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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
.

•

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____ ♦ r - •

SAVE
SA V E 6 0

1ft

SAVE 2 0 ’

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

GROUND
CHUCK

W O BRAND &lt;12 QIR

.

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BEEF C H U C K BONELESS CALIFORNIA

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CHUNK

BEEF I O N B O N E-IN SIRLOIN

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

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Turkey Ham .. » *1
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SALAMI .............. ... 99* IYSLICED
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�</text>
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(

75th Y ear. No. 116— M onday. J a n u a ry 3. 1983—Sanford, F lorida 3277)

•

E vening H erald—(U SPS 401 280)—Price 20 C ents

^

^

^

—
^

m

«

County Delays Old Hospital Renovation Meeting
H
If? 11K A I BEHA
FI T* 11A
ByV M
MICHEAL
Herald Staff Writer
A Seminole County commission work
session on plans to renovate the old
Seminole Memorial Hospital and the
county courthouse has been postponed.
The work session, which had been
scheduled for Tuesday at 2 p.m., was
postponed "for lack of information," said
John Percy, director of public services
and development.
P ercy
and
A cting
County

A dm in i rlrntn* f •&gt;•&gt; P n
__ _
*1
Administrator
Jim Easton ...
were
meeting
today to go over plans from Walter H.
Sobel &amp; Associates of Chicago. A plan
was submitted by Sobel last week but
Easton asked for more information. That
information arrived today.
"We wanted to know where the offices
would be and what Sobel’s reasoning
was," Easton said. He explained that the
report submitted by Sobel contained
some sketches of where offices should be
located within the building but gave none

f

.

I

f

.•

■ .

&gt;

•

of the information used to make the
decisions on their placement.
Commissioners have been waiting
nearly a month for the Sobel report.
Sobel, the county's space consultant, is
overseeing the renovation of the hospital
and courthouse and the relocation of
offices currently using the courthouse.
Commissioners had set an April 1
deadline for moving their offices, staff
agencies and constitutional officers into

•

...

.

.

.

M urder Case
Selection O f
Jury Begins

Action Reporti
Around The Clock
4A
B r i d g e .................. .........4R
C alendar..................
2A
Classified Ads
2,3 B
Comics
.............
4B
Crossw ord...............
. 4B
DearAbby ............... .......IB
Deaths
3A
Dr. tam b

............4A
.......... 3A
............4B
2A
!A
............. IB
.......... $4A
............. IB
........... IA
............ 3A

Photo By K ty Bartholomew

A lth o u g h little C h ris to p h e r J a m e s W ise w a s n ’t b o rn u n til J a n 2, h e is th e
f ir s t b a b y b o rn in 1983 a t C e n tr a l F lo rid a R e g io n a l H o sp ita l in S a n fo rd
a n d is th e f ir s t c h ild of B a r b a r a a n d J a m e s W ise, of 110 W. A irp o rt H lv d .
in S a n f o r d . T h e 6-pound, 12-ounce boy w a s ro y a lly w e lc o m e d b y a ll,
in c lu d in g h is g r a n d m o th e r , E v e ly n W ise, w ho is a n u r s e in th e o b s te tr ic
d e p a r t m e n t a t (h e h o s p ita l. C h ris to p h e r w a s b o rn a t 6:11 a .m . S u n d a y .
T h e f ir s t S e m in o le C o u n ty c o u p le to e n jo y th e b ir th o f th e ir ch ild in 1983
w e re A nn a n d B on D eal of A lta m o n te S p rin g s . T h e ir d a u g h te r , L in d s e y
M a rie D e a l, a r r iv e d a t 12:03 a .m . S a tu r d a y a t O rla n d o G e n e r a l
H o s p ita l. S h e w eig h ed K p o u n d s a n d P,* o u n c e s .

Homestead Ruling Costs Sem inole
$ 182 Million; Impact W eighed
Seminole Property Appraiser Bill Suber will
report to the Council of Local Governments in
Seminole County at a 7:30 p.m. meeting Wednesday
on the impact on local government from the Florida
Suprem e Court's decision declaring un­
constitutional the five-year residency requirements
for $25,000 homestead exemption.
Suber said today the decision will remove $182
million in previously taxable property from the
county tax rolls
"I'm try ing to compile statistics so that I can tell
each city individually what its impact will be from

c alcu lated the amount of space
necessary for each office through the
year 2000.
In the county's plan for construction,
when the county officials leave the
courthouse, that building will be
renovated for use by the circuit and
county courts.
.
Plans also call for construction of an
additional office building on the south
side of the courthouse to house the
constitutional officers.

Commissioners also are expected to
act Tuesday on proposals to purchase
land adjacent to their Five Points
complex for construction of an ad­
m inistration center and land n e a r
Zayre’s on Airport Boulevard in Sanford
for development of a health clinic.
The Winter Park architect also will
handle the design work for construction
of those facilities. That construction is
projected to continue through the next 10
years.

County, Cities
To Lose Over
$2 Million

FIRST FOR 1983
Editorial.............
Florida
Horoscope..........
Hospital
Nation
People.................
Sports..................
Television ..........
Weather ............
World..................

.

If FRS Killed

The jury was being selected today in the murder trial of 23year-old Susie Mae Davis, charged in the shooting death of her
boyfriend at a Sanford construction site.
Miss Davis of 1410 Williams Ave. was indicted by a grand
jury in September in the shooting death of Byron L Brooks of
ta k e Mary.
Testimony is expected to begin Tuesday in the case.
Assistant State Attorney Don Marblestone said he will not
seek the death penalty in the case. If convicted, Miss Davis
would have to spend 25 years In prison before she is eligible for
parole.
Miss Davis is being represented by the public defender’s
office.
Seminole Circuit Court Judge Kenneth M. Lelfler is
presiding in the trial.
Brooks was working at the Sanford landings apartment
construction site on West First Street the morning of Aug. 24
when a woman drove her c a r to the site, parked it and walked
up to him.
After a discussion, the woman returned to her car, pulled out
a .22-caliber pistol and shot Brooks as he tried to run away,
police said. As Brooks ran away the woman followed, yelling
"he lied on me" shooting three more bullets into him.
The attack sent Brooks' co-workers scurrying for cover but
one quick-thinking worker chased the woman down in his
truck, ramming it into her car as she drove out of the con­
struction site.
Keith King, 39, of I-ake Mary, a crew foreman, held a gun on
the woman until police arrived at the scene.
Police said the shooting was the m u lt of an apparent lovers’
quarrel between Brooks and Miss Davis. They had been living
together until two days before the shooting when he moved out
of their house. No reason for Brooks decision to move out of the
house was given and police said they don’t know what promp­
ted the shooting. - MICHEAL REHA

TODAY

.

the old hospital. But last week, Charles
■Braun, vice president of Helman, Hurley.
Charvat, Peacock-Architects, said a mid­
sum m er moving d a te was more
probable.
Braun said an exact timetable could
not be established until his firm has a
chance to examine the contents of Sobel's
report.
Easton said some of the information in
the Sobel report could help the architect
expedite the project. Sobel already has

the ruling,” Suber said today.

representatives from each of the county's seven
cities and the County Commission will meet at the
tak e Mary City Hall, 158 N. Country Club Road.

Suber added that there was a lot of new con­
struction in Seminole County in 1982, and that in­
crease In value will probably balance out the losses
in taxable property value.

County Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff is to replace
Commission Chairman Sandra Glenn as the
county's representative at this meeting.

The decision will give some 9,100 property owners
in Seminole who previously could only claim a
$5,000 homestead exemption from taxation, $20,000
additional to exempt from their property taxes
levied by city and county government.
The Council of Local Governments, composed o f

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County and its seven cities will
lose more than $2 million in revenues if the
promised death of the federal revenue sharing
program comes to pass this year.
And the action recommended to allay that
happening is an Intense lobbying of
congressman and U.S. senators to keep the
money return from the federal coffers going.
Both Sanford City Manager W. E. "P ete"
Knowles and Altamonte Springs City Manager
Jeff Etchbergcr are suggesting that route.
"Some personal contact ought to be made by
the elected heads of local government with the
elected members of Congress and the U.S.
Senate, urging they give their interest, con­
sideration and support to continuing the
' federal revenue sharing program ," Knowles
said.
And Etchberger added that the Florida
League* of Cities has laid out a program of
explaining the importance of the program to
the community and the members of the
congressional delegation from Florida.
"We succeeded the last time and I hope we
will be successful this time,” Etchberger said.
FIX! Chairman Ray Sittlg noted that cities
across the nation were successful in gaining
support in 1976 and again in 1980 when it was in
jeopardy of dying.
"Now is the tim e for city officials to begin
their lobbying activities to help assure re­
enactment," Sittlg said.
In letters to the cities of the state, Sittig said
the budget process is already underway with
the preparation of the administration’s 1984
fiscal year budget. "It is essential that the
president’s budget contain a request for
funding of the revenue sharing program.”
The budget is to be submitted to Congress
this month. "If the budget contains funding for
revenue sharing, the president will send
Congress his proposed legislation to
reauthorize the program in February or
March," Sittlg said.
In the past when the loss of federal revenue
sharing funds was threatened, the cities and
the county governments began limiting the use
of the funds to capital outlay projects such as
equipment for police and fire departments and
road construction.
Etchberger noted that when he was the
director of management and budget for the
county, he urged that the funds be used in that
fashion and has continued this philosophy in
Altamonte Springs, so that the funds have

little impact on service.
In the 1982-63 fiscal year, Seminole County
governments an ticip ate the following
revenues from the federal
government
through this program:
-

Seminole County Commission. $1,345,697:
Sanford, $384,654;
Altamonte. $152,717;
Casselberry, $94,458;
Longwood, $46,761;
Winter Springs $38,505;
Ov iedo, $17,530;
take Mary, $13,152.

Knowles, noting the federal revenue sharing
funds are budgeted in Sanford to assist in law
enforcement, said if the federal money
program is eliminated this year, the city
would have to levy an additional U x ot $1.82
per $1,000 assessed valuation of real property
to take up the slack.
He said the m ajor reason Sanford would be
hurt so severely financially by loss of the
federal money is that some 47 percent of the
properties, within the city of Sanford are
currently tax exempt.
This is due to the large nupiber of govern­
ment buildings in the county seat and because
of tax exemption for fraternal, civic and
church organizations and the $25,000
homestead exem ption on real p ro p erty .
Knowles said he anticipated the value of tax
exempt property will run over 50 percent in
the 1983-84 fiscal y e a r
Among the courses which the Sanford City
Commission could take to alleviate the
problem, Knowles said, is to make sure the
city doesn’t annex any property of lower value
and to concentrate annexations on property
already developed or planned to be developed
industrially, commercially or in apartments to
gel these lands and properties on the tax rolls.
The total of revenues to be received this year
by the county and the seven cities Is $2,093,474.
If federal revenue sharing funds were lost the
local governments here would have to levy
these additional property taxes to make up the
lost money: Seminole County, 41 cents per
$1,000; Casselberry 42 cents; Altamonte 25
cents; take Mary 17 cents; Longwood 27 cents
and Winter Springs 20 cents.
The key date to keep in mind, Sittlg has
advised the cities, Is "May 15, the date by
which the first budget resolution for fiscal
year 1964 must be passed. Funds for general
revenue sharing must be included in the first
budget resolution to assure funding.”

Casselberry Mayor Owen Sheppard will be at­
tending his final meeting as his city's represen­
tative. Beginning with the February meeting,
Mayor Charles Glascock will rep resen t
Casselberry. - DONNA ESTES.

O ne Holiday Fatality, 16 DUIs
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
And while the Sanford Police
Herald Staff W riter
Department gave drinkers a free ride
New Year's Eve was quiet for the home th e Seminole S heriff's
police who put on extra patrols to curb Department only gave free rides to
the county jail when they caught up
drinking and driving with motorists
heeding the crackdown on drunken with the 1C drunken drivers they
arrested — the same as last year.
driving.
One fatality was reported in the Florida Highway patrol did not arrest
area and most police departments any DUIs in Seminole County.
reported fewer arrests than usual.
"We are pleased that it was no more
A 22-year-old woman was killed
than last year,” said a Sheriff's
when she was hit by a pick-up truck as
Department spokesman.
she crossed U.S. Highway 17-92 at
South Street ii\ Fern P ark at 11:06
Sanford
Police
D epartm ent
arrested only one drunken driver and
p.m. Friday.
Florida Highway Patrol officers that was on Sunday, two days after the
investigating the accident said the New Year’s Eve revels. Only two
woman was living at a Fern Park drivers, who felt they were unfit to
mctel. Her identity has not been drive because pf their drinking, took
released as next of kin have not yet up the Sanford police department’s
been. Informed.
offer to take them home In a cruiser.
The truck was driven by Phillip D.
"It was as quiet as any other
Hayles, 38. of 5259 Letha St., Orlando. weekend of the year. Driven appear
Police still are investigating the in­ to be using their heads. We didn’t have
any serious injuries or fatalities.
cident.

I »
-

' •

#&lt;•

Either our people did a fantastic job
or the drivers came to their senses. I
think it was a bit of both," said Sgt.
Herb Shea of Sanford Police
Department.
"Compared with a normal weekend
it was a little quiet. I hope the publicity
to seek out the drunken driver has
done some good. Normally we are
fairly busy with DUIs on the weekend
but there were less drunken drivers
than in the past,” said Sgt. Gene
HuKgreen of the
PatrolThe following people were arrested
for DUI:
— Christopher Jam es Hoelie, 20, of
120 Galahad tane, Maitland, arrested
at 12:40 a.m. Sunday fur DUI while
traveling on B riarcllff Road,
Longwood.
— Jimmy Junior, 34, of 611 Park
Avenue, Sanford arrested on Park
Avenue, by Sanford police at 1:31 a.m.

I) f?W»-

&gt;* l\ f u jo
t € + +

on Sunday qnd charged with DUI.
— David John Wolpe of Cypress
tan e, Winter Springs arrested at
Trot wood and Northern Way, on
Sunday at 11:37 p.m. and charged
with DUI.
— Fred Michael McBowan, 25, of
3280 South Sem oran Boulevard
arrested at 2:47 a.m. Sunday (or DUI,
failure to maintain single lane and
driving with a suspended license when
he left a Shop and Go store at SR 434
and Myrtle Avenue, longwood.
- John Morgan Smith, 41, of 214
Krider Road, Sanford arrested a t SR
436 and Newbury Park, Casselberry,
at 2 a.m. Friday.
- Victoria Lee Spencer, 27, o f'606
N orthlake Boulevard, A ltam onte
Springs, who was charged with DUI,
improper tag and failure to keep to
designated lane, after being arrested
at about 4 p.m. on Sunday on SR 436
and Huntclub Boulevard, Forest City.

If

•Ml'

&lt; Mif

ITS NO DAY
Surely many people early Saturday felt like it was no day. at least no day to
be remembered, after celebrating New Year’i Eve to the hilt. But the time
and temperature sign of Atlantic Bank in downtown Spnfor4 at First and
Park was more confused than most people. The sign reportedly didn’t know
what day it was, all day. It did accurately report the temperature.
*

it ir;

ii M

ilt

4*

) »•*
;

.

-4

�J«h

2A-Ev«ntng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Jan. J, m i

Election
'82
NATION
Year Saw Mixed Bag O f Victories In Seminole County
IN BRIEF

__

Reagan Appoints

Panel;

Budget Talks Set To Start
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, having
selected members lor his MX missile study com­
mission, begins a round of conferences today with
fiscal advisers and congressional leaders to m ake final
decisions on the 19M budget.
A top White House official said Reagan planned
today to announce the members of a blue ribbon
commission, headed by former national security ad­
viser Brent Scowcroft, with a broad mandate to review
the U.S. nuclear deterrent policies and to recommend a
basing mode for the controversial MX missile.
Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig; national
security expert Thomas E. Reed, an expert on
strategic nuclear policy; and several former defense
secretaries have agreed to serve on the panel, the
official said.
In addition, a secondary advisory group with
prominent officials of past administrations, Including
former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, will be
announced to consult with the panel on nuclear defense
policy.
Reagan decided to appoint the bipartistan com­
mission after Congress withheld funds for the MX
missile, pending a decision on a way to base the
weapon. Members of Congress were highly critical of
Reagan's original plan to deploy (he weapon in a
closely-spaced "dense pack" system at Warren Air
Force Base near Cheyenne, Wyo.

_ _

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
City elections in Seminole County in 1982 saw
a mixed bag of victors.
Seven incumbents were re-elected, six
new com ers to m unicipal politics were
selected, two long-time officials were deposed
and four who had retired from the political
arena were swept back into office.
At the same time, two city government
officials resigned and three others by trying to
climb the ladder in politics were left without
any office at all. Four of those returned to
office faced no election contests.
And new city charters or charter amend­
ments on the ballot did not fare too well. A new
city charter for Sanford was turned down by
the electorate and Ixingwood voters refused to
extend the term s of its city commissioners to
four years.
In Lake Mary where three charter questions
were on the ballot, only the non-controverslal
major revision with mostly housekeeping
changes was approved. Amendments to in­
crease term s from two to four years and to
create single council member districts were
soundly defeated.
Casselberry voters, meanwhile, for the

■

__________I

,

.

Ilf .

second year in a row approved a paramedic
program, agreeing to support the program
with tax money.
Despite the lack of opposition to Altamonte
Springs City Commission incumbents —
Cheney Colardo, Lee Constantine and Bob
Reis — all three names had to be on the ballot
in compliance with city law. Thus an election
was held there.
Kenneth King, who was completing his first
two-year term on the I.ake Mary City Council,
was elected unopposed.
In Ijongwood, 10-year city commission
veteran J. Bussell Grant won another twoyear term . In l^ake Mary, Walter Sorenson
won re-election to the mayor’s office he has
held for eight years despite tough opposition
from former Councilman Vic Olvera and
Councilman Dick Fess.
Olvera, when he resigned to run for mayor,
had one year left in his elected term. By virtue
of running for mayor, Fess did not seek reelectton to the council and thus both men are
out of office.
In Sanford, City Commissioners David Farr
and Milton Smith won electlop to second
terms.
Councilman Gene McDonald, who had

L . f -1 L _
serveda on sthe
Lake Mary Council for three
years, resigned to accept a job with the
Motorola Corp. In Tennessee. And in Winter
Springs, Maureen Boyd was under fire for
serving as a police reserve officer in Winter
Park while serving on the commission in her
city. She resigned her office to go to work full
time as a police officer. Attorney Jim Smith
ruled that an elected official cannot be a police
officer, even In another Jurisdiction, at the
same time. Smith said this was dual office
holding and forbidden by the Constitution.
Marty Trencher, who ran unsuccessfully for
mayor of Winter Springs, was appointed by the
City Commission to replace Mrs. Boyd. John
Torcaso, a city commissioner, was elected to
the mayor’s office in November after Troy
Piland, who was city commissioner and mayor
(or l l ‘x years total resigned to run for the
Florida House of Representatives and was
defeated.
Newcomers elected in Winter Springs were
taanne Grove and Inez Linville. For a few
weeks before Mrs. Boyd's resignation, women
dominated the commission.
In Casselberry, two fixtures in city govern­
ment — Councilman Frank Schutte, com­
pleting six years in office, and Councilman Bill
Grier, who had served a total of 10 years as

Experts: Housing To Increase

NATIONAL REPORT: President Reagan promised swift
federal aid to Ixmisiana where 9,600 people fled high water
during more than a week of devastating rain that moved
eastward today. Freezing temperatures gripped the Southern
Plains and heavy rain doused the Southeast. "I know many
here have lost their homes and life's possessions," Reagan
said Sunday as he toured flood-ravaged areas of northern
Louisiana with Gov. Dave Treen. “But 1 also know that with
every rise in the water level, the spirit and determination of
the people of Louisiana have risen as well.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 67; overnight
low: 65; Tuesday high: 83; barometric pressure: 30.05;
relative humidity: 84 percent; winds: northwest at 6 mph;
rain: trace, sunrise 7:19 a.m.; sunset 5:41 p.m. ,
TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 11:47 a.m„
12:13 p.m.; lows, 5:43 a.m., 8:23 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 11:39 a.m ., 12:05 p.m.; lows, 5:31 a.m ., 6:14 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 4:09 a.m., 5:39 p.m.; lows, 11:16 a.m., p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
SO Miles: Wind becoming northwest 15 knots during today.
Northerly winds 15 to 20 knots tonight and northeasterly
Tuesday. Seas 3 to 5 feet increasing to 4 to 6 feet tonight.
Cloudy with few showers mainly over the Gulf Stream. Partly
cloudy Tuesday.
AREA FORECAST: Today mostly cloudy, breezy and cooler
with highs in the upper 60s. Wind northwesterly 15 mph and
gusty. Tonight partly cloud) &lt;utu coldu uilh lows In the IDs.
Wind north 10 mph or less. Tuesday mostly sunny and cool.
Highs in the low to mid 60s.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Canlrsl FlarMo R»|Im « i Huettal

SiturUay
ADMISSIONS
SANFORD
Ruth Uvlngtton
Virginia I. SyAtt

DilCHAROIS
BtfiMM M Brumfield, t baby
boy, 0 til ana
Phyli* A. Marabilo, Dtliona
Jtnnl* Grant. Labt City
SwnAay
ADMISSIONS

SANFORD:
Arnold G Buiiar
Barbara l . Wita

E v e n in g H c m ld

James O. Draper, Oeltone
Karen M. Fisher, Deltona
Frances C Sargent. Deltona
Mitered G. Berton. Orange City

BIRTHS
SANFORD'
James J. and Barbara L. Wist, a
baby boy
*
Robert M and Karen M Fisher,
a baby boy, Deltona

F i l t h D i s t r i c t C o n g r e s s m a n H ill M c C o llu m
re v ie w s th e le g is la tiv e s c h e d u le w ith , le ft to r ig h t:
M ic h e le D a v e n p o rt, K v a n s H igh S ch o o l; H a r r e t
H u tc h e n s , E d g e w a te r H ig h S c h o o l; T o n y a H e r ­

Margarat M . Osborne
Mary A . Carlton, OaBary
John F. Goodrtav. Osteen

iu im

«m m

Students Serve A s Interns In D.C.
Fifteen students from Fifth District
high schools received a first-hand
education on how Congress functions
during a recent trip to Washington, D.C.,
as participants in a special intern
program conducted by U.S. Rep. Bill
McCollum.
During their stay in the Nation's
Capital, the high school Juniors from
Orange, Seminole, take, Citrus, Pasco
and P inellas counties m et with
Congressional leaders, such as
Republican Whip Trent Ix»tt, and wat­
ched Members of Congress at work In
committee and on Floor of the House.
They also listened to arguments before
the Supreme Court and attended a Senate
hearing
where
Lawrence
S.

E agleburger, Under Secretary for
Political Affairs at the Department of
State, was offering testimony.
"The legislative process can be
somewhat confusing, especially if you’re
trying to learn about It from a textbook,”
said McCollum.
"As interns in Washington, these
students were able to sec and experience
the lawmaking process while it was
really happening and to have their
questions answered by'people who were
actually participating in it."
McCollum briefed the interns
throughout their visit on topics such as
tne role of a Member of Congress and
how business is conducted on the Floor of
the House. The students also sat In on a

hearing held by the Domestic Monetary
Policy Subcommittee of the Banking
Committee, on which McCollum serves.
The students represented roughly half
of the high schools In the current Fifth
District. l,ast Spring, students from tl\e
remaining schools came to Capitol Hill
for the same program.
During their stay In Washington, the
Interns visited the White House, the
Ubrary of Congress, the Smithsonian
Institution, the F ederal Bureau of
Investigation and the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing.
Seminole County students who par­
ticipated In the program Included: Alan
Baker, of Lake Brantley High School and
Douglas Horn of Lake Mary High School.

Elderly Easy Fraud Targets
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mail fraud is
on the rise and the elderly, fearful for
th eir economic security, are easy
targets, a new report shows.
The report, prepared by the House
Select Committee on Aging, shows
growing numbers of senior citizens,
•caking ways to supplement their fixed
incomes, are invesiuig — ami losing —
their life savings in phony business
propositions.
C hairm an Ctaude Pepper, D Fla.,
wrote: "The frauds which are examined
in this report are particularly vicious
because they prey on the fear of retirees
or those soon to be retired that they will
not have enough income to support
themselves."
P epper, an octogenarian him self,
continued: "This fear is real since 25
percent of the elderly have incomes
placing them at or near the poverty line

... Recent publicity aooui possible cuts in
"The come-on Is the promise of a good
Social Security has served to fuel the income which can be earned at home.
fears of the aged about their economic Usually, a fee is required ... The
security."
promoter claims the money Is for a start­
Based on responses to a questionnaire up kit or for other expenses.
from police chiefs snd district attorneys
"Tho promise Is that the promoter will
from major cities around the nation, the buy back the finished product or arrange
committee concluded that "the area of for it to be purchased by others In the
economic crime is op* of llw fa«(r«(- mNrke'ptare
Unfortunately, thv
growing kinds of all crimes against the promoter seldom, If ever, buys back the
elderly."
products and the consumer is not only
It found that although senior citizens robbed of his initial cash outlay, but U
make up 11 percent of the population, also stuck with a Urge quantity of
they account for about 30 percent of .both products for which there Is no market."
violent and white-collar crime victims.
Tlw report described hundreds of
The committee found that fraudulent cases, ranging from the 23,000 people in
work-at-home schemes, ranging from Nashville, Tenn., who were invited to
knitting baby booties to stuffing en­ send a $15 registration fee to participate
velopes, are almost exclusively targeted in a program stuffing envelopes in their
at the elderly.
homes, to the man In New Haven, Mo.,
The report said there are many who invested nearly $8,000 for materials
legitimate advert laments, but explained tqmake wall plaques and picture frames
how a typical work-at-home scam works. that the company refused to buy back.

Miam i Officer Violated Procedure In Shooting
MIAMI (UPI) — City Manager Howard Gary says the of­
ficer who shot Nevell Johnson Jr., sparking three days of
violence in the Overtown ghetto, violated police procedure, it
was reported today.

Sacand Clau Pastata Paid •&gt; laniard, Ptarida JJJM

Gary said officer Luis Alvarez* who fatally shot the 20-yearold Johnson once in the bead at a video game room Tuesday
night, "committed a violation of police procedure" when he
and his partner left their assigned patrol and drove to Over­
town, the Miami News reported.

Hama Driiytryi Ufatk, It.M j Maaik, H .t t j « Maatks, IH M ;
vaar, Ml so. By Mall: Waafe II.tit Manlk, I M I j * Maatks,
sia.ai; Yaar. iif.as
_______

Two days of rioting followed the shooting of Johnson, result­
ing in two dead, 26 injured and at least a dozen businesses
damaged or destroyed.

Monday. January 3. 1983-Vol. 7$. No. 116
Fiibutbtd Dally and Sunday, aawgt Saturday ky TBa laniard
Nora id, lac., SM N. Front A A w ., Santard. did. a m ,

£/ *

b e r t, L ak e H o w ell H igh S c h o o l; A la n B a k e r, L ak e
B ra n tle y H ig h S chool a n d D o u g la s H o rn , L a k e
M a ry H igh S chool.

DISCHARGES
SANFORD

And in Lake Mary, Burt Pertnchlef, who had
retired from politics after serving six years on
the city council, won election to a one-year
split term . Two newcomers won election also
to the City Council In Lake Mary — on their
first tries for office - Russ Megonegal and
Charlie Lytle.

M ore Than 200
Die O n Roads j
O ve r Holiday

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 98th Congress — a
more Democratic, more independent body — opens
today with a battle brewing over proposed restrictive
new House rules.
Democrats also arc facing a sensitive decision on
whether to yank "Boll Weevil" Phil Gramm off the
House Budget Committee as punishment for pushing
President Reagan’s budget cuts.
The first week of the new Congress will be consumed
by rules and housekeeping. The lawmakers then will
take their first long recess, until Reagan's State of the
Union address Jan. 25.
Grappling with the real problems facing the nation —
financing of Social Security, a budget deficit nearing
$200 billion, record unemployment, and the com­
petition between military and domestic programs for
tax dollars — will not start until February or March.

WEATHER

Wilh the resignation of Casselberry Mayor
Owen Sheppard, former Councilman Charles
Glascock was elected mayor without op­
position.
In a contest between two former city
commissioners in Longwood, Bill Mitchell
emerged victorious for a new two-year term
replacing Timothy O'Leary who declined to
seek re-election.

20 In Florida

Congress Reconvenes

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Some experts are
predicting a much-needed resurgence In the housing
industry this year, helped by the lower Interest rates
produced by a weak economy and little competition for
credit.
Although Chemical Bank, U.S. Trust and Bankers
Trust on Thursday raised their prime lending rate, the
experts are predicting the trend that took mortgage
loan rates down four percentage points to around 13.5
percent in 1982 will continue.
The 1982 improvement lowered by pbout $230 the
monthly payments for a typical new house.
“ I would imagine around 12 percent is where it's
going to end up" in 1983, said Michael Suinichrast,
chief economist of the National Association of
Homebuilders, the largest housing industry trade
group.

n n /1 A r tiin n llm o n
iro rik
mayor and
councilman — twere
ousted from
office.
Schutte was defeated by city fire depart­
ment employee Frank Stone while Grier was
beaten by former two-term councilman Carl
Robertson Jr., who was unsuccessful in two
previous attempts to regain his council post.
Richard Russo, a newcomer to city politics
but who was experienced in politics through
his service on the local Democratic Executive
Committee, was elected to the Casselberry
City Council.

Alvarez, 32, and his rookie partner Louis Cruz were assigned
to the central, mostly Latin, section of Miami when they
decided to leave their patrol and go to the video game room in
Overtown where Johnson was shot.
Gary, who is heading an investigation into the shooting for
the city, said Alvarez told his superiors that he and Cruz left
their assigned area to make a routine check of Recreation
Establishment Inc.
Gary would not say what punishment, If any, would be ap­
propriate for such a violation.
"When I have gathered all the facts, I will make a decision,"
he said. "If (Alvarez) is found to have acted Improperly, he
will be punished."

United Press International
More than 200 people died on the nation's highways during
the four-day New Year’s holiday but the total was far lower
than predicted by the National Safety Council.
A count by United Press International showed at least 235
people killed by early today. The 78-hour weekend began
Thursday at 6 p.m. local time and ended at midnight Sunday.
California led the list with 28 deaths and Texas had 22.
Georgia had 19, Florida reported 20, Missouri 13, Ohio 12 and
Pennsylvania 10.
The National Safety Council estimated between 300 and 400
people would die In crashes and another 14,000 to 19,000 would
suffer disabling injuries.
Millions of people heading home after a weekend of
celebrations were confronted with snow-packed roads in Texas
and Arkansas, dense fog in the valleys of central California,
the middle Missouri River valley and heavy rains along the
eastern Gulf Coast.
Drivers who overindulged were the target of most local,
county and state police — out in force across the nation as they
I crooked down on drivers letting holiday spirits get the better of
them.
Safety experts estimated the majority of weekend traffic
deaths would be linked directly to drunken drivers.
Police, transit and taxi companies in various communities
offered free rides home New Year's Eve.
A Missouri crash killed three people and left two others
critically injured when one car traveling at high speed with no
lights collided with a pickup truck being driven in the wrong
lone.
Three construction workers died in south central Texas
when the pickup truck in which they were riding skidded off a
rain-slicked highway into a tree.
Four of Florida’s victims were pedestrians. In northern
Wisconsin, a 83-year-old woman drowned when the car ia
which she was riding slid on ice and rolled into a creek. •
At least 20 people lost their lives on Florida's roadwayl
during the long New Year's weekend — eight of them 10
alcohol-related accidents, the Florida Highway Patrol report
ed today.
1
The patrol had predicted that 27 would be killed on the state's
streets and highways during the holiday period 'b at began
Thursday night and ended at midnight Sunday.
, There were at least eight accidents over the weekend in*volvlng drunken drivers, a patrol spokeswoman said.
One of the latest reported fatalities was Julie Hamby, who
was a passenger In a car that was struck by another vehicle Iq
Putnam County on State Road 308 Sunday evening. Her age
and address were unknown. The accident was alcohol-related,
the spokeswoman said.
At least six pedestrians were struck and killed by c a n
during the weekend, including Peter Frederick King, who died
on New Year’s Eve in Broward County as he tried to cross a
street.

CALENDAR
MONDAY, JANUARY 3
Rebos sad Uve Oak Rebas Club AA, noon and 1 p.m.,
220 Live Oak Center, Casselberry. Closed.
Hie? ta d Study Alaaoa, a p.m„ Senior Cttlsen Center,
200 N. Lake Triplet Drive, CasMlberry.
Scaiaole Halfway Room AA, I pint., off 17-92 on
Lake Minnie Road, Sanford. Closed.
Saaferd AFAnoa, 8 p.m. First United Methodist
Church Park Avenue and Fifth Street.
TUESDAY, JANUARY!
Baaferd Sealer Citizen Club, noon, Sanford Civic
Center, Sanford Avenue at Seminole Boulevard. Bag
lunch and bingo.
Saaferd Pilot Club, 7 p.m. board; I p.m.,
Holy Cross Episcopal parish house. Fourth and
Magnolia, Sanford.
8aaiord T w stm asters, 7 a.m., Skyport Restaurant,
Sanford Airport.
Saaferd Duplicate Bridge Club, 1 p.m., chamber of
commerce, F irst Street and Sanford Avenue.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5
Square daartag to records, 1-3 p .m , Casselberry
Senior Citizen Center, Secret Lake Park, North Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Cake Arts Society, 7 p.m., Cameron's Carousel, 2549
S. Palmetto, Sanford.
Great Southern Rabbit Breeders Assa., 8 p.m.,
Seminole County Agri-Center, Highway 17-92, south of
Sanford.
West Volusia Stamp Club, 2 p m., Jana Murray Hall,
United Congregational Church, W. University Avenue,
Orange City.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Officials Sw earing — Into
IN BRIEF
Graham Will Pay For
His Inaugural Himself
,
. .
.

••
■'
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...
,

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — At a time when Florida la
tightening her fiscal belt, Gov. Bob Graham is
determined not to compound the state’s financial
burden with a fancy inaugural ceremony.
None of the bills for Tuesday's celebration, in fact,
will be paid for with state las dollars.
Instead, Graham announced he would foot the ex­
pense with contributions remaining from his suc­
cessful re-election campaign. A (100,000 appropriation
for inaugural expenses included by the Legislature in
the 1902-03 state budget will be relumed to help pay
other state expenses, said Graham.
Graham said the inauguration will be “ substantially
less expensive than those in the past."
The budget-conscious ceremony won’t include a
parade or the formal ball at Florida State University
th at highlighted e a rlie r inaugurals, including
Graham’s first in January 1979.
But while there won’t be a parade, there will be “a
people's walk" from the Capitol to the Governor's
Mansion about a mile away.
The walk, which will be led by Graham and U . Gov.
Wayne Mixson, is intended to attract people to the
mansion for an open house and for a street fair across
from the mansion.
“The 1983 inaugural will be a people's inaugural,”
Graham said. “ It will be a celebration of the future of
Florida.”

* KKK In Miami Ignored
•&gt;

MIAMI (U P I) — A small band of robed Ku Klux Klan
members hoping to capitalize on white backlash from
racial violence in Overtown passed out leaflets on a
street comer but drew mostly waves or honks and Just
one heckler who yelled at them to go home.
"Nobody wants you around here," the heckler
shouted to KKK Im perial Wizard Bill Wilkinson and 11
other Klan m em bers at a busy intersection Sunday.
“Nobody wants your racial problem, take it back to
Georgia or Alabama or wherever you got it from.”
Wilkinson, whose organization is based in Denham
Springs, La., said he traveled to Miami to "stand up for
the rights of white people and the police" in the wake of
three days of rioting that was triggered by the police
shooting of a young black man.
The violence began Tuesday night after police officer
*. l.uis Alvarez shot Neveli Johnson Jr., 20, a black, while
trying to take a gun away from him at a video gome
arcade. Johnson, a messenger who was saving money
for college, died the next day.

Foul-Up Devastates Lady
HUDSON (U PI) — An 84-year-old widow who saved
for 20 years to travel through the holy lands was
“devastated" by the news that a 1914 immigration foul. up means she can 't leave the United States in time for
the trip.
Helen Pfenning dreamed (or two decades of the day &gt;
she would visit Israel and sing a solo at Calvary — the
hill where Jesus Christ was crucified — backed by
fellow choir m em bers of the First United Methodist
Church of Hudson.
“She was devastated when they told her she didn’t
have the right citizenship papers to get a passport,"
, said Mrs. Pfenning’s granddaughter, Clarice Saparito.
"She burst a blood vessel in her eye and I thought she
was going to pass out right In the immigration office,”
said Ms. Saparito. “She loves this country so much and
„; she's always thought she was a citizen since she
married my grandfather In 1914."

WORLD
; IN BRIEF
West Germ any Is Easing
• Its Backing O f ‘Zero Option'
ij
-..
..
,■

’•

-

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‘'
|

BONN, West Germany (UPI) — West Germany,
easing support for the U^.-proposed "zero option" to
ban medium-range nuclear missiles In Europe, said It
would support strict limits on deployment if a total ban
Is unattainable.
Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Genscher alio urged
that Western governments be alert to recognize
"advances" In Soviet disarmament attitudes and use
them to m aintain progress In arms talks.
The West Germ an position, outlined Sunday by
Genscher, m arked a change of em phasis in the
government's disarm am ent policy, which had unswervingly backed President Reagan's "zero option”
concept.
Genscher said the "zero option” — calling for a ban
on medlunwrange nuclear missiles in Europe —
remained the "ideal objective" In tnlkn on the weapons
in Geneva between the United States and the Soviet
Union.
But, he added, If It could not be attained, everything
had to be done to keep the number of m issiles deployed
as low as possible.

Solidarity Replacement
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - The Polish government
set up 2,500 small trade unions today to replace the
outlawed Solidarity union but its official m w i agency
admitted the new groups have yet to win support from
most workers.
The official news agency PAP said Sunday the new
u n io n s- each a t an individual work place - were to
begin operation today, with applications by 4,000 more
small founding cogunittees pending.

!

"However," the agency conceded, "the mood of
reserve and expectation still holds among the per­
sonnel of m any enterprises. It does not m ean that the
majority of employees decided to join the new trade
unions.”
The new imlons came with the trad e union law
passed O c t B to disband Solidarity and two other premart isl law labor organisation!. The Solidarity un­
derground and other opposition groups called on
workers to boycott them.

City Attorney Robert Petree will conduct the
oath of office ceremonies for newly sleeted
Lake Mary city cnuncilmen and Mayor Waller
A. Sorenson at 4 p.m. today.
To be sworn in are
— Sorenson to a fifth two-year term ;
— Dr. Burt Perinchief to a one-year term;
— Kenneth King to a second two-year term

in office;
— New councilmen Charles Lytle and Russ
Mcgonegal.
The four beginning new term s will join
Councilman Ray Fox, who is completing his
second term on the City Council. The newlyconstituted council will hold its first official
meeting at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday.

Monday, Jan. J, l«J— JA

, That Is

Meanwhile, tangwood Mayor June tar- tonight. The new commission will hold its first
mann conducted oath of office ceremonies at meeting on Jan. 10.
city hall, 301 W. Warren Ave., at 10 a.m. today
The oath of office is to be administered to the
for J. Russell Grant, who is beginning his fifth
two
newly elected Sanford City Com­
term on the City Commission, and Bill Mit­
missioners
— David Farr and Milton Smith —
chell, who served on the Commission 16
at
a
7
p.m.
meeting
Tuesday at city hall, 300 N.
months previously.
There is no city commission meeting Park Avenue. - DONNA ESTES

Altamonte Woman Charged After Shooting
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Writer
A 31-year-old woman was arrested by Seminole County
sheriff’s deputies after she made an early morning call to a
form er boyfriend's apartment and allegedly fired two shots.
Donna Travis, 31, of 980 Montgomery Apartments in
Altamonte Springs faces charges of aggravated assault and
shooting Into an occupied dwelling after she went to the
apartm ent of 44-year-old Charles Turner at 406 Woodstead
Circle In Longwood at 7:15 a.m . on Sunday.
Police said Turner and Travis had had an affair which was
over and Travis had been allegedly harrassing Turner with
telephone calls making claims that she would commit suicide.
Turner had answered a knock at his door to find Travis
standing there with a gun, police said. He then slammed the
door, and moved to the side. She then fired two shots, one into
the right front door and the other into the garage window,
police said.
The gun and ammunition were confiscated, police reported.

and attempting to elude police. Knutson, who police said twice
refused to leave the car, was charged with resisting arrest and
violating litter laws.

Action Reports
★

Fires
★

TIP LEADSTOARREST
A tip led police to the Jai Alai Fronton on U.S. Highway 17-92
where they arrested ta r r y Dcnell Gorman, 27, on a warrant
alleging armed robbery. Gorman, of 721 Swope Ave. in Winter
Park was arrested at 10:25 p.m. Thursday.

Courts

★ Police
TAPES STOLEN FROM CAR ,
Police believe a thief used a coathanger to break Into a c a r
belonging to Linda Zino of Brittany Circle, Casselberry. She
had parked her car outside the Falrlane bowling alley,
Wilshire Drive, Casselberry, at about 6:15 p.m. on Wednesday
and discovered it had been broken into at 8:40 p.m.
A cassette player and tapes worth about $200 were taken
from the car.
BICYCLE STOLEN
A five-speed bicycle belonging to George Henry Phillips of
1118 Eastbrook Boulevard, Winter Park, was taken from his
yard between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 12:30 p.m. Wednesday.

HUSBAND, WIFE ARRESTED
When police went to arrest Edgar Zane Greer, 37, of 1801 W.
F irst Street in Apartment B on a warrant from Manatee
County accusing Greer of passing worthless checks, they
realized his wife also was wanted on a warrant for allegedly
passing a worthless document. So they arrested the wife,
Margie Dianne Greer, at the same time, 5:57 p.m. on Thur­
sday.

JEWELS TAKEN
Jewelry worth $1,390 was stolen from the apartment of
Charlotte Johnson, of Fcm Park between 9 p.m. on Dec. 23 and
5:05 p.m. Wednesday. The Jewelry, which Included a $500
emerald ring, was removed by a thief who entered her apart­
ment through the front door.

LICENSE SUSPENDED
W. George Stevenson, who gave an alias of Sugar Man and
an address as Box 1141 in Eatonville, was stopped after police
saw his car weaving across the center line on ta k e Mary
Boulevard at Pine Hart Road. Stevenson passed ? road side
sobriety test but was booked into Seminole County jail on a
charge of driving on a suspended license.

HIGH-SPEED CHASE
Two women involved in an argument with others at 220ta k e
Shore Dr., in Mortle Manor subdivision were arrested by
police after a high-speed chase.
Arrested were Susan Dianne Schultz, 25, of 4209 ta k e
lnckhart Drive in Lockhart, and Susan Ray Knutson, 24, 408
take Shore Dr., in tangwood.

DUI CHARGES
The following person was arrested Thursday on a charge of
driving under the influence (DUI) of alcoholic beverages in
Seminole County.

Seminole County sheriff's deputies said Knutson was in­
volved in an argument with her ex-husband and when police
arrived she left in a car driven by Schultz, who sped off with no
lights on. At one time Schultz was clocked by police doing 60
mph down a dirt residential road. During the high-speed chase
by police, a brown paper bag was seen thrown from the car and
it was later found in a hedge, police said. It contained a half
bottle of liquid which was marked “ Jack Daniels” says the
report. Schultz was charged with reckless driving and fleeing

— Frank Louis Kmet of 717 East Loge Street in tangwood,
arrested at about 11:30 p.m. Thursday near 1023 Hunt Road in
Longwood. Kmet also was charged with refusing a
breathalyzer and reckless driving.

TWO SPEAKERS STOLEN
Two stereo speakers valued at $400 were stolen from 101
Eastern Fork in Longwood between 5:30 p.m. Dec. 26 and 6
p.m. Dec. 30. The speakers were the property of Janice Ken­
nedy Bogdany.
CAR DAMAGED
About $100 in dam age was reported to the hood of Sharon
Knight's car when someone poured an unknown liquid over it
when it was parked in the driveway of her home at 3681 State
Road 46 in Sanford. The incident took place between 10 p.m.
Saturday and 11 a.m . Sunday.
TWO MEN ROBBED
Two young men trying to retrieve their c a r from a ditch
outside take Howell Road Club on State Road 436 told
Seminole County sheriff deputies that they were robbed of $120
by five men.
Robbed were Richy Arnold Doem, 20, of 130 Bayberry Court
in Winter Springs and Christopher Peterson, 18, of Sweet Gum
Court in Winter Springs. They were robbed o f? 120 in cash and
a blue cloth type wallet. Police have no description of the men
involved and said neither Doem nor Peterson showed any
signs of injuries or having been Involved in a struggle.
JEWELRY STOLEN
Jewelry worth $4,000 was stolen from the home of Sally
Warren, 376 Woodshead Circle in tang wood between 12:29
p.m. and 10:15 p.m. Thursday. The Seminole County sheriff's
Department reported no family members were home. The
Jewelry, Including a $3,000 five-diamond custom-made wed­
ding ring, was in a bedroom dressing table.
PURSE SNATCHED
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies are looking for a man
who snatched a purse from a 75-year-old woman outside Publix
supermarket, Butler Plaza at Stale Road 436 at about 4 p.m,
Thursday.
Mary Jenney of Genius Drive in Winter Park said she lost $80
and two credit cards which were in her purse.

Seminole High School Dean On Job After Shoplifting Charge
By M1CHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
The dean of students at Seminole High School will rem ain on
the job this week despite h er arrest on s retail theft charge,
Sqpilnole County School Superintendent Robert Hughes said
today.
Jacquline C. Pearson, 43, of Wekiva Park Road in Sanford,
was arrested Thursday for allegedly shoplifting (10.28 worth of
merchandise from a supermarket.
Mrs. Pearson, in her first year as dean of students after 10
years as a biology teacher at the school, is scheduled to appear
in county court at 9 a.m. Friday on the misdemeanor charge.

Hughes said district administrators will monitor Mrs.
Pearson's performance at school on a day-to-day basis this
week to determine whether she should remain on the job.
"We’ll be looking at the amount of public concern and ac­
ceptance of her situation,” Hughes said. He said it is Im­
possible to determine in advance how much the arrest will
affect her performance.
Mrs. Pearson, contacted at school today, said she "is not
supposed to answer any questions" about her arrest.
District administrators are reviewing Mrs. Pearson’s
contract and district conduct codes to determine what
disciplinary options are available to them if she is convicted.

"We’re proceeding with the understanding that everyone is
innocent until proven guilty," Hughes said. Hughes said he has
not spoken with Mr*. Pearson since her arrest.
Mrs. Pearson la accused of hiding a bottle ot flea djp and a
bottle of diet pills in her clothing.
Donald G ritting, assistant manager at Publix at 1060 W.
State SI., in Sanford told police he saw a woman hide an item in
her bra and another item in her purse.
After she went through the register line and paid for other
items, Mrs. Pearson was stopped outside the store by another
employee who contacted police and recovered the items.
FR EE

Search For Life In Space
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) - Like the California.
,
creature in the movie "E .T .,” scientists
The machine — about the size of a
at Stafford University are trying to refrigerator and (Hied with racks of
"phone" the home of extraterrestrial digital electronics boards holding
beings. Any messages received are computer chips — will be able to scan
expected to be from civilizations much 74,000 different sounds simultaneously. It
older than Earth's.
will be backed by a larger computer.
In five years, the NASA scientists plan
The project will be the Western world's
most systematic search for intelligent to build a larger model that will listen to 8
life in other solar systems, scientists said million channels at once.
Sunday.
The final version of the multichannel
Believing that "we are not alone," spectrum analyzer will be a million times
individual researchers have been more sensitive than any current listening
searching for signs of extra-terrestrial device, SETI research scientist Ivan
life (or more than 20 years, but the Unscott said.
Stanford project, funded by the National
Program chief John Billlngham said
Aeronaitlcs and Space Administration, NASA will attach about 10 of the larger
is the first coordinated program.
models to antennas throughout the world.
The Search for E x tra -T e rre stria l
"If a signal Is detected, it is likely to be
Intelligence, has a $1.5 million budget, a from a civilization much older than ours,
dozen fulltime scientists and two dozen one which is advanced enough to send
part-time computer programmers.
strong transmissions over m any light
Although the machine's prototype has years," he said.
not been completed yet, the first field test
"It is one of the most ezdting scientific
already has been scheduled for April In and philosophical questions that can be
th e Mojave D esert of Southern asked: Are we'alone? This Is really a

S P I N Al E X A M I NAT ION

grand ezploration."
The prototype will take a uniform
sampling of the entire sky and focus on
778 stars within 1,000 light years of Earth.
Those stars have been determined to be
close enough to E arth's sun to have
developed life on their surrounding
planets, IJnscott said.
If a signal arrived from a planet 1,000
light years away, U would have been sent
during the Middle Ages on Earth, he said.
The SETI program Is a collaboration
between the NASA Ames Research
Center at Moffett Field Naval Air Station
in Mountain View and the privately
owned Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, Calif.
In the movie "E.T.: the ExtraTerrestrial," which broke all box office
records, an alien from outer space
contacts his home planet through a
phonetype device.
The Soviet Union also Is researching
extra-terrestrial Intelligence, Billlngham
said, but he did not know the extent of the
Russian program.

AREA DEATHS
LOUISE E. MALONEY
Louise Ellen Maloney, 65, of
160 M aitland Ave.
In
A ltam onte Springs died
Friday at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Bom Dec. 11,1915,
in Newport, R.I., she moved
to Altamonte Springs from
Lynbrook, N.Y., In 1971. She
was a retired director of
personnel and facilities for
th e In stitu te of In te rn a l
Auditors and a member of St.

M ary M agdalen Catholic
Church. She was the first
woman honored by the
Society E m e ritu s of the
Institute of Internal Auditors.
Survivors Include a brother,
John J. Maloney of Levitttown, N.Y.; and a slater, Mrs.
Merle Ferguson of Altamonte
Springs. Baldw ln-Fairchild
Funeral Home, A ltam onte
Springs, la in ch arg e of
arrangements.

JAMES "DON" WELSH
Jam es "D on" Welsh, 68, of
567 Orange St. In Altamonte
Springs died Saturday at
Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
Born A pril 24, 1113, in
Youngstown, Ohio, he moved
to Altamonte Springs from
Winter Park in 1972. He was a
retired vice president and
m an ag er of WLOF radio
station. He was a member of

Trumpeter Concert Jan. 11 At UCF
•

Jazz great Clark Terry will be at (he
UnlveraUy of Central Florida Jan. 11 far an
open rehearsal piue concert with UCF's own
jazz lab under John Whitney.
Terry, who earned hia m u sk s' stripes (or
hia trum pet and Rugelhom work with Duke
Ellington, has since appeared In dubs and
concerts around the world.
Hie appearance a t UCF la in conjuiction

St. Mary Magdalen Catholic
Church.
Survivors include hia wife,
G race; a son, Michael, of
Longwood; a daughter, Mrs.
P a tric ia
Robinson,
of
Altamonte Springs; and two
grandchildren.
Garden Chapel Home for
F u n e ra ls, Orlando, la. In
charge of arrangements.

Both events will be held in the UCF music
rehearsal hall.

GRAMKOW
FUNERAL HOM E

Funeral Noticat
eooos,

with hia annual visit to the area for a playdate
at Walt Disney World Village. The 11 i.tn.
rehearsal (a free and open to the pubUc. There
will be a dollar admission for the one hour
noontime jazz concert backed by Whitney on
piano, Chuck Lawson on baas, and Robert
P etta on drama.

People turn to ui at a time when they're
confused and at a lots. Our purpose is to
understand their needs and do everything
for them that we can.

Me.

MARVIN - Funeral

W ILLIAM

m u lc t s
tor M r. Wllllsm Marvin Boggs,
« , o lM l H. wintar Park D rive In
Casselberry, who died Th u r­
sday, will ba Tutsday at 1 p.m.
at tha graveside In All Souls
Catholic Cemetery, with tho
R tv . Joa Johnson officiating,
and lu ll m ilitary honors.
G ra m kow
lu ne re l
Hom a,
Sanlord, Is in charga ot
arrangements

130WEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFORD, FLORIDA
TELEPHONE 323-3213
WILLIAM L.GRAMKOW

W V

\
J, X

�E v e n in g H e r a ld
1USPS 4MIQ}
300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, F IA 32771
Area Code 305^22-2611 or 831-9993
M onday, J a n u a r y 3, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Ldvenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mali: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year, $57.00.

Andropov Ploy
No Bargain Here
Soviet lead er Y uri A ndropov is p ro ving no less
ad ep t th a n the la te Leonid B rezhnev a t using
a rm s control p ro p o sals to m an ip u late public
opinion in the W est.
Consider Andropov's recent offer to reduce the
numbers of medium-range nuclear weapons in
Europe. To the uninformed or naive, the proposal
must have seemed eminently fair. In truth,
however, the proffered deal was little m ore than a
rehash of a shopworn Brezhnev formula that
would leave the Soviets with a decisive margin of
superiority in medium-range nuclear weapons.
Brozhnev’s standing offer went like this: The
Soviets will agree to withdraw roughly half of
their 300 or so SS-20 missiles if NATO cancels
plans to deploy new U.S. Pershing II and cruise
missiles starting in 1983.
Even if Brezhnev’s arithmetic had been honest
. — it was not — the Soviets would have ended up
with, say, 150 SS-20s deployed against Western
Europe. NATO, on the other hand, would have
been denied the right to deploy a single modern
intermediate-range ballistic missile anywhere on
European soil.
As the respected British news weekly The
Economist put it, that was a little like a man with
two guns offering to drop one if his opponent
agrees to fight only with his fists.
Now, Andropov has reworked the sam e formula
with a new rhetorical twist. The Soviet Union, he
said, would be willing to reduce its medium-range
missiles in Europe to about 162 if NATO agreed to
forego the Pershing II and cruise weapons. The
Soviet leader underscored his assertion that this
would result in parity by claiming that the 162
figure matched the number of missiles currently
deployed by France and Britain.
11131 would be true only if all French and British
submarine-launched missiles are counted while
the far larger num ber of comparable Soviet
weapons are excluded. Britain has no land-based
nuclear missiles a t all and France has only 18.
Neither country has anything comparable to the
Soviet SS-20, a mobile missile with three in­
dependently targeted warheads and a range of
3,000 miles or more.
Moreover, France has long since withdrawn
from NATO’s m ilitary command and French
arm ed forces a re wholly independent of the
Atlantic alliance. Would the Soviets agree to count
Yugoslavia’s arm ed forces in the W arsaw Pact
total? Not likely.
* Finally, there is the m atter of what Andropov
would do with the 150-odd SS-20s withdrawn from
European Russia. The discredited Brezhnev
formula envisioned their deployment east of the
Ural Mountains. But from there, they could still
strike almost any target in Western Europe.
'Hie Andropov plan says nothing about actually
dismantling the SS-20s, or about perm itting on­
site inspection to ensure compliance. It is worth
noting that the SS-20, which is carried on a
tracked vehicle about the size of a large tank, is
easily concealable. In fact, it would be child’s play
to hide hundreds of SS-20s all over European
Russia and then wheel them out when the time
came to bully Western Europe into a Finlandstyle neutrality.
*
For all of these reasons, France, Britain, and
the United States promptly, and correctly,
rejected the Andropov proposal. Every country in
NATO remains publicly committed to President
Reagan’s proposal for a ban on all intermediaterange, land-based nuclear missiles.
If the Soviets reject that, they will have only
themselves to blam e if NATO deploys the new
Pershing II and cruise missiles. Andropov's ploy
shows that the Soviet leadership is stilj intent on
using duplicity and propaganda to mislead
Western Europeans into supporting arm s control
proposals that am ount to unilateral disarm am ent
for NATO.

By MICHEALREHA

Tom Kilroy, physical education department
chairm an at Teague Middle School in Altamonte
Springs will present a program at a regional
conference in Atlanta Jan. 13-15.
Kilroy’s presentation before the r'mthem
district of the American Association of Health,
Physical Education, Recreation and Dance at
Georgia State University will detail the school’s
physical education program.
The school Initiated a series of mini-courses
five years ago to expose middle school students
to as m any physical activities as possible.
The school offers 20 different activities in the
two or three week classes and intramural
program . The students are introduced to the
activities in the mini-courses and then may
pursue them further through the intramural
program.
The program maintains a balance between

individual and team activities.
A program to stop smoking will be held Jan. 3-7
at Orlando Regional Medical Center.
Respiratory therapist Steve Shideler will tead
the group in discussions about the facts of
smoking and the benefits of quitting.
The meetings will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. In
Room 15 of the hospital’s personnel and ad­
ministration building at 1414 S. Kuhl Ave.,
Orlando.
Registration is $20 for the program. Ten
dollars will be refunded to those who have quit
smoking for a month or more.
Auditions for “The Rivals," a 1775 comedyfarce will be held at 7:30 p.m. Jan 10 at Central
Florida Civic Theatre, 1010 E. Princeton St.,
Loch Haven Park, Orlando.

Director Bryant Simms will select actors for
nine male roles and four women's rolc« in the
play which will run from Feb. IB to March 5.
A free university is in the works in Central
Florida.
The Orange Fact Tree Learning Resources...,
Network, Ihe brainchild of Orlando resident
Hugh Webber, is working to organize people with
knowledge and people with a desire to leam.
The philosophy of the program is that anyone
can teach and anyone can leam with the main
function of the group being to get teachers and
learners together.
Webber invites people interested in par-...ticipatlng in the free program to call 841-1438 o r' *
write LRN, P.O. Box 7561A, Orlando,

JEFFREY HART

D O N GRAFF

Liddy:

Dollars
A n d O ur
Democracy
Bob Shamansky, D-Ohlo, is not your or­
dinary congressman.
For one thing, a reasonably liberal
D em ocrat, he represented a firm ly
Republican district In the 97th Congress.
For another, in the 97th’a lame-duck session
he was the genuine article — an incumbent
who lost on Nov. 2. And as such, he was even
more of a rarity — the only sitting Democrat
to be defeated by a Republican challenger.
Other House Democratic tosses were the
result of redistrictlng that threw two in­
cumbents into the same ring.
Sham ansky, the first D em ocrat to
represent Ohio’s 12th in 44 years, is quick to
point out, however, that he also was han­
dicapped by redistricting, the work of a
Republican-controlled legislature in which
his opponent, a state senator, had a hand.
But there's something more that sets
Shamansky apart from the congressional
herd. In an era of escalating political spen­
ding increasingly channelled through
proliferating political action committees, he
has paid a large part of his own way.
He estim ates that about two-thirds of the
costs of his winning 1980 race, in which he
defeated an entrenched R epublican in­
cumbent, came out of his own pocket. The
figures are still being counted on 1982 spen­
ding, but he guesses when they are all in his
share will be "maybe 20 percent." And,
because he will be obligated to no one but
himself, Shamansky has been exceedingly
choosy as to where the money for his cam­
paigns that is not his own comes from.
He thus has informed opinions on the im­
pact of money on politics that, in the wake of
the humongous spending in the 1982 election,
is spurring new demands (or another try at
reform.
To start with, Shamansky does not see
rising costs of political activity as the real
problem. They are high and inevitably will go
higher because the necessities of a political
campaign today cost a lot — "whatever TV is
going to charge, they’re going to charge."
The real problem is how to pay, without
candidates being forced to sell themselves for
the financial support without which they
could not conduct effective campaigns.
He agrees with many critics thut in­
creasingly the only alternative appears to be
personal wealth, making politics a game for
those who have already made it. Or, he adds,
those who have nothing to risk.
These alternatives, Shamansky worries,
leave out the overwhelming majority of
potential candidates that we should want to
keep interested In the political process —
concerned individuals determined to vote
their own convictions.
He does not, however, go along with
suggestions that FAC money be eliminated
entirely or believe that a healthy political
system Is necessarily endangered by special
interests.
For one thing, he has reservations about
that term since "every interest is special to
the person who has it."
For another, there is nothing to be gained
through restraining the PACs, which were
supposed to be the antidote to excessive In­
dividual contributions but have proved no
cure, unless provision Is made for obtaining
political financing elsewhere.
Shamansky doesn't claim to have all the
answers but does have some ideas as to the
direction in which we might a t least begin
looking. And that is the funding of
presidential campaigns.

:

On The
Road

ROBERT W A G M A N

Doctors Lose... For N ow
WASHINGTON (N E A )-A l one point
during the recent lame-duck session, the
Senate set a modem record by staying in
session, for almost 48 hours straight. This led
lo some odd sights—with none, perhaps, more
implausible than that which occurred just
before dawn on the second morning of the
legislative marathon.
As exhausted senators stumbled out of the
Senate cham ber to catch a few minutes'
sleep, they were buttonholed by lobbyists
from the American Medical Association, who
had been atatking the halla all night. The
doctors' message was simple: At some point
In the pre-dawn hours, the Senate would take
up an amendment lo the government-funding
bill which the AMA felt was critical to U.S.
medical practice, and which they hoped each
senator would support.
At issue was the AMA's long fight to have
Congress forbid the Federal Trade Com­
mission to interfere with the workings of
professional associations. The AMA-FTC feud
has gone on since the mid-1970s, when the
FTC m ade a series of rulings forbidding
practices of medical societies which it
claimed were kickbacks, price-fixing and
anti-competitive.
When the AMA could not win its battle In the
courts, It turned to Congress to have a statute
passed which would ban further FTC In­
terference. In the last several years, the AMA
has tried to grease the skids for this
legislation by becoming the single biggest
political contributor in town: In the last four
years alone, it gave away a total of almost
$2.5 million to more than half of the House and
three-quarters of the Senate.
E arlier in the year, U looked as If the AMA
had won. The House easily passed an
amendment proposed by Rep. Tom Luken, DOhio (who had received $19,750 In AMA
contributions), which would have stripped the
FTC of all authority over professionals. The
AMA was sure it was over the biggest hurdle,
since it believed that Senate approval was
almost a foregone conclusion.
But the AMA had not counted on Sen.
Warren Rudman, R-N.H., a little-noticed
freshman who previously had shown little
Interest in the AMA-FTC fight.
In the Senate Appropriations Committee,
Sen. Jam es McClure, R-Idaho (110,000 in

AMA contributions), offered his version of the
I,uken amendment. And all were shocked
when R u dm an—who refuses to accep t
donations from political action committees—
rose with a counterproposal that would allow
the FTC to continue regulating professionals,
as long as its regulations did not supersede
those of stale regulatory bodies. This perm its
the FTC to regulate the business, but not the
practice, of medicine—which was exactly
what the FTC had argued that It had been
doing.
The Rudm an amendment passed by 1^-14—
and so the AMA lobbyists found themselves
off the Senate floor at 5 a.m., waiting for
McClure to try again to have the Senate as a
whole accept his amendment, not Rudman's.
The dawn debate began. Once again,
Rudman passionately argued, “L et's give the
American people b break.” The full Senate
agreed by a vote of 59-37, passing his
amendment and rejecting McClure’s.
But the AMA still had one more shot, and
now it overplayed its hand. Since the House
had passed m ore restrictive language than
had the Senate, the matter had to go the
funding-bill conference. Hie AMA had its
friends in the conference push—and push
hard—for the Luken amendment. But the
conferees decided that they were sick of the
argument and the pressure surrounding it:
They voted to drop both amendments, thus
reverting to the status quo. For the time
being, the FTC Is not restricted In Its regu­
lation of professionals.
Of the AMA’s decision to push for the Luken
amendment in the conference, Rudman said,
“My language would have limited the FTC to
going after things like price-fixing...but the
AMA was just too bullheaded."
FTC chairm an James C. Miller III said that
the American public had been "well served"
by the conferees who “had the courage to
stand up on a m atter of principle." He added
that he looked forward to working'wtth the
AMA’s leadership In resolving the dispute.
But no one really expects this dispute to be
resolved. As one FIC source said, "On the
first day of the 96th Congress, the AMA will
start all over again. They may have lost this
battle, but they are determined to spend
whatever It takes to win the w ar."

JA C K ANDERSO N

Time magazine informed me that m y old ;
friend of Watergate fame G. Gordon Liddy Is
now the most sought-after and well-paid of.
campus speakers, making some 100 a p -:
pearances a year for $4,000 a shot, so I
decided to catch his act at a local campus.
Big news. His reception by students in 198$
A.D. was warm and open. They wanted to sec
him and judge what sort of creature'he is.
They listened to him attentively, and neither
during the question and answer period
following his talk, nor during the press con­
ference afterw ards, were the questions
particularly hostile.
.
The Liddy of public consciousness is in nb : *
small part a deliberate caricature limned by
himself.
•
After he blew the second Watergate breakin, Liddy went to his superiors at the White
House and offered to take the ent ire blame for
the operation himself.
They told him that no one would buy the
story.
Liddy had been superbly educated, had a 1
law degree and a graduate degree. He had
been an FBI agent in superior position!
Surely Ihe press would not believe that he had
embezzled thousands of dollars, all on his
own, and organized the Watergate caper.
They would believe it only if he were'
projected as, suddenly nuts. Therefore, the'
image of IJddy Ihe hand-burner, IJddy the
gunslinger, Liddy the violent.
To the surprise of IJddy himself and his
superiors a t the White House, not only thfe
press but also the government prosecutors
temporarily bought this concept. IJddy had
gone off the track. But, then, Judge John.
Sirica — with his huge sentences — broke the
defendants, except for Liddy.
1 was interested to hear what Gordon IJddy
has to tell his campus audiences, and. though
he does fill them in on Watergate from his'
l»lnt of view, that is not his present preoc­
cupation. He has moved on.
Bethinks that Americans live in a world of
comprehensive Illusion.
We simply do not face the demonstrable
numbers Indicating overwhelming Soviet
m ilitary su p erio rity : 10-1 In figh tin g
divisions, 5-1 In hours of pilot training, 10-1 in
tanks, 4-1 In monthly tank production, a vast
naval and submarine buildup.
Liddy, a jet pilot himself, says that tfifc'
Israeli pilots are the best in the world because
they get 60 hours of advanced Jet tactics per
year. The Soviet pilots get 300. Ours get 60:
According to Liddy, who has flown the planes,
a minor mistake In s U.S. F-1S, which flies at
twice the speed of a bullet, can kill you. But
our pilots are not budgeted for suitable hours
of practice.
Uddy criticized our illusions as expressed
in language. We call old people "senior
citizens." We call international slum areas
"developing countries." We call the head of
Nicaragua a "leader" but the head of
Guatemala a "dictator."
'&lt; :
G. Gordon Liddy is a formidably Intelligent'
human being, and knowledgeable far beyond
hia audience — including faculty members.
He is a compelling and courageous speaker,
hia dark eyes alive with passion.
He cited a member of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff as saying that our all-volunteer Army
was “hollow," and asked his audience to
examine the eyes of our troops in World War
II in old photos. Their eyes “gleam with in­
telligence," he said.
LJddy is wowing the campuses, somewhat
to his own astonishment.
•!,’l

Congress Will Have Same Power Plays

*

;
;
I

"yo u’re

duck’l"

looking at a private sector 'lame

WASHINGTON — A new congress con­
venes today, but some old squabbles will
continue to strike sparks in the traditionally
courtly corridors of power. And It’s power
that U the root of all cavil on Capitol Hill.
One of the contentious bones that remains
to be gnawed over In the 96th Congress la the
Domestic Content Bill. This would ban the
sale of foreign cars that aren't built with a fat
percentage of U.S. parts and labor.
Aa an obvious restriction on imports, the
bill should have naturally come within the
purview of the Ways and Means sub­
committee on trade. But its chairm an, Rep.
Sam Gibbons, D-Fla., is a staunch advocate of
free trade.
So Rep. John Dingell, D-Mlch., who wants
the legislation as a means of putting his
Detroit constituents beck lo work, set out to
steal the bill from Gibbons and drag it onto
the friendlier turf of his own Energy and
Commerce Committee.
He la in cahoots with Rep. Richard

Ottlnger, D-N.Y. Together, they cleverly
drafted the bill so that it made no mention at
all of trad e restrictions or Japanese imports.
The House parliamentarian referred the bill
to Dingell's committee.
Gibbons was outraged. The beat be could do
waa extract a promise from the House
leadership that his subcommittee would get to
consider the bill after Dingell’s committee
was through with U.
Meanwhile, Dingell sat on the bill for nine
montha while be quietly lined up more and
more cosponsors. By the time Gibbons got U,
the bill had the momentum of a legislative
snowball — and Gibbons was left with only
eight days to work on tL TO offset hia disad­
vantage, he tried to maneuver the floor
debate so that be would have the last word.
" T h e gentlem an from F lo rid a ," said
Dingell with some asperity, "who has moat
diligently sat upon all trade legislation and
who wholly opposes any efforts to protect

American industry and jobs. . . proposes to
conclude debate. I do not find th at fair."
Sung by this personal foul, Gibbons
responded in kind. “1 resent the gentleman
from Michigan trying lo slur my good name,"
be said. "If the gentleman insista on getting in
Uw gutter, I can sling mud just as well."
Pointing out that Dingell was the one who
had sat on the bill and left Gibbons only eight
days to consider it, the Floridian snapped:
"Now the gentleman h ia the gall to come in
and protest about his rights."
Dingell apologised, and the two shook
hands.
Another bitter turf squabble pitted Rep.
Cart Perkins, D-Ky., chairman of the
F-ducetk*1 and t-*hnr Committee, «g«ir»w
Rep. Don Fuqua, D-Fla., chairm an of Uw
Science and Technology Committee. The
prise waa Uw Engineering and Sdence
Manpower Bill, which included $1M million
for program s in technical training and precollege teaching.

Fuqua's committee drafted and paaaed the
bill and awarded Uw $150 million to the*
National Science Foundation, which is under)
Fuqua’s supervision. Perkins persuaded the-,
leadership to refer Fuqua’s bill to hia com­
mittee, where ha took Uw fundi aw ay from
Uw NSF and gave them to Uw Education
Department, which Perkins oversees.
The 70-year-old Kentuckian, who has spent'
almost half his life in the House, palyed
ahrewdly on hia seniority to put down Fuqua;
w hoat49liarelaU veitriplinganC apltol Hill.
“ * * » • when we established th e NSF'.in
1M9, h e reminded his colleagues. He argued
that the NSF had no business administering
education money.
Somewhat chastened, Fuqua later cbhcadadtom y associate, Peter Grant, that "ou?
bill did infringe on their prerogative." And
prerogatives are the stuff of pow er'.jn
Congress, to be toyed with only a t the;ip(ringer's periL
'&lt;

*

t+*e

�SPORTS
Evtning Harald, Sanford, Ft.

Monday, Jan. 1, IflJ— 5A

'Capece' Of Cake,

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

Bucs Come Back

Do You Really
Think Tampa

For Playoff Berth

Can Win It?
TAMPA — With the Tampa Bay
Buca staring a 238 deficit in the face
midway through the third quarter
Sunday, a little old lady in the VIP
section of the press bo* turned to her
husband and inquired, “Do you really
think they can come back?”
The gentlem an, resplendent in
orange, gave his spouse a discerning
look and declared, "Where have you
been for the past six weeks?"
More than likely, the disbeliever
bad been right by his side. But even
the Buccaneers' latest walk on water
— a 26-23 overtime victory over
Chicago which earned them a playoff
spot — would have the most stout­
hearted of us playtng Peter and the
rooster.
But these Bucs just won't be denied.
Especially diminutive kicker Billy
Capece and quarterback Doug
Williams. Capece kicked a pressurepacked 40-yard field goal with just 26
seconds left In regulation and then
hammered home a 33-yarder to win
the gam e at 11:46 of the overtim e
period.
The victory was the fifth In six
games for the Bucs, all of which have
been decided in the final m inute or
later (Sunday). The win kept the Bucs
undefeated in overtimes with a 2-0-1
mark.
Tampa will play at Dallas if Min­
nesota beats the Cowboys tonight, but
that probably won't happen, so the
Bucs will play at Green Bay next
Saturday or Sunday.
Capece, who missed one field goal
(36 yards) Sunday, was steady as a
rock when it counted. Although the
last field goal won the game, the 40yarder was more difficult. He was
kicking into a swirling wind and the
pressure was intense. A little too
much hook — like his miss — and the
Bucs can pull out the wide screen for
the playoffs.
" I tried not to think about the
wind," said the ex-Florida State
record setter after the game. "On the
miss, I pulled It to the left. Thank God
I got a chance to make up for it."
The chance for the winning kick was
made possible by fullback Jam es
Wilder. Taking a handoff at the
Tampa 40, the second-year back from
Missouri turned the right com er and
went 47 yards to the Chicago 13.
The run was the longest of Wilder's
career and was only his second carry
of the game. A perfect block by tight
end Jim m ie Giles — which clogged up
the defensive end and a linebacker —
sprung Wilder into the clear.
On the next play, Williams centered
the ball at the Chicago 15 and Capece
cam e on to pop the champayne cork.
"H e who messes around when he's
In field goal position lives to regret
U," said a jovial coach John McKay
after the game. "There was no sense
running any more plays, we knew
what we wanted.”
And they got it thanks to a
courageous effort by the 6-4 Williams.
The form er Grambling great bounced
off the deck from a groin pull and a
pulled ham string to lead the
comeback.
- Shrugging off another alow start
and a few boo birds ("W e want
Golsteyn"), Williams w u m arvelous
In the second half. In the fourth
quarter alone, Williams hit 11 of 20
p u s e s for 156 yards. Whenever Giles
w u one-on-one a defender — 35 and
31-yard TD passes—It was all over by
the rejoicing.
Williams finished the day 23 of 49 for

Ml yards and two touchdowns. Giles
ca tight three for 75 yards. Wilder
snagged six for 61 yards and Kevin ,
House grabbed four for 96 yards. A
rejuvenated Theo Bell latched onto
b u r for SO yards and Gordon Jones
snared four for 56 yards.
f t u c SHOTS - The Tam pa Bay
m edia selected N;si Colzle u the
Buca’ most valuable player. Colzle
received five of the 10 votes from the
sports w riteri who cover the Bucs on a
day-to-day basis.
1 Wilder w u second with three votes
while Hugh Green and Lee Roy
Selmon were next with one vote each.
Doug Williams won the award the past
two years which Is conducted by the
■fi.t Petersburg Times.
- ‘Although there were skill 1,000
tickets left a t 12 noon, the gam e w u a
(72,126)- The "no show " total
w u comparatively low to the past two
weeks u only 4,011 missed the game.

Htrald Photo by Bill Murphy

T am pa
dow n a
C h icag o
le a d a

H ay q u a r t e r b a c k D o u g W illia m s w as
c o u p le o f tim e s S u n d a y a g a in s t th e
H e a r s . H u t th e 6-4 QR g o t o ff th e d e c k to
f u r io u s H u c c a n e c r c o m e b a c k w hich

k n o c k e d off th e H e a r s , 26-23, in o v e r tim e a m t g a v e
T a m p a a b e rth In th e p la y o ffs . W ide r e c e i v e r T h eo
H ell ( le f t) c h e c k s o u t th e u n g u lsh e d W illia m s .

Invitations Out For Rozelle's Sweet 16
United Press International
The invitations are out for Pete
Itoielle'sSweet 16 party but just who will
be dancing with whom stilt remains to be
worked out.
The eight-week players' strike forced
the National Football league to revamp
its playoff format to a 16-team tour­
nament basis this season and the last
four slots were filled Sunday in a hectic
regular season windup.
New England and Cleveland joined the
B-leam American Conference field and
Tampa Bay and Detroit completed the 6team National Conference grouping. The
playoff picture Is as follows:
AFC entrants — Cincinnati, Cleveland,
the Los Angeles Raiders, Miami, New
England, the New York Jets, Pittsburgh
and San Diego.
NFC entrants — Atlanta, Dallas,
Detroit, Green Bay, Minnesota, St. Louis,
Tampa Bay and Washington,
The league will announce its first round
schedule for next weekend after tonight's
nationally telev ised game between
Dallas and Minnesota. That game will
determine pairings in the NFC. Tjie AFC
pairings are set, with Cleveland at the
Raiders, New England at Miami, the Jets
at Cincinnati and San Diego at Pitt­
sburgh.
If Dallas wins tonight, the NFC
pairings will have Detroit at Washington,
Minnesota at Dallas, Tampa Bay at
Green Bay and St. Louis at Atlanta. If
Minnesota wins tonight, it will be Detroit
at Washington, Tampa Bay at Dallas, St.
lxrnis at Green Bay and Atlanta at
Minnesota.
•
There will be two more playoff rounds
after next weekend leading to the Super
Bowl at Pasadena, Calif, on Jan. 30.
New England, 2-14 last season, earned

and returned it 52 yards for a scorp ns the
Raiders (B-li clinched the home field
advantage throughout the AFC playoffs
by beating San Diego (6-3). Mike Davis
also had a TI) on an interception return
its playoff spot by beating Buffalo 30-19
for the Raiders.
and Cleveland used the Bills’ loss to vault
Chiefs 37, Jets 13
into the playoffs despite a 37-21 loss to
Bill Kenney threw three TD passes to
Pittsburgh. Detroit edged Green Bay 27carry Kansas City (3-6) to an upset of the
24 and earned its spot when Super Bowl
playoffbound Jets (6-3) before only 11,902
champion San Francisco was eliminated
— the smallest crowd In the 11-year
21-20 by the Los Angeles Rams. Tampa
history of the the 78,000-seat Arrowhead
Bay gained its berth with a 26-23 over­
Stadium.
time victory over Chicago.
Redskins 28, Cardinals O
Steve Grogan passed for three touch­
Joe Theismann threw for three TDs as
downs and Stanley Morgan had seven
Washington (8-1) blanked St. IjouIs (5-4).
catches for 141 yards in leading the
Dolphins 34, Baltimore 7
Patriots (5-4) over Buffalo (4-5) and
David Woodley had three TD passes
bringing coach Ron Meyer a playoff club
and Uwc von Schamann added two field
in his first year in the NFL.
goals as Miami (7-2) clinched a home site
Terry Bradshaw passed for 269 yards
in the opening round of the AFC playoffs
and two TDs and rookie John Rodgers
by beating Baltimore (0-8-1).
blocked a punt and returned it 18 yards
Rams 21, 49ers 20
for another TD to carry Pittsburgh past
Vince Ferragamo connected on two
Cleveland which became the first team in
TD pas$cs, including a 42-yard strike to
the NFL's 63-year history to make the
George Farm er midway through the last
playoffs with a losing record (4-5).
period, as the Rams (2-7) deprived Super
Detroit also qualified at 4-5, using a 1Bowl champion San Francisco (3-6) of a
yard TD run on an end-around by thirdplayoff spot.
stringer Rob Rubick with 5:47 left to
Giants 26, Eagles 24
defeat Green Bay. It was the first time
Joe Danelo's fourth field goal of the
Rubick touched the ball this season.
game, a 25-yarder with two seconds left
"Obviously it's a g re a t feeling,"
to play, lifted the Giants (4-5) over
Detroit Coach Monte Clark said, "even if _
Philadelphia (3-6).
it did go down to the final day.”
Saints 35, Falcons fi
Wayne Wilson rushed for three TDs
Bengali 35, Ollera 27
and caught 11 passes as New Orleans (4Ken Anderson hit 27-oMl passes,
including an NFL record 20 In a row, for 5) crushed Atlanta (5-4) to snap a fourgame losing streak.
two TDS to carry Cincinnati (7-2) over
Seahawks 13, Broncos 11
Houston (1-8) and lend the Oilers to their
Reserve quarterback Dave Krteg’s 10seventh straight loss.
yard pass to Roger Carr with only 47
Ralden 41, Chargers 34
seconds led lifted Seattle (4-5) over
TTiird-stringer Jam es Davis picked oil
Denver (2-7).
a Dan Fouls pass in the closing minutes

Pro Football

TAMPA (UPI) — The Tampa Bay
Buccaneers believe in giving their fans
their money worth and keeping them at
the stadium for the full game.
The outcome of six of the last seven
games the Bucs played were decided in
cither the last minute or in overtime,
with Tampa winning five of the six.
Sunday was no exception.
Bill Capece booted a 40-yard field goal
with 26 seconds to go to force the game
into overtime and then kicked a 33-yard
field goal 3:54 into overtime to send the
Bucs into the NFL playoffs with a 26-23
win over the Chicago Bears.
It is the third time in four years the
Bucs have made it to the NFL playoffs,
but they won't know who or where they
will play until after tonight's game
between Dallas and Minnesota.
If the Cowboys win, Tampa (5-4) will
beat Green Bay (5-3-1) next weekend. If
Minnesota wins, Tampa faces the
Cbwboys at Dallas.
The Bucs were scheduled to play Green
Bay twice this season, but the player
strike wiped out both games. Their first
game back after the strike was at Dallas,
where the Cowboys won 14-9.
Capece had kicked second quarter field
goals of 27 and 31 yards and had missed a
fourth quarter attempt from 38 yards
before kicking the decisive field goals.
The winning field goal was set up by an
explosive 47-yard run off right tackle to
the Bears' 13 by James Wilder on only his
second carry of the game. Quarterback
Doug Williams then ran the ball on a
keeper to put it In the center of the field
between the hash marks and Capece
drilled it home.
“ The game tier was tougher," Capece
said. "It was further and it was Into the
wind."
The Bears’ defense dominated the first
half, intercepting Williams twice for a
touchdown and setting up a Held goal and
using a Williams' fumble to set up
another Held goat.
After the first interception, Bob
Thomas kicked a 43-yard field goal after
he added a 19-yard field goal after the
fumble recovery which was taken by
tackle Steve McMichael from the Bears'
28 to the Tampa 8 before Williams was
able to get up from the ground and run
him down.
Linebacker Otis Wilson added to the
score when he made a shoestring grab of
a deflected Williams pass and ran it back
39 yards, and before Tampa could mount
any threat Chicago ted 13-0.
After Capece got Tampa going with his
pair of second quarter field goals, rookie
quarterback Jim McMahon hit Brian
Baschnagel with a 19-yard scoring toss to
pad the Bears' lead to 298.
Thomas put the Bears up 238 early In
the third period before Williams got
untracked and brought the Buca stor­
ming back with a third period touchdown
pass of 35 yards to tight end Jimmy Giles
and a fourth quarter scoring pass of 31
yards, also to Giles.
Williams was hurt twice on the final
touchdown drive. Midway through the
drive he suffered a leg injury when he
was knocked out of bounds, but returned
after one play. Then, on the touchdown

Pro Football
NFL Standings
By Unlled P ress International
American Conference
W L T Pet.
B 1 0 .889
x-LA Raiders
7 2 0 .778
x-Miami
7 2 0 .778
x-Cincinnali
x-Pittsburgh
.
6 3 0 .667
x-San Diego
6 3 0 .667
x-NY Jels
6 3 0 .667
x-New England
5 4 0 .556
x-CIeveland
4 5 0 .444
Buffalo
4 5 0 .444
Seattle
4 5 0 .444
Kansas City
3 6 0 .333
Denver
2 7 0 .222
Houston
1 8 0 .111
0 8 1 .056
Baltimore
National C onferenre
W L T PcL
x-Washinglon
8 1 0 .889
x-Dallas
6 2 0 .750
x-Green Bay
5 3 1 .611
x-Atlanta
5 4 0 .556
x*St. Louis
5 4 0 .556
x-Tampa Bay
5 4 0 .556
x-Minnesota
4 4 0 .500
x-Detroit
4 5 0 .444
New Orleans
4 5 0 .444
NY Giants
4 5 0 .444
San Francisco
3 6 0 .333
Philadelphia
3 6 0 .333
Chicago
3 6 0 .333
LA Rams
2 7 0 .222
x-clinched playoff berth
(Top eight team s
In each
conference
qualify
lor
playoffs.)
pass made under heavy pressure, he was
slammed to the ground and had to be
helped (rom the field.
But, with his right thigh heavily
bandaged, he returned to move the Bucs
Into position tor the ttnal two Retd goats
by Capece.
"I'm a little sore right now, but I don't
feel it," Williams said. "I started off real
bad. I spotted them 10 points.
"They didn't blitz as much in the first
half as they did in the second," Williams
said. "The offensive line did a super job
in the second half down the stretch."
"It was evident that we had our op­
portunities today," Chicago Coach Mike
Ditka said. “ We let a good football team
come back and beat us. It's unfortunate
that we had it under control and lost it.
"He (Williams) made some runs that
were very vital to their continuing
drive," Ditka said. "He had enough
patience to stay in after he started out
bad and hit some good plays. I've got to
give him credit, he’s got a lot of guts."
"We dropped more passes than we
ever had," Tampa Coach John McKay
said. "What we did today that hurt us the
most was drop passes. We must have
dropped five passes that 1 bet we
wouldn’t drop again."
McKay said Wilder’s run was called to
counter the Bears’ nickel pass 'defense
and was a simple pitch to Wilder and
"everybody block somebody."

Dimensional Lady Raiders To Blend, -TonightBasketball
Then M ove Up; Host Lincoln,
By CHRIS F1STER
Herald Sports Writer
The first half of the 1982-83 basketball
season was one of transition (or the Lady
Raiders of Seminole Community College. she will be able to act the pace for us the
Coach Sol Battoon’s youthful squad was second half."
adjusting from high school to college .
Another Seminole graduate Is on the
competition and picking up the ex­ SCC roster but Injuries have kpet Sabrina
perience needed to make a run In the Melton from performing the way she is
second half.
capable of. Mellon averaged four points
The R ald en look to improve on a 4-6 per game the first half as backup to
first half record tonight at 7:30 as SCC Jones.
hosts Lincoln, 111. Junior College.
"Sabrina does a good job when she’s
The Raiders are made up of mostly able to play," Battoon said. “ If her knees
freshmen and Battoon feels with the first hold up she will be good support for Cathy
half out of the way, SCC should do well Jones."
the remainder of the season.
At point guard the Lady Raiders have
experience In Mindy Patrick who Bat­
"The first half gave us the experience toon Is counting on for leadership the
we needed," Battoon said. "Now we have second half. Patrick w u a standout at
to eliminate the freshman mistakes and Lake Brantley high.
U we keep a positive attitude we should
" I expect Mindy to be our leader,"
do well."
Batoon said. "She handles the ball well
One freshman who will have a lot to do and la a good scorer which la an extra'
with SCC’s success is Sanford's Cathy threat for a a point guard. We look for
Jones. The fo rm e r Seminole High
great things from her the second half so
standout averaged 14.6 points per game
she can go on to play at a four year
for SCC Ihe first 10 games at the number school."
two guard position.
Also out of Lake Brantley is 5-10 center
"She's had to make the adjustment
Debra Garrison who U strong un­
from forward in high school to guard in derneath the boards and a hard worker.
college," Battoon said. "If she opens up,
“ Debra gives us Wrong support at cen­

J.C . Basketball

te r," Battoon salt'
The Lady Raiders are expecting more
production out of 5-10 Evelyn Rivera
Smith who married her former high
school coach from Apopka over the
holidays. •
"E v e ly n helped In th e scoring
department the first half (5.4 average)
and we expect more from her the second
half both in scoring and on defense,"
Battoon said.
The backup point guard to Patrick the
firit half w u Mary Jo Miller out of
Orlando Boone High. The 5-3 freshman is
strong off the bench and 'should be a
trad er In the future. "She Is a motivating
factor on the bench and good support for
Minday," Balloon said.
One player who didn't play the first
half and should make a difference the
second half Is M center Sue Winte m h e lm e r. The O rlando Evans
graduate will play a big role inside for
the Lady Raiders. “She's a hard worker
and we expect great things from her,"
Battoon said.
The other sophomore on the squad and
one of the best defensive players Is 58
M ary Kane. Kane is out of Melbourne
High and can give even the best offensive
Oliver a hard time.
SCC’s leading scorer so far this season

I p.m. Deland p| Lady Semlnoles
Santord's Fighting Lady Semlnoles,
Iresh (rom a itcond place finish in (ha
lady Hawk Invitational, host DeLand
tonight.
" I don't know too much about
Deland," said Stminola coach Ron
Marthia. "I do know that (Loretta) Rata
is gona which is good."
Seminole, 44 ovarall and ) ] in tht Fiva
Star, is gtltlny excellent scoring (rom
guard Mona Benton Tha J I sophomore
has scored M l points in the 'Holes1 10
games lor an avaraga ot JO.I points par
game She has a season high ol X
Along with Benton In tha backcourl will
be J 7 Arlene Jonas who Is scoring i a
points an outing Maxine Campbell, a 5 1
lunior, is fourth In tha county with J.f
assists per gama and Wth with J .l
rebounds. She la averaging 11 points.
Starting at forward tonight will be t o
Croomsfreshman Patricia Campball. Sha
is averaging 1.$ rebounds which is good
lor eighth in tha county. Completing the
starling liv t it tha la d y Hawk In
vital lonat harolna - Diadra Hillary. T h t
i ) lunior dropped In two tree throws to
boat Edgrwatar In tha semi finals, tha
tin t time a Seminole team has turned tha
trick. Hillary averages 14.3 points and
tO.t board a gama.
In tonight's JV game, coach Sonya
Manley puts h tr girls unbeaten string on
Ihe lino against tha Lddy Bulldogs at 4:15.
TiM p .n i. Lincatn. lit.
•I SCC Lady Raiders
Coach Sol Balloon's la d y Raiders try
to turn around a * t season tonight whan
Lincoln, till,) Junior Collage comes to I N
SCC gym.
Battoon will storl Mindy Patrick and
Cathy Jones at tha guards, Valor le
Rots star and Katrina Andersson at the
lorwards along with Sue Winternneimer
at cantar.

is 5-11 Valerie Roessler from Pittsburgh.
Roessler averaged 15.2 points per game
the first half and can play all the
positions. “She really came out the first
half and played well," Battoon said. "She
has an outstanding attitude."
Another prolific scorer for the Lady
Raiders ii 6-1 Katrina Anderason from
Sweden. Andersson averaged 14.6 points
and shot 54 percent from the field the
first half. "She is one of our best shooters
and will do a lot better once she gets
adjusted to the pressure gam e."
Melissa McLellan, out of Tarpon
Springs, contributed 7.1 points per gam e
the first half and worked hard un­
derneath. "We feel If Melissa plays good
defense and avoids turnovers she will be
an outstanding player and give us an
added dimension."
A new addition to the team la 54 point
guard Veronica Wttcherd out of St.
Petersburg Gibbs. "She is real fast and
quick and has good speed on defense,"
Battoon said.
Now that the Lady Raiders have the
experience, they need to mold together
as s team according to Battoon. Once
that happens the only way to go for SCC is
up.

, -

*t

J, *

�tA— Evening Herald, Senlord,' FI.

Monday, Jen. 1,1113

W ait Is O v e r For Nlttany Lions,

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
S t John's Enjoys 11-0 Start,
Readies For Schedule Meat
United P r a i International
M aster chef that he is, Lou C am eseeca knows how to
lay out a m eal
“ What we’ve seen so far Is the appetiser,” says the
St. John’s coach. "The main cotirse Is yet to come.”
Cam eseeca may have been talking about the 11-0
start of his Ftedmen but he might just as well have been
speaking of college basketball's movable feast.
The easy part of the season is over for the nation's
top team s: the games against Marist, Mankato State,
Tennessee-Martin and the like.
With conference schedules beginning this week,
college basketball clears the first set of plates and gets
down to the entree. The Southeastern Conference,
deemed in some quarters the best In country, gets the
e a r l / Jump with league play beginning Monday night.
The m ain course runs through the early rounds of the
NCAA Tournament in March and concludes with
dessert and cordials in Albuquerque, N.M., April t with
the championship game.
As for the appetizer, it went down nicely:
Virginia, voted No. 1 in preseaaon, opens with a 12460 victory over Johns Hopkins. Defending champion
North Carolina is not so lucky. The T ar Heels, without
Jam es Worthy and Jimmy Black this year, lose 78-74 in
overtim e to St. John’s. North Carolina goes to M and is
out of the Top 20.
Billed as the greatest showdown of giants since King
Kong m et Godzilla, Ralph Sampson of Virginia faces
Patrick Ewing of Georgetown. Virginia beats
Georgetown 68-63, with Sampson declared the winner.
The Big E ast proves It is ready to trade elbows and
prestige with the SEC, ACC and Big Ten. By the year's
end, th e Big East has four schools (St. John’s,
Syracuse, Georgetown and Vlllanova) in the Top 20,
more than any other conference.
Kentucky again opens the seaaon with star center
Sam Bowie on crutches. No m atter, Joe Hall's team is
a killer. Kentucky wins 5845 at Notre Dame and Irish
coach Digger Phelps all but proclaims the Wildcats
national champions.
Indiana has something to aay about that. The
Hoosiers, with some smooth w orkers in Ted Kitchel
and Randy Wittman, defeat Kentucky 62-59 to move to
the top of the rankings.
Virginia goes to Japan for a tournament. On the way
home, the Cavaliers stop in Hawaii to shake off their
jet lag with a garjie against Chaminade, an NAIA
school of some 2,300 students. Chaminade rolls Vir­
ginia through the surf, winning 77-72 in one of college
basketball’s great upsets.
Among ranked teams over the weekend, No. 15
Nevada-Las Vegas defeated Utah 71-68 and No. 16
Houston swamped Pacific 112-58.
At Las Vegas, Nev., Sidney Green scored 20 points
New Y ear’s Night and Eldrtdge Hudson tipped in his
missed tree throw with 21 seconds left as UNLV ran its
record to 1W).
At Houston, Michael Young celebrated his 22nd
b irth d a y Sunday w ith 9

p o in ts to t t a d the Cougar*'

runaway. Houston, 8-2, led 52-24 at the half.

Kings' Flurry Whips Hawks
United Press International
The winning points came with 11 seconds left, but to
Atlanta Coach Kevin Loughery, his Hawks' 106-104 loss
to K ansas City Sunday night was decided in the
beginning of the final quarter.
Loughery pointed to'lhe Kings’ scoring 17 of the first
19 points in the fourth quarter to tie the game 88-88.
Although the Hawks rebounded to take a 10488 lead
with 1:16 remaining, Loughery felt the lean stretch
sapped his team.
“ We were outscored 15 (actually 17) to two at one
stretch and there's where the game was lost,”
Loughery said. "We got tired and they scored some
easy baskets in the transition."
Perhaps the easiest basket was Eddie Johnson's at
the end. With the game tied 104-104, the King's Larry
Drew stole an Atlanta inbounds pass which resulted in
Johnson's layup as Kansas City scored the game's final
10 points.
In other games, San Antonio whipped Geveland 10393, Milwaukee crushed Houston 10342, Phoenix
sm ashed Seattle 11649, Golden State clipped Indiana
114-105, Portland pounded Denver 123-104 and Los
Angeles rapped Detroit 127-112.

Flyers Trip Black Hawks, 3- V
United Press I a te ra a tta a l
The Philadelphia Flyers knew they were hot cm the
road and they passed a difficult test Sunday night.
The Flyers, winners of five straight away garnet,
cam e Into Chicago, where the Black Hawks had won 11
straight. Philadelphia took the exam and triumphed,
with Lindsay Carson scoring two goals ina 3-1 victory.
The result gave the Flyers a club-record sixth straight
victory away (ran home, upping their road record to
an NHL-leading 12-84.
The Black Hawks, owners of the league’s best
record, have lost only twice against 15 wins and two
losses In Chicago Stadium.

Canon snapped a l-l Ue at 8:04 of the final period
when he beat Chicago goalie Tony Fjpoaito with a
slapshot from the right circle.
“I saw Tony was up against the pod and I aimed for
the other tida," said Carson. “I juet let it go and caught
Itlnalde. If Tony came out he would have had a better
angle."
Carson got an empty net goal with 54 seconds
• remaining to seal the win.
,
In other games, Buffalo topped Hartford H Toronto
whipped Detroit 1-3, New Jersey dumped Vancouver 31, Wahsington crushed Quebec 7-3, Montreal Matted
Pittsburgh 5-1 and Winnipeg defeated Boston 64.

Pnllm lnarits Over For SEC
United Press
The preliminaries are over for SoutbesUm Con­
ference basketball teams.
After a month of fattening their records against
frequently iznail-callher oppottllon, the SEC race gate
under way Monde) night with Mb-ranked Tennessee
(1-1) hotting unbeaten Georgia (M ) in the featured
game.
In other action, 4th-ranked Kentucky (8-1) entertains
Mississippi (7-2), Ith-ranked Alabama (Id) travels to
Florida (M ), Mississippi State (7-2) plays at Auburn
(7-2) and Vanderbilt (M) hosts LSU (Id).

1/ *

Penn State Declared No. 1 Team
NEW YORK (U PI) - The waiting is
over (or Penn State.
The Nittany lio n s, in the past con­
sistently one of the nation’s best football
teams but unable to prove it with a No. 1
final ranking, got over that hurdle
Sunday when they were named the top
team In the country by UPI’s Board of
Coaches.
“ Obviously this la a great thrill for
everyone connected with Penn State
football," said coach Joe Patcmo. "This
year's squad just m ade up their minds
that they wanted to be national cham­
pions and also be recognized by everyone
as national champs. It's a great honor for
all of us.”
Following a 27-23 victory over
previously unbeaten and top-ranked
Georgia In the Sugar Bowl Saturdaynight, Penn State fulfilled a goal It set
last fall. Penn State, 11-1, was ranked No.
2 behind Georgia entering its Sugar Bowl
showdown.
The Nlttany Lions, runnersup twice
before in the UPI ratings, picked up 33
first-place votes and 551 points from the
37 coaches who participated in the final
voting to outdistance SMU by a lengthy
margin.
Winning the national championship
was especially gratifying to Patemo,
who three times previously coached
Penn Stale to undefeated seasons only to
see his team bypassed for No. 1 in the

with first-p la c e voles in p a re n ­
theses (to ta l points based on 15
points for first place, 14 for
second, etc.)
551
final ratings. In 1968,1969 and 1973, the 1. Penn St. (33) (11-1)
M ethdstt 4) (11-0-1)
514
Nittany lions had perfect seasons but did 2. So.
(12-1)
468
not win the national championship. In 3. N eb rask a
4.
G
eorgia
(11-1)
436
1968 and '69 they finished second in the
5. UCLA (10-1-1)
406
voting and in 1973 they were fifth.
314
In 1978 Penn State was ranked No. 1 6. A rizona St. (10-2)
293
going into the post-season competition 7. W ashington (10-2)
8.
A
rk
an
sas
(9-2-1)
266
but was beaten by Alabama 14-7 in the
(9-3)
216
1979 Sugar Bowl and blew its chance for 9. P ittsb u rg h
10. F lo rid a S t. (9-3)
173
the national championship.
11.
L
ouisiana
St.
(8-3-1)
169
It marked the first lime since Notre
12.
Ohio
St.
(9-3)
147
Dame in 1977 that an independent school
86
has won the national championship and 13. N orth Carolina (8-4)
14.
A
uburn
(9-3)
70
the first time in four years that the
53
national championship has left the south. 15. M ichigan (6-4)
46
SMU, the only major college team to 16. O klahom a (8-4)
17.
(tie
)
A
labam
a
(8-4)
45
complete the season with an unbeaten
45
record (11-0-1)), earned the other four 17. (tie ) T exas (3-3)
40
first-place votes and picked up 514 points 19. W est V irginia (9-3)
31
to beat out Nebraska, 12-1, for the No. 2 20. M ary lan d (8-4)
Note: By agreem ent with the
spot. Nebraska had 468 points and
Football
Coaches
finish'd “*2 points ahead of Georgia, 11-1. A m erican
Rounding out the top 10, in order, were Association, team s on probation
UCLA, Arizona Slate, Washington, by the NCAA are Ineligible for
Top
20
and
national
Arkansas, Pittsburgh and Florida State. the
cham pionship
consideration
by
the U PI B oard of Coaches. The
cu rre n tly
on probation
NEW
YORK (U PI)
The team s
United
Press
International are C lem son, Oregon, Southern
B oard of Coaches Top 20 final C alifornia and Southern M issis­
1982
college
football
ratings, sippi

College Football

Warner: Great Feeling To Outrush Herschel
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - Curt Warner
came out of the Sugar Bowl battered and
bruised, but convinced he's as good a
college running back as there is in the
game today.
“ft's a great feeling to have outrushed
the Helsman Trophy winner two years in
a row,” said the Penn State senior
tailback. "I’m not trying to downplay
Herschel Walker or Marcus Allen, but
I'm not going to put myself down in any
way either. I think 1 am as good as
anyone else.”
Warner, who outgalned 1981 Helsman
Trophy winner Allen 145 yards to 85 while
leading the Nittany lions to a 26-10
victory over Southern Cal in last year’s
Fiesta Bowl, outgained Walker, the 1982
Helsman winner, 117-103 Saturday when
Penn Stale beat then top-ranked Georgia,
27-23, to vault from No. 2 to the national
championship.
Georgia finished No. 4 in the final
ratings by UPI’s Board of Coaches
behind second-place Southern Methodist
and No. 3 Nebraska.
"I think Herschel Walker is a great
running b a c k ," a a ld W a rn e r. "But, I'm
not going to consider myself any lower
than Herschel or (SMU AU-Amerlca)
Eric Dickerson or anyone else."
Warner, who scored two bowl touch­
downs (on runs of 2 and 9 yards) for the
second year in a row, said he was playing
in pain Saturday night after being
wracked by the Georgia defense. “But
sometimes you have to play with a little
pain," he said. " It was a one-chance shot.
When you are playing for the national
championship, you can't think about
pain.”
Penn State Coach Joe Patemo, close
but no cigar so m any times before (196869-73-77-76), said he was glad that he
would no longer have to answer questions
about why he had never won a national
championship.
“Those questions didn't bug me, but it
seems to have bugged some of our fans,''
said Patemo. " I felt our fans were
frustrated but I w asn't. I hope to coach at
least seven or eight more years and if it
hadn’t happened this time, I'd have had
another chance."
Penn State, loser only to Alabama (4221) this past season, appeared to be
blowing previously unbeaten Georgia out

College Football
of the Superdome when the Uons, with
four second-quarter scoring threats, built
a 20-3 lead going into the closing seconds
of the first half.
But the Bulldogs drove 66 yards, on
four passes, In 39 seconds to trail 20-10 at
halftime and marched 64 yards after the
second half kickoff to close to 20-17 with
10:37 left in the third period.
"I thought we had Ihcm on the ropes,"
said PBtemo. "But they came back and
at one point I was afraid we weren’t
going to pull it off."
However, Georgia failed to generate
any more offense until late in the final
quarter and Penn State got what turned
out to be the winning touchdown on a 48yard pass from Todd Blackledge to
Gregg G am ty.
“ We felt wc could get a big play on
them because they were playing our
receivers real tight," said Blackledge,
who completed 13 at 33 passes for 213
yards. “1 don't think they realized how
quick some of our receivers are."
"I said before the game that I thought
Penn State was one of the three best
team s I'd seen in my 19 years at
Georgia," said Bulldogs Coach Vince
Dooley. "Unfortunately, my fears were
confirm ed. Penn S tale certainly
deserves to be ranked No. 1, but it's a
tribute to our team that we gol back into
the game."
Warner, who scored the second time he
carried the ball Saturday after having
scored the first time he carried in both
the I960 and 1982 Fiesta Bowls, says he
thought the Lions "relaxed a little after
getting ahead 20-3. But you have to credit
Georgia with playing a good game. They
came back with those two scoring drives
and turned it back Into a football game."
Terry Hoage, Georgia's AllAmerica
defensive back, said the Bulldogs had
only themselves to blame for falling so
far behind in the first half. "They
executed extremely well while we made
a lot of stupid mistakes," said Hoage.
"We had a lot of mental breakdowns at
the wrong time."
The Sugar Bowl had been billed as a

duel between Penn State's balanced
offense and Walker, Junior three-time
All-America and third-leading career
rusher In NCAA history with a year yet to
go. Walker, needing 26 carries to get
those 103 yards and scoring only once,
from a foot oul, didn't scetn himself
Saturday night.
"I feel fine, there’s nothing wrong,"
Walker insisted. "Penn Stale Just played
like champions. If I had a vote, I'd vote
them No. 1. They really stopped me.
They really shut down our running game.
“They started stunting up front," said
Walker. “ That’s what hurt us all year.
"I'm happy our team is taking the loss
like champions," said Walker. “ My goal
for next season? How about another
Heisman Trophy ami a national cham­
pionship for Georgia?"

Osborne Agrees With Poll
MIAMI (UPI) — Nebraska Coach Tom
Osborne says he agrees with the selection
o( Penn State as national champion.
"P enn State beat us and they beat the
number one rated team. They played a
tough schedule," he said of the Nittany
IJons, who defeated previously topranked Georgia in Ihe Sugar Bowl
Saturday night.
At the same time, Osborne’s Cornhuskers were overcoming six turnovers
by defeating IJ&gt;U 21-20 in the Orange
Bowl. The result was that Nebraska (121) remained the third ranked team in the
nation and I5U (8-3-1) advanced from
13th to 11th.
"If we'd have played an error-free
football team last night, I might have
voted for Nebraska," Osborne said
Sunday, adding that the ratings may not
mean too much anymore.
"To tell you the truth I think you can
take the top 10 or 12 teams hi the country
and put a hat over them. Almost any one
of them can beat anybody," he said
Sunday.
As for Nebraska's six turnovers, LSU
Coach Jerry Stovall said he thought his
Tigers should get at least some credit for
them.
"M y philosophy may be just a little bit
different than some other coaches, with
respect to turnovers," Stovall said.

Cook Starts Year Right With Win;
Rookie Survives Restarts For 1st
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Back after
a four-week suspension, 198041 track
champion Jack Cook started the New
Year the right way by driving the Bob's
Space Racers’ 1982 Camaro to victory In
the 25-iap late model feature on Saturday
night at New Smyrna Speedway.
Another driver who greeted New
Year’s Day in a winning way was 16-year
old Bryan Campbell who drove a shiny
new black Camaro sporting a neatly
lettered "Thanks Mom" sign on its flank.
Campbell, whose dad Steve and unde
Harry are excellent race car builders,
had never raced on a high-banked halfmile oval before. He took the lead al'the
green and surviving a multitude of
restarts, led all the way to win the
thunder car m ain.
Current street stock Rookie of the Year
Rick Clouser, who presently leads that
divltton's point standings, took the lead
the last time around, in an unusual burst
of speed, to win the feature, besting Ron
DiCandlo, Bill Kinley, Doug Young and
Benny Gibson. Heat winners were
Clouser and Jim Slanek.
With three laps to go, first heal winner
Bob Clark put the winning move on
strong early leader Milo Vidic to win the
four cylinder finale. Presently second In
the point sta n d in g s, Clark, who
nicknamed his potent Pinto "One Trick
Pony" after the lyrics of a popular song,
Is presently building a fresh "pony" in an

Auto Racing
all-out effort to win the track cham­
pionship. Second to fifth were W. G.
Watts, Vidic, Mike Shuman and A1 Gray.
Clark and Bud Beaty were the beat
winners.
Spectator races winners were Mark
Grimm and Dale Gouser.
Back with fresji mounts, Cook and
Porter were at it again in the fast heat,
with the flying pair tangling while bat­
tling for the lead, inflicting severe
bodywork damage to both c a n . With
hundreds of pit dwellers watching, both
crews went to work on the two cars and
both made it to the start-finish line for the
feature.*
Previous week’s victor and fast heat
winner Lee Faulk led for the first three
limes around. On lap four, fast timer
Cook moved up high in turn three and
four, and grabbed the lead, with Portef
giving chase. But late In the race, Porter
had to "shut it down" and pull behind the
wall, giving up second place to Joe
Middleton, with Smokey Yunick Jr., John
Passetl and second heat winner Billy
Cast rounding out the lop five.
Top thunder c a r fin ish ers were
Campbell, Barry Ownby, Tommy Pat­
terson, Harold Crooms and A1 Bitman.
Garv Patterson won the second heal.

L A T E MODKLS
f a d e d Qualifier
Jack Cook, Ormond
Beach. I I 351 tec
First heat MO lap*) — I. Lea Faulk. Orlando
Sacond heat (10 lap*) - t. Billy Gasl.
DeLand
Feature 125 lep*)
I Jeck Cook. Ormond
beecn, i. j i&gt;« MiUUmluo. Su. D a, Iona. ].
Smokey Yunick Jr., Deytona Beach; 4 John
Pauett, w e d Palm Beach, 5 Billy Oast,
DeLand. Lap Leaders: Faulk: 1 2 Cook: 125
TH U N D E R CARS
F a d e d Qualifier: Joe Caupas. Holly Hill,
».1 1 le t.
First heat I I lap*) — I. Coupas.
Second heat ( « lap*) - I. C a ry Pattanon,
Scott* moor.
Feature (20 laps) - I. Bryan Campbtll,
Dunedin; 2. " B u r Berry Ownby, New
Smyrna Baectw J. Tommy Patterson, Scott
smoor. 4. Harold Crooms. Auburndale; 5. At
Bitman, Safety Harbor. Lap Leader; Camp­
bell: 1 20
S T R E E T STOCKS
First heat I t laps) — 1. Rick Clouser,
Melbourne.
Second heal M laps) - I. Jim Stenefc, Cocoa
Feature (IS lapel t. Rick Clouser,
Melbourne, 2. Ron DiCandlo. Sharpes; 3. BUI
Kinley, Forest City; 4. Doug Young, S Benny
Gibson, Ocoee. Lep Leaders:
Danny
Burkhalter: I. R. DiCendio: I * . Clouser: 10.
POUR CYLIN D ERS
First heat I t laps) — I. Bob Clark, Orlando.
Second heat (6 laps) — I. Bud Baaty, San
lord.
Feature (10 laps) — 1. BooCiark, Orlando; 2.
W G , Watts, Daytona Baach; 1. Milo Vidic,
Orlando; 4. Mika Shuman, Port Orange; 5. Al
Cray. New Smyrna Baach. Lap Leaders:
Vidic: 17. Clark: 110.
S P E C TA TO R RACES
Top Elim inator Iona on one) — I. Mark
Grim m . Oaytona Baach.
Feature IS laps) — I
Dal Clouser,
Melbourne.

mm*
■

*

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s :

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FLOUNDERING FISH
C arlo s C e n te n o of 1831)
H aw k in s S t ., S a n fo rd ,
s h o w s o f f a n e ig h tpound
flo u n d e r
he
c a u g h t in L a k e M onroe

on F r i d a y . C e n te n o
a ls o c a u g h t s ix m u l l e t
a n d a c a tf is h u sin g
w o rm s .

Scorecard
NBA
NBA Standing!
By Unit'd Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
G8
Pd
W
828
24
Phlia
742 2
Boston
23
18 13 Sll 7
New Jersy
16 14 533 .!■»
Wshngtn
12 IV 317 13
New York
Central Division
22 tt 687
Mllwauke
17 17 500 51&gt;
Detroit
14 16 467 6' !
Atlanta
It IV 167 V,
Indiana
10 20 313 10’ i
Chicago
4 26 133 l i 'i
Cleveland
Wr»lern Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pd
GB
18 10 643
'i
Kamt Cly
23 12 616
San Anton
14 18 4)8 (' &gt;
Denver
12 17 414 7
Dallas
Utah
12 21 J64 V
4 26 133 15'
Houston
Pacilic Division
Los Ang
806
25
71V 2'i
23
Seattle
Phoenln
20 13 606 6
20 14 5B8 6'i
Portland
13 IV 406 I3'i
Golden St
6 26 188 IV ,
San Diego
Saturday’* Results
Denver 127, Phoenix 125
New York V8, Washington 77
New Jersey 111, Dallas 105
Boston 127. Utah 117
Portland 107. Golden State 7a
Detroit 117. San Diego 105
Sunday’s Result*
San Antonio 103. Cleveland »s
Kansas City 1OT, Atlanta 104
Milwaukee 103. Houston 82
Phoenix 114. Seattle W
Portland 127. Denver 104
Golden Stale 114, Indiana 105
Los Angeles 177. Delroil 112
Monday's Games
(No Game* Scheduled!
Tuesday's Game*
(A ll Tim e* EST1
Phoenix at New York, 7 30
pm
San Antonio al Atlanta. 7 35
pm
Dallas at Washington. 8 05
pm
New Jersey at Milwaukee,
8 30 p m
Detroit at Chicago. 8 35 p m
Boston at Houston, f 05 pm
Kansas City a I Denver, V 35
pm
Indiana at
Portland.
10 30
pm
Utah at Golden Slate, 10 35
pm

Hockey
N H L Standing
By United Press International
Wales Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Ptl.
Philadelphia
23 12 5 51
Washington
ig it io 44
NY Islanders •
18 14r 7 45
NY Rangers
IV 16 3 41
Pittsburgh
1J JJ 6 30
New Jersey
I 25 7 23
Adams Division
Boston
2) 10 4 52
Montreal
31 10 I 50
Butlilo
11 13 ; 4 )
Quebec
17 IS 4 40
Hartlord
10 24 5 2S
Campbell Conference
Norris Division
W L T Pts.
Chicago
25 8 6 56
Minnesota
20 II I 41
St. Louis
14 73 4 37
Delroil
V 20 II 7V
Toronto
I 21 7 23
Smythe Division
Edmonton
30 13 I 41
Winnipeg
17 i» , -)•
Calgary
14 20 7 IS
Vancouver
1) is I 34
Los Angeles
14 t l 5 ) )
(Top four in each division
R V &gt; 111 V lor
Stanley Cup
»l* y »((i.)
Saturday's Results
N V. Rangers 7, Washington 2

FREE
SI’ IN A l I X A M IN A 1 ION

Pdtsburgh 7. N Y Islander* I
Edmonton 5. Winnipeg 3
Toronto 7. Hartlord 5
Philadelphia 4. Si Louis t
Sunday * Results
Buffalo 8. Hartlord 4
Toronto 6. Detroit 3
Washington 7. Quebec 4
New Jersey 3, Vancouver l
Montreal 5. Pittsburgh 1
Winnipeg 6 Boston 4
Philadelphia-). Chicago t
Today’* Game
(A ll Times EST)
Detroit at N Y Rjnqors, 7:35
pm
Tuesday's Games
Montreal
at
Quebec.
735
pm
at
Philadelphia.;
Vancouver
7:35 p m
N Y
Islanders,
Butlaig at
8 05 p m
Chicago at St Louis, V :05
pm
Edmonton at Calgary, V;3S
pm

Football
College Football Bowls
By United Press International
Oec 31
Hall ot Fame Bowl
At Birmingham. Ala
Air Force 36, Vanderbilt 28
Peach Bowl
At Atlanta
Iowa 38, Tennessee 32
Bluebonnet Bowl
Al Houston
&lt;
Arkansas 28. Florida 24
Jan

I

Fiesta Bowl
At Tempo. Arl 1
Arijona state 32, Oklahoma 21
Colton Bowl
At Dallas
Southern Methodist 7, Pitts
burgh 3
Rose Bowl
At Pasadena, Cam,
UCLA 74, Michigan 14
Orange Bowl
,AI Miami
Nebraska 21, Louisiana Slate 20
Sugar Bowl
At New Orleans
Penn State 77. Georgia 23

Wrestling
Professional
A T E D D IE ORAHAM SPORTS
S TA D IU M
B arry W mdom Cowboy Ron
Bass d K evin Sullivan Snake
Roberts Rutus R Jones d Jim
Garvm. Angelo Mosca d Brian
Blair; The 66ldn:qht Rider d The
Te «a n . T e rry Allen defeated
Yashl Yatsu Scot MfGeeYashi
Yatsu had a draw

MON. WED.-SAT.
1:35 P.M.
P L A Y T H E E X C ITIN G

P IC K ilX
W IN N ER SIX IN
A ROW AND
WIN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS

1 F»tQu#f»l
7 Low lock o, Hi#
Ppn
1 o n lin e,, er io n et

4 NumfcAMI IBHIMI
otFeat

____ 111 * Nervouuwt*

t c a m ie n ita s hack )&gt;..*&lt;»

7 ami w»e I heuHer
earn

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH t H O M A 5 r A N D 1 1 l
i hp*ofj, di t «&lt; P h y s ic ia n

;t&gt;t 7 F R fc NC H AVE
5ANI OHD

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A L L NEWCASH
5ELLM AC H IN ES
•
T R IF E C T A O N
E V E R Y RACE

t
(T H U R S D A Y A L L L A D IE S
.A D M IT T E D F R E E !

/ m y o m )O RUYIDO
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c*t Hwv I) 12 (iigweed
HI StRVAT IONS |]t 1100
Jetty Re Dm u *4 , i 11

�*

PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Jan. 1,1981— lB

In And Around Winter Springs

TONIGHTS TV

Infants Baptized In Hom e Rites
The Hev. Edward Gunter, of Clinton, N.C., made
a special trip back home in order to baptize his
niece and nephew, Jacqueline Gunter and Brian
David Hunter. Jacqueline is the infant daughter of
Dr. Dan and Ann Gunter, and Brian is the son of Dr.
Gunter’s sister, Anne.
The babies were baptized in a ceremony held at
Anne Hunter's home in Winter Park where all the
Gunter family members gathered for the occasion
on Dec. 30.
Dr. Dan and Ann, along with Jacqueline, spent the
New Year holiday in Hinesville, Ga. where they
visited with friends, Marie and W.T. Hunter.

D ee

Catrell
Winter Springs
Correspondent
327-0378
all boys for two years.

V

Now we can talk about more Moores on the other
end of tiie street. Curt and Sherri Moore hosted a
New Y ear's Eve party with approximately eight
couples attending. There was lots of good food and
spirits floating about.
Sue IziMore flew to Miami to spend the NewYear’s holiday with Joyce ar.d Bear Baila. She says
they had a terrific time. She flew back today and
had to head straight to work. That’s the breaks, Sue.
The Winter Springs Extension Homemakers Club
will meet on Jan. 13 at 9:30 a.m. at the Community
Church on Wade Street. There will be a short
business meeting. Gordon Spencer, who is with the
Winter Springs Paramedic Unit, will be the guest
speaker. He will speak on what the Paramedic Unit
is all about and what it offers to its residents.
A baby sitter will be available for a charge of f 1
per child.

n:

SUNSHINE
Wain Cummings of
Sanford shows a navel
orange that was grown
by Don W. Flippen,
Seminole
County
building inspector. Hie
large orange, home­
grown tanil what a
boost to the Florida
C itrus
Industry),
weighed 11 pounds with
a c ir cu mf eren ce of
approxim ately
19
inches.

1:50

6:00

® (17) MOVIE "The Bobo (19671
Peter Sellers, Brdt Ekland

© ® ® b (D Q N E W S
U (35) CHARLIES ANGELS
CD (10) OCEAN US

6:05
® (I7| CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6:30

0®

The program informed members of the amount of
service work performed by both of these organizations
and the help it gives in improvement of the individual in
the realization of their goals.
The business meeting followed at which an update of the
annua) charity ball plans was given. Refreshments with
the Christmas theme were served by the hostess.
A social event of the chapter was held at the home of
Joyce Sammet in Lake Mary. A variety of hors d'oeuvres
were served with the Christmas punch.
Attending and exchanging gifts were: June and Carl
Helms, Amoret and John La Rosa, Barbara Gorman,
Jewel Rose, Ruth and Harry Hoffon, Vertrls and Eddie
Sauls, Joyce and Chuck Sammet. Marilyn and l a Mar
Meredith, Grace Marie Sllneclpher, Pam and Bud
Hawkins, Glenda and Jam es Emerson and Delora and
Frances Mark.
During the evening, 21 gifts were wrapped to de
delivered to the Beta House in Orlando before Christmas
for the residents there. This is one of the service projects
of the sorority.

C O O K OF THE WEEK
The Herald welcomes suggestions for Cook Of The
Week. Do you know someone you would like to see
featured In this spot? There Is something tor everyone
fat the Hue of cooking.
Novice cooks, as well as m u te r c b m , add a dif­
ferent dimension to dining.
Please contict PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich about
your news and views on cooking.

0

® ROMANCE THEATRE

MORNING

7:00

7:05
flg (17JGOMERPYLE

( J ) b TIC TAC DOUGH
FAMILY FEUD
iffl (35) BARNEY MILLER
CD 110) WILD AMERICA Wild
Dogs'- Marty Stoutter looks at the
roles and social structure ol the
domestic dog's mild canine cousins
- the wolf, coyote and tor

7:35
&gt;® (17) AMERICAN PROFESSION­
ALS "Stuntmen"

O

® LITTLE HOUSE: A NEW
BEGINNING An aging doctor takes
Jenny as his (mat patient after an
accident leaves her partially paratyred n
® b SQUARE PEGS
*
O
THAT'S INCREOIBLEI
Featured ostrich races: a 66-yearold man attempts to swum upriver
towing a boat loaded with passen­
gers. a blind sculptor, a baby ts
Mved from Ida in a plastic bubble
(D) (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
CD (10) NATURE The Discovery
Ot Animal Behavior Living Togeth­
er " An eiploration ot the relation­
ship between the behavior of ani­
mals and the kinds ol communities
in which they live and function is
presented

8:05

8:30
CD

o

PRIVATE

b e n j a m in

9:00
O ® MOVIE "The Kid From
Nowhere" (19821 Susan Saint
James. Loretta Swit The troubled
lives ol a retarded youngster end
hit mother are given e new meaning
when his energies are channeled
into the Special Olympics game*
)R)
® O M’ A*8*M
0
Q
NFL FOOTBALL Dallas
Cowboys et kamneeot a Vlktnga r j
I P (JS) THE OTHER ANGEL
ffi (10) ORCAT PERFORMANCES
"Tinker. Tailor, Soldier. Spy"
George Smiley (Alec Guinness) ran­
sacks the psst in search ol a clue to
the identity ol the "M ole.' end
recans his one meeting writh the
Soviet superspy Karls (Patrick
Stewart) (Parts 3 and 4)(R) g

CD O SUZANNE SOMERS... AND
10.000 G.L'S Susan Anton, the
Pointer Sisters and Jonathan
Winters |Oin Suianne Somer* lor an
hour ol song, dance and comedy
Irom the Ramstein Air Base in
Kaiserlautem. West Germany
ID (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

Birth Photos Reflect
Beautiful' Experience
DEAK ABBY: Why don't you and "New
Grandma" grow up and accept the fact that
giving birth is a beautiful experience—one
that new mothers and fathers are eager to
share with those who hold the same views?
"New G randm a” com plained because
pictures were taken of her daughter during a
painful labor, and actually giving birth.
Grandma said, "Don’t tell me that an un­
washed baby, still attached to Its mother's
umbilical cord, is u beautiful sight. I call it
sickening" (And you agreed with her.)
When "New G randm a" gave birth to her
children, she was probably knocked out while
her husband was pacing the floor in the
wailing room. Now I call that "sickening"!
NEW MOMMA IN VAN NUYS'
DEAR ABBY: I have been an obstetrical
nurse for 30 years, and I'd like to add a few
words to "New Grandma's letter.
Today, parents are well-prepared for what
happens in the delivery room. Fathers
willingly witness the birth, and most of them
take pictures. I think that’s fine. But a few
years ago it wasn't all that fine. We had
fathers fainting and getting sick all over the
place. Most of them were there only because
their wives had the attitude of, "Look at what
you’re putting me through, you s.o.b."
Grandma should get with it and realize that
times have changed since she was screaming
for something to put her under.
FRANNY AT ST. MARY'S
DEAR ABBY: Apropos "New Grandma’s"
letter: In 19(6, l was one of the first babies to
be photgraphed during birth. In fact, my
parents told me they searched the countryin
order to find a hospital that would allow it.
I can’t believe that In this day and age there
are people so ignorant that they would regard
the birth of a human being as "sickening."
The birth of a baby Is beautiful. To this day I
enjoy looking at the pictures of myself being
bom, and I am grateful to my parents for
having taken them.
HEIDI T. IN L.A.
DEAR ABBY: You and "Grandma” can go
pick up your new kids, squeaky clean and
antiseptically wrapped In white sacks Just like
McDonald's hamburger. For me, I’ll take the

10:05
® (17) NEWS

10:30
M (35) IN SEARCH OF...

11:00

0 ®

2

5:30

5:40
® (17) WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

5:45
® (17) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

0®
(j )

6:00

NEWS (MON)
O
CBS EARLY MORNING

NPWQ

(7 0 SUNRISE
II (35)JIM BAKKER
® (17) NEWS

11:05

i SOAP WORLO
1 • O I I O NEWS
(35) BIG VALLEY
(10) MYSTERY (MON)
f f l( 101 NATURE (WED)
(D( 101 NOVA (THU1
fD [ 10) EVENING AT POPS (FRO

8

12:30

0 ® NEWS
(11 O
THE YOUNO ANO THE
RESTLESS
ffi O RYAN S HOPE
1:00

0

Cl) DAYS OF OUR LIVES

1 .1 ,0 ALL UY CHILDREN
■111(35)MOVIE
tD (10) THAT'S A PLENTY (MON|
tD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
fD (10) MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
(WED)
fD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
tD (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

1:05

6:30

® EARLY TODAY
III b
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
( D O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

6:45
10 NEWS
(10) A M WEATHER

0®

7:00

TODAY
(T) b MORNING NEWS
(7 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
)1 (35) NEWS
(D (tO )TO LIFE!

7:05
JX(17)FUNT1ME

7:15
(D (IO )A M. WEATHER

7:30
01(3511WOODY WOODPECKER
O H(10)
IO )!SESAME STREET g
IX (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00
HI (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

B:05
® (17) MY THREE SONS

8:30
(1!: (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(D (10) MISTER ROOERS(R)

8*35

2:00

0

( 4 1 ANOTHER WORLD
11O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
tD (10) NO. HONESTLYI (TUE)
CDPO) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

230
J O CAPITOL
“ (10) EVERDAY COOKING WITH
JACQUES PEPIN (MON)
fD (10) NEW ENGLAND BEGINS
(TUE)
fD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
CD (10) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
(FRI)

3:00

IA I FANTASY
( j ) O GUIDING LIGHT
( D O GENERAL HOSPITAL
(ft) (35) CASPER
fD( 101 FRENCH CHEF (MON)
fD (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
fD (10) TO BE ANNOUNCED (WED)
CD (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (THU)
CD(101 THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

3:05
® (17) FUNTIME

3:30

® ( 17) TH AT QIRL

9:00
0 ® RICHARO SIMMONS
11b DONAHUE
(7) O MOVIE
Lit) (M l LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(B (10) SESAME STREET g

0

1:30
® o AS THE WORLD TURNS
tD 110) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

0

7:35

ax(17) MOVIE

.

® ( 17) MOVIE

9:05
9:30

® SO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
(U) (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

10:00

0 ® THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
(Si o MARY TYLER MOORE
ifl) (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
01 |tO) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
1Q:30

0 ® BALE OF THE CENTURY
( T b CHILD'S PLAY
(ID (35) DORIS OAY
CD (10) POWERHOUSE

11:00
® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O THE PRICE IS RIOHT .
O LOVE BOAT (R)
(35)35 LIVE
(10) OVER EASY (MON. WEDFfll)
CO (10) POSTSCRIPTS (TUE)

11:05

(17) PERRY MASON {MON.
TUE. THU. FRO

(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

0

® ( 17) PEOPLE NOW

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
JX (17) IT’S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)
JX117) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

ax

® ® 0 NEWS
(IS) SOAP

11:35
J J (17) WOMAN WATCH (WED)
AFTERNOON

12:05

5:05

0

8:00

® (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
fD (10) POSTSCRIPTS (MON,
WED-FRI)
fD (10) INAUGURATION OF THE
GOVERNOR (TUE)

J2 (17) WORLD AT LARQE (MON)

7:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

[ t HIT MAN

12:00

TUESDAY,

0 ® THEUUPPETS
tJ) o P M MAGAZINE
CD O JOKER S WILD
J T (35) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

11:30

0

3:30

6:35

10:00

Preceptor Beta lam bda Chapter -of Beta Sigma Phi
held the first meeting of December at the home of Joyce
Sammet. The program was on Jaycees and Jayccttcs
given by W. Clark Mack, president of the Sanford Jaycees
and Eileen M. Mack, president of the Sanford Jaycctles.

3:00

® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
® o MOVIE The liberation Ot
LB Jones" (19701 Lee J Cobb
Anthony Zetbe

(5) b NEWHART

To Project

2:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
til b CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH

0

NBC NEWS
} b CBS NEWS
(7 )0 ABC NEWS Q
flD(10)OCEANUS

9:30

Year Giving

® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

EVENING

® (17) MOVIE
Angel In My
Pocket (1969) Andy Griltith. Lee
Meriwether A newly ordained min­
ister seeks to unde his quarrelling
parishioners

Herald Phola by Tam Vincent

Chapter Ends

1:30

0

® (17| BOB NEWHART

Imagine waking up on Christmas morning and
seeing nothing under the tree for you except a card.
That’s what happened to Wanda Purycar. When she
opened the card it contained a key. As she read on
she found out the key was to a brand new house
hubby Don had bought her for her Christmas
present.
Wanda says she can't imagine no one slipping up
and not giving her at least a little hint. The newhome is in DcBary, and the Puryears hope to move
in the end of January. Wanda says the new house is
big enough to have a party and that's what she plans
on doing when they are settled.
Although we'll miss them in Winter Springs, we
wish them much happiness in their new home.
Meanwhile, son Jeff held a New Year's Eve party
at his parents present house with approximately 15
guests present. Wanda and Don found it hard
walking through the house when they arrived home,
as most of Jeff’s guests spent (he night.

As they say, it's better late than never. With the
Christmas holidays and all, I didn't get down the
street to find out my neighbors, Chip and Sharon
Martin, had their baby.
On Nov. 29, Brooke Allison Martin made her wa&gt;
into the world, weighing in at 9 lbs., 7 oz. Mother and
baby are doing fine, with the exception that mother
would like to have more sleep, she says.
Brooke's daddy is also known as Dr. Charles
Martin, Winter Spring’s chiropractor. Brooke is the
Martin's second child. They also have another
daughter, Erin, who is as cute as a button.
The m aternal grandparents are Rose and Ed
Klein of Orlando. Paternal grandparents are Don
and Ixiis Martin, also of Orlando.
Congratulations Chip and Sharon. We’re happy to
see a baby girl born in the neighborhood. It's been

LIQUID

Happy birthday to my good friend and neighbor,
Donna Moore, who celebrated her birthdav on Dec.
30.
Donna's brother. U-o. and his wife, Teresa and
daughter, Emily, arrived from Georgia in ontime to
share not only Donna's birthday celebration but
also to spend the New Year's holiday with the
Moores.

MONDAY,

1400 5 FR E N C H AVE ,
SANFORD

® (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

0® (35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
CD(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

3:35
02) (17) THE FLINTS TONES

4:00
O ® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
® Q HOUR MAGAZINE
J j 0 MERV GRIFFIN (MON, T u t.
THU. FRO
O ON THE OO (WED)
(38) TOM ANO JERRY
(10) SESAME STREET n

4:05
® (17) THE MUNSTERS

4:30
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4:35
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ALL S H O W S

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A JV O F F IC E R

AND A
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11:30
O ® THE BEST OF CARSON
Host Johnny Carson Guests
Sammy Oavts Jr.. Shelley Winters.
Michelle Platter (R)
T O MORE REAL PEOPLE
D (35) MADAME'3 PLACE

beautiful miracle of birth, natural, us God
intended It.
PAULINSMITHTOWN, N.Y.
DEAR ABBY: F or whatever it’s worth, my
husband missed seeing me give birth.
( Monday night football.) But a mirror was put
up so 1 could see it. 1 even put my glasses on.
GLAD1 WAS AWAKE
DEAR ABBY: About the "New Grandma"
letter: My baby was delivered by a midwife,
and although my husband did not take pictures
of the actual delivery, he was allowed to cut
the umbilical cord.
Re later said that was the most muvuig
experience of his life.
NEW MOTHER IN PHILLY
DEAR ABBY: So often you print letters
from aunts, grandmothers, etc., who com­
plain bitterly that their gifts to nieces,
nephews, grandchildren, etc., are never
acknowledged.
I, too send gifts to my young nephews, but
only because I want to. Usually they respond,
but not always. It has been my observation
that many people send gifts for the sole
purpose of getting some attention from loved
ones. This is sad.
I suggest that gift givers examine their own
motives, and if communication is what they
really want, why not pick up the phone and
say, "Hello. I Just want to know how you are."
A phone dill is less costly and infinitely
more satisfying. A word of advice: Never
accuse your dear ones of neglecting you.
Show sincere interest in their lives, and each
call will be welcomed. It works.
OVERLOOKED BUT HAPPY AUNTIE
DEAR OVERLOOKED: I agree, phone
calls to keep In touch are indeed lovely, but
there Is no excuse for falling to acknowledge a
g ift

«

11:35
as (17) MOVIE "Trouble Along
The Way" (1953) John Wayne. Don­
na Read

12:00
®

O

TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.

dD CM))0i N E W S
CISCO I STREETS OF
12:30

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3 PC. DINNIH M,9S
10 PC. BUCKET *5.79

0 ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guette: Ed Ainer.
Andy Kaufman. NBC ahoeahlneri
Floyd Jackinn and Joe Tempona
ffl 0 ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE

1:00

ID 0 M
OVIE ' W
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Alexander Knoi. Geraldine FtUgeraid.

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BREAKFAST SPECIAL

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SKYPORT
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AIRPORT TERMINAL BUILDING
PH. 223-1204 SANFORD

�IB — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Jan. 3,1911

Legal Notice

Best Gain In Seven Years

Stocks Enjoy Record '82 Volum e
NEW YORK (UPI) — An unprecedented rally
that exploded In mid-August propelled the 1982
stock market to its best gain in seven years on
record volume during the worst recession since
19M.
The 1,000 level of the Dow Jones industrial
average, once considered a goal, apparently
became a floor in the latc-year birth of a bull
m arket that saw 100 million shares or more traded
on 25 occasions.
Most analysts believe stocks will continue to
move to new heights in 1983 although the road
probably will be rocky and volatile.
The Dow Jones average, which lost 88.99 points
the year before, gained 171.54 points to 1,046.54, a
19.6 percent increase. That was the best gain since a
38.3 percent surge In 1975 at the end of another
severe recession.

81.03 —a 13.95 percent increase. Standard &amp; Poor’s
500-stock index Jumped 18.09 to 140.64 for a 14.76
percent increase.
The paper value of all stocks listed on the NYSE
climbed $148.80 billion in 1982. Advancers topped
decliners 1,590-510 among the 2,253 issues traded.
Volume again was the big New York Stock
Exchange story, with a r e c o r d 16,458,036,768
shares changing hands, eclipsing last year’s mark
of 11,653,293,531 shares by 39 percent. More than
half that volume came after the bull m arket began
Aug. 13.
Every volume standard was sh a tte re d ,
highlighted by a record 149,385,480 shares traded
Nov. 4.
Brokerage houses reaped rewards of the trading
bonanza and their stocks ranked among the best
performers of 1982.

More impressively, the Dow, which topped all
other averages in gains, rose 269.62 points or 37.7
percent from a 27-month low of 776.92 on Aug. 12.
The widely followed average of 30 stocks hit an
all-time high of 1,070.5a on Dec. 27 to culminate the
August-Novembcr rally sparked by lower Interest
rates and Federal Reserve, credit casing.

The first seven months were characterized by
fluctuating prices amid investor concern about the
battle over the budget and its $100 billion-plus
deficit, high interest rales and the lengthy
recession

The broader-based averages also surged. The
New York Stock Exchange index climbed 9.92 to

The Reagan adm inistration, which pushed
through the largest tax-cut in history in 1981, won
the largest tax increase ever — $99 billion over
three years — to cut the red ink.

Chairman Paul Volcker's Federal Reserve, under
fire from all sides, was forced to make more money
available to stem several emergency situations.in
addition to trying to revitalize the economy.
The collapse of Drysdale Government Securities,
I/imbard-Wall Securities and Penn Square Bank
created fears of.a credit crunch. The international
crises caused by debt problems of Mexico,
Argentina, Brazil and Poland required even more
money.
Wail Street reacted initially with vigor to these
crises because they produced easier credit.
Seeing these things happeni ig, Henry Kaufman,
the influential Salomon B rothers econom ist,
stunned the Investment community by changing his
forecast for interest rates.
Thus, the Volckcr-Kaufman duct kicked off the
biggest surge in Wall Street’s 190-year history and
pushed the stock market Into a new era of prices
and heavy volume.
Blue-chips, high-technology issues and stocks of
heavily capitalized companies were pacesetters,
with speculative issues trailing much of the 12
months.
Energy stocks lagged the rest of the list in view of
soft oil prices and an OPEC split on production and
pricing policies.

'Toy Magnet' Assists In Anemia Diagnosis
.V .V A W A V .V .V .V A W W X 'X i i y*T*\V&gt;

BOSTON (UPI) - People with
severe anemia and a rare genetic
disorder can now be diagnosed and
better treated with the aid of a "toy
m agnet" that m easures iron levels
when held over the liver, researchers
say.
The new magnetic technique allows
doctors safely and quickly to measure
iron buildup that previously could be
measured only by liver biopsy, a
study reported in the New England
Journal of Medicine said.
P e o p l e wilh hemochromatosis, a
rare genetic disorder where iron
builds up to such massive levels

critical organs are damaged, can now
be diagnosed and treated in the early
stages of the disease, said Dr. Gary
M. B rittenham of Cleveland
Metropolitan General Hospital.
The technique also allows effective
monitoring of severe anemics who can
die from excessive iron levels.
“ Iron is the most important trace
clement In the body. Either too much
or too little can cause problems,"
Brittenham said.
SQUID, as the superconducting
susceptometer is called, operates with
a weak magnetic field, "like a toy
tnagn ct," held over the patient's liver.
The device counts the number of Iron

atoms in the body and feeds it to a
computer that in seconds rends out
the exact amount of iron present.
Whereas other diagnostic methods
such as X-rays and ultrasound carry
some danger, this technique is safe
because • it transfers virtually no
energy into the body, Brittenham
said.
People afflicted with hem o­
chromatosis usually arc healthy until
40 or 50, then begin to develop liver
and heart disease, joint problems,
diabetes or tumors, he said.
"It’s an uncommon cause of very
common problems," he said, adding
that
once
diagnosed,

hemochromatosis is easily treated by
the oldfashioncd method of bleeding
the patient.
The new technique also can be used
to aid severe anemics, such as those
with thalassem ia, a h ereditary
anemia that strikes Mediterraneans.
They require regular blood transfu­
sions and arc susceptible because
each transfusion contains iron.
They often die in their late teens or
early 20s of heart failure due to toxic
levels of iron, Brittenham said.
In the past few years, researchers
have treated people with thalassemia
with chelating agents that combine
wilh iron so the body can excrete it.

Due To Social Security

Tax Bite Increases In 1983

WASHINGTON (U PI) - The new year brings three-quarters of the combined employer-employee
higher Social Security taxes and Medicare costs for tax, the top will rise $308.95, to $3,337.95.
Social Security officials say 9.8 million Americans
about 39 million Americans, but some retirees no
longer need fear losing Social Security benefits
are expected to earn more than $32,400 in 1983, out of
because of outside earnings.
more than 116 million paying Into the system
Social Security will lake a bigger bite from the
There will be good news In 1983 lor retirees, 70 to
paychecks of nearly 10 million Americana In 1963, 72. Members of IhU select group can earn as much
and Medicare deductibles will go up (or more than nsthey want wlthoutloslng Social Security benefits,
29 million old and disabled people.
a bonus previously available only to those over 72.
The Social Security tax rate stays the same in 1983
But the Medicare deductible will rise Jan. 1,
as in 1982 — 6.7 percent each on employers and meaning more than 29 million Americans getting
employees. But the maximum amount of earnings government health benefits will have to pay nearly
taxed will Jump to $35,700, up from $32,400 in 1982.
17 percent more out of their own pockets before
The rise is based on increases in national average
insurance takes over.
The deductible, $260 in 1982, will go up to $304 in
earnings.
That means the top payroll tax will go up $221.10, 1983. The increase Is based on rising hospital costs.
to $2,391.90 In 1983. For the self-employed, who pay
Medicare patients also will have to pay more if

they stay In the hospital more than 60 days. Those
who stay 60 to 90 days will pay $76 a day, up from
1982's $65; those staying more than 90 days will pay
$152 a day, up from $130.
Patients who spend more than 20 days in a nur­
sing home will pay $38 n day, up from $32.50, for the
21si through 100th day.
Other Social Security changes taking effect Jan.
I:

—People under 65 who receive benefits, such as
children, widows and early retirees, can make
$4,920 in 1983 without losing benefits, up from $4,440.
—For beneficiaries, 65 to 69, the earnings limit
rises from $6,000 in 1982 to $6,600 in 1983.
—A worker must earn $370 a quarter-year in 1983,
up from $340, to qualify for minimum Social
Security coverage.

legol Notice

REALTY TRANSFERS
Sabel Point Prop Inc. lo Cob
bleslone Constr. C o rp , Lot }J.
Timber Ridge at Sabai Point, Un
One. Ui.OOO
The Ryland Group Inc. to Chris
0. Richardson &amp; *&gt;( Janet L., Lot
1]. Deer Run. Un S SJ0.400
The Ryland Group Inc. to Henry
F. Pohlmann III 4 wl Carol L ., LI
14, Deer Run, Un IA , i*9,700.
Aubrey A. Anlilley A wl Dolores
lo James H. Rhea A wl M ary E.,
Lot f l S I T ol I , Bit 7, Whitcomb’s
2nd Addn Geneva, 11,500.
Howard Wanner A wt Carolyn to
R.W Braxton A wl Betty, Lot 1,
BIX 4, Lake Ridge Park, 150,000
Robert N. Good. Sr. 4 wl Mery
L to Carroll B. Picrcy J r . A wl
Joanne E., Lot D. Horseshoe

.

»

Farms, (47.000.
Classic Custom Homes. Inc. to
Tommy S Aydelott A wl Pamela
S . Lot 12, Woodgale. 165.100
Cecelia I Brock, Sql to Clinton
C. Wandle A wl Donna M , Lot 10,
Blk G. Woodmere Park. 2nd rep
114.100
Wrenco Homes Inc. to Phillip M ..
Tell A wl Leslie P . Lot 510
Wrenwood Un 1 .4th Addn 157,100
Beniamin F. Ward Jr., ind A
Tr. lo Harry O. Hall A Charles
Mlcarelll — corrective - N 50’ of
S E '. o t S W 'i o t Sec. It 21 11, W of
5R 426 A E o t O ld SR 426.1100
Judith A . Vlles A hb James lo
Perry B Buck A wl Pamela H ,
Jon M. Hall A wl Priscilla. Beg
Intersec. S line ot Lol 21, Blk B.

Woodland H ts , 1100.000
A. Haines Smith A wt Marie lo
Chester F Polley A wl Martha J .
S 'jo l N' j ol SE&gt;* ol SE&gt; . of SE'v
Ot Sec 12 20 27, less r w. 165.000
Anna Marland, wid. to Roger W
Kinnalrd A wl Elltabeth E , Lol 20.
Blk F, Country Club Manor, Un. 1,
07,900
Frank C. Carter A wt Shirley to
Jeno F. Pauluccl. Pari ol Lot 26,
Blk B. D R. Mitchell Survey ol
Levy Grenl, E of SR all, 154,700
IQ C D ) Jean Reveille, sol lo
Bruce Wakefield, LI 4. Blk C,
River Run Sec 2. 1100.
IQ C D ) M ary Roiondi lo same as
above. 1100
Maxine M. Marcus, sgl. A
Gertrude Marcus to Isabelle Y

Binger, wid . Lot 21 A W 15’ of 22,
Blk 11, Dreamwold, 147.500
James C Verney A wt Karen to
Employee Transl C o rp , Lol I,
The Woods ol Camelot. 176,100
IQ CD ) Mark A Sagert A wl
Reba lo Sharon Ann McKeown A
hb John. Lol I. Blk A. West
Brantley Luke Kd Heights. 1100
V id o r M Haddock A wl Carmen
lo John M Firios A wl Nancy L.,
Lot 2. Blk A. Charier Oaks.. Un.
One, 157.000
Hmderika Kostermans Aberson
to Paul Lowman, Un 110 Lake
Villas Cond. 162.700
Jeno F Pauluccl to Frank C
Carter A wl Shirley. Lol It. The
Meadowlandl In Sec 10 20 10.
156.700

* Despite Gloom y Economy

Florida Tourism Looks Rosy
ORLANDO (U PI) — Americtni may
have fewer dollars to spend on luxuries in
these troubled economic times, but one
thing they’re not giving up is vacations.

'

That tact u borne out by a
p tu u il
Increase In tourism In Florida during the
third quarter of 1962. State officials are
overjoyed.

"The economy doesn't seem to affect
tourism that much. It's i factor, but
there's still ■ lot of people that can afford
to travel," n f d Dean Gaiaer, Assistant
director of the a U te 'i Division of
Tourism In TaUahaaaee.
"It's kind of h ard for a husband to say
to hia wife and children, ‘we can't take a
vacation this y ear after we have planned
on it.’ ■'
Approximately 26.3 million domestic
■ and Canadian tourists visited Florida
from January through September. That's
a 7 percent Jump over the tame period
- last year, and those figures do not Include
■ visitors from abroad.
: Gaiaer said tourlats a re Mill coming to
Florida in botches because the Sunshine
State is a good vacation value. It has a
variety of attractions and It haa, of
r co u n t, a warm clim ate and hundreds of
miles of sun-kissed beaches.
Additionally, c a rrie rs are reducing
prices 1n and cut of Florida to boost
» travel, while hotels and cruise lines arc
offering bargain rates.

" I think people are pretty careful of
their budgets now, but by the same token
F lo rid a offers probably the most
economical vacation that you could take
nny place," he said. "They get more for
the buck here than any place 1 could
think of."
The Epcot Center, Walt Disney World's
new 91 billion theme park and adult
fantasy factory, has helped lure millions
of tourists to Florida since it opened its
gates in Lake Buena Vista on Oct. 1. As a
m atter of fact, more than a million
people visited the Epcot Center during
the first 24 days.
"Epcot has made an appreciable
Impact on the state of Florida," Gaiaer
■aid. “ It’s just another opportunity for
visitors to come to the sta te ..
"Many people come to Florida for the
sun and the fun, but that doesn't mean
they spend 12.9 days on the beach. They
do a lot of things and go a lot of places.
Now, they'll go to Epcot."
Lew Price, director of tourism for
Dade County, said officials were worried
a t first that Epcot "would siphon off
people from south Florida.
'But really, people wilt go lb Disney
and Epcot and stay a few days and then
come down here for the beaches and the
international flavor we offer," Price
■aid.
Tourism officials believe the negative

Image of Miami being a haven for
criminals and refugees Is wearing off.
For example, crime was down 4.4 per­
cent during the first six months of 1982
compared to the same period last year.
“ South Florida L» «lil! a traditional
winter resort destination," Gaiser said.
" It’s not as busy in the summer months,
but it will have a good winter season.
“ People who come to Miami take day
trips to other places. They can get on a
bus or plane and be in Orlando for Epcot,
Disney or Sea World, or In Tampa for
Busch Gardens.
"People can take a most a regional
vacation, if you please," he said "They
Jsut fan out. They use wherever they
happen to land as the spoke and still do a
lot of things from there."
State officials aren't the only ones
optimistic about the future of tourism In
Florida.
Sea World of Orlando, a marine-life
theme park that features ski shows,
dozens of dolphins, sharks and other sea
animals, recently announced a $100
million expansion project. The project
includes an $80 million, 780-room hotel
across from Sea World.
Hilton and Hyatt also plan to erect new
hotels In several locations in Florida.
"There is so much expansion going
on," said Gaiser. "Those people aren't
Investing megabucks to lose money. It’s
all very positive."

F IC TITIO U S N AM E
Notice is hereby given that I am
trvjaged in business, *1 206 Echo
Hollow Way Maitland, Florida
12751. Seminole County. Florida
under the fictitious name ot " T H E
ANDEN GROUP OF FLO R ID A *,
and that I intend lo register said
name with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida In
accordance with the provisions ol
the Fictitious Name Statutes. To
Wit
Section 145 01 Florida
Statules 1957
HORICK B U ILD ER S . INC. and
TH E
ANDEN
GROUP.
a
California partnership.
Sig. George N , Jahn
is Attorney
Publish. Ja n u a ry}, 10. 17,24, 111)
D EO 16
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 2107 $
French Ave.. Sanford, Fla.
Seminote County, Florida under
the lictitlous name ot T H E
B IC Y C L E C O N N E C T IO N , and
that l intend to register said name
with Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac­
cordance wilh the provisions ol the
Fictitious Name Statules, To wit:
Section I6S09 Florida Statutes
tiy
sig Michael G Koch
Publish December 13.20. 22. IW2.
January ) . 1911
DEC 67
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
engaged In buslnesi ( I 2623
Orlando D r , Sanlord, F I. Seminole
County, Florida under the fic­
titious name ol S A N F O R D
CARGO, and mat I intend lo
register said nam* with Clerk of
the C ircu it Court, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provisions ol the F ic­
titious Nome Siatutes, T o Wit:
Section (65 09 Florid* Statutes
1152.
Sig John F. Bush
Publish: December 13. 20, 27. IN2.
January 3, 1913
PEC 61_________________________
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Notice is hereby given that 1 am
engaged &gt;n business at 211
Whooptnq
Loop.
Altamonte
Springs. Seminole County, Florida
under Ih* liclltlous nam* ol
BIRD'S N E S T SANDW ICH SHOP,
and t ha I I intend lo register said
name with Clerk ol the Circuit
Court. Semmol* County. Florida in
accordance wilh Ih* provisions ol
ihe Fictitious Nam* Statules, To
Wil
Section 165 09 Florid*
Statutes 1957
S*g Dooif Inc
Rosemary 1 lood
Publish: December 20, 17. 19(2.
January 3. 10. H U

N O T IC E O F P U B L IC H E A R IN G
The Seminole County Board ot
Commissioners will hold a public
hearing to consider a request to
waive the two year waiting per iod
to Increase the density ol annexed
properly
The
properly
Is
described as follows
The West &gt;» and the West 2 5 ot
the E a s i o l the SW ’ &lt; ol the NW
lying North of SR 436 and East
of the center line ot the Little
Wekiva River, less the East ISO
leet thereof, in Section tS 21S TIE .
(Further described as 13 acres
MOL. on the North side ol SE 436,1
1j miles West ot 1-4, abutting SR
4361. (D IS T R IC T No 3)
The property Is currently joned
A I A gricu ltu re . OP Office
Oistrlct. and C 2 Retail Com
mercial. The property Is proposed
lo be annexed into the City of
Altamonte Springs with l. l acres
ol General Commercial and 11.S
acres ol Multi family. The plan
shows 131 dwelling units with a
gross density ol 12 units per acre
Application has been submitted
by Condey Land Company
BC
C ( 1 11 S31 6
Thehearingwillbeheld in Room
200. Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanlord, Florida, on JA N U A R Y
25, 19*3 A T 7 00 P M , or as soon
thereafter as possible Written
comments may be tiled with the
Land Management Division and
those appearing will be heard.
Persons are advised that, If they
decide to appeal any decision
made al Ihis meeting, they will
need a record ol the proceedings,
and. lor such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
record ol the proceedings Is made,
which record
Includes the
testimony and evidence upon
which Ihe appeal is lo be based,
per Section 2(6 0105. Florida
Statutes
Board ol County Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By Sandra Glenn. Chairman
Attest Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
Publish Jan 3. 1983
D EO 6

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice is hereby given that i am
engaged in business at 2(90 High
way 17 92. Sanlord. Florida 12771.
Seminole County. Florida under
the fictitious name ol AAMCO
T R A N S M IS S IO N
R E P A IR
C E N TE R , and lhat I intend lo
register said name with Clerk ot
the Circuit Court, Seminole
County. Florida in accordance
with the provisions of the Fit
titious Name Statutes, To Wit:
Section (65 09 Florida Statutes
1957
(Corp Seal)
ienRae, Inc
Richard L. Swann,
P iesid en l
Publish December 20, 27, 1982 A
Ja n u a ry ], 10, 19(3
DEC 100

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T OF
TH E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FOR
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY . FLO RID A .
C IV IL A C TIO N NO: I7-7975-CA-I4E
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E OF
JAMES W R O B ER TS.
Respondent Husband,
and
ABB1E M A R G A R E T OORGAN
ROBERTS.
Petit loner Wile.
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N
TO JA M E S W. ROOERTS
1174 Robin Court
Zanesville, Ohio 43701
YOU'
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
thal an action lor
dissolution ol marriage has been
tiled against you and you are
required lo serve a copy ol your
written defenses, it any. to II on G.
ANDREW S P E E R , Attorney lor
PelIIloner, whose address Is 111
West Commercial Street, Sanlord,
Florida 32771, on or before
January 20, 1983. and file Ihe
original with Ih* Clerk ol this
Court either before service on
Petitioner's attorney or 1m
mediately thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against you
Ior the rellel demanded In Ihe
Petition
W ITN ESS my hand and the seal
of this Court on December 16. IM2.
A R TH U R H B E C K W ITH JR.
As Clerk ol Ihe Court
By Patricia Robinson
As Deputy Clerk
Publish Oec. 10. 77, 1917 and Jan
3, 10, H U
DEC 91

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T, IN
«N O FOR S R M IN O L I C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO. n-237l-CA-(9 P
H E L E N E . L E IN H A R T ,
Plaintiff,
vs.
V IR G IN IA H. T H R E L K E L O and
S TEP H EN T. HOSICK.
Defendants.
N O T IC E OF A C TIO N
TO: S T E P H E N T. HOSICK
211 West Filth Street
M E T R O P O L IS .
IL L IN O IS
(I960
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D thal an
action lo foreclose a Mortgage on
the following property In Seminol*
County. Florida, to wit:
Lol I, Block F. A L E X A N D R IA
OR O V IE D O , according loth* Plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book 1,
Page 45. Public Records ol
Seminole County. Florida,
has been tiled against you, and you
are required lo serve a copy of
your written defenses, it any. lo It
on K E N N E T H W. M CINTOSH ot
S TE N S TR O M .
M C IN T O S H .
J U L IA N .
CO LBERT
4
W H IG H A M . P .A , Plaintiffs at
lorney, whose address is Poet
Oft Ice Box 1330, Sanlord, Florida.
32771, on or before January 14,
H U , and file the original with Ihe
Clerk ol this Court either before
service on Plaintiffs attorney or
immediately thereafter; other
wise a default will be entered
against you lor the relief
demanded in the Complaint or
Petition
D A TED
th li Ith day ol
December, A D. HI2.
(Seal)
A R TH U R H. B E C K W ITH , JR.
A t Clerk of the Court
By: Carrie E Buetlner
As Deputy Clerk
K E N N E T H W M d N T O S H of
S TEN S TR O M .
M c lN T O S H ,
JU L IA N .
CO LBERT
&amp;
W H IG H A M . P.A.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Post Oflic* Box 1330
Suita 27. Flagship Bank
Sanlord. Florida 22771
Publish Dec. 13, 20. 22. H U . Jan
3. 19(3
DEC 72

I

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
SA T U R D A Y 9 - Noon

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

RATES

M im e ..................... 54c a line
3 consecutive times 54c a line
7 consecutive times 44caline
to consecutive limes 42c ■ lint
52.00 Minimum
H in e s Minimum

D E A D L IN E S
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday-5:30 P.M. Friday

■v—Personals

5— Lost &amp; Found

N O V EN A TO ST. JU D E — Oh
Holy St. Jude, Apostle and
M artyr, great In virtue end
rich in miracles, near kinsman
ot Jesus Christ, faithful In
lercessor ot all who invoke
your special patronage in time
of need to you I have recourse
Irom the depths of my heart
and humbly beg to whom God
has given such great power to
come to my assistance. Help
me in my present and urgent
petition. In return I promise to
make your name known and
cause you lo be invoked Say
Three Our Fathers, Three Hall
M arys
and
Glorias,
Publication must be promised
St Jude pray for us and all
who invoke your aid Amen
This Novena has never been
known to tail, Thank you St.
Jude tor tavors received

LO S T Bassette Hound trl colored
female. Last seen Dec llth
VIC. ol Shop and Go in Lake
Mary. Children’s pet. 323 S290.

Legal Notice

LO ST Black Lab 95 lbs near
Sanlord Airport Oec. 29
Reward 373 9564

5— Child Care
W ILL keep children, my home
Exp. F yard. Reas rates
Eves 4 days 322 5015

12— Special Notices
A F T E R Christmas Sale 50 / p it
14 carat gold, sterling and
electroplate jewelry in stock
Call 323 1797 tor appt

IB— Help Wanted

N O T IC E OF P U B LIC H EAR IN G
P H LEB O TO M IS T Needed lor
The Seminole County Board of
Seminole Branch ot Central
Commissioners will hold a public
Fla. Blood Bank. Requires
hearing to consider a requesi to
Venipuncture or Nursing
waive the two year waiting period
experience
O il ice
and
to increase the intensity ot land
Clerical skills
including
use on properly lhat is to be an
minimum typing 35 W PM
nexed into Ihe City of Altamonte
Please call Tim Tobin 322 0(72
Springs. The property is described
or apply al 1302 E 2nd St.,
as:
Sanlord
Lots S and 6. Block E. Tract 30,
Saniando Springs. Plat Book 4,
PAR T T IM E Men Women. Work
Irom home Phone Program
Page 62. Public Records ol
Seminole County, Florida Lots 7, (
Earn S25I10O per week de
and 9, Block E. Tract 30. Saniando
pending on time available
Springs, according lo Ihe Plat
Call (94 2204 or 169 0916.
thereof as recorded in Plat Book a.
Page 62. Public Records
ot
Somebody is looking for your
Seminole County, Florida In
bargain Otter it today in Ihe
Secfion 2 21S 19E
{F u rth e r
Classified Ads
described as Wesl ol Harwood
Avenue and South ot Hobson
Avenue, oil Douglas Avenue.
U N C L U T T E R YOUR C LO S E T,
The lots are currently toned R
Sell those things that are lust
IA Single F a m ily Dwelling
taking upspacewith a want ad
District. Requested toning In Ihe
in the Herald 377 2411 or (31
City ot Altamonte Springs Is CG
9993
General Commercial.
Application has been submitted
by Davie and Joyce J. Sims BCC
B O O K K E E P E R $175 wk.
(I II (31 2
The hearing will be held in Room
200. Seminole County Courthouse, Accurate typing 10 key by touch,
raises and benelits, top
Sanlord, Florida, on JA N U A R Y
company.
IS. 19(3 A T 7 00 P .M , or as soon
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
thereatltr as possible. Written
comments may be tiled with the 1117 French Ave.
313 3)74
Land Management Oivision and
those appearing will be heard
T Y P IS T — Fast, accurate Take
Persons are advised lhat, If they
phone orders Pension, profit
decide to appeal any decision
share and medical plans.
made at this meeting, they will
United Solvents 323 1400
need a record ol the proceedings,
and, for such purpose, they may
need to ensure that a verbatim
GENERAL
$3.35
record ot Ihe proceedings Is made,
W ORKERS
............hr.
which
record
includes the
testimony and evidence upon
W ill tra in , some overtim e
which the appeal is lo ot baled,
possible No layoffs here.
per Section 2(6.0105, Florida
Benelits and raises.
Statutes.
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
Board ol County Commissioners
1917 French Ave.
323-1174
Seminole Counly, Florida
By Sandra Glenn, Chairman
N E E D extra Money?
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish Jan 3. 19(3
Why not sell AVON I
311(459
p e .e jN O T IC E O F
R R SCH EO U LIN O
S E C R E TA R Y R E C E P TIO N IS T
O F P U B LIC HRARINO
For small electronics company
T H E B O AR D OF C O U N T Y
Requires, shorthand, typing,
COMMISSIONERS
OF
general office skills. Starting
S EM IN O LE C O U N TY will hold a
salary tl(0 wk. Call lor ap
public hearing In Room 200 ol the
pointmenl. E 1 M. Manufae
Seminol* Counly Courthouse,
Turing 2570 Airport B lvd ,
Sanford. Florida, on JA N U A R Y
Sanlord. 321 2100
M, H I ] at 7:00 P.M or as soon
thereafter as possible, to consider
APPOINTMENT
$3.35
a specific land use amendment to
the Seminole County Com
SETTERS .................hr.
prthenslv* Pien and R EZO N IN G
Will train it people oriented. No
ol the described property
sales Days only.
AN O R D IN A N C E AM E N D IN G
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
O R D IN A N C E
77 25 W H IC H
HI7 French Ave.
313-5176
AM ENDS TH E D E T A IL E D LA N D
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
TH E
S E M IN O L E
CO U N TY
CO M
S E C R E TA R IE S N E E D E D FOR
P R E H E N S IV E P LA N F R O M
Temporary and part time
LOW O E N S ITY R E S ID E N T IA L
positions. Excellent skills
TO C O M M ER C IAL FOR T H E
necessary Interview by ap
PURPOSE OF R EZO NING FROM
polnlment only. 322 5449.
C l R E T A IL CO M M ERCIAL TO
W A N T E D Respdnsib't Mature
C 7 R E T A IL CO M M ERCIAL, T H E
Babysitter wilh light house
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
work. Call ett. 5 p m . 327 2921.
P R O P E R TY .
The Southerly 2S0 teet ol the
Westerly ISO teetot Lol 11, Orlando
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
Industrial Park, pfal Book to.
Page 100. Section 34 2IS 31E,
OPERATOR . . ...........$$
Seminol*
County,
Florida .
Excellent company, loader and
(Further described as at the
pan experience needed. Top
Northeast corner ot Alalaya trail
salary for right per sop.
(C R 520) end Park Road )
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
(D IS T R IC T No I)
H17 French Ave.
333-5174
T H IS
H E A R IN G
HAO
O R I G I N A L L Y
B E EN
S C H E D U L E D FOR D E C E M B E R
A T T E N T IO N I Own your own
» . HR.
business. Avon Te rrito rie s
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
ooen Now) 321 5910.
S U B M IT T E D
BY
Z IM M E R
P O STER S E R V IC E PZ 111 ) (7 )
47
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
N O T IC E OF P U B LIC H E A R IN G
Management Manager at 373 4330.
T O CONSIDER A C O N D IT IO N A L
Ext. 140.
USE
Persons unable to attend the
Notice is hereby given that a
hearing who wish to comment on
Public Hearing will be held by the
the proposed actions may submil
Planning and Zoning Commission
written statements to the Land
In the City Commission Room, City
Management Division prior to the
Hall. Sanford. Florida at 7:30 P.M
scheduled public hearing. Persons
on Thursday. Jan. 20. H U , to
appearing at the hearings may
consider a request for a Con
submit-wrltten statements or bo
ditlonal Use in an RC 1, Restricted
heard orally
Commercial tonad district.
Persons are advised lhat, It they
Legal description: Lol A (less S
decide to appeal any decision
IS3 It. ol E. 144 It.) Rosalind
mod* al Ihes* meetings, they will
Heights, PB 3, Pg 47
need * record ot the proceedings,
Address: 1990 S. Sanlord Ave.
end, tor such purpose, they may
Conditional Us* Requested:
need lo ensure that a verbatim
Sell Service Giiolin* Pumps
record ol the proceedings is mad*,
AH parties In interest and
which record
includes the
citliens she" hay* an opportunity
testimony and evidence upon
to be heard at M id hearing.
which tho appeal Is to bo basod per
By order ot the Planning 1
Section 214 0105. Florida Statutes
Zoning Commission ol the City ot
Board oI County Commissioners
Sanford. Florida this 4th day ol
Seminole County. Florido
December, t ill.
By: Robert Sturm. Chairman
J Q. Galloway, Chairman
Attest. Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
City ot Sanford Planning
Publish: O k I*,’ I N 7 4 Jan 3,
and Zoning Commission
HU
Publish: Jan 3. 1913
D E B TO
DED 4

Legal Notice

I

�it
$

r *

18— Help Wanted

pT
IN S U R A N C E S A L E S

insurance aqency
&lt;n Sanlord
lookinq lor a person lo lake
over I he established bus,ness
Experience not necessary we
will train person and quality
them lor slate license No
capital needed We will pay
salary plus rommissior when
employed
Phone 1305' 641 6041
*

T R U C K IN G
NO E X P E R IE N C E
N E C ES S A R Y
Tor mtormation call 919 337
6II». 919 337 099k 9 a m 1
p m . Monday thru Friday
ADAMS E N TE R P R IS E S
Gel Cash Buyers lor a small
investment Place a low cost
classified ad lor results 1JJ
3611 or i l l 9991

TELLER

S$

LiqV bookkeeping light typmq.
good with I'qures a must, bank
eiperience wins
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave.
11MI76

A D V E R T IS IN G Eiperience lo
design brochures and labels
write trade advertisements
and press releases etc Full
trmqe benefits Retiree and or
part time acceptable United
Solvents 131 1400
JO B S ITE INC
100 s lobs daily
Call 111 7940 Fee

SANORA SOUTH 1 Bdrm. ?
B.iih partially turmshed
C H A . drapes. S4S0 mo 679 5756
nr 8)4 4346

lover 17)

A TRAINEE JOB
Longwood F irm will tram eight
neat, energetic individuals lor
eicilmg. high paying career m
circulation and publishing
areas Our territories also
in c lu d e
G a in e s v ille .
Tallahassee, college areas All
transportation and immediate
eipenses paid Cash advance
plus bonus We need ei
receptionist, hostess, outgoing
or any previous public contact
eiperience helpful
For details and appointment call
Ms Te rri Veltre Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday 10 4 p m
at 119 9693

K IS H R E A L E S T A T E
131 0041
R EA LTO R
Alter Mrs 131 3461 A 133 A9S3

U N F U R N IS H E D 1 bdrm house
references required Rent S1S0
mo • dep J331143

N E A R downtown
Carnn*
air
relr.g |jy) . m

1 bdrm
range.

SAN FO RD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
maid service Catering to
working people Unfurnished
Apartments I A 3 Bedrooms
131 4107 100 Palmetto Ave

M O D ER N 1 Bdrm. 3 Oath, with
CHA drapes, appi turn,shed
U i s V o . 6?V 5;si or 8)4 4745
L A K E TM IPLF.1t iklnt j w
air 1371 Fee 119 7300
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor

35—Mobile Home Lots
H IG H B A N K i M ARINA
A RV PARK
- U i u r y RV living on the St
Johns River
STAY A DAYOR
STAY A YEAR
Taking reservations now. tor the
coming year River Iron! lots
jr c still available Call 904 661.
4901 or go West on Highbanks
Rd m DeBary to St Johns
River

37-B — Rental Offices
P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE.
Providence Blvd . Deltona
2169 Sq Ft Can Be Divided
With Parking Days 105 534
1414
Evenmqs A Weekends
904 799 6311
1600 Sq It office. IIS Maple
A ye . laniard Avail Immed
Broker Owner 133 7309
SPACE tor rent Otllce. Retail.
Storage French Avenue and
Airport 137 4401

O F F IC E SPACE
FOR LEASE
810 7321
PROFESSIONAL Otllce space
lor Lease, on 17 92 ideal
location to downtown area 70S
S French Ave or call 122 1170

REALTY -

INC. m REAITORS

Be Ufae

Call

3 BDR M . I bath,
upstairs, 1310.
677 1117 or 437 1676

FOR ALL YOUR
R E A LES TA TE N E ED S

Furnished apartments lot Senior
CitUens 111 Palmetto Aye. J
Cowan No phone calls

323-3200

PARK A V E . 7 bdrm , complete
kit. 1710 mo 119 7700 Fee
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
•

S49W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Suite ■
Lake Mary, Fla 11744 .
1111799

BATEM AN R E A L T Y

1700 M A G N O L IA upstairs, eilra
nice Large 7 bdrm. Kitchen
equipped 171 4747 alt 5 131 0445

COZY AND N E A T 1 Bdrm. 1
Bath comlortable older home,
in good condition! Nice set up
tor in laws or ell. apt. Con­
venient area, *11.000.
LAKEFRONT
Execu tive )
Bdrm. 1 Bath home on Lakt
Monroe All the extras, large
lamily room, fireplace. Cent
HA. equipped eat in kitchen,
patio with B a r-B Q pit and
more Slts.OOO
M A Y FA IR VILLAS! 7 A 1 Bdrm.
} Bath Condo Villas, next to
Maytair Country Club Select
your lot. floor plan A interior
decor! Quality constructed by
Shoemaker tor 949.200 A upt

Lie. Real Estate Broker
1940 Sanford Ave.

321-0759

EVE

322-7643

It'S easy to place a Classified Ad
W t'll even help you word
II Call 1771411

I. 7 A N D 1 BORM From *760
Ridgewood Arms Apt. j lit
Ridgewood Ave 171 6470
E N JO Y country living? 7 Bdrm.
Duplee Apts.. Olympic sr.
pool. Shenandoah Village
Open f to 9.1217910.
B A M B O Q C O V E APT*
100 E Airport Blvd
I I 3 Bdrms
From *710 mo
Phone 171 9470

31— Apartments Furnished
U P S TA IR * Garage Apt. 1 Bdrm,
wall wall carpet, air heat, kids
ok! no pet*. I7S0 mo 1*1, la*t
1100 d tp
121001* aft. A
weekend* 177 0009 before 1.
I BORM . Apt. Clean
*77* mo. ♦ Dtp.
Reference* required. 127 1141.
SAN FO R D 1.5 link 9'iF, lull kit.
tU S Fee 119.7100
Sev-On Rtfilela. lac. Rtal9er

3IA— Duplexes
D E L U X E 2 Bdrm ., duplex
carport, utility room, hook up
washer, dryer. 1)0 0511
N IC E 1 Bdrm Duplex. US0 plus
sec
J U N E PORZIO R E A L T Y
R EALTO R
»M 4 H

bd

REALTOR
MLS
I01S. French Ay*.

177-1671
UN D ER *2.000 DOWN
1 bdrm. doll house. Affordable
monthly payments
C all
Owner Broker 111 1411.________
96* 1.19th ST. 1 Bdrm, IW Bath,
Central M at A air, new paint,
real * carpal- Lease option er
buy FMA-VA. Ta preview call
today l *41,116.
The Wall St. Company
Realtors
121-SMS

A L L FLORIDA R E A L T Y
O F SANFORD R E A LTO R

S E l S K Y L IN E 5 NEW EST
Palm 5pr,nqs is Palm Manor
GREGORY M O B IL E HOMES
ilOl Orlando D&gt;
171*790
VA x F MA F -nancmg

We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name oranas.
consoles and portables EX
A M P L E Zenith 35 color m
wa'nut console Original price
Over S750 balance due 5176
casn or payments SI7 month
NO M O N E Y DOWN Still in
warranty Call 31st Century
Sales 663 $194 day or nite Free
home trial no obligation

WE PAY top dollar for
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Aulo Parts 79) 4505

A L U M IN U M cans, cooper, lead,
brass Silver, gold Weekdays
6 4 10 Sal * I K ko M o Tool
Co 918 W 1st St 13) 1100

I IWllar P a d tor Junk A
■■no ia'S truiks A heavy
Ui&lt; onit-nt 177 S*90

F IL L D IR T A TOPSOIL
Y E L L O W SANO
Call Clark A H-rt 17) 15*0

plenty
of
prospects
Advertise your product or
service in the C lassified Ads

BadCredit?
N o C re d i’
WE F IN A N C E
NoCredil Check Easy Terms
N ATIO N AL A U T O S A L E S
1170 Sanlord Ave
____________ 171 4075____________
)5 DATSUN 7dr with auto trans
and other extras Good con
dition *99 down
Cash of
Trade U9 9100. 814 4605

II FORD Granada All extras
including auto trans S450
down Cash or trade 1)9 9100.
1)4 4605

DeBary Auto A Mar.ne Sales
across the river too of hill 174
Hwy II *3 DeBary 66A ISM

86—Autos for Sale

72— Auction

Gel

• DIO Y O U KNOW ? *
You can buy or lease a new car
in the privacy of your home or
office Fla Auto Brokers
1)1 7066

3U Y JUNk CARS A TR U C K S
FromSIOIoSSO or more
Call 172 1674

VY,Hill'd lb B u\

1975 M U S TA N G It Clean,
economical, runs, and
looks qood 371 5688

W» buy Cars and Trucks
Martin Motor Sales
791 {.French
121 7831

Garage so lull there's no room
for the car’’ Clean it out with a
Want Ad in the Herald PH
722 2*11 or 6)1 *99)

S A N F O R D A U C TIO N closed
thru Jan 7 . 198) Watrh tor
Jan 3rd Auction ad

76 PONT Sunbird Excel Cond
AC. sterro, much more Low
mileage and qood M PG Must
sell now *7.569 Call 177 1468

FOR E S TA T E Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
pra sais Call Dell's Auction
)?1 5670

C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
BOARD5 A R E
G R EAT—
C L A S 5 IF IE D
AOS
ARE
E V EN B E TT E R

62— Lawn Garden

D AYTO N A A U T O A U C TIO N
Hwy 97. I mile west ot Speed
way. DaytdTia Beach will hole
a public A U T O A U C TIO N
every Monday A Wednesday at
7 1 0 p m It's the only one In
Florida You set the reserved
price Call 904 2S5 1)11 lor
JuC thtr details

J *

C O N SU LT OUR

1990 M O BILE Home 14 x60 set
up m adult section ot mobile
park Day 8)1 767)
E venings 8)1 5116

IS4S
Pjrfc

42-M obile Homer

322-2420

BROWSE AND SAVE
" »
easy and tun
The Want Ad
Way

PRE O W N E D HOMES
2 Bd Fam Park
13x65
510.500
3Bd Fam Park
14x53
513.100
IBd 13x65
5 1.800
3 Bd 34x44
511.995
)Od 34x64
514.900
3 Bd 13x60
5 6.000
3 Bd 13x65
St 1.500
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E INC
ISO) Orlando D r 17 9? S Sanford
105 17) 5700

• a

I*

HALL

\

r W

7 O

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Aloe Products

43 -Lots-Acreage

R EALTOR
131 5774
I IS YEAR* E X P E R IE N C E I

LO CATION, LO C A TIO N . LOCA
TION Perfect lor retirees
Caiy I bdrm. w-1 screened
porches Spacious trees, clast
ta starts, churches, schools.
Neal A dean. Call us qulckl
*17.6*0
R E M O O E LE O
1 bdrm ., I&gt;t
bath, w new root Enclosed
garage and tiled Fla. rm Oak
shaded yard Extra claanl
Great location! Creative
financing! See it today t4!.too
HUGE CORNER L O T - Priced
lo tell latll 1 bdrm, family
rm , CHA, lenced yard w well
and sprinkler systems. Mature
citrus trees. Oowble site patio
under sprawling camphor
tree. Large atsumabla, low
interest mortgage. Call todayl
*41.9*0.

W E N E E D LIS TIN G S !
CALL US N O W !!!!

323-5774

St JOHNS River tronlage. 21&gt;
acre parcels, also interior par
cels with river access-*!}.900
Public water. 70 mm lo Alta
monte M a ll 12 •* 70 yr
financing, no Qualifying
Broker 678 481}

17 Real Estate Wanted
WE BUY equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
in
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 2500.
Sanford Fla 12771 172 4741
N E E D to sell your house
Quickly'
We
can otter
guaranteed sale within 10
days Call 1)1 1611
Classified Ads will always give
you more
Much , Much
More than you expect

47-A—M o rtg ag es Bought
&amp; Sold
WE PAY casts tor 1st A 7nd
mortgages Ray Legg Lie
Mortgage Broker 788 3599

H A V ': YO UR financial dreams
become a reality with Aloe
P T. no investment 17) 7391

OW N^R financing La rg t. CBS
Home A Garage
*41.000 Approx 70 .*dwn
II*, interest
Many extras 377 9417

Repair. Install Sales
Auto Sound Center
A SC 310* French Ave
177 48)5

HAL C O LB E R T R E A L T Y
R E A L TO R
707 E ISIhSt.
11) 7111

Work Shoes A Boots SI* *9 pr
ARM Y N A V Y SURPLUS
722 57*1
HO Sanford Ave
E X E C U T IV E Black Vinyl high
back sw ivel office chair.
Walnut and brats pedestal,
like new SI00 173 104]

D A N IE L AND W O H LW E N D E R
CONDO CAN D O II
Altamonte 1 7 *41,000. Lake
Mary. Feather Edge Mid S40'v
4 Models
LA K E EMM A L O TS 1 acre ♦
*40.000 each.
S Y LV A N DR . Sanlord.
maculate 12 $45,000

Im ­

G E N E V A 1 story comfortable
*90.000

N rW . R E M O D E L REPAIR
AH types and phases ot con
struclion. S G Balm! 33) 48)7.
177 6665 State Licensed
A L L T Y P E S C AR PEN TR Y
Custom Built additions Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, panelling, shingles,
rerooling. For Iasi service.
call 37) 4917 195 7)71_________

Have some camping fqulpmenr
you no longer use? Sell It all
with a Classified Ad in T h t
Herald Call 172 7911 or 111
9993 and a friendly ad visor
will help you

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms

•69*4400 or 349*5491
LARG E 1 Bdrm lam ily home.
Beautiful lot with your own
citrus trees Super location.
Better See S54.750

CallBart
REAL E S TA TE
R E A L T O R . I l l 7491

SANFORD R B A LTV
REALTOR
m-sn*
Alt. Hr*. 112 99*6. 11) 4)91

ROBBII’S
RIAITY

E X T R A large 7 story Colonial on
1 acre of Oak trees. All the
amenities plus guest apt. Bast
locale.
S1M.000.
WM.
M ALICZOWSKI
R EALTO R

R E A L T O R . MLS
1)11 5. French
Suite 4
Santerd. Fla.

24 HOUR Q 322-9283

fU

W M

PAIN t ING and repair pa'.o and
screen porch built
Call
anytime 322 9481

C O L L IE R S Hum e Repairs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair. 121 4423
WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ceramic A lloer
tile Minor repairs, fireplaces,
insulation Lie. Bond 111 8171.

Maintenance ol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 13)9018

Be.iuty Cue
TO W ER 5 B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harnett's Beeuty
Nook S19 E 1st SI . 173 5747

Bookkeeping, Accounting
M A K E ROOM TO SflORE
YOUR W INTER ITEMS . . .
S E L L " D O N 'T N E E D S ",
FAST W ITH A WANT AO.
Phone 1711911 cr 111*9*1 and
a friendly Ad Vlsar grill help

Brick A Block
Stone Wprk

UOdump truck load *50 1&gt; load
Split and delivered. Free 904
77$9144

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices Frea Estimates
Ph. 149 SSOO

WILSON M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S T S T
I t ) *917

ALL
Phases o&gt; Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
rnte. sim u la te d brick

HOM EOW NERS, relax on your
days oft Let ut clean your
horn* al affordable rales. Call
now 121 1599 Pally's Horn*
Pampering Service.
A.M. Kelly cleaning strvlca.
Speclallting In restaurant A
otllce buildings. 411 91S9.

Concrete Work
B E A L Concrete I man quality
operation, patios, driveways
Days 1)1 7)1) Eves )77 1)71
S W IF T C O N C R ETE work all
types Foolers, d rlva w a ys.
pads, floors, pools, complete.
Frea est 177 710)

ModrrnUmg your Hom e) Sell no
longer needed but useful items
wilh a Classified Ad

Lawn Service

*A-1 LAWN S E R V IC E *
Remodeling

Mow wreo 'rim haul Regular
Service
time clean up 2*
hr*, best rales. 471 94M.
Shamrock Landscape
Proper* your lawn A plants lor
wlnltr now. Complete Lawn
tarv. 121 0574

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle "he
Whole B allO f Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

M ISTER . Fix It. Jo# McAdams
will repair your mowers at

Roofing

Repair
JO H N N IE S Appliance*. Wa
service refrigerators, washers. dryers, ranges Haas,
rates 171 111*

Nursing Care

Carpentry

V E IN O IX C A V A T IN 0

*•0 Ca»g lackhce Loader wextender hoe * yd. dump
truck Imi bed serv 12**17 j

Kenmore parts, service, used
washers n)0967
MOONEY APPLIANCES

Carpet Cleaning

S 3 -T V Radio-Stereo

• T R IP L E A*

ij

P. ice special SU.es tor
Family or Living Rm 1911790.

Free Estimates an Roofing,
Re Reeling and Repairs.
IMngftt, Built Up and Tile.

LOVING HO M E. Excellent car*
A companionship tor elderly
woman 1714X5

R ER O O FIN G , carpentry, TooT
repair A painting I* years
exp 111 1*7*
M AKE R O O M TO C TO A bs
YOUR W IN T E R ITEM S
SELL
" D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAST W IT H A W ANT AD
Phone i n 7411 or |)| m i and
• friendly Ad Visor will help

OUR R ATES A R E LO W E R
Lexrvifw Nursing Center
219 E Second SI . Sanford
112*707

you

Oil Heaters
Cleaned

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

OIL Heater cleaning
and ta rv king.
Call Ralph 1717111.

Tree Service
Painting

Firewood
*40 A up. Tree
trimming, removal. Trash
hauled. Free est. 172 6410

f ir e w o o o

CARPEN TER repairsarxf
additions TOyrs exp
Call 127 1)52.

ICHZCL
11 yr*. txparlenca. Licensed A
Insured. •

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

Nursing Center

Excepting Services

Financing Available

Major Appliance

Draperies
CU S TO M M ADE In our Shop.
Installation Service. Dorothy
A Vineant Bliss *46 542*.

12 1 599)

Plumbing

Cleaning Services

52— Appliances

Good Used TV 8*351 up
M ILLER S
2911 Orlando Dr
Ph 723 0157

Plastering

C L A S S IF IE D
AD S
M OVE
M O U N TA IN S oI merchandise
every day

* • *

51-A— Furniture

ART BROWN P E S T CONTROL
Comm . Resd . Lawn. Termite
Work 122 *8*5 Ask lor Champ

Lawn Mower*
A L U M IN U M Sidmg. vinyl siding
soltit A fascia Aluminum
gutters and down spouts.
F r Est 105 MS 519)

SEWING M A C H IN E Singer Zlg
Zag Lett in layaway. Only 199
Was S7tf Seminole Sewing
Winn Oixle Center 17-62 A
Lake M ary Blvd 321 6411.

• * *

Pest Control

C A R P E N TE R ? ! yrs exp Small*
remodfhnq iobs. reasonable
rales Chuck 171 994S

T H E HAPPY E LVES
Quality child care and pre
school Infants a specialty
Individual attention T L C
Slate licensed 120 E Crystal
Lake Ave., Lake M ary 171
73S4._________________________

A N IM A L Haven Boarding and
G room ing Kennels heated,
insulated, screened, lly prool
inside, outside runs. Fans.
.Also AC cages We cater to
your pets Ph 772 S/S2.

Irom

ins

ChildCare
B A T H S kitchens roofing block,
concrete windows add a
room, tree estimates 171 8461

Boarding &amp; Grooming

SAVE your box top labels and
coupons. For into on selling
them send S3 to Sandy
Box 470
Osteen, Fla. 17794.

M E IN T Z E R T IL E Exp Since!
1*11 New 9 old work comm A
re lid Free estimate 14*1*9)
t OOO r A SONS
TlrConlractors
131 0157

Home Repairs

SEAMLESS aluminum gutters,
caver these overhangs waluminum sallit A lasda. (9041
775 7H8 collect. Frea est.

Ceramic Tile

w»C

FOR S A L E 10 Speed bike
lain. 10 speed bike like new
•34 4249

M EN'S goll clubs. I twin canopy
bed, 1 dmelle set, I alto saxx
phone Alt. 1 p m 127 1797.

C E IL IN G FAN IN S TA L L A TIO N
Quality Work
We Do Most Anything
,7*1 *171
977 4711

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

56— Miscellaneous for Sale
31 IN C O L O R T V . Newly
reconditioned
E xc. cond
Portable *100 12) 1113

Ceiling Fan Installation

Auto CB Stereo

3609 HW Y. 17 97

SEASONS G R E E T I N G
Sandy Wisdom

H

AND L E T AN EXPERT DO TH E JO B

3

To List Your Business...

tR O LD

1*44 S French
11)0211
Attar Hours 11* 1*10 111077*

DIMM

77— Junk Cars Removed

r e p o s s e s s e d c o l o r tv s

YEAR E N D CLOSE O UT
1961 S K Y LIN E Mobile Home
74x52 It screen enclosure
porch utility shed Central
neat and air 1 r.drm. 2 Bath
Lot S’/e i* SOxtoo Sale pr-ce
141 900 i-nanc-ng available at
•n * • %*S pr |/-f nfcf ■•• *
1?*d •* • J Points Can be seen
at wa Ltniurt Dr
North
DfHary
F la
•n
the
VPe«c)D*lf&lt;i on the » ver
V o b-lf Hom e community
Please contact Tom Lyon or
G'b Edmunds F irst Federal ot
Semmole 105 173 1343

1. 1613— ) B

fits' .V '!

CALL A N Y T I M E

JU N E PORZIG R E A L T Y

N EW L IIT IN O I Located I black
tram shopping can ter I The
gaad life el Iha Cauda turner
will be years with this 1 Bdrm.
H* Bath, ip td b u s , r t l u r bishad tewnhouse. Families
welctme. Feat sii.sae.

IF THIS IS TH E d a y to buy a
new car, see today's Classified
ads tor best buys

in eeei

SMALL Lovable dog. Free to
good home. Hospital bed,
cheap 323 911).

NEW LI ST I NO I
d r ib this super buyi Just 119,969
and awntr will hold mortgage.
Central Air, new plumbing and
electric end lerpe yard. All
make this 1 Id rm heme a
special treat. Call u i lor
details.

78
!• twin bed. air. awn.ng,
electric lack 14 *91 J72 786)

KICK TH E STORAGE H A B IT
Sell Ihsoe useful, no longer
needed items with a Herald
Classified Ad Call 133 3611 or

JU S T LIS TE D 1 Bdrm. !'■ Bath
home in San Lanta, on a
private lenced tot! Split bdrm
plan, family room, pantry,
workshop and utility room)
Much more! *41.100
C O U N TR Y LIV IN G Immaculate
1 Bdrm. 1 Bath 14a44 Mobile
Home on I acre! Central heat
and air, wall wall carpet, eat
in kitchen, screened porch and
many
e itra s l
Horses
welcome! S45.SOO

19)8 MOBILE tra iler Seoul

WilCO Sales Hwy 46 W 133 6870
Baled shavings si 50
2nd cutting clover hay.
Irdcwtlm gillallahay
Northern Timothy mixed hay
Check evr prices.

WE LIST AND S E LL
MORE HOMES TH A N
ANYONE IN N O R TH
SEM INOLE C O U N T Y !

M E L L O N V IL L f c Trace A p l i'
spacious, modern 7 bdrm, 1
bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped. CHA, walk to town
and lake. Adults. No pels.
Available J i n I 171 1905
Mariner's Villageon Lake Ada, I
bdrm Irom *761. 3 bdrm Irom
1100 Located 17 97 lust south
of Airport Blvd m Sanford. All
Adults 1711670

M EANS

:

REALTORS

R E A L T Y , INC.
5 ACRE* cleared, mowed and
ready lor home. kids, and
anim als. Beautiful location
near St. Johns River. Drive by
anytime! S11.000 Terms
The Wall SI. Company
Roallor
Ill-SOOS

30 Apartments Unfurnished

LUX UR Y
APA R TM EN T*
F a m ily A Adults section
Poolside. 7 Bdrms. Master
Cove Apts 131 7900 Open on
weekends

A LL F E E O O N SALE

STENSTROM

37C-For Lease

STOP A N D TH IN K A M IN U TE
It Classified Ads didn't
work
there wouldn't be any

A P A R TM E N T* .
1771996

w a il

«a
F A C T O R Y Closeout on '87
Scamps I)' and 18' Travel
Trailer and I*' Sin Wheel
Light weight Need to 00 Cali
lor tree brochure Then we ll
deal 1 800 146 4992

Whole torn
St 10 50 lb h»q
•it* uqpellets
15 to 50 ib bag
Wrttibif teed
55 45 50 lb bag
(Jug foods
58 50 to 59 90
vi ib bags
'Hay 57 70 T &amp; A hay S) 60 while it
'asts
(a ltie teed 5180 Horse teed
54 80
177 7991
J670 E 51 Rd 46

f a il u r e

Siinford's Sales Leader

SANFORO. Reas weekly t
monthly rates Util Inc ell 100
Oak Adults 1 641 T ill

o e n e v a o a r o in

t h ic k

H A v SJ 50 per hale.
75 or more tree del
Other leeds avail 14* 51*4.

ASSUM E
TH A T

the

•63 6606

41— Houses
29— Rooms

A DULLARD
V0ULP

Ia n

86— Autos lor Sale

75— Recreational Vehicles

E iA P .C M Y

MAYIB6 A
FRAUD HE
Bl a m e d

M n p rt x y

67A— Food

RlP-OFF?
FRAU D?

N jT E A P
F IB R IN '
Th a t

CATCH C N ' if

24—B usiness O pportunities
A M P A P E R R O U TE Small
down payment Owner will
carry 133 4357 Noon 1 p m

B'.ANKHEAP! ) UP VtKEN
AFTER WE
VAVE MW ED
PROVED THAT Th e b r a in
MAXIMUM 5UM WAVE* FR3M
THE NEXT
16 A RlP-tfFF
ROOM ! j ‘
AST 1ST
6T ill piPNT

FOR R E N T SANFORD
3 Bdrm | bath nice neigh
txjrhood. no pets. 1)50 per mo .
first and last mo rent m ad
vance l yr lease required
Contact 131 0S13

M A IN T E N A N C E
MAN E l
perienced Motets or Apts
must have own tools Salary
lied to capabilities Phone
Mr. Robert. Deltona Inn
101 *74 669]
ASSISTANTS

can F T 11 VCUP THINK
BELIEVE PROF vHEP JMARTEN

! .EveningHerB-H 'RtifonJ. Ft.

wi*h MdjCi Hooplfc

o u r b o a r d in g h o u s e

41— Houses

35— Houses Unfurnished

WHY SAVE IT . . . SELL IT
QUICKLY with a Fast Acting,
low Cost Classified Ad.

Hendyman
HANDYMAN Servlcat Fainting,
repairs, ate. Rtatonabla
guar work 42*44*1. 977 471!..

•CALL A N Y T IM B *
Lk. A laaar. Qteauty a matt. Fr.
«*»• A. Carta# 171-9*71.

,u y ,n To*n —
Cost Clou It led Ad.

a

tow

BILL'S P A IN TIN G
InteriorExtarlor pointing. Light
carpentry. Horn#* pressure
cleaned. Business 111 2421.
Home D 1 S 1 I9 Bill Sltfner
HOUSE Minting ISM
a house. Any alia.
4111014. 43$-400*

STUMPS ground out..
Reasonable, free estimates

_________ /as0941_______
JOHN A L L E N YAR D A TREE
SERVICE. Wa'II ramove pin*
iraas. Rea* prka 311 SM0.
Lttournoau Traa Services
Removal, trimming, demossin
Licensed and Insured 0 4 4494

Upholstery
LORENE'S Upholstery. Frea
Pkk up. del A asl. Car A boil
seats Furn.

J. x

�Monday, Jan, i, 1483

4B— E vening Herald, Sanford, F I.

R L O N O IE

DAGWOOD, I'iW DQAWING
' v — / UP THE WOQK
I
s c h e d u l e s cor
' fegk THE NEW &gt;EAR

by Chic Y o u n g \

AND I \\ TRYING TO )
:tGuRE OUT WHICH
HOURS NOU PREPER A
■Sr^ .
-^ 1

t*
7ol*A^by M o rt W a lker

B E E TL E B A IL E Y

Answer to Previous Puiale

48 Optic

acr os s

51 Capital of
1 Public hall
Canada
7 Eyed
13 I have found it 54 Pertaining to
dogs
14 Slipsole
55 Privateer
15 Gunned
5 6 Having best
16 Pnckle
chance (2 wds)
17 Label
57 Denude
18 Traffic light
colot
DOWN
20 Unhappy
21 Semitic
1 In case that
language
2 Antons city
25 Entrance
3 Infant
28 Whinny
19 Printer s
enclosure
32 Piece of
measure (pi)
4 Conger
lumber
21 R e a c h
33 South Pacific 5 Hawaiian
22 Flush
instrument
island group
23 Mad
6
City
m
India
34 Egg shaped
24 Halted
7 Actress
35 Hope (Lat |
25 Nigerian
Christian
36 Ointment
tribesmen
8 Compass
37 Bndge
26 New star
oomt
strategy
27 Prison
9 Superlative
39 Angry
29 Demons
Suffn
4 1 Insecticide
10 Deteriorates 30 Leaves
44 Pension
31 Jackrabbit
1 1 Singer
45 Defense de
37 Air circulator
Fitigeraid
pirtment
12 Land contract 38 Disregard
(abbr)
3

2

1

4

5

7

6

13

14

15

16
18

17

26

23

27

32

33

34

35
37

42

29

30

31

38

45

44

43
SO

49

48

12

40

39
41

11

24

28

96

40 Mellow
41 1900 s art
style
42 Group of two
43 Take care of
45 Wall border
46 Is indebted lo
4 7 Venture
49 On same side
50 One iSp)
52 Government
levy
53 Poutboire
10

9

8

About Lean Meat

19

22

21
25

No Need To Worry

apniienjr ;

51

54

55

56

57

52

46

47

53

— 1

HOROSCOPE
Ely HKKN1CF. BEDEOSOL

For

by Howie Schneider

EEK &amp; M E E K

1 CAk) ASSURE.WSIR.'THAT
IOOTOOt PEUW OF SUJRGFr
WILL flE. USED FOR X X PROGRAMS.

CONDITIONS IU THIS CITY
DICTATE- THAT fT ALL QO
FDR DEFENSE!

&amp;UV SUBSIDIES. LEGAL
AIR,00. EDUCATOUAiL
% A SSISTA N C E... .
V--------—

M ~i

by Ed Sullivan

P R I S C I L L A 'S POP

FAFMERG ROSE N
UP IN ANGER ANR
AFTER A LONG FIGHT
FINALLY 5UBCUEC?
th e

FROM THAT TIME
ON THEY WERE
KNOWN AG
CONOUEREP GRAPES.

THE RAMPAGING.
FRUIT.

by Stoffel &amp; H eim da hl

BUGS B U N N Y

ALL RIGHT, LADS. WE'RE
APTS? THE 6PEAT WHITE
W H ALE-:

LET ME SEE THAT WE WOULDN'T WANT ID HURT HIM,CAPTAIN.
HARPOON. VOU HE M IG H T G E T A N G R Y r
LO N G -E A R E D n,4MY-«j
_ — ■&gt;
&amp;XPNACLE.

Tuesday, January 4, 1983

YOUR BIRTHDAY
‘ January 4,1983
Ways will open this coming
year that could enable you to
fulfill se v e ra l secret am ­
bitions. O bstacles which
previously th w arted your
progress will be eliminated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Do not introduce changes
today into career situations
now ru n n in g
smoothly.
Inatead of improving your
position, th ey could com­
plicate and jveaken it. Order
now: The NEW Astro-Graph
M atchm aker wheel and
booklet. Mail )2 to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Send on
additional )1 for your
C a p ric o rn
A stro-G raph
predictions for 1983. Be sure
to specify birthdate.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb.
19) You're a good observer
today and you can learn a lot
by
w atching
others,
especially those who are
successful. Later, you'll find
ways to
im ita te their
methods.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Substantial accomplishments
are possible today, provided
you are properly motivated to
achieve them. Desire success
and all the rest will follow.
ARIES (March21-April 19)
Much can be accomplished
today provided you don’t try
to squeeze more on your
agenda than time permits.
Ust your tasks in order of
Importance.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Strive to be independent
today, but don’t be too proud
to ask for assistan ce In
situations which you can't
handle alone. Two heads are
better *han one.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Even though you are noted for
being a fast thinker, take time
today when making serious
ju d g m en ts. Your second
th o u g h ts will reveal any
oversights.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
E arly in the day you could be
a trifle doubtful of your
abilities. However, once you
delve into projects you'll find
these fears are groundless.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
have an edge over your peers
today in that you should be
able to see opportunity where
they see only question marks.
Rely upon your vision, not
theirs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) If
you are on familiar ground
you could develop something
profitable for yourself today,
but the same results may not
hold true in untried areas.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
I-ady Luck wants to assist you
today, but she'll be waiting for
you to get things rolling
before she steps Into the
picture.
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You could be rather fortunate
in m a te ria l ways today.
Someone in the background
will lend a hand. Acknowledge
the contribution.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Situations you per­
sonally control should work
out well for you today, but in
m atters where you share the
helm you might run aground.

Li

€

r\

CALL TOLLFREE
I'AtfMMUl

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
concerned about a recent
report concerning diet and
cancer. The report said that
you were more likely to get
cancer of the breast, prostate
and large bowel If you ate too
much meat or used too many
dairy products.
It is very hard to cook good
meals without using m eat. I
like to serve it at least with
one meal each day. Am I
increasing the risk of my
family developing cancer? If I
don’t use meat what can I
use?
DEAR READER - You
must be referring to the
N ational
Academy
of
Sciences report on nutrition
and cancer. If so, you have not
read the actual recom ­
mendations carefully enough.
The report did say there
appeared to be an increased
risk of cancer of the breast,
prostate and large bowel if
you were on a high-fat diet
and did caution against using
too much fat meats or fatty
dairy' products in your diet.
But that doesn't mean you
have to do without m eat or
dairy products.
You can use lean meat and
low-fat dairy products. As an
example, you can use lean
round steak with all the
visible fat removed. Such lean
m eats contain only about a
third of their calorics as fat.
The report recommended that
we cut our fat intake to 30
p ercen t of the calo ries
ingested. I^ean meat and a
vegetable prepared without
adding fats satisfies this
requirement rather nicely.
To help you identify the lean
m eats and how to prepare
m eats and still avoid fat, I am
sending you The Health le tte r
8-12, Red Meats: Good and
Bad. Others can send 75 cents
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
You can use fortified skim
milk, low-fat cottage cheese
and, for cooking, nonfat dry
milk powder.
I’m not convinced that lean
m eat increases colon cancer.
A study of the Mormon

D r.

£ * f l Lamb
population in Utah showed
that they had 63 percent of the
national rate of colon cancer
and the Mormon women had
only 83 percent of the national
average of breast cancer. And
the Mormons apparently eat
as much or more m eat as the
general population. Never­
theless, I agree for many
health reasons it is best to use
low-fat products and decrease
the daily intake of fat of all
types.
DEAR DR. l-AMB - I have
recently developed diabetes
insipidus from a c a r accident.
Since this form of diabetes
seems so rare could you give
me the basics of it? I am only
16 and my doctor told me to
prepare to have it the rest of
my life.
DEAR READER - As you
know, this form of diabetes
has nothing to do with the
common d ia b e te s m ellitus
(sugar diabetes). Diabetes
insipidus is caused by a
failure of production of the
antidiuretic hormone from
the pituitary gland under the
brain. Accidents that injure
the area are a cause.
The result is a loss of the
body's ability to retain water.
There is a large elimination of
water through the kidneys
which in tu rn requires
drinking a lot of water.
There are various degrees
of the loss of ability to con­
serve body water. Mild cases
may require no more treat­
ment than a constantly
readily available source of
water.
A new medicine, a synthetic
analogue of vaospressin
(dl)AVP) has an ability to
help the body retain water for
8 to 20 hours and can be used
as a nasal spray. It may be
useful to you.

W IN A T BRIDGE
south
13 1)
♦ q 1032
V ast
♦ KJ a s
4*3
WEST
EAST
45
4S4
VyJ&lt;32
V»54
♦ 06 4
♦ 107 2
♦ KJ 62
♦ Ay 11) BS
SOUTH
4AKJI74
f KI0
♦ Ay 3
♦ 74

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South
West North Kail
Pass
Pass
Pass

34
4f
Pam

Pass
Pass
Pass

South
14
44
64

Opening lead +2

By Oswald Jacoby
and Junes Jacoby
Oswald "Declarer gets to
play 26 cards as a unit. That
gives him a decided advan­
ta g e . The hig h er the
contract, the less this advan­

G A R F IE L D

tage, but it is still there ”
Jim "The defense has one
advantage to make up in
part for this They get lo
make the opening lead
Declarers will occasionally
use confusing tactics to
upset the defenders' apple
cart."
Oswald "Today's hand is
a good exam ple. South
intended to gamble on a
slam after his partner’s
jump to three spades He
didn t try for a grand slam
because he and nis partner
were using good, but nonfofeing limit raises. Hence,
his four-club bid was
designed to inhibit a club
lead."
Jim "If you look at all the
cards you can see that with
anv lead but a club the slam
rolls in South gets to discard
one club loser on dummy's
fourth diamond "
Oswald "Now let's go
back lo West. He listened to
the bidding and wondered
why South nad bid four clubs
on his way to the strato­
sphere. Finally. he conclud­
ed that South might well
hold a w o rth less club
doubleton The deuce of
clubs hit the table and the
slam went to never-never
land."
t.NEWSPAPEH ENTERPRISE ASSN i

by J im Davis

by Bob Th a ves

FR AN K A N D ER N EST

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75th Y ear, No. 118—Wednesday, Jan. 5,1988—Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

Evening H erald— (USPS 481-280)— Price 20 Cents

D em o G ro u p M a y N a m e Bruce's Successor

BILLWACK
...D e m o c r a tic
c o m m itte e m a n

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
It’s likely that Gov. Bob Graham, a Democrat, will call on a
four-member patronage committee in Seminole County for
recommendations before appointing a new supervisor of
elections in the county.
Camilla Bruce, a Democrat who has held the elected position
for the past 31 years since her appointment in November 1951,
submitted her resignation to the governor on Dec. 21. The
resignation Is effective March 1.
Although she did not submit the name of her preferred
successor at the time, she has made no secret of the fact that
she would like to see her office manager, Sandra Sue Goard,
38, named to the office.
Both Mrs. Bruce and Mrs. Goard were In Tallahassee
Tuesday for Graham 's inauguration. They were to return to
the election supervisor's courthouse annex office later today.
Mrs. Goard has been employed by the county for the past
nine years, first in the county commission office from Nov. 1,
1973, until Oct. 1, 1977. On that date she accepted a position
with Mrs. Bruce and has since been named office manager of
the elections office.
•
Mrs. Goard, during the past few years, has gradually taken
over more and more of the office responsibilities. Mrs. Bruce,
68, said recently that Mrs. Goard now knows more about the

election laws than she does.
Marvin Meltzer, chairman of the Seminole County
Democratic Party, said It is likely the governor will seek
recommendations from a committee composed of himself,
Democratic State Committeeman Bill Wack, former state Sen.
Mack N. Cleveland Jr. and John Squires, president of ComBanks-Scmlnole County.
.
Wack and Cleveland Jointly headed Graham’s re-elect.on
committee In Seminole County in 1982 and Squires was the
financial chairman of that committee.
Dick Burroughs, an aide In Graham’s office, could not be
reached for comment today on a possible replacement for Mrs.
Bruce.
Meltzer said, however, that two men, one employed in
Orange County and the other In Seminole, but neither
currently Involved in Mrs. Bruce's office, have called him,
seeking information on possible appointments.
Mrs. Bruce assumed the office of elections supervisor in
1951, appointed by Gov. Fuller Warren, after the resignation of
Lourine Messlnger. The mother of three children, Mrs. Bruce
had returned to Seminole County after working for a time for
the FBI in Washington, D.C.
At first she set up an office in the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce building, keeping the elections office open only a
few hours per week. Later she moved into the basement office

at the old Seminole County courthouse.
When the new courthouse was constructed in the early 1970s,
Mrs. Bruce and her staff were given a suite of offices. But as
the courthouse became cramped for space, her operations
were moved into the old county jail building behind the
courthouse. Mrs. Bruce and her staff complained bitterly
about the move.
During the years, elections records went through an
evolutionary process from hand-written records through the
use of an ancient addressograph fo the ultra-modem punch
card computer process.
Seminole County in 1978 changed to the punch card method
with vote-counters attached to a computer to give almost in­
stant results.
During the county's second primary election, Mrs. Bruce’s
office was the first in the state to speed election results to
Secretary of State George Firestone’s office.
She was opposed only four times in eight elections over the
years. First in 1960 by a Democratic opponent and in 1968,1972
and 1980 by Republicans.
Wack said today that he hasn't talked with the governor's
office yet and hasn't really thought about a possible successor
to Mrs. Bruce.

Charges Pending

H a rb o r
D re d g in g

Deputy Court

D e la y e d
A requested permit to excavate the
sand bars plugging some ureas of lak e
Monroe Harbor is being held up in the
state Department of Environmental
Regulation office in Orlando.
Requested more than a month ago by
Charles Volk of Monroe Harbour, Inc.,
DER environm ental specialist Jim
Morgan said there is no way to determine
how long it will be before a state permit
allowing the work will be issued or even if
it will be issued.
While Morgan said there is no problem
with the excavation of ailt and aand b a n
from the harbor area, the proposed
“ spoils site" —the spot where Volk plans
to hold the sand and ailt removed — la no*
large enough to contain all the materials
to be dredged from the lake.
Earlier, city officials said the "spoil"
would be used to build up the beach area.
Morgan said Volk is proposing to use
the parking area at the marina for the
spoils and the site will lake only half of
the more than 10,000 cubic yards to be
removed.
“ Basically this is a maintenance type
p ro je c t,’’ Morgan said, adding the
biggest hold up in gaining state approval
for the work will be getting clearance
from the state Department of Natural
Resources. “A project involving filling in
or excavating a lake requires DNR ap­
proval,” he said.
He could not estimate how long DNR
will take to consider the request and
whether or not the permit will be ap­
proved by that agency.
Morgan said while the field work has
been done on the project, a field ap­
praisal is yet to be completed.
With support from the city of Sanford,
Volk applied for the permit to excavate
14,000 cubic yards of sand and silt to
deepen the water level Inside the harbor
area.
Thp proposed dredging has become
even more Important since the Bay
Queen dinner cruise ship has docked at
the harbor for its dally excursions down
the St. Johns River.
Because the water level was so low last
weekend and a full complement of
passengers were scheduled for the New
Year’s Eve cruises, the ship embarked
from the port of Sanford, moving out of
the harbor temporarily.
The dredging operation and the ex­
tension of the bulkhead some 300 feet
north is estimated to cost Volk about
9100,000.
— DONNA ESTES

C A M IL L A B R U C E
...r e t i r i n g s u p e r v is o r

Clerk Now Is
Back On Job

H tr ild Photo-by Tom Vlncofit

S u s ie D a v is , c h a r g e d w ith th e m u r d e r of h e r b o y frie n d , s its n e x t to h e r a tto r n e y , J a m e s F lg g a tt.

Thought He Was Going For Gun

Woman Says She Shot Boyfriend
By M1CHEAL BEHA
and VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Writer*
Susie Mae Davis testified in court today she shot Byron
Brooks at a Sanford construction site because she thought
he was trying to get a gun from under the front seat of her
car.
Miss Davis, 23, of 1410 Williams Ave. in Sanford is on trial
in Seminole Circuit Court charged with murder in the
shooting death of Brooks at 850 W. First St. in Sanford on
Aug. 24.
She took the witness stand in her own defense today and
told the Jury in a slow deliberate voice, “ I saw h in reach for
the gun. I took out mine and shot him."
Miss Davis said she drove to the Sanford Landings con­
struction site, where Brooks was working, to talk over their
relationship. The pair had been sharing a house with her
three children until Brooks moved out the day before he was
killed.
"I drove out there because I wanted to talk to Mr. Brooks
to get things straightened out In an adult way," she
testified. “ I knew he wouldn’t hit me on the Job site."
She asked several workers where Brooks was and when
she found him the two began to talk. The conversation was

going pretty well until Brooks threatened to kill Miss Davis,
she said.
“He said he was going to get even with me. He was going
to kill me," she said.
While Brooks was talking, he leaned inside the car win­
dow. Miss Davis said he was Inside the car from the waist
up during the conversation.
“ I saw him reach on thr side of the car where the gun
was," she said. Miss Davis testified that Brooks had placed
a gun under the seat of the car previously and she believed
he was reaching for the gun when she shot him.
To Public Defender Jam es Flggatt’s questioning, she said
she thought she saw Brooks with the gun In his hand.
After the shooting, Miss Davis said she cannot remember
chasing Brooks through the construction site and shooting
him three more times, as instruction workers at the site
said they saw her do.
Miss Davis said she was scared and urinated on herself
when a construction worker rammed her car and ordered
her to get out of the car while holding a gun on her.
Miss Davis said she carried a .22-caliber revolver, which
Brooks had given her for protection, to the construction site
but did not plan to use the gun.
See WOMAN Page 2A

By M1CHEAL BEHA
Herald SUll Writer
Mary Ann Knight is back at work in the
microfilm department of the Seminole
County Clerk of Courts' office despite
m isdem eanor charges still pending
against her.
Ms. Knight, 34, of 3644 Main St. in
Sanford was reinstated Monday by Court
Clerk Arthur Beckwith to her post as
supervisor of the microfilm department.
Beckwith said he reinstated Ms. Knight
at the advice of the county’s labor at­
torney pending the resolution of the
charges against her.
Ms. Knight had no comments today on
her return to work or the charges pen­
ding against her. Ms. Knight was
a rre ste d Sept. 1 on ch arges of
unauthorized practice of law, .witness
tam p erin g and attem pted evidence
tampering. She was suspended on Aug. 24
by Beckwith when the state attorney’s
office began investigating the case.
The charges against Ms. Knight were
filed after Beatrice Lee Baker of 2411
Granby St. in Midway told a Seminole
Circuit Judge that Ms. Knight had
prepared her divorce case and was paid
1180 for the work.
M rs. B aker’s daughter, M ary L.
Daugherty, later told prosecutors that
Ms. Knight had offered her $50 to destroy
handwritten instructions and to disavow
her claims. The money and other in­
formation were turned in to the state
attorney’s office.

On Nov. 29, Circuit Judge Robert B.
McGregor Jr. dismissed the felony
charge of witness tampering against Ms.
Knight but left the other charges, all
misdemeanors, standing.
Assistant state Attorney Alan Robinson
said he would appeal M cGregor's
decision to the 5th District Court of
Appeal.

Clerk reinstated pending
outcome of tria l.
McGregor continued the trial on the
other charges pending the result of
Robinson's appeal.
The felony charge was dismissed when
McGregor agreed with Ms. Knight's
lawyer, Jam es Golden, that Ms. Knight
did not know Mrs. Daugherty would be a
witness in the trial when she allegedly
offered her the 958 to destroy the notes.
Ms. Knight could face a $1,000 fine and
one year in Jail on each of the
misdemeanor counts. The felony charge
carries a five-year jail sentence and a
$5,D00 fine.
Beckwith said he reinstated Ms. Knight
pending the outcome of the trial against
her. If she is convicted on the
misdemeanor charges it could be suf­
ficient for her dismissal. A departmental
Investigation will be conducted following
the trial's conclusion.

TO D A Y
Action R eports....................................... 2A
Around The C lock.................................. 4A
B ridge..................................................... 4B
C a le n d a r.............................................. SB
Classified Ads.........................................IA
C om ics................................................... 4B
Crossw ord..............................................4B
D earA bby......................... ...•..............IB
D eaths..................................................... IA
Dr. L a m b ..............................................4B

Editorial..
Florida . ..
Horoscope
H ospital..
N ation....
P eople....
Sports........
Television
W eather..
World........

,..4A
...3A
..4B
...2A
...2A
...IB
6-7A
.. 5B
...IA
...IA

Good And Bad Results In 1982

Storm Made Impression
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
April 8,1982.
, , „
A day that will not soon be forgotten in Seminole County.
That was the day tornadoes ripped through Sanford and other
parts of the county causing more than 910 million damage from
wind, rain and golf-sized hailstones. Governor Bob Graham
declared Seminole a disaster area.
It is doubtless still fresh in the minds of Waynette Dunlvan
who was nearly drowned when she accidently stepped Into an
eight-foot ditch filled with rain water during the storms and
was nearly sucked down Into a drainage pipe.
Nor will Reed Eden and Johnny Moore, both of Sanford, who
risked their lives to rescue the 46-year-old legal secretary who
w u on her way home from work when she was forced to
abandon her car. She got a ride part of the way home and w u
wading the rest of the way on foot when she slipped Into the
ditch.

%•»•-

.

.

After damaging many parts of west Volusia County, the first
storm came in from the northwest a t about 3:15 p m . dumping
4.3 Inches of rain on Sanford. The second storm struck from the
northeast about two hours later before residents had a chance
to recover from the shock of the first onslaught The storms
were so intense that they shattered the city rainfall gauge at
the Poplar Avenue sewer plant. A total of 10.82 inches of rain
fell between Thursday afternoon and Sunday at the Port of
Sanford.
Gary Kaiser, county director of public safety, estimated
storm damage in excess of 910 million; including $3.5 million in
crop damage, and 93-5 million to businesses and other major
buildings in the county. However, that figure did not include
damage to major buildings and personal property.
County Extension Agent Frank Jasa said some 150 Seminole
(anna suffered storm d a m ^ e . Of these, 100 were considered to
have sustained major damage.
See STORM, Page 2A •

Mrs? r a m *

dmm

i»*t

City Clerk Henry Tamm adm inisters the oath of
office to Sanford Com m issioners David Farr
(above photo) and Milton Sm ith (photo at left) a t
the other city officials w atch. Farr began his
second four-year term at the m eeting. Smith w as
elected to the split tw o-year term in 1980,
r e p la c in g C om m ission er J o h n M orris, w ho
resigned. He was re-elected to a four-year term in
D ecem ber. The oath of o ffic e cerem ony was the
only item of the City Com m ission Tuesday.

�1A—Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wednetday, Ja n.i, l t | ]

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Juggling Deficits,
M ore Defense Spending
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan had two
things to consider today about the 1984 federal budget
and its projected 8200 billion deficit — what to do about
it and what to tell the American people about it.
Reagan’s first nationally broadcast news conference
of 1983, the 15th of his presidency, was scheduled for 8
p.m. with questions sure to focus on the fiscal
problems. He held his last formal question-and-answer
session Nov. 11.
Although Senate GOP leaders are urging Reagan to
cut or defer defense spending Increases In the 1984
budget, they say he is "close to set In concrete" in his
refusal to budge on the subject.
Aides said the president Is considering cuts In the
range of $30 billion in "non-defense discretionary
areas."
But the Democratic congressional leadership Is
taking a dim view of administration plans to slash
social programs during a recession and with nearly 11
percent unemployment In the country.

Dem ocrats Demand Loyalty
WASHINGTON (U PI) - House D em ocrats,
cracking the whip on party loyalty this year, are
waiting to see if Texas “ Boll Weevil" Phil Gramm
switches parties before making a decision on whether
to discipline him further,
The House Democratic Steering and Policy Com­
mittee already has removed Gramm from the House
Budget Committee because of his support for
President Reagan's programs in the last Congress.
But the panel postponed a decision on whether to dust
him also from the House Energy and Commerce
Committee, waiting to see If he resigns to run as a
Republican In a special election. Congressional
sources who requested anonymity said a decision on
whether to oust Gramm from the energy panel would
be unnecessary if he resigns.

A gnew Repays Kickbacks

Whether They Like It Or Not

Counties May Be Forced To Accept Prisons
County officials may be forced to build prisons in their areas
to case crowded conditions in state penal institutions, a
legislative leader says.
Rep. Bobby Brantley of Longwood, chairman of a House
corrections subcommittee on prison overcrowding, said
Tuesday the Department of Corrections should be able to force
local officials to allow the construction of prisons.
He said building new prisons would avoid a possible federal
court order requiring the release of excess criminals.
"Prisons and sewBge plants are two things, I guess, that no
one wants to live near. But they are necessary evils," Brantley
said. "Either we’re going to have to build some institutions or
•we’re going to have to start letting people go."
Dr. Pam Davis, a deputy corrections secretary, said the
department can not eliminate the severe crowding as long as
local governments can use their zoning power to veto plans to
locate prisons in their area.
Ms. Davis said the corrections department will often select a
site for a prison, be ready to work out a deal with property
owners, and then find the county government refuses to zone
the property for a prison.
She said Corrections Secretary Louie Wainwright needs

broader authority from the Legislature to locate prisons in
spite of local government objections.
The Cabinet formerly had authority to select prison sites, but
that power was diluted. It probably should be restored, Ms.
Davis said.
The legislature could pass a prison siting act similar to the
Power Plant Siting Act, which allows the governor and Cabinet
to approve the construction of electricity plants subject to
review by a district appeals courts.
Brantley said the legislature should be careful about in­
truding into "home rule" authority, but some provision to
force local officials to accept prisons seems necessary.
E ach| county could be ordered by the Legislature to
designate an area for correctional and mental health facilities
and include this designation in its comprehensive land use
•plan.
If a county refuses to designate an area, the Cabinet could
act through regional planning councils and make the
designation on its own. In such a case, the stale probably would
have to buy the land.
"This session, if we do nothing else, we need to come out with
some type of legislation that will build some prisons," he said.

Graham Sworn In For 2nd Term
TALLAHASSEE (U PI) Gov.
Bob Graham was sworn in for the second
time Tuesday as Florida's 38th governor,
the fruit of his landslide win over
Republican Skip Bafalis in November.
The 46-year-old Graham was exultant
throughout the day as he heard himself
p raised by two former governors, was
honored with a 19-gun salute and a
flyover by Air National Guard units and
saw his name written across the sky.
The governor was in such a good mood
that he and Lt. Gov. Wayne Mlxson ended
the threequarters of a mile “people's
walk" from the Capitol to the Governor’s
Mansion Tuesday afternoon by Jogging
the final steps from the froht gate to the
Mansion entrance.
Earlier, Graham took the oath of office
on a makeshift platform erected on the
back steps of the old Capitol.
Before him a crowd of more than 3,000
well-wishers filled the courtyard between
the old Capitol and the modem 22-story

Capitol that replaced it.
Chief Justice James E. Alderman
administered the oath while Graham
stood with his right hand raised and his
left hand placed on a Bible held by his
wife Adele. Behind Mrs. Graham stood
their four daughters.
After Graham had sworn to "well and
faithfully perform the duties of gover­
nor,” a Winter Haven National Guard
unit fired the 19-gun salute and Air
National Guard units from Jacksonville
staged a flyover in four Jets and six
helicopters.
Graham used his inaugural address to
challenge Floridians to dream bold
dreams and mold a stale that "cares
about the dignity and well being of each
of its citizens... and Invests and plans for
its future without forgetting its past.”
Graham drew his most prolonged
applause when he called for a renewed
commitment to education both as a way
of training the "workforce of the 21st

GOV. BOBGRAHAM*
...tic k le d p in k b y it a lf
century" and of enhancing the power of
individual choice that "infuses lives with
purposeful meaning.”

BALTIMORE (UPI) —A bribery suit against former
Vice President Spiro Agnew that began six years ago
as a student law project ended Tuesday with payment
of nearly 8270,000 to the Maryland treasury.
Agnew was never convicted In criminal court of
taking kickbacks and said again Tuesday that he is
innocent. But a civil court had held that he did receive
the kickbacks while he was governor and vice
president, and ordered htin to repay the money.
The lawsuit began as the idea of a George
Washington University Law School class and was filed
by three Montgomery County residents In 1976. It
charged that Maryland taxpayers were forced to pay
more for state construction work because of payments
allegedly made to Agnew between 1967 and 1969 by
engineers who sought state contracts.
He resigned os vice president in 1973.

HOSPITAL NOTES
CM tral FMrMa R afteM l Hetfital
TuatSay
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
Jama* T. Cox
Eiitabath Culver
Johnle M. Gardner
Thomas J. Nuity
Johnnie L. Taylor
lyn ga ll Woodall
Laota B. Howell. DeBary
Mary l . Back, Deltona
Opella va lent in, Deltona

Evening Herald

Eiitabath M. Nutlck, Oranga
City
Jams F. McOovam, Otlaan
DISCHARGE!
Sanford:
Ladonna J. Frank
Ann la L. Harris
John L. Sims
Iran# C. Stinson
Barbara L. W it a
Linda L. Alford. Daltona
Karan M. Flthar, Daltona
Baby Boy Flthar, Daltona

(««h mimi

Wednesday, January 5, 1*03—Vol. 75, No. HI
P vblliktd Daily sad Sunday, r u e y t Saturday By TBs Sanford
Herald, Inc., M l N. Prunes Ave.. Sanford, Fla. n n i .
Second Clast Psatasa Paid af Sealord, Florida SSFFi

H«m* Datlvwy: W**k, SI.GGj Meats, H U i * Mm NU. U M Ij

U$r. HIM. By

Malli

UtM j Year, ISMS

T /y

w**k

ll.2Sj Meats,

Uti&lt; « Mm Mu.

____________

Florida Economy To
Take Off Next Year
GAINESVILLE
(UPI) - Florida’s economic
recovery, led by an increase in housing starts and growing
employment, Will outpace the nation this year and tnen take
off in 1984 and 1985, a University of Florida economist says.
“The prospects for Florida are excellent over the next
three years,” said Hank Fishklnd, associate director of the
university's Bureau of Economic and Business Research.
Fishkind Tuesday predicted that Florida's economy
would slowly recover this year, and then undergo two boom
years.
The economist said he based his fourth-quarter forecast
on a rise in housing starts and improved employment in the
third quarter of 1982. He said the housing-start increases
were the first in more than a year.
Population growth and taxable sales showed no growth,
Fishklnd said, but they "would turn around in the very near
future."
Fishkind forecasted ."modest economic growth" in
Florida during the first half of 1983, led by gains in
manufacturing and tourism. He said by mid-year " a strong
cyclical upswing” should be under way.
"Housing starts will increase rapidly, and by the end of
1963, they will surpass their previous cyclical peak set in
1979,” Fishkind said. "Spurred by rapid population growth
and strong residential construction, the Florida economy
will be booming in 1984 and 1985.
Fishklnd also predicted:
— 82,700 single-family housing starts in 1983, rising to
123,900 in 1685. Last year 53,600 single-family homes were
started.
— A 7.7 percent unemployment rale in 1983, declining to
7.2 percent next year and 6.3 percent in 1985. Last year's
average rate was also 7.7 percent.
— A 2.5 percent Increase in population this year, picking
up to 2.9 percent in 1984 and 2.8 percent in IMS:— Thirty-nine million visits to Florida by tourists in 1983,
up from 38.4 million visits last year. The number will
continue to rise to 41.5 million in 1984 and 43.3 million in
1985.
— A 5.2 percent gain in real personal Income in 1983, in­
creasing to 6.8 percent in the next two years. Last year’s
gain was 2.8 percent.

Food Stamp Cuts
Being Rethought

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Bitter cold turned firefighters into
ice statues in New England and a Pacific rain and snowstorm
hampered efforts to find a plane that crashed in Washington
carrying five people. Prisoners in Mississippi waded into a
flooded river to rescue two people. At least 10 weather-related
deaths have been reported in the last three days — tour of them
caused by exposure. Three deaths were reported in Texas,
three in New Mexico, two in Idaho and one each in Oregon and
Mississippi. Temperatures hovered around zero over northern
portions of New England and New York throughout Tuesday.
In Maine, the murcury plummeted to 11-below zero at Caribou
before climbing to a high of only 2 degrees. Firefighters bat­
tling a stubborn blaze in Augusta were slowly transformed Into
ice statues as water dripping from their helmets and clothes
froze, n e a r skies brought Louisiana residents a temporary
reprieve from rains that dumped 18 inches of water and forced
nearly 10,000 people from their homes.
AREA READINGS (I a.m .): temperature: 60; overnight
low: 58; Tuesday high: 89; barometric pressure: 30.21;
relative humidity: 80 percent; winds: northwest at 8 mph;
rain: none; sunrise 7:19 a.m., sunset 5:43 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 1:46 a m .,
2:08 p.m., lows, 7:53 a.m., 8:15 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 1:38 a.m ., 2:00 p jn .; lows, 7:44 a.m., 8:08 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 8:44 a.m., 7:09 p.m.; lows, 12:58 a.m., 12:58
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out 58
Miles: Northerly wind IS knots except occasionally 20 knots
north part today decreasing to 10 to 15 knots tonight. Wind
Thursday northerly around 15 knots. Seas 4 to 8 feet
diminishing to 3 to 5 feet near shore but higher well offshore
tonight. Scattered showers.
AREA FORECAST: Considerable cloudiness today with a 30
percent chance of showers. Highs mid to upper 60s. Northerly
wind 20 mph. Tonight and Thursday partly cloudy with lows
near 50 and highs upper 60s to around 70. Wind tonight light and
variable.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Fair to partly cloudy and mild
Friday through Sunday. Lows north in the low to mid 40s
Friday and mid to upper 40s Saturday and Sunday. Low in the
50s central and south except low to mid 80s extreme southeast
coast and keys Friday through Sunday. Highs Friday mid 60s
to near 70 north and mid 70s south. Highs Saturday and Sunday
mid 70s north to upper 70s south.

H EP. BOBBY
BRANTLEY
...s a y s s t a t e s h o u ld be
a b l e to f o r c e l o c a l
o ffic ia ls to a llo w c o n ­
s tru c tio n o f p r i s o n s in
th e ir a r e a s

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Administration officials say they
have "substantially" altered preliminary proposals to cut
nearly |1 billion in food stamp and child nutrition spending and
to force some food stam p recipients to find work.
But they declined Tuesday to discuss exactly how the
proposals have been changed.
Final plans will be included in President Reagan's proposed
fiscal 1964 budget, which must be filed by Jan. 31.
Htrald Phot* by Tom Vinctnt

C A R IN G KIDS
Id y llw ild e E le m e n ta r y S c h o o l s tu d e n ts r e c e n tly
p a r t i c i p a t e d in a " S p a c e W a lk " a s p a r t of t h e i r
r e g u l a r p h y s ic a l f itn e s s c la s s to r a is e m o n e y fo r
th e M a rc h o f D im e s, T h e e f f o r t n e tte d a t o ta l o f
1859.35. T h e to p fu n d r a i s e r s w e r e p r e s e n te d w ith
c e r t i f i c a t e s o f m e r it b y s c h o o l p r in c ip a l N o rm a

R a g s d a le . B o tto m ro w fro m le f t a r e J a s o n H u ff­
m a n , D e r r e ll a n d T e r r e ll J a c k s o n a n d S c o tt
O 'B rie n . T o p ro w fro m le ft a r e R ic k P e t t i s , R e n a e
S e a c h r ls t, D o n a ld H o o v er I I I , a n d M a ria n n e
K o n d ra c k i.

A tentative proposal prepared by the Office of Management
and Budget would reduce federal spending on food and
nutrition programs by I960 million, to $15.6 billion, in the year
beginning Oct. 1. Spending in the current fiscal year is ex­
pected to total 116.5 billion.
Agriculture Department officials said the 1964 figures are
based on an early version of the administration’s recom­
mendation and are not accurate.
"T hat’s been revised subatantially," one official said, but he
declined to elaborate.

Also Extends Ambulance Contract

Commission Buys Land For Office Expansion
By MICHEALBEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole Cbunty commissioners have voted
to purchase two parcels of land for county
office expansion, extend a contract for
emergency ambulance service, and move a
m etal building for use by the county's road
division.
Commissioners voted Tuesday to finalize
agreements to buy a 15.85-acre parcel ad-'
Jacent to the county's Five Points complex and
an 8.7-acre parcel along Airport Boulevard
near Z tyre's In Sanford.
The purchase price of the Five Points
property, projected as the site of a new county
administration building is $481,000. The Air­
port Boulevard property, the site of a new
health center, Is 1167,910.
Commissioners also directed staff officials
to seek s change in the zoning of both

p ro p erties to o governm ent-com m ercial
classification.
A two-month extension of the county's
contract with Herndon Ambulance Service
Inc. was approved The contract expired Dec.
31 but an agreement between the county and
the company extends the pact through the end
of February.
Acting County Administrator Jim Easton
said all but one issue has been resolved in
contract negotiations. That issue, the per­
centage of profits made by the firm from nonemergency service, is still being discussed
E aston said Budget D irector E leanor
Anderson is working with Herndon's auditors
to determine how much of a subsidy is really
needed.
The contract calls for a $74,997 subsidy (or
the rest of the year plus an additional 18,779
per month once a fourth advanced life support

EPA Tests For Dioxin
TIMES BEACH, Mo. (UPI) — Federal workers were or­
dered to wear rubber boots, protective clothing and face
m asks during testing today to determine if fioodwsters spread
deadly dioxin throughout the evacuated St. Louis suburb.
Town officials complained the testing by the Environmental
Protection Agency will do little to help displaced residents find
housing, or speed repair of s flood-damaged w ater supply
system.
State and fsderal dlaaster relief officials have agreed to haul
away hundreds of truckloads of flood debris left untouched
because of the dioxin scare, Mrs. LaCrone said Ihe debris is a
health hazard, but added, dioxin la a greater threat.
Only 50 families remained in the town, which had a
population of 2,400 before the December flooding.

unit Is operational.
A $54,000 savings on the purchase of road
grading equipment will be used to finance the
relocation of a metal building from near
Seminole Memorial Hospital to the county's
Five Points complex.
Commissioners approved Tuesday a plan to
tear down the building, move it to Five Points
and re-assemble it for use by the county's
roads division.
Public Works Director Jack Schuder told
commissioners the building is needed as a
work area for the road crews. The division
currently has no Indoor working area. Mor­
ning and afternoon assemblies a re held out­
side and evaluation conferences between
employees and supervisors must be held
outside (or privacy.
Schuder said the move would provide ad­

ditional office space in the public works
building.
The building will be erected inside the
fenced compound at Five Points.
Commissioners also authorized the hiring of
an appraiser to give a second opinion on a
triangular parcel at Hie intersection of Howell
Branch and Dike Roads.
County Attorney Nikki Clayton said the
county's first appraisal of the sm all piece of
property was $70,000. The owners of the land
have offered to sell It for $145,000.
U a second appraisal substantiates the first
and the owners still refuse to sell, the county
will proceed with lmlnent domain action, she
Ms. Clayton said the property is "esential to
trsnsportstlon." The intersection is already a
hazard and additional commercial develop­
ment could magnify the situation.

... Woman Accused O f M urder Testifies
Continued From Page IA
Mias Davis testified that Brooks had raped and beaten
her on several occasions. On one occasion, he knocked her
against a stereo and then raped her, the said.
But Misa Davis said, under cross examination by
assistant state attorney Don Marfalestone, that she did not
call police to report the rape.
The pair became lovers in July and moved in together
shortly thereafter, she testified.
One of the construction workers, John P. McCullough,
testified Tuesday that Brooks had leaned into Davis' car.
She then took a gun from her purse and shot him,

McCullough said.
Throughout the first day of the hearing Tuesday, Miss
Davis sat Impassively in court as Seminole County Medical
Examiner Dr. G.V. Garay described how the first bullet
would not have killed Brooks.
A second bullet th at hit Brooks caused "m assive bleeding
around the heart," G aray said. Cross examined by Flggatt,
Dr. Garay said that after this bullet had struck Brooks
there was no possibility he could have run 50 to 100 yards.
“ He would have fainted shortly afterwards," Dr. Garay
said.
Doyle Weaver, 18, of Palatka told the Jury he had heard
shots while he was on the construction site.

J

�v l/

5

Evening Herald, ^"•ord, R

Lining-B usiness

... Storm Had

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

Continued From Page 1A

The old maxim oi "It is an ill wind that blows no good" held
true In this case as th t storm proved to be a financial bonanza
for area roofing, and glass contractors and suppliers.
“Actually, the storm was almost a God-sent blessing,"
Courson said. “It was economically healthy for the community
and got a lot of money circulating. Once t(je damage was taken
care of many of the people took care.of ektea work they had
been putting off.
"The insurance companies paid off and most were better off
than they were before,” Courson said.
Not so fortunate were the citrus growers and farm ers whose
uninsured crops were destroyed.
The hail made cole slaw of the spring cabbage crop in the
fields and It was too late to replant. Cucumbers and
miscellaneous crops were also damaged from flooding and
hails. There was also damage to farm buildings and
greenhouses.
Emergency loans at 8 percent Interest were made available
by the Department of Agriculture through the Farm ers Home
Administration's Seminole County office. To date, only two
loans have been granted — one for $83,000 to a nursery farmer
and the other for $41,000 to a vegetable farm er, according to
Marie Ferrell, FHA county office assistant.
To be eligible, applicants must be unable to get financing
anywhere else. There were a total of 20 Inquiries and each was
sent an application, however, only five applications were
actually submitted, she said. Three loans are still pending.
The deadline for applying for loans for physical loss, such as
a damaged greenhouse or bam , is May. However, deadline fqr
production loans (loss of crop) was Sept. 30, said Ms. Ferrell.
Those wtth uninsured homes, property, businesses and farm
or ranching operations who experienced losses due to the
storm may be eligible for a tax break and should file losses on
their 1982 tax return. For assistance, call the district director
of Internal Revenue Service, Jacksonville office, at 904-7912945, or the chief of Taxpayer Services Division IRS,
Jacksonville. 904-791-2511.

"It was a good lesson in disaster emergency and Insight into
assessing dam age." Kaiser said. "We learned Just what data
the state and federal agencies required to determine eligibility
aid.

Blacks Want Resignation
O f Miami Police Chief
MIAMI (UPI)—Black leaders are calling for the
resignation of Police Chief Kenneth Hams, saying he
displayed a “cowboy" mentality during last week's
rioting and lias allowed racism to become In­
stitutionalized in the police department.
Two men died, 26 people were hurt and a dozen
businesses looted or damaged during last week’s
violence in the Overtown ghetto. The riot began after
police fatally shot a young black In a video gam e ar­
cade.
Mayor Maurice Ferre, in response to criticisms of
the Police Department, Monday established a blueribbon committee to investigate the police depart­
ment’s handling of minorities.

"It could have been a lot worse," Kaiser added. "For­
tunately, there was no loss of life and only a few injuries.”
Glass blew into patients' rooms at Seminole Memorial
Hospital when high winds smashed windows. Injured during
the storm was Ralph Kelly, a 58-year-old patient from DeBary,
who had to have three fingers amputated after his hand was
crushed in a door while trying to get out of his wind-damaged
room. Another victim was 14-year-old Peter Jackson of
Altamonte Springs who suffered head cuts and an eye injury
from hall stones.

TALLAHASSEE (U P I)—The D epartm ent of
Revenue says newcomers to the state don’t get a
$25,000 homestead exemption on school property taxes,
just on city and government taxes.
The department says its interpretation of a Dec. 16
Supreme Court ruling throwing out the residency
requirement on the $25,000 homestead exemption is
that the decision didn't apply to taxes levied by the 67
school boards.
It Is instructing property appraisers to limit people
who haven’t lived In the state five years to a $5,000
exemption on school taxes, while granting them the full
$25,000 exemption on city and county taxes.

There was scarcely a budding or vehicle in the area that did
not sustain damage from the storm. Store windows were
shattered, cars were dented by falling hail, roofs rerc tom off.
and trees and shrubs were shredded.
Flagship Bank was the only bank in Seminole County to be
certified by the Small Business Association and had funds to
lend to local merchants and residents in a matter of days.
But Flagship President Dennis Courson said there were no
takers, pointing to the quick response of the insurance ad­
justers and the fair way in which they paid off claims.
Evidently, he said, most businesses and residences were
adequately Insured to take care of the damage.
Insurance companies In the Sanford area handled an
enormous volume of claims stemming from the two storms.
"I've been a Sanford resident all of my life," said independent
insurance agent Tony Russl," and I guarantee you one thing—
nothing th a t's come through here equaled the hail damage and
damage from the tornado."
Russi's agency alone handled $2,800,000 in claims. “There’s
not a house in Sanford wasn’t damaged to some extent," he
said.

Launch May Be Delayed

It's Better

United Tress International
A puzzling leak of flammable hydrogen in the engine
compartment of the second space shuttle threatens to
delay its first launch later this month.
"We still don’t understand where the hydrogen leak
is coming from," Mission Commander Paul J . Weitz
said Tuesday at the crews' final pre-launch news
conference.
The launch of the shuttle Challenger Is tentatively
scheduled for Jan. 28 at Cape Canaveral, but National
Aeronautics and Space Administration officials said
they will not approve the launch until the leak is found
and fixed.
The officials said such a leak could be dangerous
during flight.

Behind Bars

School Exemption Limited

Blacks Boycott Busch
PENSACOLA (UPI J*—A national civil rights group is
"escalating" a boycott against Anheuser Busch beers
in an attempt to spur the national brewer to hire more
blacks, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said.
Jackson announced the escalation Tuesday at a
protest where about 30 supporters smashed two cases
of Budwelser beer into twisted cans dripping foam.
They staged the demonstration when an Anheuaar
Busch distributor declined to meet with the leader of
People United to Save Humanity.

Big Hopes For
Orphan Drugs

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S P IN A I f X A M IN A I ION

4

Ninety-five applications for emergency assistance and 38
requests for additional assistance were received by Red Cross
workers. Emergency assistance was given in the form of food,
clothing and shelter immediately following the storm. The
homeless were put up in a local motel, broken windows were
boarded up. damaged roofs were temporarily covered,
emergency clothing and food were provided to those who lost
theirs in the storm.

W

FREE

United Press International
The celebrations were small — a little party in Los Angeles,
a couple of popped corks In New York — but the hopes of those
who may be helped by new drugs are very, very large.
With a wish that his signature could ease heartache and
pain, President Reagan signed legislation Tuesday that
provides a tax break to drug companies to encourage them to
develop medicines for some 2,000 rare and debilitating
diseases that afflict about 20 million Americans.
Although pharmaceutical companies know of drugs that
could help to control some of the 2,000 such diseases, they have
not gone through the expensive process of winning approval
from the Food and Drug Administration because not enough
Americans suffer from each of the conditions to repay their
costs.

A u to , h o m e , an d b o a t r e p a ir m e n a ll o v e r
S e m in o le C o unty w o rk e d o v e r tim e fo r m o n th s
fo llo w in g l a s t s p r in g ’s s t o r m s w h ich in ju r e d fe w .
b u t d id m illio n s of d o lla r s in d a m a g e , s u c h a s
th e s e b o a ts a t L ak e M o n ro e .

C O U P O N LAST3DAYS
S A V IN G S
CUT 8i SAVE

AM ERICAS FAMILY DfyUG STORE

JACKSON, Mich. (UPI) Aman serving time for armed
robbery who fled a minimum
security prison last Sep­
tem ber knocked at the
facility 's front gale after
deciding life on the outside
wasn't so great after all.
Officials said Larry Fox
returned^ to the Southern
Michigan'Prison near Grass
Lake M onday morning,
blocked on the front door, and
turned himself in.
Fox told officers he was
tired of running. A prison
spokesman said his return
could be related to the
depressed
economy
in
Michigan, since Fox probably
was unable to find a job on the
outside.
O fficials said Fox had
served five years of a llHo-25year te rm to r armed robbery
In Kent County and will be
charged with eacape.

Wedn»&lt;d&lt;iy, Jan, 5, Itt3 —3A

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�Evening Herald
IUSPS 411 ISO)

m N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771

woyvi

Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
W ednesday, J a n u a r y 5, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, *45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; S Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

F a ir

Hearing

\

c L O &lt; *

By JANE CASSEU1ERRY

Needed In Congress
President Reagan's Caribbean Basin Initiative,
the aid and trade package designed to bolster the
hardscrabble economies of Central America and
the Caribbean, deserve better than it received this
year from Congress.
T h e H o u s e a n d S e n a t e d id a p p ro v e M r.
R e a g a n ’s r e q u e s t fo r 350 m illio n in e c o n o m ic a id .
Rut t h e v ita ) t r a d e a n d in v e s t m e n t in c e n tiv e s Tell
v ic tim to s h o r ts ig h te d n e s s a n d s p e c ia l i n te r e s t
p o litic s .
C h ie f p r a c t i t i o n e r o f t h e l a t t e r w a s th e A F L CIO , I t s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s c h a r g e d th a t lo w e r
ta r i f f s f o r im p o r te d L a t i n g o o d s p lu s t a x in ­
c e n tiv e s f o r U .S . in v e s tm e n ts in C e n tra l A m e r ic a
a n d t h e C a r ib b e a n a m o u n t e d to a po licy o f e x ­
p o r tin g jo b s . T h a t w a s o v e r s t a t i n g th e c a s e , to s a y
th e l e a s t .
J a m a i c a n P r i m e M in is te r E d w a r d S e a g a p u t
th e c o u n t e r a r g u m e n t b e s t w h e n h e n o te d t h a t ,
" t h e C a r i b b e a n B a s in I n i t i a t iv e , ev en if s u c ­
c e s s f u l b e y o n d all e x p e c t a t i o n s , sim p ly c a n n o t
e n g e n d e r e c o n o m ic m a c h i n e s th a t w ill t h r e a t e n
a n y ( U .S .) d o m e s tic i n t e r e s t . "
S e a g a ’s m in is te r o f i n d u s t r y a n d c o m m e r c e ,
D o u g la s V a z , c ite d a c a s e in p o in t in te s tim o n y
b e fo re a c o n g re s s io n a l c o m m itte e . S h o e s
p r o d u c e d b y C a r r ib e a n n a t i o n s a c c o u n t f o r o n ly
t h r e e - t e n t h s o f 1 p e r c e n t o f a ll fo o tw e a r im p o r ts to
th e U n ite d S ta te s . N u d g in g t h e e x is tin g t a r i f f s on
th o s e s h o e s a b it lo w e r m ig h t h a v e m e a n t a lo t to
c o u n trie s
lik e J a m a i c a
th a t
could h a r d l y
d o m i n a t e th e U .S. m a r k e t if th e r e w e re no t a r i f f a t
a ll.
T h e s a m e c o u ld b e s a i d f o r te x tile s , lig h t in­
d u s t r i a l p r o d u c ts , a n d a t le a s t so m e o f th e
a g r i c u l t u r a l c o m m o d itie s p ro d u c e d in C e n tr a l
A m e r ic a a n d th e C a r ib b e a n .
T h e 28 n a tio n s of t h e r e g io n c u rre n tly s u p p ly
o n ly 4 p e r c e n t of a ll U .S . i m p o r ts . At m o s t, t h a t
f i g u r e m ig h t h a v e i n c r e a s e d e v e n tu a lly t o 10
p e r c e n t h a d a ll th e t a r i f f r e d u c tio n s in c lu d e d in
th e C a r ib b e a n B a sin I n i t i a t i v e b e e n e n a c te d . A n d
a p o r tio n o f th is in c r e a s e w o u ld s u re ly h a v e c o m e
at t h e e x p e n s e of im p o r t s fro m e ls e w h e re in th e
w o rld r a t h e r th a n f r o m d o m e s tic in d u s tr ie s .
B e y o n d th e s e e c o n o m ic c o n s id e ra tio n s lie s th e
l a r g e r is s u e of h e m is p h e r ic s e c u r ity . T h e b u ild u p
of S o v ie t a r m s in C u b a , t h e in s ta lla tio n o f a
M a r x is t r e g im e in N i c a r a g u a , a n d th e c o n tin u in g
g u e r r i l l a w a r s in E l S a l v a d o r a n d G u a te m a la a ll
s i g n a l a S o v ie t-b a c k e d d r i v e in to th e v u ln e r a b le
w a is t o f th e A m e r ic a s .
T h is o ffe n s iv e , w h ic h b e g a n in e a r n e s t d u r i n g
th e l a t e 1970s, c o in c id e d w ith a re g io n a l r e c e s s io n
t h a t l e f t C e n tr a l A m e r ic a a n d th e C a rib b e a n m o r e
e x p o s e d t h a n u su a l to M a r x is t in filtra tio n a n d
s u b v e r s io n . P e a s a n t f a r m e r s w ho c a n n o t g e t
d e c e n t p r ic e s fo r t h e i r c r o p s a n d u rb a n w o r k e r s
w h o c a n n o t fin d jo b s a r e le s s lik e ly to tu r n a d e a f
e a r w h e n M a r x is ts c a l l f o r re v o lu tio n .
M r . R e a g a n k n o w s t h a t p u ttin g C e n tr a l
A m e r i c a a n d th e C a r i b b e a n on th e d o le is n o
a n s w e r , e v e n if th e U .S . b u d g e t c o u ld s t a n d th e
s t r a i n . T h e e c o n o m ic a i d t h a t w a s a p p r o v e d b y
C o n g r e s s is m o re o f t h e e m e r g e n c y v a r i e t y , a n d
a l m o s t h a lf o f it w ill g o to p a t c h u p E l S a l v a d o r ’s
w a r-ra v a g e d econom y.
T h e C a r ib b e a n B a s in I n i t i a t iv e w a s in te n d e d to
s t r e s s s e lf-h e lp a n d f r e e e n t e r p r i s e a s th e b e s t
s o lu tio n s to th e r e g i o n ’s e c o n o m ic p r o b le m s .
T a r i f f r e d u c tio n s a n d t a x I n c e n tiv e s fo r A m e r ic a n
in v e s t m e n t in th e r e g i o n a r e f o rm s of s e e d c o r n
f o r e c o n o m ie s th a t n e e d to r e g e n e r a t e th e g r o w th
r a t e s th e y a c h ie v e d p r i o r to t h e c u r r e n t r e c e s s io n .
W e h o p e C o n g re s s c a n p u t a s id e p a r o c h ia lis m
lo n g e n o u g h to g iv e t h e i n i t i a t i v e a f a ir e r h e a r i n g .

BERRY'S WORLD

"Poor fella/ He seems kinda lonely since the
kids got those ‘E. T. ’ dolls for Christmas."

Have you ever taken your car to a garage for
repairs only to come away convinced that the
mechanic had not solved the problem, that he
had done some unnecessary repairs, or even
worse, done nothing at all?
Complaints about auto repair work rank
second on the list of inquiries received annually
by the Orlando Better Business Bureau.
Yet according to Ken Meyer, Gulf CarCare
manager for Florida, it need not be as difficult to
find a competent mechanic as you may think if
you follow a few basic rules based on guidelines
developed by the National Institute for
Automotive Service Excellence (NAISE).
1. Check to see If the mechanic is certified by a
credible national organization, such as NAISE. A
certified mechanic is proud of his ac­
complishment and will almost always show it by
hanging his certificate on the wall. Look for
these certificates or ask if they are a solid in­
dication of competence.
2. Check around for references. Ask your
friends and associates If they've used this ser­
vice facility and whether they were satisfied

with the-m echanlc’a work, with the cost, and
with the length of time it took to complete
repairs.
3. Ask for a written estimate, and then check
around for competitive bids. If one shop is un­
willing to make a bid, stay away. You probably
won't be happy with their work anyway.
4. Look at the condition of the shop. If it’s
untidy and dirty it could mean they take little
pride in their work. Also, check to see how many
customers' cars are sitting around in states of
disrepair. Leave your car here, and it might
wind up gathering dust in the back of the shop,
too.
5. When you do select a mechanic, ask for your
old parts when picking up your car. If they can’t
find them , think twice about going back a second
time.

6. Before paying the bill it's a good idea to take
a test drive, ideally with the mechanic who
actually did the work. It’s funny how often those
stran g e noises and hesitant perform ance
problems you've just paid to have fixed reappear

within minutes of leaving the shop.
7. Finally, when you do find a mechanic you
like and tru st-stick with him. It will be helpful
to you because good mechanics deserve the
support of your business.
Many problems result from a poor com­
munication between customers and mechanics.
"When you drop off your car, describe exactly
what the problem is, and then let the mechanic
diagnose it. Don't be vague when describing a
malfunction, tell him exactly what the car's
doing, or not doing, and then get out of his way
and let him get to work," said Meyer.
If you were as disconcerted about Time
Magazine’s selertjon of a computer as its man of
the year as I was, you will appreciate the sen­
timents expressed by a clerk overheard at a
large department store.
The store’s computer was down and after
waiting for some time for her terminal to come
back on line, she said in disgust to the line of
disgruntled customers, “ And they named this
guy Man of the Year!"

D O N GRAFF

ANTHONY H A RRIG AN

Law
£&gt;LTha
Sea Folly
The Reagan administration was wise not to
sign the law of the sea treaty in Jamaica last
month. The proposed International regime to
regulate undersea mining is not in the interest
of the United States and other advanced
countries.
The law of the sea treaty is best described
as a dangerous collectivist experiment. The
beneficiaries would be hostile Third World
countries which lack both technological ex­
pertise and capital.
One of the best analyses of the meaning of
the law of the sea treaty has been made by
Prof. D.R. Denman of Cambridge University
in England. Writing in The Times of Londqn,
Prof. Denman points out that approval of the
treaty would mean:
1. Authorizing the U.N. to go into business
against free enterprise.
2. Giving the U.N. agents (the International
Seabed A uthority and its en terprise)
calculated ad v an tag es over their com ­
petitors.
3. levying compulsory funds from state
parties and companies to finance and
maintain the collectivist
enterprise to
operate against them.
4. Compelling companies to hand over vital
technical know-how and training facilities to
the competing enterprise.
5. Setting up In the world a new absolute
sovereignty, the ISA, over the deep ocean
resources.
6. Denying the deep seabed resources to
those bold, able and willing to risk men and
money to win them for the benefit of mankind
and who should, in consequence, be
guaranteed the property right to exploit
them.
7. Giving power to the ISA to control in­
directly and ultimately directly the world
mineral markets.

8. Closing the doors to better alternative
regimes.
9. Gaining nothing more than what is now
achievable from world concensus by way of
navigation rights and national operation
zones.
10. Signing against an almost universal
opinion, among developed and developing
nations, that the proposals of the convention
must in any attempted operation lead to
breakdown.
In these comments, Prof. Denman makes
clear the very hurtful consequences of the law
of the sea treaty. It is very important that the
United States continue to refuse to sign it.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to the editor are welcomed tor
publication. All letters must be ilgned, with
a milling address and, 11 possible, a
telephone number so the identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening
Herald will respect the wishes of writers
who do not want their names la p rin t The
Evening Herald also reserves the right to
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
to space requirements.

Smoke
From
All Over

JEFFREY HART

Ban That Creche
U Just wouldn't seem like Christmas
without litigation over the public display' of
the Nativity scene.
In Pawtucket, R.I., for example, a federal
Judge ruled that the city's display of a creche
at Christmas time violated the First
Amendment's separation of church and state.
According to Judge Hugh Brown, "The
creche is purely a Christian religious symbol:
this Is the distinction between the creche and
Christmas as a holiday."
Surely this is a distinction without a dif­
ference. If it had not been for what happened
in the original Nativity scene, there would be
no Christmas "holiday"—that is Holy Day.
The Judge's distinction was all the more
absurd in that the courts consider Christmas
. trees .okay In schools and public parks, the
rationale being that the tree is rooted not in
Christian but In pagan practice. That Is, it is
all right to be pagan on public premises and at
taxpayers' expense, but not Christian.
The pagan religions, however, are
assuredly religions, no less so than
Christianity! Which puts our courts in the
fabulous position of discriminating against
Christianity In favor of paganism. Jupiter,
Thor, Wotan, Adonis, and Osiris apparently
do not violate the First Amendment.
It is a widespread perception that the "civil
liberties" groups which have been pressing
these anti-Christmas suits in the courts are
less in favor of civil liberties than they are
hostile to Christianity.
And It is my own strategic sense that they
are not doing themselves much good with the
general public by this lltlglousness. If
anything, and statistics support this, the
American people are growing more religious
and more Christian in the present phase of
our culture, and the churches are recovering
ground lost during the '60s.
Nor did civil liberties noticeably suffer in

Pawtucket during the years when the creche
was set up in a public park during the
Christmas season.
By waging these symbolic wars against
Christianity, the "dviLubertles" groups are
using up their credit * for future battles
revolving around genuine civil liberties.
At about the same time as the Pawtucket
business, we had the dust-up In New Jersey
over a bill requiring one minute of silence per
day in the public schools. The new Republican
governor, Thomas Kean, vetoed it only to
have it passed over his veto by the state
legislature.
The Impulse behind this legislation and
other measures that would return some form
of prayer to the schools is surely sound, and Is
overwhelmingly popular.
If only marginally, it Is valuable for
students in the schools, and, indeed, for the
rest of us, to be reminded that there is
something beyond the political state, and
beyond the human will.
No one expects school prayer to transform
adolescent behavior, eliminate beer, pot and
pregnancy overnight. But that mqmont of
silence, and the other forms of prayer do
represent a sm all hint that the world of our
five senses, the ordinary world in which we do
most of our living, does not exhaust reality.
There Is something beyond, and that
reflection may in a few students, or. perhaps
more than a few, produce at least a hint of
humility and reflectiveness.
In my own opinion, as a college professor,
prayer In the schools can be defended upon
sound educational grounds — indeed,
defended against the courts on grounds of
academic freedom.
Oh, yes, of course the American Civil
Liberties Union has announced that U will
challenge New Jersey's moment of silence in
the courts.

From time to time, the subject under
consideration In this space has been smoking.
It has not been treated objectively, for good
reason. It is a subject about which a reformed
smoker (13 years, but only after Herculean
effort) would find it exceedingly difficult to be
objective even if that were warranted. Which
it is not.
What follows, however, is going to be dif­
ferent. It's a look at the tobacco Industry on a
world scale with some selected details from
the December issue of the Agriculture
D epartm ent’s “ Foreign Agriculture Cir­
cular." Just the facts, as provided by USDA,
without editorial comment.
To start with, total world production this
year is expected to hit 6.57 million tons,
nearly 11 percent atjpve lost year, and the
United States has a lot of company as a
grower. Other m ajor producers include
China, India, Brazil, Zimbabwe, Argentian,
Malawi, the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia,
Turkey, Bulgaria, Greece, Yugoslavia and
both Koreas.
Japan, on the other hand, is a major im­
porter and the leading market for American
leaf—26,083 tons during the first 10 months of
1982. The No. 1 importer, however, Is the
Soviet Union which Is projected to buy 105,000
tons of foreign tobacco this year, most of it
from Bulgaria and India.
Elsewhere In the East, Poland's economy
may be suffering from disastrous production
declines in key industries but cigarettes are
an exception. This year’s output —4! percem
filter-tip — is expected to be 85 billion, up
from 1981 by two billion. However, since
domestic demand is 96 billion cigarettes for
the year, the cash-strapped m ilitary
government has been compelled to Import
significant quantities and to ration supplies.
Adults are limited to 12 packs per month.
Hungary Is In a much better situation. A
grower Itself, its export of Virginia-type
tobacco is a source of hard-currency ear­
nings, which traditionally have been used to
Improve the quality of domestically produced
cigarettes. The output of these is expected to
top 26 billion this year, but demand is ex­
pected to show a decline as a consequence of
higher prices and recently initiated govern­
ment efforts to discourage smoking on health
grounds.
East meets West.
And back in the West, the governmentcontrolled tobacco industry has been affected
by Mexico’s economic distress. In November,
cigarette prices were hiked 28 percent to
cover higher production costs resulting in
large part from higher grower prices ranging
up to 65 percent for stalk-cut hurley.
And finally, back to the United States and
the importance of tobacco as an export
product. For the first 10 months of 1982, un­
manufactured tobacco exports were In excess
of 195,000 tons. That was a 3 percent decline in
quantity from the previous year, but the
market value of $1.15 billion was a 7 percent
Increase oyer the same period of 1981.
Add to that finished cigarette exports,
which brought In $1.03 billion from January
through October.

JA C K A N D E R SO N

If Civilians Refuse Work...What Then?
WASHINGTON - At painful expense to the
taxpayers, the Pentagon has developed the
most sophisticated weaponry In the world.
The latest instruments of destruction are
wondrous to behold, with sleek designs,
com puterised controls and electronic
gadgetry.
There Is Just one problem; These weapons
are so complex that only highly skilled
technicians can operate them. Yet the armed
services d o n 't h iv e nearly enough
technicians in the ranks. So they depend on
civilian contract personnel - known in the
trade as "technical mercenaries" — to
manage and maintain the sophisticated
weapons systems.
This poses a problem; If war breaks out,
will the elght-hour-a-day civilians stay and
fight? The Pentagon has responded typically
by trying to minimize the problem. But I’ve
seen ■ grim study prepared for the Defense
Department, which warns urgently: " If these
civilians should choose not to work in crises,
the effect on weapon syrtem m aterial
readiness could be devastating."
Meanwhile, the generals and adm irals
continue to lavish billions on hardware,
without putting sufficient money Into per­
sonnel training and Inducements. Thus the
technicians in uniform, who can be trained to

keep die super weapons in working order, are
too easily lured out of service Into lucrative
Jobs In the civilian sector.
At present, there are about 5,000 civilian
technicians In the Defense Department.
About half of them are contract people — the
technical m ercenaries. A Pentagon memo
stales;
"We have become Increasingly concerned
over the past few years with the growing
shortage of skilled military technicians at a
time when weapon systems entering the In­
ventory are increasingly complex." This has
resulted in "a n expanded use of civilian
technicians, largely contractor personnel, to
provide necessary technical advice, training
and support In the maintenance of weapon
systems."
An investigation by the House Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee, chaired by
Joseph Addabbo, D-N.Y. found there were
more th an 1,000 technical m ercen aries
performing critical Jobs in the European
Command alone. Their responsibilities range
from command-and-control communications
to air defense.
The Pentagon memo puts the problem
succinctly: "This Increased use of civilian
technicians In peacetime in turn raised the
question of availability of these personnel in

wartime."
continuing struggle.
The Logistics Management Institute, an
Chemical warfare la waged on the lnse&lt;
independent defense-oriented think tank,
and rodents on a regular basis. The Reagai
recently made a study for the Pentagon. Its , kitchen, pantry and food-storage areas t
report, reviewed by my associate Lucette
sprayed with restaurant-strength pestick
Lagnado, urges the Defense Department to
biweekly, while the first family’s Uvi
reassess its policy toward the use of technical
quarters are treated periodically as the ne
mercenaries In key positions.
arises.
Officially, th e m ilitary services a re
The National P ark Service Is In charge
required to be "self-sufficient" in operating
the battle against rata, tracking them arou
and maintaining their exotic new weapons
the White House grounds and laying poll
systems. But In reality they depend on con­
bait on their pathways. No p u t of 1
tractors "on a continuing basis - frequently
executive complex Is Immune from the hi
throughout the operational Uvea of system s."
and rodents - East Wing, West Wing, the (
Rather than adm it to a breach of the
Executive Office Building, all are spra)
regulations, those in charge "under-report
routinely. The cost of treating the 680 offii
their use of co n tract engineers and
within the White House grounds top[
technicians," the report said.
$20,000 In fiscal 1982, according to the Gene
IS NANCY ANT8-Y7: It may surprise you
Services Administration.
to learn that the first family is not immune to
Impartial as ever, the creeping-crawl
some of the unpleasant, mundane problems
also Infest the legislative branch. There
that other d iy dwellers face dally. One
roadies in all the congressional buildings
dreary feature of urban life has*- literally —
Capitol Hill; pest control there costs C M
crept into the White House complex:
month.
cockroaches, a n ti and even rats.
— The White House isn’t in imminent
The problem was recentlyexacerbMed
danger of becoming a roach motel, but its
construction of the new Hart Senate Of
pest problems are not limited to pickets and
Building. As demolition and construe
recalcitrant m em bers of Congress. Con­
always do, they sent rats, roaches and t
trolling the cheeky little critters has been a
scurrying for new hideouts.

�vk

s
Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.____Wednesday, Jan. I, 1V3—3A

Congress Will Mangle,
Reshape New Budget
WASHINGTON (UPI) - On Jan. 31,
President Reagan’s budget will arrive on
Capitol Hill. There will be numerous stories
about what it contains. Ignore them all.
A president's budget almost always is
mangled and reshaped by Congress, which,
under the Constitution, has the power of the
purse.
As congressmen say, in congressional
jtngoese, "The president proposes; the Con­
gress disposes."
Reagan's first budget was a near exception
to the rule. Riding a wave of popularity rarely
seen, Reagan used a newly Republican Senate
and a House that was Republican in
philosophy, if not in name, to bull his budget
through almost intact.
In one of the rare congressional events of the
century, the entire budget was lumped into one
bill — called the GrammLatta budget
reconciliation resolution. The massive bill was
passed after only an hour of debate with only a
handful of printed copies available because
much of it had been written only hours before.
The bill was named for Reps. Delbert Latta,
R-Ohio, ar.d-PhU Gramm, D-Texas,in an ef­
fort to give it a bipartisan flavor. But it was —
and is — called "Reagan's budget."
Although the bill did represent a massive
change in U.S. priorities, it was not exactly the
budget Reagan originally proposed because of
numerous sm all compromises made to gam er
enough votes to pass it.
And in the months afterward, it became

A MATTER
OF RECORD

Cavallaro Honored
By Rotary Club
The
S anford-B reakfait
Rotary Club recently h o n a :d
E rnie
C avallaro,
vice
president-elect, as a Paul
H arris Fellow. By con­
tributing 11,000 to the Rotary
Foundation in his name, the
club was able to extend to him
a Paul Harris Fellowship for
his service to the club and the
community over the years.
The Paul Harris Fellowship
award is considered one of the
most prestigious awards that
can be bestowed upon a
Rotarian. The award is made
in the name of Paul Harris,
founder of Rotary. Cavallaro
is the comptroller for Codlsco
Inc.,
whose
corporate
headquarters are at Sanford

frayed around the edges as numerous changes
were made quietly in the process of passing
the numerous appropriations bills that provide
funds for federal agencies.
This year, Reagan will not be so successful.
With 26 new Democrats elected on a
program of reversing Reagan's policies,
the president will have more difficulty in the
House. And the Senate, although still GOPdomlnated, contains 19 Republicans who will
be up for election in 19M. The Senate has given
every indication It will return to the old ways,
if not exactly the old days.
The old ways work like this:
1. The president submits his budget, and
news organizations turn out many thousands
of words detailing what is in it.
2. The budget is received on Capitol Hill
unceremoniously, with congressmen milling
around and talking to their neighbors as the
clerk reads a cover letter.

E R N IE C AVALLARO
countries. T alented and
promising young men and
women study abroad with the
expenses paid by the foun­
dation.
The Rotary Club of SanfordBreakfast will accept ap­
plications and interviews
from those students who may
qualify. Individuals who
desire to be considered should
contact J.S. "R ed" Gcveland,
chairm an of the Rotary
F o u n d atio n C o m m ittee,
telephone 322-7771.

Airport.

The Paul Harris Fellowship
was started in 1957 and this
year in conjunction with the
R otary Foundation will
contribute some f 17 million,
which will be used to provide
scholarships to deserving
young people. The purpose of
the
Rotary
Foundation
scholarships is to further
international understanding
and friendly relations bet­
ween people of different

3. Congress writes its own budget, often in
piecemeal fashion despite a new budget
process designed to bring order to past chaos.
4. The president, if he doesn’t like what
Congress does, has only the option of vetoing
each of the 13 regular appropriations bills as
they come along.

ROTARIAN HONORED
S ta n le y B . P o t t e r is c o n g r a tu la te d b y h is w ife, A lic e , a f t e r b e in g p r e s e n te d
th e h o n o r o f R o ta r y I n te r n a tio n a l re c o g n itio n a s a " P a u l H a r r i s F e llo w ." T h e
H o ta ry C lu b of S a n fo rd c o n tr ib u te d S i,000 in P o t t e r 's n a m e to th e H o ta r y
I n te r n a tio n a l F o u n d a tio n in re c o g n itio n of h is c o n tin u e d s u p e r io r s e r v ic e in
e x te n d in g H o ta r y . P o tte r is a p a s t p r e s id e n t of H o ta r y , h a s h e ld m a n y o ffic e s
a n d h a s a c h ie v e d 27 y e a r s of p e r f e c t a tte n d a n c e a t w e e k ly m e e tin g s .

Political winds change, and Reagan may
well succeed In some of his budget priorities,
although it appears almost certain there will
be less military spending and more domestic
spending than he wants.

A»t AMERICA’S LARGEST WINE ANO SPIRITS PIKER HAS THE LOWER EVERYDAY PRICI... SAVE UP TO 40% ...AS MUCH AS $3 A BOTTllt

A l

REAL ESTATE
Larry W. Arthur &amp; wf Brenda to
John D Laitada K wf Mary E , Lot
SI, Fo.wood, Ph I, $46,000
Thomas C. Moore &amp; wf Wendy to
JohnL. Bowman!, wlCarol A. N' i
of Lot 109, Slavia Colony. $47,000
Ronald D. Gentry &amp; wf Nancy K.
to Jamw H. Smith a wl Judith A.,
Part of lots I 8. 7. Blk 7 Bel isle
Sec Loch Arbor, $45,000
Rodney G Green Inc., to Dale
W Maloney &amp; wf Sharon A., Lot 57
Weklva Cove, Ph. One. $108,500.
Daniel N Barrett &amp; wf Carol to
Donald R Hancock A wl Teresa
B , Lot 17, Blk A. Sterling Pk, Un
4. 170.000
(OCD) Chess Inc., to Family Hut
Lumber 4, Bldg Materials Inc.,
Beg Inlersec. S line of Lot 170
Slavia Colony $100.
Iva Ann A lt, sgl. to Stephen B
McKeon i. w t Teddi. Lot 744,
Trailwood Ests., Sec. 7, $57,000.
M Wayne Downs &amp; wf Patricia
to Edwin J. Baron 8 wf Kathleen,
Lot 14, Blk A, San Sebastian
Heights, Un. 7, $44,000.
Madeline B. Perkins sgl to
Steven L. D rier (m err.) Lot &gt;4.
'♦ss W $', all of 2$ 4. Lot 74 lets E
25’ Blk 4, Sanlanta, 115,000
M Julian Young t. wt Alice to
Elmer P Goeti &amp; wf Wilma J., Lot
45. Hidden Lake Ph. It, Un. I,
$51,500
Samuel R. Gilmore 4. wl Ftonela
to Allred B Dickinson 4 wt Linda
R , Lot), Blk A, Sterling Park, Un.
7. S7I.0G0
Sabal Point Prop Inc. to Vista
Constructors Inc Lot 10. Timber
Ridge at Sabal Point, Un. One,
$49,500.
Harrod Res. Comm., Inc., to
Joseph F. Williams Jr. Lot IS.
Huntlelgh Woods 5 D, $79,500
Russell T. Swain Jr. to France
M. Ricard, 1.01 6. Blk B, Sweetwater Club. Un. III. $425,000.
(OCD) Leckle Contr. Inc. to
Wayne Leckie t wt Barbara, Lot I,
Blk A, Slovak Village S D, $15,000.
William K . Stanton I wf Ellen to
Andrew J. Nodion 8. wf Joan E.,
Lot 2, Blk B, Sweetwater Oaks.
Sec. 10, $152,000.
Frederick E. Slade to Leckle
Conlr. Inc., Commencing 75’ S ol
SE cor. ol N E '* o l SWW ol Sec. 1470 79 etc., $70,000.
(OCD) C yril E. Roe i wt M. Joy
to Peter D. Roe Lot 1)9 Lake
Searcy Shores, $100.
Donnie D. Parker 4 wl Bernice
to Susan Parker, Donnie D. Parker
1 Bernice G. Ten. In common, Lot
75, Lake Searcy Shores, $100.
William H. Sparks sgl. to Peter
A. Bromberg 4 w l Bonnie S , Un.
1)5 A, Bl. 10, Weklva Villas,
$40,000.
Peter E. Hoyt 4 wt F. Carolynto
H. James Sheet!, etc., Trustees,
Lot 43, La Floresla. Un. Two,
$103,000.
Country Homes Inc. to Trevor E.
Thorlngton 4 w l Rosemary, Lot
15). Tuscawllla, Un. I B . $173,000
Arthur H. Olson 4 Jack Black to
Robert E. Rhodes 4 wl Leah
Rhodes, Lot 7. Harbour Landing,
$)0.000.
John L. Latshaw Jr., sgl. to
Nancy T. Ansley sgl.. Lot II,
Woodbrldga al th e Springs, Un.
ill, $105,000.
Werner G. Ernst, etal, to Ronald
R. Rucker 4 wt Allletta J., S 5 95 c.
ol SE'-a oI SE'&lt; o l Sec. 212037, E
ol Ov Gv. Rd. less E H r 4 r-w,
$75,000.
North Cove Inv. to Robert E.
Kralllnger 4 wf Patricia, Lot M.
North Covt, $140,000.
Derand Equity Grp. Inc. to Jay
N. Rutledge 4 wt Pamela J , Lot
47, Oakland Village, Sec. 1, $59,400.
Rice Prop. I Ik . to Daniel s.
Gray 4 w l Linda P. Lot 70. TJmbaf
Ridge at Sabal Point, Un. I,
$44100.
(QCO) Fam ily Hut lumber 4
Bldg M atr. Inc. to Chest Inc..
Beg. pt S line Of Lot 170 Slavle
Colony Co. S O. *100.
F. Cherles Frente 4 wl Marcia
to R.R. Bruce, Lots I 4 10, Blk D.
Lake Wayman Haights, Lakt Adn.
$7,700.
Naomi Carroll, wid. 4 Henry
Carroll J r. to Robart Talton 4
John, E X ’ ol: W Wt* ot E V f ol N
jot oi s a r oi *ww a sww t*
SWU ot Sec 11IU 1 , 1I.M0.
(OCD)
George
J.
Simm trm echer to Margaret M.
Simmermecher. Lot 11, Blk C, The
Meadows West, *100.
(QCD) Lucille Ann Smith to
John H. Smith. Lot 2, Blk E,
Howell Cove, 1st Sec.. $100.
Sprlogwood VIII. Apts Corp. to
Margaret G. Kassermea sgl., Un.
1)3 B, 5prlogwood village Cond.,
07,700.

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�SPORTS
rTonight-

S a n fo r d B o o te r s S tu n

Basketball
5: jo South Otorfllo **. SCC f l r l l i t UCF
The Lady Raider*. ST. go lor their
lecond straight victo ry tonight In a game
preceding UCF'» Lady Knight* 7.30
matchup w ith Biuelleld State
Mindy Patrick and Cathy Jonev Doth ot
Sanford, paved the way for SCO* *5 54
victory over Lincoln, tit. Monday night.
Patrick poured In IT point*, Including 9 of
10 Irom the tree throw line and Jones
added 13 w h ile te a m m a te V a le rie
Roe»»ler had a game high 19
jone* and P a trick are the P arting
guards, Roes*ler and Katrina Anderwon
are the forw ard* and 6 1 Sue Win
ternhelmer it the center. Bench strength
come* from Evelyn Smith who »cored
eight point* Monday
4:30 Croomt at Lake M ary
C ro om t’ P a n th e r*, w in n e r* o l 4?
straight game*, go up against the tre lh
man Ram* who are looking for revenge
The la*t tim e the two team* met. Croomt
had little trouble disposing o l Lake Mary.
S tarting to r C ro o m t are D a ry l
Williams, A lvin Jone*. Robert H ill,
Melvin Brinson and M ike W right. The
Panther*, under firs t year head coach
John M cNamara, are » 0 this season.

6 t h - R a n k e d 'H o u n d s
Sem inole soccer coach H ow ard
Hawkins has said all year that his
Fighting Semlnoles are a pretty good
team.
An 0-5 record, however, has belled
Hawkins’ faith In his Tribe.
It did, that is, until Tuesday night.
The 'Notes put it all together and
stunned sixth-ranked Lyman, 5-3, at
Longwood for their first victory of the
year. It was the Greyhounds first loss
after four straight wins.
"The defense did it," said an excited
Hawkins after the game. "We worked
on our defense during the holidays and
it paid off. Our forwards did a great job,
especially Juan Falcon. He dominated
play at the center of the field and we’ve
never been able to do that before."
T h at dom ination d id n 't s ta r t,
n e v e rth e le ss, until Jim G ray put
Lyman on top 11 minutes into the game,
1-0 . Gray picked up a loose ball in front
of tljc Seminole net and trickled it past
keeper Dean Shoemaker for the score.
Seminole’s flashy forward Ricky
Nooney knotted the score at 1-1 when he
broke away and rammed a shot past
keeper John Pinkley from 20 feet out.
With 19 minutes gone, senior Paul
G riffin snap p ed the deadlock by
hooking the ball over the goalie for a 2-1
edge. The 'Hounds, however, bounced
right back with 23 minutes gone as 1
Kevin Hines booted home a goal for a 22 stalem ate.
With Just five minutes left in the first

Prep Soccer
half, senior Brian Nulty drilled c shot
which glanced off a Lyman fullback
and bounded into the net for a 3-2 lead
which stood up at halftime.
Nooney struck again early in the
second half with the score which
provided the difference. The highscoring senior boomed in a shot from
the top of the box for a 4-2 Tribe ad­
vantage.
Nulty, however, added a goal with 12
minutes gone when he was "charged"
by Lyman keeper Pinkley and awarded
an indirect kick. Nulty took a pass from
Craig Apple and drilled the ball off the
right post and In for an insurmountable
52 lead.
Lym an's Ronnie Hollenbaugh,
making use of some good footwork in
the penalty area, kicked in the final
goal with 20 minutes gone for a 5-3 final.
"We Just got outplayed tonight," said
Lyman coach Tom Barnes about his
state-ranked powerhouse. "H ow ard
(Hawkins) told me before the game
‘They were the best 0-5 team in the
state."’
Hawkins and Griffin pointed to a
couple changes which they felt made
the difference.
"Our new offense was the dif­
ference," said Griffin. "We were
switching around so fast they couldn't
keep up with us."

“We moved Nulty to forward tonight
and Robert Ianr.one to sweeper and that
really helped," said Hawkins after the
game. “ We're becoming more familiar
with our German-Dutch style of play.
Before we played a kick-and-nm type of
game because we didn't have the skills.
Now, we've developed the skills and
can perform."
Lyman, no doubt, will vouch for that.
In the junior varsity game, the
Greyhounds blanked Seminole, 2-0.
Freshman Brian Oeasek had both
goals.
The 'Noles take on a 3A power Bishop
Moore Thursday at 4 p.m. at Seminole
High. "It'll be another good match,"
said Hawkins. "T hey have three
players-Tim Fall, Johnny.Holt and
Donald Peacock—from Sanford and
tHeir coach David Fall is from heretoo." The Hornets are 10th In the 3A
poll.
Lyman, meanwhile, prepares for a
big soccer game Saturday against
powerful Jacksonville Terry Parker at
tangwood.
Here's a schedule of Saturday’s
events;
9 a m. ta k e Brantley Junior varsity
vs. Bishop Moore Junior varsity
II a.m. Lyman vs. Jacksonville Terry
Parker (varsity)
1 p.m. M &amp; B taw n Care Clippers vs.
Automotive One Rowdies (eight and
under youth game)
2:30 p.m. ta k e Brantley vs. Bishop
Moore (varsity)

Falcons' 7 9 %
Shooting Burns
Raiders, 82-67
T E M P L E TERRACE F lorida
College's Falcons shot a blistering 79
percent In the second half to turn back
Seminole's Community College Raiders,
82-63, in Junior college basketball action
Tuesday night.
"They burned it up," said SCC coach
BUI Payne about the Falcon shooting.
“ We were frith them until midway
through the first half, then they slowly
pulled aw ay."
The Falcons finished the night with 33
of 62 field goals for a fine 61 percent.
Seminole hit 26 of 59 shots for 44 percent,
SCC, which handed FC one of its two
defeats earlier this year, was without
high-scorer Rudy Kuiper and forward
Kevin Jerry Smith. Both are nursing
injuries. Kuiper had a career-high 34
points in the 15-point win over the
Falcons.
Florida College, 14-2, Increased Its 15
10 midway lead to 37-25 at halftime.
Darryl Patterson, who led all scorers
with 24 points, paced the surge. Jim
Romkey, a 6-6 forward, continually
blitzed the Raiders from outside. He
finished with 18.

R ic k y N ooney, S e m in o le s o c c e r s ta n d o u t, r a c e s to w a rd a f ir s t- h a lf
g o a l T u e s d a y n ig h t a g a i n s t L y m a n . T h e T r ib e u p s e t th e ’H o u n d s fo r
t h e i r f ir s t win of th e y e a r .

By SAM COOK
Herald Sport* Editor
Chase Brown might have run out of gas
going to the DeLand gym Tuesday night,
but he had enough left to soft pedal a
valiant Seminole comeback and hand the
Bulldogs a 51-49 victory over (he ’Noles at
Seminole High School.
The 6-3 senior standout, who watched
the first quarter from the bench because
of a late arrival to team bus, wiggled
down two free throws with eight seconds
to play to give the ’Dogs a big Five Star
Conference victory over Sanford.
“ Thank God," said Brown about his
two charity losses which hit the rim,
backboard and rolled in. "I was just
taking my time and concentrating and
they went in."
The loss was the first In the Five Star
for the Semlnoles and gave them a 51
record. Deland improved to 4-1 and 8-5
overall. Seminole is 57 overall.
With Brown and another starter, Mark
C arter, riding Ihe pine, Seminole bolted
to
12-8 lead on the strength of eight
points by Calvin "Ktkl" Bryant. Deland,
though, bounced back In the last minute
for six points and a 14-12 lead after one
period.
The Bulldogs' (lurry at the end of a
quarter was a portent of things to come
as coach John Zeoli's club ran off a 23-8
tear In the second quarter for a com­
manding 37-20 halftime lead.
Point guard Derek Watson tossed In 10
points in the half and Brown, who entered
the game at the beginning of the second
quarter, scored six and grabbed six
rebounds.
The six boards also represented
Seminole’s total in the first half as the
'Noles had trouble working the ball
against Del .and’s zone defense and failed
to get an offensive rebound.
"Six rebounds. That’s rrdiculous for us
to get six rebounds,” said Tribe coach
Chris Marlelle. "But we came back and
played our butts off. I’m proud of them
for that."
That they did. After Watson hit a
jumper to run the Bulldogs' lead to 19
points, a swarming Seminole press
forced the 'Dogs into six turnovers as

a

Delvin Everett and Luis Phelps paced
the Raider attack with 19 and 18 points,
respectively.
SCC, 9-6, hosts Humber (Toronto,
Can.) on We&amp;esday at 7:30 p.m. A
Sanford Recreation basketball game will
be featured at halftime. — SAM COOK
SCC (67)
Whitney 1-6 M 2, Gallagher 3-5 0-0 6,
Payton 1-1 0-0 2, Charles 1-3 0-0 2, Sutton
4-11 0-2 8, EvereU 512 3-419, Merthle 2-4
2-2 6, Maher 1-21-2 4, Phelps 515 51318,
Total: 26-59 1524 67.
FLORIDA COLLEGE (tt)
Romkey 512 04) 18, Ingraham 2-7 0-0 4,
Patterson 1M7 52 24, Edwards 1-2 50 2.
McKinnon 501-21, Stachowitx 57 5012,
Morse 5 6 1-2 7, DeShaxler 52 51 4,
Jacobs 4-9 2-410. Totals: 3562 511 82.

i

W r e s t lin g

Chase Brown, DeLand’s su p er swlngman, jerks a rebound away
from S em inole’s Willie M itchell in action Tuesday night at Seminole
High. Brown sank two clutch free throws with eight seconds left to
nip the ’Noles, 51-49,

USFL Goes A fter Names In Collegiate
NEW YORK (UP1) - What the United and la hoping It can sign some of the
States Football League needs now is a senior stare before that dste.
"It comes down to how good are we as
Prof. Harold Hill.
"I think we can offer him an attractive
The league has Chet Simmons, a man ■aleroen. We have to try to convince
w ith stro n g television c o n ta c ts, as these young people they should take the enough package he'd be willing to come
commissioner. But to sign the playeri It opportunity with a new league," Sim­ and play,” said Curly Morrison, general
manager of the Express.
needs (or credibility it should enlist some mons said.
Marino m ay be a test case. The Pitt­
salesm en like Hill, the smooth talker
Marino .admits he’s interested in the
from Meredith Willson's " I h e Music sburgh quarterback was the first player new league, but like the rest of the bluetaken In the open phase of the draft, chip players selected, he will have to
M sn."
Dan Marino, Eric Dickeraon, Anthony being selected by the ta s Angeles make up his mind before he knows what
; C arter, John El way, Dave Rimtngton Express. Los Angeles offers Marino a his stilus Is with the N F L He Insists he
; and other grade A seniors wqre selected chance to be the starting quarterback In will not watt until the NFL draft before
; Tuesday by tha 11 USFL dube In the his first pro season and, u the center of making a decision.
"I don't think I’m going to be able to. I
' league's first coUsgiatc .draft and (he communications on the West Coast, gives
j battle lines with the NFL have officially him a chance for plenty of national ex­ think that's only fair for myself, for the
posure. In addition, Los Angeles could Los Angeles Express and for the N F L "
; been drawn.
•; The league, which begins reg u lar pave the way for Marino to pursue a he said.
There were 192 players selected via the
: season play on March 8, will have career In communication*, his m ajor at
• already been going for a ll weeks before Pittsburgh, after his playing days are round-by-round method Tuesday and
- the NFL conducts It* draft on April 2527 over.
another 96 will be taken when the final

ProFootbaJI

!

7:30 West Orange at Seminole
The Tribe, 13, tries lo 'tla rt 19*3 on the
right loot as they host the W arriors ot
West Orange. JV action starts at 6 30
Top performers tor the Tribe are
Ronnie W atson, V ince C la rk , G ary
Cornerman and Kevin Tapscott
In other matchups, Edgewater is at
Lyman and Lake Howell trevels to
DeLand

Brown's 2 Free Throws
'Chase' Tribe Comeback

•

Halftime - Florida College 37, SCC 25.
Fouls - SCC 15, Florida College 21
•Fouled out — Jacobs.
Technical — one.

I p.m. Lake Brantley at Lake Howell
Lake Howell, 0 9, is H ill looking tor its
first w in In 33 game* w hile Lake Bran
tley, 3 4, is looking to get beck on the
winning track a lte r losing It* last tlx
game*
This game was o rigina lly scheduled to
lake place last night at Lake Brantley.
But the Patriots flo o r is under repair and
won't be ready lo r another two weeks.
Paul Hodman has turned In an out
standing year thus ta r for Lake Brantley
while Efram Brooks has been Leke
Howell's mainstay.

