head Medlin started as a
security consultant.

Shop Orlando and Sanford daily 9:30-9:30, Sun. 12-6.
Shop ML Dora, Clermont daily ?•?, Sun. 12-6

Shop Leesburg, DeLand,
Kissimmee
daily?-?, Sun. 1M

On Sale
Sunday
Thru
Tuesday

The Saving

®

A sk A b o u t C re d it T e r m s

Fireplace Logs

1 .5 0 Off

U n assem bled

la k e - w ith Price
•*]Designer" B /W Portable TV
Solid state. "D a y lig h t Bright"
picture tube. VHF/UHF tuning

*84

Per C ase

llln o t M m b lw d In COrion

Our Reg. $59
£ ^
Outdorf ‘ Multivideo Cart

O ur R eg. 3.87

2.97

For 19” color TV an d video
aam e or VCR. W o o d -look finish

Our Reg. 5.97

Our Reg. 569

Our Reg. $154

M l. Ot 12 Dishcloths
W affle-weave p la id Cot
to n /g ^ e s te r

Sale Price

4 .9 7 .,
9kg. Of * Pr. Men's
Work Tube Socks

IISMION . iNII

TUBE S O C K S

18" o f com fortable
c o tto n / n y lo n White
Fit m e n 's sizes 10-13

b P.ury.if

l . • lit

Takewith
Price

*139$ *227

Deluxe Stereo Cabinet Stereo With Cassette

Solld*stafe Color TV

W ith tempered g la s s doors.
re c o rd and ta p e storage
Walnut-look finish. O n casters

With "A u to C o lo r”, integrated circuitry, instant p icture/sound Rich wood-look

A M /F M -ste reo receiver, t a p e p lay e r/re co rd e r. tw o UV-T-high sp eaker
enclosures. Walnut-grain lo o k S a ve

K mart C O U P O N
FILM D E V E L O P I N G

Z

WITH COUPON
Comfort TopKnee-hJgha
Nylon/spandex. Suntone or mist-tone.
•

•

CowonCood ttvu Jan 4 .19t)

m
■

#
■

Aerosol Paint
Interior-exterior primer
flat or gloss. Colors, 13 oz..

G LAD

12 E x p . . . .....................3 . 1 9

2 4 E x p . .. '.. ................. 5 . 3 9

15Exp...... 2 . 4 7

I

B S ■ ■
_
■

2 0 E xp .........................4 . 6 9

12 Exp....... 1 . 9 9

P r.

(Xtr Reg. 267

I

Developing And Printing

D eveloped And Printed

20 Exp

Price

KUSTOM AT 4"

SPECIALS

F o c a l'O r K o d a k ’ F ilm

Our Reg. 686 Pr.

Takewith

2 .9 9 .

110,126,35mm 2 4 Exp..
3 .4 7 1
And New Disc"*
m
a a
36 Exp.........4 . 9 9
Regular
Processing

04*42

3 6 E x p ......................... 7 . 4 9
Custom processing gives you full
fram e prints on glossy paper, in lux­
urious special packaging. Negatives
are plqced in protective sleeve.

U rn . I

1 .7 8

Our Reg. 2.18
WITH COUPON

lO Olod' large kitchen Bogs
l.2-mil plastic, I3 g al. W ith ties.

siin u -ra ij
L A S o ie P r i c e !
AvofcJt*. mcx»
Scoring Gooditep*

• Oil change (up to 5 q»*

On tote Thru Saturday

• install lKm or* Brand

0(1 Frittf
• Chassis lube (fittings

• extra}

I

Our

— ....... -

U M sm ciuM

58.88 • With Exchange

__

Reg. 9.88

* loch

Carryout

dulythe

l Vt6 piston. Popular
sizes for many U.S.
cars, light trucks.

M ainten an ce-free co n v e n ie n ce
at an eco n o m y price. D eliver*
up to 410 cold-cran king a m p s
Size* to fit m any U.S. a n d im port
cars O nd lig h t trucks.

Sale Price

1.88

Quaktv eouatemfr.'s
s p e c ific a tio n Many
U.S. a n d foreign c a n

Rustproof caw . weatherproof switch.

LEES9UR9

OatMClTRVlSLVC
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ATUS.MWT.M14t?

EAST COLONIAL
m i r n o o n p ia z a a c r o m

FRO M FAW H O AM UARR

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SANFORD

U.S.MWT. 11-FIAT

CLERMONT

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SOUTH LAKtfPtAIA
•M1ASTNWT.M

AIRPORT M.V»,

S. ORLANDO

m s t.0 4 A N e i4 i« .
TRAIL AT 1AMO LAKI MO.

CASSELBERRY

U.S.MWT. f&gt;*INIXT
TOJAI-ALAI FROMTOM

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Evening Herald ~

« A lls .

This week when I dismantled the colorful
Christm as tree, packed aw ay delicate, glittering
ornam ents and carefully taped hundreds of
twinkling lights so they would not tangle, I
dabbed at tears several tim es.

IUSPS 4 tl 180)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993
Sunday, January 2, 1983-4A

It was sort of like I was shucking a legendary
friend who has become a s real to me as a family
m em ber.

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
R obert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, $4.29; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $49.00. By Mail: Week. $1.29; Month, $9.29; 6 Months.
$30.00; Year. $97.00.

Like Virginia, I will alw ays believe in Santa
Claus.

V ciO **
By DORIS DIETRICH

Bulgarian
Connection

But bidding the Jolly fat fellow in the red suit a
y e a r's leave of absence was not the only
emotional upheaval. I am not ready to bury old
m an 1982. It was a good year. Nothing real ex-

--

citing, except m ayB etne April o stufnrthkt left
its mark on nearly every home in the G reater
Sanford area. At least, Sanford got a new roof
and new windows to sec more clearly through.
One thing about the holidays is that folks get
their homes all spruced up, as well as them ­
selves. The cupboards are filled with goodies
that no one really needs. Refrigerators arc still
bulging with Christm as leftovers — turkeys,
hams, desserts.
And now tradition dLuties that to start the new
year off right, we should eat a mess of greens,
blackeyed peas and hog jowls.
Sounds like m ighty fine chow to me. And we
can all use the luck that allegedly accompanies

this pot luck.
The year is new. Old slates have been wipeu
clean. New bridges are under construction and
many a New Year’s resolution already has been
pulverized.
But most of us do have honorable intentions.
We strive for peace, happiness, good health and
lower taxes.
We light the candles, toast the world and blast
the trum pets to welcome a carefree ’83 with open
arms.
So, come on In you Innocent bouncing babe.
Just rem em ber, before the year ends, we'll
make an old man out of you.

JULIAN BOND

SCIENCE WORLD

If Not
Race,
W hat?

D uring the 19 m onths since Pope John P au l II
w as g rav ely wounded by Turkish te rro rist Mehm et All Agca, Italian prosecutors h a v e been
piecing together the th r e a d s of an am azing story.
T he evidence unearth ed to date has convinced
the Ita lia n government th a t Ali Agca, f a r from
actin g alone, was p a r t of an international plot
One consequence of the election of Ronald
originating within th e Soviet bloc to a s s a s sin a te Reagan was the elevation of the idea that
the sp iritu al leader of thfe world's 580 million factora other than race caused widespread
d lsp araties between Joblessness for
R om an Catholics.
American blacks and Hispanics and for
Ita lia n police hav e a rre ste d one B u lgarian
whites.
governm ent employee in Rom e, issued a w a rra n t
Non-whites are most often unemployed,
for th e a rre s t of a seco n d Bulgarian, a n d rep o r­ compared to whites, because of different
tedly have evidence implicating a th ird ; a levels of skills, education, age or place of
B u lg arian Embassy official with diplom atic residence, the new theory said.
Black youth who live In Inner cities couldn't
im m unity who has sin c e been called h o m e by his
expect to compete, wilh white youths who live
governm ent.
Ita ly ’s socialist d efen se minister, Lelio Lagorio, In the suburbs where the Jobs are. Forty-yearold black m en with less than a high school
told a special session of the Italian p arlia m e n t education would naturally lose in competition
th a t th e attem pt on th e pontiff’s life am o u n ted to to white college graduates for jobs where a
" a n a c t of w a r . . . a protective and a lte rn a tiv e college education Is required.
solution to an invasion of Poland."
Non-English-speaking H ispanics would
M r. Lagorio and th e three other cabinet naturally be chosen last behind Englishm in isters who b riefed Italy's C ham ber of literate whites for Jobs requiring spoken
D eputies stopped ju s t short of accusing the English.
And whites who are trained in nuclear
B ulg arian government, and its Soviet o verlords,
biology wUl always get first shot at jobs
of plotting to kill the p o p e. Nor did they s a y whose requiring th at training over unskilled black
invasion of Poland th e assassination a tte m p t was and Hispanic applicants.
m e a n t to preclude.
That seem s so evident it should not have
B ut the circum stantial evidence pointing to a required the Reagan revolution to bring it to
Bulgarian-inspired co n sp irac y supervised by the light.
Among the chief promoters of the doctrine
KGB is certainly com pelling, if not yet conclusive.
that discrimination could no longer be blamed
B u lg aria, the most S talin ist of the Soviet U nion’s
for the failures of non-white Americans to
E a s te rn European sa te llite s, has long se rv e d a s a measure up In the job market were Stanford
cond u it for Soviet bloc support of in tern atio n al University's Dr. Thomas Sowell and Har­
te rro rism .
vard’s Edw ard Banfltld. Sowell compared
Indeed, the Italian government now has the experiences of native-born blacks and
evid en ce linking B ulg arian agents to both the Mack West Indian immigrants, and con­
a tte m p te d assassinations of the pope an d the cluded th at the higher incomes of the latler
were attributable to family cohesion and a
subsequent kidnapping of U.S. Army G en. Ja m e s
work ethic. Native-born blacks, he implied,
Dozier by members of Ita ly ’s Communist Red lacked both and used race prejudice as a
B rigades terrorist organization.
crutch to excuse their own failures.
M oreover, B ulgaria's espionage a n d covert
Economist Walter Williams of George
operations service is w idely known to be a de facto Mason University added that governmentsifjsid iary of the Soviet KGB. Dorjb' jjinyone imposed restraints —like the- taxi medallion
im ag in e that the B ulgarransT aclingonT nelr own,' required of caEoperators In New York City —
wpuld initiate or activ ely assist a plot to had m ore effect than race in deciding who
could ca m a cab driver's income in New
a ssa ssin a te the pope?
York. Williams argued that the cost of pur­
T he KGB’s motive fo r plottingsuch a m onstrous chasing a medallion was beyond most blacks,
c rim e is apparent en o u g h ; the very one cited by and therefore government regulation — not
Lelio Lagorio. The Polish pontiff h ad alread y
racial discrimination - conspired ito keep
aligned himself and th e church with P o lan d ’s black hands from the steering wheels of
Solidarity m ovim ent. John Paul II h a d even yellow cabs.
Sounds great, doesn't it? If true, there
pledged to return to P oland if the Soviet arm y
really Isn't any reason why the government
invaded the country of his birth.
ought to maintain an a c tiv e ' apparatus
E lim inating the c h a rism a tic Polish pope m ust fighting discrimination.
h av e stru ck the KGB and Soviet le a d e rs a s a
Why arm yourself against an enemy that
precautionary first s te p should they feel con­ doesn't exist?
s tra in e d to do to P o la n d what had been done to
Why m a k e discrim ination Illegal If
H ungary and Czechoslovakia. A lternately, the discrimination plays no part in deciding who
S oviet’s m ay have believed that assassin atin g the gets what job?
pope would remove th e pillar of Solidarity’s ex­
Why w aste the taxpayers’ money?
te rn a l m oral support an d thus make a n invasion
Sadly, th at expense can't be written off
unnecessary.
right now. No matter what the president's
In any case, a pope who spoke out eloquently favorite academics have to say, racism and
an d often for hum an rig h ts posed a continuing race prejudice still must bear the blame for
the ra m p a n t unemployment among
th r e a t to any to talitarian system.
H ie staggering political implications of a Americans whose skins are not while.
For Hispanics, unemployment In October
Soviet-Bulgarian p lot to assassinate Jo h n P au l II
should be obvious to all. It would re v e a l a s few was 15.2 percent. Among blacks, 20.$ percent
o th e r crim es could th e utterly ruthless m entality were out of work. But only 9.3 percent of
whites were unemployed.
of th e Soviet leadership. What prospect c a n there
According to the United States Commission
be fo r tru e peace a n d disarm am ent so long as
on Civil Rights, “Even when blacka of the
such, m en command in the Kremlin?
same ag e a re likely either tr be unemployed
Y uri L. Andropov, th e man who h ead e d the or under-em ployed."
KGB and in all p ro b ab ility personally approved
p lan s for the assassination of the p o p e, is now
ANDERSON
g en era l secretary o f th e Soviet Comm unist P a rty
an d lead er of the S oviet Union. What d o es th a t say
abo u t whether the W est can afford to low er its
g u a rd and assume th a t th e Kremlin w ill negotiate
in gdod faitti for a n y agreement th a t would
dim in ish the cu rren t d a n g e r to the W est?

Scanner
M ay Spot
Kidney Ills

"IT W AS THE ONLY WAY WE COULD GET LIBERALS AND
CONSERVATIVES TOGETHER O N THIS THINGL."

JEFFREY HART

Killing The Pope
Okay, the whole evil brew Is now rising into
national and international consciousness, as
the m ass media cannot Ignore it.
To her credit, Claire Sterling first broke the
story in detail — though more has now
emerged in the Reader's Digest.
NBC-TV, operating independent of Sterling,
broke the story on its own, all credit to Marvin
Kalb and the NBC-TV Investigators.
But now the Turkish assassin Mehmet Ali
Agca is spilling his guts to Italian cops;
Bulgarian intelligence personnel are being
run to ground or escaping behind the Iron
Curtain; and Agca'i revelations are pushing
the whole thing up the chain of command to
Chairman Leonid Brezhnev himself; and the
then head of the KGB, and now chairman of
the Soviet Communist Party, Yuro Andropov.
The question is, as always — as Lenin knew
— what is to be done?
First of all, we should leam something
especially about how the Soviet leadership
plays politics.
In 1979, the Polish trade union Solidarity
was gaining strength and derailing the of­
ficial communist unions with their appointed
officials. Lech Walesa was a kind of informal
national leader. The Polish Catholic Church
was a popular institution, and prudently
sym pathetic to Walesa. Every indication was
that there was going to be a Soviet crackdown
In the style of Budapest and Prague.
Between the Soviet tanks and his homeland,
it Is now clear, stood the Polish pope. He
wrote a personal letter to Chairman Brezhnev
declaring that if Soviet arm or entered
Poland, he would resign the Crown of St.
Peter and return to Poland to lead the in­
ternal resistance.
This was one of the great gestures, no
threats, of modem history. The stability of
the entire Soviet position in E ast Europe was
at risk.
The pope was to receive a reply in lead.
The Bulgarian secret service is an arm of
the Soviet KGB, then of course headed by
Andropov. The Bulgarians, absolutely and
undoubtedly at Soviet orders, cranked up a
pope assassination They got hold of a Turkish
terrorist, Agca, then in prison for murder,
and sprang him. Once In Bulgaria, he .was

provided with funds, papers and a deadly
weapon. He circled upon Rome fay a roun­
dabout route and on May 13 of last year fired
the shots heard round the world in St. Peter's
Square.
On the way to the hospital, according to
close witnesses, the pope said only two
things: The Russians were behind it. I will
live.
Agca was undoubtedly supposed to perish
at the hands of police on the scene, but un­
fortunately for Andropov and the KGB he did
not. He Is singing, as the mob says.
But the qWktlbn srlses.of, whether the KGB.
m ay have terrorized the pope and the
Catholic Church anyway. Even though the
pope survived, the Soviets have showed the
kind of hard-ball they are willing to play.
No one doubts the pope's personal courage.
He was willing to return to Poland and die
leading the resistance. But the Turkish
assassin's bullet had a message on it.
There are millions of Catholics under Soviet
co n tro l.. The immediate architect of the
assassination attempt, Yuri Andropov, now
runs the Soviet empire. Pope John Paul II
now knows haw ruthless the empire is. What
a re his responsibilities? Have the millions
thus in jeopardy intimidated him?
One notea that he has not rebuked the
pacifistic stance of the American Catholic
bishops which in his heart he must despise.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters la Ike editor are welcomed for
publication AHletters m ast bo sip ed , with
a maQiag address and, If possible, a
telephone number so tbo H rattty sI (be
w riter may be verified. Tbe Ercotag
Herald will respect tbe wtoboo of writers
who do set want tbeir aam ca la petal I t o
Eveaiag Herald also reserves tbe right to
edit letters to elimlaete Ubd or hi coefirm
to space reqairemeata.

By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Health Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - Animal studies show
a new type of body scanner that uses magnet­
ism and radio waves instead of X-rays is a
promising tool to pinpoint certain kinds of
kidney disorders.
It’s the latest in a aeries of developments
th at already have shown the new diagnostic
technique, known as n u c le a r magnetic
resonance or NMR, is useful to hunt for
diseased parts of the brain, circulatory
system, abdomen, chest and pelvis.
D r. Jeffrey H. Newhouse, assistant
professor of radiology at Harvard Medical
School, reported the new development at the
68th Scientific Assembly of the Radiological
Society of North America.
NMR is an imaging technique that does not
uae the kind of radiation associated with Xrays. Instead, NMR uses a strong magnetic
field — 3,000 to 10,000 times stronger than the
E arth ’s —and radio waves to make hydrogen
atoms In the body wobble.
This movement is picked up by a special
radio receiver, translated by a computer, and
then displayed on a television screen.
Newhouse gave this abbreviated view how
it goes in a clinical setting:
—The patient lies on a movable table placed
under a tube containing m agnetic colls.
—When body tissues a re exposed lo the
m agnetic field, some of the abundant
hydrogen atoms in water and other molecules
align themselves with the field.
—A burst of radio energy then causes the
nuclei or atoms to change their orientation
and wobble.
—After the signal is turned off, the nuclei
return to their original direction, discharging
the absorbed radio energy in varying time
spans.
—These signals are picked up and tran­
sferred lo a computer, which then flashes an
image of the inside of Lhe scanned body tissue
on a monitor screen.
Newhouse said previous studies have shown
proton NMR imaging may spot fat buildups in
m ajor blood vessels. -He said these findings
led investigators to conclude that the ultimate
goal of measuring blood flow rates from welldefined anatomic locations anywhere In the
body can be achieved.
The purpose of his study, Newhouse said,
was to find out if NMR scanning would be
useful In spatting certain kidney diseases.
He said a model of simulated kidney
disorders was created in dogs. This was done
by plugging the dogs' renal arteries and veins
and thus slopping all blood (lowing to the
anim al’s klibieys.
I t o researchers assessed the difference
between imaging of obstructed and unob­
structed renal Mood vessels and found that
NMR scans were able to correctly detect
renal vein and artery occlusion in animals.
"This means that NMR scans could well be
an important diagnostic m eans in correctly
Identifying renal artery or vein occlusion In
humans," Newhouse said.

JACK

A List Of Predictions For 1983

• t

i \ ............. ... 4

•'LM 't not /m m 'any acUdanti Wi're carrying
TOXIC CHEMICALS!-

“m andate,’: and be will d in g to it stubbornly
&lt;llp. Anyone who clawed his way to supreme
WASHINGTON - What U the outlook for
s i long a s hs can. But any Reagan mar date
power through the KGB is s certified harIMS? Pertipas the b u t assessm ents appear In
the wr.fHwrUal forecaeteJtot i r e rebaritted. - j u j u a t v j f d i A r e f ltfl t e .tte L ia a u n n . . j Wd h v __ ____________.. : ______
elrTrim s; the Whits House won’t have the
Andropov may well be cautious snd
to the White House. Here's what the govern­
riout it had with Gongrcaa in IM142. I t o
seemingly mors moderate in foreign affairs
ment experts forests:
a d m in istratio n not only lost strength
for the lime being, but th a t’s only because his
— I h a U.S. sutoiqdM try should to g in k i
nmnartcafly on Capitol Hill, but moat
first priority is consolidating his penonal
long-awaited recovery. After last year's
RcpuhUcaw who m re m d did It ia spits of tbo
power in the cu tth ra t, Byzantine world of the
disaster, analysts sxpset the Big Three
to hie caritafla
\ \ j Soviet hierarchy. Once t o has rntrencRed
autom akers to show s profit in 1M3. Even * nrreiiknt not
The president Is a realist. Ha knows hall
h im seif firmly - and he has already moved
have to compromise on the budget sooner or
with awesome Q isd and rimwdnsas - ex­
1994, whan m ors than 10 ntiDion UR.-mads
later. 8o t o l l try for later, hoping that an
pect him to to every bit a s tough as hj»
cars and track a wiB bs said. The rosy forecast
econom ic recovery will strengthen his
for the Industry Is based on the assumption
position. Bat by ra w ra rtin w , t o l l have to
th at th e companies wUl t o atd s to earn mitre
— OU prices will continue to slum$. That
start making coactsqions.
par
t old , because their expanses have
w as d early fam hsdowed by the failure of the
— What about ito s c a w a k recovery?
been cut by plant closings, layoffs and tadon.
recant masting of tbe Organisation of
Analysts teO ins It will not to asatrqpg as
wage concaaston i
Petroleum Exporting Countrise in Vienna.
noma people expect - especially the wishful
Lower interest rates will also spur car
Though tbo OPEC delegates issued a per­
thinkers In the White House. In (act,
sales. I t o only dark cloud hanging over the
functory affirmation of the ofQcU cartel
'congressional
issdsrs
have
bean
warned
Industry is mm instil high anam plpyrnni;
price, they coukh’t agree on the production
privately that there's a significant chance
people without jobs donl buy cars. As for
quotas
that aouid m ake the price aUainafaie.
tb e ru ll be no recovery anytime moo.
foreign competition, eves if th e im kns dant
UnaRjpbymanl is ins m ajor protrikn, and
get th e "dom estic c o n te n t" legislation
Too many oil-producing nations are In
even the uptimiris donl see h dropping much
thsy*ve
desperate straits financially - I n n m ud aril
below 19 parapet in ltO .
oil to finance ka costly w ar with Iraq, for
effect voiantartiy. In (act, joiat U.8.-Jspen*e*
exam ple, while Mexlce needs ofl money to
m ay appear te be Ism a g g ra d e * on the in­
bail Rout of Rs fiscal mesa. With so many oH
Reagan win
will wind up comternational scans for the next fewmontiw, but
pi oducen undercutting th e OPEC prices Just
on his budgrt tpr 1N4.
don’t be fooled. The early ssoisnranti of
to survive. U» cartel i t crwnbUng-And Saudi
A rabia, the staunchest sunooctar of OPEC,
rj!
................................... . . . . . .
man
month will d ill reflect the president's 1M
- a closet liberal, even — were pure sheep
c a n t cut back much m ore on production

**-*%-• '

***-

*4* -fc # ***• «,*'**' #"*'

without drying up the petrodollar How and
risking Internal unrest.
—T to Intaretfopal hotspot to watch out tor
is right in our backyard. Skinnishso along the
Hondunn-Nicaragusn bordsr may turn into
fuUfisdgad war. Honduras, with its UR.
equipment, will have the initial military edge.
But Nicaragua's increasingly left-tuning
regime wtlt caO on Cube for help. Then
Ifa d u ra s will ask Washington to beef up Its
m ilitary aid.
— Preridm t Reagan la still insisting that ha
But the appointment of his riooe friend, Sen.
Paul Lexsk, R-Nev., a s the n ap Republican
P arty chairman Is a r is e r signal. The people

he w ill ask a second term. Jest in case he
should retire, Vice PnsH u I Georg* Brah it
quietly laying the troche h r a Brefa bsnd-

The

muRlbUUea-doUsr

home-

the m arket fragmented antsng dosens of
com panies g ia n ts s n d aggressive
newcomers. Their hsrdbett tactics as they
struggle far s b ig g * rim re of the booming
re a re d here creeled many legal and
regulatory probit; as. Congress will h ere to

-

f

1

�OPINION
Evening H in ld , Sanford, FI.

O U R READERS WRITE

True Christmas
Meaning Emphasized
This letter Is in regards to the picture
that graced the front of the Sanford
Evening Herald on Thursday, Dec. 23.
The picture is beautiful and the lights
do brighten up a person's feelings.
I have no problem with the colored
lights. What I question is your
statement under the picture . . . "the
various Christmas lighting lights up
everybody's Christmassplrit". The key
words are "everybody's Christmas
spirit."
What Spirit of Christmas does this
picture project? There are lights, bells,
a Christmas Tree and Santa Claus.
Does this truly project the Christmas
spirit?
The Sanford parade is another m atter
in question. The theme was “Joy in the
Morning" — What was the Christmas
spirit that it projected? — gifts,
presents, Santa, snow, reindeers, E.T.?
We have gotten so far away from the
true meaning of Christmas that you
titled First Assembly’s float "Bom to
Die" as the "Most Unusual" float.........
Was it unusual?
As I stood on the second level
overlooking the displays at the
Altamonte Mall I was confronted again
with “everybody’s Christmas spirit".
There w as " S a n ta 's W orkshop",
Santa’s House with a long line waiting
to have a picture with Santa, and
Santa’s sleigh full of gifts and presents.
What "spirit" does this project?
My heart saddened as I 'looked
around this Christmas and saw less of

Christ and more of Santa. You would
think Christmas was "man-made”
(Santa, toys, snow, etc.). Is it? To a
youngster or a foreigner today who had
no previous knowledge of Christmas,
you would be hard pressed to prove to
them that Christmas is about a baby
being bom only to die 33 years later for
the Sins of Mankind.
Why not have your child’s picture
taken in a manger setting, surrounded
by Mary, Joseph, and Baby Jesus?
Satan is working hard in slowly
deceiving this world by removing all
thoughts of the "Christ child" and
replacing Him with His counterfeit —
Santa Claus" . . . Look around for
yourself!
If this generation we're living in
doesn't turn around and start
proclaiming the truth to our children
and our neighborhood about the true
meaning of Christmas (and Easter for
that m atter), God help our children and
our world! I believe we're at the
crossroads of tim e, if we (as
Christians) don't make an impact upon
our world (Sanford), it's doubtful our
children will be able to.

Sunday, Jan. 7, 111)—JA

Can Pensions Be Cut By Com panies?
Committee On Aging
Q. The company I work for has an­
nounced that It is "Terminating" our
pension plan — J u t like th a t When I
considered working for this company IS
y e a n ago, the personnel people lived
me with this great pension plan that
would provide me with the excellent
benefits when I retire. In fa c t I ac­
cepted a lower salary than I w u of­
fered i t another firm Just because of
the peu lo a benefits at this one. Now I
understand I'll only qualify for the
amount I’ve accrued to this point They
say this isn’t DiegaL But Fll tell you one
thing. I*m getting cheated.
A. I cannot comment directly on the
legality of the situation at your com­
pany, but there la an ominous trend
toward pension "raids" that does
threaten the security of millions of
Individuals dependent on the nation’s
private pension system.
It is becoming all too common, for
employers to terminate their definedbenefit plans to recapture the so-called
excess assetsof the plans. Excess funds
are those that are more than adequate
to cover the present value or all vested
and accrued benefits under a plan.

for an employee, the worker Is unlikely
to secure a new Job with pension
coverage because many employers are
reluctant to hire older workers. And
even if the employee is not old, unless a
new employer gives a worker full credit
for benefits accrued under a previous
employer, it is unlikely that the em­
ployee will be able to achieve the level
and security of benefits afforded under
the previous plan.

y Growing
Older
U.S. Rep.
Gaude Pepper

Of course, as you suggest, the result
for employees Is that their vested and
accrued benefits stop growing at the
date of termination, rather than con­
tinuing to grow until the employees
retire. For example, an employee who
has worked for employer X for IS years
may have been expecting to receive
$525 a month upon retirem en t.
However, as a result of termination of
his or her company's over-funded
pension plan, the participant will
receive only 1318 a month, far short of
the anticipated benefit.
Such an unanticipated reduction in an
employee’s pension benefit can have a
dire impact on that worker and the
worker's ability to support his or her
family upon retirement. If the plan
termination occurs at an advanced age

G early, the sad slate of the economy
and the poor financial condition of some
employers have made excess pension
funds tempting for some firms, often to
head of undesired acquisitions. The 1971
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA) prohibits the use of
pension funds to benefit an employer.
However, it is unclear whether the law
prohibits an employer from t e r ­
minating a plan and recapturing assets
in excess of vested pensions. Some
court fights are under way at this point.
Q. My husband died earlier this year
and I have had a very difficult time.
Now with the holidays coming up, 1 am
saddened even more deeply. Our only
son has offered to fly me to bis home for

Christmas, but 1 have never traveled
alone before (he lives !,Mt m iles
away), and I’m afraid Fll be so
emotional that FU spoil the day for
everyone.

&lt;

A. Holidays are an emotional tim e for
all of us, so your anticipation of sadness
over the loss of your husband is m ost
understandable. You can be sure that ’
your son who shares your loss, Is very
much aw are of your feelings. His in­
vitation to you is one wty of m aking
certain that your family has the op­
portunity to be together at a time when
you need each other's support and love.
The real beauty of the holidays Is Just
that spirit of closeness and strength
that comes from understanding and
sharing in one another's lives. Two
thousand m iles is great p h y sical
distance, but it doesn't have to be
emotional distance as well.
One last word: Your son is Inviting
you for Christmas for his own sak e as
well as your own. You may be able to
offer him g reat comfort. It's sometimes
possible to soften your own pain by
extending yourself to another. This
may be a good time to take the step.

Bty,(fin.i 6E T°3£EPSooo
!
MY W W W 15GEMS4 ft® 1
.!!

I ’m com m itted to Sanford and
returning to the standards of God’s
word.
David Bohannon,
Pastor
First Assembly of God Church
Sanford

Stop UNESCO Support
The activities in the recent general
session of th e United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural
O rganisation, (UNESCO), dem on­
strates yet again that the United States
should end Its participation in and
support of th a t organisation.
UNESCO's sole purpose for the past,
decade has been to spread antiAmerican propaganda and impose
international control over the free
world’s
m edia
and
c u ltu ra l
organisations.
In ev ery conference It holds,
UNESCO denounces what it calls the
“cultural imperialism'' of Western
democracies, the same nations from
which it derives the vast majority of its
operating funds. Now, this "world
o rd er" is to com bat "A m erican
cultural im perialism " by requiring
governmental control of media and
cultural institutions and establishing an
International regulatory agency to
license Journalists and satellite com­
munications.
Of course, the socialist nations that
control UNESCO never mention the
total denial of political and cultural

freedom In Communist nations or the
value of a free press In a democratic
society. Indeed, a U.S. resolution at last
July’s UNESCO conference declaring
"freedom of media as a basic cultural
right" failed to attract the vote of even
a single cosponsoring nation.
The danger to basic human freedom
posed by UNESCO’s propoeed in­
tern atio n al control of m aaa com­
munications la so self-evident that it
requires no further discussion here. A
question does need to be asked,
however. Why does the U.&amp; continue to
support, financially and otherwise, an
organisation which viciously condemns
the American government and media?
The American Legal Foundation
thinks it's about time the U.S. stopped
spending our precious tax dollars to
support these T hird World-U.N.
assaults on the principles for which
America stands.
ft
Michael Carvin
Executive Director
American Legal Foundation
Washington, D.C.

Bay Queen Is Great
This trip w u in marked contrast to
our EPCOT experience. It took three
months, two letters, and phone calls to
even be able to buy our World Passport
tickets by mall. Finally, deciding on a
rather cold and gloomy Monday as a
good day for us Floridians (now), we
could find (ew attendants at ths at­
tractions and those we did Ond were
indifferent and in one case, actually
surly. It was quite a chore to even get a
free small m ap of the layout. On'
several of the rides, we were herded
into the seats — in one instant* K w u
so dark we barely got into a seat from a
moving platform without (ailing. No,
we didn’t see the whole thing. Reser­
vations were required in some at­
tractions to sea their features; reser­
vations were required in one remaurant
we wanted to lunch in. However, we
had no problem a t all In ths Japanese
restaurants, contrary to what we had
been advised upon entering the gates.

Again, the Bay Quasn la a
bettor choke for a ftm trip.

Genealogical Help O ffered
With such a renewed fetere* in tsasrtofm en^ bm excetletw aid
’roots" daring recent years and eassetta mconBa p of a aorta of
a m o n d WIMT m w * M
■ M M to n a to U n d liO m fla d vtaf
t h .p t f M m n .- 'M U c d t o f e
■tuaUn of jw r m 4 » i tta a r m .
availability of ttelsndnote a d biddy*
sot of books
"PioManof

F — *» *
f t *■» — «■*
* » . * W . * &gt; W».— * W
m
tm - f r M m « tt.

of tbs Ms— D r y line mui a s dsath
lart year at igft
tetter teteaotte . tbsaa he
M o d may contact tha M i d
tie seeingleal Sactoty, a Mt-frefU
Ths aat cantata tertebte-of some organisation; ths •adaty'a addreaa ia
Gtergia SMM.
1
tm dtai of Georgia to 178 * to g o
tsn o f t h e * h c e n tu r y . Also available

rKier!SSd
alladatyo.b
net.