Prep Basketball
Sanford ran off 13 straight points.
Bryant, Willie Mitchell and Torie Hen­
dricks each had two buckels as the
Semlnoles cut the lead to 39-33 before
Matt F air hit two buckets with a minute
to go.
Hendricks, though, hit a 15footcr and
Mitchell stole the ball and cashed in with
three seconds left for a 4537 ball gome at
the end of three quarters.
"It was unbelievable that we could go
that cold. It was like they turned on the
a ir conditioning," said Zcoli about
D etand's shooting. "Seminole's press
turned it around. They had us throwing
the ball everywhere,"
In the linal eight minutes, Bryant was
unstoppable. He single-handedly brought
Sem inole into contention with four
straight jumpers in the last four minutes.
The last one, an off-balance 12-footer,
gave Sanford a 47-46 lead with Just 57
seconds to go.
At that point, Seminole settled Into a 2-3
zone and waited for Brown to make his
move. Hendricks, however, grew im­
patient and tried to make a steal which
resulted In a foul, sending Brown to the
line with 41 seconds left.
“ We moved out of our zone. It was a
m ental mistake and it hurt," said
Marietta. "But that Chase Brown is
tough. He's an animal."
Brown dropped the first shot to tie the
game, but his second rolled off. Marcus
Johnson, though, tipped the ball back up
on the rim and it fell for a 4947 DeLand
lead.
Hendricks made immediate amends
for his impatience by banking in an eightfooter to retie the game at 49 with Just 47
seconds to go.
Seminole dropped back in Its zone and
waited for the inevitable—Chase Brown
down the middle. It came with 10 seconds
to play and Bryant picked up a blocking
foul with eight ticks left. It was his fifth.
He finished with 23 points.

7 was looking to bank
the ball because the rims
are so loose you can't
trust them.'
— DeLand's Chose
Brown about his move
which led to two game­
winning free throws.
"I was looking to bank the ball because
the rims are so loose here you can't trust
them," said Brown about his move. “But
I wanted to draw the foul without getting
a charge too."
After Brown hit his free throws, the
'Notes called time out with two seconds to
go at half court. The pass went to Hen­
dricks who couldn't control the ball while
trying to shoot from 25 feet away.
DELAND (51)
Watson 61-313, Cooper 2564, Gilmore
1 50 2, Johnson 2 50 4, Fair £ 50 10,
Brown 27-811, Carter 11-2 3, Anderson 2
00 4, Ross 0 50 0. Totals 21 513 51.
SEMINOLE (49)
Wynn 1502, Bryant 111-3 23, Mitchell 4
1-2 9, ta w 2 50 4, Hendricks 5 1-1 11,
Franklin 0 50 0, Stlffey 0 00 0, Holloman
0 OO 0, Rouse 0 OO 0. Totals 23 55 49
D ttaad
14 23 I 5-51
Seminole
12 I 17 *12—49
Total fouls — DeLand 9, Seminole 17.
Fouled out — Bryant
Technical — none

G o r d o n H it s

14

In J V S e t b a c k
In Junior varsity action, DeLand
stomped Seminole, 7551. Kenny Gordon
led the Semlnoles with 14 points wh'fle
Terry Marshall and Ricky Whittacker
each chipped in 10.
The JV,
and the varsity host Spruce
Creek Friday.

14,

Levy, Malavasi Fired

eight rounds are completed today.
Besides Marino and Southern
M ethodist’s Dickerson, selected by
Arizona, other first-round choices in the
open phase of the draft were running
back Tim Spencer of Ohio State (by
Chicago), quarterback Reggie Collier of
Southern Mississippi (by Birmingham),
running back Craig Jam es of SMU (by
W ashington), running back Gary
Anderson of Arkansas (by New Jersey),
defensive end Billy Ray Smith of
Arkansas (by Oakland) arid defensive
end Irv Eat man of UCLA (by
Philadelphia).

C h ie fs C a n L e v y
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP1) - Manr
Levy spent five y e a n climbing to a
plateau as head coach of the Kansas Gty

Chiefs. Unfortunately, th at plateau
wasn’t high enough *lo satisfy club
President Jack Steadman.
Steadman fired Levy Tuesday as head
coach of the Chiefs two days after Kansas
City finished the 1982 season with a 56
record and missed the playoffs for the
11th consecutive year. Levy had one year
remaining on a contract that had been
extended during the 1981 preseason.

Ram s A x M alavasi
ANAHEIM. Calif. (UPI) - Head
Coach Ray Malavasi, whose Los Angeles
Rams went from the 1980 Super Bowl to
the worst record in the National Con­
ference this season, has been fired.
A prepared statement issued Tuesday
by team owner Georgia Frontlere said
Malavasi had been ousted "for the sake

of our fans.” A Rams’ spokesman said a
news conference would be held "shortly"
concerning a successor.
"We are indebted to Ray for some fine
seasons of football," Frontlere said. "He
helped us into the playoffs three times,
won two division chiunplonshlps and
coached our first Super Bowl team.
"Unfortunately, the results o&lt; the past
two seasons have fallen short of our goal
to give our fans a winning team. I have
strong personal feelings of friendship for
Ray. He is a fine and loyal person.
However, 1 feel for the sake of our fans It
Is Ume to make a change."
Malavasi was unavailable for com­
ment after the announcement
Malavasi, 52, became head coach when
F ro n tlere'a late husband, C arroll
Rosen bloom, fired George Allen after
two exhibition losses in 1978.

/

8

f

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Averill's Jumper
Nips Greyhounds
By BRENTSMART!"
Herald Sports Writer
If you were looking for a classic basketball
game, Lyman's gym wasn't the place to be
Tuesday night.
Returning from a week of inactivity, la k e
Mary’s lad y Rams edged coach Dick
Copeland's la d y Greyhounds, 32-31, in a
bumbling cage display by both teams.
In a game marked by turnovers, fouls and
missed opportunities, only a Kim Averill 15foot
jumper with 57 seconds remaining
would separate the error-prone squads.
“ I guess after Christmas break everybody’s
stale," declared winning coach Bill Moore. "I
never expected we’d have 14 points at half­
time. We’re averaging 60 a game."
Indeed, not much could be said about the
initial half. Only the Rams 6-2 center Laura
Glass would shine with all of the la k e Mary 14
points to keep the game deadlocked after 16
minutes.
Trailing all of the first period and most of the
second, Lyman notched three straight hoops
near the end of the period to forge the 14-14 tie
at halftime.
After intermission, nothing would change as
neither squad could Ignite any offensive
punch. D efensively, however, the G lass
Towers — I-aura and Pegg.’ — held the
'Hounds to just one shot at the basket which
resulted in total frustration for 5-11 Vikki
McMurrcr.
The senior standout drew her fifth foul with
1:30 to go in the third quarter. With McMurrcr
on the pine, the Glass twins totally owned the
board, but gained no real advantage.
Scoring four of the Rams' eight thirdquarter points, the Rams gained the
momentum and a 22-21 lead going into the final
turnover-plagued period.
The fourth stanza finally provided some
needed action for the yawning fans. Junior
guard Pam Jackson rescued the Greyhounds’
lethargic offense with a baseline Jumper at the
2:17 mark for a 29-27 Lyman lead.
Lake Mary lost Peggy Glass on fouls soon
after, but sister Laura moved inside (or a
three-point play which nudged the Rams
ahead, 30-29, with Just 1:57 to play.
On the following trip down court, Lyman's
Katie Rowland rebounded a missed Jackson
jumper and dropped it in to give the 'Hounds a
31-30 lead in the see-saw battle with 1:07 left in
the game.
The Rams, nevertheless, responded im­
mediately as Averill canned a 15-footer over a
tough Lyman defense with 57 seconds

Jai-Alai

remaining to provide the margin of difference,
32-31.
Lyman turned the ball over on its next two
possessions and a last-second Jackson attempt
was long.
"There were more chess moves in this game
than any other I've been in," said Moore. “The
thing that most upset me was we weren't very
aggressive."
Lyman's Copeland took the loss in stride.
"We can’t lose sight of the fact that it’s Just a
game," he said. “ Basketball is a silly game
and we were just having fun. We don’t have
much depth and I don't think we took them
seriously enough tonight."
leading all scorers with 10 points - half of
the Ram total — was ta u ra Glass. Michelle
Swartz and Averill had four each. Jackson had
nine for Lyinan and Kim I&gt;emon tossed in
eight.
In an exciting Jurior varsity clash, Tasha
Coleman downed two free throws with one
second remaining to send the Rams to a 3544
victory over Lyman.
Karen DeShetler paced the Ram effort with
15 points while Kim Forsyth led all scorers
with 18.
U K E MARY (32)
Swartz 2 9-14, L. Glass 7 2-6 16, P. Glass 11-2
3, Averill 1 2-3 4, Gregory 01-2 1, Penning 0 M
0, Johnson 1 0-2 2, C. Hall 1 04) 2, Stone 0 04) 0.
Totals 13 6-16 32.
LYMAN (31)
Rowland 11-2 3, Jackson 4 4-812, Goroum 3 006, Gilliam 0 04) 0 ,1.uebbe 00-0 0, tamon 3 2-4
8, McMurrcr 104) 2, Gigicos 0 04) 0, Totals 12 718 31.
Lake Mary
10
10—32
I.yman
5
10—31

U K E HOWELL (94)
Blocker 6 , Brown 11, Dietrich 6, Miller 31,
Green 1, M. Johnson 10, t 7Johnson 18, Lowe 2,
McNeil 3, McPherson 2, Scott 4. Totals: 38 1838 94.
BISHOP M O O R fi (57)

Bradford 16, Marshall 12, O’Connor 4, Brown

8, Bredemann 10, Nigra 4, Murphy 2, Gallager

IN BRIEF
Granger, Plnone Lead'Cats
Past Upstart Boston College
United Press International
Villanova Coach RolUe Massimlno knows this is just
a prelude to Infuriating nights to come.
"Welcome to the Big East," he said.
Villanova, 14th-ranked and entering what is certain
to be a perilous league schedule, must sharpen its
game If it is to be around come late March.
The Wildcats beat Boston College, 79-72, at East
Rutherford, N.J., Tuesday night behind 24 points eaqji,
by Stewart Granger and John Pinone. But there is
work to be done yet.
"We are not a great team, we arc a good team,"
Massimlno said. "We will be a better team. We are
nowhere near where we want to be but we are getting
there."
Villanova led, 32-27, at halftime and widened it to 13.
Boston College, relying on freshmen and sophomores
this year, cut It to 5 points in the last two minutes but
came no further.
"We had a alow start but the rough play causes us to
get together to play harder," Granger said.
" I definitely want to go to the Final Four but we have
to play together to get there. I gather we'll leam from
our m istakes."
For Villanova, 7-2, Pinone made 16 straight free
throws before missing on the 17th. Boston College, 8-2,
was led by Michael Adams with 22 points and John
Garris with 20.
In the only other Top 20 game, No. 19 Houston routed
Texas A&amp;M, 8441, at home behind 24 points by Larry
Mlcheaux and 19 Clyde Drexler In a Southwest Con­
ference opener* Houston, with losses to Virginia and
Syracuse, is 9-2. Texas A&amp;M, down by 25 points at the
half, was led by Claude Riley’s 18 points.

Celtics Nip Rockets, 88-87
Untied Presa International
When Boston Coach BUI Fitch moans about a team
playing without Us center, Houston Coach Del Harris
understands.
T ie Celtics, without injured All-Star center Robert
Parish, had their lowest offensive output of the season,
but still defeated the lowly Rockets, 8847. Houston, of
course, has been without MVP center Moses Malone,
who was traded last year to Philadelphia after
becoming a free agent.
"Neither team played well early tonight and with us
missing our starting center, it made our job doubly
tough," said FUch. "The Rockets did not surprise me
tonight. All players in this league are good."
Two of the best ones, Larry Bird and Kevin MeHale,
led the Celtics. Bird had 22 points and McHale added
18. Jam es Bailey continued to excel in a reserve role,
leading the Rockets, 4-27, with 19 points.
- "Bailey is doing a tremendous Job for us and coming
on strong ..." Harris said. "Our team has the wont
record in the league, yet we caught them in the fourth
quarter and went ahead."
In other gam es, Phoenix downed New York, 9746,
Washington defeated Dallas, 9244, San Antonio got by
Atlanta, 10445, New Jersey beat Milwaukee, 1(046,
Denver outlasted Kansas City, 137-121, Utah nipped
Golden State, 10048, Chicago stopped Detroit, 147-138,
in double overtime and Portland beat Indiana, 119-117.

(Space W h in e r 25 00 1 40 1 60
7 Impala Trophy
5 30 2 B0
a Painted Putt
*
510
AlOrlendoSeminole
0(4-7) 4) 70; P (6-7) 109 40; T (4Tuesday n&lt;|ht results
7-41 3,137.10
Firslgam e
n th race — &gt;», a . 3199
5 Bilbao Oyar I
14 40 21 80 13 80
3 Fast E a rl
9 60 7.40 3 60
a Gabiola A gut re
8 60 a AO 7 Stacy River
1J 60 3 SO
7 Mike) Eloria
13 BO
2 Hortei
7 60
Q (4-SI l » H . T &lt;5 4 A ll) 10140
0 (3 7) 14 20 ; P (3 7) St 00; T (1
Second game
7 2) 271 40; P ick Six; (1-5-3 1-6 3). S
7 Galla Foruria
17 40 9.40 3 60
ol 4 paid 419 OO; “ Ja ckp o t" carry
6 Garay Gold
11 00 3 60 ever I.1S7
1 Negui Aguirre
3 40
17th race - » » . B 3119
0 ( 4 7171IO;P(7-4) 719.10; T (7I Frank's F olly
6 40 S 60 6 00
67) 140 70. DO (S-7) 10*.00 5 Talent Sloan
3 40 3 00 7 60
Third game
I Ham Sandwich
9 20
3 Bilbao Farah
IB 10 6 B0 5 40
O (1)1 21.BO; P (1 )1 3140; T ()1 L f la i Foruria
16 60 10 30
I) la 00; T (1 -)-l) 14.140; T (S-l-l)
6 Durango Kid E lo ria
6 00
t) 10
0 (17117.39; P ll-T&gt; 73.96; T (3l)th race — *», C: 39 45
14) 1)9 20
IDJM achek
17 &gt;0 4 60 4 60
Fourth game
7 Bless Ida
4 00 4 30
3 L e ja r V ia
11 40 13 60 3 70 IRunlikethedevit
4 00
7 Gabiola Zubl
6 60 7 B0
0(171 0100; P ( 1-7 ) 704 40; T ( I1 Negui Reyes
1 SO
7 31 4SS.20
O 0-71 41 00; P (1-7) 19 40; T (1A - 3,241, Handle (134,734
71) JIB 10
Filth gome
I Bilbao Aguirre
9 30 10 40 IB 40
3 M ikel Foruria
9 30 4 60
NBA (landings
s Manoio Javier
icxt
By United Press International
0 (1 -S) 19 10; P (1-3) 137 00; Tbx
Eastern Conference
&lt;I &gt;S) US.90
A tlantic Division
Slalhgame
W L Pet. GB
3 Solaun Area
11 70 7 60 5 60
Phiia
i* S I2B
B Gabiola Farah
I t . 40 4 70
Boston
ra f 750 m
a L e ja iC a re a
4 70
New Jrsey
19 11 S94 .6 ';
0 (1 I) S3 40; P ( M ) 367.70; T O Wshngln
17 14 sas a
S-4) 310 M
New York
12 20 375 11'i
Seventh game
Central Division
IS 40 S 30 5 80
3 Bilbao
Milwauke
23 12 647 —
4 00 3 80
1 Gabiola
Detroll
17 18 486 S';
500
6 Zubi
Atlanta
14 17 452 45j
Q (1-11 33.40; P (3-1) 18 SO; T &lt;1
Indiana
11 70 155 9"i
1-4) 373.30
Chicago
11 30 155 9',
Eighth game
Cleveland
4 26 111 14
7 Gorostola
Western Conference
F oruria
1440 7 OO 7 40
Midwest Division
9 OO S 70
1 Galla Zubl
W l Pci
G8
5 Charola Oyari
4 60
San Anton
77 12 647
O il 7)4199; P (3-11 173.10; T (7Kan City
18 11 671 1' i
I S) 234 80
Denver
IS 18 455 4' i
Ninth game
Dallas
17 I I 400 a
7 Negui Farah
7 70 5 30 360
Utah
i i 71 383 9
5 40 4 40 Houston
4 Charola Eloria
4 27 .139 16' ;
S 20
8 Garay Zarre
Pacific D ivision
Q (3-4) 33 30; P (3 4) 8) 10; Tbx
Los Ang
35 6 106
(3-4-0) 3M.I0
Seattle
73 9 719 7 ';
10th game
Phoenix
11 11 618 S' ,
(C harola
24 00 8 00 760
Portland
71 14 600 6
6 00 7 40 Golden St
7 Javier
13 20 194 11
2 60 San Diego
7 Galla
8 28 IBB 19',
Q (S-7) 14 00; P (S-7) 114 40; Tbx
T u e id v 't Results
(3-3-3) 110.44
San Antonio 104, Atlanta 9S
11th game
Phoenix 97, New York 8S
lU r iia r C a r e a
8 40 10 40 4 60
Washington 92, Dallas B4
6 Solaun Javier
10 40 3 00
New Jersey 103, Milwaukee
3 Charola Farah
3 60
95
QI3-4) IS.40; P (2-4) 321.10; T (3Boston Bl. Houston 87
6-31 314.40
Chicago 147. Detroit 138. 2ot
12th game
Denver 137, Kansas City 121
B Charola Farah 21 00 5 to 3 20
Utah 100. Golden State BB
aM anoloO yarl
6 80 7 80
Portland MV, Indiana 117
I U rlia r Zubl
2.B0
Today's Games
0 (4 B il l 40; P (1-4) 146 40; T IILos Angeles at Philadelphia,
4-1) i l l 20.
7:3) p m
A — 1,101; Handle (91,910.
Cleveland
at
Detroit,
S 05
pm
San Antonio a t Dallas, I 35
pm
Denver at Kansas City. I 35
At Sanlord-Orlando
pm
Tuesday night results
San Diego at Utah, 9 30 p m
F irs t race — S-14.C: 11.4)
Indiana at Seattle. 10 30 p m
1 Turkish Delight I f 10 5 40 7 10
7 B r it t i
2 W 3 00
5 Depsly Dumpster
2 40
Q (3-3) 70.10; P O D 40.00; T ()■
I-‘l&gt; 1M.M
W ilt s Conference
Second ric e — N. O : »*.OS
P atrick Division
2 (tusker Gal
6 30 7 80 3 40
W L T PH
6 Patch By Night
100 2 70
Philadelphia
24 17
(S 3
• Blue's Jialle
4.40
NY islanders
20 16 7 47
O (1-4) 9.40; P (1 4 ) 19.40; T (14Washington
1(11 10 44
8) 141.38; OO (3-3) 71.80
43
NY Ranoers
70 16
Third ra c e -S -H . M ; 31.84
Pittsburgh
17 27
10
I SK'S Noel
24 40 11 00 4 70
New Jersey
8 7S
21
I W right A ll There
6 40 7 60
Adams D ivision
7 Cherokee Angel
7.70
Boston
7310
S3
Q ( l- l) 47.08; P ( 1-1) I I 7 . » ; T ( I Montreal
71II
SO
1-7) 143.00
Buffalo
1814
43
Fourth race —S-14, D ; 31.44
18IS
43
6 JE'S Angela
4 40 3 70 2 40 Quebec
1024
35
4 Teena’s Choice
17.00 5 40 Hartford .
Campbell Conference
8 Mooch
4.40
N o rris Oivislon
0(4-4) 44 41; P (4 4) 01.88; T ( t
W L T PH
4-1) 307.70
Chicago
24 ■ 4 SI
F ilth race-S-14. M ; 31.40
Mnnesota
7011 I 41
4 Derek The
St Louis
14 24 4 12
Dasher
18 00 S 60 (60
9 71 11 29
8 Oowv II Downing
I 40 4 00 Detroit
Toronto
8 21 7 73
1 My Violet
1140
Smylhe D ivision
Q (4-1) 71.00; P I4 -I) IIS OO; T (4Edmonton
71 11 I SO
8-3) 743 40
Winnipeg
17 17 4 31
Sixth ra c e -&gt; S .C : 38 77
Calgary
14 21 7 IS
I L illie Irv
5 40 3 30 1 70
11 19 I 14
6 Blue Cla/e
4 30 1.40 Vancouver
Los Angeles
14 IB ( 1 3
IM Iu R Iv e r
170
Tuesday's Results
0(1-4) 17.81; P (1-4) 44 00; T (IQuebec 1, M ontreal I
4-1) 11S.40
Phiia 4, Vancouver I
Seventhr4ce — S-14, A: 31.03
NY Islandee c B u lla lo 7
5 JR's Irving
10 40 4 40 3 40
Chicago 4, St. Louis 7
4 Gate Latch
4 40 4.70
Edmonton 6. C algary 1
I Make Our Move
3 60

NBA

Total fouls — ta k e Mary 18, Lyman 14.
Fouled out — McMurrer, P. Glass.

SPORTS

l

S c o re c a rd

Prep Basketball

1. Totals: 25 7-11 57.
Total fouls — Lake Howell 16, Bishop Moore
26.

Wednesday, Jan. S. 1913—7A

Herald Photo by Bonnie Wleboldt

L a k e .M ary 's A n d r e a J o h n s o n ( r i g h t ) m u s c le s fo r tw o p o in ts o v e r L y m a n ’s
K a tie H o w la n d .

Miller, Merfhie Shoot Down Saints
By CHRIS FISTER

Herald Sports Writer
When a team shoots 47 percent from
the floor for the night, it Is usually con­
sidered a good shooting night. But the
Trinity Prep Saints, who were 25 of 53
from the floor, would have needed to
make 100 percent of its shots if it was
going to beat lake Mary Tuesday night.
The Rams dominated the boards,
limiting Trinity Prep to one shot most of
night. Meanwhile, Fred Miller tossed in
21 points and Darryl Methle poured in 20
to lead Lake Mary to an 8146 rout of the
Saints at tak e Mary High.
ta k e Mary outrebounded the Saints,
39-17, in romping to Us sixth victory
ag ain st three tosses. The Rams'
rebounding strength and defensive
pressure were too much for Trinity to
overcome.
"When we started playing tough
defense that made the difference in the
g a m e ," Lake Mary coach Willie
Richardson said. "The defense created
offense and we executed well tonight."
Trinity was led by 6-5 center Brant
Smith who collected 28 points and eight
rebounds. Smith hit 12 of 19 free throws.
Jay Wetlach added 18 points for the
Saints.
After Jeff Reynolds dropped In the first
two points of the game, ta k e Mary never
trailed. The usuaUy pesky Saints couldn't

Prep Basketball

"Now that we have Christmas out of
our system we should do a lot better,”
Richardson said.
take Mary hosts another 1A school,
Hastings, Saturday night at 8. Hastings
was among the top 10, IA schools in the
state last year.
LAKE MARY (81)

put up much of a comeback once they got
behind. In fact, the only pesky thing
Wednesday night were the flies that
infiltrated the gymnasium after a donkey
basketball game was played at ta k e
Merthie 10 04 20, Miller 7 7-10 21,
Mary Inst month.
Grayson 4 0-2 8 , Dunn 4 0-1 8, Reynolds 1
Behind Merthie's 14 points and the
04 2, Blythe 3 0-1 6, Jackson 1 1-2 3,
Rains' 6 for 11 shooting in the second
Counts 4 04 8, Wcllon 1 2-2 4. Medlock 01quarter, ta k e Mary built a comfortable
2 1. Totals: 35-72 11-20 81.
39-19 halftime lead.
TRINITY PREP ( 66)
"Once I saw we Tiaii It in control I
wanted to give everyone a chance to play
Smith 8 12-19 28, Wettach 8 2-3 18,
and get some experience," Richardson Coopers 2-314, Phillips 10-22, tacam bra
said. “ We’re trying to build on every 20-24, Lilley 0 0-1 0. Totals: 25-5316-3066.
game to get ready for districts and the take Mary
16 23 27 15-81
more experience all the players get the Trinity Prep
7 12 20 27-46
better off we’ll be down the line."
Total fouls —Lake Mary 26, Trinity Prep
The Rams came out blazing in the 15.
second half and hit 12 o( 20 shots to take a Fouled out-nonc.
66-39 lead into the fourth quarter. The
closest Trinity came was within 18 points
O v ie d o T o p s N S B
with about two minutes left to play.
Donald Grayson, Bobby Counts and
At Oviedo Tuesday night, Ronnie
Billy Dunn added eight points each to the Murphy hit two free throws with no lim e
ta k e Mary fireworks while Mark Blythe showing on the clock to tie the Lions'
netted a varsity career high of six points.
game with New Smyrna Beach and send
Merthie pulled down eight rebounds, It into overtime. In the overtime period,
Counts nabbed seven and Grayson,
Dave Knott scored five points and
Reynolds and Chris Jackson hauled in Murphy added four as Oviedo, 74, held
five boards each.
on for a 6945 victory over the 'Cudas.
"It was a pretty close ballgame all the
way," Oviedo coach Dale Phillips said.
"We led by three (32-29) at halftime but
New Smyrna outscored us 18-11 in the
third quarter. We came out with a
halfcourt zone trap in the fourth quarter
land that turned things around."
New Smyrna Beach, 64, hud a chance
to take a three point lead wilh three
seconds left in the game but Jim m y
Lewis missed the first of two free throws
giving Oviedo the chance to tie on a lastsecond desperation pass.
Murphy netted 26 points on 10 of 20
shooting from the floor and six of eight
from the free throw line. Gene Angel
added 10, Knott and Bill McCartney
tossed in nine and Wally Wlrth, playing in
his first game, chipped in seven points.
Oviedo was able to stay within striking
distance by hitting Its free throws while
New Smyrna Beach was horrid from the
line. Oviedo hit 13 of 21 charity tosaes and
the 'Cudas m ade only 5 of 15.
The Lions travel to Eustis Thursday
night and return home Friday night for a
rematch with Lyman who bdat Oviedo in
the finals of the Oviedo Outlook Tour­
nament.
OVIEDO (89)
Murphy 26, McCartney 9, Knott 9,
Angel 10, Wirth 7. Reichle 4, Kewtey 2.
Schwab 2. Totals: 28 13-21 69.
NEW SMYRNA BEACH (15)
Fullington 28, Lewis 6, Morley 18,
Brooks 6, Thollsnder 6, Mamon 4. Totals:
30 5-15 65.
H«r«M Photo by lo n n lt Wioboldl
*
Total fouls — Oviedo 17, New Smyrna
R eggie Medlock (right), Lake Mary guard, struggles fora loose ball Beach 11.
Fouled out — none.
with Trinity Prep's C asey Cooper. M edlock scored just one point, but
Technical — Murphy 2.
the R am s whipped the Saints, 81-66.

Dog Racing

H ockey

0(4-1) 10.00; P(S-4) 111.40; T &lt;(
4-1) 164.60
e ighth race- - S-lt, C; 31.86
3 Scotty's sissy
6 20 7.40 5 00
7 King GMan
9 40 7.20
) J G s Dot 1if
13 10
0(1-3) 28.10; P (3-3) 40.10; T H ­
IS ) 411.48
Ninth race -S -14, B : 11.48
I Beer Can Nicole 8.70 4.40 S.to
1 Pukslnwah
10 40 8.40
7HugoFrancaslo
1.40
011 )1 78.38; P ( U ) 134.80; T (I3-7 ) 884.88
lO th rico — S-14, C; 11.04

DOG
GAGING
NIGHTLY 8 PM
MATINIIS
MON.-WED. SAT.
1:15 P.M.
PLAY THE EXCITINQ

PICK-SIX
WINNER SIX IN
A ROW AND
WIN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS

•
ALL NEW CASH
SELL MACHINES
•
TRIFECTAON
EVERY RACE
•
THURSDAY A L L L A O IB ll
A D M IT T E D FREE I

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
t ’** 1 M OV A

* **N l 11 i

| It, . |j ,* » lMi«
»«•
♦ k t 4l M t( V l

1

”, A N ►o k I j

3235/63

/ArtFORDOR&amp;RnOO
K E rm a u B l
N Ml
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M W IVA1IO M -IJ) 11«
Sarrj, Na Dee Dedal I I

�8A—Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Fireman's Injury Sparks Clothing Policy Change

Wednesday, Jan. 5,1883

Sanford firefighters have been ordered to wear full
firefighting gear after a fireman was burned while fighting a
fire.
Firem an Herb Rogers suffered a burned left leg while
fighting a mattress fire at 1007 W. 6th Street. Sanford, at 1 p.m.
Monday which caused about $1,000 damage to the house.
It has been the practice in the past for firemen to wear only
their short firefighting coats over standard issue polyester
pants rather than their full fire fighting gear which includes a
longer coat, boots, and over trousers.
Rogers was treated for second degree burns to his knee and
has returned to work. The matress fire is thought to have been
caused by a cigarette, investigators said.
Following Rogers' injury, Fire Chief W.C. Galley ordered his
men to wear their full firefighting uniform when battling any
blaze.
“ For the safety of my men and the fire department we think
it better for them to do that," Gailey said.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Eastern Bloc Summit Ends
With Arms Talks Proposal
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia lUPI) - Warsaw Pact
nations, ending a two-day summit, are prepared to
negotiate nuclear arm s control with the West without
pre-conditions, the Communist Party newspaper Rude
Pravo said today.
Rude Pravo said the East Bloc, led by new Soviet
leader Yuri Andropov, was even prepared to dissolve
the Warsaw Pact if NATO nations would do the same.

CLASSROOM DAMAGED
Three windows of a portable classroom at Woodlands
Elementary School, E.E. Williamson Road, longwood, were
shot out by someone with a BB gun, causing $75 damage.
The windows were shot out between 5 p.m. Saturday and 9
a.m. Monday.
.
.'.AD TO JAIL
Drinking other people's drinks landed a 26-year-old unem­
ployed woman in jail.
Police were called to Charlie’s lounge, 2000 Howell Branch
Road, Winter Park, at about 11 p.m. on Tuesday after Gael B.
Jones,of 320 Pawnee Trt'J, -MsUiflnd. - ’fusedtsJcavs the bar.

Tripoli Razed By Fighting
United Press International
Rival militias ravaged I^banon’s second largest city
today in a fifth straight day of fighting that has killed at
ki ,vyr.n&gt; r_-&gt;™«t doTrtnwn buildln frv —
crowded hospitals and ruptured water and power
supplies.
Relentless and indiscriminate shelling of civilian
neighborhoods and bitter gun battles in the streets
— vagedin the cUy5fr mitESTrurrtnjrBHrur

AREA DEATHS
CHRISTOPHER JOHN
SAVAGE
Christopher John Savage,
17, of 1531 Tracy Dee Way in
Ixmgwood died Monday at his
home. Born Sept. 5, 1965, in
Southbridge, Mass., he moved
to
I.ongwood
from
Massachusetts in 1974. He was
a student.
Survivors include his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Savage, of liongwood; and a
brother, Adam W., of
liongwood.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
GEORGE WALLACE
BALLEW
George Wallace Ballew, 52,
of 613 M arshall St., in
Altamonte Springs died
Thursday at his home. Born
Nov. 3, 1930, in McCaysville,
(la., he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Orlando in 1976.
He was a retired Air Force
master sergeant and was a
Protestant. He was a member
of Masonic Lodge 239 F&amp;AM,
Winter Park, Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 10050,
Casselberry, and the NCO
Academy
Alumni
Association.
Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. Debra Marie
Humphrey, of Missouri; Mrs.
Dolores Kay Moore, of
Pensacola, Miss Diana Sue
Ballew, of Daytona Beach; a
stepdaughter, Mrs. Barbara
M. Bays, of Orlando; two
stepsons, Gement W. Lynn, of
Cullman, Ala., Frederick B.
Holleritter Jr., of Gastonia,
N. C.; his mother, Beulah
Ballew, of Akron, Ohio, his
father, George, of Daytona
Beach; a sister, Mrs. IJllian
A. Morris, of Mogadore, Ohio;
and five grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

homemaker and a Methodist.
Survivors
include
her
husband, Robert P.; a son,
Steven, of liongwood; and a
brother, Robert Douglass, of
Flemlngsburg, Ky.
Semoran Funeral Home,
Altamonte Springs, Is in
charge of arrangements.
ALBERT SKORNIA
Albert Skomia, 80, of 2080
Catbird Court in Oviedo died
Monday at W inter Park
Memorial H ospital. Born
June 22, 1902, in Boyne City,
Mich., he moved to Oviedo
from Michigan in 1969. He was
a retired fa rm e r and a
Lutheran.
Survivors include his wife,
Geraldine; three sisters, Mrs.
Bertha Janechck, of Dear­
born, Mich., Mrs. Edith Dell,
of Miami, and Mrs. Ixnilsc
Honer, of Sun City. Ariz.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, G oldenrod, is in
charge of arrangements.
MRS. FANNIE ANGEL
COHEN
Mrs. Fannie Angel Cohen,
87, of 1520 S. Grant St. in
longwood died Thursday at
longw ood H ealth Care
Center. Bom Aug. 1, 1895, in
London, England, she moved
to liongwood from Orlando, in
1982. She was a retired coat
inspector and was Jewish.
Survivors include her two
sons, Norm an Angel, of
Maitland, and Sheldon Cohen,
of Bloomfield, Conn.; a sister,
Mrs. E sth e r H arm in, of
Hartford, Conn.; six grand­
children; and five great­
grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

Survivors include his wife,
Mildred, a daughter, Mrs.
Jean Connolly, of Fern Park;
five brothers, Robert, Denny
and Chalmcr, all of Eaton,
Ohio, and Malcolm and
Rodney, both of Lewisburg,
Ohio; and two grandchildren.
Garden Chapel Home for
F u n e ra ls, Orlando, is in
charge of arrangements.
MRS. MARY E. GRAMLING
Mrs. Mary Etta Gramling,
87, of 715 Cypress Ave. in
Sanford died Monday at the
Sanford Convalescent and
Nursing Center. Born Jan. 17,
1895 in St. Mary, Ga.. she had
been a resident of Sanford
more tharf&amp;O years. She was a
homemaker and a member of
St. Jam es A.M.E. Church.
'S u rv iv o rs include three
sons, Fred A. Gramling of
Miami, Oscar A. Gramling of
Augusta Ga., and Tommy
Gramling of I,exington Park,
Md.; eight grandchildren and
10 great-grandchildren.
W ils o n -E lc h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
__

F u ir r al Notice
G R A M L IN G . MRS. M AR Y
ETTA — Funeral service! lor
Mrs M ery £ Gramling. 17, ol
715 Cypress Ave . Sanlord. who
died Monday, w ill be held at 4
pm
Thursday al St James
AME
Church, »l* Cypress
A ve . Sanlord. the Rev F.
B e rn a rd Lemon, pastor, In

H unt M onument Co.

Display Yard
Hwy. IM1 — F#m Park
P h .ttM M
Gene Hunt, Ownar
Bronze, Marble A Granite.

JOHN D. MOWERY
John D. Mowery, 72, of 525
E. Semoran Blvd. in Fern
Park died Monday at his
home. Born Oct. 2, 1910, in
Greenville, Ohio, he moved to
Fern Park from Springfield,
MRS. HELEN E. REDMAN
Mrs. Helen E. Redman, 60, Mo., in 1974. He was a retired
of 128 Duncan T rail in manager for a tire company
liongwood died Tuesday at and was a m em ber of
Florida H ospjtal-O rlando. W e s t m i n s t e r
U n ite d
Born March 5, 1922, in P resb y terian Church in
Greenfield, Ohio, she moved C asselberry. He was a
to Longwood from tandon, member of Masonic Lodge 143
Ohio, in 1978. She was a in Greenville.

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

charge Calling hours lo r friends
w ill be held Irom t u n til I P " 1
tonight al the Chapel Burial to
follow in Resliawn Cemetery
Wilson Etchelberger M ortuary
in charge

Action Reports

★

PISTOL STOLEN
A .36-caliber Smith and Wesson pistol worth $125 was stolen
between 12:30 and 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday from the home of
Alphonzy Lowery of 2421 Main Street. Sanford.

Fires

★

Courts
Police

★

J
after being asked to do so.
The arrest report says that Jones was "drinking other
patron’s drinks without their permission." She was asked bySeminole County sheriff's deputies to leave but she refused and
was arrested. She was being held in the county jail on $500
CAR WINDOW SHATTERED
The passenger window of a car driven by Stephen Grectn of
Satsuma Drive, Altamonte Springs, was shattered when a

F re e d o m

S&amp; L

Final Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
approval of the acquisition by Freedom
Savings &amp; li&gt;an Association of Tampa of
ComBank, the com m ercial banking
organization based in Winter Park, is
expected within 45 days.
At a Tuesday stockholders meeting in
Tampa, 67.23- p wcdin of Freedom's
stockholders voted In favor of Freedom's
purchasing the assets and liability of
ComBank for $57.5 million in cash.
In a vote taken at the special
stockholders' meeting, the owners of
2,650,000 shares voted in favor of the
transaction, while the holders of 558,338
shares voted against the proposal, and

SHOTG'.N STOLEN
A 410-gauge shotgun was stolen in a burglary at 4346 Richard
Allen Avenue, Sanford, be'.ween 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Monday
when a thief broke into the house through a rear window
Beverly Ann Williams reported the theft of the $160 weapon
D U ARREST
The following person was arrested in Seminole County for
driving under the influence &lt;DUI):
—Richard Michael Austin. 18, of Orlando, was arrested after
he was found sitting in his car in the early morning hours on
Tuesday in front of a house in Maitland.

bond.

M o v e s

To

Buy

the owners of 32.916 shares abstained.
ComBank. with 17 offices, seven
branches of which are in Seminole
County, has more than 10 percent of its
total bank deposits in Orange and
Seminole counties. ComBank is almost
totally owned by Ohio financier Marvin
Warner.
__
A statutory merger requires two-thirds
approval by the owners of the out­
standing shares. The takeover vote
barely passed.
Freedom president Fred F . Church Jr.,
who presided at the meeting and an­
nounced the results, said he was ex­
tremely pleased that the stockholders
approved the acquisition.

C o m B a n k
The

m erg er

of

ComBank

into

F reedom said ChucdL."wall-put.

one of Florida's most dynamic m arkets"
- Central Florida. “ In addition, this
acquisition will enable Freedom to move
more quickly in becoming a major
competitive force in banking in Florida
and will speed our re tu rn to
profitability."
The proposed merger already has the
approval of the Federal Home Ix&gt;an Bank
Board In Washington and the Florida
Department of Banking and Finance.
The m erger is subject to approval by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. which
is expected within 45 days.

Atlantic B ank
com bines the services
o f a broker
and
a banker
and
o f each,

IN OUR FIGHT •
AGAINST

★

____ _a L
. it U at
. t it
e fdriving
lr t t ’tmf n
person threw
bottle
It nx
as W
hein im
was
on State Road 434
south of Wekiva Springs Road at 11:10 p.m. on Tuesday.

★

In tr o d u c in g

N O T IC E T O A L L

VETERANS
Who Hava Honorably Sarvad Thalr Country la Tint ol War or Paaca

f

f

Becauseof tha lack of burial spaceandthedistance of theNational Cemetery mFlorida,
weve assignino gravespacaaInVelerie lerdw if Valr. hM w ■eeerWPwl As an
honoraNy discharged veteran of the United States Armed Forces, you mey be qualified
for Free Burial Space. However, you must register for this. You nut be able to show
proof of Honorable Oischargt Thera vs a limited number of Vttyrans spaces avvlabto.
Certittcateefor spaces will beissued ona first comefirst servedbasis. To assure reser­
vation. mail thecouponbelowtoe
r --------------------------- OAKLAWN MEMORIAL PARK-------------------'

Rt 4 Boi 244 Sanford. FL 32771
(305)322-4263

i

Please Send My Veteran of Service Eligibility Ceriihcate.

I NAM E___________________________________________ ADDRESS ________________________________________________

Branch of Service__________

_N o. in Family________

Service Serial No----------------

-Telephone No_______

A t l a n t i c B a n k ’s n e w M o n e y M a r k e t M a n a g e m e n t A c c o u n t .
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bines money market savings
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Additionally, w ith a $2,5(XJ
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checkins fn credit cards ro h ro kerage activity and earnings,
as well as new services yet to
he announced.

Vour M oney Market Man­
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Yts, I'd like more information on Atlantic Hank's
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I Su o l

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PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. S, 1983—IB

Cook Of The W eek

L y m a n S e n io r To E x h ib it A t 'T h e F a ir 1 F o r F ifth Y e a r
By LOU CHILDERS
Herald Correspondent
Heather MacLeod of Oviedo chooses to believe her Mom’s
favorite saying, "The way to a m an’s heart is through his
stomach." She has been cooking "since I’ve been tall enough to
reach the stove."
Heather is a senior at Lyman High School and actively in­
volved in a Future Farmers of America project - raising
three steers. This will be her fifth year of showing steers with
her expertise increasing annually, she says.
Heather will participate in the West Palm Beach Fair Jan.
20, the Florida State Fair in Tampa Feb. 5, and the Central
Florida F air in Orlando Feb. 23.
"The first calf I raised was one bom on my mom and dad’s
farm ." When Heather sold this steer, she used the proceeds to
feed the second calf, also one bom on her parents’ farm. The
third year, she used the profit from her second sale to purchase
a calf from a cattle ranch. This tim e Heather hit the jackpot
because the steer she raised turned out to be the Blue Ribbon
winner in his class.
" l a s t year," Heather continues, “ I purchased a steer from a
lak e City cattle ranch that went on to take the Blue Ribbon in
the 1000 Pound class at the Central Florida Fair.
Heather has big plans for the money she will earn from
selling the three steers she has raised this year —'"wheels."
The only decision remaining is whether her wheels will come
on a car or a truck.
When it comes to cooking, H eather says she only had one
semester of home economics in school, and everything she has
learned has been "from my m om ."
Heather’s parents, Robert and Patsy Macl^od, and her
younger sisters, Christy, 14, and Carrie, 8, all agree with
Heather that one of their favorite meals is Venison Spaghetti.
She says, "When Dad returns from a successful deer hunting
trip, we grind the meat and make spaghetti sauce using our
favorite ingredients, but substituting the ground venison for
ground beef."
(leather made another family speciality, l.ane Cake, for the
New Y ear's celebration. This rich dessert has a unique
frosting that requires bourbon soaked raisins.
.
U S E CAKE
5 cups flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
.
8 egg whites
4 teaspoon salt
2 cups sugar
1 cup butter, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup milk
Sift together flour and baking powder. Beat egg whites and
salt until peaks form; gradually beat in 4 cup sugar until

mm

H trild Phots t y Lou Chlldtrt

H e a th e r M c ta o ri " p l u m p s " ra is in s to f r o s t L a n e
C ake.
peaks become stiff. In another bowl, cream butter and the
remaining 14 cups sugar and vanilla. Add milk and flour
mixture alternately until smooth. Fold In egg whites gently.
Pour into 3 greased and floured 9-inch cake pans and bake in a
350 degree oven 20-25 minutes. Cool 5 minutes and invert on
racks, turning layers top side up. Chill cake.
I j id c Frosting:
Pour 4 cup bourbon over 14 cups raisins and allow to sit in

a covered container overnight in the refrigerator.
12 egg yolks
1*4 cups sugar
4 teaspoon salt
*i cup butter
14 cups each chopped pecans, coconut &amp; candied cherries
Stir egg yolks, sugar, salt and butter in double boiler for 15-20
minutes until thick. Stir in drained raisins, pecans, coconut
and candied cherries. Blend well. Cool. Cover and refrigerate
overnight. Frost cooled cake.
STEAK WITH PEPPERS AND ONIONS
4 cube steaks, cut in 4-inch strips
2 large onions, cut in rings
1 green pepper, cut in 4-inch strips
2 stalks celery, cut
2 tablespoons cooking oil
1 package dry onion soup mix
Place oil in heavy skillet. Over medium heat stir in steak
strips, onion rings, green pepper strips, cut celery' and stir in
onion soup mix. Saute all ingredients and cover with a tight
fitting lid. Allow to simmer 10-20 minutes until steak is tender.
Yield 4-5 servings.
CRISPY BAKED CHICKEN
1 large fryer, whole (3 pounds or overt
salt and pepper to taste
2 tablespoons I-awry’s Seasoning Salt
lightly sprinkle fryer with salt and pepper and completely
cover outside skin of chicken with seasoning salt. Place on a
flat baking pan on rack and bake in a 375 degree oven 60-75
minutes untiljdone. Outside will be crispy, poultry juicy.
ZUCCHINI BREAD
3 eggs lbeaten until foamy)
1 cup oil
2 cups sugar
2 cups fresh zucchini, grated with peel
3 teaspoons vanilla
3 cups flour
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
l 4 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon soda
4 cup nuts
Cream oil and sugar; add eggs and vanilla. Stir in remaining
ingredients and pour batter into 2 loaf pans, greased and
floured. Bake at 375 degrees for 1 hour.
FESTIVAL FRIED RICE
(I servings)
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
2 eggs, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 cup diced cooked pork

2 cup diced cooked shrimp
1 cup diced cooked chicken
1 can (14 oz.l bean sprouts, rinsed and drained
4 cup diced celery
2 green onions, chopped
3 cups hot cooked rice
l 4 cup soy sauce
4 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 cup shredded lettuce
Heat 2 tablespoons oil In large fry ing pan or wok placed over
medium low heat; add eggs and scramble lightly. Remove
from pan; set aside.
Increase heat to medium high; add remaining 2 tablespoons
oil and stir In pork, shrimp, chicken, bean sprounts, green
onions and celery; cook and stir 2 minutes. Add rice, soy sauce
and pepper, mixing throughly; continue to cook and stir until
heated through. Stir in reserved eggs and lettuce, place in
serving dish. Serve immediately.

IO W A
MEATS
PRICES GOOD
WED. THRU SAT.

We Sell Only
U.S.D.A. Choice
Naturally Aged
Western Beef

WE W ILL NOW BE CLOSED E V E R Y MONDAY
Mild

SM O K ED SA U SA G E

« 1 43

U.S.D.A. Choice

H IN D Q U A R T E R
Cut-Wrapped And Frozen
U.S.D.A. Choice

SID E of BEEF
Cut-Wrapped And Frozen
Fully Cooked BoneU««
W HOLE o r HALF

m

SMOKED H A M S
Georgia Grade 'A'
W H O L E FRYERS

53‘
59*

CUTUP

Lb.
Lb.

Fresh Daily

NEW
ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mrs. Leon (Gloria)
Gray of Maitland, announce
the arrival of a daughter,
Elizabeth Ann, on Dec. 7,1982,
at Florida Hospital, Orlando.
She weighed 9 lbs. 6 4 ozs, and
joins a brother, Edward, 44,
the Central Florida Heart
Ambassador for 1982.
Mrs. Gray has been em­
ployed as u microbiology
supervisor a t Seminole
M emorial H ospital, now
Central F lo rid a Regional
Hospital, since 1971.
Maternal grandparents are
Mrs. Astrid Cavanaugh and
the late Mr. Charles Edward
C avanaugh.
P a te rn a l
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Benjamin Gray.

FREE
SPI NAL E X A M I N A T I O N
P«NCMf DMMtl*

I FraQuOTl
&gt; lu lK lW H f

&gt; o«tin««i :«■ ••
4

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• *ee I** ** • *1 •a#***‘#M*' F»» Mf
a M iii w*»#*•»•* •

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH THOMAS Y A N D f l l
ChifOpi Attic Physician
T01J F R E N C H AVF
SANFORD

323-5763

Family Or Not, Lovesick
In-Law Needs Exposing

I can't tell my sister because they have three children and
she loves him. Besides, I don't want to hurt her. It's a terrible
strain to keep out of his way. He's even called me at work and
tried to talk me into seeing him.
He’s making a nervous wreck of me. What should I do?
FEEU5 TRAPPED
DEAR FEELS: Tell your sister. Her husband needs help.
Attempted rape is nothing to sweep under the carpet U he's
tried It with you, he’s probably tried it with others — and
maybe succeeded. Family or not he should be exposed for
what he is.
DEAR ABBY: Is it ever 01*. for a man to wear his hat in a
restaurant? I'm dating a Texan who always keeps his cowboy
hat on while we're eating out. Wc go to nice places, and
sometimes people look at him funny. By the way, he’s not
really a cowboy, but he always wears a cowboy hat. Thanks.
BETTY IN GREENWICH, CONN.
DEAR BETTY: Unless your Texrn is an Orthodox Jew, be
should remove his hat atUle dining.
DEAR ABBY: In a recent column you asked If there was a
city known as "The Pits."
Well, there Is. And I am sending you a T-shirt bearing the
message. "HIBBING, MINNESOTA - ITS THE PITS!"

/t W AN T A BEAUTIFUL INTERIOR A \

^ | 0 . NIU

4

2108

m n n « T U j^ ;

)

1 PHONE ORDER AHEAD

CALL TOLL m B K •

l-Mf»4Mlil

|

Hibbing is the home of the largest open-pit iron ore mine in
the world. In the summer, when most of America is sweltering,
come enjoy the naturally air-conditioned city of Hibbing,
Minn.
BIIXWIRTANEN, PRESIDENT,
HIBBING C. OF C. AMBASSADORS CLUB
DEAR BILL: Thanks for the neat T-shirt (P.S. It (its.)
'DEAR ABBY: Please tell that lamebrained idiot who is
forcing his left-handed child to use her right hand that I am a vv-vlctlm of th-th-that ka-ka-kind of st-st-stupidity.
FA-FA-FA-RANK

Or. Jack Mazlin, Optometrist
For Appt. 339-3937
j

CONTACTS

EXTENDED WEAR OVERNIGHT LENSES AVAILABLE

^Optica

P A I could write a book on the damage caused by such
Ignorance, but for now, I think the above sentence says it all.

ALTAMONTE MALL
i,
1

Located upp#r level by
339 3937

You're never too old (or too young) to learn how to make
friends and be popular. For Abby's booklet on Popularity, send
$1, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to
Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

oping that hour
after hour o f vour
New Year will be
filled with happy t
times!
+ \O u r lasting y
thanks .

9

VU»i
FROM ALL OF US AT...

PERM ANENTl
S O L U T IO N m
YOUR FAMILY HAIR CARE CENTER
»9 Q A l f 9 9 DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE
w L|( MARY BLVD.j

322-7642 or 322-331S

Philips Decorating Don

11 m ile u s l i ( I 4 n U . M iry Blvtf.l

W

'{/■ Vs

’ t r

i m

Sanford's Most Unique Boutique
LOIS DYCUS • Owner

l W C T .4 4

'

Oof
1 can im
Ayiiil 1got my Designer
Eyeglasses made to my
prescriptioninonly 1hour
il 30 to50%I m
•

Decorating Don It tho colorful itort... That comas to your (Joor • Our
decorator will work with you to croota yaur heart's desire and stay within
your budgat.

NO o a o ia TOO SMALL#NO IN T B IlO a TOO LAOOB
O IV I US A C ALL# NO CMAROI 08 0 8 U 0 A T I0 N

'J 4 e 3 " * t 3 4 0

( E Y E )
6m,
EXAM
*25.00
and
v
*7 9 .0 0 Pr. JS&amp;,

WANT TO SAVE MONEY AS YOU REDECORATE?

o CARPET A V IN Y L FOR YOUR FLOORS
• DRAPERIES#VERTICALSoWOVEN WOODS
o M IN I ILINDSeVALANCES# SHADES FOR YOUR
WINDOWS* BEDSPREADS FOR YOUR BEOS
• WALLPAPER FOR YOUR WALLS -

wCe)Q

It's Ready When You're Ready

STYLED FOR YOUR NEEDS?

WE HAVE IT A LL...

S. FR E N C H A V E . (1 7 -9 2 )
NEXT TO M R.CS CHICKEN

COM PLETE ”
™ S " u RCHASe
(L IM IT ONE COUPON) EXP. JANUARY 29. 1983

DEAR ABBY: My sister's husband has always liked me.
T hat’s the problem. He likes me more than I want him to. He
l&gt;as propositioned me in the past, but I’ve always been able to
put him in his place without making a scene. (I'm separated
from my husband.) Thanksgiving night at my mother's he
cornered me in the kitchen, and 1 had to threaten him with a
butcher knife to keep him from forcing himself on me. He
sm eared my llstlck and tore my dress. (I said I was chilly andput on my coat so nobody would notice.)
On another family occasion, he followed me into the
bedroom, locked the door and tried to rape me! He keeps
telling me he "loves" me. I can't stand the sight of that man,
but we are thrown together constantly because he's family.

G R O U N D C H U C K dr\?„,. * 1 ”

Blu#

Ptrtdn®

Entrano#

�4-9

Evening HeralA 'in J c rS , D .

WcSneiDa-- . Jan. S,

vwa—-

-

Chicken Rated Among 'Five Top Taste Trends' In Magazine Survey
l » teaspoon paprika
Chicken has been rated
1 medium onion, sliced thin
1-3 cup dry white vermouth skin side up, in single layer in tightly and bake in 375 degree cream to liquid in baking pan;
1 broiler-fryer chicken, cut
3 (ablespoons butter
among the "five top taste
6 cloves garlic, peeled
l » cup sour cream
large covered casserole. Add
F. oven about 14 hours or stir to warm. Serve over hot in parts
1 tablespoon flour
trends" by both foodservice
2 tablespoons chopped
Sprinkle chicken with salt
carrots, celery, onion, garlic, until fork can be inserted in rice. Makes 4 servings.
P i teaspoons salt, divided
See TOP, Page 3B
c u sto m ers and o p erato rs
parsley
ami pepper. Place chicken, parsley, and vermouth. Cover chicken with ease. Add sour
CHERRY CHICKEN
4 teaspoon pepper
responding to a survey by
Restaurants and Institutions
magazine.
The second annual survey
also found that 22 percent of
BONUS
the people ate more chicken in
BUY
1981 than in the past and 63.4
percent of the foodservice
operators rated chicken as
one of the top "good sellers"
last year. .
The
National B ro iler
Council notes that in addition
to chicken, the other top taste
trends all reflect the current
consumer interest in lighter
foods — salads, seafood, fresh
vegetables and fresh fruit also
m ade the "Top Five." While
rh ic k e n is considered a
bargain meat in this period of
economic uncertainty, it is
also widely recognized as a
P R IC E S E F F E C T IV E W E D ., JA N .
nutritional giant — high in
5 T H R U T U E S ., JAN. 11, 1 9 8 3 .
protein and low in fat content
and calories.
Of the $2S4.!&gt; billion
EVERYDAY
Americans spent on food last
LOW
PRICE
year, about a third (31.9
percent) went for food eaten
aw ay
from
hom e.
Approximately 20 percent of
WESTERN
LARGE GREEN
th e entire b ro iler-fry er
RED OR GOLDEN
production (12 billion pounds
this year on a ready-to-cook
basis) goes to fast foods and
many restaurants are also
CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL
increasing the number and
variety of chicken entrees on
their menus.
P er capita food con­
sumption In the United States
In 1981 was 1,395 pounds —
17ozC A N
down from the 1,401 pounds
per person Americans con­
sum ed annually in 1971.
D uring the sam e 10-year
period, chicken consumption
rose from an average of 36.7
pounds per person in 1971 to
48.8 pounds last year. It is
expected that by 1990 the
SAVE 9 C
S A V E 5 C P E R LB
annual per capita con­
sumption of chicken will be
well over 60 pounds.
The
average
b ro iler
produced in 1981 weighed 3.99
pounds and was grown in just
____,
CHECK THESE PRICES
SAVE
over 52 days. It takes only 1.9
CRISP
pounds of feed to produce a
pound of m eat, m aking
chickens the most efficient
ALLPURPOSE
converters of feed into food.
The trend toward lighter
foods need not rule out pasta
FRESHLY PACKAGED
from the diet. In fact, when
combined with other Jowcalorle foods such as chicken
and vegetables, pasta dishes
FRESH
can be satisfying meals, quite
in keeping with today's in­
terest in good nutrition. One
GEORGIA RED
such dish la "Light Chicken
and
Noodles"
(below ),
developed by the National
Broiler Council.
LIGHT CHICKEN
AND NOODLES
P A N TRY PRIDE
1 broiler-fryer chicken,
cooked, boned and cut in biteT A P IO C A B A N A N A B U T T E R S C O T C H
size pieces
FREN C H OH CUT
C H O C O L A T E C H O C O LA TE FU D G E V A N IU A
3 cups chicken broth
I6 o j : C A N
D tC E D P E A C H E S OR M IX E D FR U IT
1 package (5 ounces) fine
REGULAR OR LIGHT
egg noodles
2 cups carrots, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons green onion,
white and green parts in­
6 PACK
cluded
20o&lt;r
I
2
ozCANS
S A V E 10
2 teaspoons Worcestershire
SAVE 9
SAVE 20
sauce
1 teaspoon celery salt
4« teaspoon pepper
SAVE 60In larg e frypan, place
12oz BOX
chicken broth and bring to a
boll over high tem perature.
Stir In noodles, carrots, onion,
CRACKERS
Worcestershire sauce, celery
salt and pepper. Reduce heat
SAVE 28*
to low, cover and simmer
16oz BOX
about 15 minutes or until most
of liquid Is absorbed. Stir In
chicken and continue cooking,
AALTINE CRACKERS
covered, about 10 minutes
more. Serve hot garnished
with parsley. Makes 6 ser­
vings.
To cook chicken: In deep
rV*FPOA» KATCWJU
EVERYDAY
EVER YD AY
EVERYDAY
GLNLRIC
in w
|W1*W
low
SAVE
saucepan, place chicken. Add
SAVE
COMPARE (,H O L t RY “2* GAVE
COMPARE (iH (K 1 H V PW
COMPARE UHOl l ItY £**
COMPARE TOOD
PWCt
PRC*
Ct
2 cups water, 1 teaspoon salt
REGULAR OR WITH
and 44 teaspoon pepper. (For
GENERIC
A M DANDY
MARSHMALLOWS
A l l i
I
I
PANTO* PWDE PATER
_ ___
■----- ,
additional flavor, 1 small
$ j 1 9 40*
B la c k P e p p e r .
HOT
COCOA
M
X
ct
• • l*c u l
onion, sliced, and the leaves
g e n e r ic
^
from 3 ribs of celery m ay also
GLAD SHEER STRENGTH
( . aa |
I
u m rw o c n
n _ .
|
|
UBaY
____
be added.) Cover and simmer
B a r B - Q u e sauce ^ 5 9 *
#
about 45 minutes or until fork
can be Inserted in chicken
RAOU HOME8TYLE WITH MUSHROOM.
____
PLAIN OR WITH MEAT
* e
with ease. Remove chicken
B a th T is s u e
. .
from pan and cool; reserve
oenerc n e a o r m w i
_ _ .
broth for use In recipe (adding
REG. OR HOT WITH BEANS
water to measure 3 cups, If
M a rs h m a llo w s ^ 6 9
P o t k lB w
necessary). Separate meat
cJSJ
from bones; discard bones
and skin. Cut chicken Into
bite-size pieces.
NOTE: This dish is ex­
cellent when re-heated and
served a second tim e. Or
make it ahead, store in the
MAXWELL HOUSE
RICH &amp; CREAMY |
INSTANT
refrigerator and heat in the
microwave at serving time.
E.P., REG. OR A D C.
SALTOfE CRACKERS , 1
HALF GALLON
CHICKEN VERMOUTH
1 LB CAN
B oz JA R
10oz BOX
WITH RICE
WITH T H B COUPON QOOO
WTTH T H B COUPON OOOO
WTTH T H B COUPON QOOO
THRU WEO., JAN. 12, 1063.
W ITH T H B COUPON QOOO
1 broiler-fryer chicken, cut
THRU WED., JAN. 12. 1983.
THRU WEO, JAN. 12. 1963.
THRU WED., JAN. 12. 1663.
in parts
teaspoons salt
W teaspoon pepper
SANFORD 2 9 4 4 ORLANDO ROAD, ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER OF 17-92 &amp; ORLANDO ROAD
3 medium carrots, sliced
2 ribs celery, sliced thin

SAVE 50'

U.S. NO. 1

BAKING
POTATOES
cflrfc/e
10 LB BAG

DelM onte
PEAS,
CORN

BELL
PEPPERS

DELICIOUS

APPLES

PER POUND

2/89

10

&lt;

OUTSTANDING PRODUCE BUYS!

SW EET FLOWER
STONEW ARE
INFORM ATION

Fresh Carrots.......... ^

Yellow O n io n s.......... ^ 1 0 * G

WE WILL REDEEM YOUR
STONEWARE COUPONS AND YOU CAN
PURCHASE YOUR COMPLETER PIECES
THROUGH SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1983.

DelM onte

SINGLE SERVINGS

49° 0

DelM onte
GREEN BEANS

Slaw or S a la d ............ . 4 9 ° E
Assorted Greens . . . esa* 8 9 * 0
Sweet Potatoes..........-sa. 1 5* 0
PABST BLUE
RIBBON BEER

GRITS or CORN
MEAL MIX

m

2/89

$169

SUNSHINE
HI HO

79

SUNSHINE
KRISPY

69*0

Nestle

Quick Grits

Trash Bags . .

« i.7 7 * 0

Spaghetti uuc*. J » 9 * hd
Hormel Chili • •

2 0 c OFF

*1#9 lid

Mildsw Gone ,,to.9 9 * m

Luxfoap------ J -9 9 * 0

79*0

ICE CREAM

i

i

NABISCO
PREMIUM

2/ 99* 0

Tomato Juice . ssj7 9 * 0

Fyne Napkins. ;?2/*1

. ;» 3 f* 1 0

20' OFF

2 0 c OFF

8ANKA

COFFEE

2 /* 1 Lid Towels .

E taw R ice ..,* .9 9 *

4 0 c OFF

COFFEE

�&lt;

1 bay leaf

Here is a tostada lo strve quests or include m the weekly

Tex-M ex Foods
G a in Popularity

i-sUy menu;

Evening Herald. Sanlord FI

1 teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce
teaspoon ground coriander
l i teaspoon salt
011 for frying
12 corn tortillas
1 cup dry curd cottage cheese
thinly sliced onion
chopped raw vegetables (lettuce, cucumber or zucchini)
Irsmedium saucepan, heat oil; saute onion, carrot and garlic

- ... ..

TEX-MEX TOSTADAS
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 large onion, chopped il cup)
ls cup chopped carrot
1 clove garlic, chopped
2 cans (about 16 ounces each) kidney beans, drained
l can il pound) tomatoes, undrained

Wednesday, Jan. S, 1983—3B

tur~.cdl,

until sort. Add beans, tomatoes,
p c y ^ i wuce.
coriander and salt; cook 20 minutes stirring occasionally to
prevent sticking. Mash bean mixture with a fork or chop in
food processor. Heat
inch oil in large skillet Using tongs,
slide one tortilla into hot oil; fry until crisp Repeat with
remaining tortillas Drain flat on paper towel. Spread each
tortilla with the bean mixture. Garnish with cottage cheese,
onion slices and vegetables.

'i

...Top
LEAN FRESHLY

jl

GROUND $
BEEF
LB
SAVE 60° PER LB

m

r

cPride

5 LB AVG. PKG.
UMIT-2 PKGS. WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
P R IC E S E F F E C T IV E W E D ., JAN.
5 T H R U TU E S .. J A N . 11. 1983.

TENDER SMOKED

BONELESS

CHUCK
ROAST

BONELESS

BONELESS

TURKEY

CALIFORNIA

ROAST

PER POUND

P ER POUND

SA VE 80
PER LB
COMPARE

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

TENDER DELICIOUS SM OKED

_ _

Rib Pork Chops * s2

SAVE
PER LB

39

60

COMPARE

1

"

'

TENDER ECONOMICAL
CAL
SLICED SIRLOIN

Sliced Bacon r.? LnS149

60

..S 0 4 9

2

Steak Umms
U S O A CHO ICE BEEF
BONELESS UNDERBLADE

Calif. Steak

.

U S D A CHOICE BNLS
BEEF FILLET STEAKS

Chuck Eye . .

mi

50

S -|9 9

AVG

70

PKQ LU

79

Pork Chops .

AVG

p« g

m

9

5 LB AVG PKG.. FAMILY SIZE PK G S .
THIGHS. DRUM STICKS OR

BO

*

SUNNYLAND S M O K E D

-

1
^

PORK ORIENTAL. CHICKEN OR BEEF

?5 /$l
H I G H P O I N T '"

C O FFE E

8e oo zz JJ A
AR
R

$327

DETERGENT
4 0 OFF LABEL

PANTRY PRIDE

SA V E IB '

20oz LOAVES

PANTRY PRIDE

3/*T»

64oz
JAR

30

K ra ft C h e e se

low

COM PARE

SAVE

12 o z

BA G ELS

PANTRY PRIDE

B
read(
F
r
e
n
c
h
)^.Zf 1

AAA F A M O U S
PU M PERNICKEL OR

Rye Bread

•

•

• ICkM

99*

GOLDEN TO P

$429

Apple Pie •

•

•

• 20d i

PANTRY PRIOE SOURDOUGH
OR ENGLISH

Muffins

•

•

•

PACK

20' |

Pl*#d to o 0« ONCN

0
0

2/*1

lO W

. _

w ci

SAVE

_

_____
I
I

^

P
o
tPies. . ,„2/79* 0

CHEESE, PEPPERONI
OR SAUSAG E- FROZEN

G&amp;W Pizza.

* * * * *

.

I

„89e 0

L O U N T • C X jf T O CXJH I O A f T C t T . A t T ttT W IT V t TM t t K J i J T O U M l T Q U A T l T l 't * .
( » * i l i r . n o t &lt; « s i &lt;o n ?*i i i £ T o n
u n io n ..

FRESHLY BAKED

ITALIAN
BREAD
IN T H E D 6 L I B A K E R Y S T O R E S O N LY

SAVE 3 0

S A V E 10

C
R
IC
K
E
T
L
IG
H
T
E
R

|

99*

TWIN PA C K

SAVE a r
'
4.6oz TUBE

1

LEAN

I

COMPARE

H I A l IM L
B l A U l t AIDS

I

B O IL E D
HAM

Frozen Waffles u3 9 * 0

$ 1 5 9

H ALF POUND

SAVE S I 00
CO U N TR Y PRIDE X Z Z

F R IE D
—
C H IC K E N
8 PIECE SATCHEL

the

g il l e t e

DEU BAKERY STO RES O N I*
PHI P A H t I)
IO O D S

SAVE

COMPARE

I

. OLD FASHIO N GERMAN

I

Daisy Razor . . ^ . 8 9 ' L2£J

Bologna

500 M G VITA- FRESH

IM PO R TE D AUSTRIAN

e

. . .

I

I

.

*

.

jo.

. . .

|

■*

IO *
1‘MU

99*
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Garlic Bread . . .*,*1 9

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Johnny Rib dinner . $1 "

SOUO- REGULAR OR UNSCENTED
ANTI PERSP1RANT
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79 0
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PA N TR Y PRIDE C H C K E N .
BEEF OR TURKEY- FROZEN _

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SAVE 4 '

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C h e e s e P rid e

SAVE 10

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30

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SA VE 4'

$ 2 |6 9

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SAVE 4 5

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SUC ED SINGLES
C H E ESE PROOUCT

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40

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PRICES

DAIRY

BLUE B O N N E T

L yke s F ra n k s

PMO L O '

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COMPARE

SAVE

POWER PAK. C H IC K E N

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OLD SMITHFIELD

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Liver Sausage

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TASTY BREAKFAST

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FAM ILY SIZE PKGS

SANDW ICH STEAKS

SAVE
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SLOTKOWSKI

TA S T Y DELICIOUS STICK

M ARKET STYLE

B R H LD

12 o z P K G .

SAVE 80°
PER LB

MEAT

KING

HYGRADE
HOT DOGS

UNDERBLADE

50

FRESHLY BAKED

Angel Food Cake 9 9 *

30

Continued From Page 2H
1 teaspoon sugar
*. teaspoon ground allspice
l » teaspoon ground cin­
namon
1 can ( 16oz. 1pitted red sour
ch erries, d rain ed , juice
reserved
1 can 18 oz.) crushed
pineapple
1 chicken-flavor bouillon
cube, crushed
l » teaspoon re d food
coloring
Sprinkle chicken with 1
teaspoon of the salt, pepper,
and paprika In large frypan
place butter and melt over
medium heat. Add chicken
and cook, turning, about 10
minutes or until brown on all
sides. Remove chicken from
frypan and set aside. In same
frypan place flour, sugar,
remaining l i teaspoon salt'
allspice, and cinnamon; stir
to mix with pan drippings.
Gradually pour in reserved
cherry juice; stir to mix. Add
pineapple, bouillon cube, and
food coloring; m ix u ntil'
blended. Return chicken to
frypan Cover and sim m er for
40 minutes or until fork can be
inserted in chicken with case.
Add cherries during last 5
minutes of cooking time. Tb
serve, place chicken on
serving platter and pour
sauce over chicken. Makes 4
servings.
( Hit KF.N IN A POT
1 whole b ro iler-fry er
chicken
1 apple, quartered
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 teaspoons onion salt
■r teaspoon ro sem ary
leaves
l * teaspoon instant minced
garlic
Place apple in cavity of
chicken. Fold wings across
back with tops touching.
Place chicken, breast side up,
in Dutch oven. Brush with
lemon Juice; sp rin k le with
onion salt, rosem ary, and
gurllc. Cover and roast In 315
degrees F. oven about IW
hours or until leg moves
freely when lifted or twisted.
.Makes 4 servings.
SPICED CHICKEN
MICROWAVE
2 whole b ro iler-fry er
chicken b re a sts, halved,
boned, skinned, and cut in
bite-size pieces
1&lt; cup cooking oil
1 teaspoon bottled browning
sauce
1&lt; cup flour
I cup water
II cup diced onion
2 teaspoons parsley flakes
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground cin­
namon
‘•j teaspoon minced garlic
teaspoon ground cloves
l « teaspoon ground red
pepper
In large shallow glass
baking dish. See NOTE,
below. Mix together chicken,
oil, and browning sauce,
taking care chicken is well
coated. Cover with wax
paper. Microwave on high for
l ‘j minutes, stir, continue to
microwave 2‘s m inutes
longer. Set aside, covered. In
sm all bowl p lace flour.
Gradually add water, stirring
until smooth. Add onion,
parsley, salt, cinnam on,
garlic, cloves, and red pep­
per; stir to mix well. Pour
over
chicken;
mix.
Microwave, stirring every 2
m inutes, for 6 m inutes.
Remove from oven; let stand,
covered, about 5 minutes.
Return to oven for additional
cooking if fork cannot be
inserted in chicken with ease
when testing for doneness.
Serve on hot fluffy rice.
Makes 4 servings.
NOTE: If available, use
browning dish. Preheat dish,
without ltd, in microwave
oven on high for 6 minutes. In
sm all bowl m ix together
chicken, oil, and browning
sauce; place in heated dish
without removing it from
oven. Proceed a s above.

The ihorteit lived U.S.
coin wai the twentycent
piece, mued regularly on­
ly in 1875 and 1876.
They were too easily con
fused
w ith
q u arters.

'■ ■ ■ IH S * * 1 1 1 * !

1
•Am

i

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I

�BLONOIE

*B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. S, 1983

THI3 TURKEY ©MUCH
BETTER THAN LAST
WEEKS Y- P h J
k &gt; v_ . .
y
*1

[ BECAUSE IT IS
V lL A S T W E E K ^

s y ^

M
h

hy_£&gt;.&gt;.c Y " ." « a

/j

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

by M o rt W alker

37 Delete s
opposite
39 Disintegrates
I Greek letter
42 Seems
4
45 Unit of energy
Guevara
47 Public hall
7 Baby bear
51 Cook's
10 Petroleum
measure
derivatives
12 Pigpen sound 52 Goddess of
fate
14 Arrival-time
guess (abbr) 54 Amorous look
15 Sooner state 55 Eisenhower’s
nickname
(ab b r}
56 Solar disc
16 Put on solid
57 Musical sound
food
58 Lair
17 Angle
59 Put out of
measure
sight
(abbr)
60 Rested in
18 Minor
chair
20 Roman deity
22 Clobbered
DOW N
24 Hot spring
26 Crossbar
1 Cold
30 Gash
2 Travel on foot
31 Italian
Infirmities
affirmative
Shelled
32 Cloth scrap
animals
33 Doctrine
Go swiftly
adherent
Legislate
(suffn)
fie ld
34 Dorothy's
American
destination
Indians
36 Trouble
9 Luggage item

..

i

2

3

IO

4
11

19

1 A

T R

n cH

nun

pH TT
■

edge

□□□ED O
11 Bold
13 Leg joint
19 Printer's
measure { p i)
21 Genetic
material
23 3-element
tube
24 Waft
25 Diminutive lu ff ii
27 Medical
picture (comp
wd}
28 Boys
29 Conceit
30 On same side

5

24

6

33

44
45
46
48
49
50
51
53

6

‘“ '

38

39
43

40

55

56

53

49

50

54
57

59

60

g

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Thursday, January 6, 1983

EEK &amp; M E E K

by Howie Schneider

STAVHAJ6D FORTHE LATENIGHT KJ0JOSFOIKMD EV
THE, ML-WIGHT WE'JOSMID

rrs a FAsr-McwiUGworldoar
THERE, SO W
Ik M X L E D ..
STAV lOTTH CHMJkJEL 12

THE tS fc O P tk J E R U fcW S .

m

TUAtf u} Cn |fMC«

by Ed Sullivan
I THINK OUR
LABELIN G LAWS
A R E G ETTING L A X y

BUGS B U N N Y

by Stoffel &amp; Heim dahl

YOUR BIRTHDAY
January 6,1983
It behooves you this coming
year to raise your sights anti
set loftier goals for yourself
than you have previously.
What you envision and believe
you can attain, you will.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Your chances for success
will be greatly enhanced
today if you try to include
others in what you hope to
accomplish. Think in terms of
“We." Order now: the NEW
Astro-Graph M atchm aker
wheel and booklet which
reveals
rom antic
com­
binations, compatibilities for
all signs, tells how to get along
with others, finds rising signs,
hidden qualities, plus more.
Mail |2 to Astro-Graph, Box
4B9, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Send an additional $1
for your Capricorn AstroGraph predictions for 1983. Be
sure to specify birth date.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) You have the ability today
to buoy the spirits of friends
who may need a boost. Lay it
on with gusto if a pal does
som ething w arranting a
compliment.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Out-of-the-ordinary circum­
stances or sudden shifts in
conditions tend to work for
your benefit today. Be alert
for unusual signals.
ARIES (March21-April 19)
Others will find you a very
desirable companion today.
You'll know how lo make all
whom you encounter feel
Important. You'll bring out
the best In them.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Co-workers may coast a bit
today, but your efforts will be

I'm only 35 and try to eat a
well-balanced diet, Where did
I go wrong? How can a lack of
iron cause indigestion?

Iron deficiency can cause
indigestion. It can also cause
changes in the tongue and
m outh, causing a glossy
appearance.

41

48

I always thought that a lack
of iron made you tired. I am
tired but are those other
problem s also from not
enough iron? My fingernails
are brittle and have ridges
and he says that can be
caused from not enough iron,
too.

DEAR READER - like
most symptoms there are
m any different m edical
problem s that can cause
them .
Your
fingernail
problem is a good example.
- —.
hucTTproblems can be caused
from a lack of iron but they
can also occur from lack of
m oisture,
not
enough
29
calcium, nol enough protein
and the use of harsh nail
polish remover.

36

■
52

2B

DEAR DR. LAMB - I went
to see my doctor because 1
have had some indigestion. I
belch a lot and am nauseated.
My doctor said I have an iron
deficiency anemia and put me
on iron pills.

9

44

48

51

27
32

34

P 0
0 0
N 1
E R

Type ol cross
Weep
Broad necktie
fervent
appeal
Australian
capital
Coin-operated
phono
Unclosed
Selves
Arm bone
Delray
5pamsh hero
Of God (L a t)

it

31

45

38
40
41
43

17
20

*j
«
1
D

35 Island New

14

13

26

42

X■
M
N
t l A
R 1 N

7

25

37

~■

I

23

30

By Iron Deficiency

^□□nonn

□ DOD |
no
□
on
n
ci

■

22

58

N N 1

16

18

Problems Caused

r o ^
ADA
W I

12

15

A R C H IE

Answer to Previous Purrte

A C M **.

on fulfilling your ambitions.
They’ll gain nothing of con­
sequence; you could reap
substantial rewards.
GEMINI (May 21-Junt 20)
Your' skills as a promoter or
entrepreneur will be evident
today. You should have no
trouble in gaining support for
projects about which you’re
enthusiastic.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Do not be apprehensive about
the outcome of events,
especially those of a com­
mercial nature. Hold positive
thoughts. Time will prove you
lucky.
I.EO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
decisions today should work
out well for all concerned.
Your judgments won't be
based on what's good for you
alone, but on what's good for
others, too.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Your material prospects look
extfemely encouraging today.
T here should be several
avenues open for personal
gain. Tap each one.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct, 23)
Your peers may talk about
doing nice things (or other?
today, but you are likely to be
the person who says little, yet
gets the deeds done. Good
going!
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You're a force to be reckoned
with today if you operate
behind the scenes without
m aking your moves too
evident. Help in quiet ways.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) The Impression you
make today will be both
favorable and lasting. Too
bad you won't be present to
hear all the nice things being
said about you.

The anem ia of iron
deficiency is only one in­
dication of the deficiency.
The iron is needed lo form
hemoglobin in Ihe red blood
cells so your blood can carry
oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Iron is also used to form
myoglobin In your muscles,
essential to the use of oxygen
in muscle tissue to liberate
energy.
Your entire energy system
for the whole body depends
upon Iron, among other
things. It is part of vita!
chemicals in your individual
cells used to break down food
and release energy within the
cell. No wonder that various
cell functions are inefficient
when you have an iron
deficiency. And you can have
an iron deficiency that affects
body function before anemia
.develops. Thai is why doctors
often lake a serum Iron

measurement in addition to
the Usual anemia test.
I’m sending you The Health
tetter +4, Iron and Anemia.
Others can send 75 cents with
a long, stam p ed , selfaddressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
Women in your age group
require m ore iron. The
menstrual flow is the cause
during the childbearing
years. Otherwise It is im­
portant to look for possible
reasons for blood loss. Iron
deficiency for other reasons is
common in older people, loo.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would like your discussion of
heart murmurs. I’m 83 years
old and my doctor says I have
a slight murmur. What causes
it and what can one do to care
for it? Do I have to improve
my living habits to eliminate
it? Is it dangerous? Can one
drive a car?
DEAR READER - Think
of the murmuring brook. A
murmur is sound and in
reference to the heart and
circulation it means a sound
caused by the moving blood.
In an older person the large
arteries may become rigid
and the blood flowing through
them m ay cause sounds.
Damage to the heart valves
may cause murmurs. So can
an active heart in a young
person. The key is what kind
of murmur you have and what
Is causing it.
The description of a “slight
murmur" suggests that your
doctor didn’t discuss it further
with you because he didn’t
think it was important in your
case. If he is not worried
about it, you should not have
to worry about it either.
Consider it as normal for you
and don't let it affect your life
style.

WIN AT BRIDGE
He commented that he first
resisted the impulse to bid
two hearts and then resisted
NORTH
i s as
the impulse to lead anything
♦ K(i
except th e queen of
diamonds Then he showed
• 543
us the rest of the hand.
4QJII42
“Judging by the expres­
WEST
EAST
sion on your face the queen
4yas43
♦j7
must have held the first
v io 3
trick and declarer wound up
making his contract plus an
♦W
♦ K 10917 2
♦4
4AK5
overtrick. What was the
third impulse you rejected1”
SOUTH
I asked.
♦ A 1082
He answered, "My partner
VKJB
congratulated me on the
• AJ 6
opening lead of that single♦ 1073
toni oui
queen and continued that
Vulnerable Both
if I had only held a second
Dealer: North
diamond we would have
West North Knit
Soulh made a nice profit instead of
losing the rubber. Even then
14
14
14
npulse to
lo get
ge
1 resisted the impulse
Pass 24
24
3 NT
up. walk around the table
Pass Pass Pass
and strangle him."
If any of you have wanted
Opening lead 4Q
to strangle a partner you
will admit that East's play
was horrible. He could nave
beaten declarer by the sim­
ple expedient of putting his
By Oswald Jacoby
king on his partner's queen
and James Jacoby
at trick one. Then he com­
pounded his partner's annoy­
"I resisted temptation ance by his fatuous remarks.
three times with the West So, we would like to give our
hand," com plained the friend some credit, but if he
unlucky expert, “and it did also managed to maintain
me no good ."
total silence we are really
Then he showed us the proud of him.
West hand and the bidding. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
by J im Davis

i

1/ v

�I-

-

V/

&lt;

Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI.

■r i •

t a t ----- i f

- n ia . n "

Wednesday, Jan. S, 1983—SB

ta

TONIGHTS TV
WEDNESDAY | m
EVENING

6:00
o f f lin e m o

n ew s

Jf) (35) CHARLIE S ANGELS
03(10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

6:05
IS (IT) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENOS

6:30

O

f f l NBC NEWS
0 ) 0 CBS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABCNEWSn
QD (10) focus on T o c ie ty

6:35
a (IT) BOB NEWHAnr

7:00
0 ® THEMUPPETS
5 O P M MAGAZINE
17} O JOKER S WILD
(IX (35) THE JEFFERSONS
f f l (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

ol Mayor Koch, the caretaker of Ihe
Statue of Liberty, bike polo in Cen­
tral Park and a look al some ol the
clty'i notable characters (R)
® O SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN
n n n m ca e
f f l O tales OF THE GOLD MON­
KEY Jake tries lo help a famous
baseball player who is wanted lor
the murder ol an Island girl
XI: (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
(0 (10) FLORIOA HOME GROWN
SPECIAL Tom MacCubbm otters
timely adnee on mid-winter lawn
and garden problems, viewers may
call m their questions

92 (IT) MOVIE

Monte Walsh"
(19701 Lee Marvin. Jeanne Moreau
A tough cowboy finds his greatest
challenge m life Is adiustmg to the
lifestyle ol a tamer West

9:00

a (IT) ANDY 0RIFFTTH

800
0 ® REAL PEOPLE Featured a

0

salute lo New York City, with
highlights induing a day in the life

0

7:05
7:30
O f f l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
f £ ) f | TIC TAC DOUGH
f f l O FAMILY feud
11 (35) BARNEY MILLER
f f l (10) UNTAMED WORLD

7:35

9:30
f f l T H F FACTS- OF UFVTa-

10:00
f f l QUINCY

CD O
©0
© 0

Cable Ch
(ABC) Orlando
(CBSI Orlando
INBCI Daytona Beach
Orlando

0 (35)
© ( 17)
(10) ©

7:35
92 (17) I OREAM OF JEANNIE

independent
Orlande

8:00

Independent
Atlanta, Ga
Orlando Public
Broadcaiting Syitem

S

8:35
9:00

O
I
ffl
©
ffl

lion n
IP (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
f f l (10) HILLARY'S CHALLENGE:
RACE TO THE SKY Sir Edmund
Hillary's 1977 Ganges Eipedillon
trom the Ganges River delta to Its
source high in Ihe Himalayas Is doc­
umented (R)

f f l RICHARD SIMMONS
O DONAHUE
O MOVIE
(35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(10) SESAME STREET g

f f l 8 0 YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
© (3 5 ) FAMILY AFFAIR

10:00

10:30

f f l THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
MARY TYLER MOORE
(35) ANDY GRIFFITH
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

92) (IT) NEWS

S

O

© (35) IN SEARCH OF™

11:00

10:30
O f f l 8ALE OF THE CENTURY
0 CHILD’S PLAY
(35) DORIS DAY
f f l (10) POWERHOUSE

Q f f l f f l O f f l O NEWS
OP (35) SOAP
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE-S E N T A ______________________

8

11:20

92) (IT) ALL IN THE FAMILY

Early indications are that not as many
banks will be offering the Super NOW account
as did the original money-market account.
The Super NOW will be subject to federal
reserve requirements which arc costly to a
bank. In addition, the unlimited checking and
transfer privileges will make the cost of
processing the Super NOW higher. Industry
officials expect money-market account rates
to average at least one percentage point
higher lhan the Super NOW.
But the new savings accounts appear to
falling short in accomplishing one of the main
goals of the federal regulators. Most of the
money going into the accounts may come from
within the banking and thrift industries, not
from Wall Street’s fund, or elsewhere.
The Federal Home lo a n Bank Board
reported only about 15 percent of the first
week’s 221.8 billion In thrift industry deposits
in the new money market deposit account
came from outside sources.
In Congress, legislation intended to solve the
constitutional crisis in the bankruptcy courts
by making the 227 bankruptcy judges fullfledged federal Jurists has been introduced by
the chairman of the House Judiciary Com­
mittee.
The bankruptcy courts have operated under
an interim rule since Congress failed to meet
the Dec. 24 deadline raised by a June Supreme
Court ruling that declared the bankruptcy
court system unconstitutional.
On Wall Street, the stock market staged a
powerful rally that drove prices sharply
higher. The Dow Jones industrial average,
which plunged 19.50 points Monday, rebounded
19.04 to 1,0(6.08 in heavy trading and nearly
erased Wall Street’s record opening-day loss.

11:00

0 3 ) WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(T) O THE PRICE IS RIOHT
f f l O LOVE BOAT (R)
© (3 5 ) 35 LIVE
f f l (10) OVER EASY (MON. WEDFRI)
f f l (10) POSTSCRIPTS (TUE)

11:05
92 (17) PERRY MASON (MON.
TUE. THU. FRI)

11:30

0

11:30

f f l TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson
f f l O MORE REAL PEOPLE
f f l O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
f f l (35) MADAME S PLACE

3:30

0

f f l NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
f f l O MOVIE Great Guy" (19361
James Cagney. Mae Clarke

THURSDAY

11:50
91 (IT) MOVIE Captains Ot The
Clouds' (t942| James Cagney.
Dennis Morgan

12:00
f f l o HART TO HART The Marts
become the targets ol e murderous
couple when they purchase an
antique automobile with a hidden
secret
) G THE LAST WORO
(35) 8TREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

0

5:05
92 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (MON)

5:30

f f l NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
fTUE-FRI)
92 ( it) r r s y o u r busin e s s
(MON)
92 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

5:40

1:00
f f l O MOVIE "The Enchanted
Cottage" (1945) Robert Young.
Dorothy McGuire

1:10
f f l Q MOVIE
Stunt Seven
(1979) Christopher Connetty. Chris­
topher Lloyd

1:30
0 3 ) NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:15
92) (IF) MOVIE Not With My Wile.
You Don't" (1965) Tony Curtis. Vlrn a U ti

2:20

f f l O MOVIE
Mara M aru'
(1952) Errol Flynn, Ruth Roman

2:30

0 ffl ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
f f l O CBS NEWS NKJHTWATCH
3:00

11:35
92 (1T) WOMAN WATCH (WED)
AFTERNOON

12:00
Q f f l SOAP WORLO
T j 0 (7) O NEWS
© (35) BK3 VALLEY
f f l (10) MYSTERY (MON)
f f l (10) NATURE (WED)
f f l (10) NOVA (THU)
f f l (10) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)

12:05
92 (17) PEOPLE NOW

92 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

545

12:30

f f l LATE NIOHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests Jaston Wil­
liams and John Sears, creators and
Start ot tha otl-Broadway hit
"Greater Tuna", se&gt; therapist Dr
Ruth Westheimer

0 f f l HIT MAN
© (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
f f l (10) POSTSCRIPTS (MON,
WED-FRI)
f f l (10) INAUGURATION OF THE
GOVERNOR (TUE)

MORNING

0

I r j F to y d Th e a t r e s ■

92 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)
f f l NEWS (MON)
f f l O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
O SUNRISE
(35) JIM BAKKER
117) NEWS

S
S
S

3)

6:30
TOOAY
CBS EARLY MORNING

early

O

NEWS

ffl O

ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

8:48

4:00

Q

f f l LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
i O HOUR MAGAZINE
f f l O MERV GRIFFIN (MON. TUE.
THU, FRI)
f f l O ON THE GO (WED)
© &lt;351 TOM AND JERRY
f f l (10) SESAME STREET g

1:00

f f l DAYS OF OUR LIVES
IT) O ALL MY CHILDREN
© (3 5 ) MOVIE
£D (10) THAT'S A PLENTY (MON)
f f l (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
f f l (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
f f l (10) SPORTS AMFRICA (THU)
f f l (10) FLORIOA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

4:30

ffl O

AFTERSCHOOL SPECIAL

(WED)
© (35) SCOOBY DOO

4:35
92 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

1:05

5:00

12(17) MOVIE

O f f l LAVERNE S SHIRLEY l
COMPANY
3 i O THREE S COMPANY
(I) O ALL IN THE FAMILY (MON.
TUE. THU. FRI)
(11 (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
f f l (10) MISTER ROGERS &lt;R)

1:30

0 3 ) ANOTHER WORLD

f f l 0 ONE LIFE TO LIVE
f f l (10) NO. HONESTLYI (TUE)
f f l (10) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
f f l (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

5:05.
12 (17) THE BRAOY BUNCH

5:30

0

f f l PEOPLE S COURT
a O m 'A 'S ' h
0 ONEWS
f f l 110) POSTSCRIPTS

2:30
r r o capito l
f f l (10) EVEROAY COOKING WITH
JACQUES PEPIN (MON)
f f l (10) NEW ENGLAND BEGINS
rruE)
f f l (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TOOAY
(WED)
f f l (10) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
(FRI)

5:35
12(17)STARCAD£(MON)
I I ( 17) SEWITCHEO (TUE-FRI)
J400 i F R E N C H A V E ..
* iAN FO R D

3:00
0 3 ) FANTASY

(T) O GUIDING LIGHT
f f l O GENERAL HOSPITAL
© (35) CASPER
f f l (10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
f f l (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
f f l (10) TO BE ANNOUNCED (WED)
f f l (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (THU)
f f l (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

FAMOUS FRIED CHICKEN
•SHRIMP
•FISH

•CLAMS
ALL YOU CAN EAT

3:05

* W EDN ESD AY*

92(17) FUNTIME

3 PC. DINNER *1.95

3:30
©
(35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
f f l (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

10 PC. BUCKET *5.79

Don't Be
Left Out
In
The Cold!
F o r P ro m p t C o u rte o u s

6.00

0

( i) O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
GD O RYAN'S HOPE

2.00

9:30

0

12 (17) THE FLINTSTONES

IT) o AS THE WORLD TURNS
f f l (10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

9:05
92 (17) MOVIE

10:20

Former Vows To Fight

innei
A l l SHOW S
99°
PLA IA 1 ) i.m

S e rv ic e O n Y o u r

Kwy irti

[

H e a tin g

ONLY

A N OFFICER
AND A
GENTLEMAN,

S y s te m —

Call Usil
WE OFFER 24 HOUR
EMERGENCY SERVICE
WE S ER VIC E A L L M AKES A M O D ELS
OAS, O IL OR E LE C TR IC

O NEWS
(10) AM. WEATHER

, ^ ti» W |

ASKABOUTOUR
SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT

7:00

I (J) TOOAY
OI 'MORNING NEWS
) O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
) (35) NEWS
) (10) TO LIFEI

im n iM i irn

7:05
92 (17) FUNTIME

OF SANFORD. INC.

7:15
m i 10)AM WEATHER

Doing Business In Sanford Area Since 1911

7:30

O f f l ROMANCE THEATRE
The protest drew farmers
(10135) WOOOY WOODPECKER
Burk, a former Springfieldarea farm er said to have from as far away as Missouri
moved recen tly to New and North Dakota.
Mexico. Burk escaped soon
after the arrest by bursting
through a window with his
BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) — A Colombian national crackdown of cocaine production and
handcuffs still on.
Blood stream ing down his m inister ordered a ban on imports of exportation.
Gerlin, as an ex-facto member of the
face, he told reporters outside chemicals used to manufacture cocaine in a
he had been beaten by government crackdown against $29 billion council, can ban the chemical imports without
worth of the drug smuggled Into the United presidential or parliamentary sanction.
deputies in the courthouse.
Wright appeared before the States each year.
An estimated 44 tons of pure cocaine valued
Minister of Economic Development Roberto
crowd with a bullhorn.
at $29 billion makes Its way Into the United.
“ I'm not leaving the land,” Gerlin said Tuesday the Import ban on ether,
States each year, according to the Ui&gt;. Drug
he shouted. “ I’m not giving it acetone, hydrochloride and other chemicals Enforcement Agency.
used to purify cocaine paste would be the first
up!”
A m ajority of the cocaine entering American
Three law enforcem ent step to curb cocaine smuggling.
“ I think this Is a good first step," Gerlin ports Is manufactured in Medellin, Colombia's
officers suffered mlno» in­
juries and one reporter who said. “ I recognize the bondage of this drug." second largest city.
The request for the Import ban was made by
But national police officials recently
fell during the melee was
the
Directive Council of Foreign Commerce, rep o rted hundreds of sm a lle r cocaine
taken to a hospital.
W right w as two years which also indicated It would ask Colombian laboratories have sprouted In the northeast
behind in paying off an (85,000 President Bcllsario Betancur to start a section of the country.
loan secured by the farm. The
Federal Land Bank in Lamar,
which made the loan and
purchased the farm at the
auction, went to court last
month to force the sale.
Wright contended the sale
ATLANTA (UPI) — Doctor* say the tran­
Two representatives of the National Gay
•violated his constitutional
smission of Acquired Immune Deficiency syn­
Task Force, Dr. 'Bruce Voeller of Los Angeles
rights because he had no
drome has been traced to blood transfusions
and Dr. Roger Enloe of New York, charged a
control o v er governm ent
and
gay
activists
charge
a
move
Is
under
way
move
was under way by the blood products
policies, such as the Soviet
to bar homosexuals from donating blood.
in dustry to exclude hom osexuals from
grain embargo he said kept
him from making a profit.
Blood and blood plasma In transfusions were donating blood because they are at high risk of
having the disease.
identified Tuesday at a meeting at the national
“ I agree this Is a major public health
Centers for Disease Control as one of the
problem," said Enloe. "And there Is evidence
probable transmission routes of AIDS, an
that there may be hazards relative to blood
often-fatal disease previously traced to the
products."
sexual practices of homosexual males.
But he said homosexuals should not be
Also at high risk, doctors say, are in­ singled out as contributing to the problem. "I
travenous drug users, hemophiliacs and
just don’t see the need for creating another
THURSDAY, JANUARY!
Haitian refugees.
‘bad blood’ category," said Enloe, charging
Rebos to d Live Oak Reboa Club AA, 220 liv e Oak
Dr. Jeffrey P. Kaplan, a CDC Investigator of blacks also carried that stigma.
Center, Casselberry, noon, closed meeting; 8 p m.,
the AIDS outbreak, said at the conclusion of
M edical researchers sa y an ai-yetopen discussion.
the meeting, cases of the syndrome were
unidentified virus may be responsible for the
SkSfurd AA, 1281W. First 81, Sanford, 8 p-m., open.
spreading through several segments of the
newly recognised disease. There have been
population.
more than 800 cases of AIDS and 300 deaths In
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7
the past year and a half.
He laid this spread "should not generate
Reboa and U ve Oak Reboo Clob AA, noon and 8 pm .,
The issue of safe blood products tor tran­
hysteria, but should generate concern. Steps
closed, 220 Live Oak Center, Casselberry.
sfusions were of particular concern to the
have to be taken to protect the public health."
17-12 Group AA, 8 p.m., closed. Messiah Lutheran
Kaplan said one of these steps should be n a tio n 's estim ated 12,000 to 19,000
Church, Highway 17-92 south of Dog Track Road,
closer screening of people who donate blood to hemophiliacs, some of whom require frequent
Casselberry.
eliminate carriers of the disease, Improving transfusions of blood plasma. A study reported
Wekiva AA (no smoking) Weklva Presbyterian
by Dr. Bruce Evatl ot the CDC revealed AIDS
the technological refinement of blood and
rose from seventh to second place as the cause
Church, State Road 434 and Wekiva Spring! Road, I
plasma supplies to remove or deactivate
ol death of hemophiliacs In a recent five-year
p.m., closed.
viruses.
period.
Longwood AA, 8 p.m., closed. Rolling Hills Moravian
The meeting w u attended by public liealth
AIDS la a disorder In which the body's
Church, State Road 434, Longwood.
administrators, representatives of a hemo­
ability
to ward off Infections la reduced,
philiacs
organization,
a
homosexual
group
and
Altamonte Springs Alcoholics Aaaaymoas, 8 p m .,
clearing
the way for Invasion of certain
members
of
the
blood
and
blood
plasma
In­
closed, Altamonte Springs Conmunlty Church, State
cancers
and
other'lethal infections.
dustry.
Road 436 and Hermits Trail.

S P R IN G F IE L D , Colo.
(UPI) — A founder of the
militant
American
Agriculture Movement vowed
to stay on his farm despite a
foreclosure auction that
turned into a violent protest
by 300 farm ers claim ing
federal
policies
have
bankrupted them.
Meanwhile, the AAM denied
a proper auction was con­
ducted and threatened legal
action.
“ This wasn't an auction,”
spokesman Dcrral Schroder
said Tuesday from AAM’s
headquarters In Springfield.
“ We're going to contest it on
several different grounds.
Our constitutional rights are
being denied us.”
The violence broke out
Tuesday during the public
auction at the southeastern
Colorado Baca County Court­
house of farm land owned by
Jerry Wright, who helped
found the AAM In 1977. A
crowd of about 300 protesters
rushed the courthouse and
police had to use tear gas to
disperse it.
Arrested were Jim and
Doug Goodpaster of rural
Baca County, and Kinan

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

by Larry Wright

KIT ‘N' CARLYLE

'Super NOWs' Available Today
United Press International
Consumers with checking accounts join
savers today in being eligible for floating
interest-rate accounts designed to make banks
and savings and loans even more competitive
with Wall Street money-market funds.
The so-called “Super NOW” checking ac­
counts are the second step in new laws aimed
at assisting depressed financial institutions.
Earlier, banks and savings and loans were
ullowed to offer the generally higher, moneymarket interest rates on savings accounts.
And unlike the Wall Street money-market
acounts, the new accounts are federally in­
sured.
The Super NOW rules follow by one day a
prediction by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. that mutual savings banks will return to
profitability in March if a trend to lower in­
terest rates continue.
“ If rates stay down at current levels we
expect the industry as a whole to turn
profitable about March,” FDIC spokesman
Alan Whitney said Tuesday, but he said the
weakest individual institutions may still not
survive.
The general trend toward lower interest
rates means that for the first time in a long
time, mutual savings banks and savings and
loan associations are beginning to earn more
than they spend.
A high-interest savings account was in­
troduced Dec. 14 across the country, followed
today by the high-interest checking account.
The new accounts mean savers can look to
the neighborhood bank, savings and loans or
mutual savings banks to cam the same in­
terest previously offered mainly by Wall
Street’s money-market mutual funds.

92 (17) MY THREE SONS

3:35

12:30

0

8:05

92 (17) THAT GIRL
DYNASTY Blake reiects the
proof of Steven's death, Adam
tricks Kirby into a candlelight din­
ner. and Mark gams Krystle'a atten-

O ffl NEWS

© (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENOS

In addition to the channel! listed, cableviiton tu b ic rib e ri may tune in lo Independent channel 44,
St. Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1; tuning to channel 11. which carnet ip o rti and the C h riitla n
Broadcasting Network (CBN).

ffl O

8:05

f f l O MOVIE • I Take These Men
(Premiere) Susan Saint James.
John Rubinstein A discontented
wife lantasties marriage to three
other men during the course ol a
surprise anniversary party
f f l O ABOVE THE BEAST A doc­
umentary look at culture In Central
Florida 1s presented
(IP (35) OUNSMOKE
CD ( to) TOM RUSH AT SYMPHONY
HALL: A NEW YEAR The popular
singer / songwriter performs some
new ballads ind some old standbys
trom Symphony Hall M Boston

a(1T)00M ERPYLE

f f l (10) SESAME STREET g
Cable Ch.

Colombia Fights Cocaine Industry

Doctors Trace AIDS
To Blood Transfusions

100 N. MAPLE AVE.

PH. 322-8321

SANFORD

Wednesday
Special
||41II4

Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!

CALENDAR

3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hoi biscuits.
TRY OUR CONVENIENT
TAK-A-WAY WINDOW
FAST SERVICE

You Make Us Famous!
SANFORD
190$ French AvafHwy. 17 n )
m-M$e

CASSELBERRY
41N. Hwy. 17-fj
•31-0150

�* B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan.S, I t l l

Orders O f Goods

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO. 87 7407 CA-0fL

Up In November
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Government figures show new
orders for manufactured goods increased by Just 0.7 percent in
November, a rise one official called " a little drop In the
bucket," and not enough to pave the way for recovery.
The Commerce Department reported that new orders for
manufactured goods In November increased by $1.1 billion
over October’s level, the year’s low point, to reach 1150.8
billion.
The November figures were the second-lowest of 1982. By
contrast, the average monthly level of orders was $153.2 billion
from November 1980 to November 1981.
New orders a re important because they set the pace for
factory production and employment in the months ahead. The
rates have been watched closely by both economists and
politicians hoping for recovery.
But the Commerce Department's ctyef economist, Robert
Ortner, said the report was not yet a c lear^im o f recovery for
factories.
“We are by no means out of the woods," he said. "In the
overall scheme of things, that's a little drop in the bucket. We
need a lot more drops."
Michael Evans, a private economist who heads a forecasting
subsidiary in Washington for McMahan, Brafman, Morgan
and Co., said the report did not rule out a recovery but, “We
probably have two or three more months to go downhill.’’
"Recoveries occur in general when interest rates go down
and stay down and the inventory liquidation is over," he said.
Interest rates did show a small drop as reflected by
Treasury bill yields. Yields for three-month bills moved
Monday to 7.896 percent, down from 7.975 percent the week
before.
The government also sold $5.8 billion worth of six-month bills
at an average discount of 7.916 percent, down from last week's
8.051 percent.

*

Utility
Starts
New Bill

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 3511
Cleaves C f„ Apopka, Seminole
County, Florida under the lietltious name of SUCCESSFUL
V E N T U R E i, and that I Intend to
register said name with Clerk ol
the C ir c u it C ourt, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provisions ot the F ic­
titious Name Statutes, To Wit.
Section 845 09 Florida Statutes
1057
Sig Barbara M iller
P u b lish : Decem ber 29, 1992
January S, II , It, 191)
DEC 131

The familair green and
white Florida Power Cor­
poration bill has been around
for decades. But energy is
controversial and com­
plicated. And th ere isn 't
enough Information on the old
bill. Beginning this month, IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
customers will notice a new SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
bill. It is longer and packed CASE NO.: *1 3145 CA 09 E
S E C U R IT Y F IR S T F E D E R A L
with information. Gone will be SAVINGS
AN D
LOAN
the confusing codes and ASSOCIATION, a United Slates ot
dlfficult-to-understand num­ America Corporation,
P la In fill,
bers. This bill speaks in vt.
everyday English.
CAL W P IP E R . CAL CLARK
The new bill will be a more P IP E R . SR and SH IR LE Y
DIANE P IP E R , his wife, et at
personalised account of
Defendants
customers' records. They will
NOTICE OF ACTION
be able to see clearly Just how TO
CAL W PIPER
much of the bUl goes (or
CO P.O. Box 1409
taxes, franchise tees, non-fuel

YOU

ARE

HEREBY

N O T IFIED th** an action lo
fo re clo se a m ortgage on the
following properly in Seminole
County, Florida:
Lot
14
L IT T L E
LAK E
GEORGIA TERRACE, according
lo the P la t thereof, as recorded In
Plat Book 11, Page 49, Public
Records o l Seminole County,
Florida
•
and has been tiled against CAL W.
PIPER. CAL CLARK PIPER SR
and SHIRLEY DIANE PIPER, his
w ile . B A R C LA Y S AM ERICAN
MORTGAGE INC . a corporation
qualified to do business In Florida.
BANK OF CENTRAL FLORIDA,
a F lorida Banking Corporation.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
C R E D IT
M ANAG EM ENT.
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A , U N IT .
INC., a Florida Corporation as
T rustee fo r G REAT SOUTH
6U PP LY, CO, INC,, a Florida
Corporation. SUN BANK, N A., I
k a SUN BANK OF SEMINOLE.
N A , , a national banking cor
po rat Ion, LOWE'S OF FLORIDA,
INC., a Florida Corporation d b a
LOWE'S OF M AITLAND a k a
LO W E ’ S.
and
V IR G IL
4.
BR O TH E R S . INC . a F lo rid a
CURTIS G. ROGERS
Corporation, and you are required
to serve a copy et your written
Marin* Lane* Cpl, C urtli G.
Rogers, son of Frank E. and delenses. It any, to it on L PHARR
Gtraldin* P. Whlttemore of S45 ABNER. Ol TURNBULL, ABNER
Land Av*., Longwood, has been AND DAN IELS. Attorneys lor
P la ln tlll, whose address is 147
meritoriously promoted lo his
West Lym an Avenue Post Of lice
present rank while serving with
Box 100. W inter Park. Florida
3rd Marin* Aircraft Wing, Marin*
37790, on or before January 74.
Corps Air Facility. Camp Pen
1913. and III* the original with the
dleton. Calif.
Clerk ot this Court either before
He received the accelerated
service on p la in tiffs attorney or
promotion In recognition ot outim m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r: other
standing performance, duly
wise a default w ill ba entered
proficiency and demonstrated
a g a in st you fo r th * re lie f
professional abilities.
demanded In th * complaint or
petition.
WITNESS my hand and the seal
ot said Court on Dec. 70, 1917.
ARTHUR H BECKWITH JR.
Clerk of th * Circuit Court
FICTITIOUS NAME
Eve Crabtree
Notice it hereby given thet I am
Deputy Clerk
engaged In business at Rt. 3 Box
435. Hwy. 17 97, Sanford, FI , (SEAL)
Seminole County, Florida under Publish December 77. 79 1917 l
the l let it tout name oI CORRAL OF January 5. 12. 19U
FASHION JEANS, And that I DEC I I I

expenses and th e cost of fuel.
The reverse side contains a
number of easily-understood
definitions and clarifications.
The bill will often contain
special messages pertaining
to energy conservation or
energy-related Issues.
Customers will know their
electrical use habits. They
will see how much of the bill
goes to pay for fuel. And
they'll be more able to con­
serve and control electrical
usage through an awareness
of use patterns.

IN THE
SERVICE

Legal Notice

intend to register said name with
Clerk ol the C ircuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in Ac­
cordance with tha provisions ot the
Fictitious Nam* Statutes, To Wit:
Section 145.(79 Florida Statutes
1957.
Pat Lackey
Publish December IS. I I , I f , 1917 A
January S, 1N3
DEC 7*
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle# it hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 1101 So.
Myrtle Av*., Sanford. Florida
33771, Seminole County, Florida
under the tic titlo u s name of
GERALD SMITHBAUER &amp; AS
SOCIATES. and that I inland lo
register said name with the Clerk
ot the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provisions ol I he FJC
tltious Nam* Statutes, TdW iti
Section IAS 09 Florida Statute*
19S7.
Sig. Stephen R. Smith
Publish: January 5. 17.19, 24. 1M3
DEO 71

■ •F L O R ID A *

ARRIVEAUVE
STATE m

1/

Y

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 98* Hwy.
877 North, Longwood. Seminole
County, Florida under the fic­
titious namo of DESIGN CON­
CEPTS, and that I Intend to
register said name with th* Clerk
ot th* Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provision* ol the Fic­
titious Namo Statutes, To Wit:
Section 1*5.0* Florida Statutes
1957.
Pamela S. Biackadar
Publish December IS, 72,7*. 1917 fc
January 5, 1917
DEC. 7J
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business al 37*0
Orlando Drive, Sahtord, Seminole
County, Florida under the tietillom name oI THE PEOPLE'S
AUTO EXCHANGE, INC., and
that l Intend lo register said name
with th* Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florid* In #e
cordanct with th* provisions gt the
Fictitious Nam* Statutes, To Wit;
Section 145 09 Florida Statutes
l*J7.
Sig. Diana L. J*rr*tt
P ublish: December 79, 1*17,
January 5, IT, I*. I*t)

DEC 133

Legal Notice

FIRST FED ER A L SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION OF S E M IN
O L E C O U N TY, a c o rp o ra tio n
organized and existing under the
Laws ot The United States ol
Am erica,

Plaintiff,
vs
S T E V E N
E D W A R D
K R E M E N A K , et at.
Defendants

NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IV E N
that pursuant to Final ju d g m e n t of
Foreclosure rendered on the Iln d
day ot December, 1911, in that
certain cause pending in the
C ircu it Court in and for Seminole
County. Florida, wherein FIRST
F E D E R A L SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF SE M IN O LE
COUNTY, a corporation organized
and existing under the Laws of The
United States of A m erica, is
P la in tiff, and STEVEN EDW ARD
KR E M E N AK and FLO RIDA NA
TIONAL BANK AT ORLANOO are
Defendants, Civil Action No 17
7407 CA 09 L, I, A R T H U R H.
BECKW ITH, JR , Clerk ol the
aforesaid Circuit Court, w ill at
11 00 a m., on the 17th day of
January, 1913, otter lo r sale and
sell to the highest bidder for cash
at the West Iron! door ot the
Courthouse in Seminole County,
Florida, in Sanford, F lo rid a , the
fo llo w in g described p ro p e rty ,
situated and being In Seminole
County, Florida, to wit:

Unit 11, BuildingC, according to
the Declaration oI Condominium
Ol (JOACM LIGHT ESTATES,
SECTION It, a Condominium,
recorded In Official Records Book
1777. Page 1930, at the Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida
Said sale w ill be made pursuant
to and in order to satisfy the term s
ol said Final Judgment.
(SEAL)
A rthur M Beckwith, j r .
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
P u b lis h : December 79, 1917,
January 5, 1983
DEC 134

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTV,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. *7 I0I4 CA 09-P
ED H IL L and CAROLYN H IL L ,
his wile.

Plaint Ills,

vs
M A R G A R E T W HARTON, Per
sonal Representative ot the Estate
ol BERT GRASSO, Deceased,
Defendant

.NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE
NOTICE Is hereby olven that the
undersigned, Arthur H Beckwith,
Jr , Clerk ol the Circuit Court ol
Seminole County. Florida, w ill on
the 78th day ol January, 1983.
between II a m and 2 p m at the
West, Iron! door ot the Sanford
County Courthouse, S e m in o le ,
Florida, otter for tale and se ll al
public outcry to the highest and
best bidder lo r cash, the follow ing
d e scrib e d property s itu a te in
Seminole County. Florida .
Lot 4. Block H. SUMMERSET
NO RTH,SECTIONS,according la
ihe plal thereof, at recorded in
Plat Book IS, Page! 3* and 39
pursuant to the Final Judgment
entered In a cate pending in said
Court, th * style of which is In
dfcaled above
WITNESS my hand and o ffic ia l
seal of said Court this 3rd day ol
January, 1983
(SEAL)
A rthur H Beckwith, J r.,
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By C arrie E. Buettner
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 5. 17, 1983
DED22

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 701 N.
Maple A v e „ Senlord. F ie ,
Seminole County, Florida under
the tictitlo u s nemo o l JIM 'S
C O M P LE TE A U T O M O T IV E
SER., and that I Intend to register
said name with the Clerk ot the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
provisions ol the Fictitious Name
Statutes, To Wit: Section 1*5 0*
Florida Statutes 1157.
James L. Dunn
Publish December 15.27,79, 1987 L
January S, 1911
DECT7

NOTICE OF SALE
Pursuant lo Chapter *77.210 ol
th* Uniform Commercial Code:
Documents ol T itle :
A.J.
LOSSING
TRANSFER
A
STORAGE, INC., 307 S. Pine Av*.
Sanford, Fla. 37771 w ill sell al
Public Auction on January ISth,
19(3, at 10:30 a m. the following
lots of Household Goods
ACCOUNTS: ROBERT BAR
CLAY, WILLIAM SIMS. JR., A
ARTHUR JOHNSON.
THE LOTS CONSIST OF!
Bicycles, Relrig, Living A Dining
Room Furniture, Stereo Equip.,
T.V.,
Bedroom
F u rn itu re ,
Oispeks. A Cartons ot M ile . Items.
WAREHOUSE SALE 1 1513 al
10:00 a.m.
Publish: Jan. 5. 17. 19(3
OED 19

Legal Notice,. I
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number (7-599 CP
Oiviilen
IN RE. ESTATE OF
GEORGIA ANNA FR A Z IE R .
Deceased

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS
OR
DEM ANDS
AGAINST THE ABO VE ESTATE
ANO ALL OTHER PERSONS
INTERESTED IN TH E ESTATE:
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th a t
th e
ad
m in istra tio n o l th e estate ol
GEORGIA A N N A F R A Z IE R ,
deceased. Fite Num ber 87 599 CP,
is pending In the C irc u it Court lor
Seminole County, F lorid a . Probate
Division, ihe address ol which Is
Seminole C o u n ty Courthouse,
Santord, FL 37771.
The personal representative ol
the estate is S H IR LE Y ANN
STONE, whose address Is 15410
M illard. M arkham . Illin o is 40474
The name and address ot the
personal representative's attorney
are set lorth below
All persons having claims or
demands against the estate are
required.
W IT H IN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUB LIC ATIO N OF
THIS NOTICE, to tile with the
clerk ot ihe above court a written
statement ol any c la im or demand
they may have. Each claim must
(y -vvrUlnr and m u lt Indicalelhe
basis lor the cla im , the name and
addressoflhe cre d ito r or his agent
or attorney, and Ihe amount
claimed II the cla im Is not yet
due, the date when It w ill become
due shall be stated It the claim is
contingent or unliquidated, Ihe
nature ot the u n ce rta in ty shall be
staled it the c la im is secured, the
security shall be described. The
claimant shall d e liver sufficient
copies ol the cla im to the clerk to
enable Ihe clerk lo m a ll one copy
to each personal representative
All persons Interested In the
estate to whom a copy ol this
Notice ol A dm inistration has been
mailed are required. WITHIN
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
OATE
OF
THE
FIRST
P U B LIC ATIO N
OF
THIS
NOTICE, to tile any objections
they may have that challenge Ihe
validity of Ihe decedent's w ill, the
q u a lifica tio n s o l th e personal
representative, or the venue or
jurisdiction ol Ihe court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED
WILL BE FOREVER OARRED
Dale of the llr s t publication ol
this Notice ot Adm inistration:
December 29, 1987
Shirley Ann Slone
As Personal Representratlve
ot the Estate ot
GEORGIA AN N A FRAZIER
Deceased
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
GORDON V. F R E D E R IC K
P O Box 1795
Santord. FL 37771 0073
1305) 377 3)53
Publish Dec 29. 1982. Jan 5.1983
DEC 137

PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEOF FLO R ID A
D EPARTM ENT
OF EN V IR O N M E N TA L
KCO ULATIO N
The b r i m n t i r n d

s o u rc e , not

presently com plying w ith Stale
wquirem enli fo r waste treatment
is, pursuant lo Section 403 088 (4)
la). Florida Statutes, applying lor
a Temporary Operation Permit
that, it issued, w ill allow this
source lo continue its present
operation lo r a specified length ol
lime, and restrictions as required,
to Implement measures lo assure
compliance operation to the above
referenced statutes
Source id entification
14 In
dustrial Park STP
Applicant
Lake
Monroe
Utilities
Location ol Pollution Source
Elder Road. Lake Monroe
Receiy'ng W ater Name
SI
Johns River v ia unnamed ditch.
Receiving W ater Classification:
Class III
Receiving W ater Basin: 20 I DA
Alter consideration of the ap
p lication, a n y a d d itio n a l In
form ation fu rn is h e d , and a ll
written objections submitted, the
Department shall g ra n t or deny a
Temporary O peration Perm it.
A copy o l the application is
available (or public Inspection
during regular business hours at
th* St. Johns R ive r D istrict o tllc*
ol th * D e p a rtm e n t ol En
v lro n m tn fa l R e g u la tio n , 3319
Maguire Boulevard, Suit* 737.
Lexington B u ild in g , Orlando.
Florid* 32803
Residents in the drainage area
ol Ihe te m p o ra ry discharge
receiving w a te rs are hereby
notified that objections or com
merits may be tile d on or before
February 4, 1983. These must be
submitted in w r itin g to the
Departm ent o t E n v iro n m e n ta l
Regulation d is tric t office at the
address listed below
The newspaper w ill insert a dale
which is 30 days a lte r dal* of
publication.
District Manager
A. Srnkevich, P.E
Department o l Environmental
Regulation.
St. Johns R iver D istrict
3319 Maguire Bou’ evard.

Suite m
Orlando, F lorid a 37103
Publish: January S, 19(3
DED70

PUBLIC HEAR IMG
FIFTH DISTRICT
ORPARTMENTOF TRANSPORTATION WORK PROGRAM FOR
FISCAL YRARS 1*13 (4THROUOH 19*788
A public hearing w ill be held at th* District Office, 71* South
Woodland Boulevard, DeLand, Florid* on January 12, m i starling al
‘ 1:30 A.M. lor considering Primary, Inlirstat*, Bond, Public Transportatlon, and all othar programs. This hearing Is being held to give
consideration to th* necessity of making any changes to prolects In­
cluded In th* Five Year Construction Plan and lo hear requests tor new
prolects to be added o r existing protects to be deleted In th * Five Year
Construction Plan, in accordance with th* Florida Transportation
Coda, Chapter 374.211, Florida Statutes. The scheduled time lor each •
County Is:
' 1 . Volusia
1:30A.M. 9:00A.M.
9:00 A.M. 9:30 A.M.
1 . Seminole
9:30 A.M. 10:00 AiM.
I. St.Johns
10:00a.m. - 10:30AM. (T im eout)
10:30 A.M. 1100 A.M.
4. Osceola
11:00 A.M. 11:30A.M.
s. Marion
11:30A.M. 17:00 P.M.
4. Putnam
1:30P.M. (Noon!
12:00 P.M. 1:30 P.M. 7:00 P.M.
7. Citrus
2:00 P.M. 1:30P.M.
(. Orange
7:30 P.M. 3:00 P.M.
*. Sumter
3:00 P.M. 1:30 P.M. (TimeOut)
10. Brevard
3:30 P.M. - • 4:00 P.M.
11. Lake
4:00 P.M. — 4:30P.M.
11. Flagler
4 :X P .M . J.00 P.M
C.A. Benedicl, P.E.
District Engineer
State ol F lor ide
Department o4 Transportation
I
Publish: Jan. S. 1113
I
DED 1

24-Business Opportunities

Lego) Notice ~ j !
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO 82-2514 CA-09-

G
FIRST F E D E R A L SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SEM
INOLE COUNTY, a corporation
organized and existing under Ihe
Laws of The United Stales ot
America,
Piaintilf.
vs
S T E V E N
E DWA R D
KR E M E N A K . et at,
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that pursuant to Final Judgment ol
Foreclosure rendered on the 27nd
day o l December, 1912, in that
certain cause pending in Ihe
Circuit Court in and lor Seminole
County, F lorida, wherein FIRST
FEO ERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION OF SEMINOLE
C O U N TY.
a
corporation
organized and existing under the
Laws o l The United Stales ot
A m e ric a ,
is
P ia in tilf, and
STEVEN EDWARD KREMENAK
and FLO RIO A NATIONAL BANK
AT ORLANDO are Defendants,
C ivil Action No 82 2514 CA 09 G. (,
ARTHUR H BECKWITH, JR ,
Clerk ot Ihe aforesaid Circuit
Court, w ill al I t 00 a m . on the
in n day ot January. 19S), otter lor
sale and sell lo the highest bidder
lor cash at Ihe West Iron) door of
the C ourthouse in Seminole
County, F lo rid a . In Santord.
Florida, the following described
property, situated and being In
Seminole County. Florida, lo w il:
Unit 9, Building B. according to
the Declaration ot Condominium
ot COACH L IG H T ESTATES.
SECTION It. a Condominium,
recorded in O llicla l Records Book
1277, Page 1930, ot the Public
Records o l Seminole County,
Florida
Said sale w ill be mad* pursuant
to and in order to satisfy the terms
ot said F inal Judgment.
(Seal)
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
C L E R K OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
P hillip H. Logan ot
S H IN H O LS E R . LOGAN. MON
CHIEF ANO BARKS
Post O ffice Bo* 7719
Santord. Florida 77771
Attorneys lor PlainlJH
13051 333 3460
Publish: Dec. 79, 1913. Jin 5, 1983
DEC 13*

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 11-1597 CA 09 L
CITICORP PERSON TOPERSON
F IN A N C IA L
CENTER
OF
F L O R ID A .IN C
P la ln tlll.
vs
CATHY S LYTER a k a CATHY
S IOOS. FREDER IC KO LYTER.
JAM ES
P
PANICO PRO
FESSIONAL ASSOCIATION, and
JAMESTOWN VILLAGE UNIT
ONE.
Defendants.

AMENOEDNOTlCE
OF FORECLOJURESALE
NOTICE is hereby given that the
undersigned ARTHUR H. BECK
W ITH. JR. Clerk ot th* Circuit
Court of Seminole County, Florida,
w ill on the leth aey ot January,
1913, at It 00 a m al Ihe West
Front door ot the Seminole County
Courthouse. Santord. F lo rid a ,
otter for sale and sell at public
outcry lo the highest and best
bidder tor cash, Ihe following
d e scrib e d p ro p e rty situate In
Seminole County, Florida:
Lot 707, Block A, JAMESTOWN
V ILLA G E UN IT ONE. according
to the Plat Ihereol, on tile in the
otlice ot the Clerk of the Circuit
Court recorded in Plat Book 70,
Pages 8 and 9, ol Ihe Public
Records o l Seminole County,
F lo rid a TOGETHER w ith a
perpetual non exclusive easement
lo r Ingress and Egress as
described in O llic la l Records Book
1107, Page 771, ol the Public
R ecords ot Seminole County,
Florida.
pursuant to th * Final Judgment
entered In a case pending In said
Court, the style of which Is In ­
dicated above.
WITNESS m y hand and official
seat ot said Court this 37th day ol
December, 19*7.

(Seal)
A rlhur H. Beckwith, Jr.
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
By: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Dec. 7*. IN I. Jan. 5. I N I
DEC 133
IN THE COUNTY COURT, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Civil Actian N*. IX-1S1R-SP-1R
CATHERINE WILLIAMS, tor the
us* end benefit ol UNITEO
STATES FIDELITY 4 GUARAN
TY COMPANY, a foreign co r­
poration authorized lo and doing
business In the State ol Florida,
Plaintiffs
vs.
RAY F. jOYNES. an individual.
Defendant
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
RAY F. JOYNES
P O Box 973
Oviedo, Florida 37745
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
NOTIFIED that a Complaint lor
damages arising out ot a motor
vehicle accident lhat occurred on
February 7, 1*17, has been tiled
against you, and
YOU ARE REQUIRED TO
APPEAR before The Honorable
Harold F. Johnson, a Judge ot this
Court, *1 9:00 AM. February 7,
19(3 in Courtroom "D " Annex, at
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida to answer th *
statement of claim tiled herein.
Any written answer or o lh tr
pleadings must be tiled with th *
Clerk of this Court and copies
thereof furnished to th* above
named plaintiff, whose address I*
Catherine Williams USFAG c o
Clifton H Robertson, Esquire,
P.O D raw er 3117, Longwood,
Florida 377SO.
Upon your failure lo appear on
th* above indicated deli, a delault
may be entered agalrut you tor th *
relief demanded In the statement
ot claim.
WITNESS MY HAND and th *
Official Seal ot this Court in
Santord,
Seminole County,
Florida, this 77th day ol Decem­
ber. 19(1.
(SEAL)
Clerk ol th* County Court
By: Elizabeth Kiitinger
Deputy Clerk
P ublish: D e c tm b tr 19. 19(2,
January S, 12. 19, l t d
DEC I I I

' CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FR ID A Y
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

RATES

1time
14c (line
3 consecutive limes 34c a line
1 consecutive limes 4*cdlne
10 consecutive times 41c a line
57.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

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

NOVENA TO ST JUOE — Oh
Holy St. Jude. Apostle and
M a rty r, great In virtu e and
rich in miracles, near kinsman
ol Jesus Christ, fa ith lu l in
tercessor ol all who Invoke
your special patronage in tim e
ot need to you I have recourse
(rom the depths ot my heart
and humbly beg lo whom God
has given such great power lo
come to my assistance. Help
me in my present and urgent
petition. In return I prom ise to
make your name known and
cause you to be invoked. Say
Three Our Fathers, Three Hall
M a ry s
and
G lo ria s
Publication must be promised
St. Jude pray tor us and all
who invoke your aid Amen
This Novena has never been
known to 1*11. Thank you St.
Jude lo r lavors received.

9—Good Things to E at
NAVELS U Bushel. O rapetrult
4 juice fru it 15 Bu
Call 317 7037

12—Special Notices
AFTER Christmas Sale. 50 / o i l
14 carat gold, sterling and
electroplate (ewelry In stock.
Call 373 8797 lor appt

18—Help Wanted
E X P E R IE N C E D
W a itr e s s
wanted part lime. A pply In
person M 4M Restaurant, 310
E 1st.

CUSTOMER
S E R V IC E ........ S192 Wk.
Good with figures, light typing,
attractive, some sales ex
pertence helpful. Benefits and
raises.

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1*17 French Av*.

323-5174

TYPIS T — Fast, accurate. Take
phone orders Pension, pro fit
share and m edical plans.
United Solvents 373 1400.

G EN ER A L
O FFIC E ..........$134 Wk.
W ill tra in It light o tllc * skills,
grow ing company, bl lin g u al
helpful
AAA EMPLOYMENT

1*17 French Av*.

313-1174

N E E D extra Money?
Why not sell AVON!
371 8451

D R IVER .......... $192 Wk.
Good driving record, lig h t Van
d e liv e ry
Strong,
some
collection experience helpful.
Benefits and raises, w o rk into
management.

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 French Av*.

313-5178

UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSET.'
Sell those things lhat a re |ust
taking upspacewith a w ant ad
In Ihe Herald 372 1411 o r 831

WAREHOUSE .$3.45 Hr.
Warehouse,
shipping
and
receiving, part time, can go to
40 hours. Monthly bonus.
AAA EMPLOYMENT
1*17 French Avt.
313-5178
SECRETARIES NEEDED FOR
Temporary and part time
positions. Excellent skills
necessary. In'trview by ap
point men! only. 322-344*.
WANTED Responsible Mature
Babysitter with light house
work. Cell alt. S p m. 322 7921.

F O R E M A N ................$$$
Sprinkler titlin g experience,
electrical hook up, irrigation
work, dependable, needs now.
Quick growing company.
AAAEMFLOYMCt4T
1*17 French Av*.
3133174
SALESMAN
Used Car Lot.
Finance exp. preferred, w ill
train. Excellent opportunity
lor right person. 311 407S.
PERFECT lor housewives I,
mothers. Earn extra money In
spar* lime w Stanley Home
Prod. No exp. 327 5*51.
ATTINTIO N I Own your own
business. Avon T e rrito rie s
ooen Now I 371 5*10.

TRANSFERS
Joyce »nuii, repr. eat Samuel J.
Hedrick to Jerry W. Claypool, Lots
14 1 IS. Blk A, 2nd Sec. Mobile
Manor, S10.000.
Magnolia Svc. Corp to David 6 .
Brewer A wf Mar the J., Lot 57
W tklva Club Estt., Sec. 4.179,000
Mae Carr, wkL to Norman
Nick*. Lot 14 i 17, le u E It*, less s
17’ o(14 A 17, Blk I t San Lanta 2nd
Sec., SlOO
Naran|a takes Ptr. lo John M.
Piercy A wf Jonl, Un. SJ Hidden
Rldg* Cond , (44.000.
(QCD) Ronald D. Hall, sgl. to
Thomas H. Hall A wf Betty Sue.
Lot 7S, San Lanta, 3rd sec.. $19,0(4)
Lady C. Redden to 8 en|amln
Hughes A wi Rosa Lee N US' of
E’-t acr* ot E 3 ac. ol N 's ot SEU
ot NWW el SWA Sec. 3319II.,

11,000

To Share
7 BDRM.7 Bath apt
to share.1» rent, ’ j utilities
Call 371 5929

,,

PRESSER Exp. IS hr Apply
Carriage Cleaner 414 Shopping
Center, Longwood.

Alert Intelligent individual to
look alter amusement center
in Santord Plaza Must have
mechanical
a b ility ,
be
dependable, and bondable.
P art lime 13 75 H r Apply In
Person Bally's Great Escape
NEED W arehouse R e p a ir
Person lor Santord Warehouse
location Call 373 4353 between
8 a m. and 5 p m. lo arrange
interview. EOE M F,
BABYSITTER needed in my
home Sat. and Sun nites
starting Jan. 8. 373 7106
NEW Guy'S F a m o u i F rie d
Chicken Now has 3 openings
lor Cashiers. Cooks, or Order
Takers. Apply In Person, 2
p m 5 p.m., at 2400 S. French
Ave., Sanford
PHLEBOTOMIST Needed lor
Seminole Branch ol Central
Fla Blood Bank. Requires
Venipuncture o r N u rsin g
experience:
O tlic e
and
C lerical s k ills
in c lu d in g
minimum typing 35 WPM
Please call Tim Tobin 322 0873
or apply at 1301 E. Ind St.,
Santord
PART TIME Men Women. Work
from home. Phone Program
Earn 175 1100 per week de
pending on lim e available
Call 894 3704 or 869 0916
Get Cash Buyers fo r a small
investment. Place a low cost
classified ad lo r results 332
7611 or 831 999)

E X P E R IE N C E D
IN D IR EC T SALES
National food service company,
23 yrs In business. F u ll
company benefits a lte r 90
days All leads supplied along
w ith e sta blish ed account.
Draw based upon experience.
For Interview call Bob Rector,
I 305 3)1 0064

CRUISE SHIP JOBSI

29—Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
m aid s e rv ic e . C atering to
working people Unturnished
Apartments 1 &amp; 7 Bedrooms
373 4sot S00 Palm etto Av&gt;.
SANFORO. Reas
weekly 4
monthly rates U lllin c elf S00
Oak Adults 1 841 7883
STOP AND T H IN K A MINUTE.
It C la s s ifie d
Ads didn't
work,
there w ouldn't be any.
COMFORTABLE sleeping room
150 w k.. Includes util and
maid serv. Call 321 4947.

30-A partm en ts U nfurnished
2 B D R M , tb a th .
upstairs, S750
477 5552 or 412 8876
t-urmshed apartm ents lot senior
Citizens 318 Palmetto Ay* . J
Cowan No phone calls.
G E N E V A OARDEN
APARTMENTS.
313 1090.
LU XU R Y
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily A A d u lts section
Poolside. 7 B d rm i. Master
Cove Apts 373 7900 Open on
weekends
PARK A V E . 1 bdrm ,, complete
kit. SI 10 mo 33* 7700 Fee.
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. R tilte r
M E L L O N V IL L E T race Apts
spacious, m odern 7 bdrm. 1
bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped, CHA. walk lo town
and lake. Adults. No pets
Available Jan 1 321 3905
M ariner's V illage on Lake Ada, 1
bdrm fro m $765, 2 bdrm from
5300 Located 17 97 lust south
ol A irp o rt Blvd. in Santord All
Adults 373 8670
I. 7 AND 3 BURM From t360
Ridgewood A rm s Apt. 25*C
Ridgewood Ave 333 4470.

Great Income p o te n tia l A ll
occupations. F or Information
call: 1)111 741.9780 EXT 1130

ENJOY country living? 7 Bdrm.
Duplex A p ts . Olympic iz
pool Shenandoah Village

OIL COMPANY OPENINGS
OFFSHORE rigs. No experience
necessary Start Im mediately
535.000 plus a year. For In
formation call (313) 970 9364.
Ext. 13I6B

BAMBOO COVE APT5
300 E A irp o rt Blvd
lA J B d rm s
From 12)0 mo
Phone 373 6430

RESIDENT M anager position
available lo r Garden Apt
complex ot 90 units, located In
Sanford. Fla Previous exp. is
desirable, good sta rtin g salary
and good benefits Apply in
confidence to P O Box 17,
Panama City. F la. 37401
WAITRESS
w a n te d ,
ex
perienced only need apply.
Golden Lam b Restaurant, 2101
S. French Ave., Sanford
HOMEMAKER, lu ll tim e to
provide cleaning services lo
elderly persons In Seminole
County. Act as pa rt ol skill
car* team Equal Opportunity
Employer. 618 2M4.

INSURANCE SALE!
Insurance agency
In Santord
looking fo r a person to lake
over the established business.
Experience not necessary, W t
w ill train person and qualify
them lo r state license. No
capital needed W * w ill pay
salary plus comm ission when
employed.
Phone (3051 (41 8441.

ADVERTISING Experience to
design brochures end labels;
writ* trad* advertisements
and press releases etc. Full
trmge benefits. Retire* and or
part time acceptable United
Solvents. 373 1400

O pen

9 10 4 JJ1 7*10

IF THIS IS THE DAY to buy a
new car, see today's Classified
ads fo r best buys.
SANDALWOOD VILLAS Deluxe
2 Bdr, 2 Bath, washer, dryer,
pool. S32S Mo 644 9911.

31—A p a rtm e n ts Furnished
COMFORTABLE 1 bdrm. nicely
furnished, *75 wk., plus util,
call 313 2769.
UPSTAIRS Garage Apt, 1 Bdrm,
wall wall carpet, air heat, kids
ok, no pets. *250 mo. 1st, last
SlOO d tp . 313 0025 all i
weekends. 377 0008 before S.
1 BDRM. Apt. Clean
5725 mo. -F Dtp.
Reltrer »s required. 371 334?
SANFORO I.S rms , air, lull kit,
carpet. 1715 mo. Fee 331 7700
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Matter
SANFORD, Studio,
adults only, *189 mo.
__________ 373 (019.________
LAKE MARY, 2 Bdrm. WWC.
Air, heat. WD hook up. no pets,
S29S Mo.. SlOO Sec. Available
Jan. IS. 377 2947.

31 A—Duplexes
JOBSITE INC.
100'S lobs dally.
Call 331 7940 Fee.
MAINTENANCE MAN Experienced Motels or Apts,
must have own tools. Solary
tied to cop ib flltiot. Phone
Mr. Robert, Deltona inn
1W-ST44893.
WANT E D ; Part t Im * van drlvor
and pari timo homemaker for
Stm lnol* County Service
Agency. Call (311431 Equal
Opportunity Employer.
ASSISTANTS

REALTY

A M PAPER ROUTE Small
down payment, Owner w ill
rarry 377 4257 Noon 5 p.m.

28—Apts. &amp; Houses

_)f^H etp_V !frnted

Personals

SANFORD AREA
CO M M ERCIAL COIN
O PE R ATED G AM ES
Establish route
Excellent in­
come potential be your own
boss Latest games available
lor Im m ediate sale- to In
dividual interested in a lu ll or
part tim e " A L L CASH" op
p o r lu n lt y ,
M a in te n a n c e
pro vid e d .
For
com plete
de'alls, call Tom Brady, 1 400
531 5255, E xt. 70.___________

(over 17)

A TRAINEf JOI
Longwood F irm w ill train eight
neat, energetic Individuals lor
etching, high paying career In
circulation and publishing
areas Our territories also
in c lu d e
G a in e s v i lle ,
Tallahassee, college areas. All
transportation and Immediate
expenses paid. Cash advance
plus bonus. W * need exreceptionist, hostess, outgoing
or any previous public contact
experience helpful
For details and appointment call
M l. Terri V eitr* Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday 10 4 p.m.
at 33* 9*91

21—Situations Wanted
MATURE woman w ill take car*
ot ihe e ld e rly or young
children in their home.
__________ 149 *133.________
WILL care toe invalid, elderly or
handicapped Days or nites.
References. 321 0473.

DELUXE 2 Bdrm ., duplex
carport, u tility room, hook up
washer, dryer. IIP 0545
NICE 1 Bdrm Duplex. S1U plus
sec.
JUNE FORZtlJ REALTY
REALTOR
171-8471

32—Houses Unfurnished
WINTER Springs I bdrm. 1 bath,
CHA, appt., fenced, garage,
extras, lees* (37S. 1491717.
MODERN 3 bdrm, I bath in
Sanford, with CH, drapes,
•ppl., 1325 mo., S31S damage
0*p A lter ! call 34* 5114-or
________ 377 3348
SANORA SOUTH I Bdrm, I
Bath, p a rtia lly furnished.
CHA, drapes, sxSO mo. 879 S7I8
or (34 4144.
UNFURNISHED 3 bdrm. h o c^
references required. Rent 5350
mo. + dep. 331 3341.
FOE RENT SANFORO ' l
1 Bdrm, | bath, nice n e t*
bor hood, no p*t», 1150 per
llr* t and last mo. rent In ad
vance, t yr. leas* requIrS.

Cqntacua oija.

T

B E A U T IF U L L Y restored \
bdrm. 1 bth, home, CHA, ww t
trpl, adults, no pets. t 37S 445
**4) or 372 4971.
MOBILE Home on privet* lan{k
kitchen equipped tor 1 *(
couple. Easy access in L e tt
Mary. 1125 Mo. I l l 4719.' * 1

�&lt;

32— Houses Unfurnished
WFAP rJflnAf»i|ffltflffi
C arpet,
a ir,
range,
reirtg, jjso + sec (67 m w
MODERN 1 Bdrm. 2 Bath, w ith
CHA drapes, appl. furnished
S47S Vo , aw S75B o r (3A 4246
LA K E TRIPLETT L K In t 2 bd
a ir, S27S Fee 339 7200 ’

Say On Rentals. Inc. Realtor

41— Houses
, im r ifc 0 S U °9 DOWN
1 bdrm, doll house Allordable
m onthly
p a y m e n ts
Call
Owner Broker I ' l l 1611.

41 MOBILE HOMES
31 en ]&gt; i acres with many
eitras. Near Lake Harney.
Price reduced S7K and owner
will consider holding. S14.000.
SANFORDREALTY
REALTOR
313-S324

34—Mobile Homes

37-B—Rental Offices
■PRIME
O FF IC E
SPACE*
Providence B lv d ., Deltona
2164 5q Ft. Can Be Divided
w ith Parking Days 30S-S74
1434
Evenlnqs 6 Weekends
704 7(96251
1600 Sq It ottlce, IIS Maple
A ve . Sanlord A va il Immed
Broker Owner 322 7209
SPACE tor rent O flice. Retail,
Storage French Avenue and
Airport 127 440}

lake

H ELEN 20 acres 127,500

COUNTRY L iv in g Lease Option
like new 3 2 w ith or without
acreage
PRICED under today's market
3 2 fa m ily r m „ enclosed
garage, fenced back, a real
buy 148,900
NEAR new hospital Z C 7 Older
two story large lot asking
179,900

321 0759

EVE

4 * ^
/ : _

41—Houses
KISH REAL ESTATE
371 0041
REALTOR
Alter Mrs. 323 7468 &amp; 377 69S2

322 7643

R O B B I E ’S
REALTY

’ V

REALTOR. MLS
7201 S French

ym v

Suite *
Mr®'

Q

PROFESSIONAL O lflc e space
tor Lease, on 17 92 Ideal
location to downtown area 70S
. ,5 . French Ave. or call 322 1170

t

lr r \

CPNE AND BEERTHEYRE SIMILAR/

Si

M K

STENSTROM
REALTORS

Sanford's Sales Leader

EXTRA large 2 story Colonial on
I acre of Oak trees A ll the
amenities plus guest apt Best
locale,
1200.000
WM
MALICZOWSKI
REALTOR
322 79(3

kROLD

HALL

R EA LTY, IN C

REALTOR
13) 3774
I IS YEARS EXPERIENCE I

BEAUTIFUL I Bdrm, 1 Beth
home in Ramblowood, with
greet room, brick llreptece,
eerthtone decor, split bedroom
plan, equipped eat-in kitchen,
Central he it end air, and |u tt 2
yrs. old 171.100

FHA-VA SPECIAL I Why renl
when you can awn NOW. tl.isa
dawn payment. 1 bdrm hem*
»n Ibnctd lot. Large bah and
citrus trees. Good tocetieer
Only s if i a mo. Teies end
insurance Included. I t / . i*
»rs. Price S34,S00.

JUST FOR YOU 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
homo, nowly painted, screened
breeteway,
nice
neigh­
borhood, and convaniant
location. 138.800.

CUSTOM
B U ILT
CEDAR
HOME
E nergy
efficient
custom throughout. Terrlllc
owner fin a n cin g . Potential
guest heme In rear. IT citrus
trees. Loads ol storage. Tike
44A Eesl to left on Rt. IIS. 1
houses on right pest Osteen
Pest Olflce. S49,soo.

COUNTRY
ATMOSPHERE
spacious 1 Bdrm, 2 Bath
Mobil* Home on 4.0 cteered
acres, penciled throughout,
split bedroom plan, family
roam, eat-ln kitchen and
horses welcome. S34,900
IMMACULATE 3 Bdrm, 1V»
Balh home In Longwood, with
Central heat and air, wall wall
carpet, equipped eat-ln k it­
chen. lemlly ream and morn.
Dot. 14i30 garage, can ba
, convened to Income apartmen! or In-law quarttrs. Prlca
is 147,*09,
MAYFAIR VILLAS) T A 1 Bdrm.
■3 Bath Condo Villas, n e it to
Maylair Country Club. Stlect
your let. Iloor plan A Interior
decori Quality constructed by
Shoemaker ter 147,900 A up I

CALLANYTIME

322-2420

, BDRM. Masonry home With
reasonable down payment ehd
.TERRIFIC owner financing.
Priced to tell at S32.SOO. Call
Todayl

■ Cal IBart
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR, 377 7494

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
2144 S French
322 0231
Hours 119 1910 122 0779

REMODELED — } bdrm. I&gt;&gt;
bath w-new root! Enclosed
garage and tiled Fla. rm. Oak
Shaded yard, Extra cleanl
Croat le c e tlo n t Creative
financing! See if today 141,990.
PLANT LOVERS! Double sued
house A lot, w-garden A pol­
ling shed, detached garage wworksltop. 141,000. 323-3774.
INVESTORS SPECIALI No
qualilying-low down payment.
1 bdrm, w-fam lly rm. Nice
lanced yard, well A pump.
Lets ol shrubbery. Cell nowl
139.140.
HUGE CORNER LOTI Priced to
sell la itt 3 bdrm, family rm.,
CHA, lencad yard w-well and
sprinkler systems, mature
citrus trees, double site patle
under sp ro w lln g camphor
tree. Large assumable lew
interest mortgage. Call ledeyl
S43.900.
OETA FRESH START
WITH "SANFORD'S NO. 1
PROFESSIONAL"
Currently seeking motivated
Sales Associates. Kecellent
commission schedule. Ask ter
Mr. Hall.

NOWS THE TIME
TOBUYI
FHA-VA 12^
WE NEED LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW!!!!

323-5774

1 1,19th ST. 1 Bdrm, 1V&gt; Bath.
; antral heat A air, new paint,
■eat A carpal. Lease option or
NT FHA VA. To praview call
&gt;odiy! 141,100.
The Wall St- Company
alters
M »» «

SANFORO A U C TIO N closed
thru Jan 2, 19(3 Watch lor
Jan. 3rd Auction ad.
ESTATE. Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
praisals Call Dell's Auction
123 5630_______________ ,

A lta m o n te 3 7 $48,000. Lake
M ary, Feather Edge Mid 160 *.
4 M odel!

75—Recreational Vehicles

SY LV A N DR
Sanlord,
maculate 3 2 145,000

u E N E V A 7 story comfortable

160,000

869-4600
or 349-5698
*’ —

HAL COLBERT REALTY
REALTO R

lt7 E .llth St.

3JUM1

t H C j REALTORS

Be Ufoe
Call Keyed
FOR ALL YOUR
REALESTATENEEDS

HEV'LL SET A, TRA-P FOR. M A X’

-13 -Lois- Acreage

SUN.
ItM -S tM

fO M I P U C H N A V I
V&amp; . A L L T N I H I M
N « w 1 and 2 bdrm. opts,
Clubhouse tw-haalth club, on Sit* Lfckq
Ttnnls, RAcquqlball, VolltybaH, Jogging Trill,
Swimming, $Blf-ClMnlngOv«n, Ictmaktr &amp; Mori.

i m M O BILE T ra ile r Scout 26
It tw in bed. a ir, awning
electric jack 14,995 373 7841

67A—Feed

ST JOHNS River Ironlaqe, 2 '&gt;
acre parcels, also in te rio r par
cels w llh river access SI3.900
Public water, 20 min lo A lla
m onte M all 12 •* 20 y r.
fin a n c in g , no q u a lify in g
Broker 628 4831

NEWLY-REDUCEDLOTS!
Peaceful and tranquil selling.
Each lovely treed lot ever an
acre. Room enough tar pool
and tennis court. Underground
utilities. Horsts OK. IS It.
b rid le path around total
development. Priced to soil at
119,300 each, tasy terms.
Owner financing. Sharon L.
Palm er Realtor Associate.
Alter h-s. 313-SIS4.
DEBARYLAKEFRONT
Beautiful l - l homo on Bass filled
Lak* Bonila, largo wooded
corner lot. Many extras. Easy
access Is 1-4 and 17-91. Owner
w ill help linince. Asking high
169,coo’ i Charles S. Black
Realtor Associate. Eves. MI4797.
PERFECT RETIREMENT
OR STARTER HOME
Choice l- l in Deltona, dose lo
m a|or shopping, FULLY
FU R N IS H E D ! Like brand
new. Screened porch, fruit
trees, Macklos Astor Model.
Slf.tOO. Dorothy Zolonak
Realtor Associate. Alter.hrs.
904-7I9S779
AF FOB CABLE I
IS,DM dawn w ith 1 1 /APR owner

financing, 52t4.li PAI buys
this lovely 1-1 In Dot ary.
Asking 133.390. Chariot S.
Block Realtor Associate alter
hours 661-4707.
349 W Lake Mary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary, Fla. 11744
321 3290
OWNER financing L arge. CBS
Home A Garage
343,000 A p p ro x70-*dwn
II* , interest
M any extras. 373 1417

"42—Mobile Home?

SEE SKYLIN E S NEWEST
Palm Springs A Palm Manor
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
J401 O rlando Dr
)}} 3700
VA A FHA Financing

Garage so full there's no Zoom
for the car? Clean it out with a
Want Ad in the Herald. PH.
3231*11 o r 111 9993.
1980 MOBILE Home 14 x60' set
up In adult section of mobila
park. Day 111 2673
Evenings 111 511*
PRE OWNED HOMES
2 Bd. Fam. Park
sio.500

3Bd Fam Park
M*S2
112,300
3 Bd. 12x45
S j.ioo
7 Bd. 14x44
SU,BBS
1 Bd. 74x44
114,100
7 Bd, 17x40
I (,000
2 Bd. 12*41
111,500
OREOORY MOBILE INC.
3401 Or iando Or.17 97 S. Sanlord
_________3013233200

TU T
JU N E PORZIG REALTY
OSTEEN near golf course. 40
acre* 155.000 125.000 down and
obiter w ill hold mortgage at
10 % Interest. AIM S acr*
parcel* w llh 13.000 down and
owner w ill hold at 10(4
Suitable tor mobile home*.
AAgjtiy cleared land.
REALTOR
MLS
H IS French Aye.

1 2 2 -1 6 7 1

77—Junk Cars Removed

KICK THE STORAGE HABIT.
Sell thsoe uselul. no longer
needed items with a Herald
Classified Ad Call 373 7611 or
(31 9993
X

WE BUY equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
in
VESTMENTS P O Box 3500.
Sanford. Fla 37771 377 4741

y V . li'f t t t ’ ■ B u 't

Bad Credit?
NoCredlt?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Easy Terms
NATIO NAL AUTOSALES
1170 Sanford Ave
___________ 321 4075___________
M A K E ROOM TO SlfORE
YOUR W INTER ITEMS
. .
SE LL
"D O N ’ T N E E D S "
FAST WITH A WANT AO.
Phone 122 7611 or (3 ) 9991 and
a Ir ltn d iy Ad visor w ill help
you.
- - ““ I
‘ 1,1■.. ‘
7SDATSUN2dr w ilh auto Ira n i
and other extras Good con
dition S99 down Cash or
Trade 139 9100. (34 4605
We buy Cars and Trucks
M artin Motor Salts
70IS. French
3717(34
78 FORD Granada All extras
In c lu d in g a u to Ir a n i. SaSO
down Cash or trade 139 9100,
(34 4605
.D I D YOU KNOW?*
You can buy o r lease a new car
In the privacy ol your home or
ottice. Fla Auto Brokers
321 2066
Denary Auto A Var.ne Sales
a cro ss'h e riv e r loo ol hill 174
Hwy 17 92 Denary 668 4S»*

___ ______

3UY JUNk CARS A'TRUCKS
From 510to 5SOor more
Call 331 1634

ALUMINUM, cans, cooper, lead,
bravs, silver, gold Weekdays
( 4 30. Sat 9 I K KOMo Tool
Co 918 W 1st St 373 UOO

80—Autos for Sale

kO-trAutos form ate

1980 Chevy M onla auto trans ,
Sun root under 41.000 miles
Been good to me Must sell

WE PAY to p d o lla r tor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBSAuto Parts 293 4505

47 Real Estate Wanted

TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment 377 5990

N E E D lo sell your house
q u ic k ly !
We can
o tte r
guaranteed sale w ith in 30
days Call 331 1611.

fc

WE PAY cash for 1st
2nd
mortgages Hay Legg Lie
Mortgage BfOXer 788 2599

1973 VW SQUAREBACK
n a tio n waion S600 firm
333 (0 19

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 92 1 m ile west of Speed
way. Daytona Beach w ill note
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday A Wednesday at
J 10 p m It s the only one In
Florida You set the reserved
price Call 904 355 8311 lo r
lu rlh e r details

GARAGE
SALE
1976 Jeep Cherokee

*3295
1977 Chev. Coprice

*2895
1975 Buick Regal

*1595
1978 Chrysler
Cordoba

*3295

EXTRA CLEAN

SANFORD
MOTOR CO

_

A M C

1963 Cadillac Sedan DeVille all
original Excellent condition in
and out One owner car. Estate
sale 668 (024 or 377 70(8

JEEP

501S. French Ave.
172 8)62

CONSULT OUR
A
Q

i P tK

'

-

U ico

&gt;' v-&gt; tS--

J

r

/

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
Work Shoes* Boots SI9.»9pr.
AR/AY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave.
372 S79I

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

/- S - &amp; 3

EXECUTIVE Black V in yl high
back sw ive l office c h a ir
Walnut and brass pedestal,
like new 5100 323 1043
SM ALL Lovable dog Free lo
good home H ospital bed,
cheap 333 6(83
FOR SALE 10Speed bike
26 in. 10 speed bike like new
134 4746.
PINE needlrsandOak leaves (in
bags or boxes please). Used
concrete blocks 323 3632
OVERHEAD garage door, ( tt.
heavy gauge aluminum 1100
Wall settee green cushions.
*76 Seeal 1120 Magnolia Ave.,
H I 124*
M EN 'S gelt clubs. 1 Iw in canopy
bed, I dinette set I alto saxx
phone A ll 3 p m 337 1767

.

2 bikes, boys and girls. 3 sp
Collectors Avon lew elry and
Avon m ite 323 7992
25 INCH RCA color console good
cond. SI2Sor best otter.
373 4734

* * * fiV e M xW * * *
180 dump truck load ISO’ ; load
Split and delivered, Free 904
775 9(46

YEAR END CLOSE OUT
19*1 S K Y LIN E Mobile Home
24&gt;57 f t screen enclosure
porch, u tility shed. Central
heal and a ir 1 Bdrm. 2 Bath
Lot sire is 50x100 Sale price
141.900. financing available at
80 *. o l sale* price mieresl rale
121* / + I Points. Can be seen,
at 12* Leisure Or North
D e fia ry ,
F la
in
ihe
M aa d o w le a on Ihe R iver
M o b ile Hom e com m unity
Please contact Tom Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First Federal ot
Seminole 305 372 1243

17rtS

UNIQUE G erm an made Nimrod
camp tra ile r Asking 1450 00
323 5503 lo r Into and appt

HAY 17 50 per bale,
25 or more free del
Other leeds avail 349 5194

W ednesday. Ja n J, 1 9 83-7D

47-A—M ortgages Bought
a Sold

323-3200

43—Lots-Acreage

SAT.
K iM - liM

%

¥

-

Whatever Iheoccasion, there Is a
classified ad lo solve it. Try
one soon.

OET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
FOR A FRACTION OF THEIR
C05T FROM TODAY'S WANT
ADS I

l t d Wist P in t S lrte t— Santar A F lu id * u n i - ( I M U ll- tt N

FACTORY Closeout on (2
Scamps 13* and 16* T ravtl
T railer and I f 5th Wheel
Light weight Need to go Call
lor tree brochure Then we’ll
deal 1 (00 346 4962

7-1

Im

t

MLS

you are having difficulty
finding a place to live, car to
drive, a job, or some service
you have need ol. read all our
want ads every day

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
• ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTYI
LOVELY 3 Bdrm, 1 Balh home
_ on nice corner lot In Sanlando!
, Split bdrm. plan, lu lly
‘ equipped kitchen, panelled
room. Central heal and air,
wall to wall carpet and more.
.
Mf.SOO.

72—Auction

G R E A T ^

J T fT Z l..

REALTOR
802 S French Ave

Jan. 7 1 9
City Auditorium N E. Sanches
Fri.
Sat 12 Nnon to 9 p.m
Sunday I p.m. t o * p m
Admission S3 SOentire show
The Chapman Shows

for

m

NEW LISTINCI Located I block
Irom shopping centerl The
good lile ol the Condo owner
will be yours with this 3 Bdrm,
l&lt;&gt; Bath, spacious, rilu rbiihed lownhouse. Families
welcome. Pool. S4I.S0S.

Jcaia Antiques Show

.CUE&amp;!

LAKE E M M A LOTS 1 acre +
wo.ooo each

Herald, Sanford, FI.

71—Antiques

D A N IE L AND WOHLWENOER
CONDO CAN OOtl

322-9283

JUNE P O R Z IG R E A L T Y

II

0

MON. - P H I,
f iM - S iM

THIS WAS aT^
HM0DR6&amp;R!,/. } L T c £ r _

.C A E S A R l

Sanlord. Fla

322-8678

isos
Park

CK

\it ­

SEASONS G R E E T IN G Irom
Sandy Wisdom

OFFICESPACE
FOR LEASE
(30 7723

-

60

Ltq. Real Estate Broker
7640 Sanford Ave

24 HOUR E

37C-For Lease

REALTY

The Wall St. Company
Realtor
121 tool

P R 0F W k 5 CU&amp;N6 M AXIM UM
STEAK ' d 6 P E A M
1r
W IH O JT R E M I lliK r iT .- . KNIFEM M 0R! HE N t E t n W E P beer) anp
MU&lt;5 \ F0 RK /SOMETIMESHARP 0N EAvCK
*P
THAT HI5 HANDS HELP
.' /
M A X IM U M
' mixed up the
INVISIBLE RM P.'

BATEM AN R E A LTY

Bdrm, 2 bath double wide
mobile home on a1» acres,
Horses O K., S480 month 321
0751 a m 327 2106 Night

,

3 ACRES cleArfa'T'mgwtd and
ready lo r home, kids, and
a n im a ls . B e a u tifu l location
near St. Johns River. Orlve by
an ytim e ! S2S.OOO Terms.

E v e n in g

wllh M ajor Hoople 1

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

SEWING MACHINE Zig Zag
Used only ( Mos .585 Cash or
terms We finance. Seminole
Sewing. Winn Dixie Plata 17 93
4 Lake Mary Blvd. 332 9411

Aloe Products

HAVE YOUR financial dreams
become a reality w ith Aloe
PT. no investment 323 7288

Ceiling Fan Installation
CEILING FAN INSTALLATION
Q uality Work
We Do Most Anything
^95 9171
*77 4711

R e p a ir. In s ta ll. S a in

Aulo Sound Center
A S C 3109French Ave
377 4(35

M EINTZER ItL fc fc *P %-nce
U U New A old work comm A
resid Free estim ate (691)42

,c

tO O D V A s o n s
Tile-Contractors
371 0152

Ins

A dditions &amp;
Rem odeling

NEW. REMODEL. REPAIR
All types and phases o l con
Struction, S G B alinl 323 4833,
177 (665 Stale Licensed
ALL TYPES CARPENTRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport. Door
locks, p a ile llin g . shingles,
rerooting For test service,
call 323 4917 345 7371________

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms

THE HAPPY ELVES
Quality child care and pre
school infants a specialty.
In d iv id u a l a tte n tio n TLC,
Slate licensed 120 E Crystal
Lake Ave.. Lake M ary 321
21(4
Have some campino equipment
you no longer use? Sell It all
wllh a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 122 7611 or (31
9993 and a friendly ad visor
w ill help you

WILSON MAI ER FURNITURE
311115 E FIRST ST
) t l 56)1

E ALLEN focktail table, 1130,
ping pong table, x* In. used
once, U9. S74 5(39.

Bt'ilut’y CilIC
TOW ERSBEAUTYSALO N
FORMERLY H a rrie tt s Beauty
Nook 519 E 111 St . 322 5742

52—Appliances
Ken more parts, service, used
washers 373 0497
MOONEY APPLIANCES

53—TV* Radio-Stereo
Good Used TVs IIS t u p
MILLERS
7419 Orlando Dr
Ph 133 0153
REPOSSESSEOCOLOR TV'S
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables. EX
AMPLE: Zenith 25” color in
walnut console Original p ric t
over 57543. balance due *19*
cash or paymrnls S17 month.
NO MONEY DOWN Slill in
warranty, call lis t Century
Salts 162 5344 day or nije. Free
home Irial. no obligation ___

Boarding &amp; Grooming
ANIMAL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels heated,
insulated, screened, liy proof
inside, outside runs. Fans
Also AC cages We cater to
your pels. Ph 172 S7S7.
TLC WITH "R U T H "
Dog grooming, smqll Dreads SI.
Free pick up, del. Longwood
area. 7 days. 1311*23.
SUM
BUDGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED WITH VALUES
FROM THE W ANT AD
COLUMNS.

—1

54—Garage Sales
GARAGE Sale, Jan. 9 * 10. * s.
TOO Sir Lawrenct Or., Clothes,
boat, oil hatter, etc.
MOVING Sale. Sal only, 10: NIL
Books, clothing, dining table,
ch *ln , mlsc. Hems, 1)41 A.W.
Evans Circle.

62—Lawn-Garden

Brick A Block
StoneWork
PIAIZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable
Price*. Free Estimates.
Ph 349 5500

C O L L IE R 'S Home R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window rep a ir i n a x il

Call 327 1317.

67A—Feed
Wilce Salat Hwy. 44 W. 121-4676
•*1*4 shavings M M
MB cuttlae (lever bey.
3rB (utilise alfalfa bey.
N(TiberiiTimefby mixed bey.
Check »vr priest.

Carpet Cleaning
* T IIP L e A *
&gt;&gt; Price *p *c ltl. SU.9S for
Family or Living R m. 147 7740

»*na\rs

M aintenanceof all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 323 6038

Lawn Service

o*

PI»&gt;lM inq

P la L fe r ifwj rp p it'F . M u t CQ, fu ir d

cnv*.»trvH*la ted tone* W* SWJ

P lum bing

C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
M O VE
MOUNTAINS of merchandise
every day
Modernutnq your H o m e ' Sell no
longer needed but uselul items
with a Classified Ad

*A -1 U W N S E R V IC E *
AVvw, w* f*u. r »m haul Wt^jyiar
S rfV 't*
tim e clean up H
hrs. best r a ft) . 62( ALK

Romock'ftnq

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn fc plants lor
winter now Complete Lawn
serv. 371 0576

Remodeling Specialist

Lawn Mowers

B. E, Link Const.

We Handle The
Whole B a llo t Wax

322 7029
HOMEOWNERS, relax on your
days oil. Lei us clean your
home at allordable rales Call
now 331 1566 P ally'* Home
Pampering Service.
A M. Kelly cltanine service.
Sptcialiting In restaurant 6
office buildings. 422 0351.

Conc't fP Work
BEAL L o n c 'rte I man quality
opera! on pai os driveways
Days 3)1 7313 Eves }}7 1321

SWIFT CONCRETE work all
types Foolers, driveway*,
pad*, floor*, pool*, complete.
Free est. 327 7103.

Financing Available

M ISTER. F la It. Joe McAdams
w ill repair your mowers at
your home Cali 377 7055.

Roofing

Major Appliance

Repair
A
JO H N N IE S Appliances. We
service refrigerator*, wash
ers. dryers, ranges Reas,
rates 333 (336

Nursing Care
LOVING HOME. Excellent care
fc companionship for elderly
woman. 723 4305

&amp;

B

R O O F IN

2) y ri. experience, Licensed fc
Insured
Free Estimates on Rooting,
Re-Roollng and Repairs.
Shingles, Built Upend Tile.

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON
3 2 2 -9 4 1 7

REROOFING, carpentry, roof
repair A pamting IS years
exp 332 1*76

FOR all your concrete need* call
377 7 477 Free e *tlm a tn No
builder* plea**.

Draperies
CUSTOM MADE In our Shop,
installation Service. Dorothy
fc Vincent B lin 349 $475

Excavating Services
V IIN O EXCAVATINO
610 Cate Backhoe Loader w
extender hoa. 9 yd. dump
Iruck low bad terv jjj j i ; j.

Carpentry

CARPENTER repairs and
additions 20 y r*. exp

ALL

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ceramic A floor
tile. Minor repairs, lireplacts,
insulation Lie. Bond 372 1131.

NurMpq O ntnr
OUR RATESARELOW ER
La krvie w Nursing Center
719 C Second S i. Sanlord
372 4707
W lllc e re lo r elderly
Its m y home
373 137S

Oil Heaters

MAX t
ROOM TO S lU H E *
YOUR WINTER ITEMS
SELL
"D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAST WITH A WANT AD •
Rhone 122 2611 or | ) i * * t i and.
a friendly Ad Visor w ill help
you

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. LEE IN C

Cleaned
O IL Heater cleaning
end servicing
Call Ralph 373 711).

Tree Service
STUMPSground out.
Reasonable, Iree est I m att*
714 0441

Painting

Firewood
FILL DIRT ATOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark fcH.rt 323 75*0

Plastering

Cleaning Services

51-A—Furniture
ALUMINUM Siding, vin yl siding
s o llil A la id * . Alum inum
gutters and down spouts.
Fr ESI 305 345 5341

ART BROWN PEST CONTROL
Comm . Rrsd .Law n, Term ite
Work 372 (865 Ask lo r Champ

CARPENTER 25 yrs e rp S m all'
rem odeling iobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 373 9645

ChildC are
BATHS, kitchens rooting, block,
concrete, w in d o w s, add a
room tree estimates 323 (461

PAI NT l NG and rrpa r pat,a and
screen porch q u ilt
Call
anytim e 327 9481

Pest Control

SEAMLESS aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs waluminum sollil fc lascia. (904)
7717090 colled. Fret est.

Ceramic Tile

Auto CB Stereo

Home Repairs

FIREWOOD 140 fc up. Tret
trim m in g , rtm o v a l. Trash
hauled. Free e * l„ 373 »6I0.

Handyman
HANDYMAN Service* Painting,
re p a ir*, etc. R taionabla
guar work. 475 0451. *77-4711.,

YC ALL A NYTIM E*
Lie. 6 I near. Ovality a must. Fr.
■St. A. Carina 131-eei i.
BILL'S PAINTING
in lerior Exlarlorpaiming Light
carpantry. Homes pressure
cleaned Business 1)13(73
Home (315111 BUI Sterner
MOUSE painting 1500
a house. Any site.
472 1(234, (7 1 4009

JOHN ALLEN YARD fc TREE
SERVICE. Wa‘11 remove pin*
tra tt. Rea*, prlca 331 S3K
Letourneau Tree Service*
Removal, trimming, demosiin
Licensed and insured. 134 4444

Upholstery
LORENE'S Upholstery Free
pick up. uei (, est Car fc boat
Mats Fufn 321-1771

�8 B—Evening Herald. San lord, FI.

Wednesday. J in , i. 1»IJ

DON'T MISS THE EXTRA SAVINGS. . .

Redeem your
Procter &amp; Gamble m oiled
Coupons Of F A IR W A Y
For each coupon you redeem In our store by January 22 1983
Procter &amp; Gamble will contribute 5C to Special Olympics

PLUS
BOTTLE
OEPOSIT
L IM IT ONE W ITH CO UPO N BELOW AND
Si A D D IT IO N A L PURCHASE

LAUNDRY DETERGENT A

3. mvgii* 1 .8 9
Ji 02.
DAWN L I Q U I D * ! ^

bo ld

rFOR
u n DISH
u i i n WASHING
n m n in u

jj

u i.

A

—

—

H T U e PARH H W*.

__ __

COUNTRY FAIR JO OZ. LOAF

BREAD W
.H.,T.E. ... 2 / $1

DEODORANT SOAP S.S 02.

HYDE PARK QTRS.

ZEST

MARGARINE

BATH BAR

. . .2 /9 9 *

1 .3 9

P E A N U T butter

3 lbs $ 1

U S D A CHOICE W E S TE R N B E E F

BONELESS SHOULDER

LAND 'O' FROST CHIPPED _

ROAST

MEATS

BONELESS CALIFORNIA

. . , 3 o z

2 /9 4

SUNNYLAND SMOKED H0T0R MILD

ROAST ....

SAUSAGE .-.I.* 1.9*
BACON . . „ . L$1.4&lt;

BONELESS CHUCK, FA

STEAK

OPEN 24 H O U R S A DAY

The

1490 S. ORLANDO AVE

F a s tW a y t o S h o p

THIS AD EFFECTIVE THURSDAY JAN. 6 THRU WEDNESDAY JAN. 12, 1983
WE ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS

________

W E RESERVE T H E R IG H T TO L IM IT Q U A N T IT IE S

W HILE S U P P L IE S LAST

ROSEOALE

LOAF ,UT.T.e"c.".u!T. .

SWEET PEAS
PORK &amp; BEANS 2

FRESH MADE PIES

CHOC. CREAM

STEAKS

ALL MEAT STYLE, SLICED

LUNCH. LOAVI

MACARONI
PARTY PIZZAS

AMER. CHEESE
C lip a n d R e d e e m

T h e se V a lu a b le C oupons

R E D E E M ONE C O U P O N Wl I M IS 00 A U D I I I ON A l P U R C H A S t S
OR I W O COUPONS W I T H HO 00 A D D I T I O N A L P U R CHASES
OR TMRE E C O U P O N S W l I H SIS 00 A U D I I I O N A I P u RC H AS E S I E * C L U O f TOHACCOl

T H II COUPON OOODPOB

'Flour

LIMIT ONB PAIBW4V
COUPON PBO FAMILY

v

LIMIT ONI PAIBWAY
COUPON
FAMILY

r LIMIT (MB PAIBWAV COUPON
M l FAMILY WITH t ) ADDITIONAL
PUBCMAtB IXCLUOINQTHI1ITIM
a n p tobacco i h i . i - i h i

�jT

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Wednesday, Jan. S, 1»83—1C

'You might say that I have the best of
both worlds/ award-winning singer
Anne Murray, left, says. 'I'm a
concerned parent and that concern
carries over to what my children are
eating.' Mama's Delicious Deep-Dish
Pizza, right, Is a family favorite.

Murray:
Singer Steps
From Stage

Help Publix Support the

Redeem your Procter &amp; G am ble coupons at Publix by
January 22 1983 and Procter &amp; Gamble will contribute 5c
tor each coupon to help send a special athlete to the* 1983
International Summer Special Olympic Games

Publix

Publix will make an equal contribution of 5c per coupon tor
each coupon redeemed at Publix

Into Kitchen

Once the concert is over and Anne Murray steps off the stage
and away from the footlights, she is ready to resume her life as
a Nova Scotia wife and mother. “You might say," says the
award-winning singer, “ that I have the best of both worlds."
Although it sounds enviable, balancing the "best of both
worlds" can be a delicate act. *Tve made a real effort to keep
things in perspective for myself and my family," Murray
explains. ‘T m a concerned parent and that concern carries
over to what my children are eating and — if I'm not there —
who’s preparing their supper."

I

REG. 4-O Z. TUBE,
7-O Z. BOT. REG. OR
(CONDITION SHAMPOO

NORMAL OR OILY

Pert
Shampoo
11-oz. bot.

Remove sausage from casing. Brown sausage; drain. Add
onion; cook until tender. Stir in tomatoes, tomato paste and
oregano; simmer 15 minutes. Cover dough with half of moz­
zarella cheese and meal sauce; repeat with remaining moz­
zarella cheese and meat sauce. Sprinkle with parmesan
cheese. Bake at 425 degrees, 30 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes
before serving. Makes 8 serving*.
Variations: Substitute 1 lb. ground beef for sausage. Sub­
stitute greased 13 x 9-inch baking pan for pizza pan. Bake at 425
degrees, 20 minutes. Substitute greased 14-inch deep-dish pizza
pan for 12-inch pizza pan.
GARDEN RAREBIT
1 lb. brussels sprouts
1 head cauliflower, separated into cauliflowerets
1 lb. carrots, peeled, cut into 1-inch pieces
4 lb. asparagus spears, cut into 2-inch pieces
Kale or cabbage leaves
cup beer or ale
teaspoon dry mustard
lj teaspoon W orcestershire sauce
V* teaspoon paprika
dash of ground red pepper

h
h

cups u 6 ozs. i shredded s lu rp natural chcddar cheese.
Blanch vegetables separately in boiling water; drain.
Arrange vegetables in serving bowl lined with kale or cabbage
leaves. In saucepan, combine beer and seasonings; heat. Add
cheese; stir over medium heat until melted. Dip blanched
vegetables into rarebit. Keep rarebit warm while serving.
4

D a w n ................................................ " r M 99
25c Off Label, Proctor &amp; Gamble
Regular or Unscentcd Fabr Softener

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE:
THURSDAY
JAN. 6
THRU
WEDNESDAY
JAN. 12,
1983 . . .

Scope
Mouthwash

B o u n c e ........................................... */// * 2 19
Folgers

I n s t a n t C o f f e e ......................B,:v 5 3 5 9

Bayer

CLOSED

SUNDAY

Aspirin
100-ct. bot.

18-oz. bot.

rGEL, REGULAR OR M INT1

$

Uke her mother, Anne Murray looks at cooking as an outlet
to stimulate her creativity. “ I really enjoy experimenting with
basic recipes," explains Murray. "There’s nothing more
rewarding than your own special stamp on a meal, even if it's
adding a secret spice to hamburger!"

Dissolve yeast in warm water. Add flour, oil and salt; mix
well. On lightly floured surface, knead dough until smooth.
Sprinkle parmesan cheese on bottom of greased 12-inch deepdish pan. Press dough onto bottom and 1-inch up sides of pan.

E r a P l u s ......................................... s 3 39
Dishwashing Liquid

$

Anne, the only daughter among six ohildrcn, traces her
domestic drive to the example set by her mother in Springhill,
Nova Scotia. She vividly remembers her mother constantly
preparing meals for her five physically active brothers and
herself. Murray very quickly learned how to m aster the art of
planning and producing a dinner that was nutritious, delicious
and, most important, hearty enough to withstand the chill of
wintery Canada

MAMA'S DELICIOUS DEEP-DISH PIZZA
1 pkg. active dry yeast.
cup warm water
2 cups flour
^4 cup oil
1 teaspoon salt
grated parmesan cheese
1 lb. Italian sausage
cup chopped onion
1 16 oz. can tomatoes
1 6-oz. can tomato paste
2 teaspoons oregano leaves
2 6-oz. pkgs. natural low moisture part-skim mozzarella
cheese slices
grated parmesan cheese

Concentrated Liquid Laundry Detergent

each for

"1 sing, and then I get on with the business of living," says
the winner of three Grammy Awards and 16 Junos, the
Canadian equivalent to a Grammy. Her most recent album,
“ Hottest Night of the Year," is already rising on the fharts and
most probably will follow the meteor trail set by almost every
recording since her first release, "Snowbird."

"People occasionally marvel at my having a successful
singing career. But to me, being a good companion and mother
is all that m atters," says Murray. "It's wonderful to be
recognized for your talent, whether it's singing a ballad or
preparing a well-balanced meal that wins approval from the
ones you love."

B o l d 3 .............................................. z v 5 1 99

Head &amp;
Shoulders

The Canadian songstress stars in a Kraft-sponsored TV
Special, Anne M urray's Caribbean Cruise, which will be
broadcast January 19 at ft PM 1KT1on CBS. She recently left
the tropical splendor of the Caribbean to be reunited with her
husband and two children, William, 6, and Dawn, 2, in Nova
Scotia.

Anne Murray shares "M am a’s Delicious Deep-Dish Pizza,"
a family favorite recipe. "Garden Rarebit" is a perfect
complement for the pizza dish.

Laundry Detergent

Crest
Toothpaste

(SECRET UNSCENTED OR]
REGULAR ROLL-ON

6 .4 -o z. tube

AntiPerspirant
1.5-oz. pkg.

E xt ra

200 ^V/GreenStamps

SAVE ON

{ J - o i. p k g ., R egular or U n ic a n ta d

GENERAL ELECTRIC

! Secret Solid
2 Anti-Perspirant
|

ZOO^WGreenStampsffl Wjffl^V/GreenStamps
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to o c l b o t.. 500 mg T a b le t.

Rexall Vitamin C

Colgate Toothpaste

II.

5 &lt;IH *cli». Jan 4 I I 1911)

2 l« n .c ll.. J M t i l 10431

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

.........................
150 c l b o l.,

tach,

4- o *. can A nti P a r .p lia n t or
5o i. can D a o d o rjn t

t

9 W llj

Secret Spray
7 irti.cb.* j." 6 ii loan

Personal Touch Raxor

Rolaids

3 ( Ilia c I n * J m a 11 19*1)

6 (IM .c In . J.n *1 1 l» » li

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200 ^V/GreenStamps
EXTWA

PuMi i

28 ct pkg.. Rag or Super, Plain

1

,| n h n . t 1n i . r M l n n C u , , k .

Johnson a Cotton Swabs

8 11. 19831

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Johnson’s Baby Oil
9 (Cttocli.a Jan *11 wan

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per pkg .(30. 7 0 * 100 W a lt * ) "
and (50. 100 A 150 W a ll*)

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Soft-White 3-W ay Bulb
j ^

37 K ll.cll.. J.n * I I w all

WeenStampsf3 Wl[l]^WGreenStampsf3
10-ct. p k g ..

Right Guard
Anti-Perspirant

...........

■

j
j

Gillette Atra Blades
10 ltfl8Cti«« Jan 6 11 1983)

B ( f H atli*e J«n 6 1? 1983)

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

3-o*. or 6 o*. bol..

Vicks Formula 44-D
Cough Syrup

Jl

4.99.

■ * * *

12 iliiaxin. J.a * i i wan

100 ^V/GreenStampsf3[nTj]^V/GrVenStamps|^3[inU^V/GreenStampsr5

&lt;JWGreenStamps|2

Playtas Tampons

100&lt;JwGreenStamps

rxAd. I
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Massengill Douch

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Sucrets
IS H lacl*.e Jan 8 12 19831

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k a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a d k a a ■a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a d L a

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6-o*. bot..

100-ct. bag. Triple Siia

3 0 0 -d . bag. R agular S it *

Nyquil Cold Ramady

Publix Cosmetic Puffs

Publix Cosmetic Puffs

11. K n a c k .. Jen 4 11 l a i l i

18 If If.cti*. J.n 9-11 19931

19 iir r .c b .. j«&lt; 9 l l 19931

16-0*. b o l.. Baby. Baliam .
S traw berry or Egg

1 5 -o t. o r 3 -o *. |a r.

Suave Shampoo

11

20 (IM.cIn. J.n * 11 19911

Vicks Vaporub

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100 ^WGrVenStampsHlIilil^WGrVenStampsrSir^^GrVenStampsHlIilil^GrVenS^ampsHlMy^^GrVen^ampsRI
• '. iM iM M iw h * . . . . 20-ot. poly bag. Froian

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..........................
12-ot. pkg.. Froten

How ard Johnson
Chicken Croquettas

Big Vallay
Mixed Fruit

24 itH .ctn . Jm 4 11 19911

2 3 K H a c b .. Jm 9 11 19911

A

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16-oi. pkg.. Froten King*
25 IlfUcliv* Je* 8 12 1983)

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20-ot pkg.. F ro i*n M orion'

Macaroni 8 Cheese
27 iIitM b .. j m » i i

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100 ^WGrVenl5tamps|^j[PTn^V/GrVenStamps|^3[r[TM^V/GreenStamps|3
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Hawaiian Bread
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, 14-0*. can. H oliday

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any *l*a pkg.. Ouracall

p tf pkg.. E Z Foil

Alkaline Batteries

Cup Cake Cups

28

29 Illl.c b .. J.n *

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wall

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32-ot. b o l , 15c O il Labal

Multi-Purpose Household
Insect Spray
3 0 IC tftc lift J am 8 12 1983)

I!

• 1 .4 -o r pkg.. K a llo g g ’e M auhm allow

W indax Glass Cleaner

!

krispies Cereal

31 (IH.cln.Jan * i l wall

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25-cl. pkg., Zip-Loc

Storage Bags
33 K ll.c ll.. J.n *11 19*11

4 -o *. ca n . A a ro to l

4 -o *. jar.

Bakers Joy

Publix Petroleum Jelly

34 HiiMb,.jw * il wall

17 illl.c b *. J.n *13 1»*ll

|

2S-01. bol.. Pin*. S udtty,
Claar or Lamon

Parsons Ammonia
35 Illl.c b .• J.n * 11 wan

L........................

100 t q II. ro ll.

Handi-Wrap
36 KH.cIn. Jan * I I I'Mli

�E v ening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 5, 19IJ

Ethnic Twist
To Stuffed
Vegetables
Stuffed vegetables arc a highlight of both Middle and Far
Eastern cuisine, with their cooks having a special flair at
stuffing just about anything deliciously. Cooks the world
round, in fact, appreciate the stuffed vegetable as a thrifty
way to provide varied textures and flavors In a neat package.
And, as the weather grows cooler, it also satisfies your
family's hunger for a substantial dinner or hearty side dish.
Dolma, which most of us define as stuffed grape leaves,
actually means stuffing in Turkish. The Turks frequently use
eggplant as a dolma vegetable since it is a good-tasting
example of good stuff to stuff. Middle Eastern chefs, in fact,
elaim more than 120 methods of cooking the succulent
vegetable.
In Baked Eggplant with Pork Stuffing, the flavors of the
zesly filling meld with the goodness of the eggplant. A touch of
orange, a common Middle Eastern accent to thin the richness
of pork. Joins the taste of tomato, garlic, cumin and Tabasco
_ w p p rr &lt;mio Ov»*y fn.w this
-tiriCCW &amp; lcal rc lT 'fthat will most definitely provide a Middle Eastern dining
experience. Subtly heighten flavor by using a few dashes of
Tabasco sauce in the boiling water for the eggplant as well.
Curry Stuffed Onions brings a Far Eastern tang to the
stuffed vegetable side dish. The Judicious use of fruit — tart
apples and raisins - provides a piquant counterpoint to the
full-bodied curry and mustard.
Medium-sized onions serve as the basis for the dish which is
perfect for a meat platter garnish. The onions are easy to
prepare for stuffing, an added bonus for a busy cook. The
preparation of the shells can be done ahead of time — another
boon - and the stuffing mixture is easy to prepare In advance,
loo.
You’ll find that Baked Eggplant with Pork Stuffing and
Curry Stuffed Onions will put the very best stuff that the East
has to offer on your table.
BAKED EGGPIjANT WITH PORK STUFFING
1 large eggplant
4 teaspoon salt
teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce, divided
2 tablespMns olive oil
1 pound pork slioulder, cut into 4-lnch cubes
1 medium onion, chopped ( 4 cup)
1 clove garlic, mashed
4 cup chopped celery
1 teaspoon ground cumin
I can 16-ounces) tomato paste
4 teaspoon grated orange rind
l-3rd cup orange Juice
I egg, slightly beaten
l-3rd cup toasted, sliced almonds
Grated Parmesan cheese
Quarter eggplant lengthwise. In o large saucepan bring 2
inches salted water to a boil. Add l« teaspoon Tabasco sauce.
Add eggplant; cover, steam 20 minutes. Remove eggplant
from pan; drain on wire racks. Scoop our pulp from each
quarter, leaving 4 inch of the skin and pulp to form a shell.
Chop pulp; reserve, tn medium skillet, heat oil; brown pork
over medium beat. Add onion; saute 2 minutes. Stir in garlic,
celery and cumin; 3 minutes longer. Stir In tomato paste;
orange rind and orange Juice. Remove from heat; stir In egg,
almonds and remaining 4 teaspoon Tabasco sauce. Mound
filling on each eggplant shell. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
Place in baking dish. Bake in a 350 degree F. oven 30 minutes
or until cheese is lightly browned and filling is heated through.
Serve with additional Tabasco sauce, if desired. Yield: 4
servings.
CURRY STUFFED ONIONS
4 medium onions (about 14 pounds)
3 tablespoons butter
4 cup chopped celery
t cup shredded carrot
14 tablespoons Dijon-stylc mustard
31 teaspoon curry powder
4 teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce
1-3rd cup chopped, tart apple
4 cup raisins
Peel onions. Cut off one quurter of each onion from the top.
Trim the root end leaving It intact. Using a large melon-ball
scoop, remove centers of onions leaving 4-inch thick shells.
Stand onion shells in a saucepan with 1 inch boiling water;
cover; steam 15 minutes. Remove onion shells from saucepan;
Invert on a wire rack; cool and drain. Finely chop onion cen­
ters. (You should have 4 cup chopped.) In a medium skillet,
melt 3 tablespoons butter; saute chopped onion 3 minutes. Add
celery, cook 1 minute. Stir in carrot, mustard, curry and
Tabasco sauce. Remove from heat. Stir in apple and raisins.
Spoon stuffing Into onion shells. Arrange In small baking dish;
■ pour hoi water into baking dish to a depth of 1 inch. Bake tn a
325 degree F. oven 15 minutes, or until onions arc heated
through. Yield: 4 servings.

French Fondue
From The Alps
Natives of the French Alps have their own version of a
cheese fondue using fine mountain cheeses and French wines.
These add a different flavor to fondue because of the cheese
selection. If there are dieters around, you may select a Cantal,
which is high in protein and has a low fat* content.
Too high heat when cooking can cause the cheese to become
stringy, if this happens, add a tablespoon of boiling water to
the peg and stir until smooth.
Serve with a chilled white wine but avoid Ice water, since It
causes the cheese to oongea), making it difficult to digest.
LA FONDUE AUX ALPES
8 ounces Comte, Cantal or French Gruyere cheese, grated
1 4 tablespoons flour
4 garlic clove
1 cup French dry white wine
.
1 4 tablespoons Armagnac
salt and pepper
bUe-size pieces French baguette
In a bowl, mix cheese and flour. Rub an earthenware or
glass Pyrex pot with garlic. Pour wine Into pot and heat until
wine Just starts to bubble. Add cheese mixture one handful at a
time, stirring well after each addition until fondue is smooth.
Stir in Armagnac, salt and pepper to taste. Place pot over
warm er and spear pieces of bread on forks and dip Into fondue.
Serve with chilled (not icy) French white wine from Alsace,
such as Riesling or Gewurtztraminer, or from the Jura region.
Avoid ice water or highly iced drinks while eating cheese
fondue This kitchen-tested recipe serves two.
3 pounds Comte, Canto) or French Gruyere cheese, grated
2-3 cup flour
4 garlic clove
6 cups French dry white wine
2-3 cup Armagnac
salt and pepper
bite-size pieces French baguette
Prepare as above. This kitchen-tested recipe serves 12.

4

Savory eggplant
filled with a
piquant pork
stuffing will be
a highlight of your
winter menu.

R iH ix B eef.
tchoose the special choice for
extra tenderness and flavor.

*

/

U.S.D.A. Choice Beel Boneless
per $ 169
lb
Shoulder Roast.
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
per $ 2 ^ 9
lb
Sirloin Steak....
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
per $2*9
ib
Key Club Steak
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Top Round
Steak................

per

lb

$2^9

Dairy [3 Dairy

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Standing
Rib Roast..........

per
lb

$2«9

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
$149

Short Ribs........
Boneless

$ 189

Beef For Stew

Mrs. Filberts

“I C an ’t Believe
It’s Not Butter” ...... f t

89*

Pillsbury Hungry Jack
Buttermilk or Buttertastm’

B is c u its ................2 eft 99*
Sealtest Assorted Flavors
Light n’ Lively

Y o g u rt.................. 3 f t . 51 19
Wisconsin Cheese Bar

„

C heese S p re a d ..... ft.

$2 49

Kraft Chunk Style

Swiss C h e e s e ....... f t * $2 10
Kratt Shredded Mozzarella

Swift's Premium (White Moat)

Turkey Roast......

C h e e s e ..................... ft* * 1 «

*3”

Weight Watchers Skim Milk

Swift’s Premium (Light 4 Dark Mix)

C h e e s e .......................ft* $139

Turkey Roast...... f t *3 09

Weight Watchers
Individually-Wrapped

Swift’s Premium (Dark Meat)

Turkey Roast...... 2*5 *2 19

Sliced American ... f t * $139
Wisconsin Cheese Bar IndividuallyWrapped Cheese Food

Swift’s Premium

Turkey Ham
Roast...............

Sliced American ... f t * s189

f t *3 19

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mild or
Medium Cheddar, Mozzarella,
Colby Halfmoon or Monterey Jack

Armour Star (2 to 4-lb. avg.)

Boneless Ham..... ft' * 2 "
(Plu. too

S4M G.aan Slamp. wilh coupon)

C h e e s e ..................... ft* $1S9

Rath Blackhawk Smoked

Dairi-Fresh Small or Large Curd.
Schmierkase or Lowfal

Daintees.............. E.* *2 49
Sw ill’s Premium Stick

Braunschweiger.. T *1 19
Swilt's Premium Beef, Dinner.
Regular or Bun Size

Franks................. ft: * 1«9

THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURSDAY. JAN. 6
THRU WEDNESDAY
JAN. 12, 1 9 8 3 . . .
CLOSED S U N D A Y ...

Swift’s Premium Assorted
Brown 'N Serve

C ottage Cheese ... f t $179

'[ 3

Lykes Meat or Beef Sliced

Tasty German Bologna or

Bologna............... f t * 1 "

Old Fashion Loaf qT '6 9 «

Buddig (All Varieties)

Delicious Honey or

Chipped Meats....'’ft* 49e

Pepper Loaf........ qu,r*' 99*

Oscar Mayer Lean ’N Tasty Sliced

Flavorful

Breakfast Strips., ft* * 1 49
Kahns Meat or.Beef

Ham &amp; Bacon
Loaf.............................. 89c

Franks................. f t *1 89

Zesty-Flavored

Seafood Treat, Frozen

Cole Slaw............ 7. 79c

Trout Fillet.......... 7! * 1 ”

(Regular Price S 1.09 Each)
Beef or Pork *

Seafood Treat, Hickory Smoked

Mullet................... 7 * 2 09
Seafood Treat, Frozen

Flounder Fillet.... K* «2 79

(3 Fresh Produce
I

3

■pp

Made From Cone., Publix Chilled

Orange Juice.....

*1™

Perfect For Snacks or Salad. Crisp

Red Delicious
Apples............. 3 ft 79c

fcnOat IW M l’ * * M ' | ID-ClWHl—
pfc
pfMtVWl) PtfM tOt11IW K
IWCJUIXpW
r *fi TJ M U M
u v tp an cstw ertifgtfmN jno ifctinh
.oot nwrwt
CouponIttWrt lot

tx/M

«(

»97f!

f m i«rcoloniM rtv
tH»t )

1*1*1ECHO*MUA’ltft

ONLT

$197

Prims Dor* Slides

ot primtoPrint

COLON

imnj

t'om Co-©* k M ii'iti OfclT

Sues up lo I* i ■I

Bar-B-Que
Sandwich......... cu
. i FREE!
Fresh-Baked

Lemon Crunch
Pie.......................... 7« M 59
Hot from the Deli!

Macaroni A Beef.. 7 *2°®
Beef S tew ........... 7 *2™
Fresh

Kaiser Rolls........

85 s

Excellent Steamed Florida Tender

Green Beans......

F /IM

Publix
^
Bonus Prints at "
picture-perfect prices.

Deli [9 Deli

Sausage.................f t * 1 ”

AkSf

49e

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE
CASSEROLE, BEEF,
TURKEY OR CHICKEN

Morton
Pot Pies

California Red

Emperor Grapes.. T 49e

Fresh Broccoli... t*

bunch

89*

Anjou Pears.....3 ft *1«
Florida (MediunrSize)

Tasty Tomatoes..

39e

Salad Perfect, Fresh Crisp

Cucumbers or
Bell Peppers....4 to. 89e
Florida Fresh, Crisp

Celery Hearts.....oft 39°
Naturally Fresh Brand, Cucumber,
Honey French or Thousand Island

Dressings........... ZV *1«
Reapes On Every Package^ Marion ^
Colorful Fresh Cut Bouquet of

Mini Carnations....
»

*249

Donald Duck Unsweetened
Concentrate Frozen

Grapefruit Juice ....

can

59*

Delicious Frozen

Eggo W a ffle s ........ f t *

99*

Thomas

English Muffins...... ft*

69*

Chef Saluto ’’New’’ 10-Inch 15-oz.
Deluxe or 14-oz. Pepperoni

Fresh Bake Pizzas.. Vo? s109

Good Source of Vitamin C and A
Ripe, Juicy Tasty

[ 3 Frozen Foods

Swanson 17-oz. Salisbury Steak,
18V o z Turkey or 164-oz.
White Portions of Chicken

8-oz.
FOR BREAKFAST,
SNACKS

pkgs.

Hungry Man
D inners.......................Vo? *189

| OR DESSERT, DELICIOUS |

Golden
Bananas

4 e$1

.

Rich’s

C offee Rich............3
FOR SANDW ICHES OR
SALAD CRISP, ICEBERG

Lettuce

etna. ® 1

Fleischmann’s

E g g b e a te rs ............ f t *

M 18

Ore lda Wedges, Slices, Thins

Home Style
P o ta to e s .................p”,° ft*1 1B
PictSweet Cut Corn, Green Peas or

Mixed Vegetables . f t , f t 69*
Singleton

large
heads'

C ooked S h rim p ..... ft*
Wakefield

Deviled C r a b ..........ft*

*14a

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. J, t»83—3C

Potato Skins Gussied Up
For Tempting Appetizers
New ami tempting hots d'oeuvres ideas highlight the Idaho
potato, considered the world's best because of its unique flavor
and texture. Two trendy finger foods sure to delight guests this
winter are Idaho Potato Skins with Parmesan Topping and
Ijicy Potato Fritters.
Potato skins have grown enormously in popularity as more
and more restaurants offer them. As easy in preparation as
they are on the budget, Idaho Potato Skins can be made a day
ahead and refrigerated until broiling time. The potato pulp,
which isn't needed for the appetizer, can be mashed for the
main course. Gussy up the mashed potatoes with chopped
black olives, pimiento and parsley for a glamorous side dish or
mix with cooked mashed turnips or carrots (or a stylish, stand­
out vegetable.
Paring down is the key to simple, yet elegant entertaining.
Guests don’t have to be surrounded b&gt; half a dozen hors
d'oeuvres before dinner. A single appetizer served informally,

P o ta to s k in s m a k e e n tic in g h o r s d 'o e u v r e s .

HEINZ KOSHER

Wesson
Oil

Dill
Pickles

48-02 bot

MA 4 WELL HOUSE

ScotTowels
targe roll

Pnc« t l . l ' Ct'l.'it II*

tfllft 0*'* SIMlltmp

P»it• Si*** CtfMiC ii t

W iinOfl* 5 4 * S ii « p
PtK « !#*#» C'*rM'kCll*

GALA TAMIL V

Napkins

Detergent

140 Ct pAq

111-01 tit*

6-oi ia&lt;

IZ-oi. )»r
With O n tfK H S Itn p

ARM A HAMMER
LAUNDRY

Instant
Coffee

Df CORATED OH ASSORTED

Wit'ixi Oft*5AHStamp
Pine* Six' CarliffeGit#

PUBLU PUMPKIN

flPF AKf AST CLUB
GRADE A FLORIDA

Custard
Pie

Large
Eggs

2 6 -0 2 pfcg

With Oa i SAM Sim p

With 0ft# S A N §1 amp
0TtC» 5 *« *f C#*li1«c*l#

Pific* Si*#' C#'t&lt;Bcil#

pi*r d o *

WilKOn# SAN $| Jftip
Pf&gt;C»Sjv#'
cate

On# SAM Slj»ft*p

F'nc# $#*#t Cm ti til#

New Store
Opening Hours
Beginning Monday,
January 10,1983

Publix Will Open
BLUE BONNET
REGULAR QUARTERS

01 Of SMlTMF if ID
INO SUGAR ADDfDi

Monday thru

Sliced
Bacon

Saturday

Margarine
1 lb cln
WHK Oft# SAM $l#mp

PNC#

a s s t*

Pm# S#f*i Carbine at*

!! 400 OFF

: TETLEV *
tra s s
y-\A

Economy Pack

Scott Napkins.....
Scott White or Assorted

Bath Tissue.........
Hunt’s Whole Peeled

Tomatoes............ 2'!m *1

^

;

300 11
P*9

t-fs e

79®

4-foll
pack

»17B

1

Corn C h ip s............. M 39
Krispy Crackers ... 't ° ‘ 99*
124-oz. Deluxe Grahams.
1 1V o z Fudge Stripes or
7-oz Peanut Butler Fudge Sticks

Keebler C o o k ie s ... &amp;

Tasters Choice....

Weight Watchers Chocolate,
Orange Vanilla or Chocolate Mint

9480

s1“

Hunt's Stewed

T re a ts ...................... 0«v s129

Tomatoes

Peppendge Farm White Vety Thin

1-ib. ca n

O ra n g e , Lake, S o m in o l
\
4 O tc a o la C o u n tie s O n ly !t
\
PLUS TAX A DEPO SIT
DIET HITE TONIC W A TE R ,
GINGER ALE O n LEMON LIM E,
NEHI GINGER ALE, TONIC
W ATER OR CLUB S O D A,
DIET RITE, RC 100,
OECAFEINATED OR REG.

R C Cola

Sliced Bread............. '£# 79*

Hunt’s

Peppendge Farm Wheat or
Rye Very Thin

Tomato Sauce
Hunt’s

t

3t.87c

Sliced Bread............. V J 85*

Tomato Sauce

Publix Special Recipe Butter Sesame

Hunt’s

B re ad ......................... '££ 59*

Tomato Paste

Publix Special Recipe Sesame

Hunt's Italian

Sandwich R olls.....2

Tomatoes

Lucky Leal 50 oz Regular
or 48-oz Natural

Hunt’s Tomato

IN 1 2 -0 2 . CANS
REG. OR LIGHT
BLACK LABEL

Carling Beer
six-p a ck

Apple Sauce........... p,7 s139

Puree

* 1 6 5

F &amp; P Fancy

Hunt's Rich Thick

S p in ach ..................... «“* 39*

Tomato Ketchup

Publix Tasty

Pfeiffer's Thousand Island, Caesar
or Red Wine with Vinegar A Oil

Field Trial Chunks

Salad Dressing ....

Dog F o o d ..................W 'l *3 79

bo*

Salad O lives...........

69'

79*
THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURSDAY, JAN, 6
THRU WEDNESDAY
JAN. 12, 1983 . . .
CLOSED SUNDAY

Comstock Apple

Pie Filling............. *£* 99'

10 0% PURE COLOMBIAN
AUTOMATIC DRIP
OR REGULAR PERK

Mixed Vegetables

Veg-AII................ 7.V- 49'
Joan of Arc Fancy Red

Kidney Beans..... 3?.°* 79'

Candy [ 3 Candy

Joan of Arc Caliente Style

Chili Beans.......... 3tZ 7 9'
Oriental, Beet or Chicken

Peanut Butter .

Reese C u p s ........ ...

Oodles of
Noodles............... 5 pk«» *1

Krall Regular or Party

24-ct. Small, 12-ct. Large or
18-ct. Medium

Delicious

Luvs Diapers....... S&amp; •2®8
Log Cabin

Syrup.................. V

3
i

S tE tle c liv e Jan 6 -1? 1983}
K m m im t im im m m s m t i m m m r '',

Bonus Jar! Freeze Dried Coffee
|X»

[3

Sunshine Salted or Unsalted Saltmes

JOOtl
pkg

9 0*

With This Coupon ONLY

Decaffeinated
Drip or Electric Perk
| Sanka Coffee

i

Frilo or Fnlo Lights (All Types)

White or Assorted Facial1Tissue

Scotties...............

* }

Closed Sunday

With On# SAMStamp

C#Hlfic#t»

E F *1

jj s g

at 8 a.m.

1 lb piui

1”

pkg

99*

B utterm in ts............ X* 79*

Publix
Coffee
1-lb. bag

Cricket Lighters

IDAHO POTATOES WITH SPICED CHICKEN TOPPING
4 Idaho potatoes
l i cup olive oil
4 cup slivered almonds
1 cup chopped onion
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 pound boned and skinned chicken breasts or thighs, cut in
strips
2 tablespoons flour
11» cups chicken broth
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon paprika
4 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
4 cup raisins

HORSERADISH STUFFED IDAHO POTATOES
4 Idaho potatoes
2 tablespoons butler or margarine
l cup chopped celery
4 cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons prepared white horseradish
1 tablespoon wine vinegar
4 teaspoon salt

General Merchandise

Royal Gelatin......4 pH* M

IDAHO POTATO SKINS WITH
PARMESAN TOPPING
4 Idaho potatoes
2 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted
4 cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
2 teaspoons grated onion
Wash potatoes, dry and prick with a fork. Bake in a 425
degrees F. oven 50 lo 60 minutes, until soft. Cool potatoes
slightly; cut into wedge-shaped quarters; scrape out pulp,
Place skins, skin-side-down, on baking sheet. Brush lightly
with melted butter. Hetum to oven. Bake 10 minutes longer or
until crispy. In small bowl combine mayonnaise, cheese and
onion; mix well. Spread topping on potato skins. Place under
broiler, 4-inches from heat. Broil 2 to 3 minutes until lopping is
golden. Serve hot. Yield 16 wedges.
1.ACY POTATO FRITTERS
2 eggs
1 clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon sesame seeds
I tablespoon flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
3 Idaho potatoes, peeled
vegetable oil for frying
In lurgc mixing bowl beat eggs, stir in garlic, soy sauce,
sesame seeds, fluur and baking powder. Grate potatoes
coarsely using the large holes of a hand grater or food
processor. Squeeze out as much liquid as possible from
potatoes; stir into egg batter. Heat about 2-inches oil to 325
degrees F. in an electric frypan or deep fryer. Drop a forkful of
potato m ixture into hot oil. Mixture should spread to make a
lacy effect. Brown quickly on one side; turn with fork and
brown other side. Drain on paper towels. Repeal with
remaining potato mixture. Yield about 3 dozen fritters.*

Gradually add to chicken mixture, stirring constantly, until
mixture boils and thickens. Stir In raisins, Simmer 3 minutes.
Spoon evenly over blossomed potatoes. 4 servings.

a

Gillette Disposable

l.ook for an oval-shaped potato, with a net-textureil skin and
russet brown in color. Eyes should be few and shallow. Con­
sider your use when buying potatoes. Smaller ones — up to
nine ounces — are excellent for baking while the larger
potatoes - ranging to a pound —make marvelous French fries
or deep fried potato skins.
Once you've brought your potatoes home, store lliem in a
cool, dark and dry place with good ventilation; not the
refrigerator. Chilling will convert the starch to sugar, creating
an unnatural sweet iaste. 1J gilt is an enemy loo because it
causes the potatoes to turn green and bitter. Excess heat is
also a no-no. It will shrink the skin. At 45 degrees, at which
temperature you’ll find many cellars or garages, potatoes will
keep for several weeks, Room temperature will maintain them
at their peak for approximately one week.
A baked potato produces one of life's supreme eating
pleasures. Wash and scrub the potato. Pierce the skin with a
fork lo prevent steam from building up and bursting the potato
and place it on a baking sheet. Bake an average-size potato
about? to 9 ounces, for 55 to 65 minutes at 425 degrees F. Adjust
time according to size. The potato is done if it feels soft or if a
knife slides in without resistance.
Microwave oven users should place the potatoes on paper
toweling leaving alxiut an inch between potatoes for maximum
penetration. Turn the potatoes about halfway through cooking
time. Two potatoes will take from 6 to 8 minutes while four
potatoes whould bake for 10 to 12 minutes. Six potatoes take
from 14 to 16 microwave minutes.

Scrub potatoes, dry and prick with a fork. Bake m a 425
degree F. oven 55 to 65 minutes, until soft. In large skillet heat
oil, saute almonds untll^oldcn brown. Add onion and garlic;
saute until tender. Add chicken;* cook, stirring, until chicken
turns white. Sprinkle with flour; mix well. Combine broth,
lemon juice, cinnamon, paprika, sail and hot pepper sauce.

Cracker J a c k s ....... 'JSST 59*

Assorted Flavors

yet imaginatively, such as I-acy Potato Fritters, sets the tone
for an enjoyable evening for all.
A basket of these crispy fritters makes a marvelous cen­
terpiece for pre-dinner nibbling. They are quick to make, a
boon for the busy hostess, and are easy to serve as a finger
food.
Another way to keep entertaining fun and painless is to be
well-organized. When deciding on a menu, preferably a week
before your party, look for dishes that can be prepared ahead
of time, at least in part. If your main dish and dessert are
tucked in the freezer a few days before your guests arrive,
you'll reap the psychological dividend of being prepared. And
since a calm hostess is as important an clement in successful
entertaining as the food or the guest list, an agenda plotted out
in advance will set the tone for a pleasant evening.

(Limit 1 H u m , With Other
Purchase* of 17.90 or Moro,
■icludlng All Tobacco Itoma)

where shopping Iso pleasure
VMS AO H M C fiV f *
fO u o M iC a i« T « t i

VNf

LM# U# If #o#l## Ov#«|#

,

Scrub potatoes, dry and prick with a fork. Bake in a 425
degree F. oven 55 lo 65 minutes, until s o ft.,Meanwhile, melt
butter In a small skillet; saute celery until tender. When
p&lt;(aloes are baked, cut slice from top of each potato; carefully
scoop out pulp without breaking skin. Set skins aside. In large
bowl, combine potato, heavy cream , horseradish, vinegar and
sail; beat unlit light and fluffy. Stir in sauteed celery. Spoon
potato mixture into shells. Bake In a 350 degree F. oven 20 to 25
minutes, until heated through and slightly browned on top. 4
servings.

©*«*•*» t#4••#■«. |«Akift#l#

SANFO RD PLA ZA , SAN FO RD
LONGW OOD VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGW OOD

Publix

Ths phrass ‘‘crocodile tea i s " d t r im fiom
an anciant Greek legend-The giant lizard w ai
believed to attract itt victims by loud m oan­
ing and than shed liar* whila it devoured them.

�4C - Evening Hera Id, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 5, 1983

S,\S

'

ever.
nsco

CMARMIN BATH

CHEK (ALL FLAVORS)

TISSUE

CRISCO
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
OOOO JANUART 6-8, IBS)

©

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JANUART 6-8, 1983

W-D (HANDI-PAK)

CREST

SUPERBRAND LO-FAT,
HOMOGENIZED OR SKIM

TOOTHPASTE

MILK

COFFEE

BEEF

U $149
■*

®

1-LB.
SIZE

•

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JANUARY 6-8, 1963

GAL.
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
G 000 JANUART 6-8, 1983

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUART 6-8, 1983

WIN UP TO J2,000 IN CASH!

ALL THE FUN &amp; EXCITEMENT BEGINS TODAY
WITH WINN-DIXIE S NEW GAME!

OVER &gt;490,000 IN PRIZES AVAILABLE!
IT'S EASYTOWIN!
P v * up a F u e l earn* M i l and c d a d o f cant
today MNOO and WW tt.OOO, SIOO 1 10 and
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4200 420 and 4 I0 1 Thoutanda of m .tant SI 00

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- i q lA

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JANUART 6-8. 1983

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
QOOD JANUART 6-1, 1963

CHOCK FULL O' NUTS

SIZE

4 PAK
PKG.

2 LITER
BTL.

3-LB.
SIZE

W e’re giving away 10 trips for two to the
G reat W est, Great Lakes o r Hawaii. If you
obtain a gam e marker w hich says "You Qualify
for G re a t Trip Drawing," you are eligible tor
each of th e tw o drawings. Just submit
jualifler m arker to store office and fill out a
qua
Trip EEntr
n try Form. AH entries received by
ja ry 9, 1983 will b e eligible for the
February
ing ion February 16, 1 9 8 3 . Five Great
drawing
Trips win be awarded in th e first drawing. All
valid en tries received w ithin th ree days afte r
gam e en d s&gt; wifl be eligible for the final draw ing
to b e held approximately s
seven days
■
. after
gam e en d s. R ve Great Trips will again be
aw ard ed at this time. S e e collector card for
details of trip prize.

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                    <text>Office May Move June 1

County Sets Dates To Move To Old Hospital
offices are vacated, work will begin to renovate them for court
use.
But a potential stumbling block to the renovation plans could
be funding. The county commission has about $1.5 million
designated for the renovations this year.
Charles Braun, vice president of Helman Hurley Charvat
Peacock, said the renovations to the hospital will cost between
$500,000 and $1 million. A sprinkler system alone could cost
$200,000 to $300,000.
He estimated the renovations will cost between $10 and $25
per square foot, depending upon how extensive the changes
are. The county plans to use two floors of the three-story.
Design work will begin immediately on the hospital with a
117,000-square-foot former hospital.
June 1 completion date for renovations necessary for oc­
But Sobel said there is no doubt the drawings of the old
cupancy by county commissioners and their staff.
hospital are inaccurate. The costs could vary depending upon
Work on the old hospital will continue after that move to what the Winter Park architects learn in an engineering study
ready the first floor of the hospital for use by the tax collector of the building. He said there are no drawings that show the
and property appraiser. Those offices are supposed to move building as it was built originally, plus all the alterations
into the former hospital building between Jan. 1 and March 1, subsequently made.
1984.
Cost estimates on the courthouse renovations will be
available when the schematic drawings are submitted to the
In the meantime, work also will begin on renovations in the
county at the end of February, Braun said.
courthouse. The architect has been authorized to begin design
Attorney Emory H. Rosenbluth, representing the judges,
work immediately on renovations to office space currently
tried to pin down Braun and Sobel on the earliest date possible
occupied by commissioners and staff agencies When those
■nqiM t
I0 M B M M

By MICHEALBEHA
Herald SUff Writer
A tentative timetable for design and renovation of the
Seminole County Courthouse and the old Seminole Memorial
Hospital has been established by county officials.
In a meeting with consultant Walter H. Sobel of Chicago,
representatives of Helman Hurley Charvat PeacockArchitects, County Commission Chairman Sandra Glenn, the
county’s constitutional officers and the attorney representing
circuit and county judges the timetables for moving each of­
fice was established.

for courthouse renovation.
Braun gave a four-month timetable for design work and
preparation of bid documents. Construction in the courthouse
could begin as early as June 1, he told Rosenbluth, after
pointed questioning.
But Mrs. Glenn said extensive renovations at the hospital
may not be necessary. Some area of the second floor, which is
where the commission offices will be, could be prepared with
minimal renovation.
’T in certainly not an engineer but the big problems for the
BCC are the phone system and the electrical system for the
word processors," she said.
However. Tax Collector G. Troy Ray urged a slower, more
cautious approach.
"I’m all in favor of moving as fast as we can but 1 want to
solve problems, not create them," Ray said.
He said by making a hasty move, county officials could
inhibit the services their offices are supposed to provide.
Chief Circuit Judge S. Joseph Davis also supported a
cautious approach. He said the courts should not move into the
vacated offices until renovations are completed. There will be
a temptation for judges who haven’t had chambers to take
over an office os soon as possible, said Davis, who has used the
grand jury meeting room as chambers for three years.

1

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Commissioners also plan to build an office tower south of the
courthouse. That building will be used for court-related offices
but no timetable has been set (or construction of that project.
Ultimately, an administrative center is planned for the
county's Five Points complex. That center would house the
commission and staff offices.

Davis Found Guilty

Sober Details Homestead Ruling Impact
IM 111 H

The public defender will ultimately fill space in the cour­
thouse annex now occupied by the state attorney’s office. The
public defender is now located in Sanford City Hall along with
the county's Manpower office.

Sentenced To Life In Prison

Tax Shift
■
By DONNA ESTES
II.roMIKolf
rll.r
■
Herald SUff W
Writer
A recent Florida Supreme Court
decision could wind up causing
Seminole County and the seven
cities in Seminole County to in­
c rease tux ra te s, Property
Appraiser Bill Subcr has told the
Council of l^ocal Governments in
Seminole County.
At a meeting Wednesday night in
la k e Mary of the representatives
of the cities and the county, Suber
displayed a chart shewing the
decline in the taxable property
value in each of the jurisdictions
which will be seen this year as a
result of the high court decision.
The state justices declared
unconstitutional the five-year
residency requirement for $25,000
homestead exemption.
Suber said that countywide the
decision means that the cities and
the county will lose a taxable value
of $18 million and will either have
to raise property tax rates or find
some other form of gathering
additional revenues.
"In most cases new construction
will make up the lost revenues,"
: Suber predicted, adding he does
| not have a handle on those figures
! as yet.
TTie Supreme Court decision has
been interpreted to mean that
those homeowners who previously
were eligible for only a $5,000
homestead exemption will pay less
in property taxes this year because
the taxable value of their property
will be reduced.
Those, who were able to claim
the full $25,000 exemption before
the court decision will likely be
paying a higher tax rate to make
up the difference in revenues to the
governmental units. Thus the tax
burden will be shifted.
Calling the picture he was
presenting "bleak," Suber pointed
to a detailed chart he had
prepared, Uiustratin^the loss in
property value from the tax rolls in
each of the cities and the loss in
revenue if the cities were to levy
the same property tax rate In 1983
as in 1982.
The property appraiser said
Attorney General Jim Smith is
appealing the decision by asking
the Supreme Court to reconsider

"When the county commission moves out they forget you,"
he said. "There’s a danger in making a move before you know
whether it’s interim or permanent.”
In the county's space scheme, the courts would occupy the
entire south wing of the courthouse. After renovations, the
clerk of courts will occupy two floors of the four-story north
wing, one floor will be occupied by the property appraiser and
tax collector’s offices and the remaining floor will be used by
the courts.
•
Other moves also wi» trke place. When the public services
and development, purchasing and central services depart­
ments move into the hospital from the Roumillat Building, the
state attorney's office will take over that building.

1

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By VICTOR ASSERSOIIN
Herald.Staff Writer

Htrald Photo by Donna Etto i

S e m in o le C o u n ty P r o p e r ty A p p r a is e r Bill
S u b e r e x p la in s fro m a p r e p a r e d c h a r t th e

ta x im p a c t fro m a re c e n t F lo r id a S u p re m e
C o u r t d e c is io n .

lost if the same rate of property
its action.
taxes were levied In 1983 in each
"T he Suprem e Court could
reverse itself, but that seems
instance:
— Altamonte Springs, 1,143
unlikely," Suber said. "Unless the
properties with an additional
Supreme Court agrees to rule in a
$20,000 hom estead exem ption
different way, reversing its
(where $5,000 is already being
decision, these are realistic
claimed) and with a tax rate of
figures."
$2.85 per $1,000 assessed property
Suber also said he hopes the high
value. Loss $65,196.72.
court recognizes the fiscal impact
— Longwood — 546 properties at
'of its decision and handles the stale
a tax rate oi $2.21 for a loss of
appeal in a speedy fashion.
The property appraiser said his
$24,092.82.
— lak e Mary -1 2 8 properties at
employees are currently working
a tax rate of $4.15 for a loss of
to program the full $25,000
exemptions IWI
for all liwinvwn.iv.
homeowners*
$10,624.
ho file for Utc exemption fur the---------— Sanford — 486 properties at a
tax rate of $4.37 for loss of $40,719.
1983 tax roll.
- Oviedo - 71 properties at a
He added that If the Supreme
tax rate of $2.24 for a loss of
Court doesn't act In a speedy
fashion, the work in his office could
$3,180.80.
- Winter Springs - 1,448 at a tax
reach an Impossible level.
rate of $1.20 for a loss of $34,559.40.
S u ber's ch art showed the
- Casselberry — 827 at a tax
following
num ber of new
rate of $1.01 for a loss of $17,883.20.
properties where exemptions
In addition, Suber said the
would be Increased and tax money

county commission and the School
Board will see an increase in the
homestead exemption for 4,444
homes with a combined tax rate of
.$13.94 per $1,000 for a loss of $1.4
million.
County Commissioner Bill
Kirchhoff,
the
county’s
representative to the council, said
the Supreme Court in essence has
said that It’s unconstitutional to
require newcomers to the state to
pay more taxes than residents who
have been in Florida for years.
He noted that some states grant
industries tax relief for a period of
time to entice them to thestate. lf~
the Supreme Court decision stands,
he noted that this type law would
also appear to be unconstitutional.
Suber noted that Florida does
have a law providing this type
relief. He said the law permits a
county to place the issue of tax
relief to an Industry on the ballot if
See IMPACT, P age $A

County Had Busy Year
By M1CHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County commissioners elected their first woman
chairman, made plans for future expansion and bade farewell
to the county’s first administrator in 1982.
Sandra Glenn was elected chairman following her unop­
posed re-election In the November election. She was the first
woman elected to the board In 1978 and succeeded Robert
Sturm, who served two years, as chairman.
Sturm received some good political news himself in
November, receiving more than 60 percent of the vote in the
Nov. 2 election.
Sturm defeated former commissioner Robert French, who
also lost in 1980, by almost 9,000 votes in the election which had
growth as a central issue.
French claimed Sturm was allowing undisciplined growth in
the county and pointed to the $10,000.in campaign contributions
received from developers for Sturm's campaign.

But Sturm countered that ha helped Institute controls on
development during his first four years on the board.
Commissioners said goodbye In November to Roger
Nelswender, the county's first administrator and the man
given credit for a reorganisation of county government.
Nelswender was chosen to the post In 1975 and left the
$52,000-a-year Job after seven years to take over the Orlando
office of the consulting firm Post, Buckley, Schuh and Jer­
nigam
He will be succeeded by T. Duncan Rose, 38, a former
assistant Alachua County administrator. Rose will take over
the Seminole County position on Jan. 17.
County commissioners took steps toward solving the
growing office «p*™ problem in the county courthouse. They
approved a plan to renovate the old Seminole Memorial
Hospital for short-term use by commissioners, staff agencies
and constitutional officers.
See COUNTY Page 3A

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A 23-year-old mother of three, Susie Mae
Davis, was sentenced to lifei imprisonment
Wednesday for the first degree murder of her
boyfriend at a Sanford building site in August
1982.
Davis, of 1410 William Street in Sanford, was
found guilty after the 12-member Jury had
been out Just over an hour. She will serve a
minimum of 25 years.
The death penalty for the first degree
murder of Byron I* Brooks, of 850 W. First St.,
In Sanford, was not asked for by the state
because the "aggravated circumstances"
required to be present under Florida law did
not apply in this case, Assistant State Attorney
Don Marblestone explained.
During the three-day trial before Circuit
Judge Kenneth M. l&lt;efflcr, the jury heard how
Davis had gone to the Sanford I bindings
apartment construction site on Aug. 24, 1982,
and shot Brooks at least four times using a .22caliber Saturday night special pistol which
Brooks had given her.
She had started going out with Brooks in
July 1982 and had become lovers, but Brooks
had beaten her bn two or three occasions and
had raped her, she testified on Wednesday.
She had driven to the building site to talk
with Brooks and to "straighten things out In an
adult way," she told the jury.
She and Brooks had stood by her car and,
she told the Jury in a slow deliberate voice, "I
saw him reach for the gun. I took out mine and
shot him."
She became upset when, under cross
examination, Assistant State Attorney Don

Marblestone asked if she remembered saying
that she was glad that she had shot Brooks.
"Do you remember saying T m glad I killed
him. He lied'?", asked Marblestone.
Fighting back tears, she angrily replied:
“ No, I don’t. No, 1 don’t.
"I don’t remember him being at my feet
saying "Don't shoot. Don't shoot."
She told the Jury that after the first shot, she
could not remember chasing Brooks and told
Marblestone that she had not reported the
rape to the police or other authorities.
But witnesses at the site who were among
the 10 witnesses who testified told the Jury that
Brooks had been shot at three or four times.
One of the bullets pierced Brooks' heart and
he would have fainted with "massive
bleeding." Seminole County Medical
Examiner Dr. G.V. Garay testified.
Davis told the Jury that she believed Brooks
was reaching into her car for a loaded gun kept
under the seat and she had shot him.
The last witness to be called by the state,
Floyd B. Waters, a construction worker,
testified he was standing next to Brooks on the
day of the shooting. When Davis drove up in
her car to the construction site, she seemed
calm, Waters testified.
Brooks had gone to talk with Davis and
about five or ten minutes later he heard
gunshots, Waters told the jury.
Davis had shouted that she was glad she had
shot Brooks and hoped she had killed him,
Waters testified.
Another construction worker; John P.
McCullough, testified Tuesday that Brooks
had leaned Into Davis’ car and it was then she
had shot him.

COMPARE ouR

Gasoline
Self Service
. Per Gallon
Regular

TODAY
E ditorial............................. 4A
F lo rid a ............................... SA
N ation.................................2A
People.................................IB
Sports.............................6-8A
T elevision.......................... 1B
Weather ............................2A
Coins. Stam ps. B aseball
card s. Even beer cans.
They’re all collectables. And
a lot of people have made big
bucks boarding them. But a
C asselberry
woman
Is
collecting something a bit
different — old fruit
vegetable crate labels. Herald
staff writer Mlcheal Beha
tells you about her colorful
pastime in Friday's Leisure

Z $1 GASOLINE

HtorM Photo fey J i m C iudfetni

After years on an upward spiral, gas prices have dropped to f 1.00.9 a gallon
for regular at least at this 76 self-service station In Casselberry. Hie price o fgasoline at stations throughout Seminole County have been declining for
w e e k s.

lA’MU

1

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�7A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursda v, Jan. 6,1983

NATION
IN BRIEF
Cyanide Death Traced
To Anacin-3 Capsules
PORTION'D, Ore. (UPH—Tests show the "probable
presence" of cyanide in a bottle of Anacin-3 capsules
■'found In the home of a woman who died after taking
two poisoned capsules. Officials warned consumers to
examine closely all over-the-counter capsules.
Medical Examiner William Brady said several pain
relievers were found in the home of Patricia F. Ben­
nett, 31, who died Tuesday at a hospital after taking a
poisoned pa hi reliever, and "in the airspace of one of
those bottles we found cyanide."
Scott Upham, a Washington County deputy district
attorney, said Wednesday none of the capsules in the
Anacin-3 bottle had been tested to determine whether
there was cyanide in them. *
But he sold, Dr. Brady told him tests “ indicated the
probable presence of cyanide in an Anacin-3 bottle"
found in her Hillsboro, Ore., home,
The deputy district attorney urged anyone con­
sidering use of over-the-counter medication in capsule
form to examine it closely.
Sheriff’s Capt. Harold Kleve said the death was
being treated as a homicide.

Judge Blocks Foreclosures
PITTSBURGH (U PI)—A judge says his order
halting owner-occupied home foreclosures will protect
Jobless homeowners for several months against their
"cxcrutlatingly painful" plight during a tune of
unemployment unmatched since the Depression.
The order followed a move Monday by sympathetic
county Sheriff Eugene Coon to remove 42 foreclosed
properties from the January sheriff’s sale list.
Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Nicholas
Papadakos, who expects the moratorium to last “ at
least several months," said he took the action because
of the "excruciatingly painful" plight of the recessionplagued area’s jobless homeowners.

New Gos Tax April 1
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Reagan, who
joked in September it would take “a palace coup" for
him to raise taxes, today signed a gasoline tax increase
that would generate $5.5 billion a year for bridge and
road repairs.
The White House staged the ceremony in the Slate
Dining Room for Reagan to sign the bill which will
boost the fuel lax by a nickel a gallon April 1.
Tile administration estimates the highway program
financed by the tax increase, which Reagan said would
cost the average motorist $30 a year, will create up­
ward of 320,000 jobs.

Reagan Hints At Possible Defense Cuts
WASHINGTON i U PIi - President Reagan, displaying a
new bit of flexibility on the budget, indicates he is willing to cut
military spending to force down what he acknow ledged to be
"unacceptably large deficits."
Holding his first nationally broadcast news conference of
1983 Wednesday night, Reagan restated his belief tax in­
creases will inhibit cconotmc recovery, but he did not rule
them out.
Appearing with Reagan was Elizabeth Dole, White House
assistant for public liaison. Ihe president said he had chosen to
replace Drew U w is as secretary of transportation. If con­
firmed by the Senate, as is likely, she will be the first woman to
serve in the Reagan Cabinet.
In an opening statement, Reagan tried to shut off questions
on the 1984 budget, saying he is "in the midst of making final
decisions." But reporters persisted and asked about the
looming $200 billion deficit.
“Clearly we’re facing very big deficits unless wc take action
- and we will lake action because the deficits" will become
"unacceptably large" in the future, Reagan said. "The federal
budget must not become a road block on the path to long-term
economic recovery."
Reagan said he was aware there is a "constant drum beat...
that we’re overboard on this particular subject" of increasing
the defense budget. He said he expects to receive a Defense
Department task force report shortly and "if it can be cut it
will be cut."
"Rut the priority must be not if it means reducing our ability
below the level at which we can declare ourselves safe," he
said.
As for proposals to boost taxes to offset the exploding
deficits, Reagan said: “1 think it is an accepted fact and a
common rule that to boost taxes are not the way out of a
recession."
The president took a firm stand against giving any guidance

Drainage Problem Sparks Zoning Debate
Seminole County commissioners were
willing to approve a zoning change on a
2.6-acre tract near Lmgwood but still
didn’t give the owners everything they
wanted.
Commissioners voted 4-1 Tuesday to
grant a zoning change from agricultural
to commercial use for the portion of the
property above the flood plain.
But H arry Reed, an attorney
representing the owners, George and
Hosalyn Warren, told commissioners the
action would severely limit development
of the land. Reed explained that 70
percent of the property is flood prone
and if -only the 30 percent is zoned
commercial, selling the rem aining
property would be difficult for the
-owners.
Commissioner Robert Slunn, the only

commissioner to vote against the
rezoning, agreed, saying the partial
rezoning Is unfair to the landowners and
forces them to come up with their own
solution to area drainage problems
rather than work with a neighboring
owner to create a neighborhood solution.
Commissioners recently rezoned, with
the same stipulations, an adjacent parcel
for use by a convenience store. The two
properties could have each provided
some land for a retention pond for the
area. Now, they must each solve their
own problems, Reed said.
Rut Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff said
the zoning stipulations should provide an
incentive for the owners to correct the
drainage problems. If they engineer the
drainage correctly, more of the land may
become usable.

Gam es May Seek
National Sanction

WEATHER

Should Sanford's Gulden Age Games strive to have some
events sanctioned by the National Organization ot Masters,
NATIONAL REPORT:Winds of 88 mph whistled across the
part of the American Athletic Union, in order to attract more
Northern Rockies. Ice and snow glazed Northwestern roads
top senior athletes at the cost of surrendering some local
but the Midwest and .Northeast held onto their mildest winter
control?
in years. Northern Idaho turned into a sea of slush Wednesday
This question will be voted on at the next meeting of the
before a storm that made roads dangerous across Washington
Golden Age Games Executive Committee to be held at 8 a.m.
and Oregon blew east and Into Canada. However, the National
Feb. 2 at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Weather Service said the cold, stormy weather could swing
The question of obtaining the blessing of a national
back to the northern states today. At least 11 deaths since
organization came up at a meeting of the committee Wed­
Sunday have been blamed on the weather. Texas, New Mexico
nesday when Dan Dittiner, owner of the Sharidan Aquatic Gub
and Idaho each reported three deaths and Washington and
in Izingwood, which hosts the Golden Age Games swimming
Mississippi had one. Heavy rains doused both coasts. More
and diving events, recommended holding sanctioned events to
than 2 inches of rain fell along the northern Pacific Coast in the
gel more and belter competitors. To do so would mean meeting
last 24 hours. Over 2*x inches. Cape Hatteras, N.C. and
criteria such us abiding by their rules and regulations and
Greenville, S.C. each reported a half-inch. In the Midwest,
probably some sort of fee.
residents of northern Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa and Michigan
Gaines Chairman Jim Jcmigan said to become sanctioned
were holding onto surprisingly mild temperatures. Chicago
would mean the national organization would be exercising a
highs hovered near 40 and the Milwaukee and Detroit areas
certain amount of control at the expense of local officials.
reported highs in the mld-30s. Utile to no snow was on the
"I don’t think we should do this," Jcmigan said. " I’m not
ground. The same was true for the Northeast, where tem­
quite sure we ought to cater to those who stay on the circuit
peratures were in the high 30s and 40s. In Idaho, freezing rain
competing in various sanctioned events all year round. It is a
combined with a wecklong build-up of 2 feet of snow to knock
natural evolution after eight years for some people to want to
out power to 1,200 people uround Sandpoint, and close county
make it a ’pure' event, but we want something unique where
roads and schools. Utility spokesmen said power was restored
senior citizens are encouraged to stay active and compete, but
by mid-afternoon. The brunt of the storm, which hit Tuesday
also to have fun.
night, turned the blanket of snow into slush in Bonner County,
"We don't want to shut out the average person because he or
where some spots hod 21 inches. Sandpoint had 18 inches of
she thinks the event is only for m aster athletes," Jemigan
snow on the ground. In food-dumaged northern Izniisiana,
said.
*
authorities said op to a third of the state’s winter wheal c ro p Also at Wednesday’s meeting, committee members were
170,000 acres-w as destroyed by high water. But farmers said
shown a video tape made by Orange-Scminolc Cabievision of
they were encouraged because the water spelled an end to a
the 1982 Golden Age Games held Nov. 8-13. The tape will be
drought that has plagued the area for the last two years and
available to help promote the 1983 Games.
could mean a bountiful soybean crop in the fall.
The committee went over the schedule for the various
AREA READINGS (9 a.tn,): temperature: 52; overnight
events, making a few changes in times and days. None of last
low: 50; Wednesday high: 61; barometric pressure: 30.24;
year's events will be dropped and discussions are still being
relative humidity: 80 percent; winds: north at 7 mph; rain:
held with Cypress Gardens officials on whether or not they will
trace; sunrise 7:19 a.m.; sunset 5:44 p.m
sponsor a water skiing competition in this year's Games. An
FRIDAY TIDES: DAYTONA REACH: highs, 2:44 a m . 3:05
appropriate location is one of the considerations, Jemigan
r -&gt; ■ Irnrt 8 58 - w 9 fWp nL: PORTCAN AYEHAL; highs.
“ said.
"
2:36 a.m., 2:57 p.m., lows, 8:47 a.m., 9:00 p.m.; BAYPORT:
Proof of purchase seals from Post Cereals and Sanka Coffee
highs 8:29 a.m., 8:22 p.m., lows, 2:19 a m , 1:59 p.m.
may be dropped off at the Greater Sanford Chamber of
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
Commerce office, Sanford Avenue and First Street, and they
50 Miles: Northwest to north, winds 10 to 15 mph today
will be used to obtain free sports equipment for the Golden Age
becoming northwesterly 10 to 5 knots tonight and Friday. Seas
Games. — JANE CASSELBERRY
3 to 4 feet today decreasing some tonight. Cloudy with some
rain this morning south part. Otherwise, partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST: Portly cloudy today. Highs mid to
upper 60s. Northerly wind 10 mph. Tonight and Friday mostly
fair. Rather cool tonight with lows In the low to mid 40s. Highs
Friday upper 60s to around 70. Wind tonight light and variable.

CA LEN D A R

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida RtgiwieiHotpiiel
Wtdne*d«y
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
Vicki* L , Campbell
Albert j . Campeau
Melee hi L . Davit
Edward J. Eland
Sylvia A. Morgan
R u uell A. Waldon
Virginia L . While
Anthony O. William*
B n tie L. William*

Evening IlnukJ

Voyi* L.
Georg* E
Jo*eph F
Cecil* T

Miierek. C*»**lberry
Thome* Sr., DeBary
Ctrvrny. Deltona
Dionne. Deltona
BIRTHS
William L and Beverly A
Murrey, e baby boy. Geneve
DISCHARGES
Sanford
J Bradford Morrii
Lyngail Woodall
Ralph E Hern. DeBary
Virginia B Snyder. DeBary
iu s f i

m im &gt;

Thursday, January 4, lM3-Voi. 75. No. 119
FvblitAed Daily and Sunday, eacept Saturday by Tht Sanlerd
Herald, Inc , 1MN. Franch Ay*., Sanlerd, * la Mill.
Second Clatt Pottage Paid at Sanlerd. Florida

)Wt

Home Delivery: Week, Si.Mr Month. M.1S; I Month*, IM 00r
Year, S4S.M. By Mall: Week SM S; Month. i l .l S i 1 Month*.
ISO M ; Tear. U f.M

1/ *

to his commission studying ways to make the Social Security
system solvent, saying he would "not impose myself on the
commission" no m atter "how much they ask for it.”
Commission Chairman Alan Greenspan has been seeking
intervention by both Reagan and House Speaker Thomas
O'Neill to break the deadlock between Republican and Demo­
crats on the panel.
Reagan said if the commission cannot reach a consensus,
members should submit their proposals for reform and in­
dicate where they differ. "Then it will be up to us," he said.
The panel is due to report to him by Jan. 15, two weeks later
Rian the original deadline.
Reagan refused to be drawn into specif ics on his 1984 budget,
due to be sent to Congress Jan. 31, insisting the whole panoply
of government spending is still under review.
On other subjects, the president:
-S a id he would consider a summit meeting with Yuri
Andropov, the new Soviet leader, if it is adequately prepared.
For such a session to take place, he said, "You have to believe
you can accomplish something."
He also indicated he would discuss with NATO allies the
Warsaw Pact call for an East-West non-aggression pact.
—Refused to comment on allegation Bulgarian secret
police, directed by the Soviet KGB, plotted to kill Pope John
Paul II, but said evidence of such a plot "certainly would have
an effect ... a worldwide effect" on relations with Moscow.
—Said he does not believe the recent riots in Miami were a
byproduct of high unemployment and the continuing recession.
—Declined to reveal whether he will seek a second term,
saying only, he will make a decision about 1984 "sometime this
year."
— Described Hep. Phil Gramm of Texas, a “ Boll Weevil"
Democrat who resigned his seat Wednesday to seek election as
a Republican, ns a “ mdn who put country before party."
-D enied the Strategic Anns Reductions Talks in Genpvn

FRIDAY, JANUARY 7
Reboi and Live Oak Kebos Club AA, noon and 8 p.m.,
closed, 220 Live Oak Center, Casselberry.
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m., closed, Messiah Lutheran
Church, Highway 17*92 south of Dog Track Road,
Casselberry.
Wekiva AA (no smoking) Wekiva Presbyterian
Church, State Road 434 and Wekiva Springs Road, 8
p.m., closed.
Loagwood AA, 8 pan., closed, Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, State Road 434, Longwood.
Altamonte Springs Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m.,
closed, Altamonte Springs Community Church, State
Road 436 and Hermits Trail.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 8
•
Seminole Alanon, noon, Community Church, Stale
Road 436, Altamonte Springs.
Sanford-Breakfast Rotary Gub, 7 a m , Airport
Restaurant.
Sanford AA Women's Group, 2 p.m., 1201 W, First
St., Sanford.
Seminole Halfway House AA, 8 p.rr., speaker, lak e
Minnie Road, Sanford.

Kirchhoff stood by the decision to
rezone only a portion of the property,
pointing out (hat if you lose control (of
drama gei you're going to have problems
all over.
In other action, commissioners ap­
proved the abandonment of a right-ofway in the Goldenrod area along the
Seminqle-O’ange county line.
The abandonment was approved after
the sheriff's department, which earlier
liad opposed the move because it would
lim it access to ad jacen t property,
dropped its opposition.
The right-of-way, a portion of Seminole
Avenue south of Jessup Street, is
scheduled to be incorporated into a
mobile home park by Palm Ventures Inc.

O n e r e a s o n d e fe n se b u d g e ts a r e c lim b in g s te e p ly
is th e s te e p clim b in th e c o s ts of th e n e w e s t
w e a p o n s . I llu s tra te d a r e s o m e of th e a d d itio n s to
th e U .S . a r s e n a l a lr e a d y in p ro d u c tio n — s u c h a s
t h e M -l ta n k —
o r re q u e s te d in th e a d ­
m i n i s t r a t i o n 's b u d g et p r o p o s a l — su c h a s tw o new
n u c l e a r c a r r i e r s an d t h e IM b o m b e r.
with the Soviets are stalemated, and repealed the view ot
START negotiator Edw ard Rowny, agreement is possible this
year.

82 A u to Sales
W orst S in ce 6 0 s
DETROIT (UPI) —Auto sides in the United States during1982 were the lowest in nearly two decades despite a
December sales surge for domestic automakers and a
record annual share for foreign companies.
Total industry sales compiled Wednesday were 7,958,451,
down 6.5 percent from 1981’s 8,514,956. It was the poorest
combined showing for domestic and foreign producers
since 1963, when only 7.7 million cars were sold.
American automakers sold 5,756,658 vehicles, down 7.2
percent from 1981’s 6,205,856. It marked the worst per­
formance for the U S. auto industry since 1961, when 5.5
million cars were sold.
Import automakers sold 2,201,793 cars in 1982, down 4.7
percent from 2,309,100 in 1981. Rut despite the drop in 1982
sales — due mainly to import restrictions - they captured a
record 27.7 percent of the American market - compared to
old high of 27.1 percent in 1981.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

T holiday, Jan. 8. l»dj—JA

. . . County Commissioners Took Steps To Solve Many 1982 Problems
Continued From Page 1A
The Orlando architectural firm Helman. Hurley, CTiarvat,
Peacock-Architects was hired to design the necessary space in
the hospital building and the ensuing renovation of the court­
house to serve as courtrooms and offices for the circuit and
county courts.
A plan to build an additional office building adjacent to the
courthouse, an administrative center at the county's Five
I oints complex and a new health center in Sanford also was
approved.
The plan is designed to meet the county’s space needs
through the year 2000.
County voters in October approved a $7 million bond issue to
construct four new branch libraries and improve existing
libraries.
The $7 million bond issue will be spent on building new
libraries in Lake Mary, Oviedo, the Wckiva-Forest City area

and the lake Howell-Tuskawilla area plus doubling the size of
the Sanford branch and refurbishing the Casselberry branch.
The county also weathered a scandal in its parks and
recreation division.
Butch Alexander, the county’s manager of facilities, p ark s.
and recreation, resigned. Facility and Parks Coordinator John
Varney was fired and several other division employees
resigned in the wake of a probe into the division's activities.
Varney was arrested on July 19 on charges that he illegally
used county manpower and equipment. He was subsequently
fired from his county post and later was placed on probation
after pleading guilty in Seminole Circuit Court.
Varney’s secretary, Johnnie Butler of Geneva, resigned on
Sept. 8 and later was placed on six months probation and or­
dered to pay $350 in restitution for services she illegally
received from county workers.
Bill Solitro, an air conditioning technician who was involved

in the initial complaint which led to the criminal investigation
of the parks division, was fired on Sept. 7 after he failed to
appear at a personnel hearing.
Solitro allegedly falsified a job application, prompting the
personnel hearing.'
Alexander and Henderson Ferguson, a supervisor in the
division, resigned Nov. 12.
A reorganization of the division is underway now and eight
new workers were approved for the division by county com­
missioners.
Commissioners also got involved in a dispute between
Florida Power &amp; light Co. and Geneva homeowners over
placement of two 500,000-volt power lines in their community.
The homeowners, People Against Power Intrusion, won a
delay in construction of the line when they appeared before a
Cabinet meeting in October.
The Cabinet ordered the group to look for a route west of

Geneva but that plan drew opposition from a group of residents
in that area.
The subsequent debate over the location of the line drew
commissioners into the fray as referees
Eventually, the Cabinet gave FP&amp;I. approval to place the
line through Geneva as originally proposed.
The county reached a tentative agieement with seven
municipalities on double taxation.
After months of negotiations between county officials and
representatives from Sanford, Like Mary, Altamonte Springs.
Casselberry, Lngwood, Winter Springs and Oviedo, it was
determined that city taxpayers are paying for about $2 million
in services for unincorporated areas through the sheriff's road
patrols.
County commissioners have agreed to develop a solution to
the double taxation and have until Jan 15 to respond to the
cities.

Something Nice
For His Mother
CHESAPEAKE, Va. (UPI)
A 12-year-old boy who
wanted to buy “ something
nice"
for his mother
telephoned a bomb threat to a
hospital and threatened to
detonate the device unless his
demand for $5,000 was met,
police say.
Police Detective Kay lewis
said Monday the boy was
arrested at a pay telephone
outside a convenience store in
the midst of negotiations with
a nurse a t Chesapeake
General Hospital.
; ' The child, who later ad­
mitted that he had no bomb,
was not identified because of
his age.
“ I asked him what he was
going to do with the money,”
she said. “ He said he wanted
to buy something nice for his
mom,
a
necklace or
something."
The would-be bomber,
charged with attem pted
extortion, later told police he
was upset about treatment a
relative had received at the
hospital.
The boy was being held In
the T idew ater Detention
Home until a court ap ­
pearance, Ms. taw is said.

-r

legal Notice
NOTICE OF PU BLIC HEARING
TO CONSIOER A
CONDITIONAL USE
Notice is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held by the
Planning &amp; Zoning Commiislon In
the City Commission Room. City
Hall. Santord. Florida at 7 30 P M
on Thursday. Jan TO. IMS to
ronsider a reguetl tor a Con
ditional Use in a MR ?, Multiple
F a m ily Residential Dwelling
District
legal description N 'j of N E 1.
plus W' i ol VACD ST on E Blk 7,
TR 18. Town ol Sanlord PB I. Pg
III
Address ISIS W Slh Street
Conditional Use Requested
Church
All p a rlie s In interest and
cilitens shall have an opportunity
lo be heard at said hearing
By order ol the Planning 8.
Zoning Commission ot the City ol
Sanlord, Florida this 3rd day ol
January, 1981
j q Galloway. Chairman
City ol Sanlord Planning
and Zoning Commission
Publish January 4. 198)
DED JS

IN T H E C IR CU IT COURT FO *
SEM IN O LE COUNTY, FLORIDA
P R 0 B A 5 E DIVISION
File Number: BJ 5*0 CP
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
ARTHUR W G R A FER,
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
•Y O U
ARE.
H EREBY
9 0 T IF IE D
that
the
ad
ministration ol the Estate ol
ARTHUR W. G R A F E R , deceased,
tale ol Seminole County. Florida
has commenced in the captioned
proceeding The address ol the
Personal Representative lilte d
below is co Charles D Wilder.
Esquire. 349* Lee Road. Suite No.
30S. Winter Park, Florida 3371*.
••YOU A R E H E R E B Y NOTE
F IF O At r R EQ U IR ED to tile any
Claims and demands which you
may have against the Estate, any
challenge lothe validity ol the Will
admitted lor probate, or any ob
lection to the qualifications ot the
Personal Representative, venue or
jurisdiction ol the Court. A LL
WITHIN T H R E E 1)1 MONTHS
FROM t h e DATE OF THE
F IR S T PUBLICATION OF THIS
NOTICE WITH THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF SEMINOLE COUNTY
AT POST O F F IC E DRAWER C.
SANFORD. FLORIDA 33771
A LL CLAIM S. DEMANDS. AND
O BJEC TIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
W ILL B E FO R E V E R BA RRED .
First publication ol this Notice it
on the 30th day ol Oectmber, 1*83
s William D Crater
W IL L IA M O. G R A F E R . As
Personal Representative ol the
E sta te
ol
ARTHUR
W.
GRAFER.
Deceased
BROAD AND CASSEL.
Attorneys
lor
Personal
Representative
By: S C H A R LES D W ILDER
C H A R LES D W ILD ER. Esquira
34** Lee Road. Suite No 30S
Winter P ark . Florida 3378*
Phone » S 445 143J
Publish. December X. !»■*•
January 4. 1*8)

p e c -143

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account. Mow we can offer you a transaction account that
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suddenly you’re earning Money Market rates on your
checking funds. All Federally insured up to $100,000.

Plus a hig her weekly rate.
Flagships new Money M arket Plus investment account
earns our highest Money Market rate. Federal regulations limit
the number of checks you may write each month to three, but
you may make as many withdrawals in person as you wish.
A minimum investment of $2500, and an average balance
of $2500 each month are all that’s required.

Plus advantages you won't find
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Both accounts provide full Federal Deposit Insurance
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instant accessibility to your money through your 24-Hour Jack
Automatic Teller. Both come with no minimum withdrawal
amount reauirement. And both offer you all the benefits of
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:

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300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A . 3277J
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
T h u rsd a y . Ja n u a ry 6, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert lovenbury. Advertising and Clrcu'atlon Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, *24.00;
Year, *45.00. By Mail: Week, *1.25; Month, *5.25; 6 Months,
*30.00; Year. *57.00.

Federal Pensioners:
One In 1.4 Million
Jam es W alker, a retired governm ent
economist, has written lo federal budget chief
David A. Stockman, asking that a temporary
freeze lie placed on further cost-of-living in­
creases in federal retirement pensions, including
his own.
He retired from the Department of Labor in
1967, when he was earning $17,000 a year. Now,
thanks to cost-of-living increases, he receives
$29,000 a year m retirement pay. He says it is
more than he deserves and more than he needs.
About 1.4 million government retirees receive
such cost-of-living increases, which are far more
generous than increases given most retired
workers by private industry. Only 3 percent of
workers in private industry are covered by
pension plans indexed to the Consumer Price
Index. And most of these few have cost-of-living
increases capped at 3 percent a year. There is no
cap on federal pensions.
The result is that federal pensioners have seen
their pensions increase far faster in recent years
than the incomes of other retired people or of
people in the working population, whether em­
ployed by the federal government or by private
industry. Inflation has reduced the real earning
power of the average American, but federal
pensioners have been fully protected from its
painful impact.
Until 1976, the government made cost-of-living
adjustments in federal pensions twice a year and
sometimes almost every three months. Now such
adjustments are made only once a year, saving
billions of tax dollars.
Congress in August made another move to
reduce federal pension costs, The annual cost-ofliving adjustment for retirees under the age of 62
will be delayed one month in each of the next three
years. Cost-of-living pension increases to “double
dipper" military retirees who hold federal civil
service jobs were eliminated. Changes added up
to a three-year savings of more than $4 billion.
At a time when the federal budget deficit is
approaching a record $200 billion, every little
billion counts. There have been complaints about
the pension cuts from federal retirees, of course.
Hut we do not believe James Walker is alone
among federal retirees in believing that federal
pension policies have been overly generous in the
past,

Machine Of TheYear
Time m agazine is naming no “Man of the Year”
for 1982 and instead is extending the honor to an
anonymous computer. This is the first time the
editors have deemed that a machine rather than a
human being hud the most impact on the course of
events in the preceding year.
Admirers of certain world leaders will be
disappointed that their favorites were passed
over, but it w as not a year when powerful per­
sonalities m ade their influence felt. Indeed, we
would prefer a computer to som e of the choices in
the past, such as the scowling Ayatollah
Khomeini, who appeared on the Time cover at the
end of 1979.
We have never seen a computer scowl, or
threaten his neighbor. The computers we know
are very even-tempered and reasonable, without
a mean chip in their circuits. There are fears that
a computer might some day start a war, but if
that ever happens, we’re sure it will be an ac­
cident and not an act of aggression.
Unlike some others who have made the cover of
Time, computers are not known to lie or to make
promises they can’t keep. When asked a question;
they get right to the point. No tiresom e speech­
making.
Next thing you know someone will be
nominating a computer for president. Let’s not
rush into this. Computers may remember
everything th ey’re told, but we've yet to heat one
come up with on original idea — or a promise. And
the computers we know have a tendency to panic
in the crunch, like going into a dead faint every
time there’s p power failure. A Man of the Year or
a president ought to have more stamina than that.

BERRY'S WORLD

C’■**«€*

"GOOD NEWS! GOOD NEWS! GOOD NEWS!
I'm getting FED UP with the media!''

It

By VICTOR ASSERSOHN

Sanford police are giving enthusiastic support
to a number of safety pressure groups who are
campaigning for the legal drinking age in
Florida to be raised to 21.
Nearly all of the members of the Florida
Federation of Safety Organizations, a statewide
association of safety experts, recently indicated
their support for raising the drinking age.
One bill already has been introduced in each
chamber of the Florida legislature on the
subject and State Rep. Fran Carlton of Orlando
has support for her bill which she hopes will be
passed in the next session of the Legislature.
"Over 10,000 people between 15 and 24 are
killed nationally in motor vehicle accidents with
52 percent of the 15-19 age group fatalities
reported as alcohol related. It is time to protect

the motoring public • from the inexperienced
driver who also may be under the Influence of
alcohol and-or drugs," said an association
spokesman.
The present legal drinking age in Florida is 19.
About 18 months ago the drinking age was
reduced from 21 years to 18 and then raised to 19.
Teenage tipplers could perhaps be forgiven not
quite knowing what the lawmakers will do next
but any suggestion that they are likely to become
confused by the law was rejected by Sgt. Herb
Shea of the Sanford Police Department.
“ I think the police in general support the
campaign to raise the drinking age to 21. Some
people say that if they are old enough to fight for
their country then they are old enough to drink.
But that bears no correlation," Shea said.

Raising the age limit back to 21 would prevent
high school students from taking booze onto the
campus.
“ We have found an increase in drinking on the
campus. I have seen more alcohol at functions.
You have the 14 or 15-year-old in high school and
the 18- or 19-year-old in high school and it is not
difficult for them to buy booze for the whole
school," Shea said.
It is the under age drinking by the younger
boys associating with the 18 or 19-year -old in
high school which is worrying police officers,
who say that it would be more difficult to enforce
a 21-year age limit than the existing 19-year
limit.
"It is not going to stop it. It will certainly slow
it down,” Shea said.

SCIENCE WORLD

ANTHONY HARRIOAN

I (te lliS * *

Is The
Partvi

Climate
Change

O ver?

Predicted

For years, the concept of an industrial
'policy has been the property of economic
liberals. They have conceived of it in terms of
subsidies and bailouts. At long last, however,
strong supporters of private enterprise
solutions have begun to propose an industrial
policy for the United States.
The concept of an industrial policy Is a
concept whose time has come. Fiscal and
monetary adjustments won’t solve the grave
economic problems which afflict the United
States today.
The most compelling argument for an in­
dustrial policy has been set forth by E.G.
Jefferson, chairman of the Du Pont Company.
His call for such a policy, voiced this fall in a
speech to the Economic Club of Detroit,
should be required reading for members of
Congress. Among other things, Mr. Jefferson
said:
"F or more than 20 years we have heard
much of the idea of the so-called 'post in­
dustrial society.’ The term post industrial has
not served us well because it has been
misinterpreted as teaching that the industrial
underpinnings of our economy could be taken
for granted. Public policies have stressed
consumption at the expense of investment. As
a result, we have invested inadequately in the
modernization and growth of our Industry.
"A strong worldwide competitive position
for all our industry should be a common
objective, not Just of industry and labor, but
also of government and our educational Jnat Buttons. This industrial objective la
essential to our commonwealth, to our
national defense, to achievement of social
goals, and to the adequate support of
education and research, l^ t's embrace this
objective ns we have embraced wartime
objectives or the objective to put a man on the
moon.
"We must come to view our industrial
success as a national success, and look at our
industry and its plants and laboratories as
both national and private assets.
"Can we realistically hope to establish a
disciplined long-range Industrial policy in the
present political environment? We simply
cannot afford to do otherwise. The national
interest must come first. You may ask
whether this is not easier to do in times of
challenge to our national security. I say to you
that is Just what we face."
In his speech, Mr. Jefferson set forth many '
of the details of a business-oriented industrial
policy. These involve taxation, investment,
research, regulation and many other factors.
Each of these elements in an industrial policy
should be discussed in the Congress and
discussed now — all in the framework of an
Industrial policy designed to restore and
expand America's Industrial might.
This restoration and expansion should be a
priority objective for the nation’s leaders.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to toe tailor are welcomed (or
publication. All letters niUil be aigiea, wtdr
■ mailing address and. If pooalMe, a
telephone number so the identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening
Herald will respect the wishes el writer*
who do sot waat their names In print The
Evening Herald also reserves the right to
edit letters to elimlaate libel or to coat
to space reqairments.

TWEEDLEDUM AND TWEEDLEDUMMER

ROBERT WALTERS

Our Industrial Policy
WASHINGTON (NEA&gt; - At President
Reagan’s mid-point ol his first term , he faces
the prospect that his next two years in Ihe
White House will be markedly less rewarding
than his spectacularly successful initial
biennium in office.
P red ictin g the oscillating fortunes of
politicians and the erratic shifts of public
opinion is always a chancy undertaking, but a
■pate ot recent event* suggests that the 1M2
elections represented a crucial watershed for
the president.
Prior to those elections, Reagan was per­
ceived as being virtually Invincible. In the
ensuing weeks, however, he has betuim
vulnerable to criticism from fellow politicians
who not long ago were in awe of his
popularity.
Until very recently, the conventional
wisdom held that the president's political
fortunes were Inextricably linked to the
performance of the nation's economy. A
marked decline In the unemployment rate or
a significant increase In economic growth
rates, It was widely assumed, would surely do
wonders for his sagging popularity.
Now, however, that formulation may be
Inapplicable because Reagan finds himself
confronting a wide array of problems which
transcend economics. His style of governance
Is the object of public derision and he lacks
respect from Republicans and conservatives
as well as Democrats and liberals.
Item : Although the president declared
himself to be unalterably opposed to any form
of Job-creation legislation In the post-election
session of Congress, both the House and
Senate initially approved such measures —
with the concurrence of substantial numbers
of Republicans in both chambers.

the president as susceptible to Deiense
Department budget requests embellished
with m isleading labels and cartoon
characters.
Item : The mini-scandals which have
surfaced with Increasing frequency in recent
weeks have portrayed a number of the
president's appointees as avaricious and
insensitive.
A mem ber of the Interstate Commerce
Commission was quoted as saying that bribes
in the trucking industry are merely
"d isco u n ts” or "reb ates" which “ are
probably one of the clearest instances of the
free m arket at work."
Members of the board of the I^egal Services
Corp. were disclosed to have filed for annual
expense account reimbursement of as much
as *25,000 while working assiduously to deny
subsidized legal assistance to people whose
annual incomes are less than half that
amount.
The president currently is enjoying a
respite from his mounting woes, but his
problems almost certainly will return with a
vengeance in late January when the 98th
Congress convenes and the White House must
submit its proposed federal budget for the
1983-84 fiscal year.
The p resid en t's bipartisan working
majority in the House of Representatives
faded quickly during the 1982 lame-duck
session and his Influence in that chamber will
be further diminished by the forthcoming
shift of 26 seats in that chamber from the
Republicans to the Democrats.
The political lineup will remain unchanged
in the Senate, but 41 of that chamber's 54
Republicans have terms which expire in 1984
or 1986 — and many of Uiem already are
nervous enough to begin placing considerable
distance between themselves and their
party's president.

Item: Although Congress approved much ol
the defense budget sought by Reagan, it
rejected funds for production of the MX
P relim in ary indications suggest th at
missile — by far the most visible and con- trav ersal component of the military hnllH.ip Reagan's forthcoming budget will call for
"further drastic — xml- cw tnrveishdthe White House is seeking.
reductions in domestic social programs
Ite m : Notwithstanding the president's already stripped of much of their funding to
commitment to an increase in the federal tax finance a massive military buildup.
on gasoline to finance needed public works
"The deepest worry," says Time magazine
projects, the proposal was bitterly opposed by * in an especially harsh critique of the
the Senate’s most conservative Republicans. president's tenure to date, "Is that the
Item : Time magazine, a publication not Reagan administration is losing touch with
known for its iconoclastic views, portrayed reality."

By AL ROSS ITER JR.
UPI Science Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The buildup of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere over the
next few decades is expected to produce a
gradual global warming and two researchers
say the United States may be a big loser.
Just what will happen remains in the realm
of speculation, but two atmospheric scientists
say they believe there is no way to avoid a
significant man-made change in the climate
over the next half century or so.
“We consider it unlikely that concerted
world action can be taken that is sufficient to
prevent the carbon dioxide buildup — or even
to delay it by any large number of years,"
said Walter Orr Roberts and Edward J.
Friedman in a report published by the Aspen
Institute for Humanistic Studies.
They said “the vast majority" of climate
researchers believe a continuing buildup of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from ihe
burning ol coal, wood, oil and gas will produce
a "greenhouse effect" in which the at­
mosphere keeps more of Ihe sun’s heat from
radiating back into space, like glass in a
greenhouse.
Roberts, founding director of the National
Center for Atmospheric Research, Bnd Fried­
man, a past visiting scientist at the center,
said carbon dioxide levels probably will
double by the year 2040 to produce an average
global wanning ol perhaps 5 degrees
Fahrenheit.
“The warming will be unevenly distributed
geographically and will be accompanied by
substantial alterations in the distribution of
rainfall," they said.
Roberts and Friedman said science is not
far enough advanced to tell with any certainty
the detailed regional consequences of such a
warming, but they said whatever Is normal
now won't be in a half century, paricularly in
the middle latitudes.
There could be major variations in Ihe
distribution of rain, snow, wind, hurricanes,
monsoon intensity and oth er w eather
elements.
In order to help assess policy impacts,
Roberts and Friedman developed a scenario
for 2040 based on what Is believed to have
occurred during a similar warm period on
Earth about 6,000 years ago.
There will be melting ol polar ice caps, but
— unless the West Antarctic Ice Sheet breaks
up and slides into the sea — Roberts and
Friedman said a resulting sea level rise will
be slow and they did not consider it in their
scenario.
Here’s what might happen:
The wheat belts of the United States and
Canada experience half of the average
precipitation recorded in the 1960-80 period.
The midwestem corn belt would be 35 percent
drier. This might reduce grain production as
much as 35 percent.
Canadian agricultural regions have a
month-longcr growing season, but drought in
the Western grain belt is more frequent and
sustained.
The Soviet Union, except for the far west, is
considerably drier but the Ukraine grain
region has a month-longer growing season.
All latitudes above 55 degrees North average
11 degrees F. warmer.
East Africa and the Sahara have twice »&lt;
much rain but the area is still semi-arid to
arid.
In India, mere reliable monsoons occur
with about 50 percent more* precipitation.
Western Europe has a wetter climate with
longer growing seasons and considerably
milder winters.
South America and Australia have little
changes.

JA C K ANDERSON

Wilson’s CIA Ties A re Misleading
WASHINGTON - A mysterious episode In
the murky career of convicted gun-runner
Edwin Wilson w u jrh a t the staff director of
the House Intelligence Committee chose to
call "The Stansfield Turner Affair."
The label is unfair. The form er CIA director
committed no impropriety; indeed, he didn't
even know he was being linked to Wilson, who
was a fugitive ex-CIA agent at the time.
H ere's what happened:
In early 1971, Adm. Turner was having ■
house built In suburban Washington. As bead
of the CIA, he required a security system for
his new borne.
"The builder gave me the choice of several
security systems," Turner told my associate
Dale Van Alts. He said he chose Honeywell
because an old friend was a top executive of
the company.
Unbeknownst to T u rn e r, a onetime

y

I

associate of Wilson's also worked at
Honeywell, as sales m anager for its
protective services division. One day this
m an got a call from Wilson. He later told the
Intelligence Committee he "was Instructed
by Ed to have someone from Honeywell
contact Stansfield Turner" about an alarm
system for the CIA chiefs home.
The sales manager assumed Wilson w u
acting a t Turner's behest. Like many people,
he thought Wilson w u still working for the
CIA— an impression Wilson cultivates to this
day.
So the former associate asked Gar Wood­
ward, a retired colonel who still works at
Honeywell, "lo contact someone at Turner’s
offlce^one of his liaison people, and arrange
to look at the house. . . and see what U needs,"
Woodward, like Turner, knew nothing of the
Wilson connection.

Wilson's associate told the House com­
mittee behind closed doors that Turner got at
least a 50 percent discount on the security
system, and that it w u alio “paid for out of
petty cash from CIA fundi." Both Woodward
and Turner aay they were unaware of any
discount; both vehemently deny the CIA paid
(or the Job.
In fact, Turner produced the building
contract for his home, which shows an
estimate of $1,800 for a security system u
part of the construction cost. Turner recalled
that when the actual cost turned out to be
*1,960, he paid the additional $150 through an
adjustm ent in the dosing costs. The CIA’s
only involvement w u to see that the system
was connected to CIA headquarters in
Langley, Va.
What rem ains a mystery is how Wilson
knew Turner w u looking for a home-security

system. The most likely conclusion is that
someone In the CIA’s "old boy network"
found out about it from the CIA's office of ,
security, and mentioned it to Wilson.
It would be typical of Wilson to use this
information to nurture the idea that he w u
still a CIA man. He made his fortune through
good connections, and seized every op­
portunity to "legitimize" himself by real or
perceived intimacy with the g reat and the
near-great. Acting u a go-between on Tur­
ner’s home-alarm system would fit the pat­
tern.
•
One thing Is d ear: Turner had no Idea
Wilson had any Involvement with Honeywell.
The two were "like oil and w ater," according
to a knowledgable source. Indeed, Turner's
major housecleaning at the CIA began when
he fired two agents who were moonlighting
for Wilson.

�v/

r
-

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

—

Thursday, Jan. t, lf8J—5A

FLORIDA

Police Use Mace On Knife-Wielding Man

IN BRIEF

Seminole County sheriff’s deputies had to use mace on a man
holding a knife at another person's throat.
Walter Simmon Jr., of 1309 West 7th Street, was arrested at
11 p.m. Wednesday after deputies received a call of a distur­
bance at Simmon’s house. The arrest report states that Sim­
mon was holding a knife on another person saying "he was
going to cut him ."
Deputies told Simmon several times to put the knife down
but he refused “ and he was maced and the knife had to be
taken from him." the report said.
Simmon was charged with aggravated assault, resisting
arrest and disorderly conduct. He was being held in Seminole
County jail today under $5,000 bond.
Deputies said they did not know what prompted the assault.

G as Tax, License Fee Hikes

Recommended To Legislators
TAI.I.AI1ASSEE fUPI) — A high-level advisory
group called for a $533 million band-aid for Florida’s
transportation system Wednesday that includes a $350
million gas tax increase and increased license fees.
The recommendations were presented to the House
Taxation and Finance Committee by the Citizens’ Task
Force on Transportation, a 16-member group ap­
pointed by Gov. Bob Graham, House Speaker I^ee
Moffitt and Senate President Curtis Peterson.
Jake Yam, chairman of the group and a former
Transportation Department secretary, said that at
current gasoline prices the tax hike would cost con­
sumers about 6 cents per gallon more.
He also recommended a 50 percent increase in
license fees for non-trucks, a 100 percent increase for
small trucks and a 200 percent increase for heavy
trucks.

_ Prisoners Being Freed
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — The Parole and Probation
Commission is releasing 1,000 inmates early to keep
the prison system in compliance with a federal court
order prohibiting inmate overcrowding.
Department of Corrections Secretary 1jouie Wainwright told the Senate Judiciary-Criminal Committee
Wednesday he expects to remain in compliance with
U.S. District Judge Charles Scott's mandate for the
next several months because of the parole com­
mission’s cooperation.
But. Wainwright said, the prison system, which
houses nearly 27,000 inmates now. will violate Scott's
order at some point soon unless the state constructs
additional permanent housing.
Wainwright said he will be asking the legislature for
$154 million for prison construction during the 1983-84
fiscal year and $60 million for the following fiscal year.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
New Cardinals Could Give
3rd World More Influence
VATICAN CITY (U jJI)-P ope John Paul IPs choice
of 18 new cardinals, part of a drive to boost the Roman
Catholic Church’s prestige in developing nations, could
add to Third World impact on choosing a future
pointiff.
Of 18 prelates named by the pope Wednesday, six are
from developing nations. The 17 Roman Catholic
prelates and one Maronite patriarch will be elevated to
the rank of cardinal at a special Feb. 2 consistory.
The appointments push to 49 the total number of
cardinals from Africa, l.atin America and Asia—areas
where the church is troubled by poverty and political
unrest but where it is growing at a faster rate than in
developed nations.

Middle East Talks Resume
United Press International
President Reagan ordered chief U.S. Envoy Philip
Habib to return to the Middle East and help speed up
negotiations that resumed today in northern Israel on
the withdrawal of foreign forces from Ubanon.
Israel entered the talks after Prime Minister
Menachem Begin Wednesday spumed an American
compromise proposal to break the deadlock over the
talks' agenda on the issue of normalization of relations
with l.cbanon.

MICE ON THE ROAD
Sharp-eyed deputy Anthony Diaz was driving south along
W'ekiva Springs Road and Smokerise Boulevard just before
midnight Wednesday when his headlights fell on two very
small animals on the roadway. Diaz stopped his patrol car and
approached the objects to discover they were two stuffed mice.
He gingerly lifted the critters up and gave them a ride back to
the sheriffs department where they were turned in as lost
property,
ROBBERY
Jay Thomas Sprey, 20, of Airport Boulevard, Sanford, was
robb«i of $65 after he was hit over the head by a man using an
u..kn. sminstrument-ta-lhp parking Jof of the Five Points bar,
U.S. Highway 17-92 in Sanford at about 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. IfT
was treated at Central Florida Regional Hospital.
ARMED ROBBERY
Timothy Burke, 28, of 1316 U k e Avenue, Sanford, was
robbed of $27 when a woman known to him as "Annette" held
him up with a pistol and then hit him over the head with the
butt end of a pool cue after he had handed over the cash. The
robbery took place in a Sanford rooming house at about
midnight on Tuesday, according to a police report.

Action Reports
★

Fires

it Courts
it Police
CAMERA EQUIPMENT STOLEN
A thief broke into the house of Robert M. Hillier on Jewel
I.ane, Maitland between 6 p.m. on December 30 and 10 p.m. on
Sunday and stole $60 in pennies, a $70 Pentax camera, a wide
angle lens worth $85 and a calculator worth $30.
DUI ARREST
The following person was arrested in Seminole County for
driving under the influenceI-arry Allen Lindgreen, 27, of 3187 Wind Chime Circle,
Apopka, was arrested at 8:35 p.m. on Tuesday at the rear of
the ABC parking lot on State Road 15 and State Road 436. He

was also charged with failing to yield the right-of-way.
FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following fire
alarms Tuesday:
-7 :0 8 p.m , 2580 Ridgewood Avenue, Apartment 119, rescue.
-8:14 p.m., 49th Street. Good Samaritan Home, rescue.
-9:56 p.ni.. 591 lak e Drive, rescue.
-11:09 p.m.. Redding Gardens Apartment 14. rescue.
-1 :3 8 a.m ., 1902' j Sanford Avenue, rescue.
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following
calls:
Wednesday
- 8:05 a.m., Celery and Sanford Avenues, accident, no
injuries.
- 9:16 a.m., Building H, Seminole Community College, car
fire.
- 4:42 p.m., 2521. laurel Avenue, rescue.
- 7:21 p.m., 409 W. 1st Street, Sanford, rescue.
Thursday
- 5:28 a.m., 711 E. 1st Street, rescue.
- 5:35 a.m., 2103 Palmetto Avenue, rescue.

Animal Shelter Site Plan Up For Review
Nine public hearings on zoning Humane Society animal shelter to be in which the board will consider amen­
changes, conditional use requestes, and located on the northeast comer of U.S. ding the restricted commercial zoning
slTe ptaTC.-fortx^-Ji.-iied new building*—HighwayJ7:92 and County Home Hoad. district to permit the " interment of
eremains on church property."
are on tap for the 7:30 p.m. meeting
The society is leasing the property
today of the Sanford Planning and Zoning from Seminole County on a long-term . The Rev I-eroy Soper, rector of HolyCross Eqiscopal Church, has asked for
Commission.
arrangement.
the amendment so that a memorial
The commission will meet in the City
A site plan is also to be considered for a garden can be placed on a small parcel
Commission chambers at Sanford City 9,000-square-foot building for the Sher­
adjacent to the church. The cremated
Hall, 300 N. Park Avc.
win-Williams to be located at 3763 remains of church members would be
The board will consider a site plan for Orlando Drive.
buried there in biodegradable con­
the proposed new Seminole County
Among the eight public hearings is one tainers.

...Impact
Continued From Page 1A
an industry so petitions.
If the county voters ap­
proved the plan for tax relief
to industries, the county
would be authorized to
guarantee those industries
reduced taxes.
Asked whether any state
laws are in the hopper to get
new homes on tax rolls more
quickly, Suber said some
years ago it was suggested
that law be passed calling the
preparation of two separate
tax rolls each year.
He said the cost of
preparing two tax rolls each
year would be exhorbitant
and would require that he hire
man) more employees.
As the law reads now, Suber
said, a new residence which is
not completed until after the
first day of the new year
cannot be taxed at its real
value for more than two years
at times.
He said, as an example, a
$75,000 home which was not
completed until Jan. 3 of this
year, will not be considered
complete to go on the tax rolls
until January 1984. Taxes
would not be levied on the full
value of that house until
November 1984 and the owner
could pay the taxes in March
1985.
Meanwhile, Lake Mary
Mayor Walter Sorenson urged
his colleagues to refrain from
asking
the
Florida
legislature to pass additional
laws to "help us with this
problem or we may lose our
hats."

Insured by die ED.I.C.
Backed by The Best Bank Around.
N o brokerage house can offer you as much.

j z'

r

AREA DEATHS
- MRS. FLORENCE BELLE
HAPP
Mrs. Florence Belle Happ,
91, of 919 E. Second St. in
Sanford died Wednesday at
Lakevlew Nursing C enter.
•Born Feb. 23, 1891, in
Cleveland, Ohio, she moved to
Sanford from there in 1952.
She was a homemaker and
a member of Orlando Bible
-P m -fh____ _______________
Survivors include a son,
Robert L , of Ellenton; and
two grandchildren.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, is in charge of
arrangements.
JACK H. REISER
Jack Harold Reiser, 68, of
391 E. Altamonte Springs
Drive in Altamonte Springs
d ied Monday at F lo rid a
Hospital-Altam onte. Born
Nov. 4, 1914, In Brooklyn,
N.Y., he moved to Altamonte
Springs from long wood in
1960. He was a retired patent
attorney for the U.S. govern­
m ent. He was the founder and
former president of United
States
Trademark
Association.
Survivors Include his wife,
Pauline; four daughters, Mrs.
Eileen Stem Marcus, of Oxon
Hill, Md., Mrs. Linda Boyd, of
Tucson, Ariz., Mrs. Pamela
Berger, of Houston, Texas,
and Mrs. Jamelle Watts, of
Lake Worth; two brothers,
N at, of Oxon Hill, and
Leonard, of Rochester, N.Y.;
And two grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
NATHAN H. WILSON
Nathan H. "Taler" Wilson,

71, of 631 Kendall Way in
Casselberry died Wednesday
at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital Bom March 30,1911,
in Conestee, S.C., he moved to
C asselberry in 1977 from
Norfolk, Va. He wa’s a
production line worker for
Coca Cola and a Baptist.
Survivors Include his wife,
Inez; a sister, Mrs. Jannle
H«ggpns«" of M cGregnr
Minn.; and a brother, DeWitt
Wilson, of Greenville, S.C.
Baldwin-Fairchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
WILLIE JACKSON
Willie Jackson, 69, of
A partm ent 95 Sem inole
G ardens In Sanford died
Tuesday at his residence.
Bom June 9,1913, In Cuthbert,
Ga., and has been a resident
of Sanford for 17 years. He.
was a retired construction
worker and a Methodist.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Annie W. Jackson, of
Sanford, four sons, Kenneth
Jackson, Benjamin Jackson,
Jessie James Jackson and
Bobby Lee Jackson, of San­
ford; four daughters, Sarah
R ichardson, of Colum bus,
Ga., Willie Pearl Jackson,
Edna Jackson and Hattie M.
Boston, all of Sanford; one
brother, Tally Jackson, of
Bainbridge, Ga.; one sister,
Mrs. Lottie W alton, of
Richland. G a.; 22 g ra n d ­
children and 12 g r e a t­
grandchildren..
W ila o n -E lc h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge of
funeral arrangements.

CLETUSV. BASHOR
Cletus V. Bashor, 78, of
Geneva died Wednesday at
Florida Hospltal-Orlando.
Born April 2, 1904, In
Lawrenceburg, Tenn., he was
a winter resident of Geneva
for 16 years and is from
Pioneer, Ohio. He was a
member of the Independent
Baptist Church in Pioneer.
IwrOtsH#
gjfe.
Martha; four daughters, Mrs.
Christine (Norman) Bowers,
of Greenville, S.C., Mrs. Ruth
(R ichard) S hankster, of
Camden, Mich., Jane Julian,
of LaGrange, Md., Mrs. Rosa
May (William) Chamberlain,
of Pioneer; a son, Amos
Bashor, of Pioneer; two
sisters, Mrs. Vlrgle Rio, of
Beaumont, Calif., and Mrs.
Ruby (A shley) Sutton, of
Alvordton, Ohio; one brother,
William Bashor, of Modesto,
Calif.; 38 grandchildren and
23 great grandchildren.
Gramkow-Gaines Funeral
Home, Sanford, la in charge of
local arrangements. Funeral
services and burial will be In
Pioneer.

Funwrol Notlcwt
JACKSON, M B. W IL U B Funeral m t v Ic m lor Mr. Willi*
Jackson, it . of Apartment IS
Samlnol* Gardens, who died
Tuesday, will b* held at 1 p.m.
Saturday
at
M t.
Sinai
Missionary Baptist Church, ISO
Jtrry A y*., Sanford, with !h*
Ray. L .R . Myars. pastor, in
charge. Calling hours for frltnds
will bt held from noon until f
p.m Friday at tht Chapa).
Burial to follow In Rastlawn
Camatary, Sanford Wilson
Elcholbargar M ortuary In
charge.

Introducing
1
•
i ) ?
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Panthers Pummel
Lake Mary, 62-52
By CHRIS FISTER

Heraldsportswriter
For the first quarter of the Croomstak e Mary game Wednesday night at
Seminole
Community
College,
everything went the Panthers’ way.
Crooms built a 32-13 first-quarter lead
and coach John McNamara’s squad may
have been counting its 10th straight
victory this season a little too early.
The freshman Rams cut the deficit to
11 points, 40-29, at halftime and late in the
third quarter the Rams pulled to within
two points. But the Panthers woke up in
time to preserve a 62-52 victory, the 43rd
— straight win far Crooms*-teams.— *
Robert Hill canned 18 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds to pave the way for
the Panthers. Alvin Jones added 12 points
and 11 boards, Mike Wright had 12 points
and seven rebounds and Daryl Williams
netted 12 points and dished out 12 assists.
Raymond Hartsficld led the Rams with
19 points while Allen Reid and Byron
Washington added 14 apiece.

Tribe M at Victory

Prep B ask etb all

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Seminole High's wrestlers luned up for
Friday’s three-way match with U k e
Brantley and Boone by knocking off West
Orange, 34-27, Wednesday at Seminole
High.

________________________________
R was the second time this season the
Panthers have built huge leads against
the Rams only to have U k e Mary rally In
the second half. The freshman Rams
could not come all the way back, though,
as the Panthers’ lead was cut to two at
one point in the third quarter but Crooms
built it back to eight points, 50-12, by the
lime the third period ended.
Crooms scaled the victory by outscoring U ke Mary, 12-10, in the fourth
quarter.
Crooms hosts Osceola next Monday
and Lake Howell Wednesday, both at
Seminole High.

The victory was the second straight for
Scott Sherman’s matmen and improved
their dual m eet to 2*3. Friday night, the
'Noles travel to Orlando for a three-way
match with Boone and Lake Brantley.
Sherm an pointed to senior G ary
Gonterman’s performance at 170 pounds
as making the difference Wednesday
night. "G ary’s been wrestling hurt
(shoulder Injury), so he's not 100 percent
but he really turned in a gutty per­
formance,” said Sherman.

CROOMS (82)
Hill 18, Jones 12, Wright 12, Williams
12, Brinson 6, Franklin 2.

Gonterman was trailing Chris Smith, 54, going Into the final period. He escaped
to draw even and Ihen took Smith down in
the last 30 seconds to post a 7-5 victory.
Gonterman’s win gave Sanford what
proved to be an Insurmountable 28-15
lead.
Senior Jam es Morgan (188) put the
match on ice when he whipped Jam es
Brooks on a disqualification. Morgan
trailed Brooks, 54, in the third period
when Brooks received his fourth penalty
point for stalling.
In earlier matches, Mike G ark (108)
broke open a tight match with Shawn
Mackey in the third period for a 17-8
decision. Senior Ronnie Watson (115)
remained unbeaten in dual meets with a
lopsided 15-3 victory over Mark
McDermid and sophomore Tony Brown
scored an impressive 15-7 win over Tom
Williams at 129 pounds.
“Tony really whipped up on that guy
(Williams)," said Sherman. "And he was
one of their best wrestlers. Tony would
have pinned him but he had his hand
under his shoulder and couldn't get it
out."

LAKE MARY (52)
’ Hartsficld 19, Reid 14, Washington 14,
Newby 5.

Raiders Throttle South Georgia
Sanford's Cathy Jones and Mindy
Patrick combined for 39 points and
Seminole Community College received a
much needed lift from Its reserves as the
Lady Raiders throttled South Georgia,
88-67, at the University of Central Florida
Wednesday night.
Jones and Patrick pul together solid
games for the second straight outing.
Jones, an all-conference forward for the
U dy Seminoles last year, tossed in 10 of
18 field goals and 1 of 3 free throws for 21
points. She had six rebounds too.
Patrick, who prepped at Lake Bran­
tley, dropped In 9 of 11 shots for 18 points
and handed out four assists. Katrina
Andersson tallied 16 points and added
four boards.

"Syberina Melton, Evelyn Smith and
Missy McClelland gave us a big lift in the
first half," said SCC coach Sol Batoon.
"Defensively, they did an outstanding
job after we fell behind."
At that juncture, Batoon inserted
former Seminole High performer Melton,
Smith and M cClelland. The trio
spearheaded a Raider press which
whittled the South Georgia lead to one
point, 38-37, at halftime. ‘
In the second half, SCC turned it on,
outscoring the U d y Blazers, 51-29, in the
final 20 minutes.
The Raiders, 5-6, host Bluefield (W.
Va.) State, a 9749 loser to the University
of Central Florida Wednesday, Friday
night at 7.

Hoffman, Garrfques Lead Lake Brantley
Paul Hoffman poured in 31 points and
Mike Garrlques hit some clutch free
throws down the stretch to lead Lake
Brantley to a W-75 victory over Lake
Howell Wednesday night at Lake Howell
and snap a six-game losing streak for the
Patriots.
I j k e Brantley, 4-6 and 2-2 in the Five
Star Conference, built a 21-10 lead after
one quarter but Lake Howell, utilizing a
full-court press, outscored the Patriots,
28-17 In the second quarter and the first
half ended in a 38-38 deadlock.
The Silver Hawks, 0-10 and losers of 33
straight, stayed within two points going

into the (ourth quarter. The lull-court
pressure took its toll on U ke Howell,
(though), as they were whistled for 31,
touts In the game, the most crucial touts'
coming in the decisive fourth quarter.
Garriqucs boosted the Patriots by
hitting six of sevn free throws in the final
period. Hoffman connected on 15 of 24
free throws for the night as U k e
Brantley shot 30 of 47 from the charity
stripe.
Hoffman also led the Patriots un­
derneath with 10 rebounds. Eric Trombo
added 14 points fo r the Patriots,
Garriqucs canned 12.

Herald Photo by Bonnlo Wiebeldt

A lv in J o n e s , C ro o m s c e n te r , h a s a n u n e x p e c te d g u e s t in L a k e
M a r y ’s R a y m o n d H a r ts f ic ld d u r in g W e d n e s d a y n ig h t's f r e s h m a n
b a s k e tb a ll g a m e . J o n e s o u tm a n u e v e r e d H a rts fic ld fo r th e b a s k e t
a n d th e P a n th e r s w h ip p e d th e H a m s , 62-52. It w as C r o o in s 10th
s t r a i g h t v ic to ry th is y e a r a n d 43rd in s u c c e s s io n o v e r th e p a s t th r e e
y e a rs.

Reynolds Will Announce
Ram Football Coach Soon
The list of candidates for the head football
coaching job at U k e Mary High has been
narrowed to two, according to principal Don
Reynolds. Although he wouldn't name the
candidates, Reynolds said a decision would be
made next week.
The turn of events at U ke Mary Is In the
aftermath of a 1-9 season In the Ram s' first
year of varsity football competition. A few
weeks later, coach Roq Bealhard resigned.
Sam Weir, former coach at the University of
Central Florida, was considered the leading
candidate but Weir withdrew his application
on December 15.
Speaking of coaches, DeLand Bulldogs'
head coach Don Stowers was fired by Princlpal Jam es O. Cements after Stowers
re jected a proposiTto‘resign.
In a story in Wednesday's Daytona Beach
Morning Journal, Stowers said he was fired
for "exposing things that were going on that
were wrong." The story reported that school
Superintendent Ray Dunne is conducting an
investigation after reports of "illegal gam­
bling and other misconduct at DeLand High
School."
Stowers has had 11 winning seasons In 14
years as a coach in Florida. Only In the last
two seasons did Stowers and the Bulldogs
have a losing record. DeLand was 3-7 this past
season.
Turning to basketball, Seminole County is a
hotbed for girls teams this season. The U d y
Silver Hawks of U ke Howell stand 11-1,
unbeaten In Five Star Conference play, and
should crack the 4A state poll with a top 10
position.
U k e Mary’e U d y Rams, 6-2, received
honorable mention In the last 3A state poll.
The Ram s a re unbeaten in 3A competition.
O ther Sem inole County re c o rd s a re :
Seminole, 7-1, Lyman, 4-2, Oviedo, H and
U k e Brantley Is 4-7.
R ecent notable preform ances Include
Oviedo's Tanya Roland who poured In 41
points and was named MVP ai the New Port
Richey Gulf Holiday Tournament. Roland's
team m ate, Fayetta Robinson, collected 31
points In the U d y Lions' first gam e of the
tourney.
At U k e Howell, the Lady Hawks are led by
the all-around talents of MO forward-center
Chlqulta MUler. Miller tossed in 31 points

Veteran Vince G ark (141) snapped a 33 deadlock in the third period with an
escape and a takedown to record a 6-3
Victory over Jeff Holley, Vince Williams
(158), back to the varsity after a twomatch stint with the junior varsity, used
a double-leg takedown to pin David
Holley in 1:08. Senior Kevin Tapscott
(135)’ decisioned Ernmitt Rhodes, 12-5,
for the other Tribe victory.
In other action Wednesdays Oviedo
swamped U esburg, 49-18.
101 — W. McDermid (WO) p.
Ferguson, 2:42;
108 - M. G ark (S) d. Mackey, 17-8;
115 — Watson (S) d. M. McDermid 153;

Ihm l/aM
HARDWARE STORES

Prep W restling
122 — Wiggins (WO) p. Graham 1:08
129 — Brown (S id . Williams 15-7;
135 — Tapscott (S) d. Rhodes 12-5;
141 - V G ark (S) d. J. Holley 6-3;
148 — Bacon (WO) d. Turner 7-5;
158 - Williams (Si p. D. Holley 1:08;
170 — Gonterman (Si d. Smith 7-5;
188 — Morgan (S) won by dq. Brook*
(WO) Wilkes 1:11;
Ul, — Harp (WO) p. Zimmers :52.

-TonightBasketball
7: M pm Hgmb«r (Toronto, Canada) at

*cc
The Raider* were hit by the ln|ury bog
thetirsf hall of the season but should get
bacK on the winning trach tonight atler
dropping it* lait game to Florida College
on Tociday ,
SCC. 71. is still without 4 10 center
Rudy Kulper and Kevin Jerry Smith,
Starting guard* are Keith Whitney and
Rjcky Sutton. Luis Phelps is tilling In at
center and Bernard MeTthle and Oelvin
Everett are the forwards. SCC coach Bill
Payne say* Kuiper and Smith should be
ready to play next Wednesday when the
Raiders travel to play 11th ranked
(nationally! Lake City. but. “ Don’t bank
on tt."
1 p.m. Spruce Creek at Seminole girls
The Lady Seminoles. 1 4, look to raise
their 4 2 Five Star Conference record
against the Lady Hawks ot Spruce Creek
The Tribe I* also hoping they will have a
better night shooting than Monday night
against DeLand. Seminole beat DeLand,
44 34, but shot only 37 percent (IS ot SS)
Irom the floor.
The Lady Seminoles can usually bank
on sophomore guard Mona Benton who
cashed in (or 7B points Monday night
Benton averages 70 9 points per game
while * I center Diedre Hillery is a
dominant factor underneath the boards
Hillery averages 117 rebounds per
outing.
Benton and Hillery are (oined In the
starling lineup by lunior guard Arlene
Jones, lunior forward guard Maxine
Campbell and 4 0 Ireshman forward
Patricia Campbell Sharon Jenkins and
Gcnene Stallworth have contributed oil
the bench as ot late
Soccer

Soccer
4 p.m. BlihopMoor#at Stmlnolt
Seminole, t S. Is coming oil a stunning
upset ol Lyman Tuesday night and would
like nothing belter than to upset Bishop
Moore who is usually considered a state
powerhouse
Ricky Nooney led the Tribe past and
strong play also comes Irom Paul Griffin,
Brian Nulty, Robert lannone and Juan
Falcon.