• « « - n •-

«« a—^

***•■»%» ■

* i« s i,,t k •«* &lt;;i

Cuban Missile Crisis Analyzed
By HAROLDW, ROOD
(Dr. Bertel Bead ia a professor at
ffttltle rl adftftee at C larem ont
llc R n a a CaBaga).
" lik a a thunderbolt piercing the
murky aky... Soviet Russia has stret­
ched out its n u daar aim acroaa the
Atlantic to confront us with a deadly
Tina, V year* ago, the New
Y ork T im et com m ented on the
(Recovery that Moscow bad aocrotly
nudaar-anned
and

the discover/ on -O c t 22, 1882,Prexldent Kennedy responded by In­

serting a naval blockade of Cuba. Six
days later, oa Oct M, the Ruartans
Ismateteg tha rackets and
bombers la ardor to rotors
laths M o t Union. Tha Cuba
TheBeriata, In the optnloo of moat
ceauasataterBi had gambled and loot.
Thrtr o d ia , Hmry Uatager ante la
November INS, " t o difficult to e*
pteki . exrept « a eotamal btander.
Tha Russians daariy misjudged ths
character of tha Prmtdmt and tha

Yrt a

dm

Malta kadi halm sad d m tha crirts
carts dukt « ths notion that ths
Ungod Statu waa tha victor in the
R w a Castro's ria to

la tha

tteicflala. By H atters w a U til drtrtt
that Cuba's now looter w a a rom­
an ally of the Soviets, hr

--ft * * *

ft***'*-#J, **- «■’* ns#|v% ,

thousand* of tom of m ilitary equipment
had been pouring Into the Island from
the Eastern bloc, and Cuban pilots were
being trained to Qy Russian MIG a i r
craft In Chechoslovakia.
Them developments had not gone
unnoticed in Washington. Indeed, In
A pril INI P resident Kennedy
proclaimed that "the United States
does not intend to abandon Cuba to
Communion." And one month before
the m,Mn* crisis, the U A genate
resolved by a vote of M to 1 that "the
U A is datermiasd to prevent in Cuba
the creation or use of an externally
supported m ilitary cap ab ility en­
dangering tha sscurity of the United

During the past 20 years there has
been no American effort to prevent
Moicow'i use of Cuba ss an advanced
base for Soviet operptlons In the
Western Hemisphere.
Soviet forces remain in the island
until this day. When in 1870 tt became
apparent that Soviet submarines were
using Cuban bases whils cruising In the
Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, the
Soviet newspaper IxvetUa rem inded its
readers th at there w u a m utual un­
derstanding between the Soviet Union
and tha United S tatu , dating from 180,
in Which th a. United S t a t u had"
promised not to invade Cuba. Ib is
agreement had com* shout, I n e r tia
■aid, became “the arms th at tha V AA.
bad ch am eterted u offonatve a n
withdrawn in m the island."
In 1170, tho United SUtu appeared to

That determination disappeared,
however, with the onset of the miartle
crisis. Notably, that crirta
to
ban bam purposely
the Soviets. For kotos
effort to hide their ________ __
miaaQes in Cuba thoughthey kaewUJ.

by

conclude that Soviet submarines

a n not offensive weapon within the
terms of the Soviet-UJL agreement on
Cubs.
The Soviet Union h u continued to
supply Cube with the mort up-to-date
weapons and aircraft, and h u given
Havana three submarines to operate.
Units of the Cuban army have fought
alongside their Soviet ally In Ethiopia,
and operate elsewhere in Africa a n d the
Middle E ast where Soviet intererts
dictate.
tt Is difficult on this, the tw entieth
annlveraaf y of the Cuban missile crisis,
to believe that the outcoma of th at crisis
w u a victory for the Unksd State*.
Fleet Admiral Gonkkov, the Soviet
Fleet's CommaadsHeChisf, w rote In
180,
C

!i
b

a

*

-we mate te
te Heartfled u "oflmdve." Yet hotworn January and August IMS, a
handful of German submarines
operating from Occupied Franca.had
tank a miHka and a quarter tons of
Allied gypping Inthe eaters of the Qutt
of Mexico and the Caribbean It was,

over the island. At my rate, in ratam
for Moscow’s agreoDmt to remove its
weapons from the Irtand,
. art only promised
to lift the naval quarantine bat alao
pMfcad that tha "United Mates woaid
Jrta with otter nations ia tha Wutera
Hemisphere in providing
agatort aa teuton” of Co
H u Soviet Union, (tea, and its
to threaten war over
Ctea, ate the Unite Rate* ia
naoM S, aura* sod never to attack
Cate aad overthrow Cartro. Ths
utefio crirts ranked la

eperatteaa te deliver etrmahlag
h im against am a d p a r t
■ fN w m ■

om/

pstat «f Me werM eeea a rt o*

UwnOCI, 1 uMiiMfliOW iM T u N In

R new a a a s that ths maimer ta
the

diplomatic m otostta to Mppooii in
lift, that lovirt
with nudes

the earvyktg eat of tte mrtrtn af the
Soviet Fleet, as ducritod by tehrtral

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Following up your excellent article on
the Bay Queen as a Christmas gift, we
decided to deviate from our usual
holiday routine by going aboard on
Christmas Day.
From the most pleasant reception of
our request for reservitlons, the moat
cordial "welcome aboard" greetings by
the boats officers and staff, we w e n
totally delighted with our trip — a first
for us on Lake Monroe and the St. Johns
Rive*.
This is truly an experience not to be
missed by anyone. The boat la im­
maculate, the staff courteous and most
helpful, th e food, served buffet rtyle, U
most ap p ealin g and absolutely
delicious. The open bar serves great
beverages, ths music was toetapping
all the way. By the tims ws had eaten
our lunch and passed under the bridge^
many of us w e n already friends. It was
almost lika • k n g cruise aboard a large
ocean-going ship,
Sanford-Semlnole County now haa a
tourist attraction beyond com pan. Ws
certainly expect to again make their
other trip s b efo n they must return to
Michigan the end of ApriL

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SwwtaivJa/vJ, l»8J

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
10 Killed In Accidents
In State; 4 Pedestrians
By U n ited Press International
At least ten people, including four pedestrian s, have
been killed in N ew Year's Eve w eekend traffic ac­
cidents across F lo rid a, the highway p a tro l reports.
The patrol h ad predicted 27 deaths on s ta te highways
during the 79-hour weekend ending at m idnight Sun­
day.
Wayne A lexander, 32, of Tampa d ie d Just before
midnight T hursday when he was hit b y a car while
crossing In terstate 275 in Tatnpa, police said. No
charges were filed against the d riv e r of the
automobile.
Peter F red erick King, 32, of Fort l.au d erd ale, also
was struck while crossing the street in Pom pano Beach
a highway p a tro l spokesman said.
Two other p ed estrian s were killed in accidents
Ffiday in Polk a n d St. Lucie counties, but authorities
were withholding their identities until relatives were
notified.
Jack H. Schncll, 35, of Mims died w hen the motor­
cycle he was riding in Titusville w as smashed by
another vehicle polling into its path.
In Hardee C ounty, Michael Eugene Douglas, 28, of
Bradenton died when the car he was d riv in g at a high
rate of speed le ft the road, rolled over tw ice and landed
upside-down. D ouglas was thrown fro m the vehicle,
patrolmen sa id .

Miami Works On Image
MIAMI (U P Ii — Tourist-dependent Miami, the
violence that inflam ed its Chert own g h etto subsiding,
turned its atten tio n in the new year to refurbishing the
image of a h a v e n for sun-seeking n ortherners.
Chuck K ra m er, Miami Beach V isito rs and Con­
vention A uthority chairman, announced late Friday a
northeastern m ed io blitz planned for February has
been moved u p to January.
lie said th re e local mayors - Metro M ayor Stephen
Clark, Miami M ayor Maurice Ferre a n d Miami Beach
Mayor Nonnan Cimcnt - will go to New York to try to
convince trav e l editors that it's safe to vacation in
Miami.
The I 1.32 m e d ia blitz will be aimed a t New York City,
New Jersey a n d fang Island, he said.
Uniformed po lice pulled out of the O vertow n ghetto
Friday night sh o rtly before the O range Bowl parade
passed by, and the area where two m e n died and 2fi
persons were Injured appeared to h a v e relum ed to
nonnal.
The only in cident reported Friday night was the
stoning of a b u s carrying a marching b a n d away from
the parade d estag in g area. Police sa id a window was
broken on the bus but no one was h u rt.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
3 Killed, 50 Arrested
In Stampede In London
U)NDON ( U P I ) —Two women w ere killed und UB
other people in ju re d early Saturday in a ‘'stampede"
that surged through Trafalgar S q u are at the
traditional N ew Y ear's Five celebration, police said. A
young man a ls o died of a heart a tta c k .
Witnesses s a id most of the casu alties occurred as
crowds of p eople estimated at 50,000 strong were
shoved by d an cin g youths, many drunk, and then ran to
escape the c ru sh .
Police fo ren sic experts roped off a c o m e r of the city
center square where two bodies w ere found shortly
after m idnight and combed through b o ttles, beer cans,
shoes and h a ts that littered the ground.
At least 50 people were arrested fo r public disorder
offenses at th e celebration, which clim ax es when the
Big Ben to w e r chimes midnight.
"According to our emergency incident vehicle In
Trafalgar S q u are, the Incident In w hich these people
died was a sta m p e d e ," an ambulance unit’spokesman
said.
lie said 118 people were taken to three nearby
hospitals, m o stly with minor Injuries.

*

New Fighting In Tripol I
United Press International

Factional fighting terrorized the northern coastal
city of Tripoli Saturday and tension g rip p ed the Israelicontrolled m o u n tain s southeast of B e iru t after a night
of Sectarian battles, labanese se c u rity sources said.
Israeli officials, preparing fur M onday's third round
of talks on withdrawing foreign troops from Ubanon,
downplayed differences , with their Lebanese coun­
terparts but labanese sources sa id the negotiators
remain far a p a rt.
The Tripoli fighting, between the c ity 's pro^yrian
and anti-Syrian militiamen, broke out Friday and
spilled Into th e New Year, (he sources said.
Two people were killed and 15 o th e rs wounded In
Friday's battles.

Poland Needs Food
CHICAGO ( U P I )—Solidarity lead er loch Walesa
told a leader o f Chicago's Polish com m unity during a
New Year's E v e telephone conversation toe Polish
people's g re a te st single need Is food.
Alderman R om an Pucinski, president of the Illinois
division of t h e Poliah American Congress, called the
Walesa residence Friday, Just an h o u r before the New
Year struck in Poland.
"I almost fe ll off my chair when l-ach answered the
phone personally," Pucinski said.

Pucinski s a id Walesa thanked A m ericans for their
support of P oland.

Guns
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Wrltrr

A c tio n R e p o rts

Tw o young men who reportedly had started out trying to sell
d ru g s in Vero Beach and were found sleeping in a c ar in
Sanford where they had stopped on their way to T cxar were
a rre ste d by police carrying out a routine check.
A rrested were Joe P eter King, 19, bom in N urem burg, West
G erm an y , of 1655 71st Ave. in Vero Beach and M ark Keith
M oore, 21, of 1809 41st Ave. in Vero Beach, They were on their
way to Texas with T am ara Gelsomine who w as with King and
had stopped off in Sanford to sec Moore's girlfriend, police

Are

★

Fires
★ Courts
★

Police

said.
Police said they had arrived in Sanford too late to see

"FounIn

Moore’s girlfriend and they had decided to sleep in the car
which was parked at the Farm ers Market at French and 15th
Street. King was charged with possession of cannabis and
having a concealed weapon in the glove com partm ent. Moore
was charged with possessing cannabis and a firearm. Bond of
$5,000 each was set.
A loaded .38-caliber gun was found by police under the seal
of the cpr being driven Eugene Anderson Hutley III, 23, of
Anderson Avenue Thursday, lie was charged with possession
of narcotics, possession of narcotic paraphernalia and
possession of a concealed weapon. Bond w as set at $5,000.

6 Drivers Charged With DUI In Seminole
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
H erald Stqff Writer
Tw o New Year’s E ve revelers who phoned the Sanford
Police Dcoartment 'o say they were unfit to drive had a free
ride hom e in a police cru iser but six drivers who were stopped
by Sem inole County sh eriff's deputies wound up in jail on
ch arg es of driving while under the influence.
T he Florida Highway Patrol made no drunken driving
a rre s ts between midnight Friday and 6 a m. Saturday, and
only one DUI early Friday, a FH P spokeswoman said.
T he Sanford Police D epartm ent has offered the free get-youhnm e service at New Y ear's Eve and New Y ear’s Day on at
least two occasions but there had been no tak ers before, Sgt.
H erb Shea, said.
“ We would rather they'd call us than to have to arrest
th e m ," Shea said.
Much of the reluctance to call the police for a free ride home
ste m s from what neighbors might think of a person being
brought home in a police c a r, he said.

Those jailed Fnda; night w ere:
Daniel M an Jester, 21, of 3907 la g u n a Ave.. in Orlando, who
was charged with DUI and careless driving after an accident
at Howell Branch Hoad and Dodd Road.
Michael Francis Carlson. 30. of 200 Maitland Ave. in
Altamonte Springs whose car was seen weaving southbound on
State Road 436 was charged with DUI.
Bruce Moore Roger, 21, of 1227 Roxboro Hoad in langwood
was charged with DUI and reckless driving after his car w as in
an accident on State Itoad 434 and Palm Spring Drive in
langwood.
Richard Thomas Cooke, 34, of 869 Ballard Street in
Altamonte Springs was stopped by police on South Street in
Fern P ark and charged with DUI and failing to stay in a single
lane.
Hay Vance Kemberly, 35, of 245 1joch low Drive in Sanford
was charged with DUI and failing to m aintain his lane after his
car w as seen weaving across the road at Dike Mary Boulevard
and Ridge Hoad.

Donald William Fach, 45, of 2545 Park Ave. in Sanford was
charged with DUI afte r police saw his car weaving on the U S.
Highway 17-92 south of 21st Street.
lacal authorities were fearful that dense fog early Saturday
morning would add to traffic problems. But drivers apparently
slowed down to compensate for the n e ar zero visibility
reported throughout much of Central Florida.
The Orange County Sheriff's Department reported arresting
23 people on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol
late Thursday and Friday.
The Florida Highway Patrol cancelled all leaves and had
extra patrolmen on duty but made no a rre sts for drunken
driving between midnight on Friday and 6 a.m. Saturday.
“ We take them to jail. That Is our policy. We don't lake them
home," said Sgt. John Warden of D c la n d 's FH P office.
And that was th e get-tough policy of Seminole County
Sheriff’s D epartm ent which brought in a c ro p of six drivers on
drunken driving offenses.

...Lake Mary Lost 2 Councilmen In 1982
Continued from Page 2A
the city council as the city commission;
m aking the city election tim e in September to
coincide with the first prim ary, rather than in
D ecem ber; the elimination of runoff elections,
can d id ates will be elected by plurality rather
th an majority; the council may now fire
c h a rte r officials- the city m anager, city clerk,
city ireasurer, cltv atto rn ey - by a simple
m ajo rity vote. Previously, the city manager

could be fired only with four positive votes of
the five-member Council.
F’our councilmen—two persons new lo the
la k e Mary city arena, a man who had
previously served six y ears and an in­
cum bent were elected to the council.
The new council will be m ade up of Ray Fox,
senior member of the board with three years
com pleted; Kenneth King, who is beginning
his third year in office with unopposed re-

election: Burt Pcrinchief, who has returned lo
th e rouncil after a two-year retirem ent from
city politics; and two newcomers. Buss
Megonegal and Charlie Lytle.
A disappointment to city officials during the
y e ar was the turndown by the state of a site
offered by the city under a long-term lease at
$1 per year for a proposed new S3 million-plus
Central Florida Crime laboratory.

The Florida Bureau of law Enforcement
selected a downtown Orlando site rather than
one in la k e Mary. The city had offered a
minimum of two acres of its 10-acre tract on
Rinehart Road.
The city purchased a $13,300 computer
system to use for all its w ater and sewer utility
billing, payroll, accounts payable, budget
analysis and general ledger for both the
utilities and general fund operations.

Tylenol
information Pages, New Unified Residence Pages; Government Pages, New
Alphabetized Business Pages; Yellow Pages; and Super SAVE R Coupon Pages

S u s p e c t

F re e
CHICAGO (UPII - l.eann
Ia w is, wife of the main figure
in the Tylenol-cyunide in­
vestigation, has been released
in th e custody of her father.
A federal m a g is tra te
reduced bond for Mrs. lavria
from $5 million to $100,000.
H er father, Charles M iller,
pledged to satisfy the bond
with the equity in his $90,000
K earney, Mo., home.
U.S. Magistrate Ja m es K.
Balog ruled after a two-hour
hearing there is probable
cau se to charge Mrs. I a w is
w ith Social Security fraud but
ag reed lo reduce her $5
m illion bond.
“ From what I have h eard
today, I don't believe the
p resen t bond is reasonable,"
Balog said. "I am releasing
you to your father's custody.
You will be allowed to trav el
to your father's home but
m u st remain there and cannot
tra v e l from there without
perm ission of this court or
an o th er U S. m agistrate."
Balog also warned Mrs.
I aw is her father could lose his
hom e if she jumped bail.
M rs. Iawis, 33, is charged
w ith using fraudulent Social
Security cards.
H er husband Jam es, 36, is
c h a rg e d with a tte m p te d
extortion fur allegedly writing
a letter to Johnson &amp; Johnson,
d istrib u to rs of T ylenol
dem anding $1 million to “ stop
th e killing."
FB I agents, acting on a
telephone (ip, arrested Iaw is
a t the New York Public
U b ra ry Dec. 13. He originally
refused to identify him self but
l a t e r waived an id en tity
hearin g and was returned to
Chicago.
He pleaded innocent at his
arraignm ent Tuesday.
Illinois Attorney G eneral
Tyron Fahner said Iaw is is
"h ig h on our list" of suspects
In the poisonings but he lias
not been charged.

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To Your Health

McAvoy,
'23
Rose
Queen,
MoreIn Hysterectomies
Enjoying Her New Bloom

Risk

P o o r W om en
BOSTON (U PI) — Poverty and
questionable surgical procedures are
two of the m ain factors that increase
the risk of infections in women who
have hysterectom ies, the second m ost
common operation in the nation,
doctors said today.
Infectious complications that in
rare cases c an be fatal, occur in about
20 percent of the 650,000 women who
undergo hysterectom ies annually.
A study of 1,448 women, published in
the New E ngland Journal of Medicine,
found five factors that greatly in­
crease the risk of the surgery, in
which the uterus is removed.
The most striking finding was th at
women whose operations were p er­
formed by residents in clinics had a

higher infection ra te than women
whose surgery w as performed by
physicians in p riv ate practices.
The risk of infection also was in­
creased when doctors failed to ad­
minister common antibiotics, when
abdominal r a th e r th a n vaginal
surgery was perform ed and when an
operation was lengthy, the study
found.
Although the study provided no
evidence the high infection rate was
due to socio-economic status, Dr. B.
Frank Polk ut Jo h n s Hopkins
University School of Hygiene and
Public Health said he firmly believes
it is.
"Ginic patients have a higher risk
of infection, not because they are

operated on by residents or inex­
perienced surgeons a s is commonly
believed, but because they are poor,"
he said.
“ I don't know why poor women are
m ore likely to have infections than
well-to-do women, but it m ay have to
do with nutrition a n d hygiene," he
added.
But an accompanying editorial
suggested the higher infection rates
w ere at least partly d u e to th e surgical
p ro ced u res of
inexperienced
surgeons.
Som e surgeons " h a v e been
re la tiv e ly n o n c h alan t" about the
development of wound infections, said
D r. Honald l,ee Nichols of Tulanc
University School of Medicine.

HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — The oldest living form er Rose
Queen can't even rem em ber if there was a Rose Bowl football
gam e on the day she led th e parade down Pasadena's Colorado
Boulevard.
It isn't that there’s anything wrong with M ay McAvoy’s
m em ory, because she c a n even remember little details about
h e r costume that day. It is sim ply that the whole thing was of
such trivial importance in her life, at the time, th a t w hether or
not there was a football gam e on Jan. 1,1923, was of absolutely
n o significance to her a t all.
(T here was: Southern Cal beat Penn State, 14-31.
The only reason she rem em bers what she wore so clearly is,
presum ably, because as a n actress and a woman, clothes were
significant. Football g am es and parades w eren’t.
May McAvoy — Mrs. M aurice Geary — w as not named
queen because of any contest, as happens these days. Now it’s
a big thing, with prelim inaries and voting and judges and all
th at. But in 1922, they didn't have any such procedure.
"I had come to Ins A ngeles from New York in 1921," May
McAvoy says. "I had done a movie, 'Sentimental Tommy,’
which was well-received. So, they wanted me to com e here for
th e Fam ous Players-Lasky studio. They had Bebe Daniels and
M ary Miles Minler and P auline Frederick, all v ery important
sta rs.
"So I was the newest and youngest actress on the lot, and
they were trying to publicize m e very much. And one day they
told m e I was going to rid e in the Tournament of Roses parade.
To the studio, it was ju st another day's work for m e."
The Pasadena festival had begun in 1890, in a hum ble way.
The first Rose Queen w as nam ed in 1905 but, for m any years,
the queens were chosen m ostly for political reasons. They
w ere wives of unportant local businessmen and m any of them
w ere middle-aged ladies. Tennis champ May Sutton wore the
crown in 1908. Hut, in g en eral, they were society women.
"I never knew why I w as selected and I still don't know,"
May McAvoy says. But she supposes the studio, anxious to
publicize its new New Y ork import, had wangled the Invitation
from the Pasadena com m ittee. There never again was a
Hollywood actress.
“ I was the only actress ever, ever, ever," sh e says.
She says the main im pression it made on h e r was that she
had to get up very early — 4:30 a.m. - to get to th e parade site
on tim e.
"It was freezing cold." she says. "The float was a flatbottom ed wooden tru ck , piled with unwrapped G iristm as
trees. They had a big w icker chair for me to sit on. They
w rapped m e in silver cloth, which kept slipping. I was dressed

Technology, Diet, Exercise Made Medical News
CHICAGO (U PI) — The year 1982
will be rem em bered as one in which
medical
technology
g rab b ed
headlines and people b ecam e
healthier through diet and exercise,
the America] Medical Association
said.
The AMA Thursday cited the im­
plant of th e first permanent artificial
heart and the virtual elimination of
measles in the United States among
the top m edical events of the year.
“ Perhaps in no other single year
have the strid es in medicine received
headline attention as often as they
have this past year," said Dr. Jam es
H. Sammons, AMA executive vice
president.
The AMA's list of notable m edical
events included:
— R etired dentist Barney G a rk
received a polyurethane plastic and
aluminum Jarvik-7 heart in Salt Ijike
City Dec. 1, one day short of the 15th
anniversary of the first hum anheart
transplant operation.
-A n Intensive im m unization
program against measles, begun in

Iw .l

— Gene-splicing techniques led to
the preparation of w hat promises to
be an ample supply of interferon,
believed effective in th e battle against
cancer.
—Nuclear magnetic resonance lias
the potential to revolutionize the way
physicians look inside the body. NMR
works with m agnets instead of Xrays, eliminating injected contrast
dyes and radioactive solutions.
—Medical lasers continue to,make
inroads to areas of th e body only the
scalpel went before. B rain surgeons
use them to excise tu m o rs and der­
matologists to eradicate skin cancer.
-Cyclosporin, a new antirejection
drug, is credited with improvement in
survival after organ transplants.
—Streptokinase, th e clot-dissolving
enzyme, was approved by the Food
and Drug Administration for treating
heart attacks.
—Human insulin m ad e with
recom binant DNA technology by
genetically modified bacteria was
approved for m arketing by the FDA
and will be available in 1983.

1962 when a v accin e became
available, has led to the virtual
elimination of th e childhood disease in
the United States. The only recent
cases have been sp read by people who
brought m easles infection into the
country from abroad.
—Acquired im m u n e deficiencysyndrom e
re a c h e d
epidemic
proportions during the past 18 months.
The disorder, which wipes out the
immune system ’s defenses, has killed
more than 300 people, mainly male
homosexuals, m aking it deadlier than
legionnaires’ disease and toxic shock
syndrome combined.
—The salt content of packaged
foods was voluntarily made available
to people whose daily sodium intake
must be lim ited due to high blood
pressure. Now, m any food products
have the sodium content clearlymarked on the label.
—Some of th e most promising
cancer research ever has taken place
focusing on oncogenes, or cancercausing genes.

M ay M c A v o y , the o ld e s t liv in g f o r m e r H o se
Q u e e n , a s s h e a p p e a re d in th e 1923 T o u r n a m e n t of
H o se s P a r a d e on N ew Y e a r ’s D ay.

in a satin outfit, with a heavy erm ine coat and a funny hut from
the studio wardrobe department. 1 think I looked pretty silly."
She rode down Colorado Boulevard, the same route the
parade still takes. Anil that, sh e says, was the start and end of
her reign as Rose Queen.
"I nev er thought anything m ore abouf it,” she says. "And
then, in 1974, somebody contacted me and said they were
starting a brunch for former Hose Queens, and asked m e if I
had been the Rose Queen in 1923 1 said I wasn't sure. But then I
looked it up and I called them back and said yes, I had been."
And so, today, May McAvoy G e ary is a celebrity again, with
the T ournam ent of Hoses people, because she is the oldest
living ex-Queen (in tenure, obviously; parade officials don’t
know h e r actual age), She goes to a lot of festivities, they send
limosines for her and treat h e r very nicely. She likes that.

D e m o c ra ts

Abandon

LABOfST W IN 1 A N D SPIRITS P IA L IR HAS T H I LOW IR

ABC, AMERICA'S

The o rg an iz a tio n added,
"Furthermore, two additional
representatives among the 28
•re m e m b e rs
of the
D em ocratic Steering and
Policy Committee.
The study was sent to newly
elected House Democrats by
Public G tizen President Joan
Gaybrook.

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com m ittee chairm en who
deserted th eir party &lt;#i all 11
votes w ere Reps. Marvin
Leath of Texas and Andrew
Ireland o f Florida.

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ttth Congress.

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budget
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Citizen, in preparation for
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Congress, sa y s 28 House
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limes."
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organization said, “ who more
often than not voted against
their party, Is a full com­
mittee ch airm an and seven
are subcom m ittee chairmen.
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chairm an and two sub­
committee chairm en voted
against th e ir p arty on all 12
key votes.”

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[Buccaneers 'Do
5O r Die' Sunday
TAMPA, Fla.(U PI) — The Tampa Bay
’■ Buccaneers host the Chicago Bears in
th eir final regular season gam e Sunday,
with an NFC playoff spot riding on the
outcome.
The Bucs, 4-4, can win a playoff spot
. with a victory, but if they lose their
season will be over.
Both Tampa Coach John McKay and
Chicago Coach Mike Ditka said their
team s will have to do th e ir own work and
not be looking for help from anyone else.
■ ‘‘We aren’t c o n c e rn e d with
m athem atical possibilities about the
playoffs," Ditka said. "W e’ve got to be
concerned about Just one thing — beating
T am pa Bay. The rest will take care of
itself. Besides, we c a n 't do anything
about it anyway."
"W e’re playing fo r it (playoffs),"
McKay said. "If we lose, wc don't
deserve it, it's that sim ple as far as 1 can
see it.
“ If we don't win it, w e’re going to have
to do as some other good team s that I
think aren't going to g et in it, get ready to
crank it up and hope we play 16 games
next year," McKay said.
Tam pa is riding a two-game winning
s tre a k with b ack -to -b ack home
squeakers over Buffalo and Detroit and
the Bucs are 4-2 in post-strike play.
Chicago is 3-3 after the strike and kepf
alive playoff hopes last week with a 34-26
victory over the Los Angeles Hams.
The Bucs are 44 point favorites, and if
past games this season are any in­
dication the outcome could go down to the
wire. The outcome in five of Tampa's last
six games has been decided in the final
m inute of play, with the Bucs winning
four of the five.
The Bears are paced by rookie quar­
terback Jim McMahon and veteran
running back W alter Payton, who last
week rushed for 104 y ard s and caught
passes for 102 more. It was the second
tim e in his career he h a s had a game with
m ore than 100 yards both rushing and
passing.
Payton has the fourth best career
rushing record in th e NFL with 10,093
yards, including 487 th is year. But he has
scored only one touchdown this year —
his worst record since coming into .the
N FL in 1975.
Payton is the only running back to gain
over 100 yards rushing in a game against
Tam pa more than once, doing so four
lim es.
McMahon, who took over in the second
half of the second gam e of the season, has
completed 106 of 180 passes for 1,334
yards and eight touchdowns.
The Bears will be going against the top
defense in the NFC, but one that is only
Ilth best among the 14 team s In defen­
ding against the rush.
Tam pa’s offense la built around the
passing of Doug W illiam s and the run­
ning and pass receiving of Jam es Wilder,
who has rushed 81 tim e s for 278 yards and
caught 47 passes for 405 yards. He is
T am pa's leading ru sh er and top pass
receiver.
Williams has com pleted 139 of 258
passes for 1,704 y ard s with seven touch­
downs.
T am pa will be w ithout reserve
linebacker and special team s player
Dana Nafiiger, who is out with a back
problem. Tackle C harley Hannah is
questionable with a call injury and
kicker Bill Capece an d All-Pro defensive
end Lee Roy Selmon are listed as
probable with shoulder injuries.
The Bears, who arrived In Tampa
Wednesday to get acclimated to the

With Post-Strike
Effect On Team
TAMPA (U PI) - The Tampa Bay
Buccaneer Coach John McKay lsn t
happy with the way the post-strike
schedule affected his club, but says he
doesn't know how else it could have been
handled after the players strike.
The Bucs, who lost to the Minnesota
Vikings in the opening game 17-10, are in
a must-win gam e with the Chicago Bears
Sunday to determ ine which of the tw o
will make it into the playoffs.
The Vikings are in despite a 42-12
mauling by the New York Jets and
regardless of how they do next Mondaynight against D allas.
"We beat M iami. We beat Buffalo. We
lost to the Je ts," McKay mulled Monday
at his weekly new s conference. "M in­
nesota lost to the Je ts, lost to Miami, lost
to Buffalo, T hey're in and we're still
fighting because of the game that w as
played in Septem ber."
Both teams a re 4-1 but Minnesota is in
because of the win over Tempa.
"Now that, a s far as I’m concerned, is
as fair as it could be I guess. 1don't know
of any other system they could have
used," he said, "B ut, that's the way it
goes."

Pro Football
clim ate, list four players a s probable defensive end Mike H artenstine with a
leg injury, running back Matt Shuhey,
h ip, and defensive b ack s Lenny
Walterscheid, leg, and Jeff Fisher, back.

Fouls Leads
Pro Bowlers
NEW YORK (UPI) - The NFC
defense won’t be on any vacation Feb. 6
in the Pro Bowl at Honolulu's Aloha
Stadium .
Quarterback Dan Fouts, who has
directed the San Diego offense to an
NFIyleading average of 32 points per
gam e, Wednesday was nam ed to head a
group of seven C hargers selected to
rep resen t the AFC in the annual
exhibition between the N F L elite. He will
be Joined in the starting lineup by his two
favorite targets in wha‘ shapes up as a
devastating AFC attack.
Fouts was picked as th e starting AFC
quarterback in balloting by the 14 AFC
head coaches and the NFL Players
Association members on each team. No
player was permitted to vote for a
team m ate and the C hargers led AFC
clubs with seven players selected.
The Netf York Je ts and Pittsburgh
S tcelcrs, two other clubs w ith guaranteed
playoff berths, each h ad five players
chosen for the AFC squad, composed of
20 offensive and 17 defensive players,
plus three specialists.
Joining Fouts in the starting AFC
backfield will be NFL rushing leader
F reem an McNeil of the New York Jets
and Ix&gt;s Angeles R aiders’ rookie Marcus
Allen.
' Fouts will have the advantage of
fam iliarity with his receiving crew as
team m ates Kellen Winslow and Wes
Chandler also earned startin g spots.
Winslow, who leads the conference with
48 catches, will start at tight end and
C handler will flank Cincinnati's Cris
Collinsworth at wide receiver.
The starting offensive line is anchored
by Pittsburgh center M ike Webster, with
New England's John H annah and Doug
W ilkerson of the C hargers at guard and
New York's Marvin Powell and Cin­
cinnati’s Anthony M unoi at tackle.
H annah will be m aking his sixth Pro
Bowl appearance.
The starting defensive ends will be
New York's Mark G astineau and Art Still
of Kansas City while Buffalo’s Fred
S m erlas and San D iego's G ary Johnson
will sta rt at defensive tackle.
Houston's Robert B razlle, Pittsburgh’s
Ja c k lum ber! and Ted Hendricks of the
R a id e rs were se le c te d to starting
linebacker spots, with L am bert slated to
m ake his eighth Pro Bowl appearance.
Starting at cornerback for the AFC will
be New England's Mike Haynes and the
H a id e rs' Lester H a y e s while Pitt­
sb u rg h 's Donnie Shell a n d Gary Barbaru
of the Chiefs will be the startin g safeties.
D en v er's Luke P re s trid g e Is the
punter, Rolf Benlrschke of the 'Chargers
w as chosen as kicker and Rick Upchuruh
of the Broncos as kick returner.
The losing team in th e AFC title game
Ja n . 23 will provide th e AFC coaching
staff for the 4 p.m. E ST P ro Bowl in
Aloha Stadium, with m em bers of the
winning team each earning $10,000.
Losing players will each receive $5,000.

... Offense
Continued From Page 8A
Herald Phot# by B ill M urphy

H u g h G re e n , T a m p a H a y lin e b a c k e r, s t a c k s up
r u n n i n g b ack H illy S im s . T he H ues w h ip p e d

D e tro it l a s t y e a r am i n e e d to b e a t th e C h ic a g o
H e a rs S u n d a y to clin c h a p la y o ff spot.