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Tuesday in the Hawks 94-57 waltz over Bishop
Moore. She was named Burger King Player of
the Week for her performance.
Seminole’s standout sophomore Mona
Benton burned the nets for 17 fourth-quarter
points Monday night and wound up with 28
DeLand.
U ke Mary came out a little cold after the
Giristmas break but managed to squeeze out
a 32-31 victory over Lyman Tuesday night on
the strength of Laura Glass' IS points.
Sharpshooting Kim Averill swished a jumper
late in the game to lift the Rams over the
U dy Greyhounds.
In a losing cause Monday night, U k e
Brantley's Rhonda Vasquez had one of the
best all-around performances of the year.
Vasquez poured In 25 points, pulled down 13
rebounds and handed out five assists In the
U dy Patriots 84-54 loss to U k e Howell.
And basketballs haven't been the only
things flying around U ke Mary’s gymnasium
lately.
A swarm of pesty (lies have set up cam p in
the home of the Rams to all the swatting you
tee going on isn't a Kung-Fu lesson although
some people may be using martial arts to
ward off the flies.
U k e Mary coach Willie Richardson said
the flies probably were attracted to the gym
when a game of donkey-basketball was
played th e re recently. P rin cip al Don
Reynolds says they could be coming from a
couple of dumpsters behind the building.
One onlooker at the U k e Mary-Ttinlty
Prep game Tuesday night, who chose to
remain nameless, said he didn't care where
the flies cam e from, but suggested a way to
get rid of them. Regretfully, however, his
method of disposing of the insects can't be
printed In a family newspaper.

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500 6. M A P L E A V E . S A N F O R D

�4'
S'

I

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

S c o re c a rd
Jai-Alai

IRE'sSpotcash
0 40
Q (I t) 120.40 P (I t) 114.20; T (IS I) 1,517.40
Sixth race — »«. B : 10.04

AtOrlindo-StminoU
Wednudny night re iu lll
First gam*
ICabiola Oyarl
II JO 5 60 U 10
5Mtkr* Yi a
a so u .io
1 Cara i Weyes
s . jo
Q ( l- ll ll.aOt T (1-5-3) 3JM0
Second game
JGabiola Aguirre 1010 6 to 3 10
IL e ja i Oyarl
a jo 7.10
6 U r it * r Y is
j to
d n i) » w i p &lt; n i it.**,- j uM l 111.00; DD 11 1) t l 70
Third gam*
4Garay Coiri
1 20 5 00 3 00
SNegulFarah
6 00 5 00
IGobioia Elorta
2 00
0 (4-51 11.10; P (1 A II) * so, P
(All )) M 10; T ba 1141) 114 00
Fourth game
3 Le |a iA rc a
15 40 10 60 340
^Garay Farah
7.20 a 40
INegul Reyes
no
0 11 1) SI 20; P 11 1) t ll.lO i T ()•
F I ) 711.00
Filth gam*
IGorostoia
Aguirre
9.00 5 00 3,20
ABiibao Javier
6 *0 3 so
SManoloReyes
—
O I I S)IO IO. P ( I S) 164.54; T II1-4} IS* *0
Sialhgame
SGabiola Goiri
12 40 1 00 a 10
I Ricardo Aguirre
6 00 5 20
3 Bilbao Reyes
a.20
Q (1-1) 17.10; P 15-1) 111,10; T IIM ) 111 00
Seventh gam*
s u rlie r
13 00 7 10 3 SO
SZarre
25.40 aio
aRlcarda
2S0
Q ( I S) 91.00; P IS S ) SIS. 10; T IS
S-4) 571 10
Eighth gam*
7 Charoia Javier 7.40 3 10 2 40
aSolaunOyari
s 10 5 00
JG a rayZ a rre
3 00
Q M-7) 11.20; P (7-4) 41.10; T (7S I) 111 SO
Ninth game
S Garay Zubi
17 10 14 10 20 00
7 Charoia Aguirre
5 10 4 40
2PitaCarea
lio o
0 ( S-7) 90.10; P (6-All) 11.90; P
(All 7) 10.10; T (6-7-1) 999.00
10th gam*
SCharola
ISO 5 20 4 00
IG a lla
10 40 4 40
IManolo
4 00
Q (I S) 11.20; P ( S l l 15.20; T IS
S I) 117.40
11th gam*
JU riia r Oyarl
10 40 I K
4 10
7 Charoia Y ia
3 40 2 10
2Goros1ola Eloria
3 40
Q (1-7) 15.H ; P (1 7) 90.90; T (S
71) 191.40
lllhgam *
4Gaiia Zubi
17.20 14.00 3 10
J U rlw r Carea
3 20 3 40
7 Durango Kid Y ia
4 00
Q 0-4) IS 40; P 14-3) 101.90; T 141-7) 711.SO
A - 1,101; Handle 112,079

I K'sCelebration 10 60 4 40 3 40
4 Mrs Jug
9.40 4 60
1 Big Bubba Smith
2 00
a (4 0) 41.60 P IS 4) * 100 ; T 10 4I) 11410
Seventh ra c e —5-14, A : 11.54
5 Solar
24.20 10.20 4 00
1 Double Dive
7.20 10 60
0 Quote
17 60
Q (1-51 54.40 P (1-1) 11) 00; T IS
1-0) 1,404.40
Eighth r a c e - H .C : 19.14
20ughtadoit
13.60 6 60 2 00
6 Bitter Blend
5 00 3 40
OJeJe Scott
2.20
Q (1-4) 75.(0 P (2-6) 71.10; T (1-4(I 415.40
Ninth ra c e —5-14, B; 11.51
6D J.LuSkey
17.40 16 40 34.20
5 Sand Blanket
5 40 3 00
7 ML Beau
2 60
Q (5-4) 56.40 P (4 5) 274.10; T IS
17) 510.00
10thrace— &gt;*, 0 10.9*
3 LCSW hirlwind 62 40 9 00 9.40
ICount River
4 00 3 10
7 Prince Whll
9 40
0(1-1) 40.10 P ( S I ) 01.40; T (1-37) 2.1)7 (0
lllh race — M. A; 10.62
2 Jean Scott
9.0 0 5.40 2 00
1 DJ Glidin On
5.60 4 00
3 E L. Carl
110
0(1-1) 11.40 P (2-1) 11.90 T (1-1)) 177.20; Pick Six (O-Sl-Sl-1) lo l
* winners 21.SO "lackpot" carry
ever 4,374
U lh ra c e —5-16,D: 11.71
OGooch
660 4.20 340
1 Burk Burnett
1.70 5 00
4 Finaltex
5 00
0(1-0) 11.40 P ( S I ) 17.40; T It s
4) 10)40
U lh ra ce — *», C: 19.24
3 Jane Hobby
9 60 5 40 210
2 Domestically
6 40 2 00
1White Oak Jenny
2 60
Q (1-11 51.00 P ( S I ) 11.00; T (111) 110.00.
A - 2,19); Handle 5215,109.

14 17 452 *V»
Atlanta
Indiana
12 20 .375 9
Chicago
11 20 355 9Vy
Cleveland
4 27 .129 16 'i
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pet. GB
Kan City
19 11 633
V»
San Anton
22 13 479 —
Denver
15 19 .441 6'Y
Dallas
13 It
419 7
Utah
13 22 .371 9
Houston
4 77 .129 16
Pacific Division
Los Ang
25 7 701
Seattle
23 10 697 2’ i
Phoenix
21 13 610 5
Portland
21 14 600 S’ j
Golden St.
13 20 394 12V&gt;
San Diego
7 26 212 l i ' r
Wednesday's Results
Phlla 122. LOS Ang 120. Ot
Detroit 130. Cleveland 116
Dallas 136, San Antonio 111
Kansas City 130, Denver 110
San Diego 172, Utah 115, ot
Indiana 100, Seattle 104
Today's Games
(A ll Times EST)
Atlanta at New York. 7 30
p m.
Phoenix at New Jersey. 7:35
Pm
Los Angeles at Cleveland,
9:10 p.m.
Houston at San Diego, 10:30
p.m.
Portland at Golden State,
10: JO p m
Friday's Games
Phila at Washington
Dallas at Atlanta
Phoenix at Indiana
New Jersey at Chicago
Detroit al Milwaukee
Boston al San Antonio
Utah at Kansas City
Houston at Denver

No. Carolina 06. Rutgers 69
Old Dominion 61, Western
Kentucky $9
Richmond 53, Stetson S2
So Carolina St 92. Xavier 53
Salem 90, Gienvitle 79
Salem 1)1, Shenandoah (Va ) 56
50 Florida 66, Columbia 54
51 Leo 95, McKendree 78 IDT)
Southern Tech ( 3 , 1nd Central 68
W Va Wesleyan 49, Charleston

H ockey
Wednesday's Results
Toronto 4, N J, 4, tie
Bllo 3, NY Rangers 3, tie
Washington 5. Detroit 7
St. Louis 3, Minn 3. tie
Boston 4, Chicago 1
Edmonton 0, Winnipeg 3

B a sk e tb a ll

44

South
Auburn 91, Alabama 00
Clark (3, Augusta 79
Ft. Valley 60. Ga. Southwestern
59
Kentucky 52, Louisiana St. SO
Liberty Baptist 59, Fla Southern
57
Louisiana Tech 70, Centenary 59
Louisville 79, Kentucky Wes
leyan SO
Mississippi 77, Vanderbilt 62

ARE YOU

Wagner 64, Duke 77
Midwest
Baldwin'Wallace *3, Tittin 83
Bowling Green 71. Ball St 69
Capitol 81, Ashland 66
Central M ichigan 79, E .
Michigan SI
Clarkson 93, E Alabama St. 91,
lot
Defiance 7], Indiana Tech 64
Franklin 66, Indiana Southeast
59

Thursday, Jan. *, l»»J—7A

NOW! 500 Extra Parking Spaces

Huron 66. Sioux Falls Coll. 51
John Carroll 59. Wilmington 58
Kenyon 69. Marietta 65
Miami (Ohio) 60, Kent St. 54
Michigan St. 61. Iowa 59
Minn Duluth 103, Wis Superior

66

D e a ls
Wednesday
Baseball
Cincinnati — Traded outfielder
Mike Vail to San Francisco lor
pitcher Rich Gale
Montreal — Hired Mel Wright as
bullpen coach.
New York (A L) — Named Gene
McHale president and David
Weidler adm inistrative vice
president and treasurer.
Toronto — Outfielder Barry
Bonnell agreed to a three year
contract.

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Soccer
High School
T R IN IT Y P R E P 7, FA TH ER
LOPEZ 0
Father Lopei
*-«
4-7
Trinity Prep
Goals —
McClellan, assist
U rlcchio ; K atan ich , assist by
Flynn; Katanich. assist Urlcchio;
Katanich, assist C u rbarru bla;
M cClellan, assist Valbuena;
Cubarrubia, assist Flynn; Moore,
assist Matthews. Shots on goal —
Father Lopei 6, Trinity Prep 24.
Saves — Falher Lopei II. Trinity
Prep 6 Corner kicks — Father
Lopei 2, Trinity Prep 12. Records
— Falher Lopei 3 3, Trinity Prep
5-1.
LA K E HOW ELL 4, S E A B R E E Z E
I
« 1-1
Seabreeit
S 1-4
Lake Howell
Goals — Seabreeie: Vanree,
Nelson; Lake Howell: Schnitker,
Serlno. Anders (7), Morrlsey (2).
Records — Lake Howell 5 4.
L A K E B R A N T L E Y 1. SPRUCE
C REEK)
1 1 -)
Lake Brantley
1 *-t
Spruce Creek
Goals —
La ke Brentley;
Maghadam, F risia n . Shots on goal
— Lake Brantley 19. Spruce Creek
It. Saves — Lake Brantley I .
Spruce Creek 10. Corner kicks —
Lake Brantley 6, Spruce Creek 3.

Dog Racing
At Sanford.Orlando
Wednesday night results
First race — S14. C: 11.44
1 Regal Reply
4 40 4 40 2 40
a.Viklng Shop
5 10 4 20
SOG’sZipon
5 00
0(1-4) 11.10 P (1-4) 19.40; T (1-41) 4)1.10
Second race — »%. D ; 11.95
IWrlght Daily Dill 4 40 5.IO 3 20
3 Patti Pepper
5.40 1.10
1 Mill Volatile
170
• Q(&gt; *) 14.66 PC4-II 47.46; T(»-»* 1)
DO
(1-1)
1140
Third race — S IS , 11.14
[IM a ie i'sK Id
5 40 1 40 2 40
lH A 'sA llan
1 *0 2 40
SFieidtex
3 00
Q (1-1) 11.40 P (1-1) 14.40; T (M I ) 171.40
Fourth race — S IS , M: 11.01
4 HandClasp
15 00 9 00 1.20
7 floca Grande
4 40 3 *0
5 Allen's Princess
3 *0
Q (4-7) 91.60 P (4-71 201.40; T (47-5) *10.40
F illh ra c t —l- lt .D i 11.04
1 Manatee
Needles
17.40 9 *0 14 60
IW C
73.00 16.60

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Thursday, Jan. t, 1fl3

Haley’s Comet Showers Ocala With Victories
Editor** n o li: In |uit l l y i i r i . Ocalo Vtnguird
basketball coach Jim H ilcy hot bulinho top }A
program In tha tlato. Ho hot won ltd garnet
and loot |utt It. included ara throo itole
champlonthlpo In the pact tlva ysars. Along
with Iho vlctorlei, Hatty find* time to run one
ot the top holiday lournimenti In th« South and
taka* hit pllyort on on oul ol itole trip ooch
year.

Jim Haley, Ocala Vanguard bas­
ketball coach, relaxes between
games at the Kingdom or the Sun
Holiday Classic.

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
While the majority of us will have to
wait until 1906 for another coming of
Halley’s Comet, a transplanted nor­
th e rn e r named Jim Haley began
showering Ocala with basketball vic­
tories as early as 1973.
Haley, 39, has put together a 3A cage
program at Ocala Vanguard High School
In just 10 years which could serve as a
model for beginning coaches throughout
the nation.
The Vanguard program is a mirror of
its builder. It was built on opportunity,
hard work, long hours and basketball
fundamentals. The program grew its
roots at the third, fourth and fifth grade
levels which Is, Incidentally, where
Haley began his coaching career.
After a less-than-glamorous prep and
junior college career at Joliet (111.)
Catholic High School and Joliet Junior
College, Haley went on to graduate from

Northern Illinois University (DeKalb,
HI.) in 1967.
‘T ve been a substitute all my life,”
recalls Haley about his prep and JC
playing days. “ I wasn’t a starter on an
all-star, but I was always around the
game. I was one of those gym rats. They
had to throw me out of the gym. 1 guess
that's why 1 ended up being a coach.”
But while others subs sit on the bench
and daydream, Haley was always Into
the game — even if it was just mentally.
He was watching, learning and thinking.
He knew someday he wanted to sit at the
right end of the bench and call the shots.
The path, however, wasn’t easy. He
started just about as low as you can go.
‘‘I came up the tough route," he said. ” 1
began as a fifth grade basketball coach
and stayed In the grade schools for five
years."
Wasted time? "Not In the least,"
corrected Haley. "I think it makes you a
better coach if you start at the lower
levels, you have to be patient and Leach
fundamentals. Thai's where the learning
of basketball begins.
. “If you look at most of the coaches on
the college level now, you’ll see that most
of them started on the high school or
grade school level and moved up to

Prep B a sk e tb a ll
(college) assistants, then became head
coaches,"
Haley started to make his move In 1972.
He took the Junior varsity job at East
Aurora (HI.) High School under the
legendary E rnie K ivlsto. A cham ­
pionship junior varsity season was all
Haley needed — plus a good selling job —
to land him the Vanguard position.
South Alabama coach Cliff Ellis gave a
coaching clinic in Joliet which Haley
attended. It would be a meeting which
would change the course of his life.
Ellis took a job with Cumberland.
Tenn. Junior College and called Haley to
advise him of the vacancy at Vanguard
High where he had previously coached.
Ellis told him he could him an Interview,
but the rest was up to him.
"I liked the Central Florida area,"
Haley remembers. "And I wanted to get
a coaching Job near Orlando. "For­
tunately for me the principal (now
Marlon County Superintendent of Schools
H. Leon Rogers) was raised In Kentucky
and was a big basketball fan.
"I did a good job of selling myself In the
Interview and Mr. Rogers took a big
gamble by hiring me, but I guess it paid

off." Haley added.
That could be the understatement of
the year. Haley’s first year team wfcnt 1116 (four losses by one point, three losses
by two points and three losses by three
points).
"W ith the success w e’ve had,
everybody’s forgotten that first year,"
said Haley. "But I haven’t. We weren’t
very good, but we did lose 10 games by a
total of 19 points."
The following y ear, however,
Vanguard put Haley’s first 20-victory
season on the board. It wouldn't be the
last. After winning 17 the next year, the
Knights reeled off 20-win seasons in 197576 and 1976-77.
Despite the success, though, something
was missing — a state championship.
"We were winning 20 games every
year, but we weren't getting to the state
tournament," said Haley. “ In order to
put this program on the map, we had to
get to the state tournament."
He didn’t have to wait much longer.
The following year, the Knights had a
powerhouse team . Led by seniors
Ingram Purvis and Victor Wingo along
with Juniors Zebedee Howell and Kenny
Vaughns, Vanguard • captured its first
state championship in 1977-76.
The sniff of Lakeland was contagious.
.

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McCoy's Thrashes Federal;
Joe's Variety Trips Atlantic

V

Von Eric Small poured In 24 points as McCoy's
Gcancrs unleashed a potent offensive attack en route
to a 59-4 trouncing of First Federal in Sanford
Recreation Department Junior League basketball
action.
Mike Burke added 17 points and Melvin Brinson
netted 16 for McCoy's, who built a 30-2 halftime lead.
In other action, Joe’s Variety rallied to a 26-16 lead
after three quarters and held on to win 33-30 despite a
gallant comeback attempt by Atlantic Bank.
Willie McGoud led Joe’s Variety with 18 points and
Mike Merthie added nine. Carl Eastcrday and Mike
Newsome had 10 points apiece for Atlantic Bank.

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No Momentum For Falcons
United Press International
The Atlanta Falcons were outscored In their final two
games of the regular season, failing to build the
momentum Coach Leeman Bennett would have liked
entering the playoffs.
“We were em barrassed In our last two games (a 30-7
low to Green Bay and a 35-6 defeat at the hands ot New
Orleans) and tl remains to see how we wiU respond,"
Bennett said of Sunday's NFC matchup against the
Minnesota Vikings.
Both teams finished at 5-4, but the Vikings have won
three of their last four games.
In other games, Detroit will be at Washington and St.
Louis at Green Bay In NFC competition Saturday and
Geveland at the ta s Angeles Raiders and New
England at Miami in AFC play the same day.
In addition to Sunday's game in Minneapolis, the
schedule has the New York Jets at Cincinnati and San
Diego at Pittsburgh in the AFC and Tampa Bay at
Dallas in the NFC.

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FILM Scotty*

Toney's Shot Topples Lakers
*

United Press International
The Los Angeles ta k e rs and Philadelphia 76era seem
ready to set a date in late spring with the winner to
emerge wearing the ring.
“There's no doubt there was a lot of intensity," said
Los Angeles' Coach Pat Riley after the Tilers, using
Andrew Toney's 28 points and driving layup with five
seconds to play In overtime, defeated the takers, 122120, Wednesday night.
The Lakers, whose sevefrgame winning streak was
snapped and fell to Philadelphia for the second time
this season, played without Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
who was suffering from migraine headaches.
Toney, who scored Philadelphia's first two baskets of
the overtime, held the ball on the 76ers' last possession
• before driving to the basket and arching a soft layup
high off the glass over James Worthy. Los Angeles'
Jamaal Wilkes, who had 36 points, missed a 3-point
shot from the com er as time expired.
Los Angeles had a chance to win the gam e In
regulation, but Magic Johnson who finished with 23
points, 20 assists and 12 rebounds, missed a layup st
the buzzer after Wilkes misfired on a 20-footer from the
baseline. The score was tied, 112-112.___
A basket by Maurice Cheeks and a thundering dunk
by Erving gave Philadelphia a 120-116 lead with &gt;7
seconds left In overtime but Michael Cooper and
Johnson hit field goals to enable the ta k e rs to draw
even once again.
In other games, Detroit downed Geveland, 130-116,
Dallas outgunned San Antonio, 138-131, Kansas Gly
defeated Denver, 138-118, San Diego stopped Utah, IB115, in overtime, and Indiana surprised Seattle, 108-104.

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UGHT BULBS

It took only 18 seconds before Chicago Coach Orvsl
Tessler knew his team was in trouble.
"When a team like Boston scores in the drat II
seconds of the game, you've got a raoblem," said
Tessler of the first of Rick Middleton's three goals that
propelled the Bruins to a 4-1 triumph Wednesday night
over the Black Hawks.

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t 3. poposrt your antry at th. Scotty's store
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« Iho Scotty's 15.000 Dolt-Youtstlfor's Orosm
, winner will bo selected m a rendom drswing bom
, *1 monos rtconod on ot betart Jtnuory 31. 1953
Ort w ry will bo supervised by so independent
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tm phytts. sthhmos. tubsidimiet tdrerbsing end
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Bruins Blitz Black Hawks

The Intra-County Basketball Association (IC8A) tips
off its Inaugural season this weekend with games at
take Howell High, Oviedo High and Seminole Com­
munity College.
Four games are scheduled at take Howell Saturday
with the opening game beginning at 9 ami. There will
be five games s t Oviedo starting at 1:39 p m. on Sun­
day. A preliminary game will be playad Saturday night
at 6:19 at SCC which will precede SCCa game with SL
John's River CC.
•
The league has three divisions, varsity (Hh
graders), junior varsity (6th and 7th graders) and girls
(6th through 8th grades).

(F rid a y: Halty ..p la in t how th» Kingdom ol
Iho Sun Holiday Clastic txgin and what It!
luluro hold*.I

CONCRETE MIX

IN BRIEF

ICBA Tips O ff Season

Four of the past five years, Ocala
Vanguard has been to the 1 inal Four at
the Gvic Center. Two of the years - 197879 and 1981-82 - the Knights have
brought home the biggest trophy in the
state.
Can Haley continue the championship
formula?
"The key is the grade school program
(The Roadrunners)," Haley said. “If we
can keep developing the players on the
grade school level, we can keep the
tradition going."
There is no grade school basketball
program in Marion County, so all the
organization has been orchestrated by
Haley and his four assistants — Tim
Markham, Jeff Piersall, Ron McMillin
and Wayne Allen.
After three state titles in five years,
what else can a coach ask?
“ It has been a little unreal,” said
Haley. "Of course when I came here, I
didn’t expect to have an Ingram Purvis,
a Kenny Vaughans and a Zebedee Howell
in the fifth and sixth grades.
"But we're real happy with the
program, we Just hope we can keep that
stature going." he added.

r v rJ b c .Ttjrfi r.C tU c;

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* w v i m v v w w r * »* * ♦
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A A f
jp g p *

* NAME

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PEO PLE
Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Boraw
skiT ONIGHTS

Shelly A.

TV

TH U R SD A Y

Weds K,R. Fletcher

2:10

■

EVENINO

Shelly Ann Borawski and Kevin Richard Fletcher were
married Dec. 31 at the Sanford home of Michael Thrift. Notary
public Gail Hobbs performed the 8:30 p.m. double ring
ceremony. The bride’s wedding ring is a family heirloom
handed down from her maternal grandmother.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Bonnie L. Olvera, lake
Mary. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George P.
Fletcher, 223 Meadowhill Drive, Sanford.
Carrying an arrangement of multi-colored roses, the bride
chose for her vows a white street-length dress fashioned with a
scooped neckline and a ruffled hemline.
Attending the bride were Sandi Smith of Sanford, and Kelly
Wood, Winter Park.
Michael Thrift served the bridegroom a s best man. Michael
Hobbs was the groomsman.

MU. AND MRS. KEVIN R. FLETCHER

Following the ceremony, a reception was held in the Thrift
home.
The bridegroom is an airman first class in the U S. Air
Force, stationed at Keesler AFB, Biloxi, Miss, where the
newlyweds will make their home. The bride is employed by
Walt Disney World.

in your column from children,
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secretaries, etc., so I thought
you might find this prayer
also worth sharing with your
readers. I don't know who
wrote it. Maybe one of your
readers will.
EL1JE IN ILLINOIS
DEAR ELLIE: It Is:
CALORIE COUNTER'S
PRAYER
The Lord Is my shepherd 1
shall not want.
He maketh me Be down and
do pusb-ups.
lie giveth me Hollywood
bread.
He restoreth my waistline.
He leadeth me past the
refrigerator for mine own
sake.
He maketh me to partake of
the green beans Instead of the
potatoes.
He leadeth me past the
plzierii.
Yea, though I walk through
the bakery,
I shall not falter, for thou
art with me;
Thy Tab and Fresca, they
romlort me.
Thou preparest a diet for
me In the preaence of mine
enemies.
Thou anolntest my lettuce
with low-cal oil.
My cup will not overflow.
Surely Ry Krisp and DZerta shall follow me all the
days of my life,
And I will live with pains of
hunger forever.
AMEN
DEAR ABBY: Several of us
are going in on a gift. There
are six of us altogether — two
m arried couples and two
singles. The m arried couples
think the cost of the gift
should be divided four ways.
The singles think 11 should be
divided six ways. Which is the
fairest way?
ONE OF THE SIX

Q GD ( ! i O £ i O new s
i l l (15) CHARLIE'S ANOELS
CD (10) EARTH, SEA AND SKY

6:05
H ) (IT) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6:30
Q IT NBC NEWS
i'J) o CBS NEWS
O ABC NEWS Q
fD (10) EARTH. SEA AND SKY

6:35
(IX (ITJBOBNEWHART

7:00
0 ® THE MUPPETS
1 } I O P M MAQAZINE
□D O JOKER'S WILD
11 (15) THE JEFFERSONS

If this isn’t agreeable to all
concerned, perhaps the single
ones should go together on n
gift, and the married couples
go together on another.
DEAR ABBY: This is in
response to "Letting it
Grow," the lady who stopped
shaving her legs and armpits
because, as she pul it, "If
bearded men cun be accepted
by society, why should women
have to be slaves to a razor?"
I happen to be a man who
Ukea his ladies "natural" —
som ething I became ac­
customed to while stationed in
Germany.
Since it is not considered
acceptable in today’s society
(in the U.S.), you can un­
derstand how difficult it is to
find a lady who lets her hair
grow where nature intended it
to be.
Although 1 can't speak for
other men, I have had ladies
stop seeing me because I’ve
asked them to stop shaving.
So, "Letting It Grow," stick
to your principles because
there are men out there who
think hairy women are sexy.
Here’s looking for you!
HAIR HUNTER IN BUF­
FALO

O

10:00

10:30
OX (35) IN 8EARCH OF...

11:00

J

® ® O CDO N PW S
(15) SOAP

5:40

12 (17) THE MUNSTERS

4:05
4:30
II (35) SCOOBY POO

4:35 ‘
11(17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5:00
0
4 UVERNE t SHIRLEY A
COMPANY
1 o THREE S COMPANY
I
ALL IN THE FAMILY
II (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

o

1:05
11 (17) MOVIE

6:00
15 O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
7 O SUNRISE
It (35) JIM BAKKER
12 (17) NEWS

6:30
O ® EARLY TOOAY
} □ CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
&lt;7 a ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

1:30

5:05

1 O AS THE WORLD TURNS
CD 110) THIS OLD HOUSE

(17) THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30

2:00

0 4 PEOPLE'S COURT
1 Q M 'A ’ S ’ H
7 O N EW S
CD(10) POSTSCRIPTS

0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
CD (&lt;0| MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

2:30

5:35

(4) o CAPITOL

&lt;B (17)BEW1TCH£0

6:45

7 QNEWS
CD (10) A M WEATHER

7:00

ANNUAL

7:05

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

7:15
CD (10) A M WEATHER
7:30
III (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
CD &lt;tO) SESAME ST R E ET g

7:35

SALE!

I I (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00

I I (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

SAVE 20% t. 5 0 %

0:05
&gt;11 (17) MY THREE SONS

on
★ Blouses ★ Skirts
★ Sweaters ★ Pantsuits
&gt;★ Dresses ★ Shoes
★ Coats ★ Jackets
★ Handbags

B:30
ill (15) GREAT SPACE COASTER
CD(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35

(Q (17) THAT GIRL

0:00

C l 04i RICHARD SIMMONS
V a DONAHUE
, FI O MOVIE
(| \i (15) LEAVE rT TO BEAVER
CD 110) SESAME STREET g

9:05
© (17) MOVIE

9:30

O ® SO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
III (M) FAMILY AFFAIR

10:00

1/

Q 14) THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
IJ l O MARY TYLER MOORE
II (IS)ANOY GRIFFITH
CD(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

J)
&amp;

u No Exchange
No Rtfundi
All Sal«t Final

JIB-220 E. FIRST ST.
SANFORD

10:30
Q (r SALE OF THE CENTURY
1} O CHILD’S P U Y
l|l (15) DORIS DAY
CD (10) POWERHOUSE

PH. 322-3524
k ftft

11:00
O ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE

'TaihtonrTalnlci box &amp;xaati\se People!
COUPONS
VELIO
THRU.

11:05

ax (1T) ALL IN THE FAMILY

11:30
®

12:30

0 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
T O ALLMYCHILOREN
li (15) MOVIE
fD (10) FLORIDA HOME QROWN

13 (17) WORLD AT U R G E

(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

o

12:05

1:00

4 NSC NEWS OVERNIGHT

JO20/20

I (IS) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) WORLD SP EC IA L
"Lamped Ol Bair The lile and
work ol Balinese ertlit I Gusli Nyomen Lempad. who died In t978 at
the age o il 16. Is profiled.

4:00

0
4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
(S o HOUR MAGAZINE
&gt; Q MERY GRIFFIN
11 (35) TOM AND JERRY
CD(10) SESAME STREET g

j NEWS
} a THE YOUNG AND THE
RFSTI f SS
7 O RYAN’S HOPE

02 (17) FUNTIME

O G D HILL STREET BLUES Furillo
reluctantly hires a lawyer to protect
himself in an Investigation Into
pones corruption, and HIMand Renko become undercover waltera. (R)
(® O KNOTS LANDING Gary and
Abby. angry over the handling ol
Ci|i s career, make plans to dump
Kenny

E l 4 SOAP WORLD
1 O CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
&gt; ONEW S
II (35) BIO VALLEY
fD (10) EVENINO AT POPS

q

discussion ot storage techniques,
lighting and climate control

9:30

1J (17)THEFLINTST0NES

1J (17) PEOPLE NOW

FRIDAY

CD(10)THISOLDHOUSE Bob Vila
visits a prototype wine cellar tor a

Q 3 ) CHEERS A seiy, highpowered TV commercial agent
makes Sam an otter he can t refuse
0
Q
IT TAKES TWO Sam
accompanies Molly to a law con­
vention In New York
0 :5 0
0 2 (IT) NEWS

3:30
ill
(35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
fD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

AFTERNOON

4:40
© (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

0 4 TODAY
5 OMORNINONEWS
7 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
II (15) NEWS
£D (10) TO LIFE!

I

SATURDAY,

TONIGHT Hosl Johnny

Carson
(X) O MORE REAL PEOPLE
0 O ABC NEWS NtGHTUNE
© (15) MADAMES PLACE

Uw one you hove, boon waiting fori
Our annual fal and winter clearance.
Starts Friday, January 7th.

4:30
0 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

5:30

0:00

12 (17) FUNTIME

II (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
(D (10) POSTSCRIPTS

3:35

GD O MOVIE "I'm The Girl He
Wants To Kilt" (1974) Julie Sortimars. Tony Selby

O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I TIC T AC DOUQH
J FAMILY FEUO
T t (15) BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) UNTAMED WORLD

Q ® GIMME A BREAK The Chiet
hat to donate one ol his kidneys to
save his brother's lile
( J ) O SIMON B SIMON
( D O TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT
0T) (15) GUNSMOKE
CD (10) MYSTERY Quiet As A
Nun" Jemima finds the missing stu­
dent at the end ol the lower's tun­
nel. but the figure ol the black nun
catches up with them (Part 1) cp’

3:05

4 HITMAN

12:00

4:15

MORNING

8:30

11:30

3:30

7:30

O ® fa m e
( j ) O MAGNUM. PI. A wealthy
practical Joker leaves Magnum hit
entire fortune much to the chagrin
Ot hit money-hungry reiatlont
( D O THE GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO Ralph and Pim 'i wedding
day It ditrupted when the President
aendt Ralph on a secret mission to
the North Pole
X (15) THE ROCKFORD FILES
D (10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
□abler and JeMrey Lyons make
their choices lor the worst movies
Of 1987

1] (17) PERRY MASON

0 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

aX (IT) OOMER PYLE

S

DEAR ONE: Married
couples arc usually con­
sidered “ one," so in my
opinion, the cost should be
divided four ways.

Q ® ROMANCE THEATRE
(D O MOVIE
Honeymoon
(1947) Shirley Tempte, Franchot
Tone

7:05

8:00

4 FANTASY
5 O QUIOINO LIGHT
I O GENERAL HOSPITAL
II (35) CASPER
CD (10) THE UWMAKER3

CD( 10) OVER EASY

0

3:00

REPORT

I X (IT) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawkivt Ne* York Knlcka

Dear
Abby

88!

CD110) PORTRAITS IN PASTELS
3:00

5 O the PRICE IS RIOHT
' O LOVE BOAT (R)

11:05

2:30

) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH

CD HO) MACNEIL / LEHRER

7:35

A Prayer For Calorie Counters
DEAR ABBY: Over the
years you've had "prayers"

6:00

12 (17) MOVIE "A Boy Ten Feel
Tall" |1965l Edward G Robinson.
Fergus McCWIand

SALE
STARTS
THURSDAY

JA N . I, 19131

SANFORD-2994 ORLANDO DR.
ZAVBI PLAZA AT AIRPORT BLV0.

11:35
ax (ID MOVIE "His Kind Of Wom­

fTHESELOWPRICESYllll WITHCOUPONSONLYL

an” (1051) Robert Mitchum. Jane

12:00
( D O QUINCY

o THE LAST WORD

ax
(33i)) STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO
12:30
0 ® U T E NIGHT WITH DAVIO
LETTER MAN Gueit: comedian Jay
Lano.

1:00

ryr Q MOVIE
Bliion Do*ar
Brain” (10S7I Mrchati Cain#. Francone Dorteac

-

ir

u »IV'

•M V
■ &lt; rv

1:10
CD Q

MCCLOUD A female «er-.
toft m command of the pre­
cinct when Sgl. Broadnurti is kid­
napped (R)

Oe

h

rffi*

•$*&lt;-

1:30
0 ® N O C NEWS OVERNIGHT

l

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vim

QIMM

----- Sefl end lu.urieu. in
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----- I te l yd length..
----I 6 9 --------- U e e ta lH
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DRESSES-SEPARATES-SPORTSWEAR
COCKTAIL DRESSES

w

. £

F e o fu rin q

F a s h io n s J u s l F o r Y o u

200 NORTH P A R K A V E N U E - PHONE 3 2 2 -2U 1

S A N F O R D . FLO RID A

.O U p O R T E

*

IIUCLETERRY

1 8 *** m p m

I SPECIAL BABOAIN BACK 1 '

WlaJuf-fcAthsAb

O '**' 9* 1&gt;4 *»*•*«

PvrrNeted Freni
YU HP A ll!

A LL S A L II FIN A L - NO REFUNDS-NO IXCH ANOES

U i I T T I RAM !

DRAPERIES
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41.14"........
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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.________ llturiday, Jan.4. 1**3

legal Notice

Legal Notice

j

Notice is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will beheld by the
Planning A Zoning Commission in
the City Commission Room, City
Hall. Sanford, Florida at 7-30 P M.
on Thursday, Jan. TO, D U to
consider a request lor a Con

Single

F am ily Residential Dwelling
District.
Legaldescrlplion: E 100 It of S’ i
of Lot 7, G C. Keeleys ADD To
Sanford. P B 3, Pg 44
Address: 114 W. 14th Street
C o n d llio n il Use Requested:
Church Anne*
All p a rlie s In Interest end
citUene shall have an opportunity
to be heard it said hearing.
By order of Ih# Planning A
Zoning Commission of the City ol
Santord, Florida this 4lh day ot
January, 1**3
J Q Galloway, Chairmen
City of Sanford Planning
and Zoning Commission
Publlsn January A IMS
D EO 74

mailed are required, W ITHIN
T H R E E MONTHS FROM TH E
DATE OF THE FIR ST P U B LIC A
TION OF THIS N O TICE, to til*
any objections they may have that
challenge the validity ot ’ the
decedent's will, the qualifications
of tha personal representative, or
the xenue ui jurisdiction of the
court.
A LL CLAIMS, DEMANOS, AND
O BJECTION S NOT SO F IL E D
W ILL BE FO R E V E R B A R R EO .
Date ol lha lirtl publication of
this Notice ol Admin ill rat ion
January 4, INS.
Martha P. Slade
A i Personal Representative
of tha Estate of
Frederick E. Slade
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FO R P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
Charles K. Meiner
74 Wall Street
Orlande, Florida 32*01
Telephone: (301) *43 1774
Publish: January 4,13, l* U
D E O 71

vs.
ROBERT J. W ILLA R O , JR. and
GLORIA W ILLA R O , hlS wilt,
ELDON L. WARD. HIGH VALU E
INVESTMENT CORPORATION.
INC , KATHRYN M. G A Y L E , and
L IO N E L
H.
S IL B E R M A N .
Trustee.
Defendants
C LER K 'S N O TIC E OP SA LE
Notice is g iven that pursuant to a
tinal judgment dated January 4,
lfU , in Cate No. 12 1143XA Of K of
the Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Judicial Circu it In end for
Seminole County. F lo rid a . In
which
F IR S T
F A M IL Y
F E D E R A L SAVINGS ANO LOAN
ASSOCIATION it the Plaintiff end
ROBERT J. W ILLA R D , JR. end
GLORIA W ILLA R D , hit wlte,
ELDON L. WARD. HIGH VALU E
INVESTMENT CORPORATION,
INC., KATHRYN M. G A LE end
L IO N E L
H,
S IL B E R M A N ,
Trustee, ere the Defendants, I will
seiMoththlglyeil and bail bidder
tor cash at tha W eil troni door of
the Seminole County Courthouse in
Santord,
Sem inole
County,
Florida, at II a.m. on January 31,
1913 tha following described
properly set forth In the order of
tinel judgment:
Lot f. B lock G . Columbus
Harbor, at recorded in Plat Book
IB. Paget 31 and 3f, Public
R ic o rd i ot Sem inele Counly,
Florida.
Dated: 14 *3
ARTHUR H. B EC K W ITH , JR.
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Carrie E . Buetmer
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Jan. 4. 13. I*U
DEO 30

Legal Notice

* 13— Help Wanted

FICTITIOUS NAME

Legal Notice

IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE E IG H TEEN TH JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
County Court
County Court
Seminole County, Florida
■ SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLO RID A
Orange County, Florida
CASE NO. 13 134SXC-1M
Case No. It 30)0 SP 01
Cate No CO *7 3771
PATRICIA DAVIS, individually,
Florida
Rock
Industries,
Inc
,
d
b
Oesco Shoe Corporation, a cor
and l u b o H A M ILTO N IN
a
KISSam
Division.
Plain
1
.lt
poration, P taint Iff
SURANCE COMPANY,
vs
vt.
•
Plamtilfs,
Urban Expansion, tnc
The Bootery and Dancers Market,
vs
County Court
Inc . a corporation. Defendant
N E L L IE LOCKHART,
Orange County, Florida
Circuit Court
Defendant.
CaseNo. COI1 4131
Orange County, Florida
NOTICEOF ACTION
Alpha Electric Supply Company
Cate No 013**75
TO N E L L IE LO CKH A RT
Justin Boot Company, a Division etc . P taint ill
702 East Broadway
or Subsidiary of Justin Industries, i vs
Oviedo. Florida
Urban Expansion Corporation, *1
Inc . a corporation. Plaintiff
Last Known Address
al.
Defendant
vs
YOU ARE N O T IFIE D that a
County
Court
The Bootery and Dancers Market,
Statement ol Claim has been tiled
Semmolo
County,
Florida
Inc., a corporation. Defendant
against you and you are required
Cate No 17 10JI SP 0]
NOTICE OF S H E R IF F ’S SALE
to serve a copy of your written
Construction
Fasteners
Group
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
delenses, if any. to FR A N KLIN T.
Inc., • corporation a subsidiary of
that by virtue of those certain
W A LD EN .
E S Q U IR E ,
ot
Allied Products Corporation,
Writs of Execution, as Styled
M ASSEY, A LP ER 8. WALOEN.
corporation. Plaint if t
above, and more particularly that
P A .,
3SS
E a st
Semoran
vs
certain Writ of Execution issued
Boulevard, Altamonte Springs,
Urban Expansion Corporation,
out o! and under the seal ot the
Florida, 32701, Plaintiffs' attorney,
corporation. Defendant
Circuit Court of Orange County,
on or before February I , t**3 and
NOTICEOF SH ER IFF'S
Florida upon a ll.-sl ludgment
tile the original with the Clerk ol
SALE
rendered in the aforesaid court on
the County Court, either before
NOTICE IS H ER EBY G IV EN
the 2nd day of November, A.D.
that by vlrute ot those certain service on Plaintiffs' attorney or
1)17. in that certain case entitled,
Writs of Execution, as styled Immediately thereafter, other
Justin Boot Company, etc.,
above, and more particularly that wise a ludgment may be entered
Plaintiff, vs The Boolery and
certain Writ ot Execution issued against you lo r the relief
Dancers Market, Inc., Defendant,
out ol and under the seal of the demanded In the Statement ol
which aforesaid Writ of Execution
County Court ol Seminole County, Claim
was delivered to me as Sheriff of
WITNESS my hand and official
Florida upon a linal ludgment
Seminole County, Florida, and I
seal ol this Court on this the 3rd
rendered
in
the
aforesaid
court
on
have levied upon the following
day ot January, 1)13
the )th day ol September, A D
described property owned by The
(COURT SEA L)
19(7. ih that certain case entitled.
Boolery and OancersMarket, Inc.,
ARTHUR H B EC K W ITH , JR .
Construction Fasteners Group,
said property being located in
As Clerk ol said Court
Inc , etc., Plaintilf, vs Urban
Seminole County, Florida, more Expansion Corporation, a cor
By: Eve Crabtree
W .'tV jfa r’i ocsU'ttr-f as ' oH : jv«.
C le r k ----poration. " Defendant, which
Inventory and Equipment ol the
aforesaid Writ of Execution was Publish: Jan. 4. 13. 70. 27, 1983
Defendant, The Bootery and
delivered to me as Sherlll ol D ED 3I
Dancers Market, Inc., including Seminole County, Florida, and I
but not limited to the following:
have levied upon the following IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
One Sweda Cash Regisler
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
described properly owned by
One Moore Invoice Writer
PROBATE DIVISION
Urban Expansion Corporation,
One 7 drawer file cabinet
said properly being located in File Number 11-111-CP
70 Sections Industrial Steel Seminole County, Florida, more
Division
•
Shelving
IN R E : ESTATE OF
particularly described as follows
Approxim ately 77 Western
THOMAS FULTON WILSON
Sections 6 A 7. Township 71S.
Shirts
Deceased
Range 79E Lots 7, 44, 90. 10) ana
Approximately 97 Miscellaneous 110. Wekiva Cove. Phase One,
AM ENDED
Dance Outlits
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
Sections 6 A 7 Township 71 South.
Approximately 27TI Pairs Shoes Ranqe 7) East. Seminole County.
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
Approximately 4S3 Hats
CLAIM S
OR
DEMA'NDS
Florida according to the plat
Approximately 79 T Shirts
AGAINST THE ABO VE ES TA TE
thereof as recorded in Plat Book
Approximately 340 Tampa Bay 23. Pages 88. 8) A 90 of the Public
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
Buc T Shirts
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
Records ot Seminole County.
Approxim ately 2)0 Footwear Florida,
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
Outfits
N O T IFIE D
that
the
ad
and
Approximately 2574 Leotards,
ministration ol the estate of
One 1)78 Jeep CJ 7, White in
Leg Warmers and Tights
Thomas Fulton Wilson, deceased,
Color, ID No JIF)3EH031I57,
and other assorted property to be being stored at Foster’s Auto
File Number It Sit C P . is pending
sold in a &gt;ot Complete Inventory Clinic. Longwood. Florida
in the Circuit Court for Seminole
available from the Civil Division ol and the undersigned as Sheriff ot
County, Florida, Probate Division,
the Seminole County Sheriff’s Seminole County, Florida, w ill at
the address of which is Seminole
Department.
County Courthouse, N. Park
It 00 A M on the 14th Day of
and the undersigned as Sherlll ol January A O , 1)13. oiler lor sale
Avenue, Santord, Florida. 33771
Seminole County, Florida, will and sell to the highest bidder, FOR
The personal representative of
at It 00 a m . on the 2lsi day of CASH, subied to any and all
the estate Is Barbara A. Wilson,
January a d , l* U , otter for sale existing liens, at the Front (West)
whose address is 7)4 Wilson
and sell to the highest bidder, FOR Door, at the steps, ol the Seminole
Avenue. Oviedo, Florida 37745.
CASH, sublect to any and all County Courthouse in Sanford,
The name and address of the
existing liens, at the Front (West) F lo rid a , the above described
personal representative’s attorney
Door, at the steps, ot the Seminole personal A Real property
■art set lorth below
County Courthouse in Sanford,
All persons having claims or
That said sale is being made to
Flo rid a , the above described satisfy the terms ot said Writ ot demands against the estate are
personal property.
required. W IT H IN
TH REE
Execution
Thai said sate Is being made to
MONTHS FROM TH E DATE OF
John E Polk. Sherlll
satisly the terms of said Writ of
THE FIRST PUBLICATIO N OF
Seminole County, Florida
Execution
THIS NOTICE, to file with the
Publish Dec 73. 30. IW3, Jan 4.
John. E Polk, Sher HI
clerk ol the above court a written
13, with the sale on Januasy 14,
Seminole County, Florida
statement ol any claim or demand
1)83
they may have Each claim must
Publish: December 30, ))I2 . DEC 90
January ». 13. 30, 1913
be inwriting and must Indicate the
DEC 141
basis for the claim, the name and
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT FOR
addressol the creditor or his agent
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR SEM IN O LE COUNTY, FLO R ID A
or attorney, and the amount
SEM INOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA PRO BATE DIVISION
claimed II the claim Is not yet
File Number 13 i l l CP
PRO BATE DIVISION
due, the date when ILw ill become
IN R E . ES TA TE OF
due shall be stated tl the claim Is
Fit* Number ll-Mt-CP
F R E D E R IC K E. SLADE
contingent or unliquidated, the
Division
Deceased
nature of the uncertainty shall be
IN H I : E S T A T E OF
NOTICE
OF
ADMINISTRATION
DORIS M S T E ID L E V
stated If the claim it secured, the
TO A LL PERSONS HAVING
Deceased
security shall be described The
C
LA
IM
S
OR
DEM
ANDS
A
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
claimant lhall deliver sufficient
The administration ot the estate GAINST THE ABOVE E S T A T E
copies ol the claim to the clerk to
AND
A
L
L
OTHER
PERSONS
IN
ot D O R IS M
S T E ID L E Y ,
enable the clerk to mail one copy
deceased. F ile Number 87SSS CP. T E R E S T E D IN THE E S T A T E ’ to each personal representative
YOU
A
R
E
H
E
R
E
B
Y
is pending In the Circuit Court lor
All persons Interested in the
that
the
ad
S EM IN O LE- County, Florida, N O T IF IE D
estate to whom a copy ol this
m
inistration
ot
the
estate
ol
Probate Division, the address of
Noticed Administration has been
which is P O. DRAW ER C. F rederlck E Slade, deceased. File
mailed are required. WITHIN
Number
17
147
CP,
is
pending
in
SANFORD, F L 32771. The names
TH R EE MONTHS FROM THE
the
Circuit
Court
lor
Seminole
and addresses ot the personal
D A TE
OF
THE
F IR S T
County,
Florida,
Probate
Division,
representative and the personal
PU BLIC A TIO N
OF
THIS
the
address
ot
which
Is
Seminole
representative's attorney are set
NOTICE, to tile any obiectlons
County
Courthouse.
Santord,
they may have that challenges the
lorth below
All Interested persons are Flo rid a 33771. The personal
validity ot the decendent’s w ill, the
representative
ot
the
estate
is
required to tile with this court,
qualifications ol the personal
Martha
P.
Slade,
whose
address
is
WITHIN T H R E E MONTHS OF
representative, or the venue or
lurisdictlon ol the court.
THE F IR S T PUBLICATION OF 139 Sheridan Way. Longwood,
THIS N O TIC E: 111 all claims Florida 377SO. The name and
A LL CLAIMS. DEMANDS, AND
ol
the
personal OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
agtinsl the estate and (II any address
objection by an Interested person representative's attorney are set W ILL BE F O R E V E R BARREO
to whom notice was mailed that forth below.
Dale ol the first publication ol
All persons having claims or this Notice ot Administration
challenges the validity ol the will,
the qualifications ot the personal demands against the estate are January 4, 19*3,
TH REE
representative,
venue,
or required. W ITHIN
Barbara A. Wilson
MONTHS FROM THE D A TE OF
lurisdictlon ol the court.
As Personal Representative
TH E FIR S T PUBLICATION OF
A LL
C LA IM S
AND OB
of the Estate ol
JECTIQ N S NOT SO F IL E D W ILL TH IS NOTICE, to tile with the
Thomas Fulton Wilson
clerk of the above court a written
Deceased
BE F O R E V E R BA RRED .
Publication of Ihis Notice has statement ot any claim or demand ATTORNEY FOR PERSON AL
they may have. Each claim must R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
begun on January 4, 1f(3.
be In writing and must Indlcalethe JAMES T G OLDEN, ESQUIRE
Personal Representative:
THOMAS C. S T E ID L E Y , JR . bails tor the claim, the name and Post Office Box 7702
address oft ha creditor or his agent Sanford. Florida 32771
7*1 ARAPOMO T R A IL ,
or attorney, and I he amount Telephone (70S) 3331000
M AITLAN D, F L 377SI
claimed. If the claim l i not yet Publish: Jan. 4. 13. lfU
Attorney lor Personal
due. the date when It will become OED 74
Representative:
due shall be staled. It the claim is
W ILLIA M B PR IN G LE
contingent or unliquidated, the
55 MOSS L A N E ,
IN THE C IR C U IT COURT OF
nature of the uncertainty shall be
W INTER P A R K , F L 7771)
THE E IG H T E E N T H JU D ICIAL
stated.
If
the
claim
Is
secured,
the
Telephone: 70S4710434
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FOR
security shell be described. The
Publish: Jan 4, 13, 19(3
•
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
claimant shall deliver sufficient
CASE NO. n tlU-CA-«f-K
OED 7)
copies of the claim to tha clerk to F IR S T F A M IL Y
FED ERA L
enable the clerk to moll one copy
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
to each personal representative.
ASSO CIA TIO N , * corporation
All persons Interfiled in the organ lied under the taws ot tha
NOTICE O F P U B L IC HEARINO
eitate to whom a copy of this
United Slates ot America,
________ IO &lt; ' " l l B U J L
HulicTOFAdm ^ H fa llan t.w In u i
PTiThliff
CONDITIONAL USE

3T1tcraf Use In 3 S R I *

Legal Notice
NOTICE TO T H E P U BLIC :
Notice is hereby given that the
Board ot Adlustmenl of the City of
Santord w ill hoid a regular
meeting on Jan 7*. 1)83 in the City
Halt at 11:30 A M In order to
consider a request tor a variance
in the Zoning Ordinance at It
pertains to' rear yard setback
requirements in PUD joned
district in Lot 12. Blk H, Hidden
Lake. Unit t.
Being
more
specifically
described as located at 314 Loch
Low Drive.
Planned use ot the property:
Florida room
Publish: January It . 18, 1)83
OED 2)

FIC TITIO U SN A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at It I N
Laurel Ave Sanford Seminole
County, Florida under the tic
tilious name ot T U C K ER S FARM
&amp; GARDEN C E N T E R , and that I
intend to register said name witn
Clerk ol the C ircu it Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions of the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section 845 0) Florida Statutes
1957
Signature
Cecil A Tucker, It
Publish Jan 6 . 13, TO, 77, 1983
OED 27

NOTICE
OF
A
P U B LIC
HEARINO TO CONSIDER THE
ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE
BY TH E C IT Y OF SANFORD.
FLORIDA.
Notice is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be held at the
Commission Room in the City Hall
In the City of Santord. Florida, at
7 00 o'clock P M. on January to.
1)13. to consider the adoption of an
ordinance by the City of Santord,
Florida, as follows:
O RDINANCE NO. 1470
AN O RD IN AN CEO F THE CITY
OF SANFORD, FLO RID A . TO
ANNEX W IT H IN TH E COR
PORATE A R E A OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLO RID A . UPON
ADOPTION
OF
SAID OR
OINANCE, A PORTION OF THAT
CERTAIN P R O P E R T Y LYING
EAST OF ANO ABUTTIN G
UPSALA ROAD AND BETW EEN
LARKW OOD
D R IV E
AND
VIHLEN ROAD; SAID
PRO,
P E R T Y B E IN G SITUATED IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
V O LU N T A R Y
AN N EXATIO N
PRO VISIO N S OF SECTION
171 044, FLO R ID A STATUTES.
PR O V ID IN G
FO R
SEV ER
A B IL IT Y ,
CONFLICTS, AND
E F F E C T IV E D A TE.
W H ER EA S, there has been tiled
with the City Clerk ot the City ol
Santord, Florida, petitions con
talning the names ol the property
owners in the area described
hereinafter requesting annexation
tothe corporate area ol the City of
Santord, Florida, and requesting
to be Included therein; and
W H ER EA S, the Properly Ap
pralser of Seminole County,
Florida, having certified that
there are tight property owners In
the area to be annexed, and that
said property owners have tlgned
the Petition lor Annexation, and
W H ER EA S, It has been deter
mined that the property described
hereinafter Is reasonably compact
and contigiout to the corporate
areas of the City ot Santord,
Florida, and It has further been
determined that the annexation ot
said property will not result in the
creation ol an enclave; and
W H ER EA S , the City ol Sanford,
Florida, is In a position to provide
municipal services to the property
described herein, and the City
Commission ol the City ol Santord,
Florida, deems it in the best in
teresl of the City to accept said
petition and to annex said
property.
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . BE IT
ENACTEO BY TH E PEO PLE OF
THE C IT Y
OF SANFORD.
FLO RID A :
SECTION I ; That the following
described property situated In
Seminole County, Florida, be and
lha same Is hereby annexed to and
mada a part of the City of Sanford,
Florida, pursuant to tha voluntary
annexation provisions ol Section
171 044. Florida Statutes:
The South v, of the North 13 ot
Lot 44, NEW UPSALA, according
to the plat thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 1, Page 47, of the Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida, and ALSO that part ol tha
North I 4 of said Lot 41, tying West
ot ID Y L L W IL D E OF LOCH
ARBOR, SECTIO N 4 ,according to
the Plat Iheraof as recorded In
Plat Book 71, Page 40, of the
Public Records of Seminolo
County, Florida, and ALSO the
South 3S0 feet ot the West 14* teet
of Lot 44, said Plat ol NEW UP
SALA, the same being that part ol
Lot 44 lying South and West ol said
ID Y L LW IL O E OF LOCH ARBOR.
SECTION 4.

Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at P O Box
1304 Orange City. Fla 32763.
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name of ARNOLD’S
HOME IMPROVEMENTS, and
that I intend to register said name
with Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes, To Wit
Section 845 CD Florida Statutes
1)57
Slg Elnora K. Arnold
Publish
December 30. 19*2,
January 4. 13. 20. t)81
DECI40
_______
N O T IC E
OF
A
P U B L IC
H EA RIN O TO CONSIDER T H E
ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE
BY TH E C ITY OF SANFORD,
FLO R IO A
Notice is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at the
Commission Room in the City Hall
in the City of Sanford. Florida, a I
7 00 o’clock P M. on January 34.
1)83. to consider the adoption of an
ordinance by the City ol Sanford,
Florida, as follows
ORDINANCE NO. 1421
ANORDINANCEOF THE C IT Y
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA.
TO
AN NEX
WITHIN THE COR
PO RA TE A R EA OF THE C IT Y
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA. UPON
A O O PTIO N
OF SAID OR
OINANCE. A PO RtlO N O F THAT
C E R T A IN PR O PERTY L Y IN G
NORTH
OF
A IR P O R T
BO U LEV A RD ,
SOUTH
OF
R E S E R V O IR LA K E, EAST OF
OLD L A K E MARY ROAD AND
W E S I Ol- U S Mi GH vVmY '7-V2;
SAID P R O P E R T Y BEING SITU
A T E D IN SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A . IN ACCORDANCE
W ITH T H E VOLUNTARY AN
N E X AT I ON PROVISIONS OF
S E C T IO N 171.044, F L O R ID A
S T A T U T E S ; PROVIDING FOR
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . CONFLICTS,
AND E F F E C T IV E DATE
W H ER EA S , there has been tiled
with the City Clerk ot the City ot
Santord. Florida, petitions con
tainmg the name oI the property
owner in the area described
hereinafter requesting annexation
to the corporate arra ot the City of
Santord, Florida, and requesting
to be included therein; and
W H ER EA S, the Property Ap
pralser ot Sem note County,
F lo rid a , having certified that
there is one properly owner In the
area to be Annexed, and that said
property owner has signed the
Petition for Annexation; and
W H ER EA S, it has been deter
mined that the property described
hereinafter is reasonably compact
and contiguous to the corporate
areas of the City ot Santord.
Florida, and It has further been
determined that the annexation ol
said property wilt not result in the
creation ol an enclave, and
W H ER EA S, the City ol Sanford.
Florida, is In a pos lion to provide
municipal services to the property
described herein, and the City
Commission of the City of Santord,
Florida, deems it in the best in
terest of the City to accept said
petition and to annex said
properly
NOW. T H ER EFO R E, BE IT
EN A C TED BY THE P E O P L E OF
T H E C IT Y OF SAN FO RD ,
FLO R IO A
SECTION t : That the following
described properly situated In
Seminole County, Florida, be and
the same Is hereby annexed to and
made a part of the City ot Sanford.
Florida, pursuant to the voluntary
annexation provisions ot Section
171 044, Florida Statutes:
All that certain lot or parcel ot
land lying and being in the Santord
Grant, formerly in the County ol
Orange and now in Seminole
Counly. and State ol Florida,
described as follows, to wit:
Beginning at a stake standing at
the Northern point ol Intersection
ol three roads, twenty chains
North and eleven chains West
from the quarter section post on
the South boundary ol Section 2.
Township 30 South, Range 30 East,
and running thence North seven
chains and lilly links to a slake,
thence West one chain and eighty
lour links to a stake, thence South
thirty six degrees
thirty three
minutes West live chains and nine
links to centre of road, thence
South fifty three degrees and
twenty seven minutes East six
chains and sixteen links to point in
road, thence North twenty seven
links to point ol beginning
Also another parcel of land
bounded and described as follows:
All that certain pitceor parcel ot
land lying and being in said
Santord formerly in the County ot
Orange
and now in Seminole
County and Stall of Florida
described as foiiowi:
Beginning at a point twenty
chains north and eleven chains
west ol the quarter post on the
south boundary
of Section 7,
Township 30 South ol Range 30
East, and running thence Norlh
seven and titty hundredths chains
to a stake, thence East two and
sixty six
hundredl.-.t Chains to
stake, thence South seven and
titty hundredths cheins to the point
of beginning.

SECTIO N 1: That upon this
-urdinante becoming l l l l t h 1
ordlnanct becoming ellectlve the property owners and any resident
property owners and m y resident on the property described herein
on the property described herein shall be entitled te all the rights
snail be entitled to all the rights and privileges and Immunities as
and p rivileg es and property are from time to time granted to
owners of the City of Sanford, residents and property owners ol
Flo rid a, and a i are further the City of Sanford, Flo'ide, and as
provided In Chapter 171, Florida a rt further provided In Chapter
Statutes, and shall further he 171, Florida Statutes, and shall
subjecl to the responsibilities of further be subltct to the rvspon
residence or ownership as may sibl lilies ol residence or ownership
from lima to lima be determined as may from lime to time be
by the governing authority ot the determined by ihs governing
City of Sanford. Florida, and tha authority of the City ol Sanford,
provisions of laid Chapter 171, Florida, and the provisions of said
Florida Statutes.
Chapter 171, Florid* Statutes.
SECTIO N It If any section or a
SE C T IO N S : If any section or a
portion of a section of this or­ portion of a section ol this or­
dinance proves to bo Invalid, dinance proves to be invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional. It unlawful, or unconstitutional, if
shall not bo hold In Invalidate or shall not be held to invalidate or
impair tho validity force or effect impair tha validity, force or affect
of any sodlon or port ol this or- of any sadlon or part of this or­
aiiianca.
dinance.
SECTIO N *t Thai all ordinances
SECTION It That all ordinances
or parts of ordinances In conflict or parts ol ordinances In conflict
horewlth bo and the' same era herewith be and in* same are
hereby repealed.
hereby repealed.
SECTIO N *t
That this or­
SECTIO N f:
That this or
dinance shall become effective dtnence shall become effective
Immediately upon Its paiiege and immediately upon its passage end
adoption.
adoption.
A copy shall bo available at lha
A copy shell be available at tha
Office of l ho City Clark foe all Otfica of the City Clerk lor all
persons desiring to nom ine tho persons desiring 1o examine the
same.
same.
A ll p a rlie s In Inlorosl and
All parties In interest and
cltliona shall have an opportunity cltliens shall have an opportunity
to bo hoard at said hoarlng.
to be heard el said hairing.
By order of lha City Commission
By ordar ol the City Commission
of the City ot Sanford, Florida.
of the City of Sanford, Florida.
H. N. Tam m , J r v
H.'N. Tamm, Jr.
City Clark
City Clark
Publish; Dae. 14,*3, 30,1913 A Jan. Publish. Dec. 30, m i , Jan. 4, 13,

4. 19*3

30, ieu

D ECS)

D EC 143

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322 26)1

831-9993

-

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

RATES

54c a line
3 consecutive times 54c a line
7 consecutive limes 44c a line
10consecutive times 47c a line
57.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum
Itim e

D E A D L IN E S
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday - 5:30 P.M. Frid ay

12— Sp e cial N o tic e s
A F T E R Christmas Sale. 50/ a lt
14 carat gold, starling and
electroplate lewelry In stock
Call 373 1797 for appt.

18— Help Wanted
E X P E R IE N C E D
W a itra s s
wanted part time. Apply In
person MAM Restaurant. 210
E . 1st.
T YP IS T — Fast, accurate. Take
phore orders. Pension, protil
share and m edical plans.
United Solvents 373 1400
P E R F E C T for housewives &amp;
mothers. Earn extra money In
spare lime w Stanley Home
Prod No exp 327 5951
BA BYSITTER needed in my
home Sal. and Sun. nites
starting Jan I 373 7)04
ATTENTION! Own your own
business. Avon T e rrito rie s
open Now! 323 5910

O F F I C E ............... .’ ..$175
Light but accurate typing
Excellent spelling. Sharp,
mature, able to work on own.
Excellent opportunity.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
1917 French Ave.
333-SI7*

Legal Notice
NOTICEOF S H E R IF F 'S S ALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
that by virtue of that certain Writ
of Execution Issued out ol and
under the teal of the COUNTY
Court ol Orange County, Florida,
upon a linal judgement rendered
in the aforesaid court on the 14th
day of June. A.D 1917. in that
certain case entitled. Southern
Discount Company Plaintilf, vs
Larry A Sprague and Ruby G.
Yeager,
Defendant,
which
aforesaid Writ of Execution was
delivered to me as Sheriff ol
Seminole Counly, Florida, and I
nave levied upon the following
described property owned by Ruby
G. Yeager, said property being
located In Sem inal* County,
Florida,
more
p a rticu la rly
described at follows
One 197a Ford Elite. Gold Whit*
ID No 4G21HI03teS
Being stored at Seminole 74,
Longwood. Florida,
and the undersigned as Sherlll ot
Seminole County, Florida, will at
19 00 AM, on the 7th day of
January, A D I9U, offer lor late
and sell to the highest bidder, for
cash, subject to any and all
existing liens, at tha Front (West)
Door at the steps of the Seminole
County Courthouse in Santord,
Florida, tha above described
personal property.
That said salt it being made to
satisfy the terms of said Writ of
Execution.
John E Polk, Sherlll
Seminole County, Florida
Publish: December 14. 73, 30, 1N7
1 January 4, DU with the sal* on
January 7 , 1N3.
DEC 44
N O TIC EO F
S H E R IF F 'S S A L E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
mat by virtu* ol that certain Writ
of Execution issued out of and
under the seal ol tha Circuit Court
of Semlnola Counly, Florida, upon
a final judgement rendered in the
aforesaid court on the 14th day ot
May, A.D., 1917, In that c tfllln
case entitled. Com Bank Seminot*
Counly, ■ Florida banking cor­
poration P lain tilf, v t Carrol
Tompkins and Jo Ann Tompkins,
Defendant, which aforesaid Writ
of Execution was delivered to me
as Sherlll of Seminole County,
Florida,and lhave levieduponlha
following described property
owned by Carrol E. A Jo Ann
Tompkins, said property being
located In Sem inole County,
Florida,
more
p articu larly
described at follows;

14. _W i H i T

VLRXN G i

UNIT 7, according to tha plat
theraol at recorded in Plat Book
14, Pages 17 and 13. Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
and the undersigned a t Sharitf ot
Seminole County, Florida, will at
11 00 AM on the 7th day of
January, A D 19*3, otter tor sate
and tell to the highest bidder, for
cash, sublect to any and all
existing liens, at tha Front (West)
Door at the steps ol the Seminole
County Courthouse jn Sanford,
Florida, the above described
R E A L property.
That said sale Is being made to
satisfy the terms ol said Writ of
Execution.
John E. Polk.
Sherlll
Seminole County, Florida
Publish December 14.23,3ft lt U &amp;
January i
with tha tala on
January 7, IN3.

ieu

_________________
FICTITIO U S NAME
Nolle* is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 775 N.
Highway 17»1 Casselberry Fla.
Seminole County, Florida under
tha fictitious noma of DUN R ITE
TRANSM ISSION AN O M U F­
F L E R S E R V IC E , and that I Intend
lo register said noma with tha
Clerk ol Ih t C ircu it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In ac
cordance with in* provision* ot Ih*
Fictitious Nam* Statutes. ToWlt:
Section 145.0* Florida Statutes
1957
Signature Gary R. Walts
Publish: Dec. 13,3ft 1*U, Jan A 13,

ieu

OEC 11*

I

A D V ER TISIN G Experience to
design brochures and labels
write trade advertisements
and press releases etc Full
Iringe benefits Retiree and or
part time acceptable United
Solvents 373 1400
Classified Ads will always give
you more
. Much , Much
More than you expect .

21— Situations Wanted
M ATURE woman will lake care
ot the elderly or young
children in their home
349 ) » 1 ___________
W ILL care lor invalid, elderly or
handicapped. Days or nites
References 321 0473
DRESSM AKING alterations and
repair in my home
U O t lll.

18—He Ip Wanted
PRESSER Exp 15 hr Apply
Carriage Cleaner 434 Shopping
Center. Longwood
SALESMAN
Used Car Lot
Finance exp preferred Will
train. Excellent opportunity
for right person 321 4075
Alert intelligent individual lo
look atter amusement center
In Santord P la ia Must have
m echanical
a b ility ,
be
dependable, and bondable.
Part time 13 75 Hr. Apply In
Person Bally’s Great Escape

D R I V E R ............54.00 Hr.
Two years tractor trailer **
perlence
needed.
Some
warehousing involved Good
driving record Raises, and
benefits Needs now
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
1917 French Ave.
323 1174
PHLEBOTOM IST Needed for
Seminole Branch ot Central
Fla. Blood Bank. Requires
Venipuncture or Nursing
experience
Office
and
Clerical
s k ills
including
minimum typing 3i WPM,
Please call Tim Tobin 372 0177
or apply at 1307 E . 3nd SI.,
Sanford

C A R E tor the elderly. Home or
Hospital Certified Nursing
A s s is t a n t .
R e fe re n c e s
provided 373 4749
PA IN TER 22 yrs. exp, brush,
roller or spray, commercial or
resid . 323 9744. Ask lor Butch

24— Business Opportunities
SANFORD AREA
COMMERCIAL COIN
O PER A TED G A M ES
Establish route Excellent In
come potential be your own
boss. Latest games available
for immediate sale to in
dividual interested in a lull or
part time “ A LL CASH” op
p o rtu n ity
M aintenance
provided.
For complete
details, call Tom Brady, l 800
531 5255, E x t 70
A M P A P E R ROUTE. Small
down payment Owner will
carry 327 4257 Noon 5 p m
SANFORD Women’s Apparel
Shop, highly regarded tor
quality fashions Best location
Wm Mallctbwski Realtor
123 7)*3

28— Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

PART T IM E Men Women. Work
Irom home. Phone Program.
Earn 125 1100 per week de
pending on time available.
C*ll *94 2704 or 149 0914

7BD RM .2 Balhapt
to share . 1j re n t,', utilities
Call 331 5)79

Get Cash Buyers tor a small
investment Place a lowa cost
classified ad for results 312
3411 or *31 99)3.

SC R EW M A C H IN E
O P E R A T O R 55.00 Hr. Up
Must have experience Excellent
benefits. Company needs
immediately.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
1917 French Ave.
333-1174

29—Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
maid service Catering to
working people. Unfurnished
Apartments t 4 7 Bedrooms
373 4507 soo Palmetto Ave.
SANFORD, Reas weekly &amp;
monthly rates Util Inc ett 500
Oak Adults I *41 7893
STOP AND THINK A M INUTE
It C lassified Ads didn't
w o rk ., there wouldn’1 beany.

E X P E R IE N C E D
IN D I R E C T S A L ES
National food service company,
71 y rs. In business. Full
company benefits alter 90
days. A ll leads supplied along
with established account
Oraw based upon experience
For Interview call Bob Rector,
1304 331 0044

C O M F O R T A B L E sleeping room

ISO w k , includes util and
maid serv. Call 321 4) 47.

30 A p artm e n ts U nfurnished
7BDRM , tb4lh.
upstairs, 1250
477 5557 or 437 1174

G EN ERA L
O F F I C E .. ____1157 Wk.
Light typing, m ail room, tiling,
temporary 4 months, then will
go perm anent part time
Possibility ol lull lime In
future. Quick growing com
pany.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
1917 French Ave.
33M174
N E E D extra Money?
Why not sell AVON!
113*45)
—
f--R ESID EN T Manager position
available for Garden Apt.
complex ot 90 units, located in
Santord, F la . Previous exp. is
desirable, good starting salary
and good benefits. Apply in
confidence to P .0 Box 17,
Panama City, Fla . 37401..

»7

W A IT R E S S
wanted,
per lanced only need ipply.
Golden Lam b Restaurant, 1101
S. French Ave., Santord.
UN CLUTTER YOUR CLOSET.
Sell those things tnat are lust
taking upspace with a want ad
In the Herald 172 7411 or U I

mi

ROUTE SA LES

$250 VW.

Good driving record, company
physical, excellent benefits,
drive straight truck
AJUk EM PLO YM EN T

When you place a Classified a a
■n The Evening Herald, slay
dose to your phone because
something wonderful is about
- io happen.
yurnished apartments foi Senior
C itilrn s 31* Palmetto Ave . J
Cowan No phone calls
G EN EVA G ARD EN
APARTMENTS.
313-19)*
LU XU RY
APARTM E
F a m ily A Adults se
Poolside. 7 Bdrms. 8
Cove Apts 323 7)10 Op
weekends
It you are having difficulty
finding a place, lo live, car tc
drive, a iob. or some service
you have need ol, read all out
want ads every day.
CO M FO RTABLE I bdrm car
peted, porch, children wel
come, no pets. Conveniently
located lo downtown area. 145
wk. + util. 331 4)47.
M E L L O N V IL L E Trace Apts
spacious, modern 2 bdrm, I
bath apt. carpeted, kiteher
equipped, CHA. walk to towr
and lake. Adults, No pets
Available Jan l. 771 3905
Mariner’s Village on Lake Ada. 1

" W F r a ir a n p n r --------- n j O T r
S E C R E T A R IE S N E E D E D FOR
Temporary and part time
positions. E xce lle n t skills
necessary. Interview by ap
polntmtnt only. 373 5449

DELIVERY . .. IMS Hr.
Will train to drive Van. At
traettva, d ays, tun job.
Benefits and raises.
AAA IM P L O Y M IN T
1)17 French Ave.
333-1174
IN SU RA N CE SALES
Insurance agency
in Sanford
looking tor a person to fake
over the established business.
Experience not necessary, w t
will train person end quality
them lor steto license No
cfp ilal needed. We will pay
stle ry plus commission when
employed.
Phone: (3051*414041.
JOB S IT E INC.
100 s jobs dally.
Call 331 7940 Fee.
A L U M IN U M
M AN U FA C
T U R IN G
COM PANY hes
Immediate openings for the
loUowlngpoaltiora: Scretnert.
press operators, assembled,
and material handlers Ex
perlencb tielptul but not
required. Apply In person Irom
10 a m to I p m. Monday thru
F r id a y , H a rC a r Aluminum
Products, 1301 Cornwall « d ,
Sanford, Fla.

1300 Located 17 97 just south
of Airport Blvd in Sanford. All
Adults 313*470
1. 1 AND 3 BDRM From *34
Ridgewood Arms Apt 25*
Ridgewood Ave. 773 4470.
EN JO Y country living? 2 Bdrm,
Duplex A p is, Olympic s i
. pool Shenandoah Villag e
Open ) to 4 J 73 7970
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd.
1A 7 Bdrms
From 1330 mo
Phone 333 4470

&gt;

IF THIS IS THE DAY lo buy a
new car. see today's Classman
ads lor best buys.

SANDALWOOD VILLAS Deluxe
I Bdr, 1 Bath, washer, dryer,
pool, 1371 Mo. 444 *911.
SANFORD 1 bd.. complete Kit.,
UiO mo. Fee 379 7700.
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Raaller

3 1 -i-A p a rtm e n ts F u r n is h e d
CO M FO RTABLE 1 bdrm, nlc
furnished. *71 wk., plus t
Call 313 3749.
SANFORD 1 Bdrm. kid s pel
*100 down *210 Fee. 33* 720
Sav-On Rentals, tnc. Htaltar
SfcMI furnished I bdr
St 75 mo plus *175 1
P E T S 377 5*90

�11 -Apartm ents Furnished

41—Houses

41-Houses

U P S T A I R S G f l r a q p Apt J Bdfm. 1 LG

wall wall earoet. air heat. kuis
ok, no pets *250 mo 1st. last
1100 dep 3j j 0025 alt k
weekend! 372 0008 betore 5

1 BDRM, 1’ j bth, carport,
util rms . CBS, retrig , stove.
CH. newly painted Inside out.
Ig lot, back tenced owner
financing 323 7998

I BDRM Apt clean
S22S mo * Dep
Refer er\eirequired 322 314?

—

J U N E PORZ1G R E A L T Y
LAKE M ARY. } Bdrm WWC.
Air, heat. WD hook up. no peti,
S?95 Mo , iJOO Sec Available
Jan 15 322 2 W
LAKEVIEW 2 BDRM Newly
decorated Reasonable
222 572!

NEW LIST IN G ! Located 1 block
Irons shopping center! The
good hie ot the Condo owner
will be yours wilh this ] Bdrm,
i'&gt; Bath , specious, re fu r­
bished townhouse Families
welcome Pool *4«.M0
R EA LT O R
802 S French Ave

D E L U X E 2 B d rm ., duplet
carport, utility room, hook up
waiher, dryer 830 0585

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F SA N FO RD R E A L T O R

LA KE M ARY 2 Bdrm. kids, tull
kit.,fenced. 5285 Fee 339 7200
* 'av-On Rentals. Inc., Realtor

SANDRA SOUTH 3 Bdrm, 2
Bath, p a rtia lly lurnished,
CHA. drapes, *450 mo 429 5758
or 834 4244
UNFURNISHED 3 bdrm house
references required Rent *350
mo + dep 322 3342
FOR R E N T SANFORD
2 Bdrm. 1 bath, nice neigh
borhood, no pets. *350 per mo ,
first and last mo rent in ad
vance, 1 yr. lease required
Contact 373 0532

HALL

Cali Keyed

FHA-VA S P E C IA LI Why rent
when you can own NOW, i t ,130
down payment. 1 bdrm home
on fenced lot. Large aak and
citrus trees. Good locationOnly *191 a mo. Taxes and
insurance included. I I / . jg
yrs. Price *14,504
R E M O D ELE D - j bdrm. |vf
bath w new root Enclosed
garage and tiled Fla rm Oak
shaded yard, Extra clean!
C re a t locationi Creative
financing! See It today &gt;42,900.

WE N EED LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW! 11!

323-5774

MOBILE Home on private land,
kitchen equipped lor I or
couple. E a sy access In Lake
Mary *325 Mo. 322 4219

lowest

*44,500
Nice neighbors surround this 3
bdrm 1.5 bath with family
room Assume VA mortgage at
low rale New rool. carpels,
CRANK CONST 1 R E A L T Y
Realtor 810 4041

NEW home avail, Isl Feb *400
m o, 3 b r., 2 bth. Lake Mary,
Call alter 4 p m 321 4248

LOCH ARBO R, large 2 level. 4
Bdrm, 7 Hath, 1105,000 by appt
Wm Mallciowski, R EA LTO R,
322 7983 Eve 322 1387

NEAR downtown I bdrm.
Carpet,
a ir,
range,
retrlg, *250 * sec 842 8804

L O V E L Y older home. Ideal for
newly wed or retirees. I Y E A R
HOME WARRANTY! Large
lot. Most of furniture stays.
Priced low!

MODERN 3 Bdrm, 2 Balh, with
CHA drapes, appi furnished
*475 Mo , 429 5758 or 134.4244
CLA SSIFIED ADS ARE FUN
ADS R E A D A USE THEM
OFTEN. YO U 'LL L IK E THE
1 R E S U L T S _________________

W—Mobile Homos
Bdrm, 2 balh double wide
mobile home on 4'-j acres
Horses O K , *480 month. 121
0751 a m . 127 2104 Night.

The Wall St. Company
Realtor
121-SOO*
LOOK INVESTORSI
*3.000 down, owner will hold
mortgage at )2.*20 yrs *270
month, immaculate? bdrm, 1
bath, screened porch, garage,
*29,500 Call Agent alter hr a.
47a 3903

37-B — Rental Offices
■PRIME
O F F IC E
SPACE,,
Providence B lv d ., Deltona
2144 Sq F t. Can Be Divided
With Perking. Oay* 105 574
1414
Evenings A Weekends
904 719 4251
1400 Sq It office. 115 Maple
Ave. Sanlord Avail Immed
Broker Owner 122 7209
SPACE tor rent Of I ice. Retail,
Storage French Avenue and
Airport. 122 4401

3 7C Fo r Lease

D A N IEL AND WOMLWENDER
CONDO CAN DO'!
Altamonte 1 2 *48,000. La ke
M ary, F eathef Edge Mid SOC's,
4 Models
L A K E EMMA LOTS I acre +
*40.000 each
S Y LV A N DR Sanlord.
maculate 1 2 *45,000

Irom

869-4600 or 349-5698
O F F IC E SPACE
TOR L E A S E
830 7721
PROFESSION AL Office Sp«C«
for L eaie. on 17 92. Ideal
location to downtown area. 705
S. French Ave. or call 122-3170.

41— Houses
1 Bdrm, I bth, For Sale. *42.000
or rent lor *400 mo. Sunlarvl
Estates 121 0532.

KISH R E A L ESTATE
121 0041 .
REALTOR
Alter H r*. 121 7441 k 122 4952
U N D ER *2.000DOWN
3 bo&lt; m doll house Affordable
monthly
payments
Call
Owner Broker 111 1411
41 M O B IL E HOMES
n an l ' l acra* with many
aifrat. Naar Lake Harney.
Price reduced *7K and owner
will consider heldin|. (II,M0.
SA N FO R D R EA L T Y
R EA LT O R
211*124

BATEMAN REA LTY
U c . R m I EaU le Broker
2440 Sanford A va.
L A K E H E L E N 10 acre* *22.500.
COUNTRY Living Lease Option
Ilka naw 11 with or without
acreage
PR IC ED under today’* market
3 1 fa m ily rm ., enclosed
garage, fenced back, a real
buy. &gt;41,900
NEAR naw hospital Z C 1 Older
two story large lot asking
*7t,«0

321-0759

EVE

322 7643

R O B B II’S
RIA LTY
REALTO R. MLS
1791 1 French
lu ll* 4
*4ntord. Fla

24 HOUR [9 322-9283

l i l l A

STENSTR0M
REALTY -

REALTORS

S a n fo rd 's Sales Le ad e r
WE LIST AND S E L L
MORE HOMESTHAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEM INOLE COUNTY!
B E A U T IF U L 3 Bdrm, 1 Bath
home on I acra in tranquil
Stone
island.
A ll
the
am in llltsl Split bdrm plan,
brick fireplace, fully equipped
kitchen, upstairs left, Cant HA
and lovely pool and polio area.

*111,999.
JU S T FOR YOU 1 Bdrm, 1 Balh
home in P in e cre it, w ilh
sunken living ream and dining
roam , brick fireplace in
Florida ream, gamr ream.
Cant HA A, wall wall carpet, earth fane decor and much
moral Price It *49,991.
A TT R A C T IV E 1 Bdrm, 2 Bath
home, an 1 landscaped loft,
with form al dining roa*n.
fire p lace, eat in kitchen,
panelling, Cant MBA, wall wall
carpal, and fenced yard with
large oeki. *94,590.
CH a I m in o . 1 Bdrm, 1 Balh
rastarad home, with aver 1,909
sq. ft. I Many tx fra tl Large
oaf in kitchen with panfry,
Florida ream, dining mom,
fireplace ail an a beautiful
shaded (at. Price it *49,5*9.
M A YFA IR VILLA 511 A 1 Bdrm,
? Balh Condo Villa*, n a il 1*
M ayiair Country Club. Salad
your lot, lloor plan k Interior
decort Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor *47,IM 4 upl

C A L L A N Y T IM E
2545'
Park

323-3200
N EW LY REOUCEDLOTS1
Peacelul and tranquil setting.
Each lovely treed lot over an
acre. Room enough lor pool
and tennis court. Underground
utilities. Horses OK. IS It.
bridle path around total
development. Priced to sell at
*19,500 each, easy term s.
Owner financing. Sharon L.
Palm er Realtor Associate.
Alter hrs. 12*58*4.
D E B A R Y LA K E FR O N T
Beautilul 12 home on Bass tilled
Lake Bonita, large wooded
corner lot. Many extras. Easy
access to M and 17 92. Owner
will help llnance Asking high
*40.000‘s Charles S B lack
Realtor Associate. Eves. 4414707.
A FFO R D A BLE)
*5,000 down with 11/APR owner
financing, *294.11 Pkl buys
this lovely I t in OeBary.
Asking (13.500 Charles $
Black Realtor Associate alter
hours 4414707.
549 W Lake Mary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary. Fla 12744
771 1700
OWNER financing Large CBS
Home k Garage
*43.000 Approx 20-*dwn
11% interest
Many extras 372 9417

32—Mobile Homes'
Y E A R ENOCLOSE OUT
1981 S K YLIN E Mobile Home
14x52 tl screen enclosure
porch, utility shed. Centre!
heal and air 3 Bdrm. 2 Balh
Lot sue is 50x100 Sale price
*41.900. Iinancmq available al
80 i ol sales prue intereil rate
17»4.* * 2 Points Can be seen,
at 124 Leisure Dr
North
D eBary.
F la
In
the
Meadowlea on the R iv e r
Mobile Home community
Please contact Tom Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First F.ederal ot
Semmole 305 322 124?
S EE SKYLIN E 5 NEWEST
Palm Springs A Palm Manor
GREGORY M OBILE MOVES
HO) Orlando Dr
12) 5700
VA 4 F HA Financing
___

Im

G EN EV A 2 Story comfortable
*40,000
SEASONS G R E E T IN G
Sandy Wisdom

FOR ALL YOUR
R E A L ESTA TE N EED S

322-2420

Garage so tull there's no room
lor the car? Clean It out with a
Want Ad in the Herald PH
322 2411 or 811 9993
1980 M OBILE Home I4'x40' set
up In adult section ol mobile
park Day 111 2473
Evenings 811 5114
PREOW NEDHOM ES
2 Bd Fam Park
12x45
*10.500
2Bd Fam Park
14x57
*17,100
3 Bd. 24x64Must See
*14.900
?Bd. 12x40 Nice
*4.495
2Bd 17x45 Furn.
*11.500
7 Bd 17x40
&gt;4.500
7 Bd 14x44 Ad Pk
&gt;23.500
OREOORY M O BILE INC.
3101 OrlandoDr.17 92 S Sanlord
305 323 5200
G ET THOSE LU X U R Y ITEM S
FOR A FRACTION OF T H E IR
COST FROM TODAY'S WANT
ADSI

43—Lots-Acreage

94b

JUNE PORZIG R EA LT Y
OSTEEN near golf course. 40
acres *55.000. *25.000 down and
owner will hold mortgage at
10% interest. Also 5 acra
parcels with *1.000 down and
owner w ill hold at 1 0/
Suitable lor mobile homes.
Mostly cleared land

^ O N 'T

Th

BE

ob

WE BUY equity in Houses
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LU CKY
IN
VESTM ENTS P O Box 2500
Sanford, F la 32771 322 4741
N EED lo s e ll your house
quickly)
We can oiler
guaranteed sale within 30
days Call 331 1411.

47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

C O U N TRYLIVIN G
5 Acres cleared high and dfy
land Suitable lor horses. Naar.
Geneva Price ttl.SOO with
*1500 down, 110 payments of
*1*9.17 including 1 0 ')/ In
tem t. Must see

CallBart
REAL ESTA TE
R E A L tO R . H I » « •
ST. JOHNS River frontage, 7 'i
acra parcel*, also interior par
celt with river accasa-911,900.
Public water 14 min to Alta­
monte Men 1 2 / 2 0 yr.
financing
no q u alifyin g .
Broker 429 4*33

7?— Trucks- Tra i le rs

e

FA C TO R Y Closeout on ‘82
Scamps 1)' and 14' Travel
Trailer and 19’ 5th Wheel
Light weight Need to go Call
tor tree brochure Then we ll
deal I 800 344 494?

m u r m e r

t h e p in e s
C O N C EA LS A

B l &lt;5 W I N D . '

bo

1974 GMC T ru ck , 22 ft.
Aluminum box 4 brand new
Mlchelin tires. *4.800 firm,
exc cond 37) 4047 from 9 5

80—Autos for Sale
1974 Toyota Cellca, exc cond , 4
brand new tires $1,700. can be
seen at 1109 S, Sanlord Ave

UNIQUE German made Nimrod
camp trailer Asking *450 00
373 5503 lor info and appt

/-to•0 3

BadCredit?
NoCredil?
WE FIN AN CE
No Credit Check Easy Terms
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 Sanlord Ave
i ______________111 4075______________

Wanted Hi I3u\
75 A—Vans

A LU M IN U M , cans, copper,
lead, brass, sliver, gold Week
days 9 4 30, Sal 9 1 K KoMo

1949 Ford Econo line Van A Cyl
manual shill 323 1734 days,
327 0647 mtes

T o o o lC o 918 W l i t St 371HOO

M AKE ROOM TO s fO R E
YOUR W IN TER ITEM S
S E L L "D O N 'T
N EED S”
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 322 2411 or 131 9993 and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you.

71—Antiques
77—Junk Cars Removed

Ocala Antiques Show

WE PAY top dollar tor
Junk Cars and Trucks
C BS Auto Parts 29) 4505

Jan, 7 9 9
City Auditorium N E Sanches
Frl.
Sat. 12 Noon to 9 p m
Sunday t p m to*p m
Admission!? SOentire show
The Chapman Shows

7SDATSUN ?dr wilh auto Irani
and other extras Good con
dition S99 down Cash or
Trade 339 9100. 134 4605

BUY JUNlfc C A R S k TRUCKS
From II04OS50 or more ,
Call 327 1474

WE PAY cash lor 1st k 2nd
mortgaqes Ray Legg L'C
Mortgage Broker 788 2599

50—Miscellaneous tor Sale

AutOS

fur 'w ile

We buy Cars and Trucks
Martin Motor Sales
701 5 French
321 7836
78 FORD Granada All extras
Including auto Ira n i. 5450
down Cash or trade 339 9)00,
134 4605
» DID YOU KNOW? *
You can buy or lease a new car
in the privacy ol your home or
ottice Fla Auto Brokers
121 2046
OeBary Auto k Marine Sales
across the river loo ot hill 174
May 1? 9? OeBary 86* XSM
1980 Chevy Moma auto Iran i .
sun rool under 41,000 miles
Been good to me Must sell
13.400 121 5207
1971VW SQUAREBACK
station waton $400 firm
123 8019
1962 Cad7i7ac~Sedan DeVille all
original Excellent condition In
and out One owner car Estate
sale 648 8074 or 372 2088

c'O lr
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 92. 1 mile west o* Speed
way. Daytona Beach wilt hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday k Wednesday at
7 50 p m. It's the only one In
Florida You set the reserved
price Call 904 155 8)11 for
lurihei details
Tomorrow may be the day you
sell that roll a way bed you ve
nowhere to roll away
It you
place a Classified Ad today

CONSULT OUR
\c

*4 *

Work Shoes k Boots *19 99pr
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanlord Ave
322 5791

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

E X E C U T IV E Black Vinyl high
back s w iv e l office chair
Walnut and brass pedestal,
like new *100, 173 1042

•. y

v

J K

0

To List Your Business...

FOR S A L E 10 Speed bike
la in 10 speed bike like new
834 4244

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

OVERHEAD garage doo-, 8 ft.
heavy gauge aluminum *100
Wall settee green cushions
*75 See at 1370 Magnolia A ve,
322 2748
MEN S goll clubs, I twin canopy
bed. I dinette set. I alto saxx
phone Alt 3 p m 377 1767
25 INCH RCA color console good
cond *125 or best otter
321 4714

Aloe Products

HAVE YOUR financial dreams
become a reality with Aide
PT no investment 373 7288

SEWING M A C H I N E Zig Zag
Used only 8 Mos *85 Cash or
terms We finance Seminole
Sewing. Winn Dixie Pia»a 17 92
k Lake M a r y Blvd 127 9411

51-A— Furniture
WILSON MAI ER F URNI TURE
111 315 E FIR ST 5T
327 5* 21
KITCHEN Set 5 piece, green,
*75 White dresser and desk
(girls') *75 Maple twin bed w
spring and mattress. *75. Call
327 0044 alter 5 p m

52—Appliances
Xt-nmore parts, servee. used
washers 323 0697
MOONEY APPLIA N CES
JUST received shipment ol good
used refrigerators. 30 Day
guarantee Sanford Auction,
1715 S French. 171 7340

53—T V Radio-Stereo
Good Used T V S *75 k up
M IL L E R *
2419 Orlando Dr
Ph J27 0357
R EPO SSESSED COLOR TV S
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables EX
AM PLE Zenith 2S" color in
walnut console Original price
over S7S0. balance due *194
cash or payments *17 month
NO M ONEY OOWN Still In
warranty Call 7lsl Century
Sales847 5194 day or rule Free
home tria l, no obligation

54—Garage Sales
HOUSEHOLD items, clothing,
exercise bike, lence. swing set,
retrlg., toys, garden supplies.
Sal Sun 10*. 1117 Pine Ave
_____________312 405*____________
GARAGE Sale, Jan 9 k 10, 9 5.
100 Sir Lawrence D r , Clothes,
boat, oil h ta ttr, etc.
L A K E 170th Friday 9 till. Port
e crlb , bdrm. suite, rocker,
tools, and miac. I l l 7457.

62—Lawn-Garden

REALTOR
*M LS
102 S French Ave.

322-8678

MOTORCYCLE 1979 GoldWIng.
Full dress, w stereo. 1,000
miles *3,500 171 1454

75— Recreational Vehicles

17 Real E sta te W anted

R E A LT O R
11) m i
1* y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e

78—Motorcycles

DON T STORE IT, S E LL IT with
a low cost Clasiilled Ad

H A RO LD

2404 HWY. 17 97

B E A U T IF U L L Y restored 2
bdrm, 1 bth, home, CHA, wwc.
frpl, adults, no pets. *375 445
4441 or 322 4978

DON'T Forget our First Auction
ot the Year, Friday 7 p m
Look for ad in tomorrows
paper we are loaded
Dell's Auction Service
323 5470

HAL CO LBERT R E A L T Y
REALTOR
707 E . 25lh SI
1217112

R E A L T Y , IN C

tOP Dollar Paid tor Junk k
Used cars trucks k heavy
iqu-pmen! 32? 5990

373 5620

MLS

31—houses Unfurnished
WINTER Springs 3bdrm, 2 balh,
CHA, appi . fenced, garage,
extras, lease *375 849 1712

FOR ESTA TE Commercial or
Resident ai Auctions k Ap
pra sals Call Den s Auct on

7544 S French
327 0711
Alte-Hours 139 1910 327 0779

322-8678

80—

77—Junk C ars Removed

m x

B it t e r , ,
NICE 2 Bdrm Duplex 1350 plus
sec
JUNE P O R Z IO R E A LT Y
REALTOR
121-IHI

72—Auction

'NOkE Of
^ WE
F l i U R E )( U TEtW 'U RE
‘ ^LkS6E£&gt;T&amp;
TH IS
$ 'R E E N 1 Trtl£&gt;, B U T
WC/ULP / &gt; &gt;Cl) PC
3E K &lt; ( H X \E a .
per fect)V
PO INT
TE6T I • 4

N EED A SERVICEM AN? You'll
lind him listed in our Business
Directory

T s T jr f Z I,

31A— Duplexes

I ' j Y r. Old. 12 split plan Lk.
Mary, schls., cedar A stone
ext. Upgraded carpet and
wood treatment. Kitchen has
bar and pass thru window.
The Wall St Company
Realtors
32M003

PRflF.WE'P HATE j w h a t if it
IB RAVE VJU R /WASN'T THE
EXPERIMENT
TRICK NEf&gt;£&gt;
SHJT pdw N
OF THE V A ll
BECAU SE
th a t 3 l0 ch ep
T h e TR0U6HT,
W J V I^ E P
SOMETH m l
VAVES, BUT
THE HEkSHT?

Thursday, Jan. 9,1983—JB

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOU SE

F I L L O IR T k T O P SOIL
Y ELLO W SAND
Clark k H irl 331 7510.121 7123

Ceiling Fan Installation
C E IU N G FA N INSTALLATION
Quality Work
We Do Most Anything
•&gt;95 9378
677 4781

C eram ic Tile
Auto CB Stereo
Repair. Install. Sales
Aulo Sound Center
71(79 French Ave
327 4835

ASC

M EIN TZER T IL E E«p smee
(953 New k did work comm fc
rev.d Frev estimate 469 1 542
fO D D Y k SONS
T U-Cuntractors
321 0157

Additions &amp;
Re mode Imq

NEW. REM ODEL. R E P A IR
All types and phases of con
struction. S G Balint 12) 4832.
372 8645 State L icensed

THE HAPPY E LV E S
Duality child care and pre
school Inlants a specialty
Individual attention TLC
Slate licensed 120 E Crystal
Lake Ave . Lake Mary 321
2384
*

A L L T Y P E S CA RPEN TRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, panelling, shingles,
rerooflng For last service.
call 32) *917 143 2371__________

Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 322 2611 or 1)1
9993 and a friendly ad visor
will help you

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
ALUMINUM Siding, vinyl S id in g '
soffit k lascia Aluminum
gutters and down spouts
Fr ESI 305 345 53*3

Bo.iufv Cxi re
tO W ER'S BEAUTY SALON
FO R M E R LY Harrietts Beauty
Nook SI9 E 1st St , 372 574?

ANIMAL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels heated,
insulated, screened, tty proof
mside. outside runs Fans.
Also AC cages. We cater to
your pels Ph 327 57S2

A.M. Kelly cleaning service.
Speclatiling In restaurant k
oft Ice buildings. 412 0150.

BEAL Concrete I man quality
operat on patio* driveways
Days ))1 73)3 Eves 327 1321
SWIFT CONCRETE work all
types Fo o lers, d rivew ays,
pads, floors, pools, complete
Free est. 122 7101

Brick ft Block
Stonework

Draperies
CUSTOM MADE In our Shop.
Installation Service. Dorothy
k Vincent Bliss 149 5425.

------------------------- x. - ________

Excavating Services
VtINO EXCAVATiNO
*10 C*se Backhoe Loader w
extender hoe 9 yd. dump
truck low bed serv 123.517}.

67A—Feed

HAY &gt;7.SB per be If,
IS or more Ire* dal.
Other feeds avail. I f f SIM.
KICK T H E STORAGE HABIT.
Sail thsoe useful, no longer
needed items with a Herald
Classified Ad. Call 3211*11 or

111 m i

Mamtenanceol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
k electric 373 4031

Lawn Service

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn k plants tor
winter now Complete Lawn

Carpet Cleaning
* T R IP L E A *
Price speci*!- &gt;1*.9S for
Fam ily orLIvingR m 1*217*0

Plastering
ALL
Phases ot Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco hard
rote, simulated br.cfc )7i 5WJ

Plumbing

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS MOVE
MOUNTAINS of merchandise
every day
Modernil.ng your Home? Sell no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classified Ad

Remodeling

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle The
Whole Ball O'Wax

M IST ER . F ix it JO# McAdams
will repair your mowers al
your home. Call 311 7055

Major Appliance
Repair
JO H N N IES Appliances. We
service refrigerators, wash
res, dryers, ranges. Reas
rates 1711334

Nursing Care
LOVING HOME Excellent care
&amp; companionship lor elderly
woman 321 4305

Nursmq Center
OUR R A T E S A R E L O W E R
Lakeview Nursing Center
719 E Second SI , Sanford
377 4707
W illcara lor elderly
in my home
311 $17S

Oil Heaters
Cleaned
OIL Heater cleaning
•nd servicing.
Call Ralph 123 M il

B / E . Link Const.

FIREWOOD *40 t up. Tree
trim m ing, rem oval. Trash
hauled Free est., 322 9410.

Handyman
HANDYMAN Services Painting,
repairs, etc
Reasonable
guar work 425 M SI, *77;4 7 ll..

Financing Available

Roofing

A &amp; B ROOFIN
11 yr*. experienca, Licensed k
Insured.
Free Eslimates on Roofing,
Re Rooting end Repairs.
Shingles, Built Up *nd Tile.

JAM ES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON
3 2 1 -9 4 1 7
REROOFING, carpentry, root
repair k pamltnq 1* years
exp 322 1921
M AKE ROOM TO ‘( t O R t .
YOUR W INTER ITEMS
S E L L ' DON'T NE E O S ”
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 172 2011 or 111 999) and
a Ir.endly Ad Visor will help
you

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1934.
JAMES E. L E E IN C
Tree Service
STUMPS ground out.
Reasonable. Ire* estimates
7110*41

Firewood
C A R PEN TER repairs*nd
additions » yrs. exp.
Call 377 1157.

SPEN C ER PEST CONTROL
Comm , Resd , Lawn. Termite
Work
122 II4 S. A ik tor
Champ

*A-1 LAWN S E R V IC E *
Mow va ed 'rim haul Regular
Service i lime clean up 2*
hrs. best ix try , 62b 4431.

Painting

Carpentry
Wiles Seles Hwy. 44 W. 1714170
Baledsfi8YlngsS4.il
2nd cutting clever My.
3rd cutting ellalle hay.
Northern Timothy mixed M y.
----------C H W H w rjflC H .

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ceramic k Hear
tile Minor repairs, lurplecei,
insulation Lie. Bond 111 l i l t .

Pest Control

322-7029
HOMEOWNERS, relax on your
days oil Let us clean your
home at altordable rates Call
now 121 3544 Patty’s Home
Pampering Service

FOR all your concrete needs call
377 2477. Free estimates. No
bunders please.

Wonder what to do wilh Two?
Sell One — The quick, easy
Want Ad way. The m agic
number is 172 2*11 or &gt;31 9993.

C O L L IE R 'S Home Repairs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair 111 6421.

Lawn Mowers

S LIM
BU D G ETS
ARE
BO LST ER ED W ITH V A LU ES
FRO M T H E WANT AD
COLUMNS

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices. Free Estimates
Ph 149 3500

SEAM LESS aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs waluminum solfit k lascia. (1041
775-7090 collect. Free est.

Cleaning Services

CoiiCM -te W o rk

Boarding &amp; Grooming

PAINT ING and repair pat*o and
screen porch built
Call
anytime 32? 9411

C A R PEN TER 25 yrs exp Small'
remodeling lobs. reasonable
rales Chuck 321 9445

Child Care
B a t h s kitchens rooting block
concrete windows, add a
room, tree estimates 321 844)

Homo Repairs

•CALLANYTIMEe
He. k tnsvr. Quality • must. Pr.'
Ell. A, Carina m-**71.
B IL L 'S PAINTING
Interior Exterio r painting Light
carpentry. Homes pressure
cleaned Business 111 2*71
Home 131111* Bill Steiner
HOUSE painting *500
a housg. Any a ll*
422 1034, 42S 4009

#

JOHN A LL E N Y A R D k T R E E
S E R V IC E . We'll remove pin*
tree*. Ro m . price H i 51*0
Letourneau Tree Services
Removal, trimming, demo*sin
Licensed and insured 114 44*4

Upholstery
L O R E N E S Upholstery Tree
pick up, del k •*! Car k boat
seats Furn M ill ? *

f
&gt;. X

�vk

c

4B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE

Thursday, Jan. 4, I f l l

BUT IP NEITHER OC
I TOLD YOU WE J| /
YOU C LEA R THE TABLE, W ORKED IT OUT J l '
G REAT'
Y O U 'L L HAVE NOTHING
TO SCRAPE AND RINSE

by Mori Walker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

Answ er to Previous Pur/le

42 Comedran
Caeiar
44 Indefinite in
1 Magnitude
order
5 King
45 Oil (tuffn)
Mongkut*
46 Secret agent
land
47 Make angry
9 Cilia
1 1 Mar* brother 48 Upper house
of the
12 Muffle
legislature
13 Is in store tor
51 Missing link
15 Sphere
(2 w ds )
16 Electrical unit
54 Parts in play
18 And so on
(abbr. L a t. 2 55 Sofa
56 Water bird
w ds )

ACROSS

by Chic Young

20 Twice
21 Dove sound
22 Gold plated
statuene
25 Oldest
28 A lle y _____
30 Biblical
character
31 And not
32 Disencumber
33 Bade
37 Drink to
health of
4 1 Possessive
pronoun

1

2

□ ■ui
□ u n
□ □ a
□□□

□

5

4

15

16

19

20
23

74

MUST HAVE

HO TIME
EVEN FOR AN
ANESTHETIC-1.

53

14

21
26
30

29

32

31

IMMEtv m v !

8

18

25

28

e tM l I
33

Zoo resident
Shore
Subsequently
Group of two
Southern
state (abbr)
50 Sawbuck
52 Greedy one
53 Sundown

7

17

m s amemep.-

PU LLE R

When you are lying down
this simple mechanism of
fluid leaving your arteries
and returning to your veins
works just fine in healthy
people. But when you stand up
the earth’s gravity effects
must be added. Remember
that gravity enables water
towers to produce pressure in
a city water system.

38
39
40
43
49

13

22

A TOOTH

27

6

35 Heretofore (2
w d s)
36 Brief swim

It

10

12

by Art Sansom

T
A

12 Eitinct bird
14 Resident of
Glasgow
Divides up
17 Towel word
Poetic foot
23 First-rate
Pep
(comp wd)
Before (poet) 24 Origin
Mamrn
26 Disembarked
6 Lyricist
27 Resort near
Gershwin
Venice
7 Each
29 Pushes button
8 Sayings
10 Haughty one 33 Sticky
substances
11 Short tailed ro­
34 Lords
dent

9

T H E BORN L O S E R

DEAR DR. LAMB - Could
you tell me what causes
swelling of the legs, starting
above the knees down to the
ankles? They are very heavy
in the knees and calf of the
iegs.
I take Lasix for blood
pressure and water, but I still
have swelling. In the morning
when I get out of bed they are
down a lot but by evening they
are quite swollen.
DEAR READER - P art of
the reason is because you are
an earth creature.
Each cell in your body must
be nourished by fluid that
leaves your tiny blood vessels
and bathes the individual
cells. The fluid leaves your
sm all arteries where the
internal pressure is highest
because of the pumping action
of your heart. The pressure
Inside your veins is much
lower. That combined with
the sucking action of blood
proteins pulls back the fluid
Into your circulation.

r

■ JL \ C A E l*J
T a Ll _A [?[J C
L "c T j T15
H] o’ U i a
c a a 1E JL D A to o' E
jii j_
[± T 1 N LL o' iN- f
IH 1 D
DLL N
i _A_ ^T
2 LL

DOWN

3

34

41

42

45

46
49

39

38

37

38

35

48

Gravity One Cause
Of Swelling Legs

40

44

43

47
51

50

52

The pressure in your blood
vessels (arteries and vlens)
increases below the heart.
When you are standing the
greatest Internal pressure Is
at the ankle. That causes
more fluid to leave your ar­
teries and makes it more
difficult for it to be sucked
back into your tiny viens. The
fluid accumulates ih your
ankles and swelling results.

55

54

57

56

6

HOROSCOPE
By BEKN1CE BEDE OSOL

For Friday, January 7, 1983

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK

[ w Q i . W S LIFE l»J
THE FAST lAfOE,S£Afi‘7

UOT BAD.. HOWEE. THDOGb
IU TH E PIT STOP 7

ir ~

by Ed Sullivan

P R IS C ILL A 'S POP

If

YOUR BIRTHDAY
January 7,1983
Persons you've helped In
the past will be instrumental
this coming year In giving you
a boost up the ladder of
success. They'll be there
when you need them.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) There is a possibility you
cpuld experience some
financial extrem es today.
Under ce rta in conditions
you'll be fortunate, while with
others you may not. 1983
predictions for Capricorns are
now ready. Send $1 to AstroGraph, Biox 489, Radio CityStation, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth date. Send an
additional $2 for the NEW
Astro-Graph M atchm aker
wheel and booklet. Reveals
romantic combinations and
compatibilities for all signs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Strive to fulfill your
ambitions today, but don't do
so In ways which could make
others think less of you. Being
a good guy Is more important.

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

rAND 1 ALW AYS
yTMOUGHT M IS
r e e r w ere tm e

OM.OM, MY C H U TE

woA/r open/

FkRTOF

WS ANATOMY.

don't rush into making
decisions on limited facts.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your productivity could be
lessened a bit early In the day
because of a tendency to do
things the hard way. For­
tunately, you'll find easier
routes later on.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
C om m ercial transactions
should not be conducted
hostilely today. Your first
moves may be wrong ones.
Study everything with care.

T here are many other
factors that contribute to this
basic mechanism. Too much
fluid in the circulation from
excess salt retention is one
reason. That is why liver
disease and even premen­
strual tension is associated
with swelling.
Wien you lie down at night
the gravity influence is
eliminated on the pressure

WIN AT BRIDGE

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Rather than dictate to others *
today, try to present your
ideas In ways which will lead
them to believe that your
thoughts are theirs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
The faults and shortcomings
of others will be very ap­
parent to you today, but you'd
be wise to pretend you didn't
notice them.
LIBRA (Sdpt. 23-Octl 23) If
your extravagant urges are
permitted to take control
today, you'll wind up spending
m ore than you should.
Instead, look for ways to save
money.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You can achieve what you set
out to do today, but be
prepared to overcome some
obstacles and to put forth ia
second effort.

SCORPIO.(Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Lady Luck tends to favor you
today, especially In situations
which could lead to personal
gain. Be careful not to do
tilings that could stymie her.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Early in the day you
could, uncharacteristically,
worry about things which
might never happen. This Is a
big mistake. You should be
quite lucky.

ARIES (March 21-April 10)
Be careful today that you
don’t let financial dealings
with a pal jeopardize your
relationship. Both should
consider friendship more
Important than money.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
There's a possibility some
essential Information could be
withheld from you today, so

NORTH

1-6-13

♦ 962
♦ K 843

♦ gs
♦ Q732
EAST
♦J 64
♦ A 1062
♦J742
♦'K 9

WEST

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♦ 10 916 3
♦ A 1015
SOUTH

♦ AKQlt7Sl

VQ
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♦ AK

♦ J 64

Vulnerable. East-West
Dealer: South
W nl

North

East

Pass
Pass

1 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

South

14
44

Opening lead 410

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

.

South won the diamond
lead and led his ace of
trumps The hand had looked
like a wrap-up. but the 3-0
trump breax caused South to

by Bob Thaves
1

1st NATIONAL BANK

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by Leonard Starr

A N N IE
by T. K . Ryan

TU M BLEW EED S

[W R II 4P1AN STRINGfR
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WHAT A YARN1 I CAN SEE THE
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fM AFRAID I SAVE MISS
A W E S FOOT A SEVERE
WOKHfAE,-PAPPY; N © C H PULLING (TOUT
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-MR. LYON JUST
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IN VUUR
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GOOP IDEA. I THINK I'LL S
GO SIN G -O N TH E PENCE. J

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TH A T IN A

(NEWSPAPIOt ENTERPRISE ASSN i

J

IM PAIEP V I O LiUCi,
T A U T W iT H °U T

pause and consider
If he drew trumps and led
his queen of hearts, a
defender could win with his
ace and lead a diamond.
South would have to attack
clubs eventually and could
expect to lose three club
tricks and his contract.
Could he do anything to stop
this defense?
South found a way He
cashed his second high dia­
mond and then led out his
queen of hearts.
•
Hast took his ace and saw
that the lead of a spade
would establish i trump
entry in dummy and a dia­
mond lead would give South
a ruff and discard. What was
left? A club lead.
East was a careful player.
He had seen that South held
seven top spades, the aceking of diamonds and queen
of hearts. He couldn't also
hold the ace of clubs, so East
played his king of clubs, con­
tinued with the nine and set
declarer with a club ruff.
South had outthought
himself. He could have made
the hand by drawing the
trumps and leading the club
jack and eventually playing
the clubs for the way they
were divided

by Jim D avit

G A R F IE L D
FRAN K AND E R N E S T

and the fluid is sucked up
from the tissues, eliminating
swelling.
To give you m ore in­
formation on why you have
swelling and what to do about
it, I am sending you The
Health U tte r 11-8, Swelling:
Causes and M anagem ent.
Others can send 75 cents with
a long, stam ped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband had an endoscopic
examination of his digestive
tract and they found he has a
phytobexoar.
I have never heard of this
before and he Is very con­
cerned. What causes this?
What is the treatm ent without
surgery if possible? He suf­
fers much from upper
digestive pain.
DEAR READER - It is
rare. Most bezoars occur In
patients who have had gastric
surgery or have the vagus
nerve severed. They are balls
of undigested.plant fiber that
are retained in the stomach.
Some can be crushed with
an endoscopic method. Others
can be dissolved in the
stom ach with enzymes.
Cellulase, an enzyme, has
been successful in some
cases. If they cannot be
dissolved or broken up they
must be removed surgically.
In patients who have not
had
gastric
surgery,
phytobezoars are sometimes
caused by persimmons. The
area under the skin and
unripe pulp contains a sub­
stance that reacts with the
stomach acid to form an In­
soluble mass or bezoar.
In former times bezoars
were though to have magic
m edicinal value. Queen
Elizabeth I kept several.

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                    <text>75th Y ear, No. 120— F rid a y . Ja n u a ry 7 ,1983-S anford, Florida 32771
Evening H e ra ld — (U S P 5 481 280)— P ric e 20 Cents

U.S. Jobless Rate Holds; State Rate Rises To 9.9%
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The U.S.
economic times that have gripped the
unemployment ra te held steady at 10.8 nation.
percent in December, remaining at its
An analyst for the state employment
highest sine*' the G reat Depression, with service said the county’s electronics and
sagging Christmas employment wiping construction industry have kept
unemployment low.
out improvement for factory workers,
The unemployment rates for teenagers
the I-abor Department said today.
In addition to th e 12 million Americans and adult women reached new highs, the
looking for work, the department said the ’ department said, and the amount of time
spent off the Job for the typical unem­
number of people who need jobs but are
ployed person lengthened to a post-World
too discouraged to keep looking totaled
1.8 million, the highest number of dis­ War II high.
The department made a number of
couraged jobless in 18 months.
Seminole County’s unemployment rate revisions in its procedures in December,
climbed to 6.7 percent In November but revising November's unemployment rate
the county's jobless rate remained lower downward slightly to 10.7 percent from
10.8 percent. If the old procedures had
than the state average.
Florida's Jobless rate rose last month been used in December the rate would
have climbed to 11 percent, the depart­
to 9.9 percent.
Seminole’s jobless rate has remained ment said.
The department said the Christmas
relatively steady, climbing only 1.1
percent since July despite the poor season increase in retail sales em­

ployment "was less than expected for
this tim e of year." After seasonal adjust­
ment the number of jobs in retail sales
dropped by 65,000, a huge setback for this
segment of the economy. •
It offset a marked improvement in the
unemployment picture for manufac­
turing employees. While 50,000 factory
jobs were eliminated during the month, it
was a substantial improvement over the
140,000 Jobs lost in factories in Novem­
ber. Job losses in the steel industry were
largely offset by increased employment
in the auto industry, the department said.
The moderation in factory unem­
ployment also was a sign that factory
production figures to be published later
this month will not show the severe
deterioration typical of earlier months of
the recession, government analysts said.
The unemployment rate for teenagers
climbed to 24.5 percent, a four-decade

high in December, as did the rate for
adult women, at 9.1 percent. The rates
for other m ajor categories of workers
remained at their post-Depression high
set in November, with adult men at 10.1
percent; white workers, 9.7 percent;
black w orkers, 20.8 percent and
Hispanics, 15.3 percent.
The rate of unemployment for farm
workers soared in December, climbing
nearly a full percentage point to 16.5
percent from November’s 15.6 percent to
reflect 305,000 farm employees looking
for jobs. In May the rate for farm
workers reached its 1982 high at 18.1
percent.
The rate of unemployment among
construction workers climbed to 22
percent from November's revised 21.8
percent but was still slightly under the
year's peak set in October. The depart­
ment said 1,159,000 construction workers

Pay Plan
Lake M ary Employees Not Paid For Work
By DONNA ESTES
Herald SUM Writer
I-ake Mary’s most dedicated city employees
are putting in the longest hours and are not
getting paid for overtime nor getting full com­
pensatory tim e, a consultant has told the City
Commission.
Carolyn Long of I/&gt;ng &amp; Associates, con­
sultants from Ft. Lauderdale, which recently
completed a Job classification and pay plan for
the city, Thursday night urged the commission
review its policies. She noted the city is currently
indebted to police department personnel some
$9,000 by its policy of "enforced overtime" on
holidays for police officers.
Mrs. Long said current policy provides that the
officers collect the value of the holiday time
when they retire or leave the city’s employ.
“You are building up a "tremendous bank of
holiday tim e," she said, adding that the value of
the lime builds up as the officer gets paid at a
higher rate once he leaves city employ.
Of other city employees' overtime, Mrs. Long
said the current policy allows employees to
carry over only 80 hours, while losing the rest at
year-end. She said one city employee lost 79
hours at the end of the last fiscal year.
Employees have already clocked 232 hours of
compensatory tim e since Oct. 1, the first day of
the new fiscal year.
She suggested a new policy be considered
whereby the city would "buy down" all com­
pensatory tim e over 40 hours each year from
each employee so the most dedicated ones would
not be penalized.
Commissioner Ray Fox pleaded ignorance of
the department policy on holiday work. He said
the purported police department policy is
"borderline idiocy".
“When you've got a policy that can cost that
kind of dough, it should be locked In concrete,"
Fox said.
Mrs. Long said some police department em­
ployees routinely put in 56 hours weekly and are
compensated a t straight time.
Fox said if the employees were punching a
time clock and recording that much overtime, he
could understand. At the same time, he said he
would dislike the regimentation of a tim e clock,
adding that is the only accurate way to record
employee time.

C a ro ly n l.o n g of Long &amp; A s s o c ia te s uses c h a r t s to e x p la in to L a k e M a r y C ity
C o m m is s io n e rs th e Job c la s s if ic a tio n and p a y p la n fo r c ity e m p lo y e e s c o m p le te d
by h e r F t . L a u d e rd a le f ir m .
Commissioner Russ Megonegal asked Mrs.
commission and the mayor.
Long to supply the raw data she said she
Since the proposed organization is not in effect
gathered from other cities and used as a basis for
in the city, Megonegal said the data collected
the salary ranges in the plan. He noted the salary
from other cities and used to compile the report
ranges were based on the report’s assumptions
therefore might be Inaccurate. "Without the raw
that advice on organiiatlon of the city staff
data, I feel hampered in making a decision,"
would be taken.
Megonegal said.
The Long report urged that Carol Spotts, who
Mrs. Long said she would send her
currently, serves as city hall secretary, assistant
"worksheets" to the dty.
bookkeeper and deputy city clerk, be named
She said she will return to the city on Jan. 20 or
administrative assistant to the city m anager and
21 for further discussions on the plan.
that the d ty clerk and dty treasurer be ac­
Long &amp; Associates is also to set up a job per­
countable on a dally basis to the d ty manager.
formance review and analysis system for the
The d ty charter calls for the clerk and
dty.
treasurer to work under the direction of the dty
The total fee for both studies is $2,140.

Skip Meal

County Jail Prisoners
Go Sour On Sauerkraut
About 30 Seminole County Jail prisoners who
apparently were sour about sauerkraut did not
eat Thursday night's meal.
JaU Administrator Steve Saunders said
today the Inmates complained about the food
prepared for dinner Thursday and asked for
something else.
Saunders told the Inmates no alternative
would be offered to the meal of hot dogs,
sauerkraut, salad and gelatin.
He said prisoners often refuse to eat.

"This is not unusual," Saunders said. "They
are not required to eat. We are required to
offer them food."
The jail's menus are approved by a dietitian,
he said.

were unemployed during the month.
Factory w orkers had an unem­
ployment rate of 14.8 percent, the same
as in November, showing 3,340,000
f actory workers were jobless.
Total employment during the month
was unchanged at 99.1 million after
seasonal adjustment. Since the beginning
of the recession late in the summer of
1981 total employment has dropped by 1.7
million, the department said, with adult
men and teenagers those that were less
employed.
The number of unemployed persons
seeking work for 27 weeks or longer
continued to increase and in December
accounted for more than one-fifth of the
Jobless total. The average length of time
spent unemployed lengthened to 18
weeks, the department said, the longest
period since World War II.

The Department of I^b o r reported
today an increase in the jobless figure for
the third straight month, following de­
clines throughout most of 1982.
The rate for December was 9.9 percent,
up from November's 9.5 percent and the
highest since the 9.6 percent recorded in
June 1977.
Florida’s rate remains below the
national rate, which was 10.8 percent for
December, but while the national rate
leveled off last month, staying where it
was the previous month, the state figures
continued to climb.
In December, 486,000 Floridians were
jobless out of a total work force of
4,892,000.

County M ay
Split Costs
O f Road Work
By MJCHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
A plan to split the cost of paving high
maintenance dirt roads has been recom­
mended to Seminole County commissioners by
Public Works Diredor Jack Schuder.
Schuder submitted the proposal to split the
costs between the county and the homeowners
for paving of dirt loads which are currently
costly to maintain.
Some county roads must be graded after
every heavy rain, Schuder said. The cost of
paving those roads would be cheaper than
maintenance costs over a period of years.
‘ T h e ctmnty already has a program which
allows residents to pay for paving of their
roods. But the program has been used only
twice since 1978 because of the high costs in­
volved, Schuder said.
S chuder recommended som e form of
splitting the costs, with the county paying a
third to a half of the costs and the residents
paying the remainder.
Under his proposal, commissioners could
establish special taxing districts, levying an
additional tax upon residents of the roads to be
paved. The county would pay the rest.
But there are other alternatives.
Schuder said the county could levy the labor
and materials costs on the residents while
paying administrative and engineering costs
or assess homeowners on a percentage basis.
But the key to the program is the county’s
desire to reduce the high maintenance cost of
repairing roads which wash out every time it
rains.

Commissioner Sandra Glenn said several
dirt roads in her district are costly to maintain
because they must be graded frequently.
She said paving those roads would pay for
itself over 10 years if the county pays one-third
of the paving costs and the residents pick up
the other two-thirds.
"It could be a way of beginning to correct
problems in Rolling Hills and other areas,"
she said. Rolling Hills is one area of the county
that has severe drainage problems. Those
drainage problems also have caused the roads
to deteriorate.
The special taxing districts, if approved,
would have a board of directors which would
set up long-range goals, construction projects
and the tax rate for the district.
But there are questions about the legality of
the plan. And County Engineer William Bush
Jr. said the county must be aware of double
taxation complaints from d ty residents
"unless you can show that paving sub­
stantially reduces maintenance costs."
*
Another question that looms is how to im­
plement the ordinance. Commissioners could
choose to set up the districts on their own or
could require residents to submit petitions for
the taxing district.
Commissioner Robert G. "B ud" Feather
said he’s "not in favor of creating taxing
districts without petitions. They should ask to
be taxed."
Commissioners have given approval to
examine the proposal further. Schuder will
develop the program and present it to com­
missioners for future consideration.

Carbon Monoxide Kills Woman
Sanford police reported today a 28-year-old
Seminole County Sheriff’s Department em­
ployee was found dead in a car parked in a
Sanford restaurant parking lot.
Vicki Petticrew, died as a result of carbon
monoxide poisoning, an autopsy performed
late this morning determined.
Herb Shea, assistant to police Chief Ben
Butler, said the SPD was investigating the
case, but that Ms. Pettlcrew’s death had been
ruled an accident.
Ms. Petticrew was a dispatcher in the
sheriff’s department, having worked there
since May 11, 1981.
Police reported Ms. Petticrew lived at 583
Blue Springs Court in Orange City.
Police said she had borrowed a car from a

friend while repairs were being made on her
car. Police believe she turned on the friend’s
car to keep warm, fell asleep and was over­
come by carbon monoxide.
Authorities said she last worked Wednesday.
County Medical Examiner Dr. G.V. Garay
also ruled the death an accident and said an
autopsy this morning revealed the woman died
of com bined alcohol-carbon monoxide
poisoning. Dr. Garay Indicated the car in
which she sat may have had a faulty exhaust
system and when she apparently put on the
heater, the carbon monoxide fumes entered
the inside of the car. He said the carbon
monoxide combined with the alcohol content in
the woman's blood poisoned her.
Police said Ms. Petticrew was divorced and
the mother of two children.

TODAY

" I was at the Jail Thursday evening and I ate
the meal. I liked it. It’s one of my favorites."
This morning, only three of the Jail's 250
inm ates refused breakfast, he said.

Florida’s unemployment rate rose
slightly last month to 9.9 percent and a
new five-year high.

10-11A

— M1CHEAL BEHA

D eaths..............
Dr. L am b .........
Editorial...........
F lo rid a .............
Horoscope........
H ospital...........

.............. 12A
................4A
................JA
................IA
......... .'...IA

Nation................. ............... IA
9A
People
. .
Sports................. ............9-7A
Television .......... .......Leisure
W eather..............
World...................

Sanford Would Be Depot
INCREDIBLE
Chips, a 2-year-old miniature pony, takes to the
water ik ii e a iie r than many hum ans. The pony,
owned by F orge Valley Fun Park of Horse Shoe,
N.C., was trained by Chuck B est, 112 A Elder
Road in Sanford. Best, who becam e nationally
known for training the squirrel Twiggy to water
ski. was retained to train several ponies to ski.
The ponies w ill be returned to the fun park to
perform in shows. The ponies are expected to be
nationally televised on the TV show, "That's
Incredible.”

Amtrak M ay Revive Auto-Train
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald SUff Writer
A proposed car-train service between Sanford and Lorton,
Va., similar toa service operated for 10 years by Auto-Train lx
being considered by Amtrak.
The plan Is still in Its early stages, according to Joan Corbett
of Amtrak's New York communications office.
The plan will be proposed by Amtrak msnagemenl to the
board of directors.
If the proposal does not come up at the Jan. 19 board
meeting, it probably will come up in the near future, she said.

The most likely area tor the car-train service, which would
transport passengers and their autos, Is between Washington,
D.C., and Florida, Ms. Corbett said.
If approved It would not go into service before September,
the said.
Amtrak, a government-subsidized passenger rail service,
received a $735 million federal subsidy during the year ending
Sept. 30, 1962, and suffered a $555 million loss in the same
period.
Auto-Train, which began carrying passengers and their cars
on the 1,300-mile Sanford-Lorton run on Dec. 1,1971, made its

lari run on AprikSO, 1911, after going bankrupt
Auto-Train, which was a private firm, had approxin
400 employees, about two-thirds of whom were headquai
In Sanford
The company filed (or bankruptcy In September 191
The Auto-Train Corporation’s assets were suctioned
December 1911. Auto-Train was $24 million in debt when i
under federal bankruptcy laws. Contributing to its do
were undercapitalization, a decline in ridership, a set
derailments, and a subsidiary which lost money.

�•V
Friday, Jan. 7. m i

NATION
IN BRIEF
D o w Hits N e w High

In Buying Stampede
NEW YORK (UPI) — The Dow Jones and other
stockmarket averages surged to all-time highs
Thursday in a Wall Street rally many analysts say may
reflect an upturn in the economy.
Many observers, noting the broad-based moves In
recent sessions, believe the list will shoot to new
heights today if institutions continue to Jump on the
bamjwagon of the bull market of the 1980s.
The tt&gt;w Jones Industrial average surged 26.03
points to al^all-tlm e high of 1,070.92 Thursday after
slipping 1.19 tne day before.
Through Thursday, (be Dow had climbed 294 points
since hitting a 27-month low of 776.92 on Aug. 12 last
year. Many experts believe the average will climb
above 1,100 in the near future.

G a s Tank Blast Kills I
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) — An explosion ripped
through three gasoline storage tanks at a Texaco plant
early today, killing one person, Injuring 21 others and
shooting bright orange flames hundreds of feet high.
The blast blew out windows 4 miles away.
More than 100 Newark firefighters were at the scene
and Fire Chief Stanley Kossup said the explosion may
have been caused by overfilled tanks, which each hold
a maximum of 450,000 barrels.
"The tanks have floating roofs and if overfilled,
vapors could stream out and become Ignited," Kossup
said.

Soviets: Satellite Fine
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The last days of a crippled
nuclear-powered Soviet spy satellite, at the mercy of
inflexible natural laws of space and gravity, ticked
away today to a seemingly inevitable crash to Earth.
American officials, and others throughout the world,
were not reassured by Moscow's statements that all is
well aboard the Cosmos 1402 satellite carrying a
nuclear reactor powered by more than 100 pounds of
Uranium 235.

N o Cyanide In Anadn-3
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - A bottle of Anacln-3 In
the home of a woman who died of cyanide poisoning
contained cyanide gas but the capsules were not
tainted with the poison and there Is not enough
evidence to issue a recall, officials say.
State Medical Examiner Dr. William Brady said no
evidence indicates the death of Patricia F. Bennett, 31,
of the Portland suburb of Hillsboro was anything more
than an "Isolated tragedy," unlike recent deaths from
cyanide-laced Tylenol In Chicago.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Snow and freezing rain carved a
path from Oregon to northern New England as up to 10 inches
of snow coated the northern Great Lakes. Winds up to 100 mph
howled out of the Colorado Rockies and a 375-foot mudslide
crept across U.S. 101 on Oregon's northern coast. By late
evening, heavy snow covered most of the area around take
Superior. At least 10 Inches of snow fell in extreme nor­
thwestern Wisconsin. Six Inches of snow covered Park Falls
and Wausau, Wls., as well as Duluth, Minn. Winds up to 99 mph
blasted the Rockies near Fort Collins, Colo. Winds reached 99
mph at Buckhom Mountain, and gusts to 94 mph were
recorded at Waverly before the winds knocked down
measuring equipment. Winds of 75 mph were reported at noon
around Brookings, S.D. tauisiana Agriculture Commlssoner
Bob Odom said floods which drove nearly 10,000 people from
their homes have destroyed $11.5 million of winter wheat In the
state and caused the deaths of 1,200 farm animals valued at
$500,000. Up to 85,000 acres of wheal and 570,000 acres of
pastureland are under water. Ahuge mudslide, loosed by rains
that have pelted the Pacific Northwest all week, slid down a
hill near Tillamook, Ore, closing U.S. 101 and forcing the
residents of at least two homes to leave the area.
AREA READINGS (I a.m.): temperature: 52; overnight
low: 43; Thuriday high: 66; barometric pressure: 30.20;
relative humidity: 54 percent; winds: north at 8 mph; rain:
none; sunrise 7:19 a.m ., sunset 5:44 p.m.
SATURDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:42 a m ,
4:01 p.m.; lows, 9:54 a.m., 9:59 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 3:34 a.m ., 3:53 p.m.; lows, 9:45 a.m ., 9:56 pm .;
BAYPORT: highs, 10:09a.m .,6:54 p.m.; lows, 3:30 a.m .,3:12
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: 8L Augustine to Jupitet Inlet, Out
59 Miles: Northerly winds around 10 knots today and tonight
becoming variable 10 knots or less Saturday. Seas 2 to 4 feet.
Partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST — Partly sunny today with highs upper
60s to low 70s. Northerly wind 10 mph. Tonight and Saturday
mostly fair. Rather cool tonight with lows in the upper 40s.
Highs Saturday In low 70s. Wind tonight light and variable.
EXTENDED FORECAST - Variable cloudiness with a
chance of rain north Sunday and a chance showers central and
south through Monday. Tuesday mostly fair to occasionally
partly cloudy. Lows In the 40s north to low 50s central and mid
to upper 50s south except low to mid 60s extrem e southeast
coast and keys. Highs in mid to upper 60s north to low 70s
central and m id 70s south.

h o s p it a l n o t e s
C M tril PlerMs a » « * M l H o i*U l

TtwreUsy

Ad m is s io n s
SANFORD:
Alpftont* Amlro
James D. Tolmas
Mildrrd M. Rev. DaBary
Harold E. Barry. Daltonal
Georea E. B rllharl, Daltona
Stan* tem aU, Lake M ary
Richard J. E v e n t. Lone wood
Gladys Roberson. Winter Spg
Glenn R. Choklen, Metro. W.Ve

B IR T H S
William T. and Katharine Cor so.

E m t l n g H r u ld

a baby girl, Ntw Smyrna Bch
DISCHABO IS
SANFORD:
Bftnda K. Eltwick
Johnla M. Gardner
Ruth Livingston
S«n|amln Springer
Johnnie L. Taylor
AntAony D. Williams
baby boy Wise
Albert J. Kroil, Daltona
Evert J. Odum, Lake Mary
Vera M. Johnson. Noviedo
Syndy E . M u lrh a ld . Winter
Springs

(UIM MI-INI

Friday. January l , 1913— Vd. 75. No. 120
PeM th* Daily aad l»a*ay. ticept khKtav By Tkt toatort
MwiW. I * . . M N . Fraatb A * * . . U * W t Fla. M il! .

I m m * CIM» F*tM«a raM at UaMrA FiarMa m il

Nmm DaUvtry: Waak. *».a*j MaaM. M Ui a Maatto. $MMi
Viar, m aa. By Mall: Waak IU I; Maatk. tltS j « Maatkt.

Anybody Lose
A Lot Of Cash?
Sanford police have appealed for the owner of an envelope of
what police describe as a "large am ount" of cash to come
forward and claim the money.
The envelope was found by police at Zayres Shopping Plaza,
U.S. Highway 17-92, in Sanford on Tuesday at about noon.
Police will not say how much cash is in the envelope, but they
hint In the area of several hundred dollars.
There Is a clue Inside the envelope which will prove the
Identity of the true owner, according to Sgt. Bill Bemosky.
POTARREST
Willie Jam es Burnett, 29, of Orlando, was arrested and
charged with possession of marijuana after he was seen sitting
with a friend In a car smoking.
A police officer approached the car parked outside a 7-11
Convenience store at 401 State Road 436 on Thursday when he
saw that the license bracket was damaged. As he approached,
the two men sitting In the car "became nervous" and at­
tempted to hide the cigarette that they appeared to be sharing,
the officer's report said.
The inside of the car had a "strong odor of cannabis bur­
ning," the arrest report said, and when Bifmett was searched,
a small envelope of pot was found.
GAS ATTENDANT PUNCHED
A motorist became angry when given $2 change In quarters
and punched the gas station attendant, Mansour Vahdatpour,
at the Tenneco station at 1900 Howell Branch Road, Winter
Park.
The incident occurred at about 2 p.m. Thursday after a
motorist paid for his gas with a $20 bill. A police report says
that Vahdatpour was short of $1 bills and handed the man $2 In
quarters. The man told Vahdatpour to borne out of the cash
booth and when he did the man grabbed him by the front of the
shirt, breaking a gold chain, spat in his face and then punched
him on the side of the head, the report said.
The man then fled.

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Action Reports
★ Fires

it Courts
★ Police
GAME ROOM RAIDED
Bandits forced open the front door of the Road Runner
Arcade on State Road 419 and 4th Street, Chuluota, and rifled
the coin boxes In seven video game machines, netting $340.
Owner Randy Tyler of Chuluota, said the break-ln occurred
between 9:30 p.m. Tuesday and 6:45 a.m. Wednesday.
DRIVER STUCK IN FLOWERBED
A driver stuck In a flowerbed was arrested and charged with
driving under the influence of alcohol. Kyle Dana Keogh, 19, of
123 ta k e Mary Avenue, take Mary, was seen by a woman
trying to get his car out of a flowerbed near 1904 Winnebago
Trail, Fern Park at about 12:15 u r n . Thursday.
PURSE SNATCHED
A 74-year-old woman had her handbag snatched by a youth
as she was leaving her apartment.
Cornelia Evelyn Klnunel, had Just left her apartment at
Redding Gardens at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday when a youth ran
toward her saying "ltt" ana then snatched her purse con­
taining $35, a check book, Social Security card and a bottle of
nitroglycerine pills.

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every bra you buy.

FIRE AT JAIL
Sanford firefighters rushed to the Seminole County Jail at 9
p.m. on Thursday to answer a fire call. But when firemen
arrived, ihey discovered that there had been an electrical fault
In a panel box.
"There was really no fire. It was out on arrival," a fire
department spokesman said.
DU1 ARREST
The following person was arrested in Seminole County for
driving under the influence (DUI) of alcoholic beverages:
— Gerald Lee Roy, 36, of 174 Bristol Point, Longwood, was
arrested for DUI and reckless driving at 1:37 a.m. Friday In
the parking lot of the Altamonte Springs Inn on Douglaa Road.

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Some Winter Heating
Bills Up 25 Percent
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Skyrocketing home heating bills
will be even higher this winter than the government previously
believed — a whopping 25 percent more than last year for
people who use natural gas.
The Energy Department reported the bad news Thursday In
Its statistical Short-Term Energy Outlook.
Despite the current record gas glut, the department revised
upward its natural gas price forecast, predicting the 25 percent
Jump. Its last estimate was for a 21 percent Increase.
Unusually mild weather this fall and winter In parti of the
nation — especially the East — has cushioned the blow. Con­
sumer groups say the elderly, poor people and others on fixed
Incomes may be confronted by staggering monthly g u bills If
the weather turns colder.
In addition, the 25 percent prediction Is an average figure,
and some regions may suffer through gas prices hikes as high
as 60 to 70 percent over last winter, the Citizen-tabor Energy
Coalition warned.
The energy report Immediately sparked renewed call* for
Congress to Impose tough new restrictions on natural gas
pipeline contract provisions that are fueling the record prices.
"This shows how distorted the market really is and why
Congress must act now," said E d Rothschild of the Citizenta b o r Energy Coalition.
Industry officials also reacted quickly, calling for decontrol
of natural gas prices.
"Congress has an opportunity to erase the Natural Gas
Policy Act's burdensome regulations that hurt consumers,
producers, pipelines and utilities alike this year by enacting
the total and phased decontrol of natural gas,” argued Natural
Gas Supply Association President Nicholas Bush.
Much of the blame (or the staggering rise In natural gas
costs focuses on controversial "take-or-pay" contracts that
force pipelines to transport high-priced gaa from the South­
west and foreign sources, instead of low-priced g u from areas
such u Appalachia and Ohio.

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Pipeline companies signed the long-term contracts during
frantic bidding for supplies following the natural-gu shortage
0( 1678-77.
"This 25 percent Increase reflects the change that h u taken
place because of high take-or-pay contracts," Rothschild said.
"Now we find out U h u really raised prices far more than the
Energy Department expected"

Elvis Salute O n VVTRR
In rememberance of the late Elvis Praaley, Sanford radio
station WTRR, AM 1400, will program a special musical
tribute Saturday on what would have been the King’s 41th
birthday.
Twelve hours of Elviif, covering his career from 1666 through
his death in 1677, will be aired beginning at 6 p.m.

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12:30 To 5:30
Mon. thru Sat.
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President Ronald Reagan has joined with the blood bank
community proclaiming January as National Volunteer Blood
Donor Month and is urging everyone who is healthy to donate
blood.
"There is no real substitute for the blood or blood com­
ponents needed on an ongoing and urgent basis by many people
who are sick, injured, or afflicted with chronic diseases," said
Reagan.
Volunteer Blood Donor Month was first instituted In 1971 to
help alleviate the chronic blood shortages which occur after
the holidays. The presidential declaration has been Issued
annually since that time. Bob Hope has made public service
announcements and Is encouraging the public to give so that
others might live.
More than 250 pints of blood are required daily in the Central
Florida area, and the need is constantly increasing to meet the
demands of patients in 22 hospitals and four dialysis centers.
In conjunction with National Volunteer Blood Donor Month,
each person who gives a pint of blood to the Central Florida
Blood Bank between Jan. 3 and Feb. 28 will receive a free red
rose from the Central Florida Florist Association.
Central Florida Blood Bank operates a main office in
Orlando, 12 branch stations, and two mobile units. It fulfills
patient requirements for whole blood and blood components
throughout Brevard, Highlands, Lake, Orange, Osceola,
Seminole and St. Lucie counties.

Literacy Test
Headed To Court
TAMPA (UPI) — A federal judge has scheduled a nonjury trial to decide whether Florida's controversial Functional
Literacy Test accurately measures what is taught to high
school students across the state.
U.S. District Judge George Carr Thursday set the trial date
for Feb. 28.
The test, formerly called the State Student Assessment Test
Part II, is designed to gauge a student's abilities to apply basic
skills to real-life situations, such as map reading and check­
book balancing.
At the close of the 1982-1983 academic year, passing the test
will be a requirement for a public high school diploma in
Florida.
Five years ago, when the test was first created, it prompted
a civil rights battle. A lawsuit was filed on behalf of ten
students in the Tampa Bay area, alleging the test dis­
criminated against blacks who had educational opportunities
inferior to their white counterparts.
In 1979 Judge Carr ruled that the test was not inherently
racist, but that blacks who had attended segregated schools
were at a disadvantage in taking the lest.
Carr ruled that the test could not be given as a requirement
for high school diplomas until the end of the 1982-1983 school
year, when all graduating students would have had.12 years of
instruction under the integrated system .'
In 1981, a federal appeals court ordered the state to prove
that the material covered on the exam actually was taught
before the state could require high school students to pass the
test.
School officials have prepared a 32,000 page report of the
state’s 67 school systems which will attempt to do just that.
Dianna Pullin, leading the team of attorneys who will
challenge the school board's findings, said Thursday she has
evidence the exam does not reflect what Ls actually taught.

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Polk, Commission
To Discuss Double
Taxation Problem
The Seminole County Commission will sit down with Sheriff
John Polk In the next few days to determine what action can be
taken to alleviate the problem of double taxation in the county.
County Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff assured delegates at
the Council of Local Governments In Seminole County meeting
In Lake Mary Wednesday night that the commission is looking
toward providing equity in county taxation for both the in­
corporated and unincorporated areas of Seminole.
A special committee named by the council completed a
study several weeks ago declaring that city residents receive
no "real and substantial" benefit from road patrols and the
investigation unit of the sheriff's department.
The council and all the cities sent resolutions to the Coilnty
Commission asking that the inequity whereby the city
residents pay for the service which ls not received in the in­
corporated areas be resolved.
The committee's recommendation was to seek County
Commission cooperation rather than court action to settle the
double taxation issue.
Kirchhoff noted the commission has a responsibility to all
the dtlzens of the county, both those living In the city and in
unincorporated areas.
"We are going to have our attorney tell us what ls our
liability to both sides at budget time," he said.
In other business, Altamonte Springs City Commissioner
Constantine was elected chairman of the council for 1983.
Named vice chairman was Lake Mary Mayor Walter
Sorenson, and Winter Springs City Commissioner Burley
"Buck” Adkins was chosen treasurer.
The council is composed of representatives of all seven cities
in the county and the County Commission.
Delegates in addition to Constantine, Sorenson, Adkins and
Kirchhoff, who is replacing Sandra Glenn are: Casselberry
Mayor Owen Sheppard, who is slated to be replaced in
February by new Mayor Charles Glascock; Longwood Mayor
June Lormann, who Is the retiring chairman of the
organization; Oviedo Councilman Gary Gotwalt and Sanford
City Commissioner Eddie Keith.

Cerebral Palsy
Telethon Slated
For Jan. 22, 23
New State Representative Art Grindle (R-Altamonte
Springs) will be local emcee (or the upcoming 1983 United
Cerebral Palsy Telethon to be telecast over WCPX-Cbannel 6.
Grindle has long been an active supporter of Central
Florida's Jack Holloway Jr. Memorial Cerebral Palsy Clinic
at 930 S. Orange Ave., Orlando.
Paul Anka, Dennis Jam es, and John Ritter will hoat the
"Weekend with the Stars Telethon (or Cerebral Palsy" Live
fr a n -Los Angeles and New York, Jan. 22-8 with taped
segments from U s Vegas and Hawaii and local cutaways for
10 minutes every half hour for regional entertainment.
Seventy percent of the money raised by the telethon go to
operate the local clinic and 30 percent goes to national
research, local UCP officials
Members of Rollins College fraternities and sororities will
bold benefit car washes 0 a m to 1 pm . Jan. I and 15 at area
Popeye’s restaurants.

FLORIDA ~
IN BRIEF
Panel Suggests Subsidy
For Malpractice Rates
TALI.AHASSEE (UPI) - An advisory group formed
in the wake of last summer’s work slowdown by south
Florida doctors will recommend that malpractice
insurance rates be subsidized with flat rate fees
assessed against health care providers.
The group will also recommend that the hospital
industry be the so-called "deep pocket," the group
financially responsible if the fund for excess
malpractice coverage runs short of money.
The recommendations adopted by the group call for
actuarially sound rates but also provide for a subsidy
through an annual $100 fee for physicians and an an­
nual $5-per-bed charge on hospitals.

M o r e Fire Deaths Possible
PENSACOI.A (UPI) - A proposed change In stale
laws seeking to end inspection of construction projects
by fire m arshals may result In more deaths of people
trapped In burning buildings, firefighters said.
A committee of 14 legislators and building trade
experts prepared the report after the collapse of the
Cay Condominum under construction In Cocoa Beach
killed 11 workers and injured 8 In March 1981.
Committee member Charles King of West Palm
Beach said inspection by fire marshalls before the end
of construction is an expensive duplication of In­
spection by county building departments. According to
the committee’s proposal, fire m arshals still will in­
spect buildings after they are completed, he said.

Environmentalists See Pink
MIAMI (UPI) — Environmentalists enraged over a
plan by controversial pop artist Christo to cover 10
uninhabited islands in Biscayne Bay in "silky-soft"
pink fabric are going to do some covering of their own
as a protest.
They are threatening to wrap the Dade County
Courthouse with flamingo-pink garbage bags next
week.
Jack Kassewitz Jr., head of the National Wildlife
Rescue Team, is opposed to the "Surrounded Islands"
project because he said it could harm manatees and
other wildlife in the bay. Christo, as well as state and
federal wildlife officials, said that isn’t true.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Ghandi's Party Defeated
In Three State Elections
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) — Prim e Minister Indira
Gandhi's Congress Party lost control of two itate
assemblies today for the first time since Independence
in a m ajor defeat for the leader of the world’s biggest
democracy.
In a stormy election Wednesday In which 10 people
were killed in violent clashes, opposition candidates
thrashed Mrs. Gandhi’s chief allies in the key southern
states of Andhra Pradesh and Kam atka, election
results showed today.
Mrs. Gandhi, who returned to power three years ago
for a five-year term, had been expected to watch the
results of Wednesday's state elections closely to decide
whether she has enough strength to call early national
elections.

Apparent Coup Staged
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) - El
Salvador’s m ilitary commanders went into an all-njght
meeting today as a disgruntled provincial commander
seen as one of the nation’s brightest young officers
declared his forces In rebellion. Flanked by his high
command, declared his province of Cabanas in d sr
"m ilitary alert" In a broadcast from San Salvador on
one of about a dozen commercial stations In El
Salvador at about 10 pm .
His move was seen as an open attem pt to gain sup­
port from other moderate officers in an apparent tin t
move of a military coup.

CALENDAR
8ATURDAY, JANUARY I
Seminole Alaaoo, noon, Commimlty Church, s tate
Road 436, Altamonte Springs.
8aafor6Brtafcfart Rotary Clah, 7 a.m ., Airport
Restaurant.
Saaferd AA W eaaa'a Greet, 2 p m , 1301 W. n n t
St., Sanford.
Seminole Halfway HeateAA, I p m , speaker, Laka
Minnie Road, Sanford.
Saaferd Big. Book AA, 7 p m , Florida Powfr and
lig h t building, Myrtle Avtenue. Open rttarw rion.
MONDAY, JANUARY M
League of Womea Voters el 8eaiaaie Coaatj,
general meeting, 7:45 p.m„ Altamonte Community
Church fellowship hall, State Road 431 at Forest
Avenue, Altamonte Springs. Speaker, Ruth Ann
Bramaon, state president LWV of Florida.
W hier Sprfcgs S ertsaa, 7:18 a m , Big Cypram.
Leagwaed Rotary CJab, 7:38 a m , LsagwoodVUhmi
Inn.
Ovtode Rotary Clab, 7:31 a m , Towu Homo
R estaurantSaaferd T tartw asten, 7:11 % ia I —fnril Airport
Restaurant.

TUESDAY, JANUARYU
Dllaois d a b of Central Florida, 1:18 p m , Senior
Citizen Multipurpose Center, C—aslharry.
Americas Diabetes Osseriatisa.
Laka Monroe
Chapter, 7:30 p m ., Central Florida Regional Hospital,
Sanford.

» . e^

Donate Blood

Friday, Jan. 7 ,1W—3A

�Evening Herald
(USPS U1 7M)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F U . 32771
Area Code 30M22-26U or 831-9993
F riday, Ja n u a ry 7, 1983—4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, M a n a gin g Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11,00; Month, $4. 25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, 145.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Something
To Think About
The many monolithic aspects of the Soviet state
make it easy to forget that the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics encompasses an ethnic and
cultural smorgasbord. And therein lies cause for
worry among the ethnic Russians who hold most
of the positions of real power in the Soviet Union.
The latest Soviet census, in 1979, reportedly
showed that ethnic Russians composed barely
half of the total Soviet population. The other half
was made up of more than 100 nationalities, in­
cluding such culturally diverse peoples as
U krainians, Uzbeks, K azakhs, L ithuanians,
G eorgians, A rm enians, T urkm en, P ersian s,
Kirghes, Tadzhiks, and Azerbijanis.
Most of these ethnic groups have resisted or at
least resented Russian rule since Moscow began
to extend its reach in the 16th century. Many still
do. The Baltic states, the Ukraine, and the
predom inantly Moslem rep u b lics of Soviet
Central Asia have experienced a marked renewal
of nationalist fervor in recent years.
All of this belies the official Soviet propaganda
surrounding this month’s 60th anniversary of the
founding of the Union of Soviet Socialist
R epublics. The 1917 B olshevik Revolution
established the communists in power but it was
not until December of 1922 that the various
republics were formally incorporated into the
Soviet state.
Lenin’s preseht-day heirs pay lip service to the
notion of a voluntary union of Soviet republics,
any one of which is theoretically free to secede if it
chooses. In fact, of course, the 15 republics and
the m any minority nationalities are held in lock­
step obedience by the political, military, and
police power at the Kremlin' command.
The late Soviet dissident and historian, Andrei
Amalrik, predicted that “ national animosities
within a multinational state in which certain
nations enjoy privileged statu s’’ could one day
precipitate dissolution of the Soviet state. That
possibility still seems rem ote.
But the Soviet Union's own census figures in­
dicate that the minority nationalities will hold a
collective majority in the Soviet population by the
end of the 1980s. That fact, and the Kremlin’s
failure to suppress nationalist sentiment among
the ethnic minorities during the last 60 years,
should give Yuri Andropov and company
something to think about.

Riot In Miam i
The police shooting of a young man playing a
video game has sparked street rioting in Miami.
The policeman is Hispanic and the victim, who
later died of his wounds, is black, lending racial
overtones to the death and riots.
The incident brought back memories of riots in
Miami in 1980. Then, blacks protesting the
acquittal of a policeman charged with the slaying
of a black man rampaged through the Liberty
neighborhood. The 1980 death toll was 18. So far,
two have died in the new cycle of violence, the
second man shot dead by police while he was
looting.
TTiere are differing stories as to what occurred
in the video arcade. Police say the victim was
arm ed with a handgun, which he reached for
when an officer told him to freeze. Friends of the
victim say he was unarm ed, made an abrupt
. movement when told to freeze and was shot in
cold blood.
.
The officer involved in the shooting has a record
of six citizen complaints since graduating from
the police academy in 1981, The Miami Herald
reports. The police departm ent cleared him of two
charges and four were ruled “inconclusive." He
and a fellow policeman at the scene were both put
on desk jobs pending police investigation. The city
of Miami and the FBI a re both conducting in­
vestigations of the shooting.
Tliat is good. If police brutality was responsible
for this killing, Ilk: officer must be punished, and
police m ade more responsive to complaints.
TTiere is no room for violence in the streets.
Rioting and looting must be halted and punished—
- not rewarded.
But the deeper causes of despair which erupt in
J violence—joblessness, lack of education, poverty
; and hunger—must not be ignored. The federal
: government must make serious new efforts to
• c re ate effective programs to give young blacks
: equal opportunity and to help them find jobs.

•BERRY'S WORLD

By DONNA ESTES

A contingent from the Seminole County
Democratic Executive Committee attended Gov.
Bob Graham and Lt. Gov. Wayne Mixson's
inaugural ceremonies this week and were most
impressed.
John Henry and Janice Morgan of Eastbrook
said the events began Monday afternoon when a
large barbecue, sponsored by the state party,
was held at the Rauls estate in Tallahassee.
"It was chilly with the wind blowing briskly,
but everyone was very sociable," Morgan said,
noting his belief that all the events preceding the
inaugural, the event Itself and the parly in the
park across from the governor's mansion af­
terwards reflected Graham’s personality of
charm and ease.
At 9 a.m. inauguration day a nondenominational Inaugural prayer service was
held at Florida A&amp;M University. “ It was ob­
viously an effort to dedicate the day and the new
administration to the I&gt;ord," Morgan said.
He noted that all the major faiths were
represented including the Jewish faith, Baptist,
Episcopalian. Greek Orthodox. Methodist and

Roman Catholic.
The service, which Morgan said was both
reverent and inspiring, lasted 45 minutes. Since
most state offices were opening and functioning
just like any other day, parking was a problem,
he said.
The inauguration ceremonies, held on the old
Capitol steps on (he west side, began at 11 a.m.
"Form er Gov. Reubin Askew, was m aster of
ceremonies and did a superb job," Morgan said,
estimating the crowd at 3,500 to 4,000. "The sun
came around the old Capitol about 11:30 and
sitting in the sun was very comfortable," he said.
U.S. Sen. l.awton Chiles was on the podium,
but he and the other dignitaries kept low profiles,
calling little attention to themselves," he said.
"Even though Askew only the day before had
announced his prospective candidacy for
president, Askew seemed to shift the center of
attention to the governor and lieutenant
governor," Morgan said.
Morgan said former Gov. Leroy Collins, who
spoke on the history of past inaugurals was very
eloquent.

The oath of office was administered at 12:02
p.m. The 19-gun cannon salute vibrated the
whole setting, Morgan said. Then four jets flew
in formation over the scene followed by six
helicopters. "It was very moving, very’ in­
spiring," Morgan said.
"I felt the governor was speaking from the
heart as he told Ihe crowd that Florida was made
by dreamers, but the dream ers were also
practical people. He said our first priority should
be education and that it is far better to invest
money in education early on rather than in
prisons later on.
"The governor kept comparing the personal
growth of education and agricultural growth. He
also said that we fought nature and the resources
to develop Florida and now we must fight
development to maintain the balance."
Morgan also talked of the “ Wide-open" and
hospitable atmosphere in the new Capitol with
offices open for those who wanted to sec. I could
have sat in the governor's chair if I had wanted
to," he said.

JEFFREY HART

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

Stalemate
Dangers
In Congress
The turbulent lameduck session of the 97lh
Congress suggests that worse is yet to come in
the new session.
In shifting the political balance in the House
of Representatives, the voters set up the
conditions for a stalemate. That's what we
saw emerging in the lameduck session. And
the stalemate is likely to become more
pronounced in the new Congress. The suf­
ferers in this will be the American people who
need strong, clearly defined national policies
in a period of adversity.
The American governmental system has its
strong points as compared to the
parliamentary' system in Great Britain. On
the other hand, it is an adversarial system,
with resulting checks on the formation and
execution of policy. On many occasions in the
past, the United Slates has been almost im­
mobilized by a stalem ate between the White
Rouse and Congress. We may be in for
another such period between now and the next
presidential election.
The nation's problems cry out for consensus
solutions-on Social Security reform for
example. Consensus solutions are almost
impossible to achieve with the kind of
political balance in effect because of the
rpcent congressional elections.
The stalemate occurs at the worst possible
moment for the United States. The nation's
economy is in deep trouble. Abroad, the world
financial system is in peril. The Soviet Union
has made a sw ift change to a new leadership
which seems likely to be more sophisticated
and effective in advancing the interests of
communism. In these circumstances, the U.S.
government should be both sure and flexible
in its responses. It Ls hard for it to be either
because Congress is undependable. In this
critical juncture in foreign affairs, the
lameduck Congress deleted production funds
needed for the MX missile.
The country faces unprecedented deficits.
Again, Congress seems unwilling to come to
grips with the need for austerity and for
reform of the Social Security system. The
country needs an enlightened Industrial
policy to make it more productive and
competitive, but Congress is determined to
use band-aid, WPA-type jobs programs to
deal with recession and industrial
deterioration.
In this unfortunate period, the American
people must make their voce heard. It is
especially Important that they remind the
new Congress that legislative guerrilla war
will cost the nation dearly, retarding
economic recovery and endangering
America's position abroad.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be signed, with
a mafllsi address and, U possible, a
telephone number so the Identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening
Herald will respect the wishes of writers
who do not want their names la print. The
Evening Herald also reserves the right to
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
to space requirements.

Reagans
Finest
Hour

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

Ignoring Soviet Outrages
NEW YORK iNEA)—Just what sort of
conduct do you suppose it would take, on the
part of the Soviet Union, to outrage liberal
opinion in the Western world? Granted,
bringing this outlaw nation to book for its
crimes is something else again, for it is ex­
tremely powerful and therefore dangerous.
But there is no risk involved, from the
standpoint of liberals living in perfect
freedom on this side of the Iron Curtain, in at
least expressing an appropriate moral fury at
the conduct of the despots who rule Russia.
Yet they will apparently overlook any
outrage, and keep on calling for a deeper
"understanding" of these villains—as if we
did not understand them very well already.
What kind of Soviet behavior, I repeat,
would really get to such people? The
K rem lin's total suppression of internal
dissent is clearly not cnough-that has been
going on for 65 years, and everybody takes it
for granted. The Soviet Union's systematic
destabilization and subversion of other
sovereign nations, from Cambodia and
Mozambique to Nicaragua, is positively
applauded-at any rate until the local liberals
in such places, who typically helped the
communists seize power In the first place,
come bounding out and report breathlessly
that things are actually worse than before.
Not even the outright Soviet invasion of
another country, as in the case of
Afghanistan, can rouse the world's liberals to
more than a purely pro forma protest. To this
very day the U.N. General Assembly has
never been able to bring itself to Identify by
nationality the "foreign forces" for whose
withdrawal from Afghanistan it has meekly
called. Yet this sort of pusillanimity Is
scarcely so much as criticized In the West.
Very well, then; would Western opinion be
deeply roused by a Soviet Inspired attempt to
assassinate the pope? Such an attempt was
actually made, and nearly succeeded, and the
would-be killer has now implicated a whole
raft of Bulgarian intelligence agents, not one
of whom would dream of tying his own
shoelaces wthtout the prior knowledge and
permission of the KGB. Whit’s more, the
head of the KGB at the time has just taken
over the chairmanship of the self-elected little
committee that runs Russia-and we are
Invited to butter him up on the theory that he
Is a "closet liberal"!

What’s left? How about waging highly
sophisticated chemical warfare against the
native populations of backward but refrac­
tory nations like Afghanistan and Cambodia?
Would that at least if proved against the
Russians, rouse the sluggish conscience of
Western liberal opinion? Apparently not; the
first American charges about Soviet use of
"yellow rain" were attacked and dismissed
by our liberal media as too insubstantial to
credit. The most recent official State
Department report on the subject, being far
too detailed and well-documented to dismiss
that way, has been given the absolute
minimum of media attention.
And by the way, don’t fall for the liberal
excuse that they see no point in making heavy
weather over misdeeds of foreign countries
that “the United States can't do anything
about." We couldn't "do anything about"
Hitler in the 1930s either, but that didn't
prevent the world's liberals from yelling
bloody m u rd e r-a n d rightly—about his
domestic persecution of Jews and his foreign
aggressions. One can imagine just how lively
their reaction would have been If there had
been comparable evidence that Hitler had
tried (o assassinate the pope or had resorted
in combat to “ yellow rain"!
I conclude that there ls absolutely nothing
the Soviet Union can do—no outrage against
the moral order that it can com m it-that
would tease from Western liberal opinion onetenth of the anger that any decent person
would normally feel. The reason, though
obscure, is not altogether incomprehensible,
what we call “liberal” opinion in the Western
world Is In fact essentially democratic
socialist opinion. As sudi it has many of the
same philosphical and rhetorical enemies as
com m unism : cap italists, m ultinational
corporations, the "u p p e r classes,” Big
Business, exploitative colonial powers, etc.
This common demonology prevents it from
evaluating the Soviet Union altogether ob­
jectively. Whatever lt*s "excesses" com­
munism isn't—In pure theory liberals would
stress (U they dared to be candid)—entirely
wrong.
Fortunately liberals are becoming steadily
less able to speak for the West. And that is
why the Soviet Union may yet receive what it
so richly deserves; the wholehearted moral
condemnation of mankind.

Showing
clear-sighted
leadership,
President Reagan has rejected the U.N.­
generated Law of the Sea Treaty, and in so
doing he led the rest of the Industrialized
world into opposition to this measure, which
has the fingerprints of Third World socialism
all over it. We would not have had any such
leadership from a Carter or even a Ford
administration.
Though 117 nations, or sort of nations,
signed the treaty at a Turtle Bay ceremony,
with sponsor Fiji signing first, 46 other
nations, including Britain and West Germany
did not. France and the Soviet Union signed,
but are unlikely to ratify In the absence of
United States participation.
That means the treaty is just a piece of
paper, since the only nations with a
significant capability of mining the resources
are not part of the scheme.
The provision thal sank the treaty from
Reagan's point of view was based on the
principle that the oceans are "the common
heritage of mankind.” Thai means that all
nations would be entitled to a cut of the
resources, whatever engineering capability
they possess, or even whether they can invest
anything in the projected mining enterprises.
That, of course, is global socialism writ large.
Presumably the principle, if accepted, would
inevitably extend to the resources of outer
space.
To put this global socialism into effect, the
treaty would establish a new international
bureaucracy to monitor mining operations.
Any enterprise seeking to mine the nodules of
copper, nickle, cobalt, zinc and other
materials on the ocean floor would be subject
to the politics of this bureaucracy.
The restrictive provisions set forth are
complex. Priority in granting contracts would
go to four groups of companies led by
American mining corporations, a French
consortium, and ventures controlled by
Britain, the Soviet Union and Japan.
In addition, there would be some sort of
global mining operation, under U.N.
auspices-financed by guess who-which
would be given one site equal In size or value
to any mined by a national or private en­
terprise. Private corporations would be
required to sell their technical expertise to
tne global group, which would become the
largest enterprise of all, by treaty equal to all
of the others combined.
It Is hard to believe that the Sea Treaty
reached the present stage, or that U.S.
negotiators under previous administrations
simply did not pack up their attache cases
and walk out when It became clear In what
direction things were moving.
One agrument for the treaty ls that (he
military leadership supports U because the
treaty provides that strategic straits such as
Gibraltar and Hormuz shall be kept open to
all ships. This is supposed to ensure the
military of safe passage In the event of war.
But anyone who thinks that provision means
anything probably believes fervently In the
Easter Bunny. In the event of war, for
example, it Is the job of the British navy to
close the Denmark Strait and bottle up the
Soviet Baltic fleet.

JACfC ANDERSON

Ways, Means Head Faces Challenge
WASHINGTON - Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl,
D-Ill., wears power like the Infantry helmet
he wore In Korea — and he's soon going to
need all the protection he can get.
As chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee, the big man from Chicago is
responsible for legislation to keep Social
Security solvent. He’ll be the target of pot­
shots from all aides — congressional
colleagues, the White House and the public.
Even a Solomon couldn't please everybody on
this one, and nobody has ever accused
Rostenkowskl of being a Solomon.
If the prospect of impending battle daunts
him, he didn't show it during a recent meeting
with aides in hla office a few steps from the
House floor. Knowing that many, perhaps
most, of his colleagues consider It the better
part of political valor to avoid either tax hikes
or benefit cuts, Rostenkowskl realizes he's
not going to be popular when he proposes one
solution or the other — perhaps both. But he
also recognizes necessity when it confronts
him.
"I'm going to deal with this even If It means
standing alone and being an S.O.B.," he said,
jabbing a finger in the air for emphasis.

He Is now in demand for political ap­
pearances. But he observed that once he
tackles the Social Security mess, he'll be
about as popular as Typhoid Mary.
Rostenkowskl has already had a brief
skirmish with the White House. On a recon­
naissance mission
down Pennsylvania
Avenue a few weeks ago, he had breakfast
with James Baker, the president’s chief of
staff.
Baker, still sm arting from the November
election results, accused the Democrats of
Irresponsibly politicizing Social Security
during the campaign. Baloney, Rostenkowskl
responded (or something to that effect). The
painful truth was that President Reagan's
vaunted safety net had developed gaping
holes - and the voters had simply caught
onto it, he said.
Rostenkowskl will also have to deal with
another powerful committee chairman, Rep.
Claude Pepper, D-Fla. The 82-year-old Rules
Committee boss ls the foremost congressional
champion of the elderly, and can be expected
to bottle up any Social Security reform bill
that tampers with their benefits.
The gravity of the problem is emphasized in

a report prepared for the Senate Budget
Committee by the Congressional Research
Service. My associate Michael Blnsteln has
seeh a draft of the report.
“The public... seems to have lost a
significant degree of confidence that the
system will survive over the long haul," the
report warns, "and it Is not likely that
recurring 'minimal measures’ to restore
financial soundness will remove these
doubts."
With startlin g frankness, the report
suggests that if the public really understood
how Social Security la funded, it might well
consider It “as a sort ol 'Ponzi game’ in which
the cost of meeting today’s benefit obligations
is borne not by the recipients of those benefits
but by today's workers — a sort of passing
the buck to future generations."
The unflattering reference, of course, is to
Charlie Ponzi, a con man who, in 1920, paid
"dividends" to investors out of money he got
from new investors instead of earnings —
precisely the way Social Security operates, as
the Senate report admits.
PENTAGON PIPELINE; One reason the
Air Force keeps throwing billions into its

much-criticized Maverick anti-tank missile
may be that old Pentagon institution — the
“ revolving door" that leads former Defense
Department employees to lucrative jobs with
contractors whose weapons they worked on
for the government. Hughes Aircraft of
Tucson, Ariz., which makes the Maverick,
has hired three ex-Air Force employees who
dealt with the controversial missile at the
Pentagon: Ronald Decosmo, now a project
engineer at Hughes, Wayne Mattaon, a senior
staff engineer, and Lochlan M acleay,
assistant manager of programs.
— The Armed F o rces Professional
Entertainment Program , which arranges
performances for American troops overseas,
has been caught with its male chauvinism
showing. A new brochure contains several
pictures of pretty women, and demands:
"Touring groups must include nl least one
female.” The brochure explains that ser­
vicemen "welcome the opportunity to talk
with young people their own age (especially
the g irls !)..." A Pentagon official confessed
thal the brochure was “ embarrassing." The
people who edited it have been reassigned to
Korea.

\

�I.
vy

Friday, Jan. 7, 1983-5A

Evening Henld, Sanford. FI.

Of Sanford News In 1982

M ore Tax Revenue, Storm Top List
By DONNA ESTES
houses, others who saw their automobile
Herald Staff Writer
bodies damaged with numerous pits from
The most important happening in the huge hail stones and business people who
Sanford city government in 1982 was the suffered the loss of plate glass windows
Florida legislature's raising of the and the resulting water damage saw the
sales tax which should result in nearly storms as a disaster.
1500,000 in new money being pumped into
However, independent roofers around
the city's coffers in the 1982-83 fiscal the city, automobile body repairmen and
year. This anticipated new revenue glass people may have seen the storm as
enabled Sanford to reduce property taxes a financial boon, he said.
by 11.58 per $1,000 assessed valuation for
The medical community and those who
city residents.
had used the old Seminole Memorial
At least this is the view of City Hospital over the 28 years it had fur­
Manager W. E. "P ete" Knowles from a nished medical treatm ent to the area
purely governmental standpoint.
were delighted when the new $26 million
Knowles said the funds from sales tax C entral Florida Regional Hospital
receipts helped relieve the tax burden on opened Its doors to patirnts on June 2.
property owners.
And the Seminole Memorial Hospital
"The Florida tax structure has been so was padlocked forever as a medical
minipulated by the State legislature facility.
with the high rate of exemptions that
The three-story brick Central Florida
property taxes are no longer a viable Regional Hospital is located off U.S.
means of supporting local government Highway 17-92 facing Lake Monroe. The
services," Knowles said.
225-bed facility includes 138 private
Mayor Lee P . Moore, however, rooms, 36 semi-private rooms, a nursery,
believes the April 8 twin hail storms a cardiac care and Intensive care units.
interspersed with what may have been a The new hospital, owned and operated by
tornado and the damage left in its af­ the Hospital Corporation of America, is
termath was the most important event of furnished with the latest medical
the year.
equipment.
"The storm certainly had a lot of effect
The facility's annual payroll is about $6
on the people — some devastating and million and hospital adm inistrator
some good," Moore said. He noted Jam es D. Tesar has estimated 30-to-35
homeowners who lost the roofs to their new employees will eventually be added.

He also foresees an expansion of the
hospital, possibly within two years,
noting the hospital is designed to take
five floors if necessary.
While half of the 1 cent increase in
sales tax was slated to come back to local
governments — cilies and counties —
Moore at public hearings on the city’s
1982-83 budget said Sanford may not
receive all of the $500,000 it has been
promised in revenue from that source,
lie pointed to cuts in state government
ordered by Gov. Bob Graham because
state revenues, including those from
sales taxes, are not coming in as ex­
pected.
The city took the safer route in its
budget and noted an expectation of
$467,762 from thnt- source.
The city adopted an $8.5 million budget
for this fiscal year with a tax rate of $4.37
per $1,000 assessed valuation. Despite the
reduction in the tax rate, property
owners saw little difference in their tax
bills from last year because Seminole
County Property Appraiser Bill Suber
completed a countywide reappraisal of
real property.
Countywide, property values were
boosted by 15 to 35 percent for an average
of 20 percent per property. Sanford
pro p erty owners received slight
reductions in city and county taxes, but
generally saw increases in School Board

taxes. Actual savings were slight.
For months after the April 8 hail storm
that showered the Sanford area with
stones as large as golf balls, clean up and
repair to city government facilities and
vehicles took place.
Damage to city property, facilities and
vehicles was estimated at $300,000.
The list of damage to city property and
equipment filled six Icgal-sized sheets.
The civic center had to be reroofed and
repaired to the tune of nearly $90,000; the
city sewer plant's sewage sludge bed
covers had to be replaced; broken plateglass windows at city hall and the civic
center had to be replaced along with the
civic center’s sun shades; 16 traffic lights
were replaced with new ones; some 64
traffic signs were missing and hud to be
replaced.
Thirty-nine city-owned vehicles
received dam age ranging from body
dents caused by the ahll stones to

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plan. Social Security benefits currently are exempt from
federal income taxes.
The newspaper said an allowance of $15,000 in income
benefits plus other sources of income also was being consid­
ered by the bipartisan panel. 11 said Ihc proposal would tax
benefits of married couples who file joint income-tax returns
with a total income of over $18,000.

12-

g iv e s y o u

&lt;Sf

MBe Taxed

D O N 'T

and

**

During the year, the city spent some
$100,000 to resurface portions of 36 streets
in the city.
New sodium vapor street lights cast a

sidering a plan to tax half the benefits received by a recipient
with an income above $12,000, it was reported today.
The Washington Post quoted sources as saying the extra
income would be pumped back into the nation's retirement

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Considerable dam age was done to
boats anchored at Monroe Harbor when a
tornado came across ta k e Monroe,
hitting the marina and the Holiday Inn.
The metal roof was blown off the Monroe
Harbour building and the aluminum
canopy was ruined. Water damage to the
office and showroom and to the roof was
estimated at $50,000.

WASHINGTON (UPI) —The presidential commission seek­
ing solutions to Social Security’s financial troubles is con­

c o m b i n e s t h e s e r v ic e s

jl

City merchants spent days cleaning up
and assessing their losses. Seminole
Memorial H ospital, then still in
operation, had $5,000 in damage to
broken glass, $2,000 in its print shop,
$3,000 to the emergency tower antenna
and $3,000 structural damufe inside.

yellowish glow over m any thoroughfares
in the community as the new more in­
tense lights were replacing the old
mercury' vapor street lights.
By mid-November, 383 new high
pressure sodium vapor lights owned by
the city were installed.
Meanwhile, Florida Power and Ughl
Co. in a cooperative effort hod converted
900 of the 1,500 street lights it owns in the
city to the new sodium vapor.
The new more intense lights brighten
larger areas than the old-fashioned ones
and they cost less to operate. While the
mercury vapor lights give off 4,500
lumens of light, the sodium vapor lamps
give off 5,800 lumens.
The cost to the city for the companyowned lights is about $G.17 per month (or
the old style plus fuel adjustm ent charge
and about $5.98 per month plus fuel ad­
justment charge for the new sodium
lights.

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�SPORTS
*A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 7 ,1W1

-Tonight

Relief

B a s k e tb a ll
l p.m. Sprue*C rotb at Somlnalo Bayi
The Tribe w ill tr y to rebound after li t
loot to DeLand by taking on Spruce *
Creek’s Hawks. Seminole, i s overall and
3 1 In tha Five Star Conference, lost its
l i n t conference game to DeLand on two
last second tree throws by the Bulldog's
Chase Brown.
Seminole's top scorer It Calvin " K lk i”
Bryant who came Into this week
averaging over IS points per game and
snooting better than SO percent Irom the
door The guards a r t Vernon Law who
leads tha 'Holes In assists and v e n a tlla
Torle Hendricks or Bruce F ranklin, a
tough defensive player. W illie M itchell
starts at center and W illiam Wynn is the
other forward.
I p.m. Lyman Baysat Daytona Btach
Saabreata
Coach Tom Lawrence's Greyhounds
are steadily Improving w ith a record of V
3 it w ill be Lym an's llrs t
'Hounds won lha Oviedo Outlook Tour
nament over the Christmas holidays.
1 p.m. B iu e litld (West Va.) StataatSCC
O lrls
Tha Lady Raiders go lo r their third
straight victory against a team that
UCF's Lady Knights routed, f t 57.
Coach Sol Batoon s squad is led by
sophomore point guard M indy Patrick
who has been impressive In the two
games a lte r the Christmas b rta k . At tha
second guard spot is Sandord's Cathy
Jones who has also been playing well
lately Forwards arc Valeria Roessltr
and K alrlna Anderssonwhllathacenler Is
Sue Winternhelmer. SCC's best scorer oil
the bench Is Evelyn Smith.
1 p.m. Lake M ary O lrls at W ln ttr Park
The Lady Rams are out to avenge an
earliar loss to W inter Park's Lady
Wildcats. W inter Park gave the Rams
Iheir first loss ol lha year alter Lake
M ary won Its firs t lour games.
It they stay out o l foul tro u b lt, Laura
and Peggy Glass should dominate the
boirds as they did against Lym an's V lkkl
M cM urrer. Michelle S w arti and Andrea
Johnson fill in at lha other forward
position while Kim A v e rlll and county
assist leader Lisa Gregory are the
guards
S p.m. Lyman G irls at Daytona Btach
Saabreata
Tha Lady Greyhounds woeld like to put
more than 31 points on the board tonight.
Tuesday night, Lym an dropped a 33 31
decision to Lake M ary.
Vlkkl M cM urrer leads Lym an's inside
game w ith help from Kim Lemon and
Kalle Rowland. Pam Jackson is deadly
Irom outside while point guard Kim
Goroum is a heads up player.

Raiders Hammer
Humber, 92-45,
For 10th Victory
What's the best tonic for an injuryri(jdlcd basketball team?
How about a little dose of Humber
College.
Seminole Community College’s
.Haiders, depicted with injuries to three
starters, got well in a hurry Thursday
.bight with a 92-45 victory at SCC over
If lumber, a small school from Toronto,
•Canada.
| “ We got up 9-0 and pretty much
coasted from there," said SCC coach BUI
T ayne who su bstituted liberally
'throughout the game.
The Haiders, 10-6, rolleji to an In­
surmountable 55-11 bulge at halftime
'over the over-matched Canadians.
' .SCC hit 40 of 66 shots from the field for
a sharp 61 percent. Humber connected on
jjusl-ll'of-65 shots for 26 percent. The
taller Haiders outrebounded Humber, 43

«7.
i

Sanford's Keith Whitney popped in 18
points to lead all scorers. Whitney hit 8 of
11 front the field and 2 of 3 free throws.

I Ails Phelps was n e it with 15 points whUe
Jimmy Payton added 13 and Apopka’s
Delvin Everett notched 10.
' Reserve forward Jim Maher led the
domination of the backboards with eight.
Phelps and Everett grabbed seven each
and Sanford’s Bernarid'Merthle coUected
sis. Payton handed out six assists and
David Gallagher passed out five.
GaUagher, however, injured his thumb
and his status is listed as "doubtful" by
Payne for Saturday’s encounter with St.
John's Junior College of Palalka.
8-10 Rudy Kulper,
»
cky 'Sutton' and forward
tswJ

J.C. Basketball
'We got up 9-0 and pre tty
much coasted from there I
— Bill Payne
Kevin Jerry Smith among the walking
wounded. Kuiper is still bothered by a
badly sprained ankle as is Sutton. Smith
is stUl troubled by problems in his lower
back.
"W e're going to sit them out Saturday
and hopefully get everybody ready for
Lake City," said Paine. The Raiders
m eet the nationally-ranked Timberwolves next Wednesday at Lake City.
Tipoff Saturday night is 7:30 p.m.
-S A M COOK
•
HUMBER COLLEGE (45)
Turner M l M 7, Walters 34 04) 6,
Grizzle 2-11 2-3 6, Stephenson 3-9 2-3 8,
Smith 4-7 2-10 10, Putrimas 3-11 2-3 8,
Brown 0-3 30 0, Browne 3 1 3 0 0j Bailey 3
10-0 0, Stewart 33 30 0, Pangos 32 0-0 0,
Totals: 18-65 322 45.
SCC (12)
Whitney 3112-318, GaUagher M 1-3 3,
Payton 38 3-4 13, Gaudreau 3-6 1-2 7,
Charles 36 30 6, Everett 37 30 10,
Merthle 35 2-2 8, Maher 3-4 1-3 7,
Koldenhof 2-4 1-2 5, Phelps 7 1-2 15,
Totals: 4366 1321 92.
Halftime - SCC 55, Humber 13.
Fouls - Humber 17, SCC 20.
Fouled Out — None.'

W re s tlin g

Herald Photo by Brian LaPotor

J i m m y P a y to n . S C C 's fla s h y g u a r d , sails th ro u g h
a s e a of a r m s fo r a layup against Humber College
•'niuiwdnv night. The H a id e r s h a m m e r e d (lumber,

92-45. S a tu r d a y n ig h t, c o a c h H ill P a v n e ’s s q u a d
'
takes on-Mr John'a a t 7:3*.'

&lt;&gt;)•

-(.

••

•H

\

a p.m. Seminole at Boone
Coach Scott Sherman's grapplers take
part In ih a lr llr s i threo way match of the
year tonight when they take on Lake
Brantley and Boone In Orlando.
Senior Ronnie Watson Is undefeated at
IIS pounds for the Stmlnoles In dual
meets. Vince Clark ( M il and Gary
Gontarman (17)) a r t other lop perfo rm e rs1for 'the ‘ Holes'.

Kingdom Of The Sun: A Gamble Pays Off Big Dividends
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
" Jim Holey and H. l*on Rogers gam­
bled once and won... so why not try it
ngaln?
t Rogers, presently the superintendent
of Marion County schools, but formerly
p rin cip al of O cala V anguard High
School, reached Into Illinois in 1973 and
’grabbed a Junior varsity basketbaU
coach. AU that coach — Haley — has
,done in the gast 9 'i years is win 216
games and three championships.
That's a pretty good return at
anybody's trlfe d a window.
' The next gamble, however, didn't
depend on an individual, it depended on a
lot of Individuals. Would the Ocala area
support a 16-team Christmas basketbaU
tournament?

t

*

Haley thought It would, Rogers wasn't
so sure.

n

“ Back In Bllnols, there are several 13
Jeam tournaments at Christmas tim e,"
said Haley who grew up in Joliet and
coached JV basketbaU at Aurora East.
•(‘There were none in Florida at the time
(1974). But when I first approached Mr.

Rogers about it, he was a Uttle worried
about expenses and how much money we
would make. BasketbaU was not that big
In Florida at the time."
R ogers, nevertheless, put his
trepidation behind him and Haley
launched the first "Kingdom of the Sun
Holiday Classic" In 1974.
He didn’t have to wait too long for the
cash register to sing. "It was a smashing
success," Haley recalls. "We made
$5,200 and the expenses were around
13,000."
One of the prime reasons fer Its success
was Lake Weir High School. The tiny 2A
cage power swept to the tournament title
behind the stellar performances of Frank
Johnson and Louis Faison. Johnson went
on to a fine coUege career at Wake Forest
and now holds down a backcourt position
for the Washington BuUets.
"When Lake Weir won U that year it
was the best thing that could happen,"
said Haley. "They had a lot of basketbaU
tradition (Frank and brother Eddie (one
year older, both are in the pros) and from
that point on, the tournament has grown
every year in gate receipts and ex-

Prep Basketball
penses.'
And prestige.
"The Kingdom of the Sun has always
been a class affair that is a fan's delight
and a college coach's dream because of
the coUege prospects that annuaUy play
in it," said Norman Sloan, Florida
basketball coach.
"The Sun Holiday G ass is the tour­
nament of Florida. Coach Haley not only
produces top notch players but runs one
of the classiest tournaments in the
country,'* said Glenn WUkes, Stetson
cage coach.
"The Kingdom of the Sun is the only
tournament of its kind in the Sunshine
State that matches the 'Little Davids' vs.
the ‘Goliaths’ — G ass A, G ass AA, Class
AAA and G ass AAAA. It gives the top
players in aU classes a chance to battle In
fierce, competitive action. It is a
Christmas Preview of the State Tour­
nament In.Lakeland," said Joe Williams,
Florida State basketball coach.
Sloan, WUkes and WUliams are aU

Minnesota Crushes lllini,
Eyes Big 10 Championship
Uailed Press UknaUaaal
Who will b* the Big Ten champions this
tough the pre-Mason favorites were
ana and Iowa, the Minnesota
hen believe they have a chance at
Utle In 190.
id with good reason - they are
ad No. 20, they are the defending Big
champions and they opened their
ereoce schedule Thursday with their
Lh straight victory, a 7349 rout of
sis.
Ifeplayed as well as we could for the
half," said Minnesota coach Jim
her of his team's 41-0 baUUme lead,
halftime, I was worried we wouldn't
that level for 40 minutes. We didn’t
y, but we wen intense enough to
&gt;9

ndy Brewer, a 7-fooM senior center,
•d II points along with guard
my Davis to lead 31 Minnesota,
h shot #1 percent from the field,
nnesota outscored Illinois, 135, to
the second half and built the margin
-27 with 12:90 left. The mini, 134,
Imanage Just two field goals in that
on two long baskets by Derek
er.

C o lic s* Baakotball
i
by Anthony Welch's 10 points. "Our
freshmen come in here and they*cs going
against guys like Breuer who was allBlg
Ten last year. They've never been here
before and naturally were a little in­
to other Top 10 games, second-ranked
and unbeaten Memphis state won its 11th
game wtth a 73f4 decision over St. Louis,
and No. IS Nevada Las Vegas defeated
Utah State in overtime 9377.
At Memphis, Term., Memphis State,
led by Andre Turner's II points, over­
cams a sluggish start to win. The Tigers,
114, outscored the
to takes 43
29 lead at intenniarion. St. Louis, 310,
was led by center Andre Ckalg's 21
points, II coining In the second half. ,

At Logan, Utah, Danny Tarkanlan
■cored 90 points and had eight of the
Rebels' II straight successful frpe throws
in overtime as llth-ranked Nevada-Us
Vegas won tts Pacific Coast Athletic
Sem inole’s Arlene Junes
Conference opener.
outstretches Junis Lynn
e’re not experienced enough to plsy
In some other top games, Russell Chus
im a consistent basis," said Illinois hit for 91 points as Purdue defeated rebound. Sem inole slaughtered
Spruce Creek, KX-41.
h ta u Henson, whose team was led Wisconsin. 9364.

annual spectators at the Kingdom of the
Sun. The feeling among the college
coaches In Florida Is that there is enough
talent to win In the state and the Kingdom
of the Sun puts the best of that talent on
display.
Although the Kingdom of the Sun ex­
perienced great financial success the
first few years, Haley said, "We Just try
to break even now. We're not out to make
money. We operate the tournament as an
exposure-type thing for the students to
get scholarships."
It’s also exposes a few*tate champions
like Williams pointed out about the
Christmas preview of the Lakeland affair
In March.
After winning the Kingdom in 74, take
Weir also won the AA title. In 1975,
E dgew ater won the AAAA and
TaUohassee Rickards took the AAA. In
1971, Vanguard won the AAA and Miami
Central captured the AAAA. In 1979, it
was Vanguard again and TaUahassee
McCUy in the A. In 1980, West Palm
Beach North Shore won the AAA and
Warner Christian of Daytona Beach took
the A. In 1981, G earw ater grabbed AAAA
honors whUe Marianna cleaned up in

AAA. Vanguard took its third title in five
years last year.
In Haley's first Kingdom, Bahamas St.
John's participated. It was only the
beginning of what he caUs, "The out-ofstate flavor. Now, he shoots for four of
the better teams in the country to spice
the field each year.
"It gives the Florida schools a chance
to see how they can do against some of
Die better teams in the country," said
Haley. “ We invited six of the lop 20 teams
in the country this year and two
(Decatur, Ga. and Washington D.C. St.
John's) accepted.
"We're also talking with Baltimore
Dunbar (currently the lop team in the
nation which loses Just four seniors)
about next year. That would be a great
attraction," he added.
Haley uses an involved procedure to
determine which teams qualify for the
Kingdom. He works closely with
recruiting and scouting services to see
which teams will be powerful the next
year.
"F irst, we look for teams which have
the top players," Haley said. "The teams
with the top players usually have good

programs and good team s."
The second procedure Is to find good;
talented teams.
The third step is to add the traditional:
state powerhouses like Stuart Martin:
County, Gearw ater and Vanguard.
J
To complete the field, Haley selects the]
teams which are predicted for top 10;
status and adds four teams from either,
Georgia, Kentucky, New Jersey or;
Washington D.C.
While Haley Is concerned about!
making the tournament better each year,:
he does feel that it Is close to reaching the!
summit.
S

9

"We’re very close to coming to the top'
of the ceiling," he said. "The only thin^
we need — and the only thing that'a going
to put us on top - is getting a national
sponsor.
"If that happens, you can see us
bringing in four national powerhouse^
and giving them their guarantee every;
year."
j
Looks like its time to roll the dice;
again.
;
(Sunday: Malay ta lk* abaut M t y ia y t r t and
N t futura).

Lady Seminoles Rip
Spruce Creek, 88-41
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sperts Writer
An old basketball proverb goes, "if you
put it up-som ething's bound to happen."
Seminole H igh's Lady Sem inole's
launched 90 shots from the Boor Thur­
sday night and with Diedre HUlery and
P a tric is . Cam pbell controlling the
boards, plus Maxine Campbell, Mona
Benton and Arlene Jones (running) the
break, the Tribe made things happen
their way in an 8341 drubbing of the Lady
Hawks of Spruce Creeek at Seminole
High.
Seminole, 34 overall and 32 in the Five
Star Conference, saw five players score
in double figures. Meanwhile the tad y
Tribe outrebounded the Lady Hawks, 43
20.

Maxine Campbell led the way with a
season-high of 20 points on an exceptional
10 of 12 from Die field. Benton added 18
points, Palricia Campbell ta d a M*a.snnhigh of 13 points while HUlery and Jones
added 10 points apiece.
Patricis Campbell pulled down a
game-high 14 rebounds. Hiliery snatched

Prop Basketball
eight, Benton keven and Genene
Si aUworth collected six boards.
From the opening minutes it was
evident that Seminole had loo much
firepower for the winless Hawks. The
'Notes buUl a 17-10 cushion after the first
quarter then outscored Spruce Crqek, 13
8, lo take a 32-18 halftime lead.
The Tribe opened the second half by
reeling off 14 straight points and about
midway through the third q u a rte r
Seminole led by 30, 5320. rhe Tribe
outscored the Creek, 32-8, in the third
quarter.
The runaway enabled coach Ron
Merthle to clear his bench as every
member of the ta d y Seminoles entered
ihc scoring column.
"I'm glad everyone got a chance lo
nlay," Merthle said. “ It's important Dial
everyone gets some experience to see if
they will be able to respond. We got a
chance to work on some things, like our

r.tan-io-man defense, that we doni
usually get a chance to work on."
!
Seminole hit 39 of ita 90 shots for 4l
percent whUe Spruce Creek connected o i
19 of 52 shots for 91 percenV.
Seminole will play Lake Brantley next
Monday at ta k e Brantley, If the Patric-new gymnasium floor is ready. Junl
v anity action fta ita at 1:15 with
van ity game Upping oil at I.

Prep Basketball Baxacerea
SEMINOLE (IB)
M. Campbell 1330 20, Pringle 11-2
HUlery 5 3210, Benton 1 3 4 II, Jones 41
10, P. CampbeU 5 36 13, Jenkins 3 M
Hardy 2 30 4, Stallworth 1 30
Goebelbecker 0 2-2 2. Totals: 3390 13!
88
SPRUCE CREEK (41)
Upe 3 2-5 8, Lynn 1 0 4 2, L. Moriarty
30 6, Frosh 9 33 18, C. Moriarty 1 32
Dobson 01-21, Zablo 2 30 4. Totals: 1
312 41.
Seminole
17 15 32 2
Spruce Creek
10 8 8 15-41
Fouled out-N one.
Total fouls-Seminole 9, Spruce Creek 14.
Technical-None.

»

�$

Friday, Jsn. 7, \ m - J A

Evening Hers Id. tsnford, FI.

SPORTS

Scorecard
Jai-Alal

IN BRIEF
Pabon's 2 Goals Spark
Hornets Past Semlnoles ~
Luis Patou bsrtfti two goals and John Mahoney
the Bishop Moore Hornets blanked
Seminole, 3-0, In soccer action Thursday at Seminole
High School.
"We ran into a very talented team ," said Seminole
coach Howard Hawkins. Seminole, which upset sixthranked Lyman Tuesday night, fell to 14 for the season.
Pabon broke up a scoreless battle IS minutes Into the
first half with his first goal. Mahoney Improved the
lead lo 2-0 with eight minutes left In the half with his
score.
In the second half, Pabon got a breakaway goal with
10 minutes gone to sew up the 3-0 verdict for coach
David Fall.
The Fighting Semlnoles attempt to avenge a 2-1 loss
to the Lake Mary Rams Tuesday night at Lake Mary.
Game time is 6 p.m.

H

Bdded one as

DeLand Nipt. toke,flronfiay.,,
D eland's Bridgette Gordon and Karen Thomas each
dropped in a free throw in overtime to lift the Lady
Bulldogs to a 44-42 victory over la k e Brantley Thur­
sday night at Deland.
It was the eighth loss against four wins for coach
Rennie Betrls’ girls, la k e Brantley fell to 3-4 in the
Five Star Conference.
Behind the hot shoting of Rhonda Vaiquez and Linda
Trimble, the Patriots took a 31-27 halftime lead.
Vaiquez hit several Jumpers from the right wing for 10 •
points while Trimble added eight.
Gordon, a 6-1 sophomore, was unstoppable in the
first half for the Bulldogs, though. She tossed in 21
points and collected 15 rebounds.
Brantley, nevertheless, shut off Gordon to five
second-half points and five rebounds, but Trimble
missed a jump shot with five seconds left which could
have sent the game into a second overtime.
Vazquez finished with 17 points and Trimble had 11.
The Patriots host Seminole Monday if their new
wooden floor is playable.
In other girls action Thursday, Lake Howell con­
tinued to roil as coach Dennis Codrey’s Silver Hawks
blitzed Apopka, 66-43, for their 12th victory in 13
outings.
Chiquita Miller, who tossed in a career-high 31 points
earlier this week against Bishop Moore, scored 21
points Thursday to lead all scorers. Mary Johnson
added nine points and Tammy Johnson had eight for
the Hawks.
Oviedo received 16 points from Fayetta Robinson
and 12 from Tanya Roland to edge Austis, 57-53, in
Orange Belt Conference action.
Coach Ed Bolton’s Lady Lions roared to a 36-15
halftime lead and then held off Eustis in the second
half.

Leafs Snap Road Streak, 3- i
United Press la te n a ttsa a l
The Toronto Maple Leafs figured they'd better m ap
their winless road streak before it reached Its first
anniversary.
After several close calls, the Maple Leafs registered
a 3-1 victory over the Washington Capitals in Lan- .
dover, Md., Thursday night.
The triumph, Toronto's first on the road since a 5-2
win over the Black Hawks at Chicago on Jan. 31,1962,
stopped the slide at 30 games. On the plus side, the
victory extended the Leafs' unbeaten string to six
games.
• “ It’s been a long tim e coming," said Toronto goalie
Mike Palmateer.
Palm ateer turned back a number of good
Washington scoring chances In the third period while
the Capitals were trying to overcome deficits of 2-1 and
3-1.
Toronto's Rick Valve, who scored his 11th goal in five
games, broke a 1-1 tie in the second by knockligf down a
Dan Daousl pass and scoring on a breakaway.
Defenseman Jim Korn made it 3-1 at 11:43 of the third
with an unassisted shorthanded goal.
Terry Martin put the Leafs ahead early in the
second, but Bob Gould erased the lead a minute later.
In other game, Montreal trounced Los Angeles, 11-3,
Calgary belted Winnipeg, 5-1, and Vancouver tripped
Hartford. 64.

'King' Johnson Crowns Suns
United Press la te n a ttsa a l
Mickey Johnson played his part well Thursday night
and was "King" for a day.
Starting for Nets’ s n a il forward Albert King, hob­
bled with a knee injury, Johnson shook off a mimed
free throw with 34 seconds remaining and hit two fouls
shots with seven seconds left, to lead the Nets to a
team-record seventh straight victory, a 64-63 decision
over the Phoenix Suns.
"You can't erase what you've done,” Johnson said of
his goat tum edhero night.
Phoenix guard Dennis Johnson will have to wait until
tonight in Indiana fur next time. lie missed a Jumper at
the buzzer that would have given the Suns their fifth
victory in six games.
"Len Elmore was about 3 fast away and it was a IIor 17-footer," he said. "It was the play we called bid it
Just didn't fall."
In other games, Atlanta nipped New York, 1646, Los
Angeles defeated Cleveland, U frlff, Golden Stats
stopped Portland, 64-63, and Houston edged San Diego,
106-107.

Grether Eyes World Tour
The 1661 Putt-Putt season opmed Wednesday at
Fern Park and Sanford's Dave Grether, who has
aspirations cl competing on the work) Putt-Putt tour,
ended up with a threwroum) total of ■ (II under par)
for a fourth place finfeh.
This year's first tournament came two weeks after
IMS's final tournament In which Orethsr placed
1. JknHarTttos
2. Mike Pfeiffer
3. Bill Askew
4. Dave Grether
6. Jim Meaning
I. DaveChristner
7. Clarence Daniels
I. Jim Haynes
I. DanBrtoks
10. Steve Muise
II. KenOttis

31-36-36- M (-16)
14*2746- 66 (-1#)
64 (-14)
64 (-14)
M(-14)
344643—M(-11)
334445-161 (-«)

12. BillGallaher

364147-103 (• t )

• (* )
M 4 7 —• ( « )
!(■»)
I (-16)

Mark Lindquist, Lake
Mary w restler, strains
to g et aw ay from
S e m in o le 's
T on y
Turner. Lindquist and
the
R am s
b a ttle
Lyman tonight at 8 ift a
key county w restling
m atch.
Herald Photo by Tern Vincent

Lake Mary, Lyman Battle
For County Pride Tonight
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
The way E d g ew ster m anhandled
Lyman Thursday night, and the manner
in which the Metro Conference Eagles
disposed of Lake Mary last month,
projects tonight’s 8 o’clock wrestling
battle between the Greyhounds and the
Rams aa a good one.
Edgewater, which captured the Lyman
Christmas Tournament in a convincing
manner, subdued Lyman Thursday night
in Longwood, 49-22. On Dec. 15, the
Eagles blitzed Lake Mary, 44-21.
"We didn’t have a real good match,”
conceded Lyman coach Skip Pletxer.
"But I did see a few bright spots."
The brightest continues to be the
performance of senior Dirk Smith. The
rugged 106-pounder moved up a class to
223 T hursday night and m auled
Christmas Tournament champion Jim
Taylor, 114.
Smith scored a takedown for a 24) lead
after one period, then added a near fall
and a stalling point for a 64) lead after
four minutes. In the final period he added
six more points while Taylor reversed
Smith for two for the 11-2 final.
The victory improves Smith's record to
a sparkling 104) with four pins.
Pletxer was also Impressed with fresh­
man Chris Waxier (141) who gave
Ernesto Vega, who finished third in the
Christmas Tournament, all he could
handle before losing.
"Waxier had Vega on his back and
almost pinned him In the first period, but
then he made a freshman mistake and
got pinned," said Pletxer. Waxier was
losing, 74, before be was stuck at 2:55.
Joey Lockwood (122) also turned in a
solid effort against Jam es Aubrey who
was also a Christmas champion. Aubrey
pinned Lockwood In the tournament, but
this time Lockwood put up a tough battle

P f p Wrestling
before falling, 44).
The Greyhounds rested 223-pounder
Mike Hill Thursday lo have him ready for
tonight's match. Hill has been bothered
by a back problem. The 'Hounds also lost
one grappler Thursday. Jay Hunzlker, a
veteran 129-pounder, injured his elbow
and won't wrestle tonight.
"The key for us tonight la not to give
away any matches," said Pletxer. "We
can't have anybody get pinned or lose If
they're supposed to win In the lower
weights."
Pletzer pointed to three pivotal m at­
ches which could decide the outcome.
The first, and maybe the best pairing of
the night, is Lake Mary's Jack Likens
against Lyman's Pat Bell.
likens took the Christmas Tournament
championship at 108 pounds. Last year,
he beat Bell twice, although both grapplers advanced to the state tournament.
Likens Is undefeated in hit weight class
while Bell started slowly because of an
injury, but la now rounding into shape.
Another critical match Is at 122 pounds
where Juwan Lee of Lyman takes on Jell
Farm er. Joey Lockwood and Todd
Beauchamp at 129 will also be Im portant
Ram coach Frank Schwattx, mean­
while, has his eye on the 115-pound
weight class. "If we win 115,1 think we
can beat them ," said Schwartz about the
battle between Lake Mary's Tom Olson
and Lyman's Scott Andrew, who is the
freshman brother of ex-Lyman great
Todd Andrew.
" It will be a very close m atch," con­
tinued Schwartz. "We have to get pins
where we get wins to'beat them."
" It’ll be a very strategic match too,"
offered Ram assistant Doug Peters. "We

IVAN
CARBIA
...rugged
101 pounder

figured it up on paper and we have to get
pins in the lower weights."
Tonight’s pairings
Lake Mary
Lyman
101 — Ivan Carbla vs. Chris Battle
106 - Jack Likens vs. Pat BeU
115 — Tom Olson vs. Scott Andrew
122 — Jeff F ram er vs. Juwan Lee
129. — Todd Beauchamp vs. Joey Lockwood
135 — Mike Graham vs. Mike Wasserman
141 - Bob Olsen vs. Chris Waxier
148 - Brent Blakely va. Donny Lockwood
158 — Zach Martin vs. Rhett Harwell
171 — Willie Green vs. Robert Quesinberry
IBB — Ned Kolbjomsen vs. Jirk Smiuth
223 — Ed Ades vs. Mike Hill
UNI. — Lyman forfeit to R o b o t Rawls
EDGEWATER If, LYMAN 22
111 - Davis (E)d. Battle 64); 118 Bell (L) w. by forfeit; 111 — Lee (L) w.
by forfeit; 12! — Aubrey (E) d. J. Lockwood 74; 129 — Imbrtanl (E) w. by
default; 111 — Beatty (E) p. Waterman
3:04; 1 1 1 -V eg a (E) p. Waxier 2 :« ; US
— Beachum (E) d. D. Lockwood 134; 1M
- Rollins (E) p. Harold 5:31; 171 Richardson (E) p. Garza 2:31; U6—
Smith (L) w. by forfeit; 221 - -Sm ith (L)
d. Taylor 114; U N L - Stewart (E) w. by
forfeit.

Woodley Leads Dolphins Into Playoffs
MIAMI (U P I) - Young Miami
Dolphins quarterback David Woodley
had a big day — for him — against the
Baltimore Colts Sunday.
But his critics still abound and Woodley
still answ ers them by pointing out the
score la the only number that really
counts.
The third-year Louisiana State product
completed 14 of 22 pamea for 239 yards In
the 34-7 victory at (Baltimore and now has
completed 54.7 percent of his passes for
1jOBOyards this year for 10th In the AFC
going into Saturday's flratround playoff
gama at home against New England (64). U s t week he was last among the
NFL’a starting quarterbacks.

essentially gone the distance in his U st
two sUrts.
Over the Ust three seasons, Woodley's
won-lost record ii 21-10, not including
"There have been about 10 or 15 things games won In relief by veteran backup
wrong with our pasting attack, from bad Don Strock.
Asked If individual statistics really
passes on my part, to dropped balls, to
wrong routes. You name it," soys mean anything, Woodley says: "They
don't really. I think if we were feeing,
Woodley.
(
But he said the Dolphins did the same that would be something you could point
things against Baltimore they've been to as the reason for it. But when you’re
doing ail season and, " it Just worked." (winning), the personal sU tsd o n t really
Whatever his statistics, Woodley in­ mean anything.
sists that winning is what really counts
"They concern me Insofar a s I think
and he has done plenty of that this year. tboy could be better. But I’m not really
The Dolphins go Into the playofts seeded worried about how many yards I hare or
second lo the AFC at 74 and Woodley has the rest of that," Woodley said.

Pro Football

Concerned Hunters Try To Curb Vandals
A general meeting of the newly
organised Farmton Hunting and
Sportsman's Association, has been
scheduled for 1 pm., Sunday, at Bell
fUdge in tfae Farmton Management area,
Announced Dan Pelham, president.
A board of director's meeting of the
organization will bo held at 7 pm.,
Saturday, at Cedi Ciriton's Camp at BeU
Ridge.
Pelham Hid m o m 110 hunters and
mortsmsn (ram the six county Central
Florida region, Including Orange,
Seminole, Lake, Osceola, Volusia and
Brevard counties, have organised to
work with the owners of the Farmton
Managemsni ana, leased by tbs Mate
for public use during the state banting
from mid-November to sariy
Ha said than Is great concern that
bacaaae of vandalism to tbs property
ftfh g tbs h t t b l season, tbs srumi
Land Ctarp., owners of the tract, might
discontinue its Wise with tbs state in
favor uf a more financially favorable
lease with private iatsrarts.
"The landowner has
area
hunters about tbs amiUttt of n sd ilk n
that has occurred aa a result of tbs a m
to the public oaring the
. The newly formed
will work towards reducing
vandalUm and repairing damage to
gates and fir re* by hunters using the
1" Pelham said.

He noted,that the association will be
working with the state’s Gams and and
Fresh Water Fish Commission on the
problem.
"We ah: getting together to police
ourselves," Pelham said.
Prior to the hunting Wasoc tba first
1,000 persons who apply for Ucenaas to
hunt in tha Farmton Managemmt area In
Volusia County are licensed and they are
the only onas given this privilege,
Pelham said.
Officers of the organization, in
to Pelham, are: Sid Vihlan Sr., Irt vice
president; Max Bass, second vice
president; Lyme Reborn, secretary and
Dottle Bus, treasurer. All the officers
are from Sanford.
Members of tha boardof directors nr*;
Fred Crane, DeBary; J.D. Vann,
Daytona Beach; Hobart Groves,
Melbourne; Mark Raborn and Cedi
Carkoo, Sanford; Stare Sipe and Pud
Nolan, Now Smyrna Beach; Marvin
Motts, Paola; Lorry Lott, Orlando;
Arista Williams, Euttfe; BUI Bosch,
Titusville; Kent Hoffrider and Km
Milton.
Pelham said membership Is opsn to all
interested Central Florida apoettman.
Fee is H and ducks may be mads
payable to Farmton Hunting and
Sportsman's Amorist Ion, P.O. Box W,
ix ii Monroe 227(7.
Pdham noted Uut tba Qnme and Fresh
Water Fish Commission will meet at the

Sanford Civic Center at 7:20 pjn., Jan.
II, to consider inks and ragHlatkna
pending In this new year for «port*
amca—DONNA ESTES

Going Pluhln'T
Ortro • f w e* rim camp i m -m m i
"Fantastic'' b . l w o M l Abernathy aI
the Osteen Bridge f w v Camp describes
tha flthlne far thlt w e * ana weakens.
“ l had m a n boat* out hare Wednesday
and they ware really bringing them In,"
said Abernathy, " th e (packs are really
dBlng well In tha r i m and naar tha
(O ilH n } brlctpi."
Sanford's J.D.' Jonas will attest to that.
Wednesday, Jono* pulled In I t sparks,
Santere-s Jamas Butler haulad In M
Spacks later that aftomoon.
(packs are a lia biting new IntarkrtS t
as are tha bass. "A let of people era doing
real wall with a Silver R a p e *," said
Abernathy about tha floating bait.
Sanlord's Anna May Evans alto caught
M Specks on Wednesday and Chat Jaf
frays, otto carnet to Deltona tram Iowa
♦vary year, r e a l * In n Spvtht on
Wednesday.
M eriae like Fisk Camp ( itt -V S I)
Sue and t i ll M,il, who run the Marina
I t * camp, report the shad are ru m lrv
ilka they're going out el s ty *,
lantord't Sill lay m a n caught l | mis

Utah
Houston

llO riando-lam lnal*
Thursday night results
P in t earn*
I Ricardo Oyarl 17.10 17.00 5 00
soablol* Zarrage
&lt;00 ISO
SGaray Area
*00
Q H i] M.M&gt; T (*■*■*) U I.IS
Second gama
SU rltar Elorta
I I 40 I 00 I I &lt;0
I Garay Aguirre
StO 4 10
4 L *ie t ViatOSOr O ( M l 17.M l P
(311 111.71; T (4-1-4) H I H i OD ( 3
41 141.11
Third gama ,
5 Durango Kid *
Golri
11 40 4 10 1 40
4 Bilbao Area
5 10 510
lL e |a t Foruri*
4.10
O I 4 I ) 54.111 P I M l 110.00; T ( 3
41) 414 40
Pourttgomo
CNcgul Y ia
1140 4 10 J 10
IGablota Area
5 00 140
JMenoleReyw
500
Q (1 4141.10; P («-l| 101.40, T (4M l 177 JO
Filth game
4 Gorottolo Zubi 11 00 4.10 5 10
IS o liun Reyes
5 00 SOO
IM en o io Y ia
4 70
0(1-41 51.41; P (4-5) 145.40; T 14I D 454.40
tilt h gama
SLalat Zarre
1 40 7.40 5 700
I U r lu r Reyes
4 00 4 00
I Bilbao Aguirre
4.70
011-5)47.41, P I 5-11 1 17.*; T ISM l 144.40
Seventh game
IZ s r re
17 40 5 40 3 40
I pita
5 70 4 10
7 Bilbao
4 00
Q l t - l l 11.44; P 14-11 »J.I4; T (SI71 1 7 1 *
eighth game
IM ik a lA rca
1510 140 1.10
SGorottota Zarra
5.40 1.10
ICharolaPoruria
3.40
Q ( M l 41.44, P ( I I I 14.44; T ( l 5-1) 1M.M
Ninth gama
l Pita Oyarl
is 40 14 40 1.70
4 Garay Javier
11.70 170
lU r iu r G o Ir l
140
0 ( M l II.SO; P (1-41 114.00; T b i
(1-7-4) 445.40
Itthgam e
IManola
10.10 7.00 SOO
tChsrola
4 40 1.70
IG a lla
5 40
0 ( M l 17.40; P (1-4) IM .M lT b a
(1-1-41 111.44
lllh game
1 Garay Q ia
4 40 4.40 1 40
4Mikel Javier
4 40 4.40
lSolaunOyari
5.00
0 (1 -4 ) 41.14; P ( M l 1 1 .*; T hi
II141 557.10
lllh gmaa
JManolo Caraa
1100 15.10 4 40
lSoiaun Y ia
10 3 40
JMiket W ir r *
1.40
Q ( M l 41.41; P ( M ) 114.40; T II1-1) 104 00
A - 1,414; Handle 1111,111

Dog Racing
Al lanfard-Orlande
Thursday night retuttt
P ln lre r e — 3-M. C ili.S I
1We Gotcha
4 00 4 00 1.40
I Whit Ah*4d
1.40 7 40
7 Boltyn
1 40
0 ( M l 11.00 P ( M )1 7 .S I, T M -lI I IlS-SS
Stcahd rare — 3 1 ,0 : 11-11
7 Evllent
5 10 4 00 1 00
5 Pay Bird
10.30 5 00
I Hood River Julia
4 00
0 ( 3 7 ) IM S P ( M t 41.11, T (7-5I I 11S.SS DO (1-7) M S
Third ra w - I I I , D: 11,11
1 Wright F o n t*
7.40 4 10 4 40
I Squared Away
4.00 5 10
4 Lady Bump
ISO
0 ( M &gt; 11.10 P (1 I I 4I.4S ,T (1-14) 171.41
Fourth rare — 5-14, M i 11.14
7 PWt V ic k *
1.44 . S .N ..S .N
I Tantt
3.10 4.40
5 Classic Favourite
1*0
Q ( M l IM S P ( M l 11.SS; T (7-3
51 Xll.SI
F lfth re c t — 5-14.C; 11.11
1 M ill Charlotte
4.10 4.10 1.40
4 Great Ally
l . n 140
ITaccoBall
4 SO
Q ( M l 1 I.H P ( M ) 1I.4S; T I M 1) III.S I
Sixth r a c e - M S , 0,11.41
1 Tough Chatty
WJ0 4.10 4 00
SFay't Cindy
5.00 4 10
4 Top Bid
7.00
Q ( M l 14 SO P ( M ) 71.IS; T 11-3
SI SIMS
Sivontt r a t i — SIS, B; IM S
5 Wright Gramm* 31.00 7.10 1.10
7 Laguna Rebel
11.40 4.40
4RolllngGre*n
l.io
Q (4-1) 11.11; P (37 ) 1 1 7 .*; T ( 3
7-41 1,141.4*
e ig h t h r e c t - S I.C : M i l l
7 U ltim a * Option 15 00 4 40 1.40
ID o u b * Sight
4.40 4 40
4 Walter D tn t
10.30
Q11 71 1 4 .*; P 171) 14.41; T IT*
1-4) 7 1 *.*
Ninth M M - 314, Si 11:15
1 Scotty'I Sum
10 40 4.40 1.10
7 Monty L in t
I f 40 * 00
SRP' s Tk o
i.n
0 (1 -7 )Si l l ; P 117) 171.M ; 1 (J74) 7 * . *
IN h r e c t -5 -1 4 ,0 :1 1 :4 *
IM ig htyV ic
7.10 l.M 7*0
4B *sutyP lut
4.40 4.00
7 Manat*# Katydid
1.40
0 ( 1 4 ) IM S ; P (1 4 ) 41.10; T ( 13 7 ) SI N
1 1 * r a i d - 3 1 3 A 1 11)44
4 R R 't Streak
11.40 7.40 440
tH tllo Nicholas
11.10 5.00
I Kina G
lo o
0 1 4 4 ) 7t M ; P | 4 4 t 71.#*, T 13
3*1 34414, Pick H i ; (14-71-1-4) 4
at * w Unwts p*W IM S i 'Jackpot"
sorry *« tr 4,M l
I T * M C I- 3 1 4 , 0 ; 11:41
I M an ila * Dull
440 1.40 140
ISIorm vUhlfwhart
i t o j.go
S ip s lion
4.40
0 1 1 4 ) 11.44; P ( l- t ) 34.00/ T (1*
1 4 ) 1IIJS
t i n n e d — 1 4 ,0 ; M i l l
1 Wright Ere
1.40 141 1.40
7 Goston
140 T4S
4 Sat y L it *
4.40
O l t - M S 4 S ; P IS l) 17.14; T I M 41 044*
A - M i l , H g o S * IM M S 7

M M lliM k g i
Oy UolMU P r o * loWrnoHiool
• l l t o r a Cda fare act
A I M * * OlvftMa
W L Pel, OU
P h i*
U I 4U •colon
14 • ,7M 1
New Jrsty
M 11 4 M SV*
, Wthngtn
I I 14 441 S«T

NfW York

II II

.144 UYt

Mllareuke
n 11 4*7
Detroit
&gt;■ 11 .MS s
A l*n ta
I I 17 .44* 4
Indiana
t l M .171 t
Chicago '
11 » .15* 01
Clev* land
4 M .1 0 17
Western Centered to
MMWOSI DnrtStoo
W l PCI. • •
Kan Cily
I t 11 .ID
San Anton
11 11 4M
Denver
13 11 441 M 1
Dallas
11 11 411 7

11 71 171 a
5 17 .154 15'i
Pacific Division
Lot Ang
14 7 .740 —
Seattle
11 10 .417 1
Phoenix
11 14 SOO 4
Portlsnd
71 15 .511 4 'j
Golden St.
14 10 .411 11’ ,
S4 n Diego
1 17 KM I I ' ,
Thurtday'a R ttu lti
Allants * , New York *
New Jersey 14. Phoanlx 11
Lot Angalai 115, Clave 107
Golden St 14, Portland 11
Houston 101, San Diego 107
Taday'a oamea
(All Tlmaa KSTI
Dallas at Atlanta. 7:15 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington.
I 05 p.m.
Botton at San Antonio, 1:10
pm.
Phoenix at Indiana, 1:35 p m
New Jartay at Chicago. 1:15

pm

Utah at Kam a* City, 1:15
pm
Detroit at Milwaukee, 1 p.m.
Houlton at Denver, 1:15 p.m.

Hockey
NHL Standing*
gy United P ra tt International
Walat Conference
Patrick Divitlan
W L T Pit.
Philadelphia
14 I I
5 51
Wathlnglon
I I 11 10 41
NY lilandert
10 IS
7 47
NY Rangart
70 la 4 44
Plltt burgh
1117 4 10
New Jartay
SIS
I 14
Adamt Divltion
Botton
14 10 4 54
Montreal
7111 I 31
Buffalo
1114 1 44
Quebec
I t 15 a 41
Hartford
1015 5 15
Campbell Cenference
H errlt Divltion
W L T Pit.
Chicago
is 1 S 31
Minnrtota
7011 1 41
St. Loutt
14 14 S 11
Detroit
ill
It 11
Toronto
til
1 14
Im y tte Divitlan
Edmonton
11 t l
I 51
Winnipeg
1111
4 ]|
Calgary
1511 7 17
Vancouver
14 I I
I 14
Los Angalet
14 11 5 11
Thursday's Result*
Vancouver 4, Hartford 4
Toronto 1, Washington 1
Montreal 11, Lot Angalet 1
Calgary 5. Winnipeg I
Taday't O im t t
(All Tim et EST)
Botton at New Jertey, ; jj
p.m.
Vancouver at Buffalo, 7:55
p m.
Quebec at NY Rangart, 7:13
p.m.
Pittsburgh at Edmonton, 115

pm

Basketball
C»II«|« asikdtball * rtgift
By Unitdd Press International
Thursday
■ a tl
Dominican 41. Nyack 57
King thorough I I . Oranga 71
N.Y. Tach 11. M arcv 11
Phlla. T axilla i t , Lock Havan 31 ■
Shephard S3, M d.-B altim ore I t
St. V ln c a n l't 71, Juniata 41
Stockton St. 74. f^utgersCamdan
Susquehanna 55. Lycoming 41
Ttm ple 101, Rhode island 14
Seutt
A rk .-L illie Rock 14, Samford 71
Elon 14, Mat hod it t so
Hampton 71, Morgan St. 43
J. Madison 41, UNC W ilm ington
54
Memphis St. 71. St. Louis *4
N.C. Central I t , Johnson C.
Smith IS
Oglethorpe 73, Valdosta St. 71
Saginaw Valley St. I I , Bailor
min# 17
Shephard 15, M a ry la n d Sal
llmore 11
So. Alabama 14, N.C. Charlotte
71
Tenn. St. 54, Tenn. Tach 51
V irg in ia Tach 71, Fredonia SI. 45
W a y n e tb u rg 100, A ld srso n
Broeddus SO
M Merest
Anderson IS. Huntington 17
Benedictine 11, Kansas Was
Iayan SO *
Bathat 71, St. John's 71
Bolsa St. tOI. U.S. In ti 71
BradWy 14, Creighton *5
Centra 14, Stwanee 71
Concordia *4. G ustavut 51
Cumber|pnd 11, Campbells villa
It
Drake Si, Southern Illin o is *1
F in d la y
*4,
M l.
V ernon
N e u ro n e s i
Fort H s y t *4, Friends SI
In d .P u r.d n d p ls .)* ,
Oakland
City SI
M arlon 11, T aylor 44
Mlnnasofo 75, lllln o n 41
NW Missouri 10. M id-A m erica
N#L M
Northwestern 41. M ichigan 44
Purdua N , Wisconsin 44
S O. Toch f t . Black H ills St. IS
SW Missouri 15, T aia sA riing ta n
SO
St. Cloud SI. M . M ankato St. St
Tulono 45, Cincinnati 41
Walsh 45. M orcyhurst 54
Southwatt
Ark. Coll. SI, O ia rk s Coll. SI
Arkansas St. si, M is s o u ri
Baptist a

Football
NFL Playoffs
By (lo tto s Pres* I m ar net tone!
(A ll TI0WS U IT )
( lo o s in g* lo par ta t bases I
P lrst roans
SotorSay, Jon •
NPC
Detroit ( I ) at W osMnston ( t ) ,
t l: M p.m.
St. Louis (S) a t Groan t o y U ),
11:10 p.m .
APC
Cleveland &lt;i) at Los Angelas
RaWars (1), 4 p.m .
New England (7) a t M ia m i 11), 4
pm .
StreSay, Jan «
APC
Now Y o rk J e ti ( I ) at C incinnati
(1). ) l: M p.m .
SPit D * p g ( I ) p t P ittsb u rgh ( 4),

IMS p.m.

MPC
Tampa Bay (7) at Oallas t l ) , 4
pm .
Atlanta it ) at Minnesota («), 4
pm .
•atorsoy, Jan. is and SooSsy,
Jao. I I
Cantarenc* ta m U in s * (lowest
rem aining s ta d t p i highest
remaining said*, second law as)
tress a t MconS-Mg*wM t a r o ) . ,
SooSsy, Jao. 11
Cantarenc* champforehifa (at
home* of highest rem a in lh a
ta ro ).
igossy, Jan. M
Super Bowl X V II at PeteSana.
Calif .. S p m.

�8A

BLONJIE

- E v e n in g H * r « W , S an fo rd , F I .

itJmy, J in . 7 , 1M3

by Chic Young

Answer to Previous Puirle
H im m irtk |o ld
1 Article
42 Overturn
4 Tikes option 45 North
8 Chetters
Am tricen
12 Not in
birds
13 lenguid
48 Tele
14 Flutelike
51 Auto club
instrument
ODE]
S 3 Opposed
IH T A ■ i
15 M i o ____
53 Egyptien deity CDDDDDDH
0
■ ■
1 N TH
tung
54 Sere
yB 1 1 R E
0
18 Fretful
a[7 t M1A N
s nn
18 Holy pieces 55 Stoke
d[ 1 V A N
nn
20 More cunning 58 New York bell
club
□ cun
lo E L D
21 Egg drink
57
Ensign (ebbr)
22 Bevereges
I t Verying
31 Runs
24 Tribe
weight ol
33 Mentis
D
O
W
N
26 Coegulum
Indie
38 Simple suger
27 Single thing
17
Diseese
40 Wsrm
1
Smell children
30 Chutney
cerrying fly
41 Gown
2
Cell
for
quiet
32 In trust
19 Greek colony 42 A ir defense
14 Twine ebout 3 Forever
23 People of
group (ebbr |
4 Due
15 Give in *
ection
43
Johnnyceke
5
Fe
th
e
r(Fr
)
eccount of
24 Assemblege
6 O f the foot
16 Vie
25 Singer Horne 44 Surfeit
7 Glide on snow 26 Ineipensrve 46 Entity
37 Acorn end
8 Objectives
products
27 Summer drink 47 Tell tele
48 Speeks
9 Advice
39 Dofler bile
(2 wds)
40 Buddhist
columnist
28 Informel letter 50 Comedien
shrine
10 Tree trunk
Conwey
29 Rem’s metes.
ACROSS

41

WM F
O

nn

BEETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker

1

2

3

4

12

13

15

16

16

6

5

7

8

9

10

11

28

29

14
17

19-

20
_

21

[22

■

23

■

24

25
r

■

30

33

■

31

33
■

34

33
3i

36
1

■

38

39
J

■

40
■

42

43

44

45

46

47

48

|

49

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57
7

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Safunfay, January 8, 1983

by Howif Schneider

E E K&amp; MEEK
to stay m

I AkJSWER W IT H E ADS
FOR JC B 5 .IG E TTH E R E .
EACLV... GET A GOOD SR3T
O k) LlfOD...

tows ?

m m &gt;
X

THWO I SELL U TO SOME GUY
WHO CEALLV VUAUTS THE J O B !

-y

PRISCILLA'S POP

by Ed Sullivar
' r CAN HARPLV
WAIT TO REAP IT

THE LIBRARV HAS A
NEW BOOK CALLEP
'THEORV AMP AMNP
po w er

:

ALONG WITH
'IMPROVING VOUR
CO O RPI NATION'

l

BUGS BUNNY

63
by Stoffel A Heimdahl

OH, BOY A PINA1A
SHAPED LIKE A
WABBlTj&amp;cr

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Going out on the town with
friends today could turn out to
be a bit more expensive than
you anticipate. Better have
some extra cash with you.
Order now: The NEW AstroG raph M atchmaker wheel
and booklet which reveals
ro m a n tic c o m b in a tio n s,
combatibllitles for all signs,
tells how to get along with
others, finds rising signs,
hidden qualities, plus more.
Mall $2 to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Send an additional 91
for your Capricorn AstroGraph predictions for 1963. Be
sure to give blrthdate.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Goals can be achieved
today without your having to
be too pushy o r overly
assertive. Don't use more
force than Is necessary.

S u *-,
©

YOUR BIRTHDAY
January!, IMS
It's to your advantage this
coming year to seek office or
committee work In cluba or
organizations to which you
belong. These Involvements
could develop contacts for you
who can help In other areas.

I

should m it KNOWN.
BWIN&amp; OUT THE
PlflATA SH A P E D
U K E A B U L L .’

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
When socializing today, let
your hair down and let the
real you emerge. If you tend
to withdraw it mqy cause
others to back off from you.
ARIES (March 21-AprU 19)
Be selective regarding those
with whom you team up today
in Joint ventures. Try not to
associate with persona who
look out only for their own
self-interests.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
It's Important to clarify your

objectives today. If you don’t
know what you want you're
likely to just spin your wheels.
Be purposeful.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
If you are rendering services
today, spell out what you
expert to be paid for your
work or there could be a
misunderstanding.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Once you m ake a com­
mitment or an agreement
today don't look for ways to
back out of it, even if it
becomes Inconvenient to keep
your word.
LEO (July (July 23-Aug. 22)
This could be a very
productive
day
today,
provided you don't let persons
not directly Involved interfere
with what you hope to ac­
complish.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Either schedule your day so
that you can participate In fun
Involvements o r work on
tasks that need doing. Don't
Iry to mix both.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Fundi you e a rm a rk for
faM y and household needs
will be well spent. However,
you might not be equally as
shrewd about frivolous In­
terests.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Persons who come in contact
with social situations today
will be impressed by your
warmth, wit and humor, but
family members might not
sing your praises.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Y our b asic in­
clination today will be to treat
others generously. However,
don't grumble later about
having done those kind deeds.

Take A n Activity
Break; Don't Sit
DEAR DR. L A M B -I read
In your column that you think
bed rest can be bad. You said
It can rob your bones of
calcium and cause your
circulation to deteriorate. I
agree with you that people In
nursing homes who can walk
should be out of bed and ac­
tive and that people staying at
home should be more active
than many are.
My question concerns the
millions of us who must go to
an office and work all day
sitting. I don’t think man was
designed to Just sit all day but
was intended to be more
active. Is sitting all day
harmful to you?,What do you
recommend for us?
DEAR READER - Yes, II
sitting Is all you do It can
cause loss of normal body
functions. It •* Just one more
example of the harmful ef­
fects of Inactivity.
My colleagues and I did a
study of this for the space
program. We studied young
men who spent the entire
daytime sitting in overstuffed
chairs.
The
inactivity
gradually leads to loss of
blood volume and progressive
m uscular w eakness. The
capacity
to
exercise
diminished. We also saw this
when people were confined to
small spaces to simulate the
space vehicles used then.
A lot of office workers, even
top executives, who sit all day
get "stale." By evening they
are fatigued. The same ap­
plies to students sitting for
hour after hour of lectures.
That fatigue is chemical and
is caused from disuse of
muscles.
The fatigue th a t office
workers experience Is often
eliminated by some enjoyable
physical activity, a swim, a
Jog, b tennis match or a nice
walk. The exercise activates
the system and gives you a
new surge of energy.
Anyone who must sit a lot
needs an activity break, not a
coffee break. The Russians
have used this for years. And
If nothing else, get up and
walk around a bit every hour.
Most companies would get

more production from em­
ployees if they planned
re g u la r activity breaks,
meaning physical activity —
not coffee and gossip.
To give you a more com­
plete picture of the effects of
inactivity, I am sending you
The Health Letter 6-6, Effects
of Inactivity, Including Bed
Rest. Others can send 75 cents
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for It to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY*lORY**
DEAR O R L A M B -I have
an B-year-old boy, almost 9,
who is five feet taU. He Is the
tallest In his third grade class
and many children make
rem arks ibout It as well as
some other crude people we
are acquainted with.
What I would like to know is
If you think there is a
possibility
of
hyper­
thyroidism. If so, what can I
do to treat it? If treated too
soon, what Is the possibility of
brain damage? How does a
person go about checking for
hyperthyroidism?
DEAR READER - Your
son Is at the upper range of
d Istrlbutlon curves for height
for his age. Hyperthyroidism
Is not a cause for Increased
height. If he has any problem
at all it is more likely to be
from an excess production of
growth hormone from the
pituitary gland.
Should that be the case
there Is nothing you per­
sonally can do but your son
does need to see a doctor. He
may need an evaluation by an
endocrinologist If there Is
excessive growth. He could be
just maturing more rapidly
than usual but I would suggest
having him see your doctor
for a first hand look.

W IN AT BRIDGE
may prove right costly
South finds himscif in a
very norm al four-spade
NORTH
171)
contract. It would probably
♦ A6 4 2
be reached by almost any
*7 5 1
two bridge players from
♦ K8
beginner to world'champion
♦ AQ7I
T h e king of hearts is
WEST
opened and South ducks.
EAST
♦ y io8
♦ K
Sometimes there is a shift,
V K yj
♦ 10 8 6 4
but this West continues with
♦ 10 7 6 4
♦ J 9 S3 2
the queen that South wins
♦ JB )
♦ 1095
South leads a trump to
dummy's ace and East drops
SOUTH
the king At this time South
♦ J 9 7 53
has a problem. If that king
♦ A93
♦ A t)
were from king-queen dou♦ K 82
blcton South should play a
second trump, concede a .
Vulnerable: Both
heart and win the rubber.
Dealer: North
If that king happened to
Wm
Norik E a il
Soiib
be a singleton the play of a
»♦
Pass
!♦
second trump would cost
I’ass 2^
P us
&lt;♦
South his contract. Rut
Pass Pass
Pass
assuming clubs would break ;
3-3 South could run fo u r;
clubs, discard his last heart Opening lead: YK
and be home.
We aren’t going into the
mathematical percentages
here except to say that each
By Oiwald Jacoby
line of play is about as good
and James Jacoby
as the other.
When we watched the
"Silence is golden" is a hand, East opened his mouth
maxim that all bridge play­ and remarked, "I guess I
ers should learn and prac­ should hold my hand back."
tice. We have seen declarers
Now declarer had no
lose contract after contract problem. He knew that king
due to talking instead of had been a singleton so ho
thinking. Defenders aren't as ran clubs and won the
likely to misspeak, but rubber.
•
sometimes their remarks (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |

GARFIELO
I FRANK AND ERNEST

w a n t

To

by Jim Davis

by Bob T h ivot

see

M E t H u JE Z A H

have a

TUMBLEWEEDS

f it

T

by T. K. Ryan

ANNIE
Mff. MARBUCKSf
m i u» y I Noytfow-CA.ni
JUST TDU?
.P ME NHflT r MXBSCLF, MW.
HAPPENS?// HEKGFIL
MEHGFU. I PEEK. WE CAN ALL
HEAVEN/
0E GRATEFUL FOB
ftHAPPY
ENDING-

I

-W T HOWCOULD
KEN SO STUPID A5 TO
HAVE LEFT THE HOTOfi NnrMC

mm®
vSA
n nID
u E* i11|-----/ 1v THES:
7^ THINGSf

WOULD YOU
UKE TO60
UPANP5EE
HOWANNiE
15 FEELING,
LI BEY?

by
SURE,IF
Y0U5ftY
50, HAW.
I //

Laonard Starr
EfLPERHArS
WET? SETTER
LET ANNIE
REST ftBIT-

W

r

f

II

�&lt;

PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 7,1*03—»A

Gardening

Prune And Train Grapevines To Establish Framework
YOUNG VINES
Regardless of the training system,
training and pruning of muscadine
grapevines during the first years of
growth have the sam e o b je c t-to
establish asTapidly as possible the main
framework, which consists of the trunk
and fruiting arms.
If the vines receive good care during
this formative period and if growing
conditions are favorable, they will bear
some fruit the third summer. Neglecting
pruning and training during the for­
mative period may delay full bearing for
as long as five years.

Desmond
Hastings
Urban
Horticulturist
323-2300

■
—fefalil

total of eight arms. Other growth may be
removed during the summer.
The year after the vines are set out, get
as much length growth as possible on
canes being trained for fruiting arms.
They will bear fruit the following year,
and that will slow down length growth. If
growth is slow or weak during the for­
mative period, cut back to vigorous wood
during the dormant season.

the second summer, four canes arc
trained on four wires of an overhead
BEARING VINES
arbor for future arms. All other shoots
are removed during the summer. In the
After the fram ework has been
dormant season January-February, the established, prune each year during the
vine is pruned to a trunk and four dorm ant season January-F ebruary.
^*CufuTg w.J TJRt
“ ji
’TodiaTuTg-zr. - r a &gt;•the V'? cvwwg-thc ^C uttinu hackjhooL growth. is_the_prinpruning and training are the same for an third summer, four additional arms are cipal pruning needed during the first few
overhead arbor as for a trellis. During developed on the other four wires, for a years. Remove all shoots not needed for

To Herald The N ew Year
Many Geneva folks hove had company
or family visiting during and since the
Holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Henson have been
having a grand time with Belinda’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Bays from
Culloden, W. Va.
The Bays arrived the week before
Christmas and have been doting with
grandchildren Amy, Shawn and Katie.
They have also been stealing away to
Mullet Lake Park to get in a little fishing
(something you definitely can't do this
time of year “ up North").

Given in m arriage bv her father, the bride chose for
her vows a chapel length organza and Chantilly lace
gown. The fitted lace bodice featured a scooped neckline
and full bishop sleeves. I-ace insets highlighted the slim
skirt that cascaded into a graceful chapel train. A lace
cap secured her veil of illusion and she carried a bouquet
of white roses and daisies.
Mrs. Arlene Dudley attended her sister as matron of
honor. She wore a wine-colored soft knit gown fashioned
with spaghetti straps and topped with a lace Jacket. She
carried a crimson long-stemmed rose and wore a spray
of wine-tinted baby’s breath in her hair.
Bridesmaids were Melissa DeMattio, sister of the
bride, Marcia Siskind and Helene Ritchie. Their frosty
rose gowns were similar to the honor attendant's and
each carried a single long-stemmed rose.
Junior bridesmaids were Dori Sapp and Bethany
Buffington, nieces of the bride. They wore frosty rose
taffeta gowns and each carried a nosegay of pink roses
and white carnations.
Jim Schooley of Venice served the bridegroom as best
man. Ushers were Brian Thiese, Todd Klevit and John
Rathbum of Venice.
Flower girls were Heather Dudley and Sabreena Sapp
nieces of the bride.
Following a reception at the Knights of Columbus Hall,
Sanford, the newlyweds departed on to a wedding trip to
Daytona Beach. They are making their home in San
Diego, Calif, where both are electronic technicians in the
United States Navy.

Another family having an influx of
relatives are the Bob . Browns of
Chuluota. Three of Ixiis’ sisters, Vertran
Seay and Edna Haines of Mableton, Go.,
and Arlene Hayden and son Robby
Fender of Montgomery, Ala., arrived to
swell the family dinner table to an even
dozen.
When mom and pop, Bill and l&gt;ouise
Crowder of Austell, Ga., got here a day
later, the Browns only had to find beds

DEAJ\ GOT TO KNOW: It’s unfair to ta r aU evangelists with
the same brash. Many inspire their followers to be better
people — to be kinder to their fellow new and have faith ia the
Lord.
! God cannot be bought nor does be reserve his bksslags for
those who send money to a TV evangelist.
v DEAR ABBY: I am being married in the near future. My
; father is living, but my mother Is deceased. However, my
mother Is with me in spriit all the time.
*. Is there any way I can tactfully acknowledge my mother on
my wedding invitations?
REMEMBERING MAMA
DEAR REMEMBERING: You might identify yourself as
the daughter of “ Mr. &lt;
) and the late Mrs. (
).”
It is not usually done, but if It will give you pleasure, I see no
reason why you shouldn’t do It
DEAR ABBY: About the business of writing a thank-you
&lt;on the reverse of a canceled check: What Is this world
ng to? Anyone who can’t find the tim e to write a decent
i-you note for a check doesn't deserve the gift. If it’s Just
ah added gesture while endorsing the check, I take it back, but
tgdash off a “thanks" on the back of the check and consider
tfyat adequate thanks is the pits.
‘In m y case, I don't even receive canceled checks. All I get is

Geneva
Correspondent

aga

•

Dear
Abby

After Ixiis' family left, her daughter.
Debbie McConnell moved to Mon­
tgomery with her Aunt Arlene. Debbie is
a hairdresser and has worked at the
Ponytail in Oviedo.
J a c k ie and t a r r y H e rm a n 's holidays

were made a little brighter when their
son, Doug Tindall, and Jackie's mom,
Gladys Merritt, came in from Greenville,
S.C.

Don’t know exactly what is going on
early in the morning on tnke Geneva
Drive. But it looks like the beginnings of
a Physical Fitness Gub.
If you venture out between 6:30 and
7:00 a.m., you may see two or three
enthusiasts doing early morning
calisthenics at the side of the road Just
before they take off jogging or bicycling.
The reason for all this inside in­
formation is that these "fitness freaks"
give me a bird’s eye view from my
bedroom window.
Now that the secret’s out, II you have
been looking for a few "birds of a
feather" to work out with, you can find
them just east of the elementary school
almost seven days a week.

Writers' Seminar
Three Central Florida authors and an editor will be featured
at the Florida Freelance Writers Association's (FFWA) all­
day seminar to be held Saturday. Feb. 19, at the Best Western
Catalina Inn, Orlando.

Mrs. Victoria Burton, 115
Castle Brewer Court, Sanford,
celebrated her 75th birthday
Dec. 18, 1982 at the home of
her daughter and son-in-law
Mr. and Mrs. John Hen­
derson.
Friends
and
fam ily
gathered to honor Mrs.
Burton at this gala event. A
birthday dinner was served to
the guests and a special
"IJappy Birthday" was sung
by her grands and great
grands.
Out-of-town guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Morgan,
Mr. and Mrs. C harles
Steward, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny B. M iller and
daughter Molodie, Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Steward, Sr.,
Thelm a Watson, Connie
Sutton, Almeda Singleton,

a statem ent from the credit union, and I imagine that the day •
Is coming when all checks will be handled In that fashion.
Thanks for letting me have my say.

oEtL
,

for 14 people.
Ixiis says, "The only members of my
family missing were our sisters, Ann
Gonzalez and Joan Jordon — and they
missed the Christmas gathering because
Ann's daughter had a baby Dec. 28."

Observed

Money To Preacher Will
Not Ensure Miracle Cure

The entire family, Including Rhonda
and David, left la rry to batch it while
they drove to Winter Haven and West
Palm Beach visiting more of Jackie's
side of the family.
I-arry said he wasn't minding the
solitude one little bit —except it was a bit
quiet at times.

Lou
Childers

Birthday
MRS. JAM ES ROBINSON

My husband is very angry with me because I sent as much as
I did. I would like to be free of my disease, but I will not deny
iu&gt; faniily the necessities in order to send this man money.
‘ Please tell me something positive about these TV
evangelists. I’m beginning to believe that all they want is my
money — money that I don’t have.
' God understands. Why can't they?
GOT TO KNOW

trunk.
To prevent death by girdling, remove
all tendrils that encircle the trunk or
anus. Tendrils will also girdle and kill
spurs, but the loss of a spur is com­
paratively unimportant.
Vines may be pruned at any time
during the dormant season, but if they
are pruned soon after leaf fall, less
bleeding will occur. I-ate pruning maycause the vine to bleed heavily in mild
weather, but there is no evidence that the
bleeding injures the vine. The possibility
of bleeding should not keep one from
pruning.
All Extension Programs are open to
anyone regardless of race, color, sex or
national origin.

Family A n d Friends Visit

Julie Ann DeMattio and James Robinson were united
in Holy Matrimony Dec. 18,1982, at 2 p.m., at the First
United Methodist Church, Sanford. The Rev. Michael T.
Shirley of Venice performed the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George J.
DeMattio, ISIS Douglas Ave., Sanford. The bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Blackburn of Venice.

DEAR ABBY: I have a problem that is eating my insides
out. I started writing to a TV evangelist because I have
multiple sclerosis. I know he is well-respected, in touch with
God and does many good things. The problem is that he always
wants more money. I sent him $100. Then he wrote to me
personally and told me that something great was going to
happen to me, but I had to send him another $100 first — even if
I had to save my pennies and get the money any way I could!
I believe in God with all my heart and strive to be a good
person, but, Abby, I can't take food from my children's mouths
because this man says God will do something good for me if I
do. That comes very close to saying that God can be bought.

is usually an indication that the vine
needs severe pruning, such as thinning
the number of spurs per arm, shortening
the length of the arm, or removing one or
more arms.
Too many vigorous spurs frequently
are left at the top of the trunk with both
the trellis and overhead arbor systems of
training. Prevent this condition by
removing most of the spur systems at the
top of the trunk.
With the vertical trellis system of
training, renew only arms that are no
longer vigorous. After a vine on an
overhead arbor is 4 or 5 years old and in
full bearing, renew one arm each year bycutting off an old arm and (raining a new
cane that arises from the top of the main

In And Around Geneva

DeMattioRobinson
Wedding

•

spurs and fruiting arms. Cut other shoots
back to short spurs, each with three or
four buds.
As the vines get older, they develop
clusters of spurs or spur systems.
Eventually, overcrowding will result
unless some of the spurs, or entire
clusters of spurs, are removed. Over­
crowding causes weak shoot growth,
reduced fruit-bud formation and poor
fruit set after flowering. Removing some
of the spurs will induce the growth of
strong new shoots from the arm. These
can then be developed into new spurs to
replace older ones.
Shoots should grow to at least threesixteenths of an inch in diameter and l ‘z
feet long. If they do not attain this size, it

Dr. M. Timothy O’Keefe, instructor in communication law at
UCF and established outdoor writer, will discuss "How to
Avoid I&gt;egal Problems," including libel, plagiarism,
copyright, and contracts.
Bill Belleville, a full-time freelancer from Altamonte
Springs, will discuss his specialty, "Writing for Men's
Magazines." Belleville's credits include Oui, Chic, Saga,
Cavalier, etc.; and he says this is an extremely lucrative
market — for both men and women.
Dianne Selditch, editor of the Orlando Sentinel's "Florida
Magazine," will tell attendees how to write for and sclUo the
vast "Sunday Magazine Section M arket."
A

k

V IC T O R IA B U R T O N
Melinda B allard, Rhonda
H a n k e rs o n
C a r s w e ll,
Clarence H ankerson and
daughter Valencia, Tashara
and Zakiya.

FFWA executive director Dana Cassell, a full-time freelance
writer in Port St. iJicie, will discuss "The Non-Flcllon Book
Proposal," covering how to sell your book idea to a publisher,
from Initial query through outline and sample chapters.
For further Information, contact Dana Cassell, FFWA, 214
Soluz Ave., Port St. Lucie 33452; 305478-2328.

Class

CHECK-WRITING GRANDMA
Every teen-ager should know the truth about drugs, sex and
hot to be happy. For Abby’i booklet, send $2 and a long,
stamped (37 cents), addressed envelope to: Abby, Teeu
Booklet, P. O. Box 38323, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
DEAR ABBY: I am a married woman (mid-30s), wife and
mother, who has always been overly modest. I Just hate going
to my doctor for a physical — the kind where you have to take
off everything, get up on the examining table, etc.
If I could do it myself, I certainly would. But, Abby, I can
check my own breasts for lumps, and I do.
Would it be obnoxious of me to tell my doctor I'd rather do it
rqyself? (Check my breasts.) I think he enjoys doing this, as I
am oversized.
MODEST TO A FAULT
DEAR MODEST: It would be more foolish then obnoxious.
In the first place, don't assume that your doctor “ enjoys”
checking for lumps. He gets os much enjoyment from It as a
grocer checking for an overripe cantaloupe. You are paying
for his professional expertise; use It to the fullest
DEAR ABBY: I am 17 years old and Just finished Uth grade.
4 flunked one semester of social studies, so now my dad has to
pay $ « for me to go to night school to make it up. I don't want
to go to night school in the first place, but he says if I don't go, I
can't drive, and you know how important driving is to a kid my
age.
Anyway, get this, Abby, my dad is making me pay back the
$80. Do you think he is being fair?
MAD
DEAR MAD: Yes. And wise, too.

Two noncredit short courses
in Housing and Home
D e c o r a tio n
(In te rio r
Dcccrathg) will begin in late
January at Seminole Com­
munity College. These classes
will meet in the fully equipped
Interior Design facilities for 8
weeks. The cost of each class
is $10.00.
This is a beginning doss
where the student will learn
som e basic skills of a
d e c o ra to r.
F u rn itu re
groupings and arrangements,
color coordination
and
selections, scale drawing and
period furniture styles are
some of the items to be
covered.

The 8-week day class will
m eet Tuesday m ornings,
beginning Jan. 25 from 9 to 12.
The 8-week evening class will
m eet T hursday evenings,
beginning Jan. 27 from 7 to 10.
Register at the admissions
office. For Information call
SCC.

f OH TH E B E ST

HAVI YOU

TV SERVICE
C A l I M i l L E RS
RM IJZ o m
i* It &lt;J« .«.«]«. l)&gt;

"to* d

*J

»»

HOLY SPIRIT I I
SINCI YOU
BILIIVKD ?

• WW» b Mm S*H m of * • M y SfM?
• WWt PvrpoM Dm

i

in Strvt?

• h It hr Kvtryont?
Hear The Answers To These Questions
And More Sun. Nile, Jan. 9, 4:00 P.M.
First Assembly Of God, 304 W. 27TM St.
_________________ 3*2-0222

�«t »

10A— E v e n in g H e ra ld . Seniors), F I.

F r id iv .J ir v T .lt ll

REALTY TRANSFERS
IOCO) Kenneth Plot*. vgl to
Steve G ray. &gt;i Int lo l6 A W 7 ) ’ of
5 Blk 3. Resurvey of 81k 4.
W.tam er*. SKX)
Otm A m e r Home* to Francis 8
Monro* t i l &amp; ml form er Caroline
G &amp; Csrotm e G Monroe igi (re
recorded I Lot 4, Clutter S Oeer
Run Itn 77, 74 3 4 S41.400
George R Mougenel A Darlene
M M aiecki to John Mougenel, Lot
9. Bik n. Oakland E ttt , Itt Sec
V]1,400
IOCO) Char let E Miller A wf
Betty to Ronald J M ille r, tot , Lot
37. Lake M arkham E t t t . SI7.M0
Bel A ire Hornet Inc lo ja m e tA
Corrado A w t Deborah. Lot 169
Oak Forest. Un Two. U ) 400
(QCD) Ja m e tS Howell III, tgl
to C o n tta n ce B Howell, sgl., Lot 9,
8 lk C .C ry tla l Bowl Jndaddn A&lt;00
Steven R D a i A wf Yvonne to
Richard L G e e rti A wf Nancy S ,
Lot I f Blk »C Foxmoor, Un 1,
151.000
RCA to John G Porter, tg i A
Barbara J Barbato t g i . Lot IIS
Hidden Lake. Ph it , Un V,
141,100
RCA to Marco A Solano A at
Vicenta, Lot i n . Hidden Lake, Ph
It, Un I I I . 146.(00
RCA to T ra v it J Hamilton A wt
' ’ Otemary. Lot 120 HiUO*1fu4kx.
Ph l l, Un It, ISJ.W0
Jamet V Birmingham A at
Virginia to J Huxley Walters A wf
Betty S . Lot 10* Oak Forest. Un
One. S3 7.000
W illiam T
Treadwell A wt
Kathryn to W illa rd E Granger A
wt L K ay, Lot 117, San Sebastian
His Un 4. 1*3,400
David C Sumner, tg l A Janna
C , tg l to Harold O Wynegar, Jr
A wl G retchen D . Lot 31 Weklva
Club E t t t . Sec Two, 1130.000
Maronda Hornet Inc to Edward
N Doyte A w l Potem tr y N , LI 3,
Cedar Ridge Un II, 173,100
Robert T F e r r ii, Ir to Palm
Springs Square L td , Beg In
tersec E r w « l Palm springs Dr A
N r w o t Orange St,, being SW cor
blk S3. Sanlando The Suburb
Beautiful. Palm Springs Sec,
1717,500
Cecil N Smith A wt Mary F to
Beatrice W illiam son Im arr.) n
S3 S’ ot L o t 44 A S 4 S' of 43, blk G,
Wood m ere P ark, 7nd repl 1)3,500
Thomas R Seward, sgl to 0 9
Newkerh Jr A wt Marita. Lot 41
Sandalwood. 1*4.700
The R y la n d Group Inc
to
Douglas L Dorsum A wt Christine
A , Lot 10, Deer Run, Un. I A,
174.400
The R y la n d Group Inc. to
Clarence D Carr A wl Kathleen
A , Lot 10. Deer Run. Un 1. 71,100
The Ryland Grp Inc to lyssa L
Braga, t g l , Lot 13, Deer Run, Un
■A. 173.100
Robert E Gord.mer A wt Janice
to Lawrence L Gorman A wt H
Elaine. Lot 40 repl Wyrdhjm
Woods, Ph I, 140.000
T L D yer A wt Alice to Norman
E Fisher A wt Pam, Lot 11, Dawn
E ttite t. Sec 11.1130 000
Greater Constr Corp to Caren
C Parker, tg l Lot 31S. River Run
Sec 4. SSS.SOO
Maronda Homes. Inc to Gary k
Herring A wt Susan G , Lot It, Blk
vNorlhortando
Ranches Sec to.
sa).too.
Winter Spot Dev to Sch Bd ot
Sem Co., 10 ft wide parecf beg
SE cor. Lot 71 Tuscawilla. Un I.
etc 1100
Debra L Parks to Donald Reich
wein A w l Evonne. Lot It, Blk A,
Paradise Point, 4th Sec , S13.500
Wrenco Homes, Inc to Joseph
D Yokshas A w l Leslie A , Lot 44V
W renwood. Un 3, 4th Addn.
151.300
le la n d Constr , Etc to Anthony
R CoDbe A wt Hilary, L t 7)
Springs Landing Un 7. 5710.000
Wrenco Homes. Inc to Dennis C
D 'tkm an A wt Kathleen E.. Lot
151, Wrenwood Un 1. 4th Addn.
5*1.000
Classic Custom Homes. Inc. to
Paul J Toomey A wt Elifabeth,
Lot IS, B rantley Cove, 130.000
W illiam T Smith A wl Odette L
to Sarah P Prm berton. s g l. Lot
147 M y rtle Lake HUH, 114,000
Community Hornet Co to Frank
P Barber A wt Jerle V., Lot IS,
F a irw a y O aks a t Deer Run,
518.000
M ary t Jones, sgi to Mary E.
Jones A Sharon S Setriglht, Jt.
Ten. Lot 40S. Weklva Hunl Club,
FOI H unt. Sec. 7, 1100.
M argaret C Godbold to Dennis
M Waters A wf Gail A , Lots 4 5 4 7
I 9 A 70. Blk G, Sanlando Springs.
Ir 7), 7nd rep l 147.000
Charles Godbold A wf Margaret
lo Dennis M Waters A wf Gail,
L o ti 71 77 7). Blk G. Sanlando
Spgs T r. 73. 2nd repl 118.000
Sam uel J. Me Neely A w l
Jeanette to O llle B Fulenwider A
wf G eraldine, Lot l | , Blk C.
Hidden Lake Un I A. 153,500
Elame Oaugherly to George M.
hamper A wf Peggy Jo, 5 474 13'of
W 471 17' Of NE &lt;«o| SW’ vOl NW'.
of Sec I * 71 31. etc. S 70 acres m I.
145.000
US
.umg Corp. lo Hubert R
E a ri.y , Lo t* 23 30 In ti Btk B. Oek
crest. 1100.000
H o w a rd S tulberg A Frank
L a u rie . I), t r u t t e e i to Hat*
Silvestrl In v . Ltd , Inc., I t s 1 14.
Blk D A L o f* 1 1. blk C. O a kcrtll 1
n s i n too
lla l* S ilve strl In v „ Ltd Inc. lo
Hubert R. E arley, Lott 5 I. A Lt 31,
Blk B l o t * ) S, Blk C, M l Blk D A
Loi - 4 3*. A L t It. Blk E, Oakcrest
s d 1770.000
Frank Silvestrl inv., Inc. to
Hubert R. Earley Lot 37, Blk E,
Oakcrest i d 111,000.
Del Taco Corp to M ulling Lang
Co N.V. Un. 5007 parcel of land in
Sec 1* 71 M e te . 1413.500
Dianna H. Falrel, tgl to Johnnie
C Parker, Jr. A wf Rosalia E . Lot
71 Fox wood Ph. I, M0.300
Lowry O. Holbrook A wl Mar
lorle to John R Atwood A wl
Robyn N , L o ti t, 7 A 3, Ilk M, Tr
}4. Sanlando Springs. 30,100
Com fortable M lg»., Inc to
James R Meeting, David B.
Harrison A Wendy M., Lot 133, Stlti

Legal Notice
f ic t it io u s r a m i

Notice is hereby given that I em
engaged in bviinesA i t 301 Celery
Ave, Sanford. Sem mote County.
Florid* under Ih * fictitious name
ot KAREN'S INTERIORS, and
that l Inland te regular Mid nema
with the Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Sem.nole Counly, Florida In ec
cordance with the prpvllleni ot Ihe
Fititious Nam e Statutes, To Wit;
Section IAS Of Florida Steiuies
1117
S&lt;g Keren Corley
Publish
December 31. t ill#
;.t- -ary 7. 14. 31, lt|3
Ol C MS

Rise, in Twb B. 155 000
M ichael J Battle j r A w l Lois to
Metv.n C Simon A wt Stephanie
B . Lot 7. Blk I t . Indian Hillsm Un.
Two. 114.500
The Ryland Group Inc to David
A Doudnev A wl Linda T , Lot 31,
Deer Run. Un BA, 174.700
Madeleine A Vaiich. w.d to
Baron R Luckenbach A wt T erry
C . Lot 70. Blk E, Carriage H ill Un
*. 171.000
Anna B Garber, So&gt; lo John J
M cC tatterty A wt M’Chele A . E lo ­
ot Lot 14. all oe 15 A W S' ot 14. Blk
M Lake Wayman M il., 148.000
Wrenco Homes Inc to John
Brandi Jr A wt Patricia. Lot 507
W renw ood Un 3. 4th A d d n .
151,400
Beverly J Campbell, sgl to
Eduardo Urgtltes. s g l, Lot 54,
Wolfers Lakev.ew Terr , 14.000
Stacy C Twite. *&gt;d to David W
Jackson A wf Jane A , L o t). Blk R,
Suntand E lls . 131.000
(OCDI Patrick j Zeuli A w l
S.rpa to Sue S Williams (fo rm
Zeuli) Lot 774. Wrenwood 1100
RCA to Mark A Shobe. s g l. A
Robert W Kindell, sgl,, Lot 144
Hidden Lake. Ph l l. Un
IV.
147.100
RCA to K urt Schwarting A wt
Donna, Cdf I' .T T *’ ..-n L a * * un
It. Un It . 157.400
RCA to Joaquin Pere&lt; A w l
Elba. Lot 15). Hidden Lake. Ph. it,
Un IV. 145.100
Bet A ire Homes, Inc lo Edwin
F Lowndes A wf Mary E , Lot 135.
Oak Forest. Un A. 145.300
(QCD) Leon P Dowling Jr A wl
AnnD lo Dowling A Lunsford, Inc
N 111 S’ Ot Lot 77, less N » ' A N
1175’ of 21. less ft 75'. Amended
plat. W lldmere. 5100,
P e ltie r Constr Co to Ronald F.
Hinkley A wt Patricia A , W SO’ of
Lot 17 A E SO' ot 11. Blk E. D ruid
H ills Park, 174.100
M o n tg o m e ry Wood! Inc. to
J a n a io n . In c.. Un 70S M on
tgomery Woods. Ph l. 147.(00
Same a t above, Un 701, 144.900
Same a l above. Un 704. 141.00
Same a l above. Un 704. 14A.OOO
same as above Un 703. 144.000
Same a t above Un 701, 140.700
Centex Hornet FI to Norman C.
Schober A w l Diana M , Lot 77.
Garden Lake E ill.. Un. Two,
175,900
Centex Momei FI. lo Norman C.
Schober A wt Diane, (re recorded
twice) same as ebove 175.900
Centex Homes lo Charles L
Narvell A wl Jennifer V , Lot 19
Garden Lake E lls . Un 1. 170.000
Kenneth J Krayeiki A wl L ite
W to Thomai W Zagar, s g l. Lot 4,
Blk j . North Orlando Ranches Sec
7A. 149.500
Helen H Larkin, sgl A J ill
Jackson sgl lo Bradley F.
Thompson A w l Sheila, Lots I I A
19, Blk 3, Sanlando The Suburb
Beautiful, alt Sec.. 190.000
(OCD) Jack Short to Jack Short
A wt Charlotte C Commencing at
NW cor o l SW'&lt; ol SW1. ol S W '.
ot Sec. IS 71 37. etc HOC
M ichael G Moretli A wl Victoria
to E llio t J Sandberg A wt Mona
W . Lot 749 Barclay Woods. 3rd
Addn. 149, S00
(QCO) Robert H Callaway Sr.
to Diane P Callaway, Lot 9, Blk F,
Lynwood Rev.. SUB.
F rederick E While A wt Andila
to Sidney G Fray, s g l, Lot 79S,
Spring Oaks. Un. 7. 177.000.
Robert A. Leavitt A wf V ivian I
to James B King A Phillip O . Jt
Ten, N ’ j o l S W '.o l N W '.o l SW&gt;.
ot Sec 14 20 30. less E 177 70'.
145.000
Edw ard E F e rrii A wt Ruth A
F re d e ric k H Renaud A wt
Patricia to Paul T O'Daniel A wl
Charlotte, Lot 17 Oviedo T err ,
110.000
FF . O rl to Lawrence H Knott A
wl M ary L Lot 17 San Souci,
S5S.000
C h a rle s
Comeau
A
wl
Magdalena to Studebaker Elec
Co . Lot t), repl Blk C, Nob H ill
Sec., M eredith Manor, SISO.OOO
(OCDI Durrance Constr Co lo
Em ory B. Durrance A wl Linda ,
Lot 9, Blk B. Sweetwater Oaks.
Sec 17, 149.S00
(QCD) Wendell J Brown to
D o ro th y B Brown. Lot 31,
Groveview Village i d 1100
JohnD . Kottmeyer A w l Chantal
to David A Trent A wt JoAnne, L l
77. Grove Estairs, 111,000.
Rica P ro p , Inc to Jerry C.
Sibley A wt Karol, lot 4, B lk o.
Sweetwater Oaki. Sec 13.13)9.000
A m e r i lln t Dev to R yla n d
Group Inc., lo ti 44 54 A 47. Deer
Hun, un. IB. 141.000
(QCD) Gloria A M iller A Diane
J to Beniamin M iller A w l Diane
J , lot 4)1. Winter Spring! un. 4,

1100
Carlton G Farmer A wf D tlo r lt
M to E a rl W Ebtrly, lot Tl Oak
F o re lt. un one, 115.000
G uiieppe Belcuore A wf Thalma
lo Ith w a r H arm , beg. r w H w y IT
97 Sr 400. pi 7 5 'N Irom SE cor ot lot
73. Blk EA, Lake Ellen addn,
1330.000
Becklan. Inc to G Beniamin
Lan li, Jr. A wt Mary Sue, un. 4.
Center Place. 114.100
Becklan Inc lo G Beniamin
Lanli. Jr A wt Mary Sue, Un S.
Center P I . 114.400
Robert D Haskins &amp; wt M ary to
C Neal WIIHS (marr I, lots. Blk B.
uamxiul un. urw. 17a,OOu
The Huskey Co to Deccatexln*
Constr
Corp lot I. Blk B.
Sweetwater Oeki, sec. II , 174,100
Allen L. Mills A wf Beverly Et al
10 Russell L. Niewold A M arilyn,
beg. pt intersre l r e ol Howell
Branch Rd A wl r w ot Lk Howell.
Rd . etc 1125.000
Raymonds Edwards A w l Ruth
S to Paul D Boilauier A wt Cherle
E.. lot I. Blk O Sky Lark un. 3 repl.
U7.500
Barnett Bk Cenlr FI to Angelo
P Verdi, tot a ll Winter Springs un.
4. 1171,000
Ruth E Cwicfc fg M ich ael
Rybnicky A wl Anna Ini 77 Blk A,
Winter Woods t d un 1 ,171,000
(QCD) Victor G Olvera to
Bonnie L Olvera, It I Glenwood

1100

lagfll Hotica
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 107
Longwood
Ave,,
Altam onte
Springs. Sem ingle County, Florida
under the fictitious name of EBM
AUTO SALES, end that I intend lo
register said neme with the Clerk
of th* Circuit Court. Seminole
County. Florid* in atcordanca
with Its* provisions ol th* Fic
titious Nemo Statutes. To Wit:
Section 14109 Florida Statutes
I9S7
Sig Ed H am uy
Publish
Docember 31. 1113.
January 7, 14. II , 1113
DEC M0

legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. CA 17 1140 10!) E
DAC CORPORATION.
P la in tiff,

1 legal Notice _J...leflol. Notice

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIOA
that by v irtu e ot that certain W rit PROBATE OIVISION
ot Execution issued out of and case No 11 479 CF
under the seal of the Circuit Courl IN RE ESTATE OF BERNARD
ol Seminole County, Florida, upon M O RELLI
Vi
Deceased
a linat judgement rendered in the
CAROL A C A M M A R A S A N A ,
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
aforesaid co u rt on the ISth oar of
HAROLD MAY. JR , and MARY
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
October. A O 1987. in that certain
JUNE MAY. h il wile. SUN BANK.
OR DEMANDS A
case e n title d ,
Edw in Born C LA IM S
N A SEMORAN O F F IC E , and
Plaintiff, vs Herbert 8 Gold GAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AMERICAN STEEL FENCE CO .
ltein. Defendant, which aforesaid AND ALL OTHER PERSONS IN
INC.,
Writ ot Execution was delivered to TERESTED IN SAID ESTATE
Defendant!
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
me as Sheriff ot Semmole County,
NOTICE OF SUIT
that
the
ad
Florida.and I have levied uponlhe N O T IF IE D
TO HAROLD M A Y , JR
and
follow ing d e s c rib e d property m in is tra tio n o l the estate o l
MARY JUNE MAY
owned by Herbert B Goldstein
Bernard M oretli. deceased. F ile
370 Oak Avenue
sad property being located m Number (7 479 CP. it pending .n
Sanford. Florida 37771
Seminole County, Florida, more the C irc u it Court lor Seminole
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
County, Florida. Probate D iv iiio n .
particularly described a i tallows
NOTIFIED
that an action lo
Beginning
383 17
le d the address ol which 11 Seminole
foreclose mortgage covering, the
C ounty Courthouse. Santord.
Southeasterly on road of INT
fo llo w in g reel and personal
North line. Southeast
and F lo rid a 23771 The personal
property in SEMINOLE County,
Easterly line Longwood Markham representative ot this estate is
Florida, to wit
Road running Southeasterly on M ary Bruckner, whole address i t
Lot S. Block 5. TIER S OF THE
curve 3) teet South 40 degrees 07' P O Box S97, Plymouth. Florida
TOWN OF SANFORD, according
41" East S3 teet North 49 degrees 37748 The name and address ot the
to the plat thereof as recorded in
lo r
Ihe personal
50' 19" East 131 le d North 4( a tto rn e y
Plat Book I. pages 54 through 44,
representative aresrt forth below
degrees OT 41" West U teet North
P ublic R ecord) of Sem inole
A il persons haring claims or
westerly on curve 19 78 feet South
County. F lorlda. also known as 370
50 degrees i r 77" West 135 leet to demands against the estate are
Oak Avenue. Sanford. Florida
beginning. Section 31, Township 20 re q u ire d .
W ITH IN
THREE
has been tiled against you and you
South. Range 30 East, Seminole MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
are required to serve a copy of
County, Florida. Unit 701. Building THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
vour written defenses. II any. lo it
M, CROWN OAKS FIRST ADDI
THIS NOTICE, to tile wilh Ihe
on C VICTOR B U T LE R . J R .
TION. a c c o rd in g to th * plat clerk ol the court a w ritten
ESQ . t i l l East Robinson Street,
thereof as recorded In ORB 911. statement ol any claim or demand
Orlando. Florida 37101. and tile the
Page 1977, Public Record) ot they may have Each claim must
original with the Clerk ot the
Seminole County, Florida L o tt) ,
be in w r tin g and m ull indicate Ihe
above styled Court on or before the
THE LANDINGS, according to th * basis tor the claim, the name and
10th day ol F e b ru a ry , 1183,
plat thereof as recorded in PB 2). a d d rrs io l the cred tor or his agent
otherwise, a Judgment may be
Page 2 4. P u b lic Record) of or attorney, and the amoun*
entered againil you lo r Ihe relief
Seminole County, Florida,
claim ed l l the claim is not yet
demanded in the Complaint
and Ihe undersigned as Sheriff ol
due. Ihe dale when it w ill become
WITNESS my hand and seal of
Semmole County, Florida, w ill at due shall be stated It Ihe claim is
said Court on the Sth day ot
It 00 A M on the 31st day of
contingent or unliquidated, the
January, in )
January. A D 1913. otter lor sale nature ot the uncertainly shall be
(Seal)
and sell to the highest bidder, tor stated If the claim is secured, the
Arthur M Beckwith, Jr
security shall be described The
cash, subiect to any and all
CLERK OF THE C IR C U IT
claim ant shall deliver sufficient
existing liens, at Ih * Front (West)
COURT
copies ot the claim to Ihe clerk to
Door ol th e Sem inole County
By Eve Crabtree
Courthouse In Santord, Florida, •enable the clerk to mail one copy
Deputy Clerk
to each personal representative.
Ihe above d e scrib e d REAL
Publish Jan 7, 14, 71, 78. IN )
A ll persons interested In Ihe
property
DED37
estate to whom a copy ot th is
That said s a l* is being made to
N o tic e d Administration has been
satisfy the te rm s ot said Writ ol
mailed are required, W ITH IN
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF Execution
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
John E Polk, Sherllf
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA
CIRCUIT
IN
AN D
FOR
Seminole County, Florida
iEM INO LE COUNTY. FLORIOA. Publish January 7, 14. 21, 28. 118)
TION OF THIS NOTICE, to Hie
C A iE NO. 811J71 JP I0
any objections they may have that
DEO 33
KEVIN BUDDE. individually, and
challenges the validity ol the
t u b o HAMILTON INSURANCE
decedent’s w ill, the qualifications
IN T H I CIR C U IT COURT FOR ot th * personal representative, or
COMPANY.
Piaintitls. SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIOA the venue or jurisdiction ol the
PROBATE DIVISION
vs
courl
JOSOIIN
BATSON
and File Number 11 &gt;49) CP
M ary Bruckner
OSBOUHNE
P A T T E R S O N , Division E
As Personal Representative
IN RE: ESTATE OF
lOinlly and severally,
ot the Estate ol
JENNIE V IE V A PRATT
Defendants
Bernard Morelll. Deceased
Oeceased
NOTICE OF ACTION
R P a trick Phillips. Eta
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO OSBOUHNE PATTERSON
G ra h a m , P h illip s, McCann l
The adm inistration ot the estate
Last Known Address
Edwards
ot Jennie Vieva Pratt, deceased.
70f W ndmeadows D rive
Post O ffice Box 115)
Altamonte Springs. Fla 33701 File Number (7 40S CP, is pending
Orlando. F lorida 32S07
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that a m Ihe Circuit Courl lor Seminole
ATTORNEYS FOR PERSONAL
Statement ol Claim has been tiled County, Florida, Probate Division,
REPRESENTATIVE
aqamsl you and you are required the address ot which Is Seminole
P u b lis h
December 31. 1987.
to appear at Ihe Seminole County County Courthouse. Santord. FL
Janaury 7. 1913
Courthouse. Room " D " Annex,
The names and addresses ot Ihe
DEC IS1
Safilord. F lo rid a , be fore Ihe personal representative and Ihe
Honorable W allace H
H a ll. personal representative's attorney
County Judge, on January 31, 1983. a rt set forth below
al 9 00 AM. to answer Ihe
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
AH in te re s te d persons are
statement ol Claim file d by the required lo tile w ith this court,
iE M IN O L E COUNTY, FLORIDA
attorney tor the P la in t ills , WITHIN TH REE MONTHS OF
PROBATE DIVIIIO N
F R A N K LIN
T
W A LD E N . THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
File Number 17-411 CP
ESQUIRE. 35S East Semoran THIS NOTICE
Civilian
( I) a ll claims
Boulevard A lta m o n te Sprinqs, against the estate and (1) any
IN RE: ESTATE OF
Florida, 33771 ; otherwise a |udg obiection by an interested person
ELSIE POTTS YOUMANS
menl may be entrred a q a m ll you to whom notice was mailed that
Deceased
lor the rellel demanded in the challenges the v a lid ity ot the will,
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Statement of Claim
the qualifications ot the personal
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
WITNESS my hand and official rep re se n ta tive .
venue,
or
CLAIM S
OR
DEMANDS
seal Of this Court on this the lis t jurisdiction ot Ihe court
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
day o* December. 1991
ALL
C L A IM S
ANO
OB
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
i Seal I
JECTIONS NOT SO F ILE D WILL
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE
ARTHUR M BECKW ITH, JR BE FOREVER BARRED
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
Clerk ot Court
Publication ot this Notice has
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
By Eleanor F Buratto
begun oh January 7, 191)
ministration at the estate ot Elsie
Deputy Clerk
Personal Representative
Potts Youmans. deceased. File
Publish Dec 34. 31. 1983. Jan 7,
Floyd H Powell
Number (2 413 CP. il pending in
14. 198)
PO Box 131)
the Circuit Court lor Semmole
DEC 131
Orlando. FL 37S01
County, Florida, Probate Oivislon.
Attorney to r Personal
the address ol which Is P O
Representative
Drawer C, Santord. Florida 17771.
NOTICE
OF
IN T E N T
TO
The personal representative of the
REGISTER FICTITIOUS NAME Frank M cM illan
estate is Harry Lee Lindsey,
NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN PO Box 134)
whose address ll 105 Cayle
that the undersigned, desiring to Orlando. FL 31*03
Avenue. Longwood, Florida 337SO.
engagr m business under the Telephone (30SI M l 9191
fictitious name ot SUNSHINE Publish Jan 7, 14. 19(3
The name and address ot th*
ADVERTISING AGENCY at 1107 OEO 34
personal representative's attorney
A irp o rt Boulevard. Santord.
are set forth below.
Florida, 37771, intends to register IN THE C IR C U IT COURT. IN
All persons having claims or
Hie said name with the Clerk ol the AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
demands against the estate are
Circuit Court ol Semmole County, FLORIOA PROBATE OIVISION
required.
W ITHIN
THREE
Florida
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
c a i e n o . ai tae-cp
DATED this 70th day ol IN RE: Estate ol
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
December. A D t i l l
THIS NOTICE, to til* with th *
JAMES HOWARD WOOLARD.
BLAKE AND M E E S . IN
clerk ol the above court a written
Deceased
CORPORATED
statement ot any claim or demand
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
By s Dudley B Blake
they may have. Each claim must
Th* adfninislrallon ol th* estai*
DUDLEY tl BLAKE.
b* In writing and mult indicate th*
ot JAMES HOWARD WOOLARD.
President
basis for th* claim, th* name and
deceased, File Number 17 5*9 r P.
Publish Dec 74.31. 11(7, Jan 7. 14.
address ol th* creditor or his agent
Is pending in |h * Circuit Court lor
19(3
or attorney, and th* amount
Seminole County, Florida. Probele
DEC 1)0
claimed II th* claim is not yet
Division, Ih * address ol which is
due, the date when ll will become
Seminole County Courthouse,
due shall be stated ll the claim It
Santord. FL 32771 Th* names and
FICTITIOUS NAMC
contingent or unliquidated, th*
ot
the
Personal
Notice is hereby given that I 4 m addren
nature o4 the uncertainty shall be
engaged in business al 140* Suit* A Representative and lha Perianal
stated It the claim Is secured, the
Highway 434 Longwood Fla. 377)0 Repraientative's attorney a rt set
security shait be described. Th*
Seminole County, Florida under forth below
claimant shall deliver sufficient
All Interested persons are
the fictitious name ot SULLY'S
copies ot th* claim to Ih* clerk to
SHIP SHAPE BARBER SHOP, required to i ll* with the court.
enable the clerk lo mall on* copy
and that I intend lo register laid WITHIN T H R E E MONTHS OF
to each personal represent alive
name with the Clerk of the Circuit THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
All sersons interested In the
M l all claims
Courl. Seminole County, Florida In THIS NOTICE
estate to whom a copy ol this
accordance with Ih* provision* of against Ih * estal* and (21 any
Notice ol Administration has been
ih* Fictitious Nam * Statutes, To objection by an interested person
mailed are required. W ITH IN
Wit
Section (45 0 9 F lo rid * to whom this notice was milled
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
that challenges the validity ot Ihe
Statutes 1H7
D A TE
OF
THE
F IR S T
will, th* qualifications ol the
Signature
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
TH IS
Personal Represmlative, venue,
Robert E Sullivan
NOTICE, lo rile eny objections
or jurisdiction ol th* court. ALL
Publish Jan 7, 14, 21. 21. IN )
they may have that challenges Ihe
CLAIMS ANO OBJECTIONS NOT
DEO 31
validity ol the decedent's will, th *
SO FILED W ILL BE FOREVER
qualifications
ot the personal
BARRED
Publication ol this Notict has representative, or the venue or
FICTITIOUS NAME
jurisdiction oi the court.
Notice is hereby given that I am begun on Dec. I I . 1H2.
A l l c l a im s , d e m a n d s , a n d
Personal Representative:
engaged in business at 110
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
PEGGY SUE WOOLARD
Valencia Drive, fantord. Semmole
W ILL BE FOREVER BARRED
RT. I Box 2IS
County. Florida under Ihe tic
Dale of I N first publication ot
Chad bourn, NC 21431
titious name ol SE M IN O LE
this Notice ol Administration:
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY, and Attorney for Personal,
January 7, IN I.
that I intend to register said name Represantatfve:
HARRY LEE LINDSEY
with Clerk ot in* Circuit Courl. GARY S IE G EL, ESQUIRE
A l Personal Representative
Seminole County, Florida In ac Post Otlicb Draw er MS
ol ihe Estate of
cordance with the provisions o4 Ih* 792 U S Highway 17 92
Elsie Potts Youmans
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit. Fern Park, FL 27720
Deceased
Section 143 09 Florida Statutes DOS) 3)1 SOa*
Publish) O f t I t . 3902, Jen. 7.1902 ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
I9S7 ‘
REPRESENTATIVE:
S&gt;g Marshall C. Till.*
DEC 112
Charles W. Musgrove. Esquire
Publish: December I t , I t l ] ,
7J2f South Congress Ave..
January 7. M. 11, IN J
N O T IC I UNDER FICTITIOUS
Suite I D
OEC M l
NAME
• 1 •• •
West Palm Beech. Florida 32404
. Notice is hereby given 'hat the Telephone: (203 ) 944 1799
toi towing person is engaged
NOTICE TO T H I PU BLIC
Publish Jenusry 7, 14, 1M2
business at lha following address. OCD 24
Notice li hereby given ih*t Ih*
Orange County, Florida, and that
Board atAdiMtmant o4 Ih* City Of
he intends lo register u ld name
Santord w ill hold a regular
with the Clerk ot the Courl, Drang*
meeting on Ian. M. 1911, in Ihe
FICTITIOUS NAMC
County, Florid*, in accordance
City Hall at 11)0 A M . In order to
Notice is hereby tnrtfi that I am
with the provisions ol the Fic
consider a request tor a variance
engaged in buttneu at I0S Exeter
titious N am * Statutes. To Wit
In the Zoning Ordinance as il
Section 145 09. Florid* Statutes A y * . Longwood. Seminole County,
pertain* to rear yard setback
Florida under th* lidltious name
requirements in M R 2 loned
I9S7
ot
K IM 'S
C E R T IF IE D
ORLANDO
CELLULAR
district in the N 'v o t N E 'a 4 W 'i
GROUP at t North Rosalind MECHANICS, and that I Inland to
ol VACD St on E., Blk 7, Tr l l
Avenue in the CHy ol Orlando. FL
regular said name with Clerk ol
Town o f Santord, PvB t, Pg 112
37101
Ih * Circuit Court, S tm in o lt
Bting
more
specifically
Applicant
County, Florida in accordance
described es located at ISIS W. Sth
Alan Geistar
with the provisions of fhe Fic
St.
Partner
titious Nam* statutes. T o w n
Planned us* ot the properly: A
Attorney lor Applicant
Section 145 09 Flerid* Statutes
church
"Freedom Assembly ol
Matthew L Le.bowitt, Esq
I9SZ
God"
Suit* 501. 2050 Biscayn* Boulevard
Sig Ernest K Whitaker
B. L Perkins
Miami, FL 12127
By M ary J Whitaker
Chairman
r.Publish O N 14,11. 1913. Jan7. 14. Publish
Detc-mbei l l
1917.
Board ot Adlustment
1
1911
Publish Dec 30. IN * . Jan. Z, t f U
January 7. 14. 71. 191)
DEC
t)9
OEC l i t
DEC 147

21—S ituations W anted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:10 A.M. - 5:30 P.M .
MONDAY th ru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

W ILL care lo r invalid, etaerly or
handicapped Days or nites
Reterences 371 067)

RATES
U im c
54c a
1 consecutive lim e s 54c a
7 consecutive l im e i 44c a
10 consecutive tim es 47c a
57.00 M in im u m
2 Lines M in im u m

line
line
lin t
line

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

1—Card of Thanks
THE FAM ILY o l th# late M rs
W illie V Wifliam s Will hold in
grateful remembrance your
kind expression of sympathy

9-Good Things to Eat
NAVELS S4 Bushel G rapefruit
A juice fiu il Si Bu
Call 277 7037
SWEET pink grapefruit S4 50 Bu
A l j Produce at State F armers
Market 1450 French Ave ,
S mined. 371 2498

12-Special Notices
AFTER Christmas Sale SO / o i l
14 carat qold. sterling and
electroplate jewelry In stock
Call 3711717 for appt

18—Help Wanted
PERFECT lor housewives &amp;
mothers Earn extra money in
spare time w Stanley Motne
Prod No exp 377 59)1
Classified Ads w ill always give
you more . . . Much , Much
More than you expect
E X P E R IE N C E D
W a itre s s
wanted pari tim e. Apply In
person M IM Restaurant. 210
E 1st.

legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIGHTEENTH JU D IC IA L
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR SEM IN­
OLE COUNTY. FLORIGTA
C IV IL ACTION
CASE NO (I-lISf-CA-gi-G
FIRST FEOERAL SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION OF OR
LANDO a corporation.
P la in tiff.
vs
JON L PRESTON and SONDRA
L
PRESTON, h is w ife and
THOMAS G FLOWERS. JR and
LO RETTAT FLOWERS, his wife.
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
SONDRA L PRESTON LAST
KNOWN ADDRESS 4(4 Bogata.
W rsierviiie. OH 4)011
YOU ARE N O TIFIED that an
action to foreclose a mortgage on
the following properly in Seminole
County, Florida
Lot 19, TUSCAWILLA, UN IT 7,
City of Winter Springs according
to Ihe plat thereof as recorded in
Plat Book 77, Pages 44 and 47,
Public Records o l Sem inole
County, Florida
has been filed against you and you
are required to serve * copy of
your w ritten defenses. II any. lo il
on James M Meade, ol GILES,
HEORICK L ROBINSON. P A ,
P la in tiffs attorney, whose ad
dress is 109 E Church Street, Suite
301. Orlando. Florida 17101. on or
before fhe 3rd day ol February,
198), and file the o rigina l w ith Ihe
clerk ol this Court either before
service on P la in tiffs attorney or
im m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r, other
wise a default w ill be entered
against you lo r th e re lie f
demanded in Ihe Complaint
WITNESS my hand and Ihe seal
ol this Court on Ihe 39th day of
December, 19(7.
(SEAL)
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
P ublish
Oecember 21, 1917.
January 7, 14. 21, 1912
DEC ISO

MATURE woman w ill take care
o l the e ld e rly or younq
children in their home
249 *333

lfr—Help Wanted

NEEDED
Telephone Solicitors,
Part-Time
Evening Hours.
Call 322-2611

E v e n in g H c m J d
TYPIST — Fast, accurate Take
phone orders Pension, profit
share and m e d ic a l p la n t
United Solvents 273 1400

Get Cash Buyers tor a small
investment Piece a iow cost
classified ad tor results ) 3J
7611 or 831 9993
DRESSMAKING alterations and
repair In my home
830 8181
CARE lo r the elderly Home or
H o s p ita l C e rtifie d Nurslno
A s s is t a n t
R e te re n c e s
provided 373 6749

24—Business Opportunities
.

SANFORD AREA
COMMERCIAL COIN
OPERATEDGAM ES
Establish route
Excellent fn
cofoc potential be your own
boss Latest games available
tor im m ediate sale to in
dividual Interested in a lu ll or
part tim e "A L L CASH" oo
p o r t u n it y
M a in te n a n c e
p ro vid e d
For
com plete
details, call Tom Brady. 1 400
S31 S7SS. E xt 70
Plumbing. Hardware, D1Y. Box
W wo Real Estate
Wm
M alictow ski Realtor 333 798)
A M PAPER ROUTE Small
down payment Owner w ill
carry 373 4757 Noon 1 p m

OIL COMPANY OPENINGS
Offshore rigs No experience
necessary Start immediately
S35,000 plus a year. For in
formation call (317) 970 9344.
Ext I744B

SANFORD Women’s Apparel
Shop, h ig h ly regarded tor
Quality fashions Best location
Wm M alicio w ski Realtor
332 7983

ADVERTISING Experience to
design brochures and labels;
write trade advertisements
and press releases etc Full
Irmge benefits Retiree and or
part tim e acceptable United
Solvents 373 1400

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

SOMEONE who likes to prepare
and serve good lood. lo nice
folks in a pleasant atmosphere
can find a iob a t the Runcible
Spoon Tearoom, Longwood
Hours 9 4, S days. For Appt
(31 4441 between 3 1 Sp m And
also nerd dishwasher 11 ) p m

PHIEBOTOMIST Needed for
Seminole B ranch’ ol Central
Fla Blood Bank. Requires
ve n ip u n c tu re or N u rsing
experience
O llic e
and
C le ric a l s k ills
in c lu d in g
minimum typing 35 WPM
Please call Tim Tobm 177 0877
or apply at 1307 E 2nd S t„
Santord
PART TIM E Men Women Work
irom home Phone Program
Earn S75S100 per week de
pending on tim e available
Call 894 2704 or 849 0916
SALESMAN
Used Car Lot
Finance exp preferred W ill
train. Excellent opportunity
for rig ht person 271 4075
Alert intelligent individual to
look a lte r amusement center
in Sanford P lata Must have
m echanical
a b ility ,
be
dependable, and bondable
Part tim e S3 75 Hr Apply in
Person Bally's Great Escape
PRESSER Exp SS hr Apply
Carriage Cleaner 434 Shopping
Center, Longwood

EXPERIENCED
IN DIRECT SALES
National lood service company.
23 yrs In business. F u ll
company benefits alter 90
days All leads supplied along
w ith established account.
Draw based upon experience
For interview ca ll Bob Rector.
I 305 3)1 0044
A L U M IN U M
M A N UF AC
TURING
CO M PANY has
immediate openings tor th#
following positions Screeners,
press operators, assemblers,
and m aterial handlers. Ex
parlance h e lp lu l but not
required Apply in person from
to a m to 2 p m, Monday thru
F rid a y . H a rC a r A lu m in u m
Products. 1701 Cornwall Rd.,
Santord, F la
JO BSITE INC
100’S lobs dally.
C a ll231 7940 Fee.

IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT OF
T H I IIO H T B E N T H JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FOR
SECRETARIES NEEDED FOR
S R M IN O L I COUNTV. FLORIOA
Temporary and part time
C IVIL ACTION
positions. Excellent skills
CASK NO. (t J859 CAA9-0
necessary interview by ap
FIRST FEOERAL SAVINGS AND
polntment only. 227 S449
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
OF
ORLANDO, a corporation,
Plaintiff,
*
* * * * * * * *
vs.
JON L PRESTON and SONDRA
AAA EMPLOYMENT
L PRESTON.
nis wife and
HUNDREDSOFJOBS
THOMAS G FLOWERS. JR and
LORETTA T PLOWERS.
his
WECARE
wit*.
LOWFBB — t e r m s
Defendants
NOIICC OF ACTION
NO CHAROK TO EMPLOYERS
1117 F R IN C H A VE .
272-S174
TO JOHN L PRESTON
BEVERLY
PAT
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS: 4*4
Bogala. Westerville, OH 4X11
* * * * * * * *
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action to forcloaa a mortgage on
the following property in Stminolt
UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSET.
Counly, Florida;
5ell those things that ara |ut&gt;
Lot If. TUSCAWILLA, UNIT 7,
taking up space with a want *d
Cily ot Winter Springs according
in the Herald 177 2411 or 12).
to tha plat thereof as recorded in
Pial Book 72. Pages 44 and 47.
Public Records ol Seminole
N EE D extra Money?
County, Florida
Why not sell AVON I
has been I lied against you and you
_________ Hl-BAIt_________
are required lo serve a copy ol
your writlen del arts ev it any, tg it
RESIDENT Manegev position
on James M Mead*, ol GILES
available lor Garden Apt.
HEORICK S ROBINSON. P.A
complex of 90 units, located in
Piainlilfs attorney, whose ad
Santord. Fla. Pravious exp. is
nr ess is 109 E Church Street, Suit*
desirable, good starling salary
X I, Orlando. Florida 32S01, on or
*nd good benefits. Apply in
before the 3rd day of Ftbruary
conlidenc* to P O. Box 17,
Panama CHy. Fia X X I .
1912. and lila the original with th*
clerk ot this Courl either before
WAITRESS
w anlad.
tx
service on Plaintiffs attorney or
perienced only need apply.
Immediately lh a re a tla r. other
Golden Lamb Restaurant, 1101
wis* a default will be entered
5 French Ave., Sanford.
a g a in s t. you lor the ralial
demanded in th* Complaint.
A T T IN T IO N I Own your owt.
WITNESS my hand and tha seal
Business. Avon Territories
ol this Court on th* 79th day ol
ooen Now! in 19)0
December. IN7
MAKE ROOM TO s i’ORc
(SEAL)
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr.
YOUR W INTER ITEMS . .
CLERK
SELL "D O N 'T
NEE O S"
BY Eve Crabtree D C
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Publish Oec 21. 1912. Jan 7. 14.
Phone 377 2411 or |)1 9913 and
a Iriendiy Ad Visor will help
71 1912
*
DEC t49
W*.,

2 ft DR M , 2 Bath apt
lo share i r e n t . utilities
Call 371 5929
SHARE

modern home on
acres. 5175 mo
377 5132

fo

29—Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms by ‘
Ihe week Reasonable rates.
ma&lt;d s e rv ic e C atering to
working people Unfurnished
Apartments I A 2 Bedrooms
323 4X7 500 Palmetto Ave
SANFORD, Reas weekly A
m onthly ra trs U til inc etl 500Oak Adults I 841 748)
. .
COMFORTABLE sleeping room
ISO w k „ includes util, and
maid serv Call 321 6947.
!

30-A partm ents U nfurnished
2 BORM. I balh.
upstairs. 1250
477 S5S7 or 422 8(76
r urn.shed apartments loi Senior
Citiiens 318 Palmetto A»e . J
Cowan No phone calls
G ENEVAGAROEN
APARTMENTS
112-1890____________
LUXUR Y
APARTM ENTS
F a m ity A A d u lts section
Poolside. 2 Bdrms Master
Cove Apts 3?) 7900 Op«-n on
weekends
II

you are lidvinq difficulty
finding a place, to live, car lo
drive, a iob. or some se rvice'
you have need ol. reed all our
want ads every day

COMFORTABLE 1 bdrm car
peled. porch, children wel
come, no pets. Conveniently
located to downtown area S6S
wk + u til. 371 6947
M E L L O N V IL L E Trace Apts
spacious, modern 7 bdrin. I bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped, CHA, walk lo town
and lake Adults No pets
Available Jan 1. 37 1 3905
M ariner's Village on Lake Ada, 1
bdrm from !76S. 7 bdrm Irom
1300 Located IT 97 iust south
ot A irp o rt Btvd in Santord All
Adults 373 1670
1. 7 AND 3 BDRM From
R'dgewood Arm s Apt
Ridgewood Ave 3234470
ENJOY country living? 7 Bdrm,
Duplex A p ts , Olympic s i
pool Shenandoah V illa g e
Open 9 to 6 J73 7920
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd
I A 7 Bdrms
F ro m U X m o
Phone 371 4430
'
PARK AVE 2bdr complete Kit.
5310 mo 3)9 7700. Fee
SevOn Rentals, I nc. Realtor
IF THIS IS THE DAY to buy i
new car, see today's Classified
ads lor best buys.
SANDALWOOD VILLAS Deluxe
J Bar. 2 Bath, washer, dryer,
POOL S27S Mo 444 9911.

31—Apartments Furnished
COMFORTABLE 1 bdrm. nicefl
furnished, *75 wk., plus util.
Call 371 7749
SfcMi furnished 1 bdrm. apf
S17S mo plus *17) dtp. NO
PETS 27J SI90
W

____ ^*9

LI'STAIRS Garage Apt J Bdrrj,
wall wall carpet, air heat, ki(L
ok. no pgis. S2S0 mo 1st, tal
SIOO deb 371 003S a lt
weekends 177 OOCt before $
WINTER SPRINGS (re* utli . V ,
bdrnv US wk Fee 33* 7700
Say On Rentals, inc. Realtor. ,
--------- -------------------.1.
I BDNM Apt. Clean
*275 mo. y Dtp.
References required 327 3147 *

3IA—Duplexes
LAKE M ARY, 2 Bdrm
Air. heat. WD hook up. r
*21) Mo . S300 Sec Ay
1* 377 7947

’c i

8

�•l'

31A—Duplexes

HOW coke PROF]
SANFORD Lake Ave (on W.
JSthl Oeluxe 3 Bdrm , duplex,
carport, u tility room, hook up
washer, dryer 130 05*5.

LG 3 BDRM, 1' i bth, carporl.
u til, rms . CBS, re frig ., stove.
CH, newly painted inside out,
ig lot. back fenced
owner
financing 121 7991

LAKEVIEW 3 BDRM Newly
decorated Reasonable
333 5739
NICE 3 Bdrm Duplex 1350 plus
Sf
JUNE PORZIO REALTY
REALTOR
1114471
LAKE MARY 3 Bdrm, kids, lu ll
kit .lenced, *315 Fee 339 7300
Sav On Rentals, Inc., Realtor

32—Houses Unfurnished
WINTER Springs 3bdrm, 3 bath, *
CHA, a p p l, lenced, garage,
extras, lease *375 (49 1713.
SANORA SOUTH 3 Bdrm, 2
Bath, p a rtia lly fu rn ish e d
CHA, drapes. *450 mo. 639 575*
or *34 4346
UNFURNISHED 3 bdrm house
relerences required Rent *350
mo + dep 333 3343
FOR RENT SANFORD
3 Bdrm. I bath, nlca neigh
borhood. no pets. *150 per mo ,
firs t and last mo rent in ad
vance. I yr. lease required.
Contact,)23 0533
B E A U T IF U L L Y restored 3
bdrm, 1 bth, home, CHA, wwc,
trp l. adults, no pets *375 645
4461 or 333 697*

KISH REAL ESTATE
331 0041
REALTOR
A lter Mrs 333 746* A 137 6957
UNOER 57.000 DOWN
1 bdrm doll house Affordable
m o n th ly

p a ym e n ts

C a ll

Owner Broker 131 1611
3 Bdrm, 1 bth. For Sale 541,000
or rent for *400 mo Sunland
Estates 111 0531
lo w e st
544,500
Nice neighbors surround this 3
bdrm 1 5 bath w ith la m ily
room Assume.VA mortgage at
low rate New root, carpets.
CRANK CONST A REALTY
Realtor (30 6061

ROBBIE’S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
1301 S French
Suite 4
Sanlord, Fla,

24 HOUR (B 322-9283.

NEAR downtown. 1 b d rm .
Carpet.
a ir,
range,
retrig. *250 f sec. *63*106

37-B-Renta IOffices
•P R IM E
O FFIC E
SPACE,.
Providence B lvd., Deltona.
3166 Sq. FI. Can Ba Divided
With Parking. D a yt 305 576.
1434 Evenings A Weekends
904 7*9 6351

1600 Sq It. ollice. 115 M a p le
A v e , Sanlord A va il Im m e d
Broker Owner. 331 7209.

SPACE lo r rent Ottlce, Retail,
Storage. French Avenue and
Airport 332 4603

37C For Lease

STEN STRO M
REALTY -

REALTORS

Sanford's Sales Leader
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY!
COUNTRY ESTATE 1 Rdrm. 1
Bath 1 aero (state,&lt;In Otneva
with pool and ovett houta. 1
Acres fenced far hones, and
avtry failure imaginable.
*91,*00.
BEAUTIFUL 1 Bdrm IVa bath
home, in Woedmere Park,
with Cent HA, wall le wall
carpet, paddle Ians, dining
roam, fencad yard, |ust
painttd and now roof. t*4,M0.
SPECIAL 1 Bdrm I Bath brick
home, in Sanlanta, with taf-ln
kitchen, porch, bullt-lnt and
mare. Oreal starter heme,
convenient areo. *11,390.
CONOO 1 Bdrm. I bath condo In
Woodmero T e rra c e , with
equipped Kitchen, paddle tans,
lamily roam, pantry, Cent.
HA. wall-will carpel, lenced
yard, and new root. Price is
*19,900.
MAVFAIR VILLAS! 1A 1 Barm,
3 Bath Condo Villas, naat to
Maylalr Country Club. Sttoct
your lot, floor plan A Inlrrlar
dfcort Quality constructed by
Shoemaker far *42,900 A upl

CALL ANYTIME

OFFICE SPACE
FORLEASE
(30 7713

1*4*
Pit k

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0

PROFESSIONAL Office space
tor Lease, on 17 92. Ideal
location to downtown area. 705
S French Ava. or call 323 1170

JU N E PO R ZIG REA LTY

41— H ouses

41 M O a ilE HOMES
31 on IV i acres with many
extras. Near Lake Harney.
Price reduced S7K and owner
will canstder holding. *16,(00.
SANFORDREALTY
REALTOR
’
HASH*
Have some camping equipment
you no longer u ttT Sell it a ll
with a Classilled Ad In The
Herald. Call 122 7*11 or *31
9993 and a Irlendly ad v ito r
w ill help you
.........
.......... L— —

BATEMAN REALTY *

NEW LISTING! Located I block
from shopping centori The
goed Ilf* ol the Condo owner
will be your* with this 1 Bdrm,
H i Bath, spacious, refur­
bished lownhouse. Families
weicemt. Peal. *41,50*.
REALTOR
MLS
102 S. French Ave.

332-1671
Uy Yr. Old, 1-1 iptit plan. Lb.
Mary, schli.. cedar A stone
•at. Upgraded carpet and
wood treatment. Kitchen has
bar and pass-thru window.

Lie. Real E H a lt Broker
2640 Sanford Ave.

TboWallSI- Company
Roatton______________ n iM Q l

LAKE HELEN 20 acre* * 22,*00.

NEE D A SERVICEMAN? You'll
find him listed In our Butinas*
Directory-

COUNTRY Living Leaie Option
like new J-7 with or without
acreage.
PRICED under today'* market
33 (am ity rm ., enclosed
garage, lenced back, a real
buy. S41.900
NEAR new hospital Z C 2 Older
two story large lot asking
• 179.900

ALL FLO RID A REALTY
O F SANFORD REALTOR
2*44 S, French
1110211
Alter Hour* 130 1010 1110770
HAL COLBRRT REALTY
REALTOR
107 E. Uth SI.
13F7UI

3227643

LOVELY alder heme, Ideal far
newly wed ar retiroes. 1 YEAR
HOME WARRANTY! Largo
lor. Most of furniture slays.
Priced lepri
The Wall I I . Centpe"T
R t alter
*11*00*
- - - LOOK INVESTOR SI
U.000 down, owner will hold
mortgage *1 1 1 /10 yr*. 1270
month, Immaculoto 1 bdrm, I
both, screened porch, garage,
*20,500. Call Agont after hr*.
67*1901.

f

e

r

n

B e U fo e

CM Keyed
FORALL YOUR
BEAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
1

l(

%

N IW L Y -R E D U C E D LOTH
Peaceful and tranquil setting.
Each lovely trood let over an
' aero. Room enough for pool

C 7
DANIEL AND WOHLWENDER
CONDO CAN OOII
Altem onte 1 1 *41.000. L ake
Mary, Feather Edge Mid *44'*.
4 Model*
LAKE EMMA LOTS 1 acre -F
*40.000 each.
SYLVAN OR. Sanford,
maculate 11 *4*4)00.

Im ­

GENEVA 1 Kory comfortable
U0.000
SEASONS G R E E T IN G from
Sandy Wisdom

169*4600 or 349-5691
l

WA6 A
U5EP CAR

REALTY, INC

ufllitM*. H a n o i OK. IS ft.
Bridle goth around total
dm topm oat. Priced to tall al
tit.s a * each, o aty t o r * * .
Owner llaancldB. Shams L.
Palmer R ealto r Aotoclata.
A fitr h n . m i n * .

r

SALESM AN?,

REALTOR
333 1774
l i t Y E A R S E X P E R IB N C E l

TO SELL

BLEW'

CARS'

72—Auction

.'Txlu-

W ELCO M E BACK
Dinette sets. 1 piece couch, and
chair, 7 piece loveteat. oil
space h e a te r, workbench,
cabinets, m attresses and
s p ring s,
r o ll a w ay bed,
lamp*, and all kind* ol misc.

HUOE CORNER LOTI Priced la
tall fasti 1 bdrm, family rm.,
CHA, lanced yard w-wall and
sprinkler systems, mature
citrus trees, double s in patio
under sprawling camphor
tret. Large aswmable lew
Interest merlgago. Call tadayl
141,t00.

7&amp;~ZPy

*2s 1

,

,

AUCTION
p

• » -

T U T A LL M A K E S SENSE. - w ^ R T O F ____ I'URNWAxe fxdNag uBPmBiffoa

OET A FRESH START
WITH "SANFORD'SNO. t
PROFESSIONAL"
Currently s te k ln i m atlvifsd
Sales Associates. Excellent
commission Schedule, load*
lurnished. Ash ter M r. Hall.

71—Antiques

FOR SALE 10 Speed bike
76 in. 10 speed bike like new
114 4244

Ocdo Antiques Show

CLASSIFIED AOS ARE FUN
AOS READ A USE T H E M
OFTEN. YOU'LL LIKE THE
RESULTS.
25 INCH RCA color console good
cond. 1175 or best oiler.
1214214
SEWING MACHINE Zig Z*g
Used only ( Mo* StS Cash or
term s We finance. Seminole
Sewing, Winn Dixie Plata 12 97
B Lake M ary Blvd. 122 9411

1*14 HWY. 17-91
LARGE 3 Bdrm fam ily home.
Beautllul lot with your own
citrus trees Super location
Better See. 154.750.

83

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale

O VERHEAD garage door. 0 II.
heavy gauge aluminum. *100.
Wall s e tite g m n cushions.
*75. See a l 1120 Magnolia A ve ,
127114*.

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4

/"P *&lt;

71 FORD Granada A ll extras
including a u in 'r a n i. *450
down Cash or tra d e 139 9100
114 4405

MOTORCYCLE 1979 GoldWIng.
F u ll dress, w stereo. 1.000
m iles *1,500 123 MS4

Complete household lurnithlngs.
bedroom s e ll, livln g ro om
sola's B Sleeper*, dining roomsels. ta b le t, c h a in , lamps,
paintings, appliances, wicker
and m uch more.

^

Have a room to rent? Let a
classified ad lind a tenant to r
you)

78—Motorcycles

SAT., JAN. 8,4:30 P.M.

j

1974 To- ota Cehca. exc cond , 4
brand new tire * *1.700. can be
seen al HO* S Sanlord A yr

I OP Dollar Paid lor Junk 6
used r a n trucks A hravy
i-quipm nnl 327 5940

3320 W, Mwy. 46

f

3 U Y JUNA CARS(TRUCKS
From tIO IolSO orm ore
Coil 177 1*24

WE PAY lop dollar lo r
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Au*o Parts 391 4505

CASH DOOR PRIZES

I? -‘ A

79—Trucks-Tra ilers
1924 CM C Truck. 22 II
A lum inum box 4 brand new
M lch elin llrts , 54.100 firm ,
exc cond 323 4062 fro m 9 5.

The Florida Trader
Auction Pa lace North
490 Bay Meadows Rd.
Longwood, Fla. 3194119

80—Autos for Sate
lan. 7 19
City Auditorium N.E. Sanches
F rl.
Sal 11 Noon to 9 p m
Sunday I p m lo * p m
Admission 51 50 entire show
The Chapman Shows

77—Auction
FOR ESTATE. Com m ercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
pra-sals Call D e ll's Aucl'On
171 5*30

80—Autos fo r Sale

77—Junk Cars Removed

Auction Sale
Friday Nite 7 P.M.

D ell's Auction

CUSTOM
B U IL T
CEDAR
HOME
E n trfy
tlficlent
custom throughout. Torrillc
ow ntr llnanclng. Potonilol
luosl homo In rto r. 17 cilrus
Iroes. Loads ol storage- Take
44A East la loll an Rl. t il. 1
houses on right past Otlotn
Post Ollice. *69,500.

75—R e c re a tio n al Vehicles

W# buy Cars and Truck*.
M artin Motor Sales
201 S.Fronch
121-T*1«

F4C TO R Y Closeout on 17
Scamp* 11' and I f Travel
Trailer and 19' Slh Wheel.
Light weight Need to go. Call
lor Ire e brochure Then w r it
deal. 1 *00 34* 4947

75-A—Vans
19*9 F ord Econo line V*n 4 cyl.
manual s h ill. 171 1714 dhy*.
177 0647 nites.

• DID YOU K N O W * *
You can buy or lease a new car
in the privacy n f your home or
office Fla Auto Brokers
171 7066
DeBar, Auto B M a rin e Saits
across the riv e r to« o f h ill 174
Hwy II 92 DcBarv 66* xs«a
19*0 Chevy M onia auto Ira n * .
Sun roof under 41.000 m ile *
Been good to m e M usi sell
53.400 121 5207
1973 VW 50U ARE HACK
s liiio n w a io n *600 lir m
__________ 323 *019____________
1942 C id illic Sedan DeVilie all
original Excellent condition in
and out One ow ner car. Estate
salt 66( 1024 or 322 20U

£§?&gt;

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Easy T e rm *
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 Sanlord Ave
____________321 4075___________

OAY TON A AUTO AUCTION
Mwy 92. I mite west o f Speed
wey, Dayidna Beach w ill h o lt
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday B Wednesday al
7 30 p m I t ’s th e on ly one In
Florida You set the reserved
price Call 904 255 *111 lor
further details

75D ATSU N 2dr w ilhaulo Ira n *
and other extras Good con
Oil Ion 199 down Cash or
Trade 119 9100. I l l 4405

Tomorrow may be the day you
sell that roll a w a y bed you've
nowhere lo roll aw ay
. II you
place a Classified Ad today

CONSULT OUR

19*1 T ro llin g motor Nevor Used
5175. Sear* typewriter ■ *15.
Clarinet *50 171 093*

CallBart

LOVE Seal, green epi. *Ue. exc.
cond. *75. Coffee to b it *15. *30
161*. t:10 - S p m.
4 cane 1 raitan bar stool*, *20
each. 331 1520

REAL E5TATE
REALTOR, l i t MSI

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JO B

51-A—Furniture

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
111 USE FIRST ST
317 5422

YEAR ENDCLOSE-OUT
I t l f S K YLIN E Mobile Home
74x52 If screen enclosure
porch, u tility shed. Central
heat and s ir 1 Rdrm, 7 Bath
Lot site is 50x100 Sale price
*41.900. financing available at
(0 * ol sa lts o r i 'r interest rate
1 3 4 ./ ♦ 3 Points. Can be seen i
ai 17a Leisure Or
North
D e B a ry.
F la
In
th e
M eadow lea on the R iver
M ob ile Hom e com m unity
Please contact Tom Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First Federal ol
Seminole 305 172 1747

KITCHEN s tl 5 piece, green,
*7S. White dresser and desk
(g irls ') *75 Maple twin bed w
spring and mallres*. 575. Call
127 0064 alter 5 p.m

Aloe Products

Ceiling Fan Installation

52—Appliances
Kenmore parts, service, used
washers 371 0691
MOONEY APPLIANCES
JUST received shipment o l good
usad refrigerators. 10 Day
guarantta. Sinlord Auction,
111* *. French, 111 7140.

SEE S K Y LIN E I NEWEST
Palm S pring, a Palm Manor
GREGORY MOBILE HOWES
J60I Orlando Dr
3115111
_____ VA A F HA Financing

53— T V -R a d io -S te r e o
Garage so lu ll (here's no room
lor the car? Clean II out with a
Want Ad In the Herald. PH.
113 2*11 or 111 9993

Good Used TV s*71S vp
MILLERS
1*19 Orlando Or
Ph 233 0153

1910 M O BILE Home 14‘X60' Set
up In adult section of mobile
park Day (11 3671
Evenings *11 511*

Modernltlng your Homo? Sail no
longor needed but useful Items
with a Classilled Ad.

PRE OWNED HOMES
3 Bd Fam Park
17x45
110.500
2Bd Fam Park
14x51
*11.100
114,900
] Bd 34x44MUSIS**
16.491
2 Bd 17x60 Nice
3 Bd 11x45 Furn.
*11.500
3 Bd 11x40
*4.500
3 Bd. 14x64 Ad Ph
tn,soo
OREOORY MOBILE INC.
1*03Orlando Dr. 17 93 S. Sanlord
305-123 5300
GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
FOR A FRACTION OF THEIR
COST FROM TODAY'S WANT
ADSI

RE POSSESSED COLOR T y'S
We t e ll repossessed c o lo r
te le vltio n t. all name brands,
consoles and portable*. EX
A M P LE : Zenith 25" color in
walnul console Original price
over *750. balance due 1196
ca*h or payment* I I I month.
NO MONEY DOWN S till in
w arranty Call 11*9 Century
S ales**! *194day or nile. F re t
home tria l, no obligation.
54— G a r a g e S a l t s
MOVING Sal*. Sal. only 10 till.
Booh* clothing, dining labia,
chain, m lK. Horn*. 114b A.w.
Evan* Circle, Deltona (of/
Diamond SI.)

43—Lots-Acreage

Oiant Carporl Sale. Sal., Sun. • 1. Household Hems, lum ltu r*.
tiero o . microwave oven,
clothes. 41? Beth Dr. (Ravenna
Park I

34k
JUNE PORZIG REALTY
OSTEEN near golf court*. 40
acres**5.000 *25.000 down and
owntr will hold mortgage al
10 % in la rttl. Also } acre
parcel* with *3.000 down and
ow ntr w ill hold at 1 0 /
Suitable for mobile home*.
Motlly cleertd lend.
REALTOR
(07 S French Ave

POW ERS

FUSE

K

T I—M obile Homey

3 Bdrm. 2 bath double wide
mobile home on *'.-» acres.
Horses O K i *4(0 month. 3210751 a m 327 7106 Night.

EVE

M A X IM U M *U M

WE NEED LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW! III

M—M obile Hom es

321-0759

HALL

FKA-VA12*

MODERN 3 Bdrm. 3 Bath, w ith
CHA drapes, appl lurnished.
*475 Mo . 679 5751 or *34 * 246
SUNLAND ESTATES 3 B drm ., 2
Bath, lenced yard, *350 mo.,
Schuren Really Realtor.
131 1347

PIPN’T BML
OUT WHEN
WE TOLD HIM

IROLD

NOWS THE TIME
TOBUYI

MOBILE Home on private land,
kitchen equipped lo r 1 or
couple Easy access in Lake
M ary *335 Mo 323 6319
NEW home avail 1st Feb *400
m o , 3 br , 3 bth. Lake M ary.
Call alter 6 p m 331 634*.

blan kh eap

PROF I M A * C L A IM E D PROF SAYS
THAT MAX
H E P BEEN
KNOW*
CANT BE
* 3 MUCH , M lld d E P AND
THAT HE l REPRflaMMMEP CPGOKEP,
BY A UFO,. O TH E R W IS E
FLSURE6
BUT
&lt;&lt; HE’P USE
A N Y T H IN G
H I*
ESCAPED
l£»
SPECIAL
P O S S IB L E
WHEN A

Friday, Jan. 7, i f l l - l l A

E vg nin g HiraJd, Sanford, F I.

w ith M a jo r H o o p iu

O U R B O A R D IN G H O U S E

41—Houses

41—Houses

MLS

YARD Sal*, Sal. B Sun., IMS
Park Dr., Lot &gt; . 1 tp . g irl'*
bike, dbl., door wardrobe,
household mltc.
HOUSEHOLD Ham*, clothing,
oxerctM blko, lento, swing let,
refrig., toy*, gordtn supplies.
Sat Kin. 10 6. t i l l Pine Av*.
_________ 123 4056__________

42—Lawn-Garden
F IL L O IR T A T O P S O IL
YELLOW SAND
Clark B Hirt 33175*0, U 11173

~47 Real Estate Wanted
WE BUY equity in nous**.
apartment*, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
VESTM ENTS P 0 M s 2100.
Sanlord. Fla. 11771. 1114741.

j

N E E D lo t a ll v«ur house
quickly)
We can offer
guaranteed sale within 10
day* Call l i t 1611.

A Sold
WE FAY cash lor 1*1 1 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg. Lie
Mortgagu Broker ?gg 2599

f t —Miscellaneous for Salt

*49 W. Lake M ary Blvd.
Suita B
Lake Alary, Pia 1274*
__________ n n m ___________

Work Shoe* B Bool I I I f.tfp r,
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
31* Sanlord A v*.
3121791

OWNER llnanclng Largo. CBS
Homo B Garage
*43,000 Approx 70 41own.
li% &gt;ri«ro*t
Many eriras. 1210417

E X E C U T IV E Black Vinyl h i *
bach t u l v i l a lltc * chair.
Walnut and b ra n podnlai,
tike naw 1100. W 1041.

Ceramic Tile

Auto CB Stereo
Repair. Install. Sales
Auto Sound Center
■ S C 2109 French Ave.
122 4*15

M EIN TZER TILE Exp H n ttf
)*51 New B old work comm 1
resid Free estimtte 149 1562
CO O Dr A SONS
f.ie Contractors
111 0152

ins

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
BA1HS. kitchens, roolm g. block,
concrete, w in d o w s , add e
room, tree estim ates 1211441
N E W .R EM O O E L.R EPA IR
All types and phases o l con
Strucfion, S G B a lin l 323 4(32,
122 1445 State Licensed
ALLTYFESCARPRNTRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carporl. Door
locks, panelling, shingles,
rerpoling. For last service,
cell 3 2 M 9 1 7 , 365-2371

Aluminum Siding A
Screen Rooms

Child Cam
TH E HAPPY I L V B I
Ovality child care and p rt
school, tn la n li a specially
In d iv id u a l atte ntio n TLC.
State licensed 120 E. Crystal
Lake A v e , Lake Mary 11121(4.
Have some camping tqulpmfm
you no longer use? Sell II all
with a Classilled Ad In The
Herald. Call 111 1411 or *119993 and a Irlendly adviser
will help you.

HA Y *3 JOper ba la.
15or moritraodaf.
09har Mod* avail. M - J m .
KICK THE STORAGE H A B IT.
Soil I M o t uitfut. no ionggr
naadod Ham* with a Mar a id
C la tiH M Ad. Call i n M i l or
m tm .

SPENCER PESTCONTROL
Comm, R e td , Lawn, Termite
Work. 3314*65. Ask lo r
Champ.

P it i t art ng

R e p a ir*

carpentry, rooting, painting,
w .ndow repair i l l *422.

WINDOWS, doers, carpentry.
Concrete U*h». ceramic 4 Moor
Hie. M inor repairs, fireplaces,
insulation. Lie. lond 321(121.

Ph ases ol Plaste ring
Planerinq re p air, stucco, hard
rr.ly.Simulated brick 171 5991

all

CLASSIFIED
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS of merchandise
every day.

Plumbing

Maintenanceol all types
Carpenlry, painting, plum bing
B r ltc tr lc . 323 4011

Lawn Service

M odffnljing your Homr • Sell no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classified Ad

*A&gt;1 LAWN SERVICE*
Mow, weed, trim, haul. Regular
Service. 1 lime clean upbr*. bp*t rotee. 6W 64J*.

Remodeling

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn B plant* for
wintar naw. Compltta Lawn
oarv. 1314574

Remodeling Specialist
Wo Handle Th*
Whole B a llo t wax

B. E. Link Const. .
322-7029

Lawn M ow s
ALUMINUM Siding, vinyl siding'
soffit B fascia. Aluminum
gutter* and down tpoul*
Fr Est. 305 34 5 5163

Beauty Care
TOWER'S B E A U T Y SALON
FORMERLY H a rrie tt's Beauty
Hook 519 E 1*1 SI . 323 5742

Boardtag A Grooming
ANIMAL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Konnol* healed,
insulated, screened, tty proof
inside, outside runs. Fens.
Also AC coget. Wo color lo
your pelt. Ph 311 f i l l .

HOMEOWNERS, ralax on your
day* olf. L *l u* Clttn your
to m * al affordobl* ra in . Call
ro w 111 1560 Patty'* Hem*
Pampering Service
AM . Kelly cleanlag service.
Special 111"* in roitouroM B
H I ice buildings. 411415*

SEAL c o n tr ite l men Quality
operation, par-os driveways
Days 111 7 ] ] ] E v ( j 327 1311

llr
JO H N N IES Applioncoi. W *
service refrigerator*, wash
p l
dryers, range*. Rea*,
rote* m i l l * .

NursingCara

BUM
BUDGET**
ARE
BOLSTERED W IT H VALUES
FROM T H E
W A N T AD
COLUMNS.

FOR all your concrete needs call
113 1427. Fraa estimate*. No
builder* plea**.

Nursing Center

Bride A Block

D ra p a rte s

CUSTOM MADE In our Shop,
installation Service., Dorothy
t Vincent B lit* 1495425

Nov# » m * camping equipment
you no longor uto? Soil li all
wiib a Ciaoalffad Ad In The
Harold. Call M l M i l or Q19991 end a Irlendly ad vitor
will holp you.

V I I N O EXCAVATING
m Cate Bacfchgg loader w
extender hoe. * yd dump
truck low bad terv a y w i

Firewood
r i R i A o o o *4Q B up. Tra«
trim m in g , romoval. T ra in
hauled Free **t , 32J Mio

■rnm m m m m m m m m m m m m m

be Wtiiifud fD BUY
, can*, coppor,
land, brato, titvor, gold. Woofs
day* 1 4:10. Sal. 91 K KoMo
T o o o ic o -tliw I I I SI. 3111100.

O TR IP LB A *
•&gt; Price tpocial. S14.M h r
Family or Living Rm 162 2160

Wilt cor# lor elderly
in my heme
171117*

Cteanad

Handyman
HANDYM A N Service* P*Wtng,
re p a irs
*H
Reasonabl*
guar work US 0651. *7? 4711 ,

I

II

y m . experience, Licensed B
littered.
F r t i li t l m a l r io n Booting,
Re-Retting and Repairs.

Shingifi, Built up and Titt.
JAMES ANDERSON
G.F. BOHANNON
REROOFING, carpenlry. root
repair i pamling | j yM rt
exp 312 1910
AAAKE ROOM TO S t O b t
YOUR W INTER ITEMS
SELL " D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAIT WITH A WANT AD
Rhone 121 i * n or 111 9993 and
a tiitn d ty A d v is o r w ilt http

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E, LEg INC.

OIL Heeler cleaning
ondtervlclng
CPU Ralph m T ill.

Tree Service
STUMPS ground out
Reasonable, Ire *e s tim a te *

Painting

Carpentry

CARPENTER repair*end
addition* 10 yr*. exp
Call 127 1152 -

OUR RATES ARE LOWER
L ak iv x w Nursing Center
719 E Second S t. Sanlord
M l 4707

Oil Hm tors
Excavating Services

Roofing

Major Appllane*

LOVING HOME. Eecellent c a r*
B companionship lor elderly
woman 111 4NS.

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Roatongbl*
m e t* . F ra * Estimate*.'
n i. M t s m .

Financing Available

M ISTE R . Fix It. Jo# McAdams
will repair your mower* ol
.your homo. Coll 111 7055.

SWIFT CONCRETE wore all
ly p e t. Footers, driveways,
pads, floor*, pool*, complete.
Free e»t 313 7103.

Carpet Owning

a l u m in u m

Pest Control

Cleaning Services

*7 A— F e e d

wiicu Sato* Hwy. 4iw. 1274676
B aM (baying* IB M
tad cutttag clavtr fear.
3rd cutting (Mull* bay.
Nartbara TiawMiy laixad Isay.
Cbackeur prkt*.

SEAM LESt aluminum guitars,
caver these everhangs watuminumietlltAfescie. If*4&gt;
175-7090 coliacl. Fret osl.

CARPENTER 25 yrs exp Smal,
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 323 Has

S t e n t W b r tz
MUST M il 4 Shetland panie*.
Groat wills children. Flog**
call M l SMI.

P A iN T iN G a n d r r p a ir . p a N o and
s e r r e n porch b u ll!
C a ll
anytim e 11? Salt

C O L L I E R ‘ S Home

C o n e 11-ft1 W o r k

GARAGE SON, JOh. 9 A » . 9 5.
300 Sir Lowronc* O r, Clothe*,
boat, oil hoottr, *tc.

ST. JOHNS River fu.ttege, i * j
acre parcel*, also Interior par­
cel* with river ecceee-tll.lOO.
Public water. 30 min to A lta
monte M a ll 1 1 / H yr.
financing, ne qualifying.
Brokar 41*4(33

HAVE YOUR fin a n cia l dreams
become a re a lity w ith Aloe
PT. ng investment. 12 1 729*

C EILING FAN INSTALLATION
Q uality Work
We Do Most Anything
.295 917*
*77 47*1

Home Repairs

BILL'S FAINTINO
interior Exlarier painting Light
car pantry. Hama* pressure
cleaned B utHlttb U I - l L / i .
Hume 111 5114 Bill S ttinrr
wonder what f* oo with tw o /
toll One - Th# gulch, a n y
W ani Ad way T h * m ag ic
number i* 323 3*H o r *3)9993
ItOUSt pointing 1500
* house Any t i l t
411 1034.4}S 600*

_____

74*044)_______

JOHN A L L E N Y A R D B T R IE
SIRVICK. W a 'll rem ove p K *
Iro n . Boa*, p ric e 111 SMB.

LHaumaawTra# Service*
Romoval, trimming, damootin
L'tensed and inoured (14 4464
UpftoHtery
t ORE N f 5 U p to ttle ry
fr*T
pick up. tfc-l A i m Cor B boil
•mu rum 1311771

�H A — Evening Herald, Santord. FI.________ Friday Jan. 7 , 1M3

.

Capitol Hill Drug
Use Probe On Again
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An investigation of California," Ross said.
Michael Hubbard, a District of Columbia
alleged drug use on Capitol Hill, including
charges of cocaine use Just off the floor of the police detective initially involved In the in­
House of Representatives, has resumed, NBC vestigation who is now off the case, said the
Investigation “perhaps could have gone as far
News reports.
as a dozen or more members" of Congress.
The network quoted a police detective
Hubbard told NBC he has doubts the case
initially involved in the case as saying the
investigation once could have involved a dozen will continue much further because prosecu­
or more members of Congress. But he said it tors at first did not want to bring charges
probably will not because it was hampered at against congressmen for simply using small
the start by a lack of prosecutors' amounts of drugs.
aggressiveness.
"Time was very crucial in this investigation
In a nationally televised report Thursday, as in any other investigation,” Hubbard said,
NBC said a grand Jury resumed the investi­ "and timing was of critical importance and
gation this week at the federal courthouse Just we've lost a great deal of it in this in­
vestigation."
a few blocks from the Capitol.
Ju stic e D epartm ent sources contacted
Asked if cocaine still is being sold on Capitol
Thursday nig h t‘confirmed the investigation Hill, Hubbard said, "There’s no question."
remains open but declined to comment fur­
In December, the House Ethics Committee
ther.
•
said there was iii, evidence of narcotics or
‘‘Federal investigators have been told that homosexual activity among members of
cocaine has been brought into this room Just Congress, but that two Investigations were
off the House floor - the Democratic continuing - one a drug case involving a
cloakroom — a members-only lounge for House employee, and the other about a sex
Democrats In the House," NBC reporter Brian m atter.
Ross said. "A number of employees here have
I^ast year, Rep. Robert Doman, R-Calif.,
been subpoenaed before the grand Jury, which who is no longer in Congress, let undercover
has already heard testimony from about GO agents work in his office to investigate alleged
witnesses.
drug use on Capitol Hill and said nine mem­
"Federal authorities say the grand Jury bers were being Investigated. Goldwater's
investigation also involves a Republican — name was one that came up, but he denied
former Congressman Barry Goldwatcr Jr. of involvement.

S E R IE S C O L O R T V C O N S O L E S
I AUTO-CONTROL COLOR SYSTEM

• PRECISION ELECTRONIC TUNING
• CONVENIENT ONE-KNOB CH AN N EL SELECTOR

YOU'VE
GOT
CREDIT
WITH
US

s5 ° ° D E L I V E R S
Y O U R

C H O IC E

(Includes 1st W e e k 's Rent, Delivery &amp; Set-Up)

19" C O M P A C T T A B L E T V

Bell Get $87.5 Million Rate Hike

Southern B e ll got a $140 m illio n ra te hike

2 5 " Z E N IT H C U S T O M

SPECIAL G O O D JANU ARY 3 THRU JANUARY 15

PSC Staff Recommends Southern
TALLAHASSEE (U PI) - The Public
Service Commission staff recommended today
that Southern Bell Telephone Co. get an $87.5
million interim rate increase.
Southern Bell is seeking a $4W million an­
nual permanent rate hike for its Florida
operations, including $178.5 million of that on a
temporary basis.
The PSC will meet Jan. 18 to decide whether
to give the utility any Interim rate hike.
The PSC staff not only recommended that
half of the company’s interim rate hike be
rejected, it also took Issue with Southern Bell
plans to boost residential charges more than
business charges.
Staffers submitted a plan that would have
less impact on residential customers than
Southern Bell had proposed.

NEW YEAR

from the PSC about a year ago, but it had
sought a much larger boost, so the new rate
hike request it filed with the PSC in November
was expected.
*
The $404 million rate increase, if granted,
would be the biggest ever for Southern Bell's
Florida operations.
Southern Bell has proposed a 42 percent
boost in the monthly fee for basic residential
telephone services to generate most of the
money for its interim rate hike. The basic rate
for business services would go up 27 percent
The PSC staff recommended, instead, an 8.8
percent increase for nearly all of Southern
Bell's services.
"The proposed spread of revenues places a
disproportionate amount of the interim
revenue Increase on flat-rate residential
custom ers," the staff said.

AREA DEATHS
CHARLES C. LEE
sisters. Mrs. Norene Aye and Fleet Reserve.
He is survived by his wife,
Charles C. U*e, 71, of 343 Miss Iorene Moore, both of
Dorothy;
six daughters, Mrs.
Beech Ave., l-ongwood. died Govis.
Baldwin-Fairchlld Funeral Coleen Foster, Del^ind, Mrs.
W ednesday
at
F lorida
Hospital-Orlando. Born Aug. Home, Goldenrod, Is in Ruth little , la k e Mary. Mrs.
Mary Brooke, Osteen, Mrs.
15. 1911 in Hawaii, he moved charge of arrangements.
Abby McCaslin, Deltona, Mrs.
to Longwood from Seoul,
JOHNE. LONG
Dottie Bronson, Sanford, and
South Korea in 1980. He was a
John Edward l*ong, 49, of
retired computer program­ 2519 Georgia Ave., Sanford, Miss Bridget Palmer, San­
ford; a son, Ned Palmer, with
m er and a Protestant.
died today at the Naval
Survivors include his wife, Hospital In Orlando. Bom the U.S. Navy; two sisters and
Boksoon; a daughter, Jen­ March 14.1933, In St. Joseph. three b ro th ers; and 11
nifer, longwood; two sons, Mich., he moved to Sanford 15 grandchildren.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA
Edward and William. both of years ago. He was retired
Is
in charge of arrangements.
Longwood.
from the U.S. Air Force.
Baldwin-Fairchlld Funeral
Survivors include three
MRS. CARRIE M. OLIVER
Home, Altamonte Springs, is sons, Albert, of the U.S. Air
Mrs. Carrie Mae Oliver, G6,
in charge of arrangements. Force, Michael of Deltona and
of 1007 Willow Ave., Sanford,
KENNETH G. ••ANDY” Charles of S anford; four died Monday at Central
ANDERSON
daughters, Dawn Vaness of Florida Regional Hospital.
K enneth
G.
"A n d y " W inter Springs, Regina, Bom Oct. 6, 1916 In Miami,
Anderson. 57, of 222 Waverly Michelle and Melony Long, all she was a member of Mt.
D rive, F ern Park, died of Sanford; one brother, Scott Moriah P rim itiv e Baptist
W ednesday at Brookwood Leroy Long of St. Joseph; five
Church and a housewife.
Community Hospital. Bom sisters, Julia Freeman of
Survivors include four sons,
March 10, 1925 in Beaver, W. Phoenix, Arlx.,
Emma
Va., he moved to Fern Park Freeman of St. Joseph, Ruby Donnell Oliver, Allen Parrish,
from Phoenix, Aril, in 1966. T har of Coloma, Mich, and Everett Oliver, all of
He was retired from the U.S. Phoebe Woulfe, of Sanford Rochester, N.Y., and Arthur
Air Force and a member of and Jessica DeMay of Lee Oliver, San Diego, Calif.,
two daughters, Janice Bedth e P ra irie Lake B aptist Bradenton.
Church. He was a member of
Gramkow Funeral Home is neclk, Cocoa Beach, and
the Veterans of Foreign Wars. in charge of arrangements. Delores Pittm an, Oviedo; two
brothers, Israel Black, and
MRS. MARY DUNN
Survivors include his wife,
Helen M.; a daughter. Mrs.
Mrs. Mary F. " P a t" Dunn, Harry Walker, Sanford; one
sister, Gementine Barnes,
Virginia Mason, Phoenix; a 58, of 440 Summerlin Ave.,
step d au g h ter, Mrs. B ette Sanford died Thursday at her Sanford; and 10 grand­
Jane'
W e a t h e r f o r d , home. Bom Nov. 11, 1924 at children.
Sunrise F u neral Home,
Tallahassee; a son, Wolfgang, Asplnwall, Pa., she moved to
Phoenix; a stepson, Ronald Sanford in 1942 from New Sanford, Is In charge of
arrangements.
W lltjer, Orlando; th ree Smyrna Beach.
brothers, Carl, Glen, both of
She is survived by her
Orlando, Roger, Beckley, W. husband, John G. S r.; one son, F u w r o l N o t k t
* v a .; five sisters, Mrs. Edna John G. Jr., Sanford; two
DUNN, MRS. M ARY f . "PAT"
Dates, Orlando Mrs. Joyce daughters, Jennette A. Dunn,
— Funeral services lor Mrs.
Ekins, Fern Park, Mrs. Helen Tallahassee, and Betty C.
Mary F. " P a l" Dunn, 51, ft 440
Marie Nelson, Beaver,* W. Dunn, Sanford; a sister, Mrs.
Summerlin Ave.. Sanford who
iMd Thursday w ill beef 10 a.m.
Va., Mrs. Nina Ruts and Mrs. Betty Smith, New Smyrna,
Saturday
at
the
First
F ra n c is H artsog, both of five brothers, A.E. Cole,
Presbyterian Church with Dr.
B eckley; and five g ra n d ­ Charleston, W.Va., W.G. Cole,
Virgil L. Bryant Jr. officiating.
Burial In Evergreen Cemetery.
St. Augustine, H.W. Cole,
children.
Brisson Funeral'Home-PA in
Cox-Parker Funeral Home, Orlando, R.C. Cole, H unican,
charge.
Winter Park, is in charge of W.Va., and R.D. Cole, Luling
PALMSR. M R. RAYMOND I .
arrangements.
La.
— F un eral Mass tor M r.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA
SAMUEL H. MOORE
Raymond E. Palmer. 57, of 704
Ridge Road, Sanford who died
Samuel Huggins Moore, 48, is in charge of arrangements.
Wednesday, will be celebrated at
RAYMOND E. PALMER
of 1451 Brasilian Lane, Winter
10 a.m. Monday at the Church of
Raymond E. Palm er, 57, of
Park, died Wednesday at his
the Nativity by Father Clement
J. Kuhns. Viewing will be all
home. Bom in Clovis, N.M. 204 Ridge Drive, Sanford, died
night Sunday beginning at 4 p.m.
. Feb. 3, 1934, he moved to Wednesday night at Central
Burial In Oahlawn Cemetery.
Florida
Regional
Hospital.
Brisson Funeral Home PA In
Winter Park from Virginia
charge.
Beach, Va. in 1973. He was a Bom July 15, 1925 in Slloan
Springs, Ark., he cante to
welder and a Methodist.
OLIVER. MRS. CARRIE MAE
Survivors Include his wife, Sanford in i960. He retired as
— Funeral services lor Mrs.
Carrie M ae Oliver, 44. of 1007
A nnette; two sons, Alan a nuclear weapons chief petty
Willow Ave.. Santord, who died
officer
after
21
years
in
the
W ayne, London, E ngland,
Monday, will be at I p.m.
Saturday
at
M t. Moriah
Jam es Glenn, Winter Park; U £. Navy and Marine Corps.
Primitive Baptist Church with
three brothers, Jam es A., He received three Purple
Iha Rev. M B . Ferneder ol
R osw ell,
N.M.,
R«d, Heart citations. He was a
delating. Burial will be in Shiloh
Cem alery. Sunrlsa Funeral
Providence. R.L. and Jim , member of the Church of the
Home in charge
Corpus Christi, Texas; two Nativity, Lake Mary, and the
I

t

�E v e n in g H e r a ld

LEISURE
Com plete W n k 't TV Listings
S anford, F lo r id a — F r id a y , J a n u a ry 7, lf &gt; 3

P ro d u c e L ab e l C o lle c tin g Is M m m m M m m m G o o d !
But The Fad H asn 't
C aught O n Locally
By MICHEAL BEHA
H erald Staff W riter
Some people collect stam ps. Others p re fe r butterflies or
baseball ca rd s. And m any people find coin collecting a
rewarding p astim e.
But a Sem inole County woman h a s a unique hobby
which she hopes to turn into a m oney-m aking venture.
Elaine Welson of 7315 Cook Lane n e a r Casselberry,
collects v eg etab le labels. These a re n ’t your everyday
garden v a rie ty veg etab le labels, th e se a r e vintage labels,
real ra re stuff.
Mrs. W elson’s collection is from th e 1930s and 40s when
produce com panies shipped their w ares in crates rather
than cans.
Her Interest in vegetable lab els com es from her
grandfather, J a m e s Flood, who m oved the produce
shipping firm h is fath er started in the late 1800s from
Chicago to th e Im p erial Valley of California.
The Im p erial Valley Is a boom a re a for fruit and
vegetables production. Its w arm c lim a te and available
water for irrig atio n m ade it to vegetables what Texas is to
oil.
Farm ing b e c a m e big business an d th e men Involved
with it w ere proud of their products. T hey displayed this
pride in th e distinctive labels which w ere attached to
every c ra te shipped to the eastern* m ark ets.
"They p aid lots of money to have a rtists design their
labels," M rs. Welson says. The labels were usually a
reflection of th e ow ners’ ch aracter. H er grandfather’s
Flood label h a d th e word FLOOD in large three­
dimensional le tte rs, denoting stren g th am idst a downpour
of rain.
"He nev er liked th a t one m uch," M rs. Welson confide*.
Other p ro d u cers chose to use celebrities for their labels.
Ginger R ogers posed for the label of Dancing Lady let­
tuce. Olym pic sk a tin g sta r SonJaHenie w as the model for
the Krem e de Koke label. And a c tre ss M aureen O'Sullivan
modeled for th e Irish Beauty labeL
Another p ro d u c e r chose risque n am es and illustrations
for his labels. Buxom Melons, for exam ple, used drawings
that amply illu stra te d what the n am es implied.
Other lab els fro m the same p ro d u cer were Mexicali
Rope, which fe a tu re d a Mexican g irl in a provocative
pose, and Foot H igh, which had a leggy blonde lying on
her back w ith h e r foot high in th e a ir.
"T here w as a lot of complaining ab o u t his labels from
church g ro u p s," M rs. Welson says.
Mrs. W elson’s fam ily stumbled into th e unusual hobby
after v eg etab le label collecting b ecam e popular in
California. H e r g randfather had a storehouse full of old
labels th a t h a d been kept since th e com pany closed down
in the e a rly 1960s.
.

See COLLECTING, P a g e tA

Bad but lucky
According to TV critic David Han­
dler, th e only thing keeping 'Gloria'
from getting the ax is the fact that
it’s situ ated in CBS’ strong Sunday
night lineup. On its own, the show
"wouldn’t make it.” P a g e s .

HeraM Phot* fey M k tw a l Salta

Elaine Welson and her son Steven show off
some of their fram ed vegetable labels that
d ecorate th e ir C a sselb erry h o m e. Mrs.

No laughing matter
It’s Fred T ravelena’s business to be
funny; h e ’s one of the hottest im­
pressionists around. Bpt when it
comes to the subject of Vietnam
veterans, Travelena is serious and
dedicated. F ind out why on P a g e 7.

Welson has thousands of the vintage labels in
her house and is trying to convert the
collection into cash .

Up from obscurity
From utter theatrical obscurity to a
co-starring role in a major motion
picture doing love scenes with Sean
Connery w as a giant, but rather
quick, leap for rising star B etsy
Brantley. Her story is on P age 8.

�2— Evening H erald , Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , Jan. 7,1983

nn sHftvi

Joe Spano (center) d resses up in d rag, as Sgt.
(Inldblum e, to join a couple of p ro stitu tes
(C harlene Jones, I., and Ju d y Pioli) in “ Hill
Street B lues,” to be reb ro ad cast Thursday,
J a n . 13 on NBC.
A touch of old (Germany brings ex citem en t to
the operetta “ The Student P rin c e ” which will

be staged a t . O rm ond
Auditorium Jan . 15.

B each’s

Peabody

'Student Prince' Operetta At Peabody
“ The Student P rin c e ," the
m ost frequently perform ed
operetta in the w orld since,
its prem iere in 1924, is
coming to Orm ond B each's
Peabody Auditorium ut 8
p.m. Januury 15.
" T h e S tu d e n t P r in c e "
includes nl l e a s t e ig h t
melodies which h av e given
theatre-goers m o re reasons
for humming an d whistling
than songs from any other
Broadtvay show. Most un­
forgettable of th ese is "D eep
In My Heart, D e a r," but
th e r e
a re
a ls o
su c h
p c rrc n n ia l f a v o r ite s as

" S e re n a d e ,”
" G o ld e n
Days," an d " J u s t We Two,"
plus rousing m ale chorus
num bers, like "T h e Drinking
Song," an d "Tim Student’s
M arch."
The m u sical tells the story
of a young prince attending
H eid elb erg U n iv e rsity in­
cognito, a n d a beer garden
waitress w ith whom he falls
in love. It is based on a short
story published in Germany
in 1899, an d two years later
dram atized under the title
"Old H eid elberg." In 1902,
an E n g lis h v ersio n was.

presented by the Shuberts in
New York, under th e title
"W hen All the World Was
Y oung." It was only mildly
successful, but the S huberts
retain ed the rights to the
play, and 15 years later, they
c o m m is s io n e d D o r o th y
D onnelly, author of th e
highly successful "BlossomT im e ," to turn the play into u
m usical, with music by th eir
own c o n tra c t c o m p o se r,
Sigm und Romberg.
It opened in New York on
D ecem ber 2, 1924, and broke
a ll e x is tin g re c o rd s fo r

Broadway m u sicals, with a
76-week run of 608 per­
formances. But even more
re m a rk a b le w as th e a f­
te rm a th of th a t recordb reak in g ru n . F o r th e
following two y e a rs, there
w ere nine road com panies
simultaneously louring the
country, one of w hich played
Chicago for a full y ear.
T ickets fo r th e single
p e rfo rm a n c e a r e $12.75,
$10,75 and $8.75. T hey are on
sate at the A ltam onte and
Fashion Square M all ticket
agencies.

Hollywood Deals In Unreality
DEAR DICK: I hope you can help m e find out about Ihe
adorable little dolls th at are always on "Lavcrne and
Shirley." For y ears I have wanted to find out who they
belong to. I collect dolls and love seeing them . Do they
belong to one of the girls? L.S., Angelus O aks, Calif.
DEAR DICK: We a re trying to find the bouse blueprints
that were used to build the Waltons' bouse. Can you help us?
P.M., Niva, Mo.

The class will now be in session: We will fearn today that
Hollywood deals in unreality, and we must never believe
that what we see on the screen is the truth. The "Laverne
and Shirley" dolls were simply assembled by the prop
department, who went out and bought dolls, as ordered by
the set designer. As for the Waltons' house, there never was
one. There is a facade, on the back lot of the Burbank studio,
where they shot the exterior scenes on the porch and around
the property. The Interiors were on Stage 26 at the studio,
where they built living room and kitchen sets, as needed.
Hollywood is a land of total make-believe.
DEAR DICK: My question is about the TV show
“ Dynasty." The opening shots show a large estate. Could you
please identify it for m e? My husband says it is Ihe Cherry
Creeh Country Club in Denver. I say it is som wbere around
Evergreen, Colo. Alto, a re the Interiors film ed in Hollywood
or in this building? J.A.N., Bordentown, N .J.

The estate Is the Flloli Mansion. |n San Mateo, Calif. All
the Interiors are filmed on a Hollywood sound stage.
DEAR DICK: My husband (who always thinks he's right)
and I have been arguing about who sta rre d in the movie
"Silent P artn er." I say it was George Segal. He says it was

Ask Dick

M atthew (P ete r B arton) keeps an eye on his
friend (P au l Ilegina), who is perform ing
movie stu n ts, in ‘"n ie P o w ers of M atthew
S ta r,” to be reb ro ad cast F rid ay . J a n . 14 on
NBC.

SATURDAY

Kleiner
E lliott Gould. Could you clarify this, please? UNSIGNED,
Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada

The reason your husband thinks he's always right is proba­
bly because he is The movie starred Gould, with Christopher
Plummer and Susannah York.
DEAR DICK: Oo the show “ Knight Rider," w hat kind of
c a r does Michael drive? G.A., Bloomington, Ind.

According to the NBC people, on whose network that car
tootles along, they started with an '82 Pontiac Trans-Am
Firebird, then modified the front, rear and put in a totally
new dashboard. The modifications were aone by a car
designer named Michael Scheffe. -They have several of the
cars, incidentally, just in case.
DEAR DICK: Are Charo and Eva Gabor sisters? It seems
to me Charo was oo "The Mike Douglas Show" and claim ed
th at w as so. Please let me know. WAITING, C hotlum , N.B.,
C anada

Maybe sisters in the great sorority of ladies in show biz,
but that's all. Certainly not blood relatives - Charo is Span­
ish and Eva is Hungarian.

Burt Reynold! it a n as
free-wheeling Hollywood stunt
“ Hooper,” to be rebroadcast
15 on CBS.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

,

TELEVISION

Friday, Jan. 7. I9 8 J -J

M O M rw

Jan u ary 7 thru 13
Cable Ch.

Cable Ch.

d) o
©O
® e

(A B C ) Orlando
(CBSI Orlando
(N B C ) Daytona Beach
Orlando

Independent
O rlando

(S3) (35)
@ (17)
(io) m

Independent
A tla n ta . Ga
O rlando Public
B ro a d castin g System

In a d d itio n to lh« channels listed, cablevlsion subscribers may tune in to independent channel 44,
SI. P etersburg, by tuning to channel t j tuning to cnannel IJ. which ca rrie s sports and Ihe C h ristian
Broadcasting N e tw o rk (C B N ).

Specials

Of The Week
SU NDAY

SATU RDAY
EVENING

EVENING

8:00

8:00

(I li (39) THE 8ILENT CRISIS Hosts • E D (10) THE WORLD OF DARK
CRYSTAL A behind-the-scenes
Sian Mooneyham, Carol Lawrence
look Is taken at Jim Henson's new
Guests: Mike Douglas. Dlcli Van
feature film about a mystical world
Patten. Maureen McGovern
Inhabited by the heroic Gelflings.
9:00
the evil Skeksis and the gentle Urru
i l l (39) WOMEN IN CRISIS Gary
Collins and Carol Lawrence host
this examination o l the plight ol the
MONDAY
I 6 billion women in Ihe world's
EVENING
developing nations through the sto­
nes ol s u ol these women

8:00

10:00

ED (to) MANATEES: THE VANISH­

III (39) AFRICA'S WEEPING... BUT
WHO'8 LISTENING? Hosts Carol
Law re n ce , S ia n M ooneyham
Guests Efrem Zlmbalist J r . Dean
Jones. William Shatner

ING FLORIDIANS A look Is taken
at the rescue and protection efforts
being made to save the Florida
manatee

11:00

ED (10) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T DIE Archival and rare
film footage document the story of
the Pacific gray whales, which have
twice rebounded from near e itin ction. Jack Lord narrates

III) (39) ALL GOO'S CHIL0REN
Carol Lawrence and Sian Mooney­
ham. with guests The Lennon Sis­
ters. Diahann Carroll and The Impe­
rials. present this plea to help the
world's children

7:30
17 O YOUNG PEOPLE'S SPECIAL Who Spooked Rodney?'' A
young boy has a streak ol bad luck
and becomes overly superstitious —
and on Halloween faces the ulti­
mate fear

10:00

ED (10) EVEREST IN WINTER Eight
British mountaineers attempt to
climb the most dangerous section
of Mt Everest. Hie west face, during
Ihe winter o l 1980. John Hurl nar­
rates (R)

AFTERNOON

12:00
E D (10) MANATEE8: THE VANISH­

£D (10) FUGHT FROM THE START
Sada Thompson narrates an

SPECIAL ‘ Rain F ore st" An explo­
ration of the rich variety of plant
and animal life in the rain forests of
Costa Rica is presented

9:00

E D (10) HITLER'S NIGHT OF THE
HUMMING BIRD Sir Hugh Greene
former Director Goneral of the DOC.
traces the events that led to the
birth of Hiller s terror state through
eyewitness accounts from survi­
vors

AFTERNOON

12:00

5:35
[IX (17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­
ED
EVENING

WOULDN'T DIE Archival and rare
film footage document Ihe story of
the Pacific gray whales, which have
twice rebounded from near eitinctlon. Jack Lord narrates

6:05

( J ) f J N F L TOOAY

12:30

[IX (17) WRESTLING

til O
NFL FOOTBALL NFC
Playoff Game" (Time Tentative)

ED (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "Ram Forest'' An eiploration of Ihe rich variety of plant
and animal life in the rain forests of
Costa Rica is presented

F R ID A Y
AFTERNOON

12:00
ED (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
8PECIAL "Rain Forest" An explo­
ration of the rich variety of plant
and animal life In Ihe rain forests ol
Costa Rica Is presented

1:00

SU NDAY

1:30

SPORTS '12: GEORGE
PLIMPTON SCRAPBOOK George
Plimpton takes a look back al the
ma|or sporting events of 1962.

O

4:00

9)
NFL FOOTBALL "AFC
Playoff Gam e" (Time Tentative)

4:35

til) (17) WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
QUARTER HORSE SHOW

AFTERNOON
!J

O

*

12:00
JOHN MCKAY

12:30
1:00
a
(A) NFL FOOTBALL "AFC
Playoff Game" (Time Tentative)

1:30

MORNING

10:00
(D O

ED

( J ) O BILL DANCE OUTDOOR8

FISHING WITH ROLAND

MARTIN

a-Tn
0 9 1 N F L '63

NORM SLOAN BASKET­

Don Adams re tu rn s to save the world from a
bom b that re n d e rs its victims nude in the
com edy featu re “ The Iteturu of M axwell
S m a rt," to air T uesday, Jan. 11 on NBC.

TU ESD AY
EVENING

7:35
I I (17) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawks vs Philadelphia 76ers

^W ED N ESD AY^

O 9 ) NFL 'S3

O ® WRESTLING

CD O

11:30
Q
4
BALL

Wli-WA'I

EVENING

Sports O n The Air
SATURDAY

G eorge Hums s ta r s as an engaging, eccen tric
ex-vaudevillian who befriends a ru n aw ay ,
played by Hrooke Shields, in “ J u st You and
Me. Kid.” airin g Monday, Jan. 10 on ABC.

THURSDAY

12:30

ED (10) THE WHALE8 THAT

2:00

8:00
CD (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

ING FLORIDIANS A look Is taken
at the rescue and protection efforts
being made to save the Florida
manatee

TU ESD AY
AFTERNOON

EVENING

10:00

W EDN ESDAY

8:30

12:00
III (39) NOWHERE TO TURN Stan
Mooneyham and Carol Lawrence
host this documentary on the more
than sis million people In Africa who
have been affected by war and
drought and the results of such
events

investigative report Into the impor­
tance ol infant / parent relation­
ships dunng the critical days follow­
ing birth
EVENING

(If

11:00

(10) ALFNNE SKI SCHOOL
(Premiere) "The Mountain Awak­
ens" Ski Instructors Butch Findel sen and Kathy Wood look at
selection and use of equipment and
apparel, and the basics of starting,
steering and stopping on skis

O

3:30
NFL TODAY

4:00

( if O
NFL FOOTBALL "NFC
Playoff Game" (Time Tentative)

THU RSDAY
AFTERNOON

1:00
ED (10) SPORTS AMERICA Pinch
Scott Men's 39-Plus Invitational"
Tennis players competing In this
event include Bob L u ll. Stan Smith.
Red Laver and Roy Emerson *
EVENING

EVENING

8:05

7:05

OX (17) NCAA BASKETBALL Tulsa
Golden Hurricane vs Wichita State
Shockers

()X (17) WRESTLING

-u-k,

Mrt. William Howard Taft, wife of the President wa»
responsible for p lan tin g the fam ous cherry
trees along the T id a l Basin in W ashington.

Nature has put nutritious bananas in germ-proof
and d irt-pro o f packages. Science has devel*
oped few
envelopes that taka such good
care of their contents and are to easy to open.

T h e re ’s a new a r r iv a l
household and B l a k e ’(John F o rs y th e ) and
K ry stle (Linda E v a n s ) ad m ire it lovingly on
" D y n a s ty ," to a i r W ednesday, J a n . 12 on ABC.

�4— Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Jan. 7,1983

G reene, Henson, G u in n e ss O n
There's a whole lot brewing
on PBS this week:
For film buffs, there's Jim
Henson kicking off the week
with a behind-the-scenes look
at his new, long-awaited,
Muppet-less feature film.
"The Dark Crystal."
Called "The World ol Dark
Crystal.” the PBS program,
airing Sunday, Jan 9, takes
viewers into the world of the
Gelflings, the two childlike
heroes of the story; the
Skeksis, the villains; and the
llrru, philosophers and mys­
tics who spur on the Gelflings
to save the world from the
Skeksis.
It's a complex, intricate,
many-layered world that is at
once beautiful and frightening
— and well worth a look.
A truly frightening subject
is covered in "Hitler's Night

of the BBC. traces the events
that led to Hitler's reign,
th ro u g h th e e y e w itn e s s
accounts of survivors.
Operation' Humming Bird
was the code name given to
the m urders of hundreds of

of th e H u m m in g B ird ," p la y ­

H i t le r 's f o r m e r fo llo w e rs s u s ­

JIM IIKNSON

ing Wednesday, Jan. 12. Sir pected of opposing his rule. It
Hugh Greene, former director began on June 30. 1934 when

Hitler raided the Bavarian
hotel where Krnst Boehm, the
leader of 4 million brownshirts. was sleeping.
Two re p ris a ls w orth
mentioning: "Ian McKellen
Acting Shakespeare," to be
rebroadcast Saturday. Jan. 15,
is the one-man celebration of
the bard’s works The 90-minutc special stars McKellen
performing from the plays ol
his favorite playwright. The
play originally r^n on Broad­
way, after presentations in
Scotland, Israel, Norway.
Denmark. Sweden and Brit­
ain
And, in the final two-hour
episode of "Tinker. Tailor.
Soldier, Spy," airing Monday,
Jan. 10, the identity of the
double agent is finally
revealed. Sir Alec Guinness
stars in the acclaimed "Great
Performances" presentation.
(L o c al lim e s m a y v a r y fo r
a ll o f the above p resentatio ns;
check lis tin g s )

Jan u ary 7

F R ID A Y

SA T U R D A Y
MORNING

0:00

7:35
'

0 ( 4 1 ( 1 ) 0 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
(I I) (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
tD (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN

63)5
n il (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6:30
0 ( 4 1NBC NEWS
11 ) 0 CBS NEWS
1 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS □
© (10) ART O f BEING HUMAN

6:35
111 (17) DOB NEWHART

7:00
0 ( 4 1THE MUPPET8
l Si O P M. MAGAZINE
&lt; 7 1 0 JOKER'S WUXI
III. (35) THE JEFFERSONS
©
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
in, (17) WINNERS

7:30
a (4 1ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
11 ) 0 Tic TAC DOUGH
D I O FAMILY FEUD
II11 (36) BARNEY MILLER
© (10) UNTAMED WORLD

(1* (17) ANOY GRIFFITH

8:00
0 ( 4 ' KNIGHT RIDER An eccen­
tric. dying millionaire changes an
undercover cop's idanllty and
bequeaths him a futuristic car lo aid
him In his quest lor Justice (R)
(}&gt; O THE DUKES OF HAZZARO
Coy and Vance try lo prevent a
robbery In H auard attar Boss Hogg
resurrects his perfect crime vehicle,
the Mean Green Machine
(7) O BENSON When Benson
marries Kraus, he finds n 't not a
nightmare he can dismiss by wak­
ing up Q
(11(38) THE ROCKFORD FILES
© (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

8:05
(11 (17) THE PINBALL8 Kristy
McNichol plays a wise-cracking
teen-ager trying lo cope in a lo ite r
home

8:30
1 7 i O THE NEW OOO COUPLE A
robbery lorces Fain and Oscar to
lake aalraotdinary security precau­
tions
©
(10) WALL STREET WEEK
“ Telecommunications In The '80s"
Guest Steven Chrutl, director o l
the research-technology group tor
San lord C. Bern stem A Company

9:00
(1) O DALLAS Mis* Elite has to
decide whether to tarnish Jock's
memory or te e her family disin­
tegrate because ol his wd.
(?) O HOLLVWOOO: THE GIFT OF
LAUGHTER Jack Lemmon, Waller
M atthau, Richard Pryor, Oom
DeLuiae end Burl Reynolds host a
star-studded look a l hilarious
movieiand momenta
(1|i (38) GUNSMOKE
0
(10) BODY IN QUESTION
“ Balancing A ct" Dr. Jonathan Mil­
lar looks a l the elaborate set o l pre­
ventive, reactive end repair mecha­
nisms that are designed to keep our
bodies In a slate o l health, g

N C H A V E .,
IA N F O R D

FAMOUS M I ID C K l C K B M
•S H R IM P
•P IS H
•CLAMS
A L L YO U CAN RAT
• W EDNESDAY*

3 P C . D M N B * 1 .?S
1 0 P C BU C K IT * 5 .7 ?

© (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

5:00
o (3) NBC NEW8 OVERNIGHT

5:50
i l l (17) WORLD AT LAROE

8:00
0 (41 GILUGAN S ISLAND
13) O LAW AND YOU
m O O f l . SNUGGLES
itS (17) NEWS

6:30
Q 14) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
( 3 ) 0 SPECTRUM
1 7 i O SPACE KIDETTES

7:00

(3) O BLACK AWARENESS
I? I a MORK 4 MINOY / LAVERNE
4 SHIRLEY
((I) (35) JIM BAKKER

7:05
ai) (17) BETWEEN THE LINES

7:30
O (4) GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
1 3 1 0 THIRTY MINUTES

7:35

( I I (17) VEGETABLE SOUP

8:00

1:05

as

(17) MOVIE ' Shootoul In A
One-Dog Town'1 (1973) Richard
Crnnna. Jack Elam A small-lown
banker's life is endangered when he
is entrusted with a large sum ol
money

1:30
17) O
SPORTS ’42: GEORGE
PLIMPTON SCRAPBOOK George
Plimpton lakes a look back at the
major sporting events Ol 1982
© (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

2:00
o (4) TO BE ANNOUNCED
ill; (35) MOVIE
Sunshine Run"
(1977) C hris. Robinson, David
Legge Two slave brothers and a
young woman travel through the
Everglades in search ol lost Span­
ish treasure
© (10) IT S EVERYBOOY'3 BUSI­
NESS

2:30
© (10) r r S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS

2:35

0 (4) THE FUNT8TONE FUNNIES
&lt; 3 ) 0 SPEED BUGGY
(7) O SUPERFRIENDS
a I) (35) HERALO OF TRUTH
© ( 1 0 ) QUILTING

a * (IT) MOVIE* "Junior Bonner"
(1972) Sieve McQueen. Robert
Preston An sgtng rodeo star
returns home for one last contest
and finds that his lamrly and the
town have totally changed

8:05

3:00

0 5 (17) ROMPER ROOM

EVENING

January 8
PENCEWELK
(II) (35) THE JEFFERSONS
© (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

7:30
Q ! 4 . FLORIDA'S WATCHING
(1 (I (35) BARNEY MILLER

8:00

0 ( 4 1 OIFFRENT STROKES
( D O BRING 'EM BACK ALIVE
(I) O
T.J. HOOKER
OD{36&gt; THE SILENT CRISIS Hosts
Sian Mooneyham, Carol Lawrence
Guests: Mike Douglas. Dick Van
Palten, Maureen McGovern.
© (10) MOVIE "The Boy Friend
(1971) Twiggy. Christopher Gable
When an assistant stage manager
replace* the lemale lead in a show,
she becomes ■ star and linds
romance as well

8:05
(U) (17) MOVIE “ Rio Lobo ' (1971)
John Wayne. Jennifer O'Neill An
ex-Civil War colonel rids a Texas
town ot carpetbaggers

8:30
O

(3)

SILVER 8POONS

9 :0 0
0
GO O'MALLEY A poor man s
private eye sets out to clear a
down-on-htsluck client who hat
been wrongfully implicated in a
counterfelling scheme
*
( D O MOVIE "White Water Reb­
e ls " (Premiere) Catherine Bach.
James Brdm A freelance pholojournallst becomes Involved with a
white water kayaker who it deter­
mined to save a mountain fiver
from unscrupulous developers
QD O LOVE BOAT
(U) (35) WOMEN IN CRISIS Gary
Collins and Carol Lawrence host
this examination ol Ihe plight o l the
1 6 billion women in the world s
developing nations through the sto­
ries ol tlx ol these women

(?) O
MOVIE “ Gay Purr-ee"
(1982) Animated. Voices ot Judy
8:30
Garland, Robert Goulet A group oI
9:05
0 ( 4 1THE SHIRT TALES
French farm cat* find adventure In
(111 (17) NCAA BASKETBALL Noire
1) 0 PANDAUONIUM
Dame Fighting Irish vs Vlllanovs
1 ?) O PAC-MAN / LITTLE RAS­ Parrs
© ( 1 0 ) PRESENTE
Wildcats
CALS/RICHIE RICH
q -q n
HU (35) GRANO PRiX ALL-STAR
10:00
SHOW
0 i 4 1NFL 'S3
0
(4) REMINGTON STEELE
© (10) QUILTING
1 3 ) O TO BE ANNOUNCED
Remington and Laura become
© (10) TONY BROWNS JOURNAL
entangled with en aging, eccentric
8:35
"When The Sisters Come March­
movie queen who thinks someone is OS (17) THAT GIRL
ing Home" The first black WAC unit
out lo kill her
9:00
to
serve oversea* during World War
1 Si O FALCON CREST Angela
9:30
O ( 4 . 8MURFS
It Is profiled
threatens to make Jacqueline pay
' © (10) FAWLTY TOWERS
1 3 ) 0 GILUGAN'S PLANET
lo r the a It air she had with her hus­
4:00
11V: (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
10:00
band. and Lance takes Melissa's
O
14) NFL FOOTBALL "AFC
© (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
b tb y to the hospital tor a paternity
0 (4) INSPECTOR PEREZ A New
Playoff Game" (Time Tentalival
York City detective helps the San
test
9:05
3 0 HOGANS HEROES
Francisco authorities solve a series
( 7 1o ABC NEWS CLOSEUP
aS (17) FALL OF EAQLES
'l l (35)INCREDIBLE HULK
01 murders involving young Chiill (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
©
(10)
TO
BE
ANNOUNCED
9:30
NEWS
nete-Amerlcan women
13) O BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
©
(10) BODY IN QUESTION
(7) O FANTASY ISLAND
4:30
RUNNER
“ Brute Machine" Dr Jonathan
13 1O MOVIE "The Great Ice Rip- (l!) (36) AFRICA'S WEEPING BUT
( 7 ) 0 PAC-MAN
Miller traces the birth of modern
O il ’ 119741 Lee J Cobb. Gig Young W HO '8 LISTENING? Holts Carol
til) (35) THE HAROY BOVS / NAN­
neurology and discusses the neuro­
When a gang ol jewel thieve* L a w re n ce , Stan Moonayham
CY DREW MV8TERIE8
logical implications ot piano Playing
decide to use a bus as their get­ Quests: Elrem Zimbalitl J r , Dean
© ( 1 0 ) FRENCH CHEF
with Dudley Moore Q
away car, they don’t count on a Jones, William Shatner
retired cop being one ol the pas­ © (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
. 10:00
10:30
sengers
( 71O MORK 4 MINOY / LAVERNE
til (35) IN SEARCH OF...
10&amp;0
I/O
MOVIE "Snow White And © (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
4 SHIRLEY
11:00
The Three Stooges" |!9 6 t) Carol
© (10) MAGIC OF CHL PAINTING
H I (17) NEWS
Herss, The Three Stooge* A trio of
0 ( 4 H D 0 l? ) 0 N E W 8
10:05
til (35)SOAP
bungtor* do their best to protect a
11:00
1S (17) MOVIE "Losl Command"
fair maiden.
© (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
o f 4 ) ( j i O ld o new s
(1965)
Anthony
Quinn.
Alain
Delon
SENTS
©
(10) ENTERPRISE (Season QD (35) ALL GOO'S CHILDREN
A French peasant leads a group ol
CaroLLawrence and Stan Mooney­
Premiere) "Tallspin" Most Eric
11:05
paratroo per* and eventually
SevarMd looks al the behind-the- ham. with gueals The Lennon Sis­
03) (17) NEWS
secures a command In Algeria.
scenes story ol America's first ter*. Diahann Carroll and The Impe­
major airline bankruptcy, and rials. present this plea lo help Ihe
11:30
10:30
watches a * Bramff executive* try lo w orld's children.
O
(.4) TONIGHT Host Johnny
d
(4) THE GARY COLEMAN
restructure their company
Carson Guests: Jack Lemmon.
© (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SHOW
Tanya Tucker
SENTS
(5) O
BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
4:35
(5) O MORE REAL PEOPLE
RUNNER
02) (17) WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
11:30
(7) O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
0 D (36) THREE STOOGES
QUARTER HORSE SHOW
a
(11 SATURDAY NIOHT LIVE
(11) (35) MAOAME'S PLACE
© ( 1 0 ) THIS O U ) HOUSE
Host: Ron Howard. Guests: The
5:00
Clash, Andy Griffith, Harry Ander12:00
11:00
111) (35) D A N *L BOONE
15) O
MOVIE “Movie Movie"
O G4) INCREDIBLE HULK / AMAZ­ © (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN to n . (R)
&lt;1978) George C. Scott. EH Wallach.
( i &gt; 0 BARRY PARSER
ING SPIDER-MAN
REVIEW
( 7 ) 0 TO BE ANNOUNCED
( D O M O V * "Notoriou*'' (1946)
( 3 ) 0 SOUO GOLD
ail (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­ (7) G L A S S *
Cary Grant. Ingrid Bergman
5:30
CISCO
©
(10) WALL STREET WEEK 02) (17) TUSH)
© (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
"Tatecommunlcallona In The '80s"
12:05
12:00
11:30
Quasi Steven Chruat, director of
a s (17) M O W
"The Bridge On
(ID (38) NOWHERE TO TURN Stan
( D O KJOSWOALO
the
research-technology
group
lor
The River Kwal" (1857) William Hol­
Mooneyham and Carol Lawrence
a DOS) AT THE M O W S
Sanlord C. Bernstein 4 Company.
den, Alec Guinness
host lhit documentary on lb# more
© &lt;K &gt;) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
than six million people in Africa who
5:35
12:30
AFTERNOON
a s (17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­ have been affected by war and
O ( £ LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
ED
drought and Ihe result i ol such
12KM
LETTERMAN
0 ( 4 ) DANCE FEVER
event*.
EVENING
1:00
( D O NFL TODAY
t
12:30
6:00
CD O M O W "A Fistful Ol Dol­ ( D O WEEKINOSPECIALS - i n *
CD O M O V * "Uptown Saturday
I D O NEWS
Haunted Mansion Mystery" A
lars" (1067) CHnI Eastwood. Mari­
Night"
(1974)
Sidney Poiller. Bill
IC P Q K U N G F U
young boy and girl try to solve the
anna Koch.
© ( » ) NATURE "The Discovery Cosby.
mystery of the disappearance ol a
2:00
01 Ankmal Behavior-. Living Tooath- 02) (17) M O V * "Ofve Bomber"
mlaar and hi* fortune. (Pari 1 )g
O CD NBC NEW S OVERNIGHT
*r" An exploration of the relation. (1941) Errol Flynn. Fred MacMur(U) (34) M O W
"Paper Man"
•Mp between die behavior of ani­ ray.
(1971) Dean Slockwe*. Siefanie
2:40
mal* and lha kind* of communltiaa
Powers. A credit-card computer
( D O M O W "KJRar Beet "&lt; 1974)
1:00
In which they ihm and function la
error raauits In three deaths and a
Gloria Swanson. Edward Albert.
0 ( 3 ) LAUGH TRAX
preaentad
traumatic confrontation between
3:00
1:30
human* and machine*.
6*05
O (4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
QD O M O V * "Shadow On Tha
• (10) OROWMG YEARS
OU (17) WRESTLING
Land" (1944) Jackie Cooper. John
3:30
12:30
Forsythe
#
0(3) ROMANCE THEATRE
H) 0
NFL FOOTBALL “NFC
&lt;U&gt; (17)1M O W "I Died A Thou2:00
Playoff Gama" (Time Tentative)
tend Ttmee"
Tin
(1955) Jack Pslance,
0 ( 3 ) NEW S
( D O AM0BCAM BANDSTAND
Shaftey Winters.
a t
3 KX&gt;
4 K)0
CD O
M OV*
"Youngblood
1:00
0 ( 1 ) NBC NEW S OVERNIGHT
Hawke" (1944) James Frandacua.
I (4)
WITH LAW. Suianne Ptaahette.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

January 9

SUNDAY
MORNINO

6:00
f j ' 4 PUBLIC AFFAIRS
( V O LAW AND YOU
( 7 ) 0 AGRICULTURE U S A
(11 (17) NEWS

6:30
f ) &lt; 4 OPPORTUNITY LINE
! ) ) 0 8PECTRUM
Q ) O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7:00
O 14 12'S COMPANY
( J) o ROBERT SCHULLER
(?) O TOOAV8 BLACK WOMAN
(V!) (35) BEN HAOEN

7:05
(IX (17) JAMES ROBISON

7:30
O G D E . J . DANIELS
(?) O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
(ID (35) E.J. DANIELS

7:35
(IX (17) IT IS WRITTEN

8:00
0 ( 4 1VOICE OF VICTORY
1 } l O REX HUMBARO
( 7 1 0 BOB JONES
III (35) JONNY QUEST
CD (10) 8ESAME STREET (R) g

•

8:05

iix (17) CARTOONS

REPORT
CD (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING

1:00
0
14) NFL FOOTBALL AFC
Playott Game "(Time Tentative)
( 7 ) Q PRO AND CON
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

1:30
17) O BILL DANCE OUTDOORS
CD (10) FLORIOA HOME GROWN

2:00
(*) o
MOVIE "The Gathering
S to rm " (1974) Richard Burton, Vir­
ginia McKenna Prime Minister Win­
ston Churchill becomes a leading
figure in World War II
(D O
MOVIE "Hush
Hush.
Sweet Charlotte" (1965) B elle OavIS. Olivia de Havilland A young
woman's mind is affected when her
married lover it found dead
CD (10) MOVIE "8 p a rro w s ‘
(Silent) (1926) Mary Pickford. Roy
Slewart A young woman becomes
maternally protective ot nine help­
less youngsters at an oppressive
county orphanage

2:05
t)X (17) M ovie
Rhapsody In
Blue" (1945) Robert Alda. Aleals
Smith The life and music of George
Gershwin are filled with limitless
enthusiasm

8:30

2:30

0 ( 4 ) SUNDAY MA88
1 V O DAY OF DISCOVERY
( 7) O ORAL ROBERT8
(1V (35) JOSIE AN0 THE PUSSY­
CATS

(11) (35) MOVIE "The Trial Ot
Chaplain Jensen" (1975) James
Franciscut. Joanna Miles A chap­
lain in the Navy is court-martialed
for adultery

9:00

3:30

( 4 1THE WORLD TOMORROW
1 ) 1 0 SUNDAY MORNINO
( 7 ) 0 TO LIFE
(IV (35) BUOS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
CD (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU

I } I O NFL TOOAY
CD (10) MOVIE "The Vagabond
Lover" (1929) Rudy Vallee. Sally
Blane A saiophonist finds fame
and romance when he is mistaken
lor a celebrated |a n musician

9:05

4:00

O

(1X (17)L08T IN SPACE

O

9:30

(1 ) MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
( 710 THE LAW WORKS
1)1 (35) THE JETS0N3

10:00
Q C 4 ) HEALTHBEAT
(7) O FI8HINO WITH ROLAND
MARTIN
HI) (35) MOVIE "Four Clowns"
(1970) Stan Laurel. Oliver Hardy,
Charley Chase. Buster Keaton The
best o l the early screen's tour top
comedians is compiled.

10:05
'IX (17) LIGHTER 8IDE OF THE
NEWS

10:30
0 ( 4 1EMERGENCY
(J I o SLACK AWARENESS
( 7 10 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
CD (10) AMERICA TO THE MOON

10:35
OX (17) MOVIE "The Guns Ol
Navarone" (1951) Gregory Peck,
David Niven. Sis men are sent to
destroy two Impregnable German
guns.

11:00
IS) O THIRTY MINUTES
CD (10) ALPINE SKI SCHOOL
(Premiere) "The Mountain Awak­
ens" Ski Instructors Butch Findetsen and Kalhy Wood look at
selection and use of equipment and
apparel, and the basics ot starting,
steering and stopping on skis

11:30
0

®
NORM SLOAN BASKET­
BALL
(9) O FACE THE NATION
CD O THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
® &lt; K» COOKIN' CAJUN
afternoon

12:00
O S ) M O T THB PRESS
(J) O JOHN MCKAY
(ID (35) M O V * "David Copperheld" (1970) Robin PhSkps. Richard
Attenborough. Baaed on the story
by Charles Dickens a young
orphan boy grow* up In the England
otthe 1900s.
® ( 10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

12:30
M O V * "Wonder Woman"
(1974) Cathy Lee Crosby. Ricardo
Montalban. A remarkably powerful
Amazon woman become* Involved
with U S. I

id r

O ' 4 1TO BE ANNOUNCED
l} )
O
NFL FOOTBALL "NFC
Playott Game" (Time Tentative)
(I I) (35) INCREDIBLE HULK

5:00
O 14 &gt;TO BE ANNOUNCED
(7) O
HOLLYWOOD AND THE
STARS
(I I) (35) DANIEL BOONE
CD (10) FIRING LINE "Is Commu­
nism EvoIvtngT' Guest Richard
Pipes

5:05
(IX (17) LAST OF THE WILD

5:30

-(7 ) O DIALOGUE WITH BILL NEL­
SON

5:35
1)1 (17) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
EVENING

8:00
0 ( 4 ) ( 7 J O NEWS
0 0 (3 8 ) KUNGFU
CD (10) NOVA "The Making o l A
Natural History Film" The lowly stic­
kleback lish is the subfect o l a film
documenting the patience and
ingenuity that goes Into m aking a
wild tile film (R )g

6:30
0 ( 4 ) NBC NEWS
(TJO A B C N E W S

6:35
(IX) (17) NICE PEOPLE

7.00
O (4) VOYAGERS! Phineas and
Jeffrey try to prevent the marriage
ot Princess Victoria to a Russian
duke, and help Albert Schweitzer In
Africa.
(J) O 50 MMUTES
( S O RIPLEY'S BCLJSVS IT OR
NOT1 Featured: the story of tho
supposedly haunted Grant F *•••*—'
■taagismp, strang* new musical
instruments, monkeys: a look at air­
craft from the 1580* to today.
O
(10) S0UN0 FESTIVAL Tho
king of Latin music THo Puente and
the classic Latin rhythms of Ray
Baretto are featured In a taiute lo
the big band sound of salsa.

( 7 0 MATT HOUSTON Four lets
than remorseful et-w ives show up
lo squabble over a cat food mogul t
tor tune after he ta mauled to death
by h it pet lion
III
(39) HEALTH MATTERS
"Leukemia"
CD (10) THE WORLO OF DARK
CRYSTAL A behind-the-scenes
look is taken at Jim Henson'i new
feature Mm about a mystical world
inhabited by the heroic Getflings.
the evil Skeksis and the gentle Urru

8:05
OX (17) NASHVILLE ALIVEI

8:30
)S) O GLORIA Gloria retuctantty
agrees lo be hypnotized lo help
recall the identity ol the criminal
who robbed the clinic
(ID (35) JERRY FALWELL

9:00
Q (4 MOVIE "N orth Dallas For­
ty" (1979) Nick Nolta. Mac Davis
Groupies, pul-popping and ali-night
partying begin to lake their toil on
two fun-loving but over-lhe-hill
football players (R|
())
O
TH E JEFFE R SO N 8
Jealousy o«ta the best ot Florence,
compelling her lo masquerade at
Louise Jefferson
(7) O MOVIE "Assault Force"
( 1960) Roger Moore, James Mason
A dapper frogman ta called in lo
thwart the plans o l satortionisls
who have hijacked a supply ship
and are threatening to destroy a
North Sea oil rig
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"The Good S o ld ie r" Robin Ellis
and Jeremy Bretl star in an adapta­
tion of Ford M adox Ford's novel
tracing the relationship between
two wealthy Edwardian couples
who meet yearly in a fashionable
German apa town Q

9:0 5
(IX (IT) WEEK IN REVIEW

9:30
( J) O ALICE M el's mother arrives
tn Phoenix with the news that she
and her husband have been
divorced
1) 11(35) JIMMY SWAQGART

10:00
• } ) O TRAPPER JOHN. M O . A
macho lather has big plans lor his
infant son until Q onto breaks the
stunning news that the baby is real­
ly a girl

10:05
(IX (17) NEWS

10:30
(11: (35) JIM BAKKER

11:00
O I 4 H } ) 0 ( 1 ) 0 NEWS
CD (10) 8NEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons make
their choices lor the worst movies
o l 1982

11:05
(IX (17) JERRY FAL WELL

11:30

O (4) ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
( } ) O SOLID QOLO
(?) a JACK ANDERSON CONFI­
DENTIAL
a !) (38) r r s YOUR BUSINESS
12:00
(D O
MOVIE
"C om pulsion'
(1959) O rson W e lle s, Dean
Stock w*N.
(1!) (36) W.V. GRANT

12:05

0X(17)OPENUP

12*30
O
(4) MOVIE
"B la c k w e ll's
Isla n d " (1939) John G arfield,
Rosemary Lane
CD O MOVIE "Pocket Money"
(1972) Paul Newman. Lee Marvin

1:05
OX (17) MOVIE " Little M inister"
(1934) Katharine Hepburn, John

2:10
CD O M O W
Pocket" (1973)

Mirtml flsfuiln

7:05
I X (17) WRESTUNQ

800

I GO

"Harry In Your
Jem ** Coburn.

2:30

( D O CBS NEWS MQHTWATCH

0 GD CHIPS An *a-con shows up
3'20
In town deiermlnsd lo get been el
ax (17) M O W * "Caged" (1950)
Ponch tar busting Mm years before. Eleanor Parker, Agnee Mnnrahead.
( D 0 ARCHH BUNKER'S PLACE
4:20
Gary finds himself the prime can­
"Virgin taiand"
didate for s partnership In the fami­ (Z) O M O W
ly law firm after he save* hie Unde (1958) John Cassavetes. Virginia
Abe's We.

Friday, Jan. 7 . 198J—5

'Gloria' Is A Real Stinker
ByD A V ID HANDLER
“G lo ria" isn ’t a very good
show, but it is a lucky one.
CBS has given it a spot in its
all-powerful Sunday night
lineup. Such slotting has kept
even as term in al a case as
"T ra p p e r John, M.D." alive
and well.
On i t s ow n, ‘‘G lo ria "
probably wouldn't make it.
It’s a m eager, poorly thoughout spin-off of the Sally
S tr u th e r s c h a r a c te r from
"All in the F am ily." The
whole setup feels like It was
th ro w n to g e th e r in the
parldng lot five minutes
before th e producers pitched
It to the network.
You h av e to wonder if
"G loria" would work even

New York with 8-year-old
so n ,
Jo e y
(C h ris tia n
Ja c o b s), to find herself. And,
we m ust hope, finally grow
up.
U nfortunately, our setting
is too insulated and our
su b sid iary characters too
sketchily drawn for any of
th is to happen.
G lo ria
lands* a
jo b
scrubbing cages for a genial
sm all-stow n
veterinarian,
Dr. W illard Adams (B urgess
M eredith). Since she and
Jo ey m ove Into Adams’ cozy
old house, he’s put In the
position of being a substitute
A rchie Bunker. Though he is
s o m e w h a t fa th e rly , h e
e x e r ts no p a rtic u la r in ­
fluence over Gloria.

with a sound structure.
You’d still be stuck with a
whlny, u n pleasant brat for a
lead c h a ra c te r, and a star
who isn’t strong enough to
hold our interest.
But we’ll never know. The
lineup Is simply going to
ca rry ‘‘G lo ria.’’
T h is i s a single-m om starting-over show. After 12
y e a r s o f m a r r ia g e , the
M eathead has moved into a
com m une with his college
homecoming queen. Little
Gloria ru n s aw ay to upstate

H o w a b o u t som e h u m o ro u s

d o m e s tic feuding? N ope.
E verybody gets along fine.
She: " I won't wash your
s h o rts." He: "I don’t w ear
a n y .”
Joey gets to keep a dog of
h is own — a b la c k ,
hom osexual stray, it tu rn s
out. Joey nam es it Archie.
T his should give you an idea
how fa r removed we a re
from the original show.
D r. A dam s Is too soft­
h e a rte d to be a success. This
Infuriates his partner, D r.

Maggie l-awrence (Jo de
W in te r), a s tro n g -w ille d ,
greedy feminist. He doesn’t
care. "She Just th in k s I'm
h er partner because she
owns half the p ra c tic e ," he
tells Gloria.
If you’re looking for a
m ean in g fu l
r e la tio n s h ip
betw een
G lo ria
an d
Maggie, forget it. M aggie
refuses to be a sounding
board for G loria's personal
problem s. She won’t get
involved. Who knows why. It
su re doesn't help th e show
m uch.
Our other regular is C lark
(Lou Richards), th e nerdy
v e t's assistant and resident
would-be swinger. H e h a s no
com m and over an im als or
w o m e n . A Jerk. U s e le s s .

The stories are designed to
put Gloria to the te st a s a
new single and as a p aren t.
Since "G loria" offers us
such anemic w riting and
blah subsidiary’ c h a ra c te rs,
we have no choice but to
dem and that Miss S tru th e rs
c a rry the show. She c a n ’t.
She isn't likeable o r funny
enough, to put it bluntly.
Still. "G loria" is going to
stick. ’ Maybe I'll tu n e In
again in 1994 for Jo e y 's
wedding.

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2970 ORLANDO DR.
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�F rid a y , Jan. 7,1983

(-^Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, FI,

Daytime Schedule
. 8:35

MORNINO

I)

X (17) THAT GIRL

9:00

5 :2 0
UJ, ( I D WORLD AT LAROE (MON)

5 :2 5
( I ) O HOLLYWOOO AND THE
STARS (MON)

0 ( 4 RICHARD SIMMONS
I I ) 0 DONAHUE
( 7 ) 0 MOVIE
(11j (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD (10) SESAME STREET g

5 :3 0

Cl

(4&gt; NSC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
(IX ()7) r r s YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

5 :4 0 *
It X (17) WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

5 :4 5
M (IT) WORLD AT LAROE (THU)

5 :5 0
itX (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE,
WED)

6:00
O G I l NEWS (MON)
(}) o
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
&lt;7) O SUNRISE
(I I' (35) JIM BARKER
(1X(1T)NEW8

6 :3 0
0 &lt;3 1EARLY TODAY
( I I O CBS EARLY MORNINO
NEWS

( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

9:05
(IX (17) MOVIE

O GO so

9:30
YOU THINK YOU GOT

TROUBLES
()f) (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

10:00

O (4) t h e FACTS OF LIFE (R)
( D O MARY TYLER MOORE
l) lj (38) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

10:30
Q (4 &gt;SALE OF THE CENTURY
ID O CHILD'S PLAY
(ID (38) DORIS DAY
CD (10) POWERHOUSE

11:00
f l ( 4 1WHEEL OF FORTUNE
( D O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(DO LOVE BOAT (R)
OU (38)38 UVE
CD (10) OVER EASY

11:05
(IX (17) PERRY MASON

6 :4 5

1:05

0 ( 4 ) HIT MAN
(ID (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
7 :0 0
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS (MON,
O '-),T O D A Y
WED-FRI)
,
I D O MORNING NEWS
1 11
OOOO MORNING AMERICA CD (10) POSTCRIPTS (TUE)
llll(3S)NEW 8
AFTERNOON
(D (10) TO LIFE!
12:00
0 ( 4 ) SOAP WORLD
7 :0 5
(1)
O
CAROLE
NELSON AT
111) (17) FUNTIME
NOON
7 :1 5
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
© ( 10) A M . WEATHER
HI) (38) BIG VALLEY
CD (10) MYSTERY (M0N|
7 :3 0
CD (10) MANATEES: THE VANISH­
II (J (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
ING FLORIDIANS (WED)
CD (10) SESAME STREET g
CD (10) NOVA (THU)
7 :3 5
CD (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
(IX (17)1 DREAM OP JEANNIE
SPECIAL (FRI)

o

6:00
HU (35) FRED FLINTSTONC AND
FRIENDS

6 :0 5
&gt;llJ(17)MY THREE 8 0 N S

8 :3 0
i|L (35| GREAT SPACE COASTER
CD {10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

12:05
OX (17) PEOPLE NOW

12:30
0 ( 4 ) NEWS
( D O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
CD O RYAN'S HOPE
CD (10) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T DIE (WED)

6:00
0 ( 4 ) (}) O ( D O n e w s
ill: (35) CHARLIE’ S A NOELS
CD &lt;10) OCEAN US
l)X (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6 :3 0
O (4) NBC NEWS
(5) 0 CBS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS g
CD ( 10) OCEANUS

6 :3 5

1:30
(J) O A8 THE WORLO TURNS
CD (10) THI8 OLD HOUSE (FRI)

2:00
0 ( 4 1ANOTHER WORLD
1 / lO C N E LIFE TO LIVE
CD (10) RIGHT FROM THE START
(TUE)
CD (10) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

2:30
15 1 0 CAPITOL
CD (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (MON)
CD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
CD (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

3:00
0 ( 4 1FANTASY
151 O GUIDING LIGHT
( 7 ) 0 GENERAL H08PITAL
01! (38) CASPER
CD (10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
CD (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
CD (10) ENTERPRISE (WED)
CD (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

3:05
I) X (1T) FUNTIME

3:30
II] ) (38) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

3:35
(IX &lt;17) THE FUNTSTONES

o ft)

4:00
LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

PRAIRIE
( 5 ) 0 HOUR MAGAZINE
(7) q m e r v g r if fin
01) (38) TOM AND JERRY
CD ( 10) 8E8AME 8TREET g

4:05

7 :0 0

O (4) THE UUPPET8
(5) O P.M. MAGAZINE A m*n
who M a rche s lo r evidence o l rein­
carnation; men who collect old
Army equipment and vehicle*
( 7 ) 0 JOKER'S WILD
111! (35)THE JEFFERSON8
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
7 :0 5
r)X(17)OOMER PYLE

7 :3 0
Q ( 4 1ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
( } ) O TIC TAC DOUGH
( 7 ) 0 FAMILY FEUD
t il) (35)BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) WILO AMERICA "MounUun
Monarch*" A look I* taken al the
ipeclal adaptation* lhat allow
alpine animal* to live In the severe
high mountain ecosystem

7 :3 5
(U (17) AMERICAN PROFESSION­
ALS "Jockey"

8:00
O (4) LITTLE HOUSE: A NEW
BEGINNING Sarah Carter * arroQant, powerlul lather arrive* In Wal­
nut Grove lor a vt*lt. g
(}) O SQUARE PEG8
O ) O THAT'S INCREDIBLEI
Featured bee handler* lorm
beard* on their lace* using 20,000
bees each; a m an makas 58 con­
secutive basketball free throw*
while blindfolded; a woman who hat
become a mother to Philadelphia
gang members
&lt;]J) (35) THE LIFE AND ADVEN­
TURES OF NICHOLAS NICKELBY

GOOD! FRESH! HOT! GARLIC CRABS
lt*a A L ittle B it M a n y B u i Oh So
D a lld a u il I Paw n**

DINNER

*6.95

A LA CARTE

*3*95

SAUTEED CRAB MEAT* MUSHROOMS
Chunk* 01 Lum p M a a l 4 P ra th
M u ih r e e m i la a ta ad h i P a ra p U ttar I

DINNER

*1.95

ALACARfk

3.95

MARYLAND STYLE CRAB CAKE
Tw o Cake* Marie with ts Pet. F rasli Local
C ra fc M a a t Sawtaari To A O atrian B ra w n

DINNER. 9.95 ALA CARTE M.9S

HAPPY HOURS
I liS I T e S iN A n d l liM 'T U I C laains

2 FOR 1 ALL III BALLS

&amp; MOST C0CKTA1L8!
l i ) M i M t t &lt; 0 * n i c C r t t l l h R M i h r i O y ste r*

IN ANNE BONNIE’S TAVERr
U N F R E N C H A V I (H W V . 1 7 -tl)
IP

(5)

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PRIVATE BENJAMIN
CD (10) THE WHAlEB THAT
WOULDN'T DIE Archival and rare
htm footage document the story of
lhe Pacific gray whale*, which have
twice rebounded from near estlnclion: Jack Lord narrates

9 :0 0
O 14) MOVIE "I Married Wyatt
Earp" (Premiere) Marie Osmond.
Bruce Boaleitner. A young Jewish
woman trom San Francisco tails In
love with the tamed lawman Wyatt
Earp while working lor a traveling
opera company
(5) O
M *A *8 "H
(7) O MOVIE "Juat You And Ma
Kid" (1070) Oeorga Burn*. Brooks
Shields. A 70-year-old man takes In
a 14-year-ok) |uvenile delinquent
despite the protestation* of his
meddling relative*
CD (10) OREAT PERFORMANCES
"Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy"
George Smiley's pursuit ol the
"M ote" loads him to British agont
Jim Pndeaui (Ian Bannen) and
finally, to the identity ol the double
agent (Paris 5 and 6 )(R |g

9 :0 5
l)X (17) MOVIE " I Love You
Goodbye" (1074) Hope Lange. Eart
Holliman. A wita and mother of IS
years reject* her old value* and
strikes out on her own

9 :3 0
(1) O
NEWHART George's old
high school sweetheart show* up at
the Stratford Inn.

10:00
( | l O CAGNEY &amp; LACEY
It): (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

1 0 :3 5
a x (17) NEWS

BCD ( 5 ) 0

11:00
( D O NEWS

ill) (35) SOAP
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

1 1 :3 0

B

(4) THE BEST OF CARSON
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests
Dyan Cannon. Rodney Dangerfteld.
Arnaud de Borchgrave. Jim Fowler

ffl

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($)
MORE REAL PEOPLE
( D O ABC NEWS NtGHTUNE
(Q) (35) THE ROCKFORO FILES

1 1 :3 5
&lt;Q) (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
"V irg in ia " A close-up picture ot
the land and lls people framed In
the flavor ol local culture and the
heritage of American lita la present­
ed
&lt;5)

12:00

O

(D O

TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.
T H E LASTWORO

1 2 :3 0
Q a ) LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests: Miss Am eri­
ca Debra Mattell. comedian Bob
Shaw
(U) (35) NEWS

1 2 :3 5
l x (17) MOVIE "Adventure* Ol
Don Juan" (1949) Errol Flynn. Vlveca Llndlor*

(D O

1:00

MOVIE "The Big C o u n lry"
(1956) Gregory Peck, Charlton Hes­
ton

1:10
(J ) O COLUMBO

1 :30
O ' 4) NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
0

2 :3 0
(4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

1 i I O CBS NEWS NKJHTWATCH

2 :5 0
OX ( I D MOVIE
"The Delphi
Bureau" 11972) Laurence Lucklnbill.
Joanna Pellet

J a n u a ry 11

T U E SD A Y

4:30
4:35

IT ’S CRAB SEASON

OX (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
"V irg in ia " A cloae-up picture ol
the land and Ita people framed In
the flavor ol local culture and the
heritage o l American kla la present­
ed

1 0 :3 0
(1JJ (35) MADAME’S PLACE

(IX (IT) THE MUNSTER8

OX ( 1T) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

}$ahainit diJfey

8 :0 5

8 :3 0
»

&lt;1X(17)BOBNEWHART

EVENING

8:00

ill) (38) 8COOGY DOO

B R IN G YOUR FA M ILY
&amp; F R IE N D S TO

(PART 1)
CD (10) MANATEES: THE VANISH­
ING FLORIDIANS A look IS taken
at the rescue and protection ettorts
being made to save the Florida
manatee

6 :0 5

OX (IT) MOVIE

11:30

( 1 ) 0 NEWS
CD (10) A M . WEATHER

EVENING

1:00
O (4) DAYS OF OUR UVES
( 7 ) 0 ALL MY CHILDREN
111 (3 5 )MOVIE
CD (10) MOVIE (MON)
CD (10) MA8TERP1ECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
CD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)

January 10

MONDAY

5:00
0
&lt;4 1 LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
(1) O THREES COMPANY
( D O ALL IN THE FAMILY
I))) (38) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

5:05
(IX ( 17) THE BRADY BUNCH (MOMWED. FRI)
OX (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
(THU)

5:30
0 ( 4 ) PEOPLE’ S COURT
1 0 M *A*S*H
*
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
f f i( 1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

5:35
OX (17) STAJtCADI (MON)
OX (17) BEWITCHED (TUE. WED,
FRI)

'Buffalo Bill'
Also In production for
NBC. a comedy series called
"Buffalo Bill,’'s ta rtin g Dab­
ney Coleman. John F ied ler
and Joanna Cassidy.
Coleman stars a s Bill
Bittinger, the overbearing
sta r oi "The Buffalo Bill
Show ” which Is produced by
the timid Woody (Fiedler)
and directed by Joanna
White (Miss Cassidy), with
whom Bittinger was once
romantically linked.
Coleman is a film v e te r­
an, most recently appearing
In "On Golden P o m r and "5
to 5."

0 ( 4 ) 1 ) 1 0 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
it I (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
CD (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR

6:05
(IX (ID CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6:30
0 ( 4 ) NBC NEWS
O i O CBS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS g
CD (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR

OX( ID

6:35
BOB NEWHART

7:00
O (4) THE MUPPETS
11) O P.M. MAGAZINE Shaping,
up lor pregnancy; Maryland resi­
dents who dress In medieval garb
and p liy ba ckya rd barbarian
S peT JO K E R S W HO
(ID (36) THE JEFFERSON8
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
(Q) (1D COMER RYLE

7:30
B (4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
C L 'O TfC T A C O O U O M
CD O YOUNG PEOPLE’ S SPE­
CIAL "Who Spooked Rodney?" A
young boy hat a atreak o l bad luck
and becomea overly superstitious and on HaAoween lace* the ulti­
mata tear.
(ID (8&gt;) BARNEY MILLER
® ( 10) UNTAMED WORLD

7:35

OX(ID NBA BASKETBALL

Atlanta
Hawks vs. Philadelphia 7Sers

8:00
B (3) M O V *
"The Return 01
Maaweri Smart" (IB M ) Don Adam*.
Sylvia Krlstel. Secret agent Maawari
Smart attempt* lo stop KAOS from
unleashing * dreaded bom b lhat

will (trip nude those who coma In
contact w ith It. (R)
(1) O
WALT DISNEY "The
W orld* Create*! Aihlete" Two
American coaches (Tim Conway,
John Amos) trick an African fungi*
boy (Jan-Michael Vincenl) into
becoming their one-man college
track team (Part 2)

a) O

(PARTS)
CD (10) NOVA "Salmon On The
Run" The power and detarmlnallon
ol salmon are captured In an exami­
nation ol tha role the** hsh play In
the conflict between economic
growth and conservation. (R )g

8*30
O

LAVERNE A SHIRLEY

9:00
0 ) o M O V * "Kentucky Woman"
|Premiere) Cheryl Ladd. Philip Levlan. A young woman lace* harass­
ment and humikation whan ah*
go** to worn as a coal minar to
support her smal ton and ailing
lather.
CD O THREE S COMPANY
8 ) (10) ODYSSEY "Maya Lord* Ol
Tha Jungie" Remain* ol the classic
Mayan ctvtUialion deep In lhe fun­
gi** of Central America ara exa­
mined g

9:30
0

O

10:30
a t) (36) MAOAMT8 PLACE

11.00

HAPPY DAYS

(ID (38) THE LIFE ANO ADVEN­
TURES OP NICHOLAS NICKELBY

(7)

CD (10) EVEREST IN WINTER Eight
British mountaineer* attem pt to
clim b the most dangerous section
o t Mt. Everest, the west lace, during
the winter of 1980; John Hurt nar­
rates. |R)

• TO I

9:50
OX (1D NEW S

10:00
■ O I T . ELSEW HERE Or. Westphak tries lo ascertain the Identity
01 a phantom physician, end a new
doctor rekindles tha affecttons ol
San Sanw hL
CD O HART TO HART Jonathan
and Jennifer's weekend getaway
turns Into a murder Investigation
strange c k cum stances g
(ID (3E) HriOSPENOOtT NETWORK
U
H I |4
NIWSJ

OGDCSOCDONEW 8
(11) (35) SOAP
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

11:05
ax (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY
11:30
B
( D TONIGHT Hoat: Johnny
Carton. Guetls: Michael Land on.
Patti and Leah Barton, m ol herdaughter focktee trom Kentucky.
(J ) O MORE REAL PEOPLE
1 O AEG NEWS NIOHTLIHE
) (36) THE ROCKFORO FILES

11:35
OX (17) M O V * "Action In The
North Atlantic'' (1943) Humphrey
Bogart, Raymond Massey

o

12:00

CD
QUINCY
( S O THE LAST WORD

12:30
B ( D LATE MONT WITH DAVID
LETTERM AN Quest: co m e d ia n
Jim my AJeck.

(ID(38) NEWS
1r00
CD O M O V * "Sergeant Y ork"
(1341) Gary Cooper. Waiter Bren-

1:10

CD O

M CM ILLAN

4

W IF I

1:30

O QD NEC NEWS OVIR IB OHT

2:15

O X (17)M O V * "C hubatco" (IB M )
Richard Egan, Christopher Jones.

2:30

O (3 ) ENTERT4B44EHT TONIGHT

�Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

January 12

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00

Q

(4 Ksi 0

1' a

NEWS

ration oi the rich variety of plant
and animal life In the ram forests ol
Costa Rica is presented

(11 (35) CHARLIE S ANGELS
2 3 (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

8 :0 5

llj; (17) MOVIE * The Revengers"
(197!) William Holden. Ernest Borg6 :0 5
nine A Colorado rancher hires six
1) 1 117) CAROL BURNETT AND
prisoners from a chain gang lo help
FRIEND9
him llnd the gang that massacrod
6 :3 0
his lamity and destroyed his homo
a (41 NBC NEWS
9 :0 0
t i l O CBS NEWS
o 0 THE FACTS OF LIFE Blair
( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS [J
tries lo be everything her now boy­
2 ) (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY
friend wanls her to be. CJ
6:35
(5) O MOVIE ’'An Invasion Ol Pri­
vacy" (Premiere) Valerie Harper.
(53) (17) BOB NEWHART
Cliff DeYoung A divorcee lights a
7:00
lonely battle to bring the man who
a ® THE MUPPET8
raped her to court, despite the sup­
15) O P M MAGAZINE How some
port ha enjoys from a sympathetic
MInneaotan* got a tike (rip lo M exi­
community
co by w e ttin g swimsuits and sing­
( D O t h e FALL GUY A posse
ing original songs about Teaas or
made up ol Roy Rogers. James
Mexico; a mom-and-pop brewery in
Diury. Doug McClure. Pat Butt ram
Sacramento.
and Jack Kelly set out to rescue
CD O JOKER'S WILD
Cotl when he Is taken prisoner by a
© (35) THE JEFFERSOHS
gang ol car thieves
2 ) (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
2 ) (10) HITLER S NIGHT OF THE
REPORT
HUMMING BIRO Sir Hugh Greene,
former Director General ol the BBC.
7:05
traces the events that led lo the
(53) (17) QOMER PYLE
birth ot Hiller'S terror state through
7:30
eyewitness accounts from survi­
O C41ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
vors
1 1 ) 0 TIC TAC DOUGH
9 :3 0
(7J O FAMILY FEUO
Q (4) FAMILY TIES One ol the
a t) (35) BARNEY MILLER
most popular girls In school uses
2 ) (10) UNTAME0 WORLD
Msllory lo get close to Alex

7 :3 5

03) (17) ANDY GRIFFITH

8:00
Q ( 4 1 REAL PEOPLE Featured a
convention ol college cheerleaders;
A m ericas Women's Alpine Ski
Team, a centerfold photography
session lor Play boar magazine, a
profile o f a narcotics agent
(3) O SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN
R u n ru p n A
(7) O TALES OF THE GOLD MON­
KEY
(1J) (35) THE LIFE AND ADVEN­
TURES OF NICHOLAS NICKEIBY
(PART 3)
2 1 (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "naln Forest' An explo­

T H U R SD A Y
EVENING

6:00
o c i5 C 3 ) o m o N E w s
(I I) (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
2 ) (10) EARTH, SEA AND SKY

6 :0 5
13) (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
6 :3 0
0

0 5 N *C NEWS
(35 O CBS NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS □
2 ) (10) EARTH, SEA AND SKY

6 :3 5
03) (17) BOB NEWHART

7 :0 0
0 ( 9 5 THE MUFFCTS
(55 O P M. MAGAZINE A house
made from styrofoam; a pair o&lt; Ice
■katsra who made a comeback
altar a tragic accident
( D O JOKER'S WILD
(5!) (36) THE JEFFERSOHS
2 ) (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER

7:05
(E$ (17) QOMER PYLE

7:30

O 05 ENTERTAMMBfT TONIGHT
( D o n e TAC D0U0H

8

0 FAMILY FEUO
(M ) BARNEY MILLER
2 ) (W ) UNTAMED WORLD

7:35
(Q) (17) AMOY GAMFITH

O

8.-00

(35 FAME
(15 Q MAGNUM. P X
CD O THE GREATEST AM ERICAN

HERO Manuel N kidnapped by a

demented scientist who plan* on
w ing fwn In N * genalie anplnaartng
(Qj M ) THE UPB AND AOVENTLMES OF MO tQ LAO M CKELBY
&amp; M 0

SNEAK PR rflSV

Gabler and JaflNy Lyon*
how they judge a
acanee Item "Rocky IN.'
Of Tha Loal Aik," "Olnar"

10:20
i l l (17) NEWS

10:30
II (35) MADAME'S PLACE

F rid ay, Jan. 7,1983— 7

'It Wasn't A John
Wayne M ovie A nym ore'

NEW YORK lU PI) - An worrying alwul it," he said. own com edy show, “ Just for
"I started doing television Ijiu g h s."
in te rv ie w
w ith
F re d
T rav elen a is an interview shows and I went to the
Now,' however, T ravelena
with a crowd. Ask him a National le a g u e convention spends his sp are lime on the
11:20
question and Richard Nixon where 1 m et th e fam ilies ol
ph o n e, re c ru itin g fellow
&gt;13 (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY
is likely to answer. P rovide
celebrities — Hob Hope.
11:30
Ihe pen and Lyndon Johnson
W illiam S h a tn e r, J iy n e
'It
was
people
Q
( i ) TONIGHT Host Johnny
will hang his hat on it — if he
K en n ed y , Donna D ixon
Carson
Guests: Bette Davis.
Georgs Carlin
can g et there ahead of F ra n k
them — to his cause.
( } l O MORE REAL PEOPLE
watching bodies among
S in a tra or Jake IJiM otta.
It h a sn 't been easy. H ie
l 7 i O ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
Travelena, im pressionist
[t 0 (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES
V ietnam w ar still brings a
being loaded on flush of sham e to m ost
s t a r of n ig h tclu b a n d
11:50
© (IT) MOVIE "The Big Knit*"
television game and talk
A m e ric a n s
— to
th e
(1955) Jack Pats nee. Ida Luplno
show circuits, is a very funny
helicopters
and
detrim ent of those who were
12:00
m an — until the subject of
forced to fight it.
(5) O HART t o m a r t
V ietnam veterans is rasised .
not knowing If It
(D O t h e l a s t w o r d
“ Things were done there
On th a t subject, T ravelena
12:30
that w ere not something
a C4) l a t e NtGHT WITH DAVID
was fhe/r boy.
m lm ick s no m an. H e is
A m e ric a n s o ld ie rs d id ,"
LETTERMAN
h
im
self
—
serious,
dedicated
Travelena said. "We saw it
(50(35) NEWS
and impassioned.
The
reality
that
on
television — little children
1:00
“ P re s id e n t R e a g a n is
(D O MOVIE
"Them" (1954)
lying all o v e r ... old people. It
James W hitmore. Edmund Gwenn
w orking on this, or a t least
war Is Insanity
w asn't a John Wayne movie
h e ’s trying to," T ravelena
1:10
any m ore.
(3) O MOVIE "Shame. Shame On
s a id .
“ H e’s the
only
finally
struck
“ It w as people watching
The Blxby B oy*” (1979) Monte
presid en t who's ever done it.
Markham. Don "R e d " Barry
bodies b ein g loaded on
home...'
10:00
Everyone else Just puts it on,
1:30
helicopters and not knowing
Q 4) QUINCY Quincy looks Into
O
(4 1NBC NEW3 OVERNIGHT
th
e
back
burner."
if it w as th eir boy. The
his own chief lire Investigator's 30—
John
Travelena
T r a v e l e n a 's a c t i v i s m
2:15
year record when It appear* that he
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SU NDAY EDITION

E v e n in g H e ra ld
75th Year, No. 121—S unday, January 9,1983— Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H erald — (USPS 481-280)

P ric e 35 Cents

Gasoline Prices Down And Still Falling
minded because of the economy and the energy crisis.
The OPEC countries stepped up their standard of living and
now people are using less gasoline. They have to sell more
crude to maintain their same income, but in order to do that
they have to reduce the price,” Higginbotham said.
“ We are not as dependent on them anymore as we were back
in 1973 as we have located extra oil fields in this country," he
observed. "Look for the price to keep coming down. Everyone
has an over supply and they have to get rid of It.
"The price of heating oil has dropped 6 cents a gallon, too.
My tanks are full of heating fuel and nobody is buying because
of the warm winter,” Higginbotham added.
“ Prices are still falling," said Mel Dckle, owner of Pekle's
~C—."-at-101 S. French Avc. in Sanford. "There is a gas glut
because they have more crude oil than they can sell." Self­
service regular at his Dekle's station sells for $1.04'.
December marked the fifth straight month that Florida
gasoline prices had recorded a price decline, according to the
AAA Clubs of Florida Fuel Gauge report. Price drops have
been most apparent pt the self-service pump where regular
dropped an average of 1.8 cents per gallon and unleaded 1.5
cents statewide in a month.
Since July, self-service regular has declined by 6.7 cents per
gallon and unleaded by 5.7 cents, according to the AAA report.
Gasoline prices at the pump nationwide have declined nearly
10 cents a gallon during the past year, according to oil Industry
analyst Dan Lundbcrg, who credits the drop in part to an
unexpected decline in the demand for unleaded fuel.
In 1978, dealers sold more gasoline than ever before—115.4
billion gallons-but 1982 ended with an estimated 102.5 billion
gallons.

By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
With the price for regular down to $1.00* at at least one
Seminole County self-service station, area dealers agree the
bottom price is not yet In sight.
f jr g e supplies and a drop in demand have resulted In a
buyer’s market for the dealers, it's war.
The 76 Station a t U.S. Highway 17-92 and State Road 436 in
Casselberry was advertising regular gasoline this week for
$1.00’ and unleaded at $1.10. Strickland's Sunoco Station at
State Road 434 and U.S. Highway 17-92 has dropped its price to
$1.02 for regular and $1.06 for unleaded.
Prices are also competitive on the other three comers of the
Is advertising regular for $1.03’ and unleaded is $1.10’
regular for $1.04’ and unleaded for $1.10'. Exxon regular is
$1.04*, unleaded is $1.12’ .
It's clear that the continued drop in the price of crude oil now
reflected on the wholesale level an d at the gas pump Is good
ngws to motorists.
Those who heat their homes with oil have also benefited not
only from lower prices, but the unusually warm Winter that
eliminated the need for heating except for a few days so far
this Winter.
Earl Higginbotham, Sanford distributor and Jobber for
Chevron petroleum products, said that since Nov. 2S wholesale
gas prices have dropped! cents a gallon for regular, unleaded
and diesel fuel.
Business was off 27 percent in 1982 compared to the previous
year, Higginbotham said. Reasons for this include broader use
of smaller cars, and motorists being more conservation-

The publisher of the Lundberg Letter saidfoe average pump
prices may continue to decline because some of the charac­
teristics of the 1982 gasoline market may be Just beginning to
exert themselves.
Lundberg, who surveys 18,000 gasoline stations in all 50
states each month, said the average price of all types of
gasoline is currently $1.22 per gallon, compared to more than
$1.31 a year ago.
The Florida AAA survey revealed average gasoline prices in
the Orlando area area as follows: full service-regular in
December $1.35 as compared to $1.35 in November;
unleaded, December, $1.42 as compared to $1.42 in
November; self-sendee—regular, $1.13 In December as
compared to $1.15 in November; unleaded, $1.22 in December
as compared to $1.25 in November.
In a spot check of area service stations, prices for regular
(self-service) ranged from $1.00' to $1.27'. Prices for
unleaded ranged from $1.08 to $1.34.
Here are some of the area prices:
The Highway Oil station at 2425 S. French Ave., Sanford, is a
full-service station and prices are $1.04' for regular; $1.11'
for unleaded; and $1,159' for diesel.
At Williams &amp; Son Amoco U.S. 17-92 and Lake Mary
Boulevard, self-service prices are $1,088 for regular and $1.17 7
for unleaded; full-service, $1,355 for regular and $1,448 for
unleaded. Sanford Exxon, 2990 S. Sanford Ave., sells self­
service gas at $1.11* for regular and $1.17.' for unleaded; fullservice prices are $1.21’ for regular and $1.27’ for unleaded.
Ware-Price Oil. 110 N. French Ave., Sanford, self-sendee,
See GAS, Page 10A

H ave g a s p r ic e s en d ed t h e i r s te a d y u p w a r d
m a rc h of th e l a s t d e c a d e ? As m e a s u r e d b y th e
D e p a r tm e n t o f E n e rg y in k e y u r b a n a r e a s , th e
a v e r a g e p r i c e droppe.d e v e n lo w e r a t th e e n d of
the th ir d q u a r t e r of 1982.

Blind Date For Seminole
Dispatcher Ends In Death

Seminole County schools will observe Martin lather King
Day on Friday.
Most of the activities will be classroom assignments, with
students assigned to do special projects relating to the life of
the slain civil rights leader.
At Sanford's Crooms High School, special reports will be
given In civics classes, Jean Jones said.
At Midway Elementary School, plans still are being
developed for a King Day observance.
’
District-wide special announcements will be read at each of
the 42 schools, commemorating the life of the civil rjghts
leader. The special announcements will discuss King’s life and
the strides made by black students since the beginning of the
civil rights movement in the 1950s.
School Superintendent Robert Hughes said America has
moved closer to fulfilling the goal of providing an equal op­
portunity for an outstanding education to every child.
“ In 1950, only 10 percent of America’s black students were
graduated from high school. In 1977, 76 percent of our black
students graduated from high school, and that number con­
tinues to grow."
King's birthday is January 15.
Herald Photo* by Tern Vincent

Getting Funky

S ta te p riso n o f f ic ia ls w a n t th e p o w e r to fo rc e local g o v e r n m e n ts to a c c e p t
th e c o n s tru c tio n of p ris o n s in th e ir a r e a s . H u t .. .

Funky
W in k e rb e a n
a n d h is frie n d s a r e h ip
h ig h s c h o o le rs w h o se
a d v e n tu re s
and
m is a d v e n tu r e s
have
m a d e th e m a m o n g
A m e r i c a 's
m ost
p o p u la r co m ic s t r i p
c h a r a c t e r s . Y ou c a n
la u g h w ith F u n k y a n d
h is
frie n d s
each
S u n d a y b eg in n in g w ith
t o d a y 's H e ra ld .

By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Writer
For the past 17 months of her life, Seminole
County sheriff's dispatcher Vicki Petlicrcw
had worker) sending deputies to aid those in
need. Early Friday morning, the roles were
reversed, and Ms. Pettlcrew, out on a blind
date, became the one needing help. Bui it
came too late and she was later found dead In a
car parked outside a Sanford nightspot.
She and her male companion, Michael
Barabas, also a police dispatcher who worked
for the Altamonte Springs Police department,
had been drinking at The Bam, U.S. Highway
17-92 and 13th Street, on Thursday night and
had fallen asleep in a car Ms. Pctticrew had
borrowed from a friend while hers was being
repaired.
Barabas, according to paramedics, woke up

to find his companion dead and called the
Sanford Fire Department.
Fireman Paul Keith helped lake the dead
woman, a divorced mother of two, from an
older green Chevy No^a.
"The woman was In the driver's seat. The
man was out by the road waving us in. He said
that he had shaken the woman to wake her up.
T h e re w ere no t u m e s In th e c a r a n d t h e w in ­

dows were shut," Keith said.
Police theorize that Barabas and Ms. Pet­
tlcrew, who lived at 583 Blue Springs Court In
Orange City, had been drinking at The Bam.
When the bar closed at 2 a.m., she apparently
went out to the car, started the engine to keep
warm and was asphyxiated by carbon
monoxide.
Seminole County Medical Examiner Dr.
See DISPATCHER, Page 2A

Do You Want A Prison
In Your Neighborhood?
•

By MICHEAL BEIL4
Herald Stall Writer
Seminole County Commission Chairman
Sandra Glenn says she supports a plan to
give the state power to locate prisons within
the counties over the objections of local
officials.

TODAY

Parents

NIA/Mtfk O lbU nyl

Tragedy

Martin Luther King
Day To Be Observed

Action R ep o rts...................2A
Around The Clock . . . , ...... 4A
B ridge................................. «
B ridge................................. *B
B uilness............................. $A
Calendar............................. 7B
Classified A d s..................M B
C o m ics............................... &lt;B
Crossw ord.............. ........ $B

SOURCE Department ol Energy

Dear A bby..........................IB
D eaths.............................. 10A
H oroacope......................... IB
H o sp ital............................. IB
N atio n .......................
2A
School M enus.....................7B
S ports...............................7‘9A
T elevision..........................7B
W e a th e r............................. IA

R e la te d s t o r y on P a g e 2A.
Mrs. Glenn said the proposal, suggested
by State Department of Corrections of­
ficials, may be a good idea.
“ I think they're probably right," Mrs.
Glenn said. "I
have served on state
corrections committees and observed the

problems you have In locating prisons."
Dr. Pam Davis, a deputy corrections
secretary, said the department cannot
eliminate the state s severe prison over­
crowding problem as long as local
governments can use their zoning power to
veto plans to locate prisons in their area.
Ms. Davis said the corrections depart­
ment will often select a site for a prison, be
ready to work out a deal with property
owners, and then find the county govern­
ment refuses lo zone the property for a
prison.
The DOC plan would give the department
the power to force local governments to
See PRISON, Page 10A

H erat* Phot* by Tam vincont

T h e d a r k - c o lo r e d c a r (In c irc le ) Is w h e r e 2 8 -y ear-o ld Y ie ld P e ttlc r e w d ie d
e a r l y F rid a y m o r n in g fro m a c o m b in a tio n of a lc o h o l a n d c a r b o n m o n o x id e
p o iso n in g . H e r d e a t h h a s b een r u l e d a c c id e n ta l.

Of Hooky-Playing Kids May Soon Find Themselves In Court
Playing hooky from school is practically an
American tradition. So much so that few parent* get
bent out of shape if their kids cut class now and
then.

ip

But state education oiticials don’t see it that way
and plan to attack the problem by making parents
more responsible for their truant children.
Don Croyfe, a Seminole County attendance officer
for 13 years, thinks the idea will work, but he's
reserving Judgment until a final plan has been
drawn up.
"One of the quickest ways to solve the truancy
problem is to make the parents as responsible as the
children," Croyle Said.
But Croyle said under the current system, the
program would be too unwieldy. “ If they would
bring the whole ball of wax under the Circuit Courts
it would be more efficient."
He explained that under current state laws, non­
attendance by children is handled by the Circuit
Count, negligence by their parents is the respon­
sibility of the various county courts.

\

HersM M ete by Tam Vlncaai

Who is t h e m issing student? About 5 percent o f Sem inole County's 36,000
students m iss school each d a y . Bui which of them are really ill and which
o n e s are playin g hooky? T hat's the problem that fa ces the school d istr ict’s
a t t e n d a n c e officers.

But th ere's a problem with that set-up.
"It's the time element," Croyle said. "We need to
shorten the lime between the act and the hearing."
Juvenile Court appearances can be arranged in
about 10 days. But by the tim e hearings are
scheduled in county court it can be months before
any action Is taken.

Croyle believes the courts can play an Important
role in forcing the parents to acknowledge their
responsibility lo tend their children to school.
"G uardians must attend the hearings but the
binding is on the kid," he said. "Suing the parent
could force the parent to say *1 can't handle him.' If
parents would admit they can't handle their
children we'd give them a ton of help."
.
The court is the last resort, Croyle said.
F o r most truants, a conference Is sufflfcient. Of
the’ 200 referrals Croyle received in the first three
months of this school year, none were taken to
court.
" F o r most of the children, talk Is enough. As long
as they know where you’re coming from you don't
have any problems," he said.
Croyle’s method Is direct. He lays It on the line. If
the child continues to miss school they will go to
court.
"B ut there's a question of credibility. I don't blow
smoke. If I catch them again we go to court," he
said.
If a conference doesn't work, then Croyle ac­
cumulates all the information available on the
student from school records.
" If I have to go past counseling, I find out all there
is to know about the kid," he said. "I know when he
spit last.”
In court, if Croyle proves the child is truant, the
Judge orders the child to attend school. If he doesn't
attend school the child is in contempt and can be

' ij

»

locked up (or up to 6 months.
"In 70 to 80 percent of the cases, the first court
appearance solves the problem," Croyle said. Of
the remaining 30 percent, 70 percent of thoae
respond when they receive the contempt citation.
For the remaining few, truancy is chronic,
perhaps unsolvable.
"Usually, the kid is already in trouble with the
law ," he said. "H e's out on the street much oLthe
tim e, possibly involved with drugs or alcohol."
For those students, suspension or expulsion m ay
be the only answer to the problem.
But Croyle prefers not to dwell on the suspended
students or even the ones he takes lo court. Those
students are very few, he said.
"No one ever hears anything about the work we
do with kids, keeping them in school and out of
trouble," Croyle said.
It is those kids that he feels a reward in helping.
But he added that help is available (or any child
that needs U. The important thing Is parent
cooperation: Parents must contact the schools If
they need help, Croyle said.
. He said the schools can provide all sorts of
assistance to the children If administrators a re
aw are of problems. Counseling for children with
emotional problems, drug addiction or learning
disabilities, free lunches, medical care, dental
work, eye glasses and other essential aid can be
provided. Croyle said.
— MICHEAL RF.HA

4k

�1A— Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

Sunday, Jan. I , I f t l

NAnON
IN BRIEF

Stock Market Surges To
All-Time High . . . Again
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation’s 10.8 percent
unemployment rate showed no Improvement in
December but optimistic Investors took the Dow Jones
industrial average to an all-time high anyway.
Investors shrugged off the gloomy economic news
and took the Dow Jones industrials up 5.5 points to its
all-time high o! 1,076.07 by Friday's close of trading.
Hie closely watched average jumped 29.5 points during
the week, continuing the historic SO^point surge that
began in mid-August.
Although many analysts had encouraged investors
with speculation the Federal Reserve Board was about
to ease pressure on credit again by lowering Its
discount rate for lending to banks for the eighth time
since summer, Friday passed with no such action.

Judy Higgins and Gib Edmonds

Higgins and Jean McLain

Parade Winners
Recognized

Judge Hastings' Trial Set

G r e a te r S a n fo rd C h r is tm a s
P a ra d e
C h a ir m a n J u d y H ig g in s, a t le f t in th e p h o to
a t le f t, p r e s e n ts th e G r a n d M a r s h a l T h e m e
A w a r d to P in e c r e s t E l e m e n t a r y S chool f irs t
g r a d e te a c h e r M a rla n e R e ic h e rt an d
P r i n c i p a l C a re m G a g e r , a c c e p t i n g fo r t h e i r
s c h o o l. T h is w as th e s e c o n d y e a r th e a w a r d
w e n t to P in e c r e s t, w h ic h a ls o won th e
t r o p h y f o r th e p u b lic s c h o o ls c a te g o r y for
th e f o u r th y e a r in a ro w . W in n e r s in th e D ec.
11 p a r a d e re c e iv e d t h e i r a w a r d s th is p a s t
w e e k a t th e G r e a te r S a n f o r d C h a m b e r of
C o m m e r c e . A m ong th e o t h e r s h o n o re d w e re
G ib E d m o n d s , (in th e p h o to a t u p p e r le f t) ,
w h o w a s a c c e p tin g th e tr o p h y f o r th e b e s t
c o m m e r c i a l flo at on b e h a lf of F i r s t F e d e r a l
S a v in g s &amp; L o a n o f S e m in o le C o u n ty ; J e a n
M c L a in ( c e n te r p h o to a b o v e ) , a c c e p tin g th e
a w a r d f o r b e s t p r iv a te s c h o o l flo a t won by
K r a y o la K o lleg e; a n d S te p h a n ie K e lle r.
S e m in o le C o unty 4 - l l 'e r w h o w o n th e tro p h y
fo r b e s t g ro o m e d h o rs e .

WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S. District Judge Alcee
Hastings is to become the first federal Judge in history
to be tried on criminal charges while in office when his
b rib e ry -consplracy,tri*l gets underway Monday.
U.S. Supreme Court m em bers removed the final
block to Hastings' prosecution by refusing Friday to
stop the proceedings. The court turned down Hastings'
claim that he must first be impeached and removed
from the bench by Congress.
Hastings, a 46-year-old native of Altamonte Springs,
is charged with conspiring to commit bribery and
obstruct Justice by accepting a $150,000 payoff from
two New Jersey racketeers who wanted reduced
sentences.

Volcano May Be Brewing
MAMMOTH IAKE5, Calif. (UPI) - Calm returned
to residents of the High Sierras, where scientists
rushed today to see if a new volcano is forming under
the pressure of more than 1,000 earthquakes that have
struck at a rate of nearly one per minute.
The tremors that began Thursday had almost no
effect on vacationers as evidenced by the Mammoth
Mountain ski area, 20 miles east of Yosemite Park,
which was in full operation.
U.S. Geological Survey scientists said they had
suspicions the unique swarm of quakes could mean
molten rock is moving toward the earth's surface.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Heavy rains and high winds swelled
rivers to near flood stage in the sodden Northwest, forcing the
closure of at least one bridge. Colorado rescuers fought 50 mph
winds to reach a sick mountain climber and a perilous icy
glare coated roads in upper Great Lakes states. Louisiana
Gov. Dave Trcen Friday asked President Reagan to declare 10
parishes (counties) disaster areas because of the flooding
caused by torrential rains that forced nearly 10,000 people
from their homes starting Christmas Eve. Current estimates
put dam age to private non-agricultural property at $35 million
and to farm land at $30 million, the governor said. The weather
has been blamed for at least 14 deaths since Sunday. Texas,
New Mexico and Idaho each reported three deaths, Illinois two
and Washington, Oregon and Mississippi one each. The
pounding rains hit already-soaked Washington and flood
warnings were posted for the Snoqualmle River near Car­
nation and the Chehalls River at Centralla. Authorities ex­
pected the Kalama River to crest and the slowly rising Cowlitz
-River was expected to near Its 28-foot flood level. Winds of 50
mph buffeted the Hood Canal Bridge on Washington's Olympic
Peninsula near Seattle and authorities closed the span Friday
for the second tim e in less than 12 hours. The gusts "created
too much pressure from the water and waves," said Ed
Trulson, bridge maintenance supervisor. Gale warnings were
posted from Cape Flattery to Cape Disappointment in northern
Puget Sound. A small-craft warning was issued for the Inland
waters of western Washington. Rain mixed with cold coated
roads along with upper Great la k e s with Ice, causing havoc
for drivers, but no serious injuries were reported.
AREA READING8 (I a .D L ): temperature: II; overnight
low: 55; Friday high: 70; barom etric pressure: 30.10; relative
humidity: 57 percent; winds: north at 9 mph; rain: none;
sunrise 7:19 a m , sunset 5:45 p jn .
SUNDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 4:37 a jn .,
4:53 p.m ., lows, 10:49 SJn., 10:58 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 4:29 a.m., 4:45 p.m.; lows, 10:40 a.m., 10:49 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs 11:21 a jn ., 9:51 p m .; lows, 4:22 a.m ., 4:20
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Aagastlae ta Jupiter Inlet, Oat
50 Miles; Wind northeast to east 10 knots today and east to
southeast tonight and Sunday. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Partly cloudy
with showers and a tew thunderstorms mainly south portion
today.
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today with a 20
percent chance of showers. Highs in low 70s. Wind northeast 10
mph. Partly cloudy tonight wtth lows in mid 60s. Wind near
calm. Partly cloudy Sunday with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in low 70s.
EXTENDED FORECAST: V ariable cloudiness south
portion Monday with a chance id showers. Otherwise over the
state fair to occasionally partly cloudy Monday through
Wednesday. Lows In the 40a north to low 50s central and m id to
upper 50s south except low to mid 60s extreme southeart coart
and keys. Highs in mid to upper 80s north to low 70s central and
mid 70s south.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C ta tra l F torM a R H ta a a l HewMtal
FrM ay
ADMISSIONS
C la ra M . Orwfca. Daltons
D avid M . S ha ft*. Dallona
E va M . K tlly , Oatwva
D aborah L. Y a lt* . Orlando

aiRTNS
D avid L . and Shalla D. JacU on.
a baby boy, Sanford

E v if iln g H rsa ld

iw s mvm

Sunday, January 9, IfO -V o t. 75. No. Ill
P u M IO td D olly lt d Sunday, a ic a p l Saturday by T a t Sanford
H erald , la c ., M N. P noca A r t.. Saafard , p it. M ill.
Second C la n P elta te Paid a t Saafard, Plarida W ill
M afae Doit very: W aal, S l M j M a a ftr M .tli S M ta lk *.
Y a a r, S4SJI. ay M a lii Wash s i.tS i Maadt, t lS Ii «
U U t ; Y ta r . WM __________________________________

On Prison Expansions

Brantley: State Should Not Force Counties
The idea of expanding the authority for
condemnation or eminent domain over private
property to additional state agecies is "not
acceptable" to State Rep, Bobby Brantley, RLongwood.
“The Department of Transportation has that
right now and a couple of power companies
have the right," Brantley aald Friday. "B ut 1
don't like the Idea of agencies being able to
come in and take people's land,” said the
chairman of Seminole County's legislative
delegation.
Brantley and members of his Prison
Overcrowding subcommittee discussed op­
tions suggested by other legislators, the state
Department of Corrections, governors and
attorney general's offices concerning new
prisons, this past week.

"One of those options was that the Depart­
ment of Corrections be given the power of
condemnation of eminent domain," Brantley
said, adding he prefers to discuss the prison
overcrowding problem and the need for more
prisons with local government officials before
any action is taken. He said he is opposed to
allowing t|}e state department to force Us will
on local government.
"We must m ake sure local governments
know the full import of the problem, however,
and ask them to work with us," Brantley said.
"We are faced with the options of either
building new institutions or letting people go
and it's not acceptable to Just let people go.
Recently we built temporary barracks with
some 3,000 new beds for state inmates. The
courts approved this for about five years as a
stop gap m easure," he said.

M tM i

On Thursday, Brantley said, the state prison
system had only 11 beds left and by Friday
those beds were expected to bet filled.
"The courts have said we will stay under
capacity or they will come in and release in­
mates," the Longwood legislator said.
Brantley said the subcommittee will ask
county governments to include .in their
comprehensive plans areas where correc­
tional facilities can be built.
"We are going to either continue with the
public policy that law-breakers will go to
prison and provide space for them in prisons
or let criminals prowl our neighborhoods," he
said.
Brantley said his first preference is that
counties which generate tne problem have
correctional institutions built within their
territory first.

He pointed to Dade County which has sent
3,700 inmates into the state prison system.
"Why should Putnam and Marlon counties
house the worst Dade has to offer';" he asked.
"We are trying to go to counties generating
the most business and get them to do
something," Brantley said. He said for years
money has been appropriated to build a s la te
prison in Dade County, but the effort has been
successfully staved off at every attempt.
"The state 1s getting to the point where we
arc up against the wall. 1 don't want to shove
anything down anyone’s throat. And if
someone will come forward with b better
mouse trap. I’ll buy It," he said.
Brantley said his committee Is not con­
sidering any bills at this time. "We're only
discussing options," he said.

SHS Student Dean's Shoplifting Hearing Postponed
Jacquilne C. Pearson, 43, the dean of students at Seminole
High School, who was arrested for allegedly shoplifting goods
worth $10.28 from a supermarket had her hearing in Seminole
County Court postponed until February 22.
Mrs. Pearson, of WeUvs Psrk Road, Sanford, was arrested
on Thursday. She has indicated she intends to plead not guilty
to the charge. She Is scheduled to appear on Feb. 22 before
Judge Alan Dickey.
Mrs. Pearson is in her first year as dean of students after 10
years as a biology teacher at the school.
"We are proceeding with the understanding that everyone is
innocent until proven guilty," Seminole County School
Superintendent Robert Hughes said after her arrest.
THIEF ESCAPES
Ateenager ca light shoplifting two packets of cigarettes from
Fairway Markets, 2890 Orlando Drive, broke free from the
person who had apprehended him and dashed out of the store.
The incident occurred about 8:30 a.m . Wednesday when the
youth was observed putting iwo packets of cigarettes in his
Jacket He was stopped by store personnel. As he was being led
back to the store security office he broke away and ran out of
the store Into a nearby weeded area.
8U8PENDEO LICENSE ARREST
David Kenneth Campbell, 19, of 668 Lake Villas Drive,
Altamonte Springs, was arrested at 3:37 p.m. at St. Mary Lake
Boulevard on Tuesday and charged with driving with a
suspended drivers license and possession of marijuana less
than 20 gram s. He was released on $500 bond.
AXESTOLEN
A Forest City firefighter had an axe stolen from his
emergency vehicle when answering a call Friday. Stephen
Eugene Schwarts, a supervisor at Forest City Fire Depart­
ment answered a call about a woman in pain at 112 Devon
Court, Wekiva, a t 12:10am . When he returned to his vehicle 10
minutes later, he foind a $100 pickheaded axe with a white
fibre ( | j «* handle missing from the side of the vehicle.

CYCLESTOLEN

O IS C H A IO IS
(U atha M tyb vo , Sanford
Coclto T. Dlonrw, D altons
Ralpb B. Grout. Oottons
C hariot E. M u rk y , D altons
Franco* c. Sargent, D altons
Franca* M . la c ay, P o rn P a rk
L lllla M . C urt!*, Ovtado
Savor Iy a . M u rra y and baby
o y, Gonova

Higgins and Stephanie Keller

A $125 bicycle belonging to Michael Minton of 207 E. UUi
Street, Sanford, waa stolen from outside 100 W. 9th Street,
Sanford, between 7:30 end I s.m. Thursday.
CASH AND GUN STOLEN
A woman who saw a man run through her house with a cash
box and later found a gun missing took six days to report the
theft because sha "didn't think anything could be done."
Mary Wert of Highway 46, Sanford, told police she saw the
man run through b ar front room at about 9 p m . on December
30. As the bandit fled, he grabbed two dresses off the ironing
board and w rapped them round a cash box containing about
$1,200. A pearl handled Smith and Wesson .38-caliber pistol
was also stolen in the raid on her house which she reported to
Seminote County sheriff’s deputies Thursday. When asked why
she had takes so long to report the theft, investigators quoted
her u saying she, "didn’t think anything could be done."

BOATINGTHEFTS
Two p a in of skis, a tool box and two stainless steel
propellers worth a total of $S75 were stolen from a boat parked

A c t io n R e p o r ts
A Fires
A Courts
★

Police

in the yard of Dr. Jim 's welding shop on Overland Road,
Apopka, between 8 p.m. Wednesday and 3 p.m. Thursday.
A $900 trolling motor and propeller was removed from a boat
In Ron's Outboard boatyard next door between 4 p.m. on
January 1 and 2:24 p.m. on Thursday.
WHEN THINGS GO WRONG. . .
A would-be burglar was probably cold, locked out of his
apartment, and perhaps without a car after an unsuccessful
burglary attempt at a Longwood school Thursday night.
Seminole County Bheriff's deputies called to the Forest Lake
Elementary School, a private school at 2801 Sand Lake Road,
reported two Udders leaning against the west side of the
building. On the roof, a skylight had been broken out with a
baseball bat and a rope, attached to the air conditioner, had
been hung through the window.

The baseball bat and a windbreaker with a single house key
were found nearby when deputies arrived at 12:13 a.m. Friday.
Inside, a pillowcase was found on the noor near the rope.
letter, a small computer was found near the east side of the
building.
Deputies also reported that a car, found concealed less than
100 yards away from the building, was impounded when the
owner could not be located.
BAR RECEIPTS MISSING
Sanford police reported that bar receipts totaling $1,150 were
taken from a car parked outside the Silver Tip Lounge, 1509 W.
13th St., Wednesday afternoon.
The receipts were in a metal box taken from the locked car
between 1 and 3:15 p.m.
SANFORD FIR E CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following fire
calls:
Thursday
— 5:28 a.m., 711 East French, rescue
— 5:35 a.m., 2103 Palmetto Avenue, rescue
— 10:50 a.m. Seminole Community College, rescue
— 3:18 p.m., 801 E. First Street, rescue
— 3:38 p.m., 3406 S. Sanford Avenue, rescue
— 4:56 p.m., 2603 Hiawatha Ave., rescue
— 9:00 p.m., Seminole County Jail, fire.

... Dispatcher Found Dead In Car
•
Coatteued From Fags 1A
G.V. Garay announced an autopsy performed Friday found
Ms. Pettlcww died from a combination of alcohol and carbon
monoxide poisoning. He said the death was an accident.
Ms. PeWicrew was described by her supervisor, John
Spolski, asa "nice person, who did bar Job but was one of those
people who had problems.
"She was divorced, trying to raise two kids on what she
makes here, about $9,500 a year. It was tough (for her), but we
never had any problems with her," Spolski s a id
It was the first date for Ms. Petticrew and Barabas, In­
vestigators said. They had spoken on the telephone and agreed
to meet at The Barn.
Michael Barabas, who has worked (or the Altamonte Springs
Police department for 14 months, is the father of one child and
a police spokesman said he waa In the process of a divorce.
Barabas, 24, of Blthlo, could not be reached for comment.
Sanford Detective Darrel Presley, who investigated the
tragedy, takes up the story: “They had been drinking at The
Bam . Mr. Barabas arrived some time after Ms. Petticrew.
They had a few drinks and afterwards they were talking with
the engine running. After about one hour or so Ms. Petticrew
turned off the engine and they (ell asleep. Mr. Barabas woke
up sometime later during the night. He felt dizzy which he
thought was from drinking and he got out of the car and walked

m

:

VICKI PETTICREV
. . . a divorced moth
of (w o, she was low
dead In a car outside
S an ford
n lg h tcli
F riday.

around. When he got back in he opened a wing window. He said
he woke up a couple of times.
"A t about 7:55 a.m., He woke up again and discovered she
(Ms. Petticrew) was not breathing. What probably saved his
life was getting out of the car," detective Presley aald.
"There is no evidence other than the fact that It was an
accidental death. II was the first time that they had been out
with each other. They had talked on the phone but never
physically met. 1 guess you could call U a blind date," he said.
A date that ended in tragedy.

1/ V

I

�ft

FLORIDA
INBRIEF

Abortion Clinic Owner
Charged With Manslaughter
MIAMI i U P I) — Tlie owner of a clinic where four
women have died after undergoing abortions during
the past four years has been arrested and charged with
manslaughter.
Hipolito Barreiro, 53, who is not licensed to practice
in the state of Florida, surrendered Friday at the State
Attorney's Office. He was charged with manslaughter
in connection with the death of Shirley Payne, 33, on
Tuesday.
Barreiro, the owner of the Women’s Care Center in
Miami, is accused of asking a licensed physician to
take the blame for Payne’s abortion.
In addition to manslaughter, he is charged with
practicing medicine without a license, tampering with
a witness, performing an abortion without a license
and performing an abortion without a license that
resulted in death.

Pulitzer Fight Drags On
WEST PALM BEACH (UPI) - Confronted by a
myriad of post-trial wranglings in the jet-set Pulitzer
divorce, a judge told lawyers for the publishing heir
and his ex-wife he won’t help decide how to divide the
household furnishings.
•
Attorneys for
Hoxanne and Herbert “ Peter”
Pulitzer told Circuit Judge Carl Harper they were
sharply divided over who should get which tables,
chairs, other furniture and personal effects. They
asked Harper to intervene, but he refused.
Attorneys for Mrs. Pulitzer say she will appeal
Harper’s Dec. 28 decision to take the couple's children
away from her and deny her a substantial portion of
Pulitzer's millions. They filed a motion for retrial
Friday, a preliminary step to appealing. Harper did
not rule on the retrial motion.

Heiress Killer Convicted
TAVARES i UPI i — J.B. “Pig" Parker has become
the third of four young black Fort Pierce fruit pickers
to be found guilty in Evinrude heiress Frances Julia
Slater’s robbery-abduction and murder, which netted
the robbers f 134.
Two others, John Earl Bush and Alfonso Cave,
already have been convicted and sentenced to die in
the electric chair. A fourth, Terry Wayne Johnson,
goes on trial in April.
An all-white circuit court jury convicted Parker, 20,
of first-degree murder, armed robbery and kidnapping
in the stabbing and shooting death of the 18-year-old
all-night convenience store clerk. Jurors deliberated
only two hours before convicting Parker.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF

$ 2 7 5 ,0 0 0

M o re

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The $225,000 allocated by the Florida
legislature to improve East Road—the en­
trance to Seminole Community College—is not
nearly enough money to do the job.
ta k e Mary’ City Manager Phil Kulbes
reported to the City Commission Thursday
night, that the road, which lies within the city's
bounds, will cost a total of $500,000 to improve
and expand sufficiently to alleviate the bot­
tleneck which occurs there at peak hours.
Kulbes said that he and other officials met
with state Department of Transportation
officers Thursday to consider the problem.
Kulbes said the DOT expects it will cost

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Reagan worked and
relaxed at Camp David today
a fte r putting out a rosy
fo recast the long-aw aited
economic recovery will begin
in the second half of the year.
Admittedly seeking to
counter “gloom and doom”
rep o rts of slow economic
grow th this y ear, deputy
p ress
secretary
L arry
Speakcs told
rep o rters
Friday:
“ We expect this third and
fourth quarter — the latter
half of 1983 — to begin the
recovery and the period of
sustained growth we an ­
ticipate through the end of the
forecasting period."
During
testim ony
to
congressional committees on
the 1983 budget last year,
a d m in is tra tio n o ffic ia ls
predicted the economic
recovery would begin in the
spring of 1982, then the
summer, and finally the fall.
Speakes said the housing
and auto industries already
were making " a strong
recovery" and improvements
were “ unprecedented” in
some areas. He also cited the
drop in interest rates and the
rise in the stock market as
indications the U.S. was
emerging from its deepest
recession since the Great
Depression.

In C a s e A ffe c tin g

them
But even if the court completely rejects that contention, it is
not likely to result In a sudden spree of executions, said Wollan,
a Florida State University law professor.

Sunday, Jan. f, 1M J -J A

acquired includes 20 feet along the road’s
western boundary and 10 feet along the
eastern boundary, Kulbes said.
Commissioner Ray Fox objected to the
entire project, saying he doesn’t think
“ spending $500,000 on the road is the greatest
thing since sliced bread."
Kulbes however, pointed out that SCC now
has 23,000 registered students, adding that
traffic waiting to turn left off 17-92 onto the
SCC campus, stretches for blocks during peak
hours.
Kulbes also said the expansion plans for the
road include an area for bike-riding students
from 17-92.

tak e Mary' Commissioner Burt Perinehief,
said there are two big problems at SCC-Mhe
traffic patterm on the campus itself and the
dangerous situation at 17-92 at East Road.
“ It’s difficult to get north bound traffic on 17-92
across the highway to East Road,” he said.
Perinehief said the college has never had an
expert survey done on the traffic pattern on
the campus, noting that Lake Mary Police
Chief Harry Benson offered to help with a
traffic study at one point but his offer was
ignored.
Although the college campus is within the
boundaries of the city of Sanford, East Road is
a ta k e Mary street and that's why the city is
involved. Kulbes said.

Shop O rla n d o an d S a n lo rd d a lly t : JO ♦ 30 Sun 11 «
Shop M t. D o ra . C la rm o n t d a ily t * Sun IJ 4
Shop L e e s b u rg . D e la n d . K is s im m e e d a ily * t Sun 11 t

Sale Price

2 $1

Pineapple Chunks

Acrylic Yarn

50-qt. Wastebasket

Delicious While Crown la­
bel pineapple. 2 0 oz *

4-ply yarn in solid colors
Washable. 8-oz.* skein.

Jumbo wastebasket with tex­
tured linish. Color choice.

S k e in s
For

Disposable Diapers
Elastic-leg diapers; 36
medium or 24 large size.

C o m b e d C otton /P o Tyeitet

I

*6

ioviW------

Rebate

Twist ' “ C urler
R e b a te k rre ted t o rrtt t $»&lt;KAafc#i

F red Streetm an J r . of
tangwood has been elected to
represent
the
fifth
Congressional District on the
executive board of the
Republican Party of Florida.
Streetman has served two
terms as the GOP state
committeeman for Seminole
County, is past chairman of
the county's party and a
form er m em ber of the
National Republican P la t­
form Committee.
President and owner of a
surgical supply com pany,
Streetm an serves on two
Seminole County advisory
committees, Is a member of
the U.S. Sm all Business
A dm inistration
Advisory
Council and was a delegate to
the governor’s Conference on
Small Business. He Is a board
member and past president of
the Seminole County Youth
Sports Association.
Streetman said the most
pressing business before the
state Republican Party Is
adoption of a new con­
stitution and rules.
“ One of my personal in­
t e r e s t s Is to assist In
achieving some changes In
our state party which will help
our candidates throughout the
state achieve the degree of
election successes we have
enjoyed in Seminole County
and
Central
F lo rid a ,”
Streetman said.

1 2 2 D e a t h R o w In m a t e s
ATLANTA (UPI) - The attorney for a Florida man whose
. death penalty appeal was rejected by the 11th District Court of
Appeal - removing a legal barrier that could affect more than
' 100 condemned Inmates — said Friday he will decide In a few
’ days whether to appeal the decision.
Laurin Wollan, attorney for convicted killer Alvin Bernard
Ford 29 said late Friday he had not yet seen the court’s ruling
and would wait a few days to read the opinion before deciding
whether to appeal.
Wollan said he won’t see the ruling until next week. Until
then, he won’t know how it will affect another 122 Death Row
inmates who, like Ford, claim in a class-action suit the Florida
Supreme Court unfairly considered their psychological
profiles when deciding whether to spare them. ^
The appeals court ruled that use of the profiles was not
unconstitutional even Ihough defense lawyers never had a
chance to respond to the profiles, clarify them or challenge

$100,000 to purchase the necessary right-ofway to widen the entrance road off U.S. High­
way 17-92, some $385,000 to build the road and
install a traffic signal on 17-92, and another
$15,000 "to pay lor goofs which DOT may make
In the process.
Attending the meeting with Kulbes were
ta k e Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson, Seminole
County Engineer Bill Bush, county ihiblic
Works Director Jack Schuder, County Com­
missioner Bob Sturm, R.T. Milwce, assistant
to SCC President Earl Weldon, and DOT
personnel.
The entrance road when completed will be 80
feet wide with a 15 foot median strip. The
additional right-of-way which must be

S tre e tm a n
G O P B o a rd

A p p e a l C o n s id e r e d

Evening H erald, Sanford, PI.

Job

Coif Aft#,

Non-Aggression Pact

BEIRUT, tabanon (UPI(-Opposing warlords In
Tripoli have drafted a compromise plan, sources say,
to try to end a week of artillery, rocket and mortar
duels that has left 25,000 people homeless and 93 dead
in Lebanon’s second largest city.
A government source in Beirut said warring pro-and
anti-Syrian factions prepared a d raft’for an overall
truce in a meeting late Friday, but Syrian approval
still was required.
The truce reportedly calls for the withdrawal of all
pro-Syrian fighters from the city In exchange for a
pledge by tabanese nationalists to drop a demand for
the withdrawal of Syrian arm y troops from the area.
That would be left to Die central government in Beirut
to request at a future date.

D o

1Economy
Will Get
Better1

N a m e d To

Tripoli Truce Reported

To

State Allocates Too Littie For East Road

NATO Urged To Accept
MOSCOW (UPI)—The Kremlin said the Warsaw
Pact's non-aggression proposal offers NATO a chance
to stem the am is race and welcomed the fact the
United States has not dismissed it out of hand.
The proposal adopted at the Warsaw Pact summit in
Prague this week calls for members of the West and
East-Bloc alliances to pledge they would not use
nuclear or conventional weapons to attack each other.
The Reagan administration's response to the Prague
document pointed out the United States has long
subscribed to the principle of non-aggression. A State
Department spokesman said the proposal did not seem
new.
The Kremlin statement Friday and the Prague
document appeared to form part of an East Bloc effort
to sway public opjnlon in Western Europe against the
planned deployment later this year of 572 U.S.-made
Pershing-2 and crusise missiles.

Is N e e d e d

2 ,.1 1
2-speed manual
record player

Chocolate candy
assortment. 4'/ioz.*
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Our Reg. 94C

5 0 '

1 0 0 rotary or 8 0
2 "C" or "D" bat­
teries or one 9-V.
round slide tray.
Rebate krtwiiKl to mh %
ttfx&gt;*oton

Super K-Gro' soil,
conditioners. 4 qt.

5 ' ^ Sale
Price
Vanity lamps in
choice of styles.

$1

3-day
Sale
3 ,.1 2
5-subject theme
Pkg. of 1 4 0 ,1-ply
book. 2 0 0 sheets. luncheon napkins

• V i- 01. N a t W l.

sir. Rub-"1
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A c id
1-01. N a t W t.

* 3

5 4

4 ,* 1
Corn muffin or but­
termilk biscuit mix.

Our Reg
I 2.16
Plastic measuring
cup set; 8.16 oz.

2 e k g i* 3
Lux* dish detergent, 22 ounces*.

Pepsodent* tooth­
brushes; pkg. of 3.

Mr.Bubble* for
bath fun. lO o z .'

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dry curling iron.

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Boys' or girls' 2pc. Underoos*.

Our Reg.
“
6.97
Timex* electric
alarm clock. Savel

15-16" Tall

r-NC"«ONm.«v
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SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

Suet S. M. L

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f X A M i N A • IO N

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Pull On P ants

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$ 4
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$1

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Choice

tag n &gt;oc«nr

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Stylos

Our Reg. 97C

Our Reg.
2.27 Ea.
6 slip-on cu e tips Trade-paper book Airwick’ Stick Ups
or r e p a ir kit. assortment 64 pgs pkg. of 2. Savel

Insulated auto
cup holds 12 ozs.
MT DORA
tF COkM*«

Choice Of
Trograncta

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Rid-A-Bug

Our 1.53
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Photo/craft frames
to hang or stand.

*1

�E ven in g IZentld
.

Just this week a longtime Herald reader
stopped a t my desk to comment on b round pin
attached to the comer of a basket.
Laughing, she said she has nevjer seen such a
pin before.
Well, this reader just doesn’t know the frog
lady Irene Brown.

(USPS * i l 3M&gt;

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. F l A. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Sunday, J a n u a r y 9, 1983—4A

Wayne 0. Doyle, Publijher
Thoma* Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, 124.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year, $57,00.

And History
Meets Romance

\

By DORIS DIETRICH

The white enameled pin is centered with a
funny-looking green frog with a big red mouth.

An A m erican h is to ria n and a B ritish
genealogist have collaborated to brighten the
Christmas season for romanticists around the
world.
They have discovered historical support for the
chivalric legend of King Arthur and his Round
Table of noble knights. There really was, we are
led to believe, a place and tim e of Camelot.
. . We seem now to have a British king in the
5th century as the original of the Arthurian
le g en d ," said G eoffrey Ashe, a B ritish
genealogist, writer, lecturer, and specialist on
King Arthur.
"The research by Prof. Barbara Moorman of
the University of Southern Mississippi confirms *
my long-held feeling that Arthur was more than a
legend," he said.
#
D r. Moorman uncovered three a n cie n t,
au th en ticated F ren ch chronicles and two
ocumcnts written in Latin which place King
xlhur in the right tim e frame and directly
ssociated with events "known to have taken
lace then, including an invasion he led against
rittany, in the northwest of what is now France.
Moreover, old British records, buried by the
enturies and overlooked by historians, have been
turned up designating Arthur by nam e as
VRiothamus," a title meaning "high king."
1 TTius, the shadowy, heroic figure who was said
to have led his contemporaries in fighting the
Saxon invaders from northern Europe is being
Reincarnated fron medieval legend, which was
embellished by a fanciful 12th century English
Writer, Geoffrey of Monmouth, in his "History Of
e Kings Of B ritain." Moreover, according to
r. Ashe, excavations at Cadbury, the supposed
ite of Arthur’s castle, Camelot, " . . . showed . . .
ere was an enormous citadel on a hill there
About the legendary tim e of Arthur. It had a wall
: 0 feet thick . .
Oddly, French w riters did even more than their
iritish counterparts to make King Arthur the
Superman of the 12th and 13th centuries and
hereafter.
Using Celtic sources, Chretien de Troyes during
he late 1100s, for exam ple, introduced the Holy
■Jrail theme — the quest for the vessel used by
1Christ at the Last Supper and given to Joseph of
trithmathea.
Other medieval w riters told how Arthur won his
i Town by drawing a magic sword from a stone; of
he adulterous love between Arthur’s queen,
Guinevere, and the knight, Sir Lancelot; and of
Lancelot's son, the pure knight Sir Galahad, who
lid wondrous things because he was good.
Mr. Ashe points out that Arthurian facts were
carce during the succeeding 15 centuries because
of the chaos and destruction that prevailed in
Britain following the departure of the Roman
egions in 410 A.D.
The Saxon and Viking invaders, famous for
heir slaughters, lootings, and burnings, left
irecious few historical records.
The history of such times, when scarcely
inyone could read or write, therefore, was handed
' lown from generation to generation by word of
mouth and by traveling storytellers.
H iat the mystical Camelot saga is being given
flesh and bone is, of course, as mighty a con­
tribution to the world of history as it is to the world
of romance.

i

PLEASE WRITE
te tte rs to toe editor a r t welcomed (or pubU catka All
le tte n mmt be sigwed, with a mailing addresa and, If
possible, a lo fefhttc num ber to to* Ifcalltly at Ike writer
may bo verified The E v eatai Herald will reaped the
wtobea of writer* who do not want their name* la print/
The Evcalaf Herald a b a reserve* the right to edit letters
to eliminate libel o r to ceo to rp to ipace requirement*.

BERRY'S WORLD

RUSTY BROWN

Taking
United
Stand
In my mind, I see this big map of the United
States.
A lot of cities are marked with small light
bulbs. And, as I'm looking at the map, red
lights are coming on all over.
The lights are blinking wherever groups of
people, mostly led by women, are protesting
the X-rated video games that make fun of
rape, racism and sexism.
The most blxarre is "Custer’s Revenge," In
which a caricature of Gen. Custer, clad only
In hat, scarf and boots, dodges arrows to rape
an Indian woman. Each time the two are
"mated,” the Indian woman's legs fly up to
the strains of a bugle charge.
Two other offensive offerings, by the sam e
manufacturer, are "Beat 'Em and Eat ’E m "
and "Bachelor Party."
Outraged women, from California to New
York, have tried to block the sale of these
games, priced at $50.
Here is what has happened around the
country:
— In New York City; A hundred women
from Indian organizations, the YWCA, NOW
and Women Against Pornography united to
demonstrate outside the Hilton Hotel where
the game was introduced in mid-October at a
trade show.
— In Los Angeles: Feminist and Native
American groups stirred up enough fuss that
the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
banned the sale of the three games.
— In Albuquerque, N.M.: Just three dsys
after “Custer's Revenge" was stocked at
three video cartridge outlets, an alliance of 17
Indian and women's groups, Including the
Rape Crisis Center, tent a task force to each
of the stores to deliver written and verbal
complaints.
— In Waterbury, Conn; Women involved In
the Sexual Assault Service, a YWCAsponsored project, also complained to the
manufacturer of “ Custer's Revenge" and
said the gam e "raises grave concerns for
those of* us working with victims of sexual
assault."
— In Oklahoma City; A delegation led by
the bead of the city’s Human Rights Com­
mission convinced the city council to write a
resolution branding the games "distasteful"
and "not in the best interests of the com­
munity."
— In Suffolk Connty, Long Island: Pleas
from protestors prompted the county con­
sumer affairs commission to ban the sale of
the games, an action now being tested in court
by the video gome makers.
What is so impressive about all of this Is
how quickly the Indignation flared. I can think
of no other instance when a women's issue
received such an immediate and widespread
response. In just weeks, a sisterhood of
women of different races organized to boycott
sales of the games all over the country.
What also impresses me is the number of
people who want the younger generation —
the chief video game players — to be aware
that rape la violence, not entertainment
As Y leader Ms. Delshunt says, "We can’t
let our young people think we condone this
type of exploitation of women."
Just as Gen. Custer was wiped out a t Little
Bighorn, these women's groups arc deter­
mined to wipe out attitudes that degrade,
denlgrata and humiliate women.
And don't think this Is their last stand.

During my smoking days, I listened to people
sound off about their allergies. “Thank You For
Not Smoking" signs cropped up. No longer was
smoking a symbol of sophistication, but the habit
that was killing me was linked to cancer.
Soon, I observed that more and more savvy
and stylish folks were giving up the weeds. No

longer Is it 'he "in thing" to do. The younger ones
today are not anxious to sneak behind the garage
and light up. They’re too educated on the subject.
And now, I recently opened a mail order
catalog to get my laughs for the month.
Advertised in the booklet is a smoker’s plaque
that offers a witty retort for the smokers of the
world. Described as a genuine marble plaque,
about 6 inches by 3 inches, a disgruntled figure
with his hand over his mouth and nose is in the
top comer. The bottom comer features a lighted
cigarette with smoke curling upwards.
The copy describing the plaque is as funny as
all getout — but perhaps a little tacky to print in
a family newspaper.
I laughed out loud.
Please don't order me one of those plaques. I
have no need these day for such a memento.
You see, I’m celebrating my fourth an­
niversary next week. That’s four years of no
smoking.

JULIAN BOND

MARtfl]

On The
Chinese
In Africa

'No, That's Mondale!'

JEFFREY HART

Predictions For 1983
Since we’re barely into the new year, here's
how it looks to me:
There will be a major re-shuffling of the
White House staff, the only near certainty
being that National Security advisor William
Clark will move up to chief of staff. He filled
the staff post superbly in Sacramento for then
Governor Reagan.
The present staff chief, Jim Baker, though
extremely Bble, is tired and wants out. He is
also in trouble wllh.conservatlves, as witness
last month's meeting called by Lyn Nofzlger,
erstwhile political aide to Reagan, with the
theme of making the 1964 campaign a
Reagan-Bush ticket rather than a BushReagan ticket — a shot at Jim Baker, who
was Bush's 1980 campaign manager, and at
other White House "pragmatists."
Jim Baker, who would like to be president
some day, has his eye on the post of C.l.A.
director, where William Casey is currently In
deep trouble over administrative inefficiency
and the sense that things have gotten a bit out
of control on the Honduras-Nlcaragua border.
My own choice, probably impossible, for
National Security advisor would be Henry
Kissinger, a statesm an of historic stature.
The probable choice, however, Is Tom Reed,
an immensely able member of the National
Security Council and a Reagan Intimate from
Sacramento days.
If Caspar Weinberger steps down at the
Pentagon — because of the MX "dense pack"
and other embarrassments — Texas Senator
John Tower would be a strong choice for the
job.
Other political parties:
Look for John Anderson to organize a new
political party to give his renewed candidacy
some Institutional legitimacy and a sense of
continuity into the future. Anderson will be
liberal an social Issues, but fiscally con­
servative — a potent combination — and, as
before, hia appeal will be to New Class
professionals, academics and others of that
sort. He will hurt the Democrats.
Not yet reported In the press, there Is a lot
of talk about a possible Independent con­
servative candidacy against Reagan, which
sounds quixotic but could matter In a close
election. A likely candidate would be Sen.

Jesse Helms, and if the Reagan ad­
ministration continues to accommodate taxraisers like Senators Robert Dole and Howard
Baker, this nascent movement will become a
reality.
In East-West relations, it will soon become
crystal clear that the Soviets were behind the
plot to kill Pope John Paul, and the con­
fessions of the Turkish gunman Mehmet AH
Agca, already over one hundred pages, are
going to be a sensation.
This affair will be resisted tooth and nail by
the establishment, which has Invested heavily
in the idea that the USSR is a “normal" and
even a "conservative" power. The Italians
are rounding up the Bulgarian instruments of
the Kremlin’s will.
The U.S. nuclear freeze movement will split
into the unilateralists and the disappointed.
Most voters who in 1982 supported a "mutual"
and “verifiable" freeze will not go along with
the pacifists.
The political countdown has begun on
Reaganomics, which has no more than
another year to show some solid results.
Reaganomics, with the tax cut as its cen­
terpiece, is sound in theory but has to show
some results. If those results are not for­
thcoming, the only known cure will be looser
money and some Inflation.
Senator John Glenn will move into the lead
for the Democratic nomination.
Once again, Czech tennis star Ivan tend]
will not win a m ajor title, and, once again,
Martina Navratilova, will be the number one
woman.
For the 66th year since the 1917 Revolution,
Soviet agriculture will fall far short of needs
because of "drought."
Someone will present, a bottle of Yellow
Rain to the editors of the New York Times,
who will then declare editorially that the
chemical warfare case Is not yet proved.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin will be
found culpable in the refugee cam p
massacres, but will stand for re-election and
win.
Happy New Year.

Add another player to the game of big
power politics in Africa. Or rather, increase
an old player’s hand. That’s the effect of the
visit to Africa by Chinese Premier 22iao
Ziyang, the first tour by a Chinese head of
state since Zhou Enlai visited Tanzania in
1964 and declared the continent "right for
revolution."
Until the death of Mao Zedung in 1976,
nearly half of China’s foreign aid was spent in
Africb. But Mao’s death reversed many of
China's priorities and focused attention on
internal development and on building ties
with the United States and Western Europe.
Zhao’s visit, may signal ihe start of a new
interest in Africa by the Chinese, after more
than a decade of mixed successes in African
affairs for the world’s most populous nation.
like the Soviet Union, the Chinese say their
ties with Africa are intended to strengthen
"third world solidarity."
More often than not, however, Chinese
initiatives in Africa are also intended to
counter what the Chinese consider the Soviet
Union's “global strategy for domination."
Following this anti-Soviet scenario has often
placed China, like the U.S., on the loser’s side
in African conflicts.
The Chinese supported UN1TA and FNLA
in the Angolan struggle for dominance among
liberation groups a fte r the Portuguese
departed, and the Chinese gave support to the
now non-existent SWANU in Mamibla.
In South Africa, the Chinese gave aid to the
small and divided Pan African Congress,
rather than the more aggresivc and Sovietsupported African National Congress, whjch
claims credit for last week’s attack on a South
African nuclear installation.
Only in Zimbabwe can China claim to have
back'd a winner. The Chinese support Robert
Mugabe’s ZANU liberation movement with
arms and supplies cover while the Russians
backed Joshua Nkomo’s ZAPU.
But the Chinese can claim that their aid and
assistance projects a re overwhelm ingly
successful, both in providing much needed
development projects and in demonstrating
that foreign diplomats in Africa can live with
the people they serve.
The Chinese insist on using local materials,
and, while Americans and Soviet technicians
in Africa often live in plush housing
segregated from the African populous, the
Chinese live modestly or in camps where they
grow much of their own food.
•
China's proudest project is the 1,600-mile
Tanzam railroad from the port of Dar-esSalaam to the copper belts In Zambia. The
United States and other Western nations had
called the project unbuildable and im­
practical; the Chinese built the railroad In
record time.
Other Chinese assistance in Africa includes
military training in Zaire, medical teams in
Botswana, Djibouti, Togo and elsewhere;
agronom ists In R w anda, Liberia and
Mozambique
The Soviet Union and the United States may
view China’s new presence In Africa as a
bothersome hindrance to their own plans for
exercising political and com m ercial
domination of the continent.
But at a time of declining U.S. aid to
African states, and the introduction of
"constructive engagement" as the new
American policy toward South Africa, the
Chinese presence will be welcomed by
Africans.

JACK ANDERSON

Pesticide Unbanned, Despite Protests

•-4

“Oh, dear11 suppose you’ll be another vote tor
the Democrats In '841"

l/v

c LO ^

Looking more like a leprechaun than a frog in
the hilarious blllious green costume she was
wearing, Irene creeped and leaped (or wasnt
crept and lept) around t t e Seminole area
"ribblting" to non-sm okers^d passing out pins
during the national smokeout awhile back.
Irene, representing the American Cancer
Society waa staging a one-man crusade against
smoking. She may not have stopped anyone from
smoking that day, but she did generate a lot of
laughter.

The frog, perched on its all lours, has pleading
eyes accompanied by big bold black print that
says, “ Kiss me, I don’t smoke."
I recall several years ago when I smoked, I
was really put out by anyone crossing my path
who tried to interfere with my pleasurable habit
of smoking myself into the grave. I bitterly
resented these holier-than-thou righteous critics
and their advice.
Hut then the bad effects of smoking severely
scarred those lungs that 1 need to scream out
with (if nothing else) and 1 finally quit being such
a m a r t j t to tobacco and gave in to what seemed
a hopeless addiction.

WASHINGTON - In snothsr fox-fettb*henhous* horror story, R ation ad­
ministration r«|ulatory officials tu rn
dragged their fait lor a year on an urgent
rqponunsndaUon to ban a deadly potoon that
was used to spray California fndt daring the
Medfly crisis.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s
top toiic-aubatuces official, John
Toldhunter, used to ba in s lim te ■ group
funded by the chemical Mfltftey. f c ’otha cot
who pronounced the
dibromlde, or EDB—far I
• single cigarette. Yet two California
rhm t/-»Lpi»nt works!* dad in September
from exposure to EM .
„
The two men, who had entered an empty
EDB storage tank, ware overcome within
seconds and died gramma deaths within a
few days. "Every organ system In their body
decayed," said Dr. Richard Wade, • Mate
health official. "They turned bright gram.
Their sUn fell off...liwy wars ratting before
they died."

Wade aaid that EDB, a potent human
cardnogen, attacks the nucleus o fe c e lL Itls,
he said, "literally a killer.” Wade noted that
the two workmen were exposed to " a pretty
weak solution" of the chemical — about 200
parts par million. That's 10 times the
allowable federal exposure standard.
Farmworkers, unions and scientists at the
prestigious National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health have urged the government
at lead to strengthen the federal EDB ex­
posure standard, to no avail
At the EPA, dud has been gathering on a
December 1M0 "position document" that
fffqfm pfftdad *n immediate ban tho **** °f
EDB on d o re d grain, and a phaseout of ita use
as a fruit spray by July 1M3. A decision is
finally expected sometime next month.
But a year ago, when EDB was being used
u s Medfly spray, Todhunter poohpoohed the
pad k id e's danger to workers and consumers
- though National Cancer Institute studies
had shown It to be a potent cancer-causer.
In an handwritten memo seen by my

associate John Dillon, Todhunter put down
the danger of a single exposure to EDB as
"100 times less than the rite of smoking one
cigarette in your life."
This rosy assessment was contradicted in
an Internal memo by a top EPA scientist,
Adrian Gross, who also informed the
California health agency that the federal
EDB exposure standard of 20 parts per
million was not safe. "1 do not know of any
regulated chemical," he wrote, “which had
(produced) as m any malignant tumors of a
very unusual variety" in laboratory animals.
There’s another federal agency that should
be concerned about EDB — the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration — but
unfortunately for workers in chemical plants
and orchards, OSHA has been as relaxed as
the EPA about the deadly pesticide. The
agency has been considering a rule change on
EDB'i handling for more than a year.
Even prodding by Dr. J. Donald Millar,
assistant surgeon general in charge of the
safety and health Institute, failed to move

OSHA off tU bureaucratic behind. An IttHJ
source told my reporter Jam es Crawford tha
OSHA and the EPA are still squabbling ovei
which agency has jurisdiction over whid
workers.
The do-nothing attitude of OSHA and E P /
officials suits EDB’s manufacturer, Do*
Chemical, just fine. Dow Insists that the stuf
is virtually harm less and needs no "ceilini
limit" whatsoever. Dow’s submission ti
’OSHA explained: "Setting a ceiling limit i
only requiredf when an acute exposure ha
been demonstrated to produce an advera
irrev ersib le h ea lth effect or is life
threatening; such Is not the case with EDB.1
As the two California deaths made ap
palllngly clear, such Is precisely the case will
EDB.
Footnote: As I reported last May
Todhunter Is the EPA official who ordered a
agency scientist to tone down a report tha
showed formaldehyde fumes are cancer
causing. The scientist refused to twist th
facts, and eventually quit.

�OPINION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

O U R READERS WRITE

Phone Sales People
Are Not Appreciated
Is there any way to stop Sandy,
Margaret, Carol, Debbie, Mary lo u ,
Elizabeth and etc.? They all sell
aluminum siding over the telephone
and I don't want any? In fact I hate
aluminum siding when the phone gets
me out of the bath tub, out of a sound
sleep or makes me miss the weather
report on television.
I know my house is sadly in need of
repairs but I've decided to let it fall
down. I'm afraid of being “ripped off” .
One of my favorite columnists, with
whom I often disagree, says when we
get ripped off it is due to our
“stupidity". I think it’s due to
“ignorance".
There are so many areas where I am
ignorant: how to fix an air conditioner,
cranky plumbing, a lawn mower, car or
television or screen doors.
And when I read so much about
contractors who cheat on school roofs
so kids stay drier in the ancient
grammar school on Seventh Street than
in the new schools, and hear that the
new city jail needs a new roof.

Then I remember the young man who
checked my air conditioner. He stood
on the ground, looked up at the air
conditioner which is just under the roof,
atjd pronounced it in "good condition".
He gave me a bill for twenty-two
dollars.
(A friend had borrowed his ladder!)
I haven't any faith.
Do you suppose other people, loo,
have lost faith and are letting their
homes go without repairs? Could it
have something to do with our sick
economy? In a democracy we are all
responsible for the decay of our
country. Every inferior job we do
wastes natural resources and makes
our country poorer.
When I was a little girl I lived in a
house that was then one hundred years
old. I am a "senior citizen" yet I'm told
that tough old house is still standing.
Why do condominiums fall down before
they are finished? Greedy contractors
and lazy laborers.
Name withheld

No Free' Money
When Taxes Involved

Sunday, Jan. 9 , 1VIJ—5A

Economy Hurting Program

Social Security System Sound
U. Some of my friends say Social
Security is paying for much more than
was Intended by Us original architects.
They say it has become the world's
biggest welfare program -w lth new
benrf Its being added as if there were no
tomorrow—and that's why it's In big
trouble today. Is this true?
A. In a word, "no." Social Security’s
problems stem from the decline of our
economy and from rising unem ­
ployment and the failure of payroll
taxes, which finance the system, to
keep up with the cost-of-living, to which
benefits are linked. What really needs
reform are our economic policies and
not the Social Security system itself.
Spouse and survivors' insurance
were added to old-age benefits in the
Social Security system by 1939
amendments, disability insurance was
added in 1956, and hospital insurance
(Medicare) was added in 1965. The
present cost of the old age and sur­
v iv o rs' insurance p rogram &lt;which
includes spouse and survivor benefits)
is almost exactly the same—9.3 percent
of payroll—as it was estimated to be in
1935 when the system was created. Two
separate taxes and trust frunds were
established for the disability-insurance

N Growing

Older
U.S. Rep.
Claude Pepper

programs, both cf which are self­
financing.
The addition of survivor and
disability benefits simply rounded out
the package of protection in a manner
consistent with insurance principles.
Because there is a much smaller
probability that disability or surv'vor
claims will arise before age 65 than
there is the probability of a person
reaching retirement age and receiving
those benefits, there is more real
"insurance in these benefits than in
retirement benefits.
The Social Security Administration
also operates the Supplem ental
Security Income program for the
elderly, blind and disabled poor, but the
funds for SSI come completely from
general revenues, not Social Security
trust funds. Other programs included in

S r&lt; V f3 =g B J R 5 7 l / l f e

*1982 Copky N o

t

the Social Security Act, such as Aid to
Families with Dependent Children, are
administered by agencies other than
SSA.
The idea that Social Security has
become a "Christmas tree" of benefits
is truly a misconception. While we must
deal with the system 's fiscal problems,
we should not be deluded as to their
source.
(). My father-in-law Is always
receiving offerings through the mail for
some strange produet or literature. Hr
has serious arthritis problems, and last
week some "health rnmpany" sent him
a pamphlet offering a cure—for a price.
It isn't just the potential waste of
money that bothers me. It's the false
hopes th at are raised by this
"miraculous" cure. Someone should
put a stop to this robbery through the
malls.
A. Someone has. New legislation to
combat mail fraud was recently passed
by the Congress. The law will give the
U.S. Postal Sendee new powers to
move quickly against suspected mail
racketeers. This action is of particular
significance to the elderly because
older citizens are the group most often
victimized by mail fraud schemes.

While the elderly comprise 11 percentof the population, they represent 30
percent of all mail fraud victims.
^
Many older Americans who are
retired, living on fixed incomes, or in ill
health, arc deeply affected by ad-»
vertisements offering glowing work-at- *
home opportunities or new "miracle"
cures, and many have been cheated of
their life savings. That is why thlsJt
legislation is of such significance.
'

n
The Mail Order Consumer hrauu
Protection law gives the U.S. Postal
Service subpoena authority which willJ
enable the service to demand an ad-i
vertised product immediately upon!
payment, rather than waiting months
for a distributor to send it. This means,
the product can be tested quickly and1,
lets the Postal Service get out of th e :
"catch-22" trap which has limited its^
investigative im part.
■f
With the new authority, the Postal
Service will have much quicker access j
to the products and information It needs,
to show that fraud may be taking place
and that further investigation is called'
for. The law also has safeguards
against any misuse of the new powers,;

Swrvie,

money sent to Washington and returned
to the States lost a minimum of 25
percent in the transaction.
We have our own locally elected
officials. They should shoulder the
burden and responsibility of raising the
money needed to properly finance the
City Managers Knowles of Sanford
operations of their entities. This would
and Etchberger of Altamonte Springs also keep the taxpayers in closer touch
suggest intense lobbying of our
with local officials.
congressmen and senators to keep
We all complain about high govern­
these funds coming. Certainly these
mental
deficits. The constant pressure
learned gentlemen know where this
money comes from. It Is not free applied to Congress for "free" money is
money; In fart, it Is very expensive largely the reason for those deficits.
money. A former congressman and a
Andrew Carraway
former senator told me that taxpayers’
Sanford

On Monday, Jan. 3,1983, the Evening
Herald published on the front page a
story regarding Seminole County and
its cities' losa of over 2 million dollars
due to proposed death of federal
revenue sharing.

Indians Form Group
Are You An American Indian? Don't
be ashamed of your heritage. The
Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy,
Inc. have started the Bear Band and 40
to 50 miles area belong to It. And is
accepting members with 1-18 or more of
Indian heritage, you don’t have to be
Cherokee to be accepted In the nation,
but you can't belong to a Corporation
tribe or nation and belong to us. Why
not come forward and get on a

Cherokee roll?
F or more inform ation and ap­
plications write to — Principal Chief
William “Rattlesnake" Jackson, or call
after 6 p.m. 912-436-9040.
Chief William “ Rattlesnake" Jackson
Principal Chief
Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy,
Inc.
Route 1, Box 111
Leesburg, Georgia 31763

Shriners A re G ra te fu l
Sanford Shrine Club wishes to thank
the several merchants in Sanford who
displayed "Welcome Shriner" signs in
their store windows during the weekend
the Bahia Temple held the Shrine
Ceremonial in Sanford.

We are also grateful to you for the
media coverage given this event.
Thank you.
Ernie Cowley
President
Sanford Shrine Club

Soviet Secret Police (KGB) Marks 65th Anniversary
By CHRISTOPHER C. HARMON
(Editor's Note: Christopher Harmoo
Is a student at Claremont Graduate
School, specializing la the Soviet
Union.)
Because Lenin believed that "The
courts must not ban terror, but must
formulate the motives underlying it
(and) legalize it as a principle," he
created the Soviet secret police 65 years
ago this month on Dec. 20,1917. Once
called llie Cheka, and now known as the
KGB, the organization has had many
names throughout its history. It has
known only one purpose, however: to
act as the “Sword and Shield" of the
Communist P arty of the USSR.

freedom, an ever-present fear of being
dragged into the torture chambers of
the Cheka, which exceeds by many
times in Us horrors the gendarmerie
administration of the CZarist regime."
And yet th e Leninlst-Dxerzhinsky
regime was to appear almost mild by
contrast with th at of Stalin and Berta
which succeeded iL
•
Dzerzhinsky Square, two blocks from
the Kremlin, is the sUe of KGB
headquarters. The building is not
marked; everyone knows what it is.
There is a new statue of Dzerzhinsky,
raised by Khrushchev, who, if he closed
some of Stalin's concentration camps
and executed Stalin's chief of secret
police, Beria, nonetheless pledged to
"strengthen in every way revolutionary
vigilance and the organ of state
security." He renamed the agency the
"Committee for State Security," or
KGB. but still called Us personnel "our
Cheklsta." He brought the reorganized
KGB more within the control of the
Party, and gave U more funding as well
as new, international dimensions.
The Brezhnev legacy was one of
explosive growth. And U was under
Brezhnev's eye that Yuri Andropov and
his lieutenants made their steady ad­
vance into positions of government and
party power. No KGB chief since
Stalin's Beria had even been a Polit­
buro m em ber; Andropov became one in
1973. The next year he received the
Order of Lenin for his "direct and
active part in working out and im­
plementing the home and foreign
policies of our party and the Soviet
state." Since 1977, KGB personnel have

The Cheka, or "A ll-R ussian
E x trao rd in a ry
Commission
for
Combating Counter- Revolution,
Speculation, and Sabotage," began as
an Investigative agency charged to
search out deviant communists. It was
swiftly transformed into a secret police
force with innumerable duties and few
discernible restraints. Feliks Dzerthe agency’s first director, laid down his
policy: "W e stan d for organized
te r r o r ," he d eclared. Under his
direction, the first 200,000 "official"
executions o ccu rred ; hundreds of
thousands of other Russians disap­
peared into the first Soviet Gulag
Archipelagoes, where uprisings cost
300,000 more lives.
Already by March 1921, Petrograd
sailors the naval forces which had
helped instigate the Revolution four
years earlier in su red .a manifesto
declaring com m unism to have
"b ro u g h t th e w orkers, instead o f

I

been winning the highest kinds of
government and party positions and
honors. The KGB chief of the Azer­
baijan sector, Geydar Allvyev, had not
even been part of the Politburo; sud­
denly he is First Deputy Premier, the
possible successor to Prem ier
Tikhonov. The promotion of KGB head
Andropov to general secretary of the
Communist Party upon Brezhnev's
death was, of course, without any
precedent in Soviet history.

special technical laboratories, and, In
entities like the Serbsky Institute for
F orensic Psychiatry in Moscow,
pioneer the use of medicine for
malevolent political purposes. The
"Fifth Chief Directorate," formed In
1970, combats expressions of religious
and nationalist feeling, political
dlssidencc, and intellectual and artistic
Independence. There are special
departments in some field offices for
"Jewish Affairs."

The new KGB chief is a 64-year-old
U kranlan, V italy Fedorchuk. He
commands perhaps 90,000 staff of­
ficers, some 2-300,000 specially armfed
border troops, and tens of thousands of
other paid informants and agents. If he
has a budget, it is virtually unlimited.
And government, patty, and army
organizations provide logistical and
other support free.

During the last few years, this
national and international apparatus
has crushed a nascent Soviet peace
movement with arrests and psychiatric
treatm ent, while funnelling large sums
into the same kind of movements in the
West, and spending m illions on
"peace” front organizations based in
Moscow, Sophia and Prague. It has
arrested the last of the founders of
"Smot" a free trade union movement in
the USSR, while leading and paying for
union strikes in Portugal, New Zealand
and Costa Rica. It has brought to heel
the last members of the "Helsinki
Watch" committee on human rights,
even as it built up a new gulag for
100,000 political prisoners, many of
them women, for construction of the
new pipeline. It regularly dispatches
KGB and GRU "sd en ttsu " to pose at,
and politicize, International scientific
conventions; yet at least two legitimate
Soviet scientists were kidnapped by the
KGB from an Austrian U.N. agency
when their loyalties became suspect.

The "Chief Directorates" conduct
foreign operations, border control, and
routine and special operations against
the Soviet population, foreigners, and
tourists. The KGB works closely with,
and oversees, the GRU, or/ military
intelligence service of the Red Army
General Staff. KGB officers staff the
armed forces at every echelon down to
the company level. They wear military
uniforms, but report through their own
chain of command, and can disobey
military orders. KOB sub-divisions and
special departments protect all Party
members and their families, maintain
th e ruling e lite 's com m unications,
oversee finance and probe economic
. crimes, monitor and control domestic
sentim ent, m a in tain arch iv es and

Other recent operations include firing
upon a Ukrainian crowd protesting poor
food and health conditions in factories,

kidnapping an Afghan Ambassador to
Czechoslovakia oft the streets of
Prague, the use of Aeroflot and other
personnel to Influence ETA terrorists in
Spain and southern France, the theft of
thousands of classified m ilitary
documents from our NATO allies and
from the G overnm ent Accounting
Agency in Washington D.C., and giving
guerrilla training, directly or through
the PI-O, to "neo-Nazi" terrorists from
Western European countries.
Bui the most masterful of the KGB's
operations has been its careful con­
struction of the intelligence and "active
measures" networks In its satellite
countries. In wartime, Stalin's secret
police cooperated with the Gestapo to
identify an d liquidate the m ost
democratic of the resistance leaders in
Poland and Czechoslovakia. Since the
war, E astern Europeans have been
taken to special Soviet intelligence
schools, where each national group is
kept separate from the others, and all
are studied, tested, and sometimes co­
opted by the Soviet "uncles." By
dominating each satellite's intelligence
ap p a ra tu s a s it dominates th e ir
governments, Moscow has added a
parallel network to its own, allowing
more intense activities within the Bloc
and expanded international operations.
The East G erm an service, for example,
is directed by Misha Wolf, an Andropov
protege. E a st Germany m ain tain s
between eight and ten thousand agents
In Western Germany, helps the KGB
handle the Palestinian guerrillas, in­
cluding F ateh 's internal security unit,
and polices ihc police in Ethiopia,
Angola and Mozambique.

Czech intelligence agents, serving
Cuba at Castro’s request between 1957
and 1981, helped to prepare Cuba for the
eventual and complete surrender of its
own DGI service to the KGB's control.
Czechoslovakia has been a refuge (or
Italian terrorists since the 1940s, and
Karlovy Vary and o ther training
centers routinely se rv e the Red
Brigades. Secret service operations
against Czech emigres on French soil
earned a formal protest from Francois
Mltterand this January. Even the
supposedly " m a v e ric k " and "in s
dependent" Romanians were recently*
discovered
to
be
conducting
widespread KGB espionage operations
from their embassy in Washington D.C.
The KGB must be taken seriously.
Recently England's Royal Academy
voted to reUln as one of its own
Anthony Blunt, a confessed, and con­
victed Soviet spy. Deriding those who
sought Blunt's expulsion from the
Academy, historian A.J.P. Taylor said:
"It was just like McCarthy In America
all over again."
He was wrong. The KGB is a potent
organization threatening in a deadly
way not only people under Soviet rule
but Westerners as well. It is not
McCarthyism to take action against
those who l i d it.
Lenin believed that "the scientific
concept of dictatorship means neither
more nor l e u than unlimited power
resting directly on force." Until such
lime as the USSR l&lt; ruled bv pupulm
iunseni, n will i..rtm ue to U' ruled byforce and by fear These are the wily
means ol persuasion “our (h ek isa"
hove ever known.

�Barnett In More
Than 200 Offices
Three year-end office openings have made Barnett Banks of
Florida Inc., the only Florida bank to offer its services in more
rhan 200 locations, the bank has announced.
Barnett now has 201 offices with the opening of facilities in
Jacksonville and in two Gulf Coast communities North Cape
Coral and New Port Richey.
The 200th office was opened just a few miles from the site
where William B Barnett first established his b..nk 105 years
ago.
In the years since. Barnett has grown to s e n e 29 counties
and 10f&gt; communities from Pensacola to Homestead In 19B2.
the bank has opened a total of 35 offices in 19 new cities more
than in any year since its founding.
In addition, Barnett has acquisitions and a charter pending
which would place it in five more counties with 26 more offices.

New Tabletop Air System
In response to consumer demand, Rush-Hamplon
Industries will introduce a promotional tabletop air
treatm ent system at the Housewares Show later this
month in Chicago
For the first time retailers will be able to offer
consumers an Ecologizer system at a price point well
under 115 when coupled with a £1 factory rebate. Model
0705, which cleans the air in rooms up to 2000 cubic feel,
contains the CA-90 advanced scientific formula filter,
which sets all Ecologizer systems apart.
Ecologizer systems with the unique CA-90 formula
remove household and tobacco smoke odors and
harmful gases such as hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and
formaldehyde from indoor air.
"W e're not sacrificing quality," said Murray Craig,
Vice President of Marketing. “Ecologizer systems are
based on
of scientific research, and model 0705 i«
no different. We are offering the consumer a quality
product at a price that's more than competitive. We
expert consumer response to be excellent."
Rush-Hampton Industries is a leader in the
development of air and water treatment systems, as
well as other environmentally related products.

DeLand Firm Expanding
Empire of America FSA, headquartered in Del mid,
has announced expansion of its Texas Region through a
m erger with Tarrant Savings of Fort Worth, Texas.
The announcement was jointly released by Paul A.
Willax, Empire of America FSA president, and Edwin
Conley, president of Tarrant Savings.
Tarrant Savings with headquarters in Fort Worth
has assets of (312 million. An additional nine offices are
located in the greater Fort Worth metropolitan area.
Willax said Conley has been named president of the
Tarrant division. All other officers and members of the
board will be retained. Two members of Tarrant’s
Imanl of directors will be named directors of the board
in DeLind

Sun Bank Shifts 7
Faye C. Agues, senior vice president and former head ol the
Sun Bank offices in Seminole County, has assumed the new
responsibility of coordinating personal banking functions for
the 44 Sun Bank offices in Orange. Seminole, Osceola, Like
and Brevard counties. On Dec. 17, the 11 Sun Bank offices in
Brevard County and the six Sun Bank offices in Like County
were consolidated with Sun Bank National Association

TIRE BUSINESS
lln n a ld
K u ril. D istric t
M a n a g e r fo r K elly
S p rin g fie ld T ir e s , h a s a n n o u n c e d th a t It \ K T ire
C o., K o u te It S a n fo rd , ju s t s o u th tif F le a W orld on
I '.S , H ig h w ay 17-M2, is now (h e S e m in o le C o u n ty
w a re h o u s e d is tr ib u to r fo r K elly S p rin g fie ld T ire s .
C h u c k J o h n s to n , g e n e ra l m a n a g e r of It &amp; K T ire ,
s a id It &amp; K l i r e w as s e le c te d a s (lie d is tr ib u to r

bccuiisi* ol th e ir c a p a c ity to h a n d le a ll s i / e tr u c k s
a n d t h e i r e x te n s iv e s e r v i c e d e p a r tm e n t w ith th e
l a t e s t e q u ip m e n t a n d p ro fe s s io n a l s ta f f . S how n
d u r in g th e o ffic ia l c e le b r a tio n a r e D a le Ito h e r ts o n
( le f t ) , s e r v ic e m a n a g e r , J o h n s to n ( c e n t e r ) , an d
D o n a ld C. K u ril, d is tr ic t m a n a g e r fo r K elly
S p rin g fie ld Tires.

Cluster Mall To Be Built On SR 434
An open air cluster mall, a new concept to the Central
Florida area, is being developed on Slate Hoad 434 at
Jamestown Boulevard in Altamonte Springs.
L&gt;ehniann’s Plaza, will specialize in high fashion and ac­
cessories, said Steve Brandon of the Brandon Co, of Miami,
the developer. The groundbreaking is slated for Feb. 1 with the
grand opening anticipated next November.
I/oehmann's, a ladies apparel department store, will occupy
15,000 square feet. Frankel's, a linen, bod and bath shop, will
have 10,000 square feet. The balance of the 170,000 square feet
will house 65 to 70 more merchants, Including two restaurants.
Darby and Way, Inc., a Fort Liuderdale surveying and

Empire’s slate regions were formed on July 30,1982,
when the Big E merged into American Federal Savings
and Lian Association of Southfield. Michigan and
assumed its federal savings and loan charter. Con­
currently, First Federal Savings and Lian Association
of Mid-Florida, Del-md, Florida and Harris County
Savings and Lian Association of Baytown, Texas
merged. The Michigan-New York Big E acquired all of
the outstanding stock of the new ly merged institutions
and formed its southern subsidiary, which also
operates under the corporate title of Empire of
America FSA.

engineering firm with offices in Orlando, is responsible for
surveying and civil engineering of the 20-acre site, including
building locations and parking facilities.
The firm also has the surveying contract for another Ixichm ann’s Plaza nearing completion in Clearwater, said Bran­
don.
Darby and Way is a specialist .n computer-aided design of
surveying and engineering graphics and interactive data base
mapping.
The Brandon Co. is a shopping center developer specializing
in fashion malls. There are two other liiehmann's Plazas, in
Pompano Beach and In North Miami Beach.

in fo rm a tio n
A lp h a b e tiz e d

P ages; N ew

llr u c u

K.

Neale Is Bank Manager
Jeffrey S. Neale has been named branch manager of
the Sanford office of Burnell Bank of Central Florida.
Neale was with Pan American Bank of Orlando
where he served as assistant vice president.
Prior to working for Pan American, he attended the
University of Florida where he received a degree in
finance.
Neale is a former member of Pine Hills Community
Council

Barnett Acquisition OK'd
The Federal Reserve Board has approved the
acquisition by Burnett Banks of Florida, Inc., of Great
American Banks, Inc., of Miami, a (546-million-asset
organization consisting of eight banks in six counties
with v .olal of 19 offices.
Eleven of the offices are In the Tampa area and
would join Barnett’s nine offices there, creating u 20office nctwi V in Hillsborough County.
The merger ’Iso would provide Barnett's first entry
to a new counl) - Monroe —where the company would
obtain Great An erican Bank of the Florida Keys in
Tavernier. It wou. I be the 30th county In which Burnett
offers banking services.

Apartment Director Named
Judith A. Wilkinson has been named community
d irecto r at Destiny Springs Condominium in
Altamonte Springs, u 249-unit condominium com­
munity.
As community director, Wilkinson will oversee
continuous property Improvements including land­
scaping ol grounds as well as upgrading ol various
recreational facilities and maintenance services.

P ages,

ASKED
DEUVERED

H r m iu u t tl

B r o u s s a r d , f o r m e r ly
associated with First Federal
of Seminole, lives with his
wife. Carol, in Maitland
H K U t’K B ltO l'S S A I tl)

U n ifie d R e s id e n c e P a g e s ; G o v e r n m e n t P a g e s ; N e w

B u s i n e s s P a g e s ; Y e l l o w P a g e s ; a n d S u p e r S .A Y E .R . C o u p o n

Broussard Joins Flagship
joined F lagship Bank of
Seminole as manager of the
Ling wood Office. Broussard
holds an MA Degree in
International Affairs from
Florida State University and
a BS Degree in General
Studies from University of
Central Florida.

Robert E. Patchetl, executive vice president at the Main
Office, has been promoted to the new position of group
president of the nine existing and proposed Sun Bank offices in
the Seminole Count) group which also includes Apopka. The
bank is planning to open offices in Sweetwater Oaks and
Maitland Center. Hatchett will be based in the bank's Semoran
Office on Stale Road 436.
Il also was announced that David E. Boone, Daniel W
Mahurin, and Richard C. McAlister were promoted to senior
vice presidents of the bank They w ill preside over geographic
groups of Sun Rank offices in Orange County, as will Robert L
Carter and Sam II Uwis, who are currently senior vice
presidents.
Boone will direct operations for the Sun Bank offices in
downtown Orlando and Winter Park, while Mahurin will have
similar responsibilities for the bank offices at Orlando Central
IMrk, Sand Lake Road, Dr. Phillips, Orlando International
Airport, and the three Walt Disney World offices at Like
Buena Vista. Mam Street-USA, and Epcot Center.
McAlister will be in charge of the Stm Bank branch offices of
East Orlando, Fashion Square, University Boulevard, as well
as the two offices at the US Navy Training Center. Carter will
be group president of the Sun Bank offices at South Orlando,
Conway, and South Orange Avenue while I-ewis will direct the
offices located at College Park and Pine Hills.

ik v i m

; i .k v i n k

T h e A ll N ew P h o n e B o o k fro m u n ite d T elep h o n e

Levine To
Assess
Economy
Irving R. Devine, NRC
News economic aflairs
correspondent and dean of
economic reporting, will
assess the efforts of the
Reagan Adm inistration to
pull the nation out of the
current recession at Per­
spective ’83, an annual
economic outlook presented
by Sun Bank. N.A. on Wed­
nesday.
Sun Bank also will provide
its evaluation of the health of
the Central Florida economy
for this year during the
popular, annual economic
p re d ic tio n p ro g ra m s
presented by Sun Bank eucli
January at the Orange Juice
Forum of the Orlando Area
Chamber of Commerce. The
program will begin at 8 a m.
in the new Expo Center near
the Curr Auditorium. The
public is invited without
charge.
A Sun Bank spokesman said
that those attending should
arrive early, or before 7:30
a m . in order to be assured a
seat. A self-service con­
tinental breakfast will .be
served al lhat time. Due to
standing-room-only crowds ol
past year, business, civic and
educational groups planning
id attend together &lt; a group ol
10 or more) should call 1305)
237-4060 lor reservations.

3 More Phone Firms Add
Stromberg-Carlson Systems
T hree telephone com panies, one ^ •he Saco River Telephone and Telegraph Co.
California and two in the Northeast, Joined the The Continental Telephone Co. of California iq
ranks of Stromberg-Carlson Corporation’s Bridgeport and the Continental Telephone Co.
digital customers when they installed System of New York in Hannibal also placed in service
Century Digital Centra) Offices with Ijocal their first DCO Systems with liical Line
Line Switches ( U £ s ) within hours of ofie Switches at that time.”
another.
Sirom berg-C arlson, a m em ber of the
"They were first al! the way down the line,"
Plcsscy
Group, is a leading designer ami
said Stromberg-Carlson President Jam es M
m
an
u
factu
rer of telecom m unications
Bridges. "DCO Systems with l.L&amp;s were cut
over in Bar Mills and ’Vaterburo, Maine, for equipmenl with headquarters in Lake Mary.

...th e y 're blue, for
easy reference

...info rm atio n
^
about your telephone
%
company and comT
munlty. inform ation
Pages keep you up-to-date
and inform ed.
L ie ttn ta ...F o rth e first tim e, all
^
17 com m unities from Sanford to
Lake Buena vista and In-between,
including Orlando, are combined
together In one section alphabetically
Finding a num ber is now as easy as A, B, C.

At United "telephone, when our customers talk,
we listen. And we respond with Innovative new
Ideas that help us better serve you. That's why
we developed a whole new look and format
for our 1963 Phone Book for winter Park and
surrounding areas our new Book Is Informative,
comprehensive, easy to read and use. And It can
save you money.
Check out your new Phone Book when it arrives
You'll find It packed full of valuable Information
designed to save you time and money.

■
■
■

V
r

U s tln f» ...F o r the first tim e,
business listings fo r all 17
com m unities are combined
together in one alphabetized
white pages section Plus
another telephone company
directory firs t from United RED listings

vaHew M tM ...m a k e shopping
easier and m ore convenient than
ever. veHow pages te ll where to
buy I t

m iM

For Winter Park and surrounding communities

�vl/
&lt;

Evening Hera Id. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Jan. 9, iff)]—7A

Law's Free Throws

Spruce Creek

By f IIIUSFISTK.lt
Herald Sports Writer
For the second name in a row.
Seminole High's Fighting Scminoles
staged *a cardiac comeback. On Tuesday
night, two free throws in the warnin,
seconds by D eLind's Chase Brown gave
the Bulldogs' a 51-49 victory.
This lim e, however. Sem inole's
comeback effort was not overcome as
V'enion Liw turned the tables on the
Spruce Creek Hawks, hitting two clutch
free throw s with 2.1 seconds remaining to
give the Tribe a narrow MW9 victory
before a rowdy crowd at Seminole High
Friday night.
"That's the kind of thing ■la w ’s free
throws) that we need from our seniors,"

points, hitting 11 of 15 from the floor
i although nine of his baskets were
layups i.
Seminole opened the game with a blast,
scoring six unanswered points bul the
•Tribe was outscored the rest of the way,
134i. as the Hawks look a 13-12 lead
Seminole went into its cold-shooting
streak in the second quarter, hitting just
3 of 16 shots while Spruce Creek hit 6 of 19
and look a 26-23 halftime lead.
The Tribe continued to have problems
finding the hoop in the third quarter as il
hit only 3 of 15 shots from the floor,
allowing the Hawks to take a 39-32 lead
into the fourth quarter.
A layup by Willie Cooks pul the Hawks
up 15-35. but. moments later. Cooks took
a seat on the bench with his fifth foul
"We were lucky Cooks got in four
trouble," Marlette said. “ After that we
cut our intensity going.”
At 3:46 In the fourth quarter. Mitchell’s
jumper cut Spruce Creek’s lead to five
points, 15-40, A minute later, Liw
snatched a rebound and raced down
court for a layup to cut the Hawks' lead!47-46. Another jumper by Mitchell put the
Tribe* ahead to stay, 18-47, with 1:30 left
to play.
L iw ’s two free throws made it 59-47,
hut Spruce Creek’s Carlos Poston banked
one home to make it 59-19 with 11 seconds
remaining. Seminole got the Inbounds

Crooms' Streak 44
After a check with the microfilm, it
has been determined that the Crooms
Panthers have won 44 games over the
past three years and not 43 as
previously reported
The Panthers won their last 12
games of the 1980-81 season and all 22
games last year under coach Chris
Marlette. This season, they have won
their first 10 gam es under coach John
McNamara.
- SAM COOK

Prep B a sk e tb a ll
Seminole coach Chris Marlette said.
And the attitude from our bench was a
big help too. they were standing the
whole time we were coming back."
Down 45-:t5 with 4:50 left to play.
Seminole staged an excellent comeback
by outsconng the Hawks, lad the
remainder of the game.
Calvin “Kiki" Bryant and Willie
Mitchell collected 16 points apiece for
Seminole whose record now stands at 9-7,
and 4-1 in the Five Star Conference.
Spruce Creek fell to 6-4 overall. Mitchell
led the Tribe underneath with 12
rebounds.
"S pruce Creek cam e to play,”
Marlette said. “Their defense had us
puzzled and nothing was falling for us."
Not much was falling for the Tribe the
first three quarters as Seminole hit just
12 of 45 shots for a horrendous 27 percent.
Meanwhile, Spruce Creek hil 17 of 35
shots through the first three quarters for
48 percent
( &gt;n numerous occasions Spruce Creek's
Hod McCray found himself on Ihe end of
fast breaks as he led the Hawks with 22

Lyman, Necklace

9

pass in and got across the halfcourt line
but turned the ball over with tw o seconds
left. Spruce Creek didn't have time to call
a time out or make any passes and
McCray's desperation halfcourt shot was
well off the mark.
The Tribe will go for its fifth con­
ference win Tuesday night against Like
Brantley at Seminole
In junior varsity action. Seminole blew
a three-point lead with eight seconds left
as Spruce Creek pulled out a 53-52 vic­
tory.
The JC Tribe, 1-7, took a 52-4!* lead and
seemed to have the game on ice.
However. Spruce Creek hit a shot with
eight seconds left then stole the inbounds
pass and dropped in a shut with five
seconds left for the victory.
Kenny Gordon led the 'Nulcs with 19
points, Terry Marshall added 14 and
Fred Brinson tossed in 8
SEMINOLE i 50i *
Bryant 6-17 3-4 16, Mitchell 6-16. 4-8 16,
Liw 1-4 4-6 6. Wynn 3-81-3 7. Grey 2-3 0-9
1. Hendricks 1-5 9-0 2, Franklin 0 94) 0.
Totals: 19-53 12-21 50
SPRUCE CREEK tl9i
McCray 11-15 0-1 22. Cooks 4-12 1*2 9,
Gallon 1-4 94) 2, Naugle 3-3 1-2 7, I Vision
1-2 2-2 4. Lee 1-2 9-2 2. Jenkins 1-1 1-2 3.
Nuhols 9-1 941 0 Totals 22-40 5-11 19.
Seminole
12 11 9 18 - 50
Spruce Creek
13 13 13 1 0 -4 9

Strangle Crabs

V erm in L a w . S e m in o le p o in t
g u a rd , h its a d r iv in g lay u p . Law
la te r c o n v e r te d tw o fre e th ro w s
with 23 s e c o n d s lo play to lift
S a n fo rd p a s t S p r u c e C reek .
total Fouls
Creek 19
Fouled Out
Technicals

.Seminole 11. Spruce
Cooks
None.

Bluefield State
Tops Raiders

D e L o n d T rip s P a tr io ts

H\BREN T SMAIUT

Herald Sports Writer
Two major letdowns and lack of
rebounding in crucial spots spelled
defeat for the Seminole Community
College Lady Haiders by a 84-81 count to
West Virginia’s Bluefield State.
Trailing most of the game, Blucficid's
point guard Anne Tow nicy hil 3 of 4 free
throws in the fin a l: 40 to lift the visitors to
victory.
Acknowledging Bluefield as one of the
top teams on Seminole's schedule. SCC
coach Sol Ba toon recognized fine in­
dividual efforts on his squad. "Valerie
Kuessler put forth one of the outstanding
games of the year. Hoessler, Patrick
iMindyi and l Cathy) Jones played an
outstanding team game," said the SCC
skipper.
In the initial half. SCC and Bluefield
played it very even up to the midway
point when Hie West Virginia entries
grabbed a six-poml edge on the shooting
of Pam Lucado.
The Haulers bounced right back with
Hoessler and Missy McClelland leading
the way. At the half. Seminole clung to a
. j 37-34 lead, despite losing Hoessler to foul
trouble at the 5:36 mark
In the second half, Seminole jockeyed
to a steady six-point buldge through the
| 2:59 mark with Lucado keeping Bluefield
j m the game with a spectacular shooting
j performance. Hopes looked dim for
Bluefield when l.ucado fouled out at 2:30
but not before boosting her squad to
contention at 79-77.

!

After trading buckets, Townley in­
tercepted a pass and drew a foul. After
hitting I of 2 charity tosses, the visitors
press and sloppy SCC play and freethrow shooting sent Townley to the line

JC B asketball

DeLuid. meanwhile, used 22 points
from guard Derek Watson to hold off
Like Brantley 57-53, at DcLind Friday
night.
"He was out of his mind," Like
Brantley coach Bob Peterson said about
the senior point guard. "I've never seen
him shoot like that and I just scouted him
(against Seminolei Tuesday.
"He was hitting from the three-point
range."
Watson hit six buckets in the first half
as the Bulldogs of coach John ZcoU ran

again Townley sank both Bus time to
take a 82-81 advantage.
After another Bluefield steal Dawn
Faw received 2 foul shots and downed 1
for a 83-81 edge with :10 left. After
Bluefield controlled another of numerous
dutch rebounds. Lynn Kelly was sent to
the line to hit 1 of 2 and provide the
winning margin.
“ We can't go too deep on our bench and
th a t’s u problem," admitted Batoon.
"They do have an outstanding team with
some four-year players. We just don’t
have those.”
Lucado topped all scorers with 26,
followed by Kelly with 17 and Townley
with 12 for 7-2 division II Bluefield.
For the hometown Haiders, Sanford's
Cathy Jones pitched in 22. Katrina
Anderson &lt;15&gt; and Hoessler 114)
followed.
BLUEFIELD STATF. COLLEGE (HI)
Townley 3 64112, Belcher '. 1-2 3. Faw 1
3-4 5. Lucado 12 2-3 26, Perry 0 0-0 0.
Whisman 0 2-2 2. Stcwert 4 2-510. doings 2
1- 4 5, Bowling0 4-4 4. Kelly 7 3-717, Totals
30 24-39 81
SEMINOLE (HI)
Melton 0 0-1 0. Patrick 3 2-2 8. Jones 10
2- 4 22, McClelland 2 6-7 10, Winterheimer
10-02, Hoessler 3 8-914, Anderson 6 3-615.
Smith 4 2-2 10, Totals 29 23-32 81.
Bluefield State College
34 50 — 84
Seminole
37 41 - 81
Total Fouls - SCC 28, Bluefield 21
Foul Out — Lucado, McClelland,
Hoessler.
Technical - None.

o i l l o d W-11 l e i o t

John Pinone added 16 for the 8-2
Wildcats.
"That was a sweet win, a total team
effort," said an admittedly relieved
Massimino. "The key word for us tonight
was progress. It's a prestigious national
game anytime you play Notre Dame."
Notre Dame, 6-5, got 15 points from
freshman Joseph Price, who learned
Wednesday his father had died following
a year’s battle with cancer. The Notre
Dame team attended a special service
for Price's father before the game.
Also In the Top 20, No. 18 North
Carolina defeated Clemson, 76-70.
At Clemson, S.C., Thurl Bailey and
Ernie Myers scored 25 points each to help
the Wolfpack.

LAKE BRANTLEY (53): IJoyd 3 0-2 6.
Garriques 0 3-5 3, Shorcy 1 94) 2, Evans 1
1-2 3, Trombo J 1-1 7, Groseclose 2 1-2 5,
ZuUoOO-10, Moore 0 04) 0, Hoffman 115-9
27. Totals: 21 11-22.
DEI-AND (57):
Watson 10 2-2 22,
Cooper 51-211, Gilmore 104) 2. Carter 100 2, Brown 404) 8, Ross 0 2-4 2, Anderson 2
04) 4. Fair 2 2-66, Weickel 0 9-1 0, Gauvine
0 9-1 0. Totals: 25 7-16.
laike Brantley
13 9 16 15-53
Del :ind
20 15 12 10-57
Total fouls: lX*Lmd 2 1 ,1-akc Brantley
16. Fouled out: DeLind, Brown; Like
Brantley, Hoffman. Technical fouls:
Like Brantley bench.

Lions Rip Eustis, 71-57

M erild Photo* 6y Tom Vincent

S C C * M elissa M c C le lla n d (le ft! b a t t l e s

fo r a re b o u n d w ith B e c k y B e lc h e r o f B lu efieltl S ta te .

Winter Park Jolts Rams, 60 ■39; Lake Brantley, Lady Greyhounds Fall
I,ake M ary’s I-ady Hams got off to an
11-3 lead at Winter Park Friday night,
but, it was all down-hill from there as the
Hams dropped a 60-39 decision to the
Lidy Wildcats.
"We made a lot of defensive mistakes
and took a lot of bad shots," I j k e Mary
coach Bill Moore said. "It was our worst
game of the year."
U k c Mary. 8-3, was outscored 21-10
remainder of the first half afler taking
Ihe 11-3 lead, ll was the Hams' second
loss lo the I*ady Wildcats this season.
Winter Park now stands at 9-1.
Winter Park increased its lead to 36-29
by the end of the third quarter ar.d, at one
point in the fourth quarter, the Hams
were within six points but never got any
closer.
"We started to give up several easy
baskets in the fourth quarter," Moore

said. "That and taking bad shots really
hurt us."
The U dy Wildcats outscored lak e
Mary, 24-10, in the fourth quarter.
Michelle Swartz had an impressive allaround game for the Hams with 10 points
and eight rebounds, 1-aura Glass added
eight points and pulled down 21 boards.
Winter Park's Felisha Johnson took
scoring honors with 26 points, Nina Tobin
tossed in 17 and Jerri Ferree added 10.
The lady Hams host Apopka on
Monday night.
LAKE MAKV |39)
Swartz 3 4-110, L. Glass 4 0-0 B, P. (Jlass
1 0-1 2, Averill 3 1-2 7, Gregory 2 041 4,
Fenning 10412, Johnson 0 1-31, C. Hall 2
1-3 5. Totals 16 7-13 39.
WJNTEH PARK (60)
Johnson 13 0-1 26, Tobin 5 7-9 17,
Spalding 104)2, F erree 5 0-310, Christer 2

A l i o 'D o w n o u l s c o r e d

Brantley. 15-9, in the second quarter lo
hold a commanding 35-22 edge at halftime.
"Our shooting was really cold," said
Peterson about his 4-7 Patriots. “We only
shot 38 percent and they shot 40 percent."
The Patriots started to roll in the
second half, cutting into DeLind's huge
lead behind,ihe inside scoring of Paul
Hoffman and the outside snipping of
Dennis Groserlosc and Mike IJoyd.
Hoffman, who led all scorers with 27
points, tossed in 10 points down the
stretch while IJoyd added six and
Groseclose chipped in five.
Brantley pulled within five (mints with
six minutes to go, hut could draw no
closer than the final margin (four
points i.
The Patriots held high-scoring Chase
Brown in check. The 6-3 scoring machine
could manage just eight points due lo Ihe
Brantley defenders and foul trouble. He
eventually fouled out as did Hoffman.

Villanova Rally Topples Irish
United Press International
Villanova Coach Hollic Massimino
didn't enjoy himself for most of his
team’s contest against Notre Dame
Friday night. The No. 14 Wildcats trailed
by two points at halftime and were down,
11-33, with 12:22 remaining.
"But Gary Mcl-aln turned the game
around with the way he played i Notre
Dame’s John l Paxson." said Massimino.
"Gary’s always fired up."
Paxson had eight of the Irish first 14
points of the second half, but Me I a in
then shut him down and Villanova roared
back with a 12-2 rally, Ed Pinckney, who
had 19 points, dropped in two free throws
that broke a 51-51 tie and the Wildcats
went on to a 61-55 victory.

Alexis Cleveland pumped in 21 points
and Lyman added one point on a
technical foul for a Seabreeze playing
wearing a golden necklace Friday to
come away with a narrow 79419 victory
over the Sand Crabs in Five Star Con­
ference basketball at Daytona Beach
Cleveland paced a first-half blitz for
the Greyhounds who built a 16-38 lead
During the first period, the necklace was
detected on a Seabreeze player and
Lyman’s Greg Pilot hit the free throw
which turned out to be the difference in
ihe game Wearing jewelry is a violation
of the Florida High School Activities
Association bylaws.
Tlu* Sand Crabs pulled into a tie in the
fourth quarter, bul Cleveland, with help
from the Pile' brothers, held ...i for the
one-point decision
Greg Pilot finished with 11 points while
brother James tossed in a career-high 17
markers. Tom Feller, Lyman's 6-1
center, added 12.
Lyman. 3-2 in the Five Star, meets
first-place DeLind, 5-1, Tuesday at
Lmgwood after traveling to Oviedo
Saturday night
I.ONGWOnn 170): Ihllman 2 06 4.
Cleveland 10 4-5 24. Greg Pilot 5 1*2 11.
Jam es Pilot 6 5-9 17. Feller 6 0-0 12,
Stewart 1 0-1 2. Totals: 30 19-17
SEABREEZE (69l: Heed 8 3-1 19
Wiggins 194)2. Robinson 65-917. Johnson
7 2-3 16, McCoy 1 0-1 2, Berry 3 9-2 6
Fudge 3 1-27 Totals: 29 11-21.
Longwood
20 26 12 12—70
Seabreeze
18 20 It 17-69
Team fouls Seabreeze 11. Logwood
14. Fouled out none Technical: Fudge,
jewelry

Prep B a sk e tb a ll
0-1 4, Pierre 0 1-2 I.Totals: 2G 8-16 60.
Total fouls — lak e Mary 15. Winter
Park 13.
Fouled out - none
Technical — none
In other girls action Friday night, lake
Brantley ran into a devastating Evans
team and dropped a 65-46 decision to the
lad y Trojans at Evans.
The lady Patriots. 4-9 and 3-4 in the
Five Star Conference, were led by
M ichelle Brown's 12 points, Linda
Trimble ami Linda Nunez added 9 apiece
and Rhonda Vazquez chipped in 8 before
fouling nut.
Evans' Ava Anderson was the game's
high scorer with 25 points.

la k e Brantley travels to Seminole
Monday night and takes on la k e Mary
Thursday night at lake Mary.
LAKE BRANTLEY |&lt;6|
Vazquez 4 04) 8. Nunez 41-2 9. Pritchett
0 2-2 2. Asplen 2 2-2 6. Brown 5 3-4 12,
Trimble 4 1-4 0. Totals: 19 8-14 46.
EVANS (65)
Seay 5 2-9 12. Anderson 9 7-14 25,
Williams 9 1-2 19, Manuel 1 2-2 4,
Bouchard 1 041 2, Massengalc 1 1-6 3.
Totals: 26 13-33 65.
Total fouls - lake Brantley 20,
Evans 16.
Fouled out - Vazquez, Brown.
Technicals
none.
Elsewhere Frida), Kim Dewberry hit
two free throws in the closing seconds lo
lift Daytona Beach Seabreeze to a 48-44
victory over Lyman at Daytona Beach.

Tlic la d y Sami Crabs built a eightpoint lead through three quarters, but the
Greyhounds rallied behind 5-11 center
Vikki McMurrer and guard Pam Jackson
in the final four minutes.
McMurrer finished with 18 points and
Jacksoij tossed in 15.
LYMAN (44):
McMurrer 8 2-2 18,
Jackson 7 1-215. Goroum 14-4 6, lam on 1
1-5 3, Howland 0 04) 0, Gilliam 1 04) 2,
Totals: 18 8-12 44.
SEABREEZE |4H|; Willis 7 1-6 15.
Tolliver 4 3-1 11. Dewberry 3 2-1 B,
Bradley 3 0-16, Wesley 2 04)4, Hollins 100 2. Totals: 21 6-15 48
Lyman
Seabreeze

16 7 10
46 II It

11—41
8—18

total fouls: Lyman 19, Seabreeze 14.
Fouled out: Jackson. Technical fouls
none.

Oviedo's Ronnie Murphy spiced his 26
points with three rousing slam dunks
Friday night us the Lions (ripped Eustis,
71-57, at Eustis,
For coach Dalle "D igger" Phillips'
Lons it was the seventh win in eight
games and unproved their season mark
lo 8-4. The Uons take on equally hot
Lyman Saturday night at Oviedo.
Murphy, who had scoring support from
Bill McCartney (13) and Darrin Relchle
1 12), helped Oviedo to a 31-15 lead
midway through the second quarter.
Defensively, the Lions stymied Eustis
with a 1-3-1 defense. Eustis chipped
away at the L ons’ lead in the third
quarter, bul Murphy stole the ball and
slammed one early In the fourth quarter
to stem the Eustis Momentum.
The Lons also forced 31 turnovers.
OVIEDO (71): Boston 0, Wrilh 4,
Knotts2, Kewlcy 6. Norton 0. Mulphy 26,
Reichle 12, Angel 8, McCartney 13, Klukis
0, Schwab 0. Totals 29 13*20 71.
EUSTIS |S7|: Ed. Williams 5. Er.
Williams 8, S. Williams 10, Evans 8,
Gerken 0, Perry 0, Jackson 10, McLixl
12, ,Mlikens 4. Totals 25 7-13 57.
Halftime Oviedo 37, Eustis 20; Fouls
Oviedo 17, Eustis 16; Technical fouls
Murphy

V
t le a i y

k
L
r

�6 A -E v tn in q H e ra ld Tanford, F I.

Sunday, Jan, f , 1113

Pins By Green, Hill
Force Ram-Lyman Tie
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Som etim es in wrestling it's not
whether you win or lose, it's whether you
get pinned.
l^ake M ary’s Rams faced an in­
teresting situation against L ym an's
Greyhounds. The Rams had a 23-20 lead
with three matches to go. They were
guaranteed six points at unlimited
because of a Lyman forfeit.
So, all 189-pounder Ned Kolbjomsen
and 223-pounder Ed Ades had to do was
keep from getting pinned to give the
Rams a victory over the Greyhounds.
It wasn't as simple as it sounds,
though, since coming onto the mat next
were the Greyhounds’ main maulers —
Dirk Smith and Mike Hill.
Well, the Rams went one for two
against the two Lyman brutes and settled
for a 29-29 standoff with the Greyhounds
in the first meeting between the two
schools at Lake Mary High School Friday
night.

Herald Photo by Tom Vlncont

L a k e M a r y ’s J a c k L ik e n s ( le f t) w a s in c o n tro l
F r id a y n ig h t d u r in g his 115-pound w re stlin g
m a tc h w ith L y m a n 's P a t K ell. L ik e n s d e c isio n e d

(te ll. 7-3, b u t th e H u m s a n d th e G r e y h o u n d s w o u n d
u p d e a d lo c k e d at 29-29.

Seminoles Rout Boone, Lose To Patriots
Coach Scott Sherm an’s Fighting
Seminoles concluded their dual meet
wrestling season with a win and a loss
Friday night at Orlando.
The Seminoles hammered Boone, 5845,
but then dropped a 41-20 decision to I,ake
Brantley. Coach Kevin C arpenger's
Patriots swept both matches, coasting
past Boone, 47-0.
"We wrestled super against Boone, but
when we got to Luke Brantley we didn't
have anything left," said Sherman about
his 34 Tribe.
Sophomore Tony Brown (129), Vince
Clark, (141), Bonnie Watson (115) and
Kevin Tapscott (135) all won two m at­
ches for the 'Nolcs while senior Gary
Gonterman (170) won one and tied one.
Brown, a first-year wrestler, trimmed
Boone's Jo e R ochester, 10-7, and
manhandled BUI Black, 10-2, to Improve

Prep W restling

On tap this week is the Junior Varsity
Toumument on Thursday and the Five
Star Conference meet on Saturday. Both
events will be at Seminole High School.

his dual meet record to 6-1. Watson, a
senior, ran his slate to 7-0 with a forfeit
victory and an 16-3 win over Jim Davis of
Brantley.
Clark mauled Boone’s Dean Reusson,
15-3, and pinned laike Brantley’s Kyle
Harry in 5:45 with a cradle. G ark is 5-2.
Tapscott also ran his mark to 5-2 with an
easy 16-2 romp over Boone’s Craig
Cashin and a 7-0 victory over the
Patriots’ Jack Lasch.
Gonterm an, 5-1-1, pinned Charles
Conoley and battled to a standoff with
I,ake Brantley's Dean Shirley.
In other mat action Friday, Bishop
Moore swamped Oviedo, 57-6, and l-ake
Howell dropped Colonial, 33-24.

SEMINOLE SI. BOONE 4
101 - Marcontel (SI forfeit. 101 — Clark (S)
p Edwards. I 30; US — Prentice (S) forfeit;
ID — Watson (S) forfeit; I lf — Brown (S) d.
Rochester 10 &gt;; ISS — Tapscott IS) d. Cashin
IS J. 141 — Clark (SI d Reusson IS 2, 141 —
Turner (S) d Good 4 1; IS* - Priew e (Bl d
Williams 9 t , 170 — Gonterman IS) p. Conoley
S OO. t i l — Stewart (B) d M organ 7 2; 222 —
Wilks (SI forfeit; HW — Zim m erm an IS)
forfeit
LAKE BRANTLEY 41,SEMINOLE 20
1(1 — Martin (B) p Marcontel 1:41; 104 —
Roth (B) d Clark II S. I1S — W atson IS) d
Davis 1(2; 122 — Ollenberger (B) forfeit. 120
— Brown (S) d Black 10 2; I2S — Tapscott (S)
d Lasch 7 0. 141—Clark (SI p H arry S:4S; 140
— B rucafolB t p Turner 2 53. ISO — Goddard
I Bl d Williams 4 S. 170 — Shirley (B). Con
ter man IS) lie; III —Zimbler (B id M organ 0
3 . 222 - Schumann IB) lorfelt. HW — Craft
IB) forfeit

"We were
wrestling with history
tonight," said Lake Mary assistant coach
Doug Peters. "Lyman is an established
program. We’re two years old. The tie
was more in our favor than theirs."
Trailing by three, Smith, undefeated
(KM)) and owner of the 189-pound Lyman
Christmas Tournament belt, carved out a
4-0 victory over a bloodied Ned Kolb­
jomsen.
With the score deadlocked at 23-23, Hill
needed a pin for the 'Hounds to salvage a
tie. He didn't waste much time. Circling
Ades like a caged IJon, Hill put his best
shoulder into the Ram wrestler and
leveled him for a takedown.
It was over in 51 seconds when the allstate linebacker smothered Ades near
the out-of-bounds line for the pin and a
29-23 lead. When Lake Mary heavyweight
Robert Rowl ambled onto the mat to pick
up his forfeit, the deadlock was realized.
"Hill was really wired," said I^ake
Mary coach Frank Schwartz. "H e's
really tough, but Ades didn't back off.
Both he and Kolbjomsen went right at
their two studs.”
While the Smith-Kolbjomsen and HillAdes matches were instrumental in the
outcome, Schwartz and Lyman coach

Prep W restling
W e were wrestling with

five years are no fluke. Neither are
the three championships.
Along with the winning records
comes a unique experience for the
players. Haley takes his teams on
"the road" every year. This year,
the road led to the Bluegrass
Tournament in Kentucky. Other
games were played in Georgia, and
Tennessee.
"I guess it's a pretty good field
trip," Haley said. "You wouldn’t
believe how many of these kids
haven’t been out of Florida. It gives
them a chance to see other states
and meet other people."
But, still, why docs he stay?
" I’ve been asked that question a
lot," said Haley. "As far as a high
school situation, I'm happy here at
Vanguard. I could probably stay
here the rest of my life...and I might
do that."
Haley has been approached by a
junior college but he said no thanks.
"I don't think the Junior college

Prep B asketb all
position is a good one in Florida,"
Haley said. "You only have the
players for a short time and there
are so many eligibility problems.
"And with all of the rule changes,
the real good kids with less than 2.0
(grade) averages are going the
NAIA route. The JCs are not as
competitive as in the past.”
What about a coaching op­
portunity at a four-year school?
"I had a chance to go to a fouryear school," said Haley. "But I
didn't think it was the opportune
time to do it. I would have had to
take a pay cut. The situation just
didn't come at the proper time."
Haley didn't reveal the school, but
It Is believed to be either the
University of South Florida (which
former Knight Ingram Purvis
plays) or the University of Florida

(where ex-Knight Nabe Palme
attends).
Purvis, who played on the fin
championship team during the 1977
78 season, and Palmer, who starts a
point guard for the Gators, are jus
two of a fine crop of players Hale
turns out every year.
Power forward Zebedee Howell l
a co-captain with Big 10 powerhous
Minnesota. Roosevelt Davison play
for Bradley, last y e a r 's NI'
champion. Dale Osborne, a 8-7 ali
stater last year, signed with Sout
Alabama, the scourge of the Su
Belt Conference.
"In the last nine years, we hav
had 32 players and m anagers gc
scholarships. Of those 32, 26 are stl
In school or have gotten thei
degree," points out Haley.
"T hat’s more of a highlight (th
graduation) to me than the youn
m an playing college basketball.
While the percentage of ai
complishment Is excellent, Hale

an established program.

P ro F o o tb a ll
for a touchdown rather than a field goal. The
move backfired when Brian Sipe's pass to
Ozzle Newsome In the end zone was In­
tercepted by Mike Davis.
The Raiders went on to win the Super Bowl
that year.
"That's the kind of team we are," said Davis
of his big play. "We'll do anything it takes to
get the job done."
Geveland never seemed to recover from
that playoff loss two years ago. The Browns
failed to make the playoffs last year and
barely qualified with a « record In the
current strike-torn season. The Raiders, 8-1,
finished with the best record in the American
Conference.
In the two National Conference games
Saturday, Detroit, 4-5, visits Washington, 8-1,
and Green Bay, 5-3-1, hosts St. Louis, 54. On
Sunday, Tampa Bay, 54, is at Dallas, 6-3, and
Atlanta, 54, at Minnesota, 54, In the NFC. The
New York Jets, 8-3, will be at Cincinnati, 7-2,
and San Diego, 6-3, at Pittsburgh, 6-3, Sunday
in the AFC.

White Has Jammed Thumb
DALLAS (UP1) — Cowboys quarterback
Danny White, who jammed his thumb during
practice, said he w u optimistic about playing
in Sunday's playoff game with the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers.
"It doesn't feel broken right now," he said
Thursday, "but it didn't feel broken when I
broke it in training camp three years ago.”
White w u scheduled for Xrays today and
listed u probable for the first round playoff
game Sunday.

•—

»

I

Even if the thumb Is not broken, he might
not be fit for Sunday’s game. Following his
injury Thursday he said he did not think he
could grip a football.
“Gosh, no. There's no way. But it could feel
better in a couple of days. It's really hard to
say. If there's Just a little bit of pain, I could
play. But right now I couldn't throw a football
if I had to."
Cowboys spokesman Doug Todd said White
Jammed his thum b on defensive lineman
Randy White’s helmet.
“They put a splint on U and will keep It Iced
down tonight,” Todd said. "Then well X-ray It
in the morning to be sure It Isn't broken. We
don’t think It Is serious, but he won't practice
Friday."
While's replacem ents are Gary Hogeboom
and Glenn Carano.
His absence could cause problems for the
Cowboys' offense, which h u leaned heavily on
passing this season.

Montana Needs Surgery
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (UPI) - San
Francisco 49er quarterback Joe Montana may
require off-season surgery because of a minor
knee problem.
Montana said Thursday the team 's or­
thopedic surgeon, Dr. Fred Behling, recom­
mended a further examination of his left knee.
He said be would seek a second opinion next
week, and Behling said he believed the
quarterback will require an examination by
arthrogram or arthroscope "to determine if he
has a cartilage problem ."
Montana suffered the injury during a lateseason game when his knee got twisted in a
plle-dp. •
"It's something that should be looked into

Beauchamp had Wasserman on his back
with 10 seconds left but couldn't get
enough leverage for the stick.

We're two years old. The
tie was more in our favor

Bob Olson 1 1411 gave the Rams a 17-14
lead next when he pinned freshman
O iris Waxier at 3:07 after building an 114 advantage.

than theirs'
—Doug Peters
Lake Mary assistant, coach
Skip Pletzer both pointed to Willie
Green's pin of Lyman's Robert "Tootle"
Quisenberry at 171 pounds as pivotal.
"Green’s pin of Quisenberry was the
turning point," said Pletzer. "Quisen­
berry has all kinds of moves up high. He
can either pin you or get pinned. Green
did a good job on him ."
Quisenberry broke to a 2-0 lead with a
takedown at 1:55. He dominated the early
going until Green escaped at 1:17, but
Quisenberry came back with a reversal
for a 4-1 lead at 1:12.
All of a sudden Green reversed
Quisenberry and pinned him at 1:08. “ It
all happened so quick, I don't know what
hold I used," said elated Green after the
match. "I think it was a head and arm ."
Regardless, Green’s pin gave the
Rams a 23-20 lead heading into the final
three matches.
"I thought we were in real trouble,"
confessed Schw artz. "T h eir upper
weights are so much physically stronger
than us. But Green did a great job und so
did Kolbjomsen. Hill was just too tough
for Ades.
"But we'll take it."
In the lower weights, U ke Mary
jumped to a 9-0 lead when Ivan Carbia
(101) pinned G irls Battle in 1:26 and
Jack likens (108) decisioned Pat Bell, 73.
Lyman came back a s freshman Scott
Andrew &lt;115) dominated Tom Olson in un

still worries about the other six.
"That's the thing about coaching
that gets discouraging," said the 39year-old mentor. "The player that
lets you down. When you’ve put so
much time in with a player and he
lets you down, whether it be a
discipline problem or a team
problem, it gets to you."
Haley, however, takes steps to see
that it doesn't happen. For the
players in the Vanguard program,
academic advisors and summer jobs
are provided.
"If a kid is a part of our program,
it Is a year-round deal," said Haley.
"I work a lot for the players.
Whatever you put Into basketball
you will get out.
"If you’re not going to put a lot
into basketball, you won’t get much
out," he concluded.
That last statem ent is something
Jim Haley will never have to worry
about.

Miami Has To Settle With Patriots; Bucs Face Dallas

United Press International
The 3-0 final hardly represents the score the
Miami Dolphins believe they must settle with
the New England Patriots.
In the Dec. 12 game in Foxboro, Mass.,
known as the "Snowplow Game," New Eng­
land Coach Ron Meyer waved a tractor onto
the field to clear a spot In the snow to allow
John Smith to kick the game-winning Held goal
with less than five minutes to go.
The move resulted In n wave of controversy,
a bitter reaction by Miami Dolphin Coach Don
Shula and new NFL guidelines prohibiting
such an incident In the future.
The Dolphins will get a chance to avenge the
loss when they host the Patriots in the opening
round of the NFL playoffs Saturday. If it's any
consolation to the Dolphins, Meyer said he
wouldn't repeat the move If he had the chance.
"Under the circumstances, where I sit right
now, I would not have done It," Meyer said.
"At the tim e, it was a snap decision that just
happened to run across my mind
The Dolphins, 7-2, have a four-game post­
season losing streak since winning Super Bowl
VIII eight years ago, but the Patriots, 54, have
lost 14 straight to Miami In the Orange Bowl,
going back to a victory on Nov. 27,1966 — the
first gam e played between the teams.
The Cleveland Browns also would like to
erase the m em ory of a b e n t breaking loss on a
frigid day, when they face the Beiders
Saturday in Los Angeles.
The last tim e the team s met, the Raiders
won a 14-12 decision in a Jan. 4,1981 playoff
game at Cleveland. It was a game that made
Browns’ Coach Sam Rutlgliano the most
second-guessed m an In football.
With the Browns on the Raiders' 13 yard-line
and 45 seconds remaining, Rutlgliano opted

In one of the most exciting matches of
the night, Like Mary's Todd Beauchamp
(135) fell behind. 8-0, but rallied in the
last 2:24 with two reversals, a near fall
and a penalty point for stalling by Mike
W asserm an to earn an fl-8 tie.

history tonight. Lyman is

‘B ask etb all E m pire’ K eeps Haley Happy
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
It's probably the goal of most
basketball coaches to win a state
cham pionship. Ocala Vanguard
coach Jim Haley has reached that
goal three times In the past five
years.
When som eone reaches th at
pinnacle of success three times, it
usually dictates a move to a higher
level. The sum m it has been
conquered and it's time to seek out
new summits.
Yet, Haley doesn't appear to be
looking for new horizons to conquer.
Ills horizon seems to rise and set on
the Ocala Vanguard Knights and the
Kingdom of the Sun Holiday Gassic.
"Why should he go anywhere?"
asked Ocala Star Banner assistant
sports editor Vince Murray. "He’s
got an empire here."
That he does. Haley’s 216 wins in
9W years indicate that. And four
trips to the state 3A tournament in

8-1 victory and Juwan I-ee 1 123) escaped
and added a takedown in the final 30
seconds to nip Jeff F arm er, 3-0. Joey
Lockwood 1 129) built a 15-1 lead before
pinning Virgil Grant at 4:50.

during the offseason," Behling said. “ It’s
probably not going to bother him during the
off-eeason, but you hate to let a thing like that
go and then have It flare up at training cam p
and wish you’d done something about it.
"It's a lot sm arter to have it taken care of
now."

James Placed On Reserve
FOXBORO, Maas. (UPI) - The New
F.ng iiu t Patriots placed strong safety Roland
Jam es on injured reserve Thursday and, In a
surprise move, activated running back Andy
Johnson for Saturday's playoff game with the
Miami Dolphins.
Johnson, considered by many the most
versatile back on the Patriots, has been on
injured reserve since Sept. 9, although he has
been healthy for some time. The move Is a
surprise in that Johnson has been outspoken
about his treatm ent and Is not one of coach
Ron Meyer’s favorites.
Meyer h u been upset with Johnson for some
time, starting with the halfback missing an
optional minl-cimp last spring. The coach
since h u said Johnson doesn't fit Into the
Patriots' style of running back and had a
supposed air-clearing meeting with h lm la rt
week.
Johnson, who was building his home at the
tkne of the optional mini-camp, broke his hand
early in training camp. But he h u been
healthy and anxious to play since before the
strike.
James, a No. 1 pick In 1979, h u missed New
England's last two games, the first due to a
hamstring Injury and the season finale due to a
right knee Injury sustained in practice a week
ago. Second-year defensive back Keith Lee
will continue to fill in for James, the team said.

f A

l l B

The Greyhounds bounced back to tie
when Donny lock wood edged Brent
Blakely, 8-4. Shane Harwell 1 158) set the
stage for the Green-Quisenberrv en­
counter by muscling to a 4-1 victory over
Zach Martin.
"It was a good match. Both teams
wrestled with a lot of enthusiasm ," said
Pletzer. " I t’s still too bad somebody
didn't win.”
In the Junior varsity m atch, Lyman
rode pins by Chad Dubin ( 101). Kevin
Frank 1 123), Mike Koski &lt;1291 and Derek
Smith 11591 to a 48-23 victory over the
Rams.
101 — Ivan Carbia (I.M) p. Chris
Battle 1:26.
108 — Jack IJkens I I.M i d. Pat Bell 7-3
115 — Scott Andrew ( I.) d. Tom Olson
8-1
123— Juwan Lee (L) d. Jeff Funner 3-

0

129 — Joey Iockwood (1.) p. Virgil
Grant 4:50
135 — Todd Beauchamp &lt;LMl Mike
Wasserman tie 8-8
141 - Bob Olson i I.M i p. Chris Waxier
3:07
118 — Donny I/ickwood (I.) d. Brent
Blakely 8-4
158 — Shane Harwell (Li d. Zach
Martin 4-\
171 — Willie Green (LM) p. Robert
Quisenberry 1:08
189 Dirk Smith &lt;L) d. Ned Kolb­
jom sen 4-0
223 - Mike Hill (L) p. Ed Ades :51
L'NL — Robert Rawls (LM) won by
forfeit

i r c l L I Q

U

O

R

2

“ J

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�Evening Herald, Saniord, FI._______ Sunday. Jan, t, 1983—VA

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
SeminoleBaseball, Softball
Sets Registration Schedule
Registration for Seminole Pony League Baseball will
be held Saturday, Jan. 15, and the two following
Saturdays at the Seminole Pony Baseball Complex on
State Road 419 near Winter Springs. Registration
begins at 10 a m. on Saturday and runs through 2 p.m.
Birth certificates are required and fees are as
follows:
Baseball — Pinto (7-0 year olds), $35, Mustang (9-10
year olds), Bronco (11-12 year olds) and Pony (13-14
year olds), $45.
The Seminole Softball Club will also hold registration
at the same times, fees are $35 for Starlings (9-19),
Hawks (11-12) and Eagles (13-15).
Registration sites are as follows:
Forest City — Wekiva Elementary, Forest City
Elementary, Sabal Point Elementary. For more in­
formation call Gene Devaney at 962-2565..
Casselberry - Pony Baseball Field. Contact Ed
Taubensee (634-0447).
Lake Mary — Lake Mary Elementary. Contact Ed
Suggs (322-7923).
Winter Springs - P o n y - te s :! J t Field, CVitact
Roger Clem (834-1202).
Ixmgwood — Pony Baseball Field. Contact Nap
Reyes (831-1063).
Sanford — Sunland Field, Zayre's Department Store
and Sanford Twin Cinema. Contact Jim Lucas (8318823).
For Softball registration all girls must register at the
Seminole Pony Baseball Complex, for more in­
formation contact Roger Richardson at 831-6408.

Entries Available For Bowlers
The Seminole County Women’s Bowling Association
will hold its 22nd Annual Tournament on the weekends
of Feb. 54 and Feb. 12-13 at Bowl America in Sanford.
Entry blanks are available at all three Seminole
County bowling establishments. Entries will be closed
on Jan. 15.
In recent bowling news, the Seaworthy Products
League had a 691 scratch set rolled by Ron Allman. The
T.G.I.F. U ague had a 262 scratch game by Charlie
Plant.

Rangers Rout Nordlques, 5- I

;

'

United Press International
Vaclav Nedomansky is a fan of New Vork Rangers’
Coach Herb Brooks' circular motion system and
Brooks considers Nedomansky a premier powerptay
threat.
Fittingly, Nedomansky made the most of his reunion
with the Rangers Friday night. His fourth goal of the
season was the game-winner in the Rangers' 5-1 rout of
the Quebec Nordiques in New York.
Nedomansky, 38, a forward, started the season with
New York and scored a power-play goal in the season
opener. He was then claimed on waivers by St. Louis
but returned to New York in a trade Wednesday.
Ncdomansky'a power-play goal at 5:55 of the second
period gave New York a 2-0 lead Friday night. Don
Maloney also had a goal and assist and Mike Rogers
and Rei]o Ruotsalalnen added two assists each for the
Rangers, who are 4-0-1 in their last five games.
Devils 2, Bruins 2
At East Rutherford, N.J., Ray Bourque scored on a
40-foot slapshot with 3:11 remaining to lift Boston.
Boston oulshot the Devils, 150, In the final period.
Sabres 5, Canucks 5
At Buffalo, N.Y., Tony McKegney scored two goals
and set up Phil Housley’s score with three seconds
remaining to pull Buffalo into a tie.
Oilers 7, Penguins 2
At Edmonton, Alberta, Glenn Anderson scored three
goals and Wayne Gretzky got two as the Oilers breezed
to their ninth win in their last 11 games.

Old Fighters Never Die,
But They Usually Survive
NEW YORK (UPI) - Old fighters
never die and now they've decided to do
something to show everybody they're not
and are capable of helping themselves.
It isn't much, but at least it's a
"modest beginning." That’s what a
couple of them , Johnny Colan and Danny
Kapilow, are calling it, anyway.
Both were pretty fair fighters in their
day, Colan having fought as a light
heavyweight and Kapilow as a welter­
weight. Neither ever was a world champ,
but both were top notchcrs.
Colan, 58, b a prosperous insurance
executive and he’s still in good enough
physical shape any mugger would be a
sucker to take him on.
Kapilow, who'll be 62 in a few weeks, is
no less formidable looking, and if he ever
needed any help, he'd know where to get
some in a hurry as President of I^ocal 966
of the International Brotherhood of
Teamsters.
Between them , Colan and Kapilow are
ihe leading nf(lenrs in a ^ th e r small
organization made up of former boxers
and cornermen in the New York-New
Jersey area. The group is called Veteran
Boxers Association, Ring No. 8, and is
dedicated to assisting old-time boxers
and their handlers. Colan is president
and Kapilow first vice president.
Helping them both immeasurably is
another old fighter, Charey Gellman,
who fought as a middleweight under the
name Chuck H alper. G ellm an is
president of Jewish Memorial Hospital in
Manhattan and through hb efforts, he
has seen to it the hospital has been

Milton
Richman
UPI Sports Editor

providing care for veteran boxers for
years.
Thursday the 175-member organization
enjoyed its proudest moment ever.
The group announced the establish­
ment of the Ray Arcel Medical Center
here in New York City, a facility that will
offer
free
diagnostic
physical
examinations to veteran boxers and
cornermen. If those examinations show
medical treatm ent is needed, Gellman
has offered to arrange for that through
his hospital.
You should’ve seen the way they
turned out for the official announcement
— it was like a galhlfuigTiTiiit'cidir
Jake iaM olta, the Raging Bull, was
there, more like a happy lamb. Other oldtimers who showed up, all of them
smiling and happy over what was hap­
pening, were Billy Graham, A1 Reid, Phil
Terranova, M axie Shapiro, Herbie
Kronowitz, Artie Irvine, Petey Hayes,
Eddie Blunt, Jim m y Carollo and Roger
Donoghue. Vito Antuofermo, the 29-yearold former middleweight king who
retired a year ago and isn't such an oldtimer, also was there along with referee
Arthur Mercantc.
‘‘They've never had anvthinR for

fighters before,'' Graham said. ‘‘The
veteran fighter is ‘the forgotten man.’
Something like this is terrific."
Arcel was happier than anyone. The
popular 83-year-old boxing tra in e r,
handler and adviser, who has worked
with 20 world champions in h b career,
said what a great honor he considered it
to have the medical center named after
him.
"Boxing has always been my life," he
said. "I've spent 65 years in it and the
young boxer was always important to
me. I wasn't only his doctor, lawyer,
adviser and psychiatrist, but most of all I
was his friend. Hb friend and h b
teacher. If this is the result of all the
work and effort I put in, then thank God
... It was worth it."
Kapilow talked about some of the
fighters he knew who had nothing when
they died, even former champions like
Joe Loub and Mickey Walker and others
like Tony Galento and Lulu Costantino.
_ None-af *h» ild-Unv’ .N)Tcr--*vho at­
tended the dedication of their medical
center went away hungry. There was
plenty of food and drink for all of them.
That was largely because the restaurant
in which they gathered, Delsomma’s, is
owned by five brothers, one of whom,
Frank Cardenall, once fought a fourround draw with Kapilow.
“ After that fight," Kapilow remem­
bered, laughing, "I said to Frank, ‘One
day, you're going to pay for it."’
On Thursday, he, along with hb
brothers, did. Everything was on them.

MAHER
FOR 2
J im
M a h e r, re se rv e
f o r w a r d fo r S e m in o le
C o m m u n ity
C o lleg e,
h its tw o of h is se v e n
p o in ts in th e H a id e r s ’
ro m p o v e r M um ber
(T o ro n to .
C a n .)
C o lle g e
T h u rsd a y
n ig h t. S a t u r d a y n ig h t,
th e IO-G H a id e r s ta k e
on S t, J o h n 's J u n io r
C o lle g e a t 7 :3 0 .

Hoch's 63 Leads Tucson
TUCSON, A rb. (UPI) - Scott Hoch with a 7-imderpar 63 that matched the Randolph Park North course
record leads the $300,1)00 Tucson Open - the first event
on the 1963 PGA tour —after the second round Friday.
H b total so far gives him a 36-hole lead a t 10-wderpar 130, one stroke ahead of rookie Joey RaasetL
Hoch noted he missed 11 weeks last year because of a
pinched nerve in his back.
" I earned about $175,000 In the first half of last year
and only $20,000 in the last part,’’ he said. " I was kind
of down, depressed."
But, he added, “ I've been hitting the ball well the last
two or three m onths."
Of h b round 31-32-round Friday, he said, “ I didn't hit
fantastically today, but I had a phenomenal round
putting. I putted just where I saw them and read them
right."
.

&gt;

Jai-A lai
AtOflandoSem inole
Friday night results
F irstg a m e
1 Pita Reyes
10 00 5 00 3 JO
] G .tbola F arah
4 00 1 60
SMiket Aguirre
6 60
O 11-3) 15 *0. T (13 31 HMD
Second game
IL fia jG o tri
14 00 8 60 3 60
4 u rira r Aguirre
S TO 4 10
1 Negul Reyes
3 00
O il 4] 34 60; P (141 116 SO; T(1
4 1) ltd 40; DD (1 11 131.70
Third game
4 Lejar Oyari
74 10 8 10 :3 10
1 Ricardo Aguirre
5 00 4 00
3 Pica Area
1 60
0 (1 41 I8 60; P (4 1) 1)1,10; T (413) l i t 00
Fourth game
1 CaDiola Aguirre IS 40 S 00 180
IN e g u iF a ra h
3 40 1 80
1 Pita Zubi
9 (0
0(1-31 11 00, P (M ) 61.10; T (1
H I 111.60
Fitth game
IC a iia Z u b i
14 10 6 80 4 00
IC haroia Carea
6 00 4 80
1 M'kei Oyari
) 40
0 (1 l i l t 00; P ( M l 111 40. T IIM l 440 10
S iith game
6 U m ar Carea
16 80 13 60 S 00
S P ita Z a rre
9 40 4 10
1 Gabiola E loria
3 40
O (6 6 ) 10) IO; P (6-51 JS1.30; T
(6 6-1) 10)000
Seventh game
1 Ricardo
1) 80 3 80 1 60
IZ arre
6 60 3 00
aMIkel
3 00
0(1-11 40 I 0 ; P ( 1 ) I 114.10; T (1M l 400 60
Eighth game
6 Charola Javier 9 60 S 80 3 10
ISoiaunZubi
6 80 4 00
3 G allaZ arre
4 00
0 (1 61 31 00; P 16 1) 110 30; T 16M I 160 60
Ninth game
BU m a r Javier
9 60 3 80 4 00
3 Garay Area
4 10 310
BGoroitola Reyes
4 80
0 I) II 31 40; P ( M l 11.60. T II
361 114 40
lOlh game
4 Gorostola
18 10 8 10 6 80
3 Said
8 80 6 40
I Galla
4 30
0 ( 3 41 60 10. P (4 I) 19) SO; T 14
311 441 60
tllh game
4 Gorostola F a ra h U 60 8 00 3 80
IG aray Z arre
4 80 S 10
8 Durango Kid Carea
4 80
0 ( 1 4 ) 4 ! 40; P (4-11 HI 10; T bn
(1-41) 311 10
llth game
IM ikeIZubi
16 00 4 40 7 60
8 Said Javier
4.10 1.80
1 Gorostola Z arre
7 60
0 111] 40 40; P 11-11 91.10; T &lt;1
8-1) 414 10
A — 1,911; Handle 11)6.140

Dog R acing
A tSanlordO rlando
Friday night results
First ra ce —5-14, C: 31:11
8 Hello Priscilla 11 80 10 00 5 10
SMy Heritage
8 40 9 40
) Diana's Taurus
3 40
O (I I) 107.40: P (I SI 4)3 00; T
10 5 7) 919 *0
Second race — I t. D: 19:00
I Sand Shadow

1 ) OO S OO S 00

8 Bless Ida
1 (0 3 00
5 Derry
S 70
0 (1 1 ) 79 (0; P (1-11 144.60/ T II141 SOI 10; D D 18-1) 31) 60
Third race — 5-14, M: 31:31
8 LC'S Slim Jim
3 60 3 40 1 40
1 Sail The Blue
4 70 1 80
7 Doctor Flowers
4 10
Q II I) 14.80; P 18 1) 14.40; T I t
M l 151 80
Fourth race — 4-14, D: 31:11
I Senior Prom
11 00 4 40 4 20
6 PW'S Cum Chris
$.40 9 00
1 Wrighl Cabrera
5 60
0(4-1) 39.10; P (8 4)14 10; T 18-

Herald Phot* by Brian LaPeter

M ) 1,169 10

Filth r a c e - M 6 . C : 31:59
4Suc'sO ueen
800 3.40 1 10
8 ML Goldie
8 60 1 10
7 Power TakeOH
160
O (4 1) 35 10; P (4 81 30.40; T 141-1) 141.80
Sixth race —3 8, C: 19:31

Fouts Leads All-NFL Team
NEW YORK (UPI) - Quarterback Dan Fouts led a
quartet of San Diego Chargers named to the offense of
the 1982 All-NFL team announced Friday by the Pro
Football Writers of America.
The PFWA also selected Tom Flores of the Los
Angeles Raiders as AFC Coach of the Year and
Washington's Joe Gibbs as NFC Coach of the Year.
Fouts, named for the first time, Joins team m ates
Kellen Winslow (tight end), Wes Chandler (wide
receiver) and Doug Wilkerson (guard) on the 26-man
squad, with 11 players retaining their All-NFL status.
Joining Fouts in the backfield are Los Angeles rookie
back Marcus Allen and Freeman McNeil of the New
York Jets, the league's rushing champion. Dwight
Clark of San Francisco joins Chandler a t wide
receiver.
Flanking Wilkerson on the offensive line are tackles
Anthony Munoz of Cincinnati and Marvin Powell of the
New York Jets, Pittsburgh center Mike Webster and
guard John Hannah of New England. Record-setting
Mark Moseley of Washington b the kicker.
On defense, Mark Gastineau of the Jets and Tampa
Bay's Lee Roy Selmon were selected as ends and
Randy White of Dallas and Chicago's Dan Hampton at
tackle. Jack Lambert of Pittsburgh was chosen at
middle linebacker, with Lawrence Taylor of the New
York Giants and the Buccaneers' Hugh Green at
outside linebacker.
The Giants' Mark Haynes and Everson Walls of the*
Cowboys were picked as comerbacks and Pittsburgh's
Donnie Shell b the strong safety. Nolan Cromwell of
the Los Angeles Rama b the free safety and Dave
Jennings of the Giants b the punter.

S c o re c a rd

Hawks Pleased With Wilkins' Progress
ATLANTA (UPI) - When the Atlanta
Hawks sent John Drew and $1 million to
Utah for Dominique Wilkins, their fans
expected Wilkins to arrive with an "S"
emblazoned on h b chest and an NBA
division title in hand.
It hasn’t turned out that way.
The Hawks are still struggling to get to
the .500 level and Wilkins’ play —
spectacular at times — has been in­
consistent.
Coach Kevin Loughery insists he b not
disappointed, however, In the 6-foot-6
former University of Georgia star, who
passed up his senior season and became
the third player chosen in the NBA draft
last year.
" I am very pleased with h b progress
so far," said Loughery. “Because of the
media hype that he has had, and the
great charism a that he has, people arc
expecting Superman every night.
“Some people were expecting 50 points
a night out of Dominique. You don’t get
that out of rookies in our league."
Wilkins averaged 18 points and 5.7
rebounds over the Hawks' first 30 games.
But he has been much more impressive
at home than on the road, and in the first
quarter over the fourth quarter.
“ I think most any young player coming
Into the league b going to score more at
home," said Wilkins. “You have the
home crowd behind you and that's going
to give you a little bit more of a spurt. 1
think with experience it will balance out.
I am starting to play better on the road."
Aa for h b fourth-quarter scoring
drought, Wilkins says when he gets off to
a good start, "They tend to douUeteam
me more later and that opens things up
for guys around me. Other players are
going to be open and I try to get them
kivolved."
Wiliina has already faced most of the
NBA's bert s n a il forwards, including
Julius Erving, Larry Bird, Bernard King
and Marques Johnson.
“ You really can’t say who's better or
•who can hurt you the worst," he said.

Pro B asketball
"Although they have different styles,
they can all hurt you."
(hie thing that helps b playing
alongside Tree Rollins and Dan Roundfield, two of the league’s top shotblockers.
"I know if I make some mbtakes, they
can help erase them ,'' said Wilkins.
Roundlield took Wilkins under h b wing
in training cam p and the rookie has
profited from h b experience.
"He's an all-pro and probably the best
power forward in the league," said
Wilkins. “ He’s pulled me off the side and
told me some things about some guys
I've been playing against. I give a lot of
credit to him."
Wilkins, only 12, says he doesn’t regret
passing up h b senior season at Georgia.
He was "thrilled" by the trade from Utah
to Atlanta, the city where h b mother
lives and only 70 miles from the Georgb
campus.
“I m bs college some, but I'm happy
with the guys I’m playing with," he said.
“ I like to get out and run and I think the
pro game b suited to me. I don’t think I
could have made a better move than to
come out early and get some experience
and an early sta rt."
Wilkins says the Hawks are disap­
pointed with their record, noting the club
has lost a lot of close games. But he says
the addition on New Year's Eve of
veteran free agent guard Johnny Davis
should help.
“He’s definitely quick and can score,"
said Wilkins. “ We needed some help to
back up Eddie (Johnson) and Rory
(Sparrow). I think we’re going to be a
lough club once we get everybody
going."
Inughery says Wilkins still has a lot to
learn, although he has unlim ited
potential.
“He’s done so much with h b raw

ability, but up here everybody has raw
ability," said loughery.
“ The biggest key to h b game is going
to be learning how to handle the
basketball and not just in the open court.
It's the ability to get the shot against the
half-court defense. That's going to be ihe
key to determining how good a player
Dominique becomes."

Bucks Rip Detroit
United Press International
Even without a bench, Detroit Coach
Scotty Robertson likes the spot hb team
is in.
“ I'm pleased with where we are
without our two guys (injured Pistons
Kelly Tripuka and Kent Benson &gt;,"
Robertson said Friday night after h b
team lost to Milwaukee, 109-92, and fell
six games behind the Bucks in the
Central Divblon. "They've been out 45
days.
“ Milwaukee's depth b what makes
them a pbyoff team every year. Their
bench b strong. We’re Just not good
enough and deep enough."
Sidney Moncrief and Marques Johnson
each scored 23 polnb to lift the Bucks, 2312. Milwaukee went most of the way
without Dave Cowens, who departed with
1:48 left in the first quarter after injuring
a heel.
Johnson scored 17 of h b polnb in the
first quarter and the Bucks took control,
outshooting the Pistons 57 percent to 27
percent and taking a 36-17 lead.
“ We got off to quite a start," said
Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson. “We set
up on defense, got the ball and really got
it rolling all kinds of ways."
In other games, Phoenix downed
Indiana, 106-101, Philadelphia defeated
W ashington, 106-89, A tlanta stopped
D allas, 110-102, New Je rse y beat
Chicago, 111-98, Boston got by San
Antonio, 116-113, Denver routed Houston,
125-97, and Kansas City blitzed Utah, 139117.

4 Laughing Lee 1) 40 6 80 1 OO
2 Manatee Quest
5 40 1 40
1 Impala Red Jet
910
0 (1 4 1 SO.10; P (4 1) 7119; T 14M I 1,310.30
Seventh race —5-14, A: 31:11
2 Slat
1160 9 10 4 40
1 Parlslo
1 60 S 10
1 Nebraska Gam bler
110
011-1) i s . l t ! P ( M l 119.10; T (1-

111 116.10
Elohlh r a c e - I I , C: 10:94
1 Wrighl Farina
6 20 6 40 4 00
3 Miss Sweetie Pie
5 00 5 60
1 DJ Penny
) 60
Q 17-3) 11.00; P (7-33 4) 40; T 11M I 149.00
Ninth race — 5-14, • : 11:14
3 Dean T ara
11 00 5 10 4 00
4 RR’l P retty Boy
5 00 3 00
lic e c a p a d e
14 60
011-4) 11.00; P 1)4 ) 141.00; T O 4 1) 49). 10
lOIhrace — 3-1, ■: I t :) ]
4 Dalnly D ancer 1160 9 40 6 40
1 Stacy River
4 40 4 40
1 Cherry Bomb
4 00
0(1-4) 41.40; P (4-3) 09 80; T (4M l 1,043.00
Nth race — 4-14, A: 11:11
1 High Glass
10 70 14 20 II 00
3 Autumn D riller
4 60 1 40
I Precision Dancer
4 40
Q (M I 14.00; P ( M I 11)40; T il1-1) n i . U ; Pick t i l : (4 113-4 7) 4
ol 4 winners 119.46 " J a c k p g r
carry over 1,911
llth r a c e - 5-14. C: 11:15
1 White Oak Whli 10 00 1 40 4 40
IL ak e Arlana
4 00 1 40
I P F ’t Brownie
4.40
0(1-1) 14.40; PC M ) 114.10; TO*
M ) 149.40
l l t k r o c t - 1-4.0: 10:54

FR E E
SlMNAl I *

I 11&gt;N

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
1 ” ( M( M u A V I
A N 1 11W11

323 5763

6 Mill Je Nay
10 10 10 80 6 60
3 v a ra Nice
D 00 a 00
8 Bag A Tricks
1 10
0 1)6! 51 10. RIA 31 1)0 60. T (6
311 III &lt;0
A - 3,900: Handle 1361.110

NBA
NBA Standings
By U nited P re ti International
E astern Conference
Atlantic Division
w L Pet GB
Phlladlph
26 5 8)9 —
Boston
IS 8 758 2
New jersy
11 1) 618 6’ j
Wshngln
11 I5‘ 3)1 9’ )
New York
12 11 364 ts
Central Division
Milwaukr
2) 12 6S1 — .
Detroit
It 19 486 6
Atlanta
16 11 48S 6
Indiana
12 11 364 10
II 11 344 10' i
Chicago
4 11 13S D 'l
Cleveland
W estern Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pci GB
Kanss Cly
70 11 64S —
San Antoni
21 14 611
•i
16 19 4S1 6
Oenve'
1) 19 406 )'»
Dallas
Utah
13 2) 361 9’ j
Houston
S 71 151 16
Pacific Division
76 7 788 —
Los Anqels
Seattle
73 ID 697 3
Phoenix
3*l *7
7/ 14 611 C
Portland
i t IS SB) 6' j
Golden Sit
la 20 411 tr i
7 1) 10* t9' ;
San Diego
F rid a y ’s Results
Atlanta 110. Dallas 101
Phoenix 108. Indiana 101
Phi'a 106. Washington 89
Kansas City 1)9. Ulah II)
New Jersey III. Chicago 98
Boston 116. San Antonio 113
Milwaukee 109, D etroit 91
Denver 115. Houston 9)
Today's Games ,
(All Times ESTI
Los Angeles a t New Vork.
1 M pm .
Kansas City at Philadelphia,
1 IS p m
Chicago at Atlanta. M S p m
Washington at Cleveland. 8
pm
Boston al Dallas. I 3S p m
Utah at Houston. I 35 p m
Denver al San Diego. 10 30

pm

,

Seattle at Golden Slate. It OS
pm
Sunday’s Games
Detroit al New Jersey
Phoenix al Milwaukee
Seattle al Portland

H ockey
NHL Standings
By United Press International
Wales Conference
Pelrick Division
W L T Pis
24 17 s S3
Philadelphia
Washington
19 17 10 48
NY Islanders
70 16 ; 47
NY Rangers
71 16 4 46
Pittsburgh
1173 6 10
New iersey
1 IS 9 IS
Adams Division
Boston
24 10 1 5)
Montreal
11 11 a SI
Bullalo
la 14 9 44
Quebec
11 16 6 41
H artlord
10 IS S 1 s
Campbell Conference
Division
Norris
W L T Pts
Chicago
76 9 6 S«
Minnesota
20 11 9 49
St. Louis
14*74 5 3)
Detroit
9 77 11 79
Toronto
9 11 8 76
Smythe Division
Edmonton
13 11 8 S4
Winnipeg
1) 19 4 31
Calgary
IS ?) ; 37
Vancouver
14 19 9 37
Los Angeles
14 19 S 3)
F riday’s Results
NY Rangers J.. Quebec 1
Boston 1. New Jersey 2. tie
Vancouver S. 1Buffalo S. tie
Edmonton 1, Pittsburgh J
Today’s Games
(All T im ts EST)
Philadelphia at H artlord, 7 3S

pm

Boston at Montreal, 8 ;OS p.m
Detroit al Calgary. 8 OS p m
Quebec al NY
Islanders.
8 OS p.m
Los Angeles al Toronto. I 0)
pm
Chicago al Minnesota. 9 .OS
pm
Washington at St Louis, 9 OS
p.m

�10A— Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

• • •

Sunday, Jan. 9,1911

Gas Hovering Around $ 1 A Gallon

Continued From Page 1A
$1.08, regular, and $1.14, unleaded; Tenneco, S. French
Avenue, Sanford, self-service $1.05*, regular, and $1.13*,
unleaded; Cargo, 2623 Orlando Dr., Sanford, self-service,
$1.04* regular; $1.11* unleaded; Flna, 25thStreet and French
Avenue, Sanford, self-service, $1.07 regular; $1.14, unleaded;
Cumberland Farms, Lake Mary Boulevard and U.S. 17-92; 711, Sunland Estates entrance, self-service, regular $1.04* ;
unleaded, $1.11*,

" It’s a good, cheap way to get high octane to the people," he
said.
"We've changed marketing procedures for gasohol after the
press destroyed gasohol and the demand for it fell off," he
said. "T hat's when the various companies began marketing it
under different names such as Unleaded Plus."

One gasoline distributor, who did not want to be named, said
that even when the price is cut at the wholesale level the dealer
m ay not be passing it on to the consumer.

"I've used gasohol in both my own cars for two years and
I've had no trouble," he said.

Higginbotham said some of the cut-rate stations are selling
gasohol under various nam es and that some consumers do not
realize that is what they a re getting.

The wholesale cost for gasohol is 2 cents less than regular.
Gasohol presently has no federal taxes and Thrailkill said he
fears that tax increases on the state and federal level, if im­
posed on the product, will "kill it."

“ We don't need it," he said, "there Is plenty of raw crude and
cars run better on gasoline."
Gasoline wholesaler Harlan Thrailkill, owner of Mid State
Energy Corp. in Orlando, sells gasohol under the label "Super
Ethanol Unleaded” . He said he Is "very pleased" with the
acceptance of the product which amounts to 30 percent of the
sales at his three stations.
Thrailkill said the alcohol, which Is piped into Taft, is pur­
chased separately from the unleaded gas, and they are
blended together as they are loaded off the bottom Into the

The state tax now on gasoline is 8 cents a gallon, while the
federal tax is 4 cents. Beginning April 1, the federal tax will be
Increased to 9 cents. He said he has not yet checked with the
Internal Revenue Service on Just what the increase will mean,
if anything, to gasohol.
Thrailkill also is concerned about slate proposals to either
increase the gasoline tax per gallon or assess a 5 percent sales
tax.
"That would be a tax on a tax," he said.
"We would pay almost 1-cent sales tax on the existing tax."

... A Prison Could Be Next Door
Continued From Page 1A
accept the construction of prisons and
other penal facilities In their areas.
Davis said the state needs to pass some
provision, like the Power Plant Siting
Act, to allow the governor and Cabinet to
approve the construction and location of
correctional facilities.

on the roads, sewer systems and other
public services of a community.

"Prison capacity hasn’t grown fast
enough lo keep up," he said.

Commissioner Barbara Christensen
said she has "the same reaction to
building a prison that I would have to
locating a coal burning plant without the
approval of the community."

Corrections Secretary Louis Wainwright endorsed a plan Wednesday that
would force south Florida counties to
accept new prisons.

In the past three years, the department
has been able to find only one site, in
Mrs. Christensen said the county
But State Rep. Bobby Brantley, RMartin County, for a new prison. The
should
continue to be the officials making
Longwood, and chairman of a "House
problem has gotten so bad, Walnwright
subcommittee on prison overcrowding, those decisions.
said, that 1,000 prisoners will soon be
said local input should not be eliminated
"E v e n though they are tough given early p aro le and tem porary
entirely. He said the state could order questions, we should be the ones to ad­ facilities will be built for others.
each county to designate a parcel of land dress them ," she said.
Such action is necessary, he said, to
for use as a prison and then select sites as
Commissioner Robert Sturm said "the avoid a possible federal court order
they are necessary.
state shouldn’t be able to force things requiring the release of excess criminals.
Mrs. Glenn said local input Is down people's throats."
A proposed site for a Dade County
necessary to properly site any prison.
He suggested that prisons be con­ prison is being held up by a homeowners’
"The plans should still be reviewed by structed near Ihe areas which have the suit, and the owners of a 640-acre parcel
in Orange County approved by county
the regional planning councils."
most prisoners.
commissioners have been unwilling to
She said a plan could be formulated to
Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff said no
select three potential prison sites within one wants to live near a garbage dump, a sell.
Efforts to locate other facilities In the
a region. That would allow the planning prison or a sewage plant. “ But if it's a
council to determine the best sites within, slate prison we don’t have much say." southern part of the state have been
resisted by county officials, Walnwright
for exam ple, Sem inole, Volusia,
K irchhoff said the s ta te ’s prison said. He said 50 percent of the state's
Brevard, take, Osceola and Orange
problem is one that has grown from the prison beds are located south of Orlando
countie*
but local review would still be needed great influx of people Into the state over while 75 percent of the prisoners come
from that area.
to determine the effects of such facilities the past 20 years.

Lake M ary Commission Rejecfs Workshop
Proposal; Wafer Study To Be Conducted
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The ta k e Mary City Commission has
elected a new deputy mayor and rejected
a plan by new Commissioner Russ
Megonegal to hold 30-mlnute workshops
prior to regular commission meetings.
C om m issioner Ken K ing, elected
unopposed to a second two-year term in
December, was unanimously chosen by
his colleagues to [ill the post of deputy
mayor.
The commissioner selected for this
office serves as mayor and conducts
com m ission m eetings when Mayor
Walter Sorenson Is absent.
A move by Megonegal, supported by
new Commissioner Charlie Lytle, to set
30-mlnute workshops prior to regular
meetings to gain more Information from
s ta ff m em bers, failed when three
commission members — Burt Perlnchief, Ray F oi and King — turned down
the proposition.
Fox, the most vocal opponent of the
suggestion, stld he didn't know what the
workshops would accomplish. "We would
come here 30 minutes early to go over

expeded to be completed b&gt;' April.
King was authorized to again seek a
granl from the St. Johns River Water
Management District for topographic
maps for the city.
City Attorney Robert Petree told
commissioners that he has received
Inquiries from city staff about locating
churches in
commercially-zoned
districts. He said before churches are
located in commercially zoned areas
with businesses serving alcoholic
beverages, careful study and attention
should be given to the matter,
"I can envision a church on every
comer," he said, noting there is a place
in the city for churches and commercial
enterprises which want to "serve good
wine or bad beer as the case may be."
He also noted that a recent report said
that a city police officer in a police
cruiser was involved In a chase on U.S.
Highway 17-92 at speeds of 100 miles per
hour,
Kulbes said the d ty has a com­
"There is a great potential for liability
prehensive plan, which includes the
d ty ’s anticipated population growth and when a police cruiser Is going at 100 miles
a fiv e-y ear capital Improvem ent per hour. It's not worth the ticket,"
program. He said a revision to the plan Is Petree said.

m atters and then go over the same thing
again at the official meeting," Fox said.
"It looks to me like a duplication of ef­
fort.
Lytle said the workshop would give
him a little more time to make decisions
with a little more Information. Sorenson
said the staff Is available everyday all
day for anyone — commissioner or
clllzen — seeking Information.
In other business, Megonegal asked
City Manager Phil Kulbes to prepare a
report on the costs of Improving the city's
water system by eliminating the dual
system. In some areas of the city, Kulbes
reported several months ago, the city has
installed new water lines, but many
residents have been left connected to the
old, Inadequate water lines.
Megonegal also asked whether the d ty
has a plan to fulfill Its needs on a priority
basis, rather than being hit with unex­
pected costs at one time.

Conversion Of Rita Theatre Sidetracked
Charles Williams and Dennis Brazlel
say they will appeal to the Sanford City
Commission the denial by the city's
Planning and Zoning Commission of their
request to serve alcoholic beverages at
the old Ritz Theatre.
The m atter la scheduled to be
discussed i t a 7 p.m. meeting Monday at
Sanford City Hall on Park Avenue.
At th e advisory b o a rd 's meeting
Thursday night, Williams and Brazlel
said they want to turn the old theatre,
located at the comer of Magnolia Avenue
. and Second Street, into a cinema and
pub serving alcoholic beverages and
Mexican food.
After hearing protests from nearby
business owners, the board turned down
the request because of a lack of off-street
parking. There are no public parking loti
in th e immediate area.

to permit the burial of "cremains" on
property adjacent to the Holy Cross
Episcopal Church.
The Rev. Leroy Soper, rector of the
church at 410 S. Magnolia Ave., asked for
the amendment so that a memorial
garden can be created where the
cremated remains of church members
can be buried.
The board also approved a site plan for
the proposed new Seminole County
Humane Society animal shelter on the
northeast com er of U.S. Highway 17-92
and County Home Road.
The society is leasing the property
from Seminole County on a long-term
arrangement.

The board delayed a decision on the
request of the Church of God to perm it a
private Christian School in the church
building a t M l W. 22nd St. The board
In other business, the board approved delayed the decision until a ruling could
an amendment to the city's zoning code be received from City Attorney Bill

Colbert on whether the school could
properly operate at the site.
Building Inspector Leah Rogers quoted
Colbert as saying the school Is an ap­
propriate conditional use of the property.
The board also gave its approval lo
requests (or rezoning from restricted
commercial to genera) commercial at
1501 French Ave. and from apartment to
general commercial at 412 E. 9th St.
The board denied requests for con­
ditional uses at 2506, 2506 and 2510
Princeton Ave. and at 1809 and 1811
Mellonville Ave. to permit construction
of duplexes.
The request for a conditional use to
permit construction of a service station
at 1901 Country G u b Road was approved.
Conditional uses are noted In the city's
zoning code to provide other than usual
uses of property only with special per­
mission of the Planning and Zoning
Commission.

Drug Task Force Accomplishes Little
MIAMI (UPI) - The General Accounting Office says Presi­
dent Reagan's $13 million w ar on smuggling has done little to
curtail the illegal drug trade, a Miami newspaper reported
today.
The GAO, an agency that audita federal program s for
Congress, criticized the Presidential Task Force on South
Florida for concentrating on small-fry traffickers, according
to a M-page draft report obtained by the Miami Herald.
The report said that only one out of M traffickers arrested by
the task force has been a m ajor dealer. It estimated that an
effective anti-drug •crusade would coat billions of dollars.

1 ./ v

»

tanker truck. Alcohol is an octane booster, he explained, and
gasohol has 90 octane, which compares favorably to 91 octane
found In premium unleaded.

The report questioned the administration's emphasis on
interdiction, a strategy aimed at stopping drugs from crossing
the U.S. border.
“Several UJ3. Drug Enforcement Administration and other
agency officials told us that even though the task force has
caused many traffickers to curtail or move their smuggling
operations, it is doubtful whether the task force can have any
substantial impact on drug availability," the report said.
The report said that the price of cocaine has actually
dropped since the task force began operations last March.
Task force spokesmen would not comment on the report.

H tn lo Photo by loin Vincent

ON THE ROAD AGAIN
A group of five singers from Seminole and Crooms

high schools traveled to Jacksonville this week to
participate in the All-State chorus. Participating,
from left to right, were Mike Korgan, Alan
Kendall, Leo Peterson, Arthur Jackson and Matt

S w in fo rd . S w in fo rd p e r f o r m e d in th e 1 0 0 -m e m b e r
A ll-S ta te H e a d in g C h o ru s. J a c k s o n w a s in th e AllS ta te S e n io r H ig h C o n c e rt C h o ir a n d K o r g a n ,
K e n d a ll a n d P e te r s o n s a n g in th e J u n i o r H ig h
S chool A ll-S ta te C hoir.

New SHS Tribe Members Named
Back to school and things are pretty
much the same. There are only two main
differences; one being that the students
are trying to remember everything that
had been forgotten over the two-week
vacation, the other Is that everyone is
counting the day: until su n n ie r
vacation.
Another difference Is In the Tribe
m embers; there are two new ones,
Chrissy Rufo and Lori Eckler, both
seniors. Chrissy is a member of
Fellow ship of (Jhrisltan Athletes,
Thespians and Contemporary ensemble.
She is a senior class representative, was
the lead in "Up the Down Staircase," a
finalist In the Miss SHS competition, and

the winner of the talent In the Miss SHS
contest. Lori Is a member of Keyettes,
FCA, track team, and cross-country
team. She was In "Up the Down Stair­
case" and was a Miss SHS candidate.
This week's activities Include:
Monday — Girls' basketball at tak e
Brantley, JV and varsity, 6:15 p.m.
Tuesday — Boys basketball with ta k e
Brantley, JV and varsity, 6:15 p.m., boys
soccer at ta k e Mary, JV and varsity, 5
p.m.; team pictures for winter sports.
Wednesday — Boys soccer at Spruce
Creek varsity, 4 p.m.
T hursday — Girls basketball a f
Apopka, varsity, 7 p.m; wrestling, JV
tournament, 4 p.m.

Around
SHS
By

jiii

Jannk
F riday — Boys basketball with
Apopka, home, JV and varsity, 6:15p.m.; boys soccer with Trinity Prep,
home, JV, 3:30 p.m.
Saturday — Girls basketball with
Evans, home, JV and varsity, 5:30 p.m.;
boys basketball at Evans. JV and var­
sity, 6:15 p.m.; wrestling, 5 Star Con­
ference at Mainland, varsity, 10 a.m.

Student Clubs Growing At LMHS
As ta k e Mary High School expands each year with the ad­
dition of new students and teachers, the student clubs and
activities expand also.
The 1982-83 school year has brought two new clubs to l*MUS:
Hi-Y-Trt-Hl-Y, sponsored by Joan Nickman, and Keycttea-Key
Club sponsored by G yde Hayes and John Reichert.
Each of these service clubs recently elected officers. They
are:
Hi-Y President, Mike Rouse; Vice President, Jeff Hopkins;
Secretary, Mark Clothier; Treasurer, Brian Joseph; Sergeant
of Arms, Ned Kolbjomsen; and Scrapbook, Carl Petty.
Tri-Hi-Y President, Mindi Everett; Vice President, Nanette
Johnson; Secretary, Kim Wells; Treasurer, Kathy Johson;
Chaplain, Kim Sharpe; and Scrapbook, liz McKee.
Keyettes President, Maureen Friel, Vice President, Tiffany
Selbold; Secretary, Raelene Ryerson; and Treasurer, Jill
Faber.

Around
LMHS
By
Julene

Heckler

girls’ soccer against St. Edwards, home, 6:30 p.m.; basketball
games against ta k e Brantley, home, boys' freshman, 4:30
p.m., girls’ JV, 6:15 p.m.; and boys' JV, 8 p.m.
Saturday — Girls' soccer against Vero Beach, home, 12
p.m.; girls' B.B. atainsl St. Cloud, home, 6:15 and 8 p.m.

PAUL &amp; MARY

Key Club President, Matt Haines; Vice President, Robbie
Greenstein;; Stenographer, Jam es Melton; and Treasurer,
Andy McNeill.
Here are a few of next week's activities:
Monday — Girls' basketball games against Apopka, home,
6:15 and 8 p.m.; Brain Bowl meet at Lyman against Lyman
and D etand, 6:30 p.m.; boys freshman basketball against
Lyman, home, 4 p.m.
Tuesday - Boys' soccer against Seminole, home, 5 and B
p.m.; boys' basketball against WymoreTech, home, 6:15 and B
,p.m .; wrestling match at Boone, 6:30 and 8 p.m.
Wednesday - Wrestling match against Oak Ridge, home,
6:30 and 8 p.m,
Thursday — JV county wrestling tournament at Seminole, 4
p.m.; basketball against ta k e Brantley; girls' varsity, 6:15
p.m.; boys' varsity, 8 p.m., home.
Friday — boys’ soccer against Lyman, home, 5 and 8 p.m.;

AREA
DEATH
MAY AMELIA SERENA
May Amelia Serena, 77, of
34064 S. Sanford Ave.,
Sanford, died Saturday at
C en tral Florida Regional
Hospital. Bom in Brooklyn,
N.Y. on June 23, 1905, she
m oved to Sanford from
Brooklyn In 1978. She was a
hom em aker, a
Rom an
Catholic and a member of All
Souls Catholic Church.
Survivors include one son,
Nicholas F. Serena, Sanford;
one daughter, Joan Pierce of
Margate, Fla., six grand­
children and two g re a t­
grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home Is
in charge of arrangements.

Hunt Monument Co.
' O M ay Yard
Hwy. 17-tt—Pern Pert
P4t. 339-69M
Gene Hunt, Owner •

TRISSEL
To Sing on Opening
Sundoy &amp; Monday Evening
of
Geneva Church of Nazarene
Hwy 46 i t G epeva
Ja n . 9-16
Sunday 10:30-4:00 P.M . W aaknite 7:30
Clifton B. Nixon, P asto r
140 lb. B arbecuad Pork On Sunday

NOTICE TO A U

VETERANS
Who Have HtMuMy Served TM r Country ia Tim if War or Pi k i

i
w

k

Becameol thetackofburial spacesndthePittance dtfa National Cemtary in Florida,
m an aaitgninggraveh im InWHnu lirdH «HMr. Wdm HiMrWM Aaan
honorMy discharg'd vetersn of the Undid Statu AnrwdForm, youmay be qualified
for Free Burial Space. Howewr. youmust register for this. Youmust be abte to show
prod of HonorableDischarge Than tra a limited number of Veteran spaces avail**
Certificates for apam will beissuedona first comelint servedbasis. Toauua reser­
vation, mail thecouponbelowto;

--------------------------OAKLAWN MEMORIAL PARK--------------------- —
Rt 4 Bo* 244. Santoro. FL 32771
(306)322-4263

■
|

P le a se Send My V eteran of Service Eligibility Certificate.

I N A M E ______________________________________
ADDRESS
B ran ch of Service.

_No. in Family.

|S e w c e S e n a l N o ....------- -— ______T elephone N o ________ ________|

I

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, J a n .9, 1913— IB

Jean McLain, left, says she tries to live
by the Golden Rule. She's wife, mother,
grandmother, director of Krayola
Kollege and friend. In right photo
children at Krayola Kollege are
surrounded by Bamby Duffey, from left,
Mama Jean, Debbie Bowlin and Irma
Wilson. Mrs. McLain says she doesn't
want to be a sitting service. 'I believe
that everyday, these children
should learn something.'
Photot by Lori Drew

Mama Jean
Native Daughter Has A Long History Of Doing Real Nice Things
Hy I .OKI DIIF.W
Special to the Herald
A child who lives with laughter
learns to be happy. And a grandchild
who gets a double dose earns a
degree. The next step is spreading it
around — and Jean Melvin does it
at her day care center and preschool
on South Elm Avenue in Sanford.
Fifty-two-year-old Mrs. Melvin
owns and operates Krayola Kollcge
and is considered by many to be a
grandmother to all. So the surname
goes, and the preferred “ Mama
Jean’*' is fondly emitted from the
mouths of “her children" and adult
friends as well.
"Mama Jean does so many really
fine things for people," said Jackie
Caolo, who formerly taught water
safety to Krayola Kollege attendees.
"You'd think each one of those
children was her grandchild.”
Mrs. McLain admits to caring for
each one as though he or she were
her own. And she believes her love
for working with children steins
from the "really close family" at­
mosphere she grew up in. “ My
grandparents were real special to
me," she adds. "I guess I just want
these kids to have the opportunities I
got and gave to my (two) children.
:"Do we have fun here?" said
Mama Jean to one bright-eyed

youngster. Just a smile and a slow,
shy nod came back.
What child would not have fun in a
day care center with Mama Jean to
lead them in a rhythm band, in song,
to the parks and to the lakes for
fishing? She even leads them in
prayer and then takes them in her
van to look for a public nativity
scene (of which, by the way, there
were none displayed in Sanford this
past Christmas, according to Mrs.
Mcliiin and her companions I.
“ I don’t want to be a sitting ser­
vice," she said. “ I believe that every
day, these children should learn
something."
The 2-year-olds through the 11year-olds leant inside and outside
the small schoolhouse converted
from Mrs. M clain's old home.
Some of the more than 40 enrolled
children attend preschool from 9
a.m. till noon.
Others come after their grade
school clusses. Still others are
brought by working mothers in the
wee hours of the morning when
Mama Jean opens Krayola Kollege
at 6:30 All get a taste of "homeaway-from home sweet home-awayfrom home."
Hut it is not merely the children ,
who receive the love and patience
and understanding Mama Jean

practices. She is apt to find jobs for
people she hardly knows in addition
to offering help to perfect strangers.
“ I was down and out and I needed
a job," said Irma Wilson. "Mama
Jean took me in. I think she's just
the sweetest, nicest person I’ve ever
worked for."
Mrs. Caola also opined, “Mama
Jean has a long history of doing real,
real nice things. She never runs out
of energy."
Mrs. McLiin was born and raised
in Sanford, but that does not limit
her good deeds to local residents.
“ When they started bringing
refugees over, I asked the minister,
doctor and everyone if they knew of
any such family in the area. I
wanted to help them,” said Mrs.
Mcl-nin. "Well they didn't know nt
anyone."
Then one day approxim ately
seven years ago, she noticed an
O riental-looking family in a
department store.
After following the father, mother
and two children around the store,
Mama Jean said she finally walked
up and said, "I'd like to help your
children."
The Vietnamese mother and her
youngsters then began visiting Mrs.
Melvin at the school, and soon

thereafter, at no charge, she taught
them English and the American
customs.
"It was the happiest, funniest and
most loving experience I've ever
had," said Mama Jean about her
adopted Vietnamese family. It’s an
obvious personal satisfaction that
she obtains from giving. And the
giving doesn't stop. "I've always
had one child on scholarship at all
times." And high school students
who once spent their childhood days
with Mama Jean come back not only
to say hello, but also to look for a
small part-time job. A generous
Mama Jean says she's happy to
oblige. “ It is a help. It gives them a
Job and responsibility."
S he looks

at

her

ow n

respon-

sibilities tu the children ami to
herself, and in her roles as wife,
mother, grandmother, director of
Krayola Kollege and friend, Mrs.
McLain says she tries to live by "the
golden rule."
"Do you know what the golden
rule, is, Chris?" she asked her eldest
of four grandsons. " It's to do unto
others as you . . . would have them
do unto you," the sixth grader
responded w ith only slight
hesitation.
"If everyone lived by the golden

rule, it wouldn't be* a bad world,"
Mama Jean said
“There are kids who would never
go on a train if wedliut t take them,"
added the woman who has been in
the preschool and day care business
for 22 years. It Ls not unusual for a
group of 30 children, decked in
Krayola Kollege T-shirts, to be seen
riding the "Liberty Train" or at the
Central Florida Zoo or even at the
Altamonte Mall at Christmas time,
sitting upon Santa's lap, including a
jolly Mama Jean.
"I love the children to have ex­
periences," she said. “ I knew u 6year-old. She had never seen the
ocean. So I took her."
It is perhaps that sort of attitude
which makes current and prior
students of Mama Jean’s call out on
the street to her. And Mrs. Melvin
adm its, "I don't ever go to the
movies w’hcn someone doesn't say,
'Heh Mama Jean!'”
The day care center has thus far
survived seven years, and according
to Mama Jean, there's no end in
sight to the caring. "I love it!"
Hut one dream has yet to tie
fulfilled for the woman who ran for
Sanford city commissioner four
years ago because she feels the town
officials "need a
w om an's

viewpoint." She lost that race,
coining in third out of seven. But she
says she has no idea how the next
battle for her dream will turn out.
Her dream is for a swimming pool
at the house-like day care center.
And it was spurred by recent state
legislation requiring children at day­
care centers to swim only at cer­
tified pools, Mrs. M dain explained.
Mrs. Caolo's pool, where, in past
sum m ers, Krayola Kollege a t­
tendees learned the fundamentals, is
not certified by the state, according
to the director. "So now these
children don't have a place to swim.
There is no public pool in Sanford."
Mrs. Mclxiin persists, “There are
so many lakes, ditches and ponds in
Florida, every child should know
basic w a t e r s a f e ty ." So m y d r e u m Is
to have a swimming pool here so
these kids would have the op­
portunity to learn how lo swim. It
could save their lives."
Meanwhile, there’s always the
movies yiiul fishing and ceramics
and skating every week to keep "her
children" and her happy . "There’s a
lot of laughing around here," said
Mama Jean.
There is still hope for the children
living with laughter that they may
grow up happy. As for Mama Jean,
she says, "It keeps me young.

■■■■■■■■■HI

Sanford's Son
i*
*

Moye Ends 25-Year Army
Career With No Regrets
Col. Jam ot M.
M oye III, 42, Is

It.

congratulated by
his w ife Kathy at
prom otion
ceremonies. Bom
In Sanford, M oye
has lived a ll o ve r
t

the w orld during
his m ilita ry career
and Is the'
recipient o f
num erous m edals.

More than three decades ago, this Sanford boy was “Just an
average kid around the neighborhood."
Helen Moyo of Sanford, now believes her son is very
special-especlally after one bachelor’s degree, three
children, at least four foreign country tours, promotions
equivalent to 13 pay grades and 25 years of faithful service to
the United Stales Army.
James M. Moye III, a Sanford native who now lives with his
wife and three sons in El Paso, Texas, recently retired from
the military as a lieutenant colonel at the age of 42. his sister
Miriam Jenkins explained.
"Daddy came lo Sanford in 1906 when he was 6 years old,"
said Mrs. Jenkins. "The whole family from daddy on down
graduated from Semuiole High School."
An obviously sentimental family concerned with tradition
was not upset when their eldest son of four children decided to
Join the Army after high school rather than follow in his
father’s footsteps.
"His daddy was a railroad engineer will) Seaboard coastline.
This used to be a big railroad town," said Mrs. Moye. "We
were happy he Joined the Army. (At that tim e,) he hadn't
made up his mind what he wanted to do.”
Young Moye still had not made up his mind after his first
hitch as an enlisted man. His sister remembers his separation
from the service. "Jim m y found the job m arket not that great,
so he re-enlisted and went to OCS (Officer Candidate School).
And Mrs. Moye recalls him saying, "Mother, I can get an
education right where I am ."
The lieutenant colonel received his bachelor’s degree in
administration with financial assistance from the Army. "The
Army put him all the way through college," said Mrs. Moye.
"He received a lot of education (while serving the Army), and
he really loved it."
It was after graduation from OCS In Fort Sill, Okla., 18 years
ago that Moye m arried his wife, Kathy. But the West Coast of
the United States was not the only travel opportunities this
military family was afforded.
"He has lived all over the world," said his mother. Moye was
stationed in Germ any, Korea, Gteenland and Vietnam in
addition to several stateside locations in his 25 years of active
duty.
Yet, his sister explained, at each station, Moye's respon­
sibilities evolved around defense missile systems. "So much of

his work was classified," his mother interjected. "So we didn't
really know the specifics."
Whatever his duties entailed, Moye must liave performed
them well, as he was uwarded several medals, including two
Bronze Stars, the legion of Merit and "quite u few"
Meritorious Service Medals, according to Mrs. Jenkins.
His sister confirms that information during a recent phone
See MOYE, Page2B

Pbolot by Lori Grow

M iriam Jenkins, left, and Helen Moye examine a
stein Moye purchased in Germany while he was
stationed there.

�IB — Evcnmq Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Jan. 9. I f I I

In And Around Lake Mary

Engagements

CIA To Sponsor Second

Greene-Rape

Annual Florida Grand Prix

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. C.recne, 115 Jlnkins Circle.
Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter,
I aura Ann, to William Gregory Rape, sen of Dr. and Mrs.
William C. Rape, 2445 Mellonvillc Ave., Sanford.
Bom at Brunswick, Maine, the bride-elect is the
paternal granddaughter of Mrs. Eula Greene, Derby, Va.
Miss Greene is a 1980 graduate of Seminole High School,
Sanford, where she was a member of the volleyball team
and a member of Mu Alpha Theta. She received an AA
degree from Seminole Community College in 1980 where
she was a member of Phi Theta Kappa fraternity. She is
employed as a payroll clerk for George W. Reagan Co.
Inc., Knoxville, Tenn.
Her fiance, bom at Decatur, Ga., Is the maternal
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. W.M. Michaels, l^csburg, and
the paternal grandson of Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Rape, New
Smyrna Beach.
Mr. Rape is a 1978 graduate of Seminole High School
where he was a member of the National Honor Society,
played baseball and was a member of Mu Alpha Theta. He
graduated from the University of Florida in 1982 where he
was a member of Pi Kappa Alplia fraternity. He is a
student at Emory University School of Dentistry.
The weading will be an event of July 16, at 7 p.m., at
Grace United Methodist Church, Sanford.

LAURA ANN G R E E N E .
W IL L IA M G R E G O R Y R A P E

Wells-Ansley
Mr. and Mrs. T.J. Wells, 5100 SW 110 Court, Miami,
announce the engagement of their daughter, Kelley
Ixiriane, to David Michael Ansley, son of Glen W. Anslcy,
2408 Stevens Ave., Sanford, and the late Mrs. Ruth Ansley.
Born in Miami, the bride-elect is the maternal grand­
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Townsend, Miami, and
the paternal granddaughter of Mrs. Barbara Wells of
South Miami.
Miss Weils attended Miami public schools and
graduated from high school there. She is employed as a
complaint clerk for the Sanford Police Department.
Her fiance is the maternal grandson of the late Mr.
Dennie Wooten, Wilson County, N.C., and the paternal
grandson of Mrs. Margie Ansley, Talladega, Ala., and the
late Mr. Frank Preston Ansley.
Mr. Ansley is a 1971 graduate of Seminole High School
aud attended Seminole Community College. He has been
employed by the Sanford Police Department for eight
years.
The wpdding will be an event of Feb. 5, at 2 p.m., at
Harry P. L*u Gardens, 1730 N. Forest St., Orlando.

The weekend of Jan. 15 and 16, the
la k e lary Community Improvement
Association (CIA) is sponsoring the
second annual Florida State Grand Prix.
Over 250 drivers of all ages and gokarts from all over the country will
compete in this exciting event. Over 90
trophies will be on hand to award to the
winners.
There will be five races each afternoon
with many of these go-karts reaching
speeds In excess of 100 mph. On both
days, driver practice and warm-up
begins at 9 a.m., and competition racing
starts no later than 11:15 a.m.
This event is taking place at the NCR
building on I-ake Emma Road with
spectator stands erected in the parking
lot.
The point 9 mile track extends around
the building and oul on to I j k e Emma
Road.
Admission is free to spectators but to
enter the pit area there is a $5.00 pit pass
charge. According to CIA president Dick
Fess, plenty of refreshments will be
available including "the best barbecue in
the area." .
The volunteer firemen and police will
be assisting, but more volunteers arc
needed to help in setting up the spec­
tators stands and in getting the food
service van ready.
Anyone wanting to help should attend a
meeting at city hall, Jan. 10 at 7:30 p.m.
Also needed are advertisers, businesses
or individuals to help in the funding by
sponsoring the Irophics and go-karts. The
cost of sponsoring is $160.
All proceeds from this Grand Prix will
go into the l^akc Mary CIA Community
Center and Emergency Shelter Building
Fund. List year the CIA raised over
14,000 and this year their goal Is for more

Homemakers Club will hold its meeing
this month on Jan. 11 at 10 a.m . at the AG center. Household Repairs are on the
agenda for discussion.

Lake Mar}’
Correspondent
323-9034

Karen
Warner

The Lake Mary V olunteer Fire
Association has a meeting set for Jan. 11
at 8 p.m. at the Fire Hall.

than $5,000.
For more information or financial
support, contact Cindy Brown at 322-7351.
The recent holiday season was extra
fecial for Stella Unden. et began with a
surprise visit from grandchildren Debbie
and Rick Thomas of 1-ewew, Del.
Even more special was Stella's first
time seeing great grandson, 4-ycar-old
Ricky Jr. The celebrations were com­
pleted on Dec. 28th when Stella reached
her 75th birthday.
Stella has nine grand children, four
great grandchildren and has been a
resident of Lake Mary for 21 years.
Happy belated birthday Stella.
Margaret Green will celebrate her 74lh
birthday on Jan. 11. Back in 1920
Margaret wrote this particular com­
munity interest column for the Sanford
Herald. Happy Birthday, Margaret.
There were five winners in this years’
Christmas Ughting Contest. Residential
winners are: first place, Wayne and
Carol Hoffman; second place, Pearl
Partin and third place, the A1 Wichmans.
Commercial winners ore; first place,
Country Curl-Iippincott's and second
place, Happy E lves Day Care.
Congratulations to all.
The

l^ k e

M ary

Extension

Looking ahead, the I-ake Mary Rotary
Club has announced its annual fund
raising event. The club will hold a Flea
Market on Feb. 13 at Flea World on U S
Highway 17-92. Everett Mitchell of
Seminole Community College is chair­
man of this fund raiser. Contributions to
this flea market will be accepted.
The opening Flag ceremony of the
January Chamber of Commerce meeting
was led by Cub Scout Brian Tedrow of
Troop 242.
Included in the order of business was
the election of Delxjres 1-ash as chair­
man of the Board, and Phil Kulbes as
director.
Special guest speaker was Sally Dykes,
project director of the Federation of
Senior Citizens Clubs of Seminole County
Inc.
Correction: The Jan. 12 meeting of the
Garden Gub will not be held at the home
ohMrs. Cline, although she is going to be
the guest speaker. The meeting is al the
home of Mrs. Peggy Aiken.
The Keenager Gub will hold a general
meeting on Jan 11. Bay and Marion
Mensing will give a slide travelogue of
their lost trip to Yugoslavia. The meeting
will be in the Forest Starlite room at
7:30 p.m.

K E L L E Y LO R I AN E W E L L S

Carlson-Hopkins
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Carlson of Humphrey Hoad,
Like Mary, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Carol Juan, to Gyde Curtis Hopkins, son of Mrs. Dolores
Hopkins, 1721 Missouri Ave., Sanford.
Horn at l^ike Mary, the bride-elect is the maternal
granddaughter of Dr. and Mrs. W.H. Singiey, Daytona
Reach, and the paternal granddaughter of Mrs. l.u
Carlson, l/mgwood.
Miss Carlson is a 1975 graduate of Central Adult High

School, Sanford, a 1977 graduate of Seminole Conununity
College and is a senior at University of Central Florida.
Bom at Rockville, Md., the bridegroom is the maternal
grandson of Capt. and Mrs. Anthony V. King, Linham,
Md.
Mr. Hopkins is a 19/6 graduate of Seminole High School,
Sanford, and is employed as a test technician by Stromberg-Carlson.
The wedding will be an event of Feb. 4. at 6 p.m., al
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Sanford.

Letters From Home Ease
Loneliness Of Servicemen
DEAR ABBY: Several months ago, you urged your readers
lo write to the lonesome servicemen in Korea, and you gave an
address for those who wanted to initiate a correspondence.
Well. I just wanted you to know that I wrote, and yesterday I
received a wonderful response from a staff sergeant stationed
six miles south of the DMZ in Korea. I hope to build a long und
mutually happy relationship with my newfound pen pal!
Please run that address again. It's a great feeling to be able
lo raise the morale of our service people so far away from
home. Too many of us don’t realize how much a letter con
brighten the day of a soldier stationed at a remote place in
some foreign country.
Thanks so much for caring, Abby.
R. IN SUN VALLEY, CALIF.
DEAR R.:L The address: Operation Dear Abby, r-o Com­
manding General U.S. 8th Army, APO San Francisco, Calif.
&lt;*t31

P.S. And don’t forget there are women In the service, loo!
DEAR ABBY: I've kept silent long enough, and now I must
comment on u nosy neighbor who thought a grieving widower
should wait a year — the official mourning period — before
dating.
My mother passed away, and six weeks later my father
invltrtl u lonely widow out lo dinner. My father loved my
mother dearly, but upon losing her, the loneliness and
depression were too much for him to bear alone.
A person has his God, his family and his friends. But
sometimes he needs someone to hold, to love and to keep him
company.
1 hope your readers will not judge too harshly widows and
widowers who seemingly are "out and about” too soon.
It certainly beats slaying home with a lump in your throat,
looking at an empty armchair that stirs up sad memories.
AN UNDERSTANDING DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUGHTER: Amen.
DEAR ABBY: I have a friend, raised and married in the
Catholic Church, and she's been divorced for six years. She fois
five children.
She is being m arried again - In the Catholic Church! I told
her I understood that a divorced Catholic cannot get married
in the church, and she told me that she had her marriage an-

v

Dear
Abby
nulled, so as far as the church is concerned it never took place!
Also, I thought that after five years a marriage cannot be
annulled.
OK, so her marriage is erased, wiped o u t-it never happened
— but what about her five children? They happened! So if her
first marriage never took place, doesn’t that make her
children illegitimate?
PROTESTANT NEIGlfBUK
DEAR NEIGHBOR: No. The Catholic Church recognizes
civil law, therefore the children are legitimate.
An annulment does not mean the marrihge never look place.
To annul means to nullify, repeaL cancel, to make void. And
there'a no time limit; a marriage of any duration ran be an­
nulled.
DEAR ABBY: Now I’ve seen everything — the preposterous
Idea of adding thank-you notes to the endorsement of checks
sent as gifts in order to save the recipient the trouble of
acknowledging them separately.
Abby, sometimes the endorsements on checks must be
carefully examined for validation, routing and other reasons,
which might be difficult if a message like "Thank you,
Grandma, this will buy that neat sweater I've had my eye on"
or a clever drawing is lidded.
•
Perhaps as the practice grows, our competitive, cager-toplease banks will have their checks printed with matching
envelopes for thank-you messages!
OVERDRAWN IN SOUTH CAROLINA
If you bate to write letters because you don't know what to
lay, aeod for Abby'a complete booklet on letterwriting. Send
£ and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to
Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

THANKS FOR
YOUR HELP

• •

J a c k a n ti J i l l 's y o u th p r e s e n te d C e r tif ic a te s o f A p p re c ia tio n to m e m b e r s &lt;i
th e c lu b a n d c o m m u n ity w h o h e lp e d to m a k e th e o r g a n iz a tio n 's e ffo rt
s u c c e s s f u l d u r in g 1982. R e c e iv in g c e r tif ic a te s a r e : fro m le f t, H a r b a r
A le x a n d e r fo r A llen C h a p e l AME C h u r c h , D o ris T h o m a s , D r. V elm
W illia m s , M a ry W h ite h u rs t a u d T a y lo r R o u n d tr e e , fo r (h e E a s t-W e s
K iw a n ls C lu b . V e lm a W illia m s is p r e s id e n t a n d D o ris T h o m a s , p r o g r a i
c h a i r m a n . M a rv n H a w k in s a ls o re c e iv e d a C e r tif ic a te of A p p r e c ia tio n .

. Moye Retires From Army

Continued From Page IB
conversation to her brother in El Paso, where Moye and his
family have decided to continue living, much like many retired
Navy families have continued to reside in the once-"Navy
town" of Sanford.
Moye completed his 25 years at Fort Bliss as Commander,
First Battalion, Seventh ADA, and he began his new civilian
career as an insurance agent with South Western Life
Insurance, El Paso.
Why did he voluntarily end his Army career? “He received a
great education. He's been all over the world," Mrs. Moye
explains "He’s given the government 25 years of his life, and
he says that's enough.”
It was enough for Moye, yet, when asked if he would "do it all

DIXIELAND CLOGGERS
New Ckusei Beginning
JAN. 10, 17, 24
at the Lake Maty Volunteer
Fire Department 1st l Wilbur Ave.

over again," he responded, "Sure would."
Through his sister, the Sanford native could not say one
Army experience was more memborable than another. "He’s
just Impressed with the whole 25 years!"—LORI DREW

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�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Jan 9 ,19BJ—JB

A M E R I C A S FA M ILY D I^ U G S T O R E

jn A n d A ro u n d S a n fo rd

CK

Parties Honor Bride-Elect
I-irida Whclehcl, who became the bride of Jeffrey Mark
Welker on Jan 8, was honored at a series of pre-nuptial par­
ties.
Pretty Linda was entertained at a shower given by her aunt,
Mary Ann Pierce, and her grandmother, Mary Whelchel at the
Pierce home. Guests were lin d a ’s sorority sisters.
Connie Mandeville, a former teacher of lin d a ’s, also en­
tertained the bride-elect at a shower. Invited guests were
Linda s former Seminole High School friends.
Another shower honoring Linda was given by Katie Jackson
and June Bryant at the Jackson home on lin d a Iiine*
The maternal aunts of the bride-elect. Phyllis Hardin,
Atlanta; and Peggy Winningham and Fontaine Moore, both of
C hattanooga, Tenn., entertained at th e trad itio n al
bridesmaids luncheon Friday at the l a Belle Vcrriere, Winter
Park.
Parties ended the year for Beta Sigma Phi chapters, linda
and Dan Dunn entertained Xi Theta Epsilon Chapter at their
home on Brierwood Drive.
Attending were: Tina and Joe Bojanowski, Donna and Chris
F rank, Ruth and Fred Gaines, Diane ami Joe Gazil, Ginny and
Joe Hagan, Vickie and Dennis Hall, Mary and Jim Johnson, Al
anil Hiiiiard Kurtz, Faye and Jerry [&gt;ord, 1-aurel Hodgcrs and
Hob Tromblay, Dns Smith and Tracey and Ralph Wight.
Zeta Xi Chapter’s holiday festivity was held at the home of
Nonna Loepp.
Participating in the evening, including a "Secret Sister" gift
exchange were: Wava Barrett, Myrt Clark, Maureen Haig,
Geneie Haynes, Judy Jett, Bonnie Jones, Bonnie Gilchrist,
Frances McAdams, Myra Michels and Deborah Partlow.

Doris / to*
Dietrich PEOPLE
Editor

t ✓

Scouts Cookie Sale. Doris says something new has been added
this year. For the first time, Brownies will sell the popular
sweet treats.
Mildred Bishop is officially singing her “Swan Song" as
secretary of the First United Methodist Church where she has
been a devoted servant (or more than a quarter of a century.
But there’s another chapter in Mildred’s “ This is Your Life."
She will become the bride of Hood Coker on Jan. 22. Happiness
is the word.
Sanford artist June Porter is on Cloud Nine these days. The
popular Sanford artist has been selected to exhibit her
graphics in the Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival in the
spring
According to the festival committee, only a limited number
of artists ' works from across the nation are selected for
exhibition in the prestigious festival.
Jone says, "I never tried before.*! never thought I'd get in
it.”
Grady Kimsey, June’s art instructor al Seminole Com­
munity College, will also be among the festival exhibitors. It
was Grady who encouraged Jone to enter a festival ap­
plication, she says.

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Doris Bacon-Elsea says she’s all set for the Annual Girl
This week, USA Today spotlighted a photograph of Sanford’s
Luis Perez and three dancers currently appearing in Juffrey
Ballet’s “ Fire." now on tour in New York.
Luis, son of Dr. Maria and Dr. Luis Perez of Sanford, has
made a name for himself in the nation's dance circles.

80 th Birthday
John M. Whitaker of San­
ford, was honored by his
family with an open house
celebration on his 80th bir­
thday, Dec. 28. Joining the
birthday honoree for a gettogether with refreshments
were 41 family members and
friends.
W hitaker has been a
resident of Sanford for 55
years and is still active in his
saw sharpening business on
Upsala Road, Sanford.

I j u r a Stevens celebrated her 77th birthday Friday, Jan. 7.
Among the other birthday celebrants this month are: Jam es
Neville, Alma G. Smith and Jam es Markham, all Jan. 3;
Stephen Danglenian and Patricia Speer, Jan. 4; Henrietta
Hardy and Henry I). Smith, Jan. 5; Elizabeth Mebane, Iram
W. Beal and Regina D. Ward. Jan. 7; Michael John Horner,
Jan. 8; anil Cora Robson, Jon. 9.

i
JO H N W H IT A K E R

Dr. Thomas F. Yandell, chiropractic physician, was
presented a plaque by his staff at Sanford Pain Control Clinic
for “two years of dedication and service to the Sanford a re a ,"
according to therapist Vickie Westbrook.
Other staffers included in the presentation are Sally Riggs,
liiu ra lj»ry, Barbara Cauthen, Mary Jean George and Teresa
Granger. The doctor’s wife Bee was also on hand for the
presentation.

Crooms Classes Reunite
T hree hundred fo rm er
Crooms Academy students
gathered Sunday, Dec. 26, at
Allen Chapel AME Church to
renew old friendships and
worship as a reunion of the
1950 through 1959 classes,
“ Crooms Classic Years — The
’50s," got underway.
The presiding officer, Rev.
Roosevelt Green, class of
1951, pastor of Allen Chapel
Rev. John H. W oodard,
ch airm a n Richard E vans,
class of 1952, and minister and
guest speaker of the hour the
Rev. Dr. Milas J. Austin,
p a sto r of Bethel B aptist
Church, Westfield, N.J., class
of 1952, and other pulpit
guests led the processional.
Fortner music instructor Enrl
E. Minottof Crooms Academy
played the old familiar "War
M arch of the P r ie s ts ."
Brother Ronald Nathan and
Sister Ingid Nathan and the
Tabernacle of Prayer Choir
and Band added to the
musical program.
Other participants were the

Rev. William l&gt;ewis, class ot
1953, pastor C arrie Hunt
Bryant, 1957, Preston Debose,
1956, the Rev. Eddie Tossie,
1951, the Rev. Dr. Joseph
Carwlse, 1953, Victoria Brown
Smith, 1956, Dr. Velma Hayes
Williams, 1959, Edward
Wilson, 1953, Dr. Calvin
Collins, 1955, Theodore Davis,
1954, Titus Henderson. 1950,
Robert B. T hom as, 1951,
, James Bouey, 1955, Janie
Holmes Eudell, 1952, Elmira
F ields Hall, 1951. Betty
Anderson Freddie, 1957, and
Gwendolyn Metz Numa, 1956.
Awards were presented on
behalf of the class to the Rev.
Woodard, guest speaker, Rev.
Dr. Miles J . Austin and
chairm an of th e worship
service, Marva Y. Hawkins.
After rem arks and direc­
tions from chairm an of the
Crooms Academ y Classes
Reunion R ich ard r Dick &gt;
Evans, the Alumni of Crooms
sang their Alma Mater "Dear
Ole Crooms Academy."
The benediction was given

Participating in the Crooms class reunion are,
from left, Annette Franklin, Richard Evans, W.
George Allen and Marva Hawkins.

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Ft. Ijjuderdale was toast­
m aster and the Rev. Eddie
Tossie gave Ihe invocation.
Welcome was given by
Delores Walden McGee, nnd
"occasion" was by Joe L.
Jackson.
The keynote and guest
speaker Horace L. Orr, was
presented by this writer. Orr
is president of Sem inole
E m p lo y m en t E co n o m ic
Development C orporation
(SEEDCO).
Others participating in the
program were: Annette Jones
F ran k lin , Miami; R obert
Thomas, and Richard Dick
Evans.
The school song, "D ear Ole
Crooms", was sung by all as
the reunion drew to a close.
Many classm ates said
“hello" and "good-bye" after
32 years of not seeing each
other since their graduation
from Crooms Academy.

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by the Rev. W. I«wis. The
Tabernacle of Prayer Choir
and Bund sang, "Once
Again," "Let Us All Rejoice
at Being Together One More
Time."
At reacq u ain tan ce tim e
during the day classmates
registered from around the
world,
including
Saudi
Arabia,
Greetings were given the
classmates by Betty Roberts
Washington and disco "Oldies
But Goodies," were presented
by Freddie "Poppa" Hudson.
Host and hostesses were
Juanita A. Golden, Yvonne
McGrey, Shcralyn J. Brinson,
Cassandra Jackson, Gail C.
Nelson, Anglea Thomas and
Darrell Barber.
On Dec. 27, at Crooms High
School classm ates were
served a continental break­
fast and given a tour of the
school as well as a bus tour of
Sanford and Seminole County.
On Dec. 28, all classmates,
family and friends gathered
for an afternoon of fishing,
picnicking and chatting over
old tim es at a barbecue. An
evening of music, fun, dan­
cing al the Elks Home and
other bouse parties completed
the relaxed evening.
Classmates then embarked
on a morning of sightseeing
and resting as the last evening
event was being prepared — a
banquet at the Altamonte
Springs Inn and Racquet Club
and J e r r y 's R estaurant.
P a tric ia and M errill Hit*
chmon and Henry Preston
Debose were soloists with
M inott a s the organ ac­
companist.
Attorney George Allen of

R I D * A * BUG

uTHtmucK

�Sunday, Jan. f , l * | ]

4 B— Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

•v»v

•ivl\

Adventist

y.yi

t h i s e v e n t h OAT
a d v e n t is t c h u b c m

m

...THE HOPE OF OUR COMMUNITY,

C arrier e l 1th A l i m
K en neth I r y t r i t
f iiU f
S a tu rd a y Services
S ab bath Stheol
f M am
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II M a m
W ednesday N lp h t
P ra y e r See..ce
&gt;m , m

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Methodist
CHRIST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Tucker Drive. Sunland Eitaitt
Rar hobeMW Millar
Fai'or
Sunday School
i t s am
Morninp Worship
II M am
MY F md B t th Sun
t Ma m
Eve Worship HI B Ird Sun t j j p m
Wednesday Mornmy Prayar Group

Assembly Of God
F IK S T A I I C M I L T OF 0 0 D
C a rn tr l i t h l E l m
D a y id Bohennon
F a tta r
‘ Sunday School
II M l m
N o n a ry th ro ath «rada
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W ad F a m ily N ifh l
in m i.
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1 Id p m
R o y a l R a r tfa r i A
M liiio n o t t a t
IMpm
R H E M A A S S E M B LT OF OOO
Comar of Coontry Club Road
and W ilbu r A vm o a
l a t a M a ry

OURNATIONI

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111MIT

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M o m m y S arvica
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Baptist
C E N T R A L B A FT1STC H U R C H
1111 Oaa A va . la n ia rd
111 M il
F im M te •m n n
P a tla r
• u n la y Schaal
( :( S a m
M e rn in p W e n * ,*
11.M a m .
C h u rch T ra in m y
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i y e n ln i W o rth , n
1 M pm
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l:M p m .

G R A C E U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T CHURCH
A ir p o r t l lv d . A Woodland Dr
W illia m J . B oyar
Pastor
Church S chool
I W |n
W o rs h ip S a rv lc a
II M am
Tooth F a llo w th ip
iM y m
Tuatday B ib la Study
II M a m
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C O N O R E O A T IO N A L
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1401 S P a rk A va
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P illa r
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(M a m
S un d a y Ic h o rl
10 M i l a m
Faiiaw thip
I
t
M am
M am m y W a rih ip
Wad P rayar M a a tm y
1
10a m
A a - in Study

• A F T I1 T CHUR C H
1141 C ountry Club Road
Rav. O ary D e lin k
P a tte r
Sunday School
t i l l a m.
M a m m y w o rth , p
lla . m .
C hu rch T ra lM n y
liM p . m .
E v a n in y W orship
liM p m .
Wad F ja y a rS a rv ic a
t iN p . m .

m s w a t t llt h s t .
Rav. Oaoryo W. W a rra n
Sunday School
t:M a m
M o rn ln y S arvica
II M a m.
E va n in y Sarvlca
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S IM IN O L E H E IO H T S

P lh S T B A P T IS T CHUBCH
OF D E LT O N A
I MB F ravldanca B ird
174 t i l l or 174 1771
I Indapandonl)
R av. D on ald H archam ador
P asto r
R av. B a rn a rd Pacb
A m P a llo r
D r. W .C . C a llln t
A t t l. F a tta r
M e t. J a llra y K arlay
T au th D ir.
M a n 't P ra y a r
. F a lla u rth ip
l iM p . m .
M o rn ln y W orship
l i M A I t iM a . m .
lo n d a y School
Tilta.m.
C h lld ra n 't C hurch
I t iM a . m .
C h u rch T ra ln ln y
liM p m .
E v a n in y W orship
l iM p . m .
W ad n a td a y P rayar A
BlbW Study
l iM p . m .
N u rtu ry and B u t Sarvlca
JO R O A N B A P TIS T CHURCH
in u p t a ia R d .
S E H a n lo n
F a tta r
Sunday School
IIM a m
M o rn ln y S arvlca
ItiM a m .
E v a n in y Sarvlca
liM p m .
W adnosday Sarvlca
liM p m
O ld T ru th s ta r a N rw D ay
L A K E AAART B A P T IS T M IS S IO N
l l t La ka vta w . Laka M a ry
Sunday School
T ilS a m .
w o rs h ip S orvica
II.M a m .
E v a n in y W arship
liM p m .
W ad. P ra v o r Sorv.
liM p . m .
N u n a r y P rov lo rd
F IR S T B A P T IS T CHURCH
O F LONOW OOD
I B ib . W as! at 11-11 on H w y 414
( SouI h o rn I
R av Jam as w M am m ock
P a tla r
Sunday School
T iM a m
M o rn ln y W orship
8:11 A I S t lla . m
C h lld ra n 't C hurch
IliC S a m
C h u rch T ra m ln y
S : 4 lp m
e v a n in y W arship
*
IM p m
W ad E va n in y
P ra y a r S arvlca
7 Mp m

P A LM E T T O A V E N U E
B A P T IS T CHUBCH
1414 P t lm a ll* A yr
R tv R aym o nd C rackar
P a llo r
Sunday School
S;4Sa m
M o rm n y W o rth ip
ll; M a m .
E r a n y o lltlic S o rvico i
IM p m
W«d P r a y tr I B ibla Study T :M p m .
In d tp o n d tn l M itiia n a ry
P IN IC R E S T R APTIST CHU R C H
1 K W , A irp o rt B lv d .S a n to rd

in m i

M a rk P. W k lv t r
P asto r
B iM * Study
M l a m
M o rn ln y W orship
IIM m l m.
■ vo n in y W arship
l:N p m .
W odnutday
F illo w s h .p Suppyr
4 :1 0 p m
H u rta ry Pravidod Par
A ll S o rv lc tt

O r. J a y T C atm ata
Sunday S a rv lc a t In tha
L a ta M a ry HiRh Schaol
A u d ito riu m
B ibla Study
t:
W arship
n
T a u th C hoir
|
C hurch T ra ln ln y
|
W orship
t

P a llo r

ISO m
M am
M p m.

Mp m
Mp m

W adnatday S a rv lc a t a l
Covananl P ra tb y to rla n C hurch
P ra y a r A B ibla Study
liM p m
A d u lt C hoir
T ill p m

Monday
Psalms
29 M l

A L L SOULS C A T H O LIC C H U R C H
111 Oak A vo.. S an to rd
F r . W illia m E m it
P a llo r
Sal. V iy il M a t t
S p in .
Sun. M a tt
A tb iM .ttiM
ClR lS IllS R B .S a t.
U p m

Christian

Tuesday
Psalms
33 1-22

Thursday
Psalms

111 1-10
Friday
Psalms
115 1-18

C H R IS T IA N SC1RNCR BOC1BTY
c o bw ootw otor Ac now m y
B a il Laka B ra n tla y O riva
L any wood
Sunday Sarvlca
IS M a n
Sunday School
I S iM a n
W ad T a ttim a o y
M aatm y
liM p r r

Church 07 Chrisf
CHUBCH O F C H R IS T
t i l l P a rk Avonuu
P rod Bakar
E v a n y o lls l
B iM * Study
I I Oka m
M o rn ln y W arship
11:BB a m
B v tn m y Sarvica
* so p tit
L a d ia i B ihia C l l i l
W adnosday
Id:Ma m
liM p . m
W odnotday B ik it C la n

Church 07 God
CHUBCH OF O O D
M l W. I ln d S lra o l
B au. B ill Thomason
F a tlo r
Sunday Schaol
(:4 1 a m
M o rn ln y W a rtM p
11 M a m
B v a n B o llllld Sorv
d :M p m .
F a m ily In rlD u n a a t
Sorvica
liM p . m .

10 00 o m

T IE S T H A T B IN D
E V A N G E L IS T IC C E N T E R
■ aardall A v t So i l SR 4 t E
Eull G ot pul • In to rlR ith
Sun W orship A
Christian Growth IS IS a m A 1 p m
Praytr A Bibla
Study W tdno td a y
1pm .
Saturday
4 :M p m

Scripture* s e e d e d Oy
YY* Arrettcan B n e $4X1*%

Christian Science

tO00a m

W IN TER S F O l. C O M M U N IT Y
E V A N O E L IC A L
C O N O R E O A T IO N A L
l i t W a d * S tra ti
R a t R tb rr t t u r n s
F a ila r
Sunday Ichaal
IS M a m
W arship
l lib b a m

t:4 1 a I
I I iM a.i

SAN FO R D C H R IS T IA N CHUR C H
111 A irp o rt B lvd
Phono 111 OTM
Jaa Johnson
M m ltta r
Sunday School
t:M a m
W arship Sarvlca
10 H i m
E va n in y Sarvlca
IL M p m
P ra y a r M a a lln y Wad
TiBSp.m .

I 00* m
&lt;0 00 o m

Non•
Demonlnatlonal

Saturday
Psalms
136 1-26

F IR S T C H R IS T IA N
1M 11. Santord A vo .
S. E d w a rd J aha tow

Roctor

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
•IS T u tk a w illa R oad
W iM a r S p rm y i
Phone t i l 1111
R ar O iry o rr O B ra w o r
V icar
Sunday E u c h a ris t
1410am
Sunday School
*• m

Wednesday
Psalms
93 1-5

Catholic

M o rn ln y W orship

H O L Y CROSS
40i P e rk A v t
T M R iv L e ro y D Soper
Holy Communion
Holy Communion
Chwrtk S&lt;Hee(
Holy Communion

Sunday
Psalms
24:1-10

b a p t is t c h u r c h

F IR S T B A P TIS T CHUBCH
111 P a rk A v rn u e ,J a n lo rd
h e r P a u li M u rp h y .J r.
F a tta r
(:4 S a m
Sunday Ich e a l
M o rm n y W o rth ip
11 H a m
C h u rch T ra lm n p
1 H p .ffl.
E von Inp W o rth ip
7 Mp m
(M e m
W od P r a y tr lo r v ic t

F IR S T U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T CHURCH
4 l( ParR A v t
LaaE K m y
P illa r
ja m a s A T h o m a s
D ire c to r ot M ain
M o m m y W o rs h ip
111411am
Sunday S chool
t it im
UMYF
I H pm
M an’ s P ra y a r B ra a k ta ir
In d 4 4 lh T h u rs d a y
4 10am

Episcopal

N E W M O U N T C A LV A R T
m is s io n a r y b a p t is t c h u r c h

C O U N T H T S ID E BAPTIST c h u r E h
C ou ntry Club BooB. Loko M a ry
A v e ry M Leny
P a tla r
Sunday Ich e o l
(:4 S a m .
iliu m
F ra a chinp A War th i p in |
B ib la I t u t y
t 10 p m
S h a n n p A P ra d a im in p
IM p m .
W ad P ra y e r Meet
1:M p m
N ursery b ra n d e d

St Rd 414AI4
Lo nyw oo d F la
J a m a l E .U Im a r Sr
Sun. School
1:10 41 41
W o rth ip
B.10. t 4! A I t w
UM TF
SiM

CORNERSTO NE C H R IS T IA N
CENTRE
M l O n ITwood V ille u e
W La ke M e ry B lv d
Full Gospel • In te rfe ifh
M e rn in t W orship
I 0 ,) 0 e m
C ve M n f W e rih ip
7 :M p m .
N*ehnp School. T h u fk
7: M p m

Toul*
Strings

Lutheran
L U tH C R A N C H U R C H O F
THEREOEEM ER
" T b * L u tn o ra n H o u r" and
TV T h la ia T h # L ir a "
1111 O ak A v *
Rav I lm o r A R tw ic h tr
P illa r
Sunday School
(ISam
W arship Sorvica
It M am
K lndo rya rlan and N u rsa ry

O n ly (our strings! Hut (bust! four strings
ulfer (Midlttss possibilities ol tune and har­
mony. They ripen to mail now horizons ot
beauty and happiness.
And vet. improperly played, these four
s t r i n g can brin&gt;&gt; forth unbulioviiblu discord!
T h e re are four slrings in lift?—wills similar
possibilities. M ind . . . C h a r a c t e r . . . Courage
. . . Kail It!
Tiie truths that fill our m in d s, the ideals
that m o ld n u r character, tire p u rp o s e s to

w hich our connigt! is given, the realities in
w h ic h we believe; thesu can fill our lives with
rich beauty and h a p p in e s s or drab ugliness
and sorrow.
For c e nturies o u r ’c h u rc h e s and s y n a ­
gogues have been th e m aestro of these strings
of life—helping m en to bring from their own
souls the harm ony a n d beauty God has put
there.
You can find m u sic in everyday living
through regular w o rs h ip an d prayer.

C o e r'v jN 1983 hmsio* Advon.smg S e 'x e

i

P O t o B0Z4 O artonetvuie V irjun a !?906

C O M M U N IT Y U N IT E D
M E T H O O IS T CHURCH
H w y . I M l a t Pm ay R id y r Rd
C a tto lb o rry
R yy .H W iy h i K ir t lt y
Paitar
Rau. D a v id H , H a d y o i
Assc.Paslor
M arnino W o rs h ip
( S t - ll a m
Church S chool
( . 14II t.m
S t r v lc tt w ith d e lt a s lo r a ll ty ts
F e llow sh ip C ollaa b o tw ro n services
J T F 'a r t
IM p m
UM TF
IM p m
E io m n y W o rth ip
IM p m
Wad B ibla S tudy
IM p m

N azarene
F IR S T C H U R C H
OF T H E N A Z A R E N E
SABI la n ia r d A r t .
John J. H in to n
Pallor
Sunday School
M l am
M o rn ln y W o rs h ip
14 41am
Tauth H our
IN p u i
E v a n y tliil S o rv ic a
IM p m
M id w e e k S e rv ic a tW e d .I
1 M pm
h u ts t r y P ro v id e d lo r a ll S t r v ic tt

Eastern
Orthodox
SH Peter A P«ul
Orthodok Perish
" ll e lo Byiiflfint"
t i l l Mepftolio Ave
Rev. Fr Anthony Grant
P i il u
I lM e m
Otvine Lifurf y
Rectory
i l l tin

Pentecostal
F IR S T PEN TE C O S TA L
C H U R C H OF LONOW OOD
141 O ra n y o S lra o l. Lonywood
R tv C R u th O ra n )
pat
Sunday S chaol
I I 04 a
M o m m y W o rs h ip
11:00 0
Sunday E v a n in y
r la y
w a d l i b i t Study
U p
C o n yu a ra rt M o a lm y Sunday a M p

Presbyterian
QOOD S H E P H E R D
LU TH ER AN C H U R C H
M i l O rla n d o D r I M !
I Lu theran C h u rch in A m e n ta )
B a r Ralph I. L u m a n
P a s ltr
Sunday School
I OS • m
W orship
,
KM om
N ursery P ro v id e d

S T .L U K B 'S L U T H R R A N CHURCH
SR 111 A Rad B u y Rd
O y itB P lS Ia v la l
Id w m J. Rassow
P u l* ,
Sunday School
(41am
W tr th i* S ervices
S ilt A I I M a m
Wa m aintain a C h ris tia n School
K lndo rya rlon Throwyh E iy h th O r ado

FIR S T P R R S R T T E R IA N CHURCH
O ak Avo B i r d SI
R tv V l r f t l L B ry a n t, Faster
Phono 111 t i l l
M om m y W o rth ip
I N am
Church S chool
(ISam
M a m m y W o rs h ip
It M o m
N u rsa ry

THE L A K E M A R T U N IT E D
P R E S B T T E R IA N CHURCH
W ilb u r A vo ., L e t t M ary
R tv A P H a v a n t
M m n ’ tr
Sunday C h u rc h Schaol
(Ham
M a m m y W o rs h ip
I1 :N (.*
Youth G ro u p
1 H i*
Wod C ho ir P ra c tic e
(M pm

■The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
Sanfordj F I*.
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

OSBORN'S BOOK
and BIBLE STORE

KNIGHT'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight &amp; Staff

FLAGSHIP BANK
OF SEMINOLE and Staff

2599 Sanford Ave.

200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

CELERY CITY
PRINTING CO.y INC.

GREGORY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE

Oviedo, F lo rid a

and Employees

500 M aple Ave., Sanford

H A R R E L L *B E V E R L Y
TRANSMISSION
COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First SI.
Bill A Dot Painter

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS

L. O. PLANTE, INC.

and Employees

Insurance

David Beverly and Staff

SENKARIK GLASS
A PAINT CO., INC.

MEL'S
GULF SERVICE

JCPennay
Sanford Plaza
E d H em annand Staff

PUBLIXMARKETS

THE McKIBBIN AGENCY

J e rry &amp; Ed S enkarik
and Employees

M el Dekleand Employees

SMI TTY'S SNAPPIN' TURTLE
MOWERS, INC
2506 Park Ave.
Mike &amp; Connie Smith

STENSTROM REALTY
H erb Sienstrom and S taff

WILSON-EICHELBERGER
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff

WILSON MAIER FU R N ITU R E C
M r. and Mrs. F re d Wilson

W INN-DIXIE STORES
and Employees

■SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY 1
A S S IM B L Y OP OOD
Pr iti r|i il M
A llte
IW n" b iy| rHft DbB. hT im
it* B ImIirn
*
k h t t m A iit m b ly p i 0 * 4 . C t r r » , p( C a v a lry C lub B »*4 a*4
W ilb u r A v t., L*B b M a ry
B A P T IS T
B a ile e * B a p tilt Church, OvlBB*
C a lv a ry B a p tlll C hurch. C ry ilA I Laka B Sr*. La ka M a ry
C a ita lh a rry B a h lilt C hurch. 174 la m ia * * * B lvd
C aa tral B a a tiit C hurch, t i l l Oak Ava
Chut w a ll F lr a l B y l i H
C ita rw a la r M im a a a ry B ap tlal C hurch. SauThwait k y
C ym KryU Bu B ip n c l Church. C uu atry C lub Beau. La ky M a ry
, i d a r y B a a 'ii* C hurch, O M D rlaaB a B « . a l H a ita r Ava.
( I n i B a p tilt Chur (A . I l l P a rk A v t.
P in t B a p tilt C hurch a t A ittm e m i S tr ia ta , i t . i u . A lte rna nt*
S p r in t i F i n l B a p tilt C hurch at F a r t t l C ity
U n i B a p tu t C hurch a l S w c v s
t i n t B a p h it C hu rch a* L a ta M e ry
&gt;1441 B a a tiit C h a rs * a l Laha M aaraa
&gt; ir t l B a p tilt C hurcB a l ^sa yw a tB . I B lh . W aal al 11(1 * a H u y
4M
U r c l B a p tilt 1 O rlaB a
t i n t B a p t lll C hurcB t l la a t a a t * 4pri»B»
u r t t B a p tlll C hu rch u( W ta tar S p r ia fi. 1(4 Baham a a t.
i n i S h ik a A M ilH tA B ry B a p tilt C BtrC B . SIBIW . I K * SI.
' a n i l B a p tlll C hurch * t Oi M bb
am ™
H *ia * B a p tlll C hurch. Q vlaBu
r a n B lh l* C hu rch . W 4 l S a*W rB A u y
u c a iM a ry B a p llit C hurch, H a rm I B . , B a tu r p r lt*
a e n u r n a M .itW n B a p tlll C hu rch . O s h HUI B B . Octaaa
A a ra lh p O W ry B a * titf C hurch, * * * * * * H « r*
41. M a r ISA P r lm l t l n B a p tlll, MSI U c * ( » A

; SurMissiMary E miH ChurcB. SantpABa S*rtn*t BP.
t m a i M itaJaB ary • a p itH C h u rch . I l l * i * r r y A *B .
I ,a n M iis ia a a ry B a p tilt. U pa s A n .
a t a ih a i M itiia n a r y C h a re *. S I* I t . * M ic k a ry A n .
n i r r m B a p tilt M i l l O t ic L t a p n * * 4B ‘ LanpwuaB__ ,
ip B a p tilt C hu rch . F a n il CHy C a m m u n s ty C an ter, F a n i t

rMl. Calvary Mitiianary BaptMl, UBSW- IWM.
!lalMnPrimitfn BtpttHChurch, W t i M
, Tniamant Baptist Church, Oupitty it*. Mam
I Ml It** Baptlll ChutcB, Ins Ftpr A*a

M aw L it * F a tla w ih ip . ( M l I . Laha D r lv t . C a iitth a r r y . FI. H IM
■ a v ta a a P a r t B a p tlll C hurch, l i l t W . IM h SI.
Paaala’t I t p i I i t ch apat. l i l t w . P i n t S tra tt. la n ta r *
P la y e r act B a p tlll C hurch, IIS W . A ir p a rt B la b
P r a lr i* L a b * B a p liM . ( U p I B . . B a r a P a r *
P r t f r t M M i n w a a ry B a p tilt C hurch. M iU w a r
SacaaB thM ab M U _a w a--------try B a p tlll
. -C h u rch
. |W# n| fl -SaalarB
--------S m y ra a B a p tlll C hu rch , I M O u t r t r t a h O r.. C iu a th a r ry
S u n ta n * B a p tilt C hu rch . SIM P a lm ttta
I t . J a r n n h u i a w a a ry B a p tist C hu rch . S I. I B . 411. O itu aa
SI. Luha M J iiw n a ry B a p tilt C hu rch a t C a m a ra * C ity , lac.
SI. P a u l B a p tilt C hurch, H I P tru A n .
I t . M a lth a u n BapHM Church. C anaan H f lc
I p r la pA y lB M lu ta tta r y B a p tilt, 11th * C lB a r
I t . M i l M iit w a a r y B a p tilt C hu rch . IM C y p r t c i I t
T a m p w B a p tlll C hu rch . P a lm I p r in p i B &lt; . A tla m a M a S prm yi
w illia m ChapM M iia ta n a rr B a p in l C h u rch , «Aarh A W illia m I I .
J U ta m tn lt I p r in p i
Z w a Hupp B a p in l ChurcB. M l 0 &lt; l* « * A n .
C A T H O L IC
C h u rc h H l h * n a tiv ity . Laha M a ry
A ll l a u l l C am alic Church. M l Oah A v a . S aalarB
O u r LaB y Ouaaa a t P a a c t CathaUc C hapat. t i l S. M a s n lla A r t. .
St. A M 's C a ttw lw C hurch. D * r * * * B T r a il. D tB a ry
I t . A u b w H iw C arnatic C hu te*. S u n n i O r., ne ar B u ttw BB ,
C t t M l io r r v
I t . M a ry M * « * 4* i* r.e C athalic C h u te *, M a itia n * A r t .
A tta m aata S p rin ts
O u r LaB y a t m * L * * H C a ltw u t C hu rch . I l l s M a iim iu * * . Datlaaa
C H R IS T IA N
C L ritM a a ic M n c a ta d a ty . C O S w aa tw atar A ca n a m y. R a il
B ra n tla y O r.. L a n tw a a *
F t n r 'C h r W in n c h u rc h , m i t . S ta t i r B A n
ChrW Ban O M jrck. l t l W A J rp n rl B t n
C h ris tia n C h a rt*. FtnM Ba M ayan D r , M am anu
• a ir Lana I t . at JanM a*
C H U B C H O P C H R IS T
C h u n * a t c h ria t, i l l } I . P a r t A n .
C h u r c B a t C h r lM a lL a U llla n . U t l l- n . H . C t u a l h a r r y
Sauth ta m u s n l* C hu rch a tC h r u t. H IS L a h r H a w a ii RB
C h u rch Rt C h ris t, M l P a lm ia r i n p i O r . A ita m a n M ta p s

C h u rc h a t C h r id . Ganaya
C h u rc h a t Chalet. Ltnym a a*
C h u rc h *1 C h a in , w in n It.
N u rth a iS * C hu rch *1 Chi III. F la . H i v m D r , tA a itla *B
C H U R C H OP OOD
C h u rc h u t OuB. M l H ickary
C h u rc h a t D a *. M l W ll* B I t .
C h u rc h a l OaS. O rlaBa
C h u rc h a l GaB H a im a si. Laha M anraa
C h u rc h *1 GaB M iu ia * . I « 1 t r * m *
C h u rc h u t GaB. 1141 w itm i t .
•
C h u rc h u t OaB m C V itt . OviaB*
C h u rch * I G * 4 * I Praphacy. I M t S B lm A n .
C h u rch at O n at Praphacy. IIW S P a ritm tn a n A v a .
• y s e n C hu rch a t GaB. I lb t w . n th I t , SaaturB
T rue C hurch CH OuB. &gt;111 B i t y l v ia B A n . , l u a tu n
■ A S T B B H O n T h w w w r.
■ a s te rn O rth a B u i Cherch. t i l P a ttr B P a u l, t i l l M a p h a lii A y | „

toAlirtf, Fit.
■ a t t t r n O rthaBaa Church. I t . G au rpa . 411 ShanmaB C l,
A lta m a iita S p rin ts
■ a s la rn O rthaBaa Church. I t S ta y a n 'i *1 O C A ., t i l Sauth S t .
P a m P a r*
■ a s te rn O rthaBaa Church. I t Jams C h r y ia ila m Chapat. U S
H w y . U » t F a r * P a r*
C O N O B IG A T IO N A L
C a n fra y a tla n a l C hristian Church. 1441 | . P a rk A vk ta a fk ,*
■ P tIC O P A L
■ p iic a p a t C hu rch a l l h * H rw C t n n a n t, I I ) T u t h a a illi B aa *.
W in tt r t pc m i l
T M C hurcB at tha O ta * S htfA arS i A ta m a n * . U t L a b a A r t
1 S a ln ti Ip ts c a p a i Cburch. I D tB a ry A v a , B n ttrB r iia
C h r it l Ip u c a p a i Church. L tn im n B
H a ty C{IBiH|BII*l
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- J* j.

�RELIGION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly

In Church Growth

Length Of Pastor's Stay Is A Factor

Postor Studies For Docforafe
At Baptist Seminary
In January, Mark P. Weaver, pastor of Pinecresl Baptist
Church will be attending Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary to further his studies toward his doctorate
degree. The Rev. Roy Hamilton, former pastor of
Pinecrest, will be filling the pulpit Jan. 9 and Jan. 16.

Pinecrest Baptist Men
A breakfast meeting for the Baptist Men and boys at
Pinecrest Baptist Church will be held at 7:30 a.m . January
9th in the Fellowship Hall.

Witness Commitment Day

By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UP1 Religion Writer
The Methodist system of pastoral
appointm ents may have to be
changed if the denomination wants
to see increased evangelism and
church growth, according to an
evangelism leader.
Rev. George G. (Chuck) Hunter,
evangelism executive with the
denom ination’s
Board
of
D isclpleshlp, said the p resen t
system of pastoral apppolntments —
which originated with John Wesley

200 years ngo — "sometimes func­
tions as an unconscious growth
obstruction.":
"Church growth research reports
a very strong correlation between
lengthy
p a sto ra te s
and
congregational
growth
and
development,” Hunter told a recent
meeting of the denom ination's
Council of Bishops.

But it is precisely in those years
th a t, under the Methodist ap ­
pointment system, ministers are
frequently moved to another
congregation.

mission of the congregation," he
said. "The widespread use of salary
as a determinant of 'who should go
where' undoubtedly also has its
tradeoffs."

"W henever the appointm ent
system is consciously used for
objectives other than enabling the
mission of congregations, there are
tradeoffs," he said.

H unter also challenged the
practice of ordaining clergy for life
and said it was an obstacle to ef­
fective evangelism.

"Specifically, years 5.6 and 7 arc
the most likely to be growth years in
the life history of a pastorate," he
added.

"F or instance, where an ap­
pointment is used to 'give a
promotion' ... or to ‘solve a
problem,' that can frustrate the

Seminole Heights B a ^ U Church, Sanford, will have a
Witness Commitment Day this Sunday at the 11 a.m,
worship service at Lake Mary High School auditorium.
Witness Commitment cards will be received from the
members at the conclusion of the service.
The proposed 1983 budget will be presented for the
congregation's approval.

The United Met odist
Church's F lorida Annual
Conference will officially
launch the intensive phase of
the |8.5 m illion church
D evelopm ent F in a n c ia l
Campaign during the nfonth
of January with rallies in
Orlando, Dei,and and 10 other
districts.
The Dei .and District rally
will be held Jan. 11 nl 7:30
p.m. at
F irst
United
Methodist Church. D ctand.
The Orlando District chur­
ches will rally at 7:30 p.m.
Jan. 20 at Asbury United
Methodist Church, Maitland.
These rallies have been
planned
to
provide

The Search Committee for Music-Youth Arrangements in
Seminole Heights Baptist Church announces that youth
activities are being planned and scheduled by adult ad­
visors to the Youth Council. These will include, in addition
to spiritual emphasis, special outings, banquets, and other
social-recreational opportunities, as well as fellowships on
Sunday evenings. Following the service this Sunday
evening, the youth will go to the home of Mr, and Mrs. Ed
Alderman, 516 Power Road.

Christian Tune Up
“Christian Tune Up" Week will be held Jan. 10-14 a t New
Mt. Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, W. 12th Street,
Sanford. Services will be held at 7 p.m. each night with the
Rev. A.V. Ward, pastor of the Zion Hill MB Church,
Orlando, as evangelist. The Rev. G.W. Warren is church
pastor.

Annual Meeting
Holy Cross Episcopal Church, Sanford, will hold its an­
nual meeting after the church service on Jan. 16. A
spaghetti luncheon will be served.

Mildred Bishop Retires
A s Church Secretary

LAYMEN OF THE YEAR

Peace Essays Judged
our central Floridians will specialising in books and
[e essays in the fifth an- information about the state.
Dr. John B urnside, of
1 Peace Essay contest,
Winter Park, Is a native
do red by the Orlando
Igioui Society of Friends Floridian who is a consultant
akers), which la offered to and writer on m atters of aolar
or high school students In energy and la active In the
nge and Seminole coun- Florida Solar Coalition.
James G. Sherwood is a
partner in Com m erlcal
udgea are the following:
Services, In c., of Winter
fin Burke, of Orlando, who Park. He U a w riter on peace
i a B.A. d e g re e in subjects and active in the
n an itlei from R ollins Florida N u c le a r F reese
lege He U active in St. campaign. He U also a trustee
ry M argaret C atholic of the. tfrla n d o Friends
rch and is involved with Meeting.
Central Florida Nuclear
Cash prises In the 19C2
esc campaign.
Peace Essay contest will be
eorgine (Mrs. Thomas) awarded on Saturday, Jan. 22,
:kler, of C huluota, is In the Friends Meeting House,
with h er husband 316 E. M arks St., Orlando
M lckler's F lo rld la n a , during Peace Day activities.

While he said there were “fewer
such clergy than one might think"
those few are "very itinerant, and in
a career span can half wreck half
the congregations in a conference.
“ Many of these churches do not
recover their former strength within
the next decade," he added.

The goal for this campaign

is to raise ffl.5 million dollars
over a three-year period for
United Methodist church
development purposes in the
F lorida Conference. The
monies raised will be used for
cap ital facilities only, in­
cluding such a re a s as:
launching new churches,
assisting existing churches in
stra te g ic areas, church
relocations, and church
m erg ers
and
church
redevelopment in areas with
promise.
The Florida Conference
m ade this com itm ent to
church development at the
Florida Annual Conference in

May of 1982, Due to the fact
that the population of Florida
is increasing at the rate of 43.4
percent during 1970 through
1980, with an overall growth of
44 percent during the last 30
years, the projection is that
Florida will continue to have
an estimated 30 4 percent
increase from 1980 through
1990. This means a population
of nearly 14 million per­
manent residents by the end
of the century.
The polls indicate that o(
th ese
residents
ap­
proximately R percent will
claim United M ethodist
identity.

&lt; § 1.

j u k e ’s

;8attl]frau
(!II]urcl]
Highway 434 &amp; Red Bug Road, Oviedo 317*5

SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES
8:30 A M . and 11:00 A M .
SUNDAY SCHOOL- 9 :45 A.M.

t o spe a k

•

me and I have m ade so many
lasting friendships with the
people of the church," said
Mrs: Bishop. " I appreciate
the thoughtfulness of all the
members."
A resident of Sanford since
the 20s, Mrs. Bishop worked in
the auditing office of the
M ayfair H otel far four
seasons prior to going to work
at the ch u rch . A native
Floridian, she was bom In
Ocala. She has one son,
Tommy, of Law rencevllle,
Ga.
"Mildred has served very
effectively
as
church
secretary," said the Rev.
King, "and has been able to
handle all kinds of work from
receptionist to administrative
work. She is well loved by all
of our people."

motivation, information and a
unifying enthusiasm for the
leadership of local United
Methodist Churches. Bishop
Earl G. Hunt Jr., resident
Bishop of the Florida Area,
will keynote each of the
rallies, and will, along with
others, interpret the need and
n ature of the Church
D ev elo p m en t
F in a n c ia l
Campaign. Assisting in each
district will be the district
superintendent, key laypeople and the Rev. James
Christie, of the General Board
of Global Ministries, Director
for the Campaign.

Dottie Head and Orville Touchton were honored
by F irst United Methodist Church, Sanford, as the
Lay Woman and Layman of the Year for 1982.
Awards were presented by the Rev. Leo King,
pastor. She has served as the director of
Stewardship and Volunteer Office work and he is
teacher of the Men's Bible Class and chaplain of
the Methodist Men.

REVIVAL

The R ev. Dan R.
C allah an ,
natfonal
e v a n g e list for the
Church of God, will
conduct revival ser­
vices
at
Sanford
Church of God, 801 W.
22nd SI., Jan. 9-16 at 6
p.m. on Sunday and 7
p.m. weekdays. In the
ministry for 22 years,
he has served as
district overseer, and
•on
the
sta le
Evangelism and Youth
and
Christian
Education Boards.

M IL D R E D B IS H O P

"Life tenure for all ordained
clergy is a luxury that we can no
longer afford,” he told the 9.5
m illion-m em ber denom ination’s
bishops.

"E a c h conference (regional
grouping of congregations) has
some clergy persons who are devoid
of the gifts and graces necessary to
adequately lead congregations," he
said.

Methodists Plan District Rallies

Youth Activities Planned

Retiring after more than 27
years as church secretary at
F irs t United M ethodist
Church, Sanford, Mildred S.
Bishop will be honored by
members and friends at a
retirem en t d in n er
and
program this Sunday at the
church beginning at 5:30 p.m.
Although site Is retiring
from the job she has held
since July, 1955, she has
plenty to look forward to. She
is planning her wedding
scheduled for Jan. 22 a t 2 p.m.
at First United Methodist
Church with her form er boss,
the Rev. Leo King officiating.
A widow, Mrs. Bishop will
■marry F. Hood Coker, a
.widower whom she m et at the
church. They will be leaving
In May for North Carolina
where they will spend the
summer at Blowing Rock.
She joined the church in
1944 and taught Sunday School
and was treasurer of the
W omen's Society before
becoming church secretary.
The Rev. Milton Wyatt was
pastor when she took the job.
Since then she has worked
with the following m inisters:
John P. A dam s, T.C.
Osteen, Eugene Rutland Sr.,
Robert M. Jenkins, Jam es
Ulmer, Julius Byers and Leo
King as well a s th e ir
associates, Scott H arris, Brett
Sanford, and Richard Vltolo.
The job Included being
secretary to the pastor and
the
church,
fin an cial
secretary, receptionist and
"general flunky", she said.
" It has meant so much to

Sunday, Jan. 9, 1983—SB

Sanford
Church of God
P A U L A N D M A R Y T IU S S E L

Geneva Revival Set

Jan. 9-16
DAN CALLAHAN

Sunday

7:00 P .M .

10:45 &amp; 6:00 P .M .

N ursery Provided

22nd &amp; Holly Avo.

Evangelist Ben Marlin will conduct revival services al
Geneva Church ol the Nazarcne, State Road 46, Geneva Jan. 916 with Sunday services at 10:30 a.m. and6 p.m. and weekdays
at 7:30 p.m. There will be a pork barbecue at noon this Sunday.
Paul and Mary Trissell will sing Sunday and Monday.
Special music will be provided by Barbara Childers on
Tuesday; the Al Green Singers, Wednesday; Barbara "B J"
Johnson, Thursday; and the Jerry Rucker Family on Jan. 16.
•

Religious Roots Of Vegetarians
One of the results of the'recession is a change In our eating
habits. Americans are eating more vegetables. Even the
consumption of broccoli, the most unpopular of vegetables
among children, is up.
Already before the recession, world food shortages were
forcing many populations to switch from a heavy meat diet to
vegetarianism. It has been pointed out that when grain Is
passed through the stomach of an animal and we eat the meat,
it takes about eight acres to produce as much food as we could
get from one acre if we ate the food directly.
The early vegetarians (in the 19th century) gave up meat on
m oral and religious grounds.
Didn't God say, "I give you all plants... and every tree­
bearing fruit: They shall be yours for food?"
Didn't the book of Proverbs warn, “ Be not among riotous
eaters of flesh?"
Didn’t St. Paul say, "M eat commandeth us not to God?"
Certainly economics and food shortages were not a factor in
the vegetarian difct reform in' the 19th Century. Just (he op­
posite.
In those days a “cheap, abundant food supply and a robust
habit of life sent our ancestors off on a gigantic gastronomic
binge which knew no limits," says Gerald Carson in his book,
"The Cornflake Crusade.",
It tells the story of the food faddists — mostly clergymen and
m em bers of evangelical sects — who brought ready-to-eat
breakfast foods into the American home.
Gluttony and the frying pan were ruining the American
stomach. Even the poor expected to sit down to two or three
m ajor dishes at each meal.
•
Midday dinner consisted of two meats, gravies, piA les,
vegetables, cheese and bread and butter, topped off by pud­
ding or pie, "perhaps with fruit to fill In the chinks."
The 19th century man would have scorned the modem
breakfast of orange Juice, cereal, toast and coffee. He wanted
two m eats, bread and potatoes, salt and pepper, pickles, and
sometimes eggs, toast, hot cakes, biscuits and butter.
"Overeating is killing twice as many as rum ," said the
Boston Moral Reformer in the 1830s.
The manner of eating was no more delicate than the quantity
of food consumed. The American gentleman of the tiroes ate
with blinding speed, “shoveling hia victuals In with his knife
and afterw ard cleaning hia teeth with his pocketknife."
Onto the scene now cam e Rev. Sylvester Graham, a
Presbyterian clergyman remembered beat for graham
crackers. (Graham became the generic name for any coarsely

Saints
And
Sinners
George Plageni

ground wheat.)
Graham saw only one hope for mankind — "a spare diet and
a course of vegetables." He recommended that food should be
cool and chewed slowly and thoroughly with abundant
salivation. Water was not to be drunk with meals.
By the 1890s the fashion in eating had switched to
"wholegraln foods, cheerful meals, slow eating, occasional
fasting and the cautious use of fats."
Sister Ellen White, a leading Seventh-day Adventist of the
period, made vegetarianism a major tenet of the sect.
Vegetarians in history have included Socrates. Plato, da
Vinci, Einstein, Mahatama Gandhi, John Milton and George
Bernard Shaw. Shaw, who lived to be 94, became a vegetarian
at the age of 25. He remained healthy throughout his life.
But the great Irish playwright waa particular about his
vegetables. He had hia cook buy only the best and frequently
put hia chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce at her disposal so she
could go into London to get an eggplant or Imported pineapple
that Shaw craved.

HAVE YOU HAD
YOUR PENTECOST?
(Acts 2)
• Do you need more Boldness

l

Power?

• A M ore effective Prayer Life?
• This g ift is for you
Come

l

t

a l your children.

Experience Your Pentecost

this Stm., Jan.

9,

6:00 pm as

Pastor Bohannon shares the "H oly S p irit"
First Assembly o f God, 304 W . 27th St.
3229222

Study On
Marriage
A Biblically baaed study
designed to help rekindle the
spark in m arriages, on the
book by Charles R. Swindoll,
"Strike the Original Match",
will be offered from 7 4 pan.
each Wednesday beginning
Jan. IS, at Community United
Methodist Church, Highway
1742, Casselberry.
It will be taught by Vince
Brewer. Interested couples
and individuals m ay call
Darla From a t S31-4167 prior
to Jin . 12.

i.
« r*v -

�— Evening Hera 10, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE
| v o y s A iD v o u

V

1

iIn'
• kV

L_«_

by Chic Young

ACROSS

! * H O 'JG H T YOU WECE w h a t k in d o p e n e r g y
7 IN CAVOR O P t - f ARE YOU C O N S E R V IN G
X .C O N S E Q V lN O j I
S IM P L Y LYING
ENERGY
■"
THEREON
/ ( I AM
THE S O P A ? /

*1

W E 3 E G O iN G TO '
NSULATE ThE .
A T T IC

Sunday, Jan.», 1*91

I Small
w hirlpool
S Samite
8 Paradise
12 Indian tribt.
13 Arrival time
g u a ti (a b b r)
14 Discharge
15 Coating on
iron
16 Carry
17 Im h king s
horns
18 Mountain nsar
ancitnt Troy
19 Mora fo iy
21 Crag
22 White-plumed
heron

B

X \

X

BEETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker

24 Sm elt!

26 M atter of
cerem onial
28 Retards
29 Authoritative
rule
30 Trouble
31 Pub beverage
32 Same (prefn)
33 Strides
35 More mellow
38 Aromatic gum
ream
39 Singer Bob

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

LOOK W H t &amp; t m m U D ti? Y? WITH
MAY-JOl W W C m tU B E U tfT H A T ?

5!
53
54
55
56

Answer to Previous P utile
Insecticide
Prophet
H f
]_
Nipple
o Ur
Mayday signal r s
i
Eiiltence
■ nT
(Cat)
0

-

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

H

0 0 WN

For Sunday, January 9, 1982

1 Macabre
2 Slave
3 Take weapons
4 So far
5 Set
6 luggage item
7 Carry on
8 Triton
9 Sea plant
10 Feui pat (pi I
11 Comes close
19 Furtive
20 Highway edge
(comp w d)
23 Dessert pastry

•

I

1

4

25
27
28
33
34
36
37
36

40 Our (Fr)
43 Racetrack
term
44 Bring to ruin
45 Containers
48 Swift aircraft

Tired
Ram s mates
Pelage
W hirl
Sheik s land
Slurs
Hydrophobia
Tristan's loe

»

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(ab br)

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46 Nigerian tribe
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47 Experiment
rooms
it
-4 9 Genetic
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material
41
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Persons you know socially
could be of help to you today,
either business-or carcerwise.
listen carefully if they offer
you lips.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
Your judgment should be
especially keen today when it
comes to evaluating im ­
portant issues. Pay heed to
your own counsel.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Today could offer you some
rath er su rp risin g twists.
You’ll want to help others, but
they may end up doing more
for you.

YOUR
BIRTHDAY
January 9,1983
You can expect stellar
support from those to whose
side you rallied In the past.
The markers you have out­
standing could be repaid
many times over.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Something in which you’ve
been involved that has been
slow in coming to fruition
could suddenly take a turn for
the better today. Order now:
The NEW A stro-Graph
M atchm aker wheel and
booklet
which
reveals
ro m an tic c o m b in a tio n s,
compatibilities for all signs,
tells how to get along with
others, finds rising signs,
hidden qualities, plus more.
Mall 82 to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Send an additional 81
for your Capricorn AstroGraph predictions for 1983. Be
sure to give birthdate.

LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Activities offering a bit of
friendly com petition are
likely to be your most-fun
pursuits today. Seek op­
p o n e n ts

who

know

how

to

have a good time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
there’s an Important matter
you’d like to finalize, you
could be lucky in getting it
tied down to your satisfaction
today. Get going!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) You’ll m ake a very
favorable Im pression on
persons you
encounter
socially today, so get out and
mix. The larger the crowd is,
the better.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Short jaunts for pleasurable
purposes should turn out to be
fun today. If there’s someone
nearby you’ve been wanting
to visit, this is a good day to do
it.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Others are working on your
behalf behind the scene today
regarding som ething Im­
portant to you. Their efforts
could produce results even
better than you hoped for.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your material aspects are
extrem ely encouraging. If
there’s something you have in
mind that could reap you a
profit, work on it today.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Try to spend time today with
friends who inspire you
through an interchange of
ideas. You need to be around
people who are "up" and
positive.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Situations you per­
sonally take charge of should
work out fortunately for you
today. Seek involvem ents
which can advance your selfinterests.

For Monday, January 10, 1983

PRISCILLA'S POP

by Ed Sullivan
VB5. IV E JUGT BEEN
CONCENTRATING VERY
H A R P / r M TAKING
L IT T L E BREAK

K CARLYLE. YOU'VE
BEEN GO QUIET
IN SO UK R O O M ARE SOU OKAY ?

k OUR GONFGGO
S M A R T ' HES ViOKKING O J SOMETHING
CALLEP CONNECTIVE
BALANCE.'

NORTH
ll- U
♦ 109 7 6
f 64
♦ AJ 96
♦ AKJ
WEST
EAST
♦ K
♦ 12
TAXQJltl
T il
♦ Kgn
♦ 10 5 4 3 2
♦ 964
♦ 1753
SOUTH
♦ A Q J 15 3
f 912
♦7
♦ Q 102
V u ln e ra b le E asi-W est
D e a le r W est
Hut
If
Paw

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffel A Heimdahl

FOP YO U R FIR S T LESSON
TR Y 1 H £ p o i r e e i g h t .

N o rik
Dbl
Pass

K a il
Past
Pass

South
(♦

O p e n in g lead: f K

STCX AKXW D. IN T W E
S P R IN G ,I RUN A S K IN '
D lV IN gr S C H O O L
By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
AND THATS \ 1/ / N fe
W W V JH A T E U [ - r o o f

TUAT&amp;POr.

The relrain ol a college
song of the last century
starts with "When Greek
meets Greek then comes the
lug of war.”
T ranslating this into
"Bridgese” we find lhal the

p lay and c o u n te rp la y
between experts can be most
interesting even though an
unimportant overlrick is all
that is involved.
Souths four-spade con­
tract is not in danger. The
most he can lose win be two
hearts and the king of
spades
Look at all the cards and
you can see that South can
drop West's singleton king
ana make five, but the per­
centage play favors taking
the finesse and letting that
king score on this occasion.
west led out the king and
ace of hearts East's normal
play would be to signal by
echoing with the live, then
the three. Had he done so,
West would lead a third
hrart. East would be unable
tu overrulf dummy's 10.
Expert East saw that this
would tell declarer that
West held any missing
trump honors so expert East
played the three first.
West led a club at trick
three. An ordinary declarer
would win in dummy and
take the spade finesse
Expert South won in his
own hand and ruffed his last
heart. When East failed to
ruff, declarer knew where
the missing king was. He
played the trump are and
dropped his majesty.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN |

few subtle hints, you should be
able to solicit appropriate aid
to help you over the rough
spots.

YOUR
BIRTHDAY
-anuary 10,1983
This coming year could be
unusual In lhal persons or
things which were obstacles
to you will now serve as
bridges on your path to
success. Look ahead op­
timistically.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Help where you can today.
It will not be what you do for
yourself, but what you do for
others that will bring you
satisfaction and happiness
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 $2 for
the NEW AstroGraph Match­
m aker wheel and booklet.
R eveals rom antic com ­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Pretentious people could
make you feel a bit un­
comfortable today, so try to
avoid them If possible. Sick
to unpretentious pals.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your possibilities for out­
standing achievements are
strong, both for today and
tomorrow. Schedule Im­
portant matters to fit this
timetable.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Don’t treat hunches or in­
sights lightly today. Your
intuition regarding the out­
come of events could be more
accurate than usual.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You have good friends in the
right places today and, with a

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
More can be accomplished
today with partnership
arrangem en ts
than
in­
dependently. Join forces with
productive allies.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You are likely to be able to
perform physical lasks more
efficiently today than you will
be able to handle mental ones.
Work those muscles.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
peers could be dragging their
feet a bit today and looking to
you to set the pace. For­
tunately, you'll be in an “up"
mood. You'll get things
rolling.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Do not be overly concerned
today as to how you’ll handle
problem atical situations.
Whatever needs doing, you
will do well.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Begin the week by striving to
catch up on your paperwork.
Gear up old correspondence
and make those phone calls
you've been putting off.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Financial indicators continue
to look positive for you at this
time, so focus your efforts in
areas where you think you
could derive a profit.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Try to avoid persons
who could m ake heavy
demands on your time today.
Your independence will be
Important. You won’t want to
be Imposed upon.

G ARFIELD________________

by Jim Davis

FRANK AND ERNEST

FR A N K a E R N IE 'S
DINER

IT MUJT Have gBM
.So m e o n e

a

w t

U|cE ERNIE WHO
INVENTED SCpPMtLiP
SUSS IN THE PlRST

n *c i

THE ONLY THING TO DO IS TO
GET RIGHT BACK UP THERE

AND START S IN G IN G AG AIN

bus&amp;tfc

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TUMBLEW EEDS

by T. K. Ryan
TOOK 5 VEAHS OFF MV LIFE. T

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R ie i/B B

A I I /M S I

ANNIE
JUST A FEW FULLED
THATU BE
TENDONS. KEEP fluff M5YWCT0K!
WEIGHT OFF IT FOR f EVERY TIME I
A FEN RAYS, YOUfffl 1 PUT MY FOOT
T l DOWN-.

by Laonard Starr
- 1 FEEL IT INj GOOD. THAT
TK TOP O' hill make Sure
MY HiN&gt;! YOU SET GOME

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Sunday. Jan. 9 1»S)—7B

Eveninq Herald. Sanford, FI

TONIGHTS TV
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON

2:30
83 110) IT S EVERYBODYS BUSI­
NESS

2:35
12 (17) MOVIE Junior Bonner,
(1972) Sieve McQueen, Robert
Preston An aging rodeo star
returns home lor one last contest
and finds that his family and the
town have totally changed

3:00
(7 O MOVIE
Gay Purr ee
(196?) Animated Voices of Judy
Garland. Robert Goulet A group of
French farm cats hrvd adventure in
Pans
CD 110) PRESENTE

3:30
0 4 NFL M
S O TO BE ANNOUNCED
CD HO) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
When The Sisters Come March­
ing Home ' Ttje first black WAC unit
to serve overseas during World War
II is profiled

4.00
0
4 NFL FOOTBALL AFC
Playoft Game'1(Time Tentative)
( J . O HOGAN'S HEROES
lit (35)INCREDIBLE HULK
CD HO) TO BE ANNOUNCED

4:30
9 O MOVIE The Great Ice RrpO ff (1974) lee J Cobb. Gig Young
When a gang ot )ewet thieves
decide to use a bus as thetr get­
away car. they don t count on a
retired cop being one ot the pas­
sengers
1 7 O MOVIE Snow While And
The Three Stooges' (1961) Carol
Hetss. The Three Stooges A trio ot
bunglers do their best to protect a
lair maiden
CD (10) ENTERPRISE (Season
Premiere) Tailspm' Host Enc
Sevareid looks at the behtnd-lhescenes story ot Americas tust
major airline bankruptcy, and
watches as Brandt eiecutives try to
restructure their company

4:35
1] (17) WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
QUARTER HORSE SHOW

5:00
11 (3S) DANIEL BOONE

CD (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

5:30

CD (10) WALL STREET WEEK
Telecommunications In The '80s
Guest Steven Chrusl. director ot
the research-technology group lor
Seniord C Bernstein A Company

5:35
12 (17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­
ED
EVENING

6:00
9 O NEWS
Hi (33IKUNGFU
CD (10) NATURE The Discovery
Ot Animal Behavior Living Togeth­
er " An exploration ot the relation­
ship between the behavior ot ani­
mals and the kinds ot communities
in which they live and function is
presented

6:05
12 (17) WRESTLING

6:30
I S O CBS NEWS
17 ONEW S

7:00
Q

4 HERE’S RICHARD

*
t

O HEEHAW
o MEMORIES WITH LAW­

Cable Ch

RENCE WELK
11 (35) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACOUES COUSTEAU .

7:30

O 4 FLORIDA'S WATCHING

8:00

8:05
I] (17) MOVIE Rio Lobo (19711
John Wayne Jennifer O’Neill An
ei-Civti War colonel rids a Teias
town ot carpetbaggers

8:30
Q

4

SILVER SPOONS

9:00

Q 4 O’MALLEY A poor man s
private eye sets out to clear a
down-on-h:s-luck client who has
been wrong fully implicated in a
counterfeiting scheme
5 O MOVIE White Water Reb­
els (Premierel Catherine Bach.
James Brolin A freelance pholo*
Idurnalist becomes involved with a
white water kayaker who is deter­
mined to save a mountain river
trom unscrupulous developers
&gt;7 O LOVE BOAT
It (35) WOMEN IN CRISIS Gary
Collins and Carol Lawrence host
this enamination ol tne plight ot the
1 6 billion women m the world s
developing nations through the sto­
nes ot sit ot these women

9:30
CD (10) FAWLTY TOWERS

10:00
0 4 INSPECTOR PEREZ A New
York City dereclive helps the San
Francisco authorities solve a series
01 murders involving young Chi­
nese-American women
7 o FANTASY ISLAND
11 (35) AFRICA'S WEEPING BUT
WHO'S LISTENING? Hosts Carol
Lawrence. Sian Mooneyham
Guests Elrem Zrmbaksl J r . Dean
Jones. William S iatner
CD (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

10:30

(D O

(CBS) Orlando

G

(NBC) Daytona Beach
Orlando

thui, i n million peopMin Africa who
have been allocled by wax and
though! and the results ol such
events

e

4 SATUR0AV NIGHT LIVE
Host Ron Howard Guests The
Clash, Andy Griffith. Marry Ander­
son (R|
5 O BARRY FARBER
7 O MOVIE Notorious '(1946)
Cary Grant. Ingrid Bergman
12 (17) TUSHI

12:00
It (35) NOWHERE TO TURN Stan
Mooneyham and Carol Lawrence
host this documentary on the more

Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
THURSDAY, JAN. 13
ENTREE
Oven Fried Chicken
Whipped Potatoes
Spinach
Oven Bake Rolls
Milk
EXPRESS
Chicken P attir
French Fries
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
FRIDAY, JAN. 14
ENTREE
Fiestado
Green Beans
Fruit
Milk
EXPRESS
Fiestado
TaterTots
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice

CALENDAR
MONDAY, JANUARY 10
League of Women Voters of Seminole County,
general meeting, 7:45 p.m., Altamonte Community
Church fellowship hall, State Road 436 at Forest
Avenue, Altamonte Springs. Speaker, Ruth -Ann
Branuon, state president LWV of1Florida.
Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 u n . , Big Cypraaa.
Longwood Rotary G ab, 7:30a.m., Loogwood Village
Inn.
Oviedo Rotary Gob, 7:30 a m , Town House
Restaurant.
Sanford Toastmasters, 7:15 * m Sanford Airport
Restaurant.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 11
Illinois Gub of Central Florida, 1:30 p.m., Senior
Gtlzen Multipurpose Center, Casselberry.
American Diabetes Association,
Lake Monroe
Chapter, 7:30 p.m., Central Florida Regional Hospital,
Sanford.
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Gub, 1 p.m., chamber of
commerce, First Street and Sanford Avenue.
Action for Form er Military Wives, 6:30 p.m., for
more information call 625*2801.
,
,
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12
"G reat beclslon" course presented by Vileacta
Junior College sponsored by Jewish Community
Center, at Ihe Klnneret II library, 2 p m . on second and
fourth Wednesday through May 11. Call 645-5933.

,

by Larry Wright

Q

12 (17) MOVIE

Little Minster

(1 9 3 4 ) K a th a rin e

H e p b u rn .

Beal

11:00
4 W H E E L OF FORTUNE
9 O T H E P R IC E IS R IG HT
&gt; O L O V E B O A T (R )

12 (17) PERRY MASON

5:45

7:30
O 4 E.J. DANIELS
7 O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
11 (35) E.J. DANIELS

7:35
8:00
0 4 VOICE OF VICTORY
V OREXHUMBARD
7 O BOB JONES
11 (35) JONNY QUEST
(D 110) SESAME STREET (R)Q

12 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE.
WED)

2:30
II (35) MOVIE
The Trial Ol
Chaplain Jensen ' (1975) James
Franciscus Joanna MJes A chap­
lain in Ihe Navy is court-martialed
lor adultery
9

3:30
O NFL TODAY

8 ) (10) MOVIE
The Vagabond
Lover" (1929) Rudy Valine. Sally
Blane A saxophonist finds tame
and romance when he is mistaken
lor a celebraled |&lt;m musician

0 4 TO BE ANNOUNCED
9
O NFL FOOTBALL

NFC

Playoll Game (Time Tentative)
11 (35) INCREDIBLE HULK

8:05

9 O OAY OF DISCOVERY
7 O ORAL ROBERTS
If (35) JOSIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS

7 O
HOLLYWOOD ANO THE
STARS
u (35) DANIEL BOONE
8 ) (10) FIRING LINE Is Commumsm Evolving’ '' Guest Richard
Pipes

9:00

5:05

O 4 THE WORLD TOMORROW

12 (17) LAST Of THE WILD

9 O SUNDAY MORNING
7 O TO LIFE
•It (36) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
83(10) MATINEE AT THE BLfOU

f O DIALOGUE WITH BILL NEL­
SON

9:05
O
4 MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
7 O THE LAW WORKS
H (33) THE JETSONS

10:00
o 4 HEALTMBEAT
7 a FISHING WITH ROLANO
MARTIN
It (35) MOVIE "Four Clowns
(1970) Sian Laurel. Oliver Hardy.
Charley Chase. Busier Keaton The
best ol Ihe early screen s tour top
comedians Is compiled

5:30
5:35
&lt;12 117) UNOERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
EVENING

6.00
0 4 7 ONEW S
It (35)KUNGFU
03 (10) NOVA The Making ot A
Natural History Film The lowly stic­
kleback lish is the subiect ot a him
documenting the patience and
ingenuity that goes Kilo making a
wildlife him (R |g

O

6:30

12 (IT) LIGHTER BIDE OF THE
NEWS

10:30
O 4 EMERGENCY
15 O BLACK AWARENESS
7 O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
GO (10) AMERICA TO THE MOON

10:35
12 (17) MOVIE "The Guns Ot
Navarone" (1961) Gregory Peck
David Niven Sis men are sent to
destroy two impregnable German
guns

11:00
i } O THIRTY MINUTES
CD (10) ALPINE SKI SCHOOL
(Ptemieril "The Mountain Awak­
ens" Ski instructors Bulch Flndersen and Kathy Wood look at
selection and use ol equipment and
apparel, and the basica of alartmg.
steering and stopping on skis

11:30
NORM SLOAN BASKET-

i} O FACE THE NATION
if) O THIS WEEK WITH DAVIO
BRINKLEY
03(10) COOKIN' CAJUN
AFTERNOON

8:05
12 117) NASHVILLE ALIVEI

6:30
9 O GLORIA Gloria refuctanlly
agrees 10 be hypnohied to help
recall the identity ol the criminal
who robbed the clinic
11 (35) JERRY FALWELL
O J MOVIE North Dallas For­
ty" ( t979| Nick Nolle Mac Davis
Groupies, pill-popping and all-ntghl
partying begin to take their loll on
two fun-loving but over-the-hill
tool ball players |R)
9
O
THE JEFFERSONS
Jealousy gets Ihe best ol Florence
compelling her to masquerade as
Louise Jetterson
7 O MOVIE
Assault Force
(I960) Roger Moore. James Mason
A dapper Irogman is called in to
thwart the plans ol aitortionists
vthn have hlfackad a supply ship
and are threatening to destroy a
North Sea otl rig
fD 110) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
The Good Soldier" Rohm Ellis
and Jeremy Brett star in an adapta­
tion ot Ford Madoi Ford s novel
tracing Ihe relationship between
two wealthy Edwardian couples
who meet yearly in a fashionable
German spa town g

6:00
O 4 NEWS (MON)
9 O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
; O SUNRISE
It (351 JIM BAKKER
12 (17) NEWS

6:30
O 4 EARLY TODAY
9 O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

6:45
7 ONEWS
83(10) AM WEATHER

7:00
0 4 TODAY
9 O MORNING NEWS
7 o QOOO MORNING AMERICA
It (35|NEWS
83 (10) TO LIFE!

7:05
12 (17) FUNTIME

7:15
03 (10) AM WEATHER

7:30

6:35

7:05

12:30
0 4 NFL'43
J'
MOVIE - Wonder Women"
|1B74) Cathy Lee Crosby. Ricardo
Montelban A remarkably powerful
Amar on woman becomes involved
with U S Intelligence
(7 O WALL STREET JOURNAL

o

S3 (10)

MAGIC OP DECORATIVE
PAINTING

1:30
( r IO BKL DANCE OUTDOORS
8&gt; (10) FLORKJA HOME GROWN

'9 O

2:00

•

MOW "The Gathering
Storm" (1974) Richard Burton. Vtrgrma McKenna Prime Minuter Win­
ston Churend become* ■ leading
hgurem World Ward
1 f&lt; O M O W
Hush
Hush.
Sweat Charlotte" (1965) Belle Dav­
ie. Olivia de HaviUand A young
womans mind is a heeled when her
married lover It lound dead
S 3 (10 ) M O VIE
"Sparrow*"
(Sdeni) (1|2«) Mary Pick lord, Roy
Stewart A young woman becomes
matarnaay protecliv* o l run* helpteat youngsters al an oppressive
MUtfy orphanage

2:05
12 (17) M O W
Rhapsody In
Blue ' (19451 Robert Alda. Alena

4:35
12 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5.00
O

LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
9 O THREE'S COMPANY
7 O ALL IN THE FAMILY
11 (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
83 (10) MISTER ROGERS |R)

12:30

4

5.05

0 4 NEW S
9 O THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN'S HOPE
8 ) (10) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T DIE (WED)

12 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH (MONWED. FRI)
,
12 (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
(THU)

5:30
o

4 PEOPLE'S COURT

9 O M -A -S 'H
7 ONEW S
83 (10) POSTSCRIPTS

1:00
0 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 o ALL MY CHILDREN
11 (35) MOVIE
83(10) MOVIE (MON)
83 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)

5'35
12 (17) STARCADE (MON)
12 (17) BEWITCHED (TUE. WED.
FRI)

It (35)WOODY WOODPECKER
8 ) 110) SESAME STREET g

7:35
12 &lt;17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

9:05
12 (17) WEEK IN REVIEW

9:30

BISCUIT SA N D W IC H ES
SAUSAGE ACOUNTRY-FRIEDSTEAK

9?
B® r

9 O TRAPPER JOHN. M O. A
macho lather has big plans lor his
Infant son until Gonio breaks the
stunning news that the baby it real­
ly a girl

Our buttermilk biscuits art baked Irtui tvery mermnf, rlfht
here In eur klhhtn. Wr serve ’em te yeu lest end Net with
veer chons ef tautsee er cawnfry- tried iteM. Try ear n s
biscuit sandwiches lodtyl

COUPON-------------------------

BUY 1 SAUSAGE BISCUIT
o n

10:05
12 (17) NEWS

i p r ii

COUPON REQUIRED. GOOD THRU JAN. I, HI)

10:30
•II (35) JIM BAKKER

B u rg e rC h e f

11:00
0 4 9 0 7 ONEW S
8 ) (10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons make
their choices lor the worst movies
o l 1987

„ O P B N IA M IU N 4 )0 M O N T H R U IA T
C L O U I IP M I U N T H U N I. I t P M P e l A IA T

m i -m o

11:05

2506 S. F RE NC H AVE.

SANFORD

11:30

6:00

0 14 CHIPS An a i -con shows up
in town determined to gel back al
Ponch lor busting him years before
19 O ARCHIE BUNKERS PI .ACE
Gary finds hrmaatt the prune can­
didate for a partnership hi the fami­
ly law firm alter he saves hit Uncle
Abe'a kle

0
4 ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK
9 O SOLtO GOLD
III o JACK ANDERSON CONFI­
DENTIAL
lit (35)r r s YOUR BUSINESS

&amp;ptab\
ifj today urete ttui

12:00

17

a

MOVIE

Compulsion

y &amp; te ty e a t.

You’ll find that Captain
Appleby's reveals its special
style not only in its well* preserved decor but also in
1food preparation. Captain
' Appleby's attracts folhs
'w ho are proud of their
resistance to fads.
e

Bring Your Fomfly &amp; hfands To

Anne Bonnies Tavern'
Sunday Crab
&amp; Oyster Feast

You'll find an array of interesting items
_ on the menu. Mew menu features
include Grilled Seasoned Shrimp and Old Fashioned Barbecued
Baby Bach Ribs. It’ll be love at fifst bite. In addition to a fine
seafood menu, steak and chicken lovers won't be disappointed.

G w fk C n k 2 ? " 0 .

Roaitad Oyttort 10* •sell
U
e l J U .J L 1
f P I V i l W SWwWta ■

1:00
0
'4
N P l FOOTBALL AFC
Pleyolt Game" (Time Tentative!
7 Q PRO ANO CON
83 (W&gt; MAGIC OP OIL PAJNTMO

4:30
11 (35)SCOOBY DOO

12:05

12:00
0 4 MEET THE PRESS
5 O JOHN MCKAY
ill (34) MOVIE
David Copperheld" (1970) Robin Phillips. Richetd
Allenborough Based on the story
by Charles Dickens A young
orphan boy grows up m the England
olthe 1800a
83 (10) THE QOOO NEIGHBORS

4:05
12 (17) THE MUNSTERS

12 (17) PEOPLE NOW

12 (17) JERRY FALWELL

12 (17) WRESTLING

12.00

'

10:00

7:00
0
4 VOYAGERS! Phineas and
Jeffrey Iry to prevent Ihe marriage
ot Princess Victoria to a Russian
duke, and help Albert Schweitrer in
Africa
t9 0 60 MINUTES
7 O RIPLEY'S BELIEVE rT OR
NOTI Featured Ihe story ol Ihe
supposedly haunted Great Eastern
steamship, slrange new musical
instruments, monkeys, a look at air­
craft trom the ISSOs to today
83 (10) SOUND FESTIVAL The
king ot Latin music Tito Puente and
the classic Latin rhythms ol Ray
Barelto are laatured in a salute to
the big band sound ol salsa

11 (35) TOM AND JERRY
8 ) (10) SESAME STREET g

0 4 SOAP WORLD
9 O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
7 ON EW S
11 (35) BIO VALLEY
8 ) (10) MYSTERY (MON)
8 ) (10) MANATEES THE VANISH­
ING FLORIDIANS (WED)
8 ) 110) NOVA (THU)
8 ) (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (FRI)

9 O ALICE Mel s mother arrives
in Phoenix with the news that she
and her husband have been
divorced
11 (35) JIMMY BWAOGART

4 N B C N EW S
7 O A B C N EW S

12 (17) NICE PEOPLE

10:05

fortune after he is mauled to dealh
by his pel lion
•II (35) HEALTH MATTERS
"leukemia
8 ) (10) THE WORLD OF DARK
CRYSTAL A behind-the-scenes
look is taken at Jim Henson s new
feature Mm about a mystical world
inhabited by the heroic Geittmgs
the evil Skeksis and the gentle Urru

9:00

5:00
O J TO BE ANNOUNCED

8:30
O 4 SUNDAY MASS

4 L IT T L E HOUSE O N T H E
P R A IR IE
9 o HOUR MAGAZINE
7 o m e r v GRIFFIN

AFTERNOON

5:50

4:00

12 (17) CARTOONS

4.00
0

12 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

7:00

12 (17) JAMES ROBISON

12 (17) THE FLINTSTONES

4 H IT M A N

II (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
8 ) (10) POSTSCRIPTS (MON.
WED-FRI)
83 (10) POSTCRIPTS (TUE)

12 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

7:05

3:35

11:30
Q

5:40

4 2 9 COMPANY
O ROBERT SCHULLER
O TODAY S BLACK WOMAN
(35) BEN HADEN

3:30
11 (35) BUOS BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
8 ) (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

11:05

5:30

Q 4 OPPORTUNITY LINE
9 o SPECTRUM
7 O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

3:05
12 (17) FUNTIME

11 (35) 35 LIVE
ff) (101 OVER EASY

0
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
12 (17) ITS YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

6:30

11 (3 5 ) C A S P E R

8 ) (10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
8 ) (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
8 ) (10) ENTERPRISE (WED)
8 3 (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

0

7 O HOLLYWOOD ANO THE
STARS (MON)

6:00

4

10:30

5:25

4 PUBLIC AFFAIRS
O LAW ANO YOU
O AGRICULTURE US A.
(17) NEWS

3:00
O 4 FANTASY
9 O GUIDING LIGHT
7 O GENERAL HOSPITAL

0 4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
9 O CHILD'S PLAY
ll (35) DORIS DAY
83(10) POWERHOUSE

5:20

MORNING

0

10:00
0 4 THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
9 O MARY TYLER MOORE
11 (35) ANDY ORtFFITH
83 (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R|

4:20 .

SUNDAY

O
9
7
11

n (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

7 O MOVIE
Virgin Island
(19591 John Cassavetes Virginia
Masked

12 (17| WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

9 O CAPITOL
8 ) (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (MON)
83 (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
8 ) (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

4 S O Y O U T H IN K YO U GOT
TR O U BLES

3:20

MORNINO

2:30

9:30
0

12 (17) MOVIE
Caged (1950)
Eleanor Parker, Agnes Moorehead

3:00

O
9
7
12

9:05
12 (17) MOVIE

2:30

7 O
MOVIE
Youngblood
Hawke' 11964| James Franciscus
Sutanne Pleihette

4 NEWS

11 (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
83 (10* SESAME STREET g

•

MONDAY

0

Q 4 R IC H A R D S IM M O N S
9 O DONAHUE
7 O M O V IE

John

2:00

2:00
0 4 ANOTHER WORLO
J O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
8 ) (10) RIGHT FROM THE START
(TUE)
8 ) (10) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
8 ) (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

9:00

4 N EW S
9 O CBS N E W S N IG H T W A T C H

7 Q MOVIE "Shadow On The
Land 1 (19681 Jackie Cooper. John
Forsythe

1:30
9 o A3 THE W0RL0 TURNS
83(10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

8:35

0

1:30

12 (17) MOVIE

12 (17) THAT QIRL

1:05

2:10

1:05

8:30
M (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
8 ) (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

1 O MOVIE
Harry In Your
Pocket ' (19731 James Coburn
Michael Sarrann

4 L A U G H IR A K

(FRI)

12 117) MY THREE SONS

0
4 MOVIE
Blackwells
Island" (1939) John Garfield.
Rosemary Lane
9 O MOVIE
Pocket Money
(19721 Paul Newman Lee Marvin

Orlando Public
Broadcaiting Syttem

(1 0 ) ©

8 3 (1 0 ) S PORTS AMERICA (THU)
8 ) &lt;10) FLORIDA HOME GR O W N

8:05

12:30

KIT 'N ’ CARLYLE,M

9:30

MONDAY, JAN. 10
ENTREE
Cheeseburger
Baked Beans
Cole Slaw
Milk
EXPRESS
Cheeseburger
Taler Tots
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
TUESDAY.JAN.il
MANAGER'S CHOICE
(Ground Beef)
Menu Will Vary
By School
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1!
ENTREE
HotdogonBun
Corn
Fruit
Ice Cream
Milk
EXPRESS
Hotdog on Bun
Taro Burger
TaterTots

(17)

8 ) 110) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)

It |35) FRED FLINTSTONE ANO
FRIENDS

tl (17) OPEN UP

1:00

12 (17) LOST IN SPACE

SCHOOL MENU

©

Independent
Atlanta, Ga

8:00

Dean

12:05

5 O MOVIE Uptown Saturday
Night ' (1974) Sidney Pettier, Bill
Cosby
12 (17) MOVIE
Dive Bomber
(1941) Errol Flynn. Fred MacMurray

11:00

11:30

Independent
Orlando

12:30

12 (17) IT IS WRITTEN

0 4 5 0 7 ONEW S
11 (35) ALL GOD'S CHILDREN
Carol Lawrence and Stan Mooney­
ham with guests The Lennon Sis­
ters Diahann Carroll and The Impe­
rials. present this plea to help Ihe
world s children
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

03) ( 3 5 )

In addition to the charnel* titled, cablevition kubicribert may tune in to independent channel 44,
SI Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1 ; tuning lo channel 1). which c a rrle i tp o rti and the C hrtitian
Broadcaiting Network (CBN).

CD (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
12 (17) NEWS

(ABC) Orlando

®

li (35) BARNEY MILLER
0 4 DfFFRENT STROKES
I O BRING EM BACK ALIVE
7 O T.J. HOOKER
I I (35) THE SILENT CRISIS Hosts
Stan Mooneyham. Carol Lawrence
Guests Mike Douglas. Dick Van
Pal ten, Maureen McGovern
CD (10) MOVIE The Boy Friend
(1971) Twiggy. Christopher Gable
When an assistant stage manager
replaces the lemale lead in a show,
she becomes a star and finds
romance as well •

o

®

( 1959) Orson W elles.
Stock well
It (35)WV GRANT

Cable Ch

45*

le t C roon SundMt |

tj'OO Hom borgin For Th* KM*

2 For 1 All Hi Balls
&amp;Most Cocktails
Ot. G lim s CM Ton

or Coko 45*

each dinner entitles you to a trip to the Salad Buffet — featuring
barrets of Georgia Ice Cream {cheese grits) and baked beans. Our
special hush puppies, fresh from the oven cinnamon roll, and
choice of potato or vegetable also to accompany your meal,
Cnjoy life, enjoy style. And when you visit —
by all means enjoy Captain Appleby's.

x

, ,

NppM ,.

Inportod Soor *1.00
D om oftk Boor 75*
LOCATED INSIDE

J
2501 F ren ch Ave. (H w y. 1M2&gt;

Sanford

In Mount Dora
(New) RI.441
Phone (104) 313 4442
Dinner Mon Sal from 4 30p.m.
Sundays from Noon
Lunch: Mon F rl 11:30a m. 4p m.

In Ocala
1105 N E Silver Spring) Blvd
1104) 351

OPEN
4:30p.m . f :30p.m.M on Sal
11:3 0 a .m . I;M p .m .Sun

’ 4flS

�IB—E vtnlng H erald , Sanford, F I.

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
FLORIOA IN AKO FOR THE
COUNTY OF SEMINOLE
CIVIL ACTION NO.: 43-47 CA 4S L
DIVISION OF ADM INISTRA
TION. STATE OF FLORIDA DE
PARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA
TION.
Petitioner,

vl
EMANUEL SCHATTEN. *1 a l„
Defendant*
NOTICE OF HEARING
TO SHOW CAUSE
AND
NOTICE OF SUIT
STATE OF FLORIOA TO:
Fanny R Meitler
US Wetl valley Avenue.
Suite 100
Birmingham. Alabam a 15209
PARCEL NO 109
H A Meitler
US West valley Avenue.
Suite SOO
Birmingham, Alabam a 35209
PARCEL NO 109
Harold W. Ripp*
US West Valley Avenue.
Suite 300
Birmingham. Alabam a 15709
PARCEL NO 109
Emanuel Sthalten
U lt Hyman Street
Nashville. Tennessee 33211
PARCEL NO 109
To all said defendants who are
living, and it any or all defendants
are deceased, the unknown spouse,
h eirs.
devisees,
g ra n te e s ,
creditors, lienors, or other parties
claiming by, through, under, or
again st any such d e c e a se d
defendant or defendants, if alivv,
and, If dead, th e ir unknow n
spouse, heirs, devisees, legatees,
grantees, creditors, lienors, or
other p arties c la im in g by.
through, under, or against any
such deceased d e fe n d a n t or
defendants, and all other parties
having or claiming to have any
righl, title, or Interest In and to ihe
property described In Ihe Petition,
Ibwlt:
Section 77010 35*4, Slate Road *34.
Seminole County. Description
PARCEL NO 109
FEE SIMPLE-WATER
STORAOE AREA
WATER STORAGE AREA Right
(South) Station 1*21 plus 30.57
That part of:
Lois 591 and 599, Altamonte
Land. Holel and N avig atio n
Company according to P la t
recorded In Plat Book 1. Page 12.
Public Records of Sem inole
County, Florida.'
described as follows:
Commence on the West line of
the East • &gt; of the N W '. of Section
13, Township 21 South, Range 29
E astal a point 1911 St feet South 00
degrees 7i’ 59" East of Ihe Nor
thwest corner Ihereol; thence run
South 19 degrees 5*’ *4" E ast a
distance of 530 24 leet; thence
South 00 degrees l t ‘ 3*" E ast a
distance of 119.** feet, thence
South 77 degrees 02‘ 74" West a
distant r of 172.51 feet to a POINT
OF BEGINNING, thence South 19
degrees 5*' *7" West a distance of
703 47 leet: Ihence South 00
degrees 34’ 15" E ast a distance of
3*7.5 feet: thence North 19 degrees
5*’ *1" East a distance of 274.11
leet: thence Norm 00 degrees 34’
55” West a distance ot 3*7.5 leet)
Ihence South i t degrees 5*’ *7"
West a distance of 22 *7 feet to the
Point of Beginning
Containing 1.214 acre, m ore or
less.
OWNED BY:
EMANUEL SCHATTEN, Un
married
HAROLD W. RIPPS. U nm arried
FANNY R. MEISLER and H A.
MEISLER. her husband
SUBJECT TO:
EASEMENTS recorded in Of
ficial Records Book 1113, page 1542
and Official Records Book 971,
page ISO* in favor of FLORIOA
POWER CORPORATION, a
Florid* Corporation
You are each notified that the
Petllioner Hied Its sworn Petition
and lls pedaratlon of Taking In
Ihls Court against you as defen
dants. seeking to condem n by
eminent domain proceedings Ihe
above described property located
in Ihe Slate of Florida, County ol
Seminole.
You a r t further notified that the
Petitioner will call up for hearing
before the Honorable S. Joseph
Oavis Jr. one of tha Judges ot this
Court on Ihe 3llh day ot February
A.D., 1913, at 1:30 o’clock P.V., In
Stm lnole County C ourthouse,
Sanford, Florida, lls application
for an Order ot Taking. All parlies
tothls suit and all other Interested
parties may appear at the tim e
and place designated and be
heard.
AND
Each defendant Is h e reb y
required to serve wr itten defenses,
if any, to said Petition on:
DEPARTMENT OF
TRAN
SPORTATION
Post Olllce Bos 47
DtLand. Florida 32720
t o Charles S. Stratton.
District Five Attorney
(90*1 73*3171
AND
STATE OF FLORIDA DEPART
MENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office ol Legal Operations
Mall Station 7*
Heydon Burns Building
Tallahassee, Florida 32301
(904) 444 2411
on or before the 10th dey of
February, A.D., 1913, and lilt the
original with ihe Clerk of this
Court on lhal date, to show cause
wpat right, Idle, Inlerest, or lien
you or any of you have In and to the
property described In the Petition
and to show caus* it any you have,
why the property should not do
condem ned for Ihe use* and
purpose* sat forth in the Petition,
if you fall to do so, a default may
b* entered against you tor the
relief demanded in Ifie Petition.’
W ITNESS MY HANO AND
SEAL Of said Court on Iho 4th day
of January, A.O , 1913
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Backwith, J r.
Clark of the Circuit Court
By: Cynthie Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 9, 1403
D E 0 44

Sunday, Jan. ♦, 1981

legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at P O Bo*
No 3027. Longwood, F lorida,
Seminole County. Florida under
the lictitious nam e ot ARLENE'S
ARTIFACTS, and that I intend to
register said nam e with the Clerk
ot the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida in accordance
with Ihe provisions ot the Fic
tllious Name Statutes, To Wit:
Section 445 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Sig Arlene H arris
Publish January 9, 14, 73. 30. 1943
DEO *3
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at P O Bo*
197. L ake M ary, 377*4 0197.
Seminole County, Florida under
thp fictitious nam e ot CANDID
COMMUNICATIONS, and lhal
Intend to re g iste r said nam e with
the Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Nam e Statutes. To Wit
Section 465 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Sig Judith H Zipay
Publish January 9, 14. 33. 30, 1943
OED *1
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 7405 Park
D r. Santord FI. 37771, Seminole
County, Florida under Ihe tic
titious name ol UNCLE NICK’S
LIQUOR A OYSTER BAR, and
that I Intend to register said name
with Ihe Clerk ot Ihe Circuit Court,
Semmole County, Florida in ac
cordancewith Ihe provisions ol the
Fictitious Name Statutes, To Wit
Section 145 09 Florid4 Statutes
1957
Sig Nick Pappas
Publish January 7. 9. 14, 73, 1943
OED 17
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 317 Barclay
Ave A ltam o n te S prings, FI
Semmole County, Florida under
the lic titio u s n a m e ot EN
TERPRISE STEAM CLEANING,
and that I intend to register said
name with Ihe Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, Seminote county, Florida in
accordance with the provisions of
Ihe Fictitious Nam e Statutes, To
Wit: Section 445 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
Signature
Charles T de LaTour
By
Helen R de LaTour
Publish Jan 9, 14, 23, X . 1943
DED *7
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolice is hereby given that we
are engaged in business al 3471 W
SR *3*, Longwood Sem inole
County, Florida under the tic
titious name of CALICO CANOY
KITCHEN, and that we Intend to
register said nam e with Ihe Clerk
ot the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida in accordance
wilh the provisions o l th e Fic
titious Name Statutes, To Wit
Section 145 09 Florida Statutes
1957.
Signature
Judith E Makl
Barbara S. Duran
Publish: Jan 7. 9, 14. 73, 1943
OED 7
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 3109 French
Ave. Santord Seminole County,
Florida under the lictitious name
ot AUTO SOUNO CENTER, and
that I intend to register said name
with the Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Nam e Statutes, To Wit
Section 145 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Signature
Ronald W Christian
Publish: Jan. 2. 9, 14. 73. 1943
DED It
______________

GRAPEFRUIT
F R O M F L O R ID A

CLASSIFIED A D S

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 7400 W
State Rd *3*. Longwood, FI
Seminole County. Florida under
the lic titio u s nam e of OP
PORTUNITIES UNLIMITED, and
that I Intend to register said name
with Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot Ihe
Fictitious Nam e Statutes. To Wit
Section 445 09 Florida Statutes
1957.
Signature David Bergman
Publish Jan ?. 9, t4, 23, 1943
DED 10
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 47-434 CP
Division Probate
IN RE: ESTATE OF
DILLARD ARCH BENNETT
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
The Administration of Ihe estate
of DILLARD ARCH BENNETT,
deceased. File Number 13 420 CP,
is pending in the Circuit Court tor
Seminole County, Florida. Probate
Division, the address of which is
Sem inole County Courthouse,
S antord, F lo rid a , 327 71. The
nam es and addresses ol the per
sonal re p re s e n ta tiv e and the
personal represent Hive's a t t o r n e y
are set forth below
All in te re s te d persons a re
required to tile with this court,
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: III all claims
against the estate and (31 any
oieetton by an interested person to
whom notice was mailed that
challenges the validity ot Ihe will,
the qualifications ot Ihe personal
r e p re s e n ta tiv e ,
venue.
or
jurisdiction ol the court.
ALL CLAIMS ANO O B ­
JECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of this Notice has
begun on Ja n u a ry 7, 1943
Personal Representative:
Ella Florence Bennett
104 Brown Drive
Santord, FL 32771
Attorney lor Personal
Representative
A
E dw in
Shinholser
ol
SH INHO LSER, LOGAN, MON
CRIEF AND BARKS
Post Ottlce Bo* 2279
Santord. FL 33771 0079
Telephone: (305 1 323 3*40
Publish: Jan. 3, 9, 1983
DED 9
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. OF
THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN ANO FOR SEMIN­
OLE COUNTY,FLORIDA
CASE NO.17 2041 CA 04 P
IN RE The M arriage ot
SUSAN LOUISE FLORES.
Wile,
and
EUSEBIO ANDRES FLORES.
JR .
Husband
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
EUSEBIO ANDRES FLORES.
JR
S5C4 Skyview Dr
A ieiandrla, Virginia 77J09
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
NOTIFIED that a Petition tor
Dissolution of M arriage has been
tiled against you and that you are
required to serve a copy o* your
Response or Pleading to the
Petition upon the Wile's attorney.
A A M cClanahan, Jr., 104 S Park
Ave.
Suite B, Santord. Florida
32771, a n d tile Ihe original
Response or Pleading in Ihe of lice
ot IheC lerkot the Circuit Court, on
or before the 3rd day ol February,
1943’ It you fail to do so. a Default
Judgment will be taken against
you lor the relief demanded in the
Petition.
D ated at S a n to rd . Sem inole
County, Florida, this 30lh day ot
December 1943
(SEAL)
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court
By Cynthia Proctor
Publish:’ January 7, 9, 14, 73. 1943
DED I*

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
FICTITIOUS NAME
BY THE CITY OF LONGWOOD
Notice is hereby given that I am FLORIDA that the City Com
engaged i/i business at 947 E. mission will hold a Public Hearing
Altam onte D riv e . A ltam onte on January 7*. 1943 to consider a
Springs, Fla. Seminole County, CONDITIONAL USE REQUEST
Florida under ihe fictitious name subm itted by William L Skory tor
Ot NEW DIMENSIONS REALTY, an Furniture Upholstery Shop wilh
and that I intend to register said Display Room to be located on the
name wilh Ihe Clerk ol Ihe Circuit follow ing
leg a lly
described
Court, Seminole County, Florida in properly
accordance with the provisions ol
A portion ol Lot 1*. CENTRAL
the Fictitious N am e Statutes, To PARK, as per plat thereof as
Wit: Section 445 09 Florida recorded in Plat Book 4. page 99,
Statutes 1957.
Public R e c o rd s ol Sem inole
Abram Investm ents, Inc.
C ounty, F lo rid a ; Being m ore
Signature Alice T Hughes
p a rtic u la rly
bounded
and
Pres.
described as follows Commence
Publish: Jan. 9. 14. 73. 30, 1913
al Ihe Southwest corner ol Lot t*,
OED 34
CENTRAL PARK, os per p ill
thereof as recorded In Plat Book 4.
P age 99, P u b lic R ecords of
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby .given that I am Seminole County Florida. Thence
ru n / t 00 degree* 12’ 20" E 300 0C
engaged in business al 3*14 5
Santord Ave., Sanford. Seminole leet; Thence run N 19 degrees 5*’
44" E 125 00 leet to the Point ot
County, Florida under the tic
titious nam e of j. MICHAEL Beginning. T hence run N II
GLASS l MIRROR, and that I degrees 14’ 54” 6 1*7.00 leet to ihe
intend to register said nam e wilh South right ot way line ot Dog
Track Road; Thence run along tha
Ihe Clerk ol ihe Circuit Court,
South right ol way line along the
Seminole County, Florida in ac
a rc
ol
a
c u rv e
concave
cordance wilh Ihe provisions ot the
Southeasterly
having lor Its
Fictitious Name Statutes. ToWit:
elem ents a radius ol 1171.to leet
Section 445 09 Florida Statutes
and a central angla ol 5 degrees 29'
1957
*2" and an arc d istant* of 112 99
JEFFREY M COUNELIS
leet: Thence run S 24 degrees 30'
Publish December 19, 34, 1942 &amp;
24 ” W 7144 leet; Thence run S I*
January 3. 9, 1943
degrees 54' *4” W *7 00 leet to the
DEC 93
Point ol Beglnnlno.
A Public H earing will be held on
NOTICK OF INTENT
Monday, Ja n u a ry 7*. 1913 at 7:10
T O R IO IS T IR FICTITIOUS
P.M in the City Hall. 175 West
NAMK
W arren A venue, Longwood.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Florida, or a s soon Ih c re a lttr as
that tha undersigned, d tsiring to possible. At this meeting all In
engage in business under the
lcrested p arties m ay appear and
lictltlogs nam e ot LAKEVIEW
be heard with respect to Con­
BAPTIST CHURCH, at 124 Laka
ditional Us* Request. This hearing
VlewAvonue, Lake Mary, Florida
may be continued Irom lim e to
137*4 intends to r tg ls ttr the said
tim e until final action it taken by
nams with the Clerk ol th t Circuit the City Commission. A copy ot Ihe
Court of Seminole County, Florid*. .Conditional Use Request is on tile
DATEO th is 71th day ol
with ihe c ity Clerk and m ay be
December, A.O. 1917
inspected by the public.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
A lip e d record ot this meeting It
OF SANFORD. INC.
med* by the City ol Longwood l o r
BY: WILLIAM L. COLBERT,
its convenience. This record may
TRUSTEE
not constltuta an adequate record
Publish: Jen. 7, 9, 14. 11. 1911
tor purpose* ol appeal from a
DEDI
decision m ade by tha Commission
with respect to the loregoing
m atter. Any parson wishing to
ensure that an adequate record ol
the proceedings Is m aintained lor
appellate purposes Is advised lo
make the n ecessary arrangem ents
at th tlr own expense.
Dated this 3rd day ol January,
1943. CITY OF LONGWOOD.
FLORIOA
D.L. Terry,
Cily Clerk
City of Longwood. Florida
Publish: January 9. I*. 1943
OED II

E N JO Y

1 / IT

Legal Notice
Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

322-2611

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY th ru FRI DAY
SATURDAY 9 Noon

RATES

Itim e
54c a line
1 consecutive times 54c a line
7 consecutive times ftc a lin e
10 consecutive times 43c a line
*2.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

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

• ABORTION •

Mr. and Mrs Marc Hodman
proudly announce Ihe birth ot
Nicholas Marc Hotlman Dec
2*. 1982 at 10 02 a m. 7 lbs II
o i., 20" long.

9—Good Things to Eat
NAVELS S4 Bushel Grapefruit
A |uice Iruit 15 Bu
Call 322 2037
SWEET pink grapefruit 5* 50 bu
AAJ Produce *1 Stale Farm ers
M arket USO French Ave.,
Sanford, 321 H94

12—Special Notices
AFTER Christmas Sale 50/ o i l
I* c a ra t gold, sterling and
electroplate lewelry in stock
Call 323 4797 tor appi
Falcons lair Kennel
Announces
Sundown Dog Training
G roupC iats Starling
Jan 15 t p m
23X Celery Ave., Sanford
EveryoneWelcome!
For Informal ion 321 4738

1B-Help Wanted
★

★

★

★

A

A

★

★

★

★

A

HUNDREDS OF JOBS
NO RECESSION HERE
LEOALSECRETARY S27Swk.
FORKLIFT OPERATOR 1* hr.
DIETICIAN .........
1UK
CENERALOFFICE
1140
WAREHOUSE
1200
ROUTE SALES
S2S0
SECRETARY
S22S
PBX OPERATOR
13.35hr.
SPRINKLER FITTER
IS
S A L E S .............................
SI
TRACTOR TRAILER S*. hr.
DISCOUNT FEE
TWO WEEKS SALARY TERMS
"Y our FulureO ur Cancern"

1917 FRENCH AVE
323-5176
BEVERLY

E X P E R IE N C E D W a itre s s
wanted part tim e Apply In
person MAM Restaurant, 310
E lit
UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSET
Sell those things that a re lust
taking upspacew ith a want ad
in the Herald 127 7411 or 431
9993
ADVERTISING Experience lo
design brochures and labels,
write trade advertisem ents
and press releases etc. Full
Iringe benefits R etiree and or
pari lime acceptable United
Solvents 373 noo
A L U M IN U M M A N U F A C
TURING COMPANY has
immediate openings for Ihe
following positions Screeners,
press operators, assem blers,
and m aterial handlers. Ex
p erience helpful bul not
required Apply in person from
10 a m lo 2 p m Monday thru
F rid ay , H arC ar A lum inum
froducts. 1201 Cornwall Rd ,
. Sanford, H a.________________

E X P ER IEN C E D
IN DIRECT SALES
National food service company,
13 yrs. In business F ull
company benefits alter 90
days All leads supplied along
with e stab lish e d account
Draw based upon experience
For interview call Bob Rector,
I 30S 331 0044
RESIDENT Manager position
available lor Garden Apt
complex ot 90 units, located in
Santord, Fia. Previous exp is
desirable, good starting salary
and good benefits Apply in
confidence lo P O Box 17,
Panam a City, Fla. 32*01
WAITRESS
w anted,
ex
perienced only need apply.
Golden Lamb Restaurant. 2101
S, French A v e , Santord
N EEDextra Money?
Why n o t sell A V O N I
311-0459

• EM PLOYM ENT.

PAT

'k ' k ' k i f i f i t i r ' k ' k
SOMEONE who likes to prepare
and serve good food, to nice
lotks in a pleasant atm osphere
can find a |ob at the Runcible
Spoon Tearoom, Longwood.
Hours 9 • 4, 5 days. For Appt.
431 4441 between 1 1 5 p.m. And
e i*o need dishwasher t l 3P m

Y
- | a - | | - jU C
jJ L I i a m
ICWpilOfM
T O K tT O f l/

Port-Time
Evening Mown.
CoN 322-2611
E v e n i n g H e ra ld
TYPIST — Fast, accurate. Take
phone orders. Pension, prolit
s h a re and m edical plans.
United Solvents 1211400
JOB SITE INC.
100’s lobs dally.
Call 111 79*0 F at.
SECRETARIES NEEDED FOR
Tem porary and p art lim a
p o sitio n i. E kcellant sk ills
necessary. Interview by ap
polnlm ent only. 322 54*9.
SELL Avon part tlma or lull
lim a. Ladias and man. good
aarningsl 177 5910.

LAKE MARY, 2 Bdrm WWC.
A»r, heat, WD hook up, no pets,
5795 Mo . 1X0 Sec. Available
Jan 15 JJ? 2967

CREDITPROBLEMS?
Receive a M astercard or Visa.
Guaranteed. Bad Credit No Problem For F ree Brochure
call H o u sed Credit, Toll Free
1 800 4*2 1531 anytim e
IF THIS IS THE DAY to buy a
new car, see today s Classified
ads lor best buys.

21—Situations Wanted
MATURE woman will take care
ot Ihe eld erly or young
children In their home
1*9 9313
WILL care lor invalid, elderly or
handicapped Days or nilcs
References 321 0473.
DR ESSMAKING alterations and
repair in my home
430 4141.
CARE t o r Ihe elderly. Home or
Hospital C ertified N ursing
A s s is ta n t
Rel e re n c e s
provided 373 47*9

2-t—Business Opportunities
SANFORDAREA
COMMERCIAL COIN
OPERATEDGAMES
Establish route Excellent in
come potential ■ be your own
boss Latest gam es available
lor immediate sale to In
dividual interested In a lull or
pari time "ALL CA 9” op
p o r tu n lty .
M a in ! .n a n c e
provided
For
co m p le te
details, call Tom Brady. 1 400
531 5255. Ext. 10
*100 Per Week Part Time at
Home. W ebster, A m e ric a ’s
favorite dictionary company
needs home workers to update
local mailing Hits. E aiy work.
Can be done while watching
TV. All ages, e x p e rie n c e
unnecessary Call 1714 4*2
4000, including Sunday, Ext.
5294.
OWN Your Own Business! Jean
Shop Children’s Shop Dress
Shop! *5,900 to *14.500 In
Store
T raining.
G rand
Opening. Flxturs* Installed.
Call Right Nowl Mr. Gibson at
Mademolseiia Fashions 501379 1 5 4 0 ______________
SANFORD. Women’s Apparel
Shop, highly re g a rd e d lo r
quality fashions. Best location
Wm Mallcrowskl Realtor
371 7911.

SHARE m odern home on
acres. 1175 mo
322 5132

SANFORD Lake Ave lot! W
25th) Deluxe 2 Bdrm . duplex,
carport, utility room, hook up
washer, dryer 1335 430 0545

29—Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms Dy
Ihe,w eek Reasonable rales,
m aid se rv ic e C a te rin g lo
workinq people Unfurnished
Apartments I 5 2 Bedrooms
323 *507 son Palm etto Ave
SANFORD, Reas weekly 5
monthly ra le s Util inc. ell 500
Oak Adults I 841 7883
C O M F O R T A B L E Sleeping room

550 wk , Includes util, and
maid serv Call 321 49*7

30-Apartments Unfurnished
GENEVAGAROEN
APARTMENTS.
322 2090 _____
LUXURY
APARTM ENTS
F am ily 8. A dults section
Poolside. 2 Bdrm s. Master
Cove Apis 32) 7900 Open on
weekends
SANFORD 7 bd . complete K,i.,
5710 mo Fee 339 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor
2 BDRM No pets 5220 mo Sec
dep required Avail, immed
327 9*02

NEED A SERVICEMAN? You’ll
llnd him listed in our Business
Directory

33—Houses Unfurnished
■" "
"
*
CASSELBERRY Lktnl ?bd air
5775 Fee 33 9 7200
SavO n Rentals, Inc. Realtor
AVAILABLE F e b ru a ry HI,
First a rea . Deltona, 2 bdrm. 1
blh. all appi C,4A s r 41 ner
mo. security deposit 5775 call
321 *900 or 323 51)7.
3 room cottage 1 Barm
Senior Citizens only.
322 47*1
SANDRA SOUTH 3 Bdrm, 2
B ath, p a rtia lly furnished
CHA. drapes, $450 mo 429 5758
or 834 4744
UNFURNISHED 3 bdrm house
references required Rent 1350
m o -f dep 322 3347.
BEAUTIFU LLY resto red 2
bdrm , I blh. homo, CHA, wwc,
frpl. adults. no pets 4375 445
4441 or 377 4978
MOBILE Home on private land,
kitchen equipped lor I or
couple Easy access in Lake
Mary S325 M o , 322 6219
NEW home avail 1st Feb 4400
mo , 3 br , 7 bth. Lake Mary
Call a fte r 6 p.m 371 6744
NEAR dow ntow n
I bdrm .
C arp et.
a ir,
range,
refrig, 1750 4 sec 167 4404

2 BDRM. 1 bath,
upstairs, 1250,
*77 5557 or *22 8876

SUNLAND ESTATES 3 Bdrm , 7
Bath, lenced yard, 1350 mo„
Schufcn Realty Realtor
431 1347

1. 2 AND 3 BDRM From S760
Ridgewood Arms Apt 254C
Ridgewood Ave. 323 4*20
ENJOY country hvino’ J Bdrm
* Duplex A p is. Olympic si
pool S nenandoan V illage
Open 9 lo * J73 7920
BAMBOQ COVE APTS
)OOE Airport Blvd
I A J Bdrms
From 1230 mo
Phone 323 4*70
SANDALWOOD VILLAS Oeluxc
2 Bdr, 2 Bath, w asher, dryer,
POOt, 5375 Mo 4*4 99)1.
Have some camping equipment
you no lonoer use? Sell It all
with a Classllied Ad in The
Herald Call 322 2411 or 431
9993 and a Iriendly ad visor
will help y

31—Apartments Furnished
COMFORTABLE I bdrm . nicely
furnished, 575 wk , plus ulil
Call 323 7749 121 49*7.
SEMI furnished 1 bdrm . apt
4175 mo plus 5)75 dep. NO
PETS 322 5490.
UPSTAIRS G arage Apt. 7 Bdrm.
wall wall carpet, air heat, kids
Ok, no pels. 4750 mo. lit, last
4100 dep 121 0025 a ll. &amp;
weekends 177 0008 belore 5

34—Mobi le Homes

SANFORD 1 5 rm s . air, lull kit,
carpet. *225 mo. Fee 139 7200
Sav-On R entals, Inc. Realtor

FOR ALL YOUR
REALESTATENEEOS

323-3200
OEBARYLAKEFRONT
Beautiful 3 1 home on B a it (Hied
Lake Bonita, large wooded
corner lot. M anyM itrat. E aiy
access to 1-4 and 17-92. Owner
will help Nnance. Asking high
ito.ooo’i C harles S. B lack
Realtor Associate. Eves. 4446707.
AFFORDABLE!
15.000 down with It,4a PR owner
f in a n c in g .

7 bdrm . 2 blh. No pets. 5100 per
mo. 1st, last and sec.
149*5*7.

SALESMAN - Used Car Lot.
Flnanca ta p . preferred. Will
train. Excellent opportunity
for right parson. 311-4075.
Alert intelligent individual to
look a lte r amusement center
in Sanford Plata. Must h a v t
m e c h a n ic a l
Ability,
be
d e p en d a b le , and b o n d a b lt.
P a rt tim e *375 Hr. Apply In
Person Bally’s G reat Escape.
PRES5ER Eap. *5 hr. Apply
C arriage Cleaner 454 Shopping
Confer. Longwood.

buy*

OWNER financing Large CBS
Home A G arage
5*3.000 Approx 20-8 dwn.
11\ interest
Many extras 322 9*17
CLASSIFIED ADS ARE FUN
ADS READ &amp; USE THEM
OFTEN YOU'LL LIKE THE
RESULTS

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

37-B—Rental Offices
PRIM E
O F F IC E
SPACE*
P ro v id e n c e B lvd., Oeltona.
2144 Sq Ft. Can Be Divided
With P arking. Day! 105 57*
1*3* Evening* 4. Weekends
904 749 6251
1600 Sq it olllce, 11$ Maple
Ave, Santord Avail. Immed
Broker Owner 372 7209
SPACE lor rent Olllce. Retail.
Storage French Avenue and
Airport. 322**03

37C-For Lease
GARAGE Bays use lor auto
detail, bodyw ork etc., ulil. and
paint booth incl. 323 7545
II you a rc having difficulty
Imping a place, lo live, car lo
drive, a |ob, o r some service
you have need ol, read all our
want ads every day
OFFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE
430 7773
PROFESSIONAL Olllce space
for Lease, on 17 92. Ideal
location to downtown area 705
S. French Ave. ui ini! 322 3170.

41—Houses

REALTOR. MLS
7141 * French
Suite «
Santord. Fla.

24 HOUR (3 322-9283

WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY!
BEAUTIFUL 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath
home In exc. Mayfair. Pan.
F am . rm ., w ith lire p la c e ,
Sunroom, equip, kit.an d many
extras. 199,900
CHARMING 1 Bdrm I bath
home completely rtm o d tled l
Cent HA, Fam. rm ., equip, kit,
and more. 519,100.
COUNTRY LIVING 3 Bdrm. 7
bath dbl. wide Mobil* on
fenced corner loll Screened
porch, oat ln kitchen, dining
room, and loti morel Horses
welcome! SIS,500
ATTRACTIVE 2 Bdrm. 2 bath
home near downtown areal
Panelling, family room, eat-in •
kit. fenced, and an easy
assumption 124,900!
JUST FOR YOU 2 Bdrm. 2 bath
homo near Lake Monro* and
shopping! Spacious living and
family rm. largo. Mbr., Cant
HA, wall-wall carpet, enjoy
your own pool and patio.
147,100.
MAYFAIR VILLAS! 2k 3 Bdrm.
1 Bath Condo Villas, no il lo
M aytair Country Club. Select
your lot. Hoor plan A interior
decor! Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor S47.IOO I upl
REALTOR ASSOCIATES
NEEOEDI
On* Residential • Two Com­
m ercial Invtsfm enfi II you
honestly want a Successful
C a re e r, lain the Ha. 1
Professional Sales Teaml All
Interview s S lrlclly Conlldentlalt
• REAL ESTATECAREERI
Call to s e t If you qualify H r our
F re t Tuition Progrom l Ex­
citing A Rewording!

C A LL A N Y T IM E

Have some cam ping equipment
you no lonqer use? Sell it all
wilh a Classified Ad In The
Herald Call 322 2611 or 431
9993 and a Iriendly ad visor
will help you.

Park

322-2420

Classllied Ads will always give
you more . . . Much , Much
More than you expect.

AUCTION

SUNDAY • JANUARY 23rd • 1:00 P.M.
RALSTON PURINA COMPANY
2525 S. Park Ava. • Apopka, Florida

OPPORTUNITY
E nergetic young people needed
as Jkppointment Setters for
last growing local company.
W t provide training with a
base salary plus excellent
commissions Apply Alum A
Vent behind Soblkt on French
Ava.

P4I

NEWLY REDUCED LOTS!
Peaceful and tranquil setting.
Each lovely treed lot over an
acre. Room enough tor pool
and tennis court. Underground
utilities. Horses OK. is It.
b rid le path aro u n d to ta l
development. Priced to sell at
t i t , 500 each , easy te rm s.
Owner tinancing. Sharon L.
P a lm e r R ealtor A ssociate.
Alter hrt. 323-S4S*.
549 W. Lake Mary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary, Fla 31744
3133100

)5*s

31 A—Duplexes

1294 II

th u lovely 1-1 In DeBary.
Asking SJ.\$0C Charles *.
Black Realtor Associate after
hours 644-4707.

S a n fo rd 's Sales L ea der
3 Bdrm, 2 bath double wide
mobile hom e on 6'» acres
Horses O K„ 5480 month 321
07S1 a m 327 7104 Night,

-------1---------------------------I BDRM. Apt Clean
4725 mo 4 Dep
References required. 172 1142.

nORtM. INC 0 REALTORS

Cdi Keyed

MODERN 3 Bdrm. 7 Bath, with
CHA drapes, appi furnished
U75 Mo , 429 5754 or 434 *2*6

M ariner’s Villaqe on Lake Ada. )
bdrm Irom 1745, 7 bdrm Irom
5300 Located 17 92 |ust south
ot Airport Blvd in Santord All
Adults 323 4670

fceues

NICE 7 Bdrm Duplex. SIX plus
sec
JUNE PORZIG REALTY
REALTOR
3214*74

Surn.sned apartm ents to* Senior
C M rns 314 Palm etto Ave . J
Cowan No phone calls

MELLONVILLE T rac e Apts,
spacious, m odern 2 bdrm , I
hath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped, CHA. walk to town
and lake Adults. No pets
Available Jan I, 321 3»5

3 Bdrm Bain, convenient to
schools, shopping. S*7,X0
BtllMalicicwski 327 7943

Be Utoe

MARY 2 Bdrm. kids, lull
kit,, fenced. 5285 Fee 339 7200
Sav-On Rentals, Inc., Realtor

10

4 t — Houses

LAKEVIEW 2 BDRM Newly
decorated Reasonable.
327 5729

lake

7 BOR My 2 Ba th apt
10share
r e n t . ', utilities
Call 32 1 5929

PERFECT tor housewives A
mothers. E arn extra money in
spare time w Stanley Home
Prod No exp 127 5951 _______

1st Trim ester »bortion 7 12 wks .
SIM
Medicaid *120; 13 t*
wks 1200 - Medicaid U4S.
Gyn Services *25; Pregnancy
te s t.
tre e
counseling
Professional care supportive
atm osphere, confidential
CENTRAL FLORIOA
WOMEN'S HEALTH
ORGANIZATION
NEW LOCATION
1700W. Colonial Dr .O rlando
305 194 0921
1 SOO 221 2544

AM PAPER ROUTE Small
down paym ent Owner will
carry. 372 *757 Noon 1 p m

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

18—Help Wanted

4—Personals

31 A— Duplexes

25—Loans

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

24—Business Opportunities

DESCRIPTION: Over 1,700,000 sq. ft. of prime Dutch-Type greenhouses • '
Warshouses • Office Bldgs. • Maintenance Shops • Offered as Individual parcels or
groups ot parcels • 120 acres. ALSO 203,000 sq. ft. greenhouse on 14% acres •
Quincy, Florida.
LOCATION: 2% miles south of Apopka, Florida on S.R. 435 • 10 miles north of
Orlando, Florida.
TERMS: 10% down (cash) 20% additional at closing (60 days) w/bal. financed O
12% Intsrsst.
___ ^
FOR INFORMATION OR COLOR BROCHURE

305/339-4333

P.O. Box 1930
Maitland, FL 32761

SEE YOU AT THE ORLANDO &amp; MIAMI SHOWS -

�41— Houses

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

UNDER VJ.OWJDOWN

1 Ldrm dull b a n s * Affordable
m onthly

p a y m e n ts

Call

0 - . '; r . f R 'c k »r 33! t i n

BATEMAN REALTY

LG 3 BDRM, Hy blh, carport,
util rm s , CBS. retrig , stove.
CM. newly painted inside out.
It) lot, back fenced
owner
financing 333 7999

U c. Real E state Broker
3M0 Sanford Ave

KISH REAL ESTATE

• LAKE HELEN 20 acre* 177.500

3310011
REALTOR
Alter Mrs 3337148 &amp; 332 1952

COUNTRY Llv ng Lease Option
like new 3 3 with or without
acreage
PRICED under to d a y s market
3-1 fa m ily rm ., enclosed
garage, lenced back, a real
buy s 48,900
NEAR new hospital I C 3 Older
two Story large lot asking
579,900

321 0759

EVE

372 7643

HE WENT BAC KfC RENEW
PROFE650W
C C H ru C K t
H1M * £ l F AT THE WALPEN
PROF? WE ’.MA55AGE ANP MENTATION EVERYTHING1
IF THEV P
HAVEN’T C E NTER.’ HE NEEDED TO
\vCRK THE SAP V IB E *
INVENTED
HE ARP
£ U t£ F HI* CPN^CIOUJNKS^ F O O T B A L L ,
H IM
CHANTING
HALFBACK*
FOR
'TH ER E* MUCH ABOUT
WOULD HAVE
t h i* f ie l d t h a t
TO C A R R V
HCHRS.'
SC IEN C E POE*N’T
IT IN A
5UITCASE !
understand:

Wilco Sales Hwy 41 W 322 1170
•
Baled shavings t l 54
Ind cutting clover hay
3rd cutting alfalfa hay
Northern Timothy mixed hay
Check our prices.

V

HAY S3 Viper bale.
3Sor m ore tree del
Other leeds avail. Iff 5191

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
HAROLD

7ELL.Tr WCULD CUT p p w n c m f u m b l e * H *V**|Ul*« t'U

HALL

47 Real Estate W anted

32—Mobile Homes

R EALTY, IN C
323-5774

realtor

rVr~i_
JUNE PORZIG REALTY
NEW Listing! You'll want to see
this 3 bdrm , 3 bth, 1 yr, old
home on 19 acres in a
b e a u tilu l n a tu ra l setting
Located in Paola *71.900
REALTOR
MLS
803 5 French Ave

322-8678

FHA-VA SPECIAL! Why rent
when you can own NOW. SI,ISO
down payment. 1 bdrm home
on lenced lot. Large oak and
citrus trees. Good location]
Only &gt;391 a mo. T a m and
iniurincelncluded. i i . 'j o yrs.
Price 131,300
REMODELED
3 bdrm., l l j
bath, w new root. Enclosed
garage and tiled Fla. rm. Oak
shaded yard. E itra cleanl
G re a t location! C rta liv e
linancingl See it today &gt;11,900.
GET A FRESH START
WITH "SANFORD’S NO. I
PROFESSIONAL"
C u rre n tly sto k in g m otlvalod
S alts Associates. Excellent
commission Schedule, loads
lurnlshod. Ask for Mr. Hall.

lU iL lH
m iii

NOWS TH E TIM E
TO B UYI
FHA-VA 12
WE N E E D LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW) II!

R E A L T O R S *
FISHERMAN'S paradisel Three
bedroom trailer right on St.
Johns River. Fenced on one
hall acre. $J7,soo.

323-5774

EXCELLENT sandwich and ice
cream restau ran t, one owner,
7 yr*., open 7 days, separate
game room , pays overhead,
very good location • S44.SOO.

7191 HWY. 17 9]

42—Mobile Homes

1-1 HOME, CM A, near Lake
Mary on quiet Cul de sac. Low
Interest assum ption, 119, 909.

SEE SKYLINE 5 NEWEST
Palm Springs &amp; Palm Manor
GREGOR Y MOBILE HOMES
110) Orlando Or
121 *200
VA 1 F Ha Finane,ug-

3 BEDROOM home + a I
Bedroom O uplex, partially
fu rn ish e d , good incom e, 1
a c re s. G ood in v estm en t.
&gt;73,000.
ORIFXWpOD VILLAQE
Lake M ary, Florida 31741
Ollicac (JOS) 311 &gt;00i
The sooner you place your
classified ad, Ihe sooner you
will get results

YEAR ENO CLOSE-OUT
1981 SKYLINE Mobile Home
2i«52 tt screen e n c lo su re
porch, utility shed, Central
heat and air 1 Bdrm. 2 Bath
Lot s u e is VJ.iOO Sale price
*11.900 financing available at
xn 01 sales pr&gt; e interest ra te
131, / + 2 Points Can be seem
at 126 Leisure Or
North
D eB ary,
Fla
In
th e
M eadow tea on Ihe R iv er
M obile Home c om m unity
Please contact Tom Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First Federal ot
Seminole 305 123 t i l l
1980 MOBILE Home Il'x60' set
up In adult section ot mobile
park Day 111 2621
Evenings 811 S ilt
PRE OWNEOHOMES
2 Bd Fam Park
13x65
510,500
3Bd Fam Park
11x52
&gt;11,300
3 Bd 21x61 Must See
&gt;14,900
2 Bd 12x60 Nice
S4.19S
7 Bd 12x65 Furn
511.500
3 Bd. 12x60
51,500
2 Bd 11x61 Ad Pk
523.500
GREGORY MOBILE INC
3803Orlando Or 17 925 Sanlord
305 T»3 5300

.

43— Lois-Acreage

COUNTRYLIVING
5 Acres cleared high and dfy
land Suitable lor horse*. Near.
Geneva Price S22.SOO wilh
*2500 down, 120 paym ents ol
&gt;269.87 including 10’ ,.* In
terest Must see

CallBart

12 MOBILE HOMES
1-1 on ] ' i acres with m any
oatras. Near Lake Harney.
Price reduced ITK end owner
will consider Holding. S it,000.
SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
11*3111

real esta te
r e a l t o r i n 7i t t

_

JUNE PORZIG R E A LTY
OSTEEN near goll course 10
acres 155,000 &gt;25,000 down and
owner will hold m ortgage at
10 *i Interest. Also 5 acre
parcels with S3.000 down and
ow ner will hold a t to.*
Suitable lor mobile homes
Mostly cleared land
1100 West F irst Streot - Sanlord, Florida 13771 - ( 101)111 1130

M O D IL S M W
M O N .-F R I.
* : 0O - 5:00

O H N

SAT.
14:00 - 5:00

REALTOR
103 S French Ave

SUN.

MLS

322*8678

1:00 - 5:04

SOM I PLACES HAVI
t^r A U THI FUN!
tw
r&gt;W"Li'"r&gt;

Itow 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.

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

Let a Classified Ad help you lind
m ore room ' lor storage
Classified Ads find buyers
last

PI

175 E. Tracy, Lake Mary, 1
Bdrm , 2 Bath, central, heat,
air. Many extras Large lot
&gt;89.900 . 323 18)6

I » YEARS EXPERIENCE

MUST sell l Shetland ponies,
Great with children Please
call 321 2091

67A -Feed

OPEN TODAY

GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
FOR A FRACTION OF THEIR
COST FROM TODAY'S WANT
AOS I

66—Horses

WHERE*
MAXIMUM,

HAL COLBERT REALTY
REALTOR
107E 31 Oh St
311 7032

3S44 $ French
333 0331
Alter Hours 339 3910 333 0779

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

with Major Hoople

ST. JOHNS River liu ila g e , 2' j
acre parcels, also Interior par
cels with river accast-*)3,900
Public water, 20 min. to Alta
m onte Mall 12 •* 20 yr
fin an c in g , no q u a lify in g .
Broker t3 l «13
Get Cash Buyers lor a small
investment. Place a law cost
classified ad tor results. 323
2411 or 131 9993

BUILD IN G THRO UG HO UT C ENTRAL FLORIDA

ON YOUR LOT

C ustom , Affordable, Luxury H om es
wEn&amp; i *rom C 30’« to $ 7 0 ’s

WE BUY equity in Houses,
apartm ents, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
VESTMENTS P O Box 2500.
Sanlord. Fla 32771 122 1741
NEED to sell y our house
quickly!
We c a n ‘o tte r
g uaranteed s a le w ith in 10
days Call 331 t i l l .

KICK THE STORAGE HABIT.
Sell Ihsoe useful, no longer
needed item s with a Herald
Classified Ad Call 322 2411 or
831 9993

*]

W ait tiff ID BiA

ALUMINUM, c a n s, copper,
lead, b rass, silver, gold Week
days 8 1 30, Sat 9 1 K KoMo
ToootCo 918 W 1st St 333 1100

71— Antiques

Ocala Antiques Show
47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
WE PAY cash tor 1st * 2nd
mortgages Rav Leqg Lie
Mortgage Broker h h 2599

A n. 719
City Auditorium N E Sanches
Fri.
Sat. 12 Noon to 9 p m
Sunday I p m. to&amp;p m
A dm issions! 50entire show
The Chapman Shows

72—Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
/WON DAY, JAN. 107 PM.
U nex p ected consignm ent ol
antiques and collectibles from
N o rth e a st. Item s include
rev o lv in g Oak bookcase,
mahogany mirror back curio,
oak princess dresser, 19 piece
walnut dining room suite, oak
3 door bookcase, w ick er
rocker, odd dressers, tables,
lam ps, pine dovetail blanket
chest, vanity wardrobe, china
cabinet, poster bed, alio some
reproductions and TVs.
SISICASH VISA MC

BUILDERS, IN C .

V

Call Collect (305) 327-0000
| B M M M M W W W a PIm m Mnd more Information ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ |
otveei.

CRy—

.S ta te .

.b a m home.

rm M w m M k sa.

I own property In .

-U p -

.a n d pla n lo b u ild in .

N H M o ; HALLMARK M J U D f M ,

INC PC3 Box 698 • Longwood. FL 32750

IS IT TRUE you can
lor &gt;44 th ro u g h
government? Get
today' Call 312 742
616 (Open Sunday I

Have a room Id te n t? Let a
classified ad find a tenant lor
you I
WE PAY lop dollar lor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto Parts 293 4SOS

MOTORCYCLE 1979 GoldWing,
Full dress, w stereo. 3,000
miles 13.SOO 323 1456

• 215 S. French
32)7)19

buy
th e
the
1142

jeeps
U5
tacts
Ext

79 FORD G ranada All extras
including a u to tra n s . H50
down Cash or tra d e 339 9100
9)4 4605

TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk *
Used rars. trucks &amp; heavy
equipment 32! 5990

SANFORD AUCTION

• OIO YOU KNOW? •
You can buy or lease a new car
in Ihe privacy ot your home or
office Fla Auto Brokers
321 2066
DeBary Auto &amp; Marine sales
across the riv e r too ot hill 174

F u S ESTATE Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Ap
pea sals Catl Dell's Auct-co
123 5410

Hwy 17 97 D rO ar, iisa i n ,

79—Trucks-Trailers
1973 VW SQUARE BACK
station waton *600 firm
323 8019

1971 CMC Truck, 2J It
Aluminum box 6 brand new
Michelin tires, &gt;4906 lirm .
exc cond 323 K162 Irom 9 S

AUCTION
SAT., JAN. 8 ,6:30 P.M.
Complete household furnishings,
bedroom se ts. Jlvlngroom
sofa’s &amp; sleepers, dining room
se.s, tables, chairs, lam ps,
paintings, appliances, wicker
and m uch more

1967 Cadillac Sedan DeVllle all
original Excellent condition in
and out One owner car E state
sate 669 8024 or 372 2088

80—Autos for Sale
We buy Cars and Trucks.
Martin Motor Sales
701 S. French
31*7931

The Florida Trader
Auction Palace North
490 Bay Meadows Rd.
Longwood, Fla. 339-3119

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Easy Term s
NATIONAL AUTOSALES
It20Sanlord Aye
___________ 311 4075____________

75-A—Vans

&gt;Y&gt;'OAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 92 I mile west ot Speed
way. Daytona Beach will hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday A W ednesday at
7 30 p m It's the only one in
Florida You set the reserved
price Catl 901 255 8)11 tor
further details

75 DAT5UN 3 dr with auto tran s
and other extras Good con
dltion &gt;99 down Cash or
Trade 3)9 9100..931 4605 -

1969 Ford Econo line Van 6 cyl.
manual shift 323 1731 days,
322 0667 nltes

Tomorrow may be the day you
sell that roll a way bed you've
now heretorollaw ay
It you
place a Classified Ad today

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

OVERHEAD g arage door, 8 tt.
heavy gauqe alum inum SIQ0
Wall settee green cushions.
S7S, See at &gt;320 Magnolia Aye .
331 2318.

To List Youi Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

EXECUTIVE Black Vinyl high
back sw ivel office c h air.
Walnut and b ra ss pedestal,
like new StOO 323 1042
LEVI J e a n s A Jackets
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave. 322 5791
SEWING MACHINE Zig Zag
Used only 8 Mos &gt;85 Cash or
terms We finance Seminole
Sewing, Winn Dixie P la /a 17 93
A Lake Mary Blvd. 322 9111
1981 Trolling motor Never Used
&gt;125, Sears typew riter
*35,
Clarinet &gt;50 321 0938
LOVE Seat, green apt sire, exc.
cond *75. Coflee table SIS. 830
1488. 1:30 S p m
l cane A rattan bar stools. &gt;10
each 373 1*30

51-A— Furniture
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
l it USE FIRST ST
&gt;2) Sail
KITCHEN set S piece, green.
&gt;75. White dresser and desk
(girls') &gt;75. Maple twin bed w
spring and m atlress, *75 Call
327 0044 alter S p m .

52—Appliances
K rnm oreparts, service. used
washers 12) 0697
MOONEY APPLIANCES
JUST received shipm ent ot good
used refrigerators, 30 Day
guarantee. Sanlord Auction,
I31S S French. 32) 7310

53—TV- Radio- Stereo
Good Used TV's 135 &amp; up
MILLERS
3619 Orlando Dr
Ph J77 0U7
REPOSSESSED COLOR TVS
We sell re p o sse ss e d color
televisions, alt nam e brands,
consoles and portables . EX
AMPLE Zenith 25" color in
walnut console Original price
over 1750. balance due *196
cash or paym ents St7 month.
NO MONEY DOWN Still In
warranty Call l i s t Century
S a le sltl 5394day or nite. Free
home trial, no obligalion

_________ 3211054_________
GARAGE Sal*, Jan. f A 10, 9 5,
100 Sir Lawrence Or., Clothes.
boat, all h eater, etc.

FILL DIRT A TOPSOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clark A HIM 333 7SI0. 323 2123

tt-A-farm

Equipment

EQUIPMENT AUCTION
SATURDAY, JAN. 15
10AM
Farm tractors, d o iers, loaders,
backhoes. b u c k e t tru c k s ,
trucks, trailers and m owers. At

Daytona Auto
Auction
Hwy. 92 Daytona Beach

904 255 111)

)

1974 Toyota Celica exc cond 4
brandnew tirc-s S1.700. can be
seen at 1109 S Sanford Ave

CONSULT OUR

FOR SALE lOSpeedblke
I t in 10 speed bike like new
834 1314

62—Law n-G arden

C X

3UYJ UNf t CARS*TRUCKS

WATERBED King s u e wilh new
mattress, oak pedestal wilh
new headboard &gt;150 327 0915

HOUSEHOLD ilem s, clothing,
exercise bike, fence, swing sal,
re frlg , toys, garden supplies.
Sal Sun. 101, t i l l Pina Ave.

^ Jid lm a rh

80—Autos for Sale

78—Motorcycles

50—Miscellaneous for Sale

Giant Carport Sale, Sat., Sun. 9
S. Household Hems, lurnlture,
stereo, m icro w av e oven,
clothes, 117 Beth Dr, (Ravenna
Park)
- YARD Sale, Sat. A Sun , *2S1S
Park Dr„ Lot 21. 1 sp girl's
bike, dbi., door wardrobe,
household m ite.

P a lm b rM ze — Lovely California inspired 3 bedroom,
2 bath home with double garage, cathedral ceiling,
breakfast area and 1,666 sq. ft. under roof — $43,500.

77—Junk Girs Removed
From S10foS50 or m ore
Call 322 1624

Aloe Products

HAVE YOUR financial dream s
become a reality with Aloe
PT. no Investment 32) 7288

Ceiling Fan Installation
CEILING FAN INSTALLATION
Quality Work
We Do Most Anything
295 9)74
477 1781

C eram ic Tile

Auto CB Stereo
Repair. Install. Sales
Auto Sound Center
A S C 2109 French Ave
322 18)5

A d dition s &amp;
R em odeling
BATHS.k.tchens roof ng block,
c o n cre te w indow s add a
room, tree estim ates 32) 846)
NEW. REMOOEL. REPAIR
All types and phases ol con
strudion, S G Balint 333 4837.
377 1665 Slate Licensed
ALL TYPES CARPENTRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen room s, carport. Door
locks, p a n e llin g , sh in g le*
rerooling For last service, ’

can 323-4917,365-2371

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
ALUMINUM Siding, vinyl siding'
soffit &amp; fascia. Aluminum
gutters and down spout 1 .
Fr ESI 305 )65 5363

Bf'iiuty C u e
TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H arriett's Beauty
Nook 5)9 E 1st St . 372 5717

Boarding &amp; Grooming

MEINTZER TILE Exp Sm cel
19*3 New * old work comm L
re v d Free estimate 969 9562
GOOD v A SOM
Ttlx- Contractors
321 0153

&gt;P?

ChildCare
THE HAPPY ELVES
Quality child care and pre
school Infants a specially
In dividual attention TLC.
State licensed 120 E Crystal
Lake A v e , Lake Mary 321
2381

Cleaning Services

ANIMAL Haven Boarding and
G room ing K ennels healed,
insulated, screened, tty proof
inside, oulside runs Fans
Also AC cages W t cater to
your pets. Ph. 327 5752
SLIM
BUOGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED WITH VALUES
FROM THE WANT AD
COLUMNS.

Bride ft Block
Stow Work
PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality W ork At Reasonable
Price* F ree Estimate*.
Ph 11* 5500
Have tom e cam ping equipment
you no longer use? Sell It all
with a Classified Ad In Tht
Herald. Call 3127411 or n *
**93 and a frltndly ad viior
will help you.

* TRIPLE A*
■i Price special, f 14,95 for
Family o r Living R m 147 2740.

SEAMLESS aluminum gutters,
cover those o v e rh a n g s waluminum solfil A lose la. (904)
775-7019 colled. F re t est.
C O L L IER 'S

Home

SPENCER PEST CONTROL
Comm . Resd . Lawn, Term ite
Work 327 1445 Ask lor Champ

Plastering

R e p a irs

c a r p e n t r y , roo im q. p a i n t mg.
w in dow r e p a i r l i t 4111

WINDOWS, doart. carpentry,
Concrete »l*b‘- teram ic A Moor
tile Minor repairs lirrp laces.
Insulation. Lie Bond 111 l i l t
CARPENTER 25 yrs exp Small
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 323 9615
Mamtenanceol a llty p e s
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 323 6039

Lawn Service

X ll
phases ol Plasier.ng
Plastering r rp a 'r. stucco hard
rnte. sim ulated brtek 171 i w i
CLASSIFIED
AOS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS of m erchandise
every day

P lum bing

Modernizing your H o m r ' SHI no
longer needed but useful Hems
with ,1 Classtfit'd Ad

*A -1 LAWN SERVICE*
Mow weed trim, haul R egular
Service 1 time clean up 24
hr*, best rales, 12a 6U I .

R em odeling

Remodeling Specialist

A.M. Kelly cleaniitf service.
Specialising in restaurant A
oil Ice buildings. U 3 01SI.

Lawn Mowers

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

C o n e t e t c W ork
BEAL Concrete I man quality
operation pa' os driveways
Days 3)1 7)33 Eves 337 1)31
SWIFT CONCRETE wore all
types. F o o te rs, drivew ays,
pads, floors, pooii. complete.
Free est. 322 7103
FOR all your concrete needs call
322 2172. F ree estimates. No
builders pleas*.

Dog Training

Sundown Dog Training
Qbedlance training in home
and group 32 1 4731

Draperies
CUSTOM MADE in our Shop.
Installation Service, Dorothy
A Vincent Bliss 31* 5425

Excavating Servlets
VEINOIXCAVATINQ
640 Casa Backhoa Loader wextender hoe f yd dump
truck-low bed serv ) 2) 5475.

MISTER. Fix It Jo* M cAdams
witl repair your m ow ers a t
your home. Call 332 7055.

Major Appliance

FIREWOOD 110 A up Tree
trim m in g , rem oval T rash
hauled F ree e s t , 322 *1)0.

Handyman
HANDYMAN Servlet* Painting,
r a p a lr s . a te
R easonable
guar work 425 0451. 422 4211.,

W* Handle The
Whole B a llo t Wax

Financing A vailable

Roofing

Repair
JO H N N IES A ppliances We
service refrigerators, wash
ers, dryers, ranges Reas,
rates. 37) 1334

Nursing Care
LOVING HOME Excellent c tr e
A companionship for elderly
woman 32) 4305

N u iM iiq C t'titp r

OUR RATE5ARE LOWER
Lakeview Nursing C enter
21* E Second 51 . Sanlord
37? 4707
Will care lor elderly
in my home
323 5325

Oil Heaters
Clwned
OIL Heater cleaning
and Servicing
Call Ralph 32) 7113.

Painting

Firewood

Carpat Owning

PAI NTlNGand rtpa r pat o and
screen porch built
Call
an*tim e 372 94*1

Pest Control

Shamrock Landscape
P re p a re your lawn A plants lor
winter now. Complete Lawn
ta rv . 321 0576

Carpentry

CARPENTER repairs and
additions, 20 yrs. txp.
Call 327 1357

Home Repairs

HOMEOWNERS, relax on your
days oft Let us clean your
home at affordable rales. Cell
how 371 3546 Pally * Home
Pam pering Service

54—Garage Sales

E u m p to 01 Ion modoie to chooM from.

Sunday, Jan 9, 1983—9B

BILL'S PAINTING
interior Exterior painting Light
carpentry. Home* p re ssu re
c le an e d Buslnes* 131-2423
Home 1315114 Bill Steiner
Wonder what &lt;0 do with tw o?
Sell One — The quick, easy
W ant Ad w ay. T he m a g ic
num ber 1* 222 24)1 or 131 ff* 3.
‘ HOUSE painting 5500
a house. Any *iie
427 1034,42 5 400*

222ZEL
23 yrs. experience, Licensed A
insured.
F re e E stim e ltso n Reeling,
Re Rooting and Repairs.
Shinties. Built Up and Tlta.

ja m esa n d er so n

G. F. BOHANNON

REROOFING, carpentry, root
repair A painting 1 &gt; years
exp 327 1979
MAKE ROOM TO STORE
YOUR WINTER ITEMS
SELL
"DON'T
N EED S"
FAST WITH A WANT AO
Phone 122 3411 or | ] l 999) and
a friendly Ad Visor will help
you

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. L E E IN C
Tree Service
STUMPS ground out.
R eeionebi*. free estim ates
711 0441
JOHN ALLEN YARD A TREE
SERVICE. W e'll rem ove pine
trees. Reas p rice 33I S3H
Letourneau T ree Service*
Removal, trim m ing, demaesin.
Licensed and Insured 9314141

Upholifery
LORENES Upholstery F ree
pick up. oei A est C er i boat
seats Furn 321 1721

�Sunday, Jan. f, 1983

TOB—Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI

M r* ®

WIN UP TO &gt;2.000 IN CASH!

ALL T H E FUN &amp; EXCITEM ENT BEGINS TODAY
WITH WINN-DIXIE'S NEW GAME!

OVER &gt;490.000 IN PRIZES AVAILABLE!
IT'S EASY TO WIN!

PEOP^i

W e 'r e giving aw ay 10 tnps lo r tw o to the
G re a t W est. G reat Lakes o r H a w a ii II you
o b ta in a g am e m arker w h ic h s a y s You Quality
to r G re a t Tnp Drawing, y o u a re eligible lor
e a c h o t th e tw o drawings J u s t s u b m it
q u a lifie r m arker to store o ffic e a n d (ill out a
T rip E ntry F orm . All entries re c e iv e d by
F e b ru a ry 9 , 1983 will be elig ib le lo r th e first
d ra w in g on February 16, 1 9 8 3 F iv e G reat
T rip s w l b e aw arded in th e first d ra w in g All
vafcd e n tn e s received w ith in th r e e d ays alter
g a m e e n d s wiH be ckgiblc lo r th e final drawing
to b e held approKimately s e v e n d a y s after
g a m e en d s Five G reat T rip s will again be
a w a rd e d at this lim e S e e c o lle c to r card lor
d e ta ils of trip prtre.

WIN A GREAT TR IP
V IA UNITED!

P*fc up • MBf I Mm* M H and coBpctO* c •»**
•nrte* BMGO end n n | l OOO t i o o H O Bnd
IS*
IS' C
L ot
O *«'!*•
#* r*%# 4 COMM
C.(PAM MS »nd
arxl W*«
W N 12
| J OOO
1700 tTO end 110* T*K^»ndB of
|1 00

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QUANTITY BIGHTS
RESERVED
W IHN -DO O l 'STORES, INC
C O f Y R IG M T - i m

CHEK (ALL FLAVORS)

FOLGERS

JR*
S U P E R B R A N D GRADE P'A

COFFEE

LARGE EGGS

MrwhmisI

1*LB.
CAN

DOZ.
( u )

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUARY 9-12. 1983

?a
@

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
___________ 00 0 0 JANUARY 9-12, 1983
^

p

39

2 LITER
BTL.

°

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUARY 9-12, 1983

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUARY 9-12, 1983

SUPIRBRAND H O M O G E N IZ E D
LO-FAT O R S K IM

CLAU S5EN REFRIGERATED
W H O LE OR HALVES

TIDE

D A W N L IQ U ID

D R IN K S

M A Y O N N A IS E

M IL K

DETERGENT

4»., $139

22-oz.
BT L.
®

„

BOX

Q 5)

WfTH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUARY 9-12, 1983

GAL.

■

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JAN. 9-12, 1993

16)w iT H o n e f il l e d s u p e r b o n u s c e r t if ic a t e
w
0 0 0 0 JANUARY 9-12. 1983

WITH ONE FILLE0 SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JANUARY 9-12, 1983

When you checfcout.p»MCrtone Wed

•r Bonus Coupon for ovory
Posts M Super Bonus

H e r e ’ s h o w it w o r k s !
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75ih Y ear, No. 122—Monday. J a n u a ry 10,1983—Sanford, F lorida 32771

E vening H erald—(USPS 481-2601—P rice 20 Cents

Two Sides Can't Agree On Amount

City W ill Pay H ousin g Authority Back, W h e n . ..
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The Sanford Housing Authority is threatening the city of
Sanford with withholding its annual payment in lieu of taxes
(PILOT) unless the city refunds money it paid improperly for
renting office space on.the ground floor at city hall.
The problem is that the SHA has asked the city to reimburse
$10,891.94 when the amount in question, according to city
records, is actually $12,253.32.
Under an agreement with the city, the authority pays San­
ford 16,000 to 17,000 annually in lieu of taxes on the 480 public
housing units it administers within the city.
The U S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

nearly a year ago said the SHA could not properly spend its
funds to rent a facility —city hall ground floor — that was built
with a federal grant.
The city some months ago reimbursed some $19,000 to the
federal program — Community Development Block Grant —
from which that portion of the rent had been paid to the city.
City Manager W. E. “ Pete" Knowles said today that SHA did
not have the authority to contract and spend federal money for
renting the space and now Is trying to correct its mistake at the
expense of Sanford's taxpayers.
The city stepped in to assist the authority with its financial
quandary with the federal government after Knowles deter­
mined a year ago the authority had received some $500,000 in
federal money from the CDBG program for a housing

rehabilitation and resale project.
The $500,000 funding was used to purchase eight dilapidated
houses, refurbish them and resell to low income families.
At Knowles' recommendation the federal government cut off
funding for the project. The city then assisted the authority by
hiring an accountant to clean up the bookkeeping with the
project and to sell materials and equipment on hand from the
defunct project, returning those funds to the federal govern­
ment.
In an exchange of letters with Elliott L Smith, executive
director of the housing authority, requestinc he return of
rental fees from Sanford "nowles said the $10,000 that is
requested be refunded wj
ot the correct amount.

i

Knowles also asked the authority to provide copies of the
authority’s audit and auditor’s statement about the refund, a
breakdown of the amount requested to be refunded and a copy
of the regulations under which the request was being made.
The documentation was for city records.
Knowles has referred the m atter to City Attorney Bill
Colbert for a recommendation.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development,
Jacksonville office, has instructed the housing authority to
recover the rental fees improperly paid to the city or to defer
payment in lieu of taxes until the city satisfies the debt.
The City Commission at its 7 p.m. meeting today will decide
whether to repay the $12,000 or to take the issue to court.

Easton Backs Idea

County May Pay
For Zoo Work,
But Not $94,000
Htrsld Phot* by Tom Vincent

BUSINESS
A S USUAL

C lo sed fo r e ig h t m o n th s sin c e th e f o r m e r o w n e r
r e t i r e d , a n e w ly r e n o v a te d T e x a c o s e r v i c e sta tio n
on S o u th F r e n c h A v e n u e (U .S . H ig h w a y 17-92) a t
2 5 tlu S lre e l in S a n f o r d w as r e o p e n e d S a tu r d a y a s
H o c k y 's T e x a c o . O w n ed b y K o c c o A rb ite ll of
O r a n g e C ity , it w ill o ffe r full a n d s e lf-s e rv ic e
g a s o lin e p u m p s a n d g e n e r a l r e p a i r s . J a y L e D u c is

th e m a n a g e r . T h e re o p e n in g of th e s ta tio n p o in ts
to a r e v e r s in g tre n d fro m a y e a r to IK m o n th s a g o
w h e n s o m e s ta tio n s , s q u e e z e d by s h r in k in g g a s
s u p p lie s , w e r e fo rc e d o u t o f b u s in e s s . N o w g a s
s u p p lie s a r e g r e a t a g a in , a n d th e p r ic e s a r e
d r o p p in g .

Lake Mary Hires Coach Nelson
By SAM COOK
Herald Spurts Editor
la k e Mary High School Principal Don Reynolds
wanted a football coach who had won a state
championship. Reynolds got his man today when he
hired former Bishop Moore coach Harry Nelson for
the Job.
Nelson, 48, won a state championship while at
Bishop Moore in Orlando in 1970. Nelson replaces
Roger Beathard, who resigned following a 1-9
season last year during la k e Mary's first year of
varsity competition.
Reynolds hopes Nelson, who is presently teaching
at Colonial High School in Orlando, will begin the
new Job on Jan. 24. It is contingent on Reynolds
working out a teaching position with the Seminole
County School Board office. Nelson will teuch
history and physical education.
Reynolds said Nelson's credentials and record at

Blrhop Moore were the determining factors in
hiring the veteran coach.
“ Harry Nelson's credentials at Bishop Moore
were Just too impressive to pass him by," said
Reynolds about his new coach. "I wanted someone
who had won a state championship and when I was
at Seminole High, I saw him take mediocre talent
and beat the fool out of us year after year.”
Nelson was one of three finalists for the Job.
Reynolds wouldn't reveal the other two, but he
made his decision over the weekend to select
Nelson.
Other factors instrumental in the hiring were
Nelson's ability to get along with people and high
recom m endations from form er students and
players.
"I never talked to anybody who played for him
that didn't adore him," said Reynolds who queried
several Sanford professional people about Nelson.
“ He's a great influence on the kids and I didn't talk

to anybody that worked with him that didn't like
him."
Nelson last coached at Colonial in 1980. During his
13 years at Bishop Moore, he posted a 65-49-3 mark.
In the state championship year, the Hornets were
12-1. At Colonial (1977-80), Nelson was 17-14 in three
years for an overall mark of 82-63-3.
Prior to coaching in Florida, Nelson was an
assistant to Gene "Torchy" Clark, University of
Central Florida basketball coach. G ark and Nelson
guided Xavier (Appleton, Wis.) High School to three
undefeated football seasons from 1961-63.
After three years away from the game, Nelson
was itching for a new challenge which the Lake
Mary post offered.
“ My six guns were smoking. I needed another
gunfight," Nelson said today.
"Lake Mary has good people that like their
school. I’m really looking forward to it,” he said.

Double Tax
Cities

M ay Review Sheriff's Budget
Seminole County com m issioners
were scheduled to discuss today their
response to
double
taxation
resolutions filed by seven cities.
Acting County Administrator Jim
Easton said today he will recommend
th a t
com m issioners
allow
representatives of the seven cities “to
review the sheriffs budget with us.”
Negotiations between the county
and the seven cities — Sanford, Lake
Mary, Longwood, Winter Springs,
Casselberry, Oviedo and Altamonte
Springs — about claim s made by the
cities that they were paying $2-4
million in taxes to the county without
getting any benefits eliminated all but

one area of disagreement.
Park to begin design work on two provide additional courtroom and
office space for the circuit and county
The cities asked the county to allow projects.
them some input into that area, the
Last week, commissioners met with courts.
sheriffs department.
the architects, consultant Walter H.
A ccording to the tim e fram e
In the negotiations, the cities said Sobel of Chicago, Judges and other
established last week, th e com­
they were paying nearly $1.2 million constitutional officers to review plans
missioners' move to the old hospital
for renovation of the courthouse and
to the county for the sheriffs road
should begin in June. The tax collector
patrols in the unincorporated areas of the old Seminole Memorial Hospital.
and property appraiser will move to
At that meeting they decided to give
the county.
the hospital between January and
Commissioners have until Friday to the architect authorization to begin
March 1984.
respond to the claims made by the work immediately on both projects,
After renovation of the courthouse
cities. If they fall to answer the cities' paving the way for commissioners
and their staff agencies to move Into the clerk of courts will receive two
claims, the cities could revive a
floors in the north wing, the courts will
the hospital by this summer.
lawsuit against the county.
Plans for the courthouse should be get one floor and the tax collector and
Com m issioners also will give
authorization to Helman Hurley 'completed by June, allowing con­ property ap p raiser will get the
Charvat Peacock-Architects of Winter struction to begin on that facility to remaining door. - MICHEAI. BEHA

By MIC HEAL BEHA
Herald Stall Writer
Acting County Administrator Jim Easton
will recommend that county commissioners
pay for repairs to a park and road at the
Central Florida Zoo.
Easton said today he is in the process of
analyzing Zoo Director A1 Rozon's request for
$94,917 in repairs.
Rozon said in December the zoo board
cannot afford to make repairs to a termiteinfested picnic shelter, rotting timbers on an
elevated nature trail and an access road which
is eroding away.
The facilities in need of repair are in the 69acre park outside the soo's entrance. Under
the term s of the zoo's (agreement with the
county, the zoo Is responsible for the repairs.

said. If a person would be injured on any of the
facilities the county could face a lawsuit.
But Easton wants to make sure the repairs
are a one-time only expense.
“ I want to see if they (the zoo) have a long­
term financing plan and a five-year capital
improvement plan," Easton said.
But this recommendation could face op­
position from several commissioners.
Robert G. “ Bud” Feather has expressed his
opposition to the county picking up the tab for

Study on possible m o ve
of

moo

to Orlando due

to be given board

this week.
But the zoo’s directors want to spend money
they’ve collected on improvements to the zoo’s&lt;
exhibits.
the improvements. Feather said the zoo has
violated a public trust in failing to keep up the
Rozon said the zoo wants to spend $100,000
facilities.
collected In 1982 on a reptile house and a
hooved animal exhibit.
Easton said this morning he has not yet
completed work on a proposal to fund the
repairs. He estimated that the work could be
done for much less than Rozon estimated.
But because of the circumstances, Easton
favors making the repairs.
Easton said if the zoo goes out of business,
the property, leased to the zoo for $1 a year,
would revert to the county.
"And commissioners would have to pay for
the repairs anyway," Easton said.
There's also the question of liability, he

TODAY
Action R ep o rts............ — 2A
Around The C lock .......
4A
B ridge..........................
IB
Calendar...................... ... .3A
Classified A d s .............. M B
C om ics........................ — 4B
Crossword................... ,.4B
Dear A bby...................
IB
Deaths.......................... ...,3A
4B
Dr. L a m b .....................
Editorial...................... ... 4A
F lo rid a ........................ ...3A
Horoscope................... .. 4B
Hospital ...................... ... 2A
N ation.......................... . ...2A
People.......................... . . . I B
S; o rts........................... S-4A
Television ...................
IB
W eather...................... .. 2A
World........................... ...3 A
How far wDl the new 5-ceat
federal gasoline tax go to
build new roada and fix old
ones? Not far enoogh. See
Page 2A

Besides, he says, the county has other parks
which are also in need of repairs.
And Robert Sturm said he doesn’t want to
make a decision until the results of a
feasibility study on relocating the zoo in
Turkey Lake Park in Orlando.
The study is expected to be given to the zoo's
board of directors bv Friday.
Sturm said the commission would be
premature to make repairs until it learns
whether the zoo is staying at its present 21acre site near Sanford or moving to the
Orlando park.

M an Killed, 2
Injured In Wreck
One man was killed and two others injured when a pickup
truck collided with a tractor-trailer truck and overturned on
Interstate 4 near Longwood on Sunday at about 10:50 p.m.
The dead man, who was in the pickup truck, had not been
identified by Florida Highway Patrol by Monday noon.
The victim was trapped with the driver of the pickup, W.A.
Washington of 332 N. Parram ore Ave., in Orlando, and a
passenger, Major Calvin Fuller of Alabama, when the truck
left the road.
The injured were freed from the pickup by rescue services.
The two vahldas w e n traveling west on the 1-4 when the ac­
cident a ccu m d about a half mile north of State Road 434.
The driver of the tractor trailer, Clyde E. Nance, 54, of St.
Augtutlna was not Injured, police reported.
Police said they are having difficulty identifying the dead
man, believed to be a fruit worker because he carried no
identification. According to Seminole County Medical
Examiner Dr. G.V. Garay the dead man was being given a lift
in the pickup truck.
He said the man died as a result of a concussion of the brain.
The man Is 40 to 50 years old, 170 pounds, about 5 feet 11 inches
tall and the little finger on his right hand has been amputated,
Dr. Garay said.

Judge Hastings' $ 150,000 Bribery Trial Postponed
MIAMI (UPI) — Alcee Hastings, Florida’s first black
federal Judge, dropped his bid to have his bribery conspiracy
trial moved out of Miami today and won a two-day delay in the
proceedings.
In a closed meeting with attorneys for Hastings and the
federal government, U.S. District Judge Edward T. Glgnoux
agreed to postpone the sta rt of Jury selection in Hastings' trial
from Tuesday to Thursday at 10 a jn . EST.
Patricia G. Williams, Hastings' attorney, withdrew a motion
- with the agreement of the prosecution - that the trial be
moved from Miami to F o rt Lauderdale.
Hastings had asked for the change of venue because he
feared renewed unrest in Miami's black areas if he is con­
victed.

Ms. Williams met with Glgnoux in a closed meeting along
with Reid Weingarten and Robert I. Richter, attorneys with
the U 5. Department of Justice's public integrity section.
Glgnoux was expected to rule on other pre-trial motions
today.
Hastings is charged with bribery, conspiracy and ob­
struction of Justice. He is accused of planning to reduce the
sentences of two Fort Lauderdale racketeers In exchange for
$150,000.
Justice Department officials in Washington said Hastings
appears to be the first sitting federal Judge to be indicted for
criminal conduct while performing his Judicial duties. But he
is not the first to be Indicted for criminal activity.
Otto K em er was a federal Judge when Indicted fqr crimes

I***

committed while he was Illinois governor and remained a
federal Judge throughout the criminal process. Several other
sitting federal Judges have been Indicted but stepped down
from the bench before the criminal process began.
His case before Glgnoux also has attracted attention because
of Hastings' legal moves since his indictment a year ago. He
sought to challenge the charging of any federal Judge as im­
proper prior to Impeachment. He sought television coverage of
his trial as a method of exoneration before the public. He
moved for removal the Jurist assigned to try him on grounds
bias.
•
* The prosecution, meanwhile, has found a number of key
witnesses unwilling to testify.
While undv investigation by a grand Jury, Hastings, 46,

declared, “This investigation is replete wtth Instances of over­
zealousness, lies, innuendoes, misquotes, inaccuracies, media
leaks."
His attorney, Miss Williams, has presented a catalogue of
129 prospective defense witnesses. They Include a number of
well known figures including civil rights leader Vernon Jor­
dan. She also listed 59 exhibits for the defense and a list of 103
questions for each potential Juror.
Events leading to Hastings' indictment began in August,
1981. An FBI informant reported that Hastings would consider
dismissing a case against underworld kingpin Santo Trafficante Jr. for $600,000.
The informant was a previous client of William A. Borders
See JUDGE, Page 2A,

T4

�&gt;A— Evening Htrald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Jan. 10,1fU

G a s Tax W ill
O n ly Dent

NATION
IN BRIEF

Repair Bill

Negotiations Move Slowly

&lt;j.

In N e w York Prison Siege
OSSINING, N.Y. I UPI) — Rebellious inmates
holding 17 prison guards hostage met today with
Ossining Correctional Facility officials bargaining for
an end to a three-day, cell-block siege. A crack police
unit massed nearby in case negotiations (ailed.
Prisoners told officials Sunday all the hostages were
safe. Officials did net know how many prisoners were
involved in the uprising.
Gov. Mario Cuomo was being kept informed about
progress of the negotiations.
Prison officials have not commented on prisoner
demands, although they said there have been com­
plaints about a lack of recreation activities. But state
Sen. Ralph Narino, R-Syosset, chairman of the
Committee on Crime and Corrections, said Sunday
night the prisoners' main demand seemed to focus on
overcrowding at' the facility, which houses 2,150
prisoners. The leaders of the uprising also wanted
amnesty for their actions, he said.
The takeover began at 7:40 p.m. Saturday.

Budget Decisions Due
I*

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan will
make crucial decisions on the 1984 budget this week',
amid growing signs his economic principles will be
tempered by political realities to head off 1200 billionplus deficits.
Administration officials hinted at the likelihood
Reagan would agree to some cutbacks or delays in
planned defense spending and were careful to
distinguish between his opposition to higher taxes in
1984 and future years.
Their comments seemed to suggest Reagan may
accept the reality of a record deficit in the range of 1200
billion next year, but further compromise on taxes in
later years to build confidence in the economy.

'No Social Security Taxes 1

I

WASHINGTON (UPI) — A key Republican senator,
pledging to fight tax increases to bail out Social
Security, says the money gap can be closed by slowing
benefit increases, adding government employees to the
system and making other minor changes.
Sen. William Armstrong, R-Colo., warning of the
danger of more unemployment, pledged Sunday to
fight any proposed tax increases to scrape together the
billions of dollars needed to bail out Social Security.
The 15-member presential Commission on Social
Security Reform is up against a Saturday deadline to
present its recommendations to President Reagan.
The main stumbling block Is whether to lean on taxes
or crimp benefits to come up with cash to keep checks
flowing to 36 million recipients.

WEATHER
l:

NATIONAL REPORT: Blinding wind-whipped snows and
Jcy rains across the Northern Plains were blamed for
treacherous travel conditions that caused an airliner to skid of f
a runway in Minnesota, killing one passenger and injuring
three others. Rescue efforts for two snowmobilers in the Big
Jlom Mountains of Wyoming were stymied Sunday by high
jrlnds and blowing snow that also temporarily cut off all access
(o one small mountain community. Two people were killed in
separate accidents on snow-covered Nebraska roads and at
least 10 people were injured in a 23-vehicle pilcup'blamed on
poor visibility in near-bllzzard conditions created by blowing
know near Sidney. Winds gusting to nearly 60 mph raked the
foothills ol northeast Colorado, and winds above 60 mph
bawled across southeast Wyoming and Montana’s upper
Yellowstone' Valley. Southeast South Dakota and northeast
Nebraska received 3 inches of new snow and parts of northwest
Iowa were coated with 2 Inches. Travelers advisories for snow
were out Sunday night for southeast South Dakota where up to
i more Inches was forecast by morning. A band of snow
rapped around southwest to northeast Minnesota,
reatentng to dump up to 5 inches of snow on the central
lection of the state.
’ AREA READINGS (I a.m,): temperature: GO; overnight
low: 60; Sunday high: 80; barometric pressure: 29.99; relative
{tumidity: 90 percent; winds: northeast at 4 mph; rain: none,
funrlse 7:19 a.m., sunset 5:47 p.m.
&lt; TUESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:13 a.m„
(:29 p.m; lows, 11:33 a.m., 12:20 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
hJghs, 6:05 a m ., 6:21 p.m.; lows, 11:24 a.m., 12:11 p.m.;
RAYFORT: highs, 12:55 a.m.. - p.m.; lows, 6:10 a.m., 6:05
6.m.
• BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
Miles: Wind variable near 10 knots today becoming southpeat near 10 knots tonight then northwest around 15 knots
during Tuesday. Seas 3 feet or less increasing Tuesday.
Scattered showers and a few thunderstorms mainly tonight
then partly cloudy Tuesday.
; AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy with highs in the mid to
tipper 70s. Wind light southwesterly. Tonight mostly cloudy
with 40 percent chance of showers. Turning cooler with lows in
the low to mid 50s. Wind light northwest. Tuesday partly
Cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain mainly in the morning.
4 Utile cooler with highs near 70.

5

f

HOSPITAL NOTES
CMtral FiarMa Rtgianai Hatfitai
Saturday •
A OMISSIONS

SANFORD:
Ltmmla N. Ball#my
Frank B. Hampton
Margaret L. Gegoake, DaBary
Alllt M. William*, take Monroe
Marie H. Hinkle, Orenge City
DISCHABOIS

SANFORD:
Alpnonae Amiro
Vickie L. Campbell
Virginia L. White
Louie Wright
All lout E. Angley. Del tone
E t f f ii i t g H e r a ld

Mary L. Back, Daltona
Richard J Evan*, Longwood
jani* P. McOovarn. 0»i**n
Katharine M. Corto and baby
girt. Ntw Smyrna Bch.
Sunday
ADMISSIONS

SANFORD:
Marl L. Oar land
Patrick F Htnry
K»*honda F. Martin
Dorn E Phillip*
Sutan B Richard*

Eliiabath Z. Thorn#
Edward N. Butlar Daltona
Lana B. Glaaaon, Laka Mary
Gorard A. Katltr. Oranga City
(USES eSI-lM)

Monday, January 10, 1913—Vol. 75, No. 122
PvMiakte Delly ana SaaBay, tictp* SaterSay ky Tht Santera
HaraM. lac., lee N. French Are.. Sentera. Fla. SUM.
Ucena ciatt Fettage Fate at SaMarC FlariSa IW II
N m w Delivery: Week, Sl.ee, Meath, M.tSi a MaatM, SM.Mt
Vaar, sai-M. « y Mall: W «* » U I , Maath, I I I ) : t Mantht,

1/ v

GOOD G O IN G , GUYS
T h e w in n e r of th e f ir s t C o n s u m e r 's C h o ic e A w a rd ,
s p o n s o re d by th e S l a t e A tto r n e y ’s o ffic e a n d th e
G r e a t e r S a n fo rd C h a m b e r o f C o m m e r c e , is
C a r l i 's G a rd e n M a r t, 2!&gt;ll U .S . H ig h w a y I7-D2,
S a n f o r d . F ro m le ft, S e m in o le - B r e v a r d S ta te
A tto r n e y D oug C h e s h ir e p r e s e n ts a p la q u e to

o w n e rs B r e n t a n d M a rk C a r li a s C h a m b e r
P r e s id e n t J a c k H o rn e r lo o k s o n . T h e a w a rd w as
g iv en
b ased
on c o n s u m e r
re c o g n itio n
of
b u s in e s s e s " w ith h ig h e t h i c a l s ta n d a r d s a n d
e x e m p la r y b u s in e s s p r a c t i c e s .”

Field Trips M ay Be Nixed
By M1CHEALBEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Sem inole County School Board
members may face a ticklish problem
Tuesday morning when they try to decide
if several school field trips will be ap­
proved.
The board moved its meeting from
Wednesday night to Tuesday morning to
allow board members time to travel to
state and national school board con­
ferences which begin Wednesday.
But the board may not show the same
courtesy to students and teachers
planning to visit Washington D.C. and
New York City.
Field trips requiring teachers to miss
school days are on a list of items board
members may eliminate to help make up
a loss of $1.37 million in state funds.
Superintendent Robert Hughes said it
costs the county a minimum of $29 per
day when a teacher is out of the
classroom.
The board withheld approval for two
overnight field trips in December but
now is faced with a request from a
Teague Middle School group which has

Inc., of Orlando is building the school for
$2,619,000. The school is expected to be
ready for occupancy by 600 students
when school begins in September.
Names suggested for the new school
include former school board member
Allan F. Keeth, former school board
attorney Douglas Stenstrom, recently
retired elementary education supervisor
Mary Groome, Angelin Taylor, Roy F.
Mann, David L. Thrasher, Velma S.
Mitchell, William J. Wells.
A variety of other names were also
suggested. Among those names were
Willowick,
E ag le . Elem entary,
Tuscarora, Tuscarora Trails, Mean­
dering Trails, Wilderness Point, Sanforilla, Sandforilla, SankawiUa, Sandinole and Tuskaford.

already paid $6,500 for reservations in
New York City. That money cannot be
refunded, a Teague teacher said.
The trip would cause 64 students and
three teachers to miss three school days.
A second group from Teague and a
group from Jackson Heights Middle
School want to go to Washington D.C.
That trip would take teachers and
students out of school for four days.
Also Tuesday, the board will be asked
to advertise for an architect to develop
plans for two new school facilities
propsoed for construction this year.
Assistant Superintendent for Facilities
Benny Arnold said the architect will
draw up plans for construction of a new
elementary school in Sanford, estimated
to cost $2,574,000 and an addition to
Oviedo's T.W. Lawton E lem entary
School.

Lake M ary E lem entary School
Principal Jack Frost suggested the
school's name not Include any reference
to Tuskawilla. The district already has a
Tuskawltla Middle School in Maitland.

The two projects top the board's list of
priorities for school construction this
year.
A school planned for construction this
year in Winter Springs is expected to get
a name Tuesday. Graham Contracting

Frost said Lake Mary High School and
I,ake Mary Elem entary School often get
deliveries for the other school.

M ass Burglar Suspect. Faces Only One Charge
The trial was scheduled to begin in Seminole County Circuit
Court today of a Longwood man suspected of having com­
mitted up to 160 burglaries using newspaper subscribers lists.
But Bruce Robert Pedrick, 33, former circulation manager
of the Orlando Sentinel, will face only one charge. Prosecutors,
however, won't »ay why.
Pedrick was arrested July 24 outside the newspaper’s cir­
culation substation, State Road 436 near Altamonte Springs,
reading a computer printout of vacationing newspaper sub­
scribers, Seminole County sheriff's deputies said.
According to investigators, Pedrick read into a tape
recorder the names, addresses and telephone numbers of
newspaper subscribers who were expected to be out of town
and the dates they would return. He would then drive to the
neighborhood, telephone to make sure no one was in the house
and break in, detectives said.
Assistant Stale Attorney Don Marhlestone has said that
Pedrick would be prosecuted on only one burglary charge. He
declined further comment.
Brevard-Seminole State Attorney Douglas Cheshire would
not comment on whether Pedrick had been granted immunity,
but did say that he did not expect any further cases tu be for­
warded to his office.
JEWELRY, TOOLS TAKEN
A Sanford woman reported Wednesday that Jewelry and
tools worth more than $1,300 were missing from her house.
Linda Sergent, 40, of 117 Mayfair Circle, told police she
noticed the items were missing Wednesday afternoon.
CAR BROKEN INTO
Two Volusia County men reported their car was broken into
while it was parked at Seminole Community College Wed­
nesday.
Kevin Redd, 20, of 1317 Merryfield Court, Deltona, reported
that a tape player and radio valued at $100 were taken in the
break-in. A wallet and $60 owned by Barry Thompson, 18, of
Orange City, were also reported stolen.
RUSTLER THWARTED
The mooing of his cow at 8:30 p.m. Friday prompted Willard
Ainsworth, 35, of 2660 Cameron Ave., Sanford, to call sheriff’s
deputies.
When deputies arrived at the scene a few minutes later, they
found that someone had attached a rope around the neck of
Ainsworth’s cow and had tried to lead the animal away.
The mooing of the cow apparently frightened the rustler
away.
PUMP PILFERED
A longwood woman told Seminole County sheriff's deputies
her water pump and storage tank were stolen overnight
Thursday.

Action Reports
★

Fires
★

Courts
★ Police

Katie Mocriof, 57, of 1054 Betsy Hun, told deputies the pump,
tank and fittings were worth $325.
CAR BREAK-IN
An Altamonte Springs man reported that his wallet, $150,
ami prescription sunglasses were stolen from his car while it
was parked in his driveway overnight Thursday.
David 11. Kaplan, 44, of 115 Satsuma Drive, reported the
theft.
PAIR ARRESTED
Two motorcyclists were arrested for reckless driving Friday
night in Geneva.
Police said the pair, John Michael Braddy. 20, Rt. 1, Oviedo,
and John Michael Marion, 22, Chuluota, were arrested when
they were caught drag racing on State Road 46 in Geneva
Friday at 11:10 p.m.
DUIARRESTS
The following people were charged with driving under the
influence of alcohol or drugs in Seminole County:
— Gerald l-ee Hoy, 36, of 174 Bristol Point, Longwood, was
arrested at 1:35 a.m. Friday by deputies after he was observed
1 traveling at a high speed on State Road 436. Deputies said Roy
turned in an unsafe manner onto Douglas Road and finally was
stopped in the parking jot of the Altamonte Springs Inn.
— Vernon Bartlett, 34, of 1106 Ash Circle, Casselberry, was
arrested at 12:56 a.m. Saturday at the Intersection of State
Road 436 and Wilshire Drive in Casselberry on a charge of
driving under the influence of alcohol and failure to yield the
right-of-way.
—Ronald Velten, 36, of 408 Beth Drive, Sanford, was arrested
at 2:95 a.m. Saturday along Airport Boulevard near U.S. High­
way 17-92 In Sanford after he was observed driving at a high
speed.
— Hussain Kassim, 42, of 403 Aldcrwood St., Winter Springs,
was arrested at 9:25 p.m. Friday on Stale Road 419 In Oviedo
following a traffic accident.
— Wesley Scott Steele, 18, of 2415 Key Ave., Sanford, was
arrested Friday at 11:30 p.m. Police said he was unable to stay
in a lane on US. Highway 17-92.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Highways and bridges nationwide
are in such bad shape that all the extra money raked in by the
5-cent boost in the federal gasoline tax would cover only New
York’s repair bills.
The more than $20 billion the new gas tax will raise over four
years would fall far short of what Texas officials say they need
just to rehabilitate existing roads in the state.
A United Press International survey shows that state of­
ficials have a virtually endless list of projects that would
devour the millions of extra nickels Americans will begin
pitching into Uncle Sam 's coffers this pring.
The gasoline excise tax will go up to 9 cents a gallon April 1
under a law signed last week bv President Reagan. Reagan
says the tax is a way to make highway users pay for fixing up
The nation's roads, bridges and mass transit systems.
The money also will be used to finish the Interstate highway
system. Overall, the road program will create about 320,000
jobs, mostly in skilled construction trades, officials estimate.
One highway research organization, The Road Information
Program, last fall estim ated the total price tag on bridge and
highway repair or resurfacing nationwide would run to $317
billion. The higher gas tax, now authorized for four years,
would generate about $22 billion If collections follow the
estimate of $5.5 billion annually.
Just how states spend the highway money is up to state high­
way commissions, which generally rate proposed projects and
allocate available cash — generally federal funds plus mat­
ching state money.
At the federal level, the $5.5 billion a year is earm arked this
way: $1.7 billion for repair of interstate highways; $1.1 billion
for mass transit programs; $800 million for completion of the
Interstate network; $600 million each for prim ary federal
roads and miscellaneous roads; and $700 million for bridges.
There are obvious needs, and the UPI survey of about half
the states indicates no shortage of projects officials want to
work on as they spread the extra funds over both work on new
roads and repair chores.
In New York, for example, state officials estim ate needed
road repairs total $4.5 billion, with bridges needing another $1
billion in work. The most visible problem is in New York City,
where four East River bridges, Including the Brooklyn Bridge,
need $385 million in repairs.
State officials say much of the money New York gets will be
tagged for maintaining existing roads rather than new con­
struction. A quarter of the state's highway mileage is rated in
fair shape and 13 percent is rated poor.
Texas officials say they need $7.8 billion just to rehabilitate
existing roads, and over the next 20 years could spend $37.6
billion building and reconstructing highways. One-third of the
need, they said, Is in the Houston area.

Dioxin Debris
Case Goes Back
To Court Today
TIMES BEACH, Mo. (UPI) - Flood debris that may be
contaminated with highly toxic dioxin was loaded aboard
trucks to be hauled to a landfill if a judge’s ban can be lifted.
But residents of the landfill area said they would continue
to battle the plan for hauling away the debris and said it
should be disposed of some other way.
Stale attorneys today were scheduled at a hearing in
Mexico, Mo., to ask Circuit Judge Ed Hodge to dissolve his
temporary restraining order blocking the tran sfer of the
debris to the Bob’s Home Sendee Inc. landfill in Warren
County near Wright City.
State olficial ordered the debris loaded on the trucks
during the weekend.
Times Beach Mayor Sidney K. Hammer said residents of
his town were tired of the cleanup delay.
"We are Just before the point where people will be taking
over on their own and getting this trash uul of here,"
Hammer said. “We'll either bum it or put it up next to the
highway (Interstate 44) by ourselves."
But emotions also were running high in W arren County,
40 miles away, where residents gathered Sunday to con­
sider ways to prevent the Times Beach debris from being
brought to a landfill In their county.
"Landfilling is not the way to dispose of dioxin," said
Sandra Rogers of Wright City, who was leading a town
meeting at the Veterans of Foreign Wars hall.
Warren County Prosecutor Tim Joyce, who requested the
restraining order from Hodge, said there is no reason to
alleviate the Times Beach problem by Including Warren
County in the disaster.
Joyce criticized Gov. Christopher S. Bond's handling of
the debris problem and accused Bond and the Department
of Natural Resources of taking the “cheap and easy way
out" of storing the debris. He said Bob's Home Service is
not legally permitted to take the debris and suggested in­
cineration and storage in barrels as alternatives to landfill.
Dioxin has been linked to cancer, birth defects and liver
disease in laboratory animals.
The debris was left by the Meramec River after it surged
out of its banks In the first week of December.

...Judge Hastings Faces Fall From Judicial Power
Continued From Page 1A
Jr., a prominent Washington, D.C., attorney, an ex-president
of the largely black National Bar Association, a former
member of former President Jimmy Carter's reelection cam­
paign — and a close friend of Hastings.
Since Trafflcante, accused of racketeering, was not
scheduled to go before Hastings until March of 1982, the FBI
took another course.
A retired FBI agent, posing as one of two Fort tauderdale
racketeers who Hastings had convicted earlier In 1981,
approached Borders with $25,000 in “up front" money.
The money, according to an FBI affadavit, was part of
$150,000 intended to bribe Hastings into reducing the sentences
of racketeers Frank and Thomas Romano of Fort Iauderdale
from three y ean to probation, and to lift an order impounding
91.2 million of the Romano's assets.
Hastings lifted $945,000 of the impounded property the day
after Borden called the undercover FBI agent to report the
deal was on, the FBI laid. He aet a sentence-reduction hearing
(or the Romanos, agents said.
The flgal $125,000 was given to Borden on a Friday af­
ternoon in October 1961 In a downtown hotel in Washington,
D.C., the FBI said. Hastings was in Washington at the lime to
attend a testimonial dinner in honor of Borden.
Borders never made it to the dinner. He was arrested.
Returning to his condominium home in Fort Lauderdale,

Hastings withdrew himself from the bench after being
questioned by the FBI, but remained In office, collecting his
$70,000-plus a year salary.
On Dec. 29,1961, a federal grand Jury indicted both Hastings
and B orden charging them with conspiracy to commit
bribery, defraud the United StateS and obstruct Justice.
Borders has since been convicted and sentenced by Judge
Gignoux to five y e a n In jail.
Hastings' trial was delayed while federal prosecutors
xarched for witnesses. Both Trafflcante, and reputed gam­
bler Joseph tfesllne, 68, refused to testify against Hastings,
even when granted Immunity from prosecution and later when
charged with contempt of court. B orden also refused to testify
against Hastings.
Meanwhile, Hastings' attorney at the time, Terence J.
Anderson, argued before the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals In
Atlanta that no judge should be subject to criminal prosecution
until impeached and removed from the bench by Congress. He
said federal proscuton could otherwise "get even" with
judges who overruled them by harassing them with charges
based on flimsy evidence.
The court of appeals rejected the argument. Its ruling has
been appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
In October, attorney Williams argued that Hastings' trial
should have television coverage "as a m atter of crucial Im­

portance directly relating to the restoration of his (Hastings’;
long-standing good reputation with the general public and tix
legal community's tru st.”
When Judge Gignoux rejected that and other motions lndud
ing one that Gignoux disqualify himself, Hastings assailed thi
court for what he called "cronyism" and "prejudice."
Gignoux did grant Hastings the right to act as his own at
tomey and dismissed some evidence obtained In an illega
search of Hasting’s office.
Alcee Lamar Hastings was bom, an only child, In AUamonti
Springs, FU., on Sept. 5, 1936. He graduated from Flsl
Unlverlsty, did graduate work at Howard University and goi
hU Uw degree in 1963 at Florida A&amp;M University ii
Tallahassee.
Moving to Fort Lauderdale, he was denied a room In a mote
on the day he arrived. It was the start of many civil right!
battles that led him Into politics.
" It was a personal crusade. I came down here to try to be i
Uwyer who was, incidentally, black. Mostly I was trying U
make a living," Hastings said three years ago.
Hastings ran unsuccessfully for at least eight differeh
political positions, losing In a 1970 stab at the U S . Senate. Ii
1976 he started teaching Uw at NOVA University, and by 1971
he was a Circuit Court Judge. The following year he was ap
pointed as Florida's first federal judge by then-presiden
Jimmy Carter.

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

City Commission M ay Decide Tonight

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Environmentalists Get All
Wrapped Up In Their Work
MIAMI (UPI) — A group of environmentalists, in
mock protest of pop artist Christo's plan to wrap 10
islands in Biscayne Bay in pink fabric, wrapped the
Dade County Courthouse today in pink garbage bags.
The wrappers, led by Jack Kassewiti Jr., head of the
National Wildlife Rescue Team, arrived at the cour­
thouse before dawn today and tied a huge pink ribbon
made of flamingo-pink plastic trash bags around the
courthouse. It stayed up about 10 or 15 minutes before
the police removed it."
Christo, a Bulgarian-born artist who lives in New
York, has obtained permission from local and state
officials to wrap 10 bay islands in five million square
feel of pink polypropylene fabric.

Officer Violated Procedure
MIAMI 'UPI) — For the first tbr j since the fatal
shooting of a young black man ignited three days of
violence in the Overtown slum, the chief of police has
admitted that the officer who fired the shot violated
police procedure.
The shooting of Nevell Johson Jr. in a video arcade
by officer Luis Alvarez prompted rioting in Overtown
two weeks ago. Before the rampage ended, another
man was killed by police, 26 were injured and a dozen
businesses looted or burned.
In an article in the Miami Herald Sunday, Police
Chief Kenneth Harm s admitted Alvarez had violated
police procedure by going Into the arcade without
authorization.

Sanibel M ay Curb Shelling
SANIBEL ISLAND (UPI) - Hunting forseashells by
the Sanibel Island seashore may soon cost unwary
shelters $500 or 60 days in an Island Jailcell.
A "law with teeth" being considered by the Sanibel
city council would make the taking or possession of
shells containing live mollusks illegal on the island.

WORLD
IN BRIEF

Monday, Jan 10, 1413— ]A

Cinema-Pub Coming To Downtown Sanford ?
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Denial of a zoning change to allow the old
Ritztheatre to be converted into a cinema-pub
will highlight tonight’s meeting of the Sanford
City Commission.
The commission will meet at 7 p.m. in City
Hall, 300 N. Park Ave.
Also on the agenda is the proposed an­
nexation of the ABC Conveyor property on
Cornwall Road.
ABC Conveyor, which employs 45 persons, is
requesting the annexation of a seven-acre
tract between Cornwall Road and North Way
and between County Road 427 and the
Seaboard Coast lin e Railroad right-of-way.

ABC's annexation request stems from the
wishes of officials of nearby Ju n g le
laboratory who want to be annexed into the
city for water and sewer services.
However, because the ABC property is
between the city line and the laboratory tract,
and because state law prohibits non­
contiguous property from being annexed, the
ABC parcel m ust come into the city before the
Jungle property can be annexed.
ABC Conveyor Vice President Felix Moses
said his firm is "being a good neighbor" to
Jungle Laboratory which is expanding its
operation on Silver l.akc Road.
And Charles Williams and Dennis Braziel,
who are leasing the old Ritz Theatre, Second

Life In The 2 1st Century
BOSTON (UPI) — In the 21st century American men
routinely will m arry three times in their lives and a phone
call to Jap an will cost 25 cents, a professional forecaster
says.
Depicting what American life will be like next century,
forecaster Marvin Cetron said that more women will bear
other people’s children lur a lee and that vast medical
break throughs will be achieved.
Cetron, president of Forecasting International lid. of
Arlington, Va., said at a convention Saturday that he based
his predictions on a computer analysis of current events
and trends.
"More women will initiate pre-marital sex," he told the
annual convention of the Northeastern Retail Lumbermen's
Association. "And more women will bear children for

others for money. But the birth rate will fall as more em­
phasis is placed on self."
Cetron. who works mostly for industrial clients, said
Americans will live longer but also work longer, which will
be necessary to keen up with inflation and finance a more
active lifestyle.
Medicines will be discovered to cure addiction to drugs
and alcohol and a non-addictive painkiller more powerful
than morphine will be developed.
And, he said, the cost of a telephone call from the United
States to as far away as Japan will cost only 25 cents
because of satellite communications.
He said men routinely will marry three times in their
lives — taking their first wife for romance, their second to
bear children and the third for mature companionship.

Manmade Hearts Commonplace In 20 Years
TUCSON, Arizona (UPI) — Artificial hearts may be
available to thousands of Americans in 20 years, but first the
units m ust be made cheaper and smaller, the head of car­
diology at the leading heart transplant center says.
The mechanical blood pumps will be constructed with
economical tiny, rechargeable power units by the time they
are widely used, Dr. Donald C. Harrison of Stanford University
said Sunday in an interview preceding the start of a three-day
American H eart Association conference.
The first recipient of a permanent artificial heart, retired
Seattle dentist Barney Clark, is tied for life to a large, bedside,
air-drive unit at the Universikty of Utah Medical Center in Salt
Lake G ty.
"That problem has to be overcome before it l artificial'
heart) will play a major role," said Harrison, who also is the
immediate past president of the American Heart Association.
He said only a small segment of people with severe heart
disease would be candidates for an artificial heart

cluding removing every other row of seats
inside the theatre and installing butcher block
tables. This will reduce the capacity from ■^00
seats to 200.
Williams said he plans to show first-run
movies at the theatre and could go into
operation by the second week of February!
Williams said he has a lease on the Ritz with
option to buy. He said he can't understand Lhe
refusal of the Planning and Zoning Com­
mission to approve the cinema-pub plpn,
adding he could show XXX movies at the f|te
and give beer away free without city pfcrmission.
He said he plans to charge $1 admission! to
the cinema-pub.

Street and Magnolia Avenue, want to locate a
cinema-pub there. The city’s Planning and
Zoning Commission last week turned down a
request for a conditional use at the spot.
Alcoholic beverages can be sold on those
premises only with permission of the city,
according to the zoning code.
The advisory board turned down the request
after adjacent businesses protested and
because no off-street parking Is provided.
Williams said today that he is working at­
tempting to gain permission in writing use a
downtown business's parking facilities.
Williams said if the City Commission grants
his appeal, he is prepared to spend about
$75,000 on a complete facelift at the Ritz, in­

“ But that could be lens of thousands," he siad.
The heart association said in a report issued Sunday heart
and blood vessel diseases are expected to kill more than l
million Americans in 1983. This will occur even though car­
diovascular death rates have been dropping for the past 15
years.
"What we’re doing is putting off premature death,"
Harrison said.
He said lifestyle changes such as diets with lower cholesterol
and reduced smoking, as well as improved treatm ent and
better heart-attack emergency aid are probably responsible
for the 25 percent decline in heart death rates since 1968.
The heart association estimated 42,330,000 Americans have
one or more forms of heart or blood-vessel disease. The great
majority — an estimated 37 million — have high blood
pressure.
Heart attack remains the leading cause of death in the
United States.

Injectable
Contraceptive j
Sparks Debater
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Upjohn Co., one of the
nation's largest pharmaceutical firms, Is seeking per­
mission to sell the first Injectable contraceptive in thje
United States.
A five-day board of public Inquiry’, ordered by the Food
and Drug Administration at the request of the company,
was to begin today with a parade of witnesses in support df
Ihe hormonal contraceptive, Depo-Provera. Al the sarnie
time, the National Women's Health Network called a news
conference to re-emphasize its opposition to the con­
traceptive which was rejected by the FDA in 1973 and 1978.
Depo-Provera, administered in three-month inlervalj,
has been the subject of an international health controversy
for the past decade.
Although the FDA has refused to approve it, primarily
because of a pair of studies in which laboratory anlmak
developed cancer, more than 80 foreign countries permit
the contraceptive and It is now used by an estimated 1.25
million women.
The board of inquiry was called to reassess the FDA’s
rejection of the contraceptive and ultimately wllj make a
recommendation for final action to FDA Commissioner
Arthur Hayes.
Upjohn cortends the laboratory animals used in tests
were inappropriate models and use of the contraceptive by
more than 10 million women overseas is a better test of its
safety and effectiveness.
It said no connection has been determined between the
drug and cancer in humans, although some other minor
problems, such as increased bleeding and irregular
m enstrual cycles, have been detected.

Argentines Angered By
Thatcher's Falklands Trip
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (UPI) — Argentine
political and m ilitary leaders condemned British
P rim e M inister M a rg a re t T hatcher's su rp rise
Falkland Islands trip as “ arrogant colonialism" and
warned of repercussions against landon.
On today's third day of her visit to the Falkland
Islands, Mrs. Thatcher was visiting the m ain battle
sites of Britain's 74-day conflict with Argentina, a
Falklands official said.
The prime minister was expected to gather evidence
to forestall an impending political storm next month
over publication of a report critical of the govern­
ment's failure to foresee the threat of Argentine in­
vasion.

Withdrawal Talks Hit Snag
KHA1.DE, lebanon (UPI) — Israel sought several
“ changes" in a U.S. compromise proposal aimed at
breaking a negotiating deadlock In today’s fifth round
of talks over the withdrawal of foreign forces from
I&gt;ebanon.
In Jersualem, an unidentified senior Israeli official
said Sunday the latest U.S. compromise formula for
the talks with l^ebanon called for the creation of two
subcommittees to discuss both nations' priorities for
the talks.
Meeting alternately in the Beirut suburb of Khalde
and the northern Israeli town of Klryat Shmona, Israel
and Lebanon have failed to reach an agenda in the
U.S.-led talks that begin Dec. 28.
Ubanon insists the withdrawal of 30,000 Israeli
troops dominate the agenda, but Israel dem ands the
talks first focus on security arrangements and nor­
malizing relations between the two nations.

CALEND AR
MONDAY, JANUARY 10
L eague of Women Voter* of Seminole County,

general meeting, 7:45 p.m., Altamonte Community
Church fellowship hall, State Road 436 at Forest
Avenue, Altamonte Springs. Speaker. Ruth Ann
Bramson, state president I,WV of Florida.
TUESDAY, JANUARY II
Dllnols Club of Central Florida, 1:30 p.m., Senior
Citizen Multipurpose Center, Casselberry.
American Diabetes Association,
la k e Monroe
* Chapter, 7:30 p.m., Central Florida Regional Hospital,
Sanford.
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Club, 1 p.m., chamber of
commerce, First Street and Sanford Avenue.
Action for Former Military Wives, 6:30 p.m., for
more Information call 628-2801.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12
"G reat Decision" course presented by Valencia
Junior College sponsored by Jewish Community
Center, at the Kinneret II library, 2 p.m. on second and
fourth Wednesday through May 11. Call 645-5933.

Rebos and Live Oik Rebel Club AA, noon and 8 p.m.
(closed), 220 Live Oake Center, Casselberry.
Caaaelberry Rotary, 7 a m., Caaaelberry Senior
Center. Secret Lake Park, North Triplet Drive.
Sanford Klwaale Club, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Bora To Win AA, 8 p.m. (open), 1201 W. First St.,
Sanford.
Casselberry Alcoholics Anonymous,
8 p.m.,
Ascension Lutheran Church, Overbrook Drive.

AREA DEATHS
MRS.

ELIZABETH
SOVERNS

M rs. Elizabeth Blnns
Sovems, 72, of 1325 Lake
Howard Drive Northwest in
Winter Haven died Saturday
at Winter Haven Hospital.
She was bom Feb. 7,1910, In
Nashville, Tenn. She was a
retired teacher and librarian.
She was a graduate of Ftorida
Southern College, Lakeland,
and received, her m aster’s
degree from Duke University.
During World War II, she was
employed In the Department
of Defense as a cryptoanalyst
and* working w ith h e r
colleagues she was able to
b re a k the Jap a n e se an d
German codes.
She is survived by her
daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth S.
M urchison
and
g ra n d ­
d aug h ter, K im berly M ur­
chison both of Winter Haven;
a brother-ln-lsw , F re d J .
Harris, of Sanford and several
nieces and nephews.
LOUIS G.PARLOW
Louis G. Parlow, 80, of 627
Alton Road in Winter Springs
died Saturday a t F lo rid a
H ospital-A ltam onte. Born
Aug. 17, 1902, In Yalesville,
Conn., he moved to Winter

Springs from Bristol, Conn.,
in 1979. He was a retired
superintendent of a food chain
and a Baptist.
Survivors include a son,
Mark L , of Winter Springs;
two daughters, Mrs. Ruth
Brown, of Altamonte Springs,
and Mrs. Louise C. Jones, of
C asselberry;
an d
four
grandchildren.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements,
MRS, GRACE FRAZIER
Mrs. Grace F razier, 87, of
200 W hipporwill Lane in
Altamonte S p rin g s died
Friday at lif e Care Center,
Altamonte Springs. Bom Jan.
29, 1895. In Thomaston, Ga.,
she moved to A ltam onte
Springs from Atlanta In 1975.
She was a hom em aker and a
m em ber of th e G race
Fellowship Church.
Survivors Include a son, Dr.
Fred Frazier, of Altamonte
Springs; a s is te r , Mossle
Jackson, of Thomaston; and
three grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fair child Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

EDWARD J, ELAND
Edward Joseph Eland, 76,
of 178 W indsor Court in

Sanford died Saturday at
C entral F lo rid a Regional
Hospital. Bom In Cleveland,
Ohio, ’he moved to Sanford
from Cleveland in 1972. He
was an auto-truck assembler.
He Is survived by his wife,
Virginia T.; four sons, Ray, of
Sanford, Robert and William,
both of Four Oaks, N.C., and
Edward, of Gates Mills, Ohio;
two daughters, Mrs. Janet
Nicholas, of Newbury, Ohio,
and M rs. Nora Douglas, of
Sanford;
one
brother,
Raymond, of Clearwater; and
nine grandchildren.
Gramkow-Funeral Home,
Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.

V irg il
B ry in t
officiating
G ram kow Funerel Home In
charge.

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■LAND,

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MR.

IDWAHD

Funeral services lor
Mr. Edward Joseph Eland, 71, ot
171 Windsor Court, Sanford, who
died Saturday, will ba at 10 a m.
Tuesday at Gramkow Funeral
Home chapel with the Rev.

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77, of 1)23 Lek. Howard Drivo,
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died Saturday, will be at II a m.
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Winter Haven, with the Rev. R.
Eugene Rutland, officiating,
Visitation 7-1 p.m. today. Enlombment in Clan Abbey
Mausoleum, Winter Haven. Ott
Laughlin Chapel
charge.

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M onday, Ja n u a ry 10, 1983—4A
W ayneD Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

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Kuwait: No
Struggling Nation
With a remarkably loose interpretation of
federal law, the Reagan administration repor­
tedly will perm it Kuwait to lease U.S. public lands
to drill for oil and mine mineral resources.
Apart from the question of perm itting a foreign
country, which participated in the 1973 oil em ­
bargo, access to our publicly owned oil, gas and
other resources, the administration may be afoul
of the law governing such transactions.
Under the Mineral Lands Leasing Act of 1920, no
foreign country may obtain federal mineral rights
without offering reciprocal rights to U.S. firms.
There is no such reciprocity from Kuwait,
which once expropriated oil properties within its
borders that were owned by U.S. companies.
But the U.S. Department of Interior is said to
have decided the reciprocity clause is satisfied by
Kuwait's sale of oil to this country—an in­
terpretation of the law certain to be questioned by
both friends and foes of the administration.
The administration’s obvious desire to increase
commercial ties with Kuwait is understandable.
Washington wants to strengthen its links with the
Middle East oil nations. But where will this
catering to Kuwait lead? If Kuwait obtains
federal leases, other Middle E ast oil producers
surely will bid to tap the sam e resources.
Before that occurs, there should be a thorough
debate about letting a nation, which once turned
off the oil spigot, gain control of energy resources
within our own borders.
Also, an administration that espouses free trade
should make sure that trade is not a one-way
street. U.S. investors should be permitted the
same access to foreign resources as foreign in­
vestors have to our oil and gas.
Kuwait, through its 1981 acquisition of Santa Fe
International, already controls what has become
the sixth largest oil company in the world. It
hardly qualifies as a struggling nation that needs
special treatm ent from the United States.

M e s s In A rg e n tin a
Argentina's ruling generals have made such a
mess of things that t h e i r pledge to return that
country to civilian rule within a year should be
cause for rejoicing, or at least relief.
The m ilitary men, who showed some signs two
years ago of coming to grips with Argentina's
chronic economic problems, have since failed
miserably. Inflation is in triple digits and seems
virtually out of control. A rgentina’s foreign debt
totals at least $37 billion and the government is
$1.6 billion in arrears on scheduled payments.The military men, who showed some signs two
years ago of coming to grips with Argentina’s
chronic economic problems, have since failed
miserably. Inflation is in triple digits and seems
virtually out of control. A rgentina’s foreign debt
totals at least $37 billion and the government is
$1.6 billion in arrears on scheduled payments.
The government’s m eager financial reserves
were squandered in the ruinous Falklands war.
Ihis misadventure also destroyed what remained
of the junta's credibility with even right-wing
Argentines.
Still, as the generals bow out, the man on the
street in Buenos Aires might want to hold his
applause long enough to see who takes their place.
The odds-on favorites at the moment are the
Fcronists, the political descendants of the populist
movement institutionalized by the late dictator
Juan Peron and his charism atic wife, Eva
Duarte, better known as Evita.
A Peronist regime might be the one thing
capable of making Argentines remember their
generals fondly. After all, Peronist rule in the
decade after World War II and again during the
mid-1970s produced runaway inflation and debt.
That, in turn, helped to wreck an economy that, by
rights, should be one of the strongest in Latin
America.

Argentina is blessed with a rich land, abundant
natural resources, and an energetic, welleducated population. What too many Argentines
lack is the instinct for sensible, stable politics.
Given a chance next November, they may well
give the Peronists a chance to try again.
If past performance is any guide, that will not
prove to be a wise choice.

BERRY'S WORLD

/ a

f

By DONNA ESTES

The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services will undertake a study of the pertussis,
or whooping cough, vaccine to determine how
risky it is to children and how it can be improved.
U.S. Sen. Paula Hawkins, who requested the
study several months ago, held hearings last
year as chairman of the Senate Sub-committee
on Investigations and General Oversight on the
c„st and potential adverse reactions from
childhood vaccines, including the pertussis
vaccine.
"Although were is widespread agreement in
the scientific community that the benefits of
pertussis vaccination far outweigh the risks
associated with the vaccine, adverse reactions to
the vaccine were acknowledged," Sen. Hawkins
said. She noted that reactions range from fever
and convulsions to permanent brain damage.
One British study, on which the U.S. govern­
ment bases its vaccination consent form,
estimates that one in 100,000 children suffers
permanent brain damage as a result of the
pertussis vaccine, Sen. Hawkins noted.
However, other studies, including one conducted
in Scotland, have shown a higher risk factor.
"The United States has never conducted a

thorough and independent study of adverse
reactions of the pertussis vaccine. Until now, we
have had to rely on questionable data or on
studies conducted in other countries," she said.
"The study I have rec-jested will finally orovidc
a thorough and accurate assessment of what
risks are involved in administering the pertussis
vaccine in the United States."
Mrs. Hawkins, who introduced legislation last
year to require the pertussis study told Health
and Human Sen-ices Secretary Richard Schweiker last September that she would prefer the
study be Implemented administratively to avoid
the need for legislation.
Schweiker said he has called for the study to be
completed by May 15. “ I share with you the
desire to ensure that the vaccines used in
preventing diseases of childhood are as safe and
effective as possible," he said.
"Ninety-five percent of all school-age children
in the U.S. are vaccinated against whooping
cough, a disease that can be fatal,” Mrs.
Hawkins said.
“ □early the pertussis vaccine can be a
lifesaver, and it is vital that we restore the
public’s confidence in this vaccine. This study-

can help us reach that goal by identifying risk
factors, assessing adverse
reactions, and
determining ways to improve the safety and
effectiveness of the vaccine." she said.
Mrs. Hawkins also reports that the FBI will
expand its efforts to find victims of parental
kidnapping by suspending for one year
requirements thought by many to cripple the
effectiveness of the federal parental kidnapping
prevention act.
Under the new program the FBI will suspend
two controversial enforcement requirements of
the act: proof that the child is in physical danger
or the victim of abuse or neglect, and
authorization to prosecute parental kidnapping
complaints from the Justice Department’s
Criminal Division.
Mrs. Hawkins, who sponsored the "Missing
Children Act," recently signed into law by
President Reagan, said the new law and the
FBI’s new policy together provide tremendous
potential to find missing children.
She noted that it is estimated that 100,000
children bi this country are the victims of
parental kidnapping.

JEFFREY HART

ROBERT W A G M A N

Lawmakers'
Pay Raises
Necessary?

Shooting
Of The
Pope
MEMO TO GEORGE SHULTZ: Yes, Mr.
Secretary, it is damned inconvenient, but the
Soviet plot to kill Pope John Paul II is nowcoming out into the daylight. Efforts on the
part of the U.S. diplomatic establishment,
including some of your own employees, to
shove the toothpaste back into the tube will be
futile and are very likely to be embarrassing
to the U.S. government.
Stories have been planted in the press
suggesting that the whole plot is mere
"speculation." Diplomats and CIA personnel
in Rome have told the Italian government
that it has no "proof" that the Soviets were
involved. The Soviet embassy in Paris has
circulated a demand that the French media
spike the story.
It won’t work. As soon as Claire Sterling
laid out the facts in her now famous Reader's
Digest article, followed up by a stunning
Marvin Kalb NBC-TV news special, the rock
had been turned over. We now have a cover
story in Newsweek and a feature story In
Time.
Andropov has a problem. Except that
Andropov cannot be Impeached, he knows
how Nixon felt in 1973. His problem is that he
authorized the assassination attempt against
John Paul II, and has been found out. The
problem is not going to go away.
The facts are now widely known. Mehmet
All Agca, the Turkish gunman, was not a
political fanatic or madman loner but a
professional killer.
After killing a Turkish editor and being
sentenced to life, Agca walked through
numerous locked doors to freedom — ob­
viously sprung from prison through the
payment of heavy bribes.
He made his way into Bulgaria, the most
tightly controlled police state in the Soviet
empire, and stayed at the best hotel in Sofia.
He was provided with expertly forged papers,
stamped with a genuine Bulgarian visa, and
was provided with a gun. He left Bulgaria
$50,000 richer than when he entered, and, en
route to the Vatican, Junketed around Europe.
Agca has named names, and his Bulgarian
contacts are being rounded up by the Italians.
He has described in detail the interior of the
apartment of the Bulgarian official who was
his control.
The Bulgarian secret service is merely a
branch of the Soviet K.G.B. It is in­
conceivable that a plot of this magnitude
represented the whim of some middle-level
Bulgarian official. The head of the K.G.B. at
the lime was, of course, Yuri Andropov.
Why is Agca singing? The Italians told him
that they could no longer keep him in solitary,
and planned to put him in with other
prisoners. In which circumstance he might
live, at most, 15 minutes.
Mr. Shultz, it Is obvious that the American
establishment wished the whole thing would
go away. It Is an international em­
barrassment. Comrade Andropov has rudely
tom the mask of illusion from the reality of
Soviet International behavior.
This Pope affair threatens the resumption
of detente. It throws into Jeopardy the idea of
further lavish economic credits to the Soviets.
It cannot fail to make people look for the Joker
in any Soviet arm s control proposals.
More profoundly, It reveals - though
hardly for the first time — that the men who
run the Soviet Union are not only reckless
but. to use an old-fashioned word, evil.

ROBERT WALTERS

Energy Conservation
WASHINGTON (NEA) - In a series of
a d m in istrativ e
actions
which
defy
rationality, the Department of Energy is
waging a determined campaign to discourage
energy conservation In the nation's 83 5
million households.
Ignoring its mandate to promote the ef­
ficient use of energy, DOE finds itself isolated
from scores of stale governments, consumer
organizations and industry’ groups which
oppose the departm ent's indefensible
position.
At Issue Is the provision of the National
Energy Conservation Policy Art of 1978 which
requires that DOE formulate mandatory
nationwide energy efficiency standards for
more than a dozen household appliances. The
ap p lian ces include fu rn aces and space
heaters, central and room air conditioners,
clothes washers and dryers, humidifiers and
dehum idifiers,
ranges
and
ovens,
refrigerators and freezers, water heaters,
dishwashers and televisions.
According to the General Accounting
Office, four of those items — furnaces, water
heaters, space heaters and central air con­
ditioners — are responsible for almost 15
percent of the 'country's total energy con­
sumption while the remaining appliances
account for an additional 5 to 7 percent.
DOE began the elaborate rulemaking
p ro cess required to im plem ent the
congressional mandate in 1979, but the
process was suspended in 1981 after two
House Republicans warned President Reagan
that the proposed standards "threaten to
create multi-billion (dollar) havoc in the
appliance Industry."
Most appliance manufacturers would in­
deed prefer no standards whatever but they
already are confronted by energy efficiency
standards for some or all of the appliances in
41 states and would rather deal with uniform
national requirements than disparate state
standards.
Moreover, at least one progressive firm —
the Carrier Corp., one of the country's leading
producers of home heating and cooling
equipment — believes that establishment of
energy efficiency standards for central alr

conditioners, furnaces and water heaters is
imperative.
"A nything
less
than
im m ediate
promulgation of minimum standards for this
type of equipment Is simply not In the nation’s
best Interests,” says Edward A. Bally,
Carrier's director of industry relations.
Establishing readily attainable minimum
efficiency standards only for central air
conditioners, Carrier notes, would produce
annual savings for consumers equal to almost
44 million barrels of oil —valued at more than
$1.3 billion at current price levels — by the
end of this century.
In addition, improved efficiency would
reduce the summertime peak demand for
electricity by more than 26 million kilowatts,
Carrier says. Since it costs utilities about
$1,500 to provide each new kilowatt of
generating capacity, they could save an
additional $39 billion in construction costs.
But the Department of Energy, cites "the
inherent diseconom ies of governm ental
regulatory interference is the market-place"
os its rationale for resisting impositions of
any standards.
To Justify that position, DOE relies upon the
provisions of the 1978 law which waive the
Imposition of standards if it is found that they
are not technologically feasible pr
economically Justifl:d or that they would not
result in significant energy conservation.
But the General Accounting Office, in a
scathing report, concludes that DOE reached
those conclusions through a "highly
questionable" dedsioa-making process in
which data was blatantly manipulated to
reach preconceived conclusions.
States which have Imposed their own ef­
ficiency standards win have those initiatives
a u to m atically negated by D O E's "n o ­
standard standard" and will be able to gain
rflnstatem ent only if the department acts
favorably on their petitions for special
waivers.
The department already has rejected any
standards for clothes dryers and gas ranges
and evens. Later this year, It probably will
lake the same short-sighted action with
regard to all of the remaining appliances.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The House and
Senate pay Increase was part of the con­
tinuing resolution passed in the lame-duck
session.
The House gave itself a 15 percent increase,
hiking m embers' annual salaries to $69,800
from the current $60,662. The Senate wanted
to avoid the political heat of directly voting
itself a pay raise: Instead, it voted to main­
tain the current salary, but to eliminate any
cap on outside Income. This gave senators a
larger raise than they would have gotten byvoting in a 15 percent hike, but keeping the
$25,000 ceiling on income from honorariums.
As always, this year's debate about
congressional salaries was framed almost
completely in political terms: At this time of
wide-spread unemployment and economic
upheaval, could a congressman vote himself
a raise and then go home to face the voters?
This debate ignored the reality — which is
that congressional pay is, in fart, inadequate.
When the new members of the 98th
Congress met in Washington just before
Thanksgiving, old hands told the freshmen
what to expert, what to avoid and, in general,
how to get the Job done. Several speakers
gave the newcomers some blunt advice: If
you plan to live on your congressional salary
alone, you'd better be prepared for some
tough times.
The farts are simple. Since 1977 the Con­
sumer Price Index has risen 60 percent.
While-collar salaries paid by private industryhave risen 55 percent. In the same period,
congressional salaries have risen 5.5 percent.
With 12 million people unemployed and the
average U.S. income for a family of four set
at about $23,000, it's hard to explain why- a
congressman can't make ends meet on $60,000
a year.
However, that congressman has expenses
that are almost unique. He is expected to
maintain two households — one in his home
district and one in Washington, where the cost
of living is perhaps the highest in the United
Stales.
Take the case of Rep. Ken Holland, D-S.C.
When he first came to Congress eight years
ago, Holland assumed that money would be
the least of his problems — but he quickly
learned the financial farts of life. Holland
moved his wife and four children to
Washington, but found that his monthly utility
bills were higher here than the cost of his
four-bedroom home in South Carolina. By
1982, he had moved his family back to South
Carolina and was living In his House office.
Uke him, more and more congressmen are
leaving their families at home and are either
sharing small apartments or actually living
In their offices.
This year, the financial strain became too
much. Holland, a bright, well-respected
legislator, resigned to return to the practice
of law — admitting, very honestly, that he
now will be able to at least double his
congressional salary.
The congressmen’s plight tends to elicit
little sympathy, and many people offer the
knee-jerk response that anyone who can’t
make ends meet on $60,000 a year shouldn't
run for office. However, this would mean that
the only candidates would be the in­
dependently wealthy or those who, in the
private sector, would be unable to m atch a
congressional salary.

JA C K ANDERSON

Conservatives Eye Pentagon W a ste
WASHINGTON — For years I have been
Pentagon wastrels. The report, produced by
crying out against the prodigious waste in the
the Heritage Foundation, is now circulating
Pentagon. Uke others who believe the best
at the highest levels of the White House. My
hope for peace Is a m ilitary deterrent, I hive
associate Indy Badhwar obtained a copy.
warned repeatedly that giving the Pentagon
The Heritage analysts' alarm ing conclusion
brass hats a virtual blank check for arms
Is that the $1.6 trillion Reagan wUl spend on
expenditures really produces leas bang for
defense over the next five years will give the
more bucks.
United States neither superior hardware nor
I had high hopes that Defense Secretary
better fighting capability— nor even combat •
Caspar Weinberger would rein in the
readiness - unleu the Defense Department
runaway spenders in the Defense Depart­
is overhauled from top to bottom.
ment. Some conservatives shared this hope.
This grim warning represents a significant
In fact, less than two months after President
break with the traditional conservative view
Reagan w u Inaugurated, a rockribbed
that the generals and adm irals know best.
conservative group called the Committee on
Indeed, to question the brass hats’ wisdom
National Security compiled a report for me
w u to risk accusations of disloyalty.
which pinpointed some $32 billion (hat had - Now, though, the Heritage Foundation has
been wasted on various military programs.
concluded painfully that the megabucks
Now, after two years of supposedly tightthrown at the Pentagon have often produced a
fisted management by Cap the Knife and his
mini-bang. Most surprising of all, they have
cost-cutters, another eminently conservative
faulted their favorite administration within
group has issued a stinging report on the
memory with allowing boondoggle-as-usual

at the once-hallowed Pentagon.
The conservatives’ somewhat-embarrassed
disillusionment with the defense establish­
ment w u expressed by Heritage Foundation
spokesman Herb Berkowitx this way.
"F or years the liberals threw money at
social problems hoping that they would go
away. They never did. So they asked for more
money each year. The same applies to
defense. We keep uylng we’re falling behind
and keep throwing money at the Pentagon.
The public h u already soured over defense
spending. If things continue this way, we will
only destroy the national consensus behind a
strong defense."
The foundation report u y s bluntly: "Our
defense establishment tigs stagnated." It
gives these explicit reasons:
— Resources wasted on fancy weapons that
are "prone to break down," when simpler,
cheaper alternatives are available.
— The Pentagon is not prepared to meet

l

"the threat of conventional forces (to) vital
American interests ... We are forced to rely
on the n u d e a r threat when we no longer
poeaeu ... n u d ear superiority."
- Massive in cresses in the unit cost of
weapons systems, due less to inflation than to
the policy of focusing almost exdusively on
complex hardware and unrealistic budget
planning and m anagem en t." T he cost
escalation forces a reduction in the num ber of
weapons produced.
- Inadequate cost-saving Initiatives. The
Pentagon’s projected $11 billion u v tn g s over
■even years will be a drop in the bucket. Cost
Increases for m ajor weapons programs alone
are estim ated at a staggering 077.5 billion
over a 20-year period.
Footnote: When the Heritage Foundation
•peaks, the Reagan administration listens.
White House Counselor Ed Meese Is expected
to advise President Reagan to endorse the
foundation's recommendations publicly.

i

�Mona's 20.6 Bursts Leave Opponents Crying
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
When Seminole High girls basketball
coach Ron Merthie designated Mona
Benton as the team’s captain this
season, he knew the 5-8 guard could
handle the responsibility even though
she was just a sophomore.

per game as the la d y Tribe has
recorded an 8-4 record, 5-2 in Five Star
Conference play.

Prep Basketball

After all, Benton played with Ihe
I-ady Seminoles as a freshman last
season and led the Seminole 15 and
under AAU team to the nationals in
Boston over the summer.
# And, in 12 games this season, Benton
has shown she is worthy of the role as
team captain.

Benton didn't know she was going to
be the Tribe’s captain until the first
game of the season. "I’m proud to be
the captain in my sophomore year,”
Benton said. " I hope 1 can come out and
be a leader and show that I can play as
a sophomore."

"I gave Mona the responsibility of
captain because she was showing
leadership qualities,” Merthie said.

From the opening game of the 1982-B3
season, it was evident that Benton was
ready lo be a lender. Now, after 12
games, Benton is averaging 20.6 points

Tonight
I p m Srminoltvs. lake Brantley g irll
at Seminola Community College
Two Five Star Conference loes clash at
a neutral slghl tonight since Brantley's
gym na sium floor Is nol finished.
Seminole has an 1 1 record and is 5 I In
the conference white Ihe la d y Patriots
stand 4 9 and 14 in the conference
Seminole's starling lineup includes,
Mona Benton IJO 6 scoring average).
Maxine Campbell IS a average). Arlene
Jones IB 4 points per game), Patricia
Campbell (7 I rebounds) and Difdre
Hillery (11 1 points. 101 rebounds).
The Lady Patriots are led by Rhonda
Vatquei (119 points), Linda Tim ble &lt;12 4
points, 7 4 rebounds), (Michelle Brown
(1.1 points, S 7 rebounds), Kara Pritchett
(17 rebounds) and Linda Nunei rounds
out Ihe starting five.
At 6:15 Seminole's Junior varsity goes
tor its sixth straight victory Coach Sonya
Manley's squad is led by high scoring
Andell Smith and Temika Alexander

.Scoring (7 or more games)
1. Mona Benton, Seminole
2. Chiquila Miller, la k e Howell
3. Tanya Roland, Oviedo
4. Fayetta Robinson, Oviedo
5. Pam Jackson, Lyman
6. Diedre Hillery, Seminole
7. Iju r a Glass, Lake Mary
8. Linda Trimble, fa k e Brantley
9. Rhonda Vazquez, lak e Brantley
10. Cindy Blocker, la k e Howell
11. Peggy Glass, la k e Mary12. Vikki McMurrer, Lyman
13. Tammy Johnson, l ak e Howell
14. Mary Johnson, la k e Howell
15. Maxine Campbell, Seminole
16. Arlene Jones, Seminole
17. Michelle Brown, la k e Brantley
18. Kim AveriU, la k e Mary

Ip .m . Apopka at Lake Mary girls
The Lady Rams should get back on Ihe
winning track tonight against Apopka.
Friday night. Lake Mary was dumped by
Winter Park, 40 29 at Winter Park
Lake M ary. 13, is led by Laura and
Peggy Glass, both averaging over 10
points per game, Kim Averlll who does it
all and assist leader Lisa Gregory.
Michelle Swarti, who had an Impressive
game against Winter Park 110 points. 4 4
tree throws. I rebounds), also starts lor
the Lady Rams
JV action starts al 1 1J, players‘ to
watch lor me Rami Include Karen
DeSletler, Becky Bellows, Tasha
Coleman and Lisa Simklnt
7p m Osceola vs. Croomsat Seminole
High
The Panthers are riding a 44 game
winning strrak which extends over three
seasons and coach John McNamara's
squad is 10 0 this season. ■
Starters include Robert Hill, Alvin
Jones, Daryl Williams, Mike Wright and
Melvin Brinson

Benton has hit 40 of 78 free throws for
51 percent and is second on the team in
assists with 39, an average of 3.2 per
game.

“She is consistent in doing what I ask of
her. She comes to practice every day
and has never had an attitude problem.
She does the type of things I like for a
team captain to do.”

G,
12
13
13
13
7
12
11
13
13
13
11
7
13
13
11
12
13
11

Free Throw Shooting
(20 or mare att)
L Michelle Swartz, lak e Mary
2. Diedre Hillery, Seminole
3. linda Trimble, la k e Brantley
4. Kim Averill, fak e Mary
5. IJsa Gregory, Lake Mary
6. Sharon Jenkins, Seminole
7. Peggy Glass, la k e Mary
8. Tanya Roland, (Xiedo
9. Cliiquita Miller, la k e Howell
10. Fayetta.Robinson, Oviedo
11. Mary Johnson, la k e Howell
12. fau ra Glass, la k e Mary13. Rhonda Vazquez, lak e Brantley
14. Leigh Iawe, la k e Howell
15. Mona Benton, Seminole
1t
(Les* than 10 att)

1. Liz Stone, fa k e Mary
2. Kara Pritchett, fak e Brantley
3. Kim Goroum, Lyman

"She is rapidly Improving inability,"
Merthie said. "She has more con­
fidence and is taking the initiative. She
shoots the ball well and handles
pressure situations well."
Benton’s basketball career began
when she made the seventh grade team
at Ukevtew Middle School. But, it was
her brother, Keith, that taught her the
most about the game in the early going.
"I used to watch the boys play all the
time and just picked up on the game
from that," Benton said. "Keith took
F tm .
40
34
52
42
11
29
36
49
16
23
28
18
24
’31
11
13
11
17

Fg.
104
112
102
87
47
64
53
56
69
65
48
30
59
42
42
44
47
36

P t s . A v g . R ig
30
248 20.6
31
258 19.8
256 19.7
41
31
216 16.6
20
105 15.0
157 13.1
26
142
22
12.9
161
29
12.4
25
154
11.9
153
11.8
22
124
11.3
21
18
78
11.1
18
142
10.9
8.8
115
14
8.6
20
95
8.4
14
101
16
105
8.1
89
8.1
12

G.
10
12
13
11
11
12
11
13
13
13
13
11
13
12
12

TA.
21
45
79
28
23
20
48
90
61
76
57
67
30
25
78

Ftm.
14
39
49
17
14
12
28
52
34
42
31
36
16
13
40

G.
11
13
7

Fta.
15
10
11

Ftm.
13
6
6

Pet.
67
64
62
61
61
(10
5C
57
56
55
54
53
53
52
51
PcL
87
60
55

While a ninth grader at Crooms,
Benton made the Seminole varsity and
earned a starting role as a freshman.
The Seminole captain has a goal of
helping the Tribe to the district
championship this season and has
another two years to do it If the Cady
•Seminole’s fall short this season.
But, with Benton leading the way,
Seminole won’t come up on the short
end too many times.
" I ’m pleased lo have played a part in
her career," Merthie said. "She has the
attitude and ability to go a long way."

G.
Rebounding (7 or more games)
13
1. Fayetta Robinson, Oviedo
7
2. Vikki McMurrer, Lyman
13
3. Cliiquita Miller, lak e Howell
11
4. Laura Glass, I&gt;akc Mary
12
5, Diedre Hillery, Seminole
13
6. Christy Scott. Lake Howell
11
7. Peggy Glass, fake Mary
8. Tammy Johnson, Like Howell 13
12
9. Patricia Campbell, Seminole
10. Linda Trimble, la k e Brantley 13
7
11. Kim Lemon, Lyman
13
12. Cindy Blocker, Lake Howell
13. Kara Pritchett, I-oke Brantley 13
14. Michelle Brown, Like Brantley 13
11
15. Maxine Campbell, Seminole
Assists (7 or more games)
1. Mary Johnson, lak e Howell
2. Kim Goroum. Lyman
3. Ijsa Gregory, la k e Mary
4. Maxine Campbell, Seminole
5. Rlumda Vazquez, lake Brantley
6, Mona Benton, Seminole
7. Cindy Blocker, lak e Howell
8. Natalie Barth, Osiedo
9. Cliiquita Miller, fake Howell
10. Kim Averill, Like Mary
SteaLs (7 or more games)
1. Cindy Blocker, la k e Howell
2. Mary Johnson, la k e Howell
3. Maxine Campbell, Seminole
4 .Tammy Johnson, la k e Howell
5, Mona Benton, Seminole
6. Chiquila Miller, la k e Howell
7. Pam Jackson, Lyman
9. Kim Goroum, Lyman
10. Rhonda Vazquez, ta k e Brantley
11. Linda Trimble, la k e Brantley
12. Kim Averill, la k e Mary
13. lisa Gregory, la k e Mary

Reb. Avg.
190 14.6
100 14.3
179
13.8
138
12.5
141
10.8
133
10.2
98
8.9
105
8.1
94
7.8
96
7.4
51
7.3
94
7.2
87
6.7
74
5.7
61
5.5

G. AsL Avg.
13 68 5.2
7 33 4.7
11 51 4.6
11 43 3.9
13 46 3.5
12 40 3.3
13 40 3.1
13 39 3.0
13 35 2.1
11 24 2.2
G.
13
13
11
13
12
13
7
13
7
13
13
11
11

Stl.
66
55
50
49
44
45
23
18
30
28
19
18

Avg.
5.1
4.2
4.1
3.7
3.6
3.4
3.2
*4.J
yn ,
2.6
2.3
2.1
1.7
1.0

M ona H e n to n , S e m in o le H igh g u a r d , to s s e s in a j u m p s h o t a g a in s t
D c L a o d . H en to n is a v e r a g in g 20.fi p o in ts a g a m e a s a s o p h o m o re .

4th-Quorter Scores Doom Bucs

Phelps
Dunks
Vikings
By SAM COOK
Herald Sport* Editor
As Sem inole Community College
center Lula Phelps headed for the locker
room Saturday amidst an entourage of
young admirers, Injured team m ate Rudy
Kulper wandered by and said, “Nice
game, Lu. I'm not coming back. You
don’t need me."
"You better come back," retorted
Phelps. " I ’m tired of getting beat up."
Not as Ured as St. John's Junior
College was Saturday night a t SCC.
Phelps, a 6-6 freshman from Brookaville,
personally took apart the Vikings with 29
points, 12 rebounds, seven blocked shots
and four exhilerating dunks as the
Raiders broke open a tight game in the
last 10 minutes fur a 71-59 victory.
The victory was the first In Division II
for SCC and raised Its overall record to
11-6. Hie Raiders, 1-0, take on Division II
favorite Lake City Wednesday night. The
Timberwolves, 1-0, are ranked lllh In the
nation and No. 1 in Florida. The game is
at Lake City. They are led by 7-3 center
Lester Fonville.
Phelps, meanwhile, must have looked
that big to St. John’s Saturday. The
Vlkihgs had no starter over 6-5 and the
personable ei-Sprtng Hill standout pretty
much had his own way most ol the night.
" I try not to think about their (St.
John’s) atte," said Phelps after the
game. "It was pretty easy at first but
then they started zoning me and I
couldn't get the ball.”
Sanford’s Keith Whitney had a solution
to that. The 5-9 guard started popping
from the outside. He hit three In a row
from the 18-22 foot range to pull the
Raiders within 3W4 a t halftime.
Phelps and Whitney tossed in 14 points
each in the first 20 minutes, although the
VUdngs controlled the action with their
helter-skelter type of play.

me out and taught me a lot and then 1
made the team at Lakeview."
Benton em erged as a scoring
machine at iakeview when she led the
Mustangs to two SYSA championships
by averaging 40 points a game.

Htrald Pholo by Tom Vincent

L u is P h e l p s , SC C f r e s h m a n , s l a m s o n e o f h is fo u r d u n k s a g a in s t S t.
J o h n ’s S a t u r d a y n ig h t. P h e lp s s c o r e d a c a r e e r- h ig h 29 p o in ts a s th e
H a id e r s w o n , 71-59.

JC Basketball

running up and down the court and acting
wild.
"But Luis (Phelps) had bis best game
[or us. He had some awesome dunks. And
Keith (Whitney) played well. It was nice
to see him have a good game."
Whitney finally put the Raiders ahead
for good with 13:30 to play with a jumper
from the com er. Sixth man Ricky Sutton
followed with a bucket and freshman
Delvln Everett sent the fans up for grabs
with a rousing slam off a fastbreak for a
47-44 lead.
Everett’s rebound basket, a Phelps’
dunk and E verett’s rebound Up put the
game out of reach, 62-52, with 4:10 to
play.
"When Keith starts hitting from the
outside, it opens up the middle,” said
Phelps. " I think I had my best nlgtjt
tonight. My points, rebounds, blocks and
slams all cam e together
Phelps had a lot of help on the boards
from Everett. The 8-5 Apopka freshman
had 11 rebounda while Bernard Merthie
"We played right into their hands in th e *1 had nine. Whitney and fellow guard
first half," admitted coach Bill Payne Jimmy Payton each had five assists.
about the 2-12 Vikings. “We were Just Phelps and Payton had two steals.

SCC hit 25 of 58 shots for 42 percent.
Tlit- Vikings connected on 21 ol 55 for 35
percent. Phelps hit 10 of 21 for his career
high and 9 of 12 free throws. Whitney hit 8
ol 15 and 4 of 5. Everett added 12 points.
ST. JOHN’S (5*)
S. Jenkins 0-10-0 0, P. Jenkins 2-3 0-0 4,
Dumas 1-4 1-4 3, Nixon 5-12 2-2 13,
Leonard 2-7 4-6 8, KeUy 3-5 2-3 8, Davis 1-9
0- 0 2, Jones 1-6 04) 2, Moreland 2-5 0-0 4,
Blue 5-10 54 15, Totals: 21-55 14-21 59.
SCC (71)
Whitney 8-15 4-5 20, Payton 0-2 0-1 0,
Phelps 10-21 9-12 29, Everett 3-5 04) 6,
Merthie 05 2-3 2, Sutton 3-5 04) 6, Charles
1- 104) 2, Gallagher 0-104) 0, Totals; 25-58
21-32 71.
Three-point goal — Noxon. Halftime —
St. John's 35, SCC 34. Total fouls - St.
John's 25, SCC 16. Fouled out — KeUy,
Davis, Moreland, Sutton. Technical —
none.
RAIDER RAP — Coach Payne hopes to
have highjumplng Keving Jerry Smith
back to Wednesday's clash against
powerful Lake City. He’s bothered by
back problems.
The status of Kulper, the Raiders' 6-10
center and leading scorer, however, is
still unknown. "I can’t run on It yet," said
Kulper about his badly-sprained ankle.

IRVING, Texas IUPI) - At the end of
one of those Twilight Zone kind ol games
that are filled with oddities and big plays
and opportunities forever lost, it was left
to a man who has been a part of both
organizations lo sum up Dallas' 36-17 win
over Tampa Bay in the opening round ol
the NFL playoffs Sunday.
"D allas knows how to play for the
money," said Tampa Bay defensive
lineman Dave Stalls. "That's for sure."
Stalls should know since be was part of
the 1977 Dallas Cowboys, the group that
won Super Bowl XII. And he also knows
that on a surprisingly m ild'January
aftemoon, his team let one slip through
its fingers Just when it appeared the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers were ready to
bury the most experienced playoff team
the National Football league has ever
known.
As much as any of the eight first-round
playoff games, it was a contest marked
with strangeness.
Dallas quarterback Danny White went
into the game with a badly sprained
thumb and an Infected tooth that
required the work of a dentist only a few
hours before the game. But despite all
that he threw a career-high 45 passes and
completed 27 for 312 yards and two touch­
downs — all against a secondary
depleted by Injuries.
T am pa Bay q u arterback Doug
Williams was also hurt, plagued with a
hamstring pull, and he could manage

pass at the Tampa Bay 19-yard line and
sprinted into the end zone for the touch­
down that put Dallas in front for good.
Dallas gained 456 yards to 218 for the
Bucs,
picked up 29 first downs ts Tampa
only eight completions in 28 attempts.
But lor more than three quarters the Bay’s eight and owned the football for 40
Bucs frustrated the Cowboys, had taken minutes to 20 (or the opposition. But if It
advantage of curious bounces of the ball had not been for Hunter, the Cowboys
might well not be looking forward to
and were leading 17-16.
playing the Green Bay Packers next
Linebacker Hugh Green had plucked a
Sunday In the conference semifinal round
fumble by White out of the air and run 60
of the Super Bowl tournament.
yards with it for u touchdown. Mark
"1 cannot believe this happened," said
Colney had intercepted a White pass and
Hunter, the Salem (W.Va.) College
returned it 50 yards to set up a Bill
product who had never before in­
Capecc field goal.
tercepted a pass In the NFL. "I had
And Neal Colzie had deflected a pass to outside coverage and my man broke’
teammate John Holt for another in­ inside. So I just stopped and turned into. i„
terception in the end zone, an event that my area and the ball came right to m e.,
was quickly followed by a 49-yard scoring
"I was nervous lo start today because
throw from Doug Williams lo Gordon this was Lhe biggest game I’ve ?ver‘
Jones with less than two minutes left in played in. But as it progressed the Jitters ‘
the third quarter.
. went away."
Hunter’s touchdown was the second of &gt;'[
But now, because of two penalties
the three that Dallas mustered against
called against Bucs offensive tackle
the typically brutal Tampa Bay defense..
Charley Hannah, the Bucs were backed
Rafael Seplien kicked two early field
up at their own 12-yard line in the first
goals,
both of 33 yards, before Green
moments of the fourth quarter. One big
play, however, and the Bucs could put picked off White's fumble In the second.
quarter and suddenly made a game of it.
Dallas away.
White threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to •
Instead, it was rookie defensive back Ron Springs with 35 seconds to go in Lhe '
Monty Hunter, an obscure fourth-round first hall to put the Cowboys in front 13-10
draft choice from a school with an and, after Hunter's score, White wrapped ,
enrollment of 1,000, who made the play. things up with a 10-yard touchdown throwHunter appeared in front of a Williams to Timmy Newsome.

Pro Football

Woodley, Miami March Past Pats
MIAMI (UPI) — The Miami Dolphins
have won their way to a rematch of the
41-38 "m iracle that died" playoff loss last
January to the San Diego Chargers.
The Dolphins whipped the New England
patriots 28-13 in the opening round of the
AFC playoffs Saturday and San Diego
followed Sunday with a dramatic 38-21
defeat of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
As the second-seeded team , the
Dolphins will be the hosts in the second
round ol the Super Bow] tournament.
In the Dolphin-Charger classic last
January, San Diego took a 24-0 lead
before the Dolphins clawed back to go
ahead In the second half—only to lose on
a 29-yard field goal in overtime by Ralph
Benlrschke.

ol only two current Miami Dolphins who
have been to the Super Bowl, and he
thinks the team has what takes to go back
this year.
"The team that goes to the Super Bowl
Is the team that gets hot right now,” he
said. "And It looks like our offense is
coming together Just at the right time."
The Dolphin offense rolled up 214 yards
on the ground and 234 through the air
Saturday in Its best performance of the
season.
In the other AFC semifinal matchup,
the New York Jets, 7-3, are at the Los
Angeles Raiders, 9-1, Saturday, In the
NFC, Minnesota, 64, is at Washington, 91, Saturday, and Green Bay, 6-3-1, is at
Dallas, 7-3, Sunday.

The rematch had tjeen set for a Mon­
day night in November, but that was
wiped out by the NFL players' strike.
Veteran guard Bob Kuechenberg is one

Playing at Riverfront Stadium, the
Jets trailed, 14-3, in the first period
before F reem an McNeil, t|ie NFL
rushing leader, crashed through the

Cincinnati defense lor a postseason;
record 211 yards on 22 carries in &gt;,
powering New York to a 44-17 triumph .
over the Bengals.
At Pittsburgh, Dan Fouts threw three ^
touchdown passes — two. to Kelleri’
Winslow In the final period — to rally the
Chargers to a 31-28 triumph over the
Steelers. His 12-yard hookup with Win­
slow came with a minute left In the game
as San Diego rebounded from a 28-17*
deficit entering the fourth q u arter
At Minneapolis, less than five minutes
after Mick Luckhurst kicked a 41-yard
field goal to give Atlanta a one-point lead,
Ted Brown dashed off left end for a 5yard TD with 1:44 left to propel Min­
nesota to a 30-24 triumph over the
Falcons.
Marcus Allen ran (or two TD* and Jim
Plunkett pasted (or 386 yards to power
the Raider* over Cleveland

�*A— Evtnlnt H*r« W, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Jan. 10, 19ZJ

Scorecard

SPORTS

NBA
NBA Standings
By United Pros* International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

IN BRIEF
Lyman Blanks Terry Parker;
Seabreeze Blitz Numbs Rams
Halted P r e u International
Lyman's Keith Yeung and Ronnie Hollenbaugh
booted first-half goals Saturday as the Greyhounds
blanked Jacksonville Terry Parker, 2-0, In prep soccer
action at Longwood.
The Greyhounds shutout goal keeping from senior ,
John Plnkley and Junior Ben Ritter to Improve their
record to M for the year.
"Plnkley had a relatively easy first half," said coach
Tom Barnes. "He m ade one decent save. Ritter did a
good Job In the last X minutes of the game."
Young scored first when he took the ball down the
middle tone, dodged left and kicked the ball Inside the
far post. Hollenbaugh scored on a dead ball play from
40 yards out 13 minutes into the first half for the final 20 outcome.
On Friday, the Greyhounds travel to Lake Mary to
taka on coach L arry McCrokle's Rams. The Junior
v an ity match begins at 5 p.m. The Lake Mary girls
play at 6:30 p jn . The boys get under way at 0 p.m.
The Rams, meanwhile, dropped a 5-2-decision to
Daytona Beach Seabreexe Friday to fall to 5-3 for the
Goals by Donald Kelly ai]d Andre Sanders gave Lake
Mary a 2-2 deadlock at halftime, but Seabreeze broke
loose for three second-half goals to take the 5-2
decision.
"Seabreeze is a high-pressure team," said McCorkle
after the loss. "They put a lot of pressure on our
defense and we couldn’t handle it. I was disappointed
the way we fell ap art at the end."
The game w u deadlocked until the final 15 minutes
when Gary Jones, A.J. Connely and Rick Moreno
scored goals for the win. Moreno came with Just 30
seconds to play.
Despite the setback, McCorkle praised backup
keeper Mike Dixilap who was tubbing for Joe Dalton
who w u sidelined with a knee injury.
"D ailap made two or three tremendous saves,” said
McCorkle. "But he w u playing hurt (knee) too and
there were probably a couple others he would have
, gotten to If he had been healthy.”
Seabreeze had 23 shots on goal.
Lake Mary’s goal came when Sanders kicked in a
rebound to tie the gam e a t 1-1. After Moreno beat the
Ram defenders for a 2-1 lead, Kelly rammed In his 14th
goal of the year for a 2-2 halftime standoff.
In other action Saturday, Lake Brantley scored two
second-half goals to knock off Bishop Moore, 2-1.

Adversity Doesn’t Stop Bucks
United P r e u la t e r u t ta r l
The Milwaukee Bucks are proving they can play
through adversity.
Desptte losing starters Bob Lanier and Brian Win­
ters to Injuries in the last few weeks, the Bucks have
continued to win. Sunday night, they put together
another strong effort and topped the Phoenix Suns, 106M, at Milwaukee.
The Bucks have missed Lanier's rebounding, but
Dave Cowens cam e through against Phoenix with 11
rebounds, Marques Johnson had 10 and Alton Lister
nine u the team out-rebounded the Suns, 50-36.
"I don’t know if we can play much better than we did
tonight," said Bucks’ Coach Don Nelson. "W e're
getting better on the boards; in tact, we’ve been
consistently better over the last 10 games."
With Sidney Moncrief scoring 24 points and Johnson
adding 20, Milwaukee was able to hold on even though
the Bucks, who h ad led by 11 points several times in the
second period, were up by only 84-81 early In the final
period.
The Bucks, who lead the Central Division, outscored
the Sunt, 144, with four points each by Johnson,
Moncrief and Junior Brldgeman to take a 98-87 lead
with Just over three minutes left.
"Milwaukee played very well," said Suns’ Coach
John MacLeod. "They played a strong second h a l f ...
They were really Impressive.
In other games, New Jersey topped Detroit, 110-102,
and Portland downed Seattle. 110-101.

Stars Caught Short-Handed
Uatted Press laten atieaal
Careless thieves get caught red-handed. Careless
hockey team s get caught short-handed.
Both Hartford and Minnesota were careless Sunday
and paid for it with losses because of short-handed
goala.
The Philadelphia Flyers got two short-handed goals
‘ U seconds ap art in the second period to break a 2-2 tie
and delighted a partisan crowd at the Spectrum with
their ninth straight victory, an M decision over the
Whalers.
In Chicago, Rick Paterson's short-handed tally In the
second period also snapped a 2-2 deadlock and the
Black Hawks went on to a 6-3 victory over the North
Stars.
The Flyers’ Mark Howe and Bill Barber scored at
14:09 and 14:37, respectively, while team m ate Mark
Taylor was in the penalty bra. Howe took a feed from
Bobby Clarke and beat Hartford goalie Mike Veisor
and Barber followed with a hard wrist shot for his
"The two short-handed goals were the definite
turning point," la id Clarke. "We took advantage of the
Uttle breaks and turned them into Ug goals."
In ether gam es, Buffalo routed le e Angeles, 7-2, the
New York R angers edged New Jersey, 4-3, D etroit
bumped Edm onton, 4-3, and Winnipeg trim m ed P itt­
sburgh, 44.

Morgan Drops Bird In Tuscon
TUCSON, A rts. (U P I)-G U Morgan felt he w as long
overdue on tw o fro n ts— a victory on the PGA tour and
a Irtrdle putt to falL
He got both Sunday end won the 154,000 first prize in
the Tucmh Open on the second playoff bole.
M argin sank a JM oct putt on the 407-yard, per-4
second hole of tha Randolph Park North course to beat
L e a n W atkins and Curtis Strange.
" I was long overdue for a win," la id the 36-year-old
optometrist, wboee b u t victory was a t the 1179
Hywfh** Open. " I’ve been in contention numerous
tknaa, bid I eith er played bad or someone else played
better."
Morgan said he w u not' happy with his putting In ihe
1 nadir p a r &lt;7 final round that sent him into the
playoff,
" I couldn't m ake the birdies at the a ta ri, I m ade two
real t a t and I w u thinking if I could Just m ake one
more, I could get into'the lead," Morgan said.

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

L a k e M a r y 's T om O lson ( b o tto m ) h a s h is h a n d s fu ll w ith L y m a n 's S co tt
A n d re w . A n d re w , b ro th e r o f e x -L y m a n s ta n d o u t T o d d , w h ip p e d O lso n , 8-1, in
a b u ttle b e tw e e n tw o of th e c o u n ty 's b e st f r e s h m e n g r a p p le r s . L y m a n a n d
L a k e M a ry lie d , 29-29, F r id a y n ig h t. Olson is th e y o u n g e r b r o th e r o f B ob. th e
H a m s ' fin e 141-pounder.

YOUNGER
BROTHERS

Rawls, Likens Capture M a t
I

•

I

a

&gt;

f

1 I

w L Pet. QB
Phila
27 S 144 —
Boston
24 8 .745 7
New Jrsey
22 11 .429 4&gt;j
Wshngtn
17 14 515 10'i
New York
17 77 353 14
Central Division
U 12 .447 —
Mltwauke
17 17 500 4
Atlanta
11 70 474 7
Detroit
Indiana
12 71 .344 10')
11 77 333 H ’ l
Chicago
Cleveland
5 78 .157 17'&gt;
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pet. GB
Kan City
20 12 425 —
San Anion
7) 14 .411 —
Denver
14 20 444 4
Dallas
13 20 394 7's
14 73 .371 H i
Utah
Houston
s 29 .147 14
Pacific Division
Los Ang
27 7 794 —
73 12 457 411
Seattle
77 15 .591 4' 1
Phoenix
77 15 595 4']
Portland
Golden st.
IS 20 .429 12'1
6 27 229 19')
San Diego
Saturday's Results
Lot Angeles 10*. New York 90
Philo 125, Kansas City 111
Atlanta 109, Chicago *9
Cleveland 91. Washington 12
Bo,ton 110. Dalle, 110
Utah *7. Houston 12
Son Diego 122. Denver 120
Golden St. 110, Soollle 104
Sunday's Results
New Jersey 110. Detroit 102
Milwaukee 10*. Phoenix 9*
Portland 110, Seattle 101
Today's Oamts
(No(No
games
Khedi
games
scheduled)

Cham pionships, Ram s Fifth Hockey
I

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
SEBRING - I^ake Mary's Robert
Rawls and Jack likens captured In­
dividual championships Saturday as the
Rams (194.5 points) finished fifth in the
Sebring Invitational Wrestling Tour­
nament. Haines City (149.5) won it.
Rawls, a 320-pound behemoth from
Sanford, took the unlimited division with
two pins (1:30 and :32) and an injury
default in the championship match.
"This was the first time Rawls had to
come from behind to win,” said coach
Frank Schwartz. “ The kid (Vic Haller)
from Lakeland was really a tough
wrestler and he had Rawls on his back."
Rawls battled back from a 6-0 deficit
with an escape and two reversals to pull
within one point after lwo periods. On one
m aneuver, the huge junior ripped
Haller's arm on a reversal and he
couldn’t continue after two periods.

I

Prep Wrestling
Rawls is 13-1.
"Haller didn’t want anything to do with
him after that," said Schwartz. “He
couldn’t raise his am i over his head."
likens, meanwhile, disposed of three
opponents to run his season record at 108
pounds to 134). His only loss was to John
Aubrey of Edgewater when he wrestled
“up” two weight classes.
"L ikens totally dom inated his
division," said Schwartz. The blond­
haired senior pinned Greg Mills of
Okeochobce and Pete Kinsley of Port
Charlotte in the preliminaries.
In the title match, likens fell behind, 21, to James Biller of Venice, but escaped
twice to lie the match and then added a
takedown and back points for a 6-2 win.
The Rams also received consolation

champions from Ivan Carbia (101) and
Ned Kolbjomsen (189). Todd Beauchamp
1129 and Ed Adcs 1223) garnered fourthplace finishes.
Willie Green, another Sanford product,
turned in another Impressive showing
with a secut,*1 place finish at 170 pounds.
"Green showed his pin of (Robert)
Quisenberry was no fluke," said Sch­
w artz about G reen's stick during
Friday's tie with Lyman. "He pinned the
number two and three seeds In the
tournament.
“ Willie's Mr. Nice Guy, though. If he
ever gets mean, he's going to be a
prem iere wrestler."
The Rams, 5-1-1, take on hapless Boone
Tuesday in Orlando before returning
home to wrestle Oak Ridge Wednesday.
The Seminole County Junior Varsity
T ournam ent will be T hursday at
Seminole High.

Lyman's Hill M akes First Team All-State

L Standing,
N H LN HStand
By Unlttd P ro ,, Inltrnillanol
W i l d Conlortnco
Patrick Divltlon

W L T PH.
74 12 5 57
Philadelphia
21 14 7- 49
NY Islanders
Washington
19 12 11 19
NY Rangers
27 14 4 ia
12 24 4 30
Pittsburgh
124 9 25
New Jersey
Adams Division
Boston m
25 10 7 57
Montreal
27 12 8 52
19 14 9 17
Buffalo
Quebec
II 17 4 12
10 77 5 75
Hartford
Campbell Conference
Norris Division
W L T Pts.
77 10 4 40
Chicago
Minnesota
21 12 9 51
14 74 4 31
St Louis
10 23 11 31
Detroit
10 21 8 28
Toronto
Smyth* Division
Edmonton
73 13 1 51
18 19 4 40
Winnipeg
Calgary
14 71 7 39
14 19 9 17
Vancouver
Los Angeles
14 21 5 33
Saturday's Results
Philadelphia 7, Hartford 4
Boston 7. Montreal 1
Calgary S. Detroit 7
N Y Islanders 4. Quebec I
Toronto 7, Los Angeles S
M inn esota 4, C h ic a g o 1

For the second consecutive year, a
Seminole County football player has been
selected to the 4A All-State Team. I^st
year it was Seminole’s Isaac Williams
who made all-state status, this year it
was Lyman's senior linebacker Mike Hill
who made the first team defense.
Hill, (6-1, 208) made the second team
defense &amp; year ago and came back for a
sensational senior year for the
Greyhounds, helping his team to the Five
Star Conference title. Hill led the county
In tackles with 92 solos and 46 assists for
a total of 138. He also intercepted two
passes and recovered two fumbles.
For the second straight year, Lyman's
fine offensive guard Chris Tschieder was
named to the Second Team Offense. Both
Hill and Tschieder were selected to the
Evening Herald’s All-County team.
U k e Howell's Junior defensive back
Bill I,ang was selected Special Mention
while Lyman's Jerry Axley and Willis
Perry made Honorable Mention. Lake
Howell's offensive tackle Bill Norton also
made Honorable Mention.
I.ang ended the year with GO solo
tackles and 16 assists as the Silver Hawks
compiled a 6-5 record ami gained a berth
to the Rotary Bowl. Axley led the county
in passing with 1,146 yards and nine
touchdowns while Perry was the third
leading pass receiver with 18 for 318
yards. Axley, Hill, Tschieder, Perry’ and
Norton were all seniors.
The First Team Offense consists of,
Stacy Dawsey, Bradenton Manatee (59‘j , 165, senior) and Barry Lett, Pen­
sacola Woodham (5-10, 165, senior) are
the receivers, linemen include Jeff
Zimmerman, Orlando Evans, (64, 275,

Wash ], St. Louis ). tie
Sunday's Results
Philadelphia I . Hartford 4
Buffalo 7, Los Angeles 2
NY Rangers 4, New Jersey
Detroit 4, Edmonton 3
Winnipeg 4, Pittsburgh 1
Chicago t. Minnesota ]

Prep Football
senior), David Williams, lakeland (6-4,
270, junior), Steve Wiggins, Pensacola
Woodham (6-3, 250, senior) David
Shrenker, Panama City Mosley &lt;6-3,245,
senior), Iran Gordon, Miami Killian (6-5,
220, senior), Pablo Ixipcz, South Miami
(64, 265, senior) and Clint Pollitt, lik e
City Columbia (6-3, 240, senior).
The quarterbacks arc Mike Shula,
Miami Columbus (5-11, 175, senior) and
Mark Kemp, Pensacola Woodham (64,
185, senior) the running backs include
Rodney Fennell, Tampa Robinson (5-11,
172, senior), Melvin Bratton, Miami
Northwestern (6-2, 190, senior), Dennis
Gareau, Winter Park (5-10, 194, senior)
and Ron Beckett, Deerfield Beach (54,
148, senior). The kicking specialist Is
Mike lively, Winter Park (5-10, 156,
senior) and the utility player Is Michael
Clemons, Dunedin (W , 155, senior).
The First Team Defense consists of
linemen Tim Johnson, Sarasota, (6-3,245,
senior), Alonzo H ighsm ith, Miami
Columbus (6-2, 205, senior), Winston
Moss, Miami Killian (6-4, 210, senior),
Marcellino Moss, Miami Southridge (510, 210, senior) and Reggie Fisher,
Gonzalej Tate (6-1, 240, senior).
Linebackers Include, Kelly Ziegler,
Miami Palmetto, (6-1, 215. senior),
Cedric Williams, Fort Wallon Beach
Choctawachee (6-0, 217, senior), Mike
Hill, Lyman (6-1,208, senior) and Jamel
Agemy, Hollywood South Broward (6-1,
210, senior).
Defensive backs are, Herb Gainer,

Today's Oami
Quebec at New Jersey, 7 IS
p.m.

Pro Football
N FL Playolls
By United Press International
(All Times KST)
(Sttdlngt In parentheses)
First round
Saturday's Reiults
NFC
Washington 31. Detroit 7
Green Bay 41, St. Louis 1*

AFC
Vi
IX
■ ■ -

-f t v

, -*'*,v &gt;!i V-

Mike Hill...all-stater
S a ra so ta (6-2, 165, sen io r), Ja m e s
Bryant, Miami Killian (5-11, ISO, senior),
Tommy Streeter, Miami Northwestern
(6-2, 195, senior), Jam es Savage, Pen­
sacola Pine Forest (6-2,190, senior) and
Terrence Rouhlac, Jacksonville Raines
(5-11, 180, senior). The punter Is Louis
Berry, Panama City Mosley (64, 180,
senior).
The All-State football team Is selected
each year by the Florida Sportswriters
Association. - CHRIS F1STER

P o rte r O u t-W ire s C o o k Fo r F e a tu re W in
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Challenged
all the way by arch-rival Jack Cook,
LeRoy Porter drove the Lewis Green
Camaro to a wire to wire victory In the
25-lap late-model feature on Saturday
night at New Smyrna Speedway.
Third was Lee Faulk, followed by "Mr.
Consistent" Duke Southard and current
track champion Joe Middleton. Heat
winner Smokey Yunlck Jr., dropped out
of the main on the parade lap.
Warming up for the coming World
Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing, Doug
Latbein won the thunder car finale,
besting Barry Ownby, Tom Balmer,
Richard McDtll and Chuckle Lee. Heat
w inners were fastest qualifier Joe
Coupas and Buddy Teed.
Street stock division’s high point man
Rick Clouser made It five wins out of six
starts when he steered his 455-cubic Inch
(Hdamoblle to victory.
"That engine has been in there since
April," said Clouser. "They said that you
can’t m ake all that weight go around the
turns, but I drive the hell out of it and
lh a t'i where I win my races," Clouser
added. Second to fifth were heat winner

Auto Racing
Ron DtCandlo, Doug Howard, Danny
Burkhalter and Tim Greene.
Top four cylinder finishers were Milo
Vidic, W. G. W atts, Mike Shuman, A1
Gray and Bob Trask. Heat winners were
Watts and Richard Newton. (
"The Killer Green Bean Factory
Team” of Doctor Oldsmobile and test
pilot Mark Grimm bested a strong field
of spectator racers.
Demo derby winners were George
Windsor and Je rry Shaffer.
World Series' thunder car entries now
total 100. With 62 late models and 34
modlfleds also officially inked, the total
amount of entries should have reached
200 as you read these lines.
LATIMOORLS
Fastest Qualifier: Jack Cook. Ormond
Baach, 11107 sac.
.
„
Flat boot DO lap*) — t- Smokry Yunlck Jr.,
Daytona Baach.
_ .
Feature ITS laptl — •• CaRoy Portor,
Orlando, 2. Jack Cook. Ormond BMCji; 3. La*
Faulk, Orlando, a. Duka Southard. New
Smyrna Beach. 5 Joa Middiaton. So Daytona

Lap Leaders: Porter: 125.
THUNDER CARS
Fastest Qualifier: Joe Coupas. Holly Hill,
19,9* sac.
F la t hoot (I laps) — t. Coupes
Second heat (I laps) — I. Buddy Teed,
Orlando.
Feature (20 laps) — 1. Doug Latham, Couoa;
2. Barry Ownby. New Smyrna Baach; 3. Tom
Balmer, Orlando; 4. Richard McOIII,
Maitland. S Chuckit Leo, Holly Hill. Lap
Leaders Lathem: I 9. Coupas: 10 11. Latham:
13 20
STREET STOCKS
Heat (0 laps) - I. Ron OlCandlo, Sharpes
Feature (IS laps) — 1. Rick Clouser,
Melbourne, 2. Ron DiCandlO, Sharpes; 1. Doug
Howard, Lake Helen. 4. Danny Burkhalter,
Orlando. S Tim Gretna. Tltusvlllt. Lap
Leaders: Burkhalter: t. Clouser: 210.
FOUR CYLINDERS
F la t hoot (0 laps) - 1. W G. Walts, Daytona
Beach.
Second heat (« laps) - I. Richard Newton,
Osteen.
Feature HQ laps) — I Milo Vidic. Orlando,
2. W G. Walts, Daytona Baach; 3. Mike
Shuman, Port Orange, a. Al Gray, New
Smyrna Beach; S Bob Trask. Orlando. Trask:
12 Vidic: 35 Clark: * 10. (lap Itaders)
SPECTATOR RACES
Top Eliminator (One on One) - t. Mart
Grimm, Daytona Baach.
Feature is laps) — t. Grimm.
DEMOLITION O E E E Y
t. George Windsor, Bunnell; 2. Jerry
Shatter, Lake Helen

Los Angeles
Raiders 27,
Cleveland 10
Miami 21. New England 13
Sunday's Results
AFC
New York Jets 44, Cincinnati 12
San Diego 31. Pittsburgh 21
NFC
Dallas X . Tampa Bay 17
Minnesota 30. Atlanta 24
Conlortnco semifinals
Saturday, Jan. IS
NFC — Minnesota (4) at
Washington (1), 17:30 p.m,
AFC - Now York Jots It) ot Los
Angalos It), a p m.
Sunday, Jan. U
AFC — San Diego (5) at Miami
(2). 12:30 p.m.
NFC — Green Bay (3) at Dallas
&lt;21, a p.m.
Canftranco championships (at
homos ol highest remaining
seeds.)
Saturday. Jan. 22
NFC Championship
Sunday, Jan. 21
a f c Championship
Sunday, Jan. is
Super Bowl XVII at Pasadena,
Calif., t p.m..

B«ak*tbaii

College Basketball Results
■y United Press international
Saturday
Tournaments
Carlisle Klwanls
Constlahen
Gettysburg *0, Messiah S9
Dickenson

to,

Shlppentburg 52

East
Albion (Mich.) 43, Wash A jet!
41
Albright 47, Juniata 44, ot
Boston Coll. 90. Seton Hall 73
Canisius 5*. New Orleans 49
Delaware 54. Navy 57
Del Valley 10, Alfred 41
Fairfield 44. Drexel 40 IO T)
Fairlelgh Dickinson 44. Marlst
74. ot
Grace 94, Gordon 43
Harvard 73, Dartmouth 5S
Holy Cross 75, Massachusetts 72
Iona 115, Pace 73
Lehigh 40. Loyola Of Maryland
44
M'ddlebury 45. RPI 54
Moravian 47, Widener 44
Muhlenberg 49. Oavis A Elkins
59
Northeastern 79, Maine 57
Penn 91. Brown 47
Penn St 71. SI Bonaventure 47
Phila, Pharm acy 44, Johns
Hopkins 59
Phila Textile 101, California
(Pa ) 54
Pittsburgh 45. Lafayette 52
Princeton 55. Yale 54
Providence 44, Dayton 43
R IT 45, St. Lawrence S4
Rutgers 70, St Joseph s 45
St John's IN Y I 74, Georgetown
47
St Peter's (N J) 45. Manhattan
39
Urslnus 75, Framingham St 41
W Va 73. Temple 71
South
Ala 74. Kentucky 47
Ala Birm ingham 73. South
Alabama 47
Ala Huntsville 47,
D ’ham
Southern 54
Albany SI. 74, Morehouse 71
Auburn Montgomery 49, Xavier
54
Austin Peay 72. Eastern Ken
lucky 47
Central Florida 40. Fordham 44
Centre 117, Principia S3
Cumberland 89, Georgetown 70
David Lipscomb 72 Lee 44
Davidson 54, Furman 52
Delaware SI 74. So Carolina St
77
E Carolina 43, James Madison
41
Florida 92, Auburn 75
Florida AAM 74 Tennessee St. 70
Hampton Institute 57, Eliiabelh
City SI
High Point 72, Lenoir Rhyne 42
Johnson C Smith 100. Si Paul's
97
LSU 40. Georgia 54
Louisville 94. Florida St 49
Marshall 95, VMI 44
Mercer B1, Stetson 80
Milligan 4], Appalachian SI 41,

7ol
Mississippi 54, Tenn 55
Mississippi SI 44. Vanderbilt 44
N C Asheville 71. Methodist 40
No Carolina 87, Syracuse 44
No Carolina AA T 73. Howard 40
No. Kentucky 44. Kentucky St 41
Old Dominion 99, Rhode island

81
Randolph Macon tv, Virginia St
4). ot
Saint Lea 93. Roberts Wesleyan
47

Deals
United Press International
Salurday
Basketball
Cleveland — Acquired forward
Larry Kenon Irom Golden State
tor an undisclosed amount ol cash.
Denver — Returned guard
Dwight Anderson to Onto (C B A )
College
Coast Guard Academy - An
nounced resignation ol football
Coach Larry Rutledge, replaced
him with Bob Campiglla
Cornell —
Named M axle
Baughan as football coach
Fooiball
Philadelphia (U S F L ) - Signed
defensive lineman Anlonio Gibson,
a fourth round draft choice, and
lutlback Allen Harvin. a tilth
round drall choice, to one year
'ontract*.

Soccer
Golden Bay (M ISL) Pur
chased striker Gordon Hill Irom
Chicago.

0 0 E

RACING
NIGHTLY 8 PM
MATINEES
| MON.-WED.-SAT.
titS P.M.

•
FLAY TH E EXCITING

’ PICK-SIX

F REE
• % ..

Juice Bowl
Consolation
George Washington 45, Co
lumbia 40
Toccoa Falls Invitational
Consolation
Baptist Bible 79, Atlantic
Christian 44
Championship
Toccoa Falls f4. Baptist U (G a l
75

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W IN N IE SIX IN
A tO W A N D
WIN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS
A LLN IW C A S H 5ELL MACHINES
•
TR IFECTA O N
EVERY RACE
•

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ITH UR SD AV A LL LADIES
A D M ITTE D F R E E t

fit* »#*■**#■
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SANfORD PAIN
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VAN* I 'R l )

3 2 3 5 763

M U HATN KS-II1 1100
Jerry Re Oxe M et II

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PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly

Monday, Jan. 10,1)33— IB

Miss Whelchel Bride
O f Jeffrey M . Welker

AAR P Chapter Formed
In South Seminole
•

Arthur F. Bouton, national president of the American
Association of Retired Persons, has announced the for­
mation of the South Seminole Chapter No. m i in Florida.
Bouton offered congratulations on behalf of the 13.5-millionmember organization to the new chapter and its president.
Harold C. Zeimer of Casselberry.
Ixical AARP chapters sponsor community public service
programs; work to influence the enactment of local, state
and national legislation of benefit to older Americans: and
acquaint members and other older citizens with the
programs and services offered by the national
organization.

Conversational Spanish
Seminole Community College is offering a course in
Beginning Conversational Spanish geared to those who wish
to learn how to deal with Spanish-speaking customers m
stores, restaurants, hospitals, doctors offices, and in hotels
and travel agencies. It is also useful for anyone planning a
trip to a Spanish-speaking country.
The course will be offered on Monday nights, from 7-9:45
p.m., beginning Jan. 10. The instructor will be I)r Ann
Bachmann. I-ate registration Is now in progress. For fur­
ther Information, call the registrar’s office.

Usa Pickens On Dean's List
I,isa J. Pickens of Sanford has been named to the Dean's
lJst at Carson-Newman College, Jefferson City, Tenn. foi
the fall sem ester, 1982.
The announcement of those achieving the honor was
made by C-N Academic Dean Dr. Roy Dobyns.

Mus/c Students In 'Who's Who 1
The 1983 edition of “Who's Who in Music" will carry the
names of 7 students from Seminole High School, who have
been selected as being among the country’s most out­
standing campus leaders.
Campus nominating committees and editors of the annual
directory have included the names of these students based
on their academic achievement, service to the community,
leadership in extracurricular activities and future poten­
tial.
Students named this year from Seminole High School
are: Kaylyn Witherow, Annette Arsenault, Arthur Jackson,
Sheila Brown. Sheryl Jones, Matthew Sw inford ami
Christine Rufo.

Linda Howard Whelchel
and Jeffrey Mark Welker
w ere
united
in
Holy
Matrimony Jan. 8, al 1 p.m. at
C alvary Assembly, W inter
Dark Russ Darker performed
the 1 p.m ., double ring
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Charlotte Garrett, Route
4. Sanford, the late Mr. Guy
Garrett and Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Whelchel of Metier, Go.
The bridegroom is the son of
Richard Welker, 500 Bridle
Dath, Casselberry, and the
late Mrs. Shirley Welker.
Given in marriage by her
fath er, the radiant bride
chose for her vows a formal
white organza gown lavishly
embellished with imported
Venice and Alencon lace.
Fashioned along the slim
silhouette, the fitted bodice
featured Bishop sleeves and a
battcau neckline in front that
dropped to a V in back.
E m broidered lace m otifs
enhanced the lush cathedral
train. A tiara of Venice lace
secured her veil of imported
illusion.
Miss Jam ie G arrett of
Dullsville, Ky,, served the
bride as maid of honor. She
wore a royal blue taffeta gown
and carried a cascade of
tulips, iris, miniature car­
nations and sweetheart roses
in pink, purple and blue tones.
Bridesmaids were Debbie
Whelchel, Cindy Whelchel,
Laurie Price, Laura Stanley,
l.isa Cornell, Ten Maidhof,
Susie Tetenbaum and Janine
Metzgar. Their gowns and
flowers were similar to the

CED Correspondence Course
A GED Correspondence Course has begun at Seminole
Community College for adults who want to earn a Florida
High School Diploma and are homebound. There Is no fee
For information call SCC.