Winners Paterno, Dooley
Clash In Sugar Showdown
NEW ORLEANS (U P I) - Leo
D urocher’s comment th a t "nice guys
finish last" doesn’t apply to the opposing
c o a c h e s in S a tu rd ay 's S u g ar Bowl
show dow n for the n a tio n a l college
football championship.
You won’t find two nicer guys than
G eorgia’s Vince Dooley and Penn State’s
Jo e Paterno and both a re proven win­
ners.
Dooley and Paterno a re among the six
college coaches who have been honored
by the American Sportsm ans Council for
two traits — being a winner and
upholding the standards of good sport­
sm anship.
"People ask me what our best team
has been and I tell th em I don't know
y e t," said Paterno. "O ur best team will
be the one that produces the most people
who lead active, productive lives in our
society.
"This business about winning is the
only thing is nonsense. We tell our
players, it's a game, enjoy it. Play the
best you can, but whether you win or lose,
enjoy it."
"Jo e Paterno really believes that,"
said Dooley who approaches football
along those same lines. “ I've known him
a long tim e, consider him a close friend,
and I have never known him to be less
than sincere in what h e ’s said or done."
Paterno, who has posted a 161-34-1
record during his 17 seasons as head
coach at Penn State, sa y s he thinks "if it
Ls just a question of winning and losing,
football is a silly game. It is hard for me

■"1

*

College Football
to picture myself in a situation where the
only im portant thing is whether we win
or not. College football doesn't m ean that
m uch to m e.”
Dooley, 151-58-6 in his 19 years at
Georgia, h as often said that if he ever lost
his perspective about the gam e. “ It
would be time to gel out, to find
som ething else.”
Despite these attitudes, Dooley and
Paterno a re two of the m ost successful
coaches in the nation. Since taking over
at G eorgia in 1964, Dooley has had only
one losing season — In 1977-when the
Bulldogs lost their last three gam es and
wound, up 5-6. Paterno, since assuming
the N ittany Lions' helm in 1966, has nevet
had a losing season — putting together 15
straight winners since going 5-5 that first
year.
D ooley’s team s have won six
Southeastern Conference championships
and S aturday will be going after their
second national title in three years. Penn
Stale doesn't play in a conference and
although the lions will be looking for
their first national crown Saturday,
they've wound up ranked No. 2 twice and
No. 5 or better four other tim es under
Palerm o's guidance.
"O ne of the things that m akes Satur­
day's gam e so difficult is th at so much is

at stake," said Dooley. "Here we are
ranked No. 1 and Penn State No. 2, but
only one of us can win."
Of course we want to w in," said
Paterno. "Being No. 1 has eluded us so
often that it would be a point of pride for
this team to be able to say it was the first
to accomplish that for Penn State. But if
we don't, it won't be the end of the world.
"We w ant our players to enjoy their
entire college experience, not Just
football. College should be a great time.
We don’t want our players just tied to a
football program ."
Paterno says he wants winning football
teams a t Penn State "because there is no
sense in being involved in som ething
unless you want it to be the best." But he
also says, "We arc not going to sacrifice
our academ ic credibility for the sake of a
winning team ."
Dooley says no one should think that
just because Joe Paterno refuses to be a
tyrant he can't get his players ready for a
national championship.
"Quite the contrary," says Dootey who
has been very successful with the softspoken approach himself. "T his Penn
State tea m is well conditioned, well
coached and well disciplined — all the
things it lakes to be great. The only team
Georgia has played in the 19 y ears I have
been coach that was similar to this Penn
State team was the 1976 Pitt team
(which, led by Tony Dorsett, beat
Georgia in the Sugar Bowl and won the
national championship)."

rushing with 84-i yards in his junior
year with th e Lions. Yarborough &lt;60,205) is a bruising fullback who also
possesses outstanding speed. The
I jobs will expect another fine year
from Yarborough in '83.
The second all-county receiver
made some of the most spectacular
catches of the 1982 season. You could
never predict an incomplefion if the
football w as going in Kenny Ashe's
direction. O viedo's 5-8, 145 pound
senior snared 24 passes for 350 yards
In helping the Lions to an 8-3 record,
including seven straight victories to
end the season.
Ijk e Howell had the county’s
leading rusher, and the people who
opened up gaping holes for Robey to
run through w ere known as the
"Bearded G iants." Dan Rac 16-1.
215) and Billy Norton &lt;6-24, 210
tackle) w ere the driving forces of
the Silver H aw ks' offense in '82, thus
earning them all-county honors.
Both Norton and Rae turned in
outstanding performances in their
senior year, leading I-ake Howell to
a 6-5 record and a berth in the
Rotary Bowl.
O viedo's offensive line w as
bolstered by 6-2, 215-pound tackle
David Wilson. Wilson concluded his
senior y e ar in fine fashion, he w as
effective in blocking both (or the run
and the pass.
The all-count kicker didn't m ake
headlines w ith any last-second
winning field goals but with his
consistency. Seminole's Paul and
Griffin (5-10, 143 senior I hit three
field goals and 13 extra points and
only once did he have a chance lit
win a gam e for the Tribe. With tim e
running out against lake Brantley,
the closest the 'Noles ever came to
winning, G riffin’s bid for a 38-yard
field goal fell just inches short of the
mark.Of the 13, first-team offensive
selections, 11 were seniors and two
were juniors.

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N BA Standing*
B y U n iiad Press international

Eattarn Co nlartnc*
Atlantic D ivision
W L Pet. GB
Phi la
24 5 171 —
Boston
72 1 713 2'j
t; 11 S47 7'y
New Jrsey
Wshngtn
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11 19 347 11'j
Central D ivision
Milweuke
71 11 454
Detroit
14 14 SIS 4&gt;«
Atlanta
14 11 44) ! ' »
Indiana
11 IS 377 I 't
10 70 .313 to
Chicago
Cleveland
4 IS 111 15*1
Western Conference
M idw est O iv itio n
w L P*t. OR
17 to 630
K in City
'i
San Anton
70 12 625 —
D*nv*r
11 17 411 4
Dallas
11 1* 427 4
Utah
12 70 .175 1
Houston
4 25 .111 144
P a c lllc p iv lslo n *
LOS Ang
24 4 ISO
23 I .74) V i
Seitlle
Phoenl»
II 12 111 l'i
Portlind
II 14 .513 7
Goldin SI.
17 II 400 12
S*n Diego
I 25 .174 l l ' i
F rid a y 's Gam as
(No gamos schadulad)
T o d a y's Oam as
(A ll T im a s E S T )
Phoenix a l D enver, 4 05 p m
Washington at
New York,
7 30 p m.
Dallas a l N tw Jersey. 7:35
p.m.
Boston at U tah . 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 10 10
pm
Golden Stat*
at
Pori land.
10 M p m.
Sunday'* Oamas
Kansas C ity at Atlanta
San Antonio at Clavtland
Houston a l M ilw aukee
Seattle at Phoenix
Detroit at L o s Angeles
Indiana at Golden Slate
Denver at P o rtla n d

W a lls Conitrtnc*
P a tric k Division
W L T Pis.
Philadelphia
It 17 5 47
17 15 7 45
NY Islanders
Washington
17 10 10 44
t l 14 5 39
NY R angers
Pittsburgh
t i l l 4 21
New Jersey
7 15 7 I t
A dam s Division
Boston
II 7 « 52
M ontreal
10to I 41
17 13 7 41
Buffalo
Quebec
17 14 4 40
Hartford
10 77 5 75
C am pbell Conference
*» L T F
25 7 a
Chicago
Minnesota
20 It 1
St. Louis
14 73 4
9 17 11
Detroit
Toronto
4 21 7
Im ythe
17 11 I 44
Edm onton
Winnipeg
14 14 4 34
Calgary
, 14 30 7 15
Vancouver
1317 I 34
14 11 5 31
Los Angelas
F rid a y 's Results
Buffalo 5. N Y islanders I
D etroit 4, Chicago 1
Boston 5. Minnesota 3
Edm onton I, Vancouver I
T o da y's Oames
( A ll Timas EST)
H artfo rd
at
Toronto,
I 05
pm
N Y Islanders *1 Pittsburgh,
3 05 p m
N Y R angers al Washington.
I 05 p.m.
P h ila d e lp h ia at Si Louis, 9:05
|
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5 Simon Reyts
1.10 5 00 4 40
I Gall* Area
4 20 1.43
S L t la illo r u
11.20

t i l t h n e t - 3 1 ,C: 10:17
1 E ic e p lo
17 00 * 40 5 40
IJ e Je S c o tl
S 00 4 40
7 Lo u C W hir
*
* 40
0 ( 1 * 1 21 N ; F 114) 41.40; T (14-2) 111 40
Seventh n e t — 614. A ; 11:17
5 Bucko
4 00 2 40 2 20
7 Anim ation
2 40 2 40
2 A ll F o r Pleasure
300
0 1 6 7 ) U N ) F i l l ) 52.20) T (57-3) 1)5.44
E ighth rac* - 5-14, C) 51:57
5 Bear Can Nlcol* 5.40 3.40 3.10
3 T ra cy M y Lovt
5.00 1.20
2 L a n d o Lou
1.40
0 (2-5 ) 20.10; P (62) 17.20; T &lt;5
6 1 ) It. tO
Ninth n e t — I t , C; 37:11
1 M oham m ad
M a lv ln
11.00 7 00 4.20
5 511k Top
5.40 4.00
5 Oughlodoll ,
1.20
Q 11-3) 2).11) P 0*1) 77.40) T (I61) lU .t t
t t t h r a c i — 6)4,C : 11:17
2 F ly ToChooat 12.00 5.00 2.20
4 Go K ill
3.40 2.10
5 Oughtadoit
3.20
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llt h r a c t — 6 I 6 A 1 1 1 : 1)
1 J R * Irving
32*0 11.00 1.20
2 R K 's M e c h o
7.20 4.40
2 Handle#ppar Cary
3.40
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of t wlnnars p*M t.M l.tO ) " J a c k ­
pot'* earrysver 12, 111 .
U t h r a c a - 6 1 6 0 : ) ii7 7
4 D J High Dash
7.40 1.20 1.40
7 T o p R Iv e r
3.30 4 *0
2 P y la
4.00
Q 162) l i t ) P (6 7 1 13.0t) T (6
7-2) I4.«l
U th ra c a - 1 4 ,0 : 1 7 : 1 7
I Laughing L*«
1.40 3 .N 2 40
3 R K 's Baby G rin d
3.40 2 40
4 Runlikethedevil
2 10
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A - 1,712) H lltd N 1174.755

pm

W innipeg at Edmonton
Sunday's Games
Boston at Winnipeg
H artfo rd al Bulfaio
Pittsb u rg h at Montreal
W ashington a l Quebec
P h ila d e lp h ia al Chicago
V ancouver a l Nrw Jersey
D etroit at Toronto

H ockey

B a sk e tb a ll

N H L Standings
■y United P ra s* International

College Basketball Results
By u n ite d Press inttrnatienal

Frid ay
Midwest
Indiana $t 107. A laska 73
Illinois 73. Loyola 7)
West
Brigham Young 51. Princeton 37

Deals
Sports Transactions
By United Press International
Thursday
Basketball
Detroit — Signed tree agent
forw ard Jim Smith to a 10 day
contract
Football
Calgary (CFLI - Signed Jack
Gotta to a multi year contract as
head coach and director o l player
operations.
Kansas City — Pla ce d safety
Daron Cherry on the Injured
reserve list; activated cornerback
Tim Washington
Oakland (U SFL) — Signed Ire*
agenti cornerbacks Kevin Don
nailey and John W illis , running
oack Clarenc* Hawkins, defensive
end A lv a L ilt s , s a fe ty M ik a
O 'B rie n , tackle K u rt Jo n k tr,
defensive tackle Dupre M arshall,
fullback Ted Torosian. linebackers
D avid Shaw and Dw ayne Wilkes,
and rookie guard S ttv* Houston
Tampa Bay
Signed treeagent
linebacker Lemont .tetters, placed
linebacker D in a N a fn g t r on in
jured reserve
Mackey
New Jersey - R ecalled center
Dave Cameron from W ichita ot the
C H L and sent c e n te r Glenn
Merkoskl to W ichita
College
A rm y - Named J im Young as
head football coach
Sports Transactions
By United Press Inter national
Friday
•asketbaii
A tlan ta
O b ta in e d guard
Johnny Davis Irom Indiana in
esenange tor a No 7 draft choice
m 1713 and future considerations,
signed Davis to a contract

Football
Baltimore — Placed safely Jell
Delaney on inlured reserve, ac
livated
c o rn e rb a c k
Lamont
Mea cham
Kansas C ity
Signed inside
linebacker Jam es Walker; placed
offensive guard Tom Condon on
inlured reserve
San Diego
Activated safety
Bob Gregor, placed running back
Ricky Bell on the injured reserve
list
SI. Louis — Pla ce d cornerback
Roger W enrll on ihjured reserve,
activated defensive back Vance
Bedford
Tampa Bay - Signed treeagent
running back R ick Moser
Hockey
Hertford — Recalled left wing
Mike H offm an Irom Brantford ot
the Ontario H ockay League.
Col Ieg*
U ol Connecticut — Named Tom
Jackson head footoall coach.
Em poria Stat* (Kan.) — Named
L a rry K r a m a r head football
coach. _________

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�BUSINESS

Rush-Hampton Expands 2 Lines
Rush-Hampton of Longwood is ex­
panding its construction line with the
addition of two Ecologizer built-in air
treatm ent systems.

IN B R IE F

Both units will feature a large CA-90
formula filter, giving them the capability
to remove household and tobacco smoke
odors and odors caused by bacteria and
fungi and also the capability to remove
harmful gases such as hydrogen sulfide,
am m onia, a c e tic acid , and for­
maldehyde.
In addition, one of the units will Include
a two-speed fan-heater. Both systems

Stromberg-Carlson Puts
Switches In Missouri
One of the largest telephone cooperatives In the
country Is replacing Its analog switches with a network
of S trom berg-C arlso n ’s S y stem C entury D igital
Central Offices with the Local Line Switches (LLSs).
By mid-1983, the Grand River Mutual Telephone Co.
Princeton, Mo., will have 11 DCO System s with LLS’ in
service.

L if e C a r e

The first DCO System with LLS was placed In
service In Blockton, Iowa, in November," said James
M. Bridges, president of Stromberg-Carlson Cor­
poration of U k e Mary.

Darlington, Conception Junction, Denver, Graham,

Barnard, Sheridan and Parnell," he added.
Grand River, which serves 44 telephone exchanges,
will have nearly 3,500 digital lines in service with these’
system s. All the systems provide a full line of custom­
calling features as well as pushbutton dialing.

Sun, Century Banks Merge
Century National Bank of P alatka will merge with
Sun Bank of Jacksonville and will become Sun BankNorth Florida, National Association.
I ^ s t July 1, Sun Banks of Florida acquired Century
Banks, Inc., a bank holding company based in Fort
Lauderdale. It represented the largest merger to date
in the history of Florida banking.
The m erger will give Sun Bank-North Florida six
offices in Duval and Putnam counties with combined,
current assets of more than $88 million.

L&amp; N A n d

Blackwell Bank Manager

S e a b o a rd

Ja m es S. Blackwell has been named branch
m anager of the Casselberry office of Barnett Bank of
Central Florida.
Blackwell began his banking c are er in 1972 with Sun
Bank of Orlando as a loan officer and most recently
was associate vice president for Sun Bank’s Altamonte
Springs office.
Prior to working for Sun Bank, he attended the
University of Alabama where he received his degree in
business administration.
Blackwell is also an active m em ber of the Greater
Seminole County Chamber of Commerce and treasurer
of the Board of Directors of the Altamonte Mall
M erchants Association.

M e r g in g

Florida Cypress Gardens, Inc., has announced
earnings of 32 cents per share for the fiscal year ended
Oct. 31 com pared with 25 cents per share for the sam e
period in 1981. Revenues for the fiscal year were
415,263,102 compared with 114,945,466 for 1981, a 2
percent Increase. Income a fte r taxes was $906,631
com pared with $710,321, in 1981.
The 32 cents earnings per share from fiscal 1982
continuing operations are com pared with 3S cents per
share from continuing operations in fiscal 1981. The
M anufacturing Division lost 11 cents earnings per
share in 1981 and was sold late in 1981. During fiscal
*1982 attendance at the attraction was 1,118,694 com­
pared with 1,216,418 in 1981, an 8 percent decrease.

House Of Bread Bought
The House of Bread, 401 Sanford Ave. was purchased
recently by Clyde and Dorothy Richards.
The Richards are both registered nutritionists with
m aster's degrees in foods and nutrition.
Clyde Richards was the form er food service director
at the Community Hospital in Kissimmee. His wife is
still a nutritionist for the Seminole County Health
D epartm ent.
The retail outlet called the Bake Shop will feature
breads, cookies, pies, cakes muffins, tum-overs and
m ore.

N a m e s

B o a rd

JACKSONVILLE (UPI) The Seaboard Coast Line
railroad has m erged with the
Louisville and N ashville
Railroad, officials announced.
S e a b o ard
P re s id e n t
R ichard D. S an b o rn said
Wednesday the company also
will change its n am e to
Seaboard System Railroad to
"help further the coordination
of the Seaboard rail network,
which also Includes the
Ginchlield and the West Point
Route."
“The new identification and
consolidation will provide our
customers the advantages of
dealing with a single,
through-service railroad for
s h ip m e n ts t h r o u g h o u t
Seaboard System Railroad's
13-state territory in the South,
Southeast and M idwest," he
said. "In addition, the m erger
Is expected to im prove the
efficiency of m any of the
ra ilro a d s ' In te rn a l
operations."
The firm has begun painting
a new logo featuring a redand-yellow "double-A" design
on its cars, locomotives and
office buildings, officials said.
Seaboard is a subsidiary of
CSX Corp. of Richmond, Va.
CSX also owns the Chessie
System
R a ilro a d s pnd
operates more than 27,500
miles of track in 20 states, the
D istrict of C olum bia and
Ontario.

r

, ■v u m

m

Jj*

G rapefruit Crop Is
■
Likely To Mushroom
The Florida grapefruit crop, which has been growing
by an average of 500,000 boxes of fruit per year since
1970, is likely to mushroom to an annual increase of 1
million boxes in the current decade.
Dr. Dan Gunter, economic research director (or the
Florida Departm ent of Citrus, said production is ex­
pected to increase to 66 million boxes by the 1990-91
season. He based his projection upon the 1980 com ­
m ercial grapefruit tree inventory prepared by the
United States Department of Agriculture’s Crop and
Livestock Reporting Sendee and containing in­
form ation on tree ages, fruit yield per tree and an­
ticipated tree loss and planting rates.

T he E cologizer built-in tre a tm e n t
system is the only one of its kind to m eet
the National Sanitation Foundation C-10
Criteria for Ductless Air Treatm ent
Devices.

The present Ecologizer built-in air
treatm ent system saves builders time
and money on projects by eliminating the
need for exhaust fans, ductwork, venting
and roof caps, Bailey said.

A t c h le y O n G r o u p B o a r d

life
in
the
the
in

Street Week on public television and
In addition, two representatives of Life
senior vice president of the Trust Care Services are on the board. Ia rry
Departm ent for Sun Banks in Orlando. I-aird, executive vice president and chief
operating officer, has worked in the life
Eli Subin is a partner in the Orlando
care industry since 1965, and has been
law firm of Subln, Sham s, Rosenbluth &amp;
Moran. He has been the city attorney and with LCS for II years. Stan Thurston is
The golf-aide community is being general counsel for the city of Orlando vice president of development.
developed by Life Care Services of Des since November 1980.
Scheduled to be built for Village on the
Moines, an organization that specializes
Green are 164 living units featuring one
Howard Volpcrt is vice president and to three-bedroom apartm ents, as well as
In luxury housing for active individuals
regional manager in Central Florida for secluded three-bedroom villas. A central
over the age of 62.
Burdincs Department stores. He is also building will house a 180-seat auditorium,
Dr. Eugene F o rre s te r M.D. has the director of Federated Department lounges, library, club room, biUards
practiced medicine in Winter Park for 25 stores and director for Sun Banks where room, craft’ work shops, dining and
years, is the qjedical director for a he heads the compensation committee. kitchen facilities and a pool and spa.
Winter Park nursing home and president
Willard Wisler is the administrator of A complete health care center will be
of the staff at W inter Park Memorial Winter Park Memorial Hospital and included. The project will be located on
HospltaL
chairman-elect of the Florida Hospital the Sabal Point Golf Course, encircled by
B. Carter Randall is a panelist for Wall Association.
five holes of the course.

" S u b se q u e n t digital sw itch in g system s are
scheduled for cutover in the Missouri farming com­
munities of New Hampton, Ravenwood, Gentry,

Cypress Earnings Up

■Evening H tu k f; r rnfo n lrn --

have specific applications to the con­
Consum ers also save on energy bills,
struction trade, especially to those in­ he added.
volved in hotel-motel building.
Conventional fans blow heated and
"The hotel-motel industry has been cooled air out via exhaust work. The
asking for a larger built-in air cleaner for Ecologizer built-in air treatm ent systems
its guest rooms. These two units will fit reduce energy bills by $50 or more per
their needs perfectly,” said Rush Bailey, unit per year by cleaning and recir­
Rush-Hampton president.
culating, not wasting, costly treated air.

V illa g e

Village on the G reen, a new adult
care community in Sabal Point
Seminole County, has announced
election of its board. Marketing of
new project is slated to begin
February.

'”

EDWARD ATCHLEY

E dw ard N. A tchley,
president of Cobia Boat Co. of
Sanford, has been elected to
the board of the National
M a rin e
M a n u fa c tu re rs
Association (NMMA).
A tchlcy's election took
place during the recreational
boating industry’s I n te r ­
national M arine T ra d e s
Exhibit A Conference (IMTEC ) held in C hicago
recently.
Atchley is also on the board
of the National Association of
Boat Manufacturers, one of
th re e p a rtn e r asso ciatio n s
th a t com prise th e 750m em ber NMMA.

In s u r e d b y t h e E D . I. C .
B a ck e d b y T h e B e st B a n k A ro u n d .
N o b ro k e ra g e b o u s e c a n o ffe r y o u as m u c h .

Bell Changes Due
To FCC Ruling Made
Significant changes in how Southern Bell
operates became effective Saturday, Jan. 1,
but most of the company's customers won’t
notice a difference.
Larry Strickler, Southern Bell's m anager In
Sanford, said the changes are the result of a
ruling by th e Federal Com m unications
Commission (FCC) In October 1901 and they
will apply to Bell System companies nation­
wide.
"Unless you want to change your current
telephone service arrangement, you probably
will see no change at all," Strickler said.
"W ell continue to provide and maintain the
telephones you have been subscribing to
monthly. If you want to add other phones, we
still will supply equipment for as long as our
inventory lasts.
"Local telephone calling plans will remain
In force and long distance calls continue to be
handled in the usual fashion and the FCC
ruling will have no effect on monthly bills," be
said.
But qow customers wishing to Install newly
manufactured equipment not available from
Southern Bell will be able to buy telephone id s
from other sources, such u American Bell,
Inc., a newly-formed Bell System subaidlary
set up to m eet the requirements of the FCC
ruling, or from a number of non-Bell suppliers.
Service to business customers will continue
to be offered on much the sam e b e d s as for
residence customers. Strickler explained tbs
primary difference will be that Southern Bejl
may provide Inrtf11*1lon and maintenance of
new bualness customers' equipment pur­
chased from American Bell between Jan. 1,
1903, and July 1. After that, American Bell will
provide those services itself.
" O u r response to this FCC order should not
be confused with the forthcoming divestiture
of Southern Bell from ATfcT,” Strickler said.

of 19M."
S tric k le r explained th ese Im m ediate
changes a re being made to conform to the
FCC's requirem ent th at new custom er
premises equipment and "enhanced" ser­
vices—services in which something is done
with Information beyond merely transmitting
it, such a s storing or processing It—be offered
by a fully separated Bell System subsidiary
rather than by Southern Bell after J a n !.
Two of Southern Bell’s PhoneCenter stores
in the greater Orlando area will be transferred
to American Bell and used as sales facilities.
The remaining stores, Including the Sanford
store, will be renamed Southern Bell Cwtomer
Service Centers and modified for use tyr
Southern Bell customers to pick up or drop off
leased tekphooe lets or sets needing
replacement or repair.
Strickler said customers needing telephone
services should contact Southern Bell about
dial tone, local and long distance calls, TouchToot, Custom Calling, Directory Assistance
and coin phones. Southern Bell will continue to
■ell or lease its stock of telephone Instruments.
Southern Bell will continue to supply local
calling service, long distance calling service
Touch-Tone calling and Custom Calling ser­
vices, white and yellow pages directories,
public telephones, wiring installation and
maintenance, "do-it-yourself” inside wiring
products, sale or least of pbooee in stock and
communications services for tb s disabled.
American Bell or other suppliers will
provide new basic telephone sets (for sale
only) and new bustneee system s (for sale
only), functional telephone products such as
speakerphones or atfomatic dialers (for sale
only) and "do-it-younelf" Inside wiring
products.
Strickler said customers who have questions
may call the company toll free at 1-000-6554000
"That will come a year later, a t the beginning between 9 a.m. end 5 p.m. weekdays.

Introducing
Atlantic Bank’sNew
Money Market ManagementAccount.
Now Atlantic Dank combines
money market savings and higltyicld checking in one account. The
Atlantic Bank Money Market ManE icnt Account. It gives you more
any other bank account or bro­
kerage service.
By maintaining a $2,500 mini­
mum balance you can place all your
investment funds into one umbrella
account and earn money market rates
every day. Your Money Market Man­
agement Account allows you check
access and unlimited personal with­
drawals including wittsdrawals at our
24-hour Atlantic Bankaround auto­
mated teller.

Market Checking Account which is
like a super NOW Account, paying
high-yield interest rates and allowing unlimited checking.

Money Market Account
To serve you fully, we also offer
our' new basic Money Market Ac­
count which is a super savings ac­
count tlut pays money market rates
and offers limited checking access.

Money Market
Checking Account
Additionally, with a $2,500 min­
imum deposit we offer a new Money '

Brokerage Service for purchasing
stocks and corporate bonds at a eommission discount up to
less than
a full-service hrokerk fee.
For your Convenience, your
IDeludes Discount
account will also include free check­
Brokerage Service and ing and a monthly Financial SumMore.
riury Statement of all your financial
Your Money Market Manage- account! from checking to credit
rnenti Account will include a Discount «rdi to brokerage activity and earn-

r

\t*s, I'd like more inform ation on

I

D
□

Atlantic B ank's

N ew Money M arket M anagem ent A ccount.
D iscount B rokerage Service.

Njnv

I

AdJiot
/.p

Suit

City

l

K h k # Hum

II

Mail to:
Intuynuiiufi Crwrt

J S p X S t* *

Uuu.v.t

*W

H

| A rt il aa n t i c B a n k
is ,! .

« -• ■ « « ■ *

|
|

ings, as well as new services yet to
be announced.

Strength.Convenience.
FD IC Insured.
At Atlantic Bank, your deposits
arc fully insured by FDIC to $100,000,
ltlJ ihcyVc lucked by Atlantic Bank
with $2.5 billion in suet*,
And
Andalong
alongwi
with this strength
comes the conscience of our state­
wide consolidation so you can bank
at any of our 99 locations.

Call our Hotline.
1-800-342-2705.
For current rates and account
information call our toll-free Finan­
cial Hotline today. Or see vour
Atlantic Banker. Because when it
conies to new comprehensive bank­
ing services that meet your personal
and business needs - you can't do
better than The Best Ilank Around"

I
j

At U nt ic Nat ional Bank o f F lorid a
B anking Locations S tatew ide

Member FDIC

J. *

�12A— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Jan. 2,1981

City, County Officials May Give Suggestions For N ew State Laws
Representatives of the seven cities and the Serr uiole County
Commission have been invited to submit proposed legislation
at the 5:30 p.m. meeting on Jan . 12 to the Seminole County

Legislative Delegation at the courthouse in Sanford.
State Rep. Bobby Brantley, R-Longwood, delegation
chairman, said the legislators also will hear from any person

have a chance to co m e," Brantley said.
He urged those wishing to address the delegation to call 331­
1003 to be placed on the agenda

wishing to address the members on state legislative matters
and area concerns.
"We have set this m eeting for 5:30 p.m. so that everyone will

Rainier
Considers
Abdication
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(UPI&gt; — Prince Rainier 111
hinted to his 20,000 subjects
for the Jirst time Friday that
he m ay abdicate and hand
over th e throne to his son
Prince Albert.
"I a m fully aware of the
effort to be made and 1 will
make it unflinchingly until the
day when my son will be
ready to succeed m e," the
Prince said in a brief New
Y ear’s message. Albert, the
heir apparent, will be 25 years
old next March.
R ainier, while mentioning
the possibility of stepping
down for the first tim e in a
public statement, gave no
indication that he might do so
soon.
He said he was sorry he
would disappoint those who
had w ritten that he would
abdicate, adding he might do
so only when Albert will be
ready to assume a ruler’s
duties.
R ainier, 59, also thanked
the population of his 467-acre
M editerranean principality
for the affection shown his
family after the death of his
wife Princess Grace.
The Amertcan-bom prin­
cess, form er film star Grace
Kelly, died Sept. 14 at the age
of 52 a fte r a fatal car crash.
Her daughter Stephanie, 17,
was injured in the accident.
Rainier thanked the popula­
tion for its support for his
family in "its days of trial”
and criticized those "who
doubt th a t we will be able to
recover and succeed, " an
apparent reference to people
in Monaco who predict the
p rin cip ality is headed
towards an economic decline.
Rainier became ruler in
May 1949 upon the death of his
grandfather Prince Louis 11.

cPrTde
A L L PR ICES G O O D THRU
T U E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 4, 1983.
Q U A N T IT Y R IG H T S R E S E R V E D .

U.S. NO. 1 W HITE

BONELESS
CHUCK
RO AST

B A K IN G
PO TATO ES
10 LB B A G

$ -1 5 9
LB M
r ib

Farm
Census
Begins
Census of agriculture report
forms designed with regional
cropping patterns have been
m ailed to all farm and ranch
o p e ra to rs nationw ide, a c ­
cording to the U.S. Commerce
D epartm ent's Census Bureau.
This will be the 22nd census

of agriculture in a series

1

dating back to 1640.
Crops commonly grown In
particular areas will be listed
on 12 regional forms, making
it easier for the respondent to
report on those produced.
In a continuation of Im­
provements to the form which
began with the 1976 census,
sampling will again be used in
this
cen su s. Sampling,
Bureau officials say, helps
reduce the burden on far­
mers, while still producing
needed data.
In general, about 80 percent
of th e farm and ranch
operators will receive a fourpage form containing the
basic census items. Only 20
percent will get a five-page
form
asking additional
detail*.
Both forms will include
questions on the acreage In
their operation, ownership,
type of organization and
location of the place, use
made of the land, and when
their operation began. Other
questions on the forms will
cover livestock and poultry
inventories and sales, amount
of government crop loans,
incom e from agricultural
services, and crop acreage,
amount harvested and value
sold. Q uestions on crop
acreage and yields have been
regionalized to fit the various
cropping p atterns found
across th e country.
The five-page form will be
sent to a sample of operators
and c o n tain s additional
questions
on
selected
production expenses, the
market value of land and
b u ildings, m achinery and
eq uipm ent inventory and
value, Interest expenses and
expenditures (or petroleum
and other energy sources.

i.

Hygrade

BONGS
BUY

Hot Dogs
Fresh Green
Cabbage

12oz
PKG.