GETTING MARRIED
Engagement and wedding forms are available at the
Herald offices, to announce these events. The forms may
be accompanied by professional black and white
photographs if a picture is desired with tie an­
nouncement. Wedding forms and pictures tijust be sub­
mitted within two weeks of the wedding!

FREE
EXAMINATION

ti'iu l/ U V « 1

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SAN FO R D PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
OH t M OM A S Y A N D E L L
(h it o p t a c In Physician

&gt;01/ E H E N C H A V E
SANFORD

323-5763

REVIVAL
Sanford
Church of God
Jan. 9-16 • 7:00 P.M.
DAN CALLAHAN

Nurttry Provided

g

p"

22nd &amp; Holly Ave.

ICBS) Orlando
(NBCI Daytona Beach
Orlando

indcpendfnJ
Orlando

i

Independent
Atlanta. Ga
Orlando Public
Broadcaitmg System

6:05
U (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
6:30
0 4 NSC NEWS
3 O CBS NEWS
&gt; O ABC NEWS Q
tD (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR
6:35
I] (17) BOB NEWHART
7:00
O 4 THEMUPPETS
1 O PM MAOAZINE Shaping
up lor pregnancy, Maryland restdents who dress in medieval garb
and play backyard barbarian
games
t O JOKER S WILD
M (35) THE JEFFERSONS
tD (10| MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
7:05
17 (17) OOMER PYLE

M RS. J K F F H K Y M ARK W K I.K E H
honor attendant’s.
Rick Welker of Apopka, and
George Welker of Altamonte
Springs,
served
the
bridegroom as best men.
Ushers were Kenny Corbett,
Scott Steed, Jeff llagel, Paul
Bass, Efren Yero, Tommy
Butler ami Don Thompson.
Groomsmen w ere Robbie
Ingland,
John
W elker.
Michael Whelchel, Rick
Brunson, Vic Alford, Joe Del
Vento and Neil Norman.

Susie Welker was the flower
girl and Michael Guilell, the
ring bearer.
The reception was held in
Johnson Hall of the church.
Following a wedding trip to
Vermont, the newlyweds will
make their home in Sanford.
The bride, a senior at the
University of Central Florida,
is activities director of the
L ong w o o d R e tir e m e n t
Village, Longwood. The
bridegroom is manager of
R.P. Welker Plants Inc.

7:30
0 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
1 O TIC TAC DOUGH
• O YOUNG PEOPLE’S SPE­
CIAL Who Spooked Rodney?" A
young boy has a streak of bad luck
and becomes overly superstitious —
and on Halloween laces the ulti­
mate fear
It (33)BARNEY MILLER
GD (10) UNTAMEO WORLD
7:35

17 117) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawks vs Philadelphia 7fieri
6:00
0
a MOVIE "The Return 01
Maiwell S m a if (1930) Don Adams.
Sylvia Knslel Secrat agent Maiwell
Smart attempts Io slop KAOS trom
inleashing a draadad bomb that
will strip nude those who come in
contact with it |R)
1}
O
W ALT DISNEY "The
Worlds Greatest Athlete" Two
American coaches (Tun Conway,
John Amos) trick an African fungha
boy (Jan-Michael Vincent) Into
becoming their one-man cottage
track team (Part 3)
17

O

H A P P Y D AYS

ill (33) THE LIFE AND ADVEN­
TURES OP NICHOLAS NCKELBV
(PART 2)
© (101 NOVA Salmon On The
Run'' The power and determination
ot salmon are captured in an exami­
nation of Ihe tofe these fish play in
1 he con fuel between economic
growth and consarvalion |R)Q
8:30
LAVERNE A SHIRLEY
9:00
3 O MOVIE •Kantucky Woman"
IPremiara) Cheryl Ladd. Philip Levlen A young woman faces harassmen I and humiliation whan she
goes Io work as a coal miner 10
support her small son and siting
father
7 O THREE S COMPANY
(D (10) OOYSSEY Maya lords Ot
The Jungle" Remains ot the classic
Mayan civilisation deep in the a n­
gles ot Central America are exa­
mined l)

1;

The Like Monroe Chapter of the American Diabetes
Association will hold its regular monthly meeting m the
cafeteria of the Central Florida Regional Hospital on
Tuesday, Jan. 11, at 7:30 p.m.
A board meeting will precede the regular meeting al 7
and everyone Is welcome to come for that portion.
Karen Stuart from the State Affiliate Office will show a
film entitled “ No Sugar Coating." There will also be.a
discussion aslo "Where Do We (Io From Here?". Everyone
is encouraged to attend if there is any interest in any form
of diabetes.

ItttlMlTS

(SO
®o

(LD(35)
© (17)
(10) ©

(ABC) Orlando

EVE NINO
6:00
D * 3 O &gt; a NEWS
M (33) CHARLIE S ANGELS
© (10) UNOERSTANDINO HUMAN
BEHAVIOR

Local A D A Chapter Meet

Begin louny * tight immediately with
manmum-st'engUi $u)«f OirlMi reOunng tablets and OKI PUn It lilts
over where your mil power Hivts on
Agovernment appointed panel of med
eat and soentitic eipens has reviewed
the cimrcal testa ot the manmumstrength ingredient m b yn OSrlati,
andhas termed it 'sale andeffective"
tor appetite control and weight loss
Try taper OMh i today
l i list alter Heat and
M ffliitt tnOdrlnll
OSrlati is the rebel you want during the
premenstrual cycle It is a natural
■iter pill ‘ and A. too is sold with a
money-back guarantee Read and lot­
to* all package precautions carefutiy

CD O

Cable Ch

M ONDAY,

Seminole Community College will offer a Literacy
Workshop beginning Jan. 18 in Bldg. Bon the Adult Campus.
Seminole Community College will offer a I.lieracy
Workshop beginning Jan. 18 in Bldg. Hon the Adull Campus.
The free workshop will instruct volunteers how io teach
non-readers to read using Inubach materials.
The workshop will be held on Jan. 18,20, and 25 irom t to
9:30 p.m. For registration information, contact Bob Curtis.
Seminole Community College. Ext. 443

Start losing
weight today

cable Ch.

In addition to the channeli lilted, cablevtuon tubicribert may tune in to independent channel 44
SI. Peferiburg, by tuning to channel 1; tuning to channel 12. which carriei tpom and the Chnilian
Broadcasting Network (C B N ).

Literacy Workshop

S P IN A L

TONIGHTS TV

DAUGHTERS BOOST BUILDING FUND
.Most W o rth y G ra n d .M a tro n M a ry S m ith o f T y r e C o u rt No. I t D a u g h te r s of
S p h in x . E n te r p r is e , p r e s e n t s C .J . ( Ki l l C a r s o n , p u b lic r e la tio n s d i r e c t o r of
Hie C h r is tia n S h a r in g C e n t e r of S a n fo rd , a c h e c k fo r Jail f o r th e c e n te r 's
b u ild in g fu nd.

Women's Past Secret
Clouds Happy Future
DEAR ABBY: I have this problem and
really don’t know whom to ask; so l ’t\i turning
to you.
I used to be what you would call a lesbian,
but that is all in the past. I have never had a
love affair with a male, but I have had a few
affairs with females.
1 have met this guy whom 1 really love, and
we plan on gelling married. He ttiinks he is
m arrying a virgin. 1 told him I was one, and 1 gift possible than we do from the people who
think I am, but now I wonder. Am 1?
have received corneal transplants!
Another problem: Should I tell him about
People hear about donating organs, and they
my past? We plan on getting married In June say, "Isn’t than nice," but they never take the
after 1 graduate from the University of time to find out how to make the arrangements
Minnesota.
to carry it out. Thank you for spreading the
QUESTIONS IN ST. PAUL word that all they have to do is pick up the
DEAR QUESTIONS: Technically you are a phone and call any Uons Club. The club will do
virgin. The Human Sexuality Program at the the rest.
University of Minnesota offers expert coun­
DONNA OHAND, UONS EYE BANK,
seling. Go there. You need to learn more about UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL, SEATTLE,
your own sexuality. (A few lesbian ex­
WASH.
periences during one's adolescence does not
DEAR ABBY: This is In response to “ Rightnecessarily a lesbian make.) And don't tell
your (lance anything until you have all the Handed Mama," whose husband was forcing
answers.
their naturally left-handed child Into righthandedness because he believed “ left-handed
DEAR ABBY: I am the executive director of
people are clumsy and stupid":
the Lons Eye Bank at the University of
If they’re clumsy, how would he like to have
Washington in Seattle.
Because of your column of Nov. 30. 1982, boxed heavyweight champion Gentleman Jim
urging your readers to donate their organs Corbett, played tennis with Jim m y Connors,
after death, we received a pair of eyes the very baseball with Babe Ruth, Reggie Jackson,
next morning! Following a c a r accident In our Sandy Koufax or Lou Gehrig, golf with Ben
state in which a young m an was kilted, his Hogan or basketball with Willis Redd?
parents contacted us and donated their son's
As for being stupid, he is obviously no match
eyes. They said they would not have thought of
for Alexander the Great, Clarence Darrow,
it had it not been for your column.
Julius Caesar, Napoleon or Queen Victoria,
Another mother tdld me after donating the
not to mention American Presidents Truman,
eyes of her 23-year-old daughter: “Just think,
Ford, Garfield and Reagan.
part of our daughter is alive and well and
As fa r as crea tiv ity , w hat about
seeing In Seattle!"
Michelangelo, Uonardo da Vinci, Pablo
There Is little one can do or say to comfort
Picasso or Bach?
someone whohas-lost a loved one, but knowing
This is only a sampling. Oh, one last name to
'.hat a part of him or her lives on helps to ease
drop
- can her husband match brains with
the pain of that loss. As a m atter of fact, Abby,
we hear more from families of donors Albert Einstein?
IEFTY IN BEAUMONT. TEXAS
thanking us for helping them make this special

Dear
Abby

o

it

a

•

9:30
s
9:50

to

10:00

O 4 ST. ELSEWHERE Dr Westphall tries to ascertain the identity
ot a phantom physician, and a new
doctor rekindles the affections of
Ban Samuels
7 O HART TO HART Jonathan
and Jennifer's weekend getaway
turns into a murder investigation
whan a tor mar student dies under
strenge circumstances 0
it (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
© (10) EVEREST IN WINTER Eight
British mountaineers attempt to
climb the most Sangerous section
ot Ml Everest, the west lace, during
the winter ot 1980. John Hurt nar­
rates (R)

10:30
11 (35) MAD AM ES PLACE

11:05
12 (17) A U . IN THE FAMILY

11:30
O
4 TONIOHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Michael Landon
Pattt and Leah Barton, motherdaughter |ockles Irom Kentucky
l ) i O MORE REAL PEOPLE
7 Q ADC MEWS WQHTLJNS
II (3S)THE ROCKFORD F U S

11:35
ill (17) MOVIE ’ Action In Th*
North Atlantic'' (1943) Humphrey
Bogart. Raymond Messay

12:00
•5 O CHANCY
7 O THE LAST WORD

12:30
O
4 LATE MOHT WITH DAVtO
LE TTS RMAN Guest comedian
Jimmy Aleck
11 (34) NEWS
&gt;7 O MOVIE
Sergeant York"
(1941| Gary Cooper, Waller Bren­
nan

1:10
W IFE

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:15
12 (17)SMVIS Chubaaco (194S)
Rictiard Egan. Christopher Jones

0

5.50
12 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (TUE.
WED)

6:00
0 '4 HEWS (MON)
i)
O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
1 7 O SUNRISE
ill (34) JIM SAKKER
11 ( I T ) NEWS
6:30
a 14 EARLY TODAY
If . O
CBS EARLY MOANING
NEWS
7 0 ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
6:45
-7 O N E W S
© (1 0 ) A M WEATHER
7:00
O 4 TOOAY
i ) O MORNING NEWS
7 o GOOO MORNING AMERICA
HI (35)NEWS
©&lt;10)TOLIFEI
7:05
&gt;17 (17) FUNTIME
7:15
© | 10) A M WEATHER
7:30
M (33) WOOOY WOODPECKER
© (10) SESAME STREET g
7:35
12 (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

2:30
4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

1:00

5:20
•3 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

i
&gt;
&gt;
i
*
I
‘
;

1:05

1

11 (17)MOVIE
1:30
3 a AS THE WORLD TURNS
© (10) THIS OLO HOUSE (FRI)

l
)

2:00
O 4 ANOTHER WORLO
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
© (10) RIGHT FROM THE 8TART
(TUE)
CD 110) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
© (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)
1
2 :30
1 - 0 CAPITOL
© 110) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (MON)
© (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WCO)
© (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)
3:0 0
O 4 FANTASY
3 O OUIOINO LIGHT
7 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
It (33)CASPER
© (101 FRENCH CHEF (MON)
© (tO )C O O K IN 'C A JU N (TUE)
© (1 0 ) ENTERPRISE (WEDI
© (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)
3:05
12 117) FUNTIME
3:3 0
It (35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
© (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R|
3:3 5
12 (17) THE FLINTSTONES

8:05
&gt;12 (17) MY THREE SONS

4:00
O
4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
3 O HOUR MAGAZINE
7 U MERV GRIFFIN
11 (33) TOM AND JERRY
© (10) SESAME STREET g

S'30
ll (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
© ( 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
8:35
HJ (17) THAT GIRL
9:00

0 4 RtCHAAO SIMMONS
1 ) 0 DONAHUE
i T O M O V IE
ill (35) LEAVE IT TO SEAVER
© ( 10) SESAME STREET Q
9:05
H) (17) MOVIE
9:30
4 BO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
ill (35| FAMILY AFFAIR

0

0 4 THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
&lt;} O MARY TYLER MOORE
11 (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
© (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
10:30
0 4 BALE OF THE CENTURY
1 O CHILD'S PLAY
it I (35) OORiS DAY
© (1 0 ) POWERHOUSE

11:00

0 4 WHEEL Of FORTUNE
&gt;1 © T H E PRICE IS RIGHT
7 O LOVE BOAT (R)
II (36)34LIVE
© (1 0 ) OVER EASY
11:05
t) (17) PERRY MASON
11:30
O 4 HITMAN
II (34) MOCPCNOCNT NETWORK
NEWS
© (10) POSTSCRIPTS (MON.
WED-FRt)
©(tO)POSTCMPTS(TUE)
AFTERNOON

0 4 SOAP WORLD
&lt;1 O
CAROLE NELSON AT
7 ONEW S

(34) SKI VALLEY
0(10) MYSTERY (MON)

4:0 5
12 (17) THE MUNSTERS
4:30
11 (3$) SCOOBY DOO
4:35
12 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
5:00
0
4 LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY t
COMPANY
13 O THREE'S COMPANY
7 0 ALL IN THE FAMILY
11 (33) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
© (1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS (R)
5:05
12 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH (MONWED. FRI)
12 (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
(THU)
5:30
O 4 PEOPLE'S COURT
&gt; Q U T J 'H
7 ONEW S
© (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

,

5:35
17 117) ST ARCADE (MON)
12 (17| BEW ITCHED (TU E. WED,

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A IL S E A TS

_____
PLAZA I

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© (10) MANATEES: THS VANISHIHQ FlOmOUMS (WED)
0 ( 1 0 ) NOVA (THU)

S m NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (FRI)
12:05

17 (17) PEOPLE NOW
12:30

TUESMf

I

0 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
’ O ALL MY CHILDREN
1&lt; (33) MOVIE
© (10) MOVIE (MON)
© (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
© (101 MATINEE AT THE BIJOU
(WED)
© (101 SPORTS AMERICA (1HU)
© HOI FLORIOA HOME QROWN
(FRO

II (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

11

1:30
O

5.45
12 (17)WORLO AT LAROE (THU)

12:00

1:00

MCMILLAN 4

5:40
12 (17) WORIO AT LAROE (FRI)

10:00

11:00
0 4 ) 0 7 Q NEWS
ill (3S)SOAP
© (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

O

5:30
O
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIOHT
(TUE-FRI)
1] (17) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

6:00

17 (17) NEWS

3

5:25
7 o
HOLLYWOOD AND THE
STAH3 (MON)

O 4 NEWS
-3 O THE YOUNG AMO THE
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN'SHOPS
0 (*0) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T OH (WED)

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tN TEXAS
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TH E BORDER

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�IB— Evening Htr»kf, Sanford, Ft.

Monday, Jan. 10, 198)

Legal Notice

A M AHER OF RECORD
John W. W illiam s, etal to
Charles M Cameron A wf Mary
Ann. Lot* 11 ,13 A 13, Sanlord Terr.

REAL ESTATE
Barbara Kunei, sgt. &amp; Patricia
Prochetka aka Royal to Albert J
Newell &amp; wf Betty, Un. ISO Oak
Harbour Sec Two, 177.000
Thomas P Prince 6, wf Selby J
to Naif, Ltd . w try 3M of From
NW cor . of Govt Lot 4, Sec 13 1110
etc , 17)5,000
Thoma* P Prince A wt Selby J.
to Naif, Ltd , T ra d of land in Sec.
13 31 30. 170.000
William T . Freeman to Samuel
L Belfiore Sr . (m a rr ) Lot 13,
Mecca Hammock, 140.000
Derand Equity Grp Inc. to
Denni* W. Parker 1 wt Judith. Lol
57 Oakland Vitl., Sec. Two 155,100.
Derand Eq Grp. Inc. to Frank
D Huttell. Lot (3, Oakland Village
, Sec Tow. US, 100
Allan M Pavey to Michatl A
Boyce 1 Eileen L Lol SI, River
Run Sec 3, 176.000
RCA lo Gregory A Rothteldl 1
wf Sandra. Lot 131. Hidden Lk, Ph
It. Un III, 153,400
Douglas J Barakat 1 wf Mary to
John J Jennings 1 wf Wendy C..
Lol 13, Bik A, Sweetwater Club,
Un. 3. 1337.SOO
Hacker Homes Inc. lo Leland
Conslr Inc., Lot 33. Veslavla,
114,400
Steven R, Davis to James An
dersonlw f Ruth, Lot 47, Seminole
EStS , 139,300
The Rytand Group Inc to
William B Soyars III, Lot II, Deer
Run. Un IA , 174.600
James L. Bomar A wf Bunnye to
Irving S. Freedman A- wl Joanne
M Lol 391, Spring Oaks, Un. 3,
174.000
John Mougenel, sgl. to George
R Mougenel 1 wt Renee, Lol 9,
Blk B. Oakland Eits., Ill Sec .
166.000
[
Marlin Marietta Corp lo George
| R. HewesA wt Jane D , LI 3, Blk B,
Sweetwater Oaks, 1100.000
Osceola Land Dev. to James H.
Lucas 1 wf Brenda parcel ol land
in Sec. 36 19 33. k a Lot 37 Osceola
Bluff North, 173.000
Nader Constr. to David R. Garsh
1 wf Mary c , Lot 17, Tuscawilla,
Un 9, 199,900
David Garsh 1 wl Mary to
Nader Constr. Co Inc., Lol 44, Un.
One Garden Lake ESI* , 169,600.
Equity Realty Inc. lo Jacqueline
B Tutas, sgl., Un. 341, Destiny
Springs. 139,900
Albert L Huskey 1 wf Nancy to
Patrick J. McDonald 1 wf
Charlotte. Lot 34. Blk C, Sweet
water Oaks. Sec. 13. 1164.000
Samuel N Brooks 1 wf Clare to
John N. MacArthur Sr. A wl Jean,
Lots II A 13. Blk H Sty of Tr. 14.
3nd repl. Sanlando Springs,
117,000
Harold E. Hogan A wl Sally to
Clift Jordan. Ir. Lot IS. Blk 33, No
Orl 1st Addn„ 133.000
Numa
Prop
Inc
lo F I.
C R A .P .T ., Inc., Lol 3, Shannon
Down*. 1300,000.

1100,000
Donald J VI Botlo A wf Mildred
lo Raymond E. Convene A wf Ann
C , Lot 7. Blk C. Oakland Shores.
163.500
Com plete Interiors Inc
to
Louise G Love, sgt, Lot 5. Blk 3,
Cedar Ridge Un I. 163.100
Eleanor O. Fredericks lo Edith
A Clements, sgl A Nancy L
Lumpkin, sgl A Edith C. Me
Cready. sgt., Lots 14, IS A W 1 S' of
16, Blk 6, Crystal Lake Winter
Homes s d. 134,100
Heart Homes lo Douglas N
Weldon A wt Mary E , Lot S3.
Foreil Park Ests, Sec Two.
1167,000
Govr. Pt„ Ltd to Kenneth G
Savage A wf Jacqueline J.G , Lot
16. Governors Point, Ph 1, 170.000
Frances Walker to Robert W.
Sawdy, sgl Lol 1, Blk B. Walkers
Addn AS, 1S3.000
Naran|a Lakes Ptrr to Pearl J
Catigeeiro, No. 3G. Hidden Ridge
Cond . 144.000
Naranja Lakes Ptr to Adwar

legal Notice
FICTITIO U S (IAMB
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged in business al 316 W.
1st S I . Sanford, Seminole County,
Florida under the fictitious name
of PAC N ’ SEND* and lhat we
intend lo register said name with
lhe Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole Counly, Florida In ac
cordance with the provisions ol Ihe
Fictitious Name Statute*. To Wit:
Section 665 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Charles H. Baird
Diann Baird
Publish January 10. 17, 74 A 31.
1963
D E B 117
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged .in business al 361
Whooping
Loop,
Altamonla
Springs, Seminole Counly, Florida
under Ihe fictitious name ot
BIRD'S N E S T SANDW ICH SHOP
and lhal I inland to reglii*-' Mid
name with Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, Seminole Counly, Florida In
accordance with Ihe provisions ol
the Fictitious Name Statute*. To
Wit: Section 665.09 'F lo rid #
Statute* 1957
$ig. Dooll inc.
Rosemary Flood
Publish: December 30, 37, 1X2,
January 3, 10, 1983
DEC 99

FICTITIO U S NAM*
Notlcais htraby given that I am
engaged in business af 3690 High
way 17 93. $anlord. Florida 33771,
Seminole County, Florid* under
Ihe fictitious name ol AAMCO
T R A N S M IS S IO N
R E P A IR
C E N T E R , and that I Inland la
register u l d name with Clerk ot
Ihe C ircu it Court, Semlnolt
County, Florida in accordant
with the provision* ot tht F le­
nt lout Name Statute*, To-WIt:
Section 641.09 Florid* Slalultt
19S7.

(Corp. Seel)
jtnRa*. Inc.
Richard L. Swann,
President
Publish December 30, 77, 1967
January 3, 10. 196)
DEC 100

A

NOTICI o r PROCEEDING FOR
VACATIN'} AND ABANDONING
A PORTION OP A S TR U T
TO WHOM IT M AV CONCERN:
You will lake nolle* lhal l ha City
Commission of th# City ot Sanford,
Florida, al 7:00 o'clock r.M . en
January 34, 1903, in Ms# City
Commission Room at th* City Hall
in th* City of Sanford, Florid*, will
consider and defermin* whtfher
or not th* City will do**, v * c* i #
and abandon any right of Ih* City
wtd the public in and lo a portion of
West 13th Stroot lying bofwoon
Cedar Avenue and Holly Avenue,
being mor* particularly described
That portion of west lifts Itroet
lying between Block IS, Tlor 11.
and Block U Tlor II, E.R. Trol
lord'l Map of tho Tovwt of Sanlord.
Plal look I, pages M through 64,
Public Record* of Stmlnol*
county, Florid#.
Person* interested may
and b* hoard *1 th* llmo and placa
• specified
City Commlsilon
of fh* City of
Sanford. Florida
By: H.N. Tamm, Jr.
&gt; City Clark
Publish January 10, IN )
OED41

Torkhan. No 67G Hidden Ridge
Cond.. 144.000
M ildred Zim m erm an, sgl A
Frances Gieba, sgl to James P.
Brown A wf Flora Y ., Un. S, Bl 439
Baytree Village, 1S5.900
Steven L Weber A wl Connie lo
Raymond C. Oakes A Mary B . Lol
SS. Richfield. 141.500.
George F Schrader A wf Beltie
H lo Daniel L Gunter A wf
Charlotte Ann, Un. S Sheoah,
Cond , Sec. Five. 149,500
Louis J Montesl A wt Barbara to
George Muglia A wt Eva. Lot 67
Sleepy Hollow, 1st Addn , 1106.000
Greater Conslr Corp lo Victor
P Rossi A wf Norma M , Lot 66
Mandarin Sec Four, 1109,900
Radamaes Rivera A wf Lucy to
Lucy £ Rivera, Lol 3. Melody
Acres, 1100
Clarence R. Carpenter A wt
Joan to Joan C. Frisbie. sgl. A
Mabel L Chappei. sg l, un. 116B
Springwood Village Cond , 147,000
Mario Arias A w l Juliaiba to
Edward L. Blacksheare (m arr.).'
lot 4. Blk C. Town A Country Ests.
Repl 170,000
(O CD) Jeanette Kennedy to

Oliver Kennedy A wf Jeanette, lot
I. Blk 6. Fern Te rr,, 1100
Bel Aire Homes, Inc. to Beverly
A Schroder, sgl., lot 137, Oak
Forest, Un. 3A, 176,300
Credlthrifl Am er. Inc. to San
lord Gould A wf Carmela, lot 14.
Blk E. Woodmere Park, 3nd re p l.
179.000
Kenneth M . Sandon A wl
LaWanda to Harold J. Franklin
Jr., W 400' of E 800' of SW'&lt; ol
SW'v of Sec 33 1979, A Portion ot
lots 15. 16 A 17 Yankee Lk * d N Ol
SR 46. 160.000
Oevex, Inc lo Shyam C. Parikh
A wf Natinl, Lot 14B. Replat of
Springdale, 149,900
Com m unity Homes Co. to
Richard G. Hunsicker A wf E111..
Lot 17. Fairway Oaks at Deer Run,
176.900
James H. Crapps A wf Caroline
H A Lee R Sallee A wl Carolyn G.
lo Kenneth M. Sandon A wl
LaWandaM ,SW '&lt; of SW&gt;&lt; ol Sec
73 19 39, less E 400' A r w SR 46. A
Lots IS. 16. A 17, Yankee Lk s d N
of SR 46. 153.000
Greater Constr. Corp to Karen

L Sholter, sgl. Lol 136 Sausalito'
sec. Four, 159,900
Patricia Stenstrom, repr est.
Frances Tooko lo Mark E Slen
Strom A wl Jeana K „ Beg pt 40 c.
S A 70 c. W Of N E cor ol Sec 4 30 30
etc., 160,000
Robert H Co* A wf Ruth L to
Robert H. Con, Un 1, Sheoah,
cond , Sec one, 1100
James A. Vlning A wf Anita to
Citrus State Builders Inc., Lot 11,
Wingfield Reserve Ph I, 148.600
Maronda Homes, Inc to Curtis I
Kunlhlro A wf Kimberly A , Lot 51,
Harbour Ridge. 160.900
Maronda Homes, Inc. lo Herbert
Macaya A wl Marisabel, Lot 36,
Btk H Foxmoor Un 3. 153.600
John W. Richey A wf Juanita to
Francis R. Kellmann A wl Donna
L , Lot 336, Forest Brook fourth
Sec., 184,300
M ontgom ery Woods Inc. lo
Sherron S. Schmidt, sg! Un. 607
M ontgom ery
Woods,
Cond ,
163.000
Citrus SI. Bldrs , Inc. to Arthur
W Saarinen, Jr. A wt Phyllis, Lot
17. Wingfield Reserve. Ph I,
155.000

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T OF
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY , F L O R ID A
CASE N O .: 81-1199-CA 09-K
F L O R ID A LA N D C O M PA N Y, a
Florida corporation.
Plaintilf,
v*
W IN T E R SPRINGS M O BILE
HO M E CO R PO R ATIO N , el al .
Defendants.
N O T IC E OF A C TIO N
TO :
£ J. M C M A N U S and W IL L IE
M AE M cM ANUS, whose residence
is unknown, buf whose last known
mailing address is Route 3, Box
733, Gaslonla, North Carolina
7S052.
LOUIS G A R G IU LO and B E T T Y
G A R G IU L O , whose residence Is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address is 630 Montauk
Highway, West Hampton Beach,
New York 11971;P H ILIP CAM
P A N A R O and A N N A C A M
P A N A R O , whose residence is
unknown, but whose lait known
mailing address Is 36 17 Sherry
Avenue, Wanlagh, New York
1179],
E D W AR D BECK ER and M IN A
B E C K E R , whose residence Is
unknown, but whose Iasi known
mailing address Is 4 Minot Avenue,
Chelmsford, Massachusetts 07174;
E N R IC O POZZUOLO and M A R Y
POZZUOLO. whose residence Is
unknown, but whose last mailing
address Is 674 Trim mer Road,
Spencer Port, New York I4S59;
B E T T Y A BAR TKO W IAK , whose
residence Is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address Is 3
Baylls Street, Oswego. New York
13176.
TH E O D O R E F E IC H T N E R and
A N N A M A R IE F E I C H T N E R .
whose residence is unknown, but
whose Iasi known mailing address
I* Post Office
Box
3456,
Casselberry, Florida 37700;
E R N E S T H. BO W YER. whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address is Post
Olfice Box 1475. Allam onle
Springs, Florida 37701;
R O B E R T J C O LEM A N , whose
residence is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address Is 760
Sequoia Trait, Maitland. Florida
377SI;
E M E L IA SUE THOM AS, whose
residence I* unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address it 635
North
Prim rose. V illa
10*.
Orlando, Florida;
L A W R E N C E J. L E W IS and
B A R B A R A A. L E W IS , whose
residence Is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing addrass Is 429
10 Shtoah Boulevard, W ln ttr
Springs. Florida 33701;
R U TH J DAVIS, whose residence
It unknown, but whose last known
mailing address it 1701 Lee Road,
Apt. 14-F, Winter Park, Florida
37769;
W IL B U R
YOUNG
and
E L IZ A B E T H M. Y O UN G , who**
last known residence It unknown,
but who** mailing address is Red
Barn, Lot 145, Bushnall, Florid*
33SI3;
M E R R IL L P. SCHRIM ASHER.
whose residence Is unknown, but
whose Iasi known mailing addrass
Is 1311 W. Hartley Orel*. Deltona,
Florida 37735;
E M IL CO LO N, whosa residence It
unknown, buf whose last known
mailing address is 301 Lincoln
Road. Castelbtrry, Florida 33707;
J A M E S L A R R Y W H IT A K E R ,
whosa residence it unknown, but
whose last known mailing address
I* 161 Scottsdale Square, Winter
Park, Florida 33793;
F R E O E. BARNES and E V E L Y N
T. BAR NES, wheat residence it
unknown, but whosa last known
mailing addrass It c o Green Acres
Campground, 9701 Forrest City
Road, Orlando, Florida;
D O NALD E . TO P E and E U N IC E
T O P E , whosa ratldanca it
unknown, but whosa Iasi known
mailing adirete I*
" u r o ’hg
Tree, Orlando, Florida;
THO M AS S. B A R TE L S and M A R Y
E . B A R TE L S , whott residence is
unknown, buf whose let! known
mailing address it Lot 73, 3100
Lake Picket Road, Orlando,
Florid*;

Kentia
D rive,
Casselberry,
Florida 32707
H IL M E R
JO H N S O N
and
R O S A LIE
JO H N S O N , whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address is S3S
East Semoran Boulevard. Fern
Park. Florida 32730;
P E TE R J. D E L IA and H E L E N L
D ’ E L IA , whose residence is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address Is Lol 31C, 1100
South Roger W illiam s D rive,
Apopka. Florida.
F R E D SC H A FFER and S T E L L A
S C H A FFER , whose residence is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address is 1937 Augusta
Road. Box 173, Orlando. Florida
33617;
&lt;
R O B E R T S C H A F F E R , whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address is 1937
Augusta Road, Box 177, Orlando,
Florida 33613;
NANCY
JA C O B S O N ,
whose
residence Is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address Is 1937
Augusta Road, Box 177, Orlando,
Florida 37617;
G E O R G E E. M E T Z L E R and
M A R IE
M ETZLER .
whose
residence is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address is 757
Hendrix JTvenue, Orlando, Florida
33817;
PAUL
K R E N IT S K Y ,
whose
residence is unknown, bul whose
Iasi known mailing address Is 4563
Lake Orlando Parkway South,
Orlando. Florida 32806:
JOHN F. B E A T T IE and K AR EN
B E A T T IE , whose residence Is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address is 376 Spanish
Trace Drive, Allamonle Springs,
Florida 37701;
PAUL L M cFA LL and SUSAN
M c F A L L , whose residence is
unknown, but whose Iasi known
mailing address is 1544 LaSalle
Drive, Orlando, Florida;
FRANCES LORUSSO and AN
TH O N Y
LO R U S S O .
whosa
residence is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address Is 167
Princeton Drive, Oviedo. Florida;
HOWARD M A R N E T T , whose
residence Is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address Is
Chateaux Oulac Condos, Winter
Park, Florida.
ALM A D A L E Y , whose residence
Is unknown, but whose last known
mailing address Is 7113 Sugarbin
Street. Orlando. Florida;
JOHN C. SW EAT and A LIC E
S W E A T , whose residence Is
unknown, bul whose Iasi known
mailing address is 1001 Esplende
W ay, Apt
4A, Casselberry,
Florid* 01707,
DONALD
F.
BEACH
and
DONALD R BEACH and B E T T Y
A. BEACH, whole residence is
unknown, bul whose Iasi known
mailing address is 1417 Banwick
Way, Casselberry, Florid* 31707;
TO M K. V IC K E R S and CORA O
VIC K ER S, whose residence Is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address Is 46S Oak Haven
Drive, Altamonla Spring*, Florida
33701;
T IM O T H Y P. C O L L IN G a n a
GERALD
C O L L IN G
and
M IL D R E D C O L L IN G , whose
rtsidenca It unknown, but whose
last known mailing address Is 4563
Lake Orlendo Perkway Street,
Orlando. Florida;
E D ITH R OELS, whose residence
is unknown, but whose Iasi known
mailing address Is 794] B Shoals
Drive. Orlando, Florida;
L IN D A
R A IS IE R ,
whose
residence i* unknown, but whose
last known addrass is 794] B Shoal*
Drive, Orlando. Florida;
A L F R E D H. M ANZ and LOUISE.
M A N Z , who** ratldanca is
unknown, but who** last known
mailing address Is Box 764 E,
Rout* 2. Orlando, Florida;
R ITA A. MOSS and LO UISE
P A C E LL I, whosa residence It
unknown, bul who** last known
mailing a d d ra it is *71 Laka
K s t-e -y n Circle, Casselberry,
Florida 37707;

JA Y CARUSO and ANN P.
CARUSO, whoia residence It
unknown, but who** last known
mailing address 1* 930 Collax
Avenue. Winter Park, Florida;
JO SEPH H. A YC O C K . whott
JAMES E. SHIPLEY and B E T T Y residence It uniywwn. but whose
SHIPLEY, who*# residence is last known mailing address Is 3
unknown, but whose last known Apache Trail,. Winter Springs.
mailing address n 111) Perch Florida 37701,
L . E. AYCOCK, whose residence Is
Lane, Orlando, Florida;
BAR BA R A
O E TU C C IO
and unknown, bul whoso last known
JA N IC E O E TU C C IO .
whoia mailing addrass It 7 Apache Trail,
residence I* unknown, but who** Winter Springs. Florida 33706;
lost known moiling address li 60S JO ANN G A R E F F A , whdta
Frultwood
Avenue,
W lnttr residence It unknown, bul whose
last known mailing address It 6314
Springs, Florida 13701,
FRANCES L. SWEATT, who** Urban Court, Orlando, Florida;
residence it unknown, but who** OLNEY ADKINSON, JR. and
last known mailing addrass it Jl LO LA R. A D KIN SO N . whose
Sorrento Circle, Winltr Pork, residence It unknown, but whoso
last known residence is Arapaho
Florida 33792;
E V E L Y N L. M OORE, whoia Trail, Winltr Springs, Florida;
residence I* unknown, but who** A L F R E D O LS EN . J R „ and
loaf known molting address I* SI A U D R E Y
O LS E N ,
whoso
Sorrento Circle, Winter Park, residence ft unknown, but whose
last known mailing address It 1500
Florida 33393;
W IL L IA M
J.
CR AIO
and Avalon Boulevard, Casselberry,
DOROTHY M. CRAIO. who** Florida 33307;
residence I* unknown, but whoa* H E . GOFF and SHIR LEY D.
loaf known mailing address it 353 G O F F , whosa ratldanca It
Poinsett* Orlva, Casselberry, wknown, but whose Iasi known
Florida 33307;
* mailing address Is 6037 Chenango
Lana, Orlendo, Florida;
T H E O O O R E G U IL L E M E T T E
and ANGELO G U IL L E M E TTE , DONALD E. FLIN T and ULIA I.
whose residence is unknown, but F L IN T , whott residence It
who** last known mailing address unknown, buf whoso last known
It 1311 East Michigan Avtnue, malting address is 109 Beachwood
Orlando, Florida
Lane, Altamonta Springs, Florida
HENRY B. McGRATH, whow 13701;
residence It unknown, but whose CATH ERIN E A. BAUER and
last known mailing address it S41 D EBOR AH
BAUER,
whose

residence is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address is 7X4
Kathy Jo Te rra ce , Orlando,
Florida.
D A N IE L J. FE R R A R S , whose,
residence is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address is 3937
NW 58th Court, Miami Springs,
Florida:
SAR AH
JA C K S O N .
whose
residence is unknown, bul whose
last known mailing address Is 61
Hanson
P a rkw a y,
Sanlord,
Florida 32771;
W AYN E L SH R EC EN G O ST and
CA TH ER YN
SH R EC EN G O ST.
whose residence is unknown, but
whose last known mailing address
i* 600 East Livingston Street,
Orlando, Florida;
JO H N L
S A N D E R S , whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address is 1000
South Orlando Avenue, Maitland,
Florida J77S1;
JACK A R O B E R TS end ALAN G
ROBERTS, whose retldenee is
unknown, bul whose Iasi known
mailing address is 703 Sweetwater
Boulevard, Fdresl City, Florida;
M A R G A R E T S T O R T I, whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address is 304
Cam bridge D riv e , Longwood,
Florida 32750;
A L A N P E A R S O N and E V A N
PEARSON, whose residence is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address is 4115 Beach
Boulevard. Orlando. Florida;
(1ERGE 0 A ZIG IAN and E S TH ER
BAZIGIAN, whose residence is
unknown, bul whose last known
mailing address is 711 Lake
Kalheryn C ircle . Casselberry,
Florida;
JACK NAIM AN and G LORIA
N A IM A N , whose residence Is
unknown, but whose Iasi known
mailing address Is 700 Fern Park
Boultvard, Apt. 1504. Fern Park,
F lor ida.
FRANCES S C L A R K E , whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address Is 5
Ashton Court, Orlando, Florida
37601.
PEGGY
H IG G IN S .
whose
residence is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address is 790
Lakeshor* Drive, Lake Mary,
Florida;
JO S E P H
S
A R IN I, whose
residence is unknown, bul whose
last knemm mailing address is 4641
Edmt* Circle. Orlando. Florida;
DO RO THY R LEM ON D S, whose
residence is unknown, but whose
Iasi known mailing address is 3905
Willow Run, Orlando, Florida;
IM O G EN E W M U LLIN S , whose
residence is unknown, bul whose
last known mailing address Is 3161
Willwv Run, Orlando. Florida;
JACK IVES and M A R IL Y N O
IV E S ,
whose residence
Is
unknown, but whose last known
mailing address is 134 Fairland
Circle. Sanford, Florida 32771;
ROBERT
F. W A L L E R
and
M A R G A R E T W A L L E R , whose
residence It unknown, buf whose
last known mailing address is 30
Leslie La ne,
Port Orange,
Florida;
BARNEY
H. • M AR S H
and
P H YLLIS JE A N MARSH, whose
residence i* unknown, bul whose
last known mailing address It 1105
A llie s Lane, Cocoa, Florida;
HAROLD L. M Y E R S and NAN/ fE T T E M
M Y E R S , whose
residence It unknown, but who**
Iasi known mailing address Is 1333
Hunt Road. Longwood, Florida
37750;
F R E D E R IC K E. BIALLAS and
M AR Y E L L E N B IALLAS, whose
residence It unknown, but whose
tall known mailing address is 2631
Bongart Road, W inter Park,
Florida;
ADAM
C A TA LD O ,
whose
residence It unknown, bul whose
Iasi known mailing address is 330
Mohawk Trail, Winter Springs,
Florid* } ? » « :
A N G E LO G A N D O LF O and ROSE
G A N D O LFO . who** residence is
unknown, but whose Iasi known
mailing addrass is 4033 Rot* Petal
Lane, Orlando, Florida;
AG NES O 'D E L L , who** residence
Is unknown, bul whose last known
mailing address is 309 San Far
nando Court, Sanford, Florida
32771;

CLIN TO N M. B A R F E L L and
JU N E
BARFELL,
whose
residence it unknown, bul whoso
loti known mailing address It 309
San Fernando Court, Sanford,
Florida;
ALEXIS M IC H ELLE SHEPERD,
whoia residence it unknown, but
whose last known mailing address
Is 1401 Constantin* Street,
Orlando, Florid*
LA R R Y R. P IE R C E , whott
residence Is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address It M4
Cutford Road, Longwood, Florida
33750;
S H IR LEY A. CRAGO, whose
residence It unknown, but whose
last known mailing address it 214
Hacienda Village, winter Springs,
Florida 32706;
PATRICK J. MYERS and JE N
N IF E R A . M Y E R S , whosa
residence Is unknown, but whose
last known mailing address It
Arapaho Troll, Winter Springs.
Florida 3770B;
GLEN B. SILKWOOD and R.B.
SILK WOOD, whose residence and
most recent mailing address is
uriJuMwfl.

ALBERTO ALVAREZ end ANA
ALVAREZ, whose residence and

F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 306 Echo
Hoi'ow Way Maitland, Florida
32751, Seminole Counly, Florida
under the fictitious name ol " T H E
A N D E N GROUP OF F L O R ID A ",
and that I intend to register said
name with Ihe Clerk ot the Circuit
Court. Seminole Counly, Florida in
accordance with the provisions ot
the Fictitious Name Statute*, To
W it: Section 865 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
RORICK BU ILD ER S , INC. and
TH E
ANDEN
GROUP,
a
Caiilornia partnership
S&gt;g George N Jahn
as Attorney
Publish: January 3. 10. 17, 34, 1993
D E O 16__________________________
N O T IC E
OF
R E S O L U T IO N
C L O S IN G . V A C A T IN G
AND
A B A N D O N IN G R IOHTS OF W AY
OR D R A IN A G E E A S E M E N T
T O W HOM IT M AY CO N CER N
N O TIC E Is hereby given thal the
Board ot County Commissioners of
Seminole County, Florida, at Its
Regular Meeting held on the 4th
day ol January, A D , 1963. in the
County Commissioners' Meeting
Room in the Courthouse at San
turd, Seminole County, Florida,
pursuant to Petition and Notice
heretofore given, passed and
adopted a Resolution closing,
vacating
and
abandoning,
renouncing and disclaiming any
and all right ol the County of
Seminole and the public in and to
the following described rights ol
way or drainage easement, lo wit:
That part of Seminote Avenue
tying west ot and adjacent to lot 14,
Orlando Industrial Park — Unit I,
as recorded In Plat Book 10. page
100 ol the public records ot
Seminole County, Florida
By the Board ot County Com
miss loners ol Seminole County,
Florida, this 4th day of January,
A D , 1993

most recent mailing address is
unknown;
SANDRA M M IL L E R , whose
residence and most recent mailing
address Is unknown; '
CHARLES H ROBERTSON and
B E L IT A S R OBERTSON, whose
residence and most recenl mailing
address it unknown;
F R A N C IS
G IL B E R T
and
E L IZ A B E T H G IL B E R T , whose
residence and most recent mailing
(SEAL)
address Is unknown
BOARD OF C O U N TY
SANTO J LA G A N O and TIN A D
COMMISSIONERS
LAGANO, whose residence and
OF
S E M IN O L E
CO U N TY,
mosl recent mailing address is
F LO R ID A
unknown
Arthur H Beckwith Jr
D A R LE N E E FR AS IER , whose
Clerk
residence and most recent mailing
By Joann McNabb
address is unknown.
Deputy Clerk
S E B A S T IA N J F A T IC A and
Publish January 10, 1993
H A Z E L J . F A T IC A , whose
OED4J
residence and mosl recent mailing
address is unknown;
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
V IC T O R C. H A M IL T O N and S E M IN O LE C O U N TY, F LO R ID A
E LE A N O R H A M ILTO N , whose P R O B A TE DIVISION
residence and mosl recenl mailing Fit* Number 11 004 CP
address is unknown.
Division
K E N N E T H K K A P O U N and IN R E : E S TA T E OF
NANCY
KAPOUN.
whose G E O R G E W ALLACE B ALLEW
residence and mosl recenl mailing
Deceased
address is unknown;
N O TIC E OF AD M IN IS TR A TIO N
The administration ol the estate
C E R O LE A LA P ALM , whose
GEORGE
W ALLACE
residence and mosl recenl mailing Ot
B A L LE W . deceased, File Number
address is unknown;
L O U IS E
M U L H E R N . whose 82 004 C P . is pending in the Circuit
residence and mosl recenl mailing Court lor SEM IN O LE Counly.
Florida. Probale Division, the
address Is unknown;
GARY K H E R R IN G and SUSAN address ot which is 3nd Floor
H E R R IN G , whose residence and Seminole County Courthouse.
most‘ recent mailing address is Sanlord, Florida The names and
unknown;
addresses ol the
personal
G EO R G E J W ILLS and H E LE N representative and Ihe personal
W ILLS, whose residence and most representative's attorney are set
recenl
m ailing address is lorth below
A ll interested persons are
unknown;
G EORGE
E. C H A N E Y and required to tile with this court,
N E L L I E O . C H A N E Y , whose W IT H IN T H R E E M ONTHS OF
residence and most recenl mailing T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
•THIS N O T IC E : (1) all claims
address is unknown;
T E R R Y C U R T IS , whose residence

• gainst Ih e estate end

II)

CLASSIFIED ADS
Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

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

RATES

. . . S4ca lint
3 consecutive limes 54c a line
7 consecutive lime* 4ic a line
10 consecutive times 43c a line
13.00 Minimum
3 Line* Minimum
1 lime

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M o n d ay- 5 :30 P.M. F rid a y

1&amp;-4teIp W anted

4—P erso n als
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Hoffman
proudly announce Ihe birth ol
Nicholas Marc Hotlman Dec.
24. 1982 al 10:03 a m. 7 lbs. 11
or.. 30" lono

9—Good Things to E at
NAVELS 16 Bushel Grapefruit
A juice Iruif 15 Bu
Call 327 X 37

S E C R E TA R IE S N E E D E D FOR
Temporary and part lime
positions Excellent skills
necesury. Interview by ap
poinlment only. 373 5649.
Alert intelligent individual lo
look after amusement center
In Sanford Plata. M ull have
mechanical
a b ility,
be
dependable, and bondabte.
Part time U T S H r. Apply in
Petson Bally's Great Escape

12— Special Notices

PRESSER Exp. 85 hr. Apply
Carriage Cleaner 434 Shopping
Center, Longwood.

A F T E R Christmas Sale 5 0 /x &gt; ll
14 carat gold, sterling and
electroplate jewelry in slock.
Call 373 1797 lor appt.

P E R F E C T tor housewives A
mothers. Earn extra money In
Spare time w Stanley Home
Prod. No exp. 332 5951.

18— Help Wanted
SE LL Avon part time or full
lime Ladies and men, good
earnings! 332 5910.
O P P O R TU N ITY
Energetic young people needed
as Appointment Sellers .lo r
last growing local company.
We provide (raining with a
base salary plus excellent
commissions. Apply Alum -A,
Vent behind Soblks on French
Ave.
JO B S IT E INC.
100's jobs daily.
Call 331 7940 Fee
SOMEONE who likes to prepare
and serve good lood, to nice
folks in a pleasant atmosphere
can lind a lob at the Runclble
Spoon Tearoom, Longwood.
Hours 9 4. 5 day*. For Appt.
131 4661 between 3 A 5 p.m. And
also need dishwasher 11 ■3 p.m.

NEEDED

SEC R ETA R Y ,.$225wk.
Accurate typing, good on phone,
word processor experience a
plus Benefits and raises.
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
191) French Av*.
333-51)6
E X P E R IE N C E D
W a itre ss
wanted part time. Apply in
person M A M Restaurant, 710
E. 1st.
U N C L U T T E R YOUR C LO SET.
Sell those things lhal are just
taking upspace with a want ad
in the Herald 337 7611 or 131
9993

DIETICIAN ..........S16K
Must know IOD Fla. statutes
Registered or assistant ac
cepled..
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
191) French Ava.
311-5176

N E E D extra Monty?
Why not sell AVON I
331-6459

T e le p h o n e S o lic ito rs ,

Part-Time
Evening Hours.

any

and most recent mailing address is objection by en interested person
f a whom this notice was mailed
unknown.
M IC H A E L A BALOG and VIOLA tViat challenges the validity o* the
A BALOG, whose residence and will, the qualifications ol Ihe
most recent mailing address is personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction ol Ihe court.
unknown;
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
OB
H E N R Y K ELI N and A LV IR A
K E L IN , whose residence and most JE C TIO N 5 NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
recenl
m ailing address
Is BE F O R E V E R BARRED
Publication ol this Notice has
unknown.
W ILLA R D W W H ITE and JA N E T begun on January 10, 1983
Personal Representative:
M, W H IT E , whose residence and
JOHN M MCCORMICK
most recent mailing address is
M l E Church Street
unknown.
Orlando. Florida. 37801
L O R R A IN E
D W Y E R , whose
residence and mosl recenl mailing Attorney tor Personal
Representative:
address it unknown;
W ILL IA M F O DUM JR and JOHN M McCORMICK
W ILL IA M F O DUM SR . whose 501 E. Church Street
residence and mosl recenl mailing Orlando, Florida 3260)
Telephone (305) 143 5690
address is unknown,
VIV IAN BLOCH, whose residence Publish January tO, 17, 1963
and most recenl mailing address is D E O 49
unknown;
C LA Y TO N CHASE and NATSUKO IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T, IN
CHASE, whose residence and moil AND FO R SEM IN O LE C O U N TY ,
recant
m a ilin g address Is F L O R ID A
CASE NO. 87-7)64 CA 09-0
unknown;
B AR CLAY O WILSON, whose C O N T IN E N T A L ILLIN O IS NA
residence it unknown, but whose TIO N A L BANK t TR U S T CO .
Plaintiff.
Iasi known mailing address is 9X4
Easlporl
Terrace.
Orlando. VS
C A TH Y S L Y TE H n k a C A TH Y
Florida 3X17;
And all parties having or S IOOSS. CITICOR P PERSON
claiming to have any right, title or TO PERSON FIN A N C IA L CEN
OF
F L O R ID A ,
IN C .;
interest In the property herein T E R
JA M E S TO W N
V IL L A G E U N IT
described.
YOU
ARE
H E R E B Y O N E ; and JAM ES P. PANICO,
N O T IF IE D thal Ihe above named PR OFES SIO N A L ASSOCIATION,
Defendants
Plaintiff hat filed a Second
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
Amended Complaint in th* above
SALE
.
Styled Court for the foreclosure of
NOT ICE is hereby given lhal th*
a M ortgage encumbering Ihe
following described real proptrty: undersigned, Arthur H. Beckwith,
A Tract of Land lying in Block B Jr., Clerk ol the Circuit Court of
Seminole County, Florida, will on
4, D of D R M ITC H E L L 'S SUR
V E Y O F T H E MOSES E L E V Y Ihe 1st day ol February, 1963,
G R A N T, according lo the Plal between tt a m . and 3 p m. at the
thereof as recorded in Plat Book I, West Front door of Ih# Seminole
Page S, of Ihe Public Records ol County Courthouse, Sanford,
Scmirvoit County. Florida, said Florida, oiler tale and sell el
tract being more p articularly public outcry lo the highest and
described as tol lows: allot Lois 36. best bidder tor cash, lha following
37, 36, 59, 60, 41, 74 and ihal part ot described proptrty s ilu a l* 'In
Lot 73 lying Eastarly ol Ih* Seminole Counly, Florida:
southeasterly extension of Ih*
Lot X7. Block " A " of th*
Westerly tine of Lol 74 u u u i, u id property described as JA M ES
Lot 73. all lying and being in said TOW N V IL L A G E , U N IT O N E,
Block ''O ’* Ol O R. M ITC H E L L 'S according to plat thereof at
SU R VEY O F T H E L E V Y G R A N T recorded in Plal Book 20. at pages
lying South and West ol Stata Road 1 and 9 of tha Public Records of
419, Seminole Counly, Florida Seminole
County,
F lo rida ,
(L e u Road)
together with a perpetual non­
Together w ith Ih* Itn e m tn lt, exclusive easement for ingress
hereditaments, rights of way, and egrets as described in
easements and appurfanancet Paragraph 3 and pursuant to
1hereunto belonging and the rents. G ranto r*' reserved rig h t a*
Issue* and profit* theraol, and any provided lor in paragraph 4 ot that
and a ll Improvements, can
certain Quitclaim Deed recorded
slructlon, building materials and in Official Records Book 1107,
fixtures theraon.
Peg* 771. ot tht Public Records of
You are commanded to I ilo your Seminole Counly, Florida, Ih*
writien defenses to seid Second foregoing being subject to toning
Amended Complaint with th* requirements and easements in
Clerk of Ih* above named Court existence as of lha data haraof;
end fo serve a copy thereof upon slate of facts at shown on survey
ih* attorneys herein below nol dated
September 75,
1673,
later than February 9th, 1963.
prepared by Jones. Wood Ik
W ITN ESS my hand and seal of Gentry. Inc., as resurveyed and
■he Court al Sanford, Seminole recertified on March I I , 1976 and
Counly, Florida, this Slh day of me lerm t and conditions of Ih*
January, 1903
Declaralion of Easements cove
(S E A L)
nantt and restrict Ion* recorded
Arthur H. Beckwith Jr.
in Official Records Book 1110, af
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
page 1173, of the Public Records of
By. Carrie E. Bueftner
Seminole County, Florida,
Deputy Clerk
pursuant lo th* Final Judgment
LO W N DES.
D R O S D IC K ,
entered in a cate pending in u id
O OSTER
Court, fh* style of which it In
&amp; K A N TO R
dicaled above.
P R O FES S IO N A L ASSOCIATION
W ITN E S S my hand and official
By: James M. Spoonhour,
seal of taid Court this 7th day of
Esquire
January, 1X3
31) North Eola Drive
(S E A L )
Post Office Box 7109
Arthur H. Btckwilh, Jr.,
Orlando, Florida 33103
Clerk of Ih* Circuit Court
Telephone: X S 6434600
By: Carrie E. Buetlner
Attorneys lor Plaintiff
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 10, 17, 74, 31, 1963 Publish January 10, 17. 1963
DEDS0
D E O SI

Seminole

Call 322-2611
9

Evening HenUd
DRIVER ................. S192
Light Van delivery, collection
e x p e rie n c e
h e lp tu l.
Management opportunity,
benefits and raises.
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ay.
333-5176

legal Notice

A L U M IN U M
M ANUFAC­
T U R IN G
C O M P A N Y has
Immediate openings for th*
following positions: Screeneri,
press operators, assemblers,
and material handlers. Ex
perience helptul but not
required. Apply in person from
10 a m. to 1 p.m . Monday thru
F rid a y , H a rC a r Alum inum
Products. 1201 Cornwall Rd„
Sanford, Fla.

E X P E R IE N C E D
IN D IR E C T SALES
National lood servlet company,
7) y rt. In buslnas*. Full
company benefits alter 90
days. All leads supplied along
with established account.
Draw based upon experience.
For interview call Bob Rector,
1)05 331 00*6

INVITATION TO BIO
Sealed bids will be received in
ihe City Manager's office. City
Hall, Sanlord, Florida lor:
Electronic Sirens and Related
Accessories
Detailed specifications era
available in th* City Manager's
office, City Hall, Sanford. Florida.
The sealed bids will be received
in IheCity Manager's olfice. Room
X3, City Hall, Sanlord, Florida not
later than 1:30 PM, Wednesday,
January 19, 1X3. The bids will be
publicly opened later that same
dale at 3 PM In Ih* City Com­
mission Chambers. Room 117, City
Hall. Sanlord, Florida.
The City of Sanford reserve* the
right to accept or re|*ct any and
all bid*, or anv part theraol, in th*
best interest of ih* City,
W .E. Knowles
City Manager
C IT Y OF SAN FO RD
D A T E : January A 1963
BID NO, 631)16
Publish January 10, I X )
DED47

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE E IO H T E IN T H JUD ICIAL
C IR C U IT,
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CIVIL ACTION NO: U-197S-CA44E

IN R B : TH E M A R R IA O I OF
JA M E S W. R O B E R TS ,

Respondent Husband.
A B B IE M A R G A R E T
R OB ERTS,

DORGAN

Petitioner Wtfa.
N O TIC I OF ACTION
T O :J A M E S W. ROBERTS
1174 Robin Court
Zanesville, Ohio 43701
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O TIFIE D that an action for
dissolution of marriage has been
filtd against you and you are
require^ to larva a copy of your
written defenses, if any, to It on G.
ANDREW SPEER, Attorney tor
Petitioner, whoa* address It 111
West Commercial Strati. Sanford,
Florida 31771, on or batora
January X , 1X3, and til* tha
original with lha Clark af Ihit
Court either batora service on
Petitioner'* attorney or Im­
mediately thereaftar; otherwise a
default will be entered against you
tor th* retiel demanded In the
Petition.
WITNESS my hand and tho saal
of thli Court on December is, 1X1.
ARTHUR H. BECKW ITH JR.
At Clerk ot the Court
By: Palrkla Robinson
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: O k . 30. 37, 19*2 and Jan
J, 10. 1963
DECK

CUSTOMER
SERVICE ..

$225
wk.

Light typing, good with figures,
Mies experience helpful. Top
growing company.
■ AAA EM P LO YM EN T
1917 French Ava.
333-5
174
RESIDENT Manager position
available for Garden Apt.
complex of 90 unit*, located in
Sanford. Fla. Previous exp. is
desirable, good starling salary
and good banaflt*. Apply In
conftdanca to P.O. Box 17,
Panama City, Fla. 33401.
W AITRESS
wantad,
ex­
perienced only need apply.
Go U mi Lamb Restaurant, 2X1
S. French Ava., Sanford.

GENERAL
WORKERS

*j .b
.............. hr.

Will train, machlna shop ex.
perience
helpful.
Some
overtime poulble.
, . „ * * * VM PLO VM EN T
1917 French Av*.
3U-II74
FIBERGLASS man for boat
repair. Musi be able lo match
color, mako molds, small
parti, etc. W# art putting
staka on boat* for tha retail
and wholesale trad* and also
taking cart of any fiberglass
work al th* u m * tlm*. W*
also mtg. fiberglass wal boxes
and have been In business for
13 yr*. Opportunity tor Ihe
right person In a growing co
Situated in th* right rafall
area.
Saaworfhy
Wood
Products. Inc. 1311 Stale St.
(Just so. of Sanlord Plata and
bthlnd
Robson Marina)
Sanford, Fla.

31—S itu a tio n s V tan ttd
M ATURE woman will laka car*
at lha elderly or young
children In their*homo.
___________ 369- 9333._________
WILL care (or Invalid, afdarfy or
handicapped. Day* or nil**.
Rrteranct*. 331007).________
DR ESSM AK IN G alteration* irx)

repair in my ham*.
d m m i.

CARE lor th* elderly. Hem* or
Hospital. Cartiflad Nursing
A s s is ta n t. 'R e fe re n c e s
provided. 333 6749.

0%

t

�&lt;

* 24— Business Opportunities
SAN FO RD Women'* Apparel
Shop, highly regarded lor
quality fashions Best location
Wm Malinowski Reallor.
337 79*1

32— Houses Unfurnished
SUNLAND E S T A T E S 3 Bdrm . 2
Bath, fenced yard. S350 mo .
Schuren Realty Realtor
631 1347

B A TEM A N R E A LTY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
1640 Sanford Ave.
LA K E H E L E N 30 acres 133,500

34— Mobile Homes

26— Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

3 Bdrm, 3 bath double wide
mobile home on 4'y acres
Horses O K , S480 month 331
07SI a m 337 3106 Night.

1 BORM ,? Bath apt,
to share 1, rent. &lt;i utilities
C all]?! 5939
SH A R E

modern home on
•cres. (175 mo
322 SIM.

10

29— Rooms
SAN FO RD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
m aid service Catering to
working people. Unfurnished
Apartments I &amp; 1 Bedrooms
m a jo r soo Palmetto Ave
S A N FO R 0 . Reas weekly &amp;
monthly rates Util inc etl SOO
Oak Adults I 111 7883
C O M F O R TA B L E sleeping room
(50 w k . Includes util, and
maid serv. Call J3I 6947.

30-Apartments Unfurnished
G EN E V A GAR D EN
AP A R TM EN TS.
311-3699.

P R IM E
O F F IC E
S P AC E*
Providence Blvd . Deltona
3166 Sq Ft. Can Be Divided
With Parking Days 305 57a
1434 Evenings 8 Weekends
___________ 904 719 6351

E N JO Y country llvinq? 3 Bdrm,
Duple* Apts, Olympic S3
pool Shenandoah Village
Open 9 to 6 J 33 3930
DAM BOQCOVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd
18? Bdrms
From 1330mo
Phone 333 6430
SANDALW OOD VILLAS Deluxe
3 Bdr, 2 Bath, washer, dryer,
pool. 1331 Mo 644 9911

31— Apartments Furnished
W IN TE R SPRINGS tree util., 1
bdrm, 161 wk. Fee 339 7300
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
C O M F O R TA B L E I bdrm. nicely
furnished, 171 wk., plus util.
Call 333 3769 331 6947
SEMI furnished I bdrm. apt.
1171 mo plus 1171 dep NO
P E TS 333 5190
I BDRM. Apt. Clean
1325 mo. + Dep.
Reference* required. 133 3343.

37C -Fo r Lease
GARAGE Bays use tor auto
detail, body work etc., util, and
paint booth incl. 333 356S.
It you are having difficulty
finding a place, to live, car to
drive, a |ob. or some service
you have need ol, read all our
wart ads every day

SANFORD Lake Ave. loft W.
35thI Deluxe 2 Bdrm., duplex,
carport, utility room, hook up
washer, dryer. 1351 630 QMS.

N IC E 3 Bdrm Duplex. 1350 plus
sac

JU N E PORZIG R E A LTY
n i-a tri

r ea lto r

L A K E M AR Y 2 Bdrm, kids, full
kit., fenced, 1365 Fee. 339 7300

la v O n Rentals, Inc, Realtor
D E L T O N A , country living, lust
minute* Irom 14. 2 Bdrm.
Duplex and quadraplex. units
available. Carpeting,
luliy
•quipped kitchen, lots of cktsel
space. Some with carports,
call 574 1134 or 373 4337
2 bdrm, I bth, No pats. 1300 par
mo. 1st, last and sac.

641 4147.

QnM &amp;.

PROFESSIONAL Office space
lor Lease, on 17 92 Ideal
location to downtown area 705
5 French Ave or call 322 3170

NEW Listing! You’ ll want to see
this 3 bdrm. 7 bth, 1 yr. old
home on 1.9 acres in a
beautiful natural setting.
Located in Paola 171,900
R E A L TO R
802 S French Ave

41— Houses

R E A L TO R , MLS
330! 5 French
Suite 4
Sanlord. Fla

24 HOUR □ 322-9281
Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 323 2611 or 831
9993 and a friendly ad visor
will help you

keues

The sooner you place your
classified ad, the sooner you
will gel results.
LG. 1 BORM , I’ j bth. carport,
util rms . CBS, refrlg . stove,
CH, newly pamted Inside out.
Ig lot, back lenced
owner
linancing. 313 7961.

K ISH R E A L E S T A T E
31) 0041
R EALTOR
Alter Hrs 323 7466 A 332 6953
HAL C O L B E R T R E A L T Y
R E A L TO R
107 E Ilth SI
1117811

Wm

HAROLD

CMKeyed
FOR A L L Y O U R
R E A L E S TA TE NEEDS

323-3200
S49 W Lake Mary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary, Fla 33744
133 3200
OWNER financing Large CBS
Home A Garage
143.000 Approx 20 ■*Own.
1I\ interest
Many extras 332 9417
CLASSIFIED A D I A R E FU N
ADS R E A D A USE TH E M
O F T E N Y O U 'L L L IK E T H E
RESULTS.

HAIL

R E A L T Y , IN C

R EA LTO R
323-5774
I IS Y E A R S E X P E R IE N C E
C U S TO M
B U IL T
C EDAR
HOME
E n e rg y
eltlcitnl
custom throughout. Terrific
owner linancin g. Potential
guest home In rear. IT citrus
trees. Loads ol store**. Take
46A East to left on Rt. 411, 1
houses on right pest Oslttn
Post Ollic*. 169,100.
HUOE C O R N E R L O T ! Priced le
tell lastt ) bdrm, family rm.,
CHA, fenced yerd wwell and
sprinkler systems, mature
citrus trees, double site patio
under spraw ling camphor
tree. Large assumable lew
interest mortgage. Cell today!
14),900.

WE N E E D LISTINGS!
C A LL US NOW! H I

323-5774
&gt;40* HWY. 17-91

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

3 BDRM, Masonry home with
reasonable down payment end
T E R R IF IC , owner financing.
Priced to sell at 132,500 Call
Todeyl

CallBart
H E A L E S TA TE
R E A L T O R 31&gt; » «•

WE LIST AND S E L L
MORE HOM ES TH A N
A N YO N E IN N O R TH
SEM INO LE C O U N T Y I

42— Mobile Homes
B E A U T IF U L 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
heme In exc. M e y ltlr. Fen.
Fam . rm ., with fireplace,
Sunreem, equip, kit. and many
extras. 199.9M.
CHARM INO 1 Bdrm I bath
hem* cempletely remodeled!
Cent HA, Fam. rm ., equip, hit,
end mere. 139,160.

COUNTRY LIVING 1 Bdrm. 1
bath dbl. wide Mobil* on
lenced corner loti Screened
perch, eat-ln kitchen, dining
ream, and lets morel Horses
welcome I 114,16*.

SEE S K Y L IN E S NEW EST
Palm Spr mqs A Palm Manor
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E MOVES
JIO) Orlando Or
32) 1100
VA A F H A Financing
41 M O B IL E HOMES
I I on ivy per** with many
litres. Near Lab* Herney.
Price reduced 17K and awnor
will consider holding. 118.006.
SANFORD R E A L TY
R E A L TO R
3111118

80— Autos for Sale

•73 SU P ER IO R M H 25' Root 8.
cab. a ir, generator Low
mileage, rear bdrm. SL 6
110.500 373 6611. 323 1874

1974 Toyota Cellca. exc cond , 4
brand new tires 11.700. can be
seen at 1109 S Sanlord Ave

BUY JUNfc C A R S S TRUCKS
From SIOlolSo or more
Call 322 1624

WE PAYtopdoltarfor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto Parts 79] 4SOS

F IL L D lR T A T O P S O IL
YELLO W SAND
Clark A H.rt 323 7580. 321 3833
Let a Class.tied Ad help you find
more room tor storage
Classified Ads find buyers
last

rr a

O S T E E N near goit course ao
acresSSS.000 135.000 down and
owner wilt hold mortgage at
'H ’ » interest Also 5 acre
parcels with 13.000 down and
owner w ill hold at to.*
Suitable tor mobile homes.
Mostly cleared land
R E A L TO R
803 5 French Ave

66— Horses
M U S T sett 4 Shetland ponies
Great with children Please
call 32: 3091

MLS

C A S S E LB E R R Y Lk fnt.lbd. air.
*171 Fee. 336 7100
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
U N F U R N IS H E D 3 bdrm. hous*
reference* required. Rant 1350
mo. + dep. 377 3341.
SANORA SOUTH 1 Bdrm, 1
Bath, partially ,u r n '*h*?.
C H A , drapei, MM mo. « f *751
or BS4 414*.________________
B E A U T I F U L L Y restored 1
bdrm, 1 bth, home, C H A , wwc,
trpt, adults, no pets. *175. *4544*1 or 373 4471.
M O B IL E Home on private lend,
kitchen equipped tor t or
couple. Eeay access in Lake
M ary. 1335 Mo. 377 6119.
N E A R downtown. » b d rm .
Carp et,
R lr.
range,
refrig, 13SO 4- sec M l 6*06

MODERN I Bdrm, 1 Beth, with
CHA drapes, appt furnished1675 M o . *19 *7M or 634 424*

ATTRACTIVE* 1 Bdrm. 1 beth
hem* near dewntewn areal
Panelling, family room, eal-ln
kit. lenced, end an aasy
assumption 838,9*61
JUST FOR YOU 1 Bdrm. &gt; bath
hama naar Lafca Manre* and
shoppingI Specieui living and
family rm. large. Mbr., cent
HA, wall-wall carpal, en|*y
your awn peel and pati*.
M7,MB.

MAYFAIR VILLASI1A 1 Bdrm.
1 Bath Cende Villas, next ta
Mayfair Country Club. Select
y*„r let, lloor plan B interior
dectrt Quality constructed by
tbeemaher ter 847,66* A upt

1961 S K Y L IN E Mobile Home
24x51 It screen enclosure
porch, utility shed. Central
heat and air 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath
Lot site i« 50x100 Sale price
141.900. linancing available at
80 » ol salts prirp interest rale
11V i/ + 2 Points. Can be saem
ai 176 Leisure Dr
North
D fB a ry ,
F la
In
the
Meadowlea on the River
Mobile Hom e community
Please contact Tom Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First Federal ol
Semmole 101 111 1243.
I960 M O B IL E Home I4‘x*tr set
up in adult section ol mobile
perk Day 111 M il
Evening* (111116

Unexpected consignment of
antiques and collectibles Irom
Northeast. Item s Include
revelving O ik
bookcase,
mahogany mirror back curio,
oak princes* dresser, 16 piece
walnut dining room suite, oak
1 door bookcase, wicker
rocker, odd dressers, tables,
lamps, pine dovetail blanket
chest, vanity wardrobe, chine
cabinet, poster bed. also some
reproductions and TVs.
ftllCASH VISA MC

Park

322-2420

ClMiHied Ads will alway* glv*
you more . . . Much , Much
M ort than you axpact.
UNDER 13.000 DOWN

1 bdrm. doll house Affordable
monthly paym ents
Owner Broker 131 1*11.

Call

1962 Cadillac Sedan DeVitie all
original Excellent condition in
and out One owner ear Estate
sale 668 8034 or 133 TOM

1974 C M C
T ru c k ,
2j fit
Aluminum box 6 brand new
Vichelin tires. 14.800 lirm,
exc. cond 323 4062 from 9 5

80— Autos for Sale
We buy Car* and Truck*.
Martin Motor Sales
7011. French
11) 7814

I3I1S.French
111 7140

Bad Credit? .
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Check Easy Terms
N A TIO N A L A U TO S A L E S
1110 Sanlord Ave
____________ 311 407S____________

ru R E S TA TE Commereai or
Residential Auctions 5
p
pra sais Call Deli's Auc» on
121 5620

7SD ATSU N 2dr with auto trans
and other extras. Good con
ditlon 199 down
Cash or
Trade 339 9100. *3 4 4405 -

S A N F O R D A U C T IO N

D AY TO N A A U TO AUCTION
Hwy 92. I mile west ol Speed
way. Daytona Beach will hole
a public A U TO AUCTION
every /.Sonday 8 Wednesday at
7 » p m It’* the only one In
Florida You set the reserved
price
Call 904 355 1311 for
further details
tomorrow may be the day you
sell that roll a way bed you've
nowhere to roll away . . It you
place a Classified Ad today
76MG M ID G E T Call alt. 6 p m
321 6072 New paint, excellent
condition

CONSULT OUR

322-8678
ST JO H N S River liuntage, 21,
acre parcels, also Interior par
cels with river accesHll.900
Public water. 20 min to Alta
monte M all 12.* 30 yr
linancing. no qualifying
Broker 618 4833

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

6 5 A C R E S Lake Sylvan area
143.500 W M ALIC20WSKI
R E A L T O R 333 7981

To List Your Business...

Get Cash Buyers lor a smalt
investment. Place a low cost
classified ad tor results 372
7611 or 811 9993

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

KICK TH E STORAGE HABIT
Sell thsoe useful, no longer
needed items with a Herald
Classified Ad Call 133 2611 or
83 1 9991.

Aloe Products

WE BUY equity in Houses,
apartments vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 1SOO.
Sanlord. Fla 33771 123 4741

H A VE YOUR financial dreams
become a reality with Aloe
P T, no investment 321 7288

Ceiling Fan Installation
C E ILIN G FAN IN S T A L L A T IO N
Quality Work
We Do Most Anything
-395 9311
477 4711

C e ra m ic Tile

Repair. Install. Sales
„
Auto Sound Center
3109 French Ave.
313 4111

47-A — Mortgage* Bought
&amp; Sold

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

WE PAY cash tor 1st A 2nd
mortgages Hay Legq, L'C
Mortgage Broker 168 2S99

50— Miscellaneous for Sale
W A TE R B E D King site with new
mattress, oak pedestal with
new headboard. 1150 322 0945.
E X E C U T IV E Black Vinyl high
back swivel office chair
Walnut and brass pedestal,
tike new 1100 313 1041.
L E V I Jean* A Jackets
A R M Y N A V Y SURPLUS
310 Sanlord Ave 113 5791

B a t h s kitchens, rooting, block,
concrete windows add a
room, tree estimates 121 8461
N EW . R EM O D EL. R EP A IR
All types and phases ol con
struct ion, S G Ballot 321 4617,
322 8665 State Licensed
~ A L L TY P E S C A R P E N TR Y
Custom Built additions Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, panelling, shingles,
retooling For tail service.

can 323-4917,365-2371

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms

SEW IN G M A C H IN E Ztg Zag
Used only I Mo*. 185 Cash or
terms We linance Seminole
Sewing, Winn Dixie P ina 17 92
A Lake Mary Blvd 132 9411
LO V E Seat, green apt site. exc.
cond (75 Cotlee table 115 130
1*81,1:30 5 p m
4 cane A rattan bar stools. 830
each. 311 1520

5J-A— Furniture

A L U M IN U M Siding, vinyl siding
soffit 8 fascia Aluminum
gutters and down spouts
F r.E s t losiassiai

M E IN TZ E R T I L E Exp since
1911 New 8 Old work comm .8
rrsid Free estimate 869 85*2
C O O D ra so n s
T ile Contractors
321 0153

H om e R ep airs
f'AtNt iNG and repa.r, pdf.o and
screen porch b u ’H
Call
anytime 372 9481 '

Ins

Chi kf Care
TH E H A P P Y E LV E S
Quality child care and pre
school. Infants a specialty.
Individual attention T L C .
Slate licensed 120 E Crystal
Lake A v e , Lake M ary 331
2184

Cleaning Services

C O L L IE R 'S Hom e Repairs
carpentry, roofing, painting,
window repair 321 6412.
WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ceramic 8 floor
lilt. Minor repairs, fireplaces,
insulation. Lie Bond 333 li lt .
C A R P E N TE R 35 yr* exp Smat'
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rate* Chuck 323 9445

L a w n Service

Phases or Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
role, simulated brick 321 5991
---------------»
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
M OVE
M O U N T A IN S of merchandise
every day.
all

Plumbing

Moderniung your Home I Sell no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classified Ad

* A-l LAWN SERVICE Y-

HOM EOW NERS, reliM on your
days off. Let us clean your
home at affordable rates. Call
now 331 3S66 Patty's Home
Pampering Service.

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn 8 plants lor
winter now. Complete Lawn
torv. I l l QS7*
_

A M. Kelly cleaning service.
Speclallilng In restaurant A
olllct buildings. 422 Oiti.

Lawn Mowers

Beauty Giro

B E A t Concrete 1 man quality
operation pai&gt;o* driveway*
Days 331 1311 Eves 317 t i ll

Major Appliance
Repair

TO W ER 'S B E A U TY SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harnett'* Beauty
Nook 119 £ 1st S t. 112 5741

SW IFT C O N C R E TE worn all
types Foolers, drive w a ys,
pads. I loon, pools, complete.
Free est 123 7101
FOR ail your concrete needs call
331 7677. Free estimates. No
buildtn pleas*.

PUctiring

Mow wred &lt;rim. haul Regular
Service 1 time clean up. if
hr*, best rales. 631 *631.

M ISTER. F ix it Jo* McAdams
will repair your mowers at
your home. Cell 312 7055

Boarding &amp; Grooming

S P E N C E R PEST CONTROL *
Comm , Read , Lawn, Termite
Work 312 8*65 Ask lor Champ !

Mamtenanceol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
8 electric 323 6038

Conetpie W ork

W ILSON M A IE R F U R N ITU R E
311 U S E F IR S TS T
3115*33

Pest Control

SEAM LESS aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs walumlnum soffit 8 tatcia. (tS4)
Tf 1-109* collect. Free est.

Auto C B Stereo

N E E D to sell vour house
quickly*
We can otter
guaranteed sale within 30
days Call 311 1611

JO H N N IE S Appliances. W*
service refrigerators, wash
it s , dryers, ranges. Reas,
rates. I l l 111 *

R em odeling

Remodeling Specialist
We Hindi* The
Whole Ball O ' Wax

B. E. Link Const.
3227029
Financing Available

Roofing

1) yr*. experience. Licensed 8
Insured..
Free Ktlim atet en Reefing.
Re-Reeling and Repairs.
Shingles, Built Upend Til*.

J A M E S ANDERSON
G. F . BOHANNON

Nursing Care

52— Appliances
Haven Boarding and
Groom ing Kennels heated,
insulated, screened, fly proof
inside, outside runs. Fans.
Also AC cages We cater to
your pet*. Ph. 3J2.1752.

a n im a l

Kenm oreparts, service.used
washers 121 0697
M O O N E Y APPLIANCES
JU S T received shipment ol good
used refrigerators 30 Day
guarantee Sanlord Auction,
m i s French, 333 7140

51— TV-Radio-Stereo

S L IM
B U D G ETS
ARE
B O L 5 TE R E D W ITH V A L U E S
FROM
TH E
W ANT AD
COLUM NS.

Bride A Block
StomWxk

Good Used T v s l l l 1 up
M IL L E R !
3619 Orlando Or
Ph 122 0153
R E P O IS E S S E O COLOR TV'S
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables. E X
A M P L E Zenith 25" color In
walnut console. Original price
over i;so, balance due 1196
cash or payments 117 month
NO M O N E Y DOWN Still in
warranty Call list Century
Sa tes 163 S394 day or rtilt. F ree
home trial, no obligation.

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable

Prices. Free Estimates.

DogTraining

Sundown Dog Training
Obedience training In home
and group. 331 *731

Sava some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell It all
with a Classified Ad In The
Herald. Call 3332411 or t)| 9993 and a friendly ad visor
will help you.

E Q U IP M E N T AUCTION
S A T U R D A Y , JA N . 15
10AM

3103 Orlando Dr. 17 91S. Sanlord
101 311 1300

Hwy. 91 Daytona Beach
904 3151311

Excavating Services
V IIN O EX CAVATIN G
sao Casa Backhee Loader w
extender ho* f yd. dump
truck low bed serv 3 })ia ;j.

LOVING H O M E . Excellent care
8 companionship lor elderly
woman 323 4305.

N u r s in g Center
OUR R A T E S A R E LOW ER
Lakeview Nursing Center
3I9E Second St , Sanlord
327 S707
Will care lor elderly
In m y home
131S37S

Oil Heaters
Cleaned
O IL Healer cleaning
and servicing.
Call Ralph 3317113.

Painting
.Firewood

CARPENTER repairs end
addllioni 70yrs. exp
Ceil 337 1152.

Farm tractors, dottrs, loader*,
backhoet. bucket truck*,
truck!, trailers and mowers. At

Daytona Auto
Auction

CUSTOM M ADE In our Shop.
Installation Service. Dorothy
8 Vincent Bliss 149 1423.

Carpentry

=6

P E E O W N E D HOMES
1 Bd. Fam . Park
12x43
110.500
7Bd Fam Park
14x51
111.100
IB d . 14X44 Musi See
(14,900
14,491
1 Bd 11x*0 N let
IB d . 11x45 Furn.
111.500
1 Bd. 11x40
(4.500
IB d 14x44 Ad Pk.
(n.500
G R IG O R Y M O B IL * INC.

Draperies

Ph. 1491500

Eauionwnt

C A LL A N Y T I M E
lU t

Hwy 17 97 DeBary 4M MAX

79— Truck s-Tra ilers

VBAR B N D C LO IB -O U T

32— Houses Unfurnished

DeBary Auto 8 Mar.ne Sales
across the river too ot hill 174

TOP Dollar P n a ,&lt;* Jwnk 4
Used cars, trucks 8 heavy
equipment 372 5990

P U B L IC A U C T IO N
M O N D A Y , J A N . 10 7 PM.

62— Lawn Garden

• D ID YO UK N O W ? *
You ran buy or lease a new car
in the privary ol your home or
office Fla Auto Brokers
121 206a

Have a room to rent? Let a
Classified ad find a tenant tor
you I

72— Auction

43—Lot v Acreage

76 F O R O Granada All extras
Includlnq auto trans. 1450
down Cash or trade 119 9100
134 4805

77— Junk Cars Removed

HAY 13 50 per bale,
25or more tree del
‘ Other teeds avail 149 5194

A L U M IN U M , cans, copper,
lead, brass, Silver, gold W eo
days 8 4 30. Sat 9 t K KoMo
TOOOICO 918 W 1st St 321 1100

17 Rea! Estate Wanted

n O tl« H « C * REALTORS

75— Recreational Vehicles
Wilco sales Hwy. 44 W. 113 4170
Baled shaving* &gt;4 16
2nd cutting clover hay
lrd cutting alfalfa hay.
Northern Timothy mixed hay
Checkour prices

MLS

322*8678

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

Monday, J*n. 10,1911-38

67A — Feed

sc Wanted tt&gt; Buy

J U N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y

J U N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y

Sanford's Sales Leader
L A K E V IE W 3 BDRM. Ntwly
decorated Reasonable
333 1731

3 STO RY BR ICK 1 cedar In
Markham Place. 4 Bdrm, 3
baths. 1.47 acres. 3 I ireplaces
Sundtck. Much morel Owner
will hold mtg 1124,900.
The Wall It. Company
Realtors
111 S001

ttT_ jyhZI.

O F F IC E SPACE
FOR L E A S E
130 7723

31A— Duplexes
L A K E M A R Y. 7 Bdrm. WWC,
Air, heat, WD hook up, no pels,
1795 Mo , 1)00 See. Available
Jan. IS. 332 2963.

1$ 3I56ER THAN ANV CNE
better
PER5CN1 BESIPES,
H A S c J U lT
TlMINtS
MAXIMUM SUM WANTS
WILL Y0U
THAN THE
TO MEET IN FLCRlPA
T K O F Y tf U R
IN MARCH! HE FEELS &lt;5UV WHO
RESEARCH
H N C 'S v S
INTO EXTRA THAT THE PSYCHIC
WHEN T C
VIBRATIONS
CHANGE
WILL B E
PERCEPTION
2
LINES AT
THE

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
OF S A N FO R D R EA LTO R

G E T THO SE L U X U R Y ITEM S
FOR A F R A C T IO N O F THEIR
COST FR O M TO D A Y 'S WANT
ADS!

Be

MAXIE T ]
HAS

322-7643

SPACE tor rent Office, Retail.
Storage French Avenue and
Airport 333 4403

3 BORM. I bath,
upstairs, 1350
677 5553 or 433 1176

t, 3 AND 3 BDRM From 11*0
Ridgewood Arms Apt. ;i* (
R idgewood Ave 333 4430

EVE

3544 S French
323 0331
Alter Hours 339 3910 333 0779

t-urmshedaparimentslot Senior
Cituens 3)1 Palmetto Ave . J
Cowan No phone calls

Mariner svillageon Lake Ada, 1
bdrm from 1365. 3 bdrm Irom
1300 Located 17 93 |u*t sooth
of Airport Blvd in Sanlord All
Adults 333 1670

321 0759

1600 Sq it oil ice. Its Maple
Ave . Sanlord Avail Immed
Broker Owner 333 7309

3 BDR M No pels S330 mo Sec
dep required. Avail irnmed
333 9403

M E L L O N V I L L E Tra ce Apts
spacious, modern 3 bdrm . I
bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped. CHA, walk to town
and lake Adults. No pets
Available Jan. 1 331 390S

PR ICED under today’s market
12 fam ily rm , enclosed
oarage, lenced back, a real
buy 148.900

gracious, no: the project

NEAR new hospital Z C 2 Older
two story large lot asking
179.900

37 B— Rental Offices

LUX UR Y
A P A R TM EN TS
F a m ily s Adults section
Poolside, 3 Bdrms, Master
Cove Apts 331 7900 Open on
weekends
%
PARK A V E. Ib d r complete Kit
1310 mo. 339 7300 Fee
(a v-O n Rentals,Inc. Reallor

C O U N TR Y Living Lease Option
like new 1 2 with or without
acreage.

NOW TH\T
MAXIMUM

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

with Major Hoople

OUR BO ARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

Carpet Cleaning
* T R IF L E A*

'i

Price special. 116,91 lor
Fam ilyorllvingRm 1*137*0.

FIR EW OO O 140 8 up. Tree
. trim m ing, re m o va l. Tra sh
hauled Free est., 133 9410

Handyman
HANDYM AN Services Painting,
repairs, ate. Reasonabl*
guar work 4314*51. *77-4711.,

B IL L 'S P A IN T IN G
Interior Exterior palming Light
carpenlrf Home* pressure
cleaned Business I J 1 -J 671
Home 111 jn * . Bill Steiner
wonder what to do with two?
Sail On* — The quick, easy
Want Ad w a y. Th e magic
number is 133 3411 or 111 1991.
HO USE painting 1500
ettouse Any Silt.
433 1034,43 5 4009

R ER O O F IN&lt;V r«rp#ntry. roof
fcpiiir &amp; painting 1$ y t i f i
•»P 327 1224
•m

ake
R O O M TO S TO R E
YO U R W IN TE R H EM S
SELL
" D O N 'T
NEEDS"
F A S T W IT H A WANT AD
Phone 173 2411 or 1)1 99fj and
• friendly Ad Visor will help
you

Built up and Shingle root,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 3221936.
JA M E S E. LE E IN C
Tree Service
S TU M P S ground out.
Reasonable, Ire* estlmgles.
7110*61
JO H N A L L E N Y A R D 8 T R E E
S E R V IC E . We'll remove pine
tree*. Rea*, price l i t SMO.
Leiourneau Tree Services
Removal, trimming, demossin
Licensed and insured. 0 6 44*4

Upholstery
L O R E N E S Uphollltfy Fr**“
pick up. del 8 est Car 8 boat
seats Furn » M ? n

�. ^
\

4B—Evanlng Herald. Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE

S O R Q y H E Q B ...I NEVER
M IX M O N E Y W IT H
P R IE N D 3 H IP

Monday, Jan. 10,1983

by Chic Young

J U S T P O R TH A T, W E R E
N O T PALS A N YM O R E)

by Mort Walker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

Answer to Previous Punle

ACROSS

45 Grave robber
48 Jung'e hunts
1 Outer (prefu) 52 Den
5 Carpentry tool 53 Tarboosh
54 Station (Fr)
8 Repetition
55 One (Ger |
12 Mideatt
seaport
56 Graduate of
Annapolis
13 Three (prefu)
(abbr)
14 DeValera s
57 Actor Blore
land
15 Scottish lake 58 la rge deer
16 Printer s
(P&lt;)
measure (pi) 59 Greek letter
17 Went by car 60 Remainder
18 Balls
DOWN
20 Cleans
21 Strike lightly
1 Skinny fish
22 M ake into
2 Hoofbeat
leather
sound
23 Unhappy
3 Engine speed
26 Greek
reaoout (ab b r)
geometer
4 Different
31 Overturn
33 First person
5 Soaks
34 Ory
6 Ordnance
35 Jacob's twin
7 Cheese state
(abbr)
36 Indefinite arti­
8 Weirdness
cle
37 Ancient port
9 Handle of a
whip
of Rome
10 M ask
38 Frighten
41 Collection
11 Singletons
19 Hostile
42 Spasm
43 Petition
incursion
1

2

3

4

E TT A R
i V J. i
R j/ $ 3
1 p jA&lt;
f_ 0 « '
tLV C
l
A
7T
M .1 T R
FT a’
i 4A B □
0 T T □

L
s L
T
A W
i E
T S
M
□ GJ
H □
□

DIE N

7

8

s o
I P I R
LA N

14

15

16

17

37 Egg (Fr)
39 Kind of fuel
40 Actress Gabor
44 Avid
45 Mirth

46 Ave
47 Barnyard
sound
48 Oispatched
49 Unusual
50 Purple flower
51 Religious
denomination
53 Price
10

11

28

29

30

49

50

51

9

j■
■
■| ■ k■
■ I■ ■
■
■
20

19

22

21

.

23

27

24

35
31

2#

3!

53

3‘

36

35

33

40

39

38

44

42

*3

45

by Bob Montana

47

53

54

55

56

57

SB

59

60

52

A R C H IE

46

m

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BfcDEOSOL

For Tuesday, January 11, 1983

by Howie Schneider

E EK &amp; M EEK

r

P R IS C ILL A 'S P O P
IM

LOSING
MV HAIR
AGAIN/

bill

poor

_________ by Ed Sullivan
f

IN SALES
HAP THE
SAME
PROBLEM.

WELL. HIS HAIR IS N
STILL FALLING OUT.
BUT ITS FALLING
IN ONE PLACE.

b y Sfofftl A Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

WHILE W £S£ HERE
WONT HAVE I D PUT UP
W ITH B A B B IT S -

YOUR
BIRTHDAY
January 11,1983
Several secret ambitions
which you have been har­
boring have an excellent
chance of being fulfilled this
coming year. Now Is the time
to bring them out Into the
open.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Regardless of outward
appearances, think and act
positively today In m atters
which affect your reputation
or finances. You'll do the right
things. Order now: The NEW
Astro-Graph M atchm aker
wheel and booklet which
rev eals rom antic
com ­
binations, compatibilities for
all signs, tells how to get along
with others, finds rising signs,
hidden qualities, plus more.
Mall $2 to AstroGraph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Send an additional t l
for your Capricorn AstroGraph predictions for 1983. Be
sure to specify blrthdate.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) You have good leadership
qualities today and this will be
evident to those with whom
you associate. They'll find
ways to ease you Into a
commanding role.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Continue to operate at full
throttle regarding your Im­
portant objectives and goals.
Lady Luck is still In your
co rn er, rooting for your
success.
ARIE8 (March 21-April 19)
This la a day that should be to
your
liking
because
everything will be moving at a
swift pace and you're not
likely to have any moments of
boredom.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

Chocolate Causes A
Problem With Gas

OR
A R MS
A O O

□

13

18

l
T A

20 Woman in
U S Army
(abbr)
22 Mao ____
lung
23 Winter bird
food
24 Church part
25 Precious
27 All (prefu)
28 leases
29 Cleveland s
waterfront
30 Bench
32 Gives food to
36 Segment of a
curve

6

5

V in

L

7

12

by Art Sansom

T H E BORN LO S E R

•

A m atter which has been
concerning you could sud­
denly take a turn for the
better today and enable you to
realize your hopes. Be ready
to act.
GfeMINl (May 21-June 20)
Your greatest asset today is
your ability to a rb itra te
touchy situations so that all
concerned feel they got the
better deal.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Whatever you do today, strive
to do your very best. Your
accomplishments could have
far-reaching effects which
you may not be aware of now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
optimism Is easily aroused
today and this will have a
delightful effect upon your
companions. It will be hard to
be dispirited In your presence.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Ways could develop today for
you to add to your resources
through other than your usual
channels. T hese will be
fleeting opportunities, so act
quickly.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ocl. 23)
.You can broaden your
schedule a bit today, because
you will be capable of han­
dling several situations
simultaneously — and do a
good job on each one.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You're likely to be more
fortunate In financial matters
today than you will be
tomorrow. While the breaks
are going your way, do now
whatever needs doing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Get out and circulate
today If things have been a bit
dull for you romantically.
Your possibilities for meeting
someone to whom you’ll be
attracted are good.

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
problem Is getting worse
every day and I’m afraid
something is seriously wrong
with me so I'm afraid to go to
a doctor. B esides, my
problem
is
very
em­
barrassing. That Is why I’m
writing you.
I’m expelling lots of gas.
I’ve noticed if I eat tne
smallest piece of chocolate it
happens. I can’t believe I’m
never going to be able to eat
chocolate again In my life. I
can live with that but now it is
almost anything I eat and it
happens. I can’t go out with
people it now happens so
often. If I don't eat It doesn’t
happen.
I'm 35, female and weigh
118 pounds. Can you help me?
DEAR READER - You are
not alone. About half the
people who see gastroen­
terologists have a problem of
excess gas.
Som etim es gas is from
swallowed air. But In many
cases It Is" caused by fer­
mentation of undigested food.
We know that because the gas
produced in hydrogen, carbon
dioxide and methane. None of
these is present in any major
quantity in normal air that a
person yould swallow. All are
produced by bacterial fer­
m entation of foods, par­
ticularly undigested car­
bohydrates. This of course
does
not
m ean
that
swallowing air cannot be the
problem In some people.
I strongly suspect that when
more Is learned about bac­
teria in the colon that
changing the bacterial flora
may eliminate gas problems
for some people.
In other people the solution
is to eliminate the foods that
cause gas. The bean group is a
good example. They contain a
complex sugar that cannot be
broken down and digested
completely by humans. A
person who has lactose In­
tolerance cannot break down
the double sugar In milk and
the fermentation causes gas.
I'm sending you The Health
Letter
6-8,
Controlling

Gaseousness. It will help you
u n d e rsta n d your problem .
You
m ight
try
an
elimination diet. You could
sta rt with a diet that contains
mostly the meat group and
limited amounts of bread.
Record your gas problem.
Then add one food at. a time
and If your gas Increase*,
eliminate it and go on to
som ething else until you
develop a list of foods that
don’t seem to cause a
problem. The fact that you
don’t have gas when you don’t
eat suggest it is from un­
d ig ested food. A b re a th
analysis for hydrogen could
tell If this Is so.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is It
possible to be cured of VD
while taking penicillin pills
for two weeks for a different
problem?
DEAR READER It
depends upon what you mean
by VD and how m uch
penicillin you received. While
penicillin Is effective for most
cases of gonorrhea It Is not
effective In some strains.
Some strains are penicillin
resistant.
W hile
syphilis
and
gonorrhea can be treated with
penicillin In most cases, there
are other forms of VD which
cannot be treated this way.
H erpes sim plex two, or
g en ital herpes, does not
respond at all to penicillin
because it’s a virus.
The amount and duration of
an tib io tic medication
recommended Is designed to
ensure the highest probability
of a com plete cure for
gonorrhea or syphilis. You
can obtain cures with sm aller
doses for shorter duration but
the cure rate will be well
below th a t obtained by
standard treatment.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

MM3

4QJ97
V AJ 5

♦5
♦ Q J 1092
EAST
WEST
♦ K3
4542
V Kg 10 4 3
4972
♦ 1074
♦QJ963
4 A K8 4
45
.SOUTH
4 A 1086
416
♦ AK62
4763

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

Eail

14
Pan
Pass

Dbl.
44

24
Pass

Sooth
If
24
Pm

Opening lead: +5

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Oswald: "American pairs
really swept tbe World Fairs
championships in France
this fall.”
Jim: “Lew Stansby and
Chip Martel of California,
who are currently playing
like the best pair In the
world, won the open pairs.

Here are a couple of their
hands."
Oswald: "Champion play­
ers like to bid. North's dou­
ble of one heart was for
takeout. Stansby bid two
hearts to crowd his oppo­
nents, but South bid two
spades with his rock bottom
minimum opening. Needless
to say, North took him right
to game.”
Jim : "Had Martel opened
the king of hearts, four
des would have been
rn one almost automati­
cally, but be led his singleton
club. Even the greatest don't
always find the best opening
lead /’
Oswald: "Stansby took the
ace and king of clubs and
normally would have given
his partner a club ru ff but
Chip discarded his 10 of
hearts.”
Jim : “Lew looked at that
rather astonishing discard
and figured out that Chip
didn't want a club ruff after
all. He led a heart The
defense got their normal
four tricks and a good score
since many North-South
pairs had stopped at spade
nart scores.”
Oawald: “Had the third
club been led, Chip would
ruff, but declarer would
* ably have picked up tbe
p hlng and scored a
top."

K

C

(NKWIPAPO B fT X m O B ASSN.)

by Jim D a v it
FR A N K AND E R N E S T

4‘

^

^

*e

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75th Y ear, No. 123— Tuesday, January 11,1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald— (USPS 481-280)— Price 20 Cents

They Object To Paying

Court Orders Auto-Train Purchase Repaid

T h e old A u to -T ra in t e r m i n a l in S a n f o r d is q u ie t
a n d th e b u s h e s a r e g ro w in g u n c h e c k e d a s th e
A u to -T ra in ’s b a n k r u p tc y p r o c e e d in g s c o n tin u e .
N ow , A m tr a k is c o n s id e r in g t a k in g o v e r th e
s e r v ic e a n d r e v iv in g it th is m o n th .

By MICHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
While news that Amtrak may revive the defunct Auto-Train
route has cheered many Sanford residents, a local couple Is
reeling from a financial blow they received more than two
years after Auto-Train Corporation went bankrupt.
Dale and Mary Morrison, owners of Home Appliance Center,
Inc., 1700 W. First St. in Sanford, have been ordered by the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in Washington, D.C., to return $661.44 plus
14 percent interest and court costs for two air conditioners
their company sold the railroad company several months
before it filed bankruptcy proceedings.
"They’re telling me I had no right to get my money," Dale
Morrison said.
Morrison said he was contacted by Auto-Train official R.D.
Foster on June 16,1980, about purchasing an air conditioner.
" I delivered the first one and they liked it so well that I got a
call the same day asking for another one," Morrison said.
Thirty days elapsed and Auto-Train made no payment.
Morrison then contacted the company, asking for Foster but
was told he was no longer with Auto-Train.
"I went out there to repossess the air conditioners,"
Morrison said. At the AutoTrain offices he was assured that
his payment (or the units would be made, so he left the air
conditioners. His payment was sent a few days after.
It was more than twb years later that the Morrisons heard
from anyone about the Auto-Train transaction. On Aug. 24,

1982, they received a letter from the bankruptcy court asking
for confirmation that the transaction took place.
Under current bankruptcy laws, any company which
received payments from a corporation within three months of
its filing of bankruptcy action must repay the firm and then
wait until a settlement is reached with the firm to see if they
will receive anything.
Morrison said the law is unfair. "They must have been
thinking of going bankrupt when they bought the air con­
ditioners."
•
And companies aren't the only ones ordered to repay money
to the defunct company. A refund of $14,821.63 in county and
school board taxes were sent to the company, Seminole County
Tax Collector G. Troy Ray said.
When the’Morrison's didn’t respond, the court ordered the
Morrisons to repay the money they received for the cooling
units.
At that point, the Morrisons contacted their attorney, Frank
Whigham, for advice.
"He asked if we could afford to pay for him and one of us to
go to Washington to fight it,” Mrs. Morrison said. "He said we
might have a chance if we appealed to the court in person."
But the Morrisons have had hard times of their own lately.
They've closed their Orange City Store because of the poor
economic times and many employees are now on part-time
basis.
Despite the bad times, the Morrisons are intent on resisting

For SR 434 Work

County
Splits Up

There will be plenty of room for county
offices to grow in the old Seminole
Memorial Hospital.
The former hospital was divvied up by
county officials Monday with the
assurance that lots of space will be left
between offices, providing room for
expansion during the next five years.
"There is space there to take care of
our needs for quite some time to come,"
Commissioner Bill Klrchhoff said. He
explained that the space scheme devised
for the hospital divides the building Into
various areas of interest.
According to the plan, worked out by
Klrchhoff, Public Services and
Development D irector John Percy,
Central Services Director Dave Hotary
and Planning Director Woody Price, the
first floor of the building would be used
by high-volume offices.
The tax collector’s office will locate In
the central part of the building, the
property appraiser’s office will be In the
east wing and the land management and
building offices will be In the west wing.
On the second floor, the east wing will
house the supervisor of elections office,
the central part will house computer
services, central services, mail room,
copy center and lunch room and the west
wing will house personnel and manpower
offices.
The third floor will have the com­
missioners and their staff offices. The
office of management and budget will be
in the east wing, public services and
development and library services offices
will be in the central part and com­
m issioners, county ad m inistrator,
county attorney and planning will take up
. the remainder of the west and central
parts.
Klrchhoff said the offices may seem
isolated for a while but the space between
divisions will be occupied over the next
few years as offices expand.
C om m issioners were expected to
formally approve the plan today and
authorize H elm an Hurley C h |rv a t
Peacock-A rchitects to proceed with
drawings of the hospital, courthouse and
other buildings.
The only objection to the county plan
Monday cam e from Commissioners
Robert Sturm and Robert G. "Bud"
Feather.
Sturm was opposed to the timetable
listed, holding back on construction of an
office tower adjacent to the courthouse
unUl 1990.
"We're locking ourselves into that
turkey perm anently," he said. "In
government, what is temporary becomes
permanent."
•
Sturm said delaying construction of the
office tower would lengthen the board’s
occupancy in the hospital. The county
offices are scheduled to move Into the old
hospital this summer and to remain there
for five years.
Sturm and Feather convinced other
board members to change the timetable
for construction of the office building to
between 1965 and 1990.
-M IC H E A L BEHA.

D A L E A N D M A R Y M O R R IS O N
the court order.
*,
The court could padlock the company’s door or freeze their
bank account if the Morrisons continue to refuse to repay Auto­
Train.
Now they face a difficult decision.
"I've thought about going to jail for a few days," Mrs.
Morrison said. "That wouldn’t be too bad but we can’t afford to
let them padlock the door or freeze our bank account."

County Seeks
$6.2 Million
From State

HtrsM PH»t* by T»m Vlntwil

O ld Rltx Theater In dow ntow n Sanford to stay Idle.

"or handicap the agency or Us revenue
By DONNA ESTES
fund. * But we are asking the legislators
Herald SUM Writer
County officials will ask the Seminole to find ways and means of the DOT
County Legislative delegation Wed­ devoting some money for this purpose."
Bush said he feels It Is worthwhile to
nesday to submit bills during the 1983
approach
the Legislature on the issue.
session of the Legislature allowing the
county to recover $6.2 million it has spent "434 is now owned and operated by the
on a state road and to use unclaimed state but Seminole is stuck with paying
funds paid to various county officials the $411,000 until 2003," Bush said.
Meanwhile, County Tax Collector G.
over the years.
In addition, rep resen tativ es of Troy Ray J r . said his office for the past 24
Seminole Community College, the city of years has had to carry on the books
Lake Mary and the County Commission uncashed checks ranging from a few
will ask for help in gaining more money cents to several hundreds of dollars and
to widen East Road, the entrance to the he would like to sec a law passed
authorizing those funds used.
college.
Ray said the total of checks unclaimed
And Longwood Mayor June Lormann,
as chairman of the Council of Local by persons over the years would
Governments in Seminole County, will probably amount to more than $2,000, yet
request the delegation sponsor laws to the sums have to be carried on his
provide equity between the city and records year after year while no one
county governments locally in state claims them.
He said when he suggested that the
funding.
The meeting will be at 5:30 p.m. delegation submit a special act for
Wednesday in the Seminole County Seminole County, citing a method which
could be used to channel that money after
Courthouse.
Assistant County Administrator Jim a period of time to the county general
Easton and County Engineer Bill Bush fund, s ta te Rep. Bobby B rantley,
are slated to ask the delegation If it can delegation . chairman, suggested Ray
find a way to transfer some $411,000 the prepare a general bill which could be
county Is paying annually on a road bond passed and be effective statewide.
Ray said other county officials, such as
Issue for the widening and construction of
State Road 434 when It was a county road Sheriff John Polk and Gerk of the G rcuit
to the State Department of Tran­ Court Arthur H. Beckwith Jr., have a
similar problem.
sportation.
The proposed widening of East Road,
Bush said the county floated a $6.2
million bond Issue some years ago for the the entrance road from U.S. Highway 17­
work on SR 434 and the highway has since 92 lntoihe SCC campus, is the concern of
been taken over by the state and declared Seminole County, SCC and the city of
Lake Mary. The roacTls a lake Mary city
a state road.
The county Is committed to paying streeL
Bush said former state Rep. Robert'
$411,000 a year for that bond issue until
2003. Bush said if the DOT could take Hattaway, D-Altamonte Springs, was
over repayment of that bond Issue, those able to get an appropriation of $225,000
funds could then be released for road allocated by the state for widening the
needs on county facilities for widch road, but DOT estimates show this
allocation Is inadequate.
Seminole County is responsible.
DOT has estimated that $100,000 will be
"If we could recapture that bonding
capacity, we could move ahead quickly needed to acquire the right-of-way
on other priority county road needs, necessary to expand the road from a twowhere roads are carrying higher traffic lane facility to a width of 80 feet with a 15volumes than the state highway system foot median. Some $385,000 will be
needed to construct the road and install a
does," Bush said.
“We do not want to present anything to traffic signal on U.S. 17-92 plus another
deprive the DOT of money," Bush said, $15,000 for details for a total of $500,000.

Cinema Pub Proposal
For Old
RitzDefeated
A proposal by two Orange County businessmen to trans­
form the old Rltx Theatre into a cinema pub where
Mexican food would be served and liquor would be available
was turned down by the Sanford City Commission Monday
night.
The commission In rejecting the proposal upheld an
Identical action by the city’s Planning and Zoning Com­
mission last week.
The vote was unanimous by the four members attending
- Mayor Lee P. Moore and Commissioners David Farr,
Milton Smith, and Eddie Keith.
The vote came after five downtown business owners and
operators protested that the proposed business would cause
parking problems and the sale of alcoholic beverages would
create additional problems downtown.
Charles Williams of Winter Park and Dennis Braxiel of
Orlando requested permission for conditional use on the
property - the sale of alcoholic beverages. The zoning code
requires city permission before alcoholic beverages can be
sold in the downtown area.
The two men rejected the parking problem argument,
saying the real complaint of the business people was the
proposal to sell alcoholic beverages.
Braxiel, in response to a question from F arr, said it is
hard to say if the sale of liquor is critical to the cinema pub
plan. Braxiel said the two businessmen planned to lease the
threatre and show first-run movies and serve Mexican food,

pizzas and sandwiches, beer, wine and liquor. "The three
complement each other," Brazlel said.
Ms. Dot Powell of Powell's Office Supply, 117 Magnolia
Ave., said she objected to the proposal, saying there Is not
enough parking in the area now. She also expressed concern
about serving food, pointing to the former Mr. P's supper
club where employees "dumped swill out the back door."
She said only now, several years after Mr. P ’s closed, are
nearby businesses getting rid of the roach problem created
by that operation. "And we don’t need any more liquor
places downtown," she said.
Gordon Sweeney, whose office supply business Is at 229
Magnolia Ave., said other businesses downtown suffered
through the Ritz Theatre when It had no liquor. "I ean see
nothing better if liquor added to the ingredient. It would be
nothing but trouble." He said he had no objection to
proposed renovations of the theatre and good en­
tertainment.
Bill McLaughlin of Celery City Printing said, "Alcohol
creates problems.” He told about rocks thrown through
windows In his business when the Rltx Theatre was
operating, thrown by persons he assumed had been at the
theatre. McLaughlin said he and his wife work at their
business six to seven nights a week. He said he would like to
•*

See RITZ Page IA

Sanford OKs Two Annexations

TODAY
Calendar ....................................
Classified A ds............................

Comics...................................
Crossword...............................
DearAbby.............................
Deaths.....................................
Dr. Lamb................................
Editorial................................

in
s
HO
IB
..IB
IB
IB
..4A

Raindrops keep falling...
Add raJa Is the by-product of an increaslagly Industrialized society, and
one el the mad pressing environmental
concerns of the 1980s. An In-depth review
of the problem Is found on page 4B of
today** Herald.

........3A
........IB
........IA
......4-7A

Florida ...
Horoscope
Hospital ..
sports....,
Television
Weather

........tA

Basketball
Saaferd had one winner and one loser
Monday night in prep basketball action.
IV Creams Panthers, paced by 14
from Daryl Williams, wan their
45th consecutive game by hammering
Osceola. Seminole’s girls weren’t as
fortunate as they dropped a narrow $4-54
decision to Lake Brantley. See Sports,
Page IA.

Sanford city commissioners with bated
breath, Monday night, agreed 3-1 to
annex ABC Conveyer’s seven acres off
Cornwall Road and another 18 acres for
adjacent Jungle Labs.
But the board recognized vocally the
Seminole County Com m lulon may
protest the annexation on the basis that it
creates an enclave.
Com m issioner David F a rr, who
preferred the commission delay the
action until it got a reading from the
county government, voted against the
proposal while noting the city needs to
annex industrial property to improve its
tax base.

The majority of commissioners Mayor Lee P. Moore, Milton Smith and
Eddie Keith - decided to take a chance.
“ I don’t mind backing off If we have
to," Keith said.
The problem is that the annexed
property will surround a remaining
parcel of county territory on three sides.
"If you accept the definition of enclave as
city property completely surrounding
county property, this Is not an enclave,"
Moore said.
•
State law forbids creation of enclaves,
but doesn’t define the term . The county
has been successful in two suits of having
property annexed by the cities of

Casselberry and Lake Mary ousted from
city territory (or violation of the state
annexation' law, but the courts still
haven't defined the term.
The original annexation request was
made by ABC Conveyor. An official of the
firm said the company was being a good
neighbor in requesting the annexation
because Jungle Labs, which owns the
adjacent property, wanted to annex to
the city to get water and sewer service.
State law requires that properties be
contiguous — touching - other city
boundaries to be annexed. ABC Conveyor
See ANNEXATIONS P age IA

4‘

�JA—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Tuesday, Jan. II, ItlJ

NATION
IN BRIEF
A uth o rities Regain Full
Control A t N.Y, Prison
OSSINING, N.Y. (UPI) — Seventeen guards held
hostage for three days in the state’s worst prison
uprising since the Attica revolt were reunited today
with their families as corrections officers regained M l
control of the facility once known as Sing Sing.
The standoff, which began at 7:40 p.m. Saturday
following a confrontation between an Inmate and a
guard at the Ossining Correctional Facility, was
declared over at 12:29 a.m., almost S3 hours later.
It was not known how many prisoners were actually
involved In the uprising.
The prisoners' conditions included demands for
improyed mailing privileges, more recreation time
and amnesty.

3 Die In Plane Crash
DETROIT I UPI) — A DC-8 cargo plane carrying a
small amount of radioactive material crashed and
burst Into flames today at the Detroit Metropolitan
Airport, killing at least three occupants, federal of­
ficials said.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission in Washington
said it had not decided what action, if any, it will take,
but an NRC team trained to deal with radioactive
m aterial probably will be sent to the site to assist local
officials.
The material americium 241, could be dangerous if
allowed into the air, officials said but stressed that they
could not make any assessment of possible danger at
the site without more information.

Sanford To Get New Warehouse
For An Old One In Swap Deal
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The city of Sanford will acquire a new
warehouse in a swap deal with two city
businessmen.
The City Commission Monday night
authorized Mayor Lee P. Moore to sign
an agreement with Wayne Blecha of the
Sanford Auction and Dale Gustafson,
owner of The Barn restaurant-lounge, to
swap the old city warehouse property on
Sixth Street In exchange for a new 10,800square-foot m etal warehouse to be built
at the public works complex off Fulton
Street.
On the swap of warehouses, Blecha
first agreed to build the city a new
warehouse in exchange for the city’s old
building and property on Sixth Street.
The original Blecha plan was to use that
facility for an indoor firing range. The
firing range plan fell through, Knowles
told the commission.

The new building is to be erected within
150 days at the city's public works
compound off Fulton Street.
City officials have wanted to have
public works facilities and the warehouse
together in the one complex for security
purposes and convenience.

The commission took no action on a
problem between the city and the San­
ford Housing Authority over the
authority's request the city refund the
rental fees it paid the city more than a
year ago for use of the ground floor at
City Hall.

NAACP Blasts Reagan Policies

NEW YORK (UPI) - The NAACP
blames the Reagan administration for
hindering progress on school desegrega­
tion and affirmative action and con­
tributing to the worst year that
minorities have suffered in "recent
memory."
NAACP leaders also announced plans
lo hire a new Florida field director to
ease tensions between Miami authorities
and the city's m inority population
because of the shooting deaths of two
black me" last month.
But he also told com m issioners
"The year 1982 was ihe worst for the
Monday night the two businessmen still
traditional victims of racial oppression in
want to go through with the swap and
recent memory," said NAACP Executive
plan to have a lumber yard at the site.
Direclor Benjamin Hocks. "We must ask
Blecha and Gustafson formally agreed the president to look more closely on the
to build a new pre-engineered 10,800- results of his programs than on the
square-foot metal warehouse with slab,' pureness of his ideology."
plumbing and electrical connections,
The organization used its annual
according lo specifications prepared by meeting Monday also to unveil plans to
the city’s engineering department.
woo the nation's new governors and a

strategy for coping with Reagan’s stalled
proposal to shift responsibility for major
public programs from federal to state
and local governments.
The NAACP took issue with the ad­
m in istratio n 's stands on school
desegregation and affirmative active
programs and its attempt to end legal
services for the poor.
The NAACP was most bitter about the
Justice Department's asking a federal
appeals court to overturn a courtapproved agreement aimed at desegre­
gating the New Orleans Police Depart­
ment.
At issue is a federal court decision that
calls for matching promotions of black
and white officers on a one-for-one basis
until the effects of prior discrimination
have been erased.
The Reagan administration charges
the decision c^lls for reverse
discrimination.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - For the second
time in three years, the Supreme Court will
consider the constitutionality of laws designed
to prevent fraud by charities.
The Justices Monday agreed to hear
Maryland officials' appeal of a ruling striking
down the state’s 25 percent limit on the amount
charities may spend for fund raising.
The case could affect as many as 20 other
states that also Impose percentage limits of

MEXICO, Mo. (UPI) — A judge agreed to halt the
transfer of flood debris possibly contaminated with
dioxin to a landfill where nearby residents had
claimed the suspected cancer-causing chemical would
cause irreparable harm.
After a daylong hearing Monday, Circuit Judge
Edward D. Hodge denied the state's request to dissolve
a temporary restraining order blocking the transfer of
the debris from Times Beach to a landfill near Wright
City In Warren County 40 miles away.
Hodge said Warren County residents who last week
obtained the temporary restraining order halting the
transfer showed that moving the debris has a threat of
irreparable harm.

See related stories
on pages 3A and 2B.
various sorts on charity fund-raising and
administrative costs.
The Supreme Court in 1980 struck down a
Schaumburg, 111., ordinance requiring door-todoor and street solicitors to use at least 75
percent of their funds directly “for the
charitable purpose of the organization."
Lika the high court'* 19*0 ruling, the
Maryland Court of Appeals struck down its
state's charities law for acting as a "prior
restraint" on constitutionally protected rights
to free speech.
The Maryland law, which carries criminal
penalties for its violation, was challenged by
an Indiana corporation that promotes fund­

WEATHER

AREA READINGS (9 a.m .|: temperature: 61; overnight
low: 81; Monday high: 74; barometric pressure: 30.00;
relative humidity: 90 percent; winds: northwest at 7 mph;
rain: .03; sunrise 7:19 a.m., sunset 5:47 p.m.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:57
a.m., 7:10 p.m.; lows, 12:15 a.m., 1:02 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 6:49 a.m., 7:02 p.m.; lows, 12:06 a.m.,
12:53p m .; BAYPORT: highs, 11:22a.m., 1:31 p.m.; lows,6:50
a.m., 6:44 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augustine (a Jupiter Is le t Out
50 Miles: Wind west to northwest around 10 knots today In­
creasing to around 15 knots tonight and continuing Wednesday.
Seas 2 to 4 feet today Increasing to 3 to 5 feet offshore tonight.
Areas of dense fog mainly north part with visibility below one
mile this morning improving by mid morning. A f r r showers
extreme south this morning Ihen clearing later today.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today. Highs near 70.
Wind becoming northwest 10 to 15 mph. Tonight fair and
colder. Lows around 40. Wind light northwest. Wednesday
continued fair with highs in low 60s.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Generally fair weather Thur­
sday through Saturday. Colder temperatures with lows
averaging in the low to mid 30s north around 40 central and 50s
south. Highs averaging upper 50s extreme north mid 60s
Central and near 70 south. *

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central FiarMa Rtglw ul Hti#4tal
ADMISSIONS
SANFORD:'
Merle Ivey
. James L. Johnson
Edith (Jean) Norris
Ewsene K. Stovall
CleanIM 1. (T in e ) P e lt r t ,
Casselberry
Clifford W. McCormick DeSery
M nlem ln V. Oliver, DeBery
Res N. Wroden, DeBery
Albert O. Ernst, Oeitona
Lois A. Heslen. Deltona

H tltn A. Van ntu, Daltons
Char It* Cover Jr.. Laka Mary
Dorothy
M.
Ladoucaur,
Tttutyllli
D IIC H A R O II
SANFORD:
Frank B. Hamplon
Ktihonda F. M artin
Hclwi F. Wand it
Voytt L. M ila n k, C s tttlb trry
Laois B. Howell. DeBery
Joseph F. Cerveny, Daltons
Rlheb O. Jabber and baby boy,
Sentord
IU S F I M l tM l

Tuesday. January 11, IHJ-Vol. 71 No. 123
FvbMsbed Dally sad Seadey, m e e t Saturday By The Saatori
Nereid, lac* IN N. Freach Ave.. laniard, Fla.
l.
lacaad Class Restate Paid at laniard, Plertda i n n
Heme Delivery j Week. t t . N i Meath, M . U j * Meatus. IM .M i
Veer, M I N . By M ail; week I I . U i M eet*. IM S / a ManNU,
I N N ) Tear, m t .n

Seminole County commissioners want to make repairs to
a park adjacent to the Central Florida Zoo near Sanford,
but they want to make sure the zoo stays put before they
make a commitment.
Commissioners learned Monday that a University of
Central Florida report on the feasibility of moving the zoo to
Orlando’s Turkey I^ake Park will not be released until Feb.
15, rather than on Friday as had been scheduled.
In December, the zoo’s board of directors asked com­
missioners to make repairs to a termite-infested pavilion, a
nature walkway and the access road that serves both the
park and the zoo. Zoo Director A1 Rozon estimated the
repairs to cost about 198,000.
But County Administrator Jim Easton said Monday the
road could be repaired simply by making some im­
provements to the shoulders rather than the complete re­
paving sought by Rozon.
‘ Commissioner Robert Sturm recommended that the
board spend about $1,000 to repair the road but delay
decision on spending $48,000 to fix the other facilities until
the UCF report is issued.
Easton told commissioners they would be liable for in­
juries on the facilities and may still be compelled by a state
grant to repair the pavilion and walkway.
State money was used to construct the two projects and a
provision in the grant was that commissioners maintain
them for five years, but Easton said he isn’t sure when the
grant was issued.
Also complicating matters is the county’s lease with the
zoo which stipulates that the zoo’s board of directors is
responsible for making repairs to the park facilities.
And if the zoo doesn't make the repairs the county could
find the lease in default and take over the property, Easton
said.
“But I don't think this board is interested in getting into
the zoo business," he said. — M1CHEAL BEHA

High Court To Review
High Cost Of Charity

Dioxin Debris W ill Stay

NATIONAL REPORT: Flood-weary l/mlstnna residents
crowded roadways in trucks and trailers loaded ijrlth furniture
and clothes, fleeing a new round of flooding triggered by heavy
rains. Winds up to 80 rnph battered the Rockies and parts of the
Midwest dug out from 8 inches of snow. A storm that spread
from 1 Inch of snow in Kansas to 8 inches in southwestern
Minnesota tapered off after adding 2 inches to snow on the
ground In northwestern Wisconsin and the Uppei Peninsula of
Michigan. Winds howled down the east slopes of the Rockies as
gusts over 80 mph were reported at Rocky Flats, Colo., and
more than GO mph atU vlngston, Mont. The strong winds
whipped up ground blizzards over many areas in the northern
and central mountains of Colorado. Widespread rain and
drizzle drenched the eastern part of the nation from the Great
la k e s into New England and from the Mid-Atalntic states
through the Southern Appalachians into Florida. Falling
temperatures caused many highways to ice up and travel
advisories for freezing rain were Issued for northern New York
state, northern New Hampshire, all of Vermont and southern
Maine. Heavy fog shrouded Bouthem Virginia and across the
Carolines with visibilities near zero in some areas. In
Iaulslana, heavy weekend rains dumped 1 4 Inches into
swollen rivers and set off a new wave of flooding.

Zoo Repairs Delayed
Pending Move Study

Percentage
of 1981 population living In:
NCA/Moffitt Cecil

SOURCE Cantus Burttu/Daptrtmanl o l Agriculture

Harvests may be up, but otherwise things are mostly down on American
farms. Hie total farm population dropped below six million last year, con­
tinuing a decades-long decline. Farm income is also declining, with the
median dropping 14.8 percent from 118,483 in 1079 to $15,755 In 1980. President
Reagan Is workingon plans to reverse thd"trend, including expanding credit
for farm ers and possibly protecting them against a trade embargo.

Jobless Make Their Pitch
For W ork Via Television
WHEELING, W.Va. (UPI) - A telethon for
the Jobless drew 15 work offers for some of the
117 unemployed people given a hall-minute
apiece lo broadcast their anxious appeals for
work.
A spokesman for WTRF-TV, one of the
sponsors of the "Job Tinder," said, among
those offered jobs Monday night were an
electrician and several truck drivers. Their
names were not Immediately available.
The 90-minute telethon began at 7:30 p.m
and netted about 100 calls from prospective
employers, the spokesman said.
Those who wanted to appear and advertise
their skills each were given 30 seconds.

Reagan Unveils New
Farm Recovery Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan,
seeking still another cure for agriculture's
worst economic crisis in 50 years, today
prepared a plan he hopes will return
prosperity to the farm and cut expensive
support programs.
Reagan planned to be in Dallas for the 84th
annual convention of the American Farm
Bureau Federation, armed with plans to
implement a program that fell victim to
hostile maneuvering in the lame-duck 97th
Congress.
In the latest In a series of steps to shore up
the sagging farm economy, Reagan and his
advisers derided to bypass Congress on a plan
to pay farm ers surplus grain in exchange for
agreements to cut back crop production.
Administration officials indicated Reagan
would carry other plums to the Farm Bureau
convention as well, including the promise of an
expanded credit program to encourage farm
exports.

raising and gives advice to clients on how to
conduct those events.
Joseph II. Munson Co.'s chief business In
Maryland is promoting entertainment and
social fund-raisers for chapters of the
Fraternal Order of Police. The firm said it
charges these chapters more than 25 percent
of the gross income gained from any event it
promotes.
Although Munson maintains the state's limit
violates its First Amendment right to free
speech and assembly, Maryland’s attorney
general told the Justices the law “has little, if
anything, to do with speech or advocacy."
He characterized the case as one dealing
with "an out-of-statc professional fund-raiser
seeking to charge exorbitant fees."
"It is hard to see how particular charities
a r t harmed by a state law restricting the lees
they must pay for such services," the attorney
general wrote.
Maryland Insisted its regulations are needed
to stop the “ unscrupulous practices of
professional fund-raisers."
It also noted the law is flexible because it
allows charities to apply for exemptions from
the 25 percent rule.
The high court will hear arguments in the’
case sometime next fall.

A third possible gift to the farmers, the
signing of legislation to protect farm exports
in the event of a trade embargo, was still being
mulled by White House aides late Monday.
The "crop swap" concept that forms the
basis of the payment-in-kind program the
government will open to participation Jan. 17
has been used twice before since the Depres­
sion in attempts to reduce price-depressing
( surpluses.
But the program, If successful, has a second
attractive feature: saving $3 billion to $5
billion in crop support payments and other
costs at a time Reagan Is Intensively sear­
ching for waya to curb huge budget deficits.
The PIK program would encourage farm ers
to take as much as half their acreage out of
production. They would be paid at something
less than an equal bushel-for-bushel swap.
In briefing reporters on the program prior to
Reagan's speech, Block said the program is
needed to bring "a runaway situation in
production" under control.

Another 700 people took advantage of an offer
through the program to place free situations*
wanted ads in the Martin's Ferry, Ohio, Times
leader, a co-sponsor of the drive along with
the Junior League of Wheeling.
Ange)o Marsill, 35, of Dillonvaie, Ohio, has
been unemployed for 1) months.
“I and a lot of others are well qualified. But
there are Just no Jobs available," he said after
his television appearance.
"I was kind of hoping to get a temporary
teaching job. I’m really hoping for an upturn
in the economy by sum m er," said Marsill, a
former high school m ath teacher and coal
miner.

Sentinel Worker Guilty O f Burglary
Former Orlando Sentinel newspaper cir­
culation worker Bruce Pedrick, 33, has been
found guilty of breaking into the Sentinel's
newspaper circulation office on State Road 427
near Longwood last July.
It was from this office, using a key which the
newspaper had failed to retrieve from him,
that Pedrick took lists of vacationing sub­
scribers and recorded names and addresses,
telephone numbers and dates they were due to
return, according to Assistant State Attorney
Don Marblestone.
Pedrick, who is suspected of having com­

mitted up to ISO burglaries using the In­
formation taken from the newspaper's cir­
culation .lists, was ordered to jail by Circuit
Judge Kenneth M. Leffler, pending completion
of a pre-sentence Investigation. Sentencing Is
set for February 24. Pedrick faces up to five
years In state prison.
Prosecutors would not say why Pedrick was
charged only with the burglary of the Sentinel
office and not the 15 others of which he was
suspected.
Marblestone said it Is unlikely that Pedrick
will be prosecuted on the other cases.

Two Young Boys Escape Kidnapping Attempts
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies are investigating two
recent abduction attempts of young boys at adjacent
Casselberry condominium complexes.
The first Incident occurred at the Marbeya Club apartments,
Stale Road 436, Casselberry, at about 3:30 p.m. on last Monday
when a man and a woman approached an eight-year-old boy in
the apartm ent complex.
The man made a grab for the boy who ran away and hid
behind a building. When the man » uldn't find him, he
returned to the blue van In which he had arrived with the
woman and drove away, a sheriff’s report said.
The second incident involved a 12-year-old boy who was
grabbed by i men on Monday at about 3:45 p.m. at the east
entrance ter the Lake Howell Condominium complex,
Casselberry. An investlgstor’s report saya that the man
jumped from behind e brick wall and grabbed the boy who
struggled free and ran. The man chased the boy and reportedly
said, " I ’ll get you yet kid."
The m an Involved In both Incidents was described as tall and
thin.
ROBBER FLEES EMPTY HANDED
When a knife-wielding robber knocked on the door of 77-yearold Fred J, H arris' house In Sanford and demanded money, he
got the door slammed In his face.

Action Reports
* Fires
h Courts
★

Police reported that the robber knocked on the door at 9 pm .
He had a knife wrapped in a brown paper bag and told Harris,
"Well I’ve got a knife and got to have some money."
Harris, police reported, slammed the door In the man’s face.
DAYTONA MAN ROBBED
Two gun-toting men kidnapped a Daytona Beach man in
front of a Fern Parti jal alal fronton and robbed him of $953 late
Friday.
Joseph W. Smith Jr., 40, told deputies that two men carrying
four-inch revolvers brandished the guns and told him to hand
over his money as he walked to his car outride the OrlandoSeminole Jal Alai Fronton.
The bandits forced Smith Into their car and dropped him off
a few blocks away at Oxford Road In Fem Park.

&lt;
t

Police

t

CAR BROKEN INTO
A thief broke Into a Ford LTD parked in Red Bug Park
between 3 and about 10 p.m. Monday and stole $800 worth of
Jewelry from the glove compartment. The property, Including
a diamond solitaire ring and a gold ring, was owned by
Reginald Cotton of Castle Brewer Court, Sanford.
JEWELRY AND CASH STOLEN
Thieves who broke Into the home of John C. Commander at
300 E. Oakhurst Drive in Altamonte Springs, between ll p.m.
Saturday and 5:30 a m . Sunday netted themselves a haul of
Jewels and cash worth around $3,000.
Taken were rings and mainly turquoise and silver Jewelry;
$165 in mainly $20 and $10 bills, an 1883 silver dollar, English
coins, about $400 in pennies, nickels and dimes and $700 In
quarters and half dollars.
,
NO RIDE HOME - ARRESTED INSTEAD
Donald Leslie Kruse, 28, of 2930 Jennett Lane In Sanford
wanted a lift home after police were called when he was told to
leave the bar a t the Holiday Inn.
When police refused to give him a ride home, police said he
became loud and abusive and got a ride — straight to JalL He
was charged with disorderly intoxication after the Incident at
about 9 p.m. Saturday.

K •

�v l'

s

FLORIDA
Has 2nd Black Justice
TALI.AHASSEE (UPI) — The Florida Supreme
Court has the second black Justice in its history
following the formal investiture of former appellate
Judge Leander Shaw.
Shaw, 52, took the oath of office from Chief Justice
Jam es Alderman Monday in a ceremony witnessed by
an overflow crowd that included top state elected of­
ficials, a federal judge and many of Shaw’s colleagues
and friends.
Shaw, a former private attorney, prosecutor and law
professor, was appointed by Gov. Bob Graham last
month to fill the vacancy created when Alan Sundberg
resigned last September to return to his private
practice.

Doc; K ille r 'Non-Aggressive '
TAVARES (UPI) - A psychologist testifying for
J.B. Parker, the convicted killer of Evinrudc heiress
Frances Slater, said that Parker should not be sen­
tenced to death because he is a “ non-aggre"sive" man
suffering from personality disorders.
The Jury which last week convicted Parker was
expected to recommend a sentence after closing
arguments in the sentencing hearings today.
Parker, 20, is one of four Fort Pierce men accused of
robbing kidnapping and slaying Ms. Slater last April,
when she worked the late-night ^h ifl in a Stuart con­
venience store.
Miss Slater was the granddaughter of millionaire
marine manufacturer Ralph Evinrudc.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
A ra fa t Heads For Moscow;
N e w Fighting In Lebanon
United Press International
U.S. envoy Philip Habib flew to Israel today on an
"urgent" shuttle mission but Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat charged on his way Ip Moscow
Washington should not be trusted to mediate Middle
East negotiations.
Arafat wrapped up two days of talks with Jordan’s
King Hussein and flew to Moscow, accompanied by a
high-ranking Palestine L ib eratio n Organization
delegation for his first in-depth talks with Communist
Party boss Yuri Andropov.
In Lebanon, Druse Moalem artillery sheila crashed
into Christian-held areas near Lebanon's presidential
palace for the first time, spreading their J-monlh-old
sectarian battles into the suburbs of Beirut.
Habib said his assignment is to emphasize “on an
urgent basis" the U.S. belief problems with the agenda
of the troop withdrawal negotiations between Israel
and lebanon can be solved.

End To M utiny O rdered
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) - With the
United States expressing "deep worry," Salvadoran
Provisional President Alvaro Magana ordered a
renegade colonel to end his four-day mutiny against
the nation's defense minister,
Magana made his first comment Monday on the
rebellion, demanding U. Col. Sigifredo Ochoa "comply
immediately without conditions" to a Jan. 5 transfer
order to El Salvador's Uruguayan Embassy — a post
* Ochoa sees as virtual exile.
Touted by U.S. advisers in El Salvador as one of the
nation's most effective field commanders, Ochoa
defied the order and demanded the resignation of
Defense Minister Jose Guillermo Garcia, claiming the
top general was corrupt.
There was no immediate reaction from Ochoa.

Rickets Linked To
Vitamin D Deficiency
BOSTON (U PI) - Rickets, once the most common nutri­
tional disease in childhood, afflicts tens of thousands of adults
because of Inadequate supplies of vitamin D, the so-called
sunshine vitamin.
While cases of childhood rickets have been reduced to
medical rarities, the report said the disease, which increases
adult susceptibility to fractures, is found among those whose
body machinery for activating vitam in D has failed and who
cannot m ake enough of the vitamin because of aging.
' ‘The problem of rickets has not ended," doctors wrote In the
Massachusetts General Hospital News.
The disease, referred to as osteomalacia in adults, afflicts
"tens of thousands" of Americans the publication said.
The beneficial effect of sunlight in Loth the treatment and
prevention of rickets has been recognised for more than 80
y ean , but new work conducted by Dr. Michael F. Holick eiplains who dark-skinned people, especially those living in cold,
northern climates, suffer more from vitamin D deficiency.
Vitamin D can either be made in the body or provided
through diet.
Holick concluded that "as one ages the ability to make
vitamin D dearly decreases."
Since many older people subsist on unsatisfactory diets,
Holick said it is important for the elderly to get some exposure
to th e sun and produce vitamin D in their skin or take vitamin
pills.
"Exposure of the fact and a rm s to the sun for 10 or 15
minutes a few times a week in the sum m er is probably adeauate to maintain proper vitamin D levels in Caucasians
during th at season of the year," Holick said. "A dark-skinned
person would need more time In the sun."
Holidi's team found that after sufficient hormone is made,
ultraviolet light will cause the pre-vitamin D - socalled
it precedes vitamin D in th e chemical process - to
break down into biologically inactive compounds, the report
[fa Caucasian were exposed to sunlight in the tropica for 15
lutes or so," Holick said "be would convert 10 or 15 percent
d s cholesterol precursor to pre-vitamin D."
In heavily pigmented individuals, it takes five to ten times
re exposure to sunlight to m ake the same amount of
unin D that a Caucasian will m ak e," Holick said.

Tuesday, Jan 11. 1083—3A

Anti-Drug Paraphernalia Law Upheld

IN BRIEF
Florida Supreme Court

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Supreme Court Rejects Challenge

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court, which already
permits cities to outlaw sales of drug-related accessories to
children, Monday silently refused to test even stricter crack­
downs on items know os paraphernalia.
The Justices rejected challenges to a Homestead, Fla., or­
dinance completely banning the sale, possession or advertising
of devices used to cultivate or use illegal drugs.
The ordinance is based on a model statute drawn up in 1979
by the Justice Department and copied by many of the 30 states
and hundreds of communities that have adopted anti-para­
phernalia laws to try to control Illegal drug use.
The Florida ordinance was challenged by a group of
businessmen who market paraphernalia, which ranges from
common items such as cigarette rolling papers, spoons and
scales, to such smoking accessories as "roach clips" and

water pipes.
The group claimed the law is unconstitutionally vague, espe­
cially since many of the outlawed items can be purchased
legally at department stores. It also specifically challenged
the advertising ban as an Infringement on free speech.
The businessmen lost their arguments in the lower courts.

adopted by the Chicago suburb of Hoffman Estates, III. That
law prohibits sales to minors and requires "head shops" -*
stores that sell such devices — to be licensed.
The Hoffman Estates ordinance was not based on the Justice
Department's model law but contained some of the same
language challenged in the Florida ordinance.

In its ruling upholding the Homestead ordinance, the 11th
O.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found the law and its long list of
outlawed devices is clear enough for people to generally un­
derstand what is being banned!

Appealing to the Supreme Court, the businessmen argued
the Florida law is different and deserved the justices’ at­
tention, too.
One difference is the Florida ordinance carries a criminal
penalty of up to a |500 fine and 90 days in jail, while the Hoff­
man estates law carried only a civil fine.
The Homestead ordinance has not gone into effect com­
pletely pending court challenges.

It also ruled that states or local governments can limit ad­
vertising meant to encourage Illegal activity.
The appeals court cited in its ruling the Supreme Court’s 8-0
decision last March upholding a paraphernalia ordinance

YburTelephone
ServiceW ill Still B e
A n ExcellentValue
T his T im e N ext^ear.
While it is well-known that Americans enjoy
the world s best telephone service, perhaps
less recognized is the fact that we also pay
less for telephone service than people in
any other nation in the world.
Residence telephone service now takes
a smaller bite of the average family’s
$ 3 0 . fo r a m

income in Florida than it did 20 years ago.
Relating the cost of local phone service with
other items in the family budget reveals some
interesting comparisons. While monthly
phone service will cost less than $20 if all of
our proposed rate increase i&amp;approved, (an
increase of only 20 cents a day), it costs about:

o n th s s u p p ly o f d is p o s a b le d ia p e r s .

$ 2 1 . f o r tw o c u p s o f c o f f e e a d a y f o r a m
$ 2 (

Xo

$21

Xan

r m o re to

o n th .

f ill y o u r c a r s g a s ta n k .

a p p lic a tio n f o r la w n tr e a tm

e n t

$ 2 0 . f o r tw o f a s t- f o o d d in n e r s f o r a f a m ily o f fo u r.
$ 1 6 . f o r f o u r a d u lts to b o w l th r e e g a m e s .
$14L

o r m

o r e l :o r a m o v i e f o r a f a m i l y o f f o u r .

$ 1 1 . fo r a m
$ u L

$

!

X

a m

o n th s s u p p ly o f d o g f o o d .

o n th f o r b a s ic c a b le te le v is io n .

o r le s s f o r a m

o n th

o f E c o n o m y te le p h o n e s e r v ic e .

(if our Measured Service proposal is accepted)

Why is th e C om pany now asking to reprice its
telephone service in Honda? W h at are some o f th e rates
w hich w ould go u p and why? W h at is O ptional M easured
Service? W hy is th e C om pany requesting $200 m illion
for “d ep red atio n expense ?
T h e answ er? to these an d o th e r questions c a n b e
fo u n d in three special booklets, “Q uestions ab o u t
Repricing T elephone Service’,1’“O p tio n a l M easured
Service —A Proposed New S ervice th a t M ight Save
You M oney’,’ a n a “Bringing You Tom orrow ’s Technology
Today—T h e D epreciation Story!’
T hese booklets exam ine th e effects of technology o n
th e C om pany’s operations a n d o th e r changes taking
place an a w h at they’re likely to m e a n to your p h o n e
service an d y o u r m onthly bill.
For your copies, fill out this co u p o n and sen d it
to us today.

S o u th ern Bell
PO . Bax 520100
Room 688
Miami, Florida 33152
Please check which brochures you w ould like to receive.
□ "Q uestion* about Rrpricing T elephone Service”
□ "O p tio n al Measured Service—A Proposed New Service that Might
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(Please Print)
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T his advertisement is paid for by our owners, not our customers.
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�Evening Herald
(USPS M l }R0)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-9993
T uesday, Ja n u a ry 11, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, P u b lisher
Thomas Giordano, M an a g in g Editor
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Price Is Right
In Free Market
When President Reagan, in one of his first acts
of office, removed price controls on oil and
gasoline, there were those who predicted
catastrophic results.
Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum, D-’Ohio, called
the president’s decontrol action “hasty and illadvised." He said it would cost U.S, consumers
$10 billion.
Metzenbaum forced a vote on the subject in
Congress so that every Republican member must
put a "stam p of approval" on Reagan’s decontrol
measure. Thus, voters would know the senators
who "approve of higher gasoline prices and
higher fuel oil prices ... that add to the in­
flationary spiral."
Gasoline prices did go up for a short time, just
as they had been doing, steeply, under the price
controls. But it wasn’t long before there was an
abrupt change in the price trend.
Now, and in the long run, the consumer is much
better off without the controls. Mr. Reagan was
right in taking the action against price controls on
Jan. 28, 1981. Wherever they are used, controls
tend to hold up prices artificially by eliminating
competition. Maximum prices tend to become the
going rate and the public foots the bill.
What has happened in the two years since
presidential deregulation of gasoline and oil? A
lot. There has been a worldwide nil glut and a
recession that reduced the U.S.- demand for
gasoline. And we have not seen the $10 billion
price spiral predicted by Metzenbaum.
Competition has forced gasolini! prices down.
There is more self-service. There are discounts
for cash customers. All this demonstrates the
proposition that a free m arket cuts costs in
productive ways that a re unlikely or impossible
under the rigid hand of government regulation.

Texan Leaves Fold
The historic tension within the Democratic
Party between Southern conservatives and
Northern liberals has been dramatized by what
amounted to the party’s expulsion of Rep. Phil
Gramm of Texas.
When the House Democratic leadership denied
him the seat he has held on the Budget Com­
mittee, Gramm resigned from Congress, returned
to his district and announced he would run for reelection as a Republican in a special election soon.
That was an honorable and astute course of
action for the congressman to follow. We expect
him to be re-elected. He won re-election in
November, running as a Democrat,, without
Republican opposition, against a lone Libertarian
opponent, and received 94 percent of the vote.
On the other hand, we cannot fault the
Democratic caucus for, in effect, expelling him.
He becam e the leader of those young conservative
Democrats who disagree with their p arty ’s
leadership on almost-cvery issue. On the Budget
Committee, he was the only Democrat to oppose
the budget plan put forward by chairman Jim
Jones in 1981 and instead co-sponsored, with
Republican Delbert Latta, a plan endorsed by
President Reagan.
A party which countenanced such disloyalty
could no longer discipline any member. The
Republican caucus would not have tolerated it if
one of its liberal members had so openly flouted
the GOP leadership.
Our two-party systeih requires that both
national parties be coalitions of the center, big
houses with many mansions. But, in Congress,
parliam entary responsibility requires at least a
token amount of party discipline.

BERRY'S WORLD

By SAM COOK

If Pro Football’s Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio
wasn’t on your summer vaetton itinerary, don’t
fear. Chevrolet’s Traveling Pro Football Hall of
Fame will come to you.
For three days, Jan. 13 through Jan. 16, the
Chevrolet exhibit will be on display at the
Altamonte Mall in Altamonte Springs.
The Pro Football Hall of Fame Is one of
America's prem ier sports showcases and the
central rep o sito ry of professional football
history. Founded in 1963, the Hall of Fame has
welcomed more than three million visitors since
its opening, and another 200,000-plus fans each
year passing through its portals.
By pooling Chevrolet's considerable
marketing resources and the Pro Football Hall
of Fame's vast store of pro football history and
memorabilia, the large-scale traveling exhibit is
designed to deliver more than enough action and
information to satisfy the most demanding of

football enthusiasts.
The focal point of each traveling unit is a
simulation of the Pro Football Hall of Fame
dome.
Inside the dome Is on exact replica of the Vince
I/ombardi niche at the Hall of Fame, including a
mural of Lombardi being carried off the field by
his team after a Super Bowl victory. His
biography accompanies a bonded bronze replica
of the Lombardi bust in the Hall of-Fame.
Nearby, the visitor will find small photographs
of all 114 Hall of Fame inductees. Four in­
dividual panels are devoted to this year's in­
ductees — Doug Atkins, George Musso, Sam
Huff and Merlin Olsen — officially enshrined at
the annual Pro Football Hall of Fam e [estival in
Canton, Aug. 7, 1982.
Three tape units provide continuous pro
football action and entertainment. "Fantastic
Finishes" features the key moment in 16 games

where victory’ was decided in the closing
moments of the game. "Super Bowl Highlights"
is a recap of action from the first four Super
Bowls (1967, ’68, '69 and 70). A videotaped minitour of the Pro Football Hall of Fam e in Canton
is also offered.
A pro football memento-filled showcase brings
to life the history-making events, personalities
and milestones of the game. Jerseys, helmets,
shoulder pads, footballs and other equipment
and uniforms are displayed — some represen­
ting the evolutionary stages of pro football
paraphernalia, and others having been worn by
various champion players through the decades.
On hand are facsimiles of Super Bowl rings by
Balfour, Josten’s and lenox Awards. Mementos
are placed in traveling units with specific
reference to the touring region, so that visitors
will see memorabilia keyed to pro teams in their

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

Our
Greatest
Resource

The Old
Double
Standard

With the advent of a new year, it is wor­
thwhile to look around and see the resources
the country has In this period of adversity.
America’s greatest resource is its bright,
energetic and ambitious young people. From
their dreams and work will come the
prosperity of tomorrow. This is a fact, not
simply a commencement season cliche.
Countless young people arc in the early
phase of their careers. They expect to make
their mark in life and be successful. If they
lack experience, they also are fortunate in
that they don’t have the depression syn­
drome. They aren’t inclined to look on the
dark side.
Heavens knows, there’s much to be con­
cerned about today. On the other hand, the
young Americans Who will run the country a
decade hence are confident they can create
wealth and improve our way of life. They are
planning ways to put money to work in new
business projects. If they are engineers or
scientists, they are convinced that there are
many Inventions in our future, which will
result in new business opportunities and
belter living.
The world Is in one of its periodic down
phases, but young people continue to be en­
thusiastic about, the future. They know, for
example, (hat Americans need more and
b elter housing, im proved public tra n ­
sportation, more advanced medical care
facilities, new communications and learning
machines. They intend to be involved in
developing the goods and services that are
corning into being in the 1980s.
The country Is experiencing hard times
after many good years, but pessimism isn't
likely to take root in a people traditionally
$ven to optimism. Tire can-do spirit is very
strong in Americans, despite the problems of
today. Innumerable young Americans are
studying the changes taking place in our
economy and society and pondering ways to
find new opportunities in the climate of
change. For example, u young man from
Michigan recently told me that he had done
very well in selling ski equipment in an area
plagued by layoffs at industrial plants.
1 remember, as a youngster in the Great
Depression, touring a model home in Garden
City, New York. The economic situation was
appalling, but the model house excited the
attention of thousands ol people who toured it
and marveled at the super-modem kitchen.
This type of model home sparked new en­
terprises. The same sort of thing is happening
today as countless young people discover
home computers and their extraordinary
capabilities. From such discoveries will come
new occupations, new Jobs and new in­
vestment.
In the midst of hard times, we should look at
the bright side and understand the im­
portance of the dreams that fill the minds of
young Americans.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to the editor are welcomed (or
publication. All letters must be signed, with
a mailing address and, if possible, a
telephone number so the Identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening
Herald wtU respect the wishes ol writers
who do not want their names In print The
Evening Herald also reserves the right to
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
to space requirements.

ROBERT WALTERS

Business Failures Increase
WASHINGTON (NEA) — During every
hour of the work day throughout the year that
Just ended, 11 business lin n s — many of them
small, struggling companies - were forced to
declare bankruptcy.
While public attention has been focused on
the escalating unemployment rale as an
Indicator o( the nation’s current economic
difficulties, the equally disturbing climb of
the business failure rate has gone virtually
unnoticed.
"Businesses are failing at a rate not seen
since the Great Depression of 50 years ago,"
says Rep. John J. 1-aFalce, D-N.Y., chairman
of the general oversight subcommittee of the
House Small Business Committee.
"Today's business failures mean lost Jobs,
ruined lives and dashed dreams," adds
U F a lc e .' ‘They also take a toll in human sclfestecm...They mean an end to the American
dream of opportunity and owning one's own
business.
The Dun h Bradstreet Corp., which has
been compiling business failure statistics for
the past 125 years, has just reported that
m ore than 25,500 companies declared
bankruptcy In 1982.
That figure is the highest for any year since
the early 1930s, when business failures
peaked at 31,822 in 1932.
Equally disturbing Is the fact that the 1982
business failure rate Is 50 percent higher than
the 17,044 level of 1981, more than twice as
high as the 11,742 rate of 1980 and Jli times as
high as the rates recorded in the late 1970s.
Release of the most recent statistics follows
President Reagan's preposterous suggestion
that the country's economic difficulties can
be ameliorated if every business merely hires
one additional employee.
These figures show, however, that since
Reagan was inaugurated, almost 42,000
companies have failed — and now don't
em ploy anybody. M oreover, the sm all
businesses which most desperately needed
assistance during the past two years received
little aid from the president's "Economic
Recovery Program.”
Although 97 percent of all domestic cor­
porations can be classified as small
businesses because they have assets of less

than *8 million, those firms received only 11.5
percent of the benefits from the Reaganinspired tax revisions which were supposed to
help business recover from the recession.
The vast majority of the benefits — in the
form of accelerated depreciation schedules,
harbor leasing" and corporate Income
tax rate reductions — were purposely
structured to be suitable only for the coun­
try ’s largest corporations.
But even those firms have not fared well
under the president’s leadership. Virtually all
of the measures of business prosperity —
including industrial output, capital in­
vestment and after-tax profits — have
dropped sharply during Reagan's tenure.
Major firms which have joined small
businesses In filing bankruptcy petitions In
recent years include the Wickes Cos., Braniff
International, AM International, Saxon
Industries, Mclxmth Steel and the Uonel
Corp.
Although Dun A Bradstreet figures are
valuable because of the long-term statistical
base maintained by the company, they do not
reflect the lull scope of business failures In
any year.
In 1981, for example, when D &amp; B counted
slightly more than 17,000 failures, business
bankruptcy petitions filed with all federal
courts totaled 47,000 to 66,000. (Differing
m easuring techniques account for the
disparity in those figures.)
In addition, uncounted thousands of
businesses are forced to shut down every year
but are never reported as bankruptcies
because they pay off their creditors before
abandoning operations.
TheWhlte House Is promoting prospects (or
an economic recovery, but many economists
share the concern expressed by Dr. Edward I.
Altman, a professor ol finance at New York
University and an expert on business
failures:
“The real risk la not whether the economy
will turn around and stage a recovery. The
real risk Is how long the recovery will last. If
the turnaround Is relatively short-then
thousands of firms, particularly small ones,
will not have lime to get back on their feet."

NEW YORK JNEA) - Here’s an in­
te re stin g , ultim ately enlightening, little
puzzle to start you off on the right foot in 1983:
Who wrote the following paragraph, and
about whom was It written?
“The Senator is aware that there are those
who believe that he has single-handedly
obstruct ed and delayed the Senate's business.
He is unmoved. His constituents did not send
him to Washington to turn his back on what he
regards as legislative disaster, he said.
•‘Everybody would like to be loved,' he added,
"but sometimes the price is too high."’
Note that the unnamed senator is depicted
as a hero for being willing to accept con­
demnation as the price of Integrity.
Now the trouble is that for the last two
weeks of 1982 the name Jesse Helms, the
senior senator from North Carolina, was
virtually synonymous in the public mind with
the word “filibuster," yet the media almost
unanimously pilloried Helms for his actions.
It Is difficult, offhand, to recall any occasion
In recent years on which a single senator has
undergone a heavier deluge of sustained
abuse than Helms endured for his sturdy but
ultimately futile filibuster against President
Reagan's proposed 5-cents-a-gallon gasoline
tax.'
In most cases the media w ert through the
formality of putting the denunciatory .words
in the mouth of some senator or senatorial
aide, usually anonymous, who was allegedly
outraged because Helms was compelling the
Senate to delay its recess for Christmas. But
it didn't take an expert on such things to
recognize that the media were greatly
relishing this opportunity to sink their tangs
into Helms, preparatory to destroying thU
stiff-necked conservative altogether when he
comes up for re-election in 1984.
Well, then, who wrote that glutinous little
paragraph? Did it appear in some con­
servative publication like Human Events or
the Conservative Digest? No, it didn’t. Did
Husher find it, then, in the New York Tribune
for Feb. 3,1856, apropos the legislative tactics
of Massachusetts' great anti-slavery senator,
Charles Sumner?
No, again. Sorry 'bout that.
To end your suspense, the paragraph in
question was taken from a sweetheart story
by reporter Marty Tolchln in The New York
Times for Dec. 12 — less than a month ago.
The subject of the piece, however, was not
Jesse Helms. It was Ohio’s ultra-liberal
Democrat, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum.
And therein, of course, lies the moral ol the
story; the old double standard Is alive and
well and roosting In the skulls ol the liberal
media.
Whether a particular filibuster Is a good
thing or a bad thing, therefore, depends
strictly on how you happen to feel about
whatever action is being blocked. Met­
zenbaum moved Tolchln to that lachrymose
tribute by threatening filibusters against
various pro-business measures during the
summer and autumn. Sen. Lowell Weicker of
Connecticut, a nominal Republican but one of
the few members of either party in the Senate
who can equal Metzenbaum's commitment tc
liberalism similarly endeared himself to the
media last fall with a nicely timed series of
one-man filibusters that blocked action on
various social-conservative measures (antiabortion, pro-school prayer) favored by Sen.
Helms.
But when Jesse Helms’ own turn came,
filibusters suddenly stopped being, In the eyes
of the Washington press corps, Instruments of
divine intervention In human affairs and
became the ugly weapons of a stubborn,
arrogant and fundamentally vicious loner.

JACK ANDERSON

A rm s Spending M a y Hurt Economy

"So you broke your New Year's resolution
about getting involved in assassinations. So
what! C'mon. comrade, nobody's pertectr

f

WASHINGTON—P resident R eagan’s
stubborn drive for m ilitary superiority may
cost the U nited S ta te s its econom ic
superiority, unless the reckless spending on
dubious weaponry Is brought jinder control.
For years, 1 have warned that the people In
the Pentagon are hopelessly infatuated with
complex weapons that either don't work or
have only marginal usefulness.
The spending orgy is promoted by the
military-munitions lobby, and the stakes are
staggering. Billions have been lavished on
armaments that should have been scrapped
or never should have been built In the first
place.
A conservative brain trust, with close ties to
President Reagan, has now reached the same
conclusion. The Herbage Foundation, as this
group Is called, is deeply troubled over the
billions that have been squandered on supersophisticated, ruinously expensive weapons

that are ineffective, if not inoperable.
My associate Indy Badhwar has obtained a
copy of the Heritage Foundation's findings,
which are now circulating Inside the White
House. Here are just a few examples:
-T h e Army's next major weapons system
will be DIVAD, the Division Air Defense gun.
It will be aimed by radar and computer. "But
the radar and computer will be hard pressed
to withstand the rigors of field operations on a
tracked vehicle," the report warns. The
Army figures DIVAD will be "successful" If it
knocks out a stationary helicopter at treetop
level—hardly your typical combat situation.
-T h e Navy’s claim of Increased ability to
rule the waves is based partly on the
Tomahawk cruise missile, which is supposed
to be mounted on Navy ships. Yet the
Tomahawk-which carries o.ily a single 1,009
bomb—" h a s experienced only m oderate
(light success...and can only be aimed at

predetermined stationary ta rg e ts'-a g a in ,
hardly a typical combat situation.
—The Navy is "dangerously lacking"* in
fleet air defense, and has put all its chips on
two weapons: the F-14 Phoenix interceptor
and the Aegis system of escort vessels. But
-both systems are so expensive that the Navy
has been able to buy only small quantities.
Each Phoenix costs more than *50 million,
while the Aegis vessels cost |1 billion apiece.
To make matters worse, neither alrdef ense
weapon has been tested against the specific
kind of attack It’s supposed to repel. The testa
simply sre too costly. Testing of the plane and
the escort vessel consists of firing two
missiles each. In addition, both systems rely
on strong radar devices that become
"beacons on which enemy forces can key
while still too far away to be detected."
—The Air Force is relying Increasingly on

long-range heat-seeking and radar missiles
for air-to-air combat, even though they are
“inherently less reliable" than cannons. In
some tests, the missiles "killed" our own
planes.
—More than 90 percent of anti-tank funds is
going to weapons systems that can hit enemy
targets at long range, though "ground conflict
will be won or lost in close encounters." The
report observes glumly that a hit at 3,500
m eters may be "a fine example of sniping"
that jars the enemy, "but It doesn’t win
battles."
-T e s t conditions are often "unreillstic and
benign." Not only that, the computer soft­
w are of these complex weapons la seldom
even tested. When tests do turn up problems,
they are often ignored and production goes
ahead anyway. As a result, too many lowquality weapons continue to be acquired even
though they should be scrapped.

�Disney's Dream

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Jan. I I, 1983—5A

W hat EPCOT Is Doing About Its Future
By DICK KLEINER
Special to the Herald
As I walked around EPCOT, the brave new world
al Walt Disney World, I remembered a con­
versation I had had years ago with Walt Disney
about EPCOT.
Be had explained his vision: EPCOT —
Experimental Prototype Community Of Tomorrow
— would be, Disney said at the time, a model of
what our cities would be like in years and centuries
to come. It would show how people would be living
in the future.
Now here was EPCOT — and it wasn't anything
like Disney had outlined in our conversation. I
certainly wasn't disappointed in EPCOT, which
recently opened here but it was different from what
I had expected, based on Disney's own concept.
“You have to remember," John Bench told me,
when 1expressed my doubt, "that we are not calling
this EPCOT, we arc calling it EPCOT Center."
Hench is senior vice-president of WED Enterprises
and has worked for years on the EPCOT Center
project.
,

There is plenty of room left for the original Disney
dream of a community of tomorrow, Donn Taluin,
chairman of the executive committee of Walt
Disney Productions, told me that they own 28,000
acres of this Florida real estate — “We have a
larger piece of land than Manhattan Island or the
city of San Francisco," he says.

"This Center is just the beginning. We had to have
something to attract attention, and attract dollars.
We're still going to build Walt's dream."

So there will be much more here. Bench said
there will be more foreign exhibits — and one
already in the works is a Moroccan building. '

What they have built here, a few miles and a 20minute monorail ride from the Magic Kingdom of
Walt Disney World, is what can best be described as
a permanent World's Fair. It has incredible
exhibits, housed in daring buildings. In one, the
Universe of Energy, for example, you sit down in
what appears to be a normal theater seat — and
soon the whole theater, with you in it, begins to

( iu e s ts a t E P C O T C e n te r, th e n e w p ro je c t of th e f u tu r e u n d e r ta k e n b y th e
W alt D is n e y W o rld p eo p le, e n t e r b e n e a th a g ia n t s ilv e r s p h e r e c a lle d
S p a c e s h ip E a r t h .

C a n c e r
Body Could Cause Cancer
In Fighting Other Diseases
BOSTON (UPI) — Disease-fighting white
blood cells release a toxic substance that
causes genetic damage In animals and could
lead to cancer In people with chronic infectious
diseases, a study said.
Phagocytes, or white blood cells, have been
found to alter DNA, the chemical component
ol genes, and could be the first step in the
development of cancer In people most often
exposed to them — chronic inflammatory
disease sufferers, researchers reported in the
New England Journal of Medicine.
"We hypothesize those same toxic products
that may be good for you in terms of fighting
infection may be bad for you in term s of
chronic exposure," said Dr. Alan B. Weitberg
of Massachusetts General Hospital.
Weitberg led the team from MGH and
Children's Hospital Medical Center In Boston
that based their conclusions on studies of
hamsters, which like humans are mammals.
“ It Is Important to show these same changes
occur In mammalian cells because it brings us
closer to what may be happening in m an,"
said Weitberg. He said the genetic damage
may lead to cancer in humans.

Although previous study indicated
phagocytes might have some harmful effects,
the hamster study was the first to show white
blood cells actually change DNA.
Although the finding was "intriguing," the
doctors cautioned more work needs to be done
to prove human white blood cells can be in­
volved In cancer.
A connection between chronic inflammatory
diseases and a high cancer risk has long been
noted. For example, people with ulcerative
colitis, a viral infection, run a very high
chance of developing cancer of the colon.
During a flareup, the inflamed area — the
bowels in a person with colitis — is washed
with phagocytes that attempt to control in­
fection by enveloping or "eating" the bacteria.
R esearchers sim ulated this infection­
lighting process and introduced the human
white blood cells — which had already begun
their attack on bacteria — into hamster
ovaries.
A test similar to those commonly used to
determine substances that cause cancer
revealed the blood cells had damaged
chromosomes In the hamster ovary cells.

N e w T est O n T h e W a y
MONTREAL (UPI) - Blood tests to detect
breast and lung cancer may replace other
methods currently used by doctors in the early
identification of malignant growths, a leading
cancer researcher says.
The new tests, which could be performed In
a doctor's office, may be available within two
years, Dr. Phil Gold reported from his office at
McGill University's prestigious cancer center.
"C an cer h a s required extensive Investlgstion to determine the extent of a
growth,” Gold said. "But that will soon
become a thing of. the past."
Gold, 46, physiclan-tn-chlef at Montreal
Genera) hosp ital, has spearheaded the
development of blood tests to And bowel
cancer. He recently has made progress in
refining tests to detect lung and breast cancer
long before a growth Is found by other

move.
In others, you ride inside a huge sphere, or
through a garden in a boat, or watch a fantastic 3-D
movie. You learn about energy, (ood, com­
munications and our national history, and you hear
predictions about the future in those areas, too.
There are two halves to EPCOT Center as it nowstands. The half you see first is Future World,
where the exhibits mentioned earlier are housed.
Then, nestled around a newly built lagoon, there is
World Showcase, with buildings for the exhibits
from many different nations.
You can visit France, or Canada, Italy, Germany,
China, England, Japan. Mexico or a replica of a
Williamsburgh home housing an American exhibit.
Each one has a show of some sort (incredible 360degree films—in which the screen is all around
you-for China and Canada I and shops featuring
items from those countries, and restaurants with
foods and drinks from there, too.

“The King of Morocco," Bench said, "is the first
foreign ruler to take an active interest in his
country's building. Be has a model of it in his palace
and studies it constantly. And he has insisted that
we use real Moroccan tile in the construction."

When the real EPCOT is built — that ex­
perimental prototype community of tomorrow
Disney envisioned —they may do something even
more bold and daring than they have already done.
"We are even thinking in term s of showing a
community with no crime," Tatum said. "A
community with no religious hatred. A community
with perfect health care."
At the moment, however, what they have is a
World’s Fair, to go with the already-established
amusement park that has been so successful in
California iDiseyland) and Florida (Walt Disney .
World).
They think big down here. The opening of EP­
COT—m arred, but not totally ruined, by a down­
pour on opening night-featured a few big bands
playing.
Well, a few may be an understatement. Scattered
around EPCOTs 260 acres were seven bands, all
playing at once &lt;but so far apart they didn't
overlap). There were bands led by Count basic,
lioncl Hampton, Woody Borman, Barry James.
Bob Crosby, Pete Fountain and the Glenn Miller
Orchestra.
They arc thinking big when it conies to the future,
too. Already under construction are new buildings
in the Future World area, with themes of life styles
and the ocean, and, in later years, they will be
joined by others with health and outer space
themes.
Besides the Moroccan pavilion, the World
Showcase area will have buildings featuring
exhibits, merchandise and food from Israel, Spain,
Venezuela and the African Continent.
"Wt are going to need more hotel space down
here," says Tatum, and he is probably right.

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drawals at the batik or at our 24-hour
Atlantic Bankaround automated tellers.

O ption No.4.* The Money
Market Management
Account.

Hither Atlantic’s Money Market
Account or Money Market Checking
O ption No. 2* The M oney Account can he used as a basic
building block tor Atlantic's Money
Market Checking
Market Management Account. It
Account.
combines high-yield earnings and
With a S2.500 minimum deposit, checking access with optional Dis­
we offer a new Money Market C!becking count Brokerage Service. Ymr account
will include free checking and a com­
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This account offers more value
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Call our Hotline.
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information call our toll-free Financial
Hotline today. Or see your Atlantic
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A tla n tic N a tio n a l B a n k o f F lo rid a
B a n k in g L o c a tio n s S ta te w id e
M e m b e r I I &gt;K!

methods, like X-rays.
"This refining of blood tests provides a new
dimension in cancer diagnosis,” Gold said.
Within two years patients may have blood
tests In a doctor’s office to help in the early
detection of lung and breast cancer.
"In another couple of y ean If all goes well,
our test should be available to everyone," Gold
said.
The new blood tests, when perfected, may
replace biopsies, which Involve surgery to
determine the type and extent of cancer, he
said.

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“The story Is happy and hopeful," Gold said,
adding, about 1,000 laboratory tests would be
conducted during the next two years on each
type of cancer before the test Is ready for
general use.

Telephone Costs Going Up
Southern Bell telephone customers in the everyone in Florida to pay the same local rate
Oviedo-Winter Springs ares with numbers for telephone service because of the big dif­
beginning with 365 and 327 will begin paying ferences in size of local calling areas.
slightly more for service on Jan. 31 when a
A telephone In Miami that allows a customer
rate regrouping takes effect.
to call more than 700,000 other telephones is
Basic residence service will increase 30 more valuable than a phone In Cedar Key that
cents and business service will increase 85 can call fewer than 2,000 phones."
cents.
Oviedo and Winter Springs telephone users
"Oviedo-Winter Springs will move Into a can call other areas such as Geneva, Sanford,
new rate band, causing the rate increase, Winter- Park and Orlando toll free. The
because of the growth In the number of number of main telephones and PBX (Private
telephone customers in that calling a rea," Branch Exchange) trunks in the Oviedoexplained Southern Bell spokesman U r r y Winter Springs calling area has grown to more
than 280,000, the maximum number of
Strickler.
Florida la divided Into 12 rate bands which telephones allowable in the present rate group.
are based on the number of telephone users in
In order to provide for this phenominal
local cfiBng areas. Rate groups differ in size growth Southern Bell has been spending
from fewer th an '2,000 customers to more than almost a million dollars a year for the past
700,000 customers.
three y e a n just for outside cable construction
"D ifferen t r a te bands a re n ecessary in the Oviedo-Winter Springs area. In
because your telephone service becomes more December 1981, a new electronic switching
valuable as the number of telephones you can office began to serve Oviedo custom en. The
call in your local calling area increases,” overall cost of this state-of-the-art system was
explained Strickler. "It would not be fair for over four million dollan.

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�SPO RTS
Williams, Jones
Join '100 Club'
As Panthers Rip

Lady Patriots Keep Cool,
Hold O ff Seminoles, 56-54

Osceola For 45
Crooms cagers Daryl Williams and
center Alvin Jones Joined the “ 100 Club"
Monday night as the Panthers blasted
Kissimmee Osceola, 71-35, at Seminole
High School.
Williams, a stylish point guard, handed
out 14 assists to give him 100 (or the
season in It gam es while Jones, a highjumping post m an, grabbed 11 rebounds
to give hlin 101 for the year.
The victory was the 45th in succession
over a three-year span for the Sanford
ninth grade and the lllh against no losses
this year.
"The press buffaloed them the first
quarter," said coach John McNamara
about a 22-5 first-quarter spurt. Williams
and Jones each tossed in seven points
while Robert Hill added six to fuel the
rout.
Hill paced all scorers with 14 points
while Williams added 13. Jones finished
with 11 while Dexter Franklin and Marc
Kein had six each.
The Panthers continue a busy week
Wednesday when th e y host ta k e Howell
at Seminole High School. On Thursday
Ocala Vanguard, the last school to beat
them In 1981, comes to Seminole Com­
munity College. Both tipoffs are at 6:30
p.m.
CROOMS (71)
Hill 7 0-014, A. Jones 51-111, Brinson 1
1-2 3, Williams 6 1-1 13, Franklin 3 (H) 6,
Klein 3 016, Wright 2 0-1 4, IJggons 1 OO
2 ,tawrence 0 2-2 2, Cooper 20 0 4 , Harris
2 0-1 4, Mitchell 0 -0 -0 , Cotton 0 00 0, J.
Jones 1 00 2, Total : 33 5-9 71.

m
i
m t^

p
i

fc

1

Smith's 21 Points Lead J V
In Junior varsity action, coach Sonja
Manley's tady Seminoles rolled to an
easy 73-39 victory for their sixth victory
without a loss.
Andcll Smith tossed in 21 points to lead
both teams while Temeika Alexander
and Catherine Anderson had 13 apiece.
Sonja Jenkins chipped in 11.
Smith and Alexander combined for 17
second-quarter points as the Tribe rolled
to a 44-13 halftime bulge.
Kim Wain led the Patriots with 12 and
Cam! Twaddcll added 10.

Haratd Photo by Bonnlt Wlaboldt

M o n a B e n to n stu ffs a s h o t by t a k e B r a n t l e y 's H h o n d a V azq u ez.

Coach R&gt; mie Betris and his tak e
B rantley Lady P atrio ts have en­
countered their share of misfortunes in
the closing seconds of basketball games.
M issed free throws, uncontrolled
rebounds, inopportune technical fouls
and bad luck have given the girls a fewsleepless nights.
Well, the tady Patriots snoozed easy
Monday night. Something finally went
their way. Two clutch baskets by Sherry
"Ice" Asplen, two pressure free throws
by linda Trimble and a long rebound
into the hands of Trimble after a missed
free throw were enough to lift the
Patriots past the Seminoles, 56-54, in
Five Star Conference action at Seminole
Community College.
"We finally played 32 minutes," said a
relieved Betris after Brantley improved
to 5-9 overall and 4-4 in conference.
"(Sherry) Asplin was ice out there.
Tracy Meikle and Jill Patrick did a great
Job picking up the slack for I jnda Nunez
(ill and missed the game)."
Seminole, B-5 overall and 5-3 in the Five
Star, Jumped to 10-1 and 16-5 leads near
the end of the first quarter as sophomore
sensation Mona Benton tossed the eight
points. Sara P ritch ett and Rhonda
Vazquez retaliated with four points to
draw Brantley within 16-9 at the close of
the quarter.
Brantley caught fire at the beginning of
the second period, running off eight
straight points — four on wing jumpers
from Asplen — to take a 17-16 lead.
Sophomore Michelle Brown converted a
three-point play for the lead.
*
Just as suddenly, however, the Patriots
went cold and Seminole parlayed six
straight free throws — four by Benton —
and a swift Diedre Hillery to Benton to
Maxine Campbell relay for a 28-19 lead.
It would be the only shot Campbell would
convert in 15 attempts.
The 'Noles then added a free throw
along with buckets by Arlene Jones and
Hillery for a commanding ?3-19 halftime
lead.
Benton had 13 first-half points and
Hillery 12 as Sanford hit 12 of 32 shots for
38 percent. Trimble and Asplen had four
each for the Patriots who hit Just 7 of 21

Prep Basketball
for 33 percent.
Brantley surged again to open the
second half, running off eight in a row,
the first and last by Vazquez to pull
within 33-26. Benton, though, tossed in
two jumpers from the baseline and the
Seminoles took a 43-37 lead into the final
eight minutes.
For the third straight time tak e
Brantley went on a tear to open the
period. Pritchett, Patrick and finally
Vazquez ran off eight in a row to take a
45-44 edge with 4:53 to play.
In the meantime, Seminole missed its
first 12 shots of the quarter after a
Cicnene Stallworth free throw and didn’t
get a bucket until Hillery tossed in a
rebound shot for a 46-45 lead with 3:30 to
play. Benton got a breakaway for a 48-45
lead 30 seconds later.
Meikle, a strong-rebounding junior,
picked off a carom and tossed it in to pull
the Patriots within 48-17 with 2:42 to go.
After two turnovers, Asplen swished one
from the wing for a 49-48 Brantley lead
with 1:58 to play.
Junior Sonja Jenkins hit a free throw to
pull Seminole even, but Asplen and
Meikle countered for the Patriots to spurt
them ahead, 53-49 with just 1:03 to play.
Jenkins canned another free throws
but Trimble came back with her pressure
throws for a 56-50 lead with 26 seconds
left.
With 16 seconds to play, Benton cashed
in on a jump shot, stole the ball and was
fouled. The cool 10th grader notched both
free throws to pull the Tribe within 56-54
with just 12 ticks left.
Brown was fouled but missed the free
throw. The rebound, however, went long
and Trimble snatched it. She fed to
Vazquez who was fouled with five
seconds left. She missed the free toss,
though, and the 'Notes had one last
chance after a time out with three
seconds left.
' Campbell whipped the ball to Benton
,who rifled it,to ^Ullery. The 6-1 junior's

Scarfaf (7 or more games)
Ronnie Murphy, Oviedo
Paul Hoffman, ta k e Brantley
Alexis Cleveland, Lyman
Calvin Bryant, Seminole
Fred Miller, ta k e Mary
Darryl Merthle, ta k e Mary
Willie Mitchell, Seminole
Efrem Brooks, Lake Howell
BUI McCartney, Oviedo
Skip Gordon, Lake HoweU
Rod HUlman, Lyman
Tom Felter, Lyman
Eric Trombo, la k e Brantley
John Hamrick, Lake Howell
Gene Angel, Oviedo

VERNON LAW

g

Fg. F t Pts. Avg.
25.4
21.8
I8 J
16 1

1J 137 52 326
11 86 68 204
10 79 30 188
16 104 50 258
10 60 30 150
10 66 13 145
16 89 34 212
n 61 ig 141
13 57 33 147
u 52 12 116
10 34 30 98
10 37 20 94
n 40 21 101
11 33 31 97
9 34 10 78

High
37
31
32
36
15 0 26
14.5 24

13.2 19
12 9 24
il j

is

10.6 22

u 16
9.4 18
9.2 16
8.9

17

8.7 14

PAUL HOFFMAN

.

G.
13
11
10
16
18
13
11
10
10
10

R eh
195
120
77
123
114
87
64
55
51

so

Avg.
15.0
10.9
7.7
7.7
7.1
6.7
5.8
5.5
5.1
5.0

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

A uista (7 or mare garnet)
Vernon taw , Seminole
Mike Evans, tak e Brantley
Mike Garriques, Ijk e Brantley
Skip Gordon, tak e Hoviell
Gene Angel, Oviedo

a
18
11
11
11
9

A st
130
46
42
41
32

Avg.
8.1
4.2
3.9
3.7
3.6

a

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Steals (7 or more garnet)
Ronnie Murphy, Oviedo
Gene Angel, Oviedo
BUI McCartney, Oviedo
Vernon taw , Seminole
Fred MUler, ta k e ’Mary

StL
55
34
31
37
23

Avg.
4.2
3.8
14
13
2.3

13
9
13
16
10

Seminole
16 17 10 11-54
ta k e Brantley
9 10 IS 19-56
Total fouls — Seminole- 20, take
Brantley 16. Fouled out — none.
Technical — ta k e Brantley coach Betris.

pushovers
(football is a
W y m o rt Tech Is lad by
W itherspoon but
it had a year ago.
Fred M ille r and
of tha purest
inside come*
Irom Donald Grayson, Bobby Counts, Jett
Reynolds and Neal W tllo n while B illy
Dunn can till It up In a h u rry off tha
bench.

G. 1Ftm. Fta. P e t
16 50 63 79.4
10 30 38 79.2
11 19 24 79.1
16 50 63 79.4
11 18 23 78.3
10 21 27 77.8
10 30 40 75.0
11 21 28 75.0
11 68 100 68.0
11 31 46 67.4
12 14 21 66.7

Rebounding (7 or more games)
Ronnie Murphy, Oviedo
Paul Hoffman, take Brantley
Tom Felter, Lyman
WiUie Mitchell, Seminole
William Wynn, Seminole
BUI McCartney, Oviedo
John Hamrick, take Howell
Jam es PUot, Lyman
Darryl Merthle, take Mary
Donald Grayson, tak e Mary

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

SEMINOLE (54)
Benton 9 7-8 25, M. Campbell 1 04) 2,
Hillery 6 2-214, Jones 1 3-15, Stallworth 1
1- 2 4, P. Campbell 0 0-0 0, Hardy 1 2-2
Jenkins 0 1-2 1, Total: 19 1620 54.
L\KF. BRANTLEY (56)
Vazquez 4 2-8 10, Patrick 3 1-2 7,
Pritchett 33-19, Asplen 5 6110, Brown 2
2- 8 1, Trimble 3 2-6 8, Meikle 3 04)
Totals: 23 1629 56.

I p m. L a kt B ra n llty i t S tm inol* Soyl
The Tribe is looking to up its Five Star
Conference record to S t against the
unpredictable Lake Brantley Patriot*.
The Patriot*, 47, won th a lr first three
game* but have lost seven ol the la tt
eight Paul Hottman lead* Brantley with
a Jt I scoring average and I0.» reboun
d in g average. E ric T rom bo. M ik e
Carrique*. Dennis Groseclost and M ika
Evan* bolster the P a trio t*' lineup
Two tree throw* by Vernon Law w ith 2)
second* remaining In I ha game gave
Seminole a narrow SOaf victory over
Spruce Creek Friday. Calvin " K lk i"
Bryant and W illi* M itche ll have been the
most consistent perform er* lo r the 'Note*
each scored l i point* against Spruce
Creek Torle Hendrick*. W illiam Wynn
Law complete tha starting lineup
comas fro m

going senior can go airborne from the
free throw line with the best of them
and send the crowd Into ecstacy with an
acrobatic slam.
One such masterpiece shattered a
glass backboard In practice last year.
The only thing Murphy is shattering
this year are records, lie is closing In on
2,000 career points and will also be the
Lions all-tim e rebounder. With
Oviedo's recent surge, the Lions are
heading for another 20-game season. It
would be the third of Murphy’s fouryear career, something Phillips doesn't
hesitate to point out.
"We’ve won 148 games in 94 years,"
said the "Digger." "Since Ronnie has
been here, we’ve been 68-33. Every
since h e 's s ta rte d playing, we’ve
averaged 20 wins a year.
"I was kinda wondering about next
year. What's It going to be like without
him? I guess we'll Just have to adapt."
An adaptation county coaches have
longed for for four years.

Free Throw Accuracy
(20 or more attempts)
1. Calvin Bryant, Seminole
2. Alexis Geveland, Lyman
3. Efrem Brooks, take Howell
4. Mike Garriques, take Brantley
5- Greg Pilot, Lyman
6. Hod Hillman, Lyman
7. Eric Trombo, take Brantley
8. Paul Hoffman, take Brantley
9. John Hamrick, take HoweU
10. Torie Hendricks, Seminole

Thursday, Seminole takes on Apopka,
a surprising 50-17 winner over ta k e Mary
Monday, while the Patriots travel to
ta k e Mary. - SAM COOK

Baskotball

which will never lose Its luster — the

dunk. When given the opportunity,
Prep Basketball1 slam
such as a breakaway steal, the easy­
And some of that improvement in­
volved toning down his attack. Gone are
the behind the back passes and the lookone-way-throw-lhe-other w histlers.
They’ve been replaced by good, fun­
damental basketball.
"Ronnie has started to play less
fancy," said Phillips. "He used to try
and razzle-dazzle every thing. Now,
he’s more conservative. He doesn't try
ta thread the needle as much and it's
really helped his game."
Murphy Is averaging 25.4 points in 13
games. The Lions are 9-4 and have won
eight of their last nine. Murphy has 55
steals and 42 assists. He is shooting 50.4
percent from the floor.
"Ronnie's scoring is up a little and his
rebounding is down (three per game),"
pointed out Phillips. "But every time a
shot goes up, two players block him off
the boards."
Although most of the Murphy attack
has calmed down, there is one area

"The same crap has been beating us all
year," said Betris. “ We come back and
take the lead, then we think we've got it
and end up losing.
"We've got these buttons that say 'We
Believe,’ but I think we might have
started losing a little fath. This win
should help. People better look out for
ta k e Brantley. We can play with
anyone."
The Patriots hit 23 of 44 shots for 52
percent. They were a red-hot 16 of 25 m
the second half. Seminole, meanwhile,
converted just 7 of 29 in the final half to
finish with 19 of 61 for 31 percent for the
game.
The Patriots won despite converting
Just 10 of 29 free throws. The Tribe hit 16
of 20.
Benton, averaging 20.6 going into the
game, topped all scorers with 25 points.
Hillery added 14 but Just two in the
second half. She missed half of the fourth
period with foul trouble but still finished
with 17 rebounds.
ta k e Brantley was very balanced with
Asplen and .Vazquez each getting 10
m arkers. P ritchett (nine), Trimble
(eight), Patrick (seven) and Meikle (six)
joined the procession.

Tonight

Murphy Makes Spectacular Look Commonplace
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Oviedo's Ronnie Murphy has learned
how to m ake the spectacular look
commonplace. Which is Just about the
only thing left for this amazing
basketball acrobat.
After signing early with Jacksonville
University, Murphy might have ap­
proached his senior year with com­
placency. After all, what was left to
accomplish? t a s t season, the 6-4 leaper
scored 25 points and pulled down 18
rebounds a game. These numbers
despite being double and triple teamed
as the legend of Ronnie Murphy spread
throughout Central Florida.
For his exploits, Murphy was named
Burger King Player of the Year. He
was named to the 3A All-State Second
Team. He was given the "Red Carpet"
treatment by a host of major colleges
before picking Jacksonville over South
Florida and West Kentucky.
So what do you do for an encore?
"Get better," said Oviedo coach Dale
"Digger" Phillips. "Ronnie has Im­
proved a little bit each game."

six-foot turnaround jumper hit the backboard then the rim, and rolled off.

I p.m. DeLand at Lym an Bays
The Greyhounds. 4 4. dropped a SJ4S
decision to Oviedo Saturday daspita
gaining a 27 JJ h a lftim e advantage.
DeLand slipped past Seminole la tt week
and i* looking fo r anether SemlnoU
County foe to beat.
Tha Bulldogs hava a ringer In Chat*
Brown but tha 'Hounds hava A lt ils
Cleveland. Rod Hillm an. Tom Falter.
James Pilot and Grag Pilot who hava all
contributed to tha team 's success this
season.

&gt;:M p m. S ltM Height* (Mich.) at
Semin#le Cemmwnity Callage Dirt*
Tha Lady Raiders. 5-7 ware upended by
the last out of state opponent it lacad
(Biuefieid State. W.Va.) daspita out­
standing p a rlo rm a n c a s by Sanford's
Cathy Jonas ( a points), Katrina An
dtrsson US points and Valaria Roeesitr
(14 points).
Mindy P a trk k run* the show iro m tha
point guard position, Jonas Is at tha othar
guard. Anders son and Roessler are tha
forwards and A ] Sue Winternheiner is tha
center. Strong support comas Irom
Evelyn Smith and Missy McClelland

•

R o n n ie M u r p h y , O v i e d q b a s k e t b a l l a c r o b a t , s a i l s u p b y t h e r i m
t w o e a s y p o in ts a g a in s t N e w S m y r n a

B each.

fo r

f t IS p.m. DeLand a t Lymaa O irls
This game precedes tha varsity boys
matchup at I and laatures two ol the top
center* In the F ive sta r Conlaranca.
Lyman s Vlhhi M cM u rra r Is averaging in
double figure* in both scoring and
rebounding while D eLand* Srldgetle
Gordon is averaging over 20 points and 10
boards per game.
Lyman, 4 1, has a Una shooter In Pam
Jackson and an e u t lle n l ball handler in
Kim Goroum. K im Lemon helps out on
tha boards w ith support irom Katie
Rowland and Kim G illiam

*

�SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Tribe, Rams Kick Tonight;
M ary M atm en To Boone
This one’s not for the -M ayor’s Cup," but the In­
tensity will be just as high tonight at 8 when Seminole
and I-ake Mary get together for a soccer match at Lake
Mary High School.
I m worried about this one," said lak e Mary coach
Dennis McCorkle. "Seminole will be up for us after the
first lime. It should be a great match."
The first lime t Dec. 17), the Rams nipped Seminole,
2-1, to claim the traveling Mayor’s Cup for this year.
Seminole, which owns a victory over sixth-ranked
Lyman in six games, is led by high-scoring Ricky
Nooney along with Paid Griffin and Juan Falcon.
The Rams are paced by Donald Kelly, who has 14
goals, and Andre Sanders. Joe Dalton will miss the
game because of a knee injury. He will be repieced by
Mike Dunlap in the net. The Rams are W . Junior
varsity action begins at 5 p.m.
Elsewhere in prep action tonight, coach Frank Sch­
wartz’ Lake Mary wrestling team travels to Orlando to
take on Boone a* 8.
The Rams, 5-1-1, placed fifth on the weekend in the
Sebring Invitational Tournament as Robert Rawls
(Unlimited) and Jack Likens (108) grabbed individual
titles.
Willie Green, a junior from Sanford, took a second
place finish at 171 pounds. Green was also selected Red
lobster Wrestler of the Week for his performance the
past seven days. He had a key pin in the Rams’ 29-29
deadlock with Lyman last Friday.
He received a plaque and a free dinner for four
people from the seafood chain.
The Rams entertain Boone on Wednesday at 8 p.m,

Johnson:3rd-Team A ll State
Oviedo’s Tommy Johnson was selected to the Third
Team Defense on the 3A All-State football team for
1982. The senior linebacker completed his last year
with the Lions with 63 solo tackles and 29 assists.
Johnson also intercepted two passes and recovered a
pair of fumbles.
Johnson anchored a defense that allowed Its op­
ponents just 12 points per game as the Lions compiled
an 8-3 record including a victory in the Rotary Bowl.

Oviedo Boots Lake Highland
Oviedo’s Rob Moody and Jack Genge had It down pal
Monday against Lake Highland.
Genge passed the ball to Moody for one goal and
Moody returned the favor to Genge as the lions
blanked the Highlanders, 2-0, in prep soccer Monday.
Keeper Don Wright turned in 12 saves in the
whitewash. The 4-1 Lions of coach Paul Greer host
Satellite Beach Thursday at 6 p.m.

^ Verm eil 'Burned O u t '
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — A while back, a priest
who acts as an unofficial team chaplain for the
Philadelphia Eagles gave Dick Vermeil a book dealing
with "burnout" on the job.
The master of the 20-hour workday, the 3 a.m. and 6
a.m. film sessions and the owner of a sofa bed in his
Veterans Stadium office, Vermeil took a few glances at
the book and concluded, "I thought they (the authors)
were wrong."
But, as he continued his hectic work schedule,
Vermeil discovered they were right. He had difficulty
relaxing and was admittedly "over-concerned about
everything." He found out the intensity that brought
the Eagles from also-ran to NFL championship con­
tenders was affecting his emotional health.
After wrestling with the situation for a week, a
tearful Vermeil faced a packed press room Monday at
Veterans Stadium and announced he was resigning as
head coach of the Eagles.
" I’m going to step out of coaching," he said. "I am
emotionally burned out and therefore feel I need a
break from coaching for a while."
Eagles' owner Leonard Tose immediately an­
nounced Marlon Campbell, former head coach of the
Atlanta Falcons and defensive coordinator under
Vermeil, had signed a five-year contract to take over
as head coach.
Vermeil, 46, said he realized the "tempo I set for 23
years (in coaching) m ay not be possible to keep
through a 10-year pro contract. That's why I can say
I’m Just burned out."

M ayors In Free Throws
Who is the best free throw shooting mayor in
Seminole County?
A question that has baffled trivia buffs for well over
two days will be answered Saturday night as the
mayor’s from Altamonte Springs, Casselberry, Lake
Mary, Longwood, Oviedo, Winter Springs and Sanford
will step to the charity stripe to settle the score during
halftime of Seminole Community College's game with
Central Florida CC.
The mayors competing include: Raymond M.
Ambrose Jr. (Altamonte Springs), Charlie Glaasock
(Casselberry), Walter A. Sorenson (Lake Mary), June
Lormann (Longwood), Robert Whittier (Ovletk&gt;), John
V. Torcaso (Winter Springs) and Sanford’s Lee P.
Moore.

Joe's Variety Zaps Atlantic
Ondreus Redding poured in 22 points and George
Irwin added 14 as Sanford Electric zapped Atlantic
Bank, 41-35 Monday night in Sanford Recreation
Department Junior League action at Westslde Center.
Irwin Ignited Sanford Electric with 11 first-half
points while Redding finished strong with 15 secondhalf points. Anthony Harris led Atlantic Bank with 15
points while Kerry Wiggins added 14.
In the earlier game, Joe’s Variety did not have
enough players and had to forfeit to First FederaL

Semino/e Hosts JV Tourney
Seminole High will be the site of the Fourth Annual
Seminole County Junior Varsity Wrestling Tournament this Thursday with wrestling beginning at 5
p.m.
The tourney is sponsored by Burger Chef and team s
competing indude Seminole, la k e Mary, la k e Howell,
la k e Brantley, Oviedo and Lyman. Last year la k e
Brantley upset Lyman for die title. Lyman won the
tourney the first two years.

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Ram Slump Hits Pits
With Loss To Apopka
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
One question on the minds of lake
Mary fans these days is, “how deep into a
slump can you fall?"
The Lady Rams seem to have slipped
into an abyss, losing two straight, one to
a tough 4A squad (Winter Park 60-39) on
Friday night, and again Monday night to
Apopka's Lady Darters.
Apopka, 3-9 and one of the worst 4A
teams in the state, led by as much as 14
points in the fourth quarter and escaped
the unfriendly confines of lake Mary
High with a 5&lt;M7 upset over the Rams.
"We got off to a slow start and Apopka
was burning the nets the first half," Lake
Mary coach Bill Moore said after the
Rams' record fell to 8-4. “We've played
worse games and beaten better ball
cluhs. I didn't think Apopka was that
good." •
The question is, "did anyone think
Apopka was that good?"
Apparently not, in one three-game
span earlier this season the Lady Darters
scored only 43 points, 15 in two of the
games and only 13 in the other. In fact,
not even N ostradam us could have
predicted that Apopka would score 50
points in one game.
Apopka accomplished this milestone
by catching fire from the floor in the
second quarter. The Lady Darters hit 8 of
10 shots in the quarter while Lake Mary
was struggling and hit just 9 of 31 shots in
the first half.
Four straight Jumpers by Sue Grant
gave the Darters a five-point lead at 4:59
in the second quarter. Apopka kept its
five-point cushion with a 23-18 score at
intermission.
The lady Rams couldn't break out of
their shooting slump in the third quarter
as Apopka built a 37-24 lead. Lake Mary
made just 3 of 20 shots in the quarter
while Apopka hit 6 of 14.
lak e Mary pulled within nine points
twice early in the fourth quarter only to
have theD arters take a 14-polnt lead on a
layup by Grant with 4:10 left to play.
Instead of falling to pieces as some
learns would given the circumstances,
the lad y Rams mounted a comeback
effort that fell short by a matter of
seconds.
Behind the clutch play of Laura and

Scorecard
Basketball

Prep Basketball
Peggy Glass, the lady Rams outscored
Apopka, 14-1 and pulled to within one
point, 48-47, with 28 seconds left as Peggy
grabbed a rebound and banked in the
follow-up.
With 13 seconds left la k e Mary had the
ball and a chance to pull out the victory.
But U sa Gregory’s inbounds pass got by
Andrea Johnson and went into the hands
of Grant, who raced down court for a
layup that sewed up the victory for the
la d y Darters.
Apopka made 21 of 44 shots on the night
for 48 percent white la k e Mary made 22
of 74 shots for 30 percent, la k e Mary
guard Kim Averill, usually a good out­
side shooter, fell into a slump of her own
and was 0 for 15 from the floor.
Grant took high scoring honors with 22
points, Pam Johnson added 11 for
Apopka while Am anada Robinson
chipped in nine. Valerie Griffin pulled
down 14 rebounds to lead the Darters
underneath.
Laura Glass led the Rams with 14
points and 15 rebounds, Lisa Gregory
tossed in a season-high 13 points, handed
out five assists and came up with five
steals. Michelle Swartz added eight
points and Peggy Glass netted six points
and pulled down eight boards.
The Lady Rams will look to rise out of
its slump Thursday night when It hosts
la k e Brantley’s lady Patriots.
LAKE MARY (47)
Swartz 4 0-18, L Glass 6 2-514, P. Glass
3 0-1 6, Averill 0 0-1 0, Gregory 6 1-2 13,
Fennlng 0 OO 0, Johnson 2 0-0 4, C. Hall 1
0-0 2, L Hall 0 OO 0, Stone 0 OO 0, Totals:
22-74 3-10 47.
APOPKA (50
Grant 10 2-4 22, P. Johnson 4 3-6 11,
Griffin 2 2-5 6, Robinson 4 1-2 9, McMiller
1 0-0 2. Totals: 21-44 8-17 50.
Apopka
8 15 14 13 — 50
LakeM ary
7 11 6 23 - 47
Total fouls: lake Mary 20, Apopka 14.
Fouled Out — None. Technical — P.
Glass.
In Junior varsity action, coach Bob
Wagner's Rams held off a stubborn
Daytona Beach Mainland squad, 49-40.
la k e Mary, 7-3 ran up a substantial

Herald Photo by Bonnie Wlebotdt

Lisa G regory (rig h t), L ake
Mary point guard, looks for n
team m ate as Apopka’s Pam
Johnson applies the pressure.
Gregory had her best scoring
night of the year with 13 points.
lead early in the fourth quarter only to
have Mainland cut it to two points, 38-36,
with 6:50 left to play.
With 6:14 remaining, Lake Mary's
Karen DeShctler hit a technical foul shot
and a jumper by Tasha Coleman put the
JV Rams in control, 41-36. Mainland
stayed close though and had a chance to
get back in the thick of things with 36
seconds left. DeShctler had missed a oneand-one opportunity and Mainland would
have had a chance if it would have
grabbed the rebound. However, an alert
Cindy Herman latched on to the loose ball
and Ijike Mary coasted to the victory.
Coleman led the way with 21 points,
DeShctler added 15 and Usa Simklns
tossed in eight.
The Rams host Lake Brantley’s JV
Friday night at 6:15.

Eighth-Ranked Lake Howell Drops Seabreeze
Lake Howell’s Stiver Hawks, ranked
eighth In today's 4A prep poU, scored
seven straight points early in the fourth
quarter to race past Daytona Seabreeze,
59-50, Monday night at Lake Howell In a
Five Star Conference basketball game.
The visiting Sand Crabs, 48, closed to
within 43-42 with seven minutes to play,
bul Mary Johnson hit two free throws,
Chlquita Miller tossed In a basket and
Mary Johnson and Tammy Johnson
added three more free tosses for a 5(H2
bulge.
"Seabreeze didn’t get any closer after
that," said Lake Howell coach Dennis
Codrey. The Hawks won for the 12th time
In 13 outings. The only setback was a twopoint decision to Winter Park In the Lady
Hawk Invitational when Howell hit Just 7
of 31 free throws.
Miller led the way with 20 points and 14
rebounds as the Hawks controlled the
backboards, 66-49. Junior Christy Scott
had 12 points, 10 In a hot second half, and

Prep B asketball
12 rebounds.
Junior Mary Johnson added 14 points
and handed out eight aasista. Miller
snared six steals.
Lake Howell travels to Daytona Beach
Thursday for a game with the Ladv Bucs.
DAYTONA BEACH SEABREEZE
(50): Willis 16, Poliver 4, De. Wesley 14,
Dewberry 2, Bradley B, Segha) 4, Small 0,
Da. Wesley 2. Totals 21 8-23 50.
MAITLAND LAKE HOWELL (S»i
Barma 0, Blocker 2, Dietrich 0, M.
Johnson 14, T. Johnson 7, Lowe 2, McNeil
2, Miller 20, Scott 12. Totals 21 17-36 59.
Halftime - Seabreeze 26, Lake Howell
25; Fouls - Lake Howell 21, Seabreeze
27; Fouled out — Willis, Poliver;
Technicals — Lake Howell bench.

CLASSAAAA
Fort Lauderdale rxila rd
........... 9 0
PlnailO* ia fn ln o la
....... 11-0
Satellite Beach.............................
110
Orlando Evan*
i . Ja ckto nvilla F le tc h tr ..................
6. M iam i N o rlh w e tte rn ............... ......... 11-1
7 M iam i Southrldge............
1 M aitland Lake H o w e ll................. ..........11-1
9. Bradenton Manatee .................
12 3
10. Ja ckto n vIlle R lb a u lt ...................
Henorebie Mention;
Hillsborough, P l*n l
City. Fort Walton High. Fort Walton Choc
lawhalchee. W inter Garden West Orange.
Tempa King, T ilu iv llle , Cocoe, Brandon. New
Port Richey Gult. Orange Park
CLASS AAA
1. St. Petersburg Boca Clega
DO
2. Pensacola W ashington.......................... 13 0
3. BelleGlade Glades Central ..................10 0
4. M arianna .................................................DO
5. N aplts Barron C o llie r............................14 0
4. Bradenton Southeast ............................13 0
7. Fort Lauderdale Stranahan
11 I
I . M iam i Edison .......................................I l l
f . Jacksonville Bishop Kenny................... 10 7
10. Nleeviiia..................................................... •-)
Honorable M ention; St. Petersburg Gibbs.
F ori Myers. Crestvlew. Lake M ary,
St.
Augustlna, St. Petersburg Lakewood. DeLand.
Ocala Vanguard. North Marlon. M iam i Curley.
Orlando Jonas.
t.
a.
3
4.

Virginia Tech Upsets New No. 1 Memphis State
NEW YORK (UPI) -.F e a r in g the
worst, Memphis State Coach Dana Kirk
wasn’t ‘too thrilled after learning his
Tigers had been named the No. 1 college
basketball team In the nation.
"It gives the other team so much in­
centive," Kirk said after his team moved
ahead of once-beaten Indiana In the
ratings, following voting by UPI’s Board
of Coaches.
It took less than four hours for Kirk’s
fears to be realized as Virginia Tech
upset previously unbeaten Memphis
State, 6988, Monday night at Blacksburg,
Va.
However, Kirk said he was pleased for
the players and fans as Memphis State
readied the pinnade — although short­
lived - ol its 98-year basketball history
with Its tin t No. 1 rating.
Memphis State, 11-1, received 24 firstplace votes and 592 points from the 40
members of the coaches board who par­
ticipated In this week’s ratings to take
the No. 1 spot from Indiana. The Hooiiers
suffered their first toss of the season
during the week, s t the hands of Ohio
State, and dropped to fourth.
Virginia, ranked fourth a week ago,
crushed Maryland In tti only outing of the
week and moved to No. L The Cavaliers,
1M, received 14 first-place votes and 545
points.
Unbeaten St. John’s, which set s school
record by winning its 13th straight game,
conquered two opponents during tbe
week, including
P at Ewtng-led
Georgetown, to vault four places to No. 3.
Georgetown, which dropped to H was
rated 17th last week but fell out of the Top
20 for the first tim e this season.
, UCLA, 5-1, won its only game during
the week to move up one place to No. 5
but Kentucky, 10-2, slumped three places
to No. 6 after losing to Alabama.
Arkansas, 1W, trimmed three op­
ponents last week and advanced five
places to No. 7 and Louisville, 11-2, also

College Basketball

only other SEC game. Tonight’s action
has Vanderbilt at Alabama and Florida
at South Florida in a non-conference
game.
Kentucky Look sole possession of the
SEC lead at 3-1 with its victory over
Mississippi State. Tennessee, Auburn
and Florida are tied for runnerup at 2-1.
But the Wildcats were staring defeat in
the face at Starkvllle until some fancy
free throw shooting pulled the game out
for them.
The Bulldogs took a 47-45 lead with
eight seconds left to play when Kelvin
Hildreth grabbed a rebound and scored.
Kentucky called time out to set up a play
and then turned the ball over on a fivesecond violation trying to work it into
scoring position.
Mississippi State was looking victory In
the face with five seconds left, but the
Wildcats stole the Inbounds pass and
Charles Hurt hit on a short jum per to
knot the score at 47-47 at the end of
regulation play.

moved up three notches to No« 8 after
beating three opponents.
Nevada-Las Vegas, 12-0, moved up
three places to No. 9 after whipping two
foes but Alabama, 9-2, dropped five
places to No. 10 despite beating Ken­
tucky. The Crimson Tide was beaten
twice earlier in the week, by Florida and
Auburn.
N orth Carolina, 10-3, which bad
dropped out of the ratings only three
weeks ago, continued Ita strong
comeback by blowing out Rutgers and
Syracuse and moved up five places to No.
11. Iowa, 9-2, fell off four places to No. 12,
followed by No. 13 Houston, which made
the most dramatic climb of the week by
advancing ilx places to No. 13.
Rounding out the Top 20, Syracuse,
which suffered Its first lo u of the season
last week, was No. 14, followed by No. 15
Missouri, No. 18 Minnesota, No. 17
K entucky took command of the
VUlanova, No. 10 Tennessee, No: 19 North overtime game by hitting 10 straight free
Carolina State and No. 20 Illinois State. thows and never trailed in winning Its
_
. _ ...
11th game In 13 tries. The Bulldogs fell to
W ildcats Slip Past Bulldogs u overall and 2-2 In the 8EC.
United Prate iBtenaU eaal
Road tripe have become obetade
courses In the Southeastern Conference,
even for tbe big boy*.
Sixth-ranked K entucky a n d ’ ltth ranked Tennessee stumbled and almost
fell Monday night on rocky SEC
backtrails. Kentucky had to battle from
behind to beat Mlniaaippi State SMS In
overtim e at S tark v llle, Miaa., and
Tennessee had to survive an Louisiana
State rally to win 9M 8 at Baton Rouge,
La.
But Georgia, rebounding from two
straight road losses, found a place to its
liking Monday n ig h t, stomping
Mississippi 68-53 a t Oxford, Miss., in the

Tuesday, Jan. 1), 19SJ-7A

State's Jeff Malone, tbe SEC scoring
leader, had four first-half fouls and
fouled out with 13:21 left In the gam e but
still led Bulldog scorers with 12. Jim
M aster's 14 points were high for Ken­
tucky, which aank 19 of 11 free throws In
the contest.
Tennessee was on tbe ropes a t Baton
Rouge, trailing 5845 with a Utile over
three minutes to play, until Dale Ellis
scored the final four points of tbe gam e to
give the Vols the edge.
Ellis wound up with 23 points and
team m ate Howard Carter had 22 In
leading Tennessee to Its 10th wrin In 12
outings. Leonard MltcbeU had 12 points
and 14 rebounds for UtU.

Hlghichool polls
Beyl
CLASS AAAA
1 M iam i Jackson
151
2 Stuart M artin County
11 1
) Jacksonville Jactton
*7 0
4 M e rritt island ..................... n o
5 Jacksonville Ribauit
tlJ
&lt; Clearwater
.101
7. West Palm Beach Twin
Lakes
...in
I Brandon
91
9. M iam i Senior ................... 112
to Orlando Evans....................... 133
Honorable Mention:
P inellg*
Sem inole, Lakeland K a th le e n ,
Pensacola Pina F ore it, M ia m i
Lakes. Tampa Robinson, Orlando
Oak Ridge, Jacksonville T erry
P a rk e r, Ja ckso n ville R aines.
Hudson. Daytona M a in la n d .
Orlando Boone. Daytona Spruce
Creek. OeLand. Panama City
M oslay. M ia m i C e n tra l, F o rt
La u de rd a le
D illa rd ,
South
Plantation
CLASS AAA
t Kissimmee Osceola
17 0
3 Tallahassee Godby
14 3
3 Crestvlew ................i ____ 13-1
4 Quincy Shanks
101
S. Lake Wales
121
a Tampa Catholic ..................M 2
7 Rock ledge........................... I l l
I M ilto n ................................... l l
1 F ort Lauderdale St Thomas
Aquinas
.10 2
10 F ort M y e rs ........................... 10 2
H onorable M en tio n :
SI.
Petersburg
Gibbs.
B a rto w ,
Hallandale. Lake Gibson. Daytona
Seabreeie,
New
S m y rn a .
Gainesville Buchholr. Oviedo
G a in e sville High. T allahassee
L in c o ln , Ocala F ore st, O cala
Vanguard, Miami Edison, Key
West, Cypress Lakes. Riverdale.
Tampa Jesuit, SI. Petersburg
Boca Ctega. West Palm Beach
North Shore. Jacksonville Bishop
Kenny.
NEW YORK (U P I) — The
U n ite d
P rei* International
Board ol
Coaches
P 20
( t in t .
trough
Jan f in parentheses):
1 Memphis St.(241(1) 0)
S57
2 Virginia (M l ( It t)
545
3. St John s (t) (1)0)
$77
4 Indiana MOD
456
5 UCLA I I I)
442
6 Kentucky (D (10 21
316
7 Arkansas (1001
221
I Louisville M l 2)
231
9 Nevada Las Vgs(12 0)
309
10. Alabama (9 2)
174
11. Norlh Carolina (10 31
155
12. Iowa (12)
139
13. Houston (10 2)
139
14. Syracuse M I D
177
15. Missouri (1021
113
14 Minnesota (10-1)
101
17. VUlanova (7 2)
95
I I Tennessee ( f -31
75
I f North CaroilniSt.&lt;7.3)
33
20. Illinois SI. MOD
21
Note: By agreement w ith the
National Association o l Basko),
ball Coachts ol l ho United
SM toi, looms on probation by
llto NCAA and Inollglblo lo r tho
NCAA Tournament oro InellglMe lo r Tap to and national
champlanthlp centlderatlon by
IIP ! ftta rtf •« C t M k t t.
T h o it tucti fta m i fo r n i t 1TO93 •eaten are; Oklahoma City,
St. Loul* and W ichita H a lo .
NBA Standing*
By United P ra tt Inte rn a tio n al
E aitern Conference
Atlantic O lv iilo n
W L Pet. OB
27 5 .144 Phi la
24 ■ .76) 7
Boston
New Jrsey
27 13 .429 4&gt;&gt;
Wshngtn
17 16 .SIS 10W
New York
13 22 .351 14
Central Division
M llwauke
24 12 .667 —
Atlanta
17 17 .SOO 4
Detroit
tl 20 .474 7
Indiana
17 71 .344 lOW
Chicago
D 23 .113 I l ’-Y
Cleveland
S 24 .157 17V»
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pet. OB
20 12 .425 Kan City
22 14 .411 San Anton
11 20 .444 4
Denver
13 30 .194 7Vj
Dallas
14 21 .171 I'/)
Utah
S 29 .147 14
Houston
Pacific Division
Los Ang
27 7 .794 73 12 .457 4Vi
Stadia
71 15 .595 IVY
Phoenla
32 15 .595 IVY
Portland
Golden SI.
15 20 .429 Il'Y
Son Olego
I 27 .229 19V|
Monday’* Q a m ti
(No game* tcheduted)
T««4v ’i Q a m ti
(All Tlm t) S IT )
Golden Stale at New York.
7:30 p.m.
Lot Angela* at New je n e y ,
7:35 p.m.
Philadelphia at A tla n ta . 7:35
p.m.
Phoenl* at Chicago. I:1 S p.m.
O allai at San Antonio. 9 3$
p.m.
San Diego at Houiton, 9:05
p.m.
Kentet City at U tah, 9:30
p.m.
Denver at Stattla. 10:30 o.m.

411 171 40
Eighth race— S-14. C: ) t I I
2 Whl2GoldieA
22 40 6 10 3 10
3 Free Gilt
IO M 4 00
STalent Sloan
1 10
0
( 3 3) 67.00; P (3-3) 14 00; T (1
55) 11) M
Ninth ric e — J-M. B: 31.11
4 Mud Hole
10 20 3 40 3 20
I
Close Break
2 80 2 10
SDidebitecha
3 40
Q(4 I) 11.40; P (4 1) 41 JO; T (4I II 1M U
tOthraca — 3 I . B: 3 1 I I
5 BioPenny
S 20 3 40 2 10
t Ekcepto
4 20 4 60
7 Evadate
I 40
Q M S) 31 00; P (S I) 45.30; T ( 5
1 71 377.40
lifts race — S-14, A: 30 17
4 Mopie Butord
4 60 3 40 3 10
3 ML Cap
17.60 22 60
2 Brandons Bug
6 40
O (1-4) 41.60) P (4-3) 44 00; T (43-1) 412 20; Pick S I*: (4-51-4-I-4), S
ot 4 13 winners) paid 621 00;
"J a c tp o t" carryover 34121
13thrace — 1 U , D l l 70
2 Big Time LaRu
6 10 2 60 3 10
IGabeSpence
7 10 12-00
5 Rhonda's John
4.20
O (2-31 25 00; P (3-3) 40 20; T t i ­
l l ) 207 10
llth ra c a — 3 -1 .0 ; J i l l
I Moon Gate
6 00 2 60 2 00
5 Keen Delight
2 10 3 20
t Getaway Cowboy
5 20
0 (I I) IS 60; P ( I S) 2) 00; T ( I
51) 3tS 60
A - 3453; Handle 137S.430

Jai-Alai
Monday night re m it*
F irst game
4 Negui Aguirre 10 10 7 60 2 10
7 0ab*ol» Golrl
n o ) 70
7M ikel Oyarl
6 40
O (14) 11 00. T (1-4-7) 40110
Second gome
7 Ur (Mr Goirl
13 60 S 00 3 60
1 Gobicia Area
5 60 3 60
I Garay E lor&gt;a
7 20
Q &lt;1-1)4110; P 17-1) 314.10; T &lt;7
I S) 31) 00; DD (4 7) 241.30
Third game
4 Manolo la rra g a 11 60 9 30 4 60
2 Garay Area .
10 20 3 10
6 Gablcla Foruria
400
0(1-017.40; P (4-2) 106 10; T (4
161 361.40
Fourth game
3 Manolo Reye*
1120 5 20 2 40
9 60 3 30
3 Negui Area,
1 GaBicla Aguirre
710
0 (1 1) 36 90; P i l l ) 42 00; T (13-D 111.44
F ilth game
SCharola Oyarl 13 00 6 20 3 60
1 Durango Kid Area
5 80 300
3 Manolo Carea
4 60
Q (1-SI 34 40; P (5 1 ) 115.16; T (5
1-31 141.60
Sin 111 game
7Le|ai Yia
15.40 2 90 5 60
5 U rK ir Zarraga
6 40 4.40
9 Durango Kid E to ri a
4 60
0 (3 5) 41.40; P (3-5) 134 64; T (3
511 461.19
Seventh game
3 Gab,ola
1010 SCO 110
I Mlkel
4 20 4 00
3 Le|4I
4 10
Q 11-11 3100; P 13-1) 7 1 .fl; T (131) 164.40
e ig h th game
0 Said Foruria
3( 60 6 90 5 10
7 60 4.21
lU r iia r E lo rio
1 G o m to l* Caro*
VOQ
0 (11) *140) P (9 3) 314 30; T (457) m oo
N inth game
5 Gorottola F arah 11 60 6 40 3 10
JGaeioia M endl
5 60 3 20
1 Pita Carea
4.70
0 ( M l 43.20; P (5 3 ) 19.90; T (5
J-D 2H.49
Itth game
i Men:) I
11.20 7 00 4 40
ICarca
5 SO 100
SGorostoia
6 70
Q (31) 14.96; P (4-3) 123.70; T 15
51) 211.94
l l l h game
aGorotfole
Forurie
9 90 7 00 1.40
SCharofa Caree
5 90 7 60
1 Solaun Ovari
7.40
O (4 1141.40; P (4-5) IS f.f0 ;T ( 4
511 993.40
l l l h game
5 Solaun Corea
19 60 1 60 2 60
IG o ro ito ie Y n
10 40 3 10
7 Durango Kid Ja vie r
S 60
O (2 5) 13 99; P (5 3 ) 100.00; T (5
1-7 ) 304.60
A - 3372; Handle 1194.969

Dog Racing
Menday nl§M re m it*
F In t race — 514, C: 11.71
5 LuCiiO
10 40 4 4D 3 40
4 Don't NOW h it
4.40 4.00
• Gordon R
7.90
0 (4-1) 21.19) P (5 4 ) 49.60; T ( 5
U ) 141 M
lecand race — 3-4. C: 34.13
1 Midland Crleket 4.10 1.40 4.M
3 Manatee Wad*
4.10 3 90
a o o m a ttie a liy
3.00
Q iM IM J lfP IS - l) IIT .N f T ( ( 54) 151.94; OO (5 4 ) 54.34
Third race—514, Dt St.71
2 Plaloch Point
7.10 1.10 100
5 Mary Ann Scott
5 20 140
ISco tty'iTray
1*0
0 ( 5 1 ) JS.44; P (5 1 ) 11.44) T ( 5
51) 117.M l OO ( M l S4.ll
Fourth race — 514. M : 1141
7 Dowvll Downing *.10 7.40 140
4 Spaed Factory
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140
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4.10 1.40
5 Pay's Johnny
140
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17.00 1410 4.40
4 0J GlldlnOn
1.10 1.00
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140
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Hockey
Monday's Result
New Jersey 6. Quebec 2

DOG
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�I A—E v tn ln fl H a rold , Sanford, FI,______ Tuesday, J»n. l) , 1ft3

Death Row Inmates
Given Reprieves

Said To Be Tiring O f Senate Leadership

TALIJVHASSEE (UPI) - Gov. Bob Graham said today
he won't seek the immediate execution of about 20 Death
Row inmates who lost the major issue in their appeals
' because of an Atlanta court's ruling last week.
Graham said he will continue to sign death warrants, but
The Knoxville Journal quoted friends and other sources in a
for the time being limit himself to cases where no warrant
copyright story as saying Baker, 57, will announce his plans
has been issued before and not sign second warrants.
soon not to run for reelection to give Tennessee Republicans
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said last Friday it
time to decide on a successor. Baker’s third six-year term in
was okay for the Florida Supreme Court, when reviewing
the Senate expires in January' 1985.
capital punishment cases, to look at reports never made
The New York Times quoted two unidentified aides today as
available to defense lawyers for possible attack or ex­
saying Baker planned to make a formal announcement in
planation of damaging contents.
Tennessee during the congressional recess over I in coin's
The ruling took away the major issue in the appeals of
Birthday in February.
about 20 Death Row Inmates who have had death warrants
signed by G raham over the last year and eliminated an
"He wants a new career, and wants to make some money,"
issue that is being raised in most other capital punishment
an unidentified aide told the Times. Baker was a lawyer before
appeals.
his Senate career.

Baker Won't Challenge Reagan In '84
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate Republican leader Howard
Baker, reported to be tiring of the hassles of congressional
leadership, has no intention of running for president should
President Reagan seek re-election in 1984, his press secretary
said today.
It was widely reported that Baker intends not to seek reelection but instead to make another bid for the presidency in
1984 or 1988.
But Baker’s press secretary Tom Griscom called the reports
premature and said, "Senator Baker has no intention of
running for president as long as Ronald Reagan Is in a position
for re-election."
Baker, called by some the most effective Senate leader since

Lyndon B. Johnson, is on vacation in Florida with his wife, Joy,
who underwent surgery recently.
“ Her health has nothing to do with his decision," Griscom
said, adding that she Is “doing very well.”
Griscom said it is "premature to speculate on his plans for
re-election."
"The only person who can make that announcement is the
senator," Griscom said. "He is not in a position right now to
make any type of definitive statement on what he Is going to do
when his term ends in January of 1985.”
Griscom said Baker hopes Reagan will seek a second term
but that i f he does not, Baker “will take another look" at
running for president.

Woman Loses 'Wrongful Birth1Suit

. . . Rifz Cinema Pub Idea Killed
Continued From Page 1A
see a clean operation at the Ritz.
Jerry Senkarik, 210 Magnolia Ave., said he opposes
alcoholic beverages at tlte spot. Mrs. Eleanor Russell, who
owns several downtown properties, said she doesn't "want
to see drunkspn the streets again. Parking is a big deal, but
I object to any kind of alcohol," she said.
Williams said his plan was to charge 99 cents admission to
the theatre. He said the highest profit margin would be on
the food and drinks. He said a draft beer costs about 20
cents a glass but It would have sold at the theatre for 11.25.
There is also a high profit margin on Mexican food, he said.
He reiterated h* had no plans to show triple X rated
movies. Williams insisted the planning and zoning com­
mission did not want to "hear the winds of change," adding
that he wanted to bring in a product to entice a desirable

1

PROVIDENCE, R .I. (U PI) - A
welfare mother who had a child two
years after a tubal ligation has lost a
wrongful birth suit against Women &amp;
Infants Hospital.
Ruby Myles, 33, said she had the
surgery in 1976 because she already had
two children out of wedlock and was
anxious to get off welfare and return to
work. She went to the maternity hospital
and had tubal ligation surgery, but the
operation didn't work and two years later
she had a baby.
Miss Myles filed suit against Women &amp;
Infants, saying the hospital should bear
the cost of raising her child until he
turned 18. She also sought pay her for

clientele.
In denying the appeal from the commission, Farr said the
proposal was not in keeping with community standards In
downtown Sanford. Keith said there Is a definite need for
parking in Sanford. "And you cannot tell me that people
sitting in a movie for three hours and drinking will not be a
problem for Sanford," Keith said.
Before the beginning of the appeal, Moore said Williams
approached him and wanted the hearing postponed. "I
explained to him that the hearing would be held," Moore
said, noting the commission might delay its decision if
requested to do so. Williams did not formally ask for a
delay.
Neither Williams nor Braziel could be reached today for
comment. — DONNA ESTES

four years of lost wages, her medical
costs for the birth and for a second tubal
ligation.
Alter a week-long trial, a Superior
Court jury needed only 45 minutes
Monday to return a verdict In favor of the
hospital, awarding Miss Myles no money
at all.
Her lawyer, Martin Malinou, said it
was the first trial In state court history
for the wrongful birth of a child.
Hospital lawyer Dennis McCarten
argued before the case went to the Jury
that the case should be dismissed
because there Is no precedent in state law
to enable someone to collect money

damages for the birth of a healthy child.
Moreover, he said, the costs of raising a
child to 18 were speculative.
During the trial, Miss Myles said Dr.
Edward Buonopane, now of Ft.
Iauderdale, Fla., never mentioned the
failure rate of such surgery and that the
consent forms she was shown mentioned
no guarantee.
She said she was led to believe by a
hospital social worker that the operation
was perm anent, Irreversible and
resulted tn sterility.
Miss Myles said her religious beliefs as
a Baptist prevented her from seeking an
abortion.

. . .Annexations Approved
Continued From Page 1A
is contiguous to the city while Jungle
Labs property Is contiguous to ABC
Conveyor.
Tony Wheeler of Jungle Labs told the
commission it plans to develop its 18
acres into 18 light Industrial,
manufacturing sites or warehouses. He
said most of the sites would be used by
suppliers for pet shops. The suppliers
would Include those who distribute cat
and dog toys, as an example, ftnceler
said.
"Our one m ajor problem Is the need for
water and sewer service," Wheeler said.
He noted that pet supplies are becoming
a major industry In the Sun Belt because
a large number of retirees have pets.
The city does not usually furnish water

and sewer service to properties outside
the d ty , using these services as a tool to
encourage annexation.
This annexation won’t become ef­
fective until two separate public hearings
are held after those hearings have been
advertised.
In other business, the commission after
a public hearing Instructed the city at­
torney to prepare an ordinance per­
mitting the location of memorial gardens
for the burial of crem alns in
biodegradable containers on properties
adjacent to churches.
Holy Cross Episcopal Church
requested the new city law, noting it
wishes to- locate a memorial garden
Immediately adjacent to its sanctuary.
Before the church can proceed with its

plans, an ordinance must be adopted and
two public hearings held. The Rev.
Robert A nderson of Holy Cross
represented the church.
The ordinance is expected to be
adopted on Feb. 14.
The commission also approved salary
Increases for one year In grade to: Fire
Chief William C. Galley, employed by the
city for 31 years, from $29,203.20 to
$31,366.40; Utility Administrative Aide
Ava Knowles, with the city for 124 years,
from $12,524.93 to $13,322.40; El well
Ferrell Jr., heavy equipment operator,
from $14,487.87 to $15,407.77; and Ken­
neth M. Forsyth", equipment operator,
from $12,073.41 to $12,838.86.
-DONNA ESTES

N e w H ig h P ro te in D ie t B e lie v e d S a fe
TUCSON (UPI) — Doctors seeking a safe diet for obese
people have developed a 472-calorie, high-protein preparation
that appears to avoid the sometimes fatal heart problems
associated with liquid-protein diets widely used a few years
ago.
The new diet, developed at the University of Rochester
Medical Center, Is a supplemented version of a preparation
called Optifast available only to doctors.
Dr. Dean H. Ixtckwood told an American Heart Association
conference Monday the final product contains all essential
minerals, trace elements, vitamins and essential fatty acids.
Carbohydrate is added along with selenium, molybdenum,
fluoride and cadmium.
The preparation Is not available commercially, but details
will be revealed soon in the American Journal of Medicine,
Lockwood said.
He said safe high-protein, very low-calorie diets are con­
sidered an effective way to cut weight. These diets minimize
loss of muscle and maximize loss of fat.
Uquld-proteln diets gained popularity in 1977 and Lockwood
said an estimated 100,000 people were using these diets ex­
clusively for at least a month. It soon became apparent,
however, some people using these diets were dying.

Government researchers counted at least 60 such deaths in
1977. Lockwood said detailed medical reports were available
on 17 people and 11 had had episodes of life-threatening h u r t
rhythm irregularities.
In addition, Uckwood said autopsies revealed significant
deterioration of the heart muscle, Indicating "the cardiac
muscle is not spared during the liquid-protein diet."
The Rochester researchers tested six people on the initial
liquid-protein diet for 40 days and found three developed
similar heart problems.
The new diet was put through a similar test Involving six
people for 40 days and none developed heart irregularities.
“The data does suggest a hypocalorlc (very low-calorie) diet
vigorously supplemented with essential .elements, mi­
cronutrients and vitamins appears to be safer than the oncepopular, incomplete Uquld-proteln preparations," he said.
However, he said additional testing with large numbers of
people “ Is necessary to substantiate these potentlaUy useful
findings."
In the meantime, Lockwood said it appears the now-popular
Cambridge diet uses an adequate amount of minerals and
should be "relatively safe" when used for brief periods under a
doctor's supervision.

Herald Photo by Tom V ln ttn l

T h e G r e a te r S a n f o r d C h a m b e r of C o m m e r c e 's
B e a u tific a tio n a w a r d g o es to th e new C o m B a n k
b u ild in g on P a r k A v e n u e . C h a m b e r P r e s id e n t
J a c k H o rn e r, ( le f t) p r e p a r e s to in s ta ll th e sig n
w ith B o r n e e n c o u r a g e m e n t fro m ( le f t to r ig h t)
c h a m b e r go o d w ill a m b a s s a d o r N e d Y a n c e y ,

C a th e r in e D a u c h e r , a s s is ta n t v ic e p r e s id e n t of
C o m H a n k s o f S e m in o le C o u n ty ; H eth B rig g s,
b ra n c h , m a n a g e r ; J o e J u s tic e , v ic e p re s id e n t an d
a r e a C o m B a n k s m a n a g e r ; a n d M a r th a Y an cey ,
c h a m b e r g o o d w ill a m b a s s a d o r .

BEN SO N &amp;H E D G E S

Children Suffer From Budget Cuts
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Administration budget cuts have
forced states to make "life-threatening" reductions In health
services for poor m otherland children, the Children's Defense
Fund said Tuesday.
Marian E delm in, president of the private organization,
called on the White House, Congress and state legislatures to
restore essential funds for these "suffering poor children and
their families."
Ms. Edelman told a news conference a survey by the group
found that every state has reduced Medlcajd for mothers and

AREA DEATHS
VIVIAN M. ROACH
Mrs. Vivian M. Roach, 17, of
326 E. Relder Ave. In
Longwood died Sunday at
Florida Hospital-Aitamonte.
Bom Jan. 29,1699, In Virginia,
she moved to Longwood from
Blucfleld, W.Va., in 16». She
was a retired manager's
and a mfmbff of
First Christian Church In
Longwood. She was a past
matron and charter member
of the Order of the Eastern
Star in Blucfleld.
Survivors
Include a
daughter, Mra. Helen M.
Cedi, of Longwood; a Miter,
Mrs. Winnie Rosenheim, of
Blucfleld; two grandchildren
end six great-grandchildren.
Btldw in-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements.
RICHARD (LMULLOUN
Richard H. Mulilkin, 69, of
391 E. Altamonte Drive in
Altamonte Springs, died
Sunday it Florida Hospital,
Orlando. Bom June 22, 1613,
fa Baltimore, he moved to

Altamonte Springs from there
In 1678. He v u a retired
saleMnan and a member of St.
Mark's Presbyterian Church.
He waa e member of the
AARP.
He Is survived by his wife,
Shirley.
Baldwin-FairchUd Funeral
‘ Home, Altamonte Springe, Is
In charge of arrangements.
MRS. CHARLOTTE N. LUSK
Mre. Charlotte Nadine
Lusk, 81, of 781 Creitvlew
Drive, Ciieelbcrry, died
Monday at. Lucerne General
Hospital. Bom July 29,1901, in
Wilkes-Barre, P i., she moved
to
Casselberry
from
Binghamton, N.Y., In 1974.
She was a retired clothing
buyer and a member of
Calvary Assembly of God.
Survivors
Include a
daughter, Mrs. Patricia
Kinney, of Casselberry; two
grandohlldren; one great­
grandchild.
Baldwin-FairchUd Funeral
Hom^ Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.

children end 47 states have made cutbacks in Title V, maternal
and child health block grant programs.
Ms. Edelman blamed such reductions for what she said were
rising infant mortality rates in Alabama, Maine, Michigan and
Ohio.

LOVE IS

• • •

EN JO YIN G MR. C's
SOUTHERN FRIED
CHICKEN

Every Wednesday

SP E C IA L
1 PUCI M D M O U U

K

CHICKEN DINNER

JKCUl

lNluS«t
C iw k tO U ftv i-

• FrwKkFriM
•M llM TittlNt

-$199

•C.to tl* «

• I lM k litl
A** n*t e*u

322-9442

Only 6 mg yet rich enough to be called deluxe.
Regular and Menthol.

IIO .U .M

WE USE ONLY
TOP QUALITY CHICKEN

Open a box today.

A l Feeds M e d k
0«
S o u th e r n
i CHICKIM

2100 S. frendi Ave.
Hwy. 17-92-Sanford

A l Co n itanthu-O w ner

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigareiip Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
6 mj "lar." Oirngniconnt av per cigarittt, by FTC mnhod.

/

�r

PEOPLE
Club Hosts District A rt Festival
By DOKIS DIETRICH
PEO PLE Editor
The Sanford Woman’s Club will host the Florida
Federation of Woman's Clubs District VII Arts
Festival on Feb. 10, beginning at 9:30 a.m ., at the
clubhouse on Oak Avenue.

Feb. 19, at the clubhouse, from 5 to 8 p.m. According
to chairman Ann Brisson tickets, at (3.50 for adults
and (2 for children, may lx1purchased from Peggy
Deere or Vida Smith.
Two new m em bers introduced arc Mrs. Irene
Weible and Mrs. Justine Sims.
Serving on the nominating committee arc Myra
Stapleton, Vida Smith, Mabel Piety, Bunnie Logan
and Carolyn Cornelius.
1/iuise Nelson, chairman of hostesses, and her
committee, served luncheon following the 11 a.m.
meejing conducted by president Foster.
The program after lunch was under the direction
of the Public Affairs Department. Martha Yancey,
department chairm an, introduced guest speakers
Helen Crawford, alcohol program coordinator of

Members of clubs forming District VII will
display their winning arts and crafts from local
festivals as a prelim inary to stale finals in the
sprin«.
According to Pal Foster, president of the
Woman’s Club of Sanford, several stale officers are
expected to attend the event which will include
luncheon.
The club will hold a suauhetti dinner on Saturday,

the Seminole County Mental Health Center, and
Bcllye Smith, teacher and a recent candidate for
District 35 Florida House of Hepresentatives.
Mrs. Crawford spoke about women alcoholics and
the stigma attached to the disease which has been
medically recognized as such. She told the club­
women about The Cottage, a halfway house for
women located in Casselberry.
Mrs. Smith's topic was "The Ijovc Factor.” She
stressed importance of "being nice to yourself and
not feeling guilty.’’ She explained that one must love
himself before he can love anybody else and must
allow family and friends the same right.
"Both speakers were very well received and
enjoyed by all," Stella Oritt said.

TONIGHTS TV
TUESDAY,
EVENING

6:00
0 4 y Q ' ONEW S
11 (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
ED (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR

6:05
12 (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6 30
0 4 NBC NEWS
1 O CBS NEWS
7 Q ABC NEWS g
ED (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR

8:00

Manual Marquez of Casselberry has just returned
from visiting relatives in Gearwater. He reports
such a wonderful tim e that he has made plans to
return.

Zoo

M a rilyn
W helan

Prevention begins at home, Vie says. Mothers
keep your house wiinn, do not over-dress your child
and if you think he may be coming down with
something, keep him home.

S e m in o le
C o rre s p o n d e n t

327-2141

IXiris Bogers of the Federation of Senior Citizens
in Seminole County has her best yet group of tours
waiting for you. On Jan. 30 they will go to Kosie
O’Grady’s for supper, a show* and a visit to the
Cheyenne Saloon. On Feb. 20, they will cruise down
the St. Johns River aboard the Bay Queen.
I-ast week I had the pleasant surprise of bumping
into Victor Hochman. Vic is a pediatric physical!
who is practicing in Winter Springs.

I)r. Ilochinan is a big believer in Florida orange
juice. It can go a long way towards keeping you
healthy, he says.

0
4 MOVIE
The Return Ol
Ma«wel! Smart 1 1600) Don Adama.
S 'Ivia Krutel Secret agent Maawell
Sm artaltem plt to stop KAOS Irom
inieatTung a dreaded bomb that
will strip nude those who come in
contact with d |R)
4
O
WALT DISNEY
The
W orlds Graalest Athlete
Two
American coaches (Tim Conway.
John Amott trick an African jungle
boy (Jan Michael Vincent) inlo
becoming their one-man college
track team |Parl 2|
7 Q HAPPY DAYS
'M 135) THE LIFE AND ADVEN­
TURES OF NICHOLAS NlCKELBY
(PART 2)
ED (10) NOVA Salmon On The
Run The power and determination
01 salmon are caplured in an anami­
nation □( the role Itiese tish play in
the contticl between economic
growth and conservation |R )tJ

6:30

During the spring of 1982 over 7,000 school children
visited the Central Florida Zoo. In response to the over­
whelming migration of children to the Zoo and an­
ticipation of this spring's flight, docent training classes
will begin Jan . 26. f
A docent is a special person, a volunteer teacher who
leads school groups on tours through the Zoo. Docenting,
open to anyone 16 and over, is a way to share concern for
wildlife by helping dispell many myths about fascinating
creatures and educate the zoo visitor.
Docent training classes encompass a variety of subjects
for animal behavior to zoo history. The course is designed
to introduce the trainee to the natural history of the
various anim als as well as philosophy and goals of the
Cenlral Florida Zoo.
• There is no cost for the course. G asses will be held for
seven consecutive Wednesdays from 9 a.m.- 2 p.m. Once
the training has been completed the docent will be able to
assist the education department with tours, outreach
programs, weekend animal encounters and public
relations for the Zoo.
Docents a re all kinds of people from all walks of life.
Docents volunteer their time and enthusiasm and share a
common commitment to the betterment of their com­
munity zoo. If you would like to be a part of the Central
Florida Zoo docent program call the Education Depart­
ment at (305) 323-0181 for more information.__________

Wonf to Know
. " W h a t's H a p p e n in g "
In Sem inole C ounty?
Read The Evening H e ra ld
SUBSCRIBE N O W — CALI 322-2611

Evening Herald

Happy Birthday to Harold Whelan of Altamonte
Springs. Harold was given a surprise birthday party
for his big 40th. It took a lot of planning from his
friends and relatives to get him out of the house.
A special get well to Soulh Seminole citizens
Alvera Arnold, Marty Bacon, Irene Breckner,
Evelyn Fenton.and Anna Santangelo.

DEAR ABBY: When I was 16,1 got pregnant
by m y steady boyfriend. I wanted to keep the
baby, bill my parents wouldn't let me. Instead
they sent me to another state to stay with my
aunt and uncle, who took wonderful care of
me. After I had my baby (I'll call her Tam­
my), my aunt and uncle adopted her on the
condition that 1 would never tell her I was her
real molher.
Tam m y's real father, who had just turned 17
at the lime, couldn't accept the responsibility,
so as a favor to him, I listed Tanuny's father
as "unknown." 11 don't even know where he is
now.)
•

Tam m y is now a beautiful, happy, welladjusted 15-vear-old. She knows she's adopted,
but that is all. I am now happily m arried and
have two fine sons who aren't aware that
"Cousin" Tammy is really "their half-sister.
When 1 see Tammy, my arm s ache to hold her
close and tell her who I really am.
How can I fight the urge to tell her?
ACHING HEART
DEAR ACHING: Remember your promise
to your aunt and uncle, and honor I t One day,
when Tammy is of legal age and sufficiently
m ature to handle It, If she wants to know who
her biological parents are, I think she has the
right to know— but you shouldn't be the one to
tell her.
F o r now, thank God she is a happy, welladjusted child, and leave well enough alone.
DEAR ABBY: Sometimes when people call
me and my line is busy, they call again and
ask, "Who were you talking to?" What should I
say?
I’m a respectable 41-ycar-old woman with
nothing to hide, but I think such a question is
an invasion of one's privacy. I would never
presume to ask that question of anyone
because it's none of my business, yet when I
am asked I’m never quick enough In respond
in any way other than to name the person 1 was
talking to. Then I could kick myself. Any
brilliant ideas?
PRIVACY PREFERRED

i

A

SHIRLEY

9:30.

# TO S
gen
13|1T) NEWS

2:15
2:30
O

4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

|M

WEDNESDAY

10:00
C ] 4 ST. ELSEWHERE
7 O HART TO HART Jonalhan
and Jennifer s weekend getaway
turns into a murder investigation
when a former student dies under
strange circumstances g
I t (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ED (10) EVEREST IN WINTER Eight
British mountaineers attempt to
climb the most dangerous section
o l Ml Everest, the west lace, during
the winter ot 1980. John Hurt nar­
rates |R)

10:30

0
4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
12 (IT ) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

a

5:40
12 (IT) WORLD AT LARGE (FRl|

5:45

1:00

17 (IT) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

O 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILOREN
I t (33) MOVIE
ED (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE) .
ED 110) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
ED (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
ED (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)

5:50

0 4 NEWS (MON)
5 O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
7 O SUNRISE
t l (35) JIM BAKKER
13 (17) NEWS

1:05
12 (IT ) MOVIE

6 30
0 4 EARLY TODAV
5 O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
7 Q ABC NEWS THIS MOPNINO

1:30
4 O AS THE WORLO TURNS
ED (10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

2:00

6:45

0
4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 U ONE LIFE TO LIVE
ED (10) RIGHT FROM,THE START
(TUE)
ED (10) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
ED (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

7 ONEW S
(D (1 0 )A M WEATHER

7:00
O 4 TOOAY
5 O MORNING NEWS
7 o GOOD MORNINQ AMERICA
11 (35) NEWS
(D (IO )T O LIF E I

2:30
4 o CAPITOL
ED (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
ED (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

7:05
12 (IT)FUNTIME

7:15
ED (10) A M WEATHER

7:30

•

3:00

M (35) WOOOY WOODPECKER
ED (TO) SESAME STREET g

0
4 FANTASY
'
4 O GUIDING LIGHT
7
GENERAL HOSPITAL
I t (3 5 )CASPER
ED (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
ED (10) ENTERPRISE (WEOI
ED (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

a

7:35
13 (IT) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00
11 (35) FRED FLINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

3:05

B:05

12 (17) FUNTIME

13 (17) MY THREE SONS

3:30

8:30

11 (33| BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
(D ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

it I (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(D (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8*35

3:35

11 (17) THAT GIRL

12 (17)TMEFLINT3TONES

9:00

4:00

O l« i M C H A R O SIM M O NS

a

) oDO NAHUE
7 O MOVIE
it I (34) LEA VE IT TO BEAVER
ED (10) SESAME STREET g

PRAIRIE
5 O HOUR MAGAZINE
&lt; 7 0 MEITV GRIFFIN
111 (15) TOM AND JERRY
ED (10) SESAME STREET Q

9:05

4

U T T L l HOUSE O N TH E

4:05

il2 (IT ) MOVIE

12 (1Z)THEMUNSTERS

9:30

4:30

O 4 SO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
11 (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

I t (3 5 )SCOOBYDOO

4*35
12 (IT)LE A V E it t o b e a v e r

O 4 THE FACTS OF LIFE |R)
&gt; O MARY.TYLER MOORE
I t (35) ANDY QRJFFITH
ED(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R)

5:00
0
4 LAVERNE 5 SHIRLEY 5
COMPANY
6 O THREE'S COMPANY
7 o a l l in t h e FAMILY
11 (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
ED (10| MISTER ROOERS(R)

10:30
0 4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
5 O CHILD'S PLAY
It (35) DORIS DAY
ED(10) POWERHOUSE

5:05
12 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH (MONWED. FRI)
12 (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
(THU)

11:00
0 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
4 O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
7 O LOVE BOAT |R|
M (35) 35 LIVE
ED (10) OVER EASY

5:30
O
14
7
(D

11:05

4 PEOPLE S COURT
O M *A *S *H
ONEW S
(10) POSTSCRIPTS

11:00
0 4 ) 0
7 QNEW S
I t (35)SOAP
ED(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

O
4 TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Michael Landon.
Patti and Leah Barton, mother,
daughter lockies Irom Kentucky
5 O MORE REAL PEOPLE
' 7 ' O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
11 (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES

Wednesday
Special

11:35
12 (17) MOVIE "A ction In The
North Atlantic" (IB43) Humphrey
Bogart. Raymond Massay

12:00
3 0 QUINCY
7 O THE LAST WORD

12:30
0
4 LATE NIGH I W IIH UAVIO
LITTERMAN Quest
com edian

DEAR NEEDS: lie can be traced through
the "P aren t I-ocater System," operated by the
federal governm ent under the U niform
Reciprocal Child Support law.

Tvy Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!

For more detailed Information, call your
local welfare office. You do not have to be on
welfare to qualify for auistance from this
office.
.

s

DEAR ABBY: The letter from "H is Wite,"
who was suspicious of her husband because it
look him all day to play 18 holes of golf,
reminded m e of something that happened
many years ago.

2.09

3 pieces of golden biown Famous Recipo
Fried Chicken mashed polaloes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hoi biscuits

Uur telephone number was one digit dif­
ferent from that of a nearby golf course. We
frequently got telephone calls from people
asking for reservations, and we always gave
them the correct nunifier of the .golf course.

What's bugging you? Unload on Abby, P.O.
Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. For a
personal reply, please enclose a stamped,
addressed envelope.
.

12:30
O 4 NEWS
■4 o
t h e YOUNQ AND THE
RESTLESS
7
RYAN S HOPE
ED (10) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T DIE (WED)

It (36)MADAME S PLACE

11:30

Needless to say, immediate steps were
taken to have our number changed.
A HEADER

12:05
12 (17) PEOPLE NOW

13 (IT ) PERRY MASON

11:05

One Sunday morning 1 got a call from a lady
who asked, "Is tny* husband playing a round
over there?"

|g

10:00

12 (IT) ALL IN THE FAM/L Y

DEAR PRIVACY: Put the offender on the
defensive with this response; “ Why do you
ask?"
DEAR ABHY* My ex-husband is now seven
months behind on his child support payments.
I lost track of him five months ago and can’t
find him. 1 have heard that he has left the
stale. Is there any way I can find him? 1 can't
atford a private detective.
NEEDSSUPPORT

12 00
0
4 SOAP WORLD
J
O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
7 O NEWS
It (35) BIG VALLEY
ED (10) MANATEES THE VANISH­
ING FLORIDIANS (WED|
ED (10) NOVA (THU)
ED (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (FRI)

13 (IT) MOVIE
Chubasco (16601
Richard Egan, Christopher Jones

9:00
5 O MOVIE Kentucky Woman '
(Premiere) Cheryl Ladd. Philip Lev■en A young woman Iwcew harass­
ment and hurmWatioci when she
goes to work a t a coal miner lo
support Tier small son and ailing
lather
&lt;7 O THREE'9 COMPANY
ED (10) ODYSSEY Maya lo rd s Ol
The Jungle ' Remains o f the clastic
Mayan dvJoation deep in me jun­
gles ol Cenlral America are e ia mined g
7 o

Child Adopted To Kin
Docent Should Be Left Alone

Training
Scheduled

LAVERNE

,

AFTERNOON

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

6:00

7:35

Q

WIFE

13 (IT) WORLD AT LARGE [TUE,
WED)

13 (17) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawks vs Philadelphia 76ers

7

K

1:30

5:30

7:30

I would like to pass along a health lip he gave me.
Now that cold weather is here pulmonary Infections
are out in full force.

M C M ILLA N

MORNING

0 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
* O TIC TAC DOUGH
7 O YOUNG PEOPLES SPE­
CIAL Who Spooked Rodney?" A
young boy hat a tlre a k o» bad tuck
and become! overly superstitious ••
and on Halloween face t the ulli.
male laar
11 (3S)BARNEV MILLER
ED 1101 UNTAMED WORLD

Seminole Community College Office of Com­
munity Instructional Services will hold classes at
the Casselberry Senior Center the week of Jan. 17,
at 2 p.m.
They will offer advanced square dancing with
John Hucko on Monday, sewing and necdlecrnft on
Tuesday with M arge Hombeck, beginning square
dancing with John Hucko on Wednesday, a rt classes
under Ellen P itter on Thursday, Jan. 20 at 10 a.m.
with Ellen’s interpretive gentle exercise class
scheduled right after the meal site closes at 12:30
and Luclla Howard's shape up exercise class will
continue Fridays at 10 a.m.
The Federation of Senior Citizen Clubs, Inc.
supports the art and needlecraft programs with
supplies and equipment.

O

6 35

7:05

Classes Set A t Senior Center

1:10
5

13 |17| BOB NEWHART

17 (IT)GOMER PVLE

In And Around Seminole

7 O MOVIE
Sergeant Vork
(t9 4 t) Gary Cooper. Walter Bren­
nan

O

O 4 THE MUPPE7S
5 O P M MAGAZINE Shaping
up In# pregnancy Maryland ra n ­
d o m who d ra tt in medieval garb
and play backyard barbarian
garnet
7 O JOKER'S WILD
II (35)THEJEFFERSONS
ED (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

H e lm C ra w fo rd te lls th e c lu b m e m b e r s a b o u t
w o m e n a lco h o lics.

11:30
0
4 HIT MAN
t t (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ED (10) POSTSCRIPTS I MON.
WED-FRI)
ED 110) POSTCRIPTS (TUE)

1:00

7:00

IlHfyt* S m ith s p e a k s to th e W o m a n 's C lu b of S a n fo rd , u s in g " T h e l#ovr
h a c to r " a s h e r to p ic .

Jimmy Aleck
It (35)NEWS

He, IT t i t

Ml UK

TUESDAY CARLOAD
NOT

17
5
- B u t UttW

You N a k a U s Fam ous!

PERCAR

WborabouM hi T in t
•m Ttw Border i

O psn H ):J &gt; B .n v ) 0 p m . E u * p t F r i. A S al. C te ln q 10:30 F

1909

SANFORD
French A vb ( H w y .
333-3450

im j

)

CASSELBERR
41N. Hwy. 1M
•31-0150

�SB-Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Jan. 11,1983

Court To Hear
Contamination
Suit Case
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The estate of Karen Silkwood
(Monday won a Supreme Court hearing in its battle to regain a
,110.5 million award against a company accused of con­
tam in atin g her with radioactive plutonium.
-( The justices will hear an appeal during its next term by
lawyers for the deceased nuclear Industry analyst, who died in
‘a traffic accident on her way to meet a reporter about con­
tamination problems at a Kerr-McGcc Corp. plant.
1 The justices said they would hear the m erits of her case first.
JLhen decide whether they have legal jurisdiction to rule on the
question of whether punishing damages may be assessed
- against companies involved in radioactive contamination or
^nuclear mishaps.
,. Returning from a month-long holiday recess, the court also:
•** —Reinstated a law banning federal job funds from going to
. anyone who favors the violent overthrow of the U.S. govern­
ment.
.• —Spumed a plea bv former Green Beret doctor Jeffrey
MacDonald to review his murder conviction for the slayings of
,'jiis wife and children in 1370.
- —Refused to review a Homestead, Fla., ordinance banning
the sale, possession or advertising of drug ‘‘paraphernalia.”
5 —Agreed to review a Maryland law limiting the amount
charities may spend on fund-raising costs.
-R efused an appeal from a Missouri doctor who complained
he will be penalized by higher alimony payments simply
because he divorced, married the same woman, and then
divorced her again.
J) This is the second time the legal controversy stemming from
the mysterious death of Ms. Silkwood has confronted the high
' court. Her survivors earlier lost a plea that the justices review
a ruling that blocked a suit charging KcrrMcGee with violating
her civil rights.
» This time the appeal involves a 10th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruling that states may not allow punitive damage
.awards since the federal government, not the states, regulate
:thc nuclear industry.
, lawyers for the Silkwood estate argue that the ruling allows
the nuclear industry "unprecedented immunity" from money
damages.
Sixteen states joined Oklahoma, saying the appeals court
ruling could upset the balance in federal-state relations and
give nuclear power Immunity from state law.
Ms. Silkwood, 23, died in a November 1974 auto accident on
her way to meet a reporter for The New York Times and a
union official about conditions at the Kerr-McGee plutonium
processing plant near Oklahoma Citv.
An autopsy showed Ms. Silkwood's body contained between
25 percent and 50 percent of the permissible lifetime plutonium
contamination allowed under federal standards for nuclear
industry workers.

0 0 .
P re p a re d by A dvertising D ep t, of

The states appealing the award Include Alaska, Arizona,
Hawaii, Ixm isiana, Maine, M assachusetts, Minnesota,
Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina,
Ohio, South Carolina, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

Patience Called
Business Virtue
' NEW YORK (UPI) — Americans have been described as
.people in a hurry and this has been looked on as a dynamic
virtue — but times have changed.

C O N S IG N M E N T CLOTHING
PH. JJJ-MJI
H W Y .1 7 T ja J M h S T ,
SANFORD

Not In
Conjunction
W ith Any
Other Coupon

2
3
O

Sanford

n

One of the big pitfalls that can prevent patience in real estate
investment Is getting Involved in building, he said. "If you
build, you have to keep at it regardless of need or cost in order
to maintain your organization."

For this reason, he said, real estate companies probably
should not publish quarterly reports of their earnings. "It's
actually a disservice to shareholders to do so," he said. “ It
creates too much temptation to take steps that make the
quarterly reports look good but aren't In the best Interest of the
company or the stockholders In the long run."

c

V
1 PITCHER of BEER OR SODA WITH
On Premises
Good Thru M S I )

FOOD PURCHASE
. . . . . . . .

.C O U PO N. .

DEEP Steam
CARPET CLEANERS
L IV IN G ROOM
DININGROOM
A N D H A LL

Special

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Availpble on Weekends 3 .3 1 .0 0 5 1
CARPET SALES — INSTALLATION — REPAIR

FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION
D inger Signals ol Pinched Nerves:
1 Heidsches
( Difficult Hreaihoig
2 Neck Pam
5 Loner Back Pam
3 Shoulder Pam
Hip Pam
Pam Down tegs

S A N F O R D P A IN
C O N T R O L C L IN IC
t S I f t F ru x k * , t . f.n te r d

t.cr.iih.m.lHAHUTI
M o tt I r t v r t iK . A ttie n m tn ts
Accept*. With No E i l r .
OuL,(&gt;t P jU . l (ip e n te s
Or T h e m .i y .itd c il, C ln r.p r.ctic Physician
Free E i . m Dees Nat litdede X R j, t o * T r ta lm .M

323-5763

V O LKSH O P
Specializing In Service &amp; Parts For
V.W.'s, Toyota and Datsun
(Corner 2nd &amp; Palmetto)

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SANFO RD
PHONE

321-0120
VERAS ATTI C

VCRASATTI C

VERASATTI C

NEW CONSIGNMENT SHOP!!
Vera s Attic, III* Hwy II T1
Corner UTJ A Lake Mery Btvd

blouses

391 -937 R
I *uM »

•
CONSIGNMENTS
WELCOME
S p lit 5 0 - 5 0
In The Winn Diale P la ta
Lake Mary Blvd. 4 H w y . 17-71

I t .

PUT TOUR

•

BUSINESSON TH
A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

Thornhill's Interiors Is
In New Location In Center
Thornhill's Interiors, Etc.,
a total service store, has
moved into a new larger
location facing State Hoad
434, but Is still in Ijongwood
Business Center. Their new
address Is Building 705 Suite
K. They will work with the
custom er to design and
decorate a room or a whole
house.
Owner Nancy Picotte, of
Sanford, is also proud lo
announce that Thornhill's is
going to be an Armstrong
Carpet Studio carrying the
entire Armstrong Carpet line.
They also carry a number of
other major brands and have
a complete vinyl department
offering floor-covering for
kitchen or bath, as well as
ceram ic tile and wood
departments.
Thornhill’s has also added a
contract d ep artm en t with
commercial floor coverings.
Connie Hunter has Joined
the Thornhill's staff as an
interior
d eco rato r
and
manager of the wallpaper and
drapery departments. She has
just completed a drapery
seminar with Carole Fabrics
to bring to her customers the
newest and most innovative
ideas in d rap ery
and
upholstery.
Connie has a background in
everything Thornhill’s carries
and has many years ex­
perience in both the retail and
wholesale sides of the in­
dustry.
“ As a firm ," said Nancy,
"we work hard to stay abreast
of all the lutesl colors and
styles and.attend seminars
throughout the year.”
The number of special order
lines available for custom
order furniture customers at
Thornhill's to choose from Is
getting larger each month.
Among them are Hickory Fry
and Cal-Stylc. "Check with us
before you special order
somewhere else, said Nancy.
Mention you saw this article
and you will receive 25 per­
cent discount when you
custom o rd er furniture.

Connie Hunter, interior decorator and wallpaper and drapery departm ents
m anager at Thornhill's , m atches upholstery samples with carpet.
Nancy also designs and builds
bedroom
s e tt
on the
customer’s orders.
N ancy purchased the
business in October, 1981, and
has been personally involved
in different phases of interior
decorating for 11 years. She
has an extensive background
in a rt, d raftin g and a r­
chitecture.
" I will be happy to work
with the customer on an
existing home or new con­
struction, within the confines

of their budget." said Nancy.
"In commercial offices we
will do custom designed floor
covering, draperies, wall
covering and furniture. All of
our cabinet men, wallpaper
hangers, carpet mechanics
and tile m erchants arc all
professionals. We only use
quality helpers and products.
We only do a quality job."
Thornhill's also offers an inhome cleaning service for
d ra p e ry ,
carpet
and
upholstery. Mention this
article and you will get a 10

percent discount on the cost of
the cleaning Job.
You don't have to take
samples all over town to get
your decorating done, come to
Thornhill's,
a
one-stop
shopping center for home
decorations. The store is open
Monday through Friday from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday,
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and evenings
by appointment only. If you
prefer to shop at home, a
designer will come to your
residence. F o r an ap­
pointment, call 830-4386.

VEBA’SATTICV - VERA

LOTS

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PER MO.

ompare

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a TRASH. CITY WATER &amp; SEWER INCLUDED

$ I2 ° °

• LARGE POOL • ADULT CLUB HOUSE
• NEW IMPROVED LAUNDRY FACILITIES
• LIM ITED FAMILY A ADULT LOTS AVAIL.
SR 427 SANFORD, 2 M l. E. OF 17-92
MON-SAT. 7 a.nt.-S p.m. 322-1140

PH. 322-7684

pings of Pair
1911 FRENCH AVE.

*105

MOBILE HOME MODELS ON DISPLAY
C

§

FROM

Qitand Opening

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT

&amp; BLOW DRY

SANFORD

"A BETTER WAY TO TAKE IT O F F "
WE WI LL S T R I P ANY
STRAI GHT C H A I R

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3416 ORLANDO OR. (17-92)

S B 4 9

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PRINTING

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Lantern

PHONE

PAC n'SEflD
U

3 2 3 -7 4 6 5

36 17 S. French A ve . Sanford

SANFORD

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• PACKAGING MATERIALS
8 ESTATE PACKING AND
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Learn Hit most influential martial art to omorgo from
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Group or Private instruction.

J40 HIGHWAY 17-93
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SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR23's FILED
ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC - VEES
Serving Sanford for 17 Years
OPEN MON. THAU FRI.9 S

2234455

GRAND OPINING MONTH
SATURDAYS A SUNDAYS 1:20 A.M. TO4:20 P.M.

•Buy or Soil • NoMiddleman
YOUM akt Tha Deal
•Accessory A Parts Vendors
•Antique A Classic Cars
• OailV Free Give-Aways
•Bring Your Cars • Trucks - R Vs - Boats* Etc.
For Info Cell (205) 226-202A Anytime
located Al M*vl*laad Drlva-ln Hwy. 17-72 Sanfvd

PHONE

in u T e -

3 2 3 -7 7 1 0 o r 3 1 3 -3 8 6 6
2 9 1 0 A O A K A V I. SA N FO R D
tenter o4 S. Perk Ave. A Oak)

O mni

Kung-Fu Auodntion

2635 Sanford Avo.

BLAIR AGENCY

0.0. BLAia

a

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Reg $11.25

Special

IS!

8 SHIP UPS, AIR, TRUCK,
BUS OR PARCEL POST

*17“

M TC B

C|

"PACKAGES SENT TODAYi i

JANUARY SPECIAL
1,000 BUSINESS CARDS

Another pitfall, he said, Is panicking when you have
vacancies in valuable rental properties. It doesn't pay to get
impatient and rent to tenants that are unsuitable for the
premises.
A third pitfall is failure to realize that the business cycles in
real estate a re longer than those of business in general. "A
business cycle in real estate may be IS to 90 years, far longer
than the cycles in retailing or manufacturing," Newman said.

o

^ filatora qlc

?lzz«rla

’’The university graduate business schools have come under
iheavy fire for emphasizing short-term bottom line profit In• stead of patient development of long-term growth. The nation's
• industrial competitors in Europe and Japan arc praised for
^making haste slowly by looking years ahead for big sales and
-profits.

i&lt; New Plan was new in 1926 when Newman's father founded it
•'as a plan to let little people pool their money and invest in real
estate. It has been a good money fhaker for three generations
»but is no giant.
’ The firm was a pioneer in preaching the gospel of patience, a
quality Newman puts at the head of a list of requirements for
, successful management in any business — not just real estate.
/ After patience, he lists "sticking to your knitting,"
'something you know and understand, being conservative
‘'financially, identifying closely with the people you do business
with, running a tight ship and putting a premium on keeping up
"educationally.
; But Ir* real estate, even more than In other businesses,
bNewman says patience is the absolute essential. "It’s more
important than intelligence, enterprise or ingenuity," he said.
" "As a m atter of fact any of those apparently desirable traits
rcan get you In trouble quickly in real estate. And there’s no
way to make real estate respond to forced feeding. Nobody but
*lhe government is big enough to create trends that influence
th e real estate m arket."
The single most Important time to be patient In real estate Is
in making a decision to buy a property, Newman said. "Often
it’s wise to m ake a deliberate decision to stay completely out of
the market for a year or more and it may take several years to
reach the right decision on any given deal."

A D V E R T IS IN G

HOT K m ir t
P ill*
Shopping
C u lle r

Z

CM 322-2611 Maw!

Herald Advertiser

■COUPONi

• From every side, Americans now arc urged to learn the
blessings of patience. Politicians, both national and local, are
\ being criticized severely for being shortsighted opportunists.

» A field in which patience pays off and impatience can lead to
■great grief is real estate, says Chairman William Newman of
,New Plan Realty Trust of New York.

Evening Herald

EC0ND
e c o n d I MAGE

S

• In 1979, a federal jury in Oklahoma City awarded Ms. Silkwood's estate and three children by her ex-husband - Beverly,
Dawn and Michael — $10 million in punitive damages, a
$500,000 personal injury award, and $5,000 award for damaged
property.
‘ But the Denver appeals court overturned all but the $5,000
award for damage to Ms. Silkwood's furniture and clothing
’destroyed because of radioactive contamination in her
apartment.

Business
Review

ITEMS
AS LOW
AS

*0410*

liBXOBBNOB
I AN AUTO FUA M AM ET

022 2914

�4/
r

Evening Herald, Santord. FI.

-BusinessReview

ALL

P re p a re d by A d vertisin g D ept, of

A D V E R T IS IN G

Q

I

The ancient art of
Shaolin Kung Fu has
been
adapted to
modern street appli­
cation so that it is
practical for use
today, he said.
Also instructing the
martial arts at the
Sanford School of Self
Defense is the former
owner, Teri Bourque,
who is a first degree
black belt.
Teri
has
been
studying under Dave
since she came to
Sanford last year.
“ He's a unique in­
structor and makes
things easy to under­
stand. He's more
knowledgeable than
most
senior
in­
structors I've known in
my martial arts ex­
perience," she said.
Hie study of the
martial arts not only
provides a means of

SPECIAL

•m ss

Sanford

J / io r n lu f/ s 9 n / e n o r s L&gt;tc.
F R E E Q U A LITY
CUSHION W IT H PURCHASE
OF 18 YDS. OR MORE OF
C A R P ET PR ICED
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Ill© l i t §h C | )
"Only For Those That Care
About Their H air"
S P E C IA LIZIN G IN N A TU R A L LOOKING
CUSTOM CUTS, PER M S &amp; COLOR
305-321-CUTS
2SS7 Park Dr.
321-2887
Sanlord
OW NER C O N N IE D YE

Instructors at the Sanford School of ScIT Defense are Dave Kolml/ik (left),
owner, and Teri Bourque,
self defense, but also
good self discipline,
great physical, m ental
• FU R N IT U R E • B O A T S • C A R S
and emotional exer­
L a rg e Selection of M a te ria l
cise, said Teri, and it’s
Q u ality W orkm anship
healthful fun and can
And D elivery
Free E s tim a te s
Free Pickup
be applied in everyday
4 9 0 N . 17-92
life.
Next To Soblk's Sub Shop
The school is open 1LO N G W O O D , FLA.
9p.m. Monday through
Friday, and 10 a.m . to
(305) 8 6 2 -1 6 0 0 .
noon on Saturday. Call
Mon. - Frl. 1:00 AM ■4:00 PM
321-5751 for fu rth e r
information.

DAVE'S UPHOLSTERYl

COMPLETE LINE

OILS - ACRYLICS - W. COLORS
H

Everything (or the
amateur or professional

CUSTOM FRAMING
OVER 350 MOLDINGS

210 MAGNOLIA

——

^

SANFORD

———- - - - ■ --j-j-j

KELLY TIRE SALE

OTHER

R 0 A D M *M £ A Q Q 5 S K
POLY
* MWMI.w.lll
s e i.tr . TOO I
A78-13
F N |IV 4 3 F e.T.
OIL CHANGE HIGH SPEED
ALIGNMENT
A LUBE
COMPUTER

S99?

BALANCE

$ 1 1 9 9 ^,
^
tm r l( M C in |
C tiH g lit*
m u lt
Iw b r lc .liifl aag «:i
tbenet- P rltt Iw lw dti
•p t* 1 gti. * t til w ,
lit*
( b il k
Irantm Itila n all.

$351

» Amarlcan Cart
Align ta tta r. c a m .tr
and Inn-In Camalrt*
Ifn n l-tn d
annlytla
Included. Prlca co vtri
air canditlnnad ta rt.

R&amp;E TIRE CO.

Rdtild 1, Bo 1 4)4. Sanfdrtf, Fid.

*
323-1350

On Hwy. I f - f t Sdvth df Pldd World

Rent A Car $9 ^
COUPON’

LUBE-OIL

(INCLUDES:
I. L u b ru iti
VtM ria
I. I Ovaitt
Pantail (hi
» Oil

F ilftr

OMt
$ ChMk All

Flnid Lavalt

PAINT
Y, INC.

Swduwilt

U n ite d V fe y

FILTER
* «

J

I X P I R I I l-lt-43

A&gt;
*

SPECIAL
* 1 4 9 5

WITH THIS COUPON

-------COUPON-

4114 Hwy, 17 « Between Sanford A Longwood

321-0741 Call For Appointment 830-6688
M on.-Frl. I a.m .-S :30 p .m . Sat. I a.m .-l p .m .

SANFO RD
SCHO O L OF
SELF DEFENSE
OPEN
M O N . F R I . l - f P.M.
SAT. I t A M . - I ) P M,

2

i

CLASSES FOR MEN
WOMEN • CHILDREN

|
|

• SHAOLIN KUNG FU

• SELF DEFENSE
’
716 W. 1ST ST.
• MARTIAL ARTS SUPPLIES j
SANFORD
2
^ 6751
Bring This Ad for 1 FREE Lesson I

Art Supplies

IJ E

4. Sattty

\

TVtinf f t

W E 'V E M O VEO I
OUR N EW ADDRESS IS...
705 S U IT E K. HWY. 434
LONGW OOD, F L 32750
(30$) 110-41(4

1177

\

ft "P

A D V E R T IS IN G

J IM LASH'S BLUE BOOK CARS
CHEVY Vi TON
WINDOW VAN
» ,MO MILES
IT'S NICE
PRICE LEADEN

m il

AND PAINT

2730 South Santord Ave.
(305) 323-2457

School O f Self Defense
Teaches Shaolin Kuna Fu
The Sanford School
of Self Defense, now
under the ownership of
D ave Kolodzik of
Deltona, offers private
or group classes for
m en, women and
children
in
self
defense, Shaolin Kung
Fu, and weapons.
He holds the rank of
Si-bok (senior in­
structor)
and
sp ecializes in th e
Shaolin Kung Fu style.
The school is located
at 716 W. First St.
A member of the
F lo rid a Black Belt
A ssociation,
D ave
started in the combat­
ant arts 11 years ago.
He studied both Japan­
ese and Chinese m ar­
tial arts and found the
Shaolin Kung Fu
superior. •
Vice president of the
American - Chinese
King Fu Federation,
Dave is a weapons
instructor specializing
in use and defense
from 14 weapons.
Shaolin KungFu was
founded in the Shaolin
Monestery in the Pro­
vince of Honan, 4,000
years ago, said Dave.
It incorporated animal
styles for combatant
use and encompasses
hard and soft styles
combined with exter­
nal
and
in te rn a l
systems.
Dave studied for 3*.^
years under Richard
Rock Burn, who was
instructed by grand­
m aster Lee Olum, who
studied in the Shaolin
Monastery in China.

BODY WORK

IDCM

Even in g Herald
Herald Advertiser

BUSINESSON THE M OVE

A D V E R T IS IN G

REALTY
TRANSFERS

TYPES

Call! 322-2611
• PUT TOUR

Tuesday, Jan. 11,1913—3B

WE DO

PH. 322 4422

JAMES SALES C O R P O R A TIO N
EAST H W Y .46-S A N FO R D
322-9436

339-1834

OPEN7 DAYS A W E E K
PVC Pipe And Fittings • Submersible
Pumps, Jet Pumps - Pressure Tanks And
Pump Motors And Accessories

CASE TRACTORS
YA N M A R TRACTORS

SALES A
SERVICE

HEARING TESTS
SET FOR SANFORD/
CASSELBERRY

MOWERS
ROTAVATORS
PLOWS
CULTIVATORS

AREA
Electronic hearing tests w ill be
given tre e a t the O range
Hearing A id C trl., 2fOI So
Orlando Dr . Sanlord (Monday
only), knd 120 S Hwy 17 92
Cassetoerry Monday Friday
this week H Powers and B
F ishe r, c e rtllie d by the
National Hearing Aid Society
w ill be at these ofllces to
perform the tests,
.
Anyone whe nas tro u b le
nearing or understanding is
welcome to have a test using
the latest electronic equipment
to determ ine his or her par
ticular loss

DICK JOYCE WELL DRILLING, INC.
SALES A SERVICE
1224410

3)9-1134

“Peopleusealot of methodsto
get theircarpet cleaned.I thinh
StanleySteemer cleansthebest”

Everyone should have a
hearing test at least once a
year it there is any (rouble el
a ll h e a rin g c le a rly . Even
people now w earing a hearing
aid or those who have been told
nothing could be done (or them
can find out about the latest
methods of hearing corrac
lions.

SPRING
SPECIAL

$34«L
W

• TRUCK MOUNTID UNIT
• « ■ H I AT T H I WATin
~ WR DO NOT U ll YOUR
■LICTRlCITY
NO WATIR M i l l IN
l YOUR HOMI
[ • W I DO NOT U ll IHAMPOj
ITRAINID UNIFORMlO
CRRWI

«r-

URA
'RANGE

IM S e .H w y . 17*1
Casselberry
434 17)4

3 3 9 -4 9 6 9

STANLEYSTEEMER.

Tkt carpet cleeninf ( i R p i i y m

"We'Work Saturdays Too

w

John P. Weaver, Repr. ts l Joan
T. to John P. Weaver Brasil. Lot 9,
Set. 1, Concord Woods VIII., 1109(Q CDI H a rry W. W uest A
Evelyn lo Evelyn Wuest, Lot II,
j. L . H ill's L ittle Bear ta k a SO,
1100.
,
Bucky J. Anderson A w l Tina to
Harold W. Umphress A wl Judy,
Let I . Blk A, Camelol Un. 4,

$71,400
IQCDI Herbert L. Mogdahl to
Herbert Mogdahl A wt Northa B ,
W 125 8' ot E 621' ot W ** o lW 'jo t
S E 'i Sec 18 71 29 etc ., SIOO
Oeccatexine Constr Corp. to
Hardy K Dorsey A wf Wanda J .
Lot 21. Blk C, Sweetwater Oaks,
Sec IB. $141,800
RCA to Beniamin Garbis. sgl A
Bettie G Wahlquist, sgl.. Un 125,
Escondido. Cond Sec. V II. $67,800
Magnolia SVC Corp to David L Quickel A wt Brenda J . Lot 44.
Wekiva Club E fts Sec 8 . 137.000
Hacker Homes Inc., to Christen
Homes In c ., L o t 7, V s ta v ia .
111.500
Michael C T lllis, sgl lo Sharon
Ann Tlllis. s g l. Lot 4, Blk B.
Phillips Ravenna Ph . Sec Loch
Arbor. St 3.700
IQCO) Harold J Von W eller A
Gary E Brown to A ir Flow
Designs Inc,. Lot 6. Lorraine
Commerce Park, SIOO
A ir Plow Designs Inc . to Harold
J Von Weller A Gary E. Brown,
Lot 6, Lorraine Commerce Park,
S100
H. M ille r A Sons FI., Inc., to
Lawrence A Swasey Jr. A wt
M ary A , Lot 28. Tuskawilla Point.
SB7.900
Sabai Point Prop Inc to Cob
blestone Constr. Corp Lot 17.
Timber Ridge at Sabai Point, Un
One. $36,000
IQCDI Margaret M. Anderson,
sgl A Karen P M alcolm sgl. to
Isabel M Shaughnessy, Trustee,
Lol 70 Blk 21. Dreamwold 1100
FI Res Comm., Inc to Ronald
E Nalherson A w l B Am or, Lot
29, Tiberon Cove, 175,000
Assad J Mage A w t asma to
Moussa Fekany A Sam ir J. Hage.
Lot 13 (less N 16177') t^lk B
Brentwoods. 1100
The Ryland Group Inc, to James
C Owens A wt Deborah S „ Lot 9,
Deer Run, Un 8A 173,500
FI. Land Co to Lakew ood
Venture Inc., Lot 14, Greenwood
Lakes Un. 3. 1)5.700
W illiam O O'Donnell A w l
E laine
to
Kobe
Japanese
Steakhouscol F I . Inc , W 730' ol E
60S' ol blk C Weatherstield S D.
1357.000
Deborah L. Tuskey, sgl. lo
Edwardo Arenas A wf Aileen. Lol
6. less S 7 S’ of E 16' ot 6, Cluster B.
Wildwood. PUD, 157,500
M ark Wallschlaegcr lo Howard
G. Thall A w l E li! R . NY. Lot 124.
The Forest Un 2, Sec 7, Incl M
H m , 141.000
Raynel Homes Inc , to Harold W.
Blaker A w f M ary E.. Lot 171.
Sunrise Un 2B. 159.500
Riley H Cook A w l P a tricia to
Triad Prop . Inc . Lot 72, Blk L
Fomnoor Un ], 152.000
Penelope Sue M ortord. sgl to
Jacqueline J Powers sgl., Lol 34,
Woodcreil, Un One, t 47.000
Devea Inc , lo Harold M oret A
wt K ith le . Lot 8 A. Replal ot
Springdale, 149,900
Wrenco Homes Inc., to W ylie B
G rillln III A wt Susan M , Lot 455.
Wrenwood, Un. 3. 4th A d d n ,
144.200
Angelo V. Areopagtle A w l
Josephine to Jon W. Zabel I m a rr.)
Lol 6. Blk H. North Orlando
Ranches. Sec. 2A, SIOO
The Huskey Co to R .L. Peatrois
A Hueber Inc., Lot 1, Blk O.
Sweetwater Oaks, Sec. 15, $48,000
Norman D Goad A w l Diana L
to Claude F. Blackmon A wt Lynn
D , Lot 14. Wekiva H ills Sec 5.
$128,500
O rville Johnson III lo Ball Motor
Line Inc., E ' i of S 455' of blk 50.
M M. Sm ith's S D. 150.000
Earl S Black J r. A w l Linda lo
Christine D. Bare s g l. Lol 31 (less
S I f ) A S 34' of 30. Wolfers
Lakevlew Terr,, 1100
Christine Bare to E a rl S. Black
Jr A w l Linda S Lot 3) (less S 17')
A S 34' ol 30, W ollers Lakevlew
Terr., SIOO
C om m unity Hom es E tc ., to
Kevin J Spoiskl, sgl. Lot 7 F air
way Oaks at Deer Run, 191.900
Douglas I Richardson A wt
Florence to G. Stanley Long A wf
Cassandra. Lot 9, Tee’n Green
E sls, 153,100
G. Stanley Long A wt Cassandra
lo Francis R. Blake A w tt Dolores
W , Lot 9 Tee ’n Green E s ls ,
155.000
Jose A. Suarei A w t Gladys lo
Billia M F itihugh, Lot 14. Blk 74.
Wealhersliald. 7nd Adn., 153,500
J Robert N u ll Sr. A w l Adelene
to Fred I Gerlh. sgl Lot 31. Blk G.
Mobile Manor, 7nd Sec. 11,900
Atlantic Nall. Bk., Repr. E ll
Gordon O. F lynl, Jr. lo Elbert F.
Ham Jr., V) Ini. A sama, as Gdn. of
m inor L o ti 9 A 10, Blk 3, Bal A ir,
1100 .

Ray S, Potvin A Nancy C. to
Lawrence A. Groves A w t Barbara
A , E&gt; r Ol W»&gt; ol Lol I , Blk B, O.R.
M itchell's Survey ol Levy Grant,
171.000
teddy J. Becker A wt P a tricia to
Jeanatta A. L u ll, Lot 10, C y p r ttt
Landing A l la b e l Point, 187,000
(QCD) Sabai Point Prop,, Inc. lo
Gailimora Homes Inc ., Part oI Tr.
E, Sabai Point 2nd Ray., 1100
G ailim ora Homes Inc. to Brian
J Levy A wl Sheila J,, Lot 21,
Timber Ridge a l Sabai Point, Un.
I, A part ol Tr. E, Sabai Point 2nd
Rev . $111,000
Oliva Arnold, Repr. a it H.S. Law
Arnold lo Edward W. Collin
sworth, sgl., L o l S3, Wyndham
Woods, Ph. 1 ,149,000.

CALENDAR

ream and

• r family rtaaq
m a hau
)

The tree hearing test w ill be
given Monday th ru Friday —
this week a t the Casselberry
office and Monday at the
Sanford lo c a tio n C e ll I h t
number below end arrange lor
an appointment, or drop In at
your convenience.

M iO C O DISCOUNT
DRUOI
2711 le. Orlande Dr.
laniard
323-1741

■

(QCDI Paul Johnson &amp; Diane R.
lo F rank G Gurse A wt Christine.
Lot (5, Walts Farms, 1100.
James W ra rt to Paul W Smitn A
wt Carolyn K., Lot 6 . Blk A,
Country Club Manor Un. 3 .134,000
The Huskey Co to A rth u r E,
West EL wt Gwen 5 . Lot 15. B lk B.
Sweetwater Oaks, Sec 13, $52,000
(QCDI Richard A Jankowski to
C&gt;ndy a Jankowski wt L o ts . Blk
A. T r 58. Sanlando Springs. S100
Coy A Riddle to Teotlio 0
Dim ron K wt Martha. Lot 37,
Woodvrest, Un, One, $59,000
(QCDI Abranam T rm er to Sam
Gabbal. 1.- Inti NE1. of &amp;E1. Sec
31 19 31 (less N 37 91 acres 8. W 20
ft 1 stoo
IQCDI Peter F Forlunato to
Joseph M F re tw e lt. Lot 37
C orrected &amp; Revised p la t ol
Normandy Park. 1100
M yrle E Drawdy to Adena Gail
Bowen,
int NE1, ol SW1. e tc.
Sec 70 21 32. SI58.I00
Sylvan Lake Dev to Egbert
M yers A wl Imogene. Lot 17. Sylva
Glade, SI3.500
G reater C onslr. Corp.
to
Margaret M oru lin , Lot 71) River
Run Sec Four, $58,500
The Ryland Group Inc. to Joseph
J Zucchero A wl Virginia M , Let
30, Oeer Run Un BA. $72,300
Govr Pomt, Ltd to Richard 5.
Larsen A w l Mary L,. Lot 6,
Governor's Point, Ph. I. S7B.SOO
Greater Constr Corp lo Ernest
A CO* I I I A Wl Louis. Lol 90
Mandarin. Sec Four, $107,500
Com plete In te rio rs . Inc, to
Octavio Jaram lllo, Lot (2, Hun
lington Hills, 1)7.000
H u n tin g to n Homes, Inc. lo
Michael a Cyphers, s g l. Lot 178
Hidden Lake, Ph II, Un, V,
144,400
(QCDI Jerry Siegall etu* etal to
Altamonte Springs. Ltd , Parcel of
land in Sec 4 71 21 SIOO
IQCDi John Bowman A wt
Sandra to A ll Spgs , Ltd., parcel
ot land in Sec 4 71 71 S100
(QCDI Mud Creek Farms Inc.,
to same as above. $100
(QCDI G B Flshback A wl
Florence to same as above SIOO
Charles E Pughe A w t Carol lo
Edwin A D ia l ? w l Carmen. Un.
C 3. Marbeya Club Cond . 144,000.
Rose E Plumley, wld. lo H M.J.
Corp , Lot 7 Glenwood, $45,000
Levey C Powell A wl Geraldine
to M ary Ann Cameron. Lot 2 A N1»
ot 3, Blk 8, Tier 4 Town of Sanford,
139.800
(QCDI Michael F. Sweeney to
Madeleine J Sweeney Lot 34,
Grove Estates, SIOO
B ranim lr Botic A John L. Lat
shaw Jr., dba Suncratl Plr I I I lo
Clifford L Stein, Lot 23. Wood
bridge al The Springs, Un III,
5114.900
Eleanor S Simpson, wtd. to
Ovidio Mendel, tr. Lol 2, Goldie
Manor, $42,000
C lifford L . Stein, sgl. to David V.
Cragg. sgl Apt Un. C 201. B1 4.
Fairway Villas. $85,500
Sandpiper Homes In c ., to
Roltand B Lawrence A we Helen
A.. Lot 25. Blk C. O akcrtst. $58,000.
John B M lllonlg A wt K a ltitM n
to James C. W illiam s, s g l, Lol 83,
Lake Sylvan E lls , 133.500
Greater Constr. Corp. lo Edwin
C. Relsr A wt M arie M ., Lot 148.
River Run Sec. 4, $45,900
John V. Vivelros. sgl A Pamela
A., sgl to Charles R. A u lt A w l
Dorothy J , Lot 45. Blk H, Camelol,
Un ]. S45.I00
E. Scott Brandon Inc., lo M ilton
W. Olon A wt Marsha. Lol 25,
M arkham Place, $44,000.
W illiam Culley Sr. A wt Martha
to David K Robison A w l M ary K.,
Lot 59. Lake Markham E lls ..
$18,500
John M a n y A wt Sandra to
Stephen L M a lty A wt Beth G.,
Lot 8. Blk A. Tanglewood Sec
138.900
Pickett's Pact Co., Inc., to
Charles B Caudle A w l Lynda B.,
Lol 9, Blk 28. Townsite ol North
Chuluola. $9,000
(QCDI Eddie 5 W right A wl
Connie to Conni'- W right, N 145' ol
W 141' ol Lot
d k 17, Sanlord
Farm s, SIOO
Governors Po.m _td , to Rh««
C. Wallace, sgl Lui 2, Governors
Point, Ph. I, 170 000.
A m e rllirs l Dev. lo The Ryland
Group Inc., Lots 84 55, Deer Run,
Un. 7A, $120,000
Same as Above, Lots I S, 7, 15 17,
19, 21, 22. 24. 28. 27. 34 A 35. Deer
Run, Un. IA $204,000
E lllw o rlh M. Wilson Jr. A w l
Ann lo Ronald W. Raulh A wt
Karen, LW. Lot 3, Blk C, Sweet
water Oaks, Sec 2, 1124.900.
R. Rendel, ID A Tr. to L a rry P.
Deal A wt Cathrine R , L o l IS,
Shadow Lake Woods, HS.tOO.
Adrian D. Carr A w l Lorena to
David E M ay (m a rr.) From NE
cor ol SE’ ii ol SE1« Sec 22 21 31
etc , 5 05 acres m l. 134.500.
Byron E. Shim A w l Joanne to
Joseph A. Keene A wt Beverly A.,
Lot I , Suiters M ill. Un One,
173.100

r t w a ni.
lu Ml

K .t' tm i ase

Xba

TUESDAY, JANUARY 11
American Dlabetea Allocation, Lake Monroe
Chapter, 7:30 p.m., Central Florida Regional Hospital,
Sanford.
Action for Former Military ffhrea, 1:30 p.m„ for
more information call tM-Ml.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11
“Great Dedalaa" cmraa pretested by Valcada
Jnater College qxxiaorod by Jewish Gommntity
Center, at the Kinnerst II library,) pjn. on aacood and
fourth Wednesday through May 11. Call MMttJ.
Rebaaaad Live Oak RebaaClabAA, noon and I p.m.
fdoaad), 330 liv e Oake Center, CuM lberry.

Caaaelberry Ratary, 7 a m , C iw fe r y 8
Crater, Secret Lake Park, North Triplet Drive,
laaford Klwaata CM , noon, Seated CMc Cmtpr
J J r a T e Wh AA, Ip jn . (open), W l W. Pint St.,

Mam bar Saatard Chambar at Cammar ca

rmorteten

Ceaadbcrry AkeheNee Aaraymera,

I Pm

A a c e n ilo n L u th e r a n C h u rc h , O re rfa ro o k D r iv e .

J. *

f

�Evening Hen Id, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Jan. l l , 1983

18—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

Acid Rain
It's Silent, Invisible...All Pervasive'
LAKE SOIJTUDE, NEWBURY, N.H. |U Pl) Silently and steadily, a new menace falling from the
sky threatens to poison lakes and rivers, the soil,
and possibly man.
Called acid rain, this killer of biological life has
been drenching a vast area of the United States and
Canada, sparking controversy that is certain to
grow. Environmentalists are up in arms about the
threat that they fear will spread worldwide with the
advance of civilization.
Other experts dispute the dangers of con­
taminated rainfall, blamed primarily on emissions
from towering smokestacks, which prompts vigor­
ous dissents from industrialists hard-pressed by
governm ent reg u latio n s and worried about
monumental costs of m ore restrictions.
What acid rain could mean to mankind in the long
term is not known.
What Is known Is that an estimated 30 million tons
of sulphur oxides arc blown into the air from
smokestacks of U.S. utility plants and smelters
fired by coal. Once in the atmosphere, a lot of it
comes back to earth to kill.
Some scientists believe acid rain is a forerunner
of a worsening chain of events that could eventually
affect the health of people living in impacted areas.
The predominant theory among atmospheric
scientists is that acid rain — some produced locally,
some thrown -mto the sky by fossil-fuel burning
plants hundreds of m iles away — (alls on thousands
of lakes in eastern Canada, across the U.S. Nor­
theast and as far south as Georgia.
"Sulphur, nitrogen, -oxidize, acidity, alkalinity
and the pH factor" a re the buzz words in this latest
environmental row.
‘ Studies by various a ir and water specialists in­
dicate acid rain occurs when sulphur dioxide and
nitrogen oxides combine with cloud moisture to
form mild solutions of sulphuric and nitric acids.
Once in the air, the particles are transported by
strong prevailing winds in the upper atmosphere
and ultimately fall to E arth as acid-laden
precipitation.
At New Hampshire's Lake Solitude, the few game
fish that have survived years of acid rain swim this
winter under ice. They have won a reprieve until
spring when the snow will melt and dissolve Into the
lake. Then, the accumulated o d d may poison the
lake and further threaten its existence as an en­
vironment for living things.
The irony is la k e Solitude still looks like the
perfect fishing place. It is small and secluded and
tics atop 2,743-foot-high Mount Sun a pee like a
teardrop from Zeus’ eye.
In winter, the silence on the mountain is profound.
Tufts of Ice coal the trees surrounding the lake.
Snow cushions the steps of the occasional
jackrabbil. Unseen by the human eye, steadydeposits of acid accumulate in this tranquil setting
on the frozen lake. In sum m er, the acid shower goes
directly into the water.
Once there, aided according to scientists by a

control experts the only “ unknown" Is how much
worse the acid rain can get.
"We have been seeing an increase in acidity in
remote, high-altitude ponds and lakes," said Ronald
Towne, a state water pollution biologist.
"In the spring, we tried to stock some of the ponds
with trout. We flew in by helicopter and many of the
fish died from acid shock when we put them in the
acidic lakes whose pH is much lower than that of the
hatcheries."
At liike Solitude, the pH is now 4,8; in 1950 it was
5.8. Acidity is measured by the pH scale of zero to
14. Water with a pH of 7.0 is neutral; water above 7.0
is alkaline and those lower than 7.0 are acidic.
Clean, normal rain over continental areas is
slightly acidic with readings of about 5.6.
The pH scale is logarithmic and when the pH
drops one point, the acidity rises tenfold. A pH of 4 is
100 times more acidic than a pH of 6. (Aquatic life is
considered to be vulnerable when the pH drops
below the 5.0 level.)

Steve Wheeler, 37, biologist with the New Hamp­
shire Fish and Game Department, said trout placed
in tak e Solitude from state hatcheries died of acid
shock.
"Even a 1-point change in pH is quite a shock for
them ," Wheeler said.
But Bill Ulinski, superintendent of Mt. Sunapee
Slate Park and in charge of Lake Solitude as well as
2,700 acres of other ski and park areas, said the
lake's problems arc due to causes other than acid
rain.
'" I t ’s so shallow and contaminated with organic
m atter with little flow that that may be the reason
for the lack of fish — although I spoke with some
old-timers who say they still gel some lunkers out of
there but they know where the good spots are," said
Ulinski, 37, who has been in charge of the Mt.
Sunapee area for four years.
r
"But, In reality, fishermen tell me that the lake
has never liad any fish worth a damn."
Even at some lower elevations in New Hamp­
shire, fishermen are complaining about a decline in
game fish.
• Keith Brazier, 41, vice president of the 200member taconla Rod &amp; Gun Club, said his m em ­
bers have noticed a decrease in the number of fish
they have been able to catch.
"The trout fishing is down. Nobody seems to be
catching as much as we used to, In fact, at a lot of
the ponds we're not getting much at all," Brazier
said.
Paul Knee of Baggett's Sports Shop in Concord,
N.H., agreed.
"The last couple of years have been terrible.
Trout fishing is off and the fishing seems to be
better in moving water — in streams —than it is in
the ponds,", he said.
Knee said be thought industries should be more
regulated to reduce pollution.
"They should put t&gt;etter smog control on those
power plant* in Ohio and Pennsylvania. And ll
ro c k bottom , l h * k ilte r goee to w o rk on the plant U tc
— Illy pads, weeds, plankton. When plant Utc dies, seems to me it wouldn’t be lhat expensive, either."
fish die.
Fossil fuel plant operators claim pollution con­
Fish do not die suddenly. Rather, they develop
trols on smokestacks, scrubbers and other devices
chronic reproductive failures such as the inability
would cost $300 billion and possibly cause massive
to release fertilized eggs. Other effects on fish are
layoffs.
spinal deformities caused by increased mobilization
Carl E. Bagge, president of the National Coal
of mercury due to a d d deposition.
Association, in a recent address to the Canadian
Frequently, areas that produce acid rain are not
Bar Association, said the jobs of 89,000 U.S. mining
affected by it, either because the fallout takes place
industry employees and 225,000 jobs in related In­
far away or local lakes and soils are well-buffered
dustries
would be affected if companies were forced
with bottoms composed of alkaline bedrock or
to comply with new legislation more restrictive
neutralizing compounds.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in than the present Clean Air Act.
“ Acid rain may well be u serious problem for our
1970 ordered plants to raise smokestack heights to
two
countries. But we must be certain that (be cures
carry pollution away from the local site. The theory
was that increasing height would aid in the that are prescribed actually work, that it doesn't
have the side-effects of greater economic adversity
dispersal of particles.
and a worsening of relations between our two great
Some stacks rose from 200 feet in 1970 to above
nations," Bagge said.
1,000 feet in 1982.
How extensive Is the acid rain problem?
Utility owners and some scientists, however,
A report by the National Wildlife Federation
dispute the theory that coal-burning plants cause
claims acid rain has been responsible for the
acid rain and claim the problem Is not as severe as
following;
reported.
—At least 212 fishlcss lakes in the Adirondack
"There's been no change In the acid content of
Mountains o( New York Stale.
rain over the past several decades," said Richard
—The loss of ail fish in 140 Canadian lakes.
G. Scmonin, assistant chief of inc Illinois Stale
—Damage to 15 percent of the lakes in Minnesota,
Water Survey and a professor of meteorology at the
with another 2,600 in immediate Jeopardy.
University of Illinois.
•
—Acidity increases in 107 of 314 rivers studied in
In fact, he said, there Is evidence that add rain
Pennsylvania over an 84 year period, with 58
has been around for centuries and there is no in­ percent of those showing a decline in the number of
dication it Is getting worse.
fish species present.
—A 10-fold decline in the pH ol three Maine rivers
Semonin, admitting his conclusions ran counter to
suring spring snowmelt.
other scientific studies and public opinion,
—The near-total depletion of buffering capacity In
questioned environmentalists' claims that a d d rain
3,000 lakes and 25,000 miles of streams in the
has a direct impact on hum an health, water quality,
eastern United States.
aquatic life and production of farms and forests.
The survey further stated that acidification of
"There is no concrete, scientific evidence to show
freshwater lakes and streams is a "slow
a debilitating effect of a d d rain on any of these,”
cumulative" process.
said Semonin, who has been an adviser to the
"F or a period of years, acid rain consumes a
D epartm ent of E n e rg y and Environm ental
w ater's buffering capacity with few visible effects.
Protedlon Agency.
Then, once the w ater's buffers are exhausted, a
Semonin xalit Congress would make a mistake if it
rapid drop in pll occurs." the study said.
adopted legislation designed to reduce acid rain
In addition, a recent study by the U.S. Fish and
unless and until the problems arc identified.
Wildlife Service found about half of New England's
"We need more research before we pass laws that
lakes are acidic and are approaching the point
may cause us to spend billions of dollars," he said.
where fish life can no longer be supported.
"There are Just so many unknowns out there con­
And there are sorpe purported economic losses,
cerning ad d precipitation."
too.
To New Hampshire biologists and water pollution
Estimates by the New England Rivers Basins

The agency has set up 19 sampling stations in a
s t r i n g ol mountains from the Smoky Mountains in
East Tennessee and western North Carolina to
North Georgia. The sampling has found that over a
5-year period the pH levels in the mountains
stream s became 63 percent more acidic.
The problem Is most acute at take Chatugc In
North Georgia. The Georgia Game and Fish
Department studied 266 smallmoulh bass in ta k e
Chatugc from Jan. 1 to Sept. 1 of this year. Of that
total, 47 were deformed — 18 percent.
1'These fish are so badly deformed that I don't sec
how they swim," said Doug Powell ol TVA's north
Georgia office. “Whether it’s acid rain'or not, it’s a
problem, and right now everything points to acid
rain. And it would behoove us to find out what it Is."
Some 50,000 trout died in a six-month span last
year on trout farms operated by Cherokee Indians
at Cherokee, N.C. The problem was traced to an
increase in acid levels in stream s [lowing from the
Great Smoky Mountains.
The TVA has 63 coal-fired units spread over 12
plants in the seven-state TVA region which burned
28.8 million tons of coal In fiscal 1962.
In a policy statem ent last spring, the agency
recognized "the likelihood of a relationship between
acid precipitation and the total load of sulfur
dioxide In the atmosphere.”
Dr, Mohamed T. El-Ashry, director of TVA’s
environmental quality, said the Impact of acid rain
may be "irreversible."
“TVA recognizes that longrange transport and
transformation of pollutants in the plumes of fossilfueled boilers of. all types produce sulfate and
nitrate particles which we believe to be linked to
acid precipitation," El-Ashry said.
"The environmental impacts of acid precipitation
may be irreversible and we do not believe the nation
can afford risking permanent damage to sensitive
environments."
"The effect of acid rain on the environment of
Connecticut can be summarized as subtle, and the
soils of Connecticut a re generally well buffered
against acidification," the committee said in b final
draft issued Nov. 9.
"There is no evidence that fish In our lakes have
been affected by acid rain," the commlsslen said
and It noted the state's more than 1,000 lakes have
"undergone little change from acid rain in the last
four decades."

Laser Therapy For Glaucom a
ATLANTA (UPI) — The use of User beams In the treatm ent
of glaucoma Is becoming more popular among eye doctors.
Eye specialists a t Woodruff Medical Center of Emory
University report th a t laser therapy appears to be a good in­
termediate step for aome patients between treatm ent with eye
drops and pills and surgery.
Glaucoma, one of the leading causes of blindness In the
United States, is a disease of the eye characterized by a build­
up of watery fluid within th e eyeball. If the pressure la not
controlled, it may become severe enough to damage the optic
nerve.
Glaucoma, believed to afflict as many u 2 million Ameri­
cans, leads to a gradual Impairment of vision, usually starting
with a gradual loss of aide vision.
Lasers often are beneficial In reducing the intraocular pres■w* of galaucoma. Doctors say the high intensity light beams
m ay be useful when m edical treatment has failed and before
conventional surgery is attempted.
In open angle glaucoma, the most common of the 25 to 30

r-

glaucoma types, the laser beam is directed at numerous spots
beyond the outer edge of the Iris. The treatm ent, according to a
report from the medical center, does not create new drainage
holes In the eye tissue' itself. But the laser probably aids in
stretching or tightening eye tissue between drainage pores,
thereby helping to increase drainage and escape of Intraocular
fluid.
In another form of the disease known as narrow angle
glaucoma, the eye specialist uses the User to perform an
Iridotomy — creating a tiny hole in the Iris to prevent iris
coverage of the drainage channels.
A third use of the laser beam Is found In neovascular glauco­
ma which usually is seen in diabetics. This involves the
treatment of new blood vessels that grow on the iris and on (he
outflow drainage network.
Many ophthalmologists are more familiar with User beam
treatment for retinal detachment and other retinal problems
than they are with loser glaucoma therapy.

Legal Notice
N O T IC IU M D IR FICTITIOUS
N A M IS T A T U T I
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to the
"F ic titio u s
Name S ta tu te,••
Chapter I4S04. Florida Statutes,
w ill register with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, in snd lor Seminole
County. Florida, upon ratalpt ol
proof of tha publication of this
notice, the llctltioua name, to-wlt:
ENEROY
DEVELOPM ENT
CORPORATIONundsr which I am
engaged In builntss a t 111
Westmonto Drive, Altam onte
Springs, FlorIde 32701
That the corporation interested
In said builnasa anttrprise la as
to) lews:
ENERGY
DEVELOPM ENT
SYSTEMS CORPORATION
By: William Taylor.
Prasidant
□atad e l Orlando, Orange
Couniy, Florida, Ok . IS, 1 *2 .
Publish: dan. 4, I I , II, 3J, IMS
DEO 17

7

322-2611

831-9993

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

RATES

l time
Sfcaline
1consecutive times Sfcaline
7 consecutive times 44c a line
10 consecutive times 42c a line
SI.00 Minimum
] Lines Minimum

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

Canadian officials say their lakes and reservoirs
are critically endangered.
This past June, Canada strongly criticized the
United States, which it said was stalling on
negotiations to reduce acid rain.

in the United States, pollution scientists,
biologists and others told United Press inter­
national they are seeing an Increase in the acidity of
lakes, streams and rivers.
The Tennessee Valley Authority fears the acid
rain problem in its region could become as bad as
the Adirondacks.

Orlando - Winter Park

CLASSIFIED DEPT,
HOURS

Commission of the economic impact from acid rain
in New England and the Adirondacks to
recreational fishing and related tourism, drinking
water, lumber and paper, agriculture and damage
to buildings range from $200 million to $2.5 billion
per year if secondary and human costs are con­
sidered.

Environment Minister John Roberts accused the
Reagan administration of "foot-dragging" after
U.S. officials dismissed a Canadian proposal to
reduce emissions of air-bome pollutants by 50
percent within the next decade as scientifically
premature and too expensive for the U.S, economy
without further scientific studies.
U.S. officials said the Canadian proposals would
cost the United States from $4 billion to $7 billion a
year?
Canada estimates that about half its acid rain
problems originate in America.
Canada claims the U.S. accounts for 65 percent of
the 32 million metric tons of sulfur oxides emitted
annually In North America and about 91 percent of
Ibc 22 million tons of nitrogen oxides.
Canadian lakes In the geological Precambrian
Shield area and lakes with quartzite or granite
bottoms are particularly sensitive to acidity.
In Ontario, government scientists said they
documented some 140 lakes In that province that no
longer can support fish. Scientists also estimated
that if 1980 levels of acid remain constant or In­
crease over the next 10 to 20 years, Ontario could
lose much or all of the aquatic life in as many as
48,000 susceptible lakes.
Canada clamors for solutions and cooperation
from the United Stales.
But A. Alan Hill, chief White House adviser on
environmental issues, said the United States would
not engage in “investment of in excess of $100 billion
over the next 25 years for a program whose outcome
remains uncertain."
EPA administrator Anne M. Gorsuch cautioned
that the EPA was finding "a good deal" of acid rain
research to be ‘ impressionistic, anecdotal and
contradictory."
"Rather than pointing toward sure solutions," she
said, "our research is, in many cases, simply
raising further questions."

Seminole

6—Child Care
WILL babyilt In m y home. Fun
or pari tim e. Hour or weekly.
Judy I I I 3094

NEED money? Sell Avon In
Sanlord, W ashington Oaks,
Midway and Geneva 372 S910

WILL babysit in my home.
E*perleneed m o th e r, tre e
meals Net. given 322 van

CAN YOU TRAVEL????
Openings lo r men and women at
least 11. p re fe r single to travel
e n tire
USA
(random
Itin e ra ry co a st to coast)
representing young business
group. No exp necessary
Expenses advanced II ac
cepted, a ll tra n s p o rta tio n
provided at no cost to in
dependent contractor Must be
willing to learn, eager to work
and tree to s ta rt Immediately
No phone calls. See Mrs.
Oanysh Thurs. 9 30 1 at the
Days Inn, 14 A St. Rd 46.
Sanlord.

WILL keep children In m y home
S2S per week.
321 3913

12—Special Notices
AFTER Christmas Salt. S O /p it
If carat gold, starling and
electroplate lewetry in stock.
Call 3231797 for appt.

Have some campthfl equipment
you no longer use? Sell II a ll
with a Classified Ad In Tha
Herald. Call 313 M il or I3t
9993 and a frien d ly a d viso r
w ill help you

legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 13.421-CP
Division Probata
IN RE: ESTATE OF
ROSSIE MAE EDMONOS,
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATIO N
The adm inistration of the estate
ol ROSSIE M A E EDM O N D S ,
deceased. File Num ber 12 423 CP,
Is pending In the C ircuit Court for
Seminole County, Florida, Probate
Division, the address of which is
Seminole County C ourthouse,
Sanford, Florida. 32771.
The names and addresses of the
personal representative and the
personal representallve’s attorney
are set forth below.
A ll Interested persons are
required to file w ith this court,
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATIO N OF
THIS NOTICE: ID all claim s
against the estate and (3) any
objection by an interested person
to whom notice was mailed that
challenges tha v a lid ity of tha w ill,
tha qualifications of tha personal
rep re se n ta tive ,
venue,
ar
jurisdiction of tha court.
. ALL
CLAIM S
ANO
OB
JECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of Ihis Notice has
begun on January 11, 1913.
Personal Representative:
S. Kirby Moncrief
Post Office Box 3279
Sanlord, FL 32771 0029
Attorney lor, Personal
Representative:
H a rry
0.
Reid,
II
ot
SHINHOLSER, LO G A N , MON
CRIEF AND BARKS
Post Olflce Box 3279
Sanford, FL 37771
Telephone: DOS) 323 3640
Publish: Jan, n , l l , 1913
OED53
NOTICE UNDER FIC TITIO US
NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN:
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned, pursuant to tha
"Fictitious
Name
Statuta”
Chapter I4S.09, Florida Statuta,
will raglstar with tha Clark ot tha
Circuit Court, in and tor Samlnola
County, Florida, upon racalpt ol
proof of the publication of this
notlca, tha llctltlous nama, to wit:
BEST BEDDING undar which I
am angaged In buslnass at 374
Highway 434, Casselberry In tha
City ol Cassalbarry, Florida.
That I he party inlarasttd In said
business enterprise I t as follows:
Batty Lou Best
Dated af Casselberry, Seminole
County, Florida, January 4, IffJ .
Publish. Jan. 11, ll , IS, Fata. 1,19(3
DEDS2
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Notlca Is hereby given that I am
angaged In business at 257 Hwy. 1792 Longwood, FI. Samlnola County,
Florida undar tha llctltlous nama
of KNOLLA’S PIZZA, and that I
inland to register said nama with
Clark ol the C ircu it Court,
Samlnola County, Florida In ac­
cordance with the provisions of the
Fictitious Name Statutes, ToW II:
Section 1*509 Florida Statutes
19J7.
Signature Dannie Lewis
Publish: Jan. I t . I I , IS, Fab. 1.1913
DEO 54.
N O TIC I TO T H IF U B L IC i
Notlca Is hertby given that tha
Board of Adjustment ot the City ol
Sanford w ill hold a regular
maatingonJan. 24,19*3 In the City
Hall at 1110 A.M. in order to
eonaldor a raquast for a variance
In the Zoning Ordinance as It
partalrt* to roar yard setback
requirements In P U D toned
district In Lot 17, Blk H, Hidden
Lake, Unit I.
Being
more
specifically
described as located at 114 Loch
Low Drive.
Planned use ot the property:
Florida room.
Publish: January 11, I I , 1902
OED33
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Notlca fs hereby given that I am
angaged In business ef 7411 Leka
Ava. Sanlord Samlnola County,
Florida under the tlctilious nama
Of BARNES H EA TIN G
A AIR
CONDITIONING, and that I In­
land lo r egill ar said nama with tha
Clerk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In accordancewilh tha provisions ot tha
Fictitious Nama Statutes. T o w n ;
Section US Of Florida Statutes
1917.
Signature Kenneth W. Barnes
Publish: Jan. I t , l l , 2S, Fab. I, IM3
DED39

a r.u

18-Help Wanted

JOB SITE INC.
100‘s lobs dally.
Call 331 7940 Fee
SOMEONE who likes to prepare
and serve good lood, to nice
folks In a pleasant atmosphere
can find a job a i me Runcibie
Spoon Tearoom, Long wood
Hours 9 • 4, S days. For Appt
131 4441 between 3 A 5 p m.And
also need dishwasher I I IP.m .

OPPORTUNITY
Energetic young people needed
as Appointment Setters tor
last growing local company.
We provide tra in in g with e
base salary plus excellent
commissions. Apply Alum A
Vent behind Sobiks on French
Ave.

NEEDED
Telephone Solicitors,
Port-Time
Evening Hours.
Call 322-2611

PERFECT fo r housewives &amp;
mothers. Earn extra money In
spare tim e w Stanley Home
Prod No exp 372 5951.

UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSET.
Sell those things that are iust
taking up space with a want ad
in the Herald 322 26) 1 or 43)
9993
A L U M IN U M
M ANUFAC
T U R IN G COM PANY has
immediate openings lo r the
following positions: Screeners.
press operators, assemblers,
and m aterial handlers Ex
p e rlence h e lp fu l but not
required Apply In person Irom
tO a m. to 2 p.m. Monday thru
F rid a y , H a rC a r A lu m in u m
Products, 1201 Cornwall Rd ,
Sanlord, Fla

EXPER IEN C ED
IN DIRECT SALES
National food service company,
73 yrs. In business. F u ll
company benefits a lte r 90
days. A ll leads supplied along
w ith established account.
Draw based upon experience
For interview call Bob Rector.
I 305 331 0064
RESIDENT Manager position
available tor Garden Apt
complex ol 90 units, located in
Sanlord, Fla. Previous exp. is
desirable, good starting salary
and good benefits. Apply in
confidence to P.O. Box 17,
Panama City, Fla. 32x01
W AITRESS
wanted.
ex
perienced only need apply.
Golden Lamb Restaurant, 2101
S. French Ave., Sanford
FIBERGLASS man lo r boat
repair. Must be able to match
c o lo r, m ake m olds, sm all
parts, etc. We are pulling
stake on boats tor lh« retail
and wholesale trade and also
taking care ot any fiberglass
work at the same lim e. We
also mlg. fiberglass seat boxes
and have been In business tor
12 yrs Opportunity lo r the
right person in a growing co.
Situated in the right retail
area
Seaworthy
Wood
Products, Inc. 1221 State St.
(Just so ot Sanlord Plata and
behind
Robson
M a rin e )
Sanford, Fla.

21—Situations Wanted
MATURE woman w ill take care
o l the e ld e rly or young
children in their home.
349 »713
DRESSMAK INC alterations and
repair In my home
130 111),
CARE lo r the elderly. Home or
H o s p ita l. C e rtifie d Nursing
A s s is t a n t .
R e fe r e n c e *
provided. 323 6749

24—B usiness O pportunities

E v e n in g Hem Jd
GENERAL
WORKERS .. .13.35 Hr.
W ill train on m achinery. Clean
cut,
p o s s ib le
o v e rtim e .
Benefits and raises.
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
1917 French Ave.
121-5171
SECRETARIES NEE D ED FOR
Temporary and pa rt tim e
positions. E x c e lle n t s k ills
necessary. In te rvie w by ap
po Iat merit o n ly ..332 5449.

Plumbing, Hardware. DIY, Bus.
W wo Real estate. Wm
M alicio w ski Realtor, 327 79(3
SANFORD women-* Apparel
Shop, h ig h ly regarded lo r
q u ality fashions. Best lo citlo n
Wm M aliciow ski Realtor.
322 7993

NOTICE

DESK CLERK M.OOHr.
Part time, prefer experience,
w ill train rig h t person. Gocxl
with figures.
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
1917 French Ava.
113-5174
Alert Intelligent individual to
look alter amusement center
in Sanlord P la ta Must have
m echanical
a b ility ,
be
dependable, and bondable.
Part tim e 51 75 Hr. Call lor
Appt. 121 4901.

K N IG H T S OF
COLUM BUS
7504 Oak Ave ,
Sanlord

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30

MANAGER
TRAINEE .............. US

WInS25-S100

Restaurant experience needed.
Full duties, flexible tin., fast
growing company naeds now.
AAA EM FLO Y M I NT
1917 F ranch Ave.
135-5174

BINGO

PRESSER Exp. IS hr. Apply
Carriage Cleaner 454 Shopping
Center, Longwood.

BRAKE A N D SHEAR
OPERATOR ... to$8.00
Hr.
Must have experience in set up
end ley out. Read blutprinlt
also, ovartima and banatlti.
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
1917 Francis Ava.
315-5114

DISABLED AMERICAN
VETERANS AUXILIARY
2111 Orlando Dr.
Sanford
Monday nights
Early Bird 7:00 P.M.

Win *25 *100

N EE D t x t r a M onty?

Why not set I AVON I
______ m-0419
PART TIM E Men Women. Work
Irom home. Phone Program.
Earn 125SIOU per week.
Flexible Mrs. Cell 1942204 or
149 0914. •
SALESMAN - Used Car Lot.
Financt axp. preferred. Ex­
cellent opportunity tor right
person. Eves. 321-4075 322-7191

S E C R E T A R Y .........S$S
Accurals typing needed, con­
struction background helpful.
Excellent opportunity, relies
and banaflts.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
1917 French Ave,
135-5174

legal Notice"
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Notice is hereby given that l am
angaged In business at 2543 Park
Drive, Sanlord, Samlnola County,
Florida udder the llctltlous name
of SPENCER PEST CONTROL,
and that l Intend to register said
nama with the Clerk ot the Circuit
Cw rt, Seminole County, Florida in
accordance with the provision of
iha Fictitious Name Statutes, To
Wit; Section 145 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
ART BROWN PEST CONTROL.
INC.
Signature Bill L. Spenttr.
President
Publish: ja n . 4. n , i i , is. m 3
DC D l l

BINGO
Sanlord VFW
Post 14141
Bingo Monday A
Wgdne Ida y night

earlybird?:!*
Ladies Auxiliary
Bingo
Sunday 1:34 p.m.
Log Cabin
on thcLaktlrenl.

WIN *25-*100
Did you know that your
club or organlutlon can
appear in this listing each
week tor only S3 50 per
week? This is an ideal way
to Inform the public ol your
club activities.

It your club or organize)
Would like to be Included ini
listing cell

Evening Herald
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
132 2411

�28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

32—Houses Unfurnished
SUNLAND ESTATES 3 Bdrm , 2
Bath, fenced yard, $350 mo,,
Schuren Realty Realtor
831 1347

2 BDRM. 2 Bath apt
to share,1, , e n t.1j u tilitie s
Call 371 5979
SHARE

modern home on
acres, $i?s mo
332 5137

33—Houses Furnished
LIKE new, 1 or
carpel, a ir.
$255 . or w ith
pets, security

3 7-B -R en tal Offices

29— Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
m aid service C a te rin g to
working people Unfurnished
Apartments 1 A 2 Bedrooms
373 450 7 500 Palm etto Aye

P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE*
P rovidence B lvd ., Deltona
71M Sq Ft Can Be Divided
With Parking Days 305 574
1414 Evenings A Weekends
904 789 6251

SANFCRD, Reas
weekly A
monthly rates U til inc etl 500
Oak Adults 1 841 7883

16X Sq It office, IIS Maple
A ve , Sanlord Avail Immed
Broker Owner 322 7209.

COMFORTABLE sleeping room
$50 w k „ Includes u til and
maid serv, Call 321 6947

SPACE tor rent Otlice. Retail,
Storage French Avenue and
A irport 322 4403

GENEVA GARDEN
APARTMENTS.
]» :w o
LU XU R Y
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily &amp; A d u lts section
Poolside, J Bdrm s, Master
Cove Apts 371 7900 Open on
weekends

GARAGE Boys use lor .vdo
detail, body work etc., will and
paint booth me I 123 3565
II

you are having difficulty
finding a place, lo live, car to
drive, a job. or some service
you have need ol, read all our
want ads every day
»_______________________
O FFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE
630 7721

3 Bdrm convenient to down
town Cent HA Carpet. SI50
Mo M l 7747
SANFORD I bd complete Kit.
S3I0 mo. Fee 139 7300
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor

PROFESSIONAL Office space
lor Lease, on 17 92. Ideal
locationto downtown area 705
S French Ave or call M3 3170

3 BORM No pets S330 mo Sec.
dep required A vail, Immed
327 9403

41— Houses

Furnished apartments tot Senior
Cituens l i t Palm etto Ave . J
Cowan No phone calls.
M E L L O N V IL L E T ra ce Apts
spacious, modern 3 bdrm , I
bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped. CHA, walk to town
and lake Adults No pels.
Available Jan I. 331 3TOS
M ariner’s Vlllageon Lake Ada. I
bdrm from S365. 3 bdrm from
1300 Located 17 93 iust south
ot Airport Blvd In Sanford All
Adults 3314670
I, 3 AND 3 BORM From 1340
Ridgewood A rm s Apt. 3S4(.
Ridgewood Ave 133 6430
ENJOY country living'* J Bdrm,
Duplex Apis., O lym pic SI
pool Shenandoah v illa g e
Open 9 to 6 373 3930
BAMBOO COVE APTS
3 X E Airport Blvd
l&amp; 7 B d rm s
From 5330 mo
Phone M3 6420
’ lANDALWOOO V ILLA S Deluxe
3 Bdr, 2 Bath, washer, dryer,

pool. SMS Mo 644 Mil.

31 —Apartm ents‘ Furnished
COMFORTABLE I bdrm, nicely
lurnished, 17S wk., plus ulil.
Call 131 3769 371 6947
SANFORD 7 Bdrm, kids, pels.
1100 down 1330 Fee 339 7200
la v On Rentals. Inc. Realtor

■

2 bdrm, porch,
appl!, drapes,
turn , $280 No
86 2 8806

SEMI furnished 1 bdrm apt.
1171 mo plus 1175 dep NO
PETS 372 5190

R O B B I E ’S
REALTY
* ' « . 7T) . REALTOR, M L l
&gt;»v » *
3391 $ French
V

O

f

Suite 4

Sanford FIJ

24 HOUR *Q]
322-9283,*
* Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it a ll•
with a Classified Ad In The
Herald Call 337 2611 or 831
9993 and a friendly ad visor
w ill help you

keues
C oC £ K e y e s
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
S4f W L a k e M a ry Blvd
Suite B
Lake M a r y . Fla 33744

1111384
C L A S S IF IE D AOS A R E FUN
ADS R E A D 8. USE T H E M
O F TE N Y O U ’ L L L I K E TH E
RESULTS.

NICE e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n t,
furnished 155 wk plus dep
123 8877
1 BDRM Apt. Clean
1325 mo + Dep
References required 372 3343.

31A—Duplexes
LAKE MARY, 2 Bdrm. WWC,
Air, heal, WO hook up. no pels,
1795 Mo . 1300 Sec Available
Jan. 15. 132 3967
SANFORD Lake Ave Colt W.
75lh) Deluxe 7 Bdrm., duplex,
carport, utility room, hook up
washer, dryer. 1135 130 0515.
NEW Duplex 2 bdrm bth util,
rm. carport kitch. a p p l, Lease
119 1542.
LAKE MARY 7 Bdrm. kids. M l
kit., fenced, 1315 Fee. 139 7300
Say-On Rentals, Inc.. Realtor
OELTONA, country living, lust
minutes from 14. 2 Bdrm.
Dtiplex and quadraplex, units
available. Carpeting,
fully
( equipped kitchen, lottofdoset
space. Some with carports.
*
Call 174 1134 or 373 4737

2 bdrm, 2 bth, No pets SIX per
mo. 1st, last and sec.
169 4147.

32—Houses Unfurnished
CASSELBERRY Lklnl. 2bd. air.
1271 Fee. 119 7300.
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
'u N F U R N IS h lb j bdrm. bouse
references required. Rent S350
mo. + dep. 1771141.
MODERN 1 bdrm, 1 bath in
Sanford, with CH, drapes,
appl., 1325 mo., S I25 damage
dep. Alter 5 call 149 5730 or
1331140.
SANORA SOUTH 1 Bdrm. 3
Bath, p artia lly furnished.
CHA, drapts, 1450 mo. 419 575*
or 114 414*.
ST. JOHNS River. SS50 and $450
M a Bab M . Ball Jr. PA
Rtailor 333 4111 or H I $091.
BEA U T4FU LLY rc ilo r td 2
bdrm, I bth, homa, CHA. wwc.
frpl, adults, no pats. *37$. 645
4441 or 133 4971
MOBILE Homa on private land,
kitchen equipped for I or
couple. Easy access in Lake
Mary. 1125 Mo. 1 H U19.
MODERN 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath, with
CHA drapas, appl. furnished.
1471 MO , 429 $754 or $34 424*.

B A T E M A N R EA LTY
Lie. Raal Estate Broker
3640 Sanford Ave.

COUNTRY Living Lease Option
like new 3 3 with or without
acreage
PRICED under todays market
3 2 fa m ily rm .. enclosed
garage, fenced back, a real
buy 548.900

FABPflN ME WRY®IANT5WAU5Klf’ BJSrERl VTy EAH, 1
MENTICNIN6 A \ THE F te T FCCP INPU5TRY J THEN'
CRUDE SUBJECT COULV PUSH CUSTOMERS/ COULP
LIKE
£ MCNEN, J TrtR£UcSH EVEN FA6TER B0M0ARP
PRCF, BU T
IF "THEN JCU LP TAKE c o n g r e s s
W ITH
HOW WILL
PRPER6 B&gt;' THCUo H
you PAN
THOUGHT
V/AVESl v - n -u -^
AND, OF
F C R ,M £ R E
w a v es:
COURSE,THE MILITARY
RE5EARCH 7
PO SSIB IL IT IE S ARE
o b v io u s t o T h e
pen ta g o n !

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

Sanford's Sales Leader
WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE HOMESTHAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY)
JUST LISTED 1 Bdrm, » | Bath
home in San Lanfa. an a
private fenced loti Spilt bdrm
plan, family room, pantry,
workshop and utility roomi
Much moral $43,609.
COUNTRY L IV IN O Immaculate
3 Bdrm, 7 Bath 14x44 Mobilo
Homo on I acral Control haat
and air, wall wall carpal, tat
inkltchin, screened porch and
many
e x tr a il
H a rta l
welcome! $45,500.
COIY AND NEAT 1 Bdrm, 1
Bath comfortable older home.
In good condition! Nice set up
lor in-laws or oft. apt. Convonlant a rta , $11,809.
L A K E F R O N T. Executive 1
Bdrm, 1 Bath homo on Lako
Monro*. A ll tha axtrai, largo
family room, fireplace. Cent
HA, (quipped aat-in kitchen,
patta with Bar-BQ pH and
mar*. SI IS,009.
MAYFAIR VILLAS! 1 4 1 Bdrm,
7 Bath Condo Villas, next to
Mayfair Country Club. Setteryour lot, ttoor plan 6 Intarior
decorl Duality constructed by
Shoemaker for $83,8*0 4 upl

C A LL A N Y T IM E
!54&gt;
Park

322-2420

SUNLANO ESTATES
Ownar
(Inane*.
lerms
negotiable. Larg* CBS home A
garage. Many extras. $41,000.
1339417

Classified Ads will always glvo
you mora . . . Much , Much
Mora than you expect
UNDER S2.00BDOWN
1 bdrm. doll house Affordable
monthly
payments,
c a ll’
Owner Broker 1 1 ) 1* 11 ,
1100 W. Ird SI., 1 Br, I bath with
aalra lot taned multi-family.
Clast t* new hospital. $39,99*.
SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
H»$)14
e

MUST sell 4 Shetland ponies
Great with children Please
call 371 2091.

3210759

EVE

Hay to r Sale
52 and up per bale.
332 5137
Wilco Sales Hwy. 44 W
337 4870
B aledshavingt 54 50
2nd cutting clover hay.
3rd cuttinq a lla lfa hay.
Northern Tim othy mixed hay.
Check our p ricei.

322-7643

75— Recreational Vehicles

80— Autos for Sale

GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
FOR AFR AC TIO N O F THEIR
COST FROM TODAY S WANT
ADSI
2 STORY BRICK A cedar In
M arkham Place 4 Bdrm, 3
baths, 1.47 acres. 1 fireplaces.
Sundeck. Much morel Owner
w ill hold mtg. SM4.990.
The w a ll St. Company
Realtors
771 3005

G n lu K u

iffVL

JU N E PORZ1G R E A LTY
NEW Listin g ! Y ou 'll want lo see
this 3 bdrm, 2 blh, 1 yr, old
borne on 1.9 acres in a
b e a u tifu l n a tu ra l s e llin g
Located in Paola 571,900
REALTOR
807 S French Ave

MLS

322-8678
The sooner you place your
classified ad, the sooner you
w ill gel results
LG 3 BDRM, V , bth, carport,
u til rms , CBS, relrlg , stove,
CH, newly painted inside out,
tg lot, back fenced
owner
linancing, 333 7998

K ISH R E A L ESTATE
171 0041
REALTOR
A lte r Mrs 323 7468 A 327 6957
HAL COLBERT REALTY
REALTOR
797 E , 25th 51.
311 7632

C ?H E PURCHASING
42—Mobile Homes
I960 MOBILE Home I4’x60’ Set
up in adull section ot mobile
park Day 831 7677
Evenings 831 5116
SEE S K Y L IN E S NEWEST
Palm Spnnqv A Palrri M i n o r
GR E GOR Y M O B IL E HOMES
JI01 Orlando Dr
177 5790
VA &amp; F HA Financing

YEAR ENDCLOSE OUT
1911 SKYLINE Mobile Home
24x 53 I t screen enclosure
porch, u tility shed. Central
heat and air 3 Bdrm, 7 Bath
Lot sue is $0x100 Sale price
541.900 linancing available at
no Y ot sales o cirr m erest rate
13*4 / + 7 Points Can be seeni
ai 176 Leisure Dr
North
D eB ary.
Fla
in
the
Meadowtea on the R iv e r
M obile Home co m m u n ity
Please contact lorn Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First Federal ol
Semmole 10S 322 1747

A L U M IN U M , cans, copper,
lead, brass, sliver, gold Week
days 8 4 30, Sal 9 1 K KoMo
TooolCo 918 W is! St 373 1100

COULD ^HLLL THE HlLL =
62-A—Farm

Equipment

'A

-

REA LTY , IN C
REALTOR
323-57741
I IS YEARS EXPERIENCE
CUSTOM
B U IL T
CEDAR
HOME
Energy
tlflc itn l
custom Ihroughaul. Terrific
owner linancing. Potential
guest home In rear. 17 citrus
trees. Loads at storage Take
46A East to laft on Rl. 415, 2
houses on right past Osteen
Post Oflic*. $49,500.

VW Ms

HUGE CORNER LOTI Priced lo
sell lest! J bdrm, family rm.,
CHA, lenccd yard w well and
s p rin k ltr systems, m a lu rt
citrus trats, double sit* patio
under sprawling camphor
tre t. Large assumable lew
interest mortgage. Cell todeyt
$41,900.
FHA VA SPECIAL! Why rent
when you can own NOW. *1,150
down payment. 1 bdrm heme
on lencod lot. Largo oak and
citrus troas. Oood location!
Only $191 a ma. Taxas and
insurance included. 1 1 / . 10
yrs. Price $10,500.

N E E D to sell your house
q u ic k ly !
We can
o tte r
guaranteed sale w ith in 30
days Call 331 1611

4 7 -A -M ortgages Bough!
f t Sold
WE PAY cash lor 1st 4 2nd
mortgages Ray Legq Lie
Mortgage Brokrr 781 3599
Let a Classified Ad help you find
more room lo r storage
Classified Ads find buyers
last.

WE N E E D LISTINGS!
CALLUS NOW!!!!

323-5774

WATER BED King s it* w ilh new
mallress, oak pedestal w ilh
new headboard, $150. 373 0945.

HAVE YOUR financial dreams
b«come a reality w ith Aloe
PT. no investment 323 7788

MEINTZER TILE Exp since
1953 New A old work comm A
r rtid F rer estimate 869 8U?

Repair. Install. Sales
Aulo Sound Center
ASC 2109 French Ave
377 4835

.it

DANIEL AND WOHLWENOER
G E N E V A 2 story
comfort 4 1, S60JXM

country

51-A— F u rn itu re

SYLVAN D R ., Sanford, Im
maculate 17, $45,000
SANDY WISDOM

NEW. REMODEL. REPAIR
All types and phases o l con
Struction, S G B alint 323 4832,

CONDOMINIUM In Sonora 1
Bdrm , 2'y bath. Boautifully
decorated 73 4»e first mor •
Igago, assumable, owner will
consider second mortgage.
$03,500 by ownar. 331 5944
evening &amp; 133 644$

42—Mobile Homes
FRC OWNBDHOMES
1 Bd. Fam. Park
iixas
sio.soo
3Bd Fam Park
14x57
$17,300
3 Bd. 24xi4 Must See
$14,900
J Bd. 12x40 Nice
$6,49$
2 Bd 17x6$ Furn.
$11,500
3 Bd. 12x60
54,500
1 Bd. 14x64 Ad Pk.
$23,500
O R IO O R Y MOBILE INC.
3U1 Orlando Dr. 17 93 S Sanford
305 133 5300

I

Kenmore parts, service, used
washers 131 0097
MOONEY APPLIANCES
JUST received shipment ot good
used refrigerators. X Day
guarani**. Sanford Auction,
I1IS S. French, 1237140.

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
ALUM INUM Siding, viriyl siding ■
soldi A fascia. Alum inum
gutters and down spouts.
Fr. ESI.305 365 5)61.

THE HAPPY ELVES
Quality child care and pre
school Infants a specialty
In d iv id u a l a tte n tio n State
licensed 120 E C rystal Lake
Ave , Lk M a ry 37 1 238 4

Cleaning Services

Home Repairs

Tom orrow may be the day you
sell that roll a way bed you've
nowhere to ro ll away
It you
place a Classified Ad today
76 M G M ID G ET Call alt. 6 P m
373 807? New pain!, excellent
condition

Pest Control

F&gt;Ai NT PNG a n d tr p .fr, patio ant)
s tre i'h

porch

b u ilt

C i t' 1

anytim e 322 9481

C O L L IE R ’ S Home Repairs
carpentry, roofing, painling,
window repair 331 Aa?)
WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slab), ceramic A floor
tile. Minor repairs. Hrrpiacrt,
insulation Lie. Bond 127 (111.
CARPENTER 75 yrs e .p 5mal,'
rem odeling mbs. reasonable
rales Chuck 323 9645
M am tenanccol a ll types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 373 6038
■ r -■
...

Lawn Service

SPENCER PEST CONTROL
Comm , Hesd , Lawn, Termite
W ork 337 *665 A ik lor Champ

Plastering
ALL
Phases o* P la itrfin g
Plastering repair stucco hard
rntc, Simulated brick 171 5V93
C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS Ol merchandise
every day

Plumbing

M odcrnirm q your Home',Sell no
lonqcr needed bul useful items
w ith a Classified Ad

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn A plants for
w inter now Complete Lawn
iw v . 371 0576

A M . Kelly cleaning service.
Specialliing In restaurant A
attic* buildings. 421 0358.

Lawn Mowers

Cone I f to

iV o r k

BEAl Loncrrte I man quality
operation pat.os driveways
Days 3)1 7)3) E v ts 327 1)21

TOWERS BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H arriett s Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st St . 377 5747

SWIFT CONCRETE work all
types F o o le rs , d riv e w a y s ,
pads, floors, pools, complete.
Free est 337 7103.

Boarding &amp; Grooming

* A - 1 LAWN SERVICE 4
Mow v .ir p ’ rim . haul Regular
Service l tim e clean up j *
hrs. best rales, 628 Alia

HOMEOWNERS, retax on your
days o il L e i us* clean your
home al affordable rales Call
now 371 3566 P a tty’s Home
Tampering Service.

Beauty Gift?

FOR a ll your concrete needs call
372 347;. Free * l l l m * t n . No
builders please.

MISTER. F ix It. Joe McAdemS
yyill repair your mowers at
your home. Call 337 7055

M ajor Appliance
Repair
JO H N N IE S A ppliances W*
service refrigerators, wash
e rt. d rye rs, ranges Reas
rales 373 1336

Nursing Care
ANIM AL Haven Boarding and
G room ing Kennels h ealed,
insulated, screened. My proof
Inside, outside runs. Fans
Also AC cages We c a lti lo
your pets Ph 377 5752
SUM
BUOGETS
ARE
BOLSTERED W ITH VALUES
FROM THE
W ANT A O ’
COLUMNS

Bride* Block
Stow Work

Dog Training

Sundown Dog Training
Obedience training In homa
and group 321 *731

Draperies
■

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work At Reasonable
Prices Free Estimates
Ph. 149 5SOO
Have tome camping equipment
you no longer uaeT Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in Th*
Herald Call 1231*11 or H i
9993 and a trlandly ad vlior
will halp you.

53— 'TV- Radio-Stereo

CUSTOM MADE in our Shop
Insialla'tion Service. Dorothy
A Vincent Bliss 349 $42$.

Excavating Services
VEINO EXCAVATING
MO Case Backho* Loader w
extender hoe. 9 yd. dump
truck low bed terv J23 5475.

LOVING HOME. Excellent care
A companionship for elderly
woman 3214J0S.

Nursing Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakeview Nursing Center
719 E Second S t, Sanlord
377 6707
W ill c a r* lor alderly
In my horn*
323 5375

O il Heaters
Cleaned
O IL Healer cleaning
and servicing
Call Ralph 323 7113

Painting

Carpentry
Good Used TV's SIS 4 up
MILLERS
MIS Orlando Dr.
Ph 137 0152
REPOSSESSEDCOLQR TV'S
w * 5*11 rtp o tta n e d color
television*, all noma brands,
consoles and portables. EX
AMPLE Zenith 7S" color in
walnut consol* Original prica
over $7S0, balance due l i t *
cash or payments SI7 month.
NO MONEY DOWN. Still In
warranty. Call 31st Century
Solatia] $194 day or nilt. Free
homa trial, no obligation

Bad Credit ?.
No Credit?
WE f i n a n c e
No Credit Check Easy Terms
NATIO NAL AUTO s a l e s
1170 Sanlord Ave
371 4075

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 97. I mite west ot Speed
way Daytona Beach w ill hoie
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday A Wednesday at
7 30 p m it's the only one in
F lorid a You se! the reserved
p rice
Call 904 255 8311 for
fu rth e r details

127 8665 Stale Licensed
ALL TYPES C4IRPENTRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, pan ellin g, shingles,
reroollng For tast service,
call 323-4917,365-2371

169-4600 or 349-5691
4LB—Condominfurm
_____ForSito

mt

Child Care

UATHS, kitchens rooting block,
concrete window s, add a
room, free e stim a irs 123 8463

WILSON MAlER FURNITURE
111 115E FIR STS t
H I $437

52—Appliances

COOD r A SONS*
Tile Contractors
321 0157

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

332 0310

LOVE Seal, green apl. site, exc.
cond SIS. Collet table SIS. 130
1644, I X 5 p.m

5.

SEAMLESS aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs walumm utn s o llil A tascia. (904)
77S1090 collect. Free est.

Cer.imic Tile

15 tl. chest lype I re eier, in good
condition 5125

» If $

CEILING FAN INSTALLATION
Quality Work
We Do Most Anything
495 9178
677 4781

Auto CB Stereo

1000 HWY. 17 91

SEWING MACHINE Zlg Zag.
Used only I Mot .*15 Cash or
terms W * finance. Seminole
Sewing, Winn Dixie P la t* 17 92
* Lake Mary Blvd. 132 9411

6 brand new
5 4 8 00 ll rm ,

We buy Cart and Trucks.
M a rtin Motor Sales
701$. French
31) 7834

Ceiling Fan Installation

Aloe Products

EXECUTIVE Black Vinyl high
back sw ive l o f lic * c h a ir.
Walnut and brats pedestal,
like new SIX. 123 1042
LEVI Jeans! Jackets
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
110 Sanford Ave. 372 5791

It

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale
REM ODELED - 1 bdrtp, Hy
bath w-naw root. Enclosid
gerego and Iliad Fla. rm. Oak
shaded yard. Extra deanl
O raat lacation! Creative
linancing! S t* It today 541,900.

T ru c k ,

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Real Estate Wanted

WE BUY equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
a e rra g f
LUCKY
IN
VESTMENTS P O Box 2S00.
Sanford. Fla 32771 377 4741

72

GMC

To List Your Business... ‘

CallBart

17

1974

*

COUNTRYLIVING
5 Acres cleared hityi and dry
land Suitable lor horses. Near
Geneva Price 522,500 w ith
52500 down. 130 payments ol
5369 87 Including 10’ ,
in
lerest Musi see,

KICK THE STORAGE HABIT
Sell Ihsoe useful, no longer
needed Hems with a Herald
Classified Ad Call 322 7611 or
131 9993

pickup,

%K” ,fsy

NEAL E5TATE

HALL

75 Ford Super Cab
reasonable.
MB 6773

CONSULT OUR

j

-

ST JOHNS River frontage, 21,
acre parcels, also interior par
cels w ilh riv rr access $13,900
Public water, 30 mm to Alta
monte M alt 13 «* 20 yr
lin a n c in g , no q u a lify in g
Broker 621 4833

Get Cash Buyers lor a sm all
investment Place a low cost
classified ad tor results. 377
2611 or 931 9993

1962 Cadillac Sedan DeVillr all
oriom ai Excellent condition in
and out One owner car Estate
sale 668 8034 or 372 2088

exc cond 323 4062 Irom 9

1980 Scotty Travel tra ile r, sell
contained Like new 55,x o
371 1350

REALTOR 111 ’ H i

HAROLD

79— Trucks-Trailers

A l u m i n u m box
M i - h e l l n 1 ires.

1975 Tarus trave l tra ile r 19 II
sleeps six, new carpet and
upholstery 373 830! after 4
pm

F ILLO IR T A TOPSOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clark A H lrt 323 7580, 373 7823

dt p\ f i

D e B a ry A u lo A M arine 5«l*s
a t ross th e riv e r top of h ill 174
H w y 1? 92 D e B a r, 66* MM

BO— Autos for Sale

62—Lawn-Garden

• D ID YOU KNOW? *
You can buy or lease a new car
In the privacy ot your home or
office Fla A u lo Brokers
311 7066

TOP D ollar P a d for junk A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment 377 5990

75—Recreational Vehicles

Hwy 93 Daytona Beach
904 255 8311

/

78 FORD Granada All extras
In c lu d in g auto Irans. 5450
down Cash or trade 339 9100.
634 4605

373 5670

Daytona Auto
Auction

43— L o lt Acreage

3UY JUN*. CARS A TRUCKS
Trom SlOloSSOor more
Call 377 1634

£§?&gt;

FOR ESTATE C omm erci al or
Rr', d e n i a l A , . ' n n i J. A f
pra sais Can Deli s Auction

Farm tractors, doiers, loaders,
backhoes, bu cke t tru c k s ,
trucks, trailers and mowers A!

p **UtT i v
\ -J |

77—Junk Cars Removed

72—Auction

E Q U IP M E N T A U C TIO N
S A T U R D A Y , J A N . 15
10AM

7$O A TS U N 2dr withauto Ira n i
and other extras Good con
d itio n 599 down Cash or
Trade 339 9100. 834 4605
1974 Toyota Cetica. exc cond , 4
brand
,v tires 11,700, can be
seen a! 1109 S Sanlord Ave

WE p a y top dollar lor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto P a rts 79 3 4505

W .IH M i ft ! BUY

2544 S French
322 0231
Alter Hours 339 3910 322 0779

!

Tuesday, Jan. 11,1903—SB

Have a room lo rent? Let a
classified ad llnd a tenant for
you I

HAY 12 50 per bale,
3$or m o re lre e del
Other feeds avail 349 5194

A LL F L O R ID A R EA LTY
OF S A N FO R D REALTOR

t t

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

'73 SUPERIOR M H. 25’ . Roof A
cab, a ir , g e n e ra to r. Low
m ileage, rear bdrm SL 6
510,5 X . 373 6813. 333 1874

67 A— Feed

NEAR new hospital Z C 2 Older
two story large lot asking
$79,900

FLORtOA, MC f REAITOBS

B e LU w e

with Major Hooplej
66— Horses

LAKE HELEN 20 acres S72.SOO

10

ONE PHONE CALL STARTS A
C L A S S IF IE D A D ON ITS
R E S U LTF U L E N D
THE
NUMBER IS 322 2411

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

Firewood
CARPENTER rtp a irla ry j
additions 20 yrs. exp.
Call 337 IIS],

STOP AND TH IN K A M INUTE.
II Classified Ads didn't
Thera wouldn’ t b# any.

Carpet Cleaning

‘1

9 T R IP L E A *
Prlet special $14,95 for
Familyor Living Rm. $63 7760

Handyman
HANDYMAN Services Painting,
repairs, ate
Reasonable
guar work. 41S 04S1, *7X4711.,

♦

B IL L ’S PAINTINQ
interior Exterior painting. Light
carpentry. Home* pressure
cleaned Business 831 2423
Home 111 51U. Bill Steiner
Wonder wtial to do with Two?
Sell On# - The quick, easy
W ant-Ad w ay. ih « magic
number i| 372 2*11 or H I 9993.
HOUSE painling $500
a house. Any t i lt .
412 1034, 421 4009

Remodeling

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle The
Whole B a llo t Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322 7029
Financing Avallabia

Roofing

H U LL
3) yrs. axperiance, Licensed A
Insured.
F reaE ttim ateton Rooting,
Re Rooting and Repairs.
Shingles, Built Up and Til*.

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

322-9417
R C R O O riN G , carpentry, rout
repair A painting 15 years
exp 327 1976
'•MAKE ROOM TO S T O R E .
YOUR WINTER ITEMS
SELL
’ ’ DO N’T NEE D S”
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 322 3611 or 1)1 999) and
a friendly Ad v&gt;sor win help
you

Built up and Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. LEE INC
Tree Service
STUMPS ground out.
Reasonable, Ire * estimates
711 0441 .
JOHN A LLEN YARD A TREE
SERVICE. W e ll remove pin*
trees. Rea*, prica 331 S3H.
Letourneau Tra* Services
Removal, trimming, damoatin. .
Licensed and insured. $34.44* 4. ’

Upholstery
L O R E N E ’S Upholstery. Free
pick up. del 4 est -Car A boat
w e ta fu r n n V IT H

&gt;

J ,4

�,s .

B L O N D IE _____________

IB—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.______Tuesday, Jan. 11, 1711

by Chic Young

DO N'T TELL ANNONE
ABO U T THIS I —^

DAGWOOO, THIS i c q
OPPICE HAS TO BE DUN

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T H E BORN LOSER

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38 Radio type
(abbr)
39 Jacob's twin
41 Maws
42 lu n g ailment
45 Tibetan
gajelle
47 Overturn
48 liq u e fy
49 W ing (Fr)
5 0 Salary
53 Entreat
54 Republic of
Ireland
55 Cincinnati ball
club (ab b r)
57 Small mass
58 Common
adder

17 Those in
office
19 Hawaiian
island
24 Charitable or
ganuation
(abbr)
25 Which
26 An (prefu)
27 Vegetable
spread
29 Measure of
type
31 Verdi opera
32 Columnist s
entry
33 Negate
35 Small island

Syne
Angers
Final
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f L K t

____ Lang

41 M uiiles
43 Poetess
Lowell
44 Selves

Jogging Quite Safe

Answer to Previous Punle

46 Gold symbol
48 Game at
marbles
I Principal
5 New Deal
SI Not in
project (abbr) 52 Part of a shoe
8 SendoM
56 Husband of
12 Skirt
Minnehaha
13 Dry as wine
59 Great la k e
14 Distinctive air gg Kelp ( la t)
15 H om eol
6 j Her Majesty s
Adam
ship (a b b r)
16 Makes eligible $2 Ointment
IB F o rm e rS E
53 Unwanted
Asian
plant
alliance
34 Enervate
20 Demand
65 Colors
payment
21 Summer time
DOWN
(abbr)
22 laugh syllable . French
23 Not difficult
women (a b b r)
25 Chinese
philosophy
1 Nurse S
assistant
28 Back of the
Inkling
foot
*
Last inning
30 Young woman J
34 lig h t gas
5 Mao-----lung
36 Adduce
Purchaser
37 Greek deity
Real
38 Heavy
Interweave
40 Utensil

ACROSS

■

21

-

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
very concerned that you seem
to endorse exercise and
logging for health. I read a
report that a study in Rhode
Island showed that joggers
had seven times the death
rate from heart attacks as
occurred in inactive people.
There are frequent reports of
men dying from heart attacks
from jogging. Isn't all that
mallv hnrmful?
exercise really
harmful? I'm
Im
following the old idea that
whenever I get the urge to
exercise I just rest until the
urge passes.
DEAR READER - People
die from heart attacks while
just resting, too, so don t be so
smug.
The study you are referring
to actually showed only 12
men died during jogging in
Rhode Island in a period
between 1975 and 1980. That
number is so small that a
sta tistician would have
S m » k W Tw « .il-

K

24

h

25

28

26
”

38

37
41

40
44

48
56

by Bob Montana

A R C H IE
/T.IS CLAIMING THAT WE
DIDN'T LIVE UP TO THE
TEPMS OF THE
AGREEMENTS

'Ml? IOP6E, ONE O f VO*?
EMPLOYEES WHO TOOK
ADVANTAGE OF THE
COMPANY- SUBSIDIZED
SCHOOL PLAN

NO PROBLEM.' I'LL HAVE
MV ATTORNEY LOOK INTO
IT.' WHAT RIND OF COURSE
DID THE EMPLOYEE TARE?

49

50

32

33

54

55

36

35

34

31

30

29

42l

39

■
■\L
1r
47

45

■r

53

59

58

57

60

61

62

63

64

65
II

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Wednesday, January

E E K &amp; MEEK

ALL MAJOR

MtDtCALCmsi
h o n o r ed

mm
P R IS C IL L A 'S POP
THE HOT WATER TANK
BURST LAST NIGHT
AND7 THE FURNACE
WENT OUT
/

THE BASEMENT FLOOR
IS A S H EET OF ICE.
.

BUGS B U N N Y

IN TMiS SGBNfclHBMAfiOlHARE
IS WALKING THROUGH THE
WOOCS AS THE MAD HATTER

12,

1983

apt to perform tasks as you
YOUR
.
would like them done. Don’t
BIRTHDAY
blame them.
•
January 12,1983
GEMINI (May 2I-June 20)
Tins will be an important
by Howie Schneider
year for you where friend­ If you have something dif­
ships are concerned. Your ficult to do today it’s best that
inner circle will be enlarged, you schedule it as early as
ITS EUOUGH TO MAKE.
/
and even pals who dropped possible. Your desire to be
YOUR MOUTH SWEAT
could
wane
out of sight will re-enter the productive
quickly.
picture.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
Resolve any disagreements
19) Normally you have a
you and your m ate may have
rather good sense of timing,
today In private. Matters
but today there’s a chance
could get worse If they are
that you might try to push
discussed in the presence of
issues or projects forward
outsiders.
before all is ready. 1983
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
predictions for Capricorns are
sure to show adequate ap­
now ready. Send $1 to Astropreciation to persons who go
Graph, Box 489, Radio City
out of their way to help you
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
today. A failure to do so will
by Ed Sullivan
specify birth date. Send an
lose their assistance in the
additional $2 for the NEW
I HOPE THE KIPS
Astro-Graph M atchm aker future.
PON T BOTHER HIA5 •'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
wheel and booklet. Reveals
You could be more adroit at
T
• romantic combinations and
managing things for others
compatibilities for all signs.
today than you will be in
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. handling your own affairs.
19) Success in your endeavors Take pains to do a good job in
is likely today, provided ypu each area.
stick to your original game
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
plan. When you begin to make Your possibilities for personal
departures, all may go awry. gain look good today.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) U n ch aracteristically , you
This is not the* day to offer might not be too willing to
unsolicited advice or counsel share that which you get with
to friends. E ven if your others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
by Stoffel &amp; Heim dahl opinion Is re q u ested , be
careful what you say or how Try not to take yourself or
‘ALICE IN' WONDEdAND’ you say It.
*
what you do too seriously
IS A NON-VIOLENT &amp; '
ARIES (March 21-April 19) today. You’ll perform well,
RATED PRODUCTIONYou are likely to have things provided you don’t let In­
under control today, but significant factors get to you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23th ere’s a possibility your
companions o r asso ciates Dec. 21) This Is not a good day
could make m ista k e s af­ to talk about m atters you wish
to keep secret. Even your
fecting you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) closest co n fid an ts may,
Unless your Instructions are unintentionally, let the cat out
explicit today, people are not of the bag.

PV

a

cents with a long stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me. in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station. New York,
NY 10019.
People who exercise should
know their risk farlors. They
should not smoke and should
limit activity until they start
reducing high cholesterol and
high blood pressure levels. A
good way to start an exercise
program is with a walking
program .
DEAR DR. MMB - I
wonder if you would comment
on ricketts shortening one’s
lifesp an . It was reported
l « enCl1 at a birthday party

i l thSse deaths »as cclcbralian lor a gorilla «ho

fro m
g a s tro in te s tin a l
hem orrage, unrelated to
heart disease and probably
unrelated to jogging.
Incidentally almost all of
the 11 oth ers had heart
disease and m any were
cigarette smokers.
Often~it is not whether
Jogging Is dangerous or not
but how you jog or run. You
can get killed walking if you
insist on walking across a
busy freeway through traffic.
Most heart attacks in joggers
and runners are a result of
disregarding proper safetyprecautions.
The
most
common one is trying to run
too fast and overdoing it. A
slow comfortable jog within
the limits of your physical
capacity achieved through
progressive
training is
usually safe. The exception is
the person with more ad­
vanced heart disease.
Remember that even many
people who have had heart
attacks are able to develop a
good exercise capacity.
I’m sending you The Health
lette r 13-4. A Perspective on
Jogging Deaths, for you to
contemplate while you are
resting. Others can send 75

had ricketts that his lifespan
would be shortened by
p e rh a p s 10 years. I had
ricketts in my first year of life
and nearly died. I have often
wondered how this occurred
in a family that was not im­
poverished. Could my mother
have starved me somehow? I
am now 60.
DEAR
READER
R ic k e tts is caused by a
deficiency of vitamin D. It is
almost never seen today in the
developed countries. It was
once common in large cities in
n o rth e rn clim ates w here
there was insufficient sun­
shine in the winter months.
Your skin can form enough
vitam in D if you have a
normal exposure to sunlight.
And in those days foods were
not fortified with vitamin D as
they are today.
I’m sure your mother didn’t
intentionally starve you, but if
you had little sunshine and
limited vitamin D-eontaining
foods it could happen.
If you recover from ricketts
it should not shorten your life.
Some people are left with
sk clelu l deform ities from
inadequate mineralization of
bone and retarded skeletal
growth.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
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Dealer: South
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Opening lead #9
By Oiwald Jacoby
tad James Jacoby

The test of real champions
is their ability to scramble
out of trouble. Here we see
Chip Martel turning a bot­
tom into a top with a little
help from his opponents.
When Lew Stansby, sitting
North, bid one diamond he

was showing at least a little
more than hts actual four
high-card points.
Hence, when Chip doubled
one no-trump Lew fell it
necessary to rescue. He was
correct. East would have
made at least his contract
East doubled two dia­
monds and Lew redoubled to
sec if Chip couldn't find a
better spot in one of the
m ajors. Chip tried two
hearts and East, who had
started his career as a
doubler, doubled once more.
If West hid simply led
ace-king and his last heart
even Chip wouldn't have
more than six tricks, but he
,ot his hand on the nine of
Jiamonds. Dunum's queen
was covered by East's king
and Chip's ace.
At this point Chip could
get out for down one, but he
saw a chance to scrounge
home with his contract.
He led the spade 10. Once
more. West had a chance to
beat the contract, but he
missed the simple play of
the spade k in g followed
.......... by
trum p lead He ducked!
Now Chip played ace of
clubs, club rulf, spade to his
ace. second club ruff and
jack of diamonds. Seven
tricks in and a sure trump
trick and top score sure to
come.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

by Jim D a v iv

•a

id

fj i
3

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.

J

E vening H e ra ld -tU S P S 481 280)— P rice 20 Cents

75th Year, No. 124—W ednesday, Ja n u a ry 1 2 ,1983-Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

County Gives State DOT Its List Of Highway Needs
By MICHKALREHA
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County Commissioner Robert Sturm headed a
delegation of county officials to Deliind today to seek more
state aid for county roads.
Sturm , arm ed with documents estimating $110 million in
needs for county roads and another $50 million in needs for
state highways in the county, asked Florida Department of
Transportation officials for help with at least five projects in
the county.
Those projects, not on the DOT’S agenda for attention this
year, are considered urgent by codhty officials to relieve the
congestion along State Hoad 436 and its access roads.
‘ The county asked the state to improve the intersection of SR
436, Hedbug I-ike Hoad and Winter Park-Drive; to build four
lanes on State Hoad 426A and Me'- '.toad 431; to improve to

four lanes a section of State Hoad 419 between SR 434 and
Tuskawilla Hoad to construct a new two-lane section of SR 419
between U.S. High 17-92 and SR 434; and to make traffic signal
improvements on SR 434 and SR 436 both east and west of
Interstate 4.
But commissioners already have been told the chances are
slim of getting additional funds for construction in Seminole
County.
The meeting in D el^nd is part of DOT’S annual budget
review.
The biggest construction project slated in the county is the
addition of two lanes on a portion of SR 436 through Altamonte
Springs. That project will provide six lanes on the road be­
tween Boston Avenue and Douglas and Wyinore Roads.
Work is scheduled to begin by fall with a two-year con­
struction schedule already announced.
DOT also will begin work this year on $250,000 in electrical

system improvements to the 1-ake Monroe bridge on U.S. 17-92.
That work will cost $250,000 and is expected to take more than
a year.
Several minor projects are also on the agenda for con­
struction this year. A new left turn lane will be constructed on
U.S. 17-92 at Seminole Boulevard: the left-turn lane will be
extended on U.S. 17-92 at SR 434; Dual left-turn lanes will be
built at SR 436 and Red Bug U k c Road and signal work and a
left-turn lane are planned for State Road 46 and Park Avenue
in Sanford.
Work on the Seaboard Coastline Railroad overpass on SR 46
west of Sanford will be completed by January 1984.
In a letter to DOT District Engineer C.A. Benedict, com­
missioners thanked the agency for the assistance it has ren­
dered to help improve highways in the county.
The county also asked the DOT for cooperation in funding for

verse effect the arrest has had on your

perform ance of your duties," the handdelivered tetter stated.
•
Mrs. Pearson was arrested on Dec. 29
at Publix Market In Sanford and charged
with shoplifting $10.28 in merchandise.
Prior to her suspension, she was allowed
to remain on the Job. This is Mrs.
Pearson’s first year as dean of students
after 10 years as a biology teacher at the
high school.
Before voting 3-2 to suspend Mrs.
Peurson with pay, the board voted down
3-2 a recommendation from Hughes that
she be suspended without pay. School
Board members Jean Bryant and Pat
Telson voted fpr the suspension without
pay.
,
Hughes based his recommendation for
suspension on "Immorality and moral
turpitude" charges as defined in the
criteria listed in the Rules of the
Department of Education. The rules on
suspension define Immorality as "con­
duct that Is Inconsistent with the stan­
dards of public conscience and good
m o ra ls ."
“ Moral turpitude" Is defined as "a
crim e that is evidenced by an act of
baseness, vileness or depravity In the
private and social duties."
Mrs. Pearson did not appear in person
before the board. She was represented by
Ron Boeth, executive director of the
Seminole Education Association. Boeth
reminded board members that a person
is Innocent until proven guilty. The
penalty should be equal to the proof of
guilt, he added.
“ I am here to raise procedural concern
and the underlying philosophy I think is
that the allegation of charges are not the
charges that were given to the employee
in Uie letter, said Boeth. “ The charge
that her arrest Is adversely aftectmg
performance of the employee’s duties
needs to be substantiated.
“ That Is not a reason for suspending an
employee and the recommendation to the
board on another set of charges that I
don’t think would stand the test of
legality," he said.
Seminole High School Superintendent
Wayne Epps told the board how the
arrest was affecting his dean of students.
“ M ainly in respect to h e r em ­
barrassm ent and not wanting td com­
municate openly with students and other
staff members."
He said the Incident had caused a
normal disruption in so far as the
students have made i t a center of at­
tention and there have been a number of
calls from parents about it.
I
“She has lost her credibility as far as
dealing with students and establishing
iheir guilt or innocence it has cast
| *
feubt," said Epps.
School Board member William Kroll
-■
commented, "I don’t feel we should
suspend an employee without pay. We
should either utilize them In another
position or suspend them with pay."

lr

Additionally, county officials are making a pitch to both
DOT officials and state legislators for the state to take over
payments on SR 434.
Those payments, about $411,000 annually, come from the
county’s receipts from the state sales tax and are tying up
those funds, preventing them from being used by the county to
fund further road construction.
The county constructed SR 434 through Seminole County­
using a $6.2 million bond issue. When construction was
finished, the state took over maintenance responsibility for the
highway but left the county with the responsibility for paying
off the bonds.
The bund issue rum, through the year 2003.

I Cable Customers

Board
Suspends
SHSDean
With Pay
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole High School Dean of Students
Ja c q u lin e C. Pearson h as been
suspended with pay by the County School
Board until criminal shoplifting charges
have been resolved against her in Circuit
Court.
The trial date has been scheduled for
Feb. 22 for Mrs. Pearson, who is
pleading innocent to the theft charge.
County School Superintendent Robert
W. Hughes had previously informed Mrs.
Pearson in a letter dated Jan. 7 that she
was “ suspended with pay until the
regular meeting of the School Board
Tuesday for the purpose of considering
further suspension.
“ The suspension is based on the ad­

the Seminole County Expressway Authority. The authority has
asked for $109,900 to fund two staff positions and studies of
potential toll highways in the county

Face Rate Hike

OUCHLESS LI

F

Tin* f i r s t tim e is a lw a y s th e b e s t. O r is it?
W en d y T r a m e ll ( a t le ft in th e p h oto
a b o v e ) , a n e m p lo y e e o f th e F la g s h ip H ank,
lo o k s u n s u r e a b o u t g iv in g b lo o d w hile h e r
p u lse is c h e c k e d by P a t i y T a r t e r b e fo re
M s. T r a m e l l d o n a te s a p in t o f b lo o d d u rin g
T u e s d a y 's o p e n h o u se o f th e S e m in o le
C o u n ty B r a n c h of th e C e n tr a l F lo rid a
B lood B a n k . F i r s t tim e d o n o r S a n d ! B a rto n
of G o ld e n ro d (in th e lo w e r p h o to ), a n

Herald Photos by Tom Vincent

e m p lo y e e of th e F lo r id a D e p a r tm e n t of
L a w E n fo rc e m e n t C r im e l*al&gt; in S a n f o r d ,
s e e m s to he b r a c in g h e r s e lf w h ile T im
T o b in , s u p e r v is o r of th e b r a n c h o ffic e a t
1302 K . S eco n d S t„ c h e c k s h e r b lood
p r e s s u r e . A to ta l of 45 p e r s o n s g a v e b lo o d
T u e s d a y . A nyone c a n d o n a te blo o d a t th e
f a c ility on M o n d a y s a n d W e d n e s d a y s
b e tw e e n 9 a .in . a n d 5 p .m . o r on T u e s d a y s
a n d T h u rs d a y b e tw e e n II a .m . a n d 7 p .m .

The rates paid by the nearly 30,000
cablevision subscribers In Seminole County
could be raised or some of the service lost
unless Congress continues its stay on a federal
agency ruling.
The copyright Royalty Tribunal, which
regulates the fees paid by cablevision stations
for importing signals from distant stations —
places 50 to 75 miles and beyond — announced
that rates would be quadrupled to the stations,
beginning Jan. 1.
Congress, however, has stayed the execution
of the order until March 15.
Steve McMahon, regional manager of
American Television and Communications
Corp., the parent company of OrangeSeminolc Cablevision which serves most of
Seminole County, has called on the city
governments it serves for help in getting the
Congress to eliminate the ruling.
He explained the Federal Communications
Commission two y e a rs ago deregulated
cablevision as far as the number of stations it
could carry . Previously the regulations
allowed a cablevision company to pick up the
signals from only two distant cities and
Orange-Seminole's choices were Tampa and
Atlanta.

v “The FCC ruling meant we could carry
three, four, 10 additional stations," McMahon
said. "And many cablevision companies
added additional stations.” Orange-Seminole
added the new station at Melbourne.
Meanwhile, Storer Cablevision In Altamonte
Springs is now carrying four distant station
signals, said Pat Israel, public relations
representative of the firm.

McMahon said now the Copyright Royalty
Tribunal, which regulates payment for using
those distant signals, has ruled that the costs
per station will be Increased from l7 percent to
3.75 percent of the cablevision station's gross
revenues per signal, effective Jan.l.
“ That's a quadrupling of the cost,"
McMahon said. "The result Is that the
cablevision companies will either pass the
increased costs to its customers or drop the
signals. Those are the two options available."
Some 4,000 cablevision stations in the nation
would be affected by the ruling.
He noted the U.S. Congress has stayed the
order until March 15.
“We are caught between two federal
agencies — the FCC and Copyright Royalty
Tribunal. The options we have are not
something any city or customer would like and
federal government action is forcing us to that
position," McMahon said.
lie said ATC and other cablevision firms
have Joined together in a lawsuit to have the
ruling overturned. “We also are involved in
legislative action which may reverse the
tribunal's ruling," he said.
"We want to keep the rates low and we don’t
want to drop slanaU," he said.

McMahon said the ruling does not affect
those channels delivered by satellite. It onlyaffects broadcast stations being brought in
from other markets.
The regional manager said any plans
Orange-Seminole Cablevision may have had to
import distant signals from stations would die
if the ruling stands. "They would be inor­
dinately expensive and of marginal value," he
concluded. - DONNA ESTES

Killer
O f Sanford Man
Says He Wants To Die
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Writer
Convicted killer Richard Earl Ciourlcy,
sentenced to life Imprisonment 10 years ago
for the brutal killing of a Sanford man, has
submitted a petition saying he wants to die in
the electric chair.
But the petition, a copy of which has been
sent to the Evening Herald, has been called a
"ploy" by Assistant State Attorney Alan
Robinson, who said Gourley had tried various
means to get his sentence commuted.
The petition, signed by Gourley who Is now
serving his life sentence at Tomoka Correc­
tional Institution In Daytona Beach, was sent
to the Seminole County Court In January and a
report on the case Is being prepared for sub­
mission to Judge Dominick Salfi.
Robinson said he Is preparing a report on

Gourley’s latest effort to commute his life
sentence. Gourley was sentenced May 18,1972,
when he was 20 for the "blatant, heinous, cold­
blooded" m urder of 69-ycar-old George
DiGiovanni of Sanford. Gourley lived in l-ake
Mary.
"Mr. Gourley has over the years attempted
various means for a commuted sentence. He
has filed several motions," Robinson said.
Referring to the petition signed by Gourley
asking for death, Robinson added: "He Is not
under sentence of death. I would describe this
as a ploy In an attempt to focus attention on
himself."
The petition calling for "execution In the
electric chair" refers to the Gary Gilmore
case, the convicted Utah killer who fought the
state of Utah for his death sentence to be
carried out. He was eventually executed.

TODAY
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Portable Rooms To House Retarded Students
The Seminole County School Board has
approved the construction of six portable
buildings to provide needed facilities at
Rosenwald School In Altamonte Springs
for severely retarded students.
The Sunland Centers have been or­
dered closed by the state legislature and
Seminole County Schools now have the
responsibility to educate and train an
additional 25 or more of these boys and
girls who will come to the county to live.
"We don't have any classrooms and we
are heavily Impacted with children who
•re severely retarded," said School
Superintendent Robert Hughes.
The school board has state funds
available up to $295,000 to house the 25
students. But there are no funds for their
transportation to school. The funds must
be spent by June or the county will lose
the money, Hughes said.
The portables will each be equipped

with toilet facilities suitable for use by
the handicapped. The project also will
involve building sidewalks, access
ramps, and covered walkways connected
to the rest of the buildings.
Some of the severely retarded students
from Sunland are already in the school,
while the rem ainder will begin filtering
into the program Monday. School of­
ficials said they do not know what the
total Impact will be.
Because time is of the essence for
completing the portables and the money
lor funding is coming from another
source, the school board voted 4-1 to
contract with an outside builder, rather
than use county labor. Board member
William Kroll voted no.
Miss Sandy Pruette, residential ser­
vices d irecto r for Health and
Rehabilitative Services, said although

the Sunland-Orlando facility will not be
completely phased out until the end of
June 1984 through a gradual process, all
of the clients coming to Seminole county
will have been placed in facilities in the
county by the end of March 1983. There
will be no more than 32 total, she said.
Some of the students will be from
Sunland-Gainesvllle, Miss Pruette said.
A criteria for placing the students who
are physically handicapped as well as
severely retarded is to return them to the
area they were admitted from if they still
have parents, relatives or guardians
there, she added.
They are given occupational and
physical therapy, and training in social
skills and basic academics to the extent
of their abilities. Miss Purette said 17 of
the students, already are housed in the
Howell Branch Road residential facility
and 15 more will be placed at the new

facility on Fern Park Boulevard in Fern
Park. A 64-bed four building facility, it is
scheduled to open sometime in February.
Several years ago before the phase out
of Sunland started, several children were
transferred from there to Kradle Kare on
Lake Howell Road in Casselberry.
The board also voted 3-2 to lease a 12
foot by 50 foot trailer to provide ad­
ditional classroom space for Woodlands
Elementary School at Izmgwood at $200 a
month. Nancy Warren and Jean Bryant
cast the no votes. This will be an Interim
solution (or this school year only. By­
using the trailer for an emotionally
handicapped class, more room would be
available for the gifted class. The gifted
program at Lake Orienta Elementary
School now has 64 students and 10 of them
are from Longwood. They could be
transferred to Woodlands If more space

is provided there, according to Don
Ricci. The 55 gifted students at
Woodlands do not now have enough space
and are now in the program two days a
week. School officials propose making it
a full-time program.
Herald Heckenbach expressed concern
about moving an autistic class into the 12foot-wide classroom. "Some of these
students have a very low boiling point. It
took a teacher, a coach, and myself to get
one boy into the time-out room the other
day when he got upset and began
throwing desks and chairs around. I am
concerned about the safety of the other
children in the class when this happens in
the confines of a smaller space.
"We need the additional space and 1
have mixed emotions like when your
mother-in-law goes over the cliff in jfour
. Cadillac," said Heckenbach.
- By JANE CASSELBERRY

4V

�) A— Evening H erald. Sanford, F I.

W ed n tsd iy , Jan. 1 1 ,1 ft)

NATION
IN BREF

t.

Gunman Holding Hostage
Upset World Didn't End
%
MEMPHIS, Tenrv (UPI) — An unemployed “ wild"
man with a history of mental problems who became
•♦'extremely upset" that the world didn’t end Monday
hrid a wounded policeman hostage today and
threatened to "blow his head off."
"Lynn" Lindberg Sander^ 49, who police believe is
the leader of a group holding the officer Inside a small
frame house, had demanded to talk to a rock disc
Jockey, but then refused to .talk to him over a police
radio.
• •
He repeatedly threatened to kill the hostage, and
screamed obscenities at negotiators over a portable
police radio he took from police. He told authorities he
had already "h u rt someone."
»
a*

Schwelker Quits Cabinet
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Health and Human Ser­
vices Secretary Richard Schwelker will leave the
government’s biggest department next month and
become the fourth person to quit the Cabinet since
President Reagan took office.
Schwelker, 56, will take a six-figure salary as
president of the 572-member American Council of l i f e '
Insurance, a lobbying group based in Washington,
administration sources said Tuesday night.
White House aides said former Rep. Margaret
Heckler, a Massachusetts RepsbUcan defeated in
November, is the leading candidate to take over the •
$276 billion Cabinet department whose programs touch
nearly every American. They said it was possible her
appointment could be announced today.
In a "pleasant meeting" with Reagan last Friday, *
Schweiker said he would depart in'early February to
take an "irresistible offer," officials said.

NOW Chief Held In M urder
I.OS ANGELES (UPI) — The California president of
the National Organization for Women has been
arrested in the Ure-iron slaying of an Argentine
businessman she allegedly lured from a New Orleans'
French Quarter bar 17 years ago.
Glnny Eleanor Foat, 41, who was to have been a
delegate to the state Democratic Convention in
Sacramento this weekend, was arrested Tuesday
morning at Burbank Airport by the Police Depart­
ment's fugitive detail.
Louisiana authorities said Ms. Foat and her exhusband — who is now serving a 25-year sentence for
a Nevada killing in which Ms. Foat also was implicated
— are suspected of the November 1965 slaying of
Molses Chayo, 62, who had been visiting a sick son in a
New Orleans’ clinic.

WEATHER
• V-iVin’.:
■ ■
. i ........
i i

NATIONAL REPORT: Snow squalls closed schools, caused
scores of traffic accidents and signaled a return to winter In
the Midwest, but record-breaking high temperatures wanned
New England. Gusty winds pushed torrential rains across the
Southeast. Residents of Enterprise, La., found themselves
nearly surrounded by w ater and unable to use highways
because of renewed Hooding. Ten parishes in north-central
Louisiana were declared major disaster areas by President
Reagan. Nearly 10,000 people have been forced from their
homes since waters started to rise Christinas Eve. A fastmoving storm, carried by a blast of Arctic air, raced across
the Dakotas,- Iowa, Minnesota and Upper Michigan Tuesday
with snow and ice that closed schools in a number of towns and
caused scores of traffic accidents. Fifty mph winds kicked up
blinding snow across much of the region, frequently dropping
visibility to near zero. In its return to the Midwest, winter
strewed snow from Upper and Lower Michigan across the
Great lakes into western New York State, and from Illinois to
Tennessee. PeUston, Mich., reported 3 inches of snow and
Chicago had more than 1 inch, prompting the city to send out
125 trucks to salt slick roadways. Snow changed to rain as a
band of the storm pushed from northeast Mississippi to
western North Carolina.
AREA READING8 (• a.m .); temperature: 53; overnight
low: 43; Tuesday high: 65; barometric pressure: 30.06;
relative humidity: 56 percent; winds: northwest at 18 mph;
sunrise 7;19 a m , sunset 5:58 p m
THURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 7:37 a m ,
7:51 p m ; lows, 12:52 a m , 1:41 p m ; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 7:29 a m , 7:43 p,m.; Iowa, 12:44 a m , 1:32 p m ;
BAYPORT: highs, 12:04 a m ., 2:03 pm .; lows 7:27 a m ., 7:11
p.ih.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Ju p iter Inlet, Out
58 Mile*: A sm all craft advisory is In effect. Northwesterly
wind around 20 knots Increasing to 20 to 25 knots today and
continuing tonight. Winds becoming northerly and decreasing
to around IS knots Thursday. Seas 3 to 5 feet near shore In­
creasing to 8 to 10 feet well offshore. Mostly fair.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly sunny and breezy today with
highs in the mid 50s. Wind northerly 15 to 20 mph. Tonight fair
and colder with freezing temperatures. Lows near 30 to low
30*. Wind northerly 10 mph or leas. Thursday mostly sunny and
breezy with highs in the mid 50*.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Mostly fair weather except for
variable cloudiness and a chance of showers during Saturday.
Turning a little colder again by Sunday. Lows Friday and
again Sunday from 30a north to 40s southern Interior and 90s
keys but not quite so cold b tu rd a y morning. Highs In the 80s
north to low 70a extrem e south but 56a north Sw day.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central FtertS# Reflenel MeesHel
Timtear
ADMISSIONS
Santard:

Evelyn M. Buchanan
Raymond R. Caron
Ruth P. Weldon
Harvey L. Chart**, taka Monroe

E v e n in g H e r a ld

DISCHAROIS
Maltchl L. Davie
Dor It E. Phillip*

Russell A. Weldon
Helm* M. Phillips, Casselberry
Benjamin V. Olver, DeBary
Harold E. Berry, Deltona
Louis P. Posanac, Deltona
■Wit* D. Ruwell, Deltona
iu w r m r i

Wednesday, January 12, IMJ-Vol. 75, No. 124
PubUMMd Dally and Sunday, except leterdey By The leaterd
MaraJd. lac.. M N. Preach Ava., Saatard, Pla. U ni.
Bacand Class Pastat* Paid at Saatard, PiarMa m i l
Mm m Denytry: WaatL s u i t Meat*, M.SS; «
v E T « J » - •»
« • * *'*&gt;
***** *
OAM i year. H M t

Reagan Does About-Face On Defense Spending
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In agreeing to
scale back his military budget for next
year, President Reagan has strayed
from the course he set months ago, but In
a way his advisers hope will avert
political embarrassment In the 96th
Congress.
Economic and political realities ap­
peared to win out over Reagan's drive to
"rearm America" as he announced
Tuesday he will bow to pressure to scale
back his fiscal 1984 defense budget to
help prevent a $200 billion deficit.
In Dallas, where he addressed the
American Farm Bureau Federation,
R eagan told reporters he was
"delighted" the t i l billion-plus cutback
could be made without jeopardizing his
m ilitary goals.
"Obviously, there might have been
some things that will be slowed a little
bit, but they are not absolutely essential
to the m ajor buildup," he said. "So we're
not reversing our course.”
With the 1964 budget due at the prin­
te r’s In a m atter of days, crucial
decisions on taxes and Jobs programs

acceptable, Reagan warned additional
cuts by Congress "would be, I think,
endangering the security of this coun­
try ."
Deputy White House press secretary
Larry Speakes later told reporters
aboard Air Force One Reagan does not
consider the $11 billion figure " a token"
or " a bargaining chip."
"He feels like this Is a good-faith effort
and hopes Congress will accept it In the
spirit in which It was given," Speakes
said.
Sen. John Tower, R*Texas, the con­
Administration officials, at Reagan’s
servative chairman of the Senate Armed
urging, are drafting a plan that would
Services Committee, called the action "a
trigger tax increases in 1986 and beyond
squalid political approach to the issue."
if the deficit — which could near $300
“ I think enormous pressu re was
billion by 1988 — reaches a certain
brought to bear on the president against
percentage of gross national product.
his basic instincts,” Tower said. "I think
Reagan stressed the military savings
his basic Instincts were right."
would come from lower fuel costs and
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mlch., said the
inflation and a "slight slowdown" in
programs such as housing and training, cutbacks would damage the readiness of
but "is not setting back in any sub­ U.S. conventional forces and should
stantive way a t all our defense come from such "big-ticket items" as the
B-l bomber, the MX missile and two new
program."
Drawing the line on what he deems nuclear aircraft carriers.
have ye^ to be made.
The cutbacks and deferrals announced
by Defense Secretary Casper Wein­
berger al the Pentagon and applauded an
hour later by Reagan in Dallas amount to
3.2 percent of the $247 billion the Pen­
tagon intended to request.
More significant, they represent a
long-expected m ajor concession by the
president that could set the stage for
another compromise later in the week on
the issue of using higher taxes to restrain
burgeoning deficits.

Spending in billions o f dollars by years
1 9 8 1 | ’8 2
|General

’8 3 | ’8 4 | ’8 5

\^ 8 .^ V ^ 8 .Z S ^ 0 6 .2 ^ 1 4 .( ^ 3 9 .o j

Training. Medical
and General
Personnel

35 3 39.7 44 2 47 6 52.5

Strategic Forces

(Includes Nuclear) 12.7 16.2 23.1 30.3 33.2
Research and
14.2 16.9 20.1 22.7 26.3
Development
I Supply and
|Maintenance

19.1 18.9 22.0 22.2 24.8|

Intelligence and
Communications

11.2 14.0 18.0 20 2 24.6

Although Reagan has agreed to pare his military;
budget for fiscal 1984, the chart shows the defense!
budget is expected to continue climbing for at;
least the next two years.

Customer Suspects Robbery, Summons Police
An arm ed robber who held up the Imperial gas station at
State Road 46 and Interstate 4, Sanford, Tuesday night, told the
m anager to stop shaking and serve a customer as he held a gun
to her ribs.
The customer, realizing that something was wrong left the
store, went across thejtreet and telephoned police, according
to a police report. •
The man, armed with a small blue steel pistol, walked into
the store about 6:45 p.m. as manager Mary J. Pinkerton of
Sanford was behind the counter with clerk Dave Kreusner of
Deltona, pie report said.
Sticking the gun into Kreusncr's side, the robber said: "Stick
’em up.” A few minutes later, a customer came into the store
to buy a pack of cigarettes and the robber told Ms. Pinkerton to
stop shaking and serve the customer which she did, the report
said. The customer later told police that he could sec
something was wrong and left the store as though he was
unaware of what was going on and went across the street to
summon help.
*
After taking an undisclosed amount of money, the robber
told Ms. Pinkerton and Kreusner to lie on the floor and not get
up for three minutes. He then Hed in a pickup (ruck occupied
by a male."
BUILDING MATERIALS STOLEN
Building m aterials worth $209 were stolen from a building
site at Lots 27 and 28 Darby Way, Longwood, between 3 p.m.
Dec. 29 and 3:30 p.m. Monday. The property, cases of comer
beading and drywall mud, belonged to Dennis Lee Jarvis
owner of D J's Drywall Co.
DOOR KICKED IN
Rlchelle Whidden arrived horn* at 6:15 p.m. Monday to find
the front door of her home on Smithson Drive, off State Road
520 in Oviedo kicked in and b 35 mm cam era, flash, and Jewelry
missing.
The value of the stolen property has not been established.

Action Reports
★

F ire s
★

C o u rts
★

P o lic e

DUI ARRESTS
The following persons were arrested in Seminole County and &lt;
charged with driving under the influence (DUI):
— Jimmie Ray Merritt, 38, of Orlando, arrested at about;
2:13 a m . today on State Road 436 after his car was seen to :
have crossed the center line on several occasions.
— Ryder C. Johnson, 22, of 757 South Wymore R oad,:
Altamonte Springs, arrested at 2:27 a.m . today after his car
was seen swerving from side to side of State Road 436.
t

B E E P ...B E E P ...
A TAS beeper worth $275 was stolen from Thomas Cuccaro's
pickup truck parked outside 1038 Clemson Drive, Altamonte
Springs, between 11:30 a.m. Friday and 9 p.m. Saturday.
THIRSTY WORK
Thieves used wire cutters to break into a soft drink machine
at the Tenneco gas station, 1900 Howell Branch Road, Winter
Park, between 5 p.m. Tuesday and 6:15 a.m. Wednesday and
stole 20 cases of Pepsi, Sprite and other soft drinks valued at
$60.
DRUG DEAL NETS 2
Two men allegedly involed in an attempt to sell marijuana to
undercover Seminole County drug agents were arrested in the
parking lot of the ABC lounge at State Road 436, Altamonte
Springs, Tuesday night. They were later released on $5,000
bond each.
Charged were Terry Allen Burnette, 26, of Orlando, two
counts of possession and delivery of marijuana and James
Gayton Williamson, 28, of Orlando, possession of a controlled
substance and drug paraphernalia.
According to a police report, Burnette offered to sell un­
dercover agents a bag of marijuana for $30 at about 11:15 p.m.
When a search was made of WiUlamson'a car, three more bags
of the drug and a smoking device was found in the glove box.
When Burnette was searched, another bag of m arijuana was
found.
i
,

THREE-CAR CRASH; DUI ARRESTS
Gary Udell, 27, of 401S. Magnolia Avenue, Sanford, who lost
control of his vehicle, smashed into two parked cars, causing
about $3,500 damage, was arrested and charged with driving
under the Influence- of alcoholic beverages and careless
driving early today.
The accident happened at about 2 a.m . on south Park Avenue
near W. 9th Street. A Sanford police report said that Udell
collided with two cars which belonged to Anthony Everett of
Park Avenue. Udell’s 1977 Pontiac was destroyed In the crash,
police said.
Michael Francis Rodloaki, 27, of 7th Street, Casselberry was
arrested at 1:10 a.m. today and charged with DUI after his car
was seen weaving on Airport Boulevard. He was arrested and
also charged with falling to maintain a single lane.
FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department answered the following
emergency calls:
Monday
— 10:40 p.m., 13th St. and Elm Avenue, rescue.
— 10:40 p.m., 13th St., and Elm Avenue, rescue.
— 4:06 p.m., 60 Reddings Gardens, rescue.
Tuesday
— 1:55 a m ., 10th Street and Park Avenue, rescue.
— 3:20 a.m. 160 W. 16th Street, rescue.

Neiswender Named
To Personnel Job

T

Ann Neiswender, 39, has
been
nam ed
personnel
director for Seminole County
schools.
M rs. Neiswender- was
formerly the assistant per­
sonnel director, working for
both the director of in­
stru ctio n al
and
noninstructlonal personnel
The
board
recently
reorganized Its personnel
divisions,
creating
an
assistant superintendent for
administrative services and
ANN NEISWENDER
combining the two personnel
... ’the buck
divisions.
stops here'
F o rm e r
D irector
of
Instructional Personnel Owen
McCarran was promoted to the assistant superintendent’s
post
"I'm really excited about it," Mrs. Neiswender said today.
"This is kind of where the buck stopa."
She said the position carries much more responsibility than
her previous job as assistant director.
Mrs. Neiswender has served as assistant personnel director
since April, 1977. Prior to that she was a computer science
teacher at Seminole High Schoot for one year, dean of students
at Lake Howell High School for one semester, head of the
mathem atics department at Lake Howell for three semesters
and a m ath teacher at Seminole High School for three years.
She U a graduate of the University of Tennessee and bolds a
m aster’s degree in education from Austin Peay State
University in Clarksville, Tern.
The pay range for Mrs. Neixwender's new position Is $38,011
to $44,794.
She is the wife of former Seminole County Administrator
Roger Neiswender.

Coping Program Sot
For Cancer Patients
" I Can Cope," a free program for cancer patients and their
families, will be sponsored by Central Florida Regional
Hospital, Sanford, in conjunction with the American Cancer
Society beginning February 1.
The sight-week series will be held on consecutive Tuesdays
from 3:30 to 4:30 p m . through March 22. Topics to be addreaaed.are the physiology of cancer, nutrition, exercise,
communication and stress management aa well as community
resources for cancer pa*1**1**
The purpose of the program la to teach participants about
living with cancer, help attendees explore new potentials in
their Uvea aa cancer
to teach patients about the
practices and procedures which make up their treatment, to be
sensitive to
relationships, and to enable p*rildpf nU to
experience friendships with other cancer patients and their
A faculty of highly trained professionals, including soda!
workers, nurses, physicians (oncologist), dietitians, an at­
torney, a minister, physical therapists, and representatives
from Hospice, the Cancer Society and a home health agency.
TO register call the Social Services Department at CFRH,
321-4680 or 6614441.

Complete Detailed Coverage Of
Seminole County News And Sports. ..

£
8

Daily Comics, Classified Ads
And Television Listings...
Grocery And Department Store Ads
Including Money-Saving Coupons..;

J

etsGj m

id
re s

('UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE WITHIN FIR S T) WEEKS'SERVICE)

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K SK C U l 1 MONTHS M A N

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|r — ,----------------------- 1 Call (305)322-2611
P.O. BOX 14) 7, SANFORD, PL. 11771

j

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SPECIAL O FFER FOR NEW SUBSCRIBER) ONLY.
•
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FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
No Motive Established
For 2 M iam i Bombings
MIAMI (U PIi — Bombs exploded In two businesses
in the heart of the Kittle Havana district and a police
bomb squad defused a third explosive found near the
Spanish-language new spaper R eplica, officials
reported.
Miami Fire Chief John Bertzel said bomb blasts
occurred at Paradise International travel agency and
the Padron Cigars factory shortly before midnight
Tuesday.
There were no fires and no one was injured, said
Bertzel, but windows were blown out of both of the 2story buildings and glass hurled hundreds of feet.
Officials were unable as of early today to give an
estimate of the damages, or what the motivation
behind the bombings was.

Killer Sentenced To Die
TAVARES (UPI) —The third of four men accused of
robbing, kidnapping and murdering teenage Evinrude
heiress Frances Julia'Slater has been sentenced to
death in the electric chair.
Circuit Judge Philip Nourse pronounced the death
sentence Tuesday on J.B. Parker, 20, for his part in the
abduction-slaying last April in Stuart. P arker, like the
other men accused of the crime, is an unemployed fruit
picker from Fort Pierce.
The fourth defendant, Terry Wayne Johnson, is
scheduled to go on trial in Fort lauderdale in April.

Fetal Surgery

Evening Hera Id, Sanlord. FI.

When Unborn Babies Must Be Treated
ROGERS CITY. Mich. (NEAl — Paul Martin Bennett is a
typical 13-month-old. The youngest of Dick and Terry Ben­
nett’s five children, he’s clearly a delight to the entire family
and has a normal active life.
But tilings could have been different. Doctors discovered in
September 1981 that the fetus Terry Bennett was carrying had
hydrocephalus, a buildup of fluid in the brain. It can prevent
development of nerve cells, causing severe retardation,
blindness, cerebral palsy1 or death.
Had it been left untreated, Paul almost certainly would have
a short, tragic life. But he is one of a handful of infants who
have been surgically treated while still in the womb. The
youngster is part of medical history.
In June 1981, in the early stages of her pregnancy, Terry had
some problems. Her physician suggested she undergo
ultrasound testing, a painless procedure that allows medical
personnel to view a live "picture" of a fetus on a screen. With
this, they can make inferences about fetal health and function.
Immcdiately'after the test, the doctor "asked if I had ever
heard of ‘water on the brain,” Terry recalls. During a second
test, Terry could see the Image of her son. "He looked like he
had a football helmet on," she recalls grimly.
A genetic specialist saidthat the youngster would likely have
physical problems in addition to retardation and would almost
certainly have to be institutionalized.
Some suggested that Terry have an abortion but, she says,
"I am very anti-abortion.
"We asked, ‘Where in the world can we go?' We were willing
to go anywhere, to do anything we could, for the baby.... We
consulted with the priest and prayed heavily about it."

Doctors told Dick and Terry about experimental fetal
surgery being conducted at a few facilities, including the
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver. In
April 1981, physicians there had operated successfully on
another hydrocephalic fetus. He was bom that July to John
and Susan Talbot of Glendale, Ariz,
In September 1981, the Bennetts flew to Denver. Medical
staff at the University of Colorado stressed that the prenatal
procedure was still experimental. Terry says they explained
that the surgery presented several risks, including the
possibility of breaking the amniotie sac or of prem ature labor
and the danger of infection to both to the m other and child.
On Sept. 29, 1981, a team headed by Dr. William Clcwell
inserted a needle into Terry’s abdomen, into the uterus and
through to Paul’s brain cqvity. A shunt, a tube with a one-way
valve, was inserted into the brain through the needle so it could
remain until birth and drain fluid Into the amniotie sac
surrounding the infant.
The only guide the physicians had for their work was the
image on the ultrasound screen. The extremely pain-staking
work took only about 20 minutes.
The operation was performed in the 23rd week of pregnancy.
Everything seemed to go well. But testing a few weeks later
showed that the shunt had become dislodged — apparently the
baby had pulled it out.
Despite the even greater risks of a second operation, the
Bennetts decided to try it. That procedure was performed in
Denver during the 27th week of pregnancy. There were several
complications. But subsequent tests showed the baby's excess
brain fluid was draining properly.

Paul M artin Bennett, p ic tu re d here with his
m o th e r, T e rry , when he w as 7 m onths old, could
have h a d a short, tragic life. But a new procedure
— fetal s u rg e ry — has helped him.
On Nov. 23 at the health science center, Paul was deliver
prem aturely by Caesarean section. He weighed a mere three
pounds, 15 ounces.
Within four hours, the baby underwent surgery to have a
different shunt inserted to drain off Ihe fluid into his abdominal
cavity. As with all hydrocephalics, he will have the shunt,
barely visible under the skin at the back of his head, In place
permanently.
After two months the Bennetts were able to take him home.

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INGTON (UPI) - The administration urged the Sufor the
time Tuesday to rule that it Is
_____j
(M a p p e d mortality tables to calculate
I retirem ent payments for men and women.
Justice Department said a lower court correctly ruled
i employee retirement pension based on widely used
&gt;ce annuity table* tg |a y women lower benefits violates
U Rights Act of l i f t
ables are based on the theory that women, In general,
j h f r ^ w o i l l i l contributes a g reater amount of her
uatlon than a man for an equal benefit or contributes
■) amount for a lesser benefit, the use of sex-based
al tables In calculating periodic benefits results In the
liscrimlnation," the government said,
zovenunent filed its position In a case Involving long
University Professor Diana Spirt, who challenged the
he benefit calculations used by the Teachers Insurance
rnutty Association and College Retirement Equities
mah Ms. Spirt did not file a class action lawsuit, a
ne Court ruling of the issue could have widespread
on how retirem ent benefits are paid to women.
»than 400,000 employees at approximately JJQ0 colleges
iversitiea participate in the TIAA-CREF system.
m s . Spirt’s pension plan, tenured faculty members
Nte 5 percent of their yearly salary and the university
lutes an equal sum. The contributions are forwarded to
urance companies that use m ortality tables classified
in calculating plan benefits.
Supreme Court has not yet decided whether it will hear
- T h e insurance companies have asked the high court
that the employment discrimination law does not apply
n because it Interfere with their Insurance business.

IN H I A L E A H

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Plane Crashes In Cemetery
Near Airport; Five Killed

United Press International
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, disgruntled with
U.S. efforts to negotiate Middle East peace, turned to
Moscow today for his first in-depth talks with Yuri
Andropov since the new Soviet leader took power two
months ago. ...
Arafat arrived in Moscow Tuesday following talks
with Jordan’s King Hussein in Ammap, where he
charged the United Slates was not dependable because
of its Inability to influence Israeli policy.
Ih e official news agency Tass said only that Arafat
was on " a short business visit” but the guerrilla chief
said his talks with Andropov would focus on “current
International efforts to bring about peace in the Middle
East."

at roof

A G R EAT N E W W ALG R EEN S

i

IN BRIEF
TORONTO (UPI) — Five people, including two
executives of the Sun Oil company and the president of
its Canadian subsidiary, were killed when a company
Jet crashed into a cemetery less than five miles from
Toronto International Airport,
The pilot and co-pilot of the twin-engine Sabrcliner
jet also died when the small aircraft suddenly flipped
over Tuesday and plowed Into a muddy and unused
part of Beechwood Cemetery in the northwest part of
Toronto.
Authorities were mystified as to the cause of the
crash, which occurred minutes after the pilot received
clearance to make his final approach to the airport.
A team of investigators from the
Canadian
Department of Transport were expected early today to
begin probing the wreckage of the plane owned by Sun
Oil Co., the 11th largest U.S. oil conglomerate.

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HAKKANDALE (UPI) — A thousand or more sharks
slicing through waters near Oceanside resort hotels has
forced lifeguards to have vacationers out of the water
until a shark watch confirms the school is gone.
Officials hoped the sharks would leave today so
beaches can be reopened.
H allandale Beach Patrol lifeguards ordered
vacationers out of the water Tuesday after the sharks
were sighted about a quarter of a mile off the beach at
Hollywood, just north of Hallandale.
Coast Guard Petty Officer Greg Robinson said crew
members of a U.S. Navy anti-submarine helicopter
based in Massachusetts reported about 2.000 sharks in
the water.

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�Evening Herald

Seminole County School Superintendent
Robert Hughes has been named to the 1983
statewide advisory council for school volunteer
programs.
"We are extrem ely proud of our school
volunteer programs in Seminole County,"
Hughes said. "Our Dividends and our com­
munity resources programs make invaluable
contributions to all areas of our educational
program. I am sure th at Florida’s other counties
would like the opportunity to leam more about
our outstanding programs. That Is one of our
great success stories."

ius». a t 3M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FI A 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993
W ednesday, Ja n u a ry 12, 1983— 4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, |1.00; Month, $4,25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month. $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Last school year Seminole County had more
than 1,700 volunteers to donate more than 89,000
hours In the district’s 42 schools. Additionally,
the community resources program averages 150
presentations each month in the schools by
citizens of the community.
The first meeting of the advisory’ board will be
held in February.
Speaking of committees, the regional m ental
health advisory committee, which supervises
mental health program s in Seminole. Orange
and Osceola counties, will soon expand to 21

members from its current 18.
But Seminole County Commissioner Robert
Sturm thinks reducing the size of the panel would
be a better move.
Sturm thinks the group should have six
members, three from Orange County, two from
Seminole and one from Osceola. That 6-member
body would accomplish much more than the
larger panel, he claims.
But a move to formally ask for the reduction
fell short this week. Sturm and Commissioner
Bill Klrchhoff were the only supporters for the
idea from the 5-person commission.

MICHEALBEHA

Trudeau And Gang
Take A Breather
We’re missing an old friend. The last cartoon
panel of Doonesbury, in which readers witnessed
the birth of Joanie Caucus' baby, marked the end
of the comic strip’s 12-year run.
Doonesbury’s author, Garry Trudeau, has
cleaned off his drawing board and put his pens
and brushes away. He says he needs a "breather”
and he wants to give his cartoon characters time
to grow up. He plans to resume the strip in about
20 months.
Trudeau won’t be idle during the recess. He is
expected to work on a movie about the new
political right and collaborate on a musical
version of his Doonesbury strip.
At the end, Doonesbury was carried in more
than 700 papers. In the beginning, newspaper
editors were reluctant, not quite sure what to do
with Doonesbury, which was really more political
comment than comic-page humor.
Often there was heavy pressure to drop the
strip, which shocked the old guard with its attacks
on pomposity and hypocrisy.
Trudeau took up where Walt Kelly’s comic
strip, Pogo, left off. Where Kelly depicted
President Lyndon Johnson as a longhorn steer
and Vice President Spiro Agnew as a slinking
hyena, Trudeau used people to represent people.
His comic-strip newspaperman. Rick Redfem
was a takeoff on Robert Redford, and drug en­
thusiast Uncle Duke was modeled after Hunter
'niompson, the Rolling Stone's political and social
commentator. And, of course, there was Lacey
Davenport, as Rep. Millicent Fenwick of New
Jersey, who was defeated for re-election last
November.
Even some of those who were attacked, by
Trudeau were followers. President Gerald Ford,
press secretary Ron Nessen, John Ehrlichmann
and others have requested the originals of panels
in which they were featured.
We’ve enjoyed the years with Trudeau's
Doonesbury. We know many of our readers have,
too. We eagerly await the return of Doonesbury.

Moscow Terrorism
Americans can be grateful that their country
has been largely spared from the scourge of
terrorism. Our good fortune is attributable to
geography, competent police work, and the fact
that most terrorists are busy striking at enemies
other than the United States.
It is less certain, however, that the latter will
always be so. Much of the world’s terrorism is
perpetrated by fanatics of the left who share a
common hostility to any government perceived as
"counterrevolutionary.” TTiat makes Americans
and their country a target of opportunity to be
attacked when circumstances permit.
In the meantime, the activities of Puerto Rican
terrorists should serve to remind Americans of
their vulnerability. Recently, for example, a
Puerto Rican terrorist group known as the Armed
Forces of National Liberation (FAl^N) claimed
responsibility for planting four bombs in New
York City.
The bombs, placed outside police headquarters
and at three federal buildings, severely injured
several police officers. One officer had to have the
mangled remains of his foot amputated after
doctors failed in efforts to save it.
TOe members of the FALN and other similar
Puerto Rican terrorist groups have a long history
of political violence,' both in the continental United
States and in their island commonwealth. Their
proclaimed goal is independence for Puerto Rico,
a status repeatedly and overwhelmingly rejected
by Puerto Rican voters.
FBI Director William Webster has said publicly
that at least some of the Puerto Rican terrorist
organizations have links to Cuba and to that
country’s Soviet-controlled intelligence service.
If Webster is correct, the continuing campaign
of political violence by Puerto Rican terrorists
might properly be considered as one more bit of
evidence that the United States is indeed on the
target list of an international terrorist network
directed at least in part from within the Soviet
bloc.

BERRY'S WORLD

"W h a t's the p o in t o f b e in 'a kio. i f when school
is closed. YOU'VE G O TTA SHOVEL S N O W ?"

ROBERT WAGMAN

JEFFREY HART

Right
On,
Kirkpatrick

Changes
Ahead In
Congress
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Schools group
their students by the year of graduation, but
Congress groups its members by the year in
which they're first elected. And the newly
arrived Class of '82 probably will affect
Congress more than any incoming class since
the early 1970s.
This Is especially true in the House, which
has 79 first-time members — 55 Democrats
and 24 Republicans — or almost one-fifth of
the body. (Two other Democrats in the Class
of '82 are former congressmen who won
election after an absence from Washington.)
The Class of '82 is mainly male and white
(only five new members are women), but Us
m em bers come from widely divergent
backgrounds — ranging from Mike Andrews,
a Democratic Texas lawyer who won his seat
with the backing of minorities and the poor, to
Ed Zschau, a California Republican computer
executive. As is normally the case, many of
the arrivals arc lawyers and many have
served In state and local government, but for
15 of the new members, this will be their first
political office.
There are a few illustrious names among
the incoming freshmen. Harley Staggers Jr.
takes a seat in the body in which his father
was a power for many years, and Connie
Mack Ill’s grandfather was the legendary
owner-manager of the old Philadelphia A's.
But these are the exceptions.
The oldest freshman, at 65, is James
G arkc, D-N.C., a longtime stale senator. The
youngest is 28-year-old Jim Cooper, D-Tenn.,
scion of a famous political family, who
defeated Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker’s daughter Cissy in November.
Age makes the Class of '82 different from
many past freshman classes, especially those
of recent years. In general, it is older: More
than halt of the freshmen — 45 In all — are
over 40, Including 21 over 50 and three over 60.
This reverses the youth trend of recent years,
in which most incoming freshmen seemed to
be in their early 30s, with many still in their
20s. Jim Cooper is the only class member
under 30, and only 11 are under 35.
More important, lack of ideology seems to
set this class apart from others in recent
years. A number of the classes entering in the
immediate post-Watergate era were out­
spokenly liberal. The G ass of '80 was
stridently conservative, with many of its
members having ridden to Washington on
Ronald Reagan's coattails. In contrast, both
Republicans and Democrats in the Class of '82
seem moderate almost to the point of lacking
strong Ideology.
For many years, before each new Congress
has convened, the Incoming freshmen class
has gathered at the Harvard University
School of Government for a week-long series
of seminars. Those running the program this
year are unanimous In their opinion of this
freshm en class: Its m em bers are
"pragmatic.” As one observer noted, they
seem more united by the fear of the present
world and domestic situations than divided by
party labels. Almost all of the freshmen
reject partisanship and political posturing.
Few of the 57 Democrats seem either ultra­
liberal or arch-conservative. Only a couple of
them are likely to join with the conservative
Democratic "boll weevils" who helped push
through the Reagan program in the 97th
Congress. In fact, the freshman Democrats
voted unanimously to deny Rep. Phil Gramm,
D-Texas — the chief boll weevil — his seat on
the Commerce Committee because of his lack
of party loyalty.

7V» Had H — I'm Going Info Alum inum Siding!'

ROBERT WALTERS

New Witch Hunt
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Those who
weren’t bom in time to enjoy the thrills of the
witch hunts of the Colonial era have a rare
opportunity to participate in a latter-day
search for traitors, perverts, subversives and
other evil-doers.
This time around, we’re seekiiY "secular
humanists" and the hunt is being organized
by the Moral Majority, Christian Voice,
National Christian Action Coalition and
assorted other "New Right" organizations
peddling a mean-spirited approach to public
affairs poorly disguised as religion.
Nobody Jias a very precise definition or
description of a "secular humanist” but that
makes the search more lively for the narrow­
minded people convinced that the enemy
lurks in homes, libraries and schools all
across the land — and even in the halls of
Congress.
"Secular humanists” were most recently
sighted on Capitol Hill by Christian Voice,
which earlier discovered that the nation's
schools were being abused "to brainwash our
children with secular humanist hog wash."
In a "confidential" letter to prospective
donors, Christian Voice warns that various
candidates seeking the 1964 Democratic
presidential nomination are "all ultraliberal
who put the values of secular humanists
above the name of Christians."
The appeal (or funds is made under the
name of "Christiana to Re-Elect President
Reagan,” an organization apparently un­
deterred by the president’s insistence that he
hasn’t even decided whether to seek a second
term .’
Although Reagan is "th e greatest president
of this century," saya the letter, he has been
forced to back away (n an tough stands on
Issues such as abortion, pornography and
homosexuality because of pressure from "the
liberal power structure and many of his own
'moderate' advisors."
r*H ai«n Voice doesn’t confine its political
activities to p resid en tial campaigns.
Immediately prior to last autumn's elections,
for example, it issued a "report card" on the
votes cart by members of Congress on im­
portant "moral Issues" — and the elastic

definition of "morality" extended to criticism
of the Federal Election Commission and the
National Science Foundation.
Attempting to offset that Intemperate
propaganda is People for the American Way,
a
W ashington-based,
nonpartisan,
educational organization whose founders
include some of the nation's most respected
religious and lay leaders.
Anthony T. Podesta, the organization's
executive director, explains the group’s
principal concerns:
"Some prominent religions and their
leaders seem to have chosen a belligerent,
divisive role. From time to time, they glorify
authoritarian, not democratic, values. They
often attack the goodwill and Integrity of
people who disagree with them. They oc­
casionally claim a monopoly on Christian
rectitude . . .
"From their television pulpits and in their
direct mail letters. .. (they) preach a gospel
that makes genuine ecumenical cooperation
unlikely. Understanding and reconciliation
are not part of their vocabularies.
"Their ministries do not lead to a necessary
national consensus but to new recriminations,
more religious intolerance and greater
national discord."
The growing importance of religion in
contemporary society was illustrated in a
1981 nationwide public opinion survey, con­
ducted on behalf of the Connecticut Mutual
Life Insurance Co., which concluded that
religious commitment has a greater impact
in determining an individual’s values than do
age, race, sex, Income or political viewpoint.
"Our findings," said the survey report,
"suggest that the Increasing impact of
religion in our social and political Institutions
m ay be only the beginning of a trend that
could change the face of America."
But that trend holds the potential for danger
as well as opportunity — especially if the
politico-religious zealots persist in Ignoring
the words of President Abraham IJncoln: "I
am concerned to know not whether the Lord Is
on my side, but whether I am on the Lord's
side."

Rumors are all over Washington to the
effect that U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirk­
patrick will resign soon, reportedly over
differences with Secretary of State George
Shultz.
It would be a great loss. Mrs. Kirkpatrick
has brought a measure of truth and reality to
the world of diplomatic euphemism; and
democratic policy making, which requires
the support of public opinion, cannot be ef­
fective in an atmosphere of euphemism and
evasion.
The United Nations, which former am­
bassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan called a
“ dangerous place," is the sort of place in
which U.N. information officers could issue a
report unfavorably comparing the Western
press with Soviet news media, a report the
present secretary general, Perez de Cuellar,
called “really Incredible."
In a recent speech at the Mayflower Hotel
In Washington, a speech which has been
largely unnoticed, Ambassador Kirkpatrick
gave us a dose of reality about the United
Nations. She employed honest, descriptive
words seldom heard in muffled diplomatic
corridors.
The U.N., she declared, is engaged in a
Marxist "class war" against the United
States and against the private sector.
She blasted the "arrogance of the new
class" of international bureaucrats who are
now running the U.N. and charged that they
are trying to achieve "global socialism.”
She was right on the m ark when she
charged that the controlling bureaucracy at
the U.N. views poverty as the fauit of the rich
nations, believing that Third World nations
are poor because of "exploitation” by
American multi-national corporations.
“It's a bad theory," she replied. "As Adam
Smith said, wealth Is created by saving*,
investment, entrepreneurship and hard work.
Poverty cannot be ended by transfer of
wealth but by development in the Third
World." ’
I would like to interject a thought here. The
resources of Third World countries are
valuable today precisely because the in­
dustrialized nations have devised uses for
them. The oil producing nations sat on their
petroleum resources for millennia until the
West devised motors to bum the fuel. The
sam e is true of other m ineral resources.
Furtherm ore, the caricatured multi-national
corporations provide thousands of jobs in
their host countries, virtually all posts —
including management — being held by local
nationals. An excellent structural case could
be m ade that the international corporation is
now the real "international organization,"
the United Nations the spurious one.
Ambassador Kirkpatrick does not advocate
U.S. withdrawal from the United Nations,
merely a clear-eyed recognition of what it
really is, and a determination to fight its
ideology at every turn.
A more Ironic suggestion has been widely
discussed. That is, that the U.N. meet for only
six months of the year in New York, where the
delegates and other officials enjoy the
restaurants, theaters, artistic life and other
delights of civilization. The other six months
of the year, the U.N. would m eet In Moscow,
where the civilized pleasures are very few
and far between. Those on-the-make Third
World delegates would leam in short order
where the good life really is.

JACK ANDERSON

She Wages War Against Bureaucracy
' WASHINGTON - In the backrooms of the
White House, an undaunted Donna Quixote
has been waging a one-woman war against
the federal establiahm ent Her name la
Annellse Anderson, and she has triad to
dismantle just about every government
agency that has come within her purview.
She took seriously Ronald R eag an 's
campaign speeches denouncing the evils of
big government. Through her political real,
Anderson wound up u an aaaociata budget
director. Site mounted her swivel chair In the
White House complex with all the majesty of
a noble knight astride a charger and began
lilting with the Washington windmills.
As sdeejHiyed, determined libertarian, she
believes devoutly that the less government
Interference in people’s a tta in the batter.
This Is st odds with the creed of the
bureaucrats who man the bastions of
government. Those fam iliar with bar views
regsrd her as a Trojan horse lodged Inside the
federal command port, itself.
Anderson proved equal, alas mure than
equal, to tbs bureaucrats' apprehensions. She
blocked a proposal that would have required
federal IdenUficatkn cards for every m an,

woman ana enua in the country — a
bureaucratic dream th at would employ more
bureaucrats to keep a closer, benevolent
watch upon the citizenry.
But she gslloped into the fray, assailing the
idea as an Intolerable intrusion on the privacy
of free Americans. The victory and the glory
wars bars.
Next ahe did battle with the Coart Guard.
She wanted to scuttle it altogether and shut
down the Coart G uard Academy in New
London, Conn. If there were functions that
couldn’t be eliminated, she suggested, they
could be dtrtriboted among the Navy, the
Army and such private functionaries as could
be hired on the free m arket.
F or an awful moment, ahe made some
program in the backrooms, and a cruel un*
earttW y clouded the a ir for the Coart Guard
earasriats. But they rallied quickly - with the
support of alumni and friends - and rescued
the v m ra b le service.
Undtesayed, Anderson charged off in
another direction and aaaailtd the creaky
U A maritime industry — which manages to
stay afloat only through loan guarantees and
subsidies from the taxpayers.

Supporters of maritime subsidies argued
that an American merchant marine was
essential to our worldwide military com­
mitments. As evidence, they pointed to the
Falkland Islands conflict; the British com­
mandeered 70 commercial ships, including
the Queen Elizabeth II, to transport men and
supplies to the South Atlantic.
But the flag waving did not impress
Anderson, who set forth her views in a
comprehensive treatise intended for official
eyes only, but Intercepted by my associate
Donald Goldberg. She made these con­
tentions:
— "Most of the m ajor arguments advanced
in support of assisting the UJ&gt;. merchant
marine for national security reasons are
seriously flawed.”
— "There is no evidence that relying on
foreign shipping poses a significant risk to the
United States in tim es of peace or war."
— "There is no basis for believing that nonU.S. flagships would not be available in an
emergency."
— "Economic Justifications for federal
assistance to the merchant marine industries
are weak.”
These dogmatic statem ents caused instant

traum a In maritime cird es. With the
allocation of fundi in Jeopardy, the industry’s
powerful friends In Washington engaged
Anderson in mortal combat.
An interagency Cabinet Council headed by
C om m erce Secretary M alcolm Baldrige
issued its own report, which buried Ander­
son’s work and replaced it with a new repprt,
which solemnly declared that a healthy
m erchant marine is vital to U A security and,
therefore, should continue to collect its
subsidies.
In a passing nod to the feisty libertarian in
the budget office, footnotes to several sections
of the interagency report said: "This section
does not have the concurrence of the Office of
Management and Budget."
Footnote: There have been whispers that
the embattled Annelis Anderson Is weary of
her tilts with windmills and that her Illusions
about Ronald Reagan have been shattered by
his political penchant fo r compromise.
Whatever the reason, she intends to quit her’
post and rejoin her husband, Martin, who
worked briefly for the White House before
retu rn in g to the H oover Institute in
California. Meanwhile, ahe has no comment
for pesky journalists the likes of us.

�*
&lt;

Evening H erald , Sanford, FI.

L-Reactor: Military Necessity
Or An Environmental Disaster?
United P ress International
Defense Department plans to boost production of bombtirade plutonium by restarting a 28-year-old reactor at the topsecret Savannah River Plant have unleashed a mushroom
cloud of controversy.
Defense Department officials said the IyReactor will allow
the United States to produce about 100 additional nuclear
bombs a year and help the U.S. keep pace with the Soviet
Union.
Environmental groups and state officials fear radiation
from the reactor will contaminate the Savannah River, disrupt
the ecology of Georgia-South Carolina border wetlands and
foul the water supply of 70,000 people.
No one has determined yet whether discharges from the 1,Reactor — a product of 1940s technology — will violate South
Carolina's water quality standards. But environmentalists
have already filed suit to stop the project and alarmed officials
in Georgia and South Carolina have hinted they m ay join the
action.
“ If state standards aren ’t met, we could file a lawsuit
against the government," said Russ McKinney, spokesman for
South Carolina Gov. Dick Riley,
“Of course, the federal government can pre-empt stale
standards in defense m atters," he said. "It may very well
come to a confrontation someday, but right now it's just too
early to tell."
The Savannah River Plant, a 192,000-acre complex near
Aiken, S.C., has been operating since the 1950s. The IyReactor
was shut down in 1968 after 14 years of activity.
President Carter decided In 1980 to produce more radioac­
tive bomb parts at the Savannah Plant, Energy Department
spokesman Cliff Webb said, and the IyReactor was chosen for
the project. The anticipated cost of restarting the reactor — set
for October — is about $214 million.
Last November, a coalition that included the Energy
Research Foundation, Natural Resources Defense Council,

Georgia Conservancy, Coastal Citizens for Gean Energy and
the Environmental Policy Institute of Washington, filed suit in
U.S. District Court in Washington demanding an environmen­
tal impact statem ent for the project on grounds that federal
law requires them for any “major federal action affecting the
quality of the human environment."
The South Carolina Coastal Council, Georgia Gov. George
Busbec and legislators from both states have questioned the
safely of restarting the old reactor.
The government, however, maintains the IyReactor project
is “not a m ajor federal action" affecting the environment and
therefore does not require an environmental impact state­
ment.
Energy Research Foundation Director John Lawson said
restarting the IyReactor will release radioactive cesium Into
the Savannah River, which could be ingested by fish, wildlife
and people drinking the water.
“In our combined experience of several years of monitoring
the federal government's implementation of the National
Environmental Policy Act, which mandates an environmental
impact statem ent for major federal actions, we have never
seen such a blatant attempt by an agency to evade' Us
responsibilities,” I-awson said.
Department of Energy reports said the IyReactor Is ex­
pected to discharge 46 curies of cesium into the river, 10 curies
during the first year of operation.
"Ten curies is not a small amount of radioactive cesium,”
Georgia Environmental Protection Division spokesman
James Sctser said. “Usually we deal with thousandths or
millionths of curies."

MARVELOUS MARIONETTES
T h e P re -S c h o o l C e n te r o f S a n fo rd w ill s p o n s o r th e
w o rld fa m o u s V a g a b o n d M a rio p e tte s in t h e i r r e ­
c r e a tio n o f th e f a n t a s y " H a n s e l an d G r e t e l . " T he
s h o w w ill be s ta g e d a t 7:15 p .m . F r i d a y a t th e
F i r s t P r e s b y te r ia n C h u r c h , 301 O ak A v c . L a v is h

The lawsuit is aimed at "forcing the Department of Energy
to acknow ledge that the days are over when you can flush that
much radiation into the environment and deny the people
affected the right to know th facts about the environmental and
economic im pacts," Uwson said.

s e ts a n d c o s tu m e s a lo n g w ith m u s ic a n d m a g ic
blend to g e th e r to m a k e th is a m o s t e n jo y a b le
s p e c ta c le . T ic k e ts a r e $2.50 p e r p e r s o n , $ 10.00 p e r
fa m ily a n d c a n b e p u rc h a s e d a t th e d o o r o r b y
c a llin g 323-4981.

Here A re Some
On Saving Energy
A t Home This Winter

Do your heating bills leave you with a slow enough insulation. Ixxik for missing insulation
and be sure to insulate spaces around pipes
bum?
An idustrial energy manager says some and fixtures connected to the outside.
—Set the thermostat between 65 and 68
simple homeowner energy tips can reduce
degrees during winter days and 55 and 55 to 65
those bills by 40 percent or more.
degrees at night. Each degree less than 70
Richard H. Cooper, an industrial energy
represents about a l-to-3 percent cost savings.
manager, helped save his company more than
“ Remember, an electric blanket is a big
$33 million in energy costs during 1981. Cooper
energy saver, costing about $1.80 a month to
plans and manages long-term energy con­
use," Cooper adds.
servation programs, minimizing energy use
—Use fireplaces efficiently. "Fireplaces
today while planning for the future.
m ay be aesthetic but they are not generally
Cooper says an energy “audit" is as energy efficient. They pull as much us 80
essential at home as in industry, and the same percent cf the warm air out of the room and up
principles apply. The audit identifies how and the Chimney," Cooper explains.
where energy Is being used in order to pinpoint
—Lower the temperature of your hot water
where it is being wasted.
heater. "The hot water tank is one of the
"As much as 70 percent of residential energy biggest users of energy in the home, ac­
is used to heat or cool our homes," Cooper counting for about 15 percent of your bill,"
says, "so this Is where the moat energy can be Cooper says. Consider setting the temperature
between 120 and 130 degrees depending upon
saved."
To conduct an energy audit In your home, your hot water needs, he says. "If you feel heat
take an Inventory of things that affect tem­ when you touch the tank, add an Inexpensive
perature, Cooper says. This winter, he insulating blanket to reduce heat loss. Be sure
to Insulate hot water pipes In unheated areas.
suggests:
—Tune and set heating units properly and Don’t leave a water leak alone—a leak of one
operate only when needed; maintain units to drop of hot water evey second wastes 5,000
keep them in good condition. A dollar spent on gallons of water and more than $40 in energy
maintenance will often return |2, $4 or more. per year."
—Keep the furnace filter d ean and change
—Feel for air cracks around doors and
windows. Seal by weather-stripping or by periodically.
using a high quality caulking.
—Make sure tumiture is not blocking vents.
—Consider installing storm windows. They
—Keep draperies open during the day to let
keep cold air out and w arm air in and can be in sunlight. Close at night to maintain
made inexpensively with sturdy plastic.
household heat.
—Check insulation throughout the attic and
—Use full loads in dishwashers and washing
basement. A reputable Insulation dealer or machines.
local utility company can determine if there Is
—Turn off unnecessary lights.

James P. Costello, D.D.S.

mam

SAN FO RD
*

1806 S. FRENCH AVENUE
SANFORD, FLORIDA
(17-92 NEXT T O SANFORD MIDDLE S C H O O L)

COMPLETE ONE-STOP FAMILY DENTAL CARE
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$25
FOR

Dr. H. Garrett Dotson, will
serve as chief of staff at
C entral Florida Regional
Hospital, Sanford, for 1983,
replacing Dr. Franklin Gontz
who held the post (or the past
two years.
Elected Vice Chief of Staff
at the new 226-bed acute care
facility wiu Dr. Nicholas J.
Fastis. He stepped up from
the position of Chief of
M edicine. Dr. Pedro L.
Bachrach, who served as
chief of surgery in 1977, Is the
new secretary-treasurer for
the current year.
An associate of Park &amp;
Dotson Surgical Associates of
Sanford and Longwood,
Dotson Joined the medical
staff of Seminole Memorial
H ospital in 1975. CFRH
replaced Seminole Memorial
In 1982. He attended the
U niversity of Kentucky
Medical School and served as
chief of surgery in 1978 and
vice chief of staff In 1979.

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WE S E R V IC E A L L M A K E S &amp; M OD ELS
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respective sp ecialities as
chief of services were: Dr.
Robert
M.
Rosemond,
medicine; Dr. Charles Park,
Jr., surgery; Dr. Charles W.
Hardwick, family practice;
Dr. Stephen Phillips, ob-gyn;

ASK A B O U T O U R
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Dr. Vann P a rk e r, pediatrics*,

Dr.
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John T. Johnson, Imaging.

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1

Bom in Lima, Peru, Dr.
Bachrach attended Cayctanoi
Heredia Medical School In
th a t city. He becam e a
member of the SMH medical
staff In 1974 and served as
chlal ot surgery th ree y ea rs
la te r. He headed the Seminole
County Medical Society in

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He frequently presents
ta lk s on prevention and
tre a tm e n t of snakebites,
smoking and other medicalrelated topics both In the
school system and In the
com m unity. Dotson volun­
teers time, along with other
m em bers of the CFRH
medical staff, to give physical
exams to students who are
p articip atin g
in sporta
programs in county schools.
Dr. Pastls was bom In Akron,
Ohio and attended the
University of Cincinnati. He
became a member of the SMH
medical staff in 1971 and
served as chief of medicine In
1675 aa well as president of the
Sem inole County Medical
Society the year before. He
resides in Longwood with hla
wife, Dr. Maritaa Pastls, also
a m ember of the CFRH
medical staff.

DENTAL CENTER
•

W ednesday, Jan. 11, I9 IJ —JA

sa n fo r d

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p o p k a

O R A N G E C IT Y • D eB A R Y • W IN T E R PA R K • SO U TH -EA ST O R L A N D O

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•»

**%• -4# *«*■*

-*■*. • . * -

�tA — Evening H erald, Sanford. F I.

Wednesday, Jan. 17, l f M

What Happened To
The Balanced Budget?

Nuts
Peanut Business
Is In A Turmoil
NEW YORK (UPI) — The most contoversial Industry In
America right now is not automobiles, oil, television or steel —
. it's peanuts.
Not only is a raging war going on between the peanut
processors and the holders of peanut growing allotments, with
the federal government In the middle, but now the retail
m arket’s being shaken up by the appearance of the first new
national brand of peanut butter in a quarter of a century.
Kane-Milter Corp. of Tarrytown, N.Y., and its subsidiary,
Sunnyland Refining Co. of Birmingham, are spending some
millions of dollars on advertising to launch Superman peanut
butter, which already has grabbed 10 percent of the $900
- million a year retail market from the three lop brands, Procter
&amp; Gamble's Jlf, which lias 24 percent of sales, CPC Inter• national's Sktppy with 23 percent and Esmark's Peter Pan
with 14 percent.
About 88 percent of Americans eat peanut butter. It was
0 invented and first patented In 1897 by Dr. John H. Kellogg,
founder of the famous Battle Creek Sanitarium in Michigan.
Overall, peanuts are a $3 bl!lion-a-year industry in the
United States, with salted, roasted nuts, mixed nuts, peanut oil
' and peanut confectionery making up the rest.
According to James C Kalbach of Edwards-Freeman, Inc.,
• of Conshohocken, Pa., president of the Peanut Butter and Nut
Processors Association, no one can grow peanuts for the
domestic market unless he owns or rents a peanut growing
allotment and one can't own an allotment unless his grand1 father grew peanuts in 1938.
The allotments are confined to specific counties, mainly in
six southern states, and are not transferable outside the
county. The Department of Agriculture says 70 percent of the
crop Is grown by farmers who rent allotments at $200 to $400 an
acre. Kalbach said an allotment holder in a favored area might
realize $15,000 or more a year renting allotments on 50 acres
without growing any peanuts himself.
The allotment rentals, of eourse, figure in the overall price of
peanuts. Canada and other countries buy for $350 a ton or less
American peanuts that are price supported at $550 a ton on the
domestic market.
The on-going controversy between the peanut processor and
the peanut allotment holders' lobby in Congress was
aggravated tremendously when a drought in 1980 cut the
domestic crop by around 42 percent. That forced prices up for
a prolonged period and created a lot of disturbance and
disruption in the various peanut markets.
Tilings subsided after an emergency decree permitted the
importation of peanuts on a fairly large scale for the first time
in years but the processors and m arketers are more up in arm s
than ever about the allotm ent. system. They call it an
anachronistic monopoly that hurts poor farmers who don't own
allotments and say it hurts the processing industry and con­
sum ers by keeping prices artifically high.
The processors say they are not opposed in principle to
support prices for peanuts but only want Congress to abolish
the allotment monopoly.
The Rc8gan administration has been sympathetic to their
X view but so far has not been able to get the system changed.
• Those who favor the allotments contend they assure the
grow ing of good quality peanuts, that the system has worked
well over the years, Is not excessively expensive and that
H peanuts are a unique crop and the owners ol land suitable for
growing them are entitled to special treatment from the
; government.
.
They point out that the allotment system was adopted at a
time when many peanut farm ers were destitute and con­
ceivably it could protect them from such conditions again.

&gt; Windfall

AFRO-AMERICAN
P a tr ic ia M e r r i t t llitc h m o n , so lo ist, w ill s in g a t th e H e r i t a g e J u b ile e '83
F r id a y n ig h t a n d E a r l E . M in u tt, m u s ic ia n a n d e d u c a to r , w ill be h o n o red .
ITte a ffa ir w ill b e s p o n s o re d by t h e A fro -A m e ric a n S o c ie ty o f S e m in o le
C o m m u n ity C o lle g e a n d will be h e ld a t 8 p .m . in th e SC C C o n c e rt H all.
H e rita g e J u b ile e '83 w ill be a c e le b r a tio n o f le a d e rs h ip in A m e r ic a , h o n o rin g
D r. M a rtin L u th e r K in g .

Help For Jobless Offered
Immediate openings are presently available
at Oasis Workshop, Inc., at 201 S. Elm Ave.,
Sanford, for unemployed persons who live In
Seminole County with diagnosed emotional or
physical handicaps, according to Mait Purdy,
executive director.
The Oasis Workshop, formerly Omega
Workshop, reopened it's rehabilitation
program in November.
To be eligible for help, a person must be 18,
live in Seminole County and be unemployed or
severely under-employed as a result of a
diagnosed emotional or physical handicap.

Referrals to Oasis Workshop-may be mado
through private physicians, psychiatrists,
psychologists, governm ental and social
agencies, hospitals and mental health agen­
cies. In order for a person to qualify they must
meet various other requirements determined
through abbreviated vocational evaluation
and Interview.
Any resident of Seminole who feels he or she
may qualify for the rehabilitation program
may contact his or her physician, counselor or
agency. For more information persons may
contact Ralph Henry, vocational evaluator of
Oasis, at the facility office In Sanford, 323-1387.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - "By fiscal 1984 under the policy recommendations presented
in this document — the federal budget should
be in balance."
That bald statement is found in the second
paragraph on page 12 of a booklet issued Feb.
18, 1981, by office of the White House press
secretary and entitled, “ America’s New
Beginning: A Program for Economic
Recovery."
Among the first official documents issued by
the administration of President Reagan, who
cam e to office only the month before, it began
with a copy of his first m ajor address to
Congress. He said at that time that his fourpart plan, if "taken together," would "put the
nation on a fundamentally different course —
a course leading to less inflation, more growth
and a brighter future for all of our citizens."
When the book dealt with the question of the
federal deficit, it confidently came out with the
statem ent of a balanced budget by fiscal 1984 if
the policy recommendations suggested were
acted approved.
The numbers it put forth were simple and
direct. It said that in the 1981 fiscal year, the
deficit would be {54.5 billion, and In fiscal 1982,
it would shrink to $45 billion.
For fiscal 1983, the deficit was to be slimmed
even more, to an even $23 billion, and for fiscal
1984, it would be in the black by a half-billion
dollars.
Obviously, something has gone wrong. The
deficit figure now looms at near $200 billion for
the current fiscal year. The Wall Street
Journal reported that by fiscal 1988, it could
jump to $300 billion if current economic
policies are not altered. Sen. Paul Laxalt, RNev., one of the president's closest allies, this
week said the "huge" deficit figures were
"terrifying" and unacceptable.
Administration officials are quick to say
now that a number of built-in costs are to
blame and that the Congress did not give
Reagan the requested tools he needed to curb

and (4) a monetary policy on the part of the
independent Federal Reserve System which is
consistent with these policies. These four
complementary policies form an integrated
and comprehensive program," Reagan said at
that time.
On the first part, the administration now
proudly points to its cuts in federal spending
growth over the past two years.
The second part is fuzzy, although Reagan
did push through Congress income tax
reductions, although last year he also backed a
huge tax increase in other areas.
The third part of his plan also has been
accomplished, according to administration
officers and the president himself, who con­
tinually cites the work of a special commission
he created on the topic.
Number four - FED policy — has seen the
Federal Reserve work almost hand-inglove
with the administration in lowering interest
rales, another of the successful points the
president uses in his speeches. •
Of the four points of his program, three have
been done and the remaining one — tax
reduction — is partially In place.

I/
O
ri=r
JECK b
Schick
S u p e r C h io m iu m

p

«
MIAMI l UPI) — A 67-year-old retiree who found $60,000 In a
briefcase on his front lawn six months ago says the windfall
has brought nothing but death threats, pleading letters from
strangers and legal fees.
,
"It has given us nothing — nothing but headaches and fear,”
Donald Behrens said •
Behrens turned the money over to police shortly after he
found it on June 19. Officers told him the cash would be his If no
one claimed it within six months.

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"I don’t think anyone Is going to come calling for it," MetroDodc Detective Ralph Little said at the time. Police assumed
the cash was part of a bungled drug deal.
But U ttle’s prediction was wrong. Six months later, the
Behrens have not seen a cent of the money. Who finally gets
, the money will be decided by Dade Circuit Judge George Orr

\*
MWl*

a early this year.
l
Jam es L. Burton, who said he deals In guns and gold, claims
1 the money Is part of an insurance settlement from the unsolved
■ m urder of his second wife. She was stabbed to death last year
In their home In Bonlfay, Fla., a small town in the Florida
panhandle.
Burton's gun license was found in the black leather briefcase
* along with the stacks of $100, $50 and $20 bills. Police say he
still hasn't explained how the money landed on Use Behrens'
1 lawn.

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Other claimants to the cash began calling the Behrens' home
after their windfall was publicized.

It
"They would tell us to give them the money or they would
*• firebomb our house or kill us," Mrs. Behrens said. "It has been
I a nightmare."
’ Burton sent an attorney, Mike Gold, to claim the money from
police. At the police departm ent's suggestion, the Behrens also
’; hired an attorney.
-n!
•
The Behrens said they don’t care how the briefcase arrived
f, , on their lawn. They said they didn't ask for the cash and wish
1 they had never discovered it.
, jj But the couple needs Uve money now—to pay their attorney.

COMMENTARY

AMERICAS FAMILY Di^UG STORE

Brings Trouble

"The phone rang constantly," said Verdell Behrens,
Behrens’ wife.
Behrens said the callers were "black, white, male and
female. And let me tell you, they were educated in fourlctter
words," he said. "I've never been called such names in my
life."
Some callers backed up their demands for the money with
U, threats.

the runaway deficit.
Deputy press secretary I j r r y Speakes said
this week that the president "will make every
effort to reduce the deficit and we will set the
country on a target of declining deficits in the
coming years."
Are they correct? The president’s orginal
message to Congress, as cited in the "New
Beginning" book, does not support them.
"The (economic recovery) plan consists of
four parts: (1) a substantial reduction in the
growth of federal expenditures; (2) a
significant reduction In federal tax rates; (3)
prudent relief of federal regulatory burdens;

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TONIC

Z Fern Park Attorney
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TONIC TABLETS

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Michael J.B rudnyof the lin n of Baldwin It Dikeou has been
,:, nam ed a Fund member attorney of Attorneys' Title Insurance
•njjrund.
• Brudny, a graduate of the University of Florida, College of
* Law, is active in legal practice in Fern Park.
, Through membership in the Fund, an attorney can provide
, t re a l estate buyers and sellers with the protection of title in­
surance in addition to legal advice.

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Ash

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Aliens

Simple, Safe
ATLANTA (UPIi — Everybody loves a wood-burning
stove or fireplace until it's time to empty the ashes — a
messy and potentially dangerous chore.
Even with the exercise of great care, scooping up ashes
touches off a cloud of fine dust that settles on furniture and
carpets. Worse still, live embers removed with the ashes
can result in fires if accidentally dropped on the floor or
placed in a combustible container.
The "ash bag” may be the answer to the problem, says
Ken Driskell, 30, an Atlantaarea banker and novice inven­
tor who has come up with what he hopes will be a new and
indispensable fireplace appliance.
Driskcll's "ash bag" invention is a simple contraption
consisting of a scoop-like device that looks like the front
part of a dustpan. The scoop is enclosed and a m etal throat
attached to it is connected to a fire-resistant cloth bag. A
person using the ash bag can scoop ashes from his fireplace
or stove and by tilting the device up cause the ashes to fall
into the bag, Driskell said.
This, according to the inventor, eliminates the dust prob­
lem and the fire hazard. With the ashes and hot embers in
the bag, they can be safely dumped o u ts id e .
Driskell believes there’s a market for the contraption in
view of the fact that few modern-day fireplaces and stoves
have ash dumps that allow for removal of ashes from the
basement or from outside the house.
In 1980, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
reported 112,000 fires that involved solid fuel heating ap­
pliances — wood and coalbuming stoves and fireplaces.
“ 1 feel a substantial amount of these were caused by
blundering around trying to remove the ashes," he said.
The bag itself would be made of the same kind of fireretardant fabric used in race car drivers’ suits and
firemen’s uniforms.
The device could be hung by the fireplace for con­
venience, said Driskell. The bag would be removable and
made available in different colors to suit the decor of the
room.
"Everybody I've talked to think it's a good idea," said
Driskell, who lives in Alpharetta and is vice president and
branch manager of a bank in Roswell, near Atlanta.
‘‘They’re interested in buying one.
"I think that if a manufacturer got a hold of it he could
manufacture it at a reasonable price.
"It seems so simple, it's not logical that something hasn't
been developed like this already.

5Million Illegal People Now Live In The United States
LAREDO, Texas lUPI* - Joaquin Macias
crossed the Rio Grande without even getting
his back wet, only to be nabbed by the U.S.
Border Patrol and deported within the hour
across the river to Mexico.
But, meantime, other undocumented alies
were streaming successfully into the United
States, swelling to as high as 5 million the
estimates of the number of people who nowlive illegally in this country.
Still called “ wetbacks" by some border
patrolmen — an official directive to the con­
trary notwithstanding, many of them hold jobs
at a time when more than 12 million
Americans are unemployed.
Mexico's worst recession since World War II
is expected to increase the illegal influx as the
United Stales suffers its highest unem­
ployment rate since the Great Depression.
About 1 million illegal aliens were ap­
prehended and deported last year, the great
majority of them Mexicans Uke Macias, a
stocky man of 23.
On a recent sweltering night, Macias hid in
the brush on the Mexican side of the border,
peering across the river at lights flickering on
the streets of I^redo.
He and other "indocumentados" boarded a
boat which had been crudely fashioned bywelding together two automobile hoods.
They paddled stealthily but by the time they
crept ashore they already were under sur­
veillance by Border Patrol officers staked out
in the brush on the U.S. side of the border.
Officer J.A. Garza, 27, without even
bothering to draw his sidearm, quicklyrounded up Macias and about two dozen other
docile men, women and children. They were
Jammed into two vans and taken to the Border
Patrol station.
The illegal aliens signed documents stating
they were willing to be deported voluntarily.
An hour later they were trudging across the
international bridge toward Nuevo l^aredo on

W hen y o u ’re se rio u s about 35m m
E c k e rd in tro d u c e s

W ednesday, J a n .)?. 1981— M

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the Mexican side.
Macias, a (5-nn-hour employee at a m eat­
packing plant in Oklahoma City, had been
trying to return to his job after a visit with his
parents deep in the heart of Mexico.
Before Macias boarded a van for the ride to
the bridge, a reporter asked him if he would
try again to cross the border.
Grinning, Macias nodded affirmatively.
‘‘He'll try until he makes it," commented an
officer who acknowleged illegal crossings
were difficult. "Some of them commute to jobs
on this side by innertubc."
If the Border Patrol tries hard but with
limited success to apprehend people like
Macias, its main targets are the "coyotes,"
men who for a fee smuggle Mexicans across;&lt;
the border to jobs In the United States.
"I was a coyote," admitted Raul Guerra, 41,
who did a year of hard time after his con­
viction in 197B on charges of smuggling aliens.
Guerra, who got religion in prison and now
works at Laredo's Salvation Army head­
quarters, said, "I got involved because it was
easy money."
"At the lime I was arrested I was running
two cars and a pickup truck," said Guerra,
who added that he also was paying spotters to
keep an eye on Border Patrol highway check­
points.
Some weeks he transported as many as 60
illegal aliens from pickup points near the river
to Houston and San Antonio, he said, clearing
as much as $1,200.
Guerra said the operation was m aster­
minded by a ring headquartered across the
border in Nuevo 1-aredo,
"I was picking up people at the riverbank
before dawn and slashing them in a room on
this side," he said. "We would move them out
to Houston or San Antonio after dark. We
provided them with water and food — bags of
tortillas and gallon cans uf refried beans."
Guerra acknowleged some “coyotes" in

danger of capture abandon their charges,
sometimes leaving them stranded without
food and water, or fighting for air in locked car
trucks in temperatures that often top 100
degrees. Many illegal aliens have died under
such circumstances.
“ I used to pick up people down at the river
just a half mile from here," Guerra said in an
interview in his office where he works for a
prerelease program for prison inmates near
the end of their sentences.
"I'm glad 1 was caught," he said. "I was at
the point where I was thinking of buying a gun.
1 could have gotten into drug trafficking."
Guerra said many "coyotes" use the people
they smuggle into the United States as nar­
cotics carriers.
He said that since he was arrested four
years ago the price Mexicans pay to be
smuggled into the United states has tripled
from about I20A to as much as $600.
“ I was never involved in any assaults or
drugs or anything like that," Guerra said. "I
was picking up mostly single males. There
were some women and children who wanted to
join men already working over here. Mostly
they were just poor Mexican people who were
coming across to earn money to support their
families.”
"Back then," said the convicted felon who
"accepted Jesus as my I/ird and Savior" in
prison, "I didn't consider what I was doing too
much of a crim e."
That is a view unshared by Senior Patrol
Agent J.M. Trevino, an accomplished tracker
of "coyotes."
Trevino, a former U.S. Army paratrooper
who has been in the Border Patrol for eight
years, said, “ The coyotes drop people off to
walk through the brush around our check­
points. Then they pick them up again on the
other side."
Trevino said some indocumentados spend a

A m e r ic a s f a m ily DfyUG sto re

week walking 150 m iles through the
sagebrush, niesquite and cactus to San
Antonio.
“Some of them have been bitten by ra t­
tlesnakes," he said.
“ We've got sensors out there in the brush
that can detect movement," said Trevino, but
he acknowleged hundreds of indocumentados
get through, evading checkpoints by walking
through rangeland, drinking from cattle
ponds.
“ We've known babies to be bom out here in
the brush." he said. "A baby bom out here
could be entitled to U.S. citizenship."
Trevino stopped his patrol car at a check­
point 11 miles from the river on the highway
leading north toward San Antonio where a
border patrolman was stopping every vehicle
that approached.
"We gel a lot of counterfeit and altered
documents at these checkpoints," Trevino
said.
“ I’ve stood at checkpoints where the tem ­
perature hits 110 degrees," he said. "You
stand in the same place for a while and your
heels just sink down into the asphalt."
About 20 miles out of Liredo Trevino
stopped his patrol car and walked out in the
brush to “cut signs,"
"See those tracks," he said. "They’re fresh.
This is a pickup point. The coyote will just pull
over off the highway and honk and they'll
come running out of the brush line to be picked
up. They're one step phead of us all the tim e."
Trevino said som e smuggling rings
guarantee success.
"Some of them you don't have to pay until
they get you to where you want to go,” he
explained. "If you get caught, they’ll try again
until you make it."
Most illegal aliens are caught near the two
biggest cities — El Paso and San Diego — on
the 1,952-mile border which slashes through
open desert.

Health Officials
Fighting New
Killer Disease
ATI .ANTA (UPI) - Federal health officials are pouring
more money and manpower into an investigation of a new
killer disease that attacks the body's immune system than was
spent on legionnaire's disease or toxic shock syndrome.
The disease is called AIDS — acquired immune deficiency
syndrome — and Dr. William Foege, director of the national
Centers for Disease Control, said that "it is safe to portray us
as being very concerned and very worried by this."
'•Number one, U is tncreasing In Incidence. Number two. It
has such a high fatality rate. Number three, we continue to see
new (population) groups at risk. And number four, we don’t
have an agent." .
Responding to what could be its greatest challenge in track ­
ing the cause of diseases, the CDC has set up a special in­
vestigative task force of over 100 doctors and support person­
nel. In 1982 alone, It spent more than $2 million on its AIDS
investigation, according to CDC spokesman Don Berreth.
He said the agency spent $1.6 million In an 18-month probe of
legionnaire's disease in 1976-77 and $964,000 investigating
toxic shock syndrome in 19*0-81.
With legionnaire's disease, "it soon became clear the
epidemic had peaked and there was a declining incidence" of
the respiratory ailment, Foege said. With toxic shock syn­
drome, associated with the use of tampons, "there was a verylow absolute risk."
None of these factors is present in the CDC's investigation of
AIDS. The cause of the disorder is yet to be identified and
reports of new cases continue to reach the CDC.
The fatality rate of AIDS approaches 40 percent with ex­
pectations that it may eventually go as high as 65 percent.
Hardly a week goes by that Investigators do not list new
population groups at risk of getting the disease.
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome is a disorder that
weakens the body’s natural defenses against certain rare
diseases. Victims are prone to a list of lethal infections not
often seen by doctors, including Kaposi's sarcoma, a soft
tissue cancer.
The first cases were reported among homosexual men in ta s
Angeles In October 1980. The CDC Investigative task force was
established In June 1981. In the months that followed, cases
were also detected in intravenous drug users, Haitain
refugees, hemophiliacs, and four infants.
Evidence is beginning to accumulate Indicating the disorder
Is transm itted sexually and through blood transfusions by an
infectious agent. Foege said the chances are high that the
causative agent Is a virus.

Counseling In
Business Offered
The Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce and the Small
Business Development Center at the University of Central
Florida are offering free small business counseling twice a
week on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month from 1
p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Chamber of Commerce Building, 400 E.
First St. In Sanford.
An experienced business counselor from the Small Business
Development Center at the university conducts these in­
dividualized one-on-one counseling sessions with those in­
dividuals who are either Interested In starting their own
b u sin g s and delire help with appropriate steps to follow or for
those individuals who are currently in business and require
help with certain problem areas.
Sanford Chamber board chairman Dennis ,Courson an­
nounced die service Is provided at the Chamber for those who
are in the Sanford and Seminole County area who for special
reasons cannot make It out to the university because of their
current working schedule or because of transportation
problems.
The Small Business Development Center is a joint venture
between the Small Business Administration and the state of
Florida through the University of Central Florida. It has been
' in existence since Spring 1980 to provide free business coun­
seling and seminars-workshops for current and prospective
entreprenuers In the Central Florida Community.
*
Persons may call the Small Business Development Center at
1-275-2796 or the Sanford Chamber at 322-2212 to schedule free
consultations.

pa

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�1A— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

W ednesday, Jan. 12,1983

Getting Even

Now, You Too Can Spy On The Russians
6 &lt;p

LONGWOOD
MAYOR AGAIN
June
Lormann,
completing h e r 10th
year on the Ivongwuod
City Com m ission, lias
been e l e c t e d to a
second one-year term
as m ayor of th e city by
the unanim ous vote ol
her
colleagues.
Klee ted D eputy Mayor
was
C o m m is s io n e r
Steve U skert who is
completed his fourth
y e a r on t h e c o m ­
mission.

IN THE
SERVICE

By TOM TIEUE
WASHINGTON INEAI - Ever since the
days of the Cold War, anti-communists
have claimed that Russian diplomats do
double duly in the United States. They
m anage th e ir country’s international
relations, which is orthodox, and they try
to steal American security secrets, which
is not.
Worse, the charge is that the Soviets spy
with impunity. They move about freely.
They investigate what they please. The
critics say hundreds of Ited agents
regularly survey military installations,
college lab o rato ries and even the
testimony given to congressional in­
vestigators.
Now a new group has formed to stop the
nonsense.
It says it is going to spy on the spies.
The new group is called Togetherness
International, and it's described by its
creator a s a “ patriotic re se a rc h
o rg an izatio n ." Dr. Boris K orczak,
something of a spy himself, says the group
is enlisting the aid of ordinary Americans
to monitor Russian activities in various
U.S. cities.
Korczak says the monitoring is passive,
but thorough. The monitors are not per­
mitted to interfere with the Soviets, but
they do watch them with a vengeance.
Korczak says the watch goes on around the

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BEER NUTS 1207 1 . 9 9

PLANTEF1S750Z

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18 OZ.

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"THE PREMIUM IS IN THE
BOTTLE NOT THE PRICE”

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99

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S T A G BEER

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1 5 . 6 9 1.75 LTR ■ot ifcoesrituTio

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Gorgii Zlll Schwirzi Kitz 'BO 449
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JAMES A. BRADLEY

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49

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STR. K Y .
BOURBON

Deacn. Calil.
The N^w Jersey, the tint of the
tour "Iowa" Class battleships lo
reenter active service, was
recently recommissioned at the
Long Beach Naval Shipyard. The
ceremony Included President
Reagan as the primary speaker.
The battleship was originally
commiislonad in May Iff] tor usa
in WWII. Following Iht war, tha
massive Ship was decommissioned
and "mothballed" until II was
reactivated lor use during tha
Korean and Vietnam conflict.

C A N A D IA N
CLUB

Hwy. 17-92 AT 436 OPEN SUNDAY

49

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Navy Machinist's Mate Fireman
Coy B. Byington, ton of Keith B
and Frances D. Byington ot JS7I S
Sanford A v e ., Sanford, Is a
member olthe battleship USS New
Jersey, homeported In Long

IB

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59
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LIGHT OR DARK

Upon com pletion ol recruit
training, Parsons will be home tor
a 7 day leave before going on lor
luMher technical training in a
lormal Marine Corps school
Parsons enlisted lor four years
with a guaranteed assignment in
radio communications Parsons is
a senior at Oviedo High School.

t

SAVE UP TO 4 0 %

SEAGRAMI

69

-A TEN HIGH

Brad Michael Parsons, son ol
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Edward
Parsons ol 1711 Lancelot Way,
Casselberry, has enlisted In the
United States Marine Corps
Reserve Parsons will depart June
V tor II weeks ol recruit training
at the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris island. S.C.

I I M M H I M il ISA

E V ER YD A Y PRICE

-P R IC E S GOOD THRU TUESDAY. JANUARY 18.

BRAD M. PARSONS

GRAPEFRUIT

The trouble is the government doesn't
care to know. Because it conducts its own
surveillance of Russian diplomats. The
KBI has monitored Soviet activities in the
United States since the end of World War
II, and dozens of other investigatorybodies are likewise watching for and
listening in on the Reds.
So official Washington is not too excited.

That protection lias not been offered,
apparently. Korczak insists he is still
being abused by the Kremlin. He says he
has been attacked by Russian thugs, and
shot with microscopic pellets. Once, he
goes on, Red agents even threw a

MICHAEL R. WILSON

SCO&lt;»*•

The violations are thereafter reported to
U.S. authorities. The monitors are not
supposed to get personally involved.
Korczak says his group is not a law en­
forcement agency, it is a detective bureau.
"We find out what the communist spies are
doing, and we let the government know."

u Q u o im

Pit. Donelta Jean Stroud,
daughter olM rs M ary Edna Moon
ot M il Cypress Avenue. Sanford,
retently returned home on I? days
leave from Parris Island, S C
atler completing 8 weeks ot recruit
training.
During training, Stroud received
formal instruction in lirsl aid,
physical Illness, marksmanship.
Marine Corps history, customs
and courtesy, drill, and nuclear,
biological and chemical warfare,
etiquette ot poise, cosmetology,
and wardrobe planning
Following her leave, she
reported to Marine Corps Base.
Camp Leieune, N C . tor lormal
Instruction in basic typing and
personnel administration
There she will be instructed on
the management ot administrative
and clerical functions In the areas
ot general administration, per
sonnet classification and postal
service.
suoud Is a 1897 graduate ot
SvMImli High School.

James Anthony Bradley, son ol
Mr. and Mrs. James Bradley ol
1154 Center Street, Sanlord. has
enlisted in the United Stales
Marine Corps.
Bradley will depart June 21 for
II weeks ol recruit training el ihe
Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
Parris Island, S.C.
Upon completion ol recruit
training. Bradley will be home lor
a 10 day leave belora going on lor
further technical training in a
lormal Marine Corps school.
Bradley enlisted tor lour years
with a guaranteed assignment In
personnel administration. Bradley
is a senior at Seminole High

Korczak says the monitors stake out the
Soviet embassy here. Then they follow the
departing automobiles. They trail the
diplomats to lunch, to shops, even to
Sunday outings. Korczak says the
monitors record everything they observe,
down to and including all traffic violations

And Korczak believes he's just the fellow
to do it. At least he has a passionate
motive. He is a one-time European
businessman (his Ph.D. Is in art history)
who used to spy (or the Soviets. Check
that; he says he only pretended to spy for
them. He was a double agent for the
American CIA.
Korczak says he worked for the CIA in
Denmark, until the communists learned o!
his betrayal in 1979 He says the Russians
were so angry that they tried to murder
him; eventually, the threat was such that
he had to leave his Scandinavian home and
flee to the United States for CIA protec­
tion.

DONETTA J . STROUD

Navy Seaman recruit Michael
H Wilson, son of ft Stanley and
Linda A Wilson ot «08 Orchid
Lane, Altamonte Springs, has
completed recruit training at the
Naval Training Center, San Diego
During the eight week training
cycle, trainees studied general
military subjects designed to
prepare
them
lor
further
academic and on the |ob training
in one ot the Navy's 85 basic oc
cupel IonaI Helds
Included in their studies were
seamanship, close order drill,
Naval history and first aid Per
sonnel who complete this course ot
instruction are eligible lor three
hours ot college credit in physical
education and hygiene

poisonous snake through his bedroom
window.
Therefore Korczak feels Togetherness
International is one way to get even. And
he has set about the task with enthusiasm.
He says he has recruited a ‘'growing''
cadre of monitors, most of them young, all
of them anti-communist, and they are even
now scrutinizing Russian spies.

clock; the goal is to record every
movement that every Russian makes in
America.
In other words. Dr. Korczak says he is
launching war on Soviet intentions. He
claims the Red agents have been left alone
to their mischief for too long. Resides, he
adds, turnabout is only fair play: ‘ The
Russians spies follow people all over the
world. It’s time someone followed them.”

4 .1 9
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CANADIAN
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Sebaitiani
FRENCH-. 199

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Evening Herald, Sanford. FI

More Applicants
Hedge On Truth
NEW YORK f U P I i — The recession has brought a signifi­
cant increase in falsification of credentials and other decep­
tions by executive job seekers, says an executive search firm.
Observing the increase among some of its own clients,
Thorndike Oeland Associates, queried 223 company personnel
officers around the country. A good third of them said they had
encountered rising deception,
"We're not talking about the majority of jobhunters, howe­
ver," Rawle Deland of Thorndike Deland told United Press
International. “ Most people tell the truth on job applications,
but those who don't can cause a lot of trouble for employers,
recruiters and themselves."
He said the survey showed 82 percent of those responding
found checking references more troublesome while 12 percent
reported some "bad experiences" which had caused them to
tighten reference checking procedures.
Why do people lie on job applications?
“ Well, mostly because they're naive enough to think their
resumes won't be checked, but it really goes deeper than
that," Poland said. “ Psychologically, people rationalize the
deception by saying they have to do it in order to get the job
and the salary they need.
“A chap who thinks his actual business experience Is at least
the equivalent of a university MBA degree will pul down that
he has an MBA and list a university. That puts the recruiter or
employer in a somewhat embarassing spot. You can't check
such a thing confioenlially; the university won't give out the
information without a letter from the applicant authorizing it.
But the sensible thing to do is to go through with the em­
barrassing procedure of demanding the letter of permission. If
the fellow is lying, he'll then own up to it."
It's even necessary, he said, to check if the applicant offers
photostats of credentials. They could be forged.
Another frequent area of deception is past earnings.
Applicants overstate their past earnings in the hopes of gelling
a bigger pay offer. Again they rationalize this deception by
including in the figure bonuses or pay raises they didn't ac­
tually get but figure they should have gotten, Deland said.
They also try to gloss over past employment difficulties by
leaving periods in their job history out of the resume. This can
cause the recruiter or employer to suspect the applicant is
trying to conceal adverse personality traits.
The personnel people queried in the Thorndike Deland study
all said it is clear that reference checking Ls now more difficult
than at any time in the past. The respondents said the hardest
thing to check was the applicant’s actual job performance
followed by his or her real job history. Next most difficult to
check were personality trails and interpersonal skills.
Deception on the part of the applicant is most likely to be
concerned with his or her Job performance, followed by the
compensation history and employment history. But they also
gave false answers to various personal questions other than
about their academic records.
Deland said people not engaged in the personnel business
often assume reference checking is just a m atter of getting
confirmation of facts cited in the resume.
"It’s not nearly that simple," he said ruefully. “The answers
from the references often require some sophisticated
evaluation to determine whethn the applicant really has a
suitable record of performance and the ability to manage
people," he said.

Wednesday, J an

12, 1983—9A

REALTY TRANSFERS
GIHrrdo M Ares, sgl. to Cheryl
M cIntyre, sgl., Lot 12, Blk 28.
Suburban Homes. S22.S00
(Q C D ) Karen S Randall to Jim
L Randall Lot I &amp; E 'y ol 7. Blk C.
Allendale, HOC
Jerome Young &amp; wt Diane to
Jerome Young a Diane Gdn etc..
Lots I 2 3 a a a N -; ol vacated
Tampa SI on So , blk B T r 12,
Sanlando Springs. *100
RCA to Frances Trachtenberg,
sgl , hie e s l.
Michael Kaplan,
sgl
Susan, sgl. iiene, sgl., Un
100. Escondido. Cond . Sec V III,
544.7X
John O Bergstrom a Georgia J
Oscar
wt Sarah to John 0
Bergstrom wl Georgia J , Lot 75.
Wyndham Woods. Ph One, *100
Florence Burnett, repr
est
John, to Florence Brunetl. Indiv ,
Beg 340 W ol NE cor of S' &gt; □(
SE&gt;. ol Sec 21 21 79, E of rd , etc .
*100
Donald C Opperman, Trustee to
Helen M L Bolienhirdt, W S» *7'
ot Lot 19 a E 79 79" ol Lol 70. Blk A,
Oakland Shores s d, *100
G allim ore Homes Inc. to
Emerson
Herod Inv Lol 44.
North Cove, tltS.000
Edmond O Pehrvo a wl Lydia to
W H Williamson Constr. Inc., Lot
8. Blk B. Paradise Point ird Sec.,

a
a

a

a

a
a

a

*11.000
Naranla Lakes Ptr. lo Frank
D’Amalo a wl Mary, No 88 H
Hidden Ridge. Cond . *44.000
HughM Sutton wf Nancy B to
Peter Chin Lee a wl Socorro. Lot
78, Blk B. Sterling Oaks, *71,200
William West las to ' j int) to
Hazel W Stoner (m arr.) Lot 12.
Blk A. Dr
Mrs Henry Foster's
Hammock E Irom Lake Charm,
less part, t i l l , *11.000
Robert Koch a wl Joyce lo
Clarence J
Barnhart
wl
Lorraine, From N 'j mile cor ol
Sec 22 21 72 etc , *72.400

a

a

a

North Cove Inv Co lo Dennis K
Petry a wl Gemma. Lot 47, North
Cove. *129.000
John $ Tillman a wl Terri to
John S Tillman a wt Terri. Lot
117. Howell Ests , S D Replat *100
James C Hurley a wf Elaine to
Ronald L Remus a wt Joan, Lot
II. Blk A. Howell Cove First Sec ,
*77 000
Springs Landing
Ven
to
Wallers Clark Pedigo Corp Lot
52, Springs Landing. Un Two.
*75.500
Petra Johnson, sgl to Floyd I
Levinson
wf Lorraine, Lot 14.
Blk B, I 4 Industrial Park Jrd Sec..
S IX
RCA to Irving B Gussow
wf
Tcrryl J , Un 95, Escondido.
Cond , Sec VIM, WJ.000
Linda L. Burgos to Braiton
Green, Lol 12. Blk G. North
Orlando Ranches. Sec 2A. *78,000
Governors Point. Ltd to Harvey
M Solomon wf Bernice S , Lot 3,
Governors Point. Ph I, *84.XO
Complete Interior* Inc . to Paul
F McCauley Lot 12, Blk I. Cedar
Ridge Un I. 181,000
James E . Lucas a wl Jan to
Anthony E Mancuso
wt Lynda
A , 155.000
Community Homes Co to Kevin
H. Kastner wt Nancy K . Lot 18
Fairway Oaks at Deer Run.
S94.4X
Raymond J Baker J r a wt
Sharon to C E Schevnayder s g l,
N 100' Ol S 1418' ol E 230' of W' j ot
SW'. of Sec. 13 20 70. *20.0X
Sarah E Pemberton, sgl to
Arthur A Demelree a wt Naomi
L., Lol 4. Long wood Markham
Estates. *35 '200.
David J Shelton
wj Cindy to
Gen Motors C o rp . Lot S, Green
Village S D. *103,000
Irvin A Andrews sgl
Allan
Graham Tr. lo J, Chrislie Lillie,
sg l. Lot 14. Fovspur S D Ph I,

a

a

a

a

a

a

a

114.OX
(Q C D ) Thomas R McAfee Jr &amp;
Waller E Judge a wf Sussan to wl L o rra in e lo Lorraine E
Shirley L Bridgman, sgl . Lot 14. McAlee. Lol tJ, Blk I. The
Blk I, Lake Kathryn Park, 5th Woodlands. *100
Addn . 528.000
Park Fed to William P Leach a
North Cove Inv to Robert An
wT Sabine P Lol 4, Wekiva Cove.
drewsa Jac* Barnett, Lots 18 2031 Ph One, *120,OX
22 23 a 25. North Cove. *174,400
Robert J Vartanian a wf Darla
CleyonL Malon» a wt Jewett M
lo Robert l Menn a wt Patricia
toL Michael Malone, N 145' Lot 20 R . Lot to. Blk A Camelot Un 3.
Brrtton Woods. *49.000
*73,000
L Michael Malone to Cleyon L
(Q C D ) David T Cissel a wt
Malone a wt Jewett, Lot 109 Leocadia to David Robbins a wl
Northwood S D . *72.SX
Terri R . W J It ol Lot 54, Midway
Mildred Gladson, Repr esl Parks. S IX
Calherine W Streets to James W
Florence Hatcher Etc . Trustees
Cornell a Melanie M Mollerup. to the Apostolic Church ol Jesus
Lots I 2 J a 6 70' Ol 4 etc . Blk H, Inc . E ' i ol W ISO' ol E 180' ot N
Sanlando Springs T r J. 152.400
SO' of S 389 ol SWa 01 SW'4 ol
Sid Feldman. Trustee to Top S W '. of Sec It 21 31. t lX
Associates Ltd , pareel ol land in
E liza b e th A Willis a Hb
N E ’ .o l N E ’ . ot Sec 14 71 29. 1100
Charles lo E lll Ann Willis a hb
New Am erica Dev Corp to Charles R . Beg 816 9 N a 84 3' W
Partners Five, Lol 2. Blk B, Replal o tS E co r ot S W 't ol SE'4 Sec 9 20
laestvonte. *3 3 400
X etc . 2 parcels 51X
Allen j F a ir, sgl to David G
H Bruce Frutchey a wl baphne
Bcrgslresser. (m a rr ), Lot 9a W1» to Gene N Basso a wt Judith A ,
ol 10. Fairy La kr Manor 5120.000
Commencing at SE cor ot Sec 13
Harold W
Noflslnger a wt 71 79 etc . 180.0X
Juanita to Ronald H Lot 17. Blk 3,
(Q C D ) Otis G Sledge, e ta l. to
repl Sh t
2, North Orlando Otis G Sledge. Leila L Sledge.
Tnwnsite Jth Addn,. S44.X0,
Sharon M a Ellon S . Com
Joseph H Nemec a wt Susan lo mencing at SW cor ol SE’ 4 Ol Sec
Roy W Whitworth, sgi a Jennifer 17 70 37 elc . S IX
L
Crenshaw , sgl , Lot 15,
Leon Lindsay to Ronald H
Tuscawilla. U n 9A 1119 OX
Enoch. W IOC ol Lol I Blk F.
National Homes Corp to Rustic Buena Vista Ests, 541.9X
Woods Ltd Ptr., Lol 59 Wildwood
John $ Dlm arino, sgl , to
PUD, 57.5X
Virginia A Polvcrmo Trustee,
Sabal Point Prop Inc . to Lots t a 7. Blk 9 Pme Level *19.900
Baywood Homes In c , Lot 57,
James Glenn repr est Jane R
Timber Ridge at Sabal Point, Un
tol Richard N Tollelsrud a wt
One 548.900
IQCDI Am crlllrst Dev Corp to Betty, S 3 3 ol lot 160 a N 2 3 ot lol
141, Pinehurs! 124.500
the Hyland Group. Inc , Lots 4 9 14
Stanley 2 Jacobson a wl Lila lo
18. 23. 35. 28 — 33, Deer Run, Un
W illiam M Wesson, s g l. E 10' ol
8A. SIX
lot 10. all ol 9 a W 12' ot 8 Blk t .
LyleC Christiansen. Bernard J
Doyle a Arthur B Turner to La ke W aym an Heights, Lake
Central Baptist Church ol Sanlord, addn, 150. XO
Coa Corp lo Jerry J Sollato a
FI a portion ot land in Sec 27 19
wl Cynthia A . Ito 37, Wekiva Hunt
30. 5225,000

a

Club Ests . sec 8, 1113,500
Simon P Montgomery a wt
Bessie lo W j Kellow J r . lot 114.
Casa Aloma *79X0
Johnnie L Workman a E M A .
both s g l, to Charles E Bond a wt
Ann A . lot IS. Blk F, Paradise
Poin*. 1st sec . 154 OX
M arie F Higginbotham to
Ronadi G Lawson a M arie r
Higginbotham, from SW cor ol
N W '. ol SW 14 ot sec 37 20 30 elc .
ttx
IQ CDI Ronald G Lawson to
Ronald
G
Lawson.
M arie
Higginbotham, Jane M Mim bs a
Patricia h Lawson " beg N E c o r
lot 4 Blk B Pine View 1100
IQ CDI Ronald G Lawson to
Marie F Higginbotham a Ronald
G Lawson. Jt Ten, N 100' ol W ISO
nt E 429 ol lot 4. blk B P.ne View.
*IX
IQCDI Marie Higginbotham to
Jane M
Mimbs
a
M arie
Migginbolham. Irom SW cor ol
N W 4 01 SW'4 sec 37 20 30 etc *100
Mane Higginbotham lo Patricia
M Lawson a Marie F Higgin
botham, Irom SW cor ot N W '4 ol
SW'4 ot sec 22 20 30 etc StOO
Polyak Corp to Phillip Smith
sg l, Un 5. Bldg F. Goldenrod
Villas, cond . *58 7X
Scott L Wenger, sgl to Mark L
Trach. sgl . un 177, Sandy Cove
545.9X
Donald R Sullivan to Thomas C*
Greene a wl Linda A . lol 10, Blk J,
North Orlando Ranches, s- . ?a ,
*99 OX
Community Homes Co to Ed
ward J Bukowskl a wt Barbara,
lot 51, Fairway Oaks at Deer Run
184.9X
Arthur M Olson a jack Black,
sgl lo Bernard W B speck *. wl
Antionetle, lol I Harbour Lan
dmg. *100 OX
Morris M Metis, Jr a wt Sylvia
J lo John W Williams a wt

Barbara J . lol 17. Blk 4. Tier 2
Trallords map ot Sanlord. 114.500
Greer a Assoc . Bidrs . Inc . to
Robert F. Kissman a wt Mary
Ellen M lot 5. Bik D, Sweetwater
Oaks, sec 13. *783.000
Gary L Collins a wt Nana lo
William D Soderslrom a wl
Deborah L Lots 179 187. 707 209,
1st addn Lake Sylvan *7.1X
Mary A McGee lo James E
flowers 8 wt Karlene A , lot 1 repl
Mead Manor un 7. *47 300
Joseph P Fortino. et al ‘c
Antoinette Fortino, M Paula
Fortmo Grether a David M
Grether, lot 14 Laurelwood 1100
IQCDI Jesus Acevedo. J r . sgl .
to Jesus ArevedO. J r a wt Carolyn
S, lot IX, Trailwcod Ests. sec
one *100
W ngtield Dev to William S
Or os7. Jr a wt Jody L . Lot 5,
Wingt eld Reserve, ph I, *53.000
W ngf.eld Dev lo Dick Proctor
Custom Homes
Inc . lot 49
W'nqtield Reserve. Ph I. *45,XO
Joseph E Hart a wt Janet to
Lascelle Mootat (m a rr I tols s a t .
Eureka Hammock. *40 OX
North Cove Inv to Joseph E
Wiesl, Jf a wt Lmda A., lot os,
North Cove t lt l.S X
r a R Builders Inc to Te, esa C
Searle. sgl, lol 43, the Villas ol
Casselberry, ph two, 1S10X
Leiand Constr Inc to James T
Thompson a wt Karen M . lot 471,
Springs Landing un three. 1175,500
Complete Interiors Inc lo Carol
H Prowwa sgl , lot 4 Hunt.ngton
Hills, 570 9X
John f Seebeck a wl L seloltr
F to Bruce A Morse a wl Donna
J . lot 24. Bear Lake Estates
*38.5X
(QCD) Robert L Ward a wf JO
Ann to Victor C Thermenos a wl
Charla Thermenos. W 15' at lot 1
blk D Allendale *1X

T h i s w in t e r ,
w a r m u p yovu* h o u s e w i t h
a new heat pum p.
A n d a check fro m F P L .

W in te r P a rk T e le p h o n e

Explains Deregulation

in .Ukg. f i . . f

Most telephone equipment provided by United Telephone of
Flaorida became unregulated as of Jan . 1.
Under new rules of the Federal Communications Com­
mission, the prices of telephone equipment sold to customers
will nut Ik .- regulated. And customers wishing to buy telephones
furnished by the telephone company in their home or business
may do so by contacting their local telephone business office.
Forrest K. McPherson, United Telephone vice president at
Winter Park, said new customers and existing customers who
want to add phones may lease them from the company's
existing inventory. The existing inventory of "lease" phones
will not be renewed as it is depleted. If new or existing
customers want phones other than those available for lease,
they will have to buy them in a competitive environment. This
means that prices for phones United Telephone sells are being
set the sam e way a department store sets prices on its
products.
•
Under the FCC's competitive policies, customers can choose
to obtain their telephones from suppliers other than the
telephone company.
"As a result Of competition, prices for each sendee and type
of equipment are being set to reflect their actual cost,"
McPherson said.

*57*•*800
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DIRECT FROM FLORIDA
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, C s iU

�SPORTS
I0A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

\M

Sam
c o o k
Sports Editor

Bishop Moore
Wasn't Much
Without Harry
If you don't think Harry Nelson can
coach football — look at what Bishop
Moore has accomplished since he left
the school.
Nothing.
Since Nelson's departure to Colonial
in 1976, the Hornets have put together
a string of losing seasons and fired or
resigned coaches. At one point, the
losing skein reached 19 games.
"Yes, Harry’s a good man and a
good coach," said Bishop Moore
P rincipal Angelo M assaro. "H e
demands a lot but that's part of
football."
In 1970, the new l.ake Mary football
coach demanded the ultimate — a
state championship. And he got it. It
was the first state championship evdr
won by an Orlando team.
The city fathers were so Impressed
they honored the prestigious Catholic
school with its own day. On Feb. 6,
1971, Orlando declared "Bishop Moore
State Championship Day" and threw
out the red carpet for the Hornets.
Bishop Moore went 12-1 in its most
glorious year. What makes the record
more Impeccable Is the Hornets
played primarily a 4A schedule until
the playoffs.
Bishop Moore opened the season
with victories over Bishop Kenney
(28-12) and Apopka (36-6). The lone
loss of the season came next to
Edgewater, 21-0.
The Hornets then handled Winter
Park (13-7), Colonial (12-7), Oak
Ridge (21-14), Mainland (7-0), Evans
(21-7), Boone (21-0) and Jones (20-19)
in the regular season finale.
In the playoffs, Bishop Moore
blitzed Bartow (21-0), Hollywood
Chamlnade (42-12) and Quincy (21-12)
In the title game.
" It was a great season,” remem­
bers Massaro. "1 would've loved to
keep him . B ui be w anted to go 4A."

His career record at Bishop Moore
was £6-49-3. In three years at Colonial,
Nelson was 17-14 tor a total ledger of
82-63-3. Prior to Bishop Moore he
coached football with Gene "Torchy”
Clark at Xavier In Appleton, Wise. All
Torchy and H arry did there was go
undefeated for three years (1961-63).
Although Massaro and Lake Mary
P rincipal Don Reynolds were
trem endously
im pressed
with
Nelson's football expertise, they were
more Impressed with his classroom
performance.
"H arry's excellent in the classroom
too. He’s a super teacher," said
Massaro. Nelson is certified in art,
history and physical education. He’ll
probably teach the latter too at Lake
Mary.

The Big Man Will
Bo Ml Mad By All
• The big guy in the striped shirt
won't huff and puff down the
basketball floor any more with a
quickness which belles his size.
He won't keep his eyes peeled on the
action while Bill Payne controls hla
ears with a barrage of taunts about his
lack of favorable calls.
; He won’t act like he's not listening,
but all the time he's giving Payne that
smile saying, "Can’t you do better
than that? I've heard better insults
from j y coaches."
It was hard to get Terry Manfredi
mad. That's why he was a good
referee. And that's why he was a good
coach. And, most of all, th at's why he
was such a good person.
The world lost a good man. Terry
Manfredi, former prep All America
football player and high school coach
a t Spruce Creek and Colonial,
drowned in a boating accident on
Saturday. He was 37.
; He will be missed by coaches, fans,
players and sports writers.

Mayors Toe Line
: Sanford Mayor Lee P. Moore can
ihoot free throws. He used to do it
every year at halftime of one of the
Seminole High basketball games.
As for the other Seminole County
mayors, that rem ains to be seen.
But they'll get a chance to show off
their shooting touch Saturday night at
halftime of the Seminole Community
College and Central Florida Com­
munity College basketball game.
Toeing the stripe Saturday night
will be Longwood’s June Lormann,
Oviedo's Robert Whittier, Winter
Springs' John Torcaso, Lake Mary’s '
W alter Sorenson, C asselberry's
Charlie Glaasock, Altamonte Springs'
Raymond M. Ambrose and Sanford's
Hoore.

Wednesday, Jan. 12,14SJ

Intense Tribe Overwhelms Brantley
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor

Prep Basketball

Seminole High basketball coaches
Chris Marietta and Wayne Talbot had the
LAKE BRANTLEY (46)
guards out Tuesday night to stem any
Garriques 1 0-1 2, Trombo 2 0-0 4,
overconfidence which might be brewing
Hoffman 8 4-9 20, Groseclose 3 2-2 8,
before their Five Star Conference en­
Shorey 12-2 4, Evans 2 0-14, Uoyd 00-00,
counter with I,ake Brantley.
Zullo 10-02, Moore 0 2-4 2, Cochran 0 08 0.
"I told the kids to approach the game
Totals 18 10-19 46.
like it was for the district cham­
SEMINOLE (79)
pionship," said Marlette. "They may
Bryant 7 4-518, Wynn 4 OO 8, Mitchell 3
have been a little overconfident but they
1-2 7, Law 4 4-4 12, Hendricks 3 0-1 6,
sure didn't play like it."
Franklin 11-2 3, Rouse 0 08 0, Stiffey 01-4
Harnessing an intensity which hasn't
1, Grey 00-00, Holloman 2 2-2 6, Gilchrist
appeared until the second half of recent
3 08 6, Nathan 2 1-2 5, Robinson 2 08 4.
games, the Fighting Seminoles blitzed
Walker 1 08 2. Totals 32 15-22 79.
the Patriots, 25-10, in the first eight
LakeBrwUey
10 9 10 17—46
minutes cn route to a 79-46 victory at
Seminole
25 II 19 22—79
Seminole High School.
T otariouls — 1-ake Brantley 18,
The victory upped the Tribe season
Seminole 20. Fouled out — none.
mark to 10-7. In the Five Star, Sanford is
Technicals — none.
5-1.1.ake Brantley fell to 4-6 overall and
2-5 in the conference. Seminole hosts
Apopka Friday while the Patriots travel
to Lake Mary.
when he broke loose for a rousing left"We had great intensity in the first
handed slam dunk which excited the
quarter," said Marlette. "We switched
crowd.
defenses well and our press was the best
Both coaches turned loose the second
we’ve had all year."
and third teams in the final eight
The Seminoles forced 10 la k e Brantley
minutes. Seminole’s biggest lead came in
turnovers in the first quarter and bolted
the final minutes when Eugene Nathan
to a 10-2 bulge on two baskets by la w and
and Jimmy Gilchrist each hit field goals
one each by William Wynn, Calvin
to run the margin to 33 points.
"Kiki" Bryant and Torie Hendricks.
"I thought they’d handle our‘ press
Paul Hoffman, Brantley’s 6-4 center
better than th a t," said M arlette.
who averages 21.8 points a game,
"They're a better team than they
countered with two of his own, but two
showed. I don't know what was wrong
minutes later he picked up his second
with them. But we rebounded every
foul and went to the bench.
missed shot."
During his absence, Bryant hit three
Peterson could only speculate. “ We
jump shots, Michell dripped two buckets
spent a lot at Dcl.and Friday (four-point
after rebounds and Wynn made a great
loss)," he said. "We dragged tonight. We
steal off the press and dropped it in for a
came out flat."
two-pointer.
Seminole completely dominated the
"We weren’t meeting the passes on the
backboards as Wynn, Bryant and Michell
press," said a subdued Bob Peterson in
each Iiad seven caroms. Tracy Holloman
the quiet Brantley locker room oftcr the
and Hendricks had six apiece while
game. "But they're awful tough. They
Gilchrist and Nathan fetched four.
can really get it going when Bryant sticks
Bryant led the Seminole scorers with 18
it in the hole, Mitchell works inside and
points, although Hoffman took gameI-aw hits a couple of perimeter shots."
high honors with 20. I j iw added 12, Wynn
The second quarter was slowed by
eight and Mitchell seven, law handed out
fouls until Bryant and Wynn combined
seven assists.
for eight points for a 34-15 lead. law
In the junior varsity game, Seminole '
added the final (our of the half, the last on
snapped a six-game losing streak with a
a nice feed from sophomore James
55-43 victory over the Patriots.
Rouse.
Sophomore Kenny Gordon hit three big
Seminole hit 15 ot 29 shots (52 percent)
white building a »-W halftime ad­ bucked down the rtreich and guard Sam
Redding added three points as the
vantage. The Patriots converted 8 of 23
Seminoles broke open a close game in the
for 35 percent. Bryant tossed In 12 points
last two minutes.
and Law had 10. Wynn chipped in eight
Gordon had a game-high 22 points and
and grabbed seven rebounds.
14 rebounds. Fred Brinson scored nine
Hoffman contributed nine points for
and Jo Jo Mcftoud added eight. Brinson
the Patriots while sophomore Dennis
and Ricky Whittaker had six boards
Groseclose had eight.
apiece while McCloud, Terry Marshall
The Tribe blew away any respec­
and Leroy Richardson doled out three
tability at the outset of the third quarter
assists.
when B ryant and Torie H endricks
Mike 1.aughlln led the Patriots with 11
combined for 10 points as the lead grew to
points.
54-23. Hoffman got a measure of revenge

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

Seminole guard Vernon Law dishes off a pass to
teammate William Wynn as Lake Brantley's .Mike
Seminole, 2-7, plays Apopka Friday.
TEPEE TALK Gilchrist and
Nathan, both 6-t juniors, were seeing

Evans collides with Law during basketball action
Tuesday night at Seminole High.

their first action since being reinstated
after disciplinary problems.
"It's like that guy out there," said

Tonight

Siebmann's Boot
Beats Seminoles
There still isn't too much difference
between the Seminole and Lake Mary
soccer teams. But there Is a difference
and Mark Slebmann supplied U Tuesday
night by booting in a penalty kick to give
the Ram s a 18 victory over the Tribe at
Lake Mary High School.
"We probably played our best defen­
sive game of the season," said coach
Howard Hawkins about this hard-luck 1-7
Seminoles. "Our defense was fantastic
but our Inability to score cost us again."

Socctr
4p.m. Seminole el Spruco Creek
Coach Howard Hawkinv bootere trav
to Spruce Creek today tor a match wi
the Hawks
Ricky Nooney hat been the main c
teniive weapon lor the -Nolei all ye,
while Paul Grillln and Brian Nulty ha.
kepi Nooney productive with several oo&lt;
atthti.

Prop Soccer

W r e s tlin g
Seminole’s big guns, the 'Notes did
likewise. Scott Meek shadowed Donald
Kelly while Stan Bacon did the sam e to
Lake M ary's Andre Sanders.

• p.m. Oak Rid«e at Lake Mary
The Rams precocioui wrestling team is
only two years old. but its already
knocking heads with the big boys.
Alter hammering Boone Tuesday night,
Lake Mary looks for Its seventh win In
nine dual meets against the Pioneers
tonight The Rams have lost one and tied
one.
Juniors Jack Likens (101). Robert
Rawls (U N L I and Bob Olson (141) lead
the Lake Mary attack. Likens has two
championships already this season while
Rawls has one
Sophomore Ivan Carbia (101) and
Santord-s Willie Green (170) loin Ned
Kolbiornsen ( 1 1 1 ) and Ed Ades 073) to
give the Rams a solid nucleus. Green,
who had three pins was Red Lobster
Wrestler ot the Week.

Lake Mary missed a good opportunity
to score halfway through the tin t period
when stanJin goalie Rob Cohen made a
great, diving stop on a penalty kick by
Seminole travels to Port Orange today Kelly. Cohen is subbing for Dean
for a 4 o'clock game with Spruce Creek. . Shoemaker who is sidelined with the flu.
Lake Mary, 6-3 !&gt;osts Lyman Friday at 8
Ten minutes later, the Tribe's Paul
p.m. The Lady Rams play Vero Beach St. Griffin missed another scoring op­
Edwards at 6:30 p m . while the Ram portunity when his penalty kick hit the
junior varsity takes on the Greyhounds at right port and bounced away.
5 p.m.
The only goal came eight minutes into
Lake Mary coach Larry McCorkle, too, the second half when a Seminole player
was pleased with his defenders. "Last was flagged for touching the ball in the
time, I felt we were pretty luck to win (M
penalty area. Slebmann grounded the
on Dec. 17), but his time I felt we held our ball to Cohen’s left to give Lake Mary a
own," said McCorkle. "Mark Volchko did hard-earned 18 victory.
a good defensive job on Juan Falcon and
Cohen turned in 10 saves for the
Jose Delrosario shut off (leading scorer) Seminoles while Mike Dunlap, subbing
Ricky Nooney."
for Injured Joe Dalton, had five saves for
While the Rams w ere silencing
the Rams. - SAM COOK

Basketball

Patrick Runs Lady Raiders Past Siena Heights
Sem inole
Community
College
basketball coach Sol Batoon didn't need
to go to the lost and found to rediscover
his Lady Raiders' fastbreak. He only had
to look as far as point guard Mindy
Patrick.
The former Lake Brantley eager took
things into her own hands (five assists)
Tuesday night, engineering a 93-45 rout
over Siena Heights (Mich.) College at
SCC.
“ We haven't had the break for a while
because of turnovers," said Batoon about
the Lady Raiders sixth win in 13 games.
"But Mindy (Patrick) did a superb job of
handling the ball and running the break."
So superb that Valerie Roessler turned

Assistant Principal U Marr Richardson
gesturing to a custodian with a broom.
"They had to clean up their act."

in a career-high 28 points u she hit an
outstanding 11 of 13 field goals and 6 of 9
free throws.
"Valerie (Roessler) has been a con­
sistent player all year. She really put it
all together tonight," said Batoon about
his 8-1 sco rer.
The Raiders had several turnovers at
the outset, but quickly regrouped to blow
the Michigan visitors out of the gyro. SCC
went up, 36-22, at halftime.
In addition to'running the offense,
Patrick spearheaded a strong defensive
effort with a whopping 17 steals as the
Raiders continually harassed Siena into
bad pa Mrs and violations.
Following Roessler in the scoring

column was Katrina Andersson with 17
points and Sanford's Cathy Jones with 17.
Super sub Evelyn Smith added 12 and
Patrick finished with nine.
The Raiders hit 38 of 73 shots for 52
percent. Tonight at 7:30, SCC takes on
powerful North Carolina-Ashevllle.

SCC (93) Roessler 11-13 8-9 28.
Andersson 7-13 3-7 17, Jones 8-17 1-2 17,
Patrick 4-51-19, W intemheimer 0-21-21,
Smith 6-11 08 12, Melton 0-3 1-2 1,
McClelland 1-4 2-2 4, Miller 2-2 08 4, Kane
0-2 08 0, Garrison 0-108 0. Totals 38-731525 93.

Lake Mary Grapplers Rout Boone
Lake Mary’s Bob Olson (141), Willie
Green (170) and Virgil Grant (122) all
recorded pins Tuesday night as Uk Rams
routed Boone, 5M , in prep wrestling
action at Orlando.
The victory upped Lake Mary's dual
meet record to 8-M while the Braves fell

t

1' *•

to 0-7. Tonight at 8, the Rams host Oak
Ridge.
After Lake Mary took the first two
weight classes via forfeit, sophomore
Ivan Carbia, wrestling up two classes at
115, throttW. Craig Edwards, 21-2.

7t 30 p.m. Seminole Community College
At LaktCity
The Raiders are coming oft a 17 point
victory over St. John's to take on the
nation's 11th ranked team and the
number one teem In Florida.
Luis Phelps buttered the nett lor n
points against St. John's and Is the
starting center since i 10 Rudy Kuiper
hat been sidelined with op ankle 1n|ury.
Kevin Jerry Smith, who had been ln|ured
since December, should be back and
that's good newt for SCC.
Starting guards ere Keith Whitney and
Rickey Sutton or jimmy Payton while the
forwards are Bernard Merthle and Delyln
Everett.
»:3B p.m. Atbviiie (N.C.S at IC C Women
Solomon Saloon's 17 Lady Raiders
lac* its tilth out of state opponent in the
last two weeks. The Raiders are led by
Sanford's guard tandem of Cathy Jones
and Mindy Patrick and forwards Katrina
Andersson and Valerie Roessler. Evelyn
Smith and Missy McLelland are strong
off the bench while center Sue Winternheimer has yet to come Into her own
4iM p. m. Lake Howell vs. Croems
it IlfllilAl# Hl^k
Tht Ptnfhtn go
44 th itrj.ght
victory and 11th of this Mason against the
Ireshman Silver Hawks.
Coach John McNamara's squad Is lad
by point guard Daryl Williams along
with Aivm Jones. M.ke Wrigni. Melvin
Brinson, Robert Hill and O eiter
Franklin. Creoms laces the last team to
beat them, Ocala Vanguard. Thursday
night at SCC.

�SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Martin Dons Yankees
Pinstripes For 3rd Time
NEW YORK (UPI) — Hoping for improved fortunes
in the American League E ast as well as increased boxoffice revenues, the New York Yankees-Tuesday
named Billy Martin to manage the club for the third
tim e in eight years.
Twice hired and fired by principal owner George
Steinbrenner, Martin was tabbed to replace Gyde
King. King, who had been named manager last Aug, 4
after Gene Michael was fired, was returned to a
position in the Yankee front office as a principal ad­
viser to Steinbrenner.
Also, Steinbrenner said he had been fined *5,000 by
baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn for remarks he
m ade to Chicago White Sox owner Eddie Einhom and
Baltimore Orioles' owner Edward Bennett Williams.
Steinbrenner termed the Incident "unfortunate,"
The Yankees’ owner said he had been provoked by
rem arks Einhom and Williams made concerning New
York's signing of free-agent outfielder Steve Kemp.
Einhom and Sox coowner Jerry Relnsdorf were fined
*2,500 apiece by Kuhn.
Martin, who was fired as Oakland's manager after
last season with three years left on his contract, had his
contract extended an additional two years with a
substantial salary raise to approximately *500,000 a
year.
" I’m happy to be back," Martin said. “This is where
I started and this is where I’d like to end my career."
Martin said he felt his relationship with Stein­
brenner, which has been tempestuous in the past,
would be much better in the future.

Seminole Sets Registration
Registration for Seminole Pony League Baseball will
be held Saturday, Jan. 15, and the two following
. Saturdays at the Seminole Pony Baseball Complex on
State Road 419 near Winter Springs. Registration
begins at 10 a.m. on Saturday and runs through 2 p.m.
•

Birth certificates are required and fees are as
follows:
Baseball - Pinto (7-8 y ear olds), *35, Mustang (9-10
year olds), Bronco (11-12 year olds) and Pony (13-14
year olds), *40;
The Seminole Softball Club will also hold registration
at the same times, fees are *35 for Starlings (8-19),
Hawks (11-12) and Eagles (13-15).
Registration sites are as follows:
Forest City — Wekiva Elementary, Forest City
Elementary, Sabal Point Elementary. For m ore In­
formation call Gene Devaney at 862-2565.
Casselberry - Pony Baseball Field. Contact Ed
Taubensee (834-0447).
Lake Mary — Lake Mary Elementary. Contact Ed
Suggs (322-7923).
Winter Springs — Pony Baseball Field. Contact
Roger Gem (834-1202).
Longwood — Pony Baseball Field. Contact Nap
Reyes (831-1063).
Sanford— Sunland Field, Zayra'a Department Store

and Sanford Twin Cinema. Contact Jim Lucas (8318823).
For Softball registration all girls must register at the
Seminole Pony Baseball Complex, for m ore in­
formation contact Roger Richardson at 831-8408.

Nets Jet Past Lakers, 1 JO-96
United Presa International
Nobody told the New Jersey Nets they couldn't
outrun the Los Angeles Lakers.
So they beat the fast-breaking defending NBA
champs at their own game, sprinting to a 119-98 rout
Tuesday night for a team-record 10th straight victory.
The Triumph was played before a crowd of 90,149, the
Nets’ first sellout at the Meadowlandi Arena in East
Rutherford, N J.
Mickey Johnson, with a season-high 32 points,
finished off many of the Nets' breaks while Buck
Williams, with a season-high 21 rebounds and 21 points,
usually started them .
Even Lakers’ Coach P at Riley w u impressed.
"I'm taking my hat off to New Jersey," said Riley,
whose team had won nine of its previous 10 games.
"They played an incredible game. We scored only two
fast-break baskets in the second half and nobody ever
did that to us before."
In other games, New York belted Golden State, 10379, Philadelphia tam ed Atlanta, 1094)9, Phoenix
dumped Chicago, 109-98, San Diego trimmed Houston,
10&amp;-97, San Antonio topped Dallas, 109-101, Utah
whipped K ansu G ty, 108-98, and Denver downed
Seattle, 131-119.

Hughes Sets Scoring M ark
Uaited Press latenaUeaal
If at first you succeed - try It again.
And that's exactly what Edmonton's Pat Hughes did
Tuesday night. He set an NHL record by scoring shorthanded goals within a 2S-eecond span of the second
period to lead the OUers to a 7-8 triumph over the St.
Louis Blues.
In other games, Los Angeiea blitzed Washington, 9-7,
Montreal erwhed Hartford, M , and the New York
Islanden topped Winnipeg, 4-1.

Seminole Hosts

Tourney

S an b o le High will be the site of the fo u rth Annual
Seminole County Junior V anity Wrestling Tour­
nament this Thursday with wrestling beginning at 8
p.m.
The tourney is sponsored by Burger Chef and team s
competing include Seminole, Lake Mary, Lake Howell,
L*ke Brantley, Oviedo and Lyman. Last y e a r la k e
Brantley upeet Lyman for the title. Lyman won the
tourney the firtt two y ears..

By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sports Writer
According to Wymore Tech coach
Calvin U nge, the Bobcats know only one
speed, full throttle. Tuesday night the
visiting Bobcats collided with the speedy
take Mary’ Rams and the Rams came
away with an 82-81 victory in a fastpaced game from the opening minutes.
Reggie Medlock hit one of two free
throws with six seconds remaining in the
game to ice the victory for I,akc Mary
' whose record now stands at 8-3. ,
“This was really a good win for us."
U ke Mary coach Willie Richardson said.
" All the kids did a good job and we had
some real intensity on the boards."
For about the first seven minutes of the
contest, it seemed the Rams would blow
Wymore out of the gym I^ake Mary was
on a runaway locomotive that finally
crashed with the Hams ahead, 12-1.
U ke Mary built an 184) lead after the
j
first quarter and, thanks to a three-point
play by Donald Grayson, the Rams took a
3927 lead into the locker room at half­
time.
U ke Mary shot a blistering 64 percent
in the first half on 18 of 28 shooting front
the floor while Wymore Tech hit 11 of 37
shots for a frigid 30 percent.
The Rams continued to shoot well from
the field in the second half, but managed
to gel off only nine shots In the third
quarter, hitting six of them, while the
Bobcats made 12 of 20 shots for 60 per­
cent.
In fact, Wymore’s run-and-gun game
was working to near perfection as the
Bobcats outscored U k e Mary, 2914, in
the third quarter and took a 56-53 lead
into the final quarter of play.
i
The furious pace set in the first three
quarters carried into the fourth as both
teams traded baskets throughout the rest
of the game.
Wymore Tech took its biggest lead, GO56, early in the fourth quarter on a layup
by Ken Cooper. Moments later, U k e
Mary’s Billy Dunn grabbed an offensive

Dog Racing
A» Sanford.Orlando
Tuesday night results
First rset — H i , C: 11.15
3 Fast Profit
3 10 770
I D W ’iCiassaction
3 70 740
7 Cashew
3 40
O O il 9.20; P (3 I) II 10; T 13-8-

Prep Basketball

I) S* JO

rebound and hit the follow up shot to tie
the game *at 60. It was Dunn’s basket
Saturday that nipped Hastings by two.
The game see-sawed until U ke Mary
ran off three points on two free throws by
Fred Miller and one by Grayson to take a
75-70 lead with ?:3fl remaining.
The Bobcats didn't give in though and
fought back to within two points, 81-79,
with 12 seconds remaining.
Wymore then sent Medlock to the line
for a one-and-onc situation with six
seconds left. Medlock canned the first
shot to give the Hams an 82-79 lead.
Wymore hit a shot with one second left
but it was too little, too late for the
Bobcats.
"They (Wymore Tech) matched up
well against us," Richardson said. "It
could have been a blow out but they
didn't crack."
For the night, U k e Mary hit 33 of 50
shots for a sizzling 66 percent while the
H«r*!d Photo by Brian LaPtti
Bobcats hit 36 of 80 shots for 45 percent.
Darryl Mcrthie took high scoring Darryl .Mcrthie, Lake Mary's
honors with 26 points for the Itams, Fred liil'lt-flyiiit' swinf'inait, hits two
Miller added 19, Grayson netted 12 and of his game-high -G points in the
Dunn chipped in eight.
Hams' win over Wymore Tech.
The Bobcats had five players in double
Total fouls: U k e Mary 16, Wymore
figures led by Cooper's 18 points, James
Walker added 15, Toney Witherspoon 13, Tech 15. Fouled out: None. Technicals:
Darryl Harrison 11 and
Gayron None.
In junior varsity action, coach Charles
Hamilton had 10.
The Rams host U k e Brantley Thur­ Steele's Hams disposed of the JV Bob­
sday night at 8 with the U k e Mary girls cats, 64-48, behind George Williams' 21
points.
varsity playing Ihe 6:15 opener,
The Ranis, 3-4, hit i5 of 20 free throws
U K E MARY (82)
Merthie 12 2-3 26, Miller 8 3-4 19, for the night, its best free throw shooting
Grayson 5 2-312, Dunn 2 4-t 8, Wellon 2 90 of the season, Andre Gray added 13
4, Reynolds 2 2-2 6, Medlock 1 1-2 3, points for U ke Mary, Duane Gamer had
12, Curtis Bradley chipped in 10 and
Counts 12-2 4. Totals: 33 16-20 82.
Kenneth Alloway had eight points while
WYMORE TECH 181)
Walker 6 34J 15, Cooper 9 0-0 18, going 6 for 6 from the line.
The JV Rams go up against U ke
Hamilton 5 0-0 10, Harrison 5 1-2 11,
Witherspoon 5 3-813, Scott 3 1-27, Haynes Brantley Friday night after the girls JV’s
31-2 7, Robinson 0 0-10. Totals: 36 921 81. tip the night off with a 6:15 starting time.

Late DeLand Field Coal Nips Greyhounds, 54-53
When Alexis Geveland stepped to the
free throw line with eight seconds
remaining in Tuesday night’s game al
Lyman, and the Greyhounds holding a
one-point lead, it appeared the 'Hounds
were in pretty good shape. But, two
missed free throws and seven seconds
later, DeLand's Mark Carter threw In a
d e sp e ra tio n sh o t w ith one se co n d

remaining to give DeLand a 54-53 vic­
tory.
“After we missed the two free throws
the ball bounced around and D efend
picked it up and threw the bail the length
of the court," Lyman coach Tom
Uwrencc said. "The guy.(Carter) was
falling out of bounds und it looked like he
traveled."
Had it not been for that last-second
shot, Lyman would be right In the thick of
things in the Five Star Conference. The
loss drops the 'Hounds conference m ark
to 3-3 (6-5 overall) while DeUnd upped
its Five Star record to 6-1 (10-5 overall).
“It was. a close game all the way,"
Uwrence said. "I thought we played
well and rebounded well."
The G reyhounds had a balanced
scoring attack with Greg Pilot leading
the way with 14 points, Rod Hillman
added 13 and Geveland tossed in 10.
DeU nd's Chase Brown led all scorers
with 18 points.
^ym an travels to Spruce Creek Friday
night for an im portant conference
matchup with the Hawks.

Basketball
LYMAN (53)
Hillman 13, G eveland 10, G. Pilot 14, J.
Pilot 3, Feller 6, Walker 1, Simpson 6.
Totals: 21 11-18 53.
DELAND (54)

Brown 18, Cooper 9. Carter 7, Watson 8,
Gilmore 5, Fair 5, Anderson 0, Curry 2.
Totals: 20 14-17 54.
Total fouls: Lyman 19, DeUnd 16.
Fouled out: W atson. Technicals:
Anderson.

Lions Rip St. Cloud
In other action, Oviedo built a 32-20
halftime lead and breezed to a 65-39
victory over lowly St. Cloud Tuesday
night at Oviedo.
Ronnie Murphy poured in 19 points,
Gene Angel tossed in 12, Hill McCartney
added nixie and John Kewley chipped in
eight to pace the Lions whose record now
stands KM, 2-0 in the district.
"We pretty much coasted after getting
an 18-10 lead the first quarter," Oviedo
coach Dale “ Digger" Phillips said. "We
were in control the whole ball game and
got to clear the bench early. St. Goud
was just undermanned and we over­
powered them."
Murphy led the 1Jons underneath with
13 rebounds and Angel had one of his
better games, hitting 6 of 10 shots from

the floor, pulling down five boards and
coming up with three steals.
The lions go to Bishop Moore Friday
night and play U k e Brantley Saturday
night, the site is yet to be determined.
— CHIUS FISTER
OVIEDO (65)
Murphy 19, Wirth 5, Knolt 1, Kewley 8,
Klukts 4, Relchtc 7, Angel 12, McCarlnev
9. Totals: 26 13-21 65.
ST. CI.OUD (39)

Simpson 2. Dewey 18, Johnson 4,
Cowart 11, Campbell 3, Uchenour 1.
Totals: 12 15-23 39.
Total fouls: Oviedo 20. St. Goud 18.
Fouled oul: None.

U C F R ip s R o llin s
Central Florida's Knights placed five
players in double figures Tuesday night
as they thrashed rival Hollins College, 9368, in the Sunshine State Conference
opener at the UCF gym before 2,876 fans.
The victory was the sixth straight for
UCF against- Rollins and upped the
Knights series lead over the Tars to 14-9.
Dave Murray paced the Knight effort
with 20 points while Ronnie Thornton (16)
Terrence Stanley (14), Isaac McKinnon
(10) and Dan Faison (10) joined him in
double digits.
Ronnie Harris, a 6-6 center from
Apopka, led all scorers with 21 points.
Former Seminole High eager Glenn
Stambaugh was limited to one basket.

Chargers' Defense Impresses Steelers
E veryone knows the San Die^o
Chargers put a lot of points up on the
board—more than any other team in the
league. But they also give up aLnost as
many, which makes their defense unit
the butt of many jokes around the N FL
Even the Pittsburgh Steelers, beaten,
UPI Sports Editor
31-18, by San Diego Sunday, came away
enormously underwhelmed by the Charg en ' defense. A couple of the Steelers 97 yards on the ground against us," he
raid they thought the Dolphins would pointed out. *
Through the a ir , though, T erry
beat the Chargers In Miami this Sunday
Bradshaw passed for 325 yards and a pair
and when they were asked why, they
inxwered by saying San Diego's defense. of touchdowns for the Steelers while Dan
Now this strikes straight at the heart of Fouts did even better for the Chargers
a man like Tom Baas, who happens to be with 333 yards and three TDs.
a good m an and an exceptionally capable
“When we had to gel the ball back in
one. He's also the defensive coordinator the fourth quarter Sunday, we did," Bass
for the Chargers. But he doesn’t get all said. "With about 10 minutes left, they
upset and start kicking things every time were up by 11 points. We had to stop them
he hears someone u y San Diego doesn't and get the ball back and we did on Jeff
Allen’s interception. Then after we
win gam es on defense.
"T hat's tru e," he laid amiably from scored to go ahead, they still had a
San Diego Monday. “To an extent, chance to move the ball down the field
anyway. But it's not true ail the way and maybe put it Into overtime with a
field goal. But we stopped them, forced
down the line.
"... When we went on rtrike, I think it them to punt and that w u the ball game.
hurt our concentration a great d e a l We People can u y we don't win games on
had trouble getting back the discipline our defense, but Sunday we did it when
we had before when the players came , we had to. The thing we have to do is limit
back, but we are making steady people to field goals as milch s j we can
and get turnovers. We are not strong
progress."
The Chargers’ defense took its worst enough yet to go out there and make
beating In the final game of the strike- people go three downs and then punt. We
to x ten ed season when the Los Angeles are not at that stage yet, but we are
getting there."
Raiders outlawed San Diego, 41-34.
Against the Dolphins, the Chargers'
Base, Ijowever, doesn’t think the
Chargers' defense was that bad In defense will play it differently than they
did against the Steelers. Without giving
Sunday’a win in Pittsburgh.
" I t cam e out In the Pittsburgh papers sway anything, Bass said the Dolphins
before the game that aO the S teelen had have more outside running speed than
to do w u 'give the ball to (Franco) the Steelers but not as much power, so
Harris, but their whole team m ade only the Chargers will prepare accordingly

Milton
Rlchman

W ednesday, Jan. 17,1*83— 11A

Scorecard

this week.
Even in pro football where you find all
different type personalities, Bass is quite
an individual.
He played high school ball in Southern
California for the San Bernardino Car­
dinals and was a linebacker at San Jose
State until he was stricken with polio in
1955, about a week before the general
distribution of the Salk vaccine. He took a
year to recover and was unable to play
anymore. That was when he started
coaching under Don Coryell at San Diego
State.
" I consider him one of the finest
coaches in football,” said Bass, whom
the San Diego players call "Boss Hog.”
"That doesn’t bother me at all," he
laughed. "You know how players are. I
rather enjoy U because I like the players
and like being around them ."
Baas, in addition to being the Chargers'
defensive coordinator, also is a member
of the board of directors of the Florida
Gulf Coast Symphony. He writes poetry,
too, and what’s m ore, two of his books of
poetry— "Pro Football from the Inside"
and "Fly Free My Love" — have been
published.
“That is my therapy In life, poetry,"
Basa u id . "It brings me pleasure and
I'm happy it does other people alio."
Among other things, Tom Bass has a
sense of humor.
Not long ago, a newsman, talking about
the Chargers’ defense, asked him if he
would call it a defense that bends but
didn’t break.
Bass, who plays tennis, thought that
over a moment, then laughed and said:
"Right row, all we're trying to do is
break serve."

Second race — 3 1, D It.SO
2Okaloosa Atlas 78 00 19 40 S 60
SAva River
too
4 20
J W in B y A W im
6 00
Q U S) S3 40; P (l-S ) 30t 00. T (2S 3) til.BO; D O (3-33 tO 30
Third race — $10. D: 31.99
4 Fair,ex
4 00 2 80 7 80
iSauganash Spot
4 00 340
I M ldLand W -en
4 00
O (4 0) to 00; P (4 6 ) 17.10; T (4
0-1) 43.40
Fourth race — H O . M: 32. U
OSS Flunky
4» 40 9 00 8 00
I Anascaul M ary
9 60 0 00
4 Pio Pico
7 40
0 (O S) 139 20; P (O il 703 80; T
10 0 4) 1,718 00
Filth race — S-tl, D: 33 01
1Marco Island
4 40 4 30 3 80
7La Bleu Chlen
S 80 4 70
4Pyla
4 10
O (1-7) Si 20. P (1 7 ) 54.20; T ( I 7-4) 171.13
Hath race — 11, C : 19 09
2 Aphrodite
32 00 15 00 3 40
1 Evilene
100 2 20.
0 Wright Dally Dill
2 10
Q 11 11 19 00. P (3 1 ) 4110; T (114) 199.00
Seventh ra c e — S I4, B 31.95
1 Bill Mac
13 80 13 00 7 00
7ManatceOleo
840 3 00
I Sand Blanket
o30
Q 117) 135.80; P &lt;3-7) 733.20; T
(3 2 8) J, 107.30
Eighth race — 5 14. C; 11.49
7 R K ’l M r . Jones 1100 S 00 4 40
3 I'm C rajy
10 40 2 00
S Blade Runner
100
a (1 7) 19 00; P (7 3) 300 40. T (73-S) 310.40
Ninth race — 5-14,8 .31 40
t Happy Clipper
9 00 S 00 4 00
8 Laguna Rebel
940 4 40
0 Miss Charlotte
o00
0 It I ) 11.(0; P (74 60); T (1 6 4 )
19120
tothrace — 3-1, C: 19.12
4 Double Sight
0 10 4 00 3 00
IR ippinR eno
15 80 8 20
0 Malvern
600
Q (1-4 ) 20 40; P (4 1) 0510; T (41-4) 154 00
Itth ra ca — 5-10. A; 38.40
8 Beer Can Ida
7 10 1 20 7 80
3 Wright Gramme
0 40 4 40
1 Double Dive
7 80
0 ( 3-1) 10 40; P (81) 21.30; T ( I
1-1) 119.00; Pick H i ; (1 3 7-1-4 0), 4
ot 0 (9 winners) 101.10 "Jackpot"
carryover 18,501
llth ra c e — 5-10. D; 11.44
5 Permalloy
4.20 4 00 3 60
3 PW's Wanda L
360
220
IT o p R iv e r
120
0(3-51 7.40; P (1-1) 10 00; T (5-1I) 24 OO
lJ Ih ra c f — 7-I4.D: 44 31
5 RK E ve Apple
4 40 3 80 7 20
8 B le u Ida
2 40 7.40
J C lassie F Able
7 60
Q(S-8|0 0 0 ;P (3 8I 34.39; T (3-83) 110.30
A — 3,466; Hindi* 5231,450

NBA
M BA Handing,
By United F ra u Inlarnaltsnat
Eastern Conlerenct
Atlantic Dm uon
w L Pci. OB
Phils
78 5 848 — '
Boston
24 a .765 2 ' j
N.'w Jrsey
73 U 639 6 ',
17 16 515 II
WShngln
New York
IJ 27 371 16
Central
74 17 667 —
Mitwauke
17 16 486 6 ',
Atlanta
18 70 474 7
Detroit
Indiana
11 21 364 10'j
11 73 324 17
Chicago
Cleveland
5 71 .152 17' i
W etltrn Conterance
Midwest Dlvliion
W L Pet. OB
San Anion
73 14 477 —
70 13 606 1
Kan City
Denver
17 M 459 6
Utah
15 7) 195 I ' j
Dallas
13 J1 387 I ' ,
Houston
5 30 .143 17
Pacilic Division
Los Ang
71 8 .771 —
Seattle
23 13 639 4' j
Phoenix
21 IS 605 S’ »
Portland
77 15 .595 6
Golden SI.
IS 21 .417 12'y
9 27 750 18',
San Diego
Tuesday's Retulti
New York 103, Golden State
79
New Jersey 110. Loi Ang 96
Phil* 109. Atlanta 99
Phoenix 109, Chicago 96
San Antonio 109, Dallas 101
San Diego 105. Houston 97
Utah 106. Kansas City 91
Denver 131. Seattle 119
To da y'! Game,
(A ll Tim et E S T)
Golden Slate at Bo,ton, 7:10
pm
Milwaukee
al
Philadelphia,
7 IS p m .
New Jersey at Indiana, 7:35
p m.
Chicago at Cleveland, S p.m.
Wathlngton al Detroit. I 05
pm
San Diego el Dallaj. 1:15
pm
San Antonio at Kentat City,
I 35 p m
Utah al Denver, 9 35 p.m
|

NEW YORK (UPI) - On the second go-around,
things worked out perfectly for Leroy Langdon.
The 19-year-old, right-handed pitcher from Brevard
Community College In Cocoa, Fla., was selected by the
Cincinnati Reds as the No. 1 choice in baseball’s 16th
annual winter free-agent draft. Last year, he was
picked by the Boston Red Sox but opted to rem ain in
school.
"It's quite a surprise I was the top pick," said
langdon, adding that the Reds have been his favorite
team over the years. "I'v e always wanted to play
professional baseball ever since I can remember and
now it’s finally paid off."

Medlock's Free Toss
Propels Lake Mary
Past Bobcats, 82-81

&gt;
a

Reds Make Langdon 1st Pick

E vening H era ld , Sanford, FI.

Hockoy
NHL Itandlagt
■y United Preit International
Wslet Conference
Patrick Dlvliion
W L T t ic
Philadelphia
1 8 )} I 57
N Y.I,landers
71 It 7 51

FREE
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4. Hunan*** in Head,

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(flCMft i Mtft m NtfriEfn*

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
I *»,

1Mt MA * r A M .f
.pi t
Mr,, , ,,

' l WI N&lt; M A V f
323

5763

19 13 11 ,9
Washington
N Y Rangers
27 ,6 4 48
Pittsburgh
17 74 6 30
9 76 9 27
New Jersey
Adams Division
Boston
75 10 7 57
Montreal
73 17 8 54
19 14 9 47
Buffalo
18 11 6 47
Quebec
10 78 5 25
Hartford
Campbell Conlerence
Norris Division
W L T Pit
27 10 6 ' '
Chicago
Minnesota
21 17 9 51
St Louis
14 25 6 34
10 73 11 31
Detroit
Toronto
10 71 8 28
Smythe Division
74 11 8 56
Edmonlon
Winnipeg
18 20 4 40
Calgary
16 21 7 IV
Vancouver
14 19 9 17
Los Angeles
15 71 5 35
Tuesday's Results
Los Anqeles 9, Washington 7
Montreal 8, Hartford 4
NY Islanders 4, Winnipeg I
Edmonton 7. St Louis S
Today's Games
(All Timet E S T)
Quebec al Buffalo, 7 35 p m
Winnipeg al N Y
Rangers,
7 35 p m
Minnesota al Pittsburgh. 7 35
pm
Boston al Toronto. 8 OS p m
Edmonlon al Chicago. 8 35
pm
Calgary al Vancouver, II 05
pm

Basketball
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Tuesday
South
Vanderbilt II, Alabama 79
Appalachian 00. Davidson SI. ot
Biscayne 96. Eckerd 86
Central Fla 93. Rollins 68
Cumberland 75, Berea 72
Florida 92, So Florida 79. ot
Georgetown (Ky 1 81, Union
(K y i 08
Georgia Tech 71, Clemson oo
Guillord 92. Roberts Wesleyan
James Madison 84. Maine 59
Liberty Baptist 70. Eastern 08
Memphis SW II. Milsaps 07
Old Dominion 07. Va. Com
monweallh 67
Pikeville 75. Alice Lloyd 65
SI, Andrews 69, Georgia SI 67
Stetson 05, Utica 50
Western Kentucky 60. Jack
sonville 57
Midwest
Ark Pine Blutl 52, Lincoln JO
Bethel 97. Ottawa 95
Central St 09. Gannon 65
Hanover 67, Anderson 66
Iowa 51 73, Northern Iowa 50
Luther 55, Northwestern (M inn I
Marquette 85. Iona 78
Moorhead St 70. Bemidli St 66
Murr6y St 84. Eastern Illinois 78
Ohio Dominican 67, M l Vernon
Nal 61
Rio Grande 68. Malone 64
St Cloud SI 64. No Colorado 59
Southwestern 66. Sterling 59
Taylor 61. Manchester 60
T ri State 56, DePauw 55
Wis. Parkside 75. W it. Platte
vllle *«
Wis Stevens PI
*1, W is
Superior 57
Southwell
Bishop 94, Jarvis 87
Langston 61, N E Oklahoma 6}
Okla. Panhandle 87, Western
N M 66
Oklahoma St. 108. Oral Roberts

87
Tc«as Tech 59. Texas 5t
West
St Mary's 90. So Utah St. 77
East
St. John's 85. Connecticut 73

RACING
NIGHTLY S PM
MATINEES
M O N .W E D .-S A T .
I t lS P .M .
•

PLAY THE EXCITINO

PICK-SIX
WINNER SIX IN
A ROW AND
WIN THOUSANDS
OP DOLLARS
•
ALL NEW CASH
SELL MACHINES
0
TEIPECTA ON
EVERY RACE
0

|THURSDAY ALLLADIRI
AOMITTED FREE!

/nrvofloOMADOO
KEfmaCLUB
ria l
HI they U U

MUEVAtlMt-Mt )ME
ill

�UA—Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 17,1983

Double Taxation: 7 Cities
To Review Sheriff s Budget

iitV
i-* 1

_

__

_____

C H A M B E R D IR E C T O R S

In the photo at left, outgoing Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce Chairman of the Hoard or
Directors (lib Edmonds &lt;D passes the gavel to
incoming chairman Dennis Courson. Above, the
new members of tbe board from left are: Italph
IV/ old, Dr. J.C. Ilingling, Shirley Schilke, Dr.
Earl Weldon, and Jam es Tesar.

Chamber Chooses New Officers
Hinder concrete; Dr. Julius Ringling,
Sanford dentist; Shirley Schilke,
president of Schilke Enterprises; and
Ralph Pczold, retired vice president of
Flagship.
The new directors will join 10 new
directors elected to three-year terms:
Courson's term In office is one year. Wayne Albert, Vic Arnett, Bruce Berger,
Other officers elected Tuesday by the Jam es R. Dycus, Waller Gielow, Hodges,
board were Howard Hodges, president of Art Maheu, Tony R ussi, Janice
Atlantic Bank of Sanford, vice chairman; Springfield and City Commissioner Ned
and James Tesar, administrator of Yancey.
City Commissioner Milton Smith is the
C entral Florida Regional Hospital,
official city representative on the board.
treasurer.
Courson announced th at Berger,
Courson appointed five new directors, m anager of Florida Power and fjght
including: Tesar, bes Owen, manager of Co.'s Sanford office, will lead the

chamber membership drive to begin
Feb. 7.
R also was announced that the first
inductions into the Seminole County
Sports Hall of Fame will be held at
Seminole Community College during
half-time ceremonies of the Dike City SCC basketball game. Inducted will be
Joe Sterling, former SCC basketball
coach; Tim Raines, a Sanford native who
is a m ember of the Montreal Expos
baseball team; and Red Barber, a
graduate of the old Sanford High School,*
who is a radio sportscaster now living in
Tallahassee.
The Hall of Fame will be housed in the
lobby of the SCC health center.

Dennis Courson. president of Flagship
Bank of Sanford, was elected chairman
of the board of directors of the Greater
Sanford C ham ber of Commerce,
replacing re tirin g chairm an Gib
Edmonds, president of First Federal
Savings and Inan of Seminole County.

been at the board meeting and when she got
back to the school, announced the news over
the loudspeaker.
The board unanim ously approved a
recommendation by County School Superin­
tendent Robert Hughes that the facility being
construct I'd by Graham Contracting Inc. of
Orlando be called Allan F. Keelh Elementary
School.
After 16 years on the board, Keeth was
defeated in the prim ary election by Mrs. Jean
Bryant, former board member, who later
defeated Ken Patrick in a run-off election,
ending her eight year hiatus from the board.

ALLAN KEETII
... ‘thought they were
khiding'

High Court Debates Ban On Contraceptive Ads
restricts tre e soeech.

protection and may be regulated if Congress has a "substan­
tial interest" in prohibiting a practice.
Congress has decided the law helps parents supervise the
mat) which tails Into th eir children's hands, an d protects un­

The Justices will hear arguments today by contraceptive
willing recipients from possibly offensive material, the agency
manufacturer:) who say the law unjustifiably bars them from
said.
a
The law imposes a "minimal burden” on free expression
conducting m ass mllings of promotional material for birthcontrol devices.
because it only bars unsolicited and mailed advertisements,
The United States Postal Service is urging the high court to
Ihc agency argued. Advertisers "remain free to promote
overturn a ruling that found the agency was violating free
contraceptives in a wide variety of ways."
speech rights by enforcing the law prohibiting the controversi­
Challengers claim the mailings convey "truthful Informa­
al mailings.
tion on important social issues — such as family planning and
The service says the 19th-century law, passed to protect
prevention of venereal disease” and are entitled to First
citizens against literature and articles considered immoral,
Amendment protection even if they are economically motiva­
applies only to commercial or economically motivated speech.
ted.
Commercial speech enjoys more limited First Amendment
The Postal Service is defending the law against attack by the
Young Drug Products Corp., a New Jersey manufacturer and
distributor of prophylactics.

K is s in g : D o c S a y s

I t's G o o d F o r Y o u
ROME (UPI) — Kissing is good for your health and will
make you live longer, a newspaper said In Its dally health
column.
Under a cartoon of a couple passionately pawing at each
other while a doctor watches approvingly, II Messaggero
reported Tuesday the findings of a Peruvian doctor on the
effect of kissing on humans.
Psychiatrist tUldebrando Salazar found kissing stimulates
the heart, which gives more oxygen to the body's cells, keeping
the cells "young and vibrant."
Salazar also found kissing produces antibodies In the human
body that In the long run can protect the body against certain
infections.

Dollar Gaining Strength In Europe
1XJNDON &lt;UPI) — The British pound, trading at a sixyear
low against the U.S. dollar, was steadier today but the dollar
continu'Hl to rise against all the m ajor European currencies.
Gold prices also climbed.
The dollar surged to its highest point In London since 1976,
with the pound opening at $1.5805 against Tuesday's closing
price of $1,582.
A late rise in British bank lending rates and intervention by
the Bank of England brought some relief to the pound, which
has been battered by international fears of an imminent
general election after Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's
trip to the Falkland Islands.

"The pound was much steadier when currency markets
opened Wednesday," a dealer for Barclays Bank International
said.
Elsewhere, the dollar advanced although it is still below its
best on European markets.
In Frankfurt, thp dollar opened at 2.3565 marks from 2.344
and in Zurich, al 1.94125 Swiss francs from 1.9345.

F orm er S ch ool B oard M em b er

WASHINGTON (UPI) — A 100-year-old postal law banning
the unsolicited advertising ol contraceptives is before the
Supreme Court to decide whether it unconstitutionally

As a result, representatives of the
county and the cities agreed to the
compromise allowing the cities to review
county budget procedures.
In exchange for the county s promise to
let the cities review the budget, they
promised to withhold filing a lawsuit
against the county.
The county's resolution to the cities
also asks the state legislatu re to address
the double taxation issue. The legal
definition of double taxation has never
been clearly established, county officials
said. - MICHEAL RF.I1A

The seven cities — Sanford, lake
M ary, Winter S prings, Ungwood,
Casselberry. Oviedo and Altamonte
Springs — filed a lawsuit last summer
charging the county was receiving about
(2.4 million annually in taxes from the
cities for which the cities received no
benefit.
But after se v e ra l months of
negotiations, the cities dropped all their
claims against the county except for the
sherriff department’s road patrol. The
cities said they paid $1.2 million for the
road patrol but received no benefit.

I^ O n e
[

D o l l a ir

L

B uys

I h

i
4

M

Three of England's biggest banks raised their base lending
rates by 1 percent to 11 percent Tuesday and a fourth —
Midland Bank — followed Wednesday, hiking its rate from
10.25 percent to 11.

S ch o o l T o B e N a m e d A fte r
A $2,1149,000 elem entary school scheduled to
open In September In the Tuscawilla area of
Winter Springs has been officially named by
the Seminole County School Board in honor of
former school board member Allan F. Keeth.
How does it feel to have a school named after
you? "Bather unnerving. I'm flattered and
humbled," Keeth said. "I can hardly believe
it. I thought they were kidding. TTierc are a lot
of other people associated with education in
the county that are more deserving, but it’s a
real thrill and will make my mother proud."
Keeth found out about the action Tuesday
in a call from his wife, Jerry, a teacher at
r.pneva Elementary School. The principal had

Seminole County commissioners will
allow seven municipalities to review the
sheriff departm ent's budget for fiscal
1983-84 to check for instances of double
taxation.
Commissioners agreed Tuesday to
provide information to the cities by May
1 outlining their approach to the adoption
of the budget.
Under the agreement (he cities will
complete their review by June 1.
The commissioners also agreed to
notify the cities of any decisions that
result from budget work sessions.

The U.S. currency also advanced during opening trading in
Paris and Brussels, selling for 6.66075 French francs, up from
6.6525, and 48.90 Belgian francs, up from 48.50.

The dollar has been making a strong and con­
tinuing recovery in world markets. It is at a high
point for the last five years against most major
currencies. The dollar's strength is a drag on U.S.
trade — making American products more ex­
pensive abroad — but a boon to American
tourists,

The dollar jumped against the lira in Milan, opening up at
1,355.625 from 1,345.45.
In Tokyo, the dollar closed at 231 yen, up from 227.60.
Gold opened higher again after heavy trading Tuesday that

left the metal at its highest level since September.
In Zurich, gold opened at $481.50 an ounce, up from
Tuesday's closing of $479.50. In london, it climbed to $485.00,
up from $481.50.

Veterans' Van To Be Here This Weekend
The Military Order ol the surance and death claims.
The services are provided
Purple Heart will sponsor a
two-day visit of the National without charge.
Service Van.
The Military Order of Ihe
Purple H eart traveling van
will be in Florida through
Feb. 12 providing guidance to
veterans, their wives, widows
and dependents seeking
benefits provided by federal
law.
The van will be staffed by
persons knowledgeable in the
various benefits available,
such as disability com­
p e n s a t i o n , p e n s io n s ,
e d u c a tio n a l
b e n e f its ,
hospitalization and medical
care, social security in­

NOTICE TO ALL

VETERANS
Wko Hava HaaaraMy Sarvad Their Country In Tima ol War or Poico

r

Building, 400 E. First St., on
Friday, and Saturday, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.rn. each day.

The van will be in Sanford
at the G reater Sanford
Chamber of Com m erce

COMFORTABLEI
Every-day comfort. It's
impossible to achieve in time
of sadness, but we do our best
— through homelike facilities
and neighborly concern - to
put families as much at ease
as the circumstances allow.

GRAM KOW
FUNERAL HOME

AREA DEATHS
MELODIE LYNN WILLIS
Melodic Lynn Willis, 2 4 , of
618 Helm Way In Casselberry
died Monday al O rlando
General Hospital. She was
bom In Orlando April 9, 1980.
Survivors include h er
mother, Terri Lynn WllHs, of
Orlando; her father, Timothy
Oneal Willis, of Casselberry;
grandparents, Mrs. Shirley
Willis, of Casselberry, and

tft'l I4 •'I I

iOuacil **+*#«** Wor^irt *s * CNMl

Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Smith, of
Altamonte Springs; her greatgrandparents, Mrs. Charles
Holbruner, of Holly Hill, and
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton W.
Pauley, of Winter Park, and
Mrs. Mary
Sm ith, of
Maryland.
Gramkow-Guincs Funeral
Home, Longwood, is in charge
of arrangements.
MRS. DORA E. HALL
Mrs. Dora E. Hall, 96, of 919
E. Second St. in Sanford died
Tuesday at Ukcview Nursing
Center. Bom July 14, 1886, In
Chelsea, Mich., in 1980, she
was a homemaker and a
member of
the
First
Presbyterian Church in
Stockbridge.
Survivors
Include
a
daughter,
M rs.
Jane
McKibbin,
of
Sanford,
brothers. Gum, Paul and
Robert Dancer, all of Stockbridge; three grandchildren
and
th re e
g reat­

grandchildren.
Funeral service and burial
will be in Stockbridge.
Gratnkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, Is in charge of local
arrangements.
MRS. BARBARA J. NEISON
Mrs. Barbara J. Nelson, 53,
of Hacienda Village In Winter
Springs died Monday at her
home. Born Sept. 25,1929, In
Knoxville, Tenn., she moved
to W inter Springs from
Maitland In 1979. She was a
homemaker and a Baptist.
S urvivors include her
husband, Carl H.; two sons,
Benny Ray, of Knoxville; and
Phillip L , of I^ake Mary; her
mother, Mrs. Ethel M. Moore,
of Knoxville; a sister, Carolyn
Hill, of Knoxville; and three
grandchildren.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements.

Hunt Monument Co.
Display Yard
Mwy. ty.fi — Pam Part
Pt.UM fM
Gena Hunt, Owner
•ranis, Mortis A Oranfts.
Bscausa of ths lack of burial spies and tbs distance of tfa National Camttiry in Florida,
ws ars assigning grM spaces In Vstaraas IsrAa d Vstr. Mrima dM irid P rt. As an
ta w a b * dachitQsd ration of t o United S ts * Armd Forest, you miy bt Quabfiad
for Frss Butai Span. However, you must ragutar for this. You must bs MU to show
’ Ptod of Honorabis Otchsrgs. Thors a n a limitsd numb* of W a r n spaas tvailMd
Csrtificaiss for ipaoss will ba issusd on a first corns first sarvad basis. TosMusrsasrvdlon. mail tht couaan talow tot

IS

fit 4 Boa 244. Sanford. FL 12771

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(305) 322-4263
P ia « a Sand My Vataran of Sarvica Eligibility Cartihcala.
I
I NAME
ADDRESS
| Branch of Sarvica.
_No. m Family,
^Service Serial N o .
-Telephone No

PRE A R R A N G E M E N T S

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BRISSON FUNERAL HOME P.A.

IN OUR FIGHT
AGAINST

L a u r e l Avt*

A

S an fo rd
*

S22 2 13

R o b e i l B in&gt;son

D irector

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 11,I 9 IJ -IB

Cook Of The Week

Cool Weather Calls For Hearty Soup
By LOU CHILDERS
Herald Correspondent
I-cl the mercury dip, and Nancy Smith of Sanford is ready to
make some scrumptious homemade soup. A native of Con­
necticut. Nancy is fond of a northern favorite, U.S. Senate
Bean Soup.
The Smiths moved to Sanford five and one-half years ago.
Bill, her husband, works for the Seminole County School
Board, and Nancy is a secretary at the American Produce
Exchange in Sanford. Their children, Bonnie. 12, and Billy, 8,
were excited when Nancy’s mom, Ann Pia, their grandmother,
moved to Casselberry last year.
Another all time favorite soup that Nancy makes. Vegetable
Beef, comes from a recipe handed down from her mother.
Nancy uses “a chunk of soup meat” which is a big piece of beef
chuck with a bone.
Nancy loves to read old recipes. Mrs. Pia, who saved all of
the recipes, menus and food advice brochures that the A&amp;P
Tea Company gave its customers during the Depression years,
passed them on to Nancy recently. One interesting issue dated
March 25, 1937, shows how "a family of 4 can enjoy Easter
dinner for $5.50!” A comparable circular tells “ How a family
of four can live well on $13 to $15 a week for food."
One of the unusual recipes Nancy has from these oldie-bul*
goodies is Strawberry Puff Pudding.
Nancy aLso reads recipes on boxes. "I found a wonderful
recipe for Jelly Roll on a cake flour box," she explains. “ I
really surprised me how easy it was to make because I always
thought jelly roll cakes would break when you rolled thrin up.
but they don't."
Nancy adds that her family really appreciates it when she
makes a jelly roll for them and she explains, “ 1 usually make
jelly rolls to take to a church supper, and by the time our
family makes it through the line, the jelly roll dish is empty!"
U.S. SENATE BEAN SOUP
2'x cups Northern beans i dried)
li pound salt pork
1 large onion, minced
Wash beans in cold water removing any foreign particles.
Pour off water. Put washed beans in slow cooker and add 5
cups of water. IxL beans soak overnight. Turn on slow cooker

in morning allowing beans to cook all day, adding cubed salt
pork. Two hours before ready to serve, add onions and salt and
pepper to taste.
VEGETABLE BEEF SOUP
1 chuck soup meat (beef chuck with bone)
3 quarts water
2 parsnips
- .
6 onions
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
3 carrots
li cup celery tops
4 tablespoons tomato sauce
salt to taste
l t cup rice
Pul meat and water in large soup pot and brinh to boil. Boil
about 15 minutes. Cut up parsnips, carrots, celery, onions and
parsley and add to soup along with tomato sauce. Cover and
simmer 45 minutes to an hour. Add salt to taste. Add rice and
continue simmering 20 minutes longer. I^t soup stand 1 to 2
hours. Skim off excess fat and remove meat. Cut meat into
bite-sized pieces and return to soup. Reheat when ready to
serve.
*
CHICKEN CACCIATORE
2 tablespoons cooking oil
small chicken, cut up (about l li pounds)
1 bay leaf
h teaspoon oregano
l t teaspoon garlic powder
l i green pepper, sliced
1 teaspoon grated parmesan cheese
1 targe onion, quartered
2 15-ounce cans tomato sauce

N a n c y S m ith p u ts th e fin ish in g to u c h e s m i J e lly
Hull w hich s h e s a v s is " e a s y to m a k e ."

Cook crushed berries with sugar and tapioca for 5 minutes.
Beat egg yolks until thick and lemon colored, add sugar and
beat again. Beat egg whites until foamy, add salt and cream of
tartar, beat until stiff, but not dry. Fold in yolks, then flour
gradually. Place fruit in casserole, pour batter over. Bake in a
325 degree oven for 40 minutes. Serve cold with or without
cream.

MEN'S WEAR

Parents Hurt Over Son
Dropping Family Name

15% ■50%
OFF ON....
Living Room suites. Bedroom Suites, Kitchen
tables A chairs, Lamps, Redlners, M at­
tresses. Box springs, Sofas and Chairs.
Famous brands by Bassett-Dolly Madison,
Stanley, Bryant, and Hickory Upholstery

C a m M 'b fu iu d lm
104 E A S T F IR S T ST., SANFORD. F L A .

Hake until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean
(12 to 15 minutes). Loosen cake from edges of pan and invert
on towel sprinkled with powdered sugar. Carefully remove foil
or paper: trim off stiff edges of cake if necessary. While hot,
roll cake and towel from narrow end. Cool on wire rack. When
completely cool, unroll cake: remove towel. Beat jam slightly
with fork to soften and spread over cake. Reroll cake and
sprinkle outside with powdered sugar. Yield: 10 servings.
STRAWBERRY PUFF PUDDING
1 pint strawberries
3t cup sugar
2 tablespoons tapioca
2 eggs
6 tablespoons sugar
1k teaspoon salt
l t teaspoon cream of tartar
0 tablespoons sifted cake flour

In large pan place chicken and onion. Brown in oil for 15
minutes turning to cook evenly. Pour off any excess oil and
chicken fal. Add tomato sauce and spices. Cover and simmer
for 1 hour. le t stand 15 minutes and remove any excess fat
floating on top. Serve with rice. Yield: 3 or 4 servings.
JELLY ROLL
3 eggs

WINTER
FURNITURE
SALE!
/ '&lt; H P
&gt;*-4- &lt;*&gt;

1 cup granulated sugar
13 cup water
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup cake flour
l teaspoon baking powder
lt teaspoon salt
23 cup berry jam
powdered sugar
Heat oven to 3 7 5 degrees, l a n e jelly roll pan i 1 5 ' j x 1 0 12 x 1 inchi with aluminum foil or waxed paper, grease the paper
with shortening. Beat eggs in small mixer bowl until thick and
lemon colored, about 5 minutes. Pour eggs into large mixer
bowl. Beat in granulated sugar slowly. Blend in-water and
vanilla on low speed. Add flour, baking powder and salt
gradually, beating just until batter is smooth. Pour into
prepared pan, spreading batter to comers

322-5181

FINANCING
A V A ILA B LE

We Will Bill
Medicare Direct
For Medical
Equipment And
Supplies As
Prescribed By
Your Physician
M ED-CflRE, INC
"Everything for Home Patient Care”
Rental* A Stitt

• Wheelchairs
• Hospital Beds

• Colostomy Supplies

• Respiratory Therapy

• Breathing Machines

Equipment
• Crutches

• Oxygen

DKAHABBY: Our25-ycarold son, who Is graduating
from law school in a few
months, is being married
soon. His fiancee is a college
graduate, and they are both
intelligent adults.
Our aon )u*t Informed us
that he plans to take his
fiancee’s name rather than
have her take his name!
Needless to say, we are
shocked. My husband feels
(hat our son Is disgracing our
family and abandoning his
heritage by doing such a
thing. Our name is not dif­
ficult to spell or pronounce. It
is Orlikoff. Hers is Reilly.
Our son explained that he
may one day pursue a career
in politics and Reilly would be
better than Orlikoff because
Orlikoff sounds Russian, and
people would be more Inclined
to vote for a candidate named
Reilly.
Abby, have you ever heard
of a man taking his wife’s
name? My husband I are so
hurt over this we may not
even attend the wedding.
PROUD ORUKOFFS
DEAR PROUD: Yes. I have
heard of a mao taking his
wife’s name. Please accept
your son's decision with grace
and attend his wedding. If you
refuse, you will surely
alienate him. I can un­
derstand
your
disap­
pointment, but your son Is an
adult and free to make his
own decisions.
DEAR ABBY: I have a

*

Dear
Abby

part-tim e job delivering
parcels to homes. Sometimes
it takes a very long time to
locate an address because
half the bouses on a street are
not num bered anywhere
that's visible from the street.
I keep wondering what
would happen if some of these
people needed the police, an
ambulance or a fireman in a
hurry.
I hope you think this is
Important enough to print.
D.H.
DEAR D.H.: 1 do. Readers,
If your address cannot be
easily read from the strecL
you eould lose more than a
parcel!
DEAR ABBY: Hooray for
you! Just keep telling people
that there is no excuse for
falling to write a thank-you
note.
I have three children, ages
5,8 and 10. My job as a parent
is to teach my children good
habits. When a gift arrives,
we have a rule at our house. If
it's something to wear, it is
not worn until a thank-you
note is written. If it's a toy, it
may not be played with until a
thank-you note Is written. If
it's a check or money, it may

• CATALINA
Leisure Style
M atchinq Slacks
Shorts - Shirts
And J a c k e ts

L

not be banked or spent until a
thank-you note is written.
My children have been
writing their own thank-you
notes since they were 4. (t
guided their tiny hands, but
they “ wrote" the notes, and 1
ad d ressed the envelopes.)
The older ones do It by
themselves now.
The writing is not always
perfect and neither is the
spelling, but the gratitude is
theirs, and it is sincere.
Children cannot be ex­
pected to know what they
have not been taught.
TOUGH
BUT
LOVING
MOTHER

POLO &amp;

EA R

PIERCING
FREE with
purchase of
Earrings.
Sanlord’l Moil Unique Boutique
LOIS OYCUS OW NER

PH. J7J-41J1
DOW NTOW N SANFORD

70) E. 1ST. ST

Fill Y o u r Freezer

U . S . D A C h o i c e Beef C u t and W r a p p e d For Freezer

H AL) SIOES

USDA CHOICE

U SD A CHOICE

W E S TE R N CHOICE

HALF CATTLE

H ind Q u a rte rs

F ro n t Q u a rte rs
R oasts . Steaks

W H O LE RIBS

l l t t O l W t R I 1© GUM l| •
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PACKAGE DEAL N U M B ER 3

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CHUCK S TIA K S
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PACKAGE DEAL N U M B E R 2

SPECIAL

PACKAGE DEAL N U M B E R b

*

•t*-*r*•»•
3 C L U t S1IAKS
3 ROUND S T U B S
3 T B O M S TIA K S
3 CH U CK S I U K S
3 CH U CK ROASTS
3 5MORT RtBSw S T ( W
3 GROUND ROUNDS
3 FRYERS

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OUR HOM EMADE

SAUSAGE
7.95
PATTIES -6 .9 5

2
2
2
1
2
2

ROUND S TEAK S 111111’ . lb*
CLUB S T IA K S
1 *b
CHUCK R O ASTS
3 lb*
GROUND R O UN O S
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SHORT R i b s b f S U W
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PORK PACKAGE
DEALS
ALSO AVAILABLE

tarMVID WI'GMl

86.85

49.95

IO W A M E A T S

• Oxygen Refills
O P

2108 S. French Av«*.. Sanford
Sloea Moult

Call ( 3 0 5 ) 1 2 2 - 1 8 5 5

S

Call and have your order ready 323-4528

Mundaf ih.bu«h Saluda*

- I 30 la I P M Ftedey lo I P M

PRICES S U B JEC T TO CHANGE W IT H O U T NOTICE

Each
Each
Each
Each
la th
Each

Lib,3* th»*i * i •** $*•' 4*fM H Kew., t i

• Mastectomy Supplies

505 East F irst S tre e t. S an fo rd
\ Ot^'
IV

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W i t h T a s t y I o w a W e s t e r n Fr esh Beef. Flavor G u a r a n t e e d

4 SHORT R lB S ukS TlW
I GROUND ROUNOS
4 ENVERS

Wa Will Work With Your
Idee* And Helg Coordinate
Drapory, Carpot And Wallcovorlng
Tatftfully. W* Will Bring Beauty
To Your Home.

Shave

-i.

l

B u y W h o l e s a l e and S ave A p p r o x i m a t e l y 2 5 % .

4 CHUCK ROASTS

•Wall meeting

Cologne A Alter

&amp; Shiils

IO W A M EA T S
F IG H T S IN FLA T IO N

4 T R O M STIA K S
4 ROUND S it A(tS
4 C tU B S TIA k S
4 CH OCK S T ! A*S

The colorful Hare that

GREY FLANNEL

Shorts

»*•

Drapery •Carpet

• OP Shirts

�IB

— Evening Herein, ia n to ro ,

yytcnesoay. j en.

M

f ■ ■ ■ ■ ! IN STORE COUPO N

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m m m m m i in

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Revco 12 Timed
Capsules

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C U P &amp; SAVE

500 mg.

fREVCO

20'S
• 00 m%.(

100's

Revco’s low,
everyday discount
price $1.59

YOU PAY

YOU PAY

-W 4

WITH THIS COUPON

WITH THIS COUPON

LIMITONE PER COUPON
t71tn ft! pftrttOpftling Revco ItDfff only

LIMIT ONE PER COUPON
Coupon tspirftt I71S3 At pedtcipifing flftvcc tto'et onty

! ■ ■ ■ ! IN STO RE COUPON ! ■ ■ ■ ■

■ if t i f t i l IN STORE CO U PO N ! ■ ■ ■ !

Generic

4MOl

10 0 % N EVER &gt;
LA TE R E B A TE
COLOR PR IN T
DEVELOPING

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BRI T
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Check your local
Revco Discount Drug
Center lot details

SPRAY DEODORANT

Faberge Organics SHAMPOO

3.5 II. oz.

Reg . Oily or Dry

CONDITIONER

OR FINISHING RINSE

Reg. or Extra Body

t5 II. oz.

^Specially marked
packages only.

Ecotrin

STICK DEODORANT
OR ANTI■PERSPIRANT SPRAT ANTI- PERSPIRANT
.5 02. Specially marked

packages only.

rt

iT i

3.0 fl. oz.

0R SPUSH-ON LOTION
3.5 II. 02.

H I

&lt; l i At f l t AsflMlP*

arthritis

t* m i is

Aqua Net Hair Spray

Arthritis analgesic 36's
Revco's low, everyday
discount price............................ ... .$ .99
LESS $1.00 MFR. R E B A T E .........- $1.00

Specially marked ■
packages only.
w

9 II. 02.
YOU PAY
AFTER REBATE

IT i

OFFICIAL ORDER FORM
TO Corn Musters Refund. PO Boa 9281
SI Paul. MN M l 92
BUY One 4 ounce boflfe Corn H usher* Lotion
SEND The UPC Symbol *11 M l ( B i l l from the so* of
the label on the bottle, this Official Order Form, and
the Cftiii register receipt with the price pad circled
RECEIVE t l 00 Cash Refund
PLEASE SEND MY REFUND TO
m a il

TO RECEIVE YOUR *1.00 CASH REFUND:
I Sftfxl Iho complete product cudm Symbol from the end flap
ol Ecotrin 36 s. tOQ t, 250 s. or M iiim um Strength Ecolitn
24 * GO a 1501 Iftbleli
■ Thf* offscNil Request Form mutt Accompany your
proof ot purchase
■ Offer nof ve&gt;*d outside U S A or in stales e i w prohibited
Only one refund per household Allow 3 to 5 w«wM for delivery

IIAItm
Your
Name
REFUND
Y
our Name
PO. BOXNBM2 Addrett
EL PASO. TXmn

CBf______ _ B i e i » _____ _________
Pftone f

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Name

Bic Fine Point
Roller Pen

CIIRITV

W IT H TW O F R E E
M E D IU M P O IN T P E N S ]

Turtle
Lite
Bulbs
2pk.

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discount price

Revco's low,
everyday
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60 or 7 5 '

Coty Musk For Men
After Shave

Lip Treat Gloss
|&lt;

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*&gt;

.

REVCO’S LOWER
PRESCRIPTION
CAN SAW
YOU MONEY.

RteK tranter your preecription.
No metier where your pretcnpilon It being tillednow.
we’H cell your doctor end arrange
torn to be tilled el Revco.

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everyday
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•■ -

■ypf

Bausch &amp; Lomb
Saline Solution

m &amp;H'

\

Colgate
Toothbnishesl

Soft, Medium or Hard
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everyday
discount price

r . y .
I I I

USE THIS C O U P O N AND
GET ONE F RE E T OO T H BR U S H
M«H to; Colgate Five Toothbruah Oflif, PO 6o« 4588.
Mondcello Mmnasola 55365 Foi 1 FREE Colgalo
toothbrush. Coupon good on any type toothbrush
I am sanding &gt;
! 2 Cotgalt toothbrush package end Maps
Also anctosa your cash register receipt with toothbrush
pnee* circled
Addiess
State

7&lt;P

(MUST INCLUDE)

Allow1 Swaekl Oaimary Void wtwra proTi.bled. ia,M or
r»tli«i*e inn,, on# coupon par name or addrtts tn.» oid«
torn moil accompany jour raqoasl and ma» not Cm raproducad
or copwd Ottar aipaas Marcn IS, tee) ONai good only in USA

Arm &amp;
Deimax Cleanser For Hammer
Him Or For Her
Oven Cleaner

A

d" C“ " ,P d C *

Steel Wbol
.

3 pack

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BUY TW O
G E T O N E FREE!

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everyday

i

Steel Wool

City
State
-Z«P.
Thi* Official Order Form must accompany your correct proof
of ptrchaie and may not be reproduced Sorry no clubs
or or genual ions art eligible Limil one otter per name or
address Offer good' only m U S A and! is void Where lamed
or restricted by fie Allow 4 6 weefct tor processing
OFFER ENDS APRIL 30. 1985

4 II. 02.

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6 02.

8 fl. 02.

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everyday
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Revco’a low,
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_

1
CopyrieM C 1M3 by R.vco D.8, Inc.

1 oz.

‘•feitic . ssaKf*

T -------

P a d S

Mentholatum
Jar

1

LBilliTOEllffl

Anchor Hocking
Mugs
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eveiyday
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60's Reg. or Sheer
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'/V'i; Vx*

fT ta r o tji

8 oz.

Curad Plastic
Bandages

cm

'- - •- •’-"•&gt;•

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100'8

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AFTER
SHAVE

* r '/* % y ' - -' f ' ' i ;

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curad

By Chapstlck
Asst, flavors
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MUSK

1 fl. 02.
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Marcal Facial
Tissues
■

Apt •

' a rc

MbXWMMBHBK

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Huskers
Lotion

4 fl. 02.
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LESS $1.00 MFR. R E B A TE ....... -S 1 .0 0

Rng , Unsconted,
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A FTER REBATE

Generic Drugs. Just one more w ay
you'll save on p re s c rip tio n s at
Revco. For over 25 y e a rs,
our prescription prices
have been lower than
the rest. Now, you
can save even more
with generic drugs.
^ Ask your doctor if
y f s p o s s ib le for him
to sp e c ify a generic
drug rather than a more
expensive name b ra n d .

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lM ET

Ecotnn
O u lN IM u

r e s v iA ia ia

m

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price $1.99

Coupon

\m m m m

REVCO COUPON
SAVE 60*

REVCO COUPON!
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Revco
Vitamin
C

s to r e co u po n

Item* available while quantities last

SANFORD

Hwy. 17-92 at Lake Mary Blvd. Village Market Place
Village Market Place
290 Hwy. East 434
323-3440 HOURS; BOTH STORES
327-0780
Ve.m.-Vp.m.MON. •SAT.
13 Noontoip.m. SUNDAY

Revco reserves the right to limit quantities.

�|

19

|

-

Wednesday, Jan. 1?, I9S 3 -J B

Evening
H erald,
Sanford,
FI. FI.
Evening
Herald,
Sanford.

High-Fiber Foods Combine Taste Appeal With Good Nutrition
Adeline
fihor to
tn your
iiamk
Adding mnrP
more fiber
diet can be very simple and
tasty. Breads, main and side
dishes,
d e sse rts
and
nutritious snacks can all play
a part in providing dietary
fiber.
Not all foods have fiber —
even in th e ir raw , un­
processed state. Only foods
from plant sources have
dietary fiber. There is no
dietary fiber in meat, fish,
poultry, eggs or milk.
However, there is fiber in a
wide range of foods, including
fruits, vegetables, cereals,
nuts, seeds and legumes.
like a supporting cast,
vegetables, salads and other
side dishes serve to com­
plement the leading element
or main dish in a menu.
Appetizing and colorful ac­
companiments are not only an
important source of nutrients
essential in a well-rounded
diet but also a significant
source of d ie ta ry fiber,
especially when bran cereals
are used to add crunch to a
topping or flavor to a
casserole.
Stuffed Eggplant Italiano,
with 5.6 grams of dietary fiber
per serving, is a delicious way
to introduce the beautiful
eggplant to those who are
unaccustom ed to Its v er­
satility.
STUFFED EGGPLANT
ITALIANO
1 medium-sized eggplant
(about 1 lb.)
1-3 cup all-bran cereal
1 cup
sliced
fresh
mushrooms (2 to 3 oz.)
4 cup grated parmesan
cheese
l 4 cup chopped onoin
*4 cup finely chopped green
pepper
2 tablespoons margarine or
butter, melted
1 small garlic dove, finely
chopped
4 teaspoon salt
teaspoon basil leaves
dash pepper
1-3 cup shredded mozzarella
cheese
1. Cut eggplant in half
lengthwise. Place halves, cut
side down, in shallow baking
pan. Hake at 350 degrees F for
15 minutes. Remove from
oven. Cool slightly.
2. Scoop out pulp, leaving
4-lnch shell. Place shells, cut
side up, in baking pan.
Coarsely chop pulp. Combine
with remaining ingredients
except m ozzarella cheese.
Fill eggplant shells, pressing
firmly. Giver with foil. Pierce
foil in servcral places to allow
steam to escape.
3. Bake at 350 degrees F
about 40 minutes or until
vegetables
a re
tender.
Remove foil and sprinkle with
m ozzarella cheese. Bake,
uncovered, about 2 minutes
longer or until cheese melts.
Cut each half into 2 pieces to
serve.
Yield:
4
se r­
vings.. PER SERVING: 150
Calories, 5.8 gram s dietary
fiber
While flavor and variety are
often primary concerns when
choosing the menu's main
dish, it Is Just as important to
consider Its nutrient, calorie
and dietary fiber content. A
successful new main dish may
feature a fam iliar food with a
flavor or texture twist. You'll
be pleased to present a tasty
new recipe to the family that
is not only attractive and
nutritious but also easy and
quick to prepare like Cheeseand-Meat Balls with Savory
Onion Sauce.
CHEESE-AND-MEAT
BALLS
4 cup all-bran cereal
1 egg
1-3 cup milk
4 teaspoon pepper
4 pound lean ground beef
1 cup (4 ot.) shredded
cheddar cheese
]. In medium-size mixing
bowl, combine cereal, egg,
milk and pepper. Mix well.
Let stand about 5 minutes or
until cereal Is softened.
2. Add ground beef and
cheese, m ixing until well
combined. Shape Into 1-lnch
meatballs. Place in single
layer In greased, shallow
baking pan.
3. Bake at 400 degrees F
about 10 minutes or until
browned. Remove from oven
and ln lm edlately loosen
meatballs from pan. Serve
with Savory Onion Sauce over
noodles, If desired. Yield:
about 2 4 dozen meatballs, 8
servings.
PER SERVING: (without
Savory Onion Sauce or
noodles): 160 Calories, 2.3

rteistna
I K
it__
gram s Jdietary
fiber
SAVGrtY ONIONSAUCE
4 cup chopped onion
l 4 cup m argarine or butter

1
_««
m
4 cup all-purpose flour
dash pepper
1 can (10-4 oz.) condensed
beef broth soup

1 cup water
2 tablespoons sherry
1. In medium-size frypan,
cook onion in m argarine over

low heat until tender. Stir in
flour and pepper. Cook until
bubbly and lightly browned,
stirring constantly. Remove

from heat.
2. Stir in condensed soup
and water. Increase heat to
m edium and cook until

mixture boils and thickens,
stirring constantly. Stir in
sherry. Serve over Cheeseand-Meat Balls. Yield: about

2 cups.
PER SERVING: 1-3 cup:.
100 C alories, 0.2 gram s
dietary fiber

P T

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Cat Food« . . . 21*1 0 Napkins......... 73* &gt;Pancake Mix 69*
Potatoes
69€
Sauce
5
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99* 0
Black Pepper .6 9
B Dog Burgers. . $2 290 Baby Powder . $149
Trash Bags . . . *149 0 Dry Cat Food.. $155 0 Shampoo . . . . 1 b!
Puffs icowmc) . .21*1 0 Deodorizer. . .8 3 0 Cotton Swabs . 4 9
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TOUMIT QUANTrnCS, NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. NOT HEBP0N6H E FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS.

* Mic »

1

�IB — E vening H erald, Sanford, F I.

Wednesday, Jan. IJ, )? |j

Research Shows Onion Now Widely Hailed For Health Benefits
1 cup light cream
4 cup butter or margarine
4 tsp. salt
onions. Reserve cen te r in deviled
ham .
Add mixture. Chill several hours
leaves. 6 to 8 servings,
For centuries, the onion was
1 cup milk
3
tbsp.
flour
few
grains
pepper
portions
for
use
in
other
rem
aining
in
g
red
ien
ts
and
or
until
cream
cheese
centers
CREAMEDONIONS
considered one of the world’s
Peel onions: cook in a little
1 tsp. salt
Peel onions,
With apple dishes. Beat cream cheese beat well. Fill centers of are firm. To serve, slice
12 medium-sized white
most sacred vegetables. More
See ONION, Page 5R
4 tsp. pepper
cen ters of until soft and creamy. Blend onions with cream cheese onions and place on lettuce
onions
recently, the vegetable has co rer rem ove
been unjustifiably abused and
neglected.
Although known to have
medicinal value since the
earliest times, it is now being
widely hailed for its health
BONGS
benefits as a result of
BUY
scientific research.
The following recipes have
been kitchen tested by the
National Onion Association.
STUFFED ONIONS
1 very large or 6 medium
onions
3 tbsp. butter
4 pound bacon, finely diced
4 cup chopped parsley
4 cup stale bread crumbs
4 pound mushrooms, finely
chopped
pinch of nutmeg
salt and freshly-ground
pepper
1 cup bouillon or stock
Feel the onions, cut off
PR ICES E F F E C T IV E WED., JAN .
about a quarter from the top
12 TH R U T U E S ., JA N . 18, 1983.
and cut across in root end of
each. Drop in a pan of boiling
water and sim m er for five
GEORGIA
SW EET N O R TH W E S TE R N
FR ES H
m inutes. D rain thoroughly
and rem ove the centers,
leaving a double thickness at
the sides and bottom. Chop
the tops and centers finely and
stew with the bacon in one
tablespoon of the butter for
fifteen minutes. The bacon
per
PER
1
I f
should be limp and the onions
PER
C R E A M S T Y L E OR W HOLE KERNFl
PO U N D
poun d
POUND
soft and yellow.
SA V E 10 PER LB
Stir in the parsley and
SA V E 9 PER LB
S A V E 20 PER LB
bread cru m b s. Place the
remaining butter in the pan,
add the mushrooms, and stir
CRISP FLORIDA
ALL PURPOSE
over high heat for two
U.S. NO. 1 R U S S E T I " onus
17oz
CAN
minutes. Add salt and pepper
to taste and gently but firmly
mound into the onions.
P lace
in
a covered
casserole, pour stock around
the onions and bake, covered,
at 375 degrees for about an
hour, basting frequently for
LB B A G
*
the first fifteen minutes.
LB BAG
Serves four to six.
SAVE 9e
SAVE 20
SAVE 14‘
PEANUT-ONION CASSESAVE 30'
ROLE
3 cups cooked, sliced onions
1 cup ground roasted
I v4R*t&gt;AT
peanuts
SAVE
COMPARE G R O C E R Y iIOW
ir l
CHECK THESE PR ICES
SAVE
2 cups white sauce
CRISP
3 DIAMOND C R U SH ED
1 cup bread crumbs
2 tbsp. melted butter
Place alternate layers ot
FRESH JUICY
onions and peanuts In baking
GOLDEN GRAIN- 7 2 S o l
_
.
I
1
dish. Cover with white sauce
and top with bread crumbs
CH EESE CHEDOAR, PIZZA
mixed with melted butter.
WE WILL REDEEM YOUR
FRESHLY PACKAGED
FLAVOR OR C O M B O
_
I
1
Hake in hot oven (400
STONEWARE COUPONS
degrees) until crumbs are
AND YOU CAN PURCHASE
golden brown — about 20
FRESH
YOUR COMPLETER PIECES
minutes. Serves 8.
THROUGH SATURDAY,
SAMRAL SHRIMP
■ PO U N D
'N ONIONS
J M DANDY
I--------1
JANUARY 29, 1983.
FRESH FLORIDA
1 large onion, chopped (1
cup)
2 tbsp. vegetable oil
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 slice fresh ginger,
chopped or ‘a tsp. ground
P A N T R Y PRIDE
ginger
2 tsp. chili powder
4 tsp. salt
TAPIO C A B A N A N A B u r r L R S C O I C H
FR EN C H OR C UT
C H O C O L A T E C H O C O L A T E t UlJL.f V A N IllA
1 pound shrimp, shelled,
t6 0 Z C A N
o tc e o p e a c h e s o n m i « e u m w m i
devein ed
1-3 cup AmnrcUo
REGULAR OR U G H T
2 tbsp. lemon juice
rfffro i
cooked pice (optional)
In large skillet heat oil;
saute onion, garlic, ginger,
2 0 0 Z
6 PACK
chili powder, and salt, stirring
SAVE 10
1
2
o zC A N S
SAVE 20
SAVE 9
constantly to prevent spices
from sticking. Add shrimp;
cook about 3 minutes until
SAVE 66
pink and tender. Stir in
SA VE 90
SOFT &amp; PRETTY
CAPRI SUN
1402
SAVE Ia
OLD
ENGLISH
Amarctto and lemon juice;
6 7 .5 0 2
BATHROOM
4
ROLLS
heat. Serve with rice, If
FURNITURE
desired. Four servings.
LEMON. APPLE.
FRUIT P U N C H
BEEF FUJI
W HITE. ASSORTED
OR SUN GRAPE
O R PRINT
1 small onion, sliced
20‘ OFF LABEL
2 tbsp. vegetable oil
SAVE 14M O TTS
SA VE 10
49oz BOX
1 pound beef steak {round,
4.502 CAN
6402
BEACH
chuck, blade, or flank), 1 to
14 inches thick, cut Into thin
C U FF
LAUNDRY
strips
DETERGENT
SARDINES
REG OR NATURAL
1 lb. fresh mushrooms,
sliced into "T " shapes.
4 cup chicken or beef broth
4 cup soy sauce
tv im u A t
rvtmoAv
[V I H i U A Y
1 tbsp. cornstarch in 2 tbsp.
tv tm tm
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
COMPARE (.H IM I HY Ptow
COMPARE G H O ( 1 KV p1a0 c*t
COMPARE C H O C F R Y MMCt
RCE
COMPARE G R O C E H Y .12\
SAVE
water
1 B-oz. can bamboo shoots,
REGULAR OR
A-1
C O N TA O N A
_
. I
I
33 OFF LABEL
I--------1
W ITH MARSHMALLOW S
sliced
119
1 8-oz. can water chestnuts,
h o t cocoa .
cf
g
I Sox CA N - CHICKEN. BEEF
sliced
C O N TA O N A
A
- I
I
DISHWASHING U Q U O
_ ___
ORUVERDOQFOOD
- I A A .
SHEER S TR E N G TH
3 scallions, cut Litto 1-inch
.
.
lengths
TRASH BAGS . g
PAN TRY P n O E
1 B-oz. pkg. frozen,
H E F TY
CXSPENSER
1ULAR OR THIN
SU N SH IN E
defrosted pea pods
.
.
»
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»
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•
IBoi
1
1 1-lb. can sliced peaches,
drained
5 LB FREE
3 UNIT .
RAGU W ITH M E A T
_ _ .
I
1
REG, O R H O T W ITH BEANS
|
1
Heat oil in wok or skillet and
DOOCHOW . S $ 8 2 *
(SMQMKTTf)
(SPAGHETTI)
I
But
. .
stir-fry beef, mushrooms, and
onion for 4 to 5 minutes. Add
broth, soy sauce, and corn­
starch mixture. Cook, stirring
constantly, until it thickens.
Add vegetables an0 peaches.
Continue heating until heated
through. Serve at once with
INSTANT
■ 1
rice. Four servings.
STUFFED ONION BAUD
LIGH TS
E .P . REG. OR DRIP
4 to 6 large sweet onions
802JAR
602
JAR
1202
PACKAGE
HALF
GALLON
|
POUND CAN
1
1
1 8-oz. package cream
B
W ITH TH IS C O U P O N G O O O ■
5
W ITH TH IS C O U P O N G O O O
WITH TH IS C O U P O N GOOO
W
ITH
TH
IS
C
O
U
P
O
N
G
O
O
O
■
WITH
T H B C O U P O N GOOO
B
TH
R
U
WED.,
JAN.
IB
.
1983.
■
■
cheese
TH R U WED., JAN. IB. 1963.
THRU WED.. JA N . 19. 1963.
THRU WED , JA N IB. 1883. |
THRU W ED , JA N . IB, 1B63.
■
2 tbsp. deviled ham
1 tsp. dry m ustard
1 tb sp . finely chopped
pimento
SANFORD 2 9 4 4 O R LA N D O ROAD. ZAVRE PLAZA AT THE C O R N ER O F 1 7 -9 2 F. O R L A N D O ROAD

pr

SAVE 30c PER l_B

WESTERN EX-FANCY
RED OR GO LDEN

DELICIOUS
cP fide
APPLES

DelM onte
PEA S,
CO RN

m

2/89

RED SWEET
POTATOES

D’ANJOU
PEARS

GREEN
CABBAGE
*1

c

W nJk
H

YELLOW
"®£J ONIONS

CELLO
CARROTS

BAKING
POTATOES

235

i° 0 0

a iMcl Je

c

3

49 c

OUTSTANDING PRODUCE BUYS!

SWEET FLOWER
STONEWARE
INFORMATION

0

M
acaronia
C
M
C
D
O
A
n3/$1 I 9I

NachoCheese.,„$109 0

Pork&amp;Beans c^3/$1 0

QuickGrits. .,~2/*1 Ld

DelM onte

DelM onte
GREEN BEANS

SINGLE SERVINGS

COLD
POWER

BEER

$ |6 9

7

ORANCE

$ 2 Qi

$|99

TISSUE

2n

APPLE
JUICE

$1 19

$149

a
kSauce. .^*1" 0
T
o
m
a
toSa
u
ce C
A
N
^
P
f I I—
J Ste

Downy

T
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toP
a
ste.&amp;3f’l 0

SunLight. . . ,J1 39

Glad

2/*1

M
ild
e
w
G
o
n
e

Hi-Ho Crackers ,jo7 9 *

1
9
8 1
*
^
1

LuxBathSoap .99*

NannyPan

4/89*

L
a
w
nB
ags ..c
?*28
9

P
u
rin
a

Sa
u
ce

20cO F F

FOLGER’8
COFFEE

. ~..*2

0

99*

30cO FF

it

[L

4

V

OLD MILWAUKEE

Q C

7

$ J3 9

POLISH

GRITS or CORN
MEAL MIX

mQ

2/89

HOI

Fresh C e l e r y ............. &amp;S39* 0
Florida Grapefruit . . . . 6/$1 0
Slaw or S a l a d ............... 49° 0
Canadian Rutabagas
15 □
Temple Oranges . . . 1 2 /8 9 ° 0

BREYER’S*
’! ICE
S
CREAM S

Nestles i

*1#9

Horniel Chili

as79* 0

4 0 c OFF

MAXWELL
HOUSE

COFFEE

I* '"* ,,,.......... y\

FRITO LAY
CORN CHIPS

FOLGER’S
COFFEE

�Create Special
Cake Frosting

How long lias it hen since you made a cake from ‘“scratch"?
Here is white cat you can adorn with your favorite fillings
between layers, sitli as custard, chocolate or a coconut-filled
frosting.
Serve with stra icrries, raspberries or pineapple and ice
cream.

4 teaspoon salt
s« cup butter or m argarine, softened
2 4 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
13» cups sugar
6 egg whites, unbeaten
4 cup milk

COCONUT CAKE
3 cups sifted c a ; flour
1 tablespoon bafcig powder

Evening Herald, Sanford FI

Wednesday. J a n 1 2 .1»83

SB

after each addition. Add flour mixture alternately with milk,
beginning and ending with flour Mix batter 4 minute. Turn
into two well-greased, lightly floured. 9-inch layer cake pans
Bake in a pre-heated 350-degree oven 30 minutes or until cake
tester inserted into center comes out clean Cool in pans for 10
minutes. Turn out onto racks and cool thoroughly. Spread your
favorite frosting with coconut between layers and over lop and
sides of cake.

Sift flour with baking powder and salt; set aside. In large
mixing bowl, cream butter and vanilla extract with sugar until
light and fluffy. Add egg whiles, one at a time, beating well

...Onion
I’onl’d From I'agr HI

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

WHOLE
FRYING
CHICKENS

salted boiling witter, tightly
covered, (or about 25 minutes,
or until tender Dram Melt
butter, blend in flour, salt,
and pepper add cream and
milk slowly, stirring eon*
stantly; cook until thickened
Add onions; heat to serving
tem perature. Sprinkle with
chopped parsley.
(IS It IN ilINGS
Peel and slice onion,
separate into rings Cover
with milk and soak for about 2
hours. Pour pancake or
biscuit mix into bag; shake
rings into bags; deep-fat fry

py

G
Piftfe
TW O PER BA G
UM IT-2 B A G S W ITH AD D ITIO N AL P U R C H A S E S .

SAVE 20° PER LB

o M O N -sn m . i m s n
1 cup finely chopped onoin
11 cup finely chopped celery
4 cup butter or margarine,
melted
2 cups stale bread crumbs
1 tsp. sail
4 tsp. poultry seasoning
4 tsp. black pepper
2 fish steaks, 1 lb. each
salt to taste
pepper to taste
2 tsp. lemon juice
melted butter or margarine
Saute onion and celery in
butter or margarine until
veg etab les are limp anil
tra n sp a re n t. Add bread
crumbs and cook until lightly
browned. Blend in seasonings.
Wipe fish with a damp cloth
and sprinkle with salt, pep
per, and lemon juice.
Place half the fish in a
buttered baking dish. Spread
stuffing over top. Top with
remain)
fish steak Brush
with m elted butter or
m argarine.
Bake in a preheated 35&lt;i
degrees oven for 30 to 40
minutes or until fish flakes
easily. Serves l

P R IC ES E FF E C TIV E W ED ., JA N .
12 T H R U TU E S ., JA N . 18, 1983.

PLANTATION BRAND
VAC P A C M ARKET STYLE
SKINNED &amp; DEVEINEO

SLICED
BACON
4 9
LARGE
PKG. LB

UNDERlLADE

SELECTED SU CED

CALIFORNIA ROAST

BEEF LIVER

v

$

1

7

9

LB

PACK

S A V E 70,3ER LB

BEEF BLADE C U T

SUC|D

CHUCK
STEAK

QUAFTER
PORK LOIN

BUY

TW IN PACK

[“ONUsl

? i 59

_

_

am $
AV G .
PKG.

LB

_ _

1

GREAT
GROUND
BEEF PATTIE MIX

9

LB M k

CO M P A R E

99

5 LB
AV G .
PKG.

ft
SA VE 40 ER LB

SAVE 40“ PER LB

fed

SAVE 30 PER LB

—

5

CH OCK
R O A ST

esucE m m ^

H

S A V E 50“ PER LB

, 00 Ml 5 ,

BEEF BLADE C U T

c
LB

SA VE 40“ PER LB

C H E C K HESE P R IC E S

CHECK
THESE
P R IC E S

COMPARES

SAVE

COOKED- PORK. CHUCKW AGON O R CHICKEN FRIED S TE A K

On-Cor Breaded Patties ™ 5! 39
Beef Back R i b s .......... B*1
Boneless Turkey Ham .. . ,5139 0
California Steaks
Beef Cube Steak . . .
13

EXCELLENT FO R BAR-B-OUE

1 9

SMOKED

U.S.D.A. CH OICE BEEF UNDERBLADE

iO aj rva
FLEISCHMANS CORN
OIL

C H O S M IT H F IE L D

Margarine q tr s .

13 9

Pork Sausage.
LOUIS R IC H S M O K E D

Sausage iturkey]

*18®

iPKQ.

LYKES M E A T O R BEEF

„

Weiners (plumper)

[

i

LYKES P O W E R PAK

0
I

$

3 113
AVG PK G

2

2 190
I------ 1

SUNNYLAND F R E S H BREAKFAST »

MOZZARELLA

_ _

« 79c

. . ..

f

PACK

W

$469

C h eese &lt;axelrod’s) 'Jo i

S b

I30I

cumCj

PANTRY PRIDE

Biscuits

6 9

*

PA N TRY PRID E

^

S a u s a g e s (u n k i • ime!

ta t. In re a l ot la t

Kraft Velveeta ^

F r a n k s (c h ic k e n ) • i» o* f S 5 ^

SAVE

79° \iz

Cl"

SLICED S IN G L E S
CHEESE FOOD

L3.0.1 C h ee se (cottage)

$ ^ 9 9

U.S.D.A. CH OICE

CHECK
THESE
p
P R IC E S

DAIRY
C O M P A R E ______

SA V E

PttG

INNCEfi QOOO ONLY ^ S fM lN O U COUNTY o u t lO O U H lO W I H » ; i » , A t M f i M v l THE MC*Hl TO UMlf O UAN TlfCT.
NOML r a p T O W A U H S NOT R| ‘ 3K A&lt;*jOU 1 0 8 TV ROGf|AP»HCAL I W C W i

OODLES
OF NOODLES

TOMATO
JUICE

P O P * ORIENT Al CHICKEN OH BEEF

tuna
■CmSi

5/sl

m
46oz

BROWN

APPLE
SAUCE

RICE

SAVE 18“

'

B R E A ltf 3

/ *

P A N TR Y PRIDE

FROZEN
BAGELS

PANTRY PRIDE~~ ^20o z LOAVES

l »

$

4

9

$

■

S A V E 10'

U

12oz

9

9

SAVE S 1 OO

S A V E 50“
K TV« DO)

W HOLE

S A V E IB

CRICKET

[

1

H A LF
POUND

JA R
4 A V E 10

7T

PUUN EGO o n OMON

1

64oz

69 *
49 *

^

IN T H E DELL BAKERY S T O R E S O N LY

r f f lH ] ]

SAVE 10
20oz

M O T T S N A TU R A L

20O Z

DILLS

fli
fe ^P
SAVt 13

SAVE 10*

M AHATM A

KOSHER FRESH

70 c

S A V E 45

CORNED
BEEF

JU N E BOY

BAR-B-QUE ■'(MR

CHICKEN

lighter
TW IN P A C K

RED* T O EA T

;i I W I H Y NTONCfi ONLY

$049
S A V E 20*

SA VE61*

CLOSE-UP

4.6oz TU B E

FRESH

•Wi*
W4 T&gt;&lt;t Of l&gt;
-------UAAERY BTOH tBO NLY

.ED

T O R -. K)

TOOTHPASTE

6/79

ROLLS

15“ O F F LABEL

IN T H E DEU-BAKERY S T O R E S ONLY
everyday
lo w

COMPARE

PRCE

SAVE

COMPARE

f h o 2 :m

PANTRY PRIDE CHICKEN, l
BEEF OR T U R K E Y -F R O Z E N
PANTRY PROE FR E N C H

A

Pot P ie s .

Bread . . . «s 2/,1~

AAA FA M O U S ONION OR

I

Kaiser Rolls . .
PANTRY PfWDE
PULL-A-PAHT

a

a

Bread . . . ss 2/*159
S429
BarCake....... - i

SPANISH

20c OFF
r-rrn

I

9 9 * H

a* ma n

GREAT AMERICAN
CRUNCHY CORN
CHEESE OR PUFFED
CORN CHEESE
• &lt; •» •
BozPACKAGE

B COUPON OOOO
i| :j m
* WITH
_____TM_______________
| ^ T H R U WED.. JAN
'983

.

.

'

tow

w er

SAVE

COMPARE

SAVE

_____
I
I

GILLETE

I

J!Z 79* Ld

Daisy Razor . . ^*89 0

600 MG VTTA- FRESH

CHEESE. PEPPERONI
OR S A U SA G E- FROZEN

.89* 0
Frozen Waffles .39* 0
Garlic Bread $ 4 1 9

G &amp; W P iz z a .
PANTRY PRIDE

COLES FR OZEN

m ■ save 2 a

TOMS

EVERYDAY

EVERYDAY

a a . Q

Vitamin C . . .

*179

SEC U R ITY REG. O R SUPER

Kotex

I

-

.„ g

TAMPONS . . 0 . 1

SOLID- REG U LAR OH UNSCENTED
A N TVPERSP W AN T
,

Lady’s Choice

.

-

*19

COMPARE

PANTRY PRID E

PEPSI. DIET PEPSI,
PEPSI FREE- (REG.
OR SUGAR FREE),
PEPSI LIGHT OR
MOUNTAIN DEW
2 LITER
YOU P A Y 89* W ITH THIS
CO U P O N O O O O TH R U
WED., JA N . 19, 1883.

FLAKED

COFFEE
•

SAVE 20*

M ADE W ITH CR ABM EAT

*1S9 «

. . .

I

I

NeptuneSalad ^ *1" H
$499
Dinner (CHICKEN)
2 VEG. &amp; ROLL BAR -BO

C H C K tN

FR
ICED
r n kESH
h H i uBAKED
n n k w rwwi/

Buns (CINNAMON). 6/89°

2/99*
SAVE 19*

SAVE

Boiled Ham . .

PA PER
TOWELS
85 SQUARE FEET

FVtRVQAY

LEAN

P A N T R Y PRIDE

c a sh

"

PHtPAHt O
10005

PANTRY PRIDE FROZEN

SANDWICH
STEAKS
$ 3 9 9
32oz

PKG.

SAVE S2.0Q

c u p aoH

bread
crum bs.
G rease
covered baking dish. Arrange
onions, apples, and baron in
alternating layers. Top with
bread crumbs. Combine 4
cup hot stock (consume may
be used) with 4 l. salt and
pour over all. Cover dish and
bake in 375 degree oven 30
m inutes covered and 15
minutes covered.
I’OKK AND ONIONS
1 small uniun, chopped
2 tbsp. vegetable oil
4 lb. pork (butt or
shoulder i trimmed and cut to
thin strips across the grain
4 cup chicken broth
2 tbsp. chicken broth
2 tbsp. tomato paste
1 tsp. sugar
1 tsp. chili sauce
Heat oil in wok or large
skillet and stir-fry pork strips
5 to 10 minutes, until crisp and
golden. Combine remaining
Ingredients and add to pork
Simmer for 1 to 2 minutes.
Serve at once. Yield: 2 ser­
vings.

TASTY LEAN
UBY

AI’I’LE-ONION I'ASSEItOl.l".
8 slices bacon
6 medium onions
6 medium apples — Peel
and cut crosswise in 4 slices
Saute bacon and cut Into
small pieces. Take out 2 tbsp.

ALMOND CHICKEN
WITH MUSHROOMS
1 med. onion, cut into 4 inch cubes
2 tbsp. vegetable oil
4 cup whole blanched
almonds
1 green pepper, cut into 4 inch cubes
' * lb. mushrooms, sliced in
“T " shapes
4 chicken-breast halves,
skinned, boned, cut into 4
Inch cubes
4 to 5 water chestnuts,
sliced
2 tsp. soy sauce
2 tsp dry sherry (or white
wine)
4 cup chicken broth or
water
1 tbsp. cornstarch in 2 tbsp.
cold water
Heat oil in wok or large
skillet and stir-fry almonds
until
lightly
browned.
Remove from pan. Stir-fry
green pepper and onion 2 to 3
minutes. Push aside. Stir-fry
mushj-ooms 1 to 2 minutes.
Push aside. Stir-fry chicken 3
to 4 minutes, until done.
Return the vegetables to the
c h ic k e n . Add Ihe w ater
chestnuts. In a small bowl
combine soy sauce, sherry,
chicken broth, and the corn­
starch mixture. Stir and add
to ingredients In the wok or
skillet. Heat until sauce is
th ickened. Add alm onds.
Serve at once with noodles. 4
servings.

«

�B L O N D IE

4B— Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

W ednesday, Jan.

12, 1913

by Chic Young1

49 Baseballer
Musial
50 Arrest
1 Gated
51 Source of
5 Yes (p i)
revenue
9 Urchin
54 Something to
12 Soothe
smoke
13 Comment on
14 Rosary bead 57 Macao com
8
La
15 Clare Boothe 5
Douce"
60 Vei
16 Ages
61 Skin tum or
17 Beak
62 Mild oath
19 Shovel
20 Greek letter 63 W eather
bureau (abbr
21 Acquired
22 Invitation re­ 64 Compass
point
sponse fa b b r)
65 Mediocre
24 Satellites
(comp w d |
26 Couple
66 Store
29 Actress
Hepburn
DOWN
3 1 _____ Con­
tendere plea
1 Skinny fish
3 3 Chinese
2 Yelp
philosophy
3 Salad green
34 Journey
4 Property titles
39 Adolescent
5 One
39 Sesame plant
(Scottish)
40 Menageries
6 Old tim e
41 Vigorous
7 Slate ( f r )
scuffle
8 W ord for
44 Indian
opening doors
45 Proceed (2
9 Spanish
erds)
dance
1

by A rt Sansom

T H E BORN LOSER

4

5

o im n n in
10 AirplanfFr |
t l lOU s
19 Spacewk
(abbr)
23 Golf sho
25 Court cr
26 E iplosie
(abbr)
27 Sorrow
29 Raised
platform
30 Bread cfes
32 Aware o42
w ds)
35 Somewtv
youthful;
36 Decay
37 Compass
point
7

42 lo o se n s
43 And so on
(a b b r. L a t, I
w ds)
45 M unches
46 M ansard s
eitension
47 Cut o f beef
(com p w d )
49 Buenos
52 Southern
constellation
53 Christ's
birthday
(a b b r)
55 And
56 Gather
59 Trouble

8

9

17

45

46

24 25
29

30

33

”

-

42

1
11
■

35

36

37
*

48

49

54

55

50

51

57

58

91

62

63

64

65

66

52

53
59

56

60

IL

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Thursday, January 13,1983
YOURB1KTHDAY
January 13,1983
You are likely to be luckier
this year in projects or ven­
tures which you conduct In­
dependently, ra th e r than
through partnerships. Don’t
be hesitant to go It -alone.

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; MEEK

WHY ARt'tOU V0EAR1I0G A
E A U &gt; A D O N O T R FlkJGER?

IT S W V
W EDD 1UG
P iw r-

B e^osE iosm ^
..IS A lD I.W J A S O k X Y K lD O U G !

P R IS C IL L A 'S POP

by Ed Sullivan
i

G ET INVOLVEP WITH
HELPING O T H E R S '
CARRV THE S T A N O R P
O F JOM INTO TH EIR
L IV E S '"

SWING W IPE T H E ^ N
PORTALS OF HOUR
HEART ANP EMBRACE
TH 05E LONELV SOULS
CRV1NG OUT FO R
FRIEN PSH IP."
-S

I WAS THINKING ~N
M ORE IN TERM S
O F A TAT T O O / j

4-iZ

BUGS B U N N Y
ANC? WMATfe ' T H E
U IT T l E F R E N C H
C O O KIN G

GOURMET

UP TOCW ?

by Stoflel &amp; Heim dahl

BOUILLABAISSE a f b e n c m
SOUP MADE wrrHPAW SEA'
FOOP CLAWS PRAWNS
LOBSTge HALIBUT TUNA,

PERHAPS I SHOULD
UEAVE O U T T H E
P IR A N H A -

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) Vou should now begin to
be able to exert a greater
influence on m atters im ­
portant to you which were
controlled by others. Order
now: The NEW Astro-Graph,
Box 489, Radio City Station,
N.Y. 10019. Send an additional
t l for your Capricorn AstroGraph predictions for 1983. Be
sure to include birthdate.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) You may find ways today
to revitalize a project or
venture which appeared to
have run out of possibilities.
Your new touches should
work.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
A combination of optimism
and practicality are your keys
to success at this time. Be
hopeful regarding your goals
and seek to achieve them In
realistic ways.
ABIES (March 21-AprU 19)
Today you may feel In­
clinations to scrap old ob­
jectives and replace them
with new and w orthier
targets. Follow the course
your Impulses chart.

putting your
positive ises.

lessons

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
very self-conscious about my
measurements. My figure is
OK except for my breasts
which arc entirely too small.
They have always been that
way. I’m 28 years old, and
otherwise reaso n ab ly a t­
tractive but I would be a lot
happier II I had some
cleavage.
In one of your columns you
said there were exercises that
would Uicrease the size of
breasts. You said, once one
developed the
pectoral
muscles to the size wanted,
one can maintain their size by
doing exercises once a week.
Could you please send me
some m aterial explaining
those exercises?

The breast is not a muscle.
You can't exercise it and
enlarge it. It Is a gland and
much of its content Is fat,
except during nursing when it
also contains a lot of milk.
By the way, having a child
helps some women to become
mature physiologically and
results in a larger breast
thereafter.

43

47

Exercising To Help
Improve Bustline

DEAR READER - U t ’s
set the record straight. I
never hive said that exercises
will increase your breast size.
But in some women the right
exercises and good posture
may increase your bustline.
There Is a difference.