BONUS
BUY

PER
POUND

Western D elicious

Apples

RED O R
G O LD EN

Pantiy Pride

Mayonnaise

PER
POUND

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EVERYDAY

LOW
PRICE

OT.
JAR

H i Ho Crackers
Chicken of the Sea Eg
I2 o z

c

BOX

Tuna
h

an

W ATER
O R O IL

6.5oz
CAN

C

o

1

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

K A REN IIIT T E L L
...X i E p s ilo n S ig m a C h a p te r

V A L E R IE T A Y L O R
. . .G a m m a L a m b d a C h a p t e r

Sunday, Jan. M U 3 - 1 B

V IR G IN IA L E E HAGAN
...X i T h e t a E p s ilo n C h a p te r

l*AT S H A V E R
...T h e ta E p s ilo n

V a le n tin e G irls
Crowning O f Queen To Highlight Beta Sigma Phi Charity Ball
By DORIS DIETRICH
PEOPLE Editor
A pretty girl is like a melody.
And m uch m ore, especially if she is a Beta Sigma Phi
Valentine Girl.
Each of the Sanford Beta Sigma Phi chapters and BSP
Sanford City Council have selected a Valentine Girl to
compete for the queen title at the sorority's annual
Valentine Charity Ball on Feb. 10, from 9 p.in. to 1 a.rn. at
the Sanford Civic Center.
Harry Cup, Radio Station WKIS talk show host, will be
the m aster of ceremonies for the gala evening. Music for

B ETTY JA C K
. ..B S P S A N F O R D C IT Y C O U N C IL

L IB B Y G O R D O N
...X i B eta E t a C h a p t e r

dancing will be be the Best of Friends, a band that plays a
variety of m usic for all tastes.
The following Valentine Girls will represent their
chapters:
BSP SANFORI) CITY COUNCIL
A 15-year Beta Sigm a Phi member, Betty Jack is BSP
Sanford City Council's Valentine Girl. She is also
president of Preceptor Delta Chapter.
The veteran BSP m em ber has served in every capacityincluding chapter president four times. She also served as
president, vice president and treasurer of the city council.
She will represent the council as Valentine Ball hostess.
Bom in Charleston, W. Va., Betty and her husband, Bill,
live at 2105 Glenway Drive, Sanford. They have two
m arried daughters, Dianna Foster and P aula Simpson.
She is a Methodist and also a m em ber of the Woman's
G ub of Sanford. Betty is secretary of th e family owned
business, Sanford Heating and Air Conditioning.
Her special interests Include reading and cooking, “ and
also my two granddaughters, Alisha, 3, and Jaclynn, 2,"
she says.
PRECEPTOR DELTA DELTA
Phyllis Senkarik, Preceptor Delta D elta’s Valentine
Girl, has been a m em ber of Beta Sigma for 12 years and
holds a record nine years perfect attendance.
Born in Tam pa, Phyllis and her husband, Eddie, live at
104 Sunset Drive, Sanford. She is a secretary' at Seminole
Community College, a member of U th e ra n Church of the
Redeemer and a m em ber of Sanford-Seminole Art
Association
Phyllis has held all chapter offices plus BSP Sanford
City Council secretary and council representative. She
has received five "P ro g ram of the Y ear" Awards and two
first place ribbons in scrapbook contests.
Her special Interests include painting In oils, acrylics •
and water colors; sewing, cooking, papier mache
sculpture, calligraphy and heraldry.
PRECEPTOR BETA LAMBDA
"Beta Sigma Phi is a way to gain new friendships and to
retain old friendships as well as to provide service to
others," says Sue Amoret l.aRosa, Preceptor Beta
U m bria's Valentine Girl.
A native Sanford daughter, Amoret and her husband,
John, 3318 Palm w ay Drive, Sanford, a re the parents of
three children: Am oret, 21; Connie, 16, and Bonnie, 15.
A bookkeeper for Orange Paving and Construction co.,
Amoret is a Methodist and during her 16 years as a BSP
member, has served h er chapter as president, recording
secretary, corresponding secretary and treasurer.
Amoret is Mother Advisor to the Rainbow Girls

D O N N A TH O M A SO N
...Z e ta Xi C h a p t e r

Assembly No. 25, International Order of Rainbow for
G irls, Sanford.
XI BETA ETA
Xi Beta Eta Cbpater has selected Libby Gordon for its
Valentine Girl.
Libby, a BSp m em ber for seven years, her husband,
Bill, and their daughter, Billie Eliiabcth, live at 229
Sunset Drive, Sanford. She is a protestant and is employed
as operating room secretary ut Central Florida Regional
Hospital, Sanford.
Bom in Ubanon, Ky., Libby has served her chapter as
secretary and also BSP Sanford City Council secretary.
Iib b y ’s special interests include reading, the beach and
teen-agers.
She says, “Beta Sigm a Phi has shown m e the true
m eaning of friendship."
GAMMA LAMBDA
Valerie Taylor, G am m a lam bda Chapter's Valentine
Girl has been a m em ber of Bela Sigma Phi for only a year
and one half. But during her first year V alerie was
chosen “Woman of the Y ear" and also received
"P rogram of the Y ear" honor for an individual speaker.
Born in San Diego, Calif., Valerie, her husband, Dean,
and daughter Heather M arie, 4 4 make their hom e at 3104
P ark Ave., Sanford. She is employed by ComBank and is a
m em ber of Pinecrest Baptist Church.
She has held the offices of recording secretary and vice
president of her BSP chapter.
Valerie says she enjoys bike riding with her daughter,
preparing new and Innovative meals with h e r mother-in­
law , ceramics, sewing and needlepoint.
Beta Sigma is special to Valerie. "I really enjoy
spending time with m y (sorority) sisters. I look forward to
all of our activities because I know that I am not the only
one who benefits from them . Everyone does. And th at’s a
good feeling," she says.
XI EPSILON SIGMA
Karen Hlttell, Xi Epsilon Sigma’s Valentine Girl, has
been a BSP m em ber for three years. During this time,
she has held the offices of treasurer, recording secretary
and vice president.
Bom In Norfolk, Va., K aren and her husband, Mark,
live at 1430 Indiana St., Lake Monroe.
Karen is employed a s office manager for Kenneth E.
Pyle, DDS, Orlando. She attends the Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church, Sanford.
Her special Interests Include: hand m ade crafts,
collecting cookbooks and recipes, collecting bears,
photography, reading, and collecting and using fowl
coupons and refund coupons.
THETA EPSILON
Representing Theta Epsilon Chapter as Valentine Girl,
P at Shaver has been a BSP member for five and one-half
years.
Bom in Buffalo, N.Y., P at says, "I feel m y years as a
Beta Sigma Phi has helped me grow culturally and
emotionally. I have m ade and met several invaluable
friendships."
.
• P et. her husband, D avid, and their two snas.G eoffry.2L.
and Jason, 3 months, live at 269 Valencia Road, DcBary.
P at Is employed as secretary at Seminole County Fleet
Management.
Her special Interests Include: family activities such as
beach picnics, trips, etc., sewing, craft shows and
collecting Hummels.
A member of the First Presbyterian Church, Sanford,
P at has served Her chapter as recording secretary, vice
president, and corresponding s e a eta ry as well as
corresponding secretary of BSP Sanford City Council.
XI THETA EPSILON
Virginia Lee Hagan will represent XI Theta Epsilon as
Valentine Girl f t the February Ball. Bom In Miami,
Virginia nas been a BSP member for six years.
She, ner husband, Joseph, and their children Phillip, 14,
and Sheila, 13, Uve at 106 U k e Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Virginia Is employed as executive secretary by the
Seminole County School Board. She attends the Good
Shepl&gt;erd Lutheran Church where she serves on the Goals
Committee and Social Services Committee. She says she
enjoys clogging and hook latching rugs.
Following her Ritual of Jewels degree, Virginia has held
the offices of president, vice president, recording
secretary and treasurer. Her Exemplar degree offices
include president and during 1962*1 she Is the recording
secretary of her chapter and also of BSP Sanford City
Council.
ZETAXI
Donna Thomason, Zeta Xi’s Valentine G irl, transferred

to the Sanford C hapter from North Carolina. "The

friendship and fellowship m ade m e feel welcome from the
start and it helped me gain new friends," she said.
Rom in Sawyer, Mich., Donna has been a BSP m em ber
for four years. She Attends Holy Cross Episcopal O iurch.
Donna says she enjoys snorkeling. scuba diving, a rts and
crafts. She is a Boy Scout den m other and is a m em ber of
the Home Builders' Women’s Auxiliary.
Donna and her husband, A.G., live on Route 5, Sanford. ,
They are parents of three children : Steve, 19; llilliary, 13;
t
and G ary 10. She Is employed by Air Flow Designs.
Donna has held the office of treasurer and secretary of
her chapter.

P H Y L L IS S E N K A R IK
...P r e c e p to r D e lta D e lta C h a p te r

SU E A M O R E T LAROSA
. . . P r e c e p to r B e ta L a m b d a C h a p t e r

Ui

�JB— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

rr.

Sunday, Jan.], 1913

• -.*•* T '

H ap p y H o m e m a k e rs

Engagements

Women Content Keeping
The Home Fires Burning

Greene-Cretcher
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Greene, Route 1, Sanford,
announce the engagement of their daughter, T eresa Lynn,
to John Joseph Cretcher, son of Mr. and Mrs. P au l Joseph
Cretcher, 120 Imperial Heights, Ormond Beach.
Bom in Bellingham, Wash., the bride-elect Is the
m aternal granddaughter of Mrs. Annie G. T hom as of
Paola, and the paternal granddaughter of W.G. Greene,
I&lt;as Vegas, Nev.
Miss Greene is a graduate of Seminole High School
where she was a cheerleader and a m em ber of the
National Honor Society. She received a Bachelor of Arts
degree and Master of A rts degree from the U niversity of
Florida, Gainesville. She Is employed as an audiologist.
Her fiance, bom in Dayton, Ohio, Is the m aternal
grandson of Mrs. Ruth Wetzel, Clayton, Ohio, and Die
paternal grandson of Paul D. Cretcher, Cherryvale, Kan.
Mr. Cretcher is a graduate of Seabreeze High School
and received a Bachelor of Science degree from the
University of Florida. He is employed as m anagem ent
consultant by Ernst &amp; Whlnney, Tampa.
The wedding will be an event of Jan. 22, at 4 p.m ., at
Pine Castle United Methodist Church, Orlando.

TERESA LY N N G R EEN E

ByUEEDATRELL
H erald C o rre p indent
"Staying hom e can I ecome static. You1
become Isolated and begin to feel you’re
the only one going through the monotony
of changing diapers, cleaning the house
and fixing m eals," says Mrs. Louise
Poole, m other of two small children.
Louise Is vice-president of the W inter
Springs Extension Homemakers Club
and previously worked for 12 years as the
Home-Economics Agent for Seminole
County.
After becom ing pregnant with her first
child, Ixmise decided to quit her job and
stay at hom e to raise a family.
Pam Cullen, president of the W inter
Springs Club, w as a secretary for m any
years, but since moving to Florida she
also has opted to stay at home to be with
her children.
"Most of the women in my neigh­
borhood work. Being in the Extension
Homemakers G ub gives me a chance to
meet other m others," says Pam.
Pam notes that most of the women in
the club have moved away from their
relatives and m iss the contact not only
with women their own age, but with older
women a s well.
The hom em akers club members a re of
all ages and therefore they fill the gap of

not having m others and aunts nearby.
The general consensus of the women is,
"Why should women feel guilty for
staying at hom e?" Several homemakers
say-they feel that today's society Is
career oriented and tends to m ake
women feel they are on a “ free ride" (not
contributing to the family in a monetary
way) if they stay home.
According to statistics, one of the most
stressful Jobs is a woman staying home
with two sm all children. To add to that
stre ss, h o m em ak e rs a re constantly
reminded that they a re working for
peanuts at a non-appreciative job.
“ If they (women) can get out of the
house and feel creative, then they are
able to give and to receive, and therefore
they can build self esteem ," says one
m em ber who w ishes to re m a in
anonymous.
There is one com m ercial on television
that has tried to propagate to society that
mothers should be super moms. The
women feel that no one should try to be a
super mom.
While the hom em akers are Interested
in getting out to m eet new people, they
also would like to stress that the club’s
purpose is to prom ote educational
projects.
With so m any new m em bers coming in,

" it will be an educational process of just
learning how the club operates," says
Louise Poole.
"Involvement of the kids Is my main
thing right now," notes Louise who says
there aren't m any children in her neigh­
borhood for her children to play with.
" I t’s important for the kids to have in­
teraction with other children as well as
the mothers," Louise says.
The Winter Springs club is in the
process of reorganizing. Previously the
E xtension H o m em ak ers Clubs were
basically made up of older women. Now
that the younger women and children arc
also getting involved In the Winter
Springs club, the women are hoping that
other clubs will look to them and turn
toward educational projects not only with
the adults, but also Involving the
children.
The everyday housewife may not be a
"paid worker," but she has a very Im­
portant role in molding her children and
giving that volunteer tim e to civic
organizations that couldn't exist without
her. Her dreams are of a bright future for
her children, and who knows, maybe a
career after the nest Is empty.
For more Information on the Extension
H om em akers C lubs, call B arbara
Hughes at 323-2500, ext. 179.

Hughes-Banninga
Cecil B. Hughes, 551 Hibiscus Road, Casselberry, an­
nounces the engagement of his daughter, Sharon K ay, to
David J. Banninga, son of Mrs. Marilyn Scyk, 414 W. 19th
St., Sanford, and the late Mr. Jack H. Banninga.
The bride-elect, daughter of the late Mrs. R u th V.
Hughes, was bom in Kent, Ohio. She is a 1966 graduate of
Lyman High School, longwood. Miss Hughes Is employed
in the credit department by CFS Continental.
H er fiance, bom in Muskegon, Mich., is the paternal
grandson of Mrs. Helen B anninga, MaCombe, III., and the
late Mr. Herman Banninga.
M r. Banninga Is a 1974 graduate of Seminole High
School. He is employed as a truck driver by CFS Con­
tinental.
The wedding will bean event of March 19, at 7:30 p.m .,
at G race United Methodist Church, Sanford.

Horatd phots by D«« O t t r t ll

N ew ly in s ta lle d o fficers o f th e W in te r S p r in g s
E x te n s io n H o m e m a k e rs C lu b a r e , fro m le ft; R e n a
G e r tz , a l t e r n a t e d e l e g a t e ; G l a d y s Z a h a n d ,

SHARON KAY HUGHES

Mom's Neat G ift Returns
In A Different Wrapping
DEAR ABBY: Recently I gave my daughter a neat little sum
of money and told h er to buy herself soemthing she wouldn't
ordinarily buy for herself.
I took her to a lovely little tearoom for lunch and we seemed
to enjoy each other's company Immensely. A fter lunch we
went shopping, and she bought herself a beautiful two-piece
suit, which took about half the money I had given her.
Later In the week her husband cornered m e and whipered
that she had used the rest of the money I had given her to buy
a Christmas gift for me!
Abby, both she and her husband have good, well-paying Jobs,
own their home and have plenty of everything, so I see no
reason why she used the money I had given her to buy a gift for
me. I can't explain how I feel about this, but It's not a good
feeling. It's as though I had bought my own Christmas gift,
except that she picked It out.

How would you feel had this happened to you?

MOM

DEAR MOM: After giving my daughter a gift of “ X"
number of dollars, I would feel that the money was hers to
spend as she saw fit. 1 would not conclude that she had bought
me a gift with my own money. That money becam e hers the
moment 1 gave It to her, so she spent her (not my) money to
buy a gift for me. And bow would I feel? Grateful!
DEAR ABBY: The letter from the girl who spoke German to
unwanted solicitors or to men who tried to pick her up reminds
m e of what I used to do when I lived in Florida.
When I wanted to take a walk on the beach by myself on my
day off, I encountered m any men who tried to talk to me. I
would say, “Jag talar lnte Ertgelska. Svenska Ja!" And they
would look at their friends and say, “Hey, this chick can't even
speak English."
My Swedish grandmother also taught me how to say, "How
are you," "I love you" and "Thank you very m uch.” So if I
ever got In a bind, I ’d rattle off my Swedish vocabulary. It
really worked.
HILDA IN DETROIT
DEAR HILDA: In Florida, Ja. But not In Minnesota.
DEAR ABBY: When I go to my yhyiician for my annual
routine check-up my doctor sits me down and tells me that I
need to take off 20 pounds.
Meanwhile he is sitting there with a belly th at's so (at he
can’t button hia Jacket.

*

M
■*

Can you explain this, please?
BEATS ME IN BEVERLY HILLS
DEAR BEATS: Because advice is always easier to give than
it Is to take.
DEAR ABBY: Re the ignorant father who kept taking the
spoon out of his child's left hand and putting it into her right
hand:
W hat difference does it m ake which hand the kid eats with?
H er mouth is in the middle!
PITTSBURGH SOUTHPAW
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have a serious difference of
opinion. Tom's father is very, very 111. He’s been hospitalized
since May and is rarely coherent.
Tom Is an only child and his mother didn't stay around to
raise him , so he and his fath er arc extremely close. Tom was
brought up in the country and spent many happy tim es hunting
with his father. His father built a special cabinet for his large
gun collection. Some of these guns are old and have a lot of
sentim ental value for Tom.
We live In the city and don't have a lot of spare room . After
T om 's father dies, we will Inherit those guns. Abby, 1 do not
want guns In our house! Tom does.
W hat do you say?
MARRIED TO A SON OF A GUN
DEAR MARRIED: Compromise. Keep the gun collection In
the cabinet, securely locked. And keep the bullets elsewhere.
E very teen-ager should know the truth about drugs, sex and
how to be happy. For Abby's booklet, send f t nnd a long,
stam ped (37 cents), addressed envelope to: Abby, Teen
Booklet, P.O. Box 3MM, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

S f h | u A|i f ( i i y 4

StytiKg

)

Who's Cooking
Ik e Herald welcomes sugfcstioas for Cook Of Ik*
Week. Do you know someone you would like to see
featured In this spot? There Is something for everyone
hi the Use of cooking.
Please contact PEO PLE Editor Deris Dietrich about
your lews sad views on egoking.

I:.

i

Dear
Abby

It's Tlmo For A Now Hair-Do.
Try A Now Style, A New Look For
Th# Now Yoar.

PH. 322-7684

p n g s of p i i r
STYLING SALON
tflt FRENCH AVE.

SANFORD

d e l e g a t e ; P h y l l i s O h c r , t r e a s u r e r ; D e b b ie
M cK eon, s e c r e t a r y ; ta u i s e P o o le , v ic e p r e s id e n t;
a n d P a m C u lle n , p re s id e n t.

�5

I

Sunday. Jan. 2, 1983— 3B

Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI.
.

. ---

IdNtUMp i » ,l«l

9.

Library Seeks
Books For
Memorial

j ^
*

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1

Sr

*“

*
-

*

*

-

-

4.

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S'

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&gt;

This past Thanksgiving holiday. LuAnnc (Lundy) Palton
died in a light plane crash while returning to her home in
Winter Park, only days after she had received a Florida Public
Relations Associalion-Amold Palm er scholarship to aid her
graduate studies in communication at the University of
Central Florida.
Follow ing the wishes of her family, the stipend she had been
awarded will be used to buy books in her memory for a
professional library and reading room on the UCF cam pus.
Area professionals in advertising and public relations are
invited to contribute tests or other publications, bookcases or
shelving to help establish The Lundy Palton Memorial.
Once established, the library will open to students and
professionals in communication. A lending system will be
available to m em bers of the professional community.
To contribute books or m aterials for the library, contact Dr.
Robert Davis or Maggie LeGair, (305) 275-2681.
Funds m ay be sent directly to the UCF Foundation, Inc.,
Orlando, FI. 32816, denoting that the contribution is for The
Lundy Patton Memorial.

hksS s#* -HV

IT’S ‘UP, UP, AND AW AY FOR SWEET ADELINES
Sound o f S u n s h in e C h a p te r o f S w e e t A d elin es I n c .,
an o r g a n iz a tio n p ro m o tin g f o u r - p a r t h a r m o n y ,
h a r b e r s h i p s ty le for w o m e n , w ill p r e s e n t its a n ­
n u a l c o n c e r t , " U p , Up a n d A w a y ," on J a n . 22, a t 8

p .m . in th e a u d ito r iu m of L a k e M a ry H igh S ch o o l.
J o in in g th e a w a r d w in n in g c h o r u s a r e T he F o u r
H e n c h m a n ; “ A B a rb e rs h o p Q u a r te t You C a n ’t
R e fu s e ," A m b r o s ia , 1982 s e c o n d p la c e w in n e r in

Region I X c o m p e titio n . D y n a s ty a n d B it O ’H o n ey .
F o r tic k e t in f o r m a tio n a n d s p e c ia l g r o u p r a te s ,
c o n ta c t B re n d a C o rn w e ll, :1000 P e n tb r o o k D riv e ,
O rla n d o , 92810, o r p h o n e (305) 295-3513.

In A n d A r o u n d S a n fo rd

Charity Ball To Feature ‘Legs’ Contest
There’s m ore to the Beta Sigm a Phi Charity Ball this year
than nine pretty Valentine G irls in competition for the
traditional “Queen of Hearts."
There will be legs.
And m ore legs.
Blit not shapely legs of pretty girls on parade in scanty
swimsuits.
Instead, area m en’s organizations are sponsoring can­
didates in a “ Mr. tag s" contest.
According to Margie Beine, 1983 BSP Charily Ball chairm an.
“ We are asking organizations to enter a contestant for a (25
donation which will Include a ticket to the ball for the con­
testant and guest."
Margie continues, “Each contestant is asked to provide a
snapshot of his legs from the knees down. These snapshots will
be numbered and displayed a t the ball. A separate listing will
Include each participant and sponsor. The contestant does not
have to Identify his picture."
Margie explains that voting will be by number on ballots
given to each person attending the ball. Margie adds, “ Those
who expect to win, will, I am sure, want as many as possible to
recognize his legs, and we hope organizations will support
their candidates by attending the ball."
Proceeds from the ball will benefit the Seminole Mutual
Concert Association. Margie says, “ Our purpose In sponsoring
the concert association is two-fold: to aid association m em bers
in fund raising to provide quality concerts for the community
and to provide concert scries subscriptions for senior citizens
and-or students who may not otherwise be able to attend these
functions.
The ball tickets are (15 a couple. A cash bar and free snacks

Florida.

Doris /
Dietrich ^
•PEOPLE
Editor

Are your kids jumping on file

t

#

*

beds, swinging in the closets,

Congratulations a re in order to the Rev. ta ro y and Joyce
Soper on their wedding anniversary, Dec. 29.
Others celebrating anniversaries as the year ends are:
Dorothy and Robert Williams, Dec. 28; Peggy and William
Tyre, Dec. 28; und Lillian and Russell Magonegal.

climbing the walls, and
tumbling on the furniture?
C hannel th e ir post-holiday crazies
w ith co n stru ctiv e p h y sic a l activ ities.

will be available. The grand door prize is a Sea Escape cruise
for two.
The entry deadline for contestants entering the Second
Annual Miss Sanford Scholarship is Jan . 9. This pageant,
sponsored by the Junior Woman’s Club of Sanford, will be held
March 12 in th e auditorium of Lake Mary High School.
Contestants m ust be single and between ages 17-24.
Applications a re available at the G reater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce or by calling 323-9214 o r 322-2921.
The club’s first annual Miss Sanford Scholarship Pageant in
1982, and the first Miss Sanford pageant in over 30 years, was a
beginner’s luck charm for (he club.
Deanna P itm an of Apopka won the Miss Sanford title and
later raptured the Miss Florida title to represent the stale in
Miss America competition in Atlantic City.
*

Catherine Stew art, a statuesque blond and talented pianist is
the reigning Miss Sanford. She was the Miss Sanford first
runner-up to claim the title after Deanna became Miss

omPER/

The Woman’s G ub of Sanford will meet for the regular
monthly general business meeting Wednesday, Jan. 5, at 11
a.m . followed by luncheon at noon. Reservations a re necessary
for the catered luncheon.
The program will Include l-uctle Clone, Director of Sub­
stance Abuse for Seminole County Mental Health Center who
will speak on the county's halfway house for women.
Following this segm ent, Mildred M. Caskey, curator of the
Henry S. Sanford Museum-Library, will present a program
about Gen. Sanford and the founding of the city, including his
personal effects on display at the museum.

Is a n atio n w id e p ro g ram
o( sp e c ia lty d e sig n ed a n d te s te d g y m n a stic s
a c tiv itie s fo r children.
• Intent P ro g ra m • Pre-School P io g ra m
• K id n a ttic s Classes F o r B o ys A G irls 4-10 Y rs .

Register tomorrow for the January session
M onday, Ja n . 3rd t0 a .m .-4 p.m ,
3 3 1 -8 1 2 3

Irene Weible and Peggy McKelvey spent an "absolutely
fabulous" two weeks in Hawaii, according to Irene. They
visited four islands and can't wait to return.
"We just had a gorgeous tim e," Irene says.

In And Around Lake M ary

434 Live Oaks Center — Casselberry
NW Corner Hwy. 1712 and 431

mmm
SPECIAL FOR
JANUARY

Pastor Honored On i
10th Anniversary

INTRODUCTORY OFFER

Sc;

On Sunday, Jan. 2, members of I.ake Mary's
Calvary Baptist Church will celebrate more
than Just a New Year. Sunday will be the 10th
anniversary of the Rev. Joseph Webb as
church pastor.
In celebration there will be two special quest
speakers. Jeffery Webb, the pastors son, will
deliver the sermon at 11 a.m . and Kcvan Mull
will be guest speaker at 6 p.m.
Both Jeffery and Kevan are home from the
“ Christ For The Nation" Bible Institute In
Texas, Kevan is from Altamonte Springs.
A general meeting of ta k e Mary Chamber of
Commerce hi scheduled for Jan. 3, 8 p.m. at
city hall. The topic of discussion will be Ihe
"Meals on Wheels" program. The public Is
Invited.

-V

j#

&gt;

The ta k e Mary Pony Baseball League Is
now holding a registration drive. Anyone who
is interested-should attend the meeting on Jan.
3, at 7:30 p.m. at Cafe Sorrento.
The Garden Gub of ta k e Mary will hold Its
meeting on Jan. 13, at 10 a.m ., at the home of
club member Mrs. Cline of Ruskin Street.
Anyone who is interested In the care and
growing of plants Is welcome. This week's
subject will Include spider and air plants.

SCOUT EARNS STAMPS O F APPROVAL
H ie Ju n io r Woman’s Club of Sanford, Inc. responded to n p lea from Eric
Nixon of Maitland, to help save 25,(MO used postage stam ps. P resen tin g Eric
with 5,001 stam ps from th e d u b is Ju d y Osborn. E r k is w orking toward
earning his World M erit B adge for the Boy Scoots. H ie stam ps a re to be sold
and the mohey will benefit m issionaries in Bangledesh. Money from 25,000
stam ps will feed 10 hungry children for one y ear. As the y e a r also the
-program ends, Eric w as the recipient of m ore than 500,000 used postage
stam ps.

v '

ta k e Mary's Flagship Bank and ComBank
will be closed on Monday, Jan. 3, in ob­
servance of the New Y ean weekend.
Melodee Skating Rink, on 25th Street in
Sanford, opens its doors to the students of ta k e
Mary Elementary School, every first Monday
of the month. The students are Invited to bring
a guest for this fun-filled evening, and the cost
is 11.25.
This skating session is from 6:30 to 1:30 p.m.
and is not open to the general public.

FREE

&gt; *•&lt;•'»• i WtMly
Nttdltpcml Lttuwit
With Thi Purer,,,
01 Clan luppittt

ta k e Mary
Correspondent
323-9034

THIS M ONTH O N LY !

I f «

Karen ^
Warner
This week Ihe tak e Mary Elementary
School will be sending home a Parent-Teacher
survey. The School Advisory Committee,
made up of Dr. Emory Giles, chairman, John
Leap, vice-dwuuwui; olid Felicia Spoil,
secretary; sent out this survey to get a better
understanding as to the thoughts and feelings
the parents have in regard to schools policies
and administration.
Parents are encouraged to answer all
questions and promptly return the survey to
the school. The goal of the school is for a 100
percent return of the survey a s an incentive
for the students, the three classes to return the
most surveys will receive awards.
This column is for the people of ta k e Mary
and welcomes readers' participation and
Information. By working together to obtain
Information on club and church activities,
social gatherings and community projects,
Lake Mary can be informed as to events
concerning the entire community. Call me at
323-9034.

v
/

T ill TNf Chalc/Ot
Stmpl,, Of N»,«l«Mu&lt;t
LataP,iia«,

V*tv» Of Coupon: III A p p ro ilm o l* Colt Of
Supplies: 111 Coupon M ust Bo Prosontod
Wh*n Registering F o r Classes

.PATCHWORK COTTAGE QUILT SHOP,
,N
V

Del Pointer 4 Roe Her per
H U Pint St. Sorterd. Flo . Ill Mil
"\\
Moers; Sot. *;&gt;Mam.. Mon I SO1:1*. Tm. Fri.MR.Mt Z '

lUnnmn n~m?r
Special
New Year’s
t
m

/—

Show

S a le

January 1,2,3,1983
TUPPERWARE CONVENTION CENTER
NORTH U.S. HIGHWAY 441
Between Orlando i Kissimmee, Florida
Saturday
J a n .l
1 tot p.m.

Sunday
J a n .l
1 tot p.m.

M onday
Jan, 3

1 to 6 p .m .

$ 2 .5 0 A D M IS S IO N

$2.00 (with this pass)
Good F o r All T h ree D ays
JA M Au tig an Prom otion*
898-2066

ALL EXHIBITS PON SALE
100 D e a le rs

4
*&gt;»v?
571

�SartTPtff V

Sunday, Jaa

Methodist

Adventist
T N IS B V IN T H OAT
A O V K N T IIT C H U R C H
t K N m m it u m
■•* Kennyth Bryant
p ,..,,
h t w W i Servlets
Sabbath l&lt;heel
, „
W .M h , t K . n .
IIM a m
W tin ttS iy N t(M
'" W lt f M l
IM p m

...THE HOPE CFOUR COMMUNITY,

vX;

;X v

CHRIST U H lT E O
ME THODI S T CHURCH
Tuckar O riut, Sunland E s l l l l l .w,
Rav Ro barl w M illar
P a it lr '
Sunday School
I IS a m
M arnlnp Worship
II 00 a m
M Y F ln d A llh S u n
7M a m
Eva W orship 111 A Ird tun
IMpm
Wadnasday Mam m y F r iy y r C ro u p 5

Asssmbfy O f God
PIRIT A t S C M t U V O F 0 0 0
17th A C lm
Dlrrfe lehannon
F#i»*f
liM lf k M
Nursery thru tth y ra d r
Warship Servlet
IIM a m .
Servicit in Btpenal
II M i m.
B rtW r t Warship
4M pm
Wad. Fam ily H I M '
I:N |h
Nad.Ufbthewte Vavth
T :M | m
h i l l lin f if i •
M ltt.e n.tttt
I: N m .

The
Church...

■ M IM A A S S E M B L Y O F 0 0 0
Corner »l Country Club Rand
and W ilbur Avenva
L l l f M ir y
m a tte
I n n Ii m i
in H r
Marnlnp Service
Ham ,
■rwnlnf Service
Ip m

Baptist
C B N T R A L R A F T IS T C H U R CH
t i l l O i l A n , la n ia rd

m -m a

F rtd d ii Im ith
liM iih iiN i
Mernlny Warship
ChurchTraininy
■vtnlny Warship
Wad Fraytr la rv .

F tttw
441 am
11,M am
i My m
IH m
1 ;H |m

CO UNTRYIIOR R A F T IIT C H U R C H
Cevrrtr y Club R M R . L a b i M ary
Autry M. Lony
Fatiar
Sunday Sctwoi
4,s u m
Fraachlny t W erahlpiny
11.41am
l i b i t Study
l : H p m.
Skinny A Prnclaim rny
M l pm
Wad. Fraytr M a lt
M O pm
N v rttr y F ra v ld td
FIRST B A P T IS T C H U R C H
III Park A v tn v t. la n ia rd
I tu Paul R M urphy. Jr.
P illa r
Sunday Schaal
»:41am
MarnlnpW arihip
II M a m
ChurcHTrainlna
4:44pm
I r a n ln iW a riliip
IM pn
Wad Prayar S arvlca
l: » p m

G R A C E U N ITED
M E TH O D IS T CH U R CH
A irp o rt B|vd A Woodland Or.
w illia m J. Boyar
F a ito j
Church Schaal
I R ill I
W arship Sarulca
I liW a .rB f*
Y p u lh F a lla v rih ip
IMpm .
Tutsday BiblaStudy
llt e im .
N ursary pruvldad lar i l l ttr v lc a i. **

OURNATIONI

vav!;

atjsasasa

i *
X-X'XXwX'IvIXv^'XvXVt’.W.'.V.V'VvXvX*!^•XWX'W'l'X'X'Xv! ’••••

!*

Congregational

Baptist
REVENNAPARK
• A P T I S T CHURCH
S74] Country d a b Road
Rt». O a ry D t S u ib
.Faster
Sunday School
M S am .
M arnlnp W arship
H am
Church T relM n y
IMpm
Eurntna W arship
7:14 p m
Wad. P ja y a r S aru lta
is o pm

C O N G R E G A T IO N A L
C H R IS T IA N CH U R CH
1441 S. Park Ava
1114144
P i llor
R iv . F r t d N t il
■av. Edmund L Weber A s m P iitu r
Sundly School
14:14-110 m
Fallowthip
It M o m
Morniny Worship
wod. Prayer Meetmy
lo o p m
A R ib it Study

M A G IC
HOUR

N E W M O U N T C A LVA R Y
M IS S IO N A R Y R A P T IS T CHURCH
m i w t u i i i i i si
Ray. Oaarpa W. W irrm
Sunday Sc Heel
I Ham
M arnlnp S arvlca
IIMam
Euanlnp S arvIca
SHpm

4.Mom

ATA-ltll *r STA-lfTI

■ta. Donald H trth e n re d e r
Paalar
R iv . Itrn a rd P ack
A n t . P illa r
Dr. W.C. C a liin t
A n t . Pallor
Mra. Jatfrty R a r it y
Youth Dir
Men's Prayar
..Fellaw iA lp
IM tm
Maridna Warship l : M 4 l l : M t m .
Sunday School
t:4Sa.M.
CMldran‘ 1 Churth
11 M a m
CAanb Traininy
l: M p m .
Euanlna Warship
f iM p m .
Wednesday P ra y a r A
. . R I M4 Stud)
Study
7:00 pm
N unary and B u i Sarvlca

H O LY CROSS
441 P a rk A v t
The R iv L tro y O Sopor
Radar
Holy Communion
4 M am
HolyCam m union
10 M a m
Church School
10:M am
Holy Communion
14:M am .

S E M IN O L E HEIGHTS
■ A PT IS T CHURCH
D r J a y T .C a im a ta
P illa r
Sunday Sarulcailntlia
Lah a M a ry Hlpb Scnaal
Audilarium
R iM a Study
1.41a m
W oraMp
II M a m
YoutR CIMIr
SOOpm
C h u rc h T ra ln ln p
I 00p m
Worahip
7 00 p m

E P IS C O P A L C H U R C H OF
THE N E W C O V E N A N T
471 Tuikavullla Road
W iM ar s p n n f t
Phono III 4711
Rau O ratory O B rtw a r
Vicar
Sundly lu c h a r lt i
I A 11 a m
Sunday School
4am

JORDAN B A P T IS T C H U R CH
t ia u p t a la Rd.
S I . Sim ian
Paitar
Sunday Schaal
ll: M a m
Marnlnp Sarulca
I I .M a m
■ ronlnp Sarvlca
7 10 pm
Wadnaiday Sarvlca
7 :M p m
Old Trulka la r a Naur Day
LA KE M A R Y B A P T IS T MISSION
114 L a k tv ltw , Laka M ary
Sunday Schaal
MS am
Warship Sarvlca
IIMam
(v M la p W anM p
7 :M p m
Wad Prayar Sary.
7 :M p m .
N u n a ry Prauldad

D e m o rt/ n a fio n b /

Catholic

They (old M e lissa llmt site cim lil sta y up
until iiililnlght u tid “s e e the New Y ear In."
hut the h a n d s on th e clock are well sh o rt oil
the magic m urk, u u d already sh e Is sle ep y .
H er p u re n ts a r e laughing und h ap p y .
Aunt Mary sa y s, “ It w on't lie long now ," a n d
Cousin S asun s a y s , “OITwIth th e old. oil w ith
the new." A nd M e lissa asks. I tccuusc sh e
really doesn't u n d e rs ta n d all o f th is. “W hy Is
everyone so g lad (lint the ( Mil Y eur is m Vr'J"
Why, Indeed'.' W ill the New Y eur give u s u
bccoijd cliuncc to w ip e out our m is ta k e s un d
l&gt;egln anew ?
When you get right down to It, it ta k e s
more than d u m g ltig th e d ale on a c a le n d a r. A
real "New Y eur" b e g in s In the h e a rt a n d th e
soul, and to lie su c c essfu l it re q u ire s (io d 's
liel|&gt;—in Ills S a n c tu a ry .

Christian
P I R I T CHRISTIAN
1M7 S. laniard Ava.
S. E d if ie d John son
MJMstar
Sunday Schaal
4 :41 am .
M a rn ln p W arship
1 1 :M t m.

S A N F O R D CHRISTIAN CH U RCH
117 Airport Blvd
Phant III 4114
Jaa Johnson
M m islvr
Sunday Scnaal
I M am
W arship Sarvlca
IO :M a m
E v tn ln p Sarvlca
iLO O pm
P ra y a r hAaallnp wad
IMpm

Christian Science

FIRST B A P T IS T CH U R CH
O PLO H O W O O D
I III. W a il at II 41 an Hwy ala
1I fl'iul iKwr ft I
■ tv . J a m il W. H am m ock
Paitar
Sunday Schaal
t M am
Mernlny Warship
I: IS A 11 IS am
CMIdrrn't Church
II: IS a m
Church Tralnlnp
S :4!pm
■ vanlnp Worship
7.00pm
Wad fvanlnp
Prayar Sarvlca
&gt; :M pm

' C H R IS T IA N SCIIN CR IO CIRTY
c a S w ta tw iitr Ac aPamy
■ a il LakaA ranllay O’ lva
Lonp*aad
Sunday Sarvlca
10:00 a m
Sunday Schaal
10 00 a m
Wad Tasllm an y
M a a lm p
1:10 p m

PALM RTTO AVCN UR
■ A P T IS T C H U R C H
I lia Palm atta Ava.
■ tv Raymond C rackar
Paitar
Sunday Schaal
4:41 am
Marnlnp Warship
11:M a m
Ivanpallstlc Sarvlcas
IMpm
Wad Prayar A B lb lf Study 7:S«pm
Into pan Pant M u tu n e 'y

C H U R C H OF CHRIST
ISIS F trk Annua
F r a d la k a r
E u in p a lis l
R iM a Study
10 M a m .
M arn ln p Worship
II 00 a m
R v tn ln p Sarvlca
IMpm
L id ia s B ik lt C lais
Wadnasday
IIMam
W adnasday BIMa Clast
IMpm

P IN IC R E S T B A P T IS T CHURCH
III W. A irp o rt B lvd , Sanlurd
1TM717
M arkP .W aav ar
P illa r
■IMa Study
0:41a.m.
Marnlnp W arship
ll:00m a m.
I vaalnp W orship
7: SI p m.
Wadnasday
FHItw sM pSuppar
4 :H p m .
Nursary Prauldad Par
A ll Sarvlcas

Non•

A L L S O U LS CATHOLIC CH U RCH
I I I Oak A v a , laniard
P r. W illia m E m i Ii
P a ita r
SfS* V l f l l M a l l
I p m.
Sun. M a ta
L 1I M. I1»0
Canfaailano, Sal.
4-S p m .

F I RS T U N ITED
n?
M ETH O D IST CHU RCH
,
a lt Fork Ava
L p e F .K in y
Pastor;
Ja m a l A Thomas
D .rrd o r ol M u s ic_
M am m a Worship
I 14 A 1 1 a m *
Sunday School
M in n .
UM YF
IMpm,
Mon’ s Prayar Rraaklasl
Snd A ath Thursday
4»a m

Episcopal

Wednesday la rn c a sa t
Cauananl P ritb y itrla n Church
P ra y a r A R ib lt Study
IMpm
A d u ltC h a ir
I asp m

F IR S T R A P T IS T C H U R C H
OF D E L T O N A
ISM Providence Elvd.

S I .R d .4 M B M
Lanpwaad. F it.
jam as
Sun School
, m 4 4SB 11.M
W arship
|:M
UMYF

Church Of Christ

Sunday
Isaiah
13:6-11

Monday
Joel
2:1-11

Tuesday
Joel
2:12-17

Wednesday
Joel
2:25-32

Thursday
Zachariah
14:1-9

Friday
Matthew
2531-46

WI NTER IPO S C O M M U N IT Y
E VANO EL1CAL
C O N G R E D A T IO N A L
li lW i d a S i r a d
Rav Robarl Bum s
Paitar
Sunday Schoal
lOMam
W arihip
14 M a m
TI ES T HAT BIN D
EVANGELISTIC CENTER
B a a rd a llA v a So o i S R i a E
F u ll Gospal Intarfaith
Sun Worship A
Christian Grm vtn lo M a m A 7 p m
Prayar A BIMa
Study Wadnasday
7pm
Saturday
l: M p m .

C O R N E R S T O N E CHRISTIAN
CENTRE
Driltw ood V itia te
341 W L ik a M a ry B ird
F u ll Gotpai Intarla.lh
MarnmpW orship
II W a r
Evanmp Worship
I.Mpr
Mtallisp School. Thurs
I Mpr

Lutheran
L U T H E R A N C H U R C H OF
TH E R E D E E M E R
"Tha Lviharan H our" and
TV T h ills Tha L ila ”
ISIS Oaa Ava
Rtv. Elm ar A. A fu ic h t r
P illa r
Sunday IcTwal
4:11am
Watahlp Sarvlca
Idldam
Nindartartan and Nursary

C H U R C H OFOOD
M l W. Itnd Strait
R t v . B ill Thompson
P a tlo r
Sunday Schaal
0:41 a m.
M arnln p W arship
1 l:M a m
E v a n p tllitlc Saru.
IMpm
F a m ily Enrlchm anl
Sarulca
7 :M p m

ScrcUi/ai tedded by The AmenCAn B-t/v Society

Naiarene
F I RS T CHU RCH
O P T H E N A ZA R BN B
!S tt la n iard Ava.
John J. Hinton
P i lla r
Sunday Schaal
4:dSd m ..
Marnlnp Warship
14:41a m.
Y au th H au r
t:0tp .m .
B van p tl 1st Sarulca
4:44 p m.
M ld w tt h S trv IttIW a d ]
7:44 p m,
Nursary Prauldad tar all Sarvlcas

Eastern
Orthodox
S ti P r t ff A Paul
Ofthoboi P a fiih
* •
"Itaio ■ ria n iiftf*
1
IM I Magnolia Avt.
Rt v. Fr Anthony Grant
F a ifo r
D tvln t Liturgy
ll iN a . m
R td o ry
IW -W ?

Pentecostal
FIAST PEN TECO STAL
V’
C H U R C H O FLO NO W O O D
sal Oranpa lt r a tl. Lanpwead
Rav E R u lh O ra n l
Faslov
Sunday Schaal
14 44 a my
M arnm p Warship
II M a m
lu n d a y Iv a nln p
M ap m
W td Bibla Study
I M p m.
Canpuarart Mattiny Sunday I M p m

f
M

Presbyterian
GOOD S H E P H E R O
lutheranchurch

•

1417 Orlando Or 17 SI
( Luihoran Church m A m arical
Rav R a lp h l Lum an
Pastor
Sunday Schaal
I 41 a m
Warship
IIM im
Nursary Providad

Saturday
Psalms
8-1-9

Church Of God

CO M M U N IT Y U N IT E D
M E TH O D IS T CH U RCH
H w y. 17 41 a l P ln tr Rldpa Rd.
Cassalbarry
Rav. H. Wipht K lrtlay
Pesler
Rav. David H. Hodpat
A sic. Pastor
M arnlnp Worship
4:14-11 a m .
Church School
7 10 11 a m ,
Sarvlcas with classes la r all apas * '
Fallaw shlp Callaa katwaan sarvlcas
J Y F ’ avs
IMpm
UM YF
. I M S m,
Evanm p Worship
7'M pm '
Wad Bibla Study
7 :M p m ,

ST. L U K E 'S L U T H E R A N CHURCH
SR 414 A Rad B u f Rd.
Oviedo &lt;II a v ia l
R d w lis j.R m a w
Paitar
Sunday Schaal
4:41am .
Worship Sarvlcas
l: M B I I : M i. m .
Wa maintain 4 Christian Schaal
KlnOarpanan thrauph I lp M h Orada

F I R S T P R E S B Y T E R IAN C H U R C H -1
Oak Ava A l r d S I
v
Rav. V l r f l l L Bryanl. Paslar
Phant 111 1441
U’
M o m m y Worship
I IQ a ny.,
Church Schoal .
4:41a isv)
M om m y Worship
IIMam
Nursery

T H E L A K E M A R Y U N ITEO
P R E S B Y T E R I A N CHURCH
W ilbur Ava., Laka M ary
Rt v. A .P .S Itvan s
M m islaa
Sunday Church School
t:4Sb.n|.
M arnlnp Warship
I L M a . ih '
Youth Group
•
M lp r r r ,
Wad. Chair Pry c ilia
I M a ip ,

‘The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notlco And Directory Page Possible1
A T L A N T I C N A T IO N A L B A N K
Sunford. FI*.
H ow ard H. Hodges and S taff

C E L E R Y CITY
P R I N T I N G CO., INC.

C O L O N IA L R O O M
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
BUI &amp; Dot Painter

FLA G S H IP B AN K
O F S E M I N O L E and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando D r.
G R EG O R Y LU M BER
T R U E VALU E HARDW ARE
500 M a p le Ave„ Sanford
H AR RELL&amp; BEVERLY
T R A N S M ISS IO N
D a v id Beverly and Staff

JC P enney
Sanford Plaza
E d H em annand Staff

*\
SMITTY'S SNAPPIN* T U R T L E
MOWERS, IN C

O S B O R N 'S B O O K
and B I B L E S T O R E
2599 Sanford Ave.

K N IG H T 'S S H O E S T O R E
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight &amp; Staff

2506 Park Ave,
Mike&amp; Connie Smith

PAN TR Y P R ID E
D IS C O U N T F O O D S
and Em ployees

L. D. P L A N T E , INC.
Oviedo, F lo rid a

P U B LIX M A R K ETS
and Em ployees

T H E M cK IB B IN A G E N C Y
Insurance

SEN K A R IK G LASS
A P A IN T C O ., INC.
Jerry 4 E d S e n k a rlk
and Em ployees

M E L 'S
G ULF SER V ICE
M el Dekleand E m p lo yees

STENSTROM R E A L T Y
Herb Stenstrom and Staff

.1

W IL S O N -E IC H E L B E R G E R
M ORTUARY
Eunice W ilson and Staff
W I L S O N M A I E R F U R N I T U R E CO.
M r. and M rs. F re d Wilson
W IN N -D IX IE S T O R E S
and Em ployees

•SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY1
B I I I M B L Y OP O O D
P in t A itam M y p f Gad. 17t» B I l k
I boom Assam My bf Oad. Carnar at Country C lu b Road and
WIIByr B u t., L a id M ary
BAPTIST
Bat lack BaptUI C kurck. Oviaaa
Calytry Baptist C hurch, Crystal Laka B ird , Laka M a ry
Castaitarry B a p tlsl Churck, TIB Samiaaia B ird
CaaTrH B aptlsl C h arck. m i oak Btp.
CRMdPtt F irs t B a p tlsl
Cltkrw ktar M lsH a o a ry B d y tlil Ckarck, Saatkvrrsl Rp.
CkPRlTytMt B a p tls l Churck. Country Clvk Road. L a k t M a ry
V otary Bap’ ll ) Church, OM Ovtanda I d at H a s ltr Ava.
FlrW B aptltt Church. I l l F a r t Btp.
F lr t i ip pIM I Church at A ltam aati Syrlapt. R l. 414. B ll« m a a lt
Ip rtk p l F lr t i B ap tU I Church aI F tr* it city
F lr t i la p t il l C hu rch ad Baaava
F lr t i B apH ti C h u rch •« Lake Mary
F lr t i B a p tlll C h u rch at Lake Maaraa
P i n t la p t il l C h u rch 1 Laafw cuC I Hk. W ilt a l l i t l an Hwy.

New Lit* Fellow sh ip, t i l l I . Laka O rlv t. CaSM Iharry, FI. 117H
■avtim a F o rk B a p tlsl Church, l i t ] w . M th SI.
FrtpId’S B a p lls t cnapal. IMI W. F irst S tra it, la n ia rd
F in tc r a il B a p tls l Church. I l l W. A irport Blvd.
Fram e Lah a B aptist, Rldpa Rd., Farn F a rh
F rep rtM kAisaiaaary a a p iis l Church. M tPw ay
Sacaad SMIah M lis ta n a ry B aptlll Church w a it la n ia rd
SauHapM Ma4#4s BaptM t Churth, Sarytcaa M la h a M a ry W 0
StBaaf A udM artuui
'
Smyrna B a p tltt Church. 1M Ovarhraah D r , C h tta lh a rry
Sunland B a p tltt Church. I lia Palmatta
Si. Jama a M iik ta o a ry Bapllat Church. St. B d. a ll. Osiaan
SI. Luka M ita M a a ry Baalist Church al ca m a ru a C ity- Inc.
Si. Paul B a p titl Church. I l l Pina Ava.
SI. Matthews B a p llst Church. Canton Hats.
Sprtnpllald M ls iia n a ry Baptitl. lltk B Cadar
II. Jahn'a M tlh M a a ry B aptitl Church, t n C y p ra s i St
Tampla B a p tls l Church. Palm Syrlapt ■ * . A lla m a n lt ly rln p i
William Chnpal Mlsstanary Baptist Church, M u rk B W illlsm SI.
A ilsm anta I p rm p t
I n n H i m B a p tltt Church. I l l O rinpe Bvu.

F lr t i
F lr t i
F lr t i
F ir i t

CATHOLIC
Church at lh a N a tivity , Laka Mary
A ll t a u li C a tlM llc Church. I l l Oak Ava , Sanlurd
Our Lady Quaan a l F ta ca Calhallc C h ip a l, S tl I M apnaiia Ayr.,

4M

BapUU at O v iaaa
BtpH st C h u rch at SiM aaaa S piiayi
l i p t l I t C h u rch a l w ib tar I p la y s 144 B4h«ma Rd.
SMIah M U U h d r y t d p i l l l Church, t i l l W. ISth II.

iszx .fsiiss'to M n S m

( M

l. MU I U M

U1.

_
_____ ___ _
_____ I R d . O llth R
fi*|--‘~B B M ry B a p U il C hurch. Baaavi Hwy.
M l Marlkh F r lm llly R B a p U lL M U U c u tl Bvu.. la n ia rd
M l. 0Uv4 M Jssladarv B a p tist Churck. |ahl*nd4 lp ri» | » R d .
M l. IM M hU M M dR ry B a p t lll CBurth, IM I J a rry B v t.
M l. IM4 M lilia n t r y B a p tiU . t i p l t Bui.
H r . BrthaJ M -sg a n a ry Church. tlk S I .B Hlckary A r t .
" f T ir r
- - V - m ... C ivic Laapua B M P . laapw aad
Hm r S S m C hurch, F a r pal CUT CamauaMy Caatur. Farast
Hm L . C alvary WMdaMaary B aplW - U M RL \m tl.
haw SdttM F r t h llly p B a p tta Churth. ISM »
______
haw T N lM h a M B a p t it l Church. OuaUtr liw . M a r ti U upw aad
M ra Ml. IM a B a p t lll C hurch, ITU Fear A r t .

It A m ' i C a lh a llc Church, Dapwaad T ra il. D a B a ry
II. A vyu tim e C a lh a llc Church. Sunset D r.. M a r Button R d ,
CAittl'lMNrrv
II. M a ry hU yedatene CalM Hc Church. M a itla n d A r t ,

AitifRAiifi S ffififl
Our Lady t t l lw L a h n C a lh a llc Church. lllP M a a im illa n . Outline
CH R ISTIAN
Christian Sc lane a la cta ty . C O Swaatwatar A it d a m y . I a s i Lake
Ira n i lay D r.. Lanpwaad
First C h ristian Church. IM I I. la n ia rd Bua.
la n ia rd C h ristia n Church, i n W. A irp n rt B lvd.
Narthsida C h ristia n Church. Florida M a rt* O r . M ailian d
Lakavlaw C h ristia n Church, Bear Laka B d . h i Jam lsen
CNUBCM O F C H R IS T
Church at C h r ltl. ISIS S Park Asa.
Church at Chr III a l L a h t Bilan. U S I I 4 L N. C atsaih arry
South lem m ata Church a l C h ritl. S ilt Laka H a w a ii ■&lt;
Churth a( C h rist. 4 M F ilm ta n n a t Dr , A lta m ania laps.

Church ut C h ritl. G m rva
Church u l C h rltl. Lanpwaia
Church ut C h rltl. W. 17th 17.
N arthsida Church at C k -lit, Fla. Hauan D r., Man
C H U R C H O F BO O
Church M Bad. M l Hlckary
Church i t Dad. M l W. Und SI.
Church at Oad. Dvledt
Church u l Oad H aU nrtL Laka Manraa
Church u l Oad M illio n . Bntarprlsa
Church •« Bad. IMS W. tMh St.
Church a l B ad la C h rlil. Ovitda
C h u rth at Odd at FrtRhacy, IM t S. I l m A r t .
C h u rc h a lG a d a l Fraphtcy. I7MS Persim m on A r t.
Rase ye Church al Bad, IIM W. 11th SI., la n ia rd
True Church Ot Gad. D M R lOpawwaa Bud., la n ia rd
I B S T B R N O h TH w M m
l a a l K h Orthadaa Ckurck, SH. F r ia r B P a u l. II1B MapnaUa A rt.,
la n ia rd . F la .
B it t e r n Orthadaa Church. It. G ea r ( a . U l I k irw v M Cl..
A ltam eata Syr mas
S a sta ra O rlh a d a i Church, II. I ttu a n 't at O.C.A.. 114 Saudi It..
P i r n P a rk
B a tta rn Orthadaa Churth, II. John Chryaestam Chapel. U S
Hwy. I l t l . F a n Park
C O N O R BO A TIO N A L
Can*r i f a nanal Chr Iin an Church, I M I I. F a r t A rt., Sarlard
B F IIC O f a l
1 p it cu p el C h urth a l Ik# Itaw Carananl. 471 TwhpwW a Read.
Tha Chu rch a l lha Oaad lhaphard. M a itla n d , U l L a ta A rt.
A ll Saints ■ p lic a pal Church. R. Da B a r y A n . , la terp rtw
c k r i l l I p i scape! Church. L ta tw a id
H oly C r a t i I p lica pel. Farh A rt., p i M b II., ta h lw d
It. R ic h a rd '! Church. S ill La ta Haw ull R d , W ln la r F a r t
J B W I tH
• a lh A m Synapapua maatiap a l H H a rila la M all. A ll amenta
I prlnpa
LUTHIRAN
^
Ascansian LuRm ran Church. O vtrhruah D r.. Cauatbrnry
Oaad lh a p h a rd United lu lh r- s a , 1417 S. O ria n d t Dr.
L u lh a ra n Church a l Pm&gt;aa_ca, Oattana
Lu th eran Chnrch at lha Itd a tm a r, I U W. il m . P lata
M a tsia h Lu lh aran Church. BMdan D ays Da. B Hwy. t i n ,
C a iw 'lH r y
II
Lut%eree CUgrcH. «t. €U.

SI. Sldphan Lulhuraa Church. CSC |ust Waal a l 1-4. L i»|w aa4
M IT M O O IS T
B arnett United M a m trla l Church, R . D d R try A r t., B n ta rp rill
Bade Lake United Mathaditl Church
Bethel A M R. Church. Canaan H p lt.
Cassalbarry Cammunily United M a th ad til Church, H a y. I l t l ,
Pinny Rldpa R d , C m a lh tr ry
C h ris t Uaitpd Mathaditl Church, Tucker O r , Sunland 1 s t ilt s
Da A e ry Cam m unily M a t had: it Church, W. Hlpntaaks R d ,
DdBhry
F ir s t United M ethodit Church, d t F a r t Asa.
P i n t M a th ad lil Church u l Oviedo
F ir s t Southern Mathadilt Church. 1444 la n ia rd Avt,
F ra d M e th o d it Church. SM W. tfh f i .
P i n t United Mathadlil Church a l O enevt. Oantva
Oawava M athaditl Church. Geneva
G ra ta United Method i t Church. A irp o rt Blvd.
• T h a t Chapel A M R Churth. Ovleda
O a t p r t r t M ath ad lil Church, Oviedo
Osiaan M ethods! Church
P a u la W aileyan Mathaditl, Rt. ta W . at Paaia
II. Jam aa A J A B . m i t Cypraas
It. L it h i M B Churck at Cam aran C ity, In c , BaarlaU a ll I.R . i t

t.

It. M a r y 's A M R. Church. It. R l. I I I. Osiaan
I t. F a a l'i M a r t i I lt l Church, C ite e n R d , R n la rp rlM
lia t la r d M a m a rlil Church. I. D a B u ry
S an lan dt U n i lad M athadlil Church, BR 4St and I-4, Lanpwaad
O siaan U nltadM athaO lt Ckurth, Car. at Carpenter h M urray ll. .

N A Z M IN I

F irtt Church al rta Hataraaa. U l! laniard A n .

BatM uB Church c l lha N aiarene, I .R . 44. O tn avt
L a h a M a ry Churth M N M Maaarana. I l l H. Crystal Laka A r t ,
L a h a M ary
M a rth a m Weeds Church a l rta N a u ra n a , SB-44. H y M ilts w . a l
l-d a l n a wahiva B luer

U R — RUB Church al lha N icer ana, Wayman B Jr u up A n ,
FRRSBYTRRIAN
Oattana Fra sP yip rlM Churth. HaUand B ird . B Austin A r e ,
L a n a M a ry United Presbyterian Church
P i n t PreahyM riea Church Oak A r t . B h d SI.
P i n t F m h y la rta a Church al D eBh ry. t. H iphim a
Canvanaat P rtib y ttria n Church. IT7S S. Orlande Dr.

SI. Andrews F ris k y lc n a n Church. H i t Bear Laka Rd.
SI. M a rks Pr c ity lar lan Church. 1111 Palm Ip rla p t R d ,
A lla m a n lt Iprinys
,
U psala Community F ra th y la rla n Church. Upsala Rd.
W ts lm m u ltr F rish yia ria n Church. Rad hup R d , C a e te tM rry "
W ln la r Iprinps F rts h y tirla n Chapel. Ith-day A a .tn lls t Church.l,
M a st R d , WiMar tp rln p i
1
I R V I N T H DAY A DVI NTI ST
. r,
P e n t ! L a h t tavanlh Day Adventist Church, Hwy 4M. Farast
C lly
*■'
Sauaart Day AdvaMist Church. M a itla nd A v e , Aitameate Spps,,SenturU Stvvrrlh Day A d r tn lls l Church. 14h B fllm
w r M ir Sprnips S rv in ih Day A d v a n ilsi Church, s i B. M a tt Rd.
M ara H ill Savtnlh Day A evaallst Church. B it B . la d l l , tontord
O T H I R CH URCH BS
A lla n 's A M I Church. Oliva B llt h
j
A ll F a ir t Chapel, Camp Samlnala, W th lva Park BB.
&gt;
B ta rd a ll A n n u l H tilM t s Chapel, h e a rte n Ava.
Chuiuera Cammunily Church
C h u rth at Jesus Chrlsl * Later D ay taints. S i l l F a r t A n .
L a ka Manraa Chapel. Oranpa B ir d , Laha M a n n a
* l"*Aam,M* ! '•* Jahauah's W itness. Laka Maaraa Unit, 1141 W , ,
Th ird S irta t
.■&gt;
F l n l h a m Church M n a Lulu* Oad. Midway
•,
F DM i£ m

’

Venus S t , (

Fantacasiaii Open BIMa Taber net la, hiCpawaad A n , OH ISth.,
•»pas.ti Samlnala H IM W heel
v
F l n l Fantacasiai Church a l Lanawaua
rj
P i n t Faatacaslal Church H U n fa r d
!* !!
* C A rlH . m o je rry A r e , SanNrd
F u ll G arpal Tabor net it . I l l s CbuM ry Club
M l. O l i n Haunau Church. Oah H ill R « , Dstaan
la n ia rd Allianca Church, i m i S.F a ik Ava
!•
la n ia rd Bibla Church. 1404ta n rtr d Ava.
1
U h lM d Canprapattenai M J t h p u M 't Witnasias. IIM W. tth l l .
Tha t a iv ilia n Arm y, I N w ta r t St.
RaUln« H ills M oravian Church. SR 444. Lnnpwead
•
R a d n m t r Maravlan Church. 77S Tuscaw lila R d , W lafpr ip r in p s .
U M N d Church at Christ. Attam nMa Cammunily ChapuL'
A lla m a n lt Sprlnps
, ,
H aly Trin ity Churth a l Oad in C h rist. 111! M v iO u s tm r A r t .
’
The F u ll Ouapal Church a! Our U r d Jts u t C h ris t Washmptap'.
S I , Canaan city
W iM a r S prints Cammunily R y p n p tlic a l Csnyrapalwnal,
Iprin ps. I lam ant ary Schaal

f

�I.
v y

$

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly

Sunday, Jan. 2, 1983^— 5B

M issionary Life Calls Local Pastor, W ife

Daytime Scripture Series
Set At San Pedro Center
Father Donald Mainardl, T.O.R. Director of San Pedro
Center has announced details of the Third Annual prelenten scripture studies to be held at the Center Jan. 11-Feb.
IS .

Fr. Donald said, ‘"Die series of talks are titled, The
Gospel according to Luke and will explore why Luke’s
gospel places such great emphasis on Prayer, the Holy
Spirit, the role of women in the ministry of Jesus, God's
forgiveness of sins and many other stories of happiness.”
He also added, "This year’s series will deal with those
themes and others which we hope will deepen our
relationship with the Lord Jesus and make us more faithful
followers of his way."
Presentations will be shared by the staff clergy, Father
Guy Noonan, T.O.R., Father Nino LaStella, T.O.R. and F r
Donald beginning on Tuesday, Jan. 11 from 9:30 to 11:30
a.m. and continue for six consecutive weeks. No admission
fee is required, however, donations will be appreciated.
For more details, free brochure or babysitting service,
call 305-671-6322 (Monday-Friday) 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Mrs. Elmore To Lead Choirs
The Search Committee for Music-Youth Arrangements of
the Seminole Heights Baptist Church announces that Laurel
Elimore will be directing the adult and youth choirs and
congregational music this Sunday. Mrs. Elimore rehearsed
' with the adults on last Wednesday evening. They will
present Sunday morning's music ministry.
The youth will rehearse with her at 5 p.m. Sunday and
minister in the evening service. Laurel, a resident of
Sanford, is the choral director at Seminole High School and
directs the choral ensemble at Seminole Community
College. The 6 p.m. service will feature reflections by the
youth and adults attending the Mid-winter Bible Conference
in Gatlinburg, Tenn. Following the worship the youth and
college-career young adults will have a ’’Simply Super-Fine
Spiritual Fellowship" at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Slllaway, 105 Ramblewood Drive.
Dr. Jay T. Cosmato, pastor, plans to be back in the pulpit
this Sunday morning following surgery and recuperation
period.

The Hev. and Mrs, Sheridan Stanton and children, Leah and Joshua.

The Central Florida Chapter of the American Guild of
Organists will have an anthem reading session and music
flea market on Tuesday, Jan. 11 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Marks
Presbyterian Church, 1021 Palm Springs, Altamonte
Springs. Fred Mauk will lead the session. This meeting is
open to the public.

Institute Offers Classes

Family Night Speaker
Charlie Scott of the Young Life Program in the Orlando
area will be the speaker at the family night supper at 6:30
p.m. Jan. 16 in the First Presbyterian Church of Sanford
Fellowship Hall. The supper is sponsored by the church’s
Strengthening Committee.

Christian Life World
Christian Life World, located across Interstate Four from
Stars Hall of Fam e in southwest Orlando, announces the
Third Annual Tent Cathedral Camp Meeting, Jan. 17-23.
International speaker Dr. Albert Lown from London,
England along with Dr. Curtis Smith, president of MidAmerica Nazarene College, Olathe, Kansas, are the special
speakers. Nationally known soloist, Gene Braun will be
singing in each service as well as directing the music for the
event
Daily Bible studies a t 2:30 p m . will be led by Dr. Lown.
Dr. Curtis Smith will be preaching nightly at 7:30 p.m.
Christian Life World is a 77-acre Christian community
development surrounding Sand Lake. The first phase of
construction offers 130 deluxe lots for recreational vehicles
with all o f the amenities including phone service and
fellowship hall facilities.
Dr. J.V. Morsch, director of tnis annual event, invites
persons of all faiths to join us in this week-long event.

M u tle a l D r a m a O n M a r r ia g e
“I Promise to Love,” a musical dram a written by Derric
Johnson, will be presented by the Adult Dram a Department
of First Baptist Church of Oviedo, 45 W. Broadway St., at 7
p m . Jan. I and Jan. 9. Both performances are open to the
public. The musical dramatic experience of a Christian
marriage is designed to strengthen m arriages and make
families closer together.

Homecoming At Zion Hope
Zion Hope Missionary Baptist Church, Orange Avenue
and Fijftdh Street, Sanford, will hold a Homecoming
Sundsy at the 11 a m . service with the Rev. S.E. Edwards of
Rose Hill Baptist Church as guest preacher. Zion Hope
pastor is the IVev.J.L Brooks. A dinner will be served in the
annex following the service.

Fireside

Foeu se sO n

A "Fireside" meeting featuring a film, “ Families are
F o m e r," will be held a t 7 p m ., Jan. If, at the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at 2315 Park Ave., San­
ford. The meeting is open to all those Interested in the
welfare of the family unit In today's society.

there. For about a y ear they have been m aking
preparations and getting things under way.
They are both, from I-cxington, Ky. He is a
graduate of l^xington Baptist College and she
has a degree in elem entary education from the
University of Kentucky. She has been a school
teacher for nine y ears and will be teaching her
own children when she gets to Peru.
They plan to leave Sanford by m id-January
for Kentucky w here they will be living for a
couple of months and doing deputation work in
Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and West V irginia, to
raise needed support before embarking for
South America.
They will be in language school for 4-6
months In lim a , Peru, learning Spanish
before settling down in Pucalpa, a river town
on the headwaters of the Amazon River. In
preparation for their ministry, they have
taken two Spanish courses at Seminole
Community College.
They will be living in a house form erly oc­
cupied by a m issionary, who died on the field
after establishing a church and school, Mrs.
Stanton said. The church and school a re nowrun by a native pastor, who the Stantons will
be working with.
They plan to eventually to establish their
work at points along the river where there a rc
towns and villages.

Rex Humbard To Announce Family Plan

Organists Meet Open To Public

The Ranchland Bible Institute in Winter Springs will start
a new term on Jan . 18. The Institute is a ministry of the
First Baptist Church of Winter Springs, which believes that
the authorized 1611 version of the Bible is the inspired word
of God without error and all its Bible classes are taught
from this position.
Four classes will be offered from 7-10 p.m. on Manuscript
Evidence I, Bible Doctrine I, song leading, and dispen­
sations! truth. These courses will lead to a Bible Institute
degree. Pastor Robert E. Clark will teach along with other
qualified instructors. For further information call 695-0605.

The Rev. Sheridan Stanton, pastor of the
Jordan Baptist Church In Sanford, will of­
ficially resign his pastorate on Jan. 7 in order
to go to Peru as a m issionary with the Baptist
Faith Mission.
He will be accom panied by his wife, Anita,
and children, Ix?ah, 5, and Joshua, 4. Stanton,
28, pastor of the Jordan Baptist Church for 4l j
years, began his m inistry at the age of 17.
Both Stanton and the Rev. Elgie Hornsby,
minister of m usic and education at Park Hidge
Baptist Church in Orlando, who is being called
as his replacem ent, will speak at a fellowship
meeting to be held at 8 p.m., Jan. 7.
Jordan Baptist will be contributing to the
support of its form er pastor while he is on the
mission field.
Mrs. Stanton cannot say she w asn’t
forewarned about her husband’s decision to
become a m issionary in Peru. She said when
he proposed m arriage, he warned her that she
had "better consider the fact that he felt
compelled to go there as a missionary before
she said ’yes’.”
Before they w ere m arried they were both
pari of a group th at went to Peru nine years
ago to help build a church as part of a sum m er
mission project. As a result, she explained
they have both felt a burden for the people

REX IIUMBARD

International television evangelist Orlando, to announce a plan to
Rex Humbard of Akron, Ohio, is in rebuild and save the American
Orlando to kickoff a nationwide fam ily," th e evangelist sa id .
c am p a ig n to re v italize th e "Moms, dads and children from
beleaguered American fam ily. The every nation of earth come to Disney
evangelist explained his plans to the •World and Epcol every day.
press at a luncheon at the Sweet­
" It’s a fam ily place and m y
w ater Country Club P resident’s commitment for 1983 and beyond is
Room n ear Inngwood T hursday. to the survival and prosperous
Area developer E. E vcrette Huskey future of the fam ily.
coordinated the event.
Allhough H um bard lias spoken to
The popular religious broudeaster
millions of people each week
will a p p e a r at O rlando’s Tupthrough his television program and
p e rw a re Convention C e n te r on
has appeared before millions m ore
Saturday Jan. 8 at 7 p.m. where he
in worldwide crusades, he is con­
will announce a dynamic new plan to
vinced th at effective revival begins
save the families of America.
in the fam ily structure.
"Although 1 am a pioneer in m ass
H um bard has chosen Orlando as
th e
sp rin g b o ard
fo r
th is evangelism, I have come to see that
revolutionary concept because of its it Is only as we reach the family that
attraction to all families of the world we truly re ac h the nation,’’ Hum­
as well as Us commitment to the bard said. “ The family is the
future with Us new space agc Epcot building block of any society, be it
d em o cratic,
socialist
or
Center.
*
•
"T h ere is no better place than totalitarian.”

H um bard
b e lie v e s
the
deterioration of the family has
accelerated trem endously in the
past few years.
"One out of every two m arriages
ends in divroce. One out of every five
children have only one parent and
child abuse is epidem ic," he said.
"It will be the priority of this
m inistry in 1983 to begin reinforcing
Hie crumbling foundation of the
fam ily."
To accomplish this, Hum bard will
in itia te a b a rra g e of fam ily
sem inars throughout the United
States and Canada.
“ We will be conducting seminurs
each week in at least 100 cities."
Hum bard explained. "W e have test
m a rk e te d the p ro g ra m , called
Fam ily life Sem inars, for the past
six months and have achieved
fa n ta stic
re su lts .
L iterally
thousands of fam ilies have been
helped, m arriages restored and

F o r B a p tis t Y o u t h s
Deadline for registration for choir and band auditions
for the first-ever Florida Baptist All-State Youth Choir
and Band is Jan. 15. All Florida Baptist youth grades 10-12
actively participating in a church music program can
audition with the recommendation of their church pastor,
church music director or school music teacher.
All band auditions will be, conducted by tape. Choir
auditions will be held Jan. 22 and Feb. 5 at various sites
around the state. Audition requirements will be sent upon
receipt of registration.
The non-refundable audition fee Is $5. Approximate cost
of the All-State Week to be held June 28-July 1 at U ke
Yale Baptist Assembly, near Eustis, Is 9150. Tills includes
meals, lodging, insurance, group picture T-shirt, music
and transportation for sight-seeing and performances.
The week will end with a concert by the All-State Choir
and Band at the Southern Baptist Convention Jubilation
East, an annual youth choir festival to be held In 1983 at
Stetson University In DeLand.
For registration forms or additional information,
eligible students should contact their church music
director or the Church Music Department, Florida Baptist
Convention, 1230 Hendricks Ave., Jacksonville, FI. 32207.

If 1982 was a bummer for you and you want some here-andnow happiness and m aterial rewards in 1983, maybe you
should Investigate a Buddhist sect known as Nichirin Shoshu.
It has worked for others. listen:
"When I took up chanting, I definitely was not seeking
spiritual enlightenment,” says a California-housewife, "I
wanted money to buy food. I wanted my husband to find work
and I wanted my son to be healthy."
Aladdin couldn't have done better with his m agic lamp. All
three of this woman's wishes were granted, she says, after she
began chanting the words, "Nam-myoho-rcngc-kyo."
A businessman got his wishes too.
*Tve almost doubled m y salary," he says. "I have two cars.
And when 1 chanted for a house on top of hill, I got that too.
That’s the beauty of this religion. You don't need to have any
deep understanding of its ultimate goals to reap the benefits of
chanting."
• '
Nichirin Shoshu, an E astern cult that practices the teachings
of a 13th century Japanese holy man named Nichirin
Diashonln, found its way to the United States in 1960. Its 300
original members in this country were mostly Japanese war
brides. Today membership In Nichirin Shoshu of America
(NSA) is over 400,000 — 70 percent of them non-Asiatics.
Members of the sect believe that by merely chanting, "Nammyoho-renge-kyo" (the words mean, "Glory to the lotus sutra
of the mystical law"), their lives will be put in rhythm with the
universe, making It possible for them to accomplish whatever
m ateria] and spiritual goals they desire.
Some to today's followers of Nichirin Shoshu were skeptics
to begin with.
_________________________

a

New Year, New Frontier TH0UCHTS
^

There were some In the early Church that
thought they had arrived. A Christian is not
one who has fully attained, but one who Is on
his way. There m ust always be a goal beyond
each of us, for life would be a dull business If
there was nothing to strive for. It Is true that
people will fail, they will miss the work, they
will tin, for they are human. Yet they a re on
the way.
Christ experienced times in His life when He
was not able to go through with what He had
planned. There are delays and detours In
every life, but the direction for us Is forward
for 1963. May your life not be hampered by
discouragement in this year ahead, for life
does have a great destination if you will follow
the way God has planned.
When God fashioned man He made him to go
beat in one direction — forward. He has eyes
not In the back of his head, butln front; he has
hands to tackle the task In front of him, his feet
alio face In that direction.

Families

A New Year m eans a new frontier for each
of us—a new skyline for our souls. Jesus knew
how to turn a term inus into a thoroughfare. He
wanted men to sta rt a new world from within,

re la tio n s h ip s

N um erous VIP's are expected ot
be in attendance at the Orlando
kickoff celebration where Ilex will
be joined with his wife of 40 years.
Maude Aimee, as well a s the entire
14-member Humbard family.
"My ministry has always centered
on the family," Humbard related.
"When I first started In the ministry,
I traveled with my evangelistic
parents," Humbard said. “ Many
years ago 1 asked my family to come
on the show with me and people
worldwide identify my program as a
family program ."

The Orlando seminar will be
filmed and televised at a later date
to 150 stations In the United S tates. It
will also be broadcast on 400 stations
overseas in Japanese, Spanish and
Portuguese.
Admission is free to the gen eral
public.

Chanting - When East Meets West

M u s ic A u d it io n s S e t

The way tor you in the New Year is forward.
Jesus said, "I am the way." Sometimes Ills
way is one of discipline and duty. It is always
demanding of your best. It Is always the better
way for us to go.

p a re n t-c h ild
strengthened."

By LEO F.- KING,
Pastor,
First United Methodist
• Church of Sanford

as He was always talking about a new
creation.
Sometimes It la our fault that we are
delayed, and fall to m ake connections for the
right destinations. Sometimes the good things
of life evade'us because we delay too long.
Convenience Is not a word for the Christian
vocabulary.
Remember the words of Paul; "Forgetting
what la behind and straining forward in what
lies ahead." Your purpose and goals for this
year mean you can do more than you had
previously planned. God has given you the gift
of friendship, of compassion, of caring. You
can bless the lives of others and aay with Paul;
"For me to live Is Christ." May God bless you
in the New Y ear as your life is moving forward
with Qod.
“ I won’t look back; God knows the fruitless
effort, the wasted, hours, the tinning, the
regret; I'U leave them all with Him who blots
the record, and mercifully forgives, and then
forgets."

oiiA llW f l lll t f l1 a I
TodayirAvarious
culls are
springing up and attracting
followers. Paul would say
- these people have "itching
ears," desirous of hearing
new doctrine.
"For the time will come
when they will not endure
sound doctrine, bnt after
their own lusts shall they
hean to themselves teacher,
having ilchlag ears; and
they shall tuns away their
ean from the truth uod
shill be tuned unto fables."
— II Tim. 4:3-4

Saints
And
Sinners
George Flagenz

"I began chanting only to prove to a friend that it was silly to
think that just by saying a few crazy words you could change
your destiny," says a man who had been a Baptist for 40 years
before his conversion.
After joining a chanting group, he says he experienced a new
sense of confidence in himself.
Chanting is common to most of the world's 180 million
Buddhists although few of Buddhism’s 50 different sects go as
far as Nichirin Shoshu in promising that chanting will bring
prompt m aterial rewards.
One Buddhist eiplains the psychology of chanting this way:
"Chanting produces powerfully synchronized vibrations —
especially when done by a large group of Individuals. These
vibrations are received and registered by the brain, not only at
its conscious levels but at its unconscious levels as well. This is
perhaps its greatest significance and long-term effect."
While acknowledging that the effect of the chants Is
enhanced when the meaning of the chant is understood, this
Buddhist says that "even without understanding the meaning,
the chant can be quite powerful."
He points out that "chants have been part of man’s life since
the dim past. The Latin prayers in the old Catholic m ass and
the singing of hymns are examples of chanting where the
meaning often is not understood or little attention is paid to the
meaning."
A Catholic professor friend of mine, a priest who hss spent M
years teaching in Japan, agrees that chants can be very ef­
fective.
Psychologically speaking, he aays, the monotony of a
repreated word or phrase quiets the thinking mind and "leads
us to the deeper levels of our consciousness where 90 percent of
our psychic power lies hidden.”
As to .whether It Is necessary to reflect on the meaning of a
chant a s you are saying It, the rule of the mystics, he says, Is to
"choose a meaningful word or phrase and then don’t bother
about the meaning."

�B L O N D iE

-------lB^jpv«nlng Her«kl- Sanford. Fl.‘ -----

I WANT YOU TD START
THE NEW Y E A R O PC
&gt;&lt;* WITH
'VITAMINS

Sunday. J»n 7,

m

i

_______ h y ChiC- V n itn q

TAKE POUR VITAMINS
w ith s r e a k p a s t ; p iv e
WITH LUNCH, AND S IX
WITH OINNER

. A zvytx— i a iU iW *rv---- •__ J1
1
4
9
12
13
14

B E E T LE B A ILEY

by M o rt W alker

TH E BORN LO S E R

by A r t Sansom

Destroy (sf)
Frinciscan
Last letter
Noun suffu
Tidal wave
Jaclue's 2na
husband
15 Sandwich
type (abbr)
16 lim erick
17 Madame
(abbr)
18 Showed anew
20 Ledger entry
22 Vast period of
time
23 Golfer Snead
26 Noise (p i)
27 Ability to
bend
29 Actress West
30 Compass
point
31 Canal system
in northern
Michigan
33 Environment
agency (abbr)
34 Thrash
soundly
35 Civet, for one
37 Made sweater
41 Actor
Lancaster
42 Dry .as wine
43 Bravos |Sp I
45 Ant
47 Tennyson
hero
48 Enjoy a meal
49 Devoured
53 Author of
"The Raven"
54 Inventor
Whitney
55 Having
auricles
56 Hurricane
center
57 Small bird

fastenings
59 Swift aircraft
(abbr)

B
I
A
V

DOWN
1 Striped horse
Snooting
3 Gas
4 Leafless plant
5 Hurrah, for
Short
6 1957 science
event(abbr)
7 Body limb
8 Coarse grass
9 African land
10 Weasel
11 Regimens
19 Liqueur
21 Aiberla's

'•
• " M
( 1 nt
11J3 N

V |( s
M l 1 it
C h f
* 8 W|

B y BERNICE B E D E OSOL

For Sunday, January 2, 1983

25
28
32
35

41 Attack

Guru
Viper
Gram
Clouds

44 Article of
bedding
46 Adolescent
47 Companion of

36 Underarm

38 Preli*
odds
meaning new
capital
50 Auto club
39
Flees
for
23 Creeps
51 Three |prefi«)
marriage
24 Electric
52 Conger
current (abbr) 40 Lures
»

2

a

)

t

f

f

•

•

11

t)

11

i»

ft

11

10 If

21

If

J
■TT” |L■ 2
1
11 22
&gt;0

It

r

HOROSCOPE

t

1)

)!

)ft 14

Jf

If

It

41

1)

12

n

10

at

4t

41

It

14

ft

It

11

If

It

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to

11 12

11

-1

YOUR BIRTHDAY
Jan. 2 ,19S3
The past may not have
always been the kindest to
you, but it did teach you many
valuable lessons. In the year
ahead you'll know how to use
this knowledge to your best
advantage.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You could find yourself in
a fortunate position today,
where something you’ve been
wanting
com es
easily.
There’s no reason to feel
you're not entitled to it.
Predictions for Capricorns in
1983 are now ready. Send )1 to
Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify your birth
date. Send an additional |2 for
the NEW Astro-Graph Match­
maker wheel and booklet.
Reveals ro m an tic com­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. (Jan. 20Feb. 19) Goals and objectives
can be achieved today, but the
process in getting there may
be complex and circuitous. Be
prepared to s e a rc h for
alternative routes.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Even though you will meld
well with others today, you're
likely to get m ore ac­
complished by yourself. Don’t
search for assistance unless
it's absolutely necessary.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Instead of being your usual
self who enjoys being active,
you may look for excuses to be
lazy early In the day. You'll be
back In character by evening.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Unfortunately, you m ay not
do what needs doing today

unless you can enlist the aid of
co-workers. However, with
helpers at your side you’ll
match their Industriousness.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You'll have good ideas today,
but you could waste a lot of
time getting them into action.
Once you think something will
work, put It to the test.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Don't do things today on the
basis of expecting an equal
amount In return for what you
give. Accounts can be
balanced later.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In
m atters
affecting your
security there's a chance
today that you’ll be both wise
and foolish. Fortunately,
you’ll spot and correct your
mistakes.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your hunches and logic today
regarding ways to advance
your self-interests are likely
to be fa r b etter than
suggestions offered by wellmeaning friends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Your abilities to handle dif­
ficult situations will not go
unnoticed by your friends
today. It won't be necessary
to toot your own horn.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
One of your most admirable
qualities Is your loyalty to
friends und er trying con­
ditions. Today, a pal will know
who to come to if trouble
starts.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) In sticky situations
today, the odds tend to favor
you. Challenge or oppositon
serve to aw aken your
determination to succeed.

For Monday, January 3, 1983

P R IS C IL L A 'S P O P

by E d Sullivan

I P LIKE TD HIRE SCU
ON A REGULAR BWSlS.

T 7 ST U A R T.'!*— - - &lt;

* Y

g osh

THATS
TERRIFIC'

by Stoffel &amp; Heim dahl

BUG S B U N N Y

tM Picking up s o m e
stran g e e l e c t r ic a l ,

could be some &lt;ad o f
prim itive m e s s a g e .

IMPULSES

vwws up doc?Y~

r S JUST SATURDAY Y 7
m orn in g on t h e
pla n et e a

* tR

i q

nr “

»-»«s
FRAN K AN D ER N EST

TG W SL

esting defensive hand from
the 1982 World Team cham­
pionship.
K you wonder how this
NORTH
11II
hand can be in accordance
♦ A J 102
with be-good-to-East-andVQ7 6 5 J
West, the answer is that
♦gh
while .North and South held
♦ AK
all the cards as usual and
got to an unbeatable three
y&gt;KST
EAST
no-trump. East and West
♦ 94
♦ S765I
came out with a profit.
♦8
V AK J 1092
James Cayne of New York
♦ 975 4
♦ A 63
held the West cards and got
♦8
♦ Q932
off to the lead of the jack of
SOUTH
hearts. He was sure that
♦ Kg
dummy would show up with
♦ 4
five hearts to the queen, but
♦ K J 10 2
he was also sure that declar­
♦ JI0JIJ4
er would hold back that
queen and not play It at trick
Vulnerable Both
one.
Dealer: North
Sure enough, South played
West
North
East Sooth
low. Then Jimmy continued
If
Pass 1 NT
with the 10. South had noted
Pass
2♦
Pass 3 NT
East's play of the eight and
Pass
Pass
Pass
ducked again.
Now Jimmy took his ace
and kina. There was no way
Opening lead: f j
to sneak the nine through
since East had shown out on
the second heart.
Billy Eisenberg, sitting
By Oiwald Jacoby
East, had discarded the
and James Jacoby
three, five of spades and
deuce of clubs. Jim m y had
We have made a New no trouble finding a diamond
Year'! resolution. We are lead and the defense had
going to be kinder to East scored the first five tricks.
and West than we have been.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |
We will start with an inter-

YOUR BIRTHDAY
January 3,1983
Your Instincts and common
sense regarding ways to
better your lot in life will be
greatly heightened this
coming year. Following your
positive urges will lead you to
the success you seek.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You could be In for a
pleasant surprise today when
you discover that a situation
you thought was going to be a
bummer turns around to be
something quite beneficial.
1983
predictions
for
Capricorns are now ready.
Send $1 to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date. Send an additional f2 for
the NEW Astro-Graph Match­
maker wheel and booklet.
Reveals ro m an tic com­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) Don't be resistant today
regarding changes, even If
they are not of your own
making. The shifts which may
ensue will be engineered by
Lady Luck.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Personal beneflta ca n be
reaped today If you treat
persons with whom you do
business more like friends
rather than mere commercial
contacts.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be alert today for opportune
developments careerw tse.
That big break for which you
have been hoping could
suddenly present itself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Peraonj you know socially
could be of big help to you
today In business situation.
If they offer you any tips or
advice, be an attentive

G A R FIELD

listener.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
This Is a good day to take on
importart projects, provided
you are prepared to follow
things through. You'll get
desirable results.
CANCER (July 23-Aug. 22)
In order to Improve your
material position, you may
need to take a calculated risk
today. If the odds are In your
favor, give it serious con­
sideration.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your leadership qualities can
be put to good use today
should you see coworkers
fumbling at th e starting
block. Take over the controls.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
a good listener today. You
have the ability to take the
Ideas of others and expand
upon them in ways which
could prove beneficial to you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Be hopeful regarding matters
relating to your personal
finances today. If your at­
titude is positive, you’ll figure
ways to Increase your
holdings.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Lady Luck tends to
favor you today in ways that
will help you reach your
financial objectives. She’ll
open the doors; the rest is up
to you.

U n it e d IM ri
by Jim Davl*

by Bob T h aves

XV&gt; LOVf T °

PAY a s x GO,

IF ONLY MY
F IN A N C E S W O U L D

CATCH U P T °
wh£* e xve been .
l- l- ll
TU M BLEW EED S

by Ltonard Starr

by T . K . Ryan

1NNIE | I NOTICED THAT
YtX/ LOCKED ANNIE
IN THE CEU.AH W
BAN?
? ) TIC CEMENT HAS
FOR HEAVENS
CHUM8UN6 ON ONE OF
SAKE, WHY?! TIC STEPS I HAS AFRAID
SOMEONE 1N0ULP HURT
THEMSELVES-

HOWAPOUTA DATE/ WEEMPOAT?

y

~K7

-WHILE 1 HAS LOOKING WTNHAT
FOR A STICK TO BOLT
HAPPENED
THE POORS, MISS
TO LIM Y?
ANNIE MUST NAVE
f THEY HERE
PUCKEP A0WN
PLAYH6 HIP5THERE.
\MtbSEEH.

TO

t

�if

c

■

— - — -51-g- —

------------Prefers Texes To LA ™ NIGHTS ™
Tommy Lee Jones
'HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Tommy l* e Jones is an ado.with power. Maybe th at’s why
he gets powerful parts to play.
The characters he portrays
mfcy not all be winners, but
they all are strong people.
He’s played Howard Hughes
uii'TV and he’s played Mooney
Lynn (Loretta's husband) in
“Coal Miner’s D aughter" and
you'll see him soon as Gary
Gilm ore
in
"T h e
Executioner's Song," a fourhour TV movie from NBC.
Jones is alm ost a legend
already in Hollywood, simply
bwause he refuses to be part
of Hollywood. Not only h as he
not "gone Hollywood," but he
also has not even gone to live
in Hollywood.
He still lives in Texas, his
home state. But he won’t say
exactly where in Texas he
lives now.
"My neighbors are very
private," he says, “ and 1
don’t want to disturb their
privacy. I-et’s just say it’s
deep in the heart of Texas,
right in the m iddle. On the
mpp, it's under the X."
'He says he can function in
both w orlds,
v irtu a lly
simultaneously.
“ I t’s only a th ree -h o u r
plane ride aw ay," he says
"We have a telephone at the
house, we have one in the
bam , we have an office in
town. I can get a telephone
call, sitting in m y office, and
be in I os Angeles five hours
later.
•"I have agents and lawyers
here. If they need m e, we talk.
I have lots of very dear
friends in Southern Califor­
nia. I love this part of the
country."
But obviously he loves
Texas more. He says he and
his family live on a working
ranch, and they really work.
,"As we say down in T exas,"
Jones says, "we work from
can to cain’t every day."
He says Ms friends and
neighbors in Texas at first
were not really sure what to
moke of this actor fellow in
their midst. But he quickly
convinced them "th at I was
one of them, that I was at
home there."
"In the country," he says,
"neighbors help each other,
depend on each other. So it
didn't take me very long to
develop a happy relationship
with my neighbors."
ft helped that he was from
close by. He comes from
Mjdland, a Texas oil town. He
wps just a n o th e r norm al
Toxas boy, hunting, fishing,
playing sports, until he got a
football sch o larsh ip to a
D allas prep school, St.
Mark's.
"One day," he says, "I
stum bled into a building
where they were rehearsing a

cable Ch.

(S O
®o
®o

(0(35)
© (17)
(io) m

(ABC) Orlando
ICBSI O rlando
(NBC) Daytona Beach
Orlando

Independent
Orlando
Independent
Atlanta, Ga.
O'tando Public
Broadcasting System

0 ® CHIPS
(D O ARCHIE BUNKER'S P U C E
CD O MATT HOUSTON
© (35) H EA LTH MATTERS
"Insomnia"
0 (10) EVENING AT POPS John
Williams and the Boston Pops
Orchestra are |omed by |azz
drummer Buddy Rich tor a West
Side Story" medley and a perform­
ance ot Gershwin* Strike Up The
Band " (R)

8:05

SATURDAY,

/
Tommy Lee Jones gels
bigger and better parts
than most actors in
Hollywood, yet he
won’t live there. He
makes his home in the
heart of Texas, on a
working ranch that he
and Ids family run.
play. The headm aster was the
director. It w as ’Mister
Roberts,’ and I’d never seen a
group of people gel together
and seriously work on their
imagination. That was the
first tim e I ’d been exposed to
the theater, and I was really
struck by it."
He read for the next play,
and got a sm all pari in it. It
was tough to squeeze that in,
between athletic endeavors
and sch o o lw o rk , but he
managed.
Jones then went to Harvard,
where he played more foot­
ball. He was an offensive
tackle, although the most he
ever weighed was 205. In 1968,
there was a famous YaleHarvard gam e — Harvard
scored 26 points in 41 seconds,
to earn a 29-29 tie.
At one point in that game,
Jones (playing defense) tried
to tackle Y ale’s fullback —
Calvin Hill, who later went on
to pro greatness with the
Dallas Cowboys.
"I m et Calvin at the line of
sc rim m a g e ,” Jo n es says.
"One of the Yale guards was
trying to block m e, but 1 beat
him. But he was a natural
hustler, and he stayed after
me, caught me on the side of
the knee a t the sam e time l
tackled Calvin. That injury
plagued m e the rest of my
college c are er.” ’
Jones w as p a rt of the
Harvard D ram atic Society,
too. He says they did some
good work during his time
there, a n d he had some
colleagues who have gone on
to im portant things - John
Lithgow (he played the
transvestite in "The Love
Boat"; and Jam es Woods;
and playwright Thomas Babe.
He went from there to New
York, and on to Hollywood.
But, alw ays, his home is
Texa^ Under the X on the
nnp.

KIT ’N’ C A R L Y L E ,M

Restaurant.
Sanford Toastm aaten, 7:u a jn . Sanford Airport

Restaurant.
Step and Study Alanon, 8 p.m., Senior Citizen Center,
200 N. Lake Triplet Drive, Casselberry.

6:30
® O GLORIA Gloria accepts her
tirsl date since her separation (R)
© (35| JERRY FALWELL

© (35) MOVIE "The Cutaways
On ailltgan’a Island ' (19791 Bob
Denver, Alan Hale Jr. The
»hipwrecked ciew ol Ihe Minnow II
are rescued again and decide lo
turn (heir tropical island home into
a posh resort for the world-weary
BRAZILIAN CONNEC­
TION Brazil* first tree elections in
18 years and Ihetr impact on Ihe
country's future are eiammed m a
documentary featuring interviews
with Brazilian government officials,
candidates, and representatives of
American banks and businesses

4:00

0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
To Serve Them All My Days"
Chris, having lost the election,
make* a decision about David*
marriage proposal (Part 1? | r i

O FIESTA BOWL PARADE
(35) INCREDIBLE HULK
(10) TONY BROWN S JOURNAL

S

4:05
© (IT ) MOVIE Threes A Crowd"
(1969) Larry Hagman. E J Peaker
After remarrying, a man discovert
that h it first wile never actually
died

9:30
(D O ONE DAY AT A TIME Ann*
peaceful stay at Sam* apartment
comes to an abrupt and emotional
end (Part 3)
© (IS ) JIMMY SWAQQART

4:30
O
®
ROSE BOWL Michigan
Wolverines vs UCLA Brums
CD (10) MARK RUSSELL Mark
Russell's 198?" Washington s top
political satirist recalls the year’s
most unforgettable events m song
and satire

5:00
( D O SO LID OOLO
i l ! (35) DANIEL BOONE
(D (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

5:30

’) O SUGAR BOWL PREVIEW
J
(10) WALL JTHEET WEEK
"Wall ttreel Week Year End
Review" Frank Capptelk). Robert
Nurock. Carter Randall and Robert
Stovall review the past year and
offer predictions ol wtial s ahead
lor 1983

5:35
031(17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­
ED
EVENING

6:00

( D O NEWS
111)(35)KUNGFU
CD (10) NATURE "The Discovery
Of Animal Behavior Signs And Sig­
nals" The eipenmenls done by Karl
von Frlacfi. Julian Huiley, Konrad
Lorenz and other naluratuti over
the centuries Io learn the tanguage
ol animals are eipiored

10:00
O W tv M * **

12:15
(7) O MOVIE ' The Good. The
Bad And The Ugly ' (1967) Clint
Eastwood. Ice Van Cleel

12:30
( D O MOVIE ' Perilous Voyage"
(1969) Michael Parks, William
Shatner
© (35) MOVIE
Mark Of The
Vampire" (1957) John Beal, Coieen
Gray

1:00
0 ®

lauo htrax

2:00
0 ®

NEWS

2:05
© 117) MOVIE ' WUSA (1970)
Paul Newman. Joanne Woodward

2:45

1:00
f f l O NFL FOOTBALL Regional
coverage ol New York Giants al
Philadelphia Eagles. Atlanta Fal­
cons It New Orleans Samis. Si
Louis Cardinals al Washington
Redskins. Green Bay Packers at
Detroit Lions. Chicago Bears al
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
) Q PRO AND CON
) (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

4:35
© (17) RAT PATHOL

4:40

® O MOVIE "The Amazing
Adventure" (1936) Cary Grant,
Mary Brian

— —

5:05

© (17) WORLD AT LARGE

( D O CBS NEWS

7:00

I D O MEE HAW
(7) O MEMORIES WITH LAW­
RENCE WELK
© (35) THE JEFFERSONS .
0 (10) UNDERSEA WORLO OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

7:30
© (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER

8:00

O CD ORANGE

BOWL Louisiana
S la te T ig e rs v i
Nebraska
Cornhuskers
(D O WALT DISNEY "Watt Dis­
ney's Mickey And Donald" Mickey
Mouse and Donald Duck share Ihe
spotlight In a quartet of cartoons
ID O
SUGAR BOWL Georgia
Bulldogs v* Penn State Nut any
Done
31) (35) WILD. WILD WEST
O ) (10) BEVERLY HILLS UNLISTED
JAZZ BAND This special features
Conrad Janie and hti we(l-known
band performing Jazz favorites.

5'30

( D O MOVIE ' "The Black Stallion" 119791 Kafty Reno. Mickey
Rooney. After being rescued from
the island on which they wars
shipwrecked together, a young boy
and • horse become involved In the
race Of the century.

9:00

© (35) GUNS MOKE

9:30
» &lt; 10) FAWLTY TOWERS

10:00

© (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
8 ) {10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

8

6:00
0 ® TO BE ANNOUNCED
U lQ U W A N O Y O U
( 7 ) 0 AGRICULTURE U S A.
© (17) NEWS

6:30
0 ® OPPORTUNITY LINE
IS) O SPECTRUM
® O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7:00
0 ® J'8 COMPANY
(D O ROBERT SCHULLER
® O TODAY'S BLACK WOMAN
© (35) BEN HADEN

7:05
© (17) JAMES ROBISON

7:30
® E J . DANIELS
O FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
© (35) E.J. DANIELS

8

7:35
© (17) fT IS WRITTEN

8:00
® VOICE OF VICTORY
f t REX HUMBARD
O BOB JONES
(35) JONNY QUEST
(10) SESAME STREET ( R ) g

8:05
© (17) CARTOONS

6'30
O ® SUNDAY MASS
( J ) Q DAY O f DISCOVERY
,
( 7) O ORAL ROBERTS
© (35) J08IE AND THE PU SS Y ­
CATS

9:00
® THE WORLO TOMORROW
0 SUNDAY MORNING
0 TO U f £ THE G 0 88 A M ER
THREAD
©
(35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
0 ( 1 0 ) MATINEE AT THE BUOU

9:05

10:05

© (17) LOST IN SPACE

10:30

0
L tl MONTAGE: IHE B LACK
PRESS
O THE PALACE
(15) THE JET SONS

FRIDAY, JAN 7
ENTREE
ChlU Dog
T aterT ots
G reen P e a u
Baked Dessert
Milk
EXPRESS
Sloppy Joe
Chill Dog
T aterT ots
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange J u k e

11:00

® ® QNEW S
(15) BENNY H tU
(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

2

11:05
© ( IT ) TUSH

9:30

10:00
0 ® QILUGAff 8 ISLAND
©
(35) MOVIE
"Cocoanuls"
(1929) Mara Brother*, Kay Franci*
A group of tanka* lake* over a
retort hotel in the day* ol Ihe Flori­
da land boom.

11:30
© ® SATURDAY MONT UVE
Host: Louts Gossett Jr. Guesli:
Mr. T.. George Thorogood and the
Destroyers |R)
~ © BARRY PARSER
(M tU A D A M T S PLACE

11:45
CDONCW S

12:05
© (17) MOVIE "Underground"
(1941) Jeffrey Lynn. PtMp Dorn.

BARBS
Phil P a storet
Fear of flying is negligi­
ble. It's the fear of falling
that bugs so many reluctant
air travelers.
Be first at your desk la
the morning and that’s
where they'll dump all the
day’s work.

1:05

© (17) MOVIE "Taming Ol The
Shrew' (1967) Elizabeth Taylor.
Richard Burton. Shakespeare's
Petruchm and Katharine match wits
in a battle ol Ihe sene* In 16th-cen­
tury Italy.

© (IT) AGRICULTURE U S A.

© (1 7 ) MOVIE "Last Ol The Red
Hot Lovers" 119721 Alan Arkm, Sally
Kederman The balding, middleaged owner of a seafood restaurant
makaa three awkward attempts at
extra-marital romance.

6'30

SU N D A Y ^^
MOANING

32) (17) WRESTLING

7)01NEWS

12:30
0 ( 4 1 NEWS
( D O nfi t o o a v
( 7 ) 0 DIRECTIONS
0 (10) WOODWRIGMT'S SHOP
"Housewright" Roy Underhill visits
Colonial Williamsburg lor a look at
the hewers, sawyers, joiners and
carpenters who build houses the
way they used lo

® o MOVIE
fdzwitly" (1967)
Dick Van Dyke, Baibara Feldon

6:05
6:30

spondent * (1940) Joel McCred.
Ldrame Day An American reporter
breaks up a spy ring in England
60 (101 EVERYDAY COOKING
WITH
JA C Q U E S
PEPIN
"Pansienne G notch!
Jacques
Pepin poaches these little dum­
plings and serves them with a hnanciere sauce

10:05
©

(17) LIGHTER SIOE OF THE

10:30
0 ® EMERGENCY
® 0 B U C K AWARENESS
® B FOOT BAPTIST CHURCH
0 ( 1 0 ) MOVE "U tta Men" (1934)
Frankie Otvro, Frank Morgan
Baaed on ihe ttory by Louisa May
Aicott. A family ol brolhera experi­
ence the )oy and pain ol growing
up.

10:35
© (17) MOVIE "Cactus Flower"
(1909) Waiter Matthau. Ingrid Berg­
man. A middle aged bachelor Ifnda
a more meaningful love whan ha
devises a plan lo marry his mis­
tress

11.00
® 0

THIRTY MINUTES

11:30
®

NORM SLOAN BASKET.

Q D 0 FACE THE KATU N
( D O TMB WEEK WITH DA V C
BRBBOEY
AFTERNOON

12*0
MEET THE PRESS
JOHN MCKAY
(36) MOVE "Foreign Corre­

1:30

0 ® N F L '82
7' O WALL STREET JOURNAL
REPORT
031101 FLORIDA HOME GROWN

® O
TRAPPER JOHN, MO.
0 (10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

11:00

11:30

3:00

S

11:05
© (17) JERRY FALWELL

11:30
0
®
ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
( D O SOLID GOLD
. T I Q NEWS
© |15) IT S YOUR BUSINESS

3:35
© (17) MOVIE
"U 7 Scratch"
(1970) An outdooF enthusiast dis­
covers *n orphaned bear cub.

4:00

CD O NFL FOOTBALL Los Ange­
les Rams al San Francisco 49ers
(3$) INCREDIBLE HULK
(19) MYSTERY ' Mehssa ' Guy
I* now the suspect in two murders,
but a new twist points to Melissa’s
involvement with more than gam­
bling (Part 3&gt;g

’

12:30
0
®
MOVIE
Along Came
Jones" (19451 Gary Cooper, Loretta
Young
(S) O MOVIE
Alice Doesn't Live
Here Anymore" (1974) Ellen Burstyn. Kris Knslolleison
171 Q MOVIE
The Model And
The Marriage Broker' (1952)
Jeanne Crain. Scott Brady

1:05

5:35
0:00

0 ® SOAP WORLO
l) O i 71O NEWS
(11 (35) BIG VALLEY
0 (10) MYSTERY (MON)
0 ( 1 0 ) NATURE (WED)
0 ( t O ) NOVA (THU)
0 (10) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)

8

(10) NOVA "Test-Tube Babies
A Daughter For Judy" Exclusive
footage of the conception and birth
of America's first test-tube baby is
rabroadcast on her one year btrth«Uy.(R)g

6:30

7:00

MOVIE

5.05

© (17|THE BRADY BUNCH

12:05

5:30

© (17) PEOPLE NOW

0 1 4) PEOPLE'S COURT
IS1O M’ A ’ S ’ H
(7 0 NEWS
0 (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

12:30
0® N EW S
( il a
THE YOU NO AND THE
RESTLESS
® O RYAN'S HOPE

5:35
© (17|STARCADE (MON)
11 (17) BEWITCHED (TUE-FRI)

1:00
0 ® OAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
11 (35) MOVIE
0 ( 1 0 ) THAT'S A PLENTY (MON)
0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
0 (10) MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
(WED)
0 (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
0 (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

B f J R oyd T h e a tr e s
___ t tfNg &gt;W i Cn a y ,

/[P L A Z A T W l ^ i
«»r m i i n tv :
A ll SHOW S
[ ru z A t

1

99C

t »o ONLY

1:05

TnauofttPw.

1:30

Vi/nfkV&amp;nlfw*
I II I I!

&lt;D O AS TMf WORLD TURNS
0 (10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

OFFICER
AND A
GENTLEMAN
_
I

2:00

A JV

0 ® ANOTHER WORLD
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
0 ( 1 0 ) NO, riOfftSTLYI (TUE)
0 110) THAT DELICATE B A U N C E
(THU)
0 (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

l

pTaza

11 1 lill-TiN •JS

2:30

CDO

CAPITOL
0 (10) EVERDAY COOKING WITH
JACQUES PEPIN (MON)
0 (to) NEW ENGUND BEGINS
(TUE)
0 {10) INSIDE BUSINESS TOOAY
(WED)
0 (10) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
(FRI)

»M/S

3:00
0 ® FANTASY
IS) O GUID1NO LIGHT
® a GENERAL HOSPITAL
© (35) CASPER
0 (10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
0 (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
0 (10) TO BE ANNOUNCED (WED)
0 (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (THU)
0 (10) THE UW M AKERS (FRI)

1J2 i

1 &gt;0

FRIDAY I3fh PART III
STILL OF THE NIGHT

3.05

© (17) FUNTJME

2:30

0 (4) NEWS
(D O CBS NEWS NIOHTWATCH

4:05
© (17) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

4:20

CD

O
MOVIE
Panic In The
Streets" (1950) Richard Widmark.
Paul Douglas
m o m m y

A *

MORNING

B IS C U IT S A N D W I C H E S

© (17) WORLD AT U R G E (MON)

5:30
0

® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
UE-FRI)
' (17) IT’ S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)
© 117) WORLO AT U R G E (TUE)

5:40

5:45
© (17) WORLD AT U R Q E (THU)

6:00
® NEWS (MON)
O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
O SUNRISE
(1S| JIM BAKKER
(17) NEWS

8
S

6:30
® EARLY TODAY
O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
f f l O A BC NEWS THIS MORNING

8

SAU SAG E &amp; CO UNTRY-FRIEDSTEAK
Ovr bullvrm ilk b ttcu d ia rl bJVnHrtvh every m om m a, r ifM
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O P I N 7 A M TUN I M M O N THAU 1AT
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SANFORD

O NEWS
(tO) A M . WEATHER
0 ® TOOAY
( D f l MORNING NfWA
CD0 OOOO MORNING AMERICA
© (35) NEWS
0 ( 1 0 ) TO LIFEI

7:05
7:15
® ( 10) A M . WEATHER

7:30

8

7:35

©(17)1 DREAM OF JEANNiE

8:00
© (36) FRED FUNTBTONC ANO
FRIENDS

6:05
© (17) MY THREE SONS

8:30
) GREAT SPACE COASTER
10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
© (17) THAT GIRL

O MARY TYLER MOORE
(38) ANOY GRIFFITH
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

10:30
0 ® SA LE OF THE CENTURY

J

BuiyerChef

6:45

S

7:05

A LL IN T H E F A M IL Y (M O N .

TUE. THU, FRI)
© (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER ROQERS(R)

"Kiss Ol Death"

9:00
0 3) VOYAGERS! PNnaas dual*
(?) RICHARD SIMMONS
with the Roman gladiator SparQDONAHUE
iecus, than escapes to Missouri to
O MOVIE
help runaway slave Harriet Tubman
(38) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
win hw Iraedom. |R|
(10) SESAM E S T R E E T g
Q P O I0 M W U T E 8
® O RIPLEY’ S BELIEVE (T OR
9:05
NOT) Featured: the story of how
0 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE
"Abes In Wonderland" was written,
9:30
some remarkable people who have
0 ^ 8 0 YOU THINK YOU GOT
triumphed over their handicaps.
ea stories, unusual
© (34) WILO. WILD WEST
© O S )F A M ILY AFFAIR
0 ( 10) SOUNO FESTIVAL An eve10:00
nktg of rock, rriythm and Wuea Ma­
® THE FACTS OF UFE &lt;R)
tures lha sights ano sounds of TWfra. and introduces Shade Escovedo
and her group. Cho-Cho-Sen
©(17) WRESTLING

(J l O

2:20
(7) o

(35) WOOOY WOODPECKER
(10) SESAM E STREET g

f fi® 0 N E W S
(M)KUNQFU

6:35

5:00
0 ® U VER N E 8 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
Li O THREE'S COMPANY

12:00

©
(17) M O VIE
"Anthony
Adverse" (1936) Frednc March. Oli­
via de Manlland

© (17) FUNTIME

© (17) UNDERSEA WORLO OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
EVENING

0 ( 1 7 ) NICE PEO PLE

4:35
® (17)LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

7:00

0 8) THE R A C E FOR NUMBER
ONE
©(15) DANIEL BOONE
0 (1 0 ) FIRING LINE

NBC NEWS
ABC NEWS

4:30
® O AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL
(WED)
® (35) SCOOBY DOO

11:35

12:05
© 1 17)OPEN UP

4:30
(D O 19(2: A LOOK BACK

5.00

12:00

JA CK ANDERSON CONFI­
DENTIAL
© (35) W.V. GRANT

© (17) WORLD AT U R Q E (FR1)

0 (10) MYSTERY Melissa" Dr
Swanley musts that Guy was under
his psychiatric car*, and a Inend ot
Melissa* reveals that the was a
compulsive gambler (Pan 21g

© (17) THE MUNSTERS

© (17) WOMAN WATCH (WED)
AFTERNOON

11:00
® ® O NEWS
(10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons pick the
best films ol 198?

5:05

2:30
© (15) MOVIE "The Devil s Oiscipie" 11959} Burt Lancaster. Kirk
Douglas Based on the play by
George Bernard Shaw During Ihe
American Revolution, a politically
Irtdill want colonial Is captured by
the British who believe him lo be n
rebel leader

4:05

0 ® HITMAN
© (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0
(10) POSTSCRIPTS (MON.
WEO-FRI)
0 (10) INAUGURATION OF THE
GOVERNOR (TUE)

© (1 Tj MOVIE

(11 (35) JIM BAKKER
0 ( 1 0 ) FAWLTY TOWERS

2:00
0 ® NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins al Baltimore Colts
f f l O MOVIE
"Dark Victory
|1939| Bette Davit. George Brent
When a woman learns that her days
are numbered because ol an inop­
erable brain condition, she gains
sustenance Irom ihe doctor she
marries
(D (10) MYSTERY "Melissa A
phone call from Guy Foster a wile at
a parly is the last step in a compiei
web of suspicion created by some­
one who wants Ihe police lo believe
Guy murdered hit wile (Part D p

4:00
O ® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
} O HOUR MAGAZINE
O a MERV GRIFFIN (MON. TUE.
THU. FRI)
a O ON THE GO (WED)
IT OS) TOM ANO JERRY
CD (10)SESAME S T R E E T g

11:05

10:30

CD 0

3:35
© (17) THE FLINTSTONES

© (17) PERRY MASON (MON.
TUE. THU. Ffll)

10:05
© (17) NEWS

3:30

© 05) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
0 (10)ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

0 ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
® o t h e p r ic e IS RIGHT
g O LOVE BOAT (R)
J l (35)35 LIVE
© (10) OVER EASY (MON. WEDFRI)
0 1 1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS (TUE)

9:05
© (17) WEEK IN REVIEW

Sunday, Jan. J, 19B3—7B

C5J O CHILD'S P U Y
l10 (35) OORIS 0AY
0 ( 1 0 ) POWERHOUSE

9:00
0 :4 MOVIE Cocaine And Blue
Eyes (Premiere) O J Simpson.
Candy Clark A detectives search
for a missing woman leads him to
an illegal drug operation run by a
prominent family
[ fl O THE JEFFERSONS
(D O MOVIE
Live And let Ike
(1973) Roger Moore Jane Sey­
mour Secret agent James Bond
dodges sharks, crocodiles and voo­
doo spells during an attempt to
locale a Caribbean drug operation

3:00

S3 (10) THE

(38) AT THE MOVIES
(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

Juice B ar
Milk
EXPRESS
Fishwich
Cheeseburger
Tat er Tots
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Ju k e
THURSDAY, JAN. I
ENTREE
MANAGER’S CHOICE
(Ground Beef)
Menu W01 Vary
By School

©
(17) NASH VILLE ALIVEI
Guests Ronnie McOowafl. Billy
’ Crash Craddock. Res Aden Jr

2:30

© (17) NEWS

SCHOOL MENU

by Larry Wright

AFTERNOON

8:05

MONDAY, JANUARY 3
Square dancing to records, 1-3 p.m ., Casselberry’
Senior Citizen Center, Secret fake P a rk , North Triplet
Drive.
Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 a.m., Big Cypress.
Longwood Rotary Oub, 7:30 a.m., Longwood Village
Inn.'
Rebos and Live Oak Reboi Club AA, noon and 8 p.m.,
220 live Oak Center, Casselberry. Closed.
Oviedo Rotary Oub, 7:30 a.m„ Town House

MONDAY, JAN. 3
ENTREE
Pizza
Green B e a u
Pineapple Chunks
Milk
EXPRESS
Pizza
T aterT oti
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
TUESDAY, JAN. 4
ENTREE
Barbecue on Bun
Scalloped Potatoes
Green Pens
Milk
EXPRESS
Barbecue on Bun
Hamburger
French Fries
Fresh F ruit
MUX or
Orange Juice
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 5
ENTREE
Fishwich
Macaroni ft Cheese
Broccoli

8:00

Cible Ch

In addition to the cturmtl* listed, cablevisic.i subscribers may tune in to independent channel 44.
St. Petersburg, by tuning lo channel 1 j tuning tochannel 1). w hich carries sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N ).

CALENDAR
&lt;;

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

—

-

Bring Your Family A Friends To

Anne Bonnies Tavern
Sunday Crab
&amp; Oyster Feast
G a rik O a t 25’ •«»

Roasted Oysters 10* 98Ch
Smoked MuVit
45* lea Cream Sundaes 4
»1.00 HamburgersForTh* Kid*

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t Most Cocktail*
* o». ou*m of Tea or Coke 45*
Imported Beer. *1.00
Domestic Beer 75*
l o c a t e d in sid e

JabamaeJoeJ

2504 French Ave. (Hwy. 17-01
Sanlord

�— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Jan.3, 1911

Alcoholism Greater
Today A m ong Women
I,OS ANGELES f U P I ) — In American
society, where business and social contacts
often begin with the Invitation to “ have a
drink ," sipping cocktails is In, but being
drunk is out.
It’s especially out for women, who make
up an estimated 45 percent of all alcoholics.
Muriel Zink, a handsom e silver-haired
woman in her 60s, whose social life used to
include chic hangover p arties to "get well"
on Bloody Mary's, is a recovered alcoholic.
She now directs Amethyst, a new alcoholdrug recovery program designed to help
free women from alcohol’s death grip.
But how does a woman know for sure if
she is an alcoholic?
“ One of alcoholism’s symptoms is the
conviction you’re not afflicted," said Mrs.
Zink, adding, 65 percent of alcoholics have
close relatives with the disease.
“ We go on the premise this is a disease of
unknown origin for which th ere is no cure. I
believe people are bom with the X factor. If
they take a drink, th ey 're sitting ducks,"
she said.
fin d a C., a 44-year-old Orange County
woman who asked her last name not be

revealed, was a “ sitting duck."
At 23, she began “ blackout" drinking to
forget a divorce that took aw ay her four
children.
Discouraged and depressed, Linda drank
and got into drugs while working for a
doctor. Alcohol was her dally crutch and
m orphine shots led her to heroin.
Like a collapsing row of dominoes, one
problem followed another. Iinda was
caughi shoplifting to help support her habit
and eventually sent to prison in Huntsville,
Texas.
" I knew I would have to pay the price,"
she said. “ I never once thought of trying to
get help."
In prison Iinda went to an Alcoholics
Anonymous meetings, but thought they
w ere "corny" and dropped out. After her
parole, she vowed "never to stick another
needle in my arm " — and she didn’t - but
she popped pills.
"Som etim es I would drink in the morning
before work. At work I ’d take pills, then
drink at lunch. After lunch I'd take pills
again. Then in the evening I would drink
and take more pills."

Falling Interest
Rates Help Housing
New homes were started a t a seasonally adjusted annual
ra te of 1,428,000 units during November, up 26 percent from a
m onth earlier and up 66 percent from November 1981, ac­
cording to figures released today by the U.S. Bureau of the
Ce"sus.
"W e're delighted with the 26 percent upturn in housing
production," said Fred Napolitano, president of the National
Association of Home Builders.
‘ 'This increase is In line with all the other housing indicators
th a t have been on the upswing ever since the Federal Reserve
Board shifted gears in October, precipitating a m ajor decline
in interest rates," he added. “ As long as interest rates stay
down, housing has a great opportunity to lead the country out
of recession."

'Charity Days’ A t
Tracks, Frontons
M a y FaceCourt Test
TALUHASSEE ( U P I ) - The House regulated indus­
tries chairm an believes a new law has eliminated m uch of the
controversy over the "charity days" run by parimutuel
racetracks, dog tracks and Jal alal frontons.
Rep. Carl Ogden, D-Jacksonville, also thinks the concept of
charity days still faces a potential constitutional challenge.
Beginning in 1931 for horse and dog racing and four years
later for jal alai, the legislature authorized parimutuel
facilities to add extra dates to their seasons for the purpose of
aiding charities.
Under the concept, the profits of the tracks or frontons and
m ost of the take that would normally go to the stale in taxes
a re turned over to charitable or educational institutions.
Proponents argued th at neither the state for the parimutuel
organizations lost money they otherwise would have had while
schools and charities benefited.
Over the years, however, all variety of charities and educa­
tional institutions began clamoring for a piece of the pie and
pressured local law m akers into introducing legislation that
would add still more charity days specifically for them.
The result, according to the House Regulated Industries
Com mittee, was "a m aze of statutes” so complicated that It
w as virtually impossible even to pinpoint the exact number of
authorized charity days statewide.
The Division of Parim utuel Wagering found 196 of them. The
sta te 's 37 tracks and frontons actually have been conducting
about 60 percent of the authorized number, raising about |3
million for charities an d education yearly.
"The charity days h ad alm ost reached the point of being an
absurdity," Ogden said, "everybody and his brother was
asking to have a day. We had some people com ing out of the
woodwork you never h eard of."
In a comprehensive oversight report earlier th is year, com­
m ittee staffer Chris H aughee wrote: "The charity day concept
has mushroomed from a m odest beginning wiUi a generalized
approach to a grabbag for special Interests, primarily
educational institutions."
Adding to the confusion was the yearly changing of the
charity day statutes, changes the tracks and frontons have not
alw ays been awsre of.
"The practice of operating the same charity days year after
year resulted in several tracks conducting unauthorized
charity days for alm ost 10 years due to the repeal of
puthorizlng acts," the oversight report said.
E arlier this year, the legislature passed a measure
designed to clear up the confusion. Gov, Bob G raham signed it
into law.
" I think we have it resolved," Ogden said.
While some tracks previously had as many as 11 authorized
charity days and others a s few as three, m ost parimutuel
track s and frontons now a re authorized five p e r year. The
sta te 's three winter thoroughbred tracks a re lim ited to two
apiece.
The program Is voluntary and the tracks and frontons can
choose any charity or educational institution they wish to help,
providing the charity has qualified for that status with the
Internal Revenue Service and the Florida Secretary of State.
The only other m ajor restriction is that at least two of the
rive charity days, to th e extent they are used, m ust benefit the
Board of Regents or m ajor higher education institutions.
" I'm hoping that will at least resolve the situation of the
legislators coming up all the time under pressure wanting to
add this one and that one," Ofden said.
Despite the cleanup of the statutes, Ogden said he believes
charity days might violate the state Constitution by using what
is In effect state money to help finance programs without going
through the appropriations process.
Other lawmakers fe a r the charity days sometimes amount
to government funding of religion because of the churchaffiliations of some charities.
“ T h e basic threshold question which must be resolved for
th t constitutional issues to arise is whether the state's share of
the charitable proceeds are state tax funds," Haughee wrote.
Courts hsve yet to decide that issue.
"Y ou're giving state lax do R an away without an appro­
priation and 1 think th a t can be challenged." Ogden said.
So far, no one has filed suit to do ao.

37 B - R e n ta I O ffices

25—Loans

Legal Notice

CLA SSIFIED A D S

NOTICE OF IN T E N T
TO R EG IS T ER FICT IT IO U S
NAME
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that the undersigned, d e sirin g to
engaqe in business under the
fictitious name of L A K E V I E W
B A P T IS T CHURCH, at 134 Lake
V iew Avenue, take M ary, F lo rid a
17744 Intends to re g itle r the said
name with the Clerk ot the C ircu it
Court of Seminole County. F lo rid a
D A T E D this 29lh d a y ol
December. A O 198?
F IR S T BAPTIST C H U R C H
OF SA N F O R D .IN C
B Y W ILLIA M L C O L B E R T .
TRUSTEE
Pub lish Jan 2, 9, li. 73. 1983
DEDB

«

Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

322-261 1

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M .
MONDAY t h r u FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

RATES
Ib m e

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

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

FICTITIOUS N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 3800 W,
State Rtf O l, Longwood. FI
Sem inole County, Florida under
the tic tltio u s name ot O P
P O R T U N IT IE S U N L IM IT E D , and
that I intend to register said name
w ith Clerk ol ihe C ircu it Court.
Sem inole County, Florida in ac
cordance with Ihe provisions ot the
F ictitio u s Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 84S 09 Florida Statutes
19ST
Signature David Bergman
Publish: Jan. 1. 9. It. 71, 1983
O E D 10

I Card of Thanks
TOOUR F R IE N D S &amp; Customers
A
Happy.
H e a lth y
A
Prosperous New Y ea r is our
wish lor you in 1913 We ap
predate your patronage in the
past and took forw ard to
continuing lo give you the
finest service and products
possible in the com ing years
Kathleen t B ill Reynolds
A S ta ll
Bike A M ow er Center
908FrenthAve.
371 *751

INVITATION TO BIO
Sealed bids will be received in
the C ity M anagers of 14ce. City
H all, Sanford, Florida lo r
4—P e rs o n a ls
I Si* (81 75' Type I Concrete
Light Poles
II Si* 181 High Pressure Sodium
• ABO RTIO N *
Light F u tu re s
1st Trimester abortion 7 17 wks..
III Fencing Materials
5150
M edicaid 1130/ 13 14
IV Parking Lol and Tennis I
wks 5300
M e dicaid ilAS.
Court Pavmq
Gyn Services S25. Pregnancy
V. M m I? Station P h y s ic a l
lest,
tre e
counseling
Fitness Course
Professional care supportive
FIC T IT IO U S NAME
D e ta ile d v p e cilic a tio n s are
atmosphere, confidential
Noiice is hereby given that I am av a ila b le in Ihe City M a n a g e rs
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
engaged in business at P 0 Bo* otllce. City Hall, Sanford. F lo rid a
W O M EN 'S H E A L T H
1114, Longwood, Florida, Seminole
The sealed bidi will be received
O R G A N IZA T IO N
County, under the fictitious name In t h e fjty Manager's otllce. Room
NEW LO C AT ION
ol L E T IT SH IN E , and that I in
303. C ity H all, Sanlord, F lo rd a not
1700W Colonial Dr .Orlando
tend lo register said name with
later than 1 ]o p m , Wednesday.
305 898 0921
C le rk ol the C ircu it Court.
January 19, 1983 The bid s w ill be
1 800 77 1 7588
Seminole County. Florida In ac
publicly opened later that same
cordance w ith the provisions ot the date at 3 P M m the C ity Com
Fictitious N am e Statutes. To wit
m ission Chambers, Room 117. City
Section MS 09 Florida Statutes
5—Lost &amp; Found
H all. Sanlord. Florida
" K " W H O L E S A L E , INC
The City of Sanlord reserves fhe
By Lew is O Willard
r,qht to accept or reject any or a ll
D A T E D 17 7 87
LOST Bassetle Hound Iri colored
bids in the best interest ot the City
Publish December J 7 ,19.38. 1983 8,
temale Last seen Dec I8ih
W E Knowles
January 3, 1981
Vic ol Shop and Go In Lake
C ity Manager
DEC 41
Mary C hild re n's pet 323 S390
C IT Y OF SANFORD
Pub lish January 3, 1983
FICTITIO U S NAME
O E D 13
Notice IS hereby given lhal I am
LOST Black Lab 95 lbs near
engaged in business at 3a94 S
Sanlord A ir p o r t Dec
39
IN T H E CIRCUIT CO U R T F O R
Sanford A v c , Sanford. Seminole
Reward 173 9SA4
S E M IN O L E COUNTY. F L O R ID A
County. FTorlda under the tic
P R O B A T E DIVISION
titious nam e Ol J M IC H A EL
F ile Number S3 820 CP
GLASS A M IR R O R , and that I
6—Child Care
D ivision Probate
intend to register said name with
IN
R
E
:
ESTATE
OF
the C le rk o l Ihe Circuit Court,
D IL L A R D ARCH B E N N E T T
Seminole County Florida in ac
W ILL keep children, m y home
Deceased
cordance w ith the provisions ot Ihe
E*p F yard Reas rates
N O TICE OF A D M IN ISTR A T IO N
Fictitious Nam e Statutes, ToW tl
Eves A days 177 5015
The administration ot the estate
Seel ion 885 09 Florida Slatules
of D IL L A R D ARCH B E N N E T T ,
1937
deceased, F ile Number 83 870 CP,
J E F F R E Y M COUNELIS
12— Special Notices
is pending in the Circuit Court lor
Publish December 19. 38. 1913 A
SeminoleCounly, Florlda, Probate
January 7, 9, 1983
Division, the address ot w hich is
DEC 97
A F T E R Christm as Sale 50 ,*.ol!
S e m in ole County C o u rth o u se ,
14 carat gold, sterling and
S a n lo rd , F lo rid a . 32771
The
electroplate (ewelry in stock
FICT IT IO U S NAME
names and addresses o l the per
Call 371 179 7 lo r appt
Notice is hereby given that I am
son al representative and the
engaged in business at 7805 P a rk
personal
representative's
attorney
Or., Sanlord FI 37777, Seminole
are set forth below
HAPPY N E W Y E A R
County. F lo rid a under the He
A ll- Interested p e rso n s are
From Santoro's F irs t and Finest
tilious name ol UNCLE NICK S
required
to
tile
with
this
court,
BMK R A C IN G T E A M
LIQUOR &amp; O Y S T E R BAR. and
W ITHIN THREE M O N T H S OF
Sponsored by
thal.l intend to register said name
THE
FIRST
PU
B
LIC
A
T
IO
N
OF
Bike A M ow er Cenler
with the Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court,
THIS NOTICE
(11 a ll cla im s
908 French Ave.
117 4751
Seminole County, Florida in ac
against the estate and 12) any
cordance w ith the provisions ot Ihe
ojection by an interested person to
Fictitious Nam e Stafules, To W it
whom nolice was m ailed that
18— Help Wanted
Section 885 09 Florida Statutes
challenges the validity ot Ihe will,
1957.
the qualifications ot the personal
Sig, N ick Pappas
re p re se n tative,
venue,
or
Publish January 7. 9, 16. ?), 1983
MAKE EXTRA
jurisdiction ol the court
D ED 13
M ONEY
A L L C L A IM S A N D
OB­
D U R IN G Y O U R
JE C T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D W IL L
S P A R E T IM E !
B E FO R E V E R B A R R E O
FICT IT IO U S NAME
Show our new line ol Calendars.
Publication ol this Notice has
N olice is hereby given lhal I am
Pens and A dvertisin g G ills 10
begun on January 2. 1983
engaged in business at 3109 F rench
local firm s Prom pt, triendly
Personal Representative
Ave Sanford Seminole County,
service from 74 year old. AA A
E lla Florence Bennett
Florida under the liditioos name
1 Company Weekly commis
108 Brown Drive
Ol AU T O SO UND CENTER, and
lions Set your own hours No
Sanlord. FL 32771
lhal I intend lo regitler said name
Investments N o collections
Attorney tor Personal
wilh the C le rk ol Ihe Circuit Court,
No e xp e rie n ce necessary
Representative
Semmole County. Florida in ac
Write Frank Buckley, NEW
A
E dw in
S h in h o lser
ol
cordance w ilh the provisions of Ihe
TON M F G C O M P A N Y . Dept
SHI N H O L S E R , L O G A N , V O N
Fictitious Nam e Statutes. To W it
67, Newton. Iowa 50208
C R IE F AND BARKS
Section 887 09 Florida Statutes
Post Otllce Bo* 2279
1957
Sanlord. F L 37771 0079
Signature
Telephone I30S) 323 3880
Ronald W Christian
B O O K M O B ILE
D R IV E R
Publish Jan 3. 9. 1983
Publish: Jan. 7. t. 18. 73. 1983
C LER K starting salary til*
D EL) 9
O E fT lI
weekly High school grad with
IN T H E CIRCUIT C O U R T OF
2 years lib ra ry c le rica l e»perl
FICT IT IO U S NAME
T H E IITH JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
ence V alid F lo rid a drivers
Nolle* Is hereby given that we
IN
A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E
license is required Apply by
are engaged in b u tln e tl at 3838 W
C O U N T Y ,F L O R ID A
January 4. 1983
SR. 478, Longwood Sem inole
GENERAL
JU R IS D IC T IO N
County, F lo rid a under Ihe tic
DIVISION
PLANNING A ID E II Starting
titious nam e of CALICO C A N D Y
C A S E NO. l i n i l CA-dl P
salary l i t O w e akly. High
K IT C H E N , and that we intend to A M E R I C A N
S A V IN G S
AND
school grad w i'h I year experl
re g lu e r said name with the C le rk
LO AN
A SSO CIA T IO N
OF
ence in planning graphics or
ol the C irc u it Court, Seminole
F L O R ID A , a Florida corporation.
related Held Apply by 1 7 83
County, Florida in accordance
P la in tiff,
with the provisions of Ihe FIc
vs.
PLANN ING A ID E III Starting
titious Nam e Statutes, To W it
M IC H A E L 0 S T R IC K L A N D and
salary 1737 weekly BA degree
Section 8AS 09 Florida Statute*
G IN A STRICKLAND , husband
in applied A r t or A A degree
I9S7.
and w ile.
with course w ork In Art. Tech
Signature
Defendants
m eal illu s tr a t io n s , and or
Judith E M a k l
TO
Defendants, M I C H A E L
technical draw ing, and 7 years
B arb ara S. Duran
D S T R IC K L A N D and G IN A
ot related experience Apply
Publish Jan 2, f, 18. 73, 1983
S T R IC KLA N D , husband and w ile,
■by 1781.
OED 7
whose residence is unknown, and
to Ihe unknown defendants who
S E C R E T A R Y W ORD P R O C E i
m ay be spouses, heirs, devisees,
SING T E C H N IC IA N Starting
gran te e s, assignees, lie n o rs ,
111 T H E . C IR C U IT COURT. O F
salary 1702 week High school
crediiutk, liv iU c i, and all parties
THE E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
grad with 1 yrs. secretarial
C IR C U IT , IN AND FOR S E M IN ­ claim ing interest by, through,
clerical experience Including
under or against Ihe Defendants,
O LE C O U N T Y . FLO RID A
some experience with word
who are not known to be dead or
CASE NO. 81 J48ICA84-P
processing unit. Work includes
alive, and all parlies having or
IN R E The Marriage ol
substantial se cre tarial support
claim ing any right, title or interest
SUSAN LJ3UISE FLO RES.
to professional staff members,
W ile.
In Ihe properly described herein
and is not isolated lo work
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D Ih a ta suit
and
dealing only w ilh word procts
to foreclose a mortgager on ihe
E U S E B IO A N D R ES FLO R E S .
ting unit. A p p ly by I 10 83
following described pro pe rly in
JR..
Husband
Seminole County, Flo rid a:
Apply Sem inole Counly Per
N O T IC E OF ACTION
Lol
S4.
V IL L A S
OF
sooner Courthouse N. Park
CASSELBER R Y, PH A SE
II,'
TO:
A v e , S e n fo rd
F la . Ap
E U S E B IO AN D RES F L O R E S .
according to Ihe Pla t thereof, as
plications g iv e n and accepted
recorded in Plal Book 25. Pages If,
JR.
Monday fhrU F rid a y 1.10 a m.
IS0R Skyvlew Dr,
70 and 71. ot Ihe Public Records ot
lo noon. E q u a l Opportunity
A lexandria. Virginia 37309
Seminole Counly, F lo rid a,
Employer. M F H V.
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
pa* been f lied against you and you
N O T IF IE D lhal a Petition lo r a r t required to serve a copy ot
PH LE B O T O M IS T Needed lor
Dissolution ot Marriage has been your written detanses, It an y, to It
Seminole B ranch o l Central
tiled against you and that you a r t On AAARK L RIVLIN. E S Q .. Broad
Fla, Blood Bank. Requires
required to serve a copy at your and Cassel, 1101 Kane Concourse.
V e n ip u n c tu re o r N ursing
Responsa or Flooding lo tha Bay Harbor islends. F lo rid a 331S4,
e xperience:
O ffic e
and
Petition upon the Wile's attorney. on or before January 14, I8B3, and
C lt r ic a l
s k ills
including
A A. M cClanahan, Jr.. 108 S. P a rk m e tha original with the C le rk ol
minimum typing IS WPM.
Ave.
Suite B, Sanlord. F lo rid a this Court either before service
Please ca ll T im T o b in 777 0(77
37771, and tile Ihe o rig in a l upon P la in iiirt attorney or Im
or apply at 1107 E. 7nd St ,
Response or Pleading In Ihe office mediately thereafter; otherw ise, a
Sanlord.
ot Ihe C le rk o l the Circuit Court, on default w ill be entered against you
or before the 3rd day ot February, for the relief demanded In Ihe
PART T IM E M en Women. Work
1913. It you ta il to do so, a D efault Com plalnl Hied herein.
from home. Phone Program.
Judgment w ill be lik e n against
Earn 1751100 per week de
W ITNESS my hand and seal ol
you lo r Ihe relief demanded in the this Court at Sanlord, Semmole
pending on tim e available
Petition.
Counly, Florida, this fth day ol
Call 884 7704 or 8*8 0814
Decamber, IfBZ.
D ated e l Sanlord, Sem lnol*
County, Florid a, this JV oey ol (S E A L )
December 1917
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR .
t a k e
a
f 10 n i d *
A s Clerk of ft.: C ircu it Court
(S E A L )
B y Eve Crabtree
A rth u r H . Beckwith, Jr.
A s Deputy Clerk
C lerk of the Circuit Court
Publish December 17. If. 74.1817 A
By Cynthia Proctor
B R E A M
Publish: January 7, 9, 11,13. 1813 January 7. 18(1
D E C aa
D E D 14

Legal Notice

J

OMMJUIK

★

★

★

★

★

★

* *

AAA

m mm mm m

A N EW Y EAR
A N EW JOB
W E CAN H ELP
C A L L E A R L Y MONDAY
D R IV E R
1200 Wk.
National company, van delivery,
m anagement potential, raises
and benefits
FACTORY
SI IS hr.
W ill ( ra in , ra ise s, benefits,
permanent, needs now
G E N E R A LO F F IC E
5175 wk
A ccurate typing, 10 key e*
perience, plush job. -aises.
and benefits
S P R I N K L E R IN STA LLER l o t i
hr.
Forem an position with growing
co m p an y . P V C liltin g e*
perience. Need car. raises
W AREHOUSE
SJ.SShr,
S h ip p in g and receiving w ill
tram , part lim e hours, raise
plus m onthly bonus
PHONE W O RKERS
t l. llh r .
E xcellent company Days only
No quotas W ill tram
SALESM AN
comm.
E s t im a t o r lo r last growing
roofing company Musi have
own vehicle. Expenses paid.

TO O M AN Y
T O LIST
D ISCO U N T F E E - T E R M S
7 W E E K S SALARY
17 00 R EG IS T R A TIO N F E E
F R A N C H IS E S A V A ILA B LE .

1917 F R E N C H AVE
323-5176
BEVERLY
★

★

PAT
★

★

★

★

★

IN S U R A N C E SALES
Insurance agency
in Sanlord
looking lo r a person lo lake
over Ihe established business
E xperience not necessary We
w ill tram person and auallfy
them for stale license No
capita l needed We w ill pay
salary plus commission when
employed
Phone &lt;305 ) 841 8041
secrftary

S A N F O R D Furnished room s by
the week Reasonable rates,
m a id service C a te r in g to
working people U nfurnished
Apartm ents I A 2 Bedroom s
333 4507. 500 Palmetto A ve

PR O FESSIO N A L O ff»ce space
tor Lease, on V 92 Ideal
location to d ow n tow n are a 70S

§ French Ave o r ca ll 322 3170

41—

STOP A N D fHIN K A M IN U T E .
If C la ssifie d A ds d id n 't
work,
there wouldn't be any.

- E M P L O Y M E N T

★

O F F IC E S P A C E
FOR L E A S E
830 7723

S A N FO R D
Reas w eekly A
m onthly rates Uhl Inc e tl SOI
Oak Adults 1 1*1 7863

18— Help Wanted
★

37C-For Lease

29—R oom s

5 4 c,lim e

3 consecutive times J4c a line
7 consecutive times 44c a line
inconsecutive times a?c a line
13.00 Minimum
1 Lines Minimum

SPACE lor rent O tlice txetailv**
Storage F re n ch Avenue aj&gt;4&gt;j
Airport 737 4403
- »

C R E D IT PROB L E M S 7
Receive a Mastercard or Visa,
r.rar.snteed »a? r r e d it No
Problem For Free Brochure
ca ll House ol Credit. Toll Free
1 800 447 1511 anytime.

r e c e p t io n is t

F or sm a ll electronics company.
Requires, shorthand, typing,
general otlice skills Starting
salary 1180 wk Call tor ap
pointment E A M Manutac
lu r in g 7S70 A irp o rt B lv d ,
Sanford 371 7100
D E N T IS T F u ll Time Fam ily
p r a c tic e
c lin ic .
F lo rid a
L ic e n se . Send resume to:
Executive O lreclor Box 1077,
Sanlord, F la
17771 Equal
Opportunity Employer.

T R U C K IN G
N O E X P E R IE N C E
NECESSARY
F o r inform ation call: 818 7774119, 919 777 0494 9 a m 7
p m , M onday thru Friday.
A D A M S E N T E R P R IS E S
Get Cash Buyers for a small
investment. Place a low cost
classified ad tor results 177
3811 o r 811 8881
A D V E R T IS IN G Experience lo
design brochures and labels;
w rite trade advertisements
and press releases etc. Full
fringe benefits Retiree and or
part lim e acceptable United
Solvents. 173 1400
JO B SITE INC.
100‘s lobs daily.
C a ll 131 7940 Fee.
W A N T E D fu ll A part tim e
production workers 7 shifts 7 lo
4 and 4 lo 17:10 Pinebrtete
Farm s.
A T T E N T IO N 1 Own your own
b u sin e ss A vo n T e rrito rie s
open Now! 377 59W.

U N C L U T T E R YO U R CLOSET.
Sell those things lhal are iust
taking up space with a want ad
in the H erald 772-3411 or 1119993
—r --------------------------------------T Y P IS T — Fast, accural*. Take
phore orders Pension, profit
s h a re an d m edical plans.
United Solvents 371 1400 ,
O N E P H O N E C A LL STARTS A
C L A S S I F I E D A D ON ITS
R E S U L T F U L EN D
THE
N U M B E R IS 377 2811.
S E C R E T A R I E S N E E O E D FO R
Tem porary and part lim a
p o sitio n * . E x c t llt n t s k ills
necessary Interview by appointm ent only. 771S849.
W A N T E O Responsible M ature
B abysitter w ilh light house
w ork. C a ll aft. S p m 722 7821.

30-A partm ents U n fu rn ish e d

n o w n * c * X M .T O R S

Be UJfoe
CM Keyed

7 BDRM, I bath,
upstairs. 1250
877 5SS7or *72 8178

fo r a l l y o u r
r ea lestate neeo s

hurnished apartments loi Senior
C 'tiie n s 318 Palmetto A v e . J
Cowan No phone calls

323-3200
H tW Lake M a ry Blvd
Suite B
Lake M ary. F la 12748
731 1200

4.

H A P P Y H O LID AYS
CENEVAO ARDENS ’
A PA R T M EN T S . I l l 3080.

LUXU RY
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily A Adults se ctio n
Poolside. 7 Bdrms. M aster
Covf Apts J?} 7900 O prn on
weekends
1700 M AGN OLIA upstairs, extra
nice Large 1 hdrm Kitchen
equipped 371 4347 alt S 373 0445
M E L L O N V lL L E T ra c e A p ts
spacious, modern 2 bdrm . I
bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped. CHA. w alk to town
and lake Adults. No pets
A vailable Jan I. 321 3905
M anner'* Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm Irom SJSi. 2 bd rm Irom
S30O Located 17 92 iust south
ot Airport Blvd in Sanlord A ll
Adults 321 8870
1. 7 A N D 3 BURM F ro m *740
Ridgewood Arms Apt 254c
Ridgewood Ave 371 4470
E N JO Y country living? ? Bdrm ,
Duplex Apts. O lym p ic sr
pool Shenandoah V illa g e
Open 9 to 6 J33 3930

ID Y LLW ILO E — 574,500 1 7
only } yrs. old. dream kitchen
w gerden w in d o w , comb
range and m icrow ave. 13x70
ter. porch, plus much more.
Don't wait, ca ll loday to
preview
B ecky
Courton
Associate. T he W a ll St
Company Realtors
Eves133 9420.

V

BATEM AN R EALTY
Lie. Real E sla te Broker
3840 Sanlord Ave

FOR Sent 1 I B L K nice neign
borhood, 1)50 lir s l. Iasi and DD
OSTEEN high and dry w ilh trees
2 7 acres o w n e r fin an cin g
514 900
FOR Sale J l ' j B L K w ilh large
family room, nice neighborhood
VA or F H A W8.900
321 0759

BAM B OO COVE A P T S
10Q E Airport Blvd
) A 2 Bdr m l
From 5710 mo
Phone 333 *420

E V E

322 7643

WHY SAVE IT
S E L L II
Q U ICKLY w ith a Fast Acting,
Low Cost C la ss llie d Ad

31—A partm cnls F u rn is h e d
S A N FO R D 7 bdrm . kids, pets,
S10O down S2SO Fee 339 7200
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. R ealtor
J U N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y
IB EO R O O M
L A R G E K IT C H E N
8)17184
1 BDRM . Apl. Clean
1325 mo. ♦ Oep
References required 322 3142,

31 A—D uplexes

NEW L IS T IN G !
Grab Ibis super buyt Just 139.980
and owner w ill hold mortgage
Central A ir, new plumbing ahd
electric and large yard. All
make this 7 B drm home .a
special treat. C a ll us lor
details

D E L U X E 7 B d r m . d u p le x
carport, utilily room, hook up
washer, dryer 830 0S8S

NEW LIS T IN G ! Located I block
Irem shopping center! Tk*
good lilt o l the Condo.owjer
will be yours w ith this 3 Bdrm,
!&gt;t Bath, s p a c io u s , r t lu r
bished townhouse Fam ilies
welcome. Pool. *48,500.

N ICE 3 Bdrm Duplex 1350 plus
sec.
J U N E PORIIO R E A L T Y
REALTO R
311.8878

REALTOR
80) S F re n ch Ave

32— H o u s e s U n f u r n i s h e d
HOSP Area. New paint. 3 I,
trees, some lu r n , no pets,
lease 870 0107 E ve s

322-8678
U N D ER S7.000 DOWN
1 bdrm. doll house Affordable
monthly
p a y m e n ts
Ca)l
Owner Broker 111 1611_____ •’

C A S S E L B E R R Y Lkfnt. 7 .b d „
air, 1175 F t* 719 7700
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. R e a lto r
S A N O R A SOUTH 3 B drm , 2
B a lh , partial|y fu rn is h e d .
CH A, g rip e s.5450 mo. 829 5758
or 814 4748.

R E A L T O R S *

U N F U R N IS H E D 1 bdrm . house
references required. Rent S1S0
mo ♦ dtp 177 7142.

H A N D Y M A N S P E C I A L . 4-1.;
Two porches. Carport A t '
bdrm. cottage now rented at,!
*115 mo. Needs point. Good;
Income. llS .» t* F ir m l

FO R H IN T S A N F O R D
7 Bdrm, | bath, nice neigh
borhood, no pets, 1350 per m o .
first and last mo rent In ad
vancf, l yr. lease required.
Contact 3110537.

ONE OF S A N F O R D 'S Finest, lit*
e it e lle n t co n d itio n , greet,
censtrw ctlen, 4 b d rm , i'» J
baths, also garage opt. plus V
c ir g ire g e t S i l t , 100.

N E A R downtown.
Carpet,
» ir ,
refrlg jjjg . lc e

LA R G E V A C A N T LO T In quli
residential a rto . A ll utilitli
ava ilab le an d re a dy l&lt;
building O nly tl.SOO.

5

b d rm
ra n g e ,

M O D E R N 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, w ilh
CHA drapes, appl. furnished.
S4IS Mo , 418 575* o r *14 4244.

35—Mobile H om e Lots
H IO H BANKS M A R I N A
ARVPARK
-Uxury RV living on the St.
Johns River.
STAY A D A Y O R
STAYAVEAR.
Taking reservations now, tor the
coming year. R iv e r (root lots
are s till available. C a ll 8M-4484981 or go Weal on H ighbanks
Rd. in DeBary lo St. Johns
R iver.
Whatever the occasion, there is a
classified ad to solve it. Try
one soon.

37-B—Rental Offices

24— Business Opportunities

P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE.
Pro vid en ce B lU d ., D e lto n a.
71M Sq. FI. Can Be Divided.
W ith Perking. D e y t JOS 574
1814
Evenings fc W eekends
804 719 4251

Plum bing, Hardware, DIY, Bus.
W w o R t a l Estate. Wm.
M jU c io w tk l Realtor. 777 7811.

1400 Sq It. oMtce. U S Maftle
A v e , Sanlord A v a il im med.
Broker Owner. 171 7708

N E E D extra Money?
W hy not sell AVON I
1311858

keues

S A N F O R D 2 bd. com plete kit
S310 mo Fee 339 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc. R ealto r

ft

H ouses

NEAR L A K E M O N R O E and!
Dewntewn. 1 B drm , I B alk )**'
y*un« la m ily o r retirees. V erf •
good condition F a r quick u l t i ;
5)5,100.
D R IFTW O O D V IL L A G E
549 W. L ik e M a ry Blvd.
Lake M e ry, F lo rid a 117*4

Otlice: (losnit ioos

:*
j’
!*

;!

The sooner you place your&gt;!
classified ad. the sooner you&gt;*
gel results
.*!

BARBS
Phil P asto re t
Sign on the desk ol ajvacationing atom ic power;!
plani director: Gone fission 'M
A schedule is a timetable;
tlul enables you to drfer&gt;'
miae at once just how muclr'
you've fallen behind Ifr
whales er you're supposed ifk
‘b
**

*

Mow did (hey manage to
gel rid of sour cream bcloi&gt;
someone developed hakejl
potatoes to put it o n '
n t s s w e r l y t t h f r im

*uv i

�4/

$

I

fcVfc -

41— Houses

KISH REAL ESTATE

m

a

BUY AS R E N T . Fence, new
M in i, j j FH A Short on DP?
Owner A s s o c ia te *31 8 m

2 B D R M . 2 Bath, living rm,
dining rm , eol in kitchen, Fla.
rm . Cent HA, wall to w all
c a rp e t,
appliances
Low
UO.OOO s 57a 3147.

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF SANFO RD R EA LTO R

FORT

JO U R N A L

H AL C O LBER T REALTY
REALTO R
207 E 21th St
1217111

$
■

iiR C

__ St

SEP
I i/ t / U iN
A T lICO

HflRxj Kcw l/o n

JU S T F O R YOU ) Bdrm . ] Bath
home, in Sunland, w ith decor
w allpaper, carpet, etc. Large
screened porch. Cent. Heat
and air, fenced yard, amt
more. H U M .

f a * Tfce "Hato"
CU STO M
B U ILT
CEDAR
HOME
E n erg y
e fficie nt
custom throughout. T errilic
owner fin a n c in g . Potential
g u ilt home in rear. 17 cilrus
Irees. Loads of storage. Take
♦4A East lo le ft on Rt. 411, j
houses on rig h t past Osteen
Post Office. *49,*00,

B E A U T IF U L ) Bdrm 2‘ y Bath, 1
story home, in Ram blew oodi
Stone fire p la ce , c a th e d ra l
c e ilin g s ,
la m ily
room ,
equipped eat-ln
k itc h e n .
Central heat and a ir. W all to
w all carpet, patio, all on a
lovely shaded lot. *79,900.

FH A VA S P E C I A L ! Why rent
when you can own NOW. SI, 110
down payment. 1 bdrm home
on fenced lot. Large oak and
citrus trees Good locelleq?
Only 1)91 a mo. T a ie i and
insurance included. 13/ . ]o
yrs Price II*.MO.

F A M IL Y 'S D ELIG H T ] Bdrm 1
bath home in Longwood, with
earthtone decor! F ire p la c e in
g re a t room, pa d d le fan s,
central heat and air, w all-w all
carpet, eat in kitchen, fenced
yard and lolt m orel *44.*0*.
C H A R M IN G 1 Bdrm , 1 'i bath, 1
story home, on an oak shaded
lot. Cent, heat and a ir, dining
room, eat-ln kitchen, coiy
fireplace and m orel SU.eoo.
M A Y F A I R VILLASI J A J Bdrm ,
1 Bath Condo V illas, next to
M ayfair Country Club. Select
your lot, floor plan t interior
decor! Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor 1*7.100 A up!
R E A L ESTATE C A R E E R )
C a ll to see if you qualify for our
Free Tuition Program ! E v ­
ening I Rewarding!
R E A L T O R A SSO CIATES
NEEDEDI
One Residential — Two C om ­
m ercial Investment! If you
honestly want a Successful
C a re e r, |eln the N o . 1
Professional Sales Team I A ll
In te rv ie w s S tric tly
Con­
fidential!

A lta m o n te 1 2 *41,000, L a k e
M ary, Feather Edge M id *40'»,
4 Model*
L A K E E M M A LOTS
*40.000 each.

SEASO N S G R E E T IN G
Sandy Wisdom

WE N E E D LISTINGS!
C A L L U S NOWIII!

323-5774

DRO W SE AND S A V E . . . It s
easy and tun
.T h e Want Ad
W a y . __________________

3*06 H W Y . 17 93

REALTO R. M L S
2201 t French
Suite *
Sanlord. Fla

HOUR 03 322-9283

C O U N T R Y L IV IN G
5 A cre s cleared high and dry
land Suitable lor horse*. Near.
Geneva Price tll.SOO with
*2500 down, 120 payment* ot
*269 *7 including lOVs/ In.
leresl M usi see

CallBart
R E A L ESTATE
RE A iT O R . 122 1*41
SA N FO R D R E A L T Y
REALTO R
I t J - t ll*
AH H rs - 112 I t lt , 11) 41*1

42—Mobile Homes
Y E A R E N D C L O IE OUT
1981 S K Y L IN E Mobile Home
34*5? tt screen enclosure
porch, u lilily shed. C enlral
heat and a ir J P.drm. 3 Bath
Lot s u e it 50*100 Salt price
*41.900. financing available at
80 *. o l sale* p ri'e interest rate
11*. / f 2 Points. Can be seen
ai lie Leisure Dr
North
D e B a ry ,
Fta
in
the
M e a d o w le a on the R iv e r
M o b ile H om e com m unity
Please conracl Tom Lyon or
G ib Edm onds First Federal ol
Seminole 305 322 1242

1900 W ts lF irs t S t r e e t - Sanford, Florida 12771 — (105)121 *170

M O D U S NOW ODIN
SAT.

SUN.

»:00-S:04

10:00 - 5:00

1:00-3:00

SOMK PLACES HAVE
£r A LL THE FUN!
Q 4 M|
Now 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
m b

Clubhouse w-health club, on Site Lake .
Tennis, Racquetball, Volleyball, Jogging Trail,
Swimming, Self-Cleaning Oven, Icemaker &amp; More.

N E E D L u iu ry home ON St.
Johns River. F irm buyer Geo
W lllm e r
Assoc
me.
REALTO RS 111 *900

47-A— Mod gages Bought
A Sold

iv90 M u ts iL h Home I4'x*v le t
up In adult section ol m obile
park Day l i t 1613
Evenings 111 5116

43-- L o l t Acreage
ST. JO H N S River frontage. ?■&gt;
acre parcels, also interior par.
cels with rive r *cce**-t13,900.
P u b lic water. 20 min. to A lta
m onte M a ll 1 2 * 20 y r
fin a n c in g , no Q u a lify in g .
Broker 621 6113

ON Y O U R L O T
Custom, Affordable, Luxuiy Borneo
h w n O O ’A t o W

u ^ M

Exampto of tan tnocM s to chooM from .

P*lmbr»«2e — Lovely California inspired 3 bedroom,
2 bath home with double garage, cathedral ceiling,
breakfast area and 1,666 sq. ft. under roof— $43,500.

21

^ ^ ld lm a rk
BUILDERS, INC.

I PIm

m

Bond m om information ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■

i
I

C ity.

!

rm ln

™

'

KICK THE S T O R A G E HABIT
Sell thsoe useful, no longer
needed items with a Herald
Classified Ad Call 322 2611 or
111 9993

On 427 between 17 9? and 434 In
Longwood

80—Autos for Sale

75—R ecreational V ehicles

71 PONT Sunblrd Excel. Cond.
AC. stereo, much more. Low
mileage and good M P G Must
sell now *2.589 C a ll 322 1468

F A C T O R Y Closeout on
»?
Scamps 11' and 16' Travel
Trailer and 19' Sth Wheel
Light weight Need lo oo Call
tor tree brochure Then we’ll
deal. 1 800 346 4962

IS IT T R U E you can buy Jeeps
tor *44 throug h the U S
Government? Get the la d *
today! C all 312 742 1142 Ext
616 (Open Sunday).

1978 M O B ILE Trailer Scout 24
It twin bed, air. awning,
electric lack S4 995 322 786)

C O M M U N II Y
B U L L E T IN
BOAROS A R E
GREATC L A S S IF IE D
ADS
ARE
EVEN BETTER

.State.

DeBary Auto A M arine Sates
across the river toe ot hill 174
Hwy 17 92 DeBary 666 8SM

D A Y T O N A AU TO AUCTION
Hwy 92 t m ile wesl o* Speed
way. Daytdha Beach w ill hole
a public A U T O AUCTION
every Monday A Wednesday al
7 30 p m . tt’s the only one In
Florida You set the reserved
price C a ll 904 235 1311 tor
further details

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Aloe Products

Work Shoe* fc Boot* *19 99 pr
ARMY NAVY SU RPLUS
310 Sanford Ave.
122 3791

H A V 1: Y O U R financial dreams
become a re a lity with Aloe
PT. no investment 1317211

E X E C U T IV E B la c k V in y l high
back sw iv e l o ffic a c h a ir
Walnut and b ra ts pedestal.
Ilk* new 1100. 121 1042
Loveble dog. Free lo
good home. H o s p ita l bed,
cheep 131*111

sm all

3 NEW FO RD V an bucket seels
with stands, brown S25 ea 172
•SOI.
SEW ING M A C H IN E Singer Zlg
Zag. Lett In layaw ay. Only SI*.
Was 1319 Sem inole Sewing
Winn Dlale Center 17 f7 A
Lake M ery B lvd 373 9411.
M E N 'S golf dubs, I tw in canopy
bed, I dinette set. I alto sa»*
phone AH 1 p m 127 1767.
SAVE your box top le b t li end
coupons. For into on selling
them send S3 to Sandy
Box 420
Ostean, F la . 12764

• * *

VM kM M

* * *

W ILSO N M AIER F U R N IT U R E
I t n t S E F IR S T S T
It? $63?

52—Appliances

C E IL IN G FA N IN S T A L L A T IO N
Quality Work
We Oo Most Anything
295 9171
677 4711

Ceramic Tile

Auto CB Stereo
Repair. Install. Sales
Auto Sound Center
A S T 2109 French Ave.
32? 4815

M E IN T Z E R T ILE E x p t m c i
19*3 New A old work comm A
resid Free estimate 869 1562
.
L ,C

tO O D Y A SONS
Tite&lt;ontrac1ors
3?' 015?

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Child Can;
BATH S kitchens, rooting block,
concrete, w indow s, add a
room, free estimates 121*461
NEW. R E M O D E L . R E P A IR
A ll types and phases ol con
slruction, S G Balm l ]31 4832,
12? 1665 Stale Licensed

THE H APPY E LV E S
Quality child care and pre
school. Infants a specialty
In d ivid u al atte n tio n T LC
Stale licensed 120 E. C rystal
Lake A v e , Lake M a ry 321
2384

A L L TYFJES C A R P E N T R Y
Custom B u ilt addition*. Patios,
screen room s, carport Door
locks, p a n e llin g , ih in g li* .
rerooting. F o r fast service,
call 323 4917 365 2371________

Have some campinQ equipment
you no longer use? Sell it a ll
with a Classified Ad In The
Herald Call 122 2811 o r U t
9991 and a friendly ad visor
w ill help you

tlO dump truck load. SS0 •, load.
Spilt and delivered. Free 904
773 9144

51-A— Furniture

Ceiling Fan Installation

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
A L U M I N U M Siding, vinyl siding
soft it fc lascla. Alum inum
gutters and down spouts.
F r. E st. 305 3*5 5161

B eauty Care
T O W E R 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a rrie tts Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st St . 322 1742

Boarding &amp; Grooming
A N IM A L Haven Boarding and
G ro o m in g Kennels h e ale d ,
insulated, screened, fly prool
inside, oulside runs. Fan*.
Also A C cage* We cater lo
your pets Ph 122 *752.

N E E D A S E R V IC E M A N ? Y w 'l l
find him l|$ttd In o u r Busina**
Directory.

Bookkeeping, Accounting

R E P O S S E S J E D C O L O R T V 'S
We l t d re p o ssesse d co lo r
te lly It ton*, a ll nam e brand*,
console* end portables. E X
A M P L E : Zenith IS” color in
walnut console. O rig in al price
over S710, balance due t l t l
cash or payment* 117 month.
NO M O N E Y DOWN. S till In
warranty, c a ll 11st Cantury
Salts 163 Sit* day or nite. F rta
home trie), no obllflation.

M AKE
R O O M TO S ffO R E
Y O U R W IN T E R IT EM S . . .
SELL
" D O N 'T
N E E D S".
FA S T W ITH A W AN T AD .
Phone i n M i l or M l m i ond
• frlo n d ly A d V ito r w ill help

B r k fc t Block
Stonework
P IA Z Z A M A SO N R Y
Quollty W ork A t Reotonabie
Price*. Free Estimates
P h . 149 5544.

G A R A G E S A L E Sal. i Sun. 9 J.
R edbrick house corner 33rd i
Oak Ave.

Carpentry

I ow n property m ___________ and plan lo b w k l i n .

•

Pest Control

P A I N T I N G a n d r e p a ir , p a l o a r 'd

screen po rch b u ilt
anytime 332 9481

C a ll

C O L L I E R 'S H o m e R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window re p air 1316&lt;7?

C A R P E N T E R repair*and
addition*. 20 yr*. exp.
Co ll 127 1153.

Carpet Owning

HAY 12.SO per bale.
15or m ore tre e del.
Other faecfc a v a il. V 9-3194

• TRIPLEA*

*i

P r ic e tpeclal. tla.ts for
F a m ily or Livin g Rm M l 1760.

Plastering

ALL

H O M EO W N ER S, retax on your
days off. Let u t clean your
home at affordable rate*. C e ll
now p i l lS M Petty'* Home
Pampering Service.
A M. Kelly ctoaning service.
Speciallitnf In restaurant A
oflice buildings. 421 M M .

Concrete W ork
B E A L Concrete I men quality
operation pet&gt;os. drivew ay*
Days 1)1 7)3) Eves 337 1)21
SWIFT C O N C R E T E w ork o il
lypes. Fo o ters, d riv e w a y * ,
pads, floors, pools, complete.
Free est. 12? 710).

C A R P E N T E R 25 yrs enp Small*
remodeling Jobs, reasonable
rate*. Chuck 323 9645

P lum bing

M a in te n a n ce s a ll types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 1316011

Lawn Service

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S ot merchandise
every day.
Modernizing your H o m e ' Sell no
longer needed bul uselul items
with a Classified Ad

*A -1 LAW N S E R V I C E *

R em odeling

Mow weed, trim haul Regular
Service l time clean up Y*
hr*, best rg tgi, 62* 6431
Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn fc p la n li lor
winter now. Complete Lawn
terv. 121 057*

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle The
Whole B a llo t Wax

B. E. Link Const.

322-7029
M IS T ER . F ix It Joe M cAdam s
w ill repair your mowers i t

Financing Available

Roofing

Major Appliance
Repair
A
JO H N N IE S A p p lia n c e s
We
service refrigerator*. wash
rrs, dryer*, range*. Rea*,
rale* 323 0136

Nursing Care
LO VIN G H O M E. Excellent care
i companionship lo r elderly
women. 333 4305

Nursing Center

Have some cam ping equipm nF
you no longer use1 Sell it all
wdh a Classified A d m The
Herald Cell 32? 2411 or 8)1
9993 and a Irifrndly ad visor
W*ll help you

ot P ia slrrin g

PJiiUfTinq rt-priir stucco hard
rr*tc. Simulated br*ck J7I SW)

Draperies
CUSTOM M A O E In o u r Shop
installation Service. Dorothy
fc Vincent Blips 149 5425.

Phases

WINDOWS, doers, carpentry,
Cencrefe stabs, ceram ic A floor
tile. M inor repair*, fireplaces,
insulation. L ie Bond 122 1111.

Lawn Mowers

OUR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
Lekeview Nursing Center
319 E Second S t , Sanford
132 *707

O il Heaters
Cleaned
O IL Heater cleaning
end servicing
C all R alph 333 TIM.

Excavating Services

&amp;

B

ROOFIN

23 yr*. experience. Licensed
Insured.
Free Estim ate* en Rooting,
Re-Reeling end Repairs.
Shingle*. ■ uilt Up end Tile.

JA M E S AN D ERSO N
G. F. BOHANNON

322-941 7
R E R O O F IN G , carpentry, ruoi
repair i pamtlng 1* years
exp 322 1924
M AKE
R O O M TO S T O R E
Y O U R W IN T ER ITEM S
SELL
"D O N 'T
NEEDS”
FAST WITH A WANT* A D
Phone 372 3411 or 1)1 999) and
e friendly A d V&lt;sor will help
you

Built up and Shingle root,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
J A M E S E. L E E IN C

Tree Service
Painting

VelNO EXCAVATING
0 4 Case Bockhoe Loader wextender hoe. 9 yd. dump
truck low bed serv m s B T S
Handyman

F IL L D IRT A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SA N D
Call Clark fc H lr l 33) tiao

ART BROW N PEST CONTROL
Comm , R e id , Lawn. Termite
Work. 32? 8865 Ask lor Champ

S E A M L E S S alum inum gutters,
caver these e verhang * waluminum selttt A fascia. (904)
771-7*9* celtoct. Fra* est.

•C ALL ANYTIM E •
Lie. fc Intvr. Quality ■ meet. Pr.Est. A. Carina M2-M7I.

42-Lawn-Garden

*7A— Feed

H a il to: H A L L M A R K B U I L D E R S , IN C P d Box M B-longw ood, a 32750

Home Repairs

Cleaning Services

Wonder what to do w ith Two?
Soil One — The quick, easy
W ent A d w ay. T h o m a g ic
number i» 323 3611 o r M l-O ffl.

. bath home

*

• 01 0 YO U KNOW ? *
You can buy or lease a new car
in Ih* privacy ot your home or
office. F la Auto Brokers
121 2066

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

V

Call Collect (305) 327-0000
■ ■

TH E FLA. T R A D E R
AUCTION P A LA C E NO.
490 BAY MEADOW RD.
LONGWOOD, FLA. 339-3119

71 F O R D Granada A ll extras
In c lu d in g a u lo trans. 1450
down Cash or trade 13*9100.
134 4605

CONSULT OUR

IN CO LO R T V . N ew ly
reconditioned. E n c . cond
Portable *100. 323 H I2

54-Garag* Sabs

■

Wilco Seles Hwy. 66 W. 122 617*
Baled shavings *6.**
2nd cutting clover hey.
3rd cutting a lta lla hey.
Northern T im othy m iiedhey.
Check our prices.

1975 H O N D A 125 CB
runs good *300
121 4*5?

Fer Sale By Owner
S Acre* Toned A t 11.000
assumable 10 f loan Tot*l
price *75,000 West ot Orange
City o*l Blue Spring* Av«.
County m aintained Rd 904
719 SS90

Good Used T v s S3* i up
M IL LE R S
3419 Orlando Dr.
Ph 323 0152

L /

A L L F E E D ON SA LE:
w noiecorn
*4 30 5010 bag
14* hog pellets
*5 40 50 lb bag
Rabbit teed
*5 4 5 501b bag
Dog foods
*150 to 19 90
50 lb. bags
Hay *2 70 T A A hay *} 80 *li,le it
lasts
Cattle (red *4 80 Horse teed
*4 80
322 7991
3870 E SI Rd 46

W* buy Cars and Trucks.
M a rtin Motor Salts
7*1*. French
333.7*31

A tine selection ol bedroom,
dining room A living room
sets, plus c h a irs , la m p s ,
paintings A brie a brae

L A K E FRO NT L arg e wooded
lot. D eBary *6000
fly owner 323 3127

SJ-TV- Radio-Stereo

■ ■

78—Motorcycles

7 5 D A T S U N ?d r wdh aulo Iran*
and other extras Good con
ditlon *99 down Cash or
Trade 339 9100. 814 460S

O-B—W iter Front
Property_______

Kenmore part*, service, used
washers 3210697
M OONEY A P P L I A N C E S •

■

TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
nou pment 32? 5990

WE PAY cash tor 1st t 2nd
rnoriqeges Ray Legq. L.&lt;
Mortgage Broker 71* 2599

BUILDING THROUGHOUT CENTRAL FLORIDA |

ESS.

3 U Y JUNfc CA R S A TRUCKS
more
C a ll!? ? 1624

FOR E S T A T E Com m ercial or
Residential Auctions A A o
pra sals Can D ell's Auction
323 5620

BadCredit?
NoCredit?
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Check Easy Terms
N A T IO N A L AUTO SA LES
^
1130 Sanlord Ave
3)1 4075

50—Miscellaneous for Sale

5E fc S K Y L IN E 5 NEW EST
P a lm Sprinqt A Palm^Aanor
G R E G O R Y MOBILE H O M E *
1101 Orlando Dr
11)1100
VA A FH A Financing

MON.-FRI,

N E E D to ie ll y o u r house
q u ic k ly !
We
ca n
otter
guaranteed s a le w ith in 30
days Call 111 1611

Irom

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

24

WE BUY equity in Houles,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
V EST M EN TS P O Box 2500.
Sanlord. Fla 32771 33? *741

Im

869-4600 or 349-5691

GET A FR ESH START
WITH "S A N F O R D 'S NO. I
P R O F E S S IO N A L ”
Currently se e k in g m otivated
Sales Ass4&gt;ciates. E *c client
commission schedule. Ask lor
Mr. Hall.

322-2420

f

2 story comfortable

GENEVA
*60.000

HUGE C O R N E R LO T - Priced
to sell t a il I 1 bd rm ,-lam ily
rm., CHA, leneed yard w well
and sprinkler system s. Mature
cilrus trees. Double site pallo
under s p ra w lin g cam phor
tree. Large assumable, low
interest mortgage. C a ll lo d iy l
*41,900.
R E M O D E L E D • 1 bdrm.. IVy
bath, w new root. Enclosed
garage and tiled F la rm. Oak
shaded yard. E k tra cleanl
Great lo c a lio n l
C reative
linancing! Sec it today 142,100

NOWS T H E TIME
TO BUY!
FHA-VA12 ••

1 acre

S Y L V A N DR Santord,
m aculate 3 2 *41,000

PLANT L O V E R S ! Double sited
house A lot. w garden A pot­
ting shed, detached garage wworkshop 141.000. 111 1774

CALL A N Y T I M E
ms
Pjrfc

Garage so full there's no room
tor the car? Clean it out with a
Want Ad in the Herald PM
322 2611 or *31 9993

S A N F O R D A U C T IO N d o s e d
thru Jan 2, 1983 Watch tor
Jan 3rd Auction ad

AUCTION

D A N I E L A N D W O H LW EN D ER
CONDO CAN DOIt

I97SM U STAN G II Clean,
economical runs, and
looks good 123 5688

72—Auction

SAT. 1-1-83,4:30 P.M.

S U P E R 1 Bdrm 2 Balh home in
Pinecrest with Con). Hoot and
• If. panelled F a m ily r m „
fireplace, dining room, many
built ins on a Beautiful lot.
tll.1 00.

1973 V W Super Beetle,
runsqood *U9S
C a ll 131 tOSI Anytim e

WE P A Y top do llar for
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Au'o P a rts ?91 4S0S

NEW Y E A R 'S D A Y

W E LIST AND S E L L
M O R E HOMES TH A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O LE COUNTY)

80—Autos for Sale

77—Junk C ars R em oved

A L U M IN U M , cans, cooper, lead,
tra ss, silver, gold Weekdays
I 4 10. Sat 9 1 r KoMo Tool
qo 91* W 1st St 321 1100

Somebody is looking lor your
bargain O ile r it today In the
Classified Ads

S a n f o r d 's S ales L e a d e r

!-5

W .t n ftx l »{&gt; BiTV

{

I L L T E L L THE ^
SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
HOW FAR TH0U6HT
WAVES CAN T R A V E L
B E F O R E THEY RE
6TCPPEP! t h e n i ' l l
EXPERIMENT WITH
D IFFER EN T WALLS ANP
SUBJECT* TO FIND THE
PERFECT COMBINATION’.

O W N ER financing Large CBS
Home &amp; Garage
143.000 Approx 70 •*Own.
11% Interest
M an y e*tras 32? *417

Eves

2544 S French
332 0231
Alter Hours 339 3910 322 0719

Happy Itwu Ijcat

IM
K
r
ABOUT AS CHECKINS X ^ f
FA R A S X
TH E
C A N SOI D I S T A N C E
W HAT'S
TO THE WALL
F0R M V
THIS

IV E aon£

321 0041
REALTO R
A ller Mrs 323 tans &amp; 33? 495J

S
TENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

W TJJ&amp;it. ildopte*

o w n a s r . T jira n to s s ir

41— Houses

41— H o u se s

H A N D Y M A N Service* Pointing,
're p a ir* , t i c .
R o t io n o b lt
guar work 425 M SI. 677 4 711

The Best Buy In Town — A tow
cost C lassified Ad.
B I L L ’ S P A IN T IN G
Interior-Exterior painting Light
carpentry. Homo* pressure
cleaned. B u tin a * * M l 242)
Heme M I S IM B ill Steiner
H O U SE painting MOO
a houta. A ny alia.
431 1034.431 4049

S T U M P S ground out.
Reasonable, tree estimates
___________ 741 0441____________
JO H N A L L E N Y A R D fc T R E E
S E R V IC E . W e'll remove pine
tret*. Rea*, price 111 SM0
»
Letourneeu Tree Service*
Removal, trim m ing, demoatln.
Licensed and insured 114 4444

Upholstery
L O R E N E 'S Upholstery
F re e
pick up. del fc est Car fc boat
1*41* Furn

�■V
\t'

■JfR— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, J in . J, 1F8J

Now more than evei; we’re
.

•

V

____ ♦ r - •

SAVE
SA V E 6 0

1ft

SAVE 2 0 ’

(V

IB.

W O BRAND U SD A
CHOICI
I I I ! CHUCK BO N ELESS

GROUND
CHUCK

W O BRAND &lt;12 QIR

.

. . . .

^

SIKED D010GNA...................'«• M" UVU
w o SRAND A U NEAT AND AU BEEF

GRILL
FRANKS....... W O BRAND SU CID SPTCEO IU N CH EO N ANO
'
CO
OKED SALAMI _______
S?
.
W O BRAND S IC 1D
.
.
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PATTIES) BEEF

Patties...........Si*.‘2”

R o a st........ I* S1
.

IB

PREMIUM
FRESH FRYER

LEG
QUARTERS

ND
STEAK

&lt;*» *

49

IB .

IB.
BEEF C H U C K BONELESS CALIFORNIA

1.D USDA
CHOICE
11 CUT

M A R KET FRESH

CHUCK
ROAST

w.O SRAND (AU VARRTRS)

^

S H E N A N D O A H BONELESS SMOKED
CHUNK

BEEF I O N B O N E-IN SIRLOIN

Steak............. is

. 0
_______
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49

Turkey Ham .. » *1
W O BRAND FEIST10I

S3- 99* SIKED
SALAMI .............. ... 99* IYSLICED
DACON
W -0 BRAND SLICED
K U SUCID
te■ 89c wOUVE
LOAF................... LS 89‘
COOKED HAM
.O BRAND SUCID PICK I f AN O
’
LYO D PLUMPW ■ A U M IA T A N D A U
&amp; 99* W.O
PIMENTO
LOAF ---------- S2I9* BEEF
WKl
BRAND SUCID
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�</text>
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