21

23

■1
1■
1

27

20

11

10

16

41

I THINK IT'S
GETTING A
LITTLE O U T

a □□□□
m an
□□
inn □□

15

39

by Bob Montana

can
□

14

19

__r

-2J S

13

31

Jr

6

a AT T
□ R.a
□ jJ t

12

26

f e j

''EVERYTHING IS SELFSEPVTCE TDPAY MAJT//.
GAG STATIONS, I7E5TAURANTS
EVEN CAR WASHES.'

3

22

HA-MA,BA£.MA-H*,TD,WMAHANAHAHAHAHAHA^

A R C H IE

2

18

m i, I'LL BET UJTSOF PECflE’S
ANCESTRIES ftm S L i ONLY60 ,

Answt to Previous Puttie

across

to
•

GEMII (May 21-Junc 20)
Changes re now beginning to
stir whjh will eventually
benefit &gt;u materially. The
shifts wl be sluw and may
not be Immediately apparent.
CANCfi (June 21-July 22)
Do not treat lightly any
negotiates which you enter
Into todi. They could have
far-reacing effects. Be sure
all tnvohd are pleased with
the term.
LEO (uly 23-Aug. 221 This
Is a gooiday to start that
exerciseprogram or diet
you've ben putting off. Your
chances )r achieving your
goals arexcellenl.
VIRGO Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It
behooves fou a t this tim e to
seek newocial activities and
friends. P le a su ra b le ex­
periences! re in the offing if
you wfldet your circle of In­
terests.
LIBRA tpt. 23-Oct. 23) I!
you have'-' mtemplated doing
things
beau tify your
surround! ;s, this Is the day
to begin Implement them.
SCORflO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
It Is like! you’ll begin to get
new slani now on problems
for whtefyou were unable to
find sotUons. The answers
shouldn’tlefy you any longer.
SAGITARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) fou have the ability
today t&lt; make something
worthwhb from a situation

Any woman who has truly
small breasts and who Is
concerned about it should talk
It over with her own doctor. In
some lew cases a better
balance in hormones will help
improve breast development.
Female hormones stimulate
breast development.
The exercises you need to
do are those that contract
your muscles over the front of
your chest. The breast sits on
these
m uscles.
The
enlargem ent of the chest
muscles behind the breast will
set the breast forward and
increase your bustline, even If
your breasts are small. But
this doesn't e n la rg e the
breast. If you develop good
posture — avoiding rounding
of your shoulders — that helps
too.

Dr.

Lamb

These points about what you
can do are discussed in more
detaiTin The Health U tte r 1812, Breast Basics, which I am
sending you. Others can send
75 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me, in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,,
Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
DEAR DR. L A M B -T ell us
about the spread of staph. We
know it usually begins in
hospitals. What ore the ways
of catching it from another
person? What about handling
clothing belonging to someone
who has it? Also, what are the
early symptoms if one is
infected? What about filthy
restrooms where the floors
and stools are not cleaned or
sanitized for many months?
DEAR READER - Tiere
are se v e ra l strains of
staphylococcal
bacteria.
These b a c te ria normally
Inhabit the skin and mucus
membranes. When the skin is
broken or injured in some
way that m ay allow the
bacteria on your skin to enter
and start a localized Infection.
They m ay also invade a hair
follicle causing a furuncle or
boll.
Such bacteria may also
cause
s ta p h y lo c o c c a l
pneum onia and other in­
fections.
The infection from one
person to another is usually
spread by personal contact.
That is why washing the
hands after handling an in­
fected person is important.
H exachlorophene will kill
these bacteria. Washing the
hands after handling clothing,
bedding or towels of anyone
who has skin lesions from
staph is also important, th e
clothing and articles should
be all tight after washing and
use of a regular dryer.

WIN A T BRIDGE
NORTH

■12 &gt;3

♦ 102
VAJ10I I J

♦ g J ti
♦ A4
WEST
*643
*7
♦ A9BJ
♦ K8762

EAST

♦ Q9 5
VKQ94
♦ 10 7 4
♦ J 93
SOUTH
* AK J I 7
*52
♦ K52

♦ y 105
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer North
Wen North
East
1*
Pass
Pass 2*
Paw
Pau Pass
Pass

South
1*
3 NT

Opening lead. +6

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
The Ladles Pairs was won
by Carol Sanders of Nash­
ville, Tenn., and Betty Ann
Kennedy of Shreveport, La.
Carol arrive in Biarritz with
her husband Tommy, one of

America's top players, their
six children ana two sons-inlaw Jack Kennedy, also a
life master, and (he Kennedy
children didn’t get to go, but
Jack was in daily touch by
‘telephone.
elephone.
These
das women
e days
v
seem
to like to play no-trump as
well as men and here we see
Carol at three no-trump.
She won the club lead with
her queen over East's jack
and led a heart to dummy's
10 and East's queen.
East returned the nine of
clubs to dummy's ace. The
10 of spades was ted and
covered by Bast's queen.
Carol won and led her last
heart. West discarded a
diam ond. C arol played
dummy's ace and gave up on
hearts. She could only come
to eight tricks even if spades
broke 3-3, but she wanted
nine.
She led dummy’s queen of
diamonds and when West let
it hold, Carol went out for
everything th at wasn’t
nailed down. She led the Jack
of the suit. West took the ace
and led a diamond back. He
was sure that Carol still held
the 10 and three of clubs.
Now Carol scored an overtrick. Making three would
have been a near top, mak­
ing four was a top.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

by Jim Davis
GARFlELP, ..
SEEM TO BE
PREOCCUPIED
WEEK

�vl7

f

Evening H erald , Sanford. FI.

CALENDAR

W ednesday, Jan i j , 1933— 7B

T O N IG H T S T V

W E D N E SD A Y , JAN UARY 12

W TO N TCTW
SanfordT° H 'n

CauH btrry Alcoholics Anonymous,
8 pm
Ascension l-utheran Church, Over brook Drive.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 13
Senior Citizens Tour to Rosie O'Grady’s for evening
show, leave Sanford Civic Center, 4:30 p m .; pick up at
Seminole Plaza, Casselberry at 5 p.m. Return by bus at
11 p.m. Call 322-9148 for reservations.
Longwood Tourist Club dinner, noon, Irongwood
community building, Sunnyshade Park, Wilma and
Warren.
Seminole County Democratic Executive Committee,
7:30 p.m., Seminole County Agri-Center, 4300 S.
Orlando Drive, Sanford.
Rebos and Live Oak Rebos Club AA, 220 Live Oak
Center, Casselberry, noon, closed meeting; 8 p.m.,
open discussion.
Sanford AA, 120f W. First SL, Sanford, 8 p.m., open.
AARP covered dish luncheon and meeting, noon,
Sanford Civic Center.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 14
Sallle Harrison Chapter DAR, 2:30 p.m., 2052 Aldoro
Terrace, Deltona, Speaker - the Rev. Hugh Pain on
"Florida’s Endangered Treasure." Hostesses, Mrs.
W.B. IJttle and Mrs. S.E. Moore.
Re boa and Live Oak Rebos Club AA, noon and 8 p.m.,
dosed, 220 Live Oak Center, Casselberry.
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m., closed, Messiah Lutheran
Church, Highway 17-92 south of Dog Track Road,
Casselberry.

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice it hereby given that I am
I engaged in buiines* at 3511
j Gteaves C t , Apopka, Seminole
I County, Florida under the tic
I tit lout name ol SUCCESSFUL
I V E N TU R E S , and that I intend to
i regitter taid name with Clerk ol
the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provitiont ol the FIc
filiout Name Statutes, To Wit
Section b&amp;S ov Florida Statutes
1957
&amp;ig Barbara Miller
Publish
December 19, 19*2
January 5, 12. 19, 19*3
DEC 131.

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice n hereby given that t am
Engaged in business at 110* So
Myrtle A v e , Sanlord, Florida
32771, Seminole County, Florida
Under the fictitious name ot
G E R A L D S M ITH B A U E R f. AS
SOCIATES, and that I intend to
' register said name with the Clerk
ol the Circuit Court, Seminole
County. Florida in accordance
With the provisions ot the Fic
tltious Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section *45 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Sig Stephen R Smith
Publish January 5. 17. 19, 74. 19*3
D E O 71
NO TICE TO TH E P U B LIC !
Notice is hereby given that 1hef
Board ol Adjustment ol the City ot"
Sanford will hold
a regular
meeting on Jan 7I, 19*3 In the City
Hall at 11 30 A M In order to
consider a request tor a variance
In the Zoning Ordinance as it
pertains to Iron! yard setback
requirements In GC 7 Zoned
District in All that part ol Lot 7. &amp;
theW 70 B tt. ol Lot 9. Blk V, FL
Land A Colonization Co M apotSt
Gertrude Add n to the Town ot
Sanford. PB 1. Pg 111, ol the Public
Record* ot Seminole County, F L ,
tying S and E ol the Oranch,
U E SS Right ol Way tor St Road
Mo J4
■ '.“ r Being
more
specifically
escribed as located at 1120 W
first St
Planned use ol property is Sign
Oltice building
B L, Perkins
Chairman
Board at Adjustment
Publish: Jan. 12, 21. 19*3
JE D 45
.

Legal Notice
NOTICE T O T H E PUBLIC:
Notice is hereby given that the
Board ot Adjustment ot the City ot
Sanlord will hold a regular
meeting on Jan 28, 1983 In the City
Mall al 11 30 A M
In order to
consider a request lor a variance
in the Zoninq Ordinance as it
pertains to front yard setback
requirement! in RC 1 zoned
district inLot 1, ItessS. 15111. ot E,
144 It I Rosalind Heights. PB 1, Pg
47
Being more specifically as
located at 7990 S. Sanford Ave
Planned use ol the properly
Sell service gasoline pumps and
canopy
B L. Perkins
Chairman
Board ot Adjustment
Publish January 12, 21, 19*3
DED12

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO *2 2094 CA 09 P
ED MILL and C A R O LY N HILL,
his wile,
Plaintiffs,
vs
M A R G A R E T W H A R T O N , Per
sonal Representative ot the Estate
ol BERT GRASSO, Deceased.
Defendant

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE
NOT ICE is hereby given that the
undersigned. Arthur H Beckwith,
Jr . Clerk ot the Circuit Court ol
Seminole County, Florida, will on
the 7*th day ol January, 19»J,
between It a m and 2 p m at the
West, tront door ot the Sanlord
County Courthouse, Seminole,
Florida, otter lor sale and sell at
public outcry to the highest and
best bidder tor cash, the following
described property situate in
Seminole County, Florida
Lot 4, Block M, SUM M ER SET
NORTH, S E C TIO N 2. according to
the plat thereof, as recorded in
Plat Book IS, Pages 3* and 39
pursuant to the Final Judgment
entered in a case pending in said
Court, the style ot which is in
dicated above
WITNESS my hand and ollicial
seal of said Court this 3rd day ol
January, 19*1
(SEAL)
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.,
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By Carrie E. Buetlner
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 5, 12, 1913
DED77

Wednesday

Special

llllllPS
*ll|&gt;|M‘d

T r y Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!

$

m

cable Cfi

8 P'm ' ,0pCn1, 1201 W' First a -

2.09

3 pieces ol golden brown Famous Recipe
Chicken mashed potatoes and gravy
[creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits I
Fried

EVENING

6:00
0 4 J Q 1 O NEWS
M (35) CHARLIE S ANQELS
ID (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

6:05
12 (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
O 4 NBC NEWS
5 O CBS NEWS
’ O ABC NEWS CJ
(D (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

6:35

© (35)

® o

(CBS) Orlando

©

Independent
Atlanta. Ga

®

(NBC) Daytona Beach
Orlando

(17)

. (10) &amp;

Orlando Public
Broadcaiting Syttem

'4 05

10:00

500
O
4 LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY *
COMPANY
5 O THREE S COMPANY
7 O ALL IN THE FAMILY
11 (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS |R)

505
12 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH |MONWED. FRI)
12 (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
(THU)

3:00

11:00

O
5
7
H

4 FANTASY
O GUIOtNO LIGHT
a GENtRAL HOSPITAL
(35)CASPER
CD(10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
CD(t0) ENTERPRISE (WED)
CD(10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

Q

4. WHFEL OF FORT1INF
5 O t h e p r ic e is r ig h t ' ' "
7 O LOVE BOAT (R)
11 (35) 35 LIVE
CD(10) OVER EASY

11:05

5:30
0 J PEOPLE S COURT
5 O M 'A 'S 'H
7 ONEW S
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

3:05

12 (17) PERRY MASON

7:35

4:35
12 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

2:30

10:30

7:30

4 30
11 (35) SCOOBY DOO

1 5 o CAPITOL
CD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
CD (10| MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

O J SALE OF THE CENTURY
J O CHILD S PLAY
11 (35) DORIS OAY
CD(10) POWERHOUSE

O 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
1 O TIC TAC DOUGH
7 O FAMILY FEUD
It (35)BARNEY MILLER
ED (10) UNTAMED WORLD

12 (17) THE MUNSTERS

0 4 ANOTHER WORLD
’ O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
CD (101 RIGHT FROM THE START
(TUE)
CD(10) THAT DELICATE BALANCE
(THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

Q 4 THc FACTS OF LIFE (R)
S O MARY TYLER MOORE
II (35)ANDY GRIFFITH
CD( 'Ol ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

Mey, t&gt;0N'T Worry. CARLYLe!
TWiN£6 m
6UPP0&amp;ei&gt; To
60 a w iN lH e NiCiUT
m
6Tmas e v e.

7:05

12 (17) FUNTIME

11:30

12 (IT) ANDY GRIFFITH

Q 4 HITMAN
11 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD HO) POSTSCRIPTS (MON.
WED-FRI)
CD (10) POSTCRIPTS (TUE)

8:00
O 4 REAL PEOPLE Featured a
convention ol college cheerleaders
Americas Womens Alpine Ski
Team, a centerfold photography
session for Playboar magazine. a
profile of a narcotics agent
5 O SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN
BROTHERS
7 O TALES OF THE OOLO MON­
KEY
ill (35) THE LIFE AND ADVEN­
TURES OF NICHOLAS NtCKELBY
(PART 3)
ED (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL Ram Forest" An eiploration ot the rich variety ol plant
and animal Me in the ram forests ol
Costa Rica is presented

traces the events mat led lo the
birth ot Hitler i tenor stale through
eyewitness accounts trom survi­
vors

8:05

9:30

IN T H E C O U N T Y COURT. IN
ANO FO R S E M IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO R ID A
Civil Action No (1 351* 5P 10
C A T H E R IN E W ILLIAM S, lor the
use and benefit ol U N IT E D
STA TE S F ID E L IT Y A GUARAN
TY C O M P A N Y , a foreign cor
poration authorized lo and doing
business in the State ol Florida,
Plaintiffs
vs
RAY F JO Y N E S , an individual,
Defendant
N O T IC E OF ACTION
TO
RAY F JO Y N E S
P O BOk *73
Oviedo, Florida 12745
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D that a Complaint lor
damages arising out ot a motor
vehicle accident'that occurred on
February 7, 1917, has been tiled
against you, and
Y O U A R E R E Q U IR E D T O
APPEAR before The Honorable
Harold F. Johnson, a Judge ot this
Court, at 9.00 AM , February 7,
19*3 in Courtroom “ D " Anne«, at
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida lo answer the
statement ul claim tiled herein.
Any written answer or other
pleadings must be tiled with the
Clerk of this Court and copies
ihertol lurmshed to the above
named plaintiff, whose address Is
Catherine Williams USF&amp;G c o
Chiton H. Robertson, Esquire,
P O. D ra w er 3**7, Longwood,
Florida 32750.
Upon your (allure to appear on
the above indicated dale, a default
may be entered against you lor I he
relief demanded In the statement
ot claim.
W ITN ESS M Y HAND and the
Official Seal ol this Court In
Sanford,
Seminole
County,
Florida. Ihls 77th day ol Decern
ber. 19*2
(S E A L )
Clerk of the County Court
By: Elizabeth KlStinger
Deputy Clerk
Publish
December 29, 1117.
January 5, 12. t«. 1913
DEC 133

1:30

O 4 SO YOU THINK YOU OOT
TROUBLES
II (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

12 (IT)Q OM ER PYLE

Legol Notice

12 (IT) MOVIE

9:30

by Larry Wrighl

7:00

O 4 THE FACTS OF LIFE Blsu
tries to be everything her new boy.
friend wants her to be Q
5 O MOVIE An Invasion Ol Pri­
vacy ' (Premiere) Valerie Harper.
Clitl DeYoung A divorcee tights a
lonely battle to bring the man who
raped her to court, despite the sup­
port he en|Oys trom a sympathetic
community
7 o THE FAIL OUY A posse
made up ol Roy Rogers, James
Drury. Doug McClure. Pal Bultram
and Jack Kelly set out lo rescue
Coll when he is taken prisoner by a
gang ot car thieves
ED (10) HITLER S NIGHT OF THE
HUMMING BIRO Sir Hugh Greene,
lormer Director General ot the BBC,

4:00
€ ) 4 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
5 O HOUR MAGAZINE
7 Q MERV ORlFFIN
11 (35) TOM AND JERRY
CD (10) SESAME STREET Q

2:00
K IT ‘N ’ C A R L Y L E ,M

0 4 THEMUPPETS
S O P M MAGAZINE How some
Minnesotans got a free trip to Meiico by wearing swimsuits and sing­
ing original songs about Teias or
Meuco; a mom-and-pop brewery In
Sacramento
17 O JOKER'S WILD
11 (3S) THE JEFFERSONS
ED (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

0:00

335
12 (IT)THEFLINTSTONES

5 O AS THE WORLO TURNS
CD(10) THIS OLO HOUSE (FRI)

12 (171 BOB NEWHART

i|J (IT ) MOVIE ‘ The Revengers '
(197J| William Holden. Ernest Borgnine A Colorado rancher hires sn
prisoners trom a chain gang to help
him find the gang that massacred
his family and destroyed his home

3:30
"
(35) BUOS BUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

1:05

in addition lo the channel* lilted, cabievmon tubtcribert may tune in to mdependant channel 44,
SI. Petertburg. by tuning lo channel 1; tuning tg channel 1). which carnet ipgrtt ardth* Chriitian
Broad calling Network (CBN).

l

6:30

CZ) O

(ABC) Orlando

Independent
Orlando

O

7 O A l l MY CHILDREN
11 (35) MOVIE
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
CD(10| SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
CD (10) FLORIOA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

Cable Ch

•

FREE
Oo^si**
P NCi-if n

AFTERNOON

12.00

3:00
Q

4 ROMANCE THEATRE

3:30

MORNING

5:30

0

O 4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
12 (17) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

ENLARGEMENT SPECIAL!

5:50

11:30
* TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Belle Davis
George Carlin
S O MORE REAL PEOPLE
17 Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
11 (35) THE ROCKFORD FILE8

CBS EARLY MORNING

12:00

Megathre

Q 14 1 LATE NIGHT WITH OAVID
LETTERMAN
ll) (35) NEWS

7:00
11 (35) NEWS

7:35
;12 (17) I DREAM O f JEANNtE

8:00

Oh (35)GREAT SPACE COASTER
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

KODAK PAPER
10x15 O N L Y 35 M M

4 RiCHARO SIMMONS
O DONAHUE

GROMOV*

Leg Quarters

CO O K IN ' G O O D

\ '

Chicken
Wing*
CHICKEN
•A CIS

*

01 (3S| LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD (10| SESAME STREET Q

9:05
01 (IT ) MOVIE_______________

REVIVAL
Sanford
Church of God
Jen. 9-14 • 7:00 P.M.
Sunday ■10:45 4 6:00 P.M.
Mod 4 Holly Avo.

58'

'j
s £ &gt; -

/j
-

FRYERS
Chicken

’ r

Tvrtrr

*1 °°

k .

Shoulder Picnics

.... «C&gt;

Pork Chops
Spare Ribs
U .l D A. Chair*
*169

49
lb

113 9
■

Steak*

lb.

» 1 ".

USOA.

Dal Manila

31

Steak*

89*

1
Churk

Check Roes!

P o rk
. . . .Nock
S o n ee" ft*' M a w i'k A a '

Hog Jowls

wings

G ra d e A A sso rte d

99!

Lyktt imeked IheuMer

4 9

■ 4&lt;C i»

Legs

Chitterlings 10 im- $ 6 "
U l D A Ctierce Meal,
Ox Tail
M 1?
Beef Liver
69!
Plfli
fe e t*

lb
C

.V

GRADE A

69«

5

^ o o k ir ^ o e d ^ *

Pork

9:00
Q
iJ

U ' i Select * 3 " Stand SJW

a

8:30

&lt;11 (17) THAT GIRL

ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
CBS NEWS NKJHTWATCH
(? ) o
MOVIE "The E.plosiv#
Generation " (1941) Pally McCor­
mack, William Shalnar

Oysters

01 (17) MY THREE SONS

8 35

2:30

5.97
4.99
7.99
1.99
9.99

SN
DN
SN
DN

CD(10)AM. WEATHER

8:05

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

1
3
2
3
3

EXPIRES FEBRUARY 15, 1983

1:00

1:30

SN
DN
SN
DN

10 X IS

s.m
4.99
3.99
4.99
7.99

7:15

&amp; ) O MOVIE "Them" (1954|
James Whitmore. Edmund Gwenn

1:10

I
2
2
}
3

OVERNITE ScHVICE
DISC. ONLY* 3x7

CD (10) TO UFEI

lit (25) FRED FUNT8TONE AND
FRIENDS

1 J) O MOVIE "Shame. Shame On
The Blsby Boys" (1979) Monte
Markham. Don "Red" Barry

* ON- OlHwarrt Maiaiiv*

.1 X 10

J.99
3.99
4.99
5.99
5.99

Q U iT O O A Y
51O MORNING NEWS
7 O OOOO MORNING AMERICA

ill (35) WOODY WOODPECKER
CD (10) SESAME 8TREET CJ

12:30

3 3 9 -6 6 6 1

-X I

SN

7:30

, 5 O HART TO MART
&lt; 7 ) 0 THE LAST WORD

H 2 4 HWY. 17 92
NEXT TO ALBERTSON'S

COLOR ENLARGEMENTS

0 l4 CARLY TODAY
'J ' o
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
C7J O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

12 (17) FUNTIME

112 (17) MOVIE "The Big Kmle '
( IS55) Jack Palance. Ida Lupino

LONGW OOD LAKE
SHOPPING C E N TE R

6:00

7:05

11:50

PHOTO, INC.

O 4 NEWS (MON)

7 i o NEWS
O H IO ) AM . WEATHER

a

N u rto ry Provided

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

6:45

11:20

DAN CAL LAHAN

1:00
4 DAYS OF OUR UVFR

6:30

111 (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

O d
(!) O

7017 F R E N C H A V E
SANFORD

12 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE,
WED)

10:30
11:00

0 (4

DR T H O M A S Y A N D E L L
C h irop ra ctic Phyxictan

5:45

(7 0 SUNRISE
11 (35) JIM BARKER
&lt;11 (17| NEWS

O i4 )itlO iH O N IW *
(It (34)SOAP
ED (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

a*miff * i

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

Q &lt; 4 NEWS
15 O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
7 O RYAN 8 HOPE
CD (10) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T DIE (WED)

12(17) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

iS O
NEWS

ill (35)MADAME'S PLACE

OFFICER
AND A
G ENTLEM AN
AJV

* *•a4 ’ 14*•W ,?•** ' i'

*

12 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

10:20
it) (17) NEWS

PLAZA I J ’ « °**-y

I Neck Pa»n or
Stiffno••
7 Atm «nd SffouW#»
Pam

12:05

0

5:40

ALL SCATS

* Nomoutn*»•

12:30

10:00

TW TO -

y 17*1 WZ7W7 g g c

4 Numbnotl in Nifid*
or f oor

12 f TJ PEOPLE NOW

Q
4 FAMILY TIES One ot the
most popular girts in school uses
Mallory lo gel close lo Alei
4 QUINCY Quincy looks into
his own chief fire investigator s 30year record when it appears that he
bungted an inquiry
(?) O
DYNASTY Sammy Jo
returns lo Denver, and Mark Jenn­
ings takes advantage ol Aleila's
heartbroken stale over Steven y
ill (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ffi (10) SOUNDSTAGE Country
music star Romni® Miimp performs
"Sm okny
Mountain Rain.*'
Cowboys And Clown*/' "I’m A
Stand By My Woman Man ‘ and
other hit*

4 SOAP WORLD
S O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
7 ONEW S
' 1 (35) BIG VALLEY
CD (10) MANATEES THE VANISHING FLORIDIANS (WED)
CD (10) NOVA (THU)
CD (10) NATIONAL QEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL (FRI)

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

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) Ouiinon or Lott o»

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Hamburger

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Dvltk HaHand

Hartlifa

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J O W lS Bon,ln

Cookin' G ood

FRESH
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C0HC0W.

Ducks

Groom»*’ s 159

*-7 lb. Avg.

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49
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$ l■ lb*.
29

Martho White Bleckeye Pees 15c
Bruce's Yems n «* « « ,
7»c
T.O. Lee Fruit Punch |al. *l.o»
Martho WMe Seff-tkik^ PW S - W
CoeMry Mwgwhw N ttk i
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3/69*
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Celery
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HERITAGE

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Paper Towel* ‘“T

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Old Milwaukee Bear M
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Parti

Potatoes

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Detergent ........................... $1.29

*1"

YouMakeUs Famous!
Open 10: JO a.m.-M p -m Except F r i ft Sat.

SANFORD
I90J Fftnch Av* (Hwy. 17-91)
OT- MM

lOtJOpim.

CASSELBERRY
41N. Hwy. t l M
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9000 STAMPS WELCOME

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GOODTHRU
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�8&amp; -E v tn in g H e ra ld . Sanford, FI.

W ednesday, Jan.

11,1111

legal Notice
LEASE recorded in Official
Records Book 1006, page 1471,
AM ENOM ENT
TO LEASE
recorded in Official Records Book
1031.page 1130. and FIN ANCING
S T A T E M E N T recorded in Official
Records Book 1113, page 900 in
lavorot TH E G R E A T A TLA N TIC
1. PACIFIC T E A COMPANY,
INC , a Maryland Corporation
and
LEASE recorded in Official
Records Book 1008, page 143: and
LEASE M O D IF IC A T IO N record
ed In Official Records Book 1031.
page 1135 held by SUPER X
DRUGS, now known as SUPER X
DRUGS OF F L O R ID A , INC. a
Florida Corporation, by merger:
and
M O R TG AG E
recorded in Of
ticlal Records Book 1397, page 154
inlavor ol B E N IT A S T E IN , and
LEASE recorded in Official
Records Book 1014, page 171 and
ASSIGNM ENT A ASSUMPTION
OF LE A S E recorded In Official
Records Book 1305, page 1107 held
by JE F F E R S O N STO RES. IN C . a
Delaware Corporation

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
FLORIDA IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF SEM INOLE
CIVIL ACTION NO: U ll-C A OJ L
D IV IS IO N OF AO
M IN IS T R A T IO N . S T A T E OF
F L O R ID A D E P A R T M E N T O F
TRANSPO RTATIO N,
Petilioner.
«
SEARS. ROEBUCK A. CO . el *1..
Defendant*

NOTICE OF HEAR IN O
TO SHOW CAUSE
ANO .
NOTICE OF SUIT
S TA TE OF F L O R ID A TO
Cordon E . E m erson, J r , at
Trustee
3 Faneull Hall Market Plate
Boston, Massachusetts 03109
PARCEL NO. 117
Antony E
M onk. General
Partner
Barnitienema Properties I,
In c , a Limited Partnership
MS Park Avenue, 73rd Floor
New York, New York TOOK
PARCEL No 106
E Robert Roskind. General
Partner
Barnitlenema Properties I.
Inc., a Limited Partnership
MS Park Avenue, 73rd Floor
New York, New York 10073
PARCEL No 106
Philip H, Shears, as Trustee
3000 Two Notch Road
Columbia, South Carolina 7?703
PARCEL No 117
Untied States Trust Company ol
New York
SERVE
Danny
Davison,
President
75 Wall Street
New York, New York 10005
PARCEL No 117
To ail said defendants who are
living, and il any or all defendants
are deceased, (he unknown spouse,
heirs,
devisees,
grantees,
creditors, lienors, or other parlies
claiming by, through, under, or
against any such deceased
defendant or defendants, if alive,
and, il dead, Iheir unknown
spouse, heirs, devisees, legatees,
grantees, creditors, lienors, or
other parlies claim ing by,
through, under, or against any
such deceased defendant or
defendants, and all other parlies
having or claiming to have any
right, title, or Interest In and to the
property described In the Petition,
towlt:

SECTION 77011-3564 S TA TE
ROAD 436
SEMINOLE
‘C O U N T Y
DESCRIPTION
FEE SIMPLE -R IO H T OF WAY
PARCEL NO. 117
Thai part of.
The W 11 of the NW
of the SE
&lt;&lt; of Section 14,
Township 71
South. Range 39 East lying South
of Slate Road 436 and Wes) ol the
existing 10 loot right of way of
North Lake Boulevard
described as follows
Commence on ihe West line of
theNE U of Section 14. Township
71 South. Range 79 East ol a point
35 64 leet North 00 degrees M ‘ 19"
West along said line from the
Southwest corner of said NE '/«,
and running thence South 19
degrees 57' 46" East. 461 80 feel lo
the beginning of a curve concave
to the Northerly and having a
radius of 3 164 93 leet: thence
along said curve through a central
angle ol 00 degrees 07' 11" a
distance ol 114 leet to a point on
said curve having a tangent
bearing of South 19 degrees 54’ 51"
East; thence South 00 degrees 07‘
14" West a distance of 100.30 teet to
a point on the existing Southerly
right ol way line of State Road 436,
said point being Ihe beginning ol a
curve concave to the Northerly
and having a radius of 3964.93 leet;
thence Irom a tangent bearing ol
South 19 degrees S3' 46" East, run
along said curve through a central
angle ol 03 degrees 03' 36" a
distance ot 106 45 leet lo Ihe
POINT OF B E G IN N IN G , being a
point on said curve, having a
tangent bearing ot North 11
degrees03' 41“ East; thence South
00 degrees 35‘ 01" East a distance
of 794.74 leet, thence North 19
degrees 74' 57" East a distance of
3 53 teel. Ihence North 00 degrees
33' 50" West 794 It leet to Ihe point
of intersection ol Ihe W M I existing
right of way line of North Lake
Boulevard and the South existing
right ot way line of Stale Road 436,
said point being the beginning ol a
curve concave lo the Northerly
and having a radius ol 1964.91 feet;
thence Irom a tangent bearing ot
South 11 degrees 00' 45" West, run
Westerly 4long the arc of said
curve ■ distance of 1 U
leet
through a central angle ol 00
degrees 03’ 01" lo Ihe Point of
Beginning.
Containing 7M square feet, more
or leu

PERPETUAL STORM SEWER
EASEM ENT
PARCEL NO. M6
STORM SEW ER EASEM EN T
left (North) Station 1403too 17
(Part)
Thai Pari ol:
The NE ',4 ot Section 14,
Township 71 »oulh. Rangel? East,
Seminole County, Florida,
described as follows:
Commence on the West line of
Ihe S E o 4 Ihe N E ' . of Section 14,
Township 31 South, Range 79 Easl,
at a poinl 1161 06 leet South M
degrees 33' 04" East ot the Nor
thwesl corner thereof, said point
being on a curve concave lo Ihe
Northerly and having a radius ol
7164 91 teet (chordl; thence, from
a tangent bearing of Norlh 73
degrees 57'31" Easl, run Easterly
along the arc of said curve through
a central angle ot 17 degrees 36'
44" a distance ol 630 61 feet to a
point on said curve, having a
tangent bearing ot
North 60
degrees 30' S4" Easl; Ihence North
00 degrees 47' 33" West a distance
of 914 01 leet lo Ihe POINT OF
B E G IN N IN G ; Ihence continue
North 00 degrees 47' 33" West a
distance ol 55 teel; thence South 19
degrees 45' 41" West a distance ol
111 55 leet; Ihence North 00
degrees 14' 17" West a distance ol
10leel; thence South 19 degrees 45‘
41" Wesl a distance ot 15 41 leet;
ihence South 00 degrees I4‘ IT '
East a distance ol 65 leel; Ihence
North 1? degrees 45' 41" East a
distance
ol 35 48 teet, thence
North 00 degrees 14' 13" Wesl a
distance of 35 leet; thence North
19 degrees 45’ 41" East a distance
ot 1351 leet; thence South 00
degrees 47' 31" Easl a distance ol
35teet; thence North 19 degrees45'
41 ‘ East a distance of 40 leel lo Ihe
Point of BeginningContaining 0 31$ acre, more or
lest
OWNED BY
A L TA M O N TE ,
INC . A K A A L T A M O N T E M ALL,
INC., a Florida Corporation, and
HOMART D E V E L O P M E N T CO,
A K A HOM AHI
D EVELO P
M ENT C O M P A N Y , an Illinois
Corporation
S U B JE C T
TO:
LEASE
recorded In Official Records Book
1051. page 1497 and ASSIGNMENT
A B ILL OF SALE recorded In
Official Records Book 1134, page
701 In favor ot DARNSCINEMA
PR O PER TIES I. INC . a New
Jersey Limited Partnership; and
NO TICE OF L E A S E recorded In
Otlidal Records Book 1174. page
713 In
favor o! G EN E R A L
CINEMA CO R P O R ATIO N ,
a
Delaware Corporation, and
M O R TG A G E recorded In Ol
lldal Recordt Book 1114, page 719;
ASSIGNM ENT OF LE A S E AND
RENTS
recorded in Official
Records Book 1114, page 765; 6nd
F IN A N C IN G
S TA TEM EN T
recorded In Official Recordt Book
1134, page 776 In lavor ol JEF
FER SO N
S T A N D A R D L IF E
INSURANCE C O M P A N Y ; and
U T IL IT Y E A S E M E N T recorded
In Ollldal Records Book 1051, page
306 In tavorof F L O R ID A POWER
C O R P O R A T IO N ,
a Florida
Corporation

OWNED B Y : ED W ARD A.
STERN, as Trustee of Ihe Milton
Stein Family Trust under the Will
ol Milton Stein, deceased
SUBJECT TO . M O R TG A G E
recorded In Official Recordt Book
1006. peg* T; A G R EEM EN TS
recorded In Official Records Book
tOM, page t il l and Official
Records Book toil, page 1119;
MORTGAGE recorded in Official
Records Book 1010, page 1795;
ASSIGNMENT OF R EN TS
recorded In Official Records Book
1010.
page
1104;
CON
SOLIOATION, M ODIFICATION
end EXTENSION A G R EEM EN T
recorded In Official Recordt Book
1011, page 1101; SUBORDIN
ATION A G R EEM EN TS TO FEE
LOAN recorded in Official
Records Book 1031. page 1151,
Official Records Book KM. page
1144 and Official Records
10H. page 1131; ASSIGNMENT
OF LEASES recorded in Official
Records Book K M . page 1111; and
ASSIGNMENT O F MORTGAOE
recorded in Official Recordt Book
1030, page 1157 In favor of JOHN
HANCOCK M U TU A L LIFE IN
5URANCE CO M PAN Y; and
LEA SEH O LD
M O R TG A G E
recorded in Official Recordt Book
1043, page904; ASSIGNM ENT OF
LEASES ANO RENTS recorded in
Official Records Book 1041, page
909; FINANCING STATEM EN TS
recorded In Official Records Book
1041, page9H end Official Recordt
Bock 1077, page ISIS In fevor of
GORDON E. EMERSON, JR.,
Nominee of the Trustees of CaboI,
Cabot A Forbes Land Trusi under
Declarallon of Trust dated
January J1, 1971. now known as
BAY CO LO N Y
P R O P E R TY
COMPANY, INC.,, a Delaware
Corporation; end
SECOND
M O R TG A G E
recorded In Official Records Book
1 1 1 ], page I7 U ; ASSIGNMENT
OF M O R T G A G E recorded In
Official Record! Book 1141. page
1401 in favor of PHILIP H.
SHEARS, as Successor Trustee of
Clayton Family Trusts, deled
January 1, 1960. and

'* V

Legal Notice
3/, O llld a l Records
Booh 747,
page S17, and Official Records
Book Ills , page 1353 inlavor of ihe
C IT Y
OF
A LTA M O N TE
SPRINGS, and
EASEM ENT
recorded In Ol
fidal Records Book 103, page 344
in lavor ot F LO R ID A POWER
CO R PO R ATIO N
You are each refilled that Ihe
Petitioner tiled Its sworn Petition
and its Declaration ol Taking In
this Court against you as delen
dants. seeking lo condemn by
eminent domain proceedings Ihe
above described properly located
In the Slate ol Florida, County ol
Seminole.
You are further notified that the
Petitioner will call up lor hearing
before Ihe Honorable S Joseph
Davis, J r. one of the Judges of this
Court on the 31th day ol February
A D . 1913. at 1 30 o'clock P M , In
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord. Room 770 Florida, lit
application lor an Order ol Taking
All parties to this suit and all other
interested parties may appear at
the time and place designated and
be heard.

AND
Each delendanl Is hereby
rrquired to serve written defenses,
il any, lo said Petition on:
D E P A R T M E N T OF TRANS
P O R TA TIO N
Post Otllce Box 47
DeLand. Florida 33730
C o Charles S. Stratton,
District Five Attorney
1904) 734 7171

AND
STATE O F F L O R ID A DEPART
M EN T O F TRAN SPO R TATIO N
Office ot Legal Operations
Mail Station 74
Haydon Burns Building
Tallahassee, Florida 33301
1904) 411 7411
on or before Ihe 14th day of
February. A .D ., 1991, and file the
original with Ihe Clerk ot this
Court on that dale, to show cause
whal right, title. Interest, or lien
you or any of you have in and to Ihe
properly described In Ihe Petition
and lo show cause, If any you
have, why the properly should not
be condemned for Ihe uses and
purposes set forth In Ihe Petition
If you tail to do so, a default may
be entered against you lor the
relief demanded In the Petition.
W IT N E S S M Y H AND AND
SEAL of said Court on the lOlhday
ol January, A .D ., 1913
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
BY Patricia Robinson
Deputy Clerk
(S E A L I
Publish: Jan. 17, 1913

CED.S4____ __________________

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
SE M IN O LE C O U N T Y , FLORIDA
CASE H O .: 111145 CA Ot E
S E C U R IT Y F IR S T F E D E R A L
S A V IN G S
AND
LOAN
A SSO C IATIO N , a United Slates ol
America Corporation.
Plaintiff.
vs
CAL W P IP E R , CAL CLARK
P IP E R . SR
and S H IR L E Y
DIANE P IP E R , his wile, et el
Defendants
N O T IC E OF ACTION
TO
CAL W. P IP ER
c o P O Box UOt
Hialeah. Florida 3X17
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D that an action to
toreclose a mortgage on the
following property in Seminole
County, Florida
Lot
14
L IT T L E
LA K E
G EO R G IA T E R R A C E , according
to the Plat thereof, as recorded In
Plat Book tl, Page 49, Public
Records ot Seminole County,
Florida
and has been tiled against CAL W
P IP ER . C AL CLARK PIPER SR
and S H IR L E Y D IA N E PIPER, his
wile. B A R C L A Y S A M E R IC A N
M O R T G A G E INC , a corporation
qualilled to do business In Florida,
BANK OF C E N T R A L FLORIDA,
a Florida Banking Corporation,
N A T IO N A L ASSOCIATION OF
C R E D IT
M A N A G EM EN T.
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A . U N IT ,
INC , a Florida Corporation as
Trustee lor G R E A T S O U TH
S U P P LY . C O . INC., a Florida
Corporation, SUN BANK. N A , t
P E R P ETUA L STORM SEWER
ka SUN BANK OF ■SEMINOLE.
EA SEM EN T
N A „ a national banking cor
P A R C E L N O .il]
poratlon. LO W E 'S OF FLO RIDA.
Storm Sewer Easement tell INC., a Florida corporation d b a
(North) Station 1403 + 00 13 (Part) LO W E'S OF M AITLAN D a k a
That part of:
L O W E 'S .
and
V IR G IL
8.
A parcel of land situated In Ihe N B R O T H E R S . IN C ., a Florida
Vt ot Ihe NE 54 of Section 14, Corporation, and you are required
Township 11 South, Range7? East, tq serve a copy of your written
Seminole County, Florida and delenses, IIa n y ,lo IIo n L PHARR
further described at follows:
A B N E R , Ot TU R N B U L L. ABNER
Commencing if the SE comer of AND D A N IE L S . Attorneys tor
the NE 54 of the NE 5+ of Section Plaintiff, whose address it 147
14, Township I I South, Range 11 West Lym an Avenue Post Otllce
,Eatl; Ihence N 19 degrees 3I‘ 57" Box 100. Winter Park, Florida
W ■ distance ot ll4 i.it f«et to the 31790, on or before January 74,
Irua point ol beginning of the 1913, and file the original with the
following description; Ihence N 00 Clerk ot this Court lither before
degrees 31’ 03" E a distance of service on plalnllll'l attorney or
110.41 feet lo a point. Ihence S 41 im m ediately therealter; other
degrees 34' 31" W a distance ol wise a default will be entered
1110 X feet lo a point; Ihence S If against you lor the relief
degrees 31' ST" E a distance ot demanded In the complaint or
751.71 feel fo the true point ol petition.
beginning.
W ITN E S S my hand and Ihe seal
lying within the following of said Court on Dec X , 1913.
described boundaries:
A R T H U R H BECKWITH JR.
Begin et the Soulhwetl corner ol
Clerk of Ihe Circuit Court
Eve Crabtree
the NE
of Ihe NE &gt;. INorthwesl
Deputy Clerk
corner of the SE 54 ol Ihe NE '*1 ol
Section 14, Township 31 South, (S E A L )
Range 79 East; thence run South Publish December 33, 39 1913 4,
It degrees S1‘ 30" Wesl a d,stance January 5, Yl, 1913
ol S71.I7 feet; thence Norlh 00 DEC 111
degrees 04’ 40“ West 4 distance of

FICTITIO U S NAME
».07feet; Ihence South I t degrees
Nolle* ft hereby given that I am
44' 14" West e distance or 30 74
engaged In business 11 2740
leet; Ihence North 01 degrees
Orlando Drive. Senford, Seminole
34" East • distance of 4011 feet;
County, Florida under the ticthence Norlh If degrees SI' 30"
titious name of THE PEOPLE'S
East a distance of 113.31 leet; AUTO EXCHANGE, INC., *
ttwnce South 00 degrees 04’ 40" that I Intend to register said name
Easl a distance'of 7007 feet; with the C ter k ol the Circuit Court,
Ihence Norlh It degrees SP 30" Seminole County, Florida In ac
East a distance of 300 foot; thence cordanc* wills the provision* of the
North M degrees « ’ 23" East a Fictitious Nam* Slalutea. To-Wit:
distance ol 4SS.ll feet; thence Section 145 Of Florida Statutes
South 00 degrees 14' 11" Easl a
1157.
distance of 41 feet; thence South If
Sig. Diana L. Jarrell
degrees 45' 41" West a distance ot Publish: December 29, 1912.
144.27 leet to Ihe Point ol Bogin January S. 12, 19, 1913
n(ng.
DEC 132_______________________
Containing 0 132 ecro, more or
NOTICK OF SALE
lets.
Pursuant lo Chapter 477.210 ot
OW NED
BY:
TOP
ASSOCIATES, LTO ., a Florida the Uniform Commercial Code:
Limited Partnership; MICHAEL Document* ol Title: A .J .
TRANSFER
A
FELDM AN, SID FELDMAN end LOSSINO
ROBERT FELO M AN as General STORAGE, INC.. X7S. Pin* Avt.
Sanford. Fla 12771 will Mil at
Partners
Public Auction on January isih,
SUBJECT TO: MORTGAGES
recorded in Official Records Book 11«3. at 10:00 am . the toitowing
loft ot Household Good*.
I42S. page 577 end Official
ACCOUNTS: ROBERT BAR
Records Book 1425, page 442;
CLA Y. W ILLIAM SIMS. JR.
A SSIG N M EN T OF LEASES
recorded in Official Records Booh
T H E L O TS CONSIST O F :
142$, page 441; and ASSIGNMENT Bicycle*. Refrtg, Living A Dining
OF L E A S E S A N D RENTS
Room Furniture, Stereo Equip.,
recorded in Official Recurds Book T .V .,
Bedroom
Furniture,
1435. page 475 In lavor of UNITED
Clspekt. A Carton* of Mite. Hem*.
STATES TRUST COMPANY OF
W AREHOUSE SALE I IS S3 at
NEW YO R K ; and
10.00 a.m.
E A S E M E N TS
recorded In Publith: Jan. 1 12, I9S3
Official Records Booh 1110, page D EO 19

C LA SSIFIED A D S
Seminole

Orlando * W inter Park

322-2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

831-9993
RATES

Mime
54c a line
3 consecutive times 54c a line
7 consecutive times 4tc a line
10 consecutive times 42c a line
52.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

D E A D L IN E S
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M onday-5:30P.M. Friday

6—Child Cane
W IL L babysit in my home Full
or part time Hour or weekly.
Judy 321 3094
W IL L babysit in my home.
Experienced mother, tree
meals Ref. given 122 9391
W IL L keep children in my home
S25 per week
321 3913

CAN Y O U TR A V E L?? ??
Openings for men and women at
least 1|, prefer single to travel
entire
U 54
Irandom
itinerary coast to coast)
representing young business
group No exp necessary
Expenses advanced it ac
cepipd, all transportation
provided at no cost to In
dependent contractor Must be
willing to learn eager lo work
and free to start immcd atety
No phone calls See Mrs
Danysh Thurs. 9 30 1 at the
Days Inn, I 4 8. St Rd 46.
Sanford

v*.

Carpet Cleaning

A llO R lQ A

ORANCfjUICt
Q H E A K

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

PHARMACEUTICAL*
20K 7 Years experience, working
with
pharmacies
Ex
pharmacist would be perfect
Seminole. Volusia county area,
car provided, plus expenses
paid, excellent benefits," may
pay tee Interviewing in Sanford
Ottlce on F rid a y
Call Im ­
mediately lor interview
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave.
333 5174

O0O

IN O U R R G tfT
A G A IN S T

BIRTH
DEFECTS

* * ! * * *

+

* * *

ti

• TRIPLE A*
Price special. 114,95 tor
Family or Living Rm. 147-2740.

S LIM
B U D G ETS
ARE
B O L S T E R E D W ITH VALUES
FROM
TH E
W A N T AD
COLUM NS
SALESM AN
Used Car Lot
Finance exp preferred Ex
cellent opportunity lor right
person Eves 171 4075 337 7191

GENERAL
O FFIC E ...........U 3 5 H r.

U N C L U T T E R YOUR CLOSET
Sell those things that are just
taking up space with a want ad
In Ihe Herald 322 3611 or li t
9993
Alert intelligent Individual to
look after amusement center
m Sanford Pla;a Must have
mechanical
ability,
be
dependable, and bondable
Part time 53 75 Hr Call tor
Appf 371 4903
N E E D money? Sell Avon In
Sanford. Washington Oaks,
Midway and Geneva, 377 5910
N E E D extra Money?
Why not sell AVON)
137 041?
P A R T T IM E Men Women Work
trom home Phone Program
E a rn S2SSIOO per week
Flexible Mrs. Call 894 3X4 or
969 0916.

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Ceiling Fan Installation
CEILIN G FAN IN S T A L L A ttO N
Quality Work
We Dq Most Anything
495 9378
677 4781

MfcINTZEH T I L E E «P
tt*3 New A old wofi* comm A
rtiid Freer estimate 169 1562

w'C

P A IN T IN G and f*pj» r p.P o and
screen p ort* built
Call
anyt+me 12? §401

Pest Control
SP EN C ER PEST CO NTRO L
C om m , Resd, Lawn, Termite
Work 377 8865 Ask for Champ

SEAM LESS aluminum gutters,
cover those overhangs waluminum sollit * latcia &lt;1441
775-7090 collect. Free est.

C eram ic Tile

CO OUY A SONS
T.le Contractor*
321 0152

Home Repairs

in*

C O L L IE R 'S Home Repairs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
window repair 371 6437

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry,
Concrete slabs, ceramic 4 lloor
tile. Minor repairs, fireplaces,
insulation. Lie. Bond 3]3 |I3I

Child Care

C A R P E N 1 ER 75 yrs exp Smal,
remodeling |obs, reasonable
rates Chuck 33) 9645

THE HAPPY ELVES

Maintenance ol all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
4 electric 323 60)8

Quality child care and pre
school Infants a specialty
Individual attention Slate
licensed I X E Crystal Lake
Ave. Lk. M ary 3213M4

Cleaning Services

Plastering
Phase* of Plaster,ng
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
roll-, simulated br.ck 331 5993

all

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
M OVE
M O U N TA IN S of merchandisi
every day

Rem odeling

LawnServtce

Remodeling Specialist

*A-1 LAWN SERVICE *

B.E. Link Const.
322 7029

We Handle The
Whole Ball Of Wax

Mow, wrea, trim, haul Regular
Service t time clean up, i 4

Financing Available

hrt. best rates. *?* oau.
HOM EOW NERS, relax on your
days off Let us clean your
home at atlordable rates. Call
now 37) 1566 P tlfy ’i Home
Pampering Service

A M. Kelly cleaning service.
Speclalliing tn restaurant 4
office buildings. 411.4)14.

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn 4 plants lor
winter now Complete Lawn
sarv. 31) 0574

Rooting

Lawn Mowers

Gone tele Work

M ISTER, Fix it. Jo* McAdams
wilt repair your mowers at
your home Call 323 70S)

7) yrs. eipirlenct. Licensed 4
Insured.
Fret Estlmateson Roofing,
Re-Rooting *nd Repair*.
Shingles, Built Up tnd Tile. 5

DEAL Concrete i man q„*M ,
bcer*&gt;&lt;on pal.os. d'&gt;ve**,i
D « ,t l i t 7)1) E .e s U l 1)31

M ajor Appliance
Repair

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

* ,«i&gt; T C O N C R E T E worn all
types Footers, driveways,
pads. Doors, pools, complete
tree M l 137 710)
FOR *11 ,our concrete needs cell
332 7177 Free estimate*. No
builder* please

JO H N N IE S Appliances We
service refrigerators, wash
ers. dryers, ranges. Reas
rales 323 4)34.

Nursing Care
ANIMAL Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels heeled.
Insulated, screened, tty proof
inside, outside runt. Fans
Also AC cages. We cater lo
your pets. Ph 337 5757

J U D IT H A TE L L E R S , and
M ERLA MANOR.
T l £ WITH " R U T H "
'
Oetendant*.
Dog grooming, small Breeds tl
NOTICE OF SALE
Free pick up, del Longwood
Notice It hereby given that,
are* j deys
m j
purtuent to an order or a final
judgment of loreclotur* entered In
the above captioned action. I will
tell the properly tltualed In
Brick &amp; Block
Seminole
County,
Florida,
StoncWork
described at:
The South &lt;i ol Lots 4 and S.
Block 17. Chapman and Tucker'*
PIAZZA MASONRY
Addition lo Sanford, according to Quality work At Reasonable
the plat thereof i t recorded In Plat
Price*. Free Estimates
Bocfc 1 at pig* 2* of the public
Ph 349 5500
record* ol Stmtnol* County,
Florida,
Have tom* camping equipment
at public tale, lo the highe*t and
you no longer uteT Sell It ail
bet! bidder for cash, at the
with a Claulfled Ad in The
Courthout* in Sanford, Florida,
Herald. Call 332 3411 or O lbetween 11:00a.m and 11:30a.m.,
9993 and a friendly ad vitor
on January 31, 19B3.
will help you.
ARTHUR H. BECKW ITH, JK.
CLERK CIRCUIT COURT
By: Carrie E Buettner
Carpentry
Deputy Clerk
SELBER &amp; SELBER
By: Fredrick Loot*
Attorney* for Plaintiff
427 Edward Ball Building
CARPENTER repair*and
Jacktonville, FL 33302 4348
addition*. X yrt. exp.
(904 ) 3SI X X
Cell 377 13)3.
Publith Jan. 13, 19, 1913
D ED SJ
TAH *

S E C R E TA R IE S N E E D E D FOR
Temporary and part time
positions Excellent skills
necessary, interview by ap
pointment only 332 SM9

0 CD
OQO

iSC

Boa rd in g i Grooming

E v e n in g H o n ild

★

PRESSER Exp 15 hr Apply
Carriage Cleaner 414 Shopp.ng
Center, Longwood

Accurate typing, tiling, phone
work. 3 to 4 mos temporary,
could go permanent
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1917 French Ave
3315174

Call 322-2611

[o o a

%"4 %

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IN
AND POR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. Il llt l CA It-K
D U V A L FED ER A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
JACKSONVILLE, a corporation
organlitd and existing under tl*
law* ,ol the United Slate* ot
America.
Plaintiff,

Port-Time
Evening Hours.

jgglJRj

Folconslair Kennel
Announces
Sundown Dog Training
Group Class Starting
Jan IS tp m .
73X Celery Ave , Sanford
Everyone Welcome!
For Information 171 4731

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U RT FOR
Wanted! Arm Wrestlers
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY. F L O R ID A
For Sanctioned Tournament
P R O B A TE DIVISION
AtIhe Barn Sanlord
File Number tl I14CP
Mon Jan. 17th., Weigh In Tim e
Division Probate
7 to i pro. Tournament 8 p m
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
M IC H A E L
P A TR IC K
SCH
W A R TE
*v„
Deceased
N O T IC E OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
TO A L L PERSONS H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
A G A IN S T T H E ABOVE E S T A T E
AND A L L OTHER PERSONS
IN T E R E S T E D IN THE E S T A T E
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
m inistration ot the estate ot
M IC H A E L
P A TR IC K
SCM
W A R T E , deceased, File Number
87 638 CP. it pending in the Circuit
Court lor Seminole County,
Florida. Probalc Division, the
address of which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, North Park
Avenue. Sanlord, Florida. The
personal representative ol Ihe
estate is PAUL K S C H W A R TE.
whose address is 508 Edgemon
Avenue, Winter Springs, Florida
The name and address ol the
personal representative's attorney
are set torth below
All persons having claims or
Aloe P roducts
demands against the estate are
required.
W IT H IN
TH R EE
M O N TH S FROM THE O A T E OF
TH E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
TH IS N O T IC E , to tile with Ihe HAVE YOUR financial dreams
clerk ol the above court a written
become a reality with Aloe.
statement ot any claim or demand
P T. no Investment. 333 7338
they may have Each claim must
be In writing and must indicate the
basis for the claim, the name and
Auto CB Stereo
addressolthp creditor or his agent
or attorney, and the amount
claimed II the claim is not yet
Repair. Inttall. Sale*
due. the date when It will become
Auto Sound Center
due shall be stated It the claim Is
3109 French Ave.
contingent or unliquidated, the
373 4US
nature ol Ihe uncertainly shall be
slated II the claim Is secured, the
security shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
Additions &amp;
copies ot the claim to the clerk to
Remodeling
enable the clerk to mail one copy
to each personal representative.
All persons interested In the
estate to whom a copy ot this TiATHS, kitchens, rooting, black,
concrete, windows add a
Notice ol Administration has been
room, tree estimates 333 8*61
mailed are required. W IT H IN
T H R E E MONTHS FRO M T H E
NEW. R EM O D EL. R EP A IR
D ATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
All types and phases ot con
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
struclion. S G Ballot 171 4133.
N O T IC E , to tile any objections
173 1665 State Licensed
they may have that challenge the
validity ol the decedent's wiM, the
ALL TYPES CARPENTRY
qualifications ol the personal
representative, or the venue or Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
lurisdiction ol Ihe court.
locks, panelling, shingles,
A L L CLAIM S, DEMANDS. A N D
rerooling. For last service.
O B JE C TIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
can 323-4917,365-2.371
W ILL BE FOREVER B A R R E D
Dale ot the lirst publication ol
this Notice ol Administration:
Aluminum Siding &amp;
January 17, t i l l
•
Screen Rooms
Paul K. Schwarlt
At Personal Representative
of the Estate ol
ALU M IN U M Siding, vinyl siding'
M IC H A E L P A T R IC K
SCH
solllt t lasel* Aluminum
W A R TE
gutters and down spouts
Deceased
Fr Est 30 US 5143
A T T O R N E Y FOR P ERSO N AL
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E
C L A Y TO N O SIMMONS
B e .iu ty C&lt;ire
Pott Otlice Box 1310
Sanford. Florida 37771
Telephone 1105) 317 7171
TOWER S B E A U TY SALON
Publish January tl, 19, 1943
FO R M ER LY Harr,eft's Beauty
O E D 40
Nook 519 E 1st St . 373 5747

Telephone Solicitors,

E X C E L L E N T income tor part
time home assembly work For
Information ca ll 504 641 B003
Ext 7960

Tomorrow may be the day you
sell that roll a way bed you've
nowhere to roll away . . . II you
place a Classilled Ad today

Legal Notice

NEEDED

CRUISE SHIP JOBS!

A F T E R Christmas Sale 50/o ff
14 carat gold, sterling and
electroplate jewelry In stock
Call 331 1797 for appf

B A B Y S IT T IN G in my home lor
working mother.
3711613

SOMEONE who likes to prepare
and serve good toed, to mee
talks In a pleasant atmosphere
can lind a job at the Runobte
Spoon Tearoom. Longwood
Hours 9 4, 5 days For AppL
931 4661 between7 S 5 P m
■
aiso need dishwasher 11 -

Great income potential All
occupations. F o r information
call (313) 741 9710 E X T . 1330

12—Special Notices

18— H e lp W an ted

18—Hel^Wanted

18—Help Wanted

Dog Training

Sundown Dog Training
Obedience training in home
and group. 371 47)|

Draperies
CUSTOM M ADE in our Shop
Installation Service. Dorothy
&amp; Vincent Blit* 349 5425

Excavating Services
t f e t N O EXCAVATING
10 Case Backhoe Loader w
extender ho*. ? yd. dump
.truck-low bed terv 223-5175

LO VIN G HOM E Excellent care'
4 companionship for elderly
woman 333 4 X5

Built up and Shingle root,’;
licensed and Insured.':
Free estimates. 322-193d
JAM ES E. LEE IN C

TV Repair
N ursing Center
OUP R A TE S AR E LOWER
Lakey,ew Nursing Center
719 E Second St. Sanford

*»" TV Service C
tbarge I7.9J P|„
make*. 7|| |;jg.

323 4707
Will care tor elderly
In my home
373 5375

Oil Heaters
Cleaned

iM Al!E R O f f M 'T l T ST'Oft
YOUR WINTER ITEMS
SELL "D O N 'T N EEDS
FAST WITH A WANT Al
Phone 3X3*11 or 1)1 999) *r
a friendly Ad V-sor will he
you

O IL Healer dcining
and servicing
Call Ralph 3317113

Tree Service
V*

STUMPS ground out.
Reasonable, tree estimates.

Painting
Firewood
FIREWOOD S40 4 up. Tree
trimming, removal. Trash
hauled. Free est., 322 9410

'R E R O O F IN G , carpentry, root
repair 4 painting IS years
exp 372 1934.______________ ^

B IL L 'S P A IN TIN G
Interior E xterior pointing. Light
carpentry. Home* pressure
cleaned Business 131-2423

Home 1315114. Bin stelner!

JOHN A LL E N YARD 4 TR EE*.
SERVICE. W rit remove pln*&gt;
tree*. R m . price 131 5310. 5
■

----------------------------&lt;

Letourneau Tree Service*
£
Removal, trimming, demotsin. •»,
Licensed and Insured. 13.

Wonder what to do with Two?

Handyman
HANDYMAN Serv.cet Painting,
repair*, etc. Reasonable
guar work. 42$ 04SI, 477.4711..

J?** P?* - Th* OU'CK easy
W ant-Ad w ay. The magic
number it 322 2411 or 131 *993

HOUSE painting tSOO
a house. Any sit*
432 1034, 435 4009

V

____________ m o m
*
--------------------------- &lt;

Upholstery
LORENE'S Upholstery,
pickup, del S e ll Car 4
seat* Furn Xt.1721

1

�vV

&lt;

19— Rooms

IB—Help Wanted
DESK
CLERK

*3.50 Hr.

Wtll train right person, flexible
hours, excellent company
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
1*17 French Ave
22J$t?6
O IL COMPANY O P EN IN G S
[O FF S H O R E rigs No experience
necessary Start immediately.
*35.000 plus a year For in
formation call (312) 920 9344.
Ext I246D
JO B S IT E INC
tOOs iobsdaily
C all331 7940 Fee
|FIB ER G LASS man tor boat
repair Must be able to match
color, make molds, small
parts, rtc We are putting
teak on boats tor the retail
and wholesale trade and also
takino care ol any fiberglass
work at the same time We
alsomtg liberglass seat bones
and have been in business tor
12 yr* Opportunity tor the
right person in a growing co
Situated in the right retail
area.
Seaworthy
Wood
Products, Inc, 1121 Slate St.
(Just so ot Sanlord Plaia and
behind
Robson
M arine)
Sanlord. Fla

E X P ER IEN C E D
IN DIRECT SALES

SANFORD, Reas weekly a monthly rates Util Inc elt 500
Oak Adults t 141 7683

30 Apartments Unfurnished
Mariner's Vitlaqeon Lake Ada, 1
bdrm from 3265 7 bdrm from
1300 Located 17 97 just south
of Airport Blvd in Sanford All
Adults 323 6670
LARGE 6 rm apt , 13m and
French, upstairs 3350 mo , first
and last, 373 1104
G E N E V A G A R D EN
A P A R TM E N TS .
___________ 322 2090_____________
LUXURY
AP A R TM EN TS
F a m ily &amp; Adults lection
Poolside, 2 Bdrms, Master
Cove Apts 371 7900 Open on
week ends
C O M FO R TA B LE 1 bdrm car
Peted. porch, children wel
come, no pets Conveniently
located to downtown area 345
wk + util, j ; ) i9iJ
convenient to down
town Cent HA Carpet, 3250
Mo 323 7767

PARK A V E. 2 bdr, complete Kit.
3210 mo 339 7200 Fee
SavOn Rentals,Inc. Realtor
2 BDRM No pets *220 mo See
dep required. Avail, immed
_
327 9402

I

M E L L O N V IL L E Tra c e Apts,
spacious, modern 2 bdrm, 1
bath apt. carpeted, kitchen
equipped, CHA, walk to town
and take Adults, No pets.
Available Jan. I 321 390$

Fart lime position, attractive,
H arp, ladleswear Excellent
Jympany.
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
(&gt;17 French Ave.
123 3174
[L U M IN U M
M A N U F AC
-T U R IN G
COMPANY
has
[ immediate openings tor the
^Jollowing positions Screeners,
f press operators, assemblers,
[and material handlers Ex
-perience helpful but not
[required Apply in person from
|10 a m to 2 p m, Monday thru
i F rida y, H a rC a r Alum inum
[ Products, 1201 Cornwall Rd.,
•Sanlord, Fla
------------------------------------------------------J E S I O E N T Manager position
available lor Garden Apt
‘~UM complex ot 90 units, located in
Sanford. Fla. Previous exp, is
J K desirable, good starting salary
L and good benefits. Apply in
[T.v ' confidence to P.0 Box 17,
Panama City, Fla. 32401

siE CRETARY

........... $$$

“■t
Accurate typing, shorthand
helpful, very motivated, possible
executive position, 3 mos.
t
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
|9I7 French Ava.
373 3)74
■ONE PHONE CALL S TA R TS A
; C L A S S IF IE D A D ON IT S
R ES U LTFU L
END
TH E
NUM BER IS 322 2611

21—Situations Won tod
CARE for the elderly. Home or
„ Hospital. Certified Nursing
‘.'A s s is t a n t .
R e fe re n c e s
provided 323 4749

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
r ■
2 BDRM.2 Balh apt
(S*i? to share ' y rent,' j utilities
Call J71 S929
|HARE

modern home on 10
acres, S17S mo.
322 5132.

29— Rooms
SANFORD Furnished rooms by
I the week. Reasonable rates,
[.m a id service Catering to
warding people. Unfurnished
Apartments 1 1 2 Bedrooms
* JJ3r4®7 500 Palmetto Ave.

ST JOHNS River. 3550 and $450
Mo Bob M
Ball Jr. PA
Realtor 373 4118 or 323 5097
M OD ER N 3 bdrm, 1 balh In
Sanlord, with CH, drapes,
appl, $325 mo,, 3323 damage
dep Alter 5 call 349 5220 or
377 3346
A V A IL A B L E Febru ary 1st.
First area Deltona. 2 bdrm I
bth, all appl CHA, 3300 per mo
security deposit S27S call 321 4900
or 32) 3117,
C ASSE LB E R R Y Lklnt 2bd air.
$27$. Fee. 339 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

( 1 EcAP- HER \
OBSESSION WITH "
Tati IS BACK. B I T
I P BETTER n o t
p w e l l c m i t ~~.
MAKES CCME SOMETIMES SHE
PEOPLE V C R K
Ac t u a l l y r eaps

ADDITIONAL

AND O TH ER S
L O A F / HM FH.&lt;

RESEARCH/

HURRY B A C K ,
pro fesso r
3LANKHEAD!
YOU C A N
.S T U D Y W H A T

Furnished apartments lot Senior
C'tijens 311 Palmetto A ve. J
Cowan No phone calls

'• 3 AND J B D r m From 5260
Ridgewood Arms Apt. 25IC
Ridgewood Ave 321 6470
EN JO Y country living'* 7 Bdrm,
Duplex Apts, Olympic si
pool Shenandoah Village
Open 9 to 6 J71 7920
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd
t A 7 Bdrms
From $230 mo
Phone 121 6470
SANDALWOOD V IL L A S Deluxe
2 Bdr, 2 Bath, washer, dryer,
POOt, 1375 MO 644 9911

31—Apartments Furnished
N IC E ettlciency apartment,
furnished 355 wk plus dep
373 1177
SANFORD 3,5 rm i air, full kit
3225. Fee. 339 7200
Sav-On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
B E A U T IF U L 2 bdrm, 7 bth apt.,
spilt into 7 separate lolnlng
units, n rw ly decorated and
furnished. 1100 wk plui 3200 tec
dep Call 323 2269 or 371 6947.
1 BDRM. Apt. Clean
3725 mo. f Dep.
References required 322 3342

31 A— Duplexes
NOV/ Duplex 2 bdrm bth util,
rm carport kltch. a p p l, Lease
139 *547
LA K E M AR Y 2 Bdrm, kids, full
kil„ fenced, $7*5 Fee 139 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc., Renter
D E LTO N A , counlry living, lust
minutes from I 4 7 Bdrm
Duplex and quadraplex, units
available Carpeting,
fully
equipped kitchen, lotsol closet
space Some wilh carports.
Call 574 1124 or 373 4737
C LA S S IFIE D ADS A R E FUN
ADS. R E A D A USE TH E M
O FTE N , Y O U 'L L L IK E TH E
R ESULTS

7 bdrm. 7 bth. No pets. BOO per
mo. 1st, last and see,
I494S47.

33—Houses Furnished
L IK E new, I or 2 bdrm, porch,
carpel, air, appll, drapes,
*255 , or with turn , 3280 No
pels, security 842 8806

37-B—Rental Offices
P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE*,
Providence Blvd., Deltona,
7164 Sg. Ft. Can Be Divided.
With Parking Days 305 574
1434 Evenings 8, Weekends
904 789 4251

t

37C-For Lease

P R O FE TS^ONAL Office space
lor Lease, on 17 92 Ideal
location to downtown area. 70$
S French Ave. or call 322 3170
G E T THO SE L U X U R Y ITE M S
FOR A FR A C TI0740 F TH E IR
COST FRO M TO D A Y 'S W ANT
ADSt

41—Houses
S U N L A N D E S T A TE S
Owner
finance.
terms
negotiable. Large CBS home A
garage Many extras $41,000
372 9417
LOCH AR B O R , large 7 Ikvel. 4
Bdrm, 7 Bath. 1103,000by appl.
Wm. Mallciowskl, R E A L TO R ,
127 798) Eve 377 33*7
COVE Estates
Osleen, by
owner, I' j years like new. 24x40,
2 bdrm, 7 bth. Mobile and land
scaped lol with permanent 11x20
Florida rm Many extras. Low
330'S 327 1999
____________
YO UN G 3 Bdrm home. Can be
used as residence or professional
ottices or commercial. Only
*12.000 down 3411 Monthly. Call
Broker Owner 331 1611.
U N O ER 12.00B DOWN
3 bdrm, doll house Ailordabte
monlhly
payments
Call
Owncr Broker 1311411

h

FOR A L L YOUR
R E A L E S T A T E NEEDS

323-3200
lies west First Street — SanlerC Florida J t n 1— &lt;J0SI11I-4218

n m u b p m p p

JS b ,
fO M B M A C IS N A V I
M l TUI FUN!

•SWB-

1 and 2 bdrm. opts.
Clubhouse W -health club, on Bit* L a k e
Tennis, R acquetball. V o U B y b .ll, J W l n f l
S w im m in g , Se lf-C le w ilng O ven, Ic e m e k y A M ore,

$49 W L lk e M a ry Blvd.
Suite B
Lake Mery, Fte. 22744
311-1200

coun lry

im

-/

41—Houses

D U W. 3rd It., ) Br, 1 bath wilh
extra lot toned multi family.
Close to new hospital tio,000
S AN FO R D R EA LTY
R E A L TO R _______
321-3124
Classified Ads will always give
you more . , . Much . Much
More than you expect.

R O B B I E ’S
REALTY
;V :) H

R EA LTO R . MLS
» » ' S French
Suite 4
Sanlord Fla

n r

Z y jm ji

24 HOUR IB 322-9283

T T i

JUNE PORZIG R E A LTY
NEW Listing' You'll want to see
this 3 bdrm, 2 blh, I yr old
home on 19 acres In a
beautiful natural setting
Located in Paola. 171,900
R E A L TO R
B07 S, French Aye

MLS

322*8678
LG 3 BDRM, 1', bth, carport,
util rms , CBS, relrig , stove.
CH. newly painted Inside out.
Ig lot; back fenced
owner
financing, 323 7996

STENSTROM
REALTY -

REALTORS

WE L IS T AND SELL
M O R E HOMES THAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY !
C O U N T R Y E S T A T E 1 Bdrm. 7
Bath S acre estate, in Geneva
with pool and guest house 2
Acres fenced lor herses, and
every lealure Imaginable.
390,140.
B E A U T IF U L 1 Bdrm l ’ j bath
home. In Woodmere Park,
with Cent HA. wall lo wall
carpet, paddle fens, dining
room , fenced yard, |usl
painted and new root. 334,340.
S P E C IA L 1 Bdrm 1 Bath brick
home, In lanlenla, with eat In
kitchen, porch, bullt-im and
mare. Oreat starter heme,
convenient aree. 331,290.
CONDO 1 Bdrm. 1 bath condo In
Woodmere Terrace, with
equipped Kitchen, peddle lent,
family room, pantry. Cent.
HA, wall-wall carpet, fenced
yard, and new rool. Price Is

*29,900.
M A Y F A IR V IL LA S l 1A 3 Barm,
1 Bath Condo Villas, next lo
M aylair Counlry Club Select
your lot, floor plan A interior
decor I Quality constructed by
Shoemaker lor 367,904 t up)

C A L L A N Y T IM E

25*5
Park

322-2420

L A K E H E L E N 20 acre* 322,300
C O U N T R Y Living Lease Opllon
like new 3 7 with or without
acreage
P R IC E D under today* market
3 2 fam ily rm ., enclosed
garage, fenced back, a real
buy S4I.900
N E A R new hospital I C 1 Older
two *lory large lol asking
*79,900

EVE

CONDOM INIUM in Sanora 3
B d rm , 2' j bath Beautifully
decorated 73 4**t!rst mor
tgage. assumable, owner will
consider second m ortgage
167.500 by owner 323 5946
evening 6 322 6445

•12—Mobile Homes

41— Houses

321-0759

O P E N HOUSE
171 Wildwood Or.
Sanford
Saturday, 1 to 4p.m.
J U S T L I S T E D ! In beautiful
f l i m b l e w o o d .
NO
Q U A L IF Y IN Q I H talod tpa,
scroontd
room ,
,
wChatahoochao stone, Sunken
great room. Too many extra* to
mention • must seel Michael
Lukas, Realtor Assoclat*. Alt.
Hr*. 311-0973.

THE
\\'RC?N&lt;5
PER5CN =

C ■■!*&gt;**#* n

L it. Raal Estate Broker
2440 Sanlord Ave.

Be Ufae
CoU Keyed

r{TE6TET

im

BA TEM AN REALTY
m c.m r ealto rs

G E N E V A 2 story
comlort 4 I. 180,000

41-B—Condominiums
For Sale

Sanford's Sales Leader

O F F IC E SPACE
FOR LE A S E
8)0 7723

D A N IE L ANO W O H LW E N O ER

869-4600 or 349-5698

1600 Sq It Office. 115 Maple
A ve , Sanford Avail Immed
Broker Owner. 127 720V.
SPACE lor rent Ot flee. Retail,
Storage French Avenue and
Airport 322 4403

SEIGLER Heater w tan, 170
g a l, fuel oil and titty gal. drum,
*350 172 4299

M V THOUSHTH

1r» t t 1

322-7643

A LL FLO RIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
2544 S French
122 4211
Alter Hours 339 3910 327 0779
I S TO R Y BRICK A cedar in
Markham Place. 4 Bdrm, 3
baths. 1.47 aero*. 2 fireplaces.
Sundeck. Much morel Owner
will held m t«. *124,944.
The Wall St. Company
Realtor*
111 3003
The sooner you place your
classified ad, the sooner you
will get results.

KISH REAL ESTATE
321 0041
R E A L TO R
Alter Hr* 373 7446 A 322 4952
HAL C O LB E R T R E A L T Y
REALTOR
707 E 25th St
323 7111
LOCH ARBOR
CHIP Shot to Maylair Golf Walk
lo Idytlwitde Elem entary 3
bdrm. 2 bth split plan rarpet,
air, double garage, screened
patio Ready lor you, 177,900

Call Bart.
HEAL E S TA TE
R EALTO R 212 74*6

HAROLD

HALL

REALTY, IN C

R E A L TO R
323-5774 |
I 1$ Y EA R S E X P E R IE N C E
CU STO M
B U IL T
CEDAR
HOME
Energy
elllclent
custom throughout. Terrific
owner financing. Potential
guest home in rear. 17 citrus
trees. Loads ol Stonge. Take
44A East to left on Rt. sis, 1
houses on right past Osteen
Post Ollice. 169,300 •
H U G E CORNER LO TI Priced to
sell fasti 1 bdrm, family rm .,
CHA, fenced yard w-well and
sprinkler systems, m ature
citrus trees, double site patio
under sprawling cam phor
troo. Large assumable low
interest mortgage. Call todayl
341,944.
FH A -V A SPECIAL! Why rent
when you can own NOW. 31,134
down payment. 3 bdrm home
on fenced lot. Largo oak and
citrus tree*. Good location)
Only 1392 a mo. Taxes and
insurance Included. 17 Jt, 14
yrs. Price $36,344.

PRE OWNE D HOM ES
2 Bd Fam Park
12x65
310.500
?Bd Fam Park
14x57
112 700
3 Bd 21x64 Must ' «
314.900
2 Bd Ux&amp;O Nice
14.493
2 Bd 12x65 Furn
311,500
7 Bd 12x60
34.500
7 Bd 14x64 Ad Pk
373.500
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E INC.
3603 Orlando Dr 17 92 S Sanlord
305 323 5700
3 2 plus dblc mobile home on
acre Many extras I mile trom
Rt 441. Ml Dora S3S,900
373 2545.
I960 M OBILE Home I4‘ x60‘ set
up m adult section ot mobile
park Day 831 2623
Evenings 431 5116
SE L SKYLINE 5 N EW ES TPain- Springs A Palm Manor
G REGORY MOBILE HOM ES
ilO] Orlando Or
) ) j JJOO
VA a F HA Fm a n cnfY EA R E N D C LO S E O U T
1981 SK YLIN E Mobile Home
24x 52 It screen enclosure
porch, utility shed. Central
heat and a&gt;r 3 I'.drm, 2 Balh
Lul sue IS 50x100 Sale price
54) *00 tinancmq available dl
SO •ol sales prire interest rate
12D x* t 2 Points. Can be seeni
at 126 Leisure Dr
North
DeBary,
Fla
m
the
Veadowlea on the River
Mobile Home com m unity
Piease contact lorn Lyon or
Gib Edmonds First Federal ol
Seminole 305 322 1242

13—Lots-Acreage
ST JOHNS River trontage. 2' ,
acre parcels, also interior par
cels with river accasa *13,» 0
Public water, 20 min. to Alta
monte M all |j .* M yr
financing, no q u a llly in g .
Broker tit a*H
r
Get Cash Buyeri for a small
Investment Place a low cost
classified ad tor results. 377
7611 or 831 9993
KICK TH E STO R AG E H A B IT.
Sell thsoe useful, no longer
needed items wilh a Herald
Classified Ad Call 327 1611 or
131 9993

LEVI Jeans &amp; Jackets
ARMY N A V Y SU R PLU S
310 Sanford Ave. 322 S79t
15 tt chest'type Ireeier, In good
condition S12S.
327 0110
LOVE Seat, green apt. si/e, exc
cond 375 Coltee table SIS 830
1468, 6 »
$p m
51-A — F u r n i t u r e

WILSON M A IER F U R N IT U R E
311 313 E F IR S T ST
393 5437

43B-Lots &amp; Acreage
Wanted
W A N TE D
About *i acre ot land tor house
trailer site. R ural property
preferred near Sanlord. Can be
contacted at CanFlea Food
Store lit W 27th St.. Sanlord.

17 Real Estate Wanted
WE BUY eguily in Houses,
aparlmrnll, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
V E S TM E N TS P O Box 1500.
Sanlord. Fla 37771 322 4741 *
N E E D to sell your house
quickly!
We can
otter
guaranteed sale w ithin 30
days Call 3)1 t i ll.

47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
W E PAY cash tor 1st A 7nd
mortgages Ray Leqg. Lie
J
Mortgage Broker 786 7S99

NOWS TH E T IM E
TO B U Y I
FHA-VA 12 W E N E E D LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW! 111

323-5774

Let a Classified Ad help you find
more room lo r storage.
Classified Ads find buyers'
last.
E U R E K A
H O O V E R
PANASONIC on sale this week
only. Cash or terms. We finance.
Seminole Sewing. Winn Dixie
Plata 17 97 A Lake M a ry B lv d ,
3729411.

2648 HW Y. 17 92

197S tarus travel trailer. 19 II
sleeps six, new carpel and
Upholstery 323 8301 alter 4
Pm
1*80 Scotty Travel trailer, sett
contained Like new 15.000
321 1)50
•7) SUPERIOR M H 25' goof 8.
cab. a ir, generator
Low
mileage, rear bdrm SL 4
*10,500 321 4813. 32) 1874

77—Junk Gars Removed
3UY JUNfc CARS A TRUCKS
From SIO luSW or more
Call 322 1624
Have a room to rent? Let a
classified ad Hnd a tenant for
you!

52—Appliances

WE P AY fopdotlar to'rJ
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto Parts 293 4505

Krnmoreparts, service, used
washers 323 0697
MOONEY A P P L IA N C E S

TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
equipment 322 5990

JUST received shipment ot good
used refrigerators 30 Day
guarantee Sanford Auction,
1215 S French. 373 7340

S3— TV Radio-Stereo
Good Used TV s 375 * up
M IL L E R S
2619 Orlando Dr
Ph 72 2 0152
REPOSSESSED COLOR TV S
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables E X
AMPLE Zenith' 2S" color in
nalnut console Original price
over 1750. balance due 1194
cash or payments $17 month
NO M ONEY DOWN Still ,n
warranty Call 21st Century
Sales842 5394 day or nite Free
home trial, no obligation
Modernuing your Homer Sell no
longer needed bul useful Hems
min a Classified Ad

54—Garage Sales
YARO Full Multi Fam ily Lots
ol stull. 3314 S Sanlord Ave.,
Friday and Saturday, 9 till.
JAN 14 16, 9 3 Car parts, wheels,
lire*, hubcaps, starters, belts,
brlc brae &amp; more 193 Evansdale
Pkwy , Lk. M ary 323 2S6S
SATURDAY 9 a m , 202 Forrest
D r . Loch A rb o r-a re a Toots,
lumber, 2 dining room tables,
and misc. articles
tt you are having difficulty
imding a place, to live, car to
drive, a lob, or some service
you have need ot. read all our
want ads every day

ti-A— Farm

Egulpnyfl

E Q U IPM EN T AUCTION
S A TU R D A Y . J A N . 15
10AM
Farm tractors, doaers, loaders,
beckhoes, bucket trucks,
trucks, trailers and mowers At

Daytona Auto
Auction
Hwy. 97 Daytons Beach
904 733 t i l l

62—L aw n -G ard en

R E M O D E L E D - 1. bdrrp. I»i
balh w-new root. Enclosed
garage and tiled Fla. rm . Oak
shaded yard. Extra cleanl
Oreat location! Creative
financing! Sea It today 142,900
O E T A F R E S H S TA R T
W ITH "S A N F O R D ’S NO. 1
PR O FES SIO N A L"
C urrently saaking motivated
Salts Associates. Excellent
commission Schedule, leads
furnished. Ask lor M r. Hall.

Wednesday, Jan. 12,1*1)—BB

50—Miscellaneous for Sale 75—Recreational Vehicles

S Y L V A N DR , Sanford,
maculate 3 7, $45,000
SANDY W ISDOM

M O B IL E Home on private land,
kitchen equipped tor 1 or
couple Easy access In Lake
Mary, $325 Mo 322 4219,
M OD ER N 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath, with
CHA drapes, appl furnished
1473 Mo . 629 5756 or 1)4 4744

.

V

U N F U R N IS H E D 3 bdrm house
references required Rent $350
mo. + dep 372 3342
SUNLANO E S T A T E S ) Bdr m . 2
Balh, fenced yard, 3350 m o,
Schuren Rralty Realtor
*3) 1)47

Evening H era ld ,S an fo rd , FI.

with Major Hoople

M W H0GPLE, I L L
IN C L U D E * S P E C I E
F O O T N O T E ON V0U R ,
l o o k in g
IN m y
J O U R N A L A R T IC L E !
T H A T D E F IN IT E L Y
C A LLS FOR

1 Bdrm

| National food service company,
23 yrs. In business. Full
^
company benefits after 90
days, All leads supplied along
wilh established account
Draw based upon experience
For Interview call Boo Rector,
1 305 331 0046

£ L E S ...............S3.50 Hr.

32—Houses Unfurnished

FILL O IR T A TO P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAN D
Clark 61 Hlrt 32) 7S80, 323 782)

66— Horses
MUST sell 4 Shetland ponies
Greet wilh children. Please
call 111 2091

67 A—Feed
Hay tor Sale

*2 and up per bale.

79—Trucks-Trailers
1943 Chevy Pickup Run* good,
good tires, 1500
323 218)
75 Ford Super Cab
reasonable.
441 *773

1*74 G M C
T ru c k , 22 IF
Aluminum box 6 brand new
Michelin lire*. S4.800 firm,
exc cond 323 4042 trom 9 5

80— Autos for Sale
We buy Car* and Trucks.
Martin Motor Sate*
70)8. French
773 7*71
Bad Credit?
NoCredil’
WE F IN A N C E
No Credit Check Easy Terms
N A TIO N A L A U TO S A L E S
1120 Sanlord Ave
321 4075
7SD ATSUN 2dr withautotrans
and other extras Good con
dition 399 down Cash or
Trade. 139 9100, *14 4403

1974 Toyota Celica. exc. cond . 4
brand new tires *1,700. can be
seen at 1109 S. Sanford Ave
78 FORD Granada. All extras
including auto Iran*, S4S0
down Cash or trade. 339-9100.
834 46QS_____________________
• D ID Y O U K N O W ! 9
You can buy or lease a new car
Inlh* privacy ol your horn* or
office Fla. Auto Brokers
121 2064
DeBary Auto L Marine Sale*
across the river too ol hill 17*
M «v SI *1 DeBary see as**
1962 Cadillac Sedan DeVllle all
original. Excellent condition In
and out. On* owner car. Eilat*
•Jla. 44* 1024 or 322 208*

D A Y T O N A A U T O AU C TIO N
Hwy 92, 1 mil* west ot Speed
way. Oayron* Baach will hoi*
* public A U T O A U C TIO N
evary Monday A Wednesday al
7 30 p m. It's Ih t only one In
Florida. You set the reserved
price. Call 904 255 *311 for
further defails.
76MG M ID G E T . Call all. 4 pm .
373 8072. N tw paint, axctllenl
condition.

GARAGE
SALE
197* D a ta * 2 dr.

322 5127
Wile* Sales Hwy. 44 w : 311-4*78
laled shavings M S*
2nd cutting clever hay.
Ird cutting alfalfa hay.
Northern Tim othy mixed hay.
Check our prices-_______
H AY 82 50 per bale,
25 or more free del.
Other feeds avail. 149-$lf4.

*2195
1*49 VW Camper

*2500
197* Jeep 0-7

*3500

H A R D TO P

06 W.ink-d 10 BiG
A L U M IN U M , ca n t, copper,
leed, brass, silver, gold, week
days I 4 : X . Sal. 9-3 K KoMo
Toooico 91* w lit SI. 323 1100

72— Auction

pickup,

1*79 Detwa 2802X

*6500
SA N FO R D
M O TO R CO
a m c

FOR E S T A T E . Commercial or
Heydenlial Auctions A Ap
pr41*4 is Call Dell's Auction
32) 5620

jeep

'i * 1 IMU fl A et*
HI

MB.

L o n g w &amp; b d L in c o ln -M f f c w ^
C e n t r a l F l o r i d a $ if 1 L i n c o l n M e r c u r y D e a l e r
5555 HI GH W A Y 1782. L O N G W O O D • 831 8090 • 322-4884 • O P E N N I G H T L Y TILL 9 00 SAT &amp; SUN T I L L b P M

* OPEN SUN

12-6

USED CAR SPECIALS UP TO 24 MQS./24,000 MILE WARRANTY AVAILABLE

l

�1

1'1

10B— Evening H«r»ld. Sanlord, F I.

Wednesday. Jan. IJ, 1V83

PLUS
I

B O TTLE
D E P O S IT

L IM IT ONE W ITH CO UPON BELOW ANO
SS A D D ITIO N A L PURCHASE

CEN TER CUT RIB

3 LBS. OR MOR

PORK CHOPS
LOIN CHOPS l.* 1
WHOLEROASTING
CHICKENS .. . lsi

ROASTS
LEAN CUBED i
STEAKS
FAMILY PACK G
ROUNDc

PIZZAS “mo?1.. *1.09
ROOT BEER . *1.09
LADY BORDEN PREMIUM
^
ICE CREAM0^2.99

w
ABW3
n &lt; k
LITER
l l E H N.R.
H i n i BBOTTLES
W I IV C 1 i , _

FRESH SLICED ASSORTED PORK

* ■ •’ ,'v ■ ^ - ' 1
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m t i •*. f

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The Fa st Way to Shop!

OPENAA.M .-M IDNIGHT

THIS AD EFFECTIVE THURSDAY JAN. 13 THR U WEDNESDAY J A N . 19, 1983
W E A C C E P T USD A F O O D S TA M P S

W E R E S E R V E T H E R I G H T T O L I M IT Q U A N T IT IE S

Tomato
S L IC E D A N D T I E D

LB

——

•

m

LYKtSSMOKED
PORKCHOPS

H O I

Clip a n d R e d e e m Th es e V a l u a b l e Cou p on s

THIS COUPON OOOD f OH
LYKI’t OLD FASHION BO
11 02. PKO.

) l I M O N I I O I J P O N W i l l * \ \ HI A U D I I I ON A t P U H l HAS I S
I W O C O U P O N S W l t H S 10 00 A O L H I I O N A l I’ U K O I A S I S
I MW C 1 « O U P O N &gt; Wl I M U S IKj A U U I U U N A I P U R L H A S ! S I t * l l U O t

THIS COUPON OOOOPOB

I O B AC CO)

'TM
ITOIIPORIHIOOFOir'
• PACK 1SOX. OOTTLIS

�I

W ednesday. Jan, tl, l»M—ic

Evening H era ld , Sanford, FI,

It's Teatime:
Entertain At
Elegant Fete
Yes, indeed! All over Ihe country, in the finest hotels and
restaurants, the hours between three and five are being
devoted to serving that most gracious and relaxed of meals —
afternoon tea. In the elegant, flower-filled lounge of the
Mayfair Regent Hotel on New York City’s Park Avenue, for
instance, it's the tune to relax with friends and enjoy quiet
conversation "over the teacups." Guests are offered a choice
of teas, brewed in individual white teapots, carefully kept
warm under pretty tea cozies. Sandwiches are made with the
thinnest of breads, scones are accompanied by an Individual
jar of strawberry Jam and a little crock of "hard" whipped
cream, A selection of luscious cakes is also available, in­
cluding a delectable pear tart.
Afternoon tea is a delightful way to entertain in your own
home. Do it on a weekend or holiday after the workaday week
is over. Get out your Sunday-best china and linens; splurge on
some pretty flowers. Refreshments can b e as simple or bs
elaborate as you wish. Serve traditionally paper-thin sand­
wiches filled with cucumber slices and watercress sprigs or
spread with anchovy paste.
Or break with tradition and serve an array of open-faced
canape-style sandwiches. Either kind should start out with the
perfect slice for tea sandwiches — Pepperidge Farm Very
Thin Bread — white and whole wheat — and just right tea
sandwiches. Directions for these eye-catching, palate-pleasing
tidbits follow.
For the piece de resistance you couldn't do better than to
reproduce the Mayfair's pear tart. Start with a sheet of frozen
puff pastry to make a flaky tart shell. This is then filled with a
creamy custard, topped with fresh pear slices and glazed with
apricot preserves.
Make sure that the tea you serve is freshly made, hot and
fragrant. Start with a good quality tea to ensure that you’ll
have a brew that relaxes and revives at the same lime. Just
follow the simple rules below to bring out the fine qualities and
full flavor of the particular tea you choose.
THE PERFECT POT OF TEA
Use a teapot, preheating it by rinsing it out with hot water.
Bring freshly drawn cold tap water to a full rolling boil.
Put the tea lone teabag or one teaspoon of loose tea per
serving) into wanned teapot.
Pour the bubbling water iabout 5 4 ounces per serving) over
(he tea.
Cover and let stand 3 to 5 minutes.
Remove teabags and stir before pouring.
If you like tea less strong, add a little hot water after the
brewing period.
Serve with milk i not cream) or with lemon slices, and sugar
to taste.
FRENCH FRESH PEAR TART
1 frozen puff pastry sheet
Yolks of three large eggs
l-3rd cup sugar
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 cup milk
4 leaspooh vanilla extract
1 ripe pear, peeled, cored, halved and thinly sliced crosswise
l-3rd cup apricot preserves, strained and heated
Thaw puff pastry for 20 minutes, then unfold. On a lightly
floured surface, roll one sheet to a 104x174 inch rectangle.
Trim edges so rectangle measures an even 10x17 Inches. From
one short end cut two 14 inch wide strips. From a long side,
cut four 14 inch wide strips. Moisten the top of all the pastry
strips Wid a 1*4 inch wide border around the outside of the
pastry rectangle with water. Arrange pastry strips in two
layers around edges of rectangle, moist strips down, cutting
when necessary, to fit. Press firmly with fingers; then press
edges with tines of a fork to sea). Using a sharp knife, make
shalluw diagoryd slashes 4 inch apart around pastry border.
Transfer ta rt shell to baking sheet and prick the inside very
well with the tines of a fork, line with wax paper and fill with
rice or dried beans. Freeze 30 minutes. Bake in a preheated
425 degree oven for 10 to 12 minutes or until puffed and golden.
Remove, discard wax paper and rice and cool shell com­
pletely.
In a bowl, beat egg yolks, sugar and flour together until
smooth. In a medium sized saucepan, over moderately high
heat, bring milk to a boil. Stirring constantly with a wire
whisk, gradually add milk to egg mixture. Return egg-milk
mixture to pan, add vanilla and heat over moderately low heat
for 5 to 7 minutes, stirring constantly until mixture thickens
and is the consistency of a thick pudding. Pour Immediately
into a bowl and put a sheet of plastic wrap directly on the
surface of the cream. Chill at least 1 hour or until very cold.
Spread cream filling evenly over the indlse of the baked tart
shell. Top with pear slices and brush with apricot preserves to
glaze. Refrigerate for 2 to 3 hours and serve. Makes 1 tart, 8
servings.
TEA SANDWICHES
Using a sharp knife, cut crusts off very thin white and whole
wheat bread. Cut bread slices into ovals, diamonds, triangles,
squares and other fancy shapes. Top with any of the following:
— Spread with cream cheese and top with red salmon
caviar,
— Spread with cream cheese and top with a thin slice of
smoked salmon and a sprig of dill.
— Spread with cream cheese or butter and top with sieved
egg yolk, black lumpfish caviar and sieved egg white arranged
in a stripe pattern.
— Spread with butter and top with thin-slices of cucumber
and-or tomato; sprinkle with salt and pepper.
— Spread with Blue Cheese Butter and top with thin-allccd
red radishes and capers.
Blue Cheese Butter: Mix 4 cup softened butter with 4
ounces crumbled blue cheese. Mix until smooth.
—Spread with Herbed Watercress Butter and top with sliced
cherry tomatoes and a sprig of watercress or thin pieces of
smoked salmon.
Herbed W atercress Butter: In a food processor, put 4 cup
softened butter, 1 cup packed watercress leaves and 3, 3 inch
long pieces of scallion or green onion. Cover and process until
smooth. Add salt and pepper to taste.
— Spread with Strawberry Cream Cheese and fresh
strawberries.
Strawberry Cream Cheese:
Beat 4 cup strawberry
preserves with 8 ounces softened cream cheese.
— Spread with Ham and Almond Pate and top with sliced
black olives and a sprig of dill.
Ham and Almond Pate: Put 4 cup chopped almonds, 4
pound boiled ham, 3 ounces softened cream cheese, 4
teaspoon dry m ustard, 4 teaspoon paprika, 4 teaspoon
pepper, 4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, 2 drops Tabasco
sauce and 2 to 3 tablespoons sour cream into food processor,
Cover and process until smooth.
— Spread with Gingered Cream Cheese and top with kiwifruit slices.
Gingered Cream Cheese: Mix 3 ounces softened cheese with
1-4 tablespoons finely chopped preserved ginger and 1
tablespoon ginger syrup.
— Spread with Curry-Chutney Butter and top with a piece of
thin-sliced boiled ham.
Curry-Chutney Butter: Mix 4 cup softened butter with 4
teaspoon c u r r y powder and 1 *4 tablespoons chopped chutney.

* »* -**

F rt’iifh Fresh P e a r
Tart u s i n g frozen puff
pastry is the'perfect
piece de resistance to
serve ;it ;i tea. Or
b re a k tradition and
serve trays of liny
appetizing open-faced
• lea sandwiches. I'se
your
S u n d a y -b e st
ehina. linens and, of
course, splurge on a
d a i n t y

floral

arrangement.

THIS AD E F F E C T IV E :
THURSDAY. JA N . 13
THRU W ED N ESD A Y
JAN. 19, 1983. . .
CLOSED S U N D A Y . . .

m et

8$etoneto&amp;'

(SAVE 5 9 c)
ONE LARGE ROLL OF

{REGULARLY 6 9 c E A C H )
B R E A K F A S T CLUB Q U A R T E R S

Soft-Ply Tow e ls

Corn Oil
Margarine

W ITH PURCHASE OF ONE
6-R O LL PKG. OF SO FT-PLY

Publix

Bathroom Tissue

P UB UI Rf SFRVfS THE RIGHT
TO lIM lt QUANTlTlt S SOLO

1-lb. ctn.

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Pleaso)

(REGULARLY $ 3 .8 4 EACH)
GENERAL ELECTRIC 60,
75 OR 1 0 0 WATT

Soft White l*Q
Light Bulbs

(Li mit 1 Deal Per C ust omer, Please)

{REGULARLY 55c EACH)
MR. COFFEE

(REGULARLY $ 1 .2 9 EACH)
RATH BLACKHAWK

Coffee
Filters

Breakfast
Links

5 0 -c t. pkg.

4 -p k . pkg.
(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Please)

8-oz. pkg.

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Pleaso)

(Limit t Deal Per Customer, Please)

^one'mzl
(REGULARLY $ 3 .1 9 EACH)
FROZEN W EAVER THIGHS
&amp; DRUMSTICKS

(REGULARLY 5 9c EACH)
PUBLIX

Drinking a
Water J T

Dutch Frye
Chicken
2 8 -o z . pkg. *

m. one
r /
(REGULARLY $ 1 .3 9
EACH) FROZEN
EARTH GRAIN

Kosher
Pickles

gallon bot.

32-oz. jar

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customor, Please)

( Li mi t 1 Doat Per Cust omer , Please)

,r

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Please)

FREE'

(REGULARLY $ 1 .5 9 EACH)
HEINZ OLD FASHION WHOLE

k
e
to
n
e
tyjeMMFRKTJ FREE/
II*

EV

(PER PAIR) NO N O N SEN SE

E-Z Foil Bakew are

Garlic
Bread
16-oz. pkg.
(Limit 1 Deal Per
^Customer, Please

•E lectric B urn er Bib Liner, 6 -p k .
•Baby L o a f P an, 3-pk.
•Tart P an, 8 -p k .
•Cup C a k e C ups
•Roll P an , 3 -p k .
•S qu are C a k e Pan, 3-pk.
•D eep P ie P an , 3-pk.
•Mini C a s s e ro le

Com fort Stride
Panty Hose
1R e g u la r M edium -Tall
N ud e or T an
P e tite -M e d iu m or M e d iu m -T a ll
S h e e r to W aist Nude or T a n
T an Q u e e n Regular
or S h e e r to W aist

(REGULARLY $ 1 .4 5
EACH) SW EET SOUR

Old Dutch
Dressing
16-o z. bottle
(Limit 1 Deal Per
Customor, Please),

one
(REGULARLY $ 2 .2 9 EACH)
9-IN C H FASHION

(REGULARLY 9 1 C EACH)
W EIGHT W ATCHERS
REDUCED CALORIE

Hefty
Plates

Mayonnaise
1 6 -o z. ja r

i

___

»» -«*. *as-

10-oz. jar

(Limit 1 Deal Par Customor, Please)

W- -i
s.iw-1'

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Please)

Publix
Jelly

40-ct. pkg.

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Please)

lOVi-oz. bot.

3 (REGULARLY 6 9 c EACH)
GRAPE OR APPLE

m

(Lim it 1 D eal P er C u sto m er, P le a s e )

(REGULARLY $1.43 EACH)
STORAGE

EVEREADY 9-V O LT OR 2-PK.
PKG . OF AA, C OR D C E LL
EftROZLP

25-ct. pkg.

bm ?

(Limit 1 Deal Per Customer, Please)

KSj« Energizer
1 1 Batteries
(Limit 1 Deal Per Customor, Please)

�1C— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 12, H I)

Filling Cobb Salad and lettuce hearts are popular
main dishes for women and men watching their
weight.

Cobb Salad
Light Main
Dish Meal

Sauerbraten: A Real Classic Revisited
Sunny Sauerbraten gives a Rheinish specialty a wonderful,
stlck-to-your-ribs flavor. It starts with a piquant sauce, made
by simmering Florida orange Juice, vinegar, onion, pickling
spice, peppercorns and bay leaves for a few minutes. When it
cools, the sauce is poured over the beef, which then m arinates
for two to four days. This gives the roast time to absorb all of
the rich flavor from the marinade while also tenderizing the
beef. After this prolonged pampering, the meat is browned and
then cooked slowly in the marinade for three hours, becoming
meltlngly tender.
The gravy is the superb soul of Sunny Sauerbraten. The
marinade is strained and defatted, then thickened slightly and
combined with brown sugar, ginger snap crumbs, raisins and
Florida orange Juice. Sweet and sour, its distinctive and
sparkling zest iness makes it a winner.
And while your family is raving about the dinner, give
yourself a pat on the back for the vitamin C bonus they're
getting from the Florida citrus. It will help the family ward off
all those pesky winter infections and keep you smiling with its
sunshine taste till spring.
SUNNYSAUERBRATEN
5 pounds boneless bottom round, chuck or rump roast
2to cups Florida orange Juice, divided
1 cup wine vinegar
1 large onion, sliced
1 tablespoon pickling spice

10 peppercorns
3 bay leaves
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon brown sugar
to teaspoon salt
to cup ginger snap crumbs
to cup raisins
Orange sections
Pierce m eat in several places with a fork; place in large,
shallow, glass dish. In medium saucepan combine 2 cups
orange Juice, vinegar, onion, pickling spice, peppercorns and
bay leaves; bring to a boll. Simmer about 4 minutes. Cool;
pour over m eat. Cover. Refrigerate 2 to 4 days, turning oc­
casionally. Remove meat from marinade; pat dry with paper
towels. Reserve marinade. Heat oil in heavy kettle or Dutch
oven; brown m eat on both sides. Add marinade. Cover, cook 3
to 3to hours, or until meat is tender, turning occasionally.
Remove meat to heated platter; keep warm. Strain marinade;
remove fat. Return marinade to kettle. Combine flour with
remaining to cup orange Juice; mix until smooth. Slowly stir
flour mixture into marinade; cook, stirring constantly, until
gravy bolls and thickens. Blend in brown sugar, salt, ginger
snaps and raisins. Cook 1 minute longer. Garnish meat with
orange sections and serve with gravy. Yield: 8 to 10 servings.

For your shopping convenience, Publix is now open at 8 A.M., Monday thru Saturday.

HPublix* Extra Fresh
Produce Gives You
ExtraValue.
Finding the most value lor your money is easy when you shop
(or fruits and vegetables at Pubkx Thais because Pubfcx
produce buyers shop as carefully as you do so that you re
sure of getting peak-ol flavor freshness And it s this type
ot extra attention that makes shopping at Pubtx a pleasure

With an eye on the scales, more men and women are en­
joying main dish salads for lunch or light suppers.
Use a variety of greens, such as Iceberg lettuce, Romalne,
watercress, spinach and escarole, rinsed and dried. Pour salad
dressing over greens at the last minute and toss with Just
enough dressing to coat the leaves lightly.
COBBSALAD
4 head Iceberg lettuce (about 2 cups), washed, well-drained
to head Romaine lettuce (about 2 cups), washed, welldrained
1 bunch watercress, washed and trimmed
2 small tomatoes, cut in wedges
1 medium ripe avocado, peeled and thinly sliced
2 cups cooked, diced chicken
2 hard-cooked eggs, quartered
to pound bacon, cooked, crumbled
2 tablespoons crumbled blue cheese
1 tablespoon chopped chives
Fresh Ixmon Dressing
Tear lettuce into bite-size pieces. In large salad bowl
(preferably glass), combine lettuce with watercress. Arrange
wedges of tomato and avocado slices around edge of bowl;
spoon chicken into center of bowl. Arrange egg slices around
chicken; sprinkle bacon, blue cheese and chives over all. Serve
with Fresh l^m on Dressing. This kitchen-tested recipe makes
6 to 8 servings.
FRESH LEMON DRESSING
1 cup vegetable oil
l-3rd cup freshly squeezed lemon Juice
1 clove minced, fresh garlic
1 teaspoon salt
to teaspoon pepper
In small bowl, combine all ingredients; mix well. Serve over
Cobb Salad.
LETTUCE HEARTS
WITH AVOCADO DRESSING
2 avocados, vary ripe
6 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon Juice
*4 cup vegetable oil
3 cloves fresh garlic, mashed
to teaspoon chill powder
to teaspoon salt
1 head Iceberg lettuce, cut in 6 wedges

BR EA K FA ST
CLUB FLA.
GRADE A

Breaded Patties . . 7. 917B
Swift's Premium Mild or Garlic

Corn Beef............ 7 9238
Olde Smithfield (No Sugar Added)

Franks................ AS M 7*
Swift’s Premium Sliced Olive Loaf
or Pickle &amp; Pimento Loaf or

per lb.

Bologna...............5?,* 85c

$499
Chocolate

H ersh ey K is s e s ... .

Marshmallows.....

d

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Boneless

99*

Top Sirloin
Steak.................. 7. 9279

bag

49*

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Health &amp; Beauty

5

7-oz. Concenlraled Tube
or 16-oz. Bot. Liquid

Prell S h a m p o o ........ " V M 88
35c Off Label! Aqua Fresh

T o o th p a s te ..............".AY 9128

•LIGHT RHINE,
LIGHT ROSE. LIGHT
ICHABUS, CHABLIS OR ROSE |

-

b ig

Campfire 10-oz. Regular or
10to-oz. Miniatures

CHOICE

W ln w
1.5-litsr bot.

$ 4 8 9

YOUNG 'N TENDER,
| GOV'T-INSPECTED, SHIPPED |
DAD, FRESH NOT FROZEN
PREMIUM GRADE

■

’ ■*

Whole
Fryers

THIS AD IF FIC TIV I]
THURSDAY, JAN. 13
THRU WIDNKSDAY
JAN. 19,1983...
CLOSKD SUNDAY...

per lb.

King's Ruby Red

ICombination
Vegetables

Seedless Grapes. 7. 99°
For Snacks or Salads Slightly Tart

Stayman
Applas..............3 tag 69°

16-oz. poly bag

Florida (Extra Large)

0UNG3T
T end Eii”

Tasty Tomatoes. . 7 49°
Florida (Large Size)

Florida Sweat, Juicy, Seedleaa

Avocados............“V 59°

White
Grapefruit....... 8 ft

Florida Seedlass

Made From Concentrate,
Tropicana Chilled

Florida Fresh

Limes................6 &lt;». 99*

Orange Juice..... 51" *1f*
Swift's Premium Btef or Regular
Breakfast Strips

Sixxlean.............. ’A TM ”
Sunnyland Regular, Beef or Thick
(All Varieties)

Sliced Bologna .... *1: M 99
Plumrose Sliced

Florida sweet, Juicy, Seedleaa

Red Grapefruit.. 8
Minute Maid Concentrate Frozen

Florida Sweet

Blueberry or Apple Cinnamon

Florida Tasty, Juicy

Eggo W affles........ 79*

Tai

Cook'd Ham.......K: *2“

Pita B read..............69*

Eckrich Smoked of Poll.h

Raisin *N Honey or Raisin 'N Wheat

Sausaga..............

*249

Lender’s B agels... 2

Seafood Treat, Frozen

Stouffer’s French Bread

Whiting Filiate.... 7. H »

Morton’s Assorted

Seafood Treat, Frozen
Mr

128$

»11#

Juice Oranges.. So*., 99°

Apple Juice............ 'I S 79«

Assorted Farah

.

Grouper Fillets

Paul Masson

Sirloin Tip Roast.. 7 *2“
Beef Cube Steak. 7 927#

S TO K ELY FROZEN
INTERNATIONAL

For something delightfully different, give Candleglow
Casserole a try.
This flavorfui buffet dish combines both hard-cooked and
stralght-from-the-shell eggs, cottage and mozzarella cheeses,
spinach noodles and zesty Italian seasonings for a bountifully
nutritious and cheerfully colorful casserole.

Nete: to hard-cook, put eggs in single layer in saucepan. Add
enough tap water to come at least 1 inch above eggs. Cbver and
quickly bring Just to boiling. Turn off heat. If necessary,
remove pan from burner to prevent further boiling. Let eggs
stand covered in the hot water 15 to 17 minutes for large eggs.
(Adjust tim e up or down by about 3 minutes for each size
larger or sm aller.) Immediately run cold water over eggs or
put them in ice water until completely cooled. To remove t e l l ,
crackle it by tapping gently all over. Roll egg between hands to
loosen shell, then peel, starting at large end. Hold egg under
nam ing cold water or dip in bowl of water to help ease of! shell.

U.S.D.A . CHOICE BEEF
BONELESS FULL CUT

Steak

Casserole Is
Delightfully
Different

In greased 12 x 7to x 2-lnch baking pan or dish, layer 1*3 of
the noodles, turkey, U desired, sliced eggs and mozzarella
cheese. Repeat layers twice. Beat together 3 eggs, cottage
cheese, milk and seasonings until well blended. Pour over
layers. Cover and bake in preheated 330 degrees F. oven 30
minutes. Uncover and continue baking until cheese Is lightly
Browned, 5 to 10 minutes. Makes 8 to 10 servings.

Armour Star Beef or Pork
(Heat &amp; Serve)

Round

. In sm all bowl, mash avocados with fork. Add lemon Juice,
oil, garlic, chili powder and salt; mix well. Spoon over lettuce
wedges. TTils kitchen tested recipe makes 6 servings or (2 cups
dressing).

CANDLEGLOW CASSEROLE
1 package (7 oz.) spinach noodles, cooked and drained
1 cup diced, cooked turkey, chicken or ham, optional
5 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
2 cups (I oz.) shredded mozzarella cheese
3 eggs
1 cup (8 oz.) small curd cottage cheese
W cup milk
1 tablespoon instant minced onion
1 teaspoon garlic salt
to teaspoon basil leaves, crushed

Sunny Sauerbraten is laced with a piquant sauce
made with Florida orange juice.

Kumquats

Fruit Salad........... j?

peijgiwi )

Frost Mix
xoa.........ft. 39#
Assorted Colors, Beautiful

erines...... 10

*1

Rtigtr Begonias .. »&lt;* H 99

(4/5
5 Bu. Box of 150......... $13.99)
Florida Flavorfui

91

PepperonlPl2x a ...."«r, 1"

ft

........

• I 09

ggff~Swdl,M

TV Dinner*...........'it 69'

ALL PURPOSE
.....» '« *1

Mrs. Smith's Golden Deluxe

White
Potatoes

T e m p le

P I* S h a ll*.............. f i r 89* S(4/5
jfSBiT.
J IS
; of 80 . . .12
“ - '1 "
Box
. . ........ .7 $7.99)

Ore-ida Reg. or With Onions

Tatar T o tt.............. *5:

Tasty Garlic or Beef

Bologna.........

"H'” 6 9 *

Delicious

Mortadella......

9U* .", 6 9 *

Regular or Caraway Munches

Cheese............... ** 9199

Cuban Sandwich . *.? M”
Spareribo............ 7 93 "
Fraah-Bakad

Peach Fla...........r

M99

Fresh Plain, Poppy or Seeded

ItaHan Bread...... Z 79*
Hot from the Deb!

Pepper Steak..... 7 93 "
Potato Au Gratin. 7. M99

J
-

.

-

-

_ V .v . *- r * T.

HO,

Singleton Breaded Butterfly

Shrim p.......................p*f.

8 34$

Singleton Peeled &amp; Deveined
C k rlm n

Baked Beane...... ? 89*
Always A Favorite! Bar-B-Oua

Florida Seedless

Nibblers.................... 5?," 99* (4*5*£ rBoxx/f*35!. . 7 . 'Ia.39)
1Z-M. | £ 9 f

AS

flavorfui
Fresh-Made

912#

Green Giant Cob Corn

92 99

Libby'a Orange, Banana,
or Pineapple

Coffee Rings.......... Jft 99* gortdjFlavorful,Large

(

-ft, 79*

“ Seald S w eet" Brand Chilled

M a lt -

UOOfLEZ-3
u rc T so re c m w o w

•

Kxy-Fona /

a

SALE!
i4 N N &gt;|iLil = *9**
Leu refund by Mail = $2®

I

’ 19»

’U M U M tiim iM — HI
,o 1 * 1 ouMtimi ««■»

/

/*/

• Cl— &gt;m — *
e i — to— iin i—
• lOF— Cwt

^
j

Mg

$7 "
Your Final Cost
Per Gallon
$ 3 19

�Evvnlnq Herald. Sanford. FI.

Many readers may have received a microwave oven as a gift
and now are confronted with the operation of it and un­
derstanding this new method of food preparation.
This column, I hope, will aid you in using your equipment
more efficiently and inspire you to try many different kinds of
foods and recipes using your microwave.
Use your microwave oven for more than defrosting and
reheating foods. Good results are possible for roasting, sim­
mering, cooking and baking. The beginner should: use simple,
easy microwave recipes, use appropriate microwave utensils,
experiment and make notes about your results, enroll in a
microwave cooking class taught by a knowledgeable and
experienced microwave instructor and start a file of
microwave recites.
This Tuna Noodle Casserole is an old familiar one that can be
easily prepared by a new microwaver.
TUNA NOODLE CASSEROLE
4 cups uncooked medium egg noodles
1 can (6 4 oz.) tuna, drained
1 can condensed cream of celery soup
4 cup milk
1 can mushroom stems and pieces, strained
1 tablespoon Worchestershire Sauce
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
I cup coarsely crushed potato chips
1. Cook noodles on stove top as directed on package. Drain

Microwave Magic

Use Oven
For Variety
O f Cooking

Midge
Mycoff
Home Economist
Seminole Community College

well.
2. Combine all ingredients except potato chips in a 2 quart
glass baking dish. Mix well. Cover with plastic wrap.
3. Microwave 100 percent power 6-8 minutes, or until heated
through.
4. Remove covering and sprinkle with crushed potato chips.
Return to the microwave.
5. Microwave 100 percent power, uncovered, for 1-14
minutes or until hot.
Another easy basic recipe is this Meat Balls and Tomato
Sauce. The sauce can also be used as a lopping for pasta or
vegetables.
MEAT BALLS AND TOMATO SAUCE
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 medium onion, finely chopped
2 tablespoons oil
2 cans (16 oz.) crushed tomatoes

Wednesday. J»n . H, 1933— 3C

1 can (6 oz.) tomato sauce
1 bay leaf
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon thyme
1 pound ground beef
4 teaspoon salt
1 egg
4 teasfioon celery salt
1. Place garlic, onion and oil in a 2 quart glass casserole.
Cover and microwave 100 percent power for 3 minutes. Stir in
tomatoes, tomato sauce and seasonings. Cover and microwave
at 50 percent power for 38-W minutes.
2. Combine ground meat and remaining ingredients. Mix
well. Shape mixture into balls 1-1 4 inch in diameter. Uniform
size and shape is Important for even cooking. Arrange on a
rack or round shallow dish. Cover with wax paper; microwave
at 100 percent power for 4 minutes. Add partially cooked meat
balls to tomato sauce in large casserole. Cover with wax paper
or casserole cover and microwave Bt 100 percent power for 2
minutes, reduce power to 50 percent power and microwave 1214 minutes.
Microwave hint: Use minimum times and check; If food is
cooked, no need to give nTOrc cooking time. Factors involved in
cooking time variables are: shape, density, amount of
moisture and temperature of the food.
Next week’s column: Kitchen wTaps and microwave usage.

HATH BLACKMAWK
REGULAR OR THICK

Sliced

Bacon
1K&gt; phg

Wtt*0*« tAH$l»i«f
Price Sin* C«HtiCat#

0Tjb^reenStampsf3
10-ot. bol..

Nyquil Cold Remedy
t. (Ifl.ch,* J m 13 IV 1BA11

gJwGreenStampsfSl
Decorative tuna sandwiches are topped with
templing fruits and vegetables.

3*oi. or 6-oi. bol.,

Vicks Form ula 4 4
Cough Syrup
3 |fff4Ct*ve Jsn 13 19 19331

^5wGrVenStamps
34-01. CAfl. Bowl ClAAHAf

J

Granular
Sani Flush
J lltl.lln* J»« 13 IV 1»8)&gt;

^GreenStampslfl
»*« m

&lt;|v»H M* •%**baM **

■

10-ox. bol.. L ba B Petrine

J

Steak Sauce
5 (effective Jan 13 19 19SJ&gt;

Publix Cream y or Crunchy

Peanut B u tte r......

*2 M

JWGreenStamps

Planters Dry Roasted

P e a n u ts ............

*

Log Cabin Country Kitchen

Syrup..................2b
4oT *119
ChickervOf The Sea Solid Pack
7*ol.
White Tuna .................. can e 1 se

%

Instant 10-oz. or
Decaffeinated 8-oz.

Neecafe Coffee. . .
Lipton Family Size

Tea Bage............

p*&gt;. * 3 8 9
1A»
14-el. * 1 * 9
pkg.

Quality Inn California

Tomatoes...........
Quality Inn Yellow Cling
Halved or Sliced

Peaches.............

2

VS? »1

29*01.
can

69*

.

fertavm nour fMxWw 4
coupons m Kd»n by
January U 1983 and Protiw 4
*4tmrrCMv Sc
«arh coupon ki hwtp
s
*Twr4* to Pw 49*3
MarnaUjnal S * * n rw S t* * £&gt;»*%* Ganvrs
**ue*.» *4 make an

a r &amp; f y jH r d U tw*
I M Ptlte

Orange. Lake, Se«iaete,
4 Osseela Counties Only!
IN 12-01. CANS,
M O . OR LIGHT

Carling Black
Label Bear

kv

10-02. Peanut Butter Sandwich,
Sandwich Mint or 9-02. Jelly Tart

fl^WGrVenStampsH
Two 15-oe* cam.

70°

Van Camps White

P d ry flP M ty

Charmin Assorted Colors

*V

7 .IM b«Ui b JM 1)11. IM3)

Hominy............ 2 « « 68*

(

Breakfast Club

Jib .

Household Cleaner

Spread......

Mr. Clean............. KSt
Bar Soap

Pillsbury Hungry Jack
Buttermilk or Butter Tastin’

Zeat..................... 49*

Swift’s Brookfield Quarters of

)

79*

Biscuits...................3 f t *1,

8-oz. Rippled, 9-oz, Light or Reg.
Potato Chips
‘
•1 ”

sls*gnek

Cream Cheese

A*o&lt;.

99*

9*oi.
PM*

99*

Kraft Individually-Wrai
Slicsd Sharp or.

-

Cheese Pood.......

PLUS TAX 4 DEPOSIT

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Cheese Spread, Sliced

m ie-ox. Bomst,

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Dairi-Fresh
Yogurt

B utter...................... n.’.lin.M”

Philadelphia Brand Soft
With Pineapple, Strawberry
or Pimentoi A Olive

•

Rues ’N Boots Assorted
Cat Food

Appls Sauce....... 69*

Designer, W hite &amp; Decorated
or Assorted

Pringles

6 ( I I I b a B i b J**i. 131V. l « « ) l

Publix Brsad....2 £ ft»1 "

M o tt’s Natural Style

Pampers
Diapers................. Z *8«
Bounty Towels....

Mildew Stain
Remover

Special Recipe 100%
Stone Ground W hole W heat

F.F.V. Cookies.... f t M "

48-ct. Elastic Toddler
Convenient Pack or
60-ct. Extra Absorbent Elastic

Bath Tissue.........f t

$ 1 6 6

n « * * «M il m

IB-oi. bol.. Purai ln»t«n!

8*oz.
cups

Look, Taste
Tuna sandwiches, (he working mother's standby, take on a
new look and taste with youth-oriented sandwich makings.
These combination sandwiches are high in essential
nutrients growing youngsters need.
TUNAGOODYHOUSE
1 can (6 4 or 7 ounces) tuna, drained and flaked
4 cup chopped celery
3 tablespoons mayonnaise
4 teaspoon fresh lemon Juice
4 teaspoon garlic powder
1 medium zucchini
4 4 slices whole-wheat bread
3 raw broccoli buds
1 cup toasted sliced almonds
In medium bowl, combine tuna, celery, mayonnaise, Icmun
Juice and garlic powder; mix well. Slice 2 slices of bread In half
diagonally. On luncheon plates arrange bread triangles, to
form roofs, above each whole slice of bread. Spread tuna filling
over bread “house." Cut zucchini into 6 pieces 2-by-l inches
and IB Julienne strips 14 Indies. Decorate house using zuc­
chini pieces for doors and chimneys and Julienne strips for
wlndowi. Arrange broccoli buds for bushes. Form a shingled
roof by overlapping sliced almonds. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes 3 servings.
SMILING TUNA HERO
2 cans (6 4 or 7 ounces) tuna, drained and flaked
1-3 cup mayonnaise
V« cup chopped scallions
V* cup chopped water chestnuts
3 hero rolls, split lengthwise
6 pineapple rings, cut in half
6 green pepper slices
4 cup grated Cheddar cheese
In medium bowl, combine tuna, mayonnaise, scallions and
water chestnuts; mix well. Spread tuna filling on spilt rolls.
Top with pineapple and green pepper. Sprinkle with cheese.
Place under broiler 3 minutes or Just until cheese melts. This
kitchen-tested redpe makes 6 open-face sandwiches.

Hearty Winter Dip

Velveeta............. f t ®1M

UBLLO VBUO , M O . OR OM T

Tuna Treats
TokeOn New

Kraft Casino Brand Swiss

Cheese...... .......f t

Coca-Cola

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Shredded
Monterey Jack &amp; Cheddar,
Mozzareta or Sharp Cheddar

$199

.

Cheese........... 69*

FREE FILM
WRk * r* . no el M u prw mm w * H tT -‘t■ Ml
f t OomcJ
Fba M b Fr«r**iBl.
I n M i R «MM|
m
BH mO e H U ib( a* Um si KoBaA't cM r

Wisconsin Cheeae Bar

Sliced Swiss........ f t *2»

i

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sharp or
New York Sharp Cheddar

Cheese.................f t
Breakstone Lowfat, California
Style or Smooth &amp; Creamy

Upton Assorted

Lots A Noodles.... ft 73* Cottage Cheese.... ’f t MM
Convenient Pack

Luvs Diapers...... f t *8"
Cycle 1, 2 1 4 Dry

CHIPPED BEEF DIP
FUBUl N M f tV tl T M RKWT
TO UMTOUAMTTTV ISOLD

whereshoppingisa pleasure

4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

Cycle 1,2,3 A 4 Assorted

DogPood...........3 ’f t »1
Detergent...........f t 89*
(limit 1 PIMM WHS Otter PurchMtv
ol I7.S0 or Mon KicittOuig AMTobacco tUmv)

UWOtO PUZS, MNNMD
tONGWOOD VAUQt CBm t

40$ Off Label!
Purex Heavy Duty Uquki

D tlargan t..............t S

»2»

1 package ( I oz.) cream cheeae
1 packages (4 ox. to.) frozen prepared creamed chipped beef
14rd cup chopped green pepper
V* cup sliced green onion
5 drops hot pepper eauce

Dog Pood............ft *2^
20e Off Label! Purex
AN Temperature Heavy Duty

When pretzels, nuta and party mints are making your guest
yawn, it's time to revamp the menu. Try a dip, served hot for a
change that La unique enough to satisfy any hungry party
person. And don’t worry, this redpe, tested by the Banquet
Foods Test Kitchens, only takes minutes to prepare In the
microwave oven. Start by combining cream cheese with frozen
prepared creamed chipped beef u the base. The addition of
chopped green pepper and onion add color plus crunch, and the
■eaaonlngs add Just the right m ap to this recipe. Serve with
crackers o r crisp cut-up vegetable! and eny party menu will be
revived!

Publix

2 tablespoons sliced almonds (optional)
Assorted crackers
In 1-4-qusrt round glass casserole, place cream cheese.
Microwave at HIGH 30 aecoods to 1 minute or until softened.
Set aMde.
Cut lilt in each beef bag. Place on mlcrowavMafe plate.
Microwave at HIGH 2 to 3 minutes or until warm. Combine
chipped beef, cream cheeie, green pepper, onion, Woro v ertu re eauce and hot pepper aauce. Stir isitll smooth.
Microwave at HIGH 1 to 2 mimXas, or until warm. Birring
once. Sprinkle almonds on top, if desired. Serve with cracken
er crisp cet-up vegetables. Makes abot* 1H cups.

�1/

4C— Evening H era ld , Sanford, FI.

W ednesday, Jan. 13, 1983

____

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TAB, SPRITE, DIET COKE
MELLO YELLO OR

SUPERBRANO GRADE 'A

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JANUARY U -1 B . 1943

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
OOOD JANUARY I M 5 , ISB3

HICKORY SWEET

ysU H S H IW

*8$
1- LB.

QTRS
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUARY I M S , 1983
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PRICKS OOOD
UAN. 13-15,

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WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 JANUARY IM S , 1983

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ALL THE FUN &amp; EXCITEMENT BEGINS TODAY
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obtain a game marker which says "You Qualify
for G re a t!rip Drawing,'’ you are eligible for
each of the two drawings. Just submit
qualifier marker to store office and fill out a
Trip Entry F^rm . AO entries received by
February 9, 1983 will be eligible for the first
drawing on February 16, 1983. Five Great
Trips will be awarded in the first drawing. All
valid entries received within three days after
game ends wW be eligible for the final drawing
to be held approximately seven days after
game ends. Five Great Trips will again be
awarded at this time. See collector card for
details of trip prize.

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SAVE 7 5

U.S. CHOICI
H I J H DOMESTIC
W H O ll OR RUMP HALF

w BONELESS

Chuck Roast

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BONELESS CHUCK

U S CHOICE FRESH DOMESTIC SHANK
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BONE IN SKUCRN

PREMIUM FRESH FRYER

W D BRAND USOA CHOICE REEF CHUCK
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1 6 -o i.

CANS

THRIFTY MAID CREAM OF MUSHROOM
OR CHICKEN NOODLE

A U VAR KTCS CARLO ROSSI

Soup ..........4 can?*1#*
SAVE 4 0

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S A V E 20

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HARVEST f r e s h g r e e n

SAVE 30

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s

75th Y ear, No 125—T hursday, J a n u a ry 13,1983—S anford, Florida 32771

Evening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481 280)—P ric e 20 Cents

For Building Near Longwood

Developer Wins Approval Second Time Around
By MICIIEAL RF.HA
Herald Staff Writer
What a difference a monlh can make, particularly when il
comes to zoning matters.
la st month, when developer Walter Judge asked Seminole
County commissioners to approve a change in the site plan for
a piece of property he was buying, Judge was met by stiff
opposition from Commissioner Robert 0 . "Bud" Feather.
But Judge received approval for a site plan change this week
when he appeared before the board. And Feather even
seconded the motion.
Judge .had planned to construct a two-story buildim* on a lot

at the corner of East lake Brantley Drive and Wekiva Springs
Road near Iangwood.
But Feather, who has owned the property prior to his 1980
divorce from Dodie Simerson, opposed the two-story building
because it did not conform to the one-story site plan which
Feather had submitted to commissioners.
He claimed the two-story building would change the
character of the neighborhood.
Judge’s plan was rejected by a 3-2 vote.
But this time Judge came in with a plan to double the 4,800square-foot plan for the site by constructing two one-story

buildings. And while Feather still held some reservations
about Judge's plan, he voted with the 4-1 majority in approving
it.
In other business, commissioners voted to vacate a portion
of West Centre Street near State Road 431 in Paola.
The property is owned by Central Florida Inland Develop­
ment Co.
—Approved a permit to erect a boat dock on Deep I-ike near
Sanford for David Gloeckner. The dock will extend 72 feet into
the lake.
-Approved a zoning change from Commercial 1 to Com­
mercial 2 for Zimmer Poster Service along Alafaya Trail and

And

U n ite d W a y
Drive Cool Increased
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Although the United Way of
Seminole County raised ap­
proximately $400,000 in 1982, its
volunteers will try to collect
$800,000 this year.
The 25 percent increase in (he
United Way's goal from one year to
the next was announced Wed­
nesday by Sharyn Dickerson, 1983
United Wav camoaiim chairman.
She was Introduced to agency
representatives by newly elected
President Larry Strickler at the
luncheon m eeting at Aggie's'
Restaurant in Sanford.
Mrs. Dickerson told the group
she did not think this year's
campaign goal of $500,000 was
unrealistic. Mrs. Dickerson also
was elected by the board to serve
as first vice president. Other of­
ficers elected at the board's first
1983 meeting immediately prior to
the luncheon were David Joswick,
second vice president; Maxine
Marsh, secretary; and George
Duryea, treasurer.
New members appointed to the
United Way board Include Duryea,
Lou Whitney, who also will be
deputy campaign chairman; Mrs.
Walter Glelow; John Daniels; and
Dr. Sara Irrgang.
Strickler, who served as 1982
campaign chairman, said he ex­
pects the final tally from the drive
conducted last October to be less
than the $400,000 announced at the
Victory Dinner.
When the audit is completed in
two or three weeks he expects the
total will be approxim ately
$375,000, which Strickler said, is
still well in excess of the last year's
goal of $338,000.

To $500,000

Herald Phot* by J»n# C iM rtO o rry

N ew ly e le c tr d U n ite d W ay P re s id e n t L a r r y
S tr ic k le r . le ft, d is c u s s e s 1983 c a m p a ig n id e a s
President Emeritus of the United
Way of Seminole George Touhy
presented plaques of appreciation
to outgoing president Dick Fess;
former treasurer Val Colbert and
1982 campaign chairman Strickler.
Strickler announced United Way
will cooperate with Dr. Ned
Johnson, director of Adult and
Continuing Education at Seminole
Community College, and volun­
teers from the community in
conducting a community needs
assessment of services available
and services needed. The

w ith S h a ry n
c h a ir m a n .

evaluation will help the United
Way to belter appropriate funds
where they are most needed.
Strickler told the group there will
be a year-round effort to keep the
United Way before the community
in Seminole County.
He said there will be more
frequent board meetings, possibly
on a monthly basis, and more
frequent feedback from the par­
ticipating agencies to provide the
board with facts and budgets on
their programs.
The 20 participating agencies

D ic k e r s o n ,

19H.1

c a m p a ig n

»WSS|
H t r t t f Phot* by D o w n B ites

J u lie F e a t h e r , C ou n ty C o m m is s io n e r
H u b e r t (1. “ B u d ” F e a t h e r ’s y o u n g
d a u g h te r , a m u s e s h e rs e lf b y ta k in g
n o te s, fo llo w in g th e e x a m p le o f c o m ­
m issio n s e c r e t a r y T e re s a C o k e r.

Related stories on page 8A
“ We don't enjoy paying debt service until 2003 for
a state road when we so badly need the bonding
capacity for county roads in Seminole County,"
Bush said.
Bush said while the county wants the state to pay
the bond issue payments, the county has no desire to
hurt the state Department of Transportation.
State Rep. Bobby Brantley, R-Longwood,
tiutirmaii of the delegation, said that three of Uie
five counties he represents are offering the same

—A preliminary plan was approved for Chira Development's
subdivision along General Hutchison Parkway and County
Road 427.

SR

436 Overp

State To Build
New St. Johns
River Bridge
By MICHEALHEIIA
Herald Staff Writer
The 5-eent increase in the federal gasoline
tax will allow planning to begin on con­
struction of an overpass at State Road 436 and
Red Bug ta k e Road near Casselberry and
replacement of the U.S. Highway 17-92 bridge
over the St. Johns River.
Bill Gray, a Florida Department of Tran­
sportation engineer, said the projects are in
line for construction over the next five years
because of the new funds which will be
available through the gasoline tax hike.
The two projects were not previously on
DOT'S work plan for the next five years.
Other projects already on the plan may be
speeded up, Gray said.
DOT official* r r v e a lp d the tw o p ro je c t x In a
meeting Wednesday with Seminole County
officials. But Gray warned that the projects
have not been finalized. He said the state
Legislature will discuss highway funding when
it meets later this year.
Gray said the new interchange at SR 436 and
Red Bug ta k e Road would alleviate a traffic
congestion problem there. Currently, only one

car at a time can turn onto SR 436. The new
interchange would elevate SR 436 and carry it
above Red Bug Like Road, permitting traffic
to flow more freely on the access road. Gray
estimated the cost of the project at $5 million
and said construction could begin within five
years.
Die St. Johns River Bridge replacement
could be financed through federal bridge
repair funds, Gray said.
That project, estimated to cost $15 million, is
not anticipated until 1988, Gray said, and
would replace the current 2-lane drawbridge
with a high-rise span.
Die transportation department is planning
to improve the electrical system on the
existing bridge this year at a qost of $250,000.
Other projects which could be speeded up
Include the rebuilding of State Hoad 419 be­
tween State Road 434 and U.S. 17-92.
Gray said the cost of repairing the 2-mile
stretch of SR 419 would be about $1.2 million.
He said work on a planned Interstate 4-SR
436 bypass also could be speeded up. That

By County Officials

Executive Director Bob W'alko
introduced Clara Shannon as the
new secretary in the United Way of
Seminole County office in Sanford.

For Annexation Opposed

No SR 434 Funding Promises

w

—Approved a waiver of the two-year waiting period for a
one-acre parcel west of Brantley Square near Altamonte
Springs. The property, owned by Johnny Walker and the
JoMAR Trust, is being annexed into Altamonte Springs.
Commissioners waived the waiting period on the portion of
the property which lies above the flood plain.

were presented with their first
United Way allotment checks for
this year and all except the two
new agencies—Spouse Abuse and
Jewish Family Services—received
bonus checks totaling $9,000 from
last year’s surplus. The second
allotment distribution will take
place on April 15 at the Casselberry
Senior Center.

State Lawmakers Give County
Seminole County officials' plea that the state take
over paying the $411,000 annual payments on a 1973
bond issue floated by the county for the widening
and Improvement of S ate Road 434 fell on deaf cars
at Wednesday night's meeting of the Seminole
County Legislative delegation.
The legislators told county officials there is little
or no chance that the Legislature would favor the
request when Seminole County has not opted to put
the Issue of a 1 cent gas tax increase for road fun­
ding before the voters.
t
"It Is hard to sit here and say we want to help &gt;ou
when you have made no effort to help yourselves,"
said Sen. Richard I.angley, R*Clermont, referring
to the ninth cent of gas tax, which counties have the
option of levying if voters approve.
C om m issioner Robert G. "B u d " F eath er,
representing the county commission, noting a
referendum must be called on the issue, predicted
that one will be scheduled soon.
Feather was representing the county commission
since Chairman Sandra Glenn was in Tallahassee
meeting with state Department of Resource officers
about funding to provide public access in the north
end of the county to the Wekiva River.
County Engineer Bill Bush said the county used
$6.2 million of its bonding capacity in 1973 to pur­
chase additional right-of-way and widen and im­
prove State Road 434 and it is slated to continue
paying $411,000 annually on that bond issue until
2003.
Since the state took over the road as quickly as the
county got it improved and now owns the highway,
Bush said the county would like to recapture the
money it is paying on the bond issue each year.
Bush said if the state would take over payment of
that bond Issue for its road, the county would then
have the ability to float another bond issue for other
badly needed road projects in Seminole County.
"If we are one of only two or three counties in the
stale with a sim ilar problem, we want something
done," Bush said.

Park Road in Goldenrod. Die company wants to construct a
service station on the 1.43-acre site.

argument on refunding money spent for roads taken
over by the DOT after improvements.
Bill Gray, an engineer with the DOT district office
in Del^nd, said Seminole County is the only county
in the DOT’S fifth district with the specific problem
of having to pay a bond issue for a road taken over
by the state.
Brantley affirmed I^ngley’s early rem arks about
how the legislature would look at Seminole
County's request. "When the rubber hits the road,
the reality is that if nothing is done about the ninth
cent locally the state won't do anything. I agree it's
net right, but thnt’w reality," Brantley said.
The county also received no assurance from the
delegation that it would seek the additional $275,000
funding to widen and rebuild East Road en­
tranceway to Seminole Community College from
U.S. Highway 17-92.
Feather, Lake Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson,
Bush and Commissioner Bob Sturm told the
delegation East Road is probably the third most
highly traveled road in the county and its in­
tersection with the federal highway presents a
dangerous situation.
The road is within the city limits of Lake Mary,
but the college campus Is in the city of Sanford.
Two years ago, then-state Rep. Robert Hattaway,
D-Altamonte Springs, was able to get legislative
approval for $225,000 for the one-half mile stretch of
road. Bush said Hattaway got the most money he
could out of the Legislature.
And Sturm said even then It was known that it
would probably cost about $450,000 for the im­
provements. R.T. Mllwee,, a SCC official, said in
excess of 23,000 students are using the roadway.
Estimates by DOT are that it will cost $500,000 for
the improvement, including $100,000 for acquisition
of right of way and the balance for the road con­
struction and to locate a traffic signal on U.S. 17-92
A the entrance road intersection.
- DONNA ESTES

See DOT Page 8A

Winter Springs Move
dustrial was asked for by Cottle. All the
The proposed annexation of four parcels of
properly is currently zoned agricultural by the
about 360 acres into Winter Springs is being
county.
opposed by Seminole County commissioners.
Easton said the city did not follow the
The proposed annexation violates state laws
county’s development review process which
for compactness, creating enclaves, docs not
provides information on the impact to water,
conform to the county's comprehensive plan
sewers, roads and other county systems.
for development in the area and fails to follow
Under the county's statutes the landowners
the county's procedure for density changes
must apply directly to the county for a waiver
commissioners said in a letter to Winter
of the two-year prohibition on a change of
Springs Mayor John Torcaso.
density for the property.
Acting County Administrator Jim Easton
"If we have gone along with their request we
explained commissioners’ opposition to the
would
have been without any of that in­
plan.
"State statute says you will not create en­ formation," Easton said.
Easton explained that the changes in density
claves," Easton said. He described enclaves
on
two of the properties involved would violate
as Isolated pockets which cause a disruption of
the
county’s comprehensive plan for land use
services from one section of county property to
in the area.
•
another.
The changes would not provide for "an
An enclave is an area surrounded or nearly
orderly planned growth in the area," Easton
surrounded by another governm ent’s
said.
territory.
Assistant County Attorney Robert McMillan
Easton said the annexation, in the opinion of
will
attend the Winter Springs City Com­
county officials, would create at least one
mission meeting Jan. 25 to express the
enclave and cause an Inefficient use of tax
county’s opposition to the plan.
money.
Die annexation is scheduled for final
Winter Springs City Planner Jacquelme
reading
at that meeting.
Koch said the owners of the property — Circuit
Easton said the county must raise its ob­
Court Judge Kenneth M. Lcffler, Madltne
jections at the meeting if an appeal is to be
Luttrell, Charles Cottle and Edward, Robert
filed.
and Richard Parker — asked the city to annex
If Winter Springs commissioners approve
their property.
the annexation request, the county has 30 days
Additionally, Mrs. Koch said, a zoning
to file an appeal in Seminole County Circuit
change to low density residential was sought
by Mrs. Luttrell and a change to light in­ Court. - M1CHEAL BEHA

TODAY
Action R eports......................................2A
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Comics ..................................................4B
Crossword.............................................4B
Dear A bby.......................................... IB
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2A

Sports ...-........................................ 6-7A
Television............................................. IB
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World.....................................................3A

Dreams
We all have dream s — that we're rich,
famous, good-looking.... But for most of
us, those dreams never become reality.
Michelle Feldman, 14, of Longwood, had
a simple dream — to own her own horse.
Recently, her dream cam e true. Herald
staff writer Jane Cnsselberry tells
Michelle's .story In Friday’sLeisure
magazine.

4‘

l

�1A— Evonlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Jin. 13, m i

NATION
IN BRIEF
Environmentalists Sue To
Halt W att Wilderness Plan
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The nation's leading en­
vironmental groups filed suit today against Interior
Secretary Jam es Watt, challenging his departm ent's
removal of wilderness protections from about 800,000
acres of lands in the West.
The federal court suit is a response to the Interior
Department's Dec. 27 announcement eliminating the
lands in 10 states, from consideration as part of the 80mlllion-acre federal wilderness system.
The lawsuit also Is part of an effort to “head off at the
pass" any further withdrawal of protections from
millions of acres of potential wilderness areas, a
coalition spokesman said.

AnfMcfng~Steps O rdered
WASHINGTON ( U P l I .- O ut year, after an Air
Florida jet crashed in a snowstorm into the frozen
Potamac River and killed 78 people, a government
agency says airlines must lake immediate steps to
prevent plane crashes from ice buildup.
The National Transportation Safety Board said
Wednesday Boeing 737 planes either should have on­
ground wing de-icers, or pilots should be required to
take off at higher speeds to avoid a repeat of the crash
of Air Florida Flight 90 one year ago today.
In a break with the Federal Aviation Administration,
NISB Chairman Jim Bumett said the Increased safety
measures should be taken now "for the current cold
weather season" Instead of awaitfng further studies.

Arms C ontrol Chief Fired
WASHINGTON (UPI)—In a move that should please
conservatives, President Reagan has fired his chief
arms control official because of what one official des­
cribed as an "accumulation of differences."
Reagan requested the resignation of Eugene Rostow,
69, as director of the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency. The president also fired Richard Staar as U.S.
Negotiator to the conventional arms talks with the
Soviets in Vienna.
For months, Rostow lias been the target of sniping
from conservative Republican senators who did not
view him as sufficiently hard-line, and succeeded in
torpedoing the nominations of his deputy and one of his
chief assistants.
Reagan appointed Kenneth Adelman, deputy U.S.
representative to the United Nations, to replace Rostow
and replaced Staar, a political appointee, with Morton
Abramowitz, a career foreign service officer.

Scottish Games Saturday
They’re coming to help celebrate the sixth annual Orlando
Scottish Highland Games and gathering of the clans. They're
coming for a day of Scottish music and dance, athletics,
fellowship, Old World tradition and pageantry.
The clans will gather Saturday at the Central Florida Fair
grounds, 4603 W. Colonial Drive, Orlando. The competition
nnd exhibitions will be open at 9 a.m.
Headlining the activities will be, the Scottish Athletic
Competition. Professional athletes will test their skills in the
seven traditional Scottish field events including the Caber
Toss, Hammer Throw, Sheaf Toss and Clachnaert (Stone of
Strength).
Other athletic events will Include the Inter-Gan athletic
challenge; the running of the "Kilted Mile," Junior Highland
competition and a Tug-of-War. Special interest areas include
sheep dog demonstrations, Scottish Fiddling, Scottish Shoppes
and aerial rides in Rosie O’Grady's Balloon.
The sound of bagpipes will be heard as pipe bands from all
over the South and E ast will compete for piping and marching
honors. Individual piping and drumming competition will also
be held. The featured host band will be Rosie O'Grady's
Scottish Highlanders.

WEATHER
AREA READINGS (• a.tn.): temperature; 38; overnight
low: 33 Wednesday high; 56; barometric pressure: 30.31;
relative humidity: 6i percent; winds: northwest at 9 mph;
rain: none; sunrise 7:19 a.m. sunset 5:49,p m
FRIDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 8:18 ajn .,
8:28 p.m.; lows, 1:20 a.m ., 2:18 p.m.fT*ORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 8:08 a.m ., 8:20 p.m.; lows, 1:21 a.m ., 2:07 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 12:41 a.m.,2:31 p.m.; lows, 7:80 a.m., 7:50
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: 8L Augustlae to Jupiter Inlet, Out
SO Miles: Small craft ahould exercise caution until seas sub­
side. Winds northerly around 18 knots today decreasing to 10 to
18 knots tonight. Winds variable 10 knots or less Friday. Seas 4
to 6 feet decreasing to 3 to 8 feet tonight. Partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST: Sunny and cool today with highs upper
50* to low 60s. Wind northerly 18 mph. Tonight, fair and cold
with some frost likely. Lows In the low to mid 30s. Light nor­
therly winds. Friday, fair and not so cool. Highs mostly upper
80s.
EXTENDED FORECAST: A period of generally fair
weather turning colder again by Sunday. lo w s Saturday
morning mid Ms north to mid 50e south and near 60 Keys then
Sunday and Moqday from near 30 extreme north to 40s
southern Interior and 80a Keys. Highs Saturday 60a north and
central and 70s south. Highs Sunday and Monday in the 80s
north to near 70 south.

HOSPITAL NOTES
CMtrsI FlertS* Rtgieaei Meiettel

WUmWir

D ISCH ARO IS

Sanfbrd:

ADMISSIONS

Sanford:
Lewi* M. Griffin
Bootrlc* M. Murrey
Roy A. Rlc*»r. DeBery
Ralph E Groom*. Dalton*
Wilhelm Hfrnai, Dalton*
SIXTHS

Philip R. and Judy Naiion, •
aby boy, Winter Spring*.

Gaorga Horn*
Laura Ratliff
Battl* L. W illiam *
Clianthl Z. ( T ln a l P ater*,
Caiiatoarry
Helen A. Vann***, Deltona
Grace L.Carnet, Geneva
Alll* M. W illiam *. Lake Monro*
Mildred a . Barton, Orange City
Jack Pattanon, Orange City

Evmlftg Hnultl iwsaw
Thursday, Jan. U 1963-Vol. 75. No. 125
PeMtked OaUy and Sunday, cues* Seterday by The Senfard
Herald, lac.. M N. Preach A**.. SeeSwd. Pie » m .
Secaad Cleo*

Paid at Saeterd. Florid* I27JI

Name DdNearyt Weak. St Mr Meath, SMS; l _____.
Tear, SU N. Uy MaU&gt; Week SI.Sli Maath. IMS; «
****** V**r- UM»______________

Former Altamonte Springs Resident

Judge Hastings G o e s O n Trial Today
MIAMI (UPI) — More than one year after his Indictment for
bribery, trial begins for the first federal judge ever to be tried
for crim es allegedly committed while on the bench.
Alcee Hastings, 46, Florida's first black federal judge,
former civil rights activist and one-time U.S. Senate can­
didate, crowded Into his home courtroom with 313 prospective
jurors at 10 a.m. today.
What transpires under the eyes of presiding U.S. District
Judge Edward T. Gignoux of Maine will make or break the
career of a man unabashedly proud of his hard-won rise to a
high Judicial post.
H akings, an Altamonte Springs native, stands charged with
planning to bilk $150,000 from two racketeers he convicted, in
exchange for reduced sentences.
The evidence against him Is largely circumstantial, and
Hastings has accused the government of singling him out
because he is black, because of his liberal rulings and lenient
sentences, and because of his attacks against the Reagan
administration.
Jury selection alone could take up to a week, observers say,
and will be bogged down by a list of more than one hundred
questions that Hastings and his co-attorney Patricia Williams
plan to ask them.
Gignoux has also said that he will consider motions made by
Hastings and Williams that he bar certain tvidcnce-ttGet' Hi
during an illegal search of Hastings' chambers.

The case against Hastings is based on an 1981 FBI undercov­
er payoff of longtime Hastings friend and prominent Washing­
ton D.C. attorney William A. Borders Jr.
Borders allegedly first accepted $25,000 and then $128,000
from an undercover FBI agent in exchange for reducing the
sentences and releasing the property of Frank and Thomas
Romano, two south Florida racketeers convicted by Hastings.
Borders was convicted last year of bribery conspiracy, and
sentenced to five years in prison by Gignoux. Hastings never
reduced the sentences, but did release some of the Romanos
property.
Following the conviction, Hastings said, "I had absolutely
nothing to do with whatever Bill Borders did."
Since then Hastings has said that Borders was using his
name to bilk the racketeers of their money, without Hastings'
knowledge. Hastings also said the property reduction he or­
dered was in accordance with an appeals court ruling in a
separate case.
What makes the Hastings' case unusual Is not only its
historic uniqueness, but the unconventional and aggressive
defense that Hastings has put up.
While remaining silent in the courtroom during the grand
jury investigation, Hastings denounced the government to the
press— —._________ ...
Defying the legal tradition that "A lawyer who represents

F e d e r a l j u d g e A lcee H a s tin g s a n d h is a tto r n e y
w alk o u ts id e th e c o u rth o u s e o n t h e f ir s t d a y o f h is
tr ia l o n c h a r g e s h e c o n s p ire d to a c c e p t a $150,000
b rib e a n d o b s tr u c t J u s tic e w h ile o n th e b e n c h .
himself has a fool for a client,” Hastings has won that right
from Judge Gignoux. It is one of his few legal victories In the
case so far.

Lawyer Questions Reliability O f Breathalyzer Test
An Altamonte Springs lawyer, who claims that police radio
transmissions can affect the accuracy of the breathalyzer, has
filed motions in Seminote and Orange county courts
challenging the reliability of the alcohol detection device.
Steve Homeffer, part of the Attorney's Defense Group which
is fighting for the formulation of rules fur Hie operation and
maintenance of the breathalyzer, says that the group will be
making its arguments to the state Department of Health and
Rehabilitation Services next month.
Homeffer claims that experts have determined that the
breathalyzer unit built by Smith and Wesson can give grossly
Inaccurate readings because of the effects of police radio
transmissions.
The absence of rules governing the machine's use calls the
reliability of the breathalyzer Into question, Homeffer said.
"There are no rules to test the reliability, how It should be
operated or how It should be maintained. There are no rules at
all."
Homeffer has argued his position before Seminole CountyJudge Alan Dickey, asking that a client charged with driving
under the influence be acquitted.
Dickey is expected to rule on the motion Jan. 20.
Even If Homeffcr's challenge is successful and rules are laid
down for the operation of the breathalyzer, it will probably not
affect the cases of those already convicted of drunken driving
where the breathalyzer was used to gain a conviction,
prosecutors say.
GUNMANSUBDUED
Police wearing bullet proof vests surrounded a Sanford
house on Tuesday after a gunman barricaded himself inside.
Police rushed to a house at 403 Mattie Street about 7:45 p.m.
after receiving a report from neighbors that a man was firing a
gun In the area.

causing trouble. It was just a disturbance."
Police said they found a loaded .375 magnum In a desk in the
house but the weapon had not been fired.
The elderly gunman, who was not arrested because of his
mental condition, was taken to the psychiatric unit of Florida
North Hospital.

A spokesman for the Sanford Police Department said that
about 14 officers had been involved in the stand-off. "It was not
a siege. We received a report that a mentally 1U person waa

CYCLE STOLEN
A $280 cycle belonging to Marian Graham of Cedar Avenue,
Sanford, was stolen only 20 minutes after she placed it In front
of her house on Monday afternoon. The cycle Is a 26-inch 10speed model.

A B SC A M Ruling Expected By Sum m er
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Government
He was convicted by s jury, but U.S.
prosecutors seeking reinstatement of the District Judge William Bryant on May
Abscam bribery conviction of former 14, 1962, threw out the conviction on
Rep. Richard Kelly, R-Fla., do not expect _ grounds the FBI violated the former
a ruling in the case for four to six months.' congressman's rights.
U.S. Attorney Mike Farrell made the
Bryant, who at the same time granted
estimate Wednesday, a day after a threenew trials to two of Kelly’s co­
member panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of
defendants, ruled that law enforcement
Appeals for the District of Columbia
exceeds Its bounds when It "m anufac­
heard arguments on the government's
tures crimes and creates criminals."
appeal of a ruling throwing out Kelly's
conviction.
The government Is sppealing Bryant's
Kelly, the only Republican among ruling on grounds the FBI never
seven members of Congress convicted in exhibited the kind of "demonstrably
the scandal, was filmed taking a $28,000 outrageous" conduct the Supreme Court
payoff from an FBI undercover agent has ruled Is a reason for barring
posing as a sheik.
prosecution.

K lc h a rd K elly
m u s t w a it 4-6
w eeks
b e fo re
le a rn in g if h is
1982 A B SC A M
co n v ictio n ,
th ro w n o u t b y a
fe d e ra l ju d g e ,
w ill be r e i n s t a t ­
ed.
Kelly openly admitted at trial that he
took the money, but said he did so as part
of his own investigation of "shady"
characters. He claims he was entrapped
by the FBI.

W inter C om es South
United Press la terns tiocal
Up to 14 inches of snow
closed schools and sent cars
bashing into each other in the
Southeast and a freeze threat­
ened F lo rid a today, but
temperatures climbed to an
unseasonable 60 degrees In
the Plains. Three people died
as a result of cold, Ice and
snow.
A fast switch was played by
winter upon the Great lik es
region Wednesday where
tem peratures plunged into the
single digits after more than a
week of readings near 40.
Forecasters called for highs
again today near 40.
At the sam e time, parts of
the G reat Smoky Mountains
In east Tennessee and western
North Carolina were covered
with up to 14 indies of mow
and another 2 Inches was
expected overnight.
N orthern and cantral
Florida braced for a freeze
and a hardf reeze warning was
Issued for southeast North
Carolina. There were travel
advisories in the mountains ol
western North Carolina for
icy and slippery roads.
Midday temperatures in the
Plains rose 40 degrees In 24
hours. The mercury topped 60
u far north as Rapid City,
S.D., and Sheridan, Wyo., and
p arts o( Montana had
readings in the upper 50*.
Light snow showers were
rep o rted scattered from
northern Minnesota to south­
west New York State and
across central New England.
Schooli were forced to close
in five E i e t Tennessee
counties end in western North
Carolina because mow made
travel Impossible. C an and
trucks bashed each other on
Icy bridges.

legal Notice
FIC TITIO US N A M I
Notice i* hereby given that I am
engaged In butlnee* at Ml A E.
F in t St. and Park Ay*, in Sanford,
Seminole County, Florida under
the
fic titio u s
name
ol
E L I Z A B E T H 'S
F A S H IO N
CORNER, and that I Mend to
regiitor said name with CMrN of
tha c irc u it Court, Somlnole
County, Florida In accordant*
with lhe provision* ol the Fic­
titious Name Statute*. Town:
Section taS Ot Florida Statute*
WSJ.
Sig. Elizabeth Lavern Graham
By: Graham and Assort*!**
Publish; J a n u a ry tJ, N . 2J,
February I , tt*J
DSD *7

A mixture of snow and rain
pelted
eastern
North
Carolina.
"We got 10 inches of snow
here ... and whenever we get
that much snow il sits around
for a while," said Cindy
Holda, wife of the park ranger
at Soco Gap, N.C.
lig h t snow dusted Atlanta
on the anniversary of the 1982
storm that crippled the city.

Complete Detailed Coverage Of
Seminole County News And Sports. . .

Two men were killed and
an o th er was missing in
A labam a after an un­
successful attempt to rescue
three stranded duck hunters
ended, when the rescue boat
sank in icy Tennessee River
waters.

£

Hot desert winds scoured
Southern California, pushing
mercury levels toward the 90degree mark. Fire officials
Issued a "red flag" brush-fire
alert because of the unusually
warm temperatures and the
drying winds.

£

Daily Comics, Classified Ads
A nd Television Listings.. .
Grocery And Department Store Ads
Including Money-Saving Coupohs. . .

Legal Notice
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT PON
SKMINOLS COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROSATR DIVISION
Pile Number 17 SIS-CP
Dlvltlen
-IN R R i IS T A T S O P
DORIS M . STEIDLEY
Deceeted
N O T IC I OP ADMINISTRATION
The adminitlretien of in* estate
of
DORIS
M. S T E ID L E Y ,
deceased. File Number 12 SSS CP.
t* pending In the Circuit Court tor
S E M IN O L E County, Flo rid a,
Pro bale Division, iho addrest ol
which i l P.O. DRAWER C,
SANFORD. FL 32771. The name*
and add re t le t ot IM personal
representative and IM personal
representation attorney are set
' forth below.
A ll Intoroslod per torn e ra
required to III* with this court,
W IT H IN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (l) all claims
against I M estate and (2) any
obloctlon by an intoroslod parson
lo whom notice was mailed that
chattengastM validity ot t M will,
i m quallflcatloAa ol tM personal
repreoantativo,
venue,
or
lurM iction ot IM court.
A LL
CLAIMS
AND
O B­
JECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D W IL L
BE FOREVER BARRED.
Publication ot this Nolle* ha*
begun on January A I M .
Personal Representative:
THOMAS C. STEIDLEY, JR.
JVl ARAPOHO TRAIL.
M AITLAND. FL J77SI
Attorney tor Personal
Representative:
W IL L IA M S. PRINGLE
IS MOSS LANE.
W INTER PARK. FL 22701
Telephone: 105*110410
Publish: Jan. A \l H U

O liG j

(H ' I / B L

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O B 'L - I

(•UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE W ITHIN FIRST! WEEKS'SERVICE)-

81 SMCIM 3 MONTHS *10.00

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E v e n in g H e r a ld
SfRVINGSEMINOLE C O U t^Y

D ID I f

1/*
f

�4f
s
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

To Be Secretary O f Transportation

Thursday, Jan. 11. WB3-3A

Mrs. Dole M ay Win Senate O K Unanimously
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Never has a president’s Cabinet
nominee stood a better chance of winning Senate confirmation
unanimously than Elizabeth Dole.
The new transportation secretary-nominee will win speedy
approval from the Commerce Committee and then from the
full Senate not only for her own political strengths. She has
brains, experience, ability, a Southern background, former
status as a Democrat and an independent, and the backing of
the president of the United States.
Yet even the most popular Cabinet nominees sometimes
have a few negative votes cast against them.
Not Mrs. Dole. Whoever would vote against her, no matter
what issues of policy or principle might be in dispute, would be
voting against the wife of one of the Senate's most powerful
members — Bob Dole, the Kansas Republican who chairs the
Finance Committee.
The senator's power derives not so much from his national
stature as the man Reagan must deal with on taxes, but from
the committee’s long-revered power to grant special tax
breaks to special interests represented by other members of

the Senate.
Antagonizing Dole would guarantee a Senate tenure devoid
of any help from the man in a position to dispense political
plums and a lifetime of glares from the man whose glower
during a debate can be more effective than a speech.
While Dole’s successful career in the Senate and national
politics no doubt helped his wife advance, she has also helped
him — softening him to the point that the one-time Nixon clone
— a self-described partisan “hatchctman" — has become a
darling of the Washington media and political establishment.
His words are now given equal weight with those of the
president on legislative matters, his jokes are now clever
instead of bitter, and he is now the voice of GOP moderation
Instead of a carping backbencher.
During his 1976 campaign for the vice presidency and his
1900 run for president, it was apparent to reporters traveling
with him that "Liddy" Dole was at times the better candidate.
She spoke often and convincingly on his behalf, met with the
backroom boys and glad-handed crowds far more effectivly
than he.

For as long as they have been married — since 1975 — the
question of conflict of interest has come up. When he ran for
vice president less than a year later while she was a federal
trade commissioner, Dole always answered the question by
saying, "No conflict — lots of interest."
Recently, when Mrs. Dole was Reagan's assistant for public
liaison and Dole was sometimes at odds with White llouse
policy, he was asked if he was speaking often with the ad­
ministration. "I talk to the While House every day," he said.
"She calls me at 7 and tells me what to put on for dinner."
Now, however, Mrs. Dole outranks her husband in salary,
protocol, access to the president and bodyguards, if not power.
The residence of such political and governmental power in
one couple may be unprecedented in the American merito­
cracy. And it raises some interesting, ’perhaps amusing,
possibilities.
For one thing, important nominees arc usually introduced
around the Senate by their senior senators — in this case Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C. Would the senator from Kansas do the
honors this time? Or would that be .seen as a conflict of in­
terest?

Will Commerce Committee member Nancy Kassebaum.
Senator Dole’s Kansas colleague, or anyone else on the panel,
ask tough questions of her? Will committee chairm an Bob
Packwood, the maverick Republican who is feuding with
Reagan?
As a member of the Cabinet privy to official secrets, will she
have to promise not to talk in her sleep?
When the couple is invited to a party or a state dinner, will
she have to sit apart from her husband, whom she outranks in
seating protocol? How are invitations to be addressed Secretary and Senator Dole?
How will the senator feel knowing his wife is more popular
among his colleagues than he is?
And what if Mrs. Dole winds up, as her predecessor Drew
lew is did, having to lobby for an administration-backed gaso­
line tax that has to win the approval first of her own husband.
A final oddity is that Dole, widely admired for his World War
II heroism, for which he suffered a permanent disability, was a
mere lieutenant. His wife, now, as transporation secretary,
will head a military service of her own — the Coast Guard.

School Field Trips Approved
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald SUff Writer
Proposed field trips to Washington.
D.C., and New York City have been
approved by the Seminole County School
Board.
Board members voted 4-1 in favor of
the trips at Tuesday's meeting. Board
member Nancy Warren voted against
approval.
Sixth and seventh graders from
Teague Middle School in longwood will
travel to New York April 29-May 4.
Teacher chaperones will be Mrs. Doric
Sherm an, sixth grade m athem atics
teacher, and Mrs. Susan Macomber, a

sixth grade social studies teacher.
There will be64 students and 10 parents
participating.
The board was concerned that J6,500
already had been paid out for the trip in
non-r'efundablc deposits and disbur­
sements before the trip was approved by
the board. The cost of the trip will be paid
by the parents.
County School Superintendent Robert
Hughes told the board, "Teachers have
been instructed that before they solicit
any money for field trips it must he
approved. It won’t happen next year.*
Forty students from Spring Like
Elementary School in Altamonte Springs

accompanied by six adult chaperones
will visit the Nation's Capital April 25-29.
The teacher sponsor is Barbara Gruber.
Her classes-have been studying U.S.
government and American history.
An eighth grade class of gifted students
from Jackson Heights Middle School in
Oviedo will go to Washington, D.C., by
way of Amtrak March 26-31 during the
spring vacation. Mrs. P a tric ia A.
Feverston is the sponsoring teacher for
the 16 students. There will be one adult
chaperone for each five students. The
trip is made available through the
cooperation of the POGO I Parents of the
Gifted) group.

Angry Men Die Early
H tra ld Photo by J if t f C iu t lb t r r y

M ONEY HAPPY
W hy art* t h e s e p e o p le s m ilin g ? T h e y h a v e good
re a s o n to s m ile . E a c h is a r e c i p i e n t oT a c h e c k fo r
th e ir f a v o r i t e c h a r itie s by th e H is to r ic L ongw ood
H o ta ry C lu b to ta lin g $5,750. F r o m le f t a r e J a c k
S iria n n i f o r th e d r u g r e h a b i l i t a t i o n p r o g r a m
S tr a ig h t, $5(H); J u d y P e te r s o n f o r B e ta , $1,500;

J o a n M a d iso n fo r H S V P , $750; P a t t i B r a n tle y for
th e D ru g A w a re n e ss T a s k F o rc e , $200; T o m H unt
fo r th e H o n a ld M c D o n a ld H o u se, $1,500; J u lie
F i s h e r fo r J u n io r A c h ie v e m e n t. $500; C h a rle y
F r i t c h , fo r th e G ro v e S c h o o l, $500; a n d J a c k G u r r
fo r th e K a ris ja il m in is tr y , $300.

TUCSON. Ariz. (UPI) - Hostile and
angry men appear to have higher rates of
coronary artery disease and an in­
creased risk of premature death than
those who are content with the world, a
Duke University psychiatrist reported
today.
Dr. Redford B. Williams Jr. said a
recently completed study show ed doctors
who scored high on the hostility section of
a psychological test 25 years ago had a 12
percent rate of heart attacks or other
coronary events — nearly five times
higher than those with low scores.
"An even more striking finding to
emerge from this study was, in addition
to higher coronary disease rates, high

hostility scores also predicted mortality
from all causes in this physician sam­
ple,” he said.
In addition, Williams said in the report,
released at an American Heart
Association meeting, a separate study
conducted on 1,900 middle-aged Chicagoarea men came up with similar results.
Re said reports of both studies will be
published soon in the medical Journal,
Psychosomatic Medicine.
Williams said there are several factors
that can indicate a high level of hostility.
"Someone coming up and spitting in
your face would make just about
anybody angry,” he said. “ But an
elevator that doesn't arrive quite aa last

as you might like would only make some
people angry."
There also are those who have hostile
attitudes toward other people. And he
said hostility might show up in what a
person does when he or she is angry.
He said he thinks people who express
their anger are those more prone to
coronary disease. Those who hold their
anger in, he said, might be asking for
other problems, such as depression or
possibly some other ailments.
Williams said the new studies indicate
hostility may be the key aspect o( the
Type A personality that increases a
person' a risk ol developing heart disease.

Guardino: Psychic To The Stars
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — David Guardino
says he makes dreams of wealth and happiness
come true as the "Psychic to the Stars.’!
"I am not God. I am a gifted human being, but I
am not God. For instance, I couldn’t make Nancy
Reagan divorce her husband and m arry you. But if
you and your girlfriend had a tiff, I could be 90
percent sure of getting you back together.
"I don’t bother much with readings and predic­
tions. I specialize in making things happen."
Guardino is, at the very least, a confident man.
The modemday Merlin said he has helped stars find
true love, get big movie parts, make millions. He
said he has even helped politicians get their bills
passed.
But Guardino can't do these things for himself.
("Lawyers don’t defend themselves In court. Brain
surgeons don't operate on their brains.")
Guardino, 40, spends half his time In Las Vegas

and the other half In Lenoir City, Tenn., where his
wife, Dedra, 19, was raised.
"We met over the telephone," explained his wife.
"After about 30 or 40 seconds, he said, ‘Will you
marry m e."'
It didn’t happen that fast. First she flew to I .as
Vegas. Eleven days after they met face-to-face they
were married.
"It has worked out very good," she said.
The former social worker gets his clients what
they want through telekinesis — the ability to in­
fluence people's thoughts. More simply, he puts
"wammles” on people.
"If a politician wants a bill passed, I’U put a
whammy on his opponents. If a star wants a choice
film role, I just zero in on the producer and that's
that.
The scientific name for his specialty is
psychokinetlc energy. He explains that life Uself is a

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, JANUARY 13
Rebos and Live Oak Reboe Club AA, SO liv e Oak
Center, Casselberry, noon, closed meeting; B p.m.,
open discussion.
Sanford AA, 1M1W. First S t, Sanford, I p.m., open.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 14
Sallie Harrison Chapter DAR, 2:90 p.m., 2052 Aldoro
Terrace, Deltona, Speaker — the Rev. Hugh Pain on
"Florida’s Endangered Treasure." Hostesses, Mrs.
W.B. Little and Mrs. S.E. Moore.
Rebos aad Live Oak Rebos Clah AA, noon and I p m ,
closed, 220 Live Oak Center, Casselberry.
l?-« Group AA, S p m , doeed, Messiah Lutheran
Church, Highway 17-02 south of Dog Track Road,
Casselberry.
Altamonte Springs Alcoholics Aaeaymoaa, I p m ,
closed, Altamonte Springs Community Church, State
Road 430 and Hermits Trail.

result of biochemical reactions. Those reactions
create unique electromagnetic fields around all
human beings. "Every scientist In the world would
agree with me on that," he said. "Psychics call
those fields vibrations. I have the gift of being able
to tune Into those and read them."
What Guardino does is "psychic regression."
"1-et’s say you and your wife got along famously
the first year you were married and then things
went sour. Now she's going out with someone else. I
put a whammy on him, put a whammy on her, break
them up and make her come back to you. I
psychically regress her to feel about you the way
she felt during the honeymoon."
Sounds too good to be true, right?
"I claim 90 percent success. Actually it’s higher,"
he said.
Guardino said his biggest failure was Elvis
Preslev.

Clinical Lab Managers
Will Form Association
The organizational meeting of the Central Florida Chapter of
the Clinical Laboratory Management Association (CLMA) will
be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Central Florida Regional
Hospital.
Laboratory m anagers from hospital and .p riv a te
laboratories throughout Central Florida also will attend the
luncheon which will feature James D. Tesar, CFRH ad­
ministrator, as speaker.
Objectives of both the national and local organizations will
be discussed by the organizers of the meeting, Ann Cole,, lab
manager at CFRH and Tom Dryden, lab manager at the
Winter Haven Hospital.
CLMA is a national organization with over 1,000 members
designed to meet the professional and educational needs of
directors, supervisors, managers and administrators of
laboratories and management personnel from industry servinflJhe&gt;c i l n i c a n s b o r i t o r £ _ _ _ ^ _ _ _ ^ _ ^ _ _ ^ &lt;

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Lake Mary Grand P rti Go-Kart Street Race, 11:15
a m , NCR-Lake Emma Road, Lake Mary. Track open
for practice 9:30 a m . Free to ^w etators. Lake Mary
Community Center and Emergency Shelter Building
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Sanford Republican Wemea'sCtab, 11:30 a.m. home
of Jerry Keeth, 205 Crystal View Drive South. Election
of officers and membership program. Bring brown big
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Longwood AA, I p m , doeed, Rolling Hills Morsrian
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300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-0993
T h u rsd a y , Jan u ary 13, 1983—aA
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, 94.29; 6 Months, $34.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Genetic Engineering

On To Something Big

By JANE CASSELBERRY

In expectation of the annual spring migration
to the too of (locks of Freckle-Faced Fidgets and
the "Blue-Jeaned Smallfry" to the Central
Florida Zoo, near Sanford, the too La recruiting a
new group of docents. Last spring more than
7,000 school children visited the too. .
Docent training classes are scheduled to begin
Jan. S .
In case you didn't know—a docent is a special
person, a volunteer teacher who leads school
groupaontoun through the too. DocenUng, open
to anyone If and older, la a way to share your
concern for wildlife by helping dispel many
m yths about fascin atin g creatures and
educating too visitors.
The training course encompasses a variety of
subjects from animal behavior to too history. It
is designed to introduce the trainee to the natural
history of the various animals as well as
philosophy and goals of the too.
There Is no cost for the classes which will be
held for seven consecutive Wednesdays front 9
a m . to 2 p.m. On completing the training, the
docent will be able to assist the education
department with tours, outreach programs,

The memorable news photos of 1982 must in*
elude the side-by-side pictures of two mice, one of
them norm al sized, the other alm ost twice as big.
The accompanying story told how a “super
mouse” had been created by transplanting into it
the growth-hormone gene of rats.
The pictures of the mice may have been more
significant than the experiment they illustrated.
They took the new science of genetic
engineering out from under the microscope and
put it before the naked eye. The oversized mouse
shows exactly what gene-splicing can do and
explains why genetic engineering is causing such
scientific excitement.
The world doesn't need bigger mice, of course,
but the techniques proven by the mice ex­
NASHVILLE (Tenn.): While Liberals rage
periments at San Diego’s Salk Institute and about the Reagan administration's alleged
University of California at San Diego School of " insensitivity", this past Christinas season
Medicine are pointing toward fa r m ore significant waa witness to the* overwhelming rightness of
the President’s basic approach to helping the
achievements.
Genetic engineering may prevent birth defects poor: th a t individuals and private
organizations do it beat. Throughout the
and hereditary diseases. It may provide a nation, churches, charitable organizations,
defense against cancer. Scientists are gaining the and Individuals fed the hungry, found beds far
kind of control over biological processes that they the homeless, and added a small glimmer of
Christmas cheer to those who otherwise
have long exercised over chem ical processes.
The super mouse explains why gene-splicing heard no glad tidings UUs holiday season.
may have as much impact on agriculture as on
In Nashville, the Big Brothers, a group
medicine. The manipulation of growth hormones devoted to finding caring older friends (or
could produce meatier livestock, dairy cows that orphaned boys and girts, ' distributed 3,500
give m ore milk, and grains m ore rich in protein. boxes of food to underprivileged families.
Some experiments point toward a "sunbean" — a S ausage, bacon, fru it, vegetables and
new food plant that would grow like a weed and Christmas treats were delivered by private
citizens, using their own vehicles and their
vastly increase the productivity of the land.
It is not surprising that such bold biological own gasoline, not to mention ingenuity at
finding the oft-hidden homes of the city’s
engineering raises uneasiness at the same time it poor.
raises hope of progress against disease and
hunger. Researchers have been accused of
In stark contrast to the soul-deadening
tampering with the secrets of life or of trying of processes of public welfare administration,
“play God.”
the Big Brothen’ syMem of assigning
This is not unfamiliar in science. The same volunteera addresses and loading food boxes
concern arose with the harnessing of electricity in into their vehicles was precise and efficient.
the 19th century, and with the splitting of the atom Participants simply loaded as many cartons
as they could take, and received addresses to
in the 20th.
which the food was to be delivered.
There is indeed a risk of abuse in “ tampering"
with genetic material to create new life forms or
Those volunteers who were unfamiliar with
change a code of heredity. But we think the moral the trappings of poverty learned much from
issue resolves itself in the fact that the good to be their experience. Poor people In America ere
realized in reducing human suffering far out­ seldom scarred by genuine malnutrition. The
function of welfare, after all, has been to keep
weighs any risk that genetic engineering would be hunger a t arm’s length. One might be sur­
used for evil purposes.
prised, even indignant, at discovering color
A decade ago when the possibilities of research television in the homes and apartments of the
with recombinant DNA first began to emerge, poor. But television is the cheapest form of
fears were expressed that a new, artificial strain entertainment, that reminds the poor con­
of virus m ight'escape from a laboratory and stantly of whet they cannot have.
cause a devastating epidemic.
For the average middle class American,
Years of study by the government and
stepping through the doorway of a ghetto
academic institutions have led to the conclusion home la as a voyage to another planet. He
that such fears are exaggerated. A proposal that sees the d art eyes of the poor, dulled by
genetic experiments be encompassed by a new set dependence on public assistance. Those eyes
of federal laws was dropped. The rules of in­ glow with gratitude, however, when proffered
dividual agencies and institutions are considered a ChrlMmae gift from the Big Brothers — a
private organization.
sufficient to prevent danger o r abuse.
The experiments with growth hormones that
What Mends out moat is the consummate
produced the oversized mice a re being conducted failure of welfare to do anything but cukivste
on the very frontier of genetic science. There is no the habits of dependence. Ahnoat always, the
doubt that the scientists pushing at that frontier doors of poor homes a n opeoed by women,
are on to something big — perhaps an a id to who have m ilitated welfare checks for
unemployed or lasy husbands or unmarried
scourges of famine and disease which have partners. Reel poverty is at times hard to
haunted humanity from the beginning of time.
recognise. la Nashville, the beneficiaries of
puttie amistoace usually awn the basic

EDWARD

weekend animal encounters and public relations
for the xoo.
Docents come from all walks of life. They
volunteer their time and enthusiasm and share a
common commitment to the betterment of their
community too.
If you would like to be a docent call the
Education Department at 323-0181 (or more
information.
The Sanford-Seminole Jaycees will be
celebrating the 83rd anniversary of the UJJ.
Jaycees on Jaycee Week, Jan. 18-22. An open
house will be held on Sunday from 1-6 p.m. at the
Jaycee building at Fifth Street and French
Avenue. Any young men (18-35 years old) living
in the Sanford area who would like to be in the
Jaycees or who would like Information are in
vited to attend. The Jaycees will also have a
Jaycees Membership Night on Wednesday, Jan.
19 at the Jaycee building at 7:30 p.m. for in­
terested young men.
They will climax the week’s activities with a
Distinguished Service Award banquet at the
Holiday Inn in Sanford at which outstanding

young persons from various fields of endeavor
will be recognized.
Saddle up, pardner, and head for the Seminole
County 4-H horse banquet to be held at 7 p.m.,
Jan. 21 at the Agri-Center auditorium. The event
is for 4-H'ers in the horse program, parents and
leaders. There are sure to be some nervous
youngsters at the banquet awaiting an exciting
announcement.
The winner of five-month-old chestnut saddlebred horse filly by the name of Aurora's
Morning Star (Dawn for short,) will be an­
nounced. Deadline for entries from 4-H’ers
wanting the horse donated by Dr. and Mrs. P.M.
Mabry is Jan. 14.
This will be the second time in three months
that a lucky young 4-H’er has won a horse of their
own, because someone donated a filly to
Seminole County 4-H. Michelle Feldman was the
winner of an Arabian horse In November. The
yearling w hs presented to her by Carolyn and
Ell Pietrack of Orange County Arabian Horse
Ranch. (See the Leisure Magazine in Friday’s
Herald).

J.WALSH

SCIENCE WORLD

American
Generosity
Powerful

necessities: electricity, running .water,
fvnkure. Bo o m enjoy huge stereo systasa.
But the poor in America suffer a deeper
deprivation: a lack of hope, engendered by
the cloying hand of welfare. Tto government
check, whether looked on ea a godmod or a
ptttm ce.il always there, a reninderthM the
State gives and the State can take away.

BERRYS WORLD

Yet the faces light with Bniles at a personal
gift. So ws were reminded, this difficult
Christmas, that tbs assmtfsl generosity of
individuals In America la Min the moat
powvfri weapon In the war against poverty.

Child Gum
Disease
Inherited?

ROBERT WALTERS

TV And Party Coverage
WASHINGTON (NEA) — An Intriguing
approach to televised news coverage of future
presidential nominating conventions has been
suggested by the chief executive officer of one
of the three commercial networks.
Leonard H. Doldenson, board chairman of
ABC, has proposed that "the Public Broad­
casting Service assume responsibility for
complete coverage of the official record of the
convention proceedings."

assorted other local political luminaries, for
example) but the networks also have failed to
offer their viewers an accurate and com­
prehensive portrayal of both the substance
and the mood of the conventions.
Instead, they have displayed a penchant lor
creating or promoting Irrelevant sideshows,
utilising their roving campers crews to in­
flate minor floor feuds Into supposed major
controversies suitable for somber com­
mentary by analysts perched in booths high
To enable PBS to assume the heavy
above the convention floor.
financial burden of providing "gaveW o
Goldenson complains that contemporary
gavel" television coverage of the Republican
conventions are "largely ceremonial" events
and Democratic conventions in 1964 and
structured by their sponsors to allow “the
beyond, Goldenson says ABC would con­
parties to parade before the public in their
tribute a proportionate share of tlie sub­
Sunday best."
stantial expenses involved and has invited
That indeed is an accurate assessment of
CBS and NBC to Join in the cost-sharing
the evening sessions, but both parties' con­
arrangement.
ventions regularly are the forum for spirited,
That innovative approach la attractive to issue-oriented — but untelevised — platform
both the telviiion networks end to viewers debates during their afternoon sessions.
who take their politics seriously for a number
Although the networks are willing to
of reasons, all of which Goldenson discreetly sacrifice their regular evening programs for
failed to mention when he advanced the Idea three or four consecutive days, especially
In a mid-December speech at Harvard during the summer rensi period, the af­
University's John F. Kennedy School of ternoon soap operas are too lucrative to be
Government.
preempted for convention coverage.

First, the networks have now all abandoned
their highly publicized, self-imposed commtment to providing gavel-to-gsvel coverage
of the conventions.
. ABC, the most obvious In discarding
comprehensive convention coverage, In
recant yean has offered Its viewers situation
comedies, films and similar fare on the
evenings when the major political pertiee'
conventioni were in session.
CBS and NBChave maintained the pretense
of providing complete coverage by beginning
their brondcuts when the evening seariona of
the conventions are gaveled to order and
remaining on the air until the dose of the
prortedhigi
Bid they have broadcaM only a small
fraction of what occurs at the podium. Much
of that material Is Kknittedly tedious and
Irrelevant (the obligatory welcoming
speeches from the governor, mayor and

Indeed, Goldenson's idea may be appealing
to all three networks because convention
coverage increasingly has become a toeing
proposition, In terms of both ratings and
expenses.
It costs each network approximately $10
million to cover a single convention — or $90
million for the matched set — but total
audience Mm is far below the vtewerxhlp
levels on evenings when more routine fare is
broadcast.
Under Goideneon'i plan the networks
could save money and abandon their
pretense of providing comprehensive con­
vention coverage while viewers who really
care about the proceedings, Mrtpped of the
cxpeniiva sideshow extras, would be served
by the non-commerdal network which has a
proud tradition of offering serious public
affaire programming rather than en­
tertainment diaguiaed as news.

By SHARON RUTENBERG
CHICAGO (UPI) - Researchers say
Juvenile periodontitis, a rapidly advancing
gum disease in which teenagers could lose
permanent teeth, may be inherited from
mothers.
“ U ptothis point, I think the genetics of this
disease was controversial, said Dr. Thomas
Lelnbach of the University of Virginia
Hospital.
Periodontitis, or juvenile gum disease,
affects up to 10 percent of the children in the
United States.
“It's usually more prevalent in g irls... and
though it can affect males, we have found no
evidence of the disease being passed by males
to their offspring," Lelnbach said in the
Journal of the American Dental Association.
"It appears to be linked to the X, or female,
chromosome.”
Lelnbach and colleagues traced the dental
history of a Virginia family through four
generations back to a greatgrandmother on
the mother’s side. They found a history of the
disease among several fem ale fam ily
members.
Existing dental records for male family
members showed no sign of the disease.
Juvenile periodontitis is an "unusual form
of periodontal disease that young people get
and it’s real bad," he said in an interview.
"The cause of It, even though we know It’s
inherited ... what’s going on in their mouths,
we don't know,” he said.
In periodontal disease, bacterial plaque
that everyone has stays on the teeth too long
—If teeth are not being cleaned sufficiently —
and gets hard and calcifies.
It then grows down the root surface of the
teeth underneath the gum, causing an in­
flammation. The gum — and bone in which
the teeth are lnbedded — begin to pull away
from the teeth.
"And the eventual outcome is that as the
teeth lose their gum support and bone sup­
port, they become loose and eventually fall
out,” Lelnbach aald.
General periodontal disease usually ap­
pears in older people—during the 40s to 60s —
and "the amount of destruction is somewhat a
function of the dirt or debris around the teeth
and how well the person is taking care of their
teeth," he said.
But Juvenile periodontitis is Inherited and
even eccars in teenagers taking good care of
their teeth, Lelnbach said.
It "usually begins about puberty and it
progresses really fast through the teens and
the 20s and probably by the early 30s they’ve
lost the teeth that they’re going to lose."
The permanent molars are the "first ones
that are attacked by this disease and It can
spread to the other teeth," Lelnbach said.

1

"There is no cure. Some cases respond to
standard periodontal treatment, whether It be
aurgery or antibiotics, or just cleaning. But
some of them do not. And we don’t know why
the ones who respond respond," he said.
The disease can be slowed in such cases but
Is virtually impossible to stop, Lelnbach said.
"The sooner we can detect it, the better the
chances of treating it successfully."
"Women who have a history of periodontitis
in their family should be counseled about the
probability of passing the trait to their
children,’’ he said.

JACK ANDERSON

Jordanian Minutemen Part O f Plan
WASHINGTON - Then haa been much
agitated whispering m Capiol HIU about a
aacrat Pentagon plan to aMahbfa • rapid
deployment force ke Jordan, lb s eacrecy of
the project has prevented open djacaralm of
an estramriy centrovarMal 1m m .
Basically, the mcret plan calls for perhaps
two brigades of site Jordanian troops, who
weald serve oa modern m to tn sn ready to
reapand kamodWaty to any crisis in the
Persiaa Grif area. Thla “mint-Rapid
Deatoymat Ferca," as It has already boos
nkkaaaaod la On ftatagm , weald ha trained
a d stripped by the U J. ariftaty.
The detail a n cenridsrad ao aaarittvo
C v t t o u a M h r n r i s T to y L T a a d ttoy'tovo

"Hey. *Golden Parachute.' wake up! It may be
time tor us to worry about things!'’

h a a a o m to money. The M a t la to ksap
the project ta h ta rii a d to finance It
saprifcr.

The r w n for all the secrecy Is not to
•ap ron the congressional debate, which Is
beginning to rimmor below the surface.
Rather, it ia intended to prevent a storm of
ptotori In Jordan. While King Huaeeto
reportedly favors the project, It is doubtful
that the PilastInian majority In Jordan would
welcome such does, active cooperation with
the United B it to
Nevertheless, inaiders told my aaaodato
Lucotto
that the pentagon la coovtncod Hussein can be a key Uft. ally in the
Middle East. Some of thoaa who art puridag
the plan even see Jordan as the pillar of UJ.
strategic operationi in the Persian Gulf area.
Here's what the Jordanian force would be
uaod for;
- Maintaining Jordan's own stability. An
elite military unit would guard against both
internal throats to Hueeetn’a regime — at-

iwnjiiiii coups or ,&gt;m i,| iii|1m i —
ex­
ternal threats from such hwen* neighbors as
Syria.
— Emergencies In frimdly Persian Gulf
Matas: This is tha main purpose for creating
the Jordanian RDF. R corid to dispatched
quickly to put down Inaumctions agalnat
regimes In Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait,
Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates.
— Possible use in iotor-Arab wan: The
Pentagon apparently aeat tha Jordanian RDF
•a a potential surrogate force to promote UA
tntoraats in tto on e, without the need for
American troops.
Tto use of friendly Arab troops would be
fafinltoly more palriabis to Saudi Arabia,
which haa ixpreaesJ displeasure over the
possibility of calling In American forces, even
in a direct emergency.

Needless to isy, the Pentagon1! secret plan
has already raised concern, especially among
senators who believe Israel, not Jordan, Is
totter equipped to protect American intorerts
In the Middle East They fear It will damage
our relations with our moM dependable ally;
tto Israelis would understandably be con­
cerned that a crack Jordanian military force
could to used against them.
Thera is also uneasiness or Capitol Hill over
the Idea of establishing a special relationship
with any Middle East potentate. Some
■matore are Mill haunted by the disaMrous
reaulto of such an arrangement with the late
shah of Iran.

9

•
;
;

Bri tto Pentagon can presumably count on 1
strong White House support. Jordan is crucial !
to President Reagan's Middle EaM peace I
plan

I!

1/v

.

�1

s
Evening HeraW, Sanford. FI.

GLUP, Phyldil And Ptah

Thuriday, Jan. U, I98J-5A

The Stars Name Their Corporations
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — For reasons of artistry and
economy, there's a boom in Hollywood corporations these
days. Almost every actor, director and producer has his own
personal corporation.
According to California's laws, no two corporations can have
the same name. The office of the secretary of state has the
power to approve any new corporate name. The result is a
challenge to an individual's imagination, and a small survey
shows an incredible array of strange, wonderful and awful
names.
Maybe it began with Kirk Douglas. Back in 1955, he started
his Bryna Productions, perhaps the first instance of dn actor
incorporating. He named his company after his mother. Since
then, stars have incorporated using the names of relatives,
pets, animals, streets, home towns, trees and vegetables,
Greek and Egyptian gods and goddesses. They often invent
words with no meaning at all.
Probably the acronymlc construction is most common, in
which parts of names are taken and a new name built from
those parts.
Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis are Bil-Mar Inc. Michael
Caine calls his company Mikira, from himself and his wife —
Michael and ShaKIRA. Dorn DeLulse’s company is Petmido,
an acronym derived from his three sons, PETer, Michael and
DAvid. Greg Morris has GLUP Inc., which comes from Greg,
his wife, Lee, and his children, Linda, Iona and Philip.
Acronyms are also made from other combinations. Mariette
Hartley and her manager, Arlene Dayton, are partners in

Maraday Inc., from MARiette and DAYton. Phyllis Diller has
Phyldil, an acronym contraction of her own name. Jacqueline
Bisset takes the same route and comes up with her corporate
entity, Jacquct.
Robert Hays uses his name another way. He is known to
accountants as NOEE Inc. - "that’s because I want people to
know there is no E in the way I spell Hays."
Carl Weathers — Rocky’s opponent in the first two “ Rocky"
films — is Stormy Weathers Inc. Marcia Wallace, who used to
be Bob Newhart's receptionist when he played a psychologist,
is Off-the-Wallace Inc. Soap opera heroine-singer Gloria
Loring and her husband, talk show host Alan Thicke, are
mutually incorporated as Thickofit Inc. O.J. Simpson uses his
real first name — Orenthal Inc. — and Robert Slack uses his
middle name - Langford Inc.
Leslie Uggams and D iara Ross both turned their names
around, and so Leslie is Smaggu Inc., and Diana is Anaid Inc.
Sometimes, actors use a facet of characters they play for
their corporate names. Melissa Gilbert used to be known as
Half-Pint on "Little House on the Prairie," so she is Half-Pint
Inc., and Peggy Rae, who was Rose on "The Waltons,"
became Roseland Inc.
Sometimes, the names actors choose arc designed to be
funny or self-deprecating. Karen Valentine is Egg Money Inc.
Ted Lange of "The Love Boat" is Rock Bottom tr.c. Mills
Watson, a fine character actor, is Third Base Productions,
because he says people always said he’d never even get to
first.

N e w Heart Pump Unveiled
TAMPA (UP1) — Two medical resear­
chers unveiled a magnetic heart assist
pump Wednesday they said could be im­
planted Into the chest of a patient, leaving
him fully mobile.
Surgeon Michael D. Yamoz and bio­
physicist Stephen G. Covacs of the
University of South Florida Medical School
said the heart device is still two years away
from being implanted Into animals and five
to seven years away from being ready for
human use.
Research on the pump — called MALVD
for Magnetic Advanced Left Ventricle
Device — is being funded by a Veterans
Admlnstration grant, the researchers said.

Yamoz said the concept of the device
differs from others under development
because the pump has no moving parts,
unlike electric pumps.
The MALVD pump, the researchers said,
operates off a battery pack that sends
electrical impulses, setting up an electrical
field that activates the electro-magnet and
forces the diaphragm to move forward and
backward.
The researchers said the pump, which
will weigh less than a pound, will duplicate
the action of the human heart, pumping six
liters of blood per minute while the patient
is at rest and 10 liters when he is exercising.

Willie Aames, ex-"Eight Is Enough" star, is partnered in
Keep Working Kid Inc. Paul Williams and his partner are
Tugboat Productions since, Williams says, “everybody else is
thinking big so I decided to think sm all."
Bo Derek and her husband, John Derek, are incorporated as
Svengall Inc., a reference to the frequent charge that Derek is
a Svengali to Bo and her career.
Animals are often the source of corporate names. Werner
Klemperer is Babka Inc., after a dog he had as a boy. Karen
Grassle is Clownfish Inc. Shelley Duvall is Platypus Inc., and
explains that she loves animals "but armadillo and aardvark
were already taken."
Other names are exotic. Richard Thomas is Melpomene
Inc., after the Greek muse of tragedy. Georg Stanford Brown
has two — Nexus (a U lin word for "joining") and Ptah (an
Egyptian deity.) Henry Winkler picked an Australian slang
expression, F air Dinkum, which means a good guy.
Gavin MacLeod is Persun Inc., and says “ I just can't spell
very well." Danny DeVito of "Taxi" is New Street Produc­
tions. and explains that he grew up on New Street back in
Asbury Park, N.J. lcslie Easterbrook of "Laveme and
Shirley" is McCadden Place Productions and says that, no, she
didn't ever live on McCadden Place, but that’s where she spent
a tot of time, because the Unemployment Office is there.
There are many, many more. But you get the general idea.
And that's a great name for a company — General Idea Inc.

The Future Is Now In Florida
TALLAHASSEE
(U P I)—Author
John
Naisbitl says Florida may become the country’s
“number one state" and leader in its tran­
sformation from an industrial economy to a com­
puter-based one.
"California is slipping and there is a great op­
portunity for Florida to be the number one state in
this country, the bellwether," the Washingtonbased writer and planner said Tuesday. "We can
see much of the future by looking at the present in
Florida."
He met with Gov. Bob Graham and the six
Cabinet members Tuesday in the beginning of a
series of monthly luncheon conferences between
hig-levcl state officials and noted intellectuals.
Naisbitt is the author of “ Magatrends." a best­
seller in which he contends the country is shifting

from an industrial economy to "an electronic, in­
formation economy" and the transformation will be
as dramatic as the shift from an agricultural-based
economy to an industrial one 150 years ago.
Texas, California and other states in the south­
western quadrant and Florida will lead this
development of a new economy and, essentially, a
new country, Naisbitt contends.
And his message to Florida's major elected of­
ficials Tuesday was that their state could be the
leader.
Conventional Industry, including autom obile
manufacturing and steel production, is on its way
out, Naisbitt said, and Florida no longer should
recruit old-style Industrial firms.
It should concentrate, instead, on the new high
technology firms, like the computer comnanies that

Don't Frighten The Horses'

ARE YOU

Judith Martin Minds Your Manners
NEW YORK (NEA) - Call her a
response to the Me Decade.
"There's been a tremendous lack of
consideration in the name of selfassertiveness and honesty," says
Judith Martin. “ If I asked you how I
looked and you said ‘awful,’ you'd
then congratulate yourself for being
so honest. A lot of this honesty has
simply been an excuse for bad
behavior."
*
She carefully crosses her legs and
continues. "People have tried all of
that and they don’t Uke It. They
thought they could do without kind­
ness, and they were wrong. That’s
why they’re rediscovering manners."
And discovering Judith Martin, a
gracious, 41-year-old Washington Post
drama and film critic who is never
without her white gloves and her tart
wit. The daughter of a diplomat, she
realized two key things about herself a
few years back.
1) She was tired of being insulted by
sales clerks;
2) She was the only person at the
Post who knew the correct thing to
wear to an afternoon wedding.
And so Miss Manners, arbiter of
correct behavior, was bom. As Miss
M anners, Ju d ith M artin pens a
wickedly funny Q &amp; A etiquette
column that Is syndicated thriceweekly to 70 new spapers. Her
columns have Just been compiled In a
handsom e, 745-page hardcover
volume, “ Miss Manners' Guide to
E xcruciatingly Correct B ehavior"
(Atheneum) that has set off a tasteful
zoom In her popularity.
She Is on the verge of becoming a
household name — the new Amy
Vanderbilt, if you wtlL But with a
decided difference.
Her book does cover the standard

reference volume queries about forks
and fingerbowls and wedding in­
vitations. What makes her a breath of
fresh air in the manners biz is her wit
(when asked by a Gentle Header the
proper way to walk in high-heeled
shoes she replies, "Left, right, left,
right” ) and her willingness to chart
new social waters.
Tim es have changed. Gentle
Readers these days have' etiquette
questions about everything from
living together to one-nlght-stands to
hom osexuality. Miss M anners Is
ready with the answers.
"Where there are rules, I know
them,” she says. “ Where there aren’t
rutes, I make them up. Manners are
evolutionary, like language. I don’t
legislate morality. Do what you have
to do, I say, just so long as you do it
gracefully and don't frighten the
horses In the street.
"Actually, the question Tm asked
most often Is why we need etiquette at
all. My reply Is so we won't kill each
other. To me, etiquette is any in­
teraction between human beings.
Americans sometimes confuse It with
snootiness. F ar from it. Snootiness is
bad manners."
Miss Martin calls this a terrific time
to be a m anners professional.
"Manners are at their very best
during times of great social upheaval.
There Is a tense of chaos right now. In
the past, middle-class husband earned
the living, middle-class wife handled
the social life. Now, both men and
women work. But business manners
for women hardly existed before, or
manners for men at home.
“ You see, no m atter how much we
evolve, someone still has to go
through the door first. Since the
Middle Ages, the strong have yielded

J u d i t h M a r t i n , a u t h o r of
" M i s s M a n n e r s ’ G u i d e to
E xcruciatingly
C orrect
B ehavior,"
believes good
m a n n e r s a r c e s s e n tia l. " N o
m a t t e r h o w m u c h we e v o l v e ,
s o m e o n e still h a s to go
t h r o u g h ( h e do o r f i r s t . ”
to the weak. Nobody wants to be
defined as weak today. Women don’t
want to be defined as weak. The
disabled don't want to. I'm afraid
we’re sticking the old folks with it.
"The result is you have a situation
where a young woman gives up her
seat on the bus to an old man, who
then shoots her a dirty look. There has
never been such a period for the
inadvertent Insult."
With her Washington base, Miss
Martin Is a much respected, much
feared critic of White House
ceremony. She was not high on the
Carters. "Excessive informality can
be just as bad as snootiness," she

says. "Carter didn't use his formal
first name when he was sworn in. He
insisted on carrying his own suitcase
getting on and off planes. That’s a
case of trying to be something you’re
not. He was the president, and people
wanted him to uphold the dignity of
the office. Thj state dinners were
quite nice though."
The R eaguisl' "Thdy’rc struggling
along.'They implied they were gotnr
to bring formality back, but they still
haven't had a single white-tie state
dinner. They’re probably allergic to
the smell of mothballs."
Miss Martin, who was raised in
several world capitals and has been a
lover of old etiquette books and 19thcentury novels since her childhood, is
married to a genetics researcher.
They have two children, age 11 and 16.
Two very well-behaved children.
“ A woman once asked my daughter
whether she had to be polite at home
and my little girl looked up at her and
said ‘You bet your Aunt Fanny I do.'
My children have been required from
birth to behave themselves. I like
good manners, and 1 don't believe In
just having them when you’re in
public. I believe manners are more
Important In the home than out of it.
You should be polite to those you
love."
Miss Martin admits that becoming a
heavyweight etiquette expert has one
big drawback — she can't help but
make
people
uncomfortable.
"Strangers do make rem arks to me as
If I’m an etiquette meter maid who
gives out tickets. Sometimes when I
go to lunch with someone I think I
should just dump a bowl of soup on my
lap right away to make then) feel at
ease. But I don't. The cleaning bills
are too high."

have huddled near San Francisco in California’s
"Silicon Valley.."
Florida has an advantage in the competition for
this new type of industry over other states because
of its high “ quality of life," which now is more
important than the requirements of conventional
industry like roads and water.
It should fight to protect and improve this quality
by curbing crim e and increasing the level of its
colleges, universities and schools.
“These new companies we're creating now, we
can put them anywhere, so we look not for the in­
frastructure, but for the quality of life, the am ­
biance," Naisbitt said.
While it has an advantage over other states, it has
some peculiar problems and the rest of the country
will he watchine to sec how it deals with them.

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Want To Save Big On Your Mortgage ?
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - A Jacksonville
businessman Is selling computer printouts that
show how much a homeowner can save in Interest
on his mortgage loan if he "accelerates" his
monthly payments.
For Instance, for $90 a month above the regular
mortgage payment a homeowner can save $91,500 in
repaying a $50,000, 30-year mortgage at 15 percent
interest, says Robert B. Norris.
Norris, $7, is the founder of Accelerated Mortgage
Payoff System, which markets computerized

payment schedules for homeowners.
“All you have to do Is not go out once a month,
apply the $50 you would spend on that evening out to
the outstanding principal of your existing mortgage
on a regular bails, and you would be surprised how
much money you can save," Norris said.
.
On the mythical $50,000 mortgage, Norris said, a
homeowner actually would pay Uw mortgage
company $227,013 over the 30-year term. That does
not Include the down payment, closing costs or
taxes and insurance.

10 W orst D re sse d W om en Are...
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - One of the world's 10
worst-dressed women is a man. Dustin “Tootale" Hoffman made fashion history by becoming
the first man named to the lis t
Hoffman, who crossed the fashion line by
playing a woman named Dorothy Michaels in the
film "Tootsie," shared his No. 10 spot on the
annual list of Mr. Blackwell with Houston Mayor
Kathy Whitmire, who resembles the film
character.
Blackwell called the pair "look aUkes ...
w aving Betsy Bloomlngdale discards.''
Princess Diana topped the list and drew a
typical Blackwell barb - "Shy Di has invaded
Queen Victoria’s attic!"
The list of worst dressers included Bonnie

Franklin, sta r of television'! "One Day at a
Time;” Victoria Principal of “ Dallas;" singer
Bette Midler; Charlene Tilton of “ Dallas;"
Greek shipping heiress Christine Onatsls;
Princess Jasmine Khan; golfer Jan Stephenson,
and actress Cathy Lee Crosby of “That's
Incredible."
Blackwell described Miss Principal u a
“Dallas Valley girl,” and stung Mias Tilton as “a
Victorian lampshade holding her breath.”
Bliss Crosby’s wardrobe “looks u if she
bought out a rummage sale, wore It all and ...
that's incredible," the designer said.
The designer claimed first lady Nancy Reagan
committed the "fashion flop" of the year by
appearing in public last year wearing knickers.

Of that amount, $177,613 is Interest. By kicking In
an extra $50 a month with each payment, the In­
terest payment would be reduced to $06,112.
“ Simply put, these accelerated amortization
schedules call for extra payments of $50 monthly, or
whatever amount you can handle with no great
strain,” Norris said. “This money is applied
directly to your principal balance, each time
trimming JuA about one full payment oft the end of
your mortgage."
Norris said it is not necessary to rewrite the
original mortgage, and what he is doing — en­
couraging people to pay off their mortgage loans
e v ly - Is perfectly legaL
“ Mortgage lenders cannot deny your right to
speed up retirement of your home loan," he said.
“They cannot refuse legally to accept any extra
payment to the principal of any loan at any time.
That la the law."
Norris charges $10 (or the first schedule and $7 for
each additional one. Some people want schedules
for different additional monthly payments — $25,
$50, or maybe $100 — for purposes of comparison.
All he needs from the homeowner to print out the
schedules are the Interest rate of the existing
mortgage, the original amount and the total number
of payments, the date of the first payment on the
original loan and the monthly payment (principal
and interest only), the qredfic date the last
payment was made and the balance of the original
mortgage after the last payment was made.
The computer does the rest, he said.

M tA ftT K M N
W M IS C T

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T rie d m a n te

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321-4070
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�SPORTS
4A—Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Thursday. Jan. 13,1983

Fonville Factor Just Enough To Stop Raiders
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
LAKE CITY — lis te r Fonville, I^akc
City Community College's 7*3 center,
isn't yet a big factor on the basketball
court. But the Mount Bayou, Miss, fresh­
man did make one big play Wednesday
night a g a in st Seminole Community
College.
Fonville rejected a layup attempt by
SCC’s Kicky Sutton with the Tim*
berwolves holding a diminishing fourpoint lead with 1:30 to play to preserve an
eventual 87-77 victory over the Haiders In
M id-Florida Conference basketball

M ilton
Richman
UPI Sports Editor

Martin Chortles
Over Big Money
NEW YORK (UPI) - The first thing
Billy Martin and George Steinbrenncr
had to get straight between them was the
contract.
That was done and Martin “ won,"
“I wound up getting more money
again," he chortled. ‘T ve got a great
contract. A lotto money."
Then they had to settle the ground rules
and, as an old hand Martin knew how
perilous a journey this could turn out to
be.
He wanted to find out at the very
beginning, right at the top of the show,
how much interference he could expect
from Steinbrenncr if he agreed to
manage the New York Yankees again
following a pair of previous hitches he
never got to finish.
Steinbrenncr looked Martin straight In
the eye and gave him the answer. It was
such a beautiful answer — the answer he
was hoping for.
"I'll conic Into the clubhouse and talk
to the players only in spring training,"
Steinbrenncr said to Martin. "And only
once m ore at the AU-Star break because I
want the players to know where I'm
coming tram . That'tt be tt, though. I
promise you."
Promises, promises.
The first time Martin was hired to
manage (he Yankees, replacing Bill
Virdon on Aug. I, 1975, he lasted 24
seasons. The second time, taking over for
Bob I^m on on June 19, 1979, he kept it
only four months.
flow long he will endure this time is
anyone's guess although Steinbrenncr
added two years to the three unexpired
ones M artin had when the Oakland A’s let
him go this past Oct. 20, so theoretically
Martin can manage the Yankees through
1987.
Depending on who you listen to since
neither Stelnbrenner nor Martin would
talk about the money he's getting, Billy
wl'.l be paid at least $350,000 a year by the
Yankees and with what he'U settle for
with the A’s, his gross Trill be con­
siderably more. No m atter what, now
he'll have enough to pay his taxes.
Tuesday, In one ol the huge rooms at
Yankee Stadium, Stelnbrenner, Martin
and Billy's friend and .agent, Judge Eddie
Sapir, all were on band for the rehlring
announcement.
It took less than two minutes for
Stelnbrenner and Martin to start arguing
again after the Yankee owner said how
glad he was to have Martin back and how
he hoped he'd finish up with the Yankees
this tim e.
“ It's a pleasure to be back," Martin
said, acknow ledging S telnbrenner’s
warm Introduction. “This Is where 1
started and this Is where I'd like to finish.
We’ve straightened out a lotta things.
For instance, I’ll be handling all the
trades."
Sitting nearby, Stelnbrenner suddenly
leaped up.
"W h ad d 'y a m ean?" he insisted
sharply.
"TTicreTl be no phone calls In the
dugout," Martin sought to Ignore him.
"W h a d d 'y a m ean?" Stelnbrenner
demanded to know again, getting hotter
by the minute. "That's not right. I'm
handling the trades."
"T h at's not the way It's gonna be,
George,” Martin said, evenly.
"D am n’ right, It Is," Stelnbrenner
snapped. "And If you don't like It, you're
fired!"
It was all In fun, of course,
choreographed by them beforehand and
then staged for the benefit of the
assembled media.
Beyond question, Billy Martin Is wiser
now than he was when he look over the
Yankees' managerial job the first Ume.
Martin sounded a lot more conciliatory
than he had before - " I’m not gonna say
mine will be the final opinion." Maybe
that was because Stelnbrenner was
showing so much good-will, too.
"BUly and I are going to deal more
directly than we did in the ptut,"
Stelnbrenner said and Martin agreed.

'r / * v

Brtinn
"Lester's only 19 and he came from a
very, very small high school where he
didn't have much competition,” said
lake City coach Joe Fields about his
long-armed prospect. "This was Just his
second college game, but he’s a factor
Inside the lane.
"That block he made late - and I can
see where they (the Raiders) might have
questioned it — was a big one. I jester
causes problems. He helped us late In the
game."
Fonville, who scored just three points,
pinned the shot on the backboard. SCC

J.C. Basketball
coach Bill Payne fell the ball was coming
down — thus goaltending. "I thought we
had a goaltend there which they l the
referees) didn't call." he said. “ But our
shooting percentage (36 percent) was
terrible. If we’d shot the ball anywhere
decent, we’could have won this game."
But the Raiders didn’t as the 29 of 80
field-goal Inaccuracy will attest,
although they got off 22 more shots than
l-ake City. The Timberwolves, ranked

No. 1 in Florida and No. 11 in the nation,
hit 32 of 58 for 55 percent. The Tim­
berwolves are 16-2.
SCC, .11-7, evens its record at 1-1 in the
conference (fak e City is 2-0). The
Raiders host Central Florida Community
College from Ocala Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
A free throw contest, with the county
mayors toeing the tine, will be featured
at halftime.
•
Free throws, incidentally, were a
factor Wednesday night. SCC hit 15 of 22
in the first 20 minutes to sjay ciuse, 37-33,
at halftime while the 'Wolves converted
just 3 of 7.

In the second 20 minutes, however, it
was quite the opposite as the Tim­
berwolves converted 18 of 23 down the
stretch and SCC hit 3 of 5. The Raiders
never reached one-and-one.
Like City opened with a very tough 2-12 zone defense which forced SCC's guards
to fire away from the outside. The results
were disastrous as the Timberwolves
Jumped to a 27-H lead with seven
minutes to play.
"If we couldhave hit anything from the
outside we could have won this game,"
re-emphasized Payne. For the game,
Sutton hit 5 of 18, Whitney was 2 of 12 and

UNCA. 11-2, was aided by the efforts of
G-3 Sheila Ford. Ford Is the leading
rcbo under in the nation I Division I and

The Crooms Panthers had little trouble
disposing of Lake Howell’s freshmen
Wednesday night as the Panthers
breezed to its 12th straight victory this
season and 47th straight over the past
three years.

J.C. Basketball

Hobert Hill poured in all of his gamehigh 18 points in the first half as the
Panthers ran up an 18-4 lead after the
first quarter and a 36-12 halftime ad­
vantage.

II) and went into Wednesday night's
game averaging 20 boards per outing.
Against the Raiders, Ford owned the
boards with a game-high 24 rebounds and
she chipped in 15 points.

Mike Wright added 13 points and Daryl
Williams tossed in eight for Crooms, Hill
and Alan Mitchell pulled down 10
rebounds apiece and Williams handed
out 11 assists.
Once Crooms was in command, coach
John McNamara was able to clear his
bench as 12 players scored for the
Panthers.
Tonight at 6:30 at Seminole Com­
munity College, the Panthers go up
against Ocala Vanguard in what should
be a lough test for Crooms. Vanguard
was the last team to beat the Panthers
but that was back in 1981. ('rooms has
already beaten Vanguard once this
season in a game played in Ocala.
CHOOMS (631
Hill 9 0-0 18, Jones 2 1-2 5. Wright 6 1-2
13. Williams 4 0-0 8, Brinson 1 0-0 ?,
Franklin 10-02, Cooper 1 0-0 2, Harris 1 00 2, Mitchell 1 0-1 2, I-awrenee 0 1-2 1,
Klein204)4.C otton2M 4. Totals: 30 3-7
63.
U K E HOWELL (35)
Schnitkcr 1 04)2,1jowv 31-4 7, Lenard 0
2-4 2, Stlghlch 1 5-10 7, Peterson 4 44) 12,
Taylor 1 0-2 2, Botclho 1 0-2 2, Schafer I 00 2. Totals: 11 13-30 35.
Crmims
18 18 14 13-63
4 8 15 8-35
Lake Howell

SCC was in the game all the way, but
loul trouble in the second half look some
of the Raiders' strength away. Both
Patrick and Katrina Andersson were in
foul trouble much of the second half.
"After we lost Mindy to fouls we broke
down up front," Batoon said, "Mindy is
the team 's quarterback and when we lost
her, it caused us a lot of problems,"
The Lady Haiders host Black Hawk
Junior College (Missouril, Friday night
at 7:30 before opening its conference
schedule Tuesday against C entral
Florida Community College in Ocala.
SCC (65)
Patrick 4 6-614', Wintemhcimer 1 0-0 2,
Jones 10 3-6 23, Roessler 7 2-5 16,
Andersson 30-06, Smith2 0-0 4. Totals: 27
11-17 65.

Black Colleges Not Angry, Says Byers
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - The executive
director of the NCAA has denied reports

that mostly black colleges were angered
by new rules requiring higher academic
standards for student-athletes.
"Sinceyesterday I have talked to six or
seven leaders of predominantly black
institutions and none of them has said
anything to m e," Walter Byers said after
the NCAA convention adjourned Wed­
nesday.
"The decisions made on the floor were
made by the delegates,” Byers said.
“There was a full exchange of views. It

was conducted in a most orderly manner
and 1 don't know anything ntxiut
relationships that have been breached."

Byers said he knew more black con­
ventioneers than the reporters and said
he did not sense "friction and
animosity."
Black educators Tuesday told repor­
ters in the lobby of the San Diego Con­
Herald Photo by Bannle W itboldt
vention Hall where the NCAA annual
C
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t
h
y
J
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,
SCC
Kuartl,
p
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r
s
f
ur
t
w
o points a g a i n s t Lori
convention was held this week, (hey
M
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T
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f
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of the NCAA.

Oak Ridge Upsets Ram With 5 Pins
The last thing U ke Mary wrestling
roach Frank Schwartz had in mind
Wednesday night was his Hams losing to
Oak Hidgc.
After all, the Hams were sailing along
with a 6-1-1 record and the hapless
Pioneers had yet to win in six grappling
contests.
Five Oak Ridge pins later, however,
U k e Mary was looking up from the short
end of a 35-30 decision which gave the
exuberant Pioneers their first win of the
season at U k e Mary.
"They were 0-6," repeated Schwartz In
disbelief. "Bui we had five guys get
pinned m d there's no way you should win
a match when five guys get pinned.
"We’re really going to have to work on
fighting out of a pin. When some of these
kids get on their back, they quil."
•
Herald Phots by Bonnlt W itboldt

Lake M ary's Hob Olson (Hi)
looks for a soft spot to land
during his match with Oak
lU dgc's
Doug
Kershum.
Although Kershum had the
upper hand here, Olson came
back to show Kershum the
ceiling in 11:53.

Schwartz also got fooled at 101 pounds.
“They’d been forfeiting lhal class all
year," he said. “ But they surprised us.
They sucked somebody down."
Tiie result was Cedric Wilson sticking
substitute Joe Johnson In 55 seconds.
Ivan Carbla, who has been having
trouble making 101, wrestled up and lost,
M , to Steve Farrell at 108.
Junior Jack likens pinned Frank

Prep Wrestling
Hull/ey at 114 to run his record to 14-1 for
the season. In the next three matches,
though, Lake Mary could muster Just a 53 decision by Todd Beauchamp and lost
the other two by pins.
Trailing, 21-9, U k e Mary Junior Bob
Olson (141) squashed Doug Vershum in
3:53, but Mark IJndquisl &lt;1481 and Brent
Blakely both lost by pins to swell the
Pioneer lead to 33-15.
U ke Mary rallied in the upper weights
as WUHc Green (170) decisioned John
Mallard, 6-5, and Ned Kilbjomsen (189)
battled lough Eric Emerson to a 4-4
deadlock.
Ed Ades f 2231 wiped out Hay Thomas,
11-3, and Robert Rawls (UNI.) stuck Cliff
Mosley in Just 29 seconds, but the Hams
still came up five points short. It was
Rauls' lltli pin in 14 wins. The u-v, 320pound Junior has lost just once.
"O ur four upper weights came
through," said Schwartz. "We’re Just not
powerful enough to overcome two people
(Carbia up a weight and Jeff Farmer

1135) out with flu) being out of the
lineup."
The Hams, 7-2-1, host Oviedo on
Wednesday. — SAM COOK
• 101 — Cedric Wilson lOKi p. Joe
Johnson :55
108— Steve Farrell (OR) d. Ivan
Carbia 8-6
US — Jack IJkens (LM) p. Frank Holly
2:51
122 — Dun Espinoza (OR) p. Virgil
Grant 4:17
129— Todd Beauchamp i LM) d. Chuck
Simerski 5-3
135 — Jose Negron (OH) p. Mike
Grahum 2:29
141 — Bob Olson (LM) p. Doug Vershum 3:53
148 — Kevin Kwader (OR) p. Mark
I jndquisl 3:05
158 — Ken Johnson p. Brent Blakely
4:45
170 — Willie Green iLM)&gt;d. John
Mallard 6-5
189— Ned Kolbjomsen (LM) tied Eric
Emerson 4-4
223— Ed Adcs(LM)d. Ray Thomas 113
UNL — Robert Rawls p. Cliff Mosley
:2ff

Robinson, Marichal Enter Hall Of Fame; Killebrew Comes Up Short
NEW YORK (UPI) - Two of the most
stylish players of the modem era reacted
to baseball's, most cherished honor
Wednesday ... with style.
Brooks Robinson, a clutch hitter who
earned his AU-Star reputation primarily
with a magic glove at third base, and
Juan
M arichal,
a
high-kicking
righthander with more pitches than a
traveling salesman, were elected to the
Hall of Fam e by the Baseball Writers
Association of America.
Marichal, who spent 14 of his 16 big
league seasons with the San Francisco
Giants, received 313 votes (83.6 percent)
to become the first player from the
Dominican Republic to gain admittance
totlje Cooperstown, N.Y., shrine. For the
siz-tlme, 20-game winner who posted 243
career victories, the third lime proved

See FONVILLE, Page 7A

47-0 Panthers
Host Vanguard

U.N.C.-Asheville
Turns Back SCC
By CHIUS F1STEK
Herald Sports Writer
Nobody expected the Seminole Com­
munity College I,ady Raiders to upset
Division 11 NCAA power North CarolinaAshvilic Wednesday night, and they
didn't. But, had it not been for foul
trouble late in the second half, SCC might
have pulled off one of the biggest upsets
of the year.
The Lady Raiders stayed within one
point, 38-37, of UNCA at the end of the
first 'half and even took the lead at one
point in the second half. But, when point
guard Mlnday Patrick fouler! out, SCC
lost its quarterback and wound up
dropping a 69-65 decision to UNCA at
SCC.
"It was a pretty good game despite the
loss," SCC coach Solomon Untoon said.
“Just for a junior college to stick with a
Division 11 team like UNCA Is good."
Sanford's Cathy Jones poured in 23
points to lead the Haiders, whose record
fell to 6-8, Valerie Kocssler added 16 and
Patrick tossed in 14.

Jimmy Patyon connected on 1 of 8.
Combined, the guards hit just 8 of 38
shots. Payton's was a three-pointer.
Seminole came back on rebound
buckets by Bernard Mcrthie and Delvin
Everett and two free throws by Payton
with 34 seconds left to pull within 35-33
but a travel against Whitney and a basket
by sharpshooter Tony Eady put l«akc
City up by four at halftime.
SCC hit just 9 of 33 127 percent I in the
first 20 minutes to 17 of 31 (55 percent) for
lake City. Eady, a deadeye lefthander,
hit 10 points and freshman Donald

happen to you as a player,” said
Robinson, who attended the new* con­
B a s e b a ll
ference with his wife, Connie. "So many
o( the players in the Hall of Fame were
the charm.
idols of mine growing up in little Rock.
"When I was eligible the first time 1 When I thought about the Hall of Fame I
didn't make it and when I was eligible the
thought it was unattainable."
second time 1 didn’t make it, but nobody
The iwo men will be officially en­
is happier than I am right now," said shrined at ceremonies at Cooperstown on
Marichal. "Everybody in my country is
July 31.
very excited."
Slugger Harmon Killebrew missed
With 75 percent of the vote needed for election by only 12 voles. Minnesota's
election, Robinson, who played all of his muscular third baseman received 269
23 major-league seasons with the Bal­ votes and was followed, in order, by
timore Orioles, became only the 14th shortstop 1Alia Aparicio (252), relief
player In history to make the Hall of pitcher Ho&gt;t Wilhelm (243), pitcher Don
Fam e In his first year of eligibility. He Drysdale (242) and first baseman Gil
was named on 344 ballots (81 8 percent) Hodges (237) it was Hodges' final year
cast by 374 members of the BHWAA.
on the ballot.
"This is the utmost thing that can
Marichal made the Hall of Fame

despite having pitched only four innings
In World Series competition &lt;1962) and
never having won the National League’s
prestigious Cy Young Award. He did,
however, pitch a no-hitter in 1963 and his
lifetime 2.89 ERA ranks No. 7 in baseball
history.
A winner of 16 Gold Gloves for
defensive excellence during his
illustrious career, Robinson said he felt
his election was a boost for defensive
players.
Although he accumulated 2,848 hits,
including 268 homers, and was named the
Most Valuable Player In the American
leag u e (1964), in an All-Star Game
(1966) and in the World Scries (1970).
Robinson said the most memorable
moment of his career was appearing in
his first World Senes gam e in 1966.

T o n ig h t
Wrestling
I he junior varsity w restlert take their
spot in the limeMght tonight when
Seminole Hiatt hosts the 4th Annual
Seminole
County
Junior V a rs ity
Wrestling Tournament
Weighins w ill take place from 1 p m to
4 p m w ith action beginning at S p m.
Lake B ra n tle y is the detending
champion a lte r unseating two tim e
tournam ent
w in n e r L y m in
The
Grryhounds. however, placed second In
ihe College Park Junior varsity Tour­
nament m December and loom as Ihe
lavorite

Basketball
1 p.m. Seminole girls at Apepka
The Lady Scmmoles were upset by
Lake B rantley Monday nlgtil while
Apopka was busy upsetting Lake Mary.
The last tim e these two teams collided.
Seminole routed ihe Lady Blue Darters.
Seminole starters include Mona Benton
and Arlene Jones at the guerds, Maxine
and P a tric ia C am pbell or Genene
Stallworth at forward and Diedre H illtry
is the center,
( : l ) p.m . Lake Brantley girls at Lake
Mary
The im p re s s iv e play ol Rhonda
Varquei has the Lady Patriots playing
well while the Lady Rams are looking to
pull themselves up out ot e slump.
For the Rams. Laura and Peggy Glass
have been consistent a ll year both ol
lensively and on the boards Michelle
Swarti has been playing well lately an)
Lisa Gregory runs the show at point
K .in Aver ill &lt;s Ine other guard end
is look ing to rise out ol en 0 tor IS shoot log
drought against Apopka Courtney Hall.
Andrea F enning and Andrea Johnson are
Strong o il the bench while L lj Stone Is Ihe
Rams best tree throw shooter.
For Brantley, Linde Trimble and Kara
Pritchett join Va/quei inside while Linda
Nunei and Michelle Brown ere the
guerds Sherry Asplen, a Irishm en
sharpshooter, had 10 points against
Seminole.
I p m Lake Brantley boys at Lake Mary
This should be an interesting matchup
Brantley has slrength inside with high
scoring S 4 Paul Hoffman while Ihe Re ms
have a p a ir of line outside shooters In
Darryl M e rlh ie and Fred Miller. The
Patriots m ay have a slim advantage
underneath but Lake Mary is taster.
Joining M ille r end M erth it in me
starting lineup are Reggie Medlock. Jell
Reynolds and Donald Grayson. Bobby
Counts, Chris Jackson and Billy Dunn
provide Strength o il the bench
For B ra n tle y . M ik e Evans, M ik e
G errlques. M a rk
Shorey, Dennis
Grcneclose and E ric Trombo bolster Ihe
lineup.
4:11 p.m. Ocala Vanguard « . Crooms
at Seminole Community Callage
Oceia Vanguard was lha last laam to
beat Crooms, but that was back in me
early going ol the I N I season. Tha
Panther s, 11 o. this season end winners ot
44 straight, have already beaten Ocala
Vanguard once this season
Crooms lt a r l e r *
inrtg&lt;j* D g ry)
Williams, A lvin Jones, Mike W right,
Melvin Brinson and Robert Hilt.

�5

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Sco re ca rd

SPORTS

Dog Racing

IN BRIEF

W/re-To-W/re Action Spices
Inter-County Cage Play
The Inter-County Basketball Association opened its
inaugural season with 10 games this past weekend with
sii of the games going to the wire.
Katie Jacobs tossed in a layup at the buzzer to give
the Jackson Heights Terrors a 28-27 victory over the
Tuskawilla Mighty Warriors. Suzanne Hughes led the
Terrors with 12 points while Joyce Shaw paced the
Warriors with 17 and Robin Bell added 10.
In other girls action, the South Seminole Kittens
squeezed by the Jackson Heights Lone Strangers, 1513. Malorie Osgood had six points for the Kittens while
Karla Karplnka led the Strangers with five.
In varsity (8th grade) boys play, the South Seminole
Bobcats ham m ered the Altamonte All-American
Rebels, 64-26. Vince Florence led four South Seminole
players in double figures with 18 points, Oscar Wilder
tossed In 16, Darryl Reliford 14 and Phil Florence 12.
Ryan Lisle had 10 points for the Rebels.
The Jackson Heights Pac-men slipped past Winter
Park, 49-38, as Randy Ferguson and Rob Hughes
pumped in 16 points apiece. The Jackson Heights
Orange Pickers edged the Eastmont Greyhounds, 3534. Glen Reichle led the Orange Pickers with 11 points
while Henry Oxford had 21 for Eastmont.
The Tuskawilla Black Knights were upended by the
Eatonville 76'ers, 41-40. Brian McKnighl was im­
pressive for the Knights with 29 points.
In Junior varsity action (6-7th grade), the South
Seminole T om cats outm anuevered th e Jackson
Heights Bobcats, 34-25. Mike Sandeman led the
Tomcats with eight points while John Flath, Danny
Rubin and Eugene Rivers had six points apiece.
The Jackson Heights Bruins got a pair of baskets in
the closing seconds to claim a 37-32 victory over the
Tuskawilla Lakers. Garth Bolton poured in 17 points
for the Bruins while the Lakers were led by Eric
Gammons and Gary Peterson with 10 points apiece.
Jeff Pantalam en scored 10 points and Robbie King
added six to lead the Jackson Heights Dirty Dozen over
the Eastm ont Greyhounds, 20-17. The Tuskawilla
Celtics tripped the Eatonville 76'ers, 32-28 behind Tim
lam oureoux' 18 points.

Coefleld's 18 Boost Tip Top
Bobby Coeficld poured in 18 points, 14 in the second
half, to lead Tip Top Supermarket to a 38-28 victory
over McCoy's Cleaners Wednesday night in Sanford
Recreation Department Junior leag u e basketball
action at W£stside Center.
Dwight Brinson's nine first-half points lilted
McCoy’s to a 20-12 lead at halftime but McCoy’s held to
Just eight points the entire second half. Brinson
finished with 13 points.

Oilers Blast Chicago, 10-4
United Press International
The Chicago Black Hawks got Jolted twice Wed­
nesday night — they lost to the visiting Edmonton
Oilers, 10-4, then were blasted by Coach Orval Tesslcr.
“A few heads are going to roll and w e're going to
make some line changes," Tcssier said, discounting
his team ’s 27-11-6 record. "They’ve been enjoying the
good life (and) I've been a little too easy on them.
That's going to stop."
Edmonton didn't know when to stop. Pot Hughes,
who scored two short-handed goals in a 25-second span
against St. Louis Tuesday night, tallied twice in a fivegoal first period and Wayne Gretzky added two goals
and an assist to offset a hat trick by Chicago’s Tom
Lyslak.
Paul Coffey added a pair of goals for the Oilers, who
notched the most goals against Chicago since Nov. 26,
1980, when the Oilers beat Chicago, 10-3.
In other games, Buffalo edged Quebec, 2-1, Winnipeg
and the New York Rangers played to a 5-5 tie, Min­
nesota blanked Pittsburgh, 7-0, Boston dropped
Toronto, 6-4, and Calgary defeated Vancouver, 6-t.

Trlpucka Guns Down Bullets
United Press International
To Kelly Trlpucka, the Silvcrdome seemed more like
the Twilight Zone.
"It was strange; it seemed like a new surrounding,"
said Trlpucka who scored 25 points Wednesday night,
in his first game since Nov. 24, to lead the Detroit
Pistons to a 116-100 triumph over the Washington
Bullets.
Trlpucka, who strained ligaments In his right knee
and m issed 23 games, hit ll-of-18 shots, including a
seven-point spree late in the third quarter that gave the
Pistons an 88-70 advantage.
Sixers 122, Bocks 121
,
.
At Philadelphia, Marc Iavaronl scored a season-best
19 points, including two free throws with five seconds
left, to c a n y the 76ers to their ninth straight triumph.
Celtics U», Warriors 117
At Boston, Danny Alnge and Quinn Buckner scored
10 point* apiece in the third quarter a s the Celtics
cracked It open to win their fixth consecutive game.
Nets 120, Pacers 111
„
,
At Indianapolis, New Jersey, led by Albert King ■ 21
points, won ila 11th game in a row.

Bulls M, Cavaliers N
At Richfield, Ohio, Reggie The us scored 16 of his 30
points In the fourth quarter, Including two free throws
with eight seconds left, to help Chicago snap a threegame losing streak.

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

Smuiiuili* High athletic cliiTchir Jerry Posey tells
volleyInill couch Belli Torso (middle) mid Hose
L'litrell (right) to wash Hie Seminole windbreakers in cold water. The Semiiuiles were
trying mil the new washing machine donated liy
(lie Seminole High Xlliletie Roosters Club of which
I'utrell is president.

BOOSTERS
DONATE
WASHER

Sampson's 33 Too Much
United Press International
North Carolina State, making the most of the
Atlantic Coast Conference's 19-foot, 3-point
bonus shot this year, struck for 10 of them
against Virginia Wednesday night.
It was not enough.
No. 2 Virginia, behind Ralph Sampson's 33
points (14-of-23 shooting) and 21 rebounds,
rallied to an 88-80 victory in Raleigh over No.
19 North Carolina Slate. The Cavaliers,
trailing, 50-34, in the first half, were nearly
buried by the Wolfpack's Dereck Whiltenburg
and Thurl Bailey.
• "The key was the defensive effort on
Whittenburg and Hailey in the second half,"
said V irginia Coach T erry Holland.
"Obviously, we began by playing them tough
defensively."
Whittenburg scored 27 points, all in the first
half, and led the 1-point parade with seven.
Virginia failed to hit a 3-poinl shot. Thurl
Builey had 25 points, hitting ll-of-18 shots.
Whittenburg left the game with 15:24
remaining when he broke his right ankle.
There was no immediate word on how long he
will be sidelined. However, Dr. Don Heibcl, the
team 's physician, said such Injuries take "a
long time to heal."

Continued from 6A
Johnson had eight. Luis Phelps hit 10 for SCC
and Everett had seven.
The Timberwolves opened with a man-to­
man defense in the second half and Phelps, a 66 freshman, immediately went to work Inside.
His turnaround Jumper at 17:02 tied the game
at 31 ail.
Six minutes later another Phelps' jump shot
gave the Raiders Ihelr only lead of the night,
54-53. At that Juncture, Fields called off his
man-to-man defense.
"Phelps is a good athlete and they were
lobbing the ball to him," said Fields. "So we
really started concentrating on him and
putting more heat on the guards.
The strategy paid off bs Phelps scored just
six points the rest of the way and none in the
last five minutes. "We had trouble getting Luis
the ball," said Payne about I-uke City's 2-1-2
shadow defense. "But he has trouble wanting
the ball. He doesn't want the ball hard enough.
I think the guards and forwards are looking to
get him the ball but laiis is not working hard
enough to get il."
A rebound basket by Everett at 1:35 pulled
SCC within 79-75 but Fonville’s block and five
straight points by Ulycn Coleman put the
gam e out of reach.
Phelps hit 9 of 15 field goals and 4 of 6 free
throws to lead all scorers will) 22 points.

At Chapel Hill, N.C., Jim Braddock sank a 3point field goal with nine seconds left as North
Carolina won its Atlantic Coast Conference
opener.
At Ann Arbor, Mich., l-eslic Rockymore
scored 15 points and Michigan surged from a 9point deficit in the second half to surprise
Minnesota in a Big Ten game.

Everett tossed In 13 and Sutton had 12. SCC
outrebounded the taller 16-5. 6-6, 7-31 Tim­
berwolves, who played wllhoul floor leuder
Willie I.awton (injury) of Oak Ridge High, by a
43-35 margin. Phelps and Everett each had 10.
Whitney hod a good night passing the ball with
seven assists. Payton had five.
Coleman and Donald Johnson each tallied 19
for the ‘Wolves. Herb Washington, a swift
point guard who shredded SCC's press in the
last seven minutes, contributed 18 while Eady
had 14.
" I’m not upset," said Payne about the near
miss. "The kids came up here and did a good
job. I think we ran out of gas at the end."
SCC (77)
Everett 5-123-4 13, Sutton 5-18 2-412, Phelps
9-15 4-6 22. Whitney 2-12 3-» 7, Payton 1-8 4-6 7,
Merthie 3-4 (H) 6, Gallagher 1-3 &lt;M) 2, Smith 341
2-3 8. Totals: 29410 1827 77.
LAKE CITY 1871
Washington 5-9 8-10 18, Bailey 2-6 04) 4,
Fonville 1-3 1-2 3, Coleman 6-9 7-8 19, D.
Johnson 9-12 1-2 19, Eady 7-10 04) 14, E.
Johnson 0-12-2 2, Davis 04) 0*1 0, Staten M 0-1
2, White 2-8 2-4 fi. Totals: 33-38 21-30 87
Three-point goal — Payton.
Halftime - Lake City 37, SCC 33. Total fouls
- SCC 25, U k c City 19. Fouled out — none.
Technicals — Phelps (grabbing rim ), I-ake
City bench.

■ t U M j ^ N ^ O U P W ^ X ^ A N U A R Y 29, W J ^

Klags 111, Spars 1U

HOUSTON (UP1) - At ease despite the burden of
carrying the label of No. 1 tennis player in the world,
Martina Navratilovs began a new $150,000 women's
circuit tournament as she ended the last one.
Blasting 17-year-old L iu Bonder 84), 8-2, Wed-.
nesday, Navratilova, cf Dallas, advanced to the second
round a s effortlessly as die dispatched Sylvia Hanika
on Monday for the Washington, D.C., title.

A layup and foul shut by Ricky Stokes with
5:47 to go pul the Cavaliers up. 7B-7G. Ernie
Myers tied it 10 seconds later on goal-tending
by Sampson hut ihc All-America center
stuffed a shot a half minute later to give
Virginia a lead it never lost.
Elsewhere in the Top 20, it was: No. 8
Umisvillc 91, Duke 76: No. 11 North Carolina
72, Maryland 71; No. 13 Houston 54, Texas
Christian 51; No 15 Missouri 91, Northern town
62; Michigan 63, No. 16 Minnesota 58; and No.
17 Villanova 66, Pittsburgh 48.
At Durham, N.C.. I-ouisville rolled to its 12th
victory In 14 games behind 21 points by Milt
Wagner and 16 by l-w a ste r Gordon.

S f f ESW K jS e EYE^STpU R bTlXSffi- " |

A1 ru |1 " ‘ , Mark Aguirre, who finished with 35 points,
lied Uw game, then connected on a 23-footer with four
itconds left as the Mavericks won for only the third
time In their last 13 games.

Martino Hammers Bonder

College Basketball

A tS in lo rd Orlando
Wednesday night results
F irst ra c e - 5 16, D t u t
6 ML Carr
13 80 10 90 o 70
7 ML Goldie
9 40
1 Forlys Sebon
5 70
O (6 7) St 40 P (4 71 93 40; T ( t
7-11 1.111,00
Secondrace— &gt;e, C; 19 99
1 DJ Penny
4 90 7 90 7 40
t Our Bobba Louie
3 40 300
iH R Rock N Red
3 90
0(1 t&gt; I 00; P ( I 4) I I *0; T ( I t
II IK «0, DO &lt;6 11 51 00
Third race — S it , M : I I 19
7LCsNoShow
10 70 7 70 t JO
a Boca Grande
ta d 4 80
SRedhotWhltkld
too
Q ( M l 39 10; P ( M ) 175 tO; T 17
1 5) 547 tO
Fourthrace —
C; 19 I I
2BlueGia/e
540 3 70 J 00
4 W hit’S Sue
3,40 5 00
I Sweet Lawyer
9 70
0 (7 41 I t 00, P ( I t) H I ; T ( I t
II 191 tO
F iflh ra c e — 5 It. C: 31.t l
t Whir Ahead
5 00 3 DO 1 40
7 Mighty VIc
7 70 3 10
?LakeArlana
310
O I t 71 75 70; P (4 71 75 tO; T ( I
M l IIS 40
in lh race — l». B 31.97
7 Redd Brown
10 00 4 00 1 00
tSIacy River
5 00 3 00
7 I'm Cured
310
O i l t) H 40; P I I t l St 00; T I I
t 7) 117 40
Seventh race — 5 It. A 30 91
4Dutch Sweetie
4 40 7 to 7 40
9M.»ke Our Move ,
3,70 7 80
7 F o rly tL y n n
4 70
O I t 91 19 10; P (4 91 19 90. T (4
9 11 97 tO
Eighth race — 7 It. B 44 05
7 Lillie Irv
6 tO 6 40 300
tLC sC oncho
7 io 4 40
9 Count R iver
tao
O il t l 1) 90. P ( I t ) 51 90. T 11
M l l i t to
Ntnlhraee — 5 It . B: 11 1
2Casey D
12 60 9 40 5 60
7 ML Sydney
12 80 13 40
, PC 5 Money Maker
§ 10
O (2-71 It 10 P ( 2 7) 55.10; T (1
7 41 J tt 10
10th race —
A 31 t l
5 Well Decorated 4 60 3 00 7 60
lAm m alion
3 00 7 40
6 Symphony
3 40
0 I I SI 7 00; P 15 31; T (5 311
1)4 10
llth ra c e — 5 It. T A ; 31 19
7K sM orn
14 AO 12 90 6 60
7 High Glass
9 40 17 60
4 Te.amy
7 40
O II7 ) 70 10, P (2 7) 111 00. T 11
7 t l t i t tO. Pick So 17 6 2 7 5-1). 5
ul t (I winners) 107 10 “ |ackpol"
carryover 1,191
llth r a c e - S it , C: I t . I f
H ay s Cindy
7 40 5 00 2 60
3 Sovor Prom
] 60 160
7 Manatee D u ll
11 40
O il 3) 3110; P ( I 31 67 10; T (I

111 Kl 00

l llh race — &gt;».D: 19 14
3 Bag A Tricks
7 40 t 90 5 40
1 Gaston
ISO 310
1 Mucker Coal
10 tO
O (3 I I 9 10; P 10 tOi T (1 111

Western Conference
M idwest Division
GB
W L Pd
Kan City
71 1] 619
San Anton
73 15 605
19 N 474 5
Denver
14 71 400 7* i
Dallas
Ulah
IS 74 195 l r j
Houston
S 30 143 16';
PacU-c O iviuon
LOS Ang
7/ - 771
Seattle
73 U 439 4' t
23 IS 605 S')
Phoenin
Portland
22 IS 595 t
Golden SI
IS 72 • 405 13
9 79 ?t! 19
San Diego
Wednesday* Result*
Botion 139, Golden Sla'e 117
New Jersey 170. Indiana 114
Phila 177, Milwaukee 171
Chicaqn 9*. Cleveland 96
Detroit l i t . Washinqlon 100
Da'las 117, San Diego HO
ta n C:ty 111- San Antonio 113
Denver 17t Utah 111
Today’ * Gamut
(A ll T im e t ESTI
Cleveland al Milwaukee, I 30
pm
Seattle at Phoenin. 9 10 p m

Hockey
NHL Standing!
Bv United P re tt Inlernational
Wale* Conference
P atrick Division
W L T Pis
Ph’ ladelptwi
57
7t 17
51
77 I t
NT islanders
49
NY Rangers
77 I t
Washington
49
19 13
Pittsburgh
17 75
30
New Jersey
9 7t
77
Adams Division
Boston
26 10 1 59
Montreal
.
71 12 8 54
70 14 9 49
Outlaid
Quebec
18 19 6 47
10 29 5 75
Martlord
Campbell Conference
N orris Division
W L T P ti
77 It 6 to
Chicago
Minnesota
2? 12 9 53
14 25 6 34
St Louis
Detroit
10 21 u 31
10 22 1 78
Toronto
Smythe OiviSion
Edmonton
75 13 4 59
Winnipeg
11 20 5 41
Calgary
17 21 ; 41
Vancouver
I t 2C 9 37
IS 21 s 36
Los Angeles
Wednesday’ s Results •
BuMato 7, Quebec 1
Winnipeg 5. NY Rngrs S, tile
Minnesota 7, Pittsburgh 0
Boston 6, Toronto 4
Edmonton 10 Chicago 4
Calqary 6, Vancouver 4
Today's Games
I A ll Times EST)
Quebec at Boston, 1 J5 p in
Montreal at M arllord. 7 35
pm
NV islanders al New Jersey.
7 3S p m
Pittsburgh
al
Philadelphia.
7 35 p m

&lt;0110

Los Angeles al Detroit, 7 35
pm
Toronto al Minnesota, 9 35
pm
Vancouver al Calgary, 9 35

pm

B a s k e t b a ll
College Basketball Rtsulls
By United Press International
Wednesday
South
Alabam a SI
90
Belhune
Cook man AS
Baptist 71, Campbell A9 i?OT!
Beth..- y S3 Carnegie Mellon A9
Boston U 79 74 C Wilmington i t
Brmngham Southern 104, Tal
ledeqa 65
Catawba 101, Eton 77
Charleston 57, W Liberty 55
La rm ont 96 Aiderson Broaddu*
74
f la international 110 Webber
&gt;9
Greensboro Cotl 74 MrlhodiSt
77
Guilford 1134. Wingate 97
Louisville 91, Duke 76
Newberry 56. Edward Waters 57
No Carolina 77, Maryland ?l
Pledler 97 Pembroke 70
Radlord 98, Eastern 69
Richmond 50 George Mason 49
Huanoke Coll 86. Vassar 36
S C Spartanburg 76 Highpoint
57
Salem 63 W Va Wesleyan 60
50 Carolina 60 The Citadel 56
Southern Tech 74, Berry 6?
51 Leo 59, Florida Tech 56
Virginia 99 No Carolina Si so
Wm 9. M ary 77, E Carolina 51

NIGHTLY 8 PM
MATINEES
M O N W E D SAT.
1:1$ P.M ,

•
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PICK-SIX
WINNER SIX IN
A ROW AND
WIN THOUSAND!
OF DOLLARS

FR EE

A - 1.117; Handle S i l t . t i t

NBA
NBA Standings
.
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
V2 L Pet. GO
Phi la
79 5 953
27 1 771 2')
Boston
14 11 649 S';
New Jrsey
Wshngtn
17 17 500 12
1) 22 171 16';
New York
Central Division
74 13 649
MUwauke
19 TO 457 6
Detroit
17 IK 496 6
Atlanta
11 77 351 10';
Indiana
I I 73 341 11
Chicago
5 79 147 17';
Cleveland

•
ALL. N E W CASH
S E L L M A C H IN E S

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CHICKEN

TRIFECTAON
EVERY RACE
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/AflFORDOR1PODO

Watch the
Herald
for

KEnaaauB
N etOdaede Just
eft Hwy 17 11 longwoed
fltSIRVATIONS 931 1(00
Sony N (0 m Under I I

Details

...Fonville Factor Just Enough

Mavericks 112, Clippers HI

At K ansas City. Mo., the Kings moved Into first place
in the Midwest Division as Steve Johnson led the way
with 23 points.
Nuggeta 111, J a n 111
At Denver, Kiki Vandeweghe hit IfroMO shots for 30
points to spark Denver. Darrell Griffith led Utah with
22.

Thursday, Jan. 12,1?BJ— 7A

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Thursday, Jin. 13, t t ll

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Police: Bombings M ay Be
A N e w Wave O f Terrorism
MIAMI (UPI) — Two bombs which exploded in Little
Havana businesses may be the start of a new wave of
anti-Castro terrorism in Miami, according to police
investigators.
Omega 7, an international militant anti-Castro
organisation, claimed responsibility Wednesday for
planting the two bombs and for a third device which
failed to explode at a Spanish-language magazine.
No one was hurt by the explosions, which ripped
through the offices of Paradise International Travel
Agency and the Padron Cigars factory just before
midnight Tuesday.
An apparently authentic message from Omega 7,
delivered to a Spanish-language radio station, warned
the Justice Department and the FBI to back off from
an investigation into the group's activities.

$50 Dock Tax Opposed
TAL1.AHASSEE (UPIi — The Department of
Natural Resources wants to collect a 150 one-time lax*
on the 6,000 private docks built over stale-owned
waters and that has created an uproar.
It is part of a plan prepared by the Cabinet's Marina
Committee which consisted of marine industry
rep re se n ta tiv es, government officials and en­
vironmentalists.
The plan, which goes before the Cabinet next
Tuesday, also includes a reduction in the annual
licensing fee for most commercial marinas and a $200
one-time registration fee for commercial docks that
don't pay a licensing fee because they were “grand­
fathered in" when the fees were established in 1970.

Shark Watch Still On
HALMNDALE (UPI) - The beaches abutting the
tourist bungalos of Hallandale will be off limits to
bathers for a third day if police helicopters spot any
further sign of hundreds of blacktip sharks lurking off
the coast.
Following reports that as many as 500 sharks were
still hovering nearby Wednesday, beach patrol of­
ficials kept swimmers from entering the waters for a
second day.
In nearby Hollywood Beach, however, lifeguards
lifted their swimming ban Wednesday after searching
the waters in skiffs for the dreaded predators.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
U.S. Compromise Debated
A t Troop Pullout Talks
United Press International
l-ebanese, Israeli and U.S. negotiators meeting for
the sixth time today agreed on an agenda for the
trilateral talks on the withdrawal of foreign forces
from I-ebanon, an Israeli spokesman said.
In Jerusalem, U.S. envoy Philip Habib met with
Prime Minister Menachem Begin in a session both
Israeli and U banese sources said earlier would be
pivotal to the success ol the talks.
The state-run television said Wednesday, both Israel
and tabanon appeared ready to endorse the latest U.S.
compromise formula on a negotiating format —
although both were seeking some changes in the U.S.
proposal.
Israel has insisted the talks lead to future diplomaticrelations but Lebanon maintains they must focus on
withdrawal of 30,000 Israeli troops from the war-tom
country.

Poland Expels Reporter
WARSAW, Poland (UPI) Polish military
authorities announced the expulsion of United Press
International correspondent Ruth E. Gruber, accusing
her after nearly 24 hours of detention of gathering
“Intelligence" material.
Miss Gruber, 33, was instructed to appear at the
Foreign Ministry today where she was handed an
expulsion order and told to leave the country within 48
hours.
A UPI secretary who also was held by the authorities
had not been released as of early today.
The order came teas than a week after expulsion of
British Broadcasting Corp. correspondent Kevin
Ruane and was seen as the latest move in an official
campaign against Western news media by the Polish
military regime.

H t ir ld Photo by Ja n * C iitH b tr r y

JOB WELL DONE
President Emeritus of the United Way of Seminole County George Touhy
(second from right) presented plaques of appreciation of service to (from
left) Vul Colbert, treasurer; Dick Fess, outgoing 1982 president; and Larry
Stricklcr. campaign chairman, during a United Way luncheon Wednesday.

Did Drug Dealer Have Judge Killed?
JACKSONVILIE (UPI I A govern­ assistant U.S. Attorney Ray Jahn told the jury'
ment prosecutor said today Jainiel “ Jimmy" in opening arguments. "Jimmy Chagra was
Chagra ordered the assassination of Texas a fra id ... Ho took every legal recourse he could
federal Judge- John* Wood because “he was to get Judge Wood removed from the court."
afraid" the judge would give him a maximum
"Failing that, he decided to murder Judge
sentence in a narcotics trial.
Wood.”
The trial was moved to Jacksonville because
“ Judge Wood had a nickname of Maximum
John because of his penchant for imposing of the extensive publicity surrounding the case
stringent penalities on drug offenders," in Texas.

1/ v

led from a schoolhousc across
the street from the house,
screaming, "Oh my son, oh
my son. Why did they have to
kill my son? Oh my
husband."
Police moved reporters into
a guarded room In a
schoolhousc that served as a
command post across from
the house just before the
assault: Afterward, the house
was cordoned off and police,
wiping tears from their eyes,
were seen around the
structure.
Reporters could hear gun­
shots from the room and later
heard scream s and sobs from
the room where Mrs. Sanders
and the relatives of the group
inside the house were waiting.
"You didn’t have to kill
them,” one woman cried.
Using a bullhorn, officers
shouted to the people Inside,
and there were shouts back.
Officers had not heard any
voices in the house since 2
p.m. Wednesday, and no word
had been heard from Hester

Continued From Page 1A
work, expected to cost at least $2.4 million, is
currently slated for completion by 1988.
Gray said most of the project, construction
of Maitland Avenue further west and
upgrading of Forest City Road, lies within
Orange County but it would help ease
congestion along SR 436 at the 1-4 Interchange
In Altamonte Springs.
Seminole County Engineer William Bush
Jr., said even though the meeting in DeLand
was largely ceremonial, it was encouraging in
several areas.
Bush was encouraged by the Inclusion of the
new projects and with DOT plans to increase
resurfacing and traffic improvement projects.
"I thought it was probably one of the best
meetings we’ve had," he said. Three members
of the county's legislative delegation — Slate
Sen. Bobby Brantley, R*Longwood. and newly

elected Republican Reps. Carl Selph and Art
Grindle from Seminole County attended the
meeting along with County Commissioners
Robert Sturm, Robert G. "Bud" Feather and
Bill Kirchhoff.
Bush said Wednesday’s meeting was the
first any ol the county’s state legislators had
attended.
“ Just having th e ir presence was im ­
pressive," he said.
But Bush said therq was some disap­
pointment at the meeting.
The state did not include improvements to
SR 419 between SR 434 and Tuskawilla in its
list. The road is highly traveled because of new
developments in the area and because of new
industries like M artin-M arietta and
Westinghouse which have located in Orange
County.

Business,Consumer Spending Down
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The two main
sources of economic strength, business
spending and consumer spending, were
disappointing in the latest government
measurements, raising new skepticism
about recovery.
The nation’s businesses, after cutting
capital spending 4.8 percent last year, told
the Commerce Department they will cut
deeper this year, lowering capital In­
vestment by 5,2 percent after inflation, the

department said Wednesday.
The Commerce Department’s annual
survey of business plans for 1983 revealed
deepening pessimism among businesses
that contradicts the adm inistration's
forecast of an im pending economic
recovery.
Since some other averages hit new
records in the mixed and active session,
most analysts expect the market to make
another charge at the 1,100 level.

Bill Will Be Prepared, Knowles Says

Sanford Wants Part Of Lake Monroe Bottom
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
City-county cooperation, a definition of “real and sub­
stantial" benefits, proposed state certification of building
inspectors and a problem with city ownership of part of the
Monroe Harbour Marina were the topics discussed by Sanford
City Manager W.E. "Pete" Knowles with the Seminole County
legislative delegation Wednesday.
Knowles voiced the city’s opposition to a proposed lawcalling for state certification of building inspectors, saying
Sanford's requirements for the job are much higher than the
ones being considered by the state.
Knowles said while the proposed law is purported to be on
effort to increase the competency of building officials, actually
it calls for an open book, true and false, multiple choice test.
Knowles said that Sanford requires its building officials to be
licensed in the building trades and to take additional courses in
building inspections.
Knowles (jointed out that the proposed competency testing
which would be mandated by the state will cost the 467 units of
government in Florida $1.4 million annually. The proposal "is
being used as a political ploy by some building inspectors to
enhance their ability to get higher salaries," Knowles said.
“ Adding the state certification will not increase building of­
ficials’ competency."
Rep. Tom Draue, R-Orlando. said that the intent of the

proposed stale testing is to prevent, for example, the mayor of
a small community from hiring his son or nephew, who is not
competent in the construction trades, as a building inspector.
Drage said testimony given to a legislative committee shows
this to be the case in at least one small town In Brevard County.
The delegation appeared to be less concerned with Knowles'
protestations than with Sanford’s claim that it does not have
legal ownership of a portion of the lake bottom at the marina.
Knowles said that 17 years after the marina was built, the
city lias discovered that part of the east harbor and part of the
east seawall are not owned by the city.
He said there was an error in the legal description of the
property when it was conveyed by the state to the city in the
1960s. The error was found recently when the city asked the
stale for a permit for dredging of the harbor.
Knowles urged the delegation to straighten out the problem
by pushing through a special act.
Drage said the proposed legislation should be prepared by
the city in a proper bill form and Knowles said this would be
done within two weeks.
Knowles, representing the Council of Ix&gt;cal Governments in
Seminole County, reported to the delegation that Seminole’s
city and county governments have taken a positive approach
toward solving the double taxation controversy. H ie problem
is being worked out cooperatively and thus the necessity of
going to court on the issue is being forestalled.

AREA DEATHS
AWAD A. S1KHAN
Awad A. Sirhan, 58, of 225
Escondido Ave. in Altamonte
S prings died Tuesday at
F lo rid a Hospital-Orlando.
Born July 2,1924, in Palestine,
he was a winter resident o*
A ltam onte Springs from
Mount Gemens, Mich. He was
a retired pharmacist and was
D member of St. George
Orthodox Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Gloria, two sons, Eddy, of
Altamonte Springs and John,
of Mount Clemens; two
daughters, Mrs. Dolly Van
Hoeck, of Orlando; Miss
Dorothy Sirhan, of Ypsilantl,
Mich.; five brothers, Fahlm,
of Michigan, Karim, of
D etroit, Mich., Adel, of
Chattanooga, Tenn., Ghalib,
of Houston, Abed, of
Colombia, South America;
two sisters, Mrs. N asra
■- Sirhan, of Daly City, Callf.j
and Mrs. Norma Tabsharani,
of Healdsburg, Calif.
Carey Hand Funeral Home
Chapel, Orlando, Is in charge
of arrangements.
MRS. JANE ALBERT
Mrs. Jane Albert, 57, of 400
Lynchfield
Drive
in

A ltam onte Springs died
Tuesday at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Born April 17,
1925, In Vinton, Iowa, she
moved to Altamonte Springs
from Maine in 1968. She was a
sales clerk.
Survivors include her
husband, Rocky; a daughter,
D arla Markuson, of Los
Angeles; a son, D arrell
Albert, of San Diego, Calif.;
her father, John W. Thomp­
son, of Yakima, Wash.; two
brothers, Tommy Thompson,
of Vinton, and John D.
Thompson, of Tucker, Ga.;
and four grandchildren.
Semoran Funeral Home,
Altam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.
MRS. MARIAN E. LUSK
Mrs. Marian E. Lusk, 72, of
396
Orange
Lane
in
Casselberry died Wednesday
at Orlando Regional Medical
Center. Bom Nov. 7, 1920, in
Silver Springs, N .Y., she
moved to Casselberry from
New York In 1961. She was a
hom em aker
and
a
P resbyterian. She w as a
member of the American
Legion
Auxiliary
of
Casselberry and the Uons

Police Storm Kidnappers; 8 Die
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) Police tactical units, firing
tear gas and bullets, stormed
into a house today where a
wounded policeman was held
hostage by a group ot
religious sestets. Police said
eight people, including the
hostage, were killed.
Police a d m i n i s t r a t i v e
assistant Bob Graham said
police were fired on first In
the assault on the white,
three-bedroom house where
officer Robert S. Hester hid
been held sin ce Tuesday
night.
He said one officer was cut
on the hand when police
storm ed th e house and
reported no further Injuries to
tactical squad members.
The d e a d included the
leader of the religious sect,
Lindberg ‘'Lynn" Sanden. 41,
and his aoo. S a n d e n was a
black with a long history oT
mental illness who apparently
formed a cult that preaches
police "a re the anti-Christ."
Sanders' wife, Dorothy, was

To Speed Work

since dawn Wednesday, when
he shouted, “Do whatever
they want."
But Graham said at the
time Hester was believed to
be in "good d u p e" because
"we haven't had any in­
dication by movement or
noise inside that would in­
dicate otherwise. Some of the
c o n v e rs a tio n s
w e’re
assuming are directed toward
the officer," Graham said.
Police
attempted* to
negotiate with Sanders
throughout the day Wed­
nesday both by bullhorn and
telephone, but said he did
little but curee and threaten to
kill Hester.
Hester and two fellow offi­
cers were jumped by several
people when they went to the
house In the north Memphis
suburb ot Hollywood Tuesday
night. One was shot Ln the J*w
and the other rtruck on the
bead, but both escaped.
Hester was trapped Inside
and had been injured in the
altercation.

Knowles said city residents and officials have believed for
years that city dwellers were not getting their fair share of
county-provided services for which they pay taxes.
A m ajor problem with the law and court decisions on double
taxation, Knowles said, is that the decisions require that all
residents of the city receive 'Teal and substantial" benefits
from their county taxes, but the term lias not been defined in
law or by the courts.
Knowles suggested it would be better to establish a new
standard of what is fair and equal. "The fact is that If a person
pays $1 in taxes and gels 1 cent ln services, that's real, but is it
substantial? We have no feel for what is substantial."
Also Wednesday, State Sen. Richard Ungley, R-Clermont,
was elected vice chairman of the Seminole County Legislative
delegation by his colleagues.
As a result of last year's reapportionment, the Lake County
senator's district was expanded into the western side of
Seminole County. Roughly 40 percent of Seminole is in
t^ngley's district.
Stale Rep. Bobby Brantley, R-Longwood is delegation
chairman. In addition to Brantley and Langley, the delegation
includes Sen. Toni Jennings and Rep. Tom Drage, both of
Orlando, Reps. Art Grindle of Altamonte Springs, and Carl
Selph of Casselberry and Sen. John Vogt, D-Cocoa Beach.

The OMELET
REVOLUTION

S '*
Gub Auxiliary.
Survivors include her
husband,
R ichard;
a
daughter, M rs. P atricia
Kinney, of Casselberry; a
brother, Milford Creighton, of
Casselberry; eight grand­
children;
one
g re a t­
grandchild, a niece, Miss
Linda Creighton, of Belmont,
N.Y.; a nephew, Richard
Creighton, Lake City.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.VICTORIA A. PETTICRF.W
Victoria A. Petticrew, 28, of
Orange City, died ac­
cidentally Friday of carbon
monoxide poisoning in a car in
Sanford. Bom Aug. 13, 1954, In
Detroit, Mich., she moved to
Orange City 15 years ago from
Highland, Mich. She was
communication specialist for
the Seminole County Sheriff's
Department for the past two
years and formerly of the
DeLand Police Department.
She also held an EMT cer­
tificate.
She is survived by her
father, Richard Petticrew, of
Deltona; two sons, Ronnie
and Ricky Sutton, of OranRe

City; and a sister, Miss Mary
Petticrew, of Deltona.
Stephen
R.
Baldauff
Funeral
Home
Chapel,
Deltona, is in charge of
arrangements.
MRS. DAISY M. WHITE
Mrs. Daisy Mae White, 80,
ol Apartment 60 in Redding
Gardens In Sanford died
Monday at her home. Born
March 11, 1902, in Sorrento,
she moved to Sanford from
Jacksonville eight years ago.
She was a housewife.
She is survived by her
husband, George White, of
Fort Lauderdale; a niece,
Ruth Allen Hatch, of Sanford,
and four great-nieces.
Sunrise Funeral Home, 900
Ijocust Ave., Sanford, is in
charge of arrangements.

Funvrol NotkB
WHITE, MRS. DAISY M A I Fun«r«l service* fo r M r*. Deity
Mae W hite. 10. of Redding
Carden*. Sanford, who died
Monday, w ill be at 1 p.m.
Saturday at Sunrita Funeral
Home w ith the Rev. Robert
Doctor o lftciatlng. Burial In
Ughtfoot
Cemetery. Sunrlte
Funeral Home, WO Locust A v e ,
Sanford, In charge.

NOW! 500 Extra Parking Spaeaa

Wednesday night, Graham
said three people fled the
house "during th e a lte r ­
cation" late Tuesday in which
Hester was taken hostage.
He said one man, identified
as T.C. Smith, was arrested
and charged with three counts
of aggravated i

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Sanford
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PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Groom 's Mom Out Of Line
On Reception Guest List
DEAR ABBY: Marty and I
are being m arried in three
weeks, and M arty's mother
(Ethel) wants to post an in­
vitation to our wedding and
reception on the bulletin
board at thp school where she
works! (She works in the
cafeteria.I
My p aren ts are paying
nearly H.000 for a catered
affair, and I've told Ethel I
need to know the exact
number of guests, but she
doesn’t seem to understand
the position she's putting me
in.
My mother has offered to
send individual invitations to
anyone Ethel considers her
close friend, but she refuses to
put an invitation on the
bulletin board.
Now I'm in the middle.
Ethel says maybe she won't
come if she doesn’t get her
way. Please help me. Marty

Dear
Abby
thinks his mother is out of
line, but he doesn’t want Id
take sides.
UPSET BRIDE
DEAR UPSET: Explain to
Ethel that yours Is a catered
affair and you cannot ac­
commodate her by making it
a free-for-all. And tell Marty
he'd better start standing up
In his mother when he thinks
she's wrong, or you'll be
starting down the aisle on the
wrong foot.
DEAR ABBY: Where on
e a rth did some so-called
"m en" ever gel the idea that
they have to "pucker up" like

a monkey to kiss a woman?
The gentleman I am now
dating insists on "puckering
up." I think it’s gross and does
not fit into the soft, passionate
love scene. 1 get all set for a
tender kiss, and here come
these two puckered-up lips,
turning me off completely!
I will look for your answer
in the paper.
MONKEY-IjOVED IN OHIO
DEAR MONKEY*LOVED:
Your man is kissing you the
way he learned to kiss.
However, kissing is a learned
activity. And what has been
learned ran be unlearned, so
if you want to swing with this
monkey-lover, first tell him,
then show him.
DEAR ABBY: So you think
you've heard everything’’ 1
got this "invitation” from an
out-of-state niece who in the
past rarely acknowledged
receipt of other special-

The one you hove been waiting for!
Our annual fall a id winter clearance.

occasion gifts (C hristm as,
graduation, etc.):
"Dear Aunt Sue and Unde
John: I am being married
Nov. 13. Tin sure you would
like Mike.
“ 1 am enclosing a list of
gifts I have already received,
as well as my cry stal,
silverware and china pat­
terns.
"The Bi-Price Store in your
area carries these, and any
duplicates 1 get can be ex­
changed here for whatever I
need.
“ If you are unable to attend
the ceremony, you will be in
our thoughts. lan e, Janie"
Well, Abby, how is that fur
an "invitation" to a wedding?
I’d appreciate your com­
ments.
HAD IT IN ARKANSAS
DEAR HAD IT: It appears
that your presence wouldn’t
be missed, but your presents
would.
C O N F ID E N T IA L
TO
LOOKING FOR MS. RIGHT:
A clergyman In Worcester,
Mass., told me: ‘In marriage,
il's not so important to Urn!
the right person as it is to be
the right person."
What you don't know can
hurt you. For Abby’* booklet,
"W hat E very Teen-Ager
Ought to Know," send $2 ami a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Teen Booklet,
P.t). Box 38923. Hollywood.
Calll. 90038.

UP

t o n ig h t s t v
'

THURSDAY
EVENING

6:00
0 V S O &gt; O NEWS
n (35| CHARLIE’S ANGELS
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605
t: (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6:30
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V
/
©

People
Power

DRESSES-SEPARATES-SPORTSWEAR
COCKTAIL DRESSES
ALL VALES F I N A L ■NO REFUNDS NO EXCHANGES

helps
prevent
birth
defects

i P t C I A t B A R G A IN H A C K |

V n a /iy -£ A t]w &amp;
I m fn i hhj I m inim * J iiif f u r Y ou
JO O b O M lH M f i r t A V IN . I

Support

(**0#af

9ANFOHO FLORIDA

kem

a

March of Dimes
t*»i■■•'Ad c&lt; NT* i,( fioa*
puiu»*»•!»»

M fttS p m

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS
THROUGHOUT THE
ENTIRE S T O R E . . .

■
$ALE
■ STARTS
■ THURSDAY

7:00
0 4 THEMUPPETS
V O P M MAGAZINE A hPuw
mado tiom it.io lo jm a pan ot
sM teii *h o made a comeback
alter a IragiC accident
i O JOKER S WILD
n (35) THE JEFFEHSONS
©
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
13 (17) GOMER PYLE

7:30
( I 4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
S O TIC TAC DOUGH
/ o FAMILY FEUD
n (35) BARNEY MILLER
tD (10) UNTAMED WORLD

Nothing Withheld!

8:00
0

4

FAME

S O MAGNUM. PI
) o THE GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO Ma**eii is kidnapped by a
demented kcieni.st who plana on
usmg him in him genetic engine®*mg
eipenments
II (35) THE UFE AND ADVEN­
TURES OF NICHOLAS NICKELBY
(PART 4)
£LI (10| SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gab'er and Jeffrey Lyons dftcusm
how they fudge a mo.te, with
scenes trom Rocky Ml,” Raiders
Ot The Lost Ark.
Dmet and
Body Heat |R|

0:05
13 (17) NCAA BASKETBALL Tulsa
GoWen Humean* vs Wichita Slate
Smother*

8:30
(I) (10) THIS OLD HOUSE Bob Vila
vists Wes Ion Nurseries to select
planting materials lor the Arlington
sde
*
( | 4 GIMME A BREAK
y o SIMON A Sim o n
I o TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT
(D (10) MYSTERY Sergeant
Cnbb The Last Trumpet'' Sergeant
Cnbb tries In tmd out who wants to
prevent the sale ot Jumbo the most
celebrated elephant at the London
Zoo. to America g

9:30

0 4 CHEERS
T O IT TAXIS TWO

10:00

f)
4 HILL STREET BLUES
Captain Furwo otters to lure m his
badge, and an nr:.nigM poker game
makes Joe decide to deal with Lucy
In a different manner (Rl
S O KNOTS LANDING Mack
proposes to Karen, who finds her
love lilo increasingly complicated
when an old boytnend comes to
town
© (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL Ram Forest An eiploration of the rich variety of plant
and animal Ida m the ram tmesis ot
Cost* Rica is presented

10:05
13 (17) NEWS

0 4 1 0 ' a NEWS
M (35) SOAP
(I) (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

OTIONS

ROMANCE THEATRE
&gt; U MOVIE Romano) In Man­
hattan
(1934) Ginger Rogers
4

F r a n t IS L e d e r e r ’

3:30
0

4

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

FRIDAY
MORNINO

5:30
0

O
4 TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests David Brenner
Johnny Mathis
s o MORE REAL PEOPLE
’ O ABC NEWS NIGMTLINE
n (3$) THE ROCKFORD FILES

8:35
0
5
’
11
£0

t l (17) MOVIE

4 RICHARD SIMMONS
O DONAHUE
0 MOVIE
(35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(10) SESAME STREET g

1:30
O AS THE WORLD TURNS
©110) THIS OLD MOUSE

2:00
O 4 ANOTHER WORLD
’ o ONE LIFE TO LIVE
© (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

9:05
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9:30

0

1000

6:45
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7:00
4 TODAY
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o GOOD MORNING AMERICA
(35) NEWS
(10) TO LIFEI

705
t) (17) FUNTIME

7:15
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7:30
II (35| WOODY WOODPECKER
Q) (10| SESAME STREET g

8:00
It (35) FRED FUNTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

805
13 (17) MY THREE SONS

8:30
41 (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(D (10) MISTER ROGERS (R|

I
7
II
©

0

4 FANTASY
0 QUIDINO LIGHT
O GENERAL HOSPITAL
(35| CASPER
( tO) THE LAWMAKERS

3:05
U (17) FUNTIME

3:30

(35) BUQS BUNNY AND
fr ie n d ;
© (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
ill

11:00

4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
5 O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
7 o LOVE BOAT (R)
II (35)35LIVE
© (1 0 ) OVER EASY

3:35
I I (17) THE FLINTSTONES

4:00

11:05

0
4 LITTLE MOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
1 J O HOUR MAGAZINE
17 O MERV GRIFFIN
tl (U | TOM AND JERRY
© (10) SESAME STREET g

11 (17) PERRY MASON

11:30
0 4 HITMAN
II (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
© (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

4:05
III (17) THE MUNSTER3

AFTERNOON

4:30
11 (35) SCOOBY DOO

12:00

4:35

0 4 SOAP WORLD
S O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
I f O NEWS
M (35) BfG VALLEY
© (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL

11 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
® LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY
COMPANY
J O THREE'S COMPANY
7 0 ALL IN THE FAMILY
II (35) EIGHT IS ENOUOH
© (10) MISTER ROGERS (R|

12:05
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5:00

0

U (17) PEOPLE NOW

11 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH

1 J O THE YOUNO AND THE
RESTLESS
! O RYAN S HOPE

5:30

0

4 PEOPLE'S COURT
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1:00
O 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
I O ALL MY CHILDREN
II (35) MOVIE

5:35
I I (17) BEWITCHED

ANNUAL

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

P h il P n s to r e t
One way lo keep warm
during a cold spell is lo
camp in the gas company's
comfy office while waiting
tor an explanation of your
astronomical fuel bill

SALE
FURTHER

V

SAVE

REDUCTION

2 0 %
An optimist is a person
who expects to find anything
surpassing in interest the
test pattern on TV in the
wee hours
If your*re skilled at mak­
ing counterproposals, chanc­
es are you'll wind up with a
date with the waitress.
%

.. 5 0 %

AND MORE
ON
A Blouses
★ Sweaters
A Dresses
A Coats

Our drinkin' neighbor
boasts that he never touches
booze — drinks right from
Ihe bottle.

★ Skirts
★ Pantsuits
★ Shoes
A Jackets

. A Handbags

No Exchanges
No Rtfunds
All Salas Final

These days, carrying a
torch for someone will most
likely get you an arson rap

111-120 E. First St.
Sanford
j
PH. 322-3524

11-35

%

11(17) MOVIE
Roughly Speak,
mg ’ (1945) Rosaltnd Russell. Jack
Carson

12:00
S O QUINCY
t a THE LAST WORD

12:30
O 4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Quasi musician
Michael Nesmith, former member
ot TbeMonkees
It (35) NEWS

•

'

1:00

1 a MOVIE Wail Until Dark
119671 Audrey Hepburn, Alan Arkin

1:10

5
O
MCCLOUD McCloud
suspects that models ere being
used as earners by drug smugglers
&lt;B)

RAPERIES
• DRESS FABRICS
• UPHOLSTERY
• BEDSPREADS • TRIM S
I I I M

I

NOTHING W ITHHELD f
A LL FABRICS M UST BE C LEA R ED !. . . REGARDLESS O F COST!

1:30
0

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:05
i l l (17) MOVIE

"Up The Down

FREE
CHICKEN
DINNER
Watch the
Herald
for
Details

% iA

• 'f

i

A

505

12:30

BARBS

Now. while th r sap is ris­
ing in the sugar maples, ii it
alma stirring in th r gullible
h earts ol mprlng-louched
used-cur buyers.

0

10:30

7:35
11 (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

3:00

4 THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
S O MARY TYLER MOORE
11 (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
© (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (fl&gt;

6:00

0 4 EARLY TODAY
5 O CB5 EARLY MORNINO
NEWS
’ O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

5 O CAPfTO l
© (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING

0

s O CHILD 8 PLAY
11 (35) DORIS 0AY
© (1 0 ) POWERHOUSE

630

2:30

4 SO YOU THINK YOU GOT
TROUBLES
11 (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

o 4 SALE O f THE CENTURY

5 O CBS EARLY MORNINO
NEWS
I o SUNRISE
II (35) JIM BAKKER
1} (17) NEWS

1
7
II
©

1:05

900

5:40

13 (13) WORLD A t LARGE

0

© 110) FLORIDA HOME GROWN

11 (17) THAT GIRL

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

11:05
11
( I 7 | WOMAN WATCH
Featured Jenny Kelner. sports
writer tor Ihe New York Daily News
Alison Bradshaw, auctioneer for
Christies s of New York. Lois Hepworth who owns and operates a
targe apple larm

11:30

PATTERNS

3:00
(|

7:35
11 (17) ANDY GRIFFITH

11:00

"WE MUST MIKE ROOM FOR
REW SPRING MERCHANDISE
iRRIVING D R ILL . .

4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
5 O CBS NEWS NlGHTWATCH

7:05

10:30

ZAYRE P L A Z A A T AJRPORT IL V D ,

0

II (17) BOB NEWMART

II (35) MADAME S PLACE

SANFORD-2994 ORLANDO DR.

2:30

6:35

&gt; 010130

^T askion 'T c lrtic J fo o t C re a tiv e

Staircase (1967) Sandy Dennis
Eileen Meckart

4 NBC NEWS
O CBS NEWS
U ABC NEWS q
(10) EARTH. SEA AND SKY

9:00

TO

|

Thursday, Jan. tJ, )9gj—IB

t

�JB-Evt nl ng Htrald, Stnford, f I.

Thursday, Jan. 13, lf | ]

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF oomt on e line parallel w ith and
•0 00 tret N ortherly ot, when
THE EIOHTEENTH JUDICIAL
measured at rig h t angles to, M id
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
Southerly boundary of that certain
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIOA
parcel ot land as described in Deed
CASE NO. DSfT-CA-Of-L
Book S3, Page 347'; run thence
CAR O LINE B W ALSH end
North I f degrees 5a' 54" West
COMBANK W IN T E R
PARK.
M100 teet along said parallel tine
Trustee ol the Harold R Welch
lo a point on the aforeM ld
T ru ll,
Southerly p ro lo n g a tio n ol the
*
P la in tiff a.
Westerly boundary ol that certain
H.
parcel ol land as described In
T IM O TH Y S B R U M L IK end
Official Records Book 754 Page
PATRICIA BR U M LIK, h il wile,
1171. run Ihence North 00 degrees
end C M BUILDERS IN C , a
Of 17" East 335 75 teet to the Point
Florida corporation.
of Beginning
D efendanti
Parcel 1 (Revised es per mertNOTICE OF SALE
M *e ):
NOTICE IS H ER EBY G IVEN
From the Northwest corner ot
mat me u n d e rlin e d , the Clerk ol
Section 71, Township 71 South,
Ihe Circuit Court lo r Seminole
flange 77 E a it, run South I f
County, Florida, under and by
degrees 57' 77" Easl 344 lee! lo Ihe
ylrlue ol the Final Judgm ent ol
Northeast corner ol that certain
Forecloiure herelolore entered on
parcel of land described in Deed
the llt h day ol January. 17*3, in
Book 13, page 77] Public Records
that certain ceute pending in Ihe
of Seminole County, Florida; run
Circuit Court ol the Eighteenth
thence North 00 degrees 01' 55"
Judicial Circuit ol F lorid a , In and
East 1 15 leet to the Southwest
lo r Seminole County, Florida,
corner ol that certain parcel ot
being Civil Action No I I 553 CA
land described In O lfic la l Records
Of L in which CAROLINE B
Book 777, Page 114. Public
WALSH and COMBANK W INTER
Records of Sem inole County,
PARK, Truttee ol the Harold R
Florida; run thence South I f
W aiih T ru ll are the P le ln tltfi and
degrees I f 17" East 174 07 tre t,to
T IM O TH Y 5 B R U M L IK and
tha Southeast c o rn e r ol said
PATRICIA BR U M LIK. h il wile
description, run thence North 47
and G.M BUILDERS. INC., are
degrees 71' Of" East 11 57 feet lo
the Defendant! and under and by
the Northwest corner ol that
virtue ol Ihe te rm i o l la id Final
certain parcal ol land as described
Judgment, w ill o ile r lo r sale at
in deed dated July Tin, 1770 from
public outcry to Ihe h lg h e it and
Spring Valley Farm s. Inc, to
b e lt bidder lor ca ih at the W ei!
Harold R Walsh, run Ihenca South
door ol the Seminole County
*7 degrees 37' 55" East 357 77 leel
Courthouie In the City o l Sanlord,
alonq the North boundary of M id
Florida, on the 7th day ol
description to th e N orthw est
February, 1713, at the hour ol
corner ot that certain parcel ol
eleven o'clock in Ihe m orning, the
land described in O fficia l Records
lam e being a legal la le t day and
Book 754. Page 1171, Public
the hour a legal hour ol ta le , the
Records ol Sem inole *C ounty,
properly iltueled in Seminote
Florida; run Ihence South DO
County, Florida e l d rie rib e d on
degrees Of 13" W e ll 540 t7 leel
attached Exhibit " A .”
along the Westerly boundary of
EXHIBIT " A "
M id description and tha Southerly
LEOAL DESCRIPTION
prolongation thereof; run thance
Parcel I
North i f degrees 17' 55" West
From the Northwest comer ol
74t 77 leel to the East boundary of
Section 73, Township 71 South.
the West 175 00 teat ol tha NW t , ol
Range 7f East, run South i f
tha NW
ol said Section 31. run
degrees ST177" East 7«4 feet to the
thanca South 00 dagraas 0 I‘ 51"
Northeast corner ol that certain
West 417 41 leef along said Easl
parcel ot land described In Deed
boundary; to r tha p o in t ot
Book 17, Page 773, Public Records
beginning; run thence South I f
Of Seminole County, F lorid a ; run
degrees 54’ 54" E ast 471 04 teat to a
thence North 00 degrees 01' S i"
point on the Southerly boundary ot
East 1.15 teat to the Southwest
mat certain parcel ot land as
corner of that certain parcel ot
described and recorded In Deed
land described In O fficia l Records
Book 17, Page 3a7, Public Records
Book 777. Page l i t . P u b lic
ot Seminole County, Florida, run
Records ol Sem inole C ounty,
Ihence South 45 degrees I l f 73"
Florida; run Ihence South I f
West 504 07 teet to Ihe Southeast
degrees I f 17" East l?4 07 leel lo
corner ot M id description. M id
Ihe Southeast c o rn e r o l said
Southeast corner being on lha
description; run thence N orth 47
South boundary ot lha aloreM id
degrees 77' Of" East II.S f (eat lo
NW '« of lha NW Vi; run Ihanca
the Northwest corner ol that
North I f degrees 54' 54" West
certain parcel ol land as described
U417 leel along lha said South
in deed dated July f , 1770 from
boundary ol lha NW &gt;&lt; of lha NW
Spring Valley Farm s, Inc. lo
'• to lha Southeast corner ol tha
Harold fi. Walsh; run thence South
West 175 teal ot Ihe said NW &lt;i of
n degrees j r t i " East 357 7? teet
Ihe NW Viol Section 71; run Ihenca
along tha North boundary ol said
Norm 00 degrees O f 31" East
d e s c rip tio n lo the N o rth w e st
155 74 teat to tha Point ol Begin
corner ol that certain parcel ot
ning Containing 7 1703 acras more
land described in O lllc la l Records
or less. (Land and W a ltr).
Book 754. Page 1171. P u b lic
LESS lha following described
Records o l Sem inole County.
parcel sometimes known as Parcel
Florida; run thenct South 00
7B
degrees O f 17" W eil aaf teet to the
From Ihe Northwest Corner ot
Southwest
corner
ol
said
Section 71, Township 71 South,
d e scrip tio n for the p o in t ol
Range 77 East, run Soulh I f
beginning; thence co n tin ut South
degrtas SI minutes 77 seconds
00 degrees O f 17" West 147 57 teet
East 744 teat to the Northeast
along the Southerly prolongation
Corner ol that certain parcal ot
of ihe Westerly boundary of said
land described In Deed Book 17.
description lo a point on a line
Page 771, P u b lic Records of
parallel with and MOO taef Nor
Seminole County. F lorid a ; run
therly ot, when measured at right
ihence N o rth 00 degrees 01
angles to Ihe South boundary ol
minutes 55 seconds East 1.15 teal
that certain pared o l land as
to the Southwest Corner ol that
described and recorded in Deed
certain parcel ol land described in
Booh 17, Page 747, P ublic Records
Official Records Book 777. Page
of Seminole County, F lo rid # ; run
1)4. Public Records ol Seminole
m enct South I t degrees 54' 54"
County, Florida, run Ihanca South
East 111 00 teet along.said parallel
I f degrees I I minutes 17 seconds
line lo a point on the Westerly
East 174 07 leet lo tha Southeast
rig ht ot way line of W ymore Road,
Corner ol said description; run
said point being 75 teat Westerly
Ihenca N o rth 47 dagraas 3)
of, when measured at rig h t angles
minutes 09 seconds East 11.57 teat
lo. the East boundary ot Ihe NW 14
lo tn t Northwest Corner of that
01 the NW •• ol the aforesaid
Section 7); run Ihence North 00 certain parcal ot land as described
In Deed dated July I , 1170, Irom
degrees O f 17" East 145 70 teet
SPRING V A LLE Y FARMS, INC
parallel with said East boundary
lo HAROLD R WALSH; run
ot the NW &lt;4 ot the NW &lt;« and
thence S o u lh ll degrees 19 minutes
along M id W ts ltrly rig h t ot way
35 seconds East 757.77 teet along
line; run thence North I f degrees
Ihe North bo u nd a ry o l said
17' S3" West 113 00 F te t along Ihe
description to Ih e N o r tn w t il
South boundary ot the aloreM id
Corner of that cartaln parcal of
d escription as d e scrib e d and
land described In O lllc la l Records
recorded in o ffic ia l Records Book
Book 734. Page 1171, P ublic
7S4, Pag* UM, to lha Point ol
Racordt ot Sam lnole County,
Beginning. Less, the North 50 feet
Florida; run Ihanca Soulh DO
Containing 7 407 Acres, more or
dagraas 04 m inutes 17 seconds
less.
t
West 560 47ftet along tha Westerly
Pared 7 1 (ra llie d per mertgege)
boundary ol M id description and
From the Northwest corner at
lha
Southerly
p ro lo n g a tio n
Section 71. Township 71 South,
thorool. Ihenca run North I I
Range 77 E ft), run South I f
dagraas 17 minutes S3 seconds
degrees SI4 77" East 744 feet to the
West 744 31 leal lo r tha Point ol
Northeast corner ol thet certain
Beginning; (hence continue North
parcel ol land described in Deed
I f dagraas 17 minutes SS seconds
Book 17, Page 771, Public Records
West 500 00 teat to lha East boun
of Seminole County, Florida, run
dary at the W ait 175.00 fia t of lha
thence North 00 degrees 01* 55"
Northwest v« of the Northwest Vi of
East 1.15 leaf to the Southwest
M id Sactlon 71, run thanca South 00
corner ol that carta In parcel of
degrats 04 minutes 51 seconds
land described in Official Records
West 150 00 teat along said East
Booh 771, Page 114, Public
boundary; run thanca South I I
Records ot Seminole County.
deg r a n I f m inutes 55 seconds
Florida; run Ihence South I f
East JOO00 teat; thanca run North
degrees I f 11" East 1*4.01 feet lo
00 degrees 04 minutes S3 seconds
the Southeast corner ol said
East 150 00 teat to the Point ol
description; run Ihence North 47
Beginning.
degrees IT 07" East 11.57 leaf to
Tha said property aloreMid,
the Northwed corner ol that
together with all tha tenements,
certain parcel ol land as described
hereditaments and appurlenancn
In deed deled July tth, 1770 from
litereunio belonging, or in any wiM
Spring Valley Farms. Inc. to
appertaining, balng sold to satisfy
Harold R. Walsh; run thence South
Mid Judgment.
I f degrees I f 55" East 15177 teet
Dated the llth day of January,
along lha North boundary of said
1741.
description lo Ihe Northwest
ARTHUR H. BECKW ITH, JR.
comer of that certain parcel ot
CLERK
land describad In Official Records,
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
Book 754. Paga 1171, Public
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY,
Racordt of Samlnole County
FLORIDA
Florida; run thence South 00
BY; PAlrlcla Robinson
dagraas 00' 11" w is t 500 SI fast
along tho Westerly boundary of Ell H. Subln, Esq.
said description and tho Southerly P O. Boa 745
prolongation thereof lor lha point Orlando. FL 17401
of beginning; run Ihence North I f Publish January 13, 70, I f t l
dagrtet i f 55" West 744 77 teat to D ID 44
the East boundary of tha west
17S.M feet of the NW U» of the NW
U of saw lection 11; run Ihanca
South 00 drgrtta M ' 51" West
417.44 feat along u ld East boun
dory; run thence South Of degrees
S4‘ S4" East 471.04 teat to a point on
tha Southerly boundary of that
certain parcal ot land as described
and recorded in Deed Book S3,
Page 141, Public R a cordt ol
Samlnole County, Florida; run
thanca North 45 degrees 11* 33'
East 111.11 feet to an angta point In
M id Southerly boundary; run
Ihanca South I f dag rtet 54' i f '
East 517.71 teat along said South
boundary lo a point on tha
W aslarly right ot w a y Una ol
Wymere Road, sold point being
35.M Ite t Weaterly of, when
measured at right angles to,
the East boundary o(, said NW
i . ol Ihe NW U ; run Ihence
North N degrees OB' 11" Eaol
M .M tael parallel w ith said
East boundary anil atonfr M id
Weaterly rlght-ef-way iwo • * ■

Legal Notice
FICTITIO US NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 101 A E
First St and Park Ave., Santord,
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name of GRAHAM &amp;
ASSOCIATES, and that I intend to
register M id name w ith Clerk ol
Ihe C irc u it C ourt, Seminole
County, F lorid a in accordance
with the provisions ol the Fic­
titious Name Statutes. ToW it:
Section 445 09 Florida Statutes
1757
•
Sg Etifabeth Lavern Graham
Publish
J a n u a ry 13, 70, 77,
February 1, 1913
DED 4)

NOTICB U N D IR FIC TITIO US

NAMI LAW
NOTICE I I H E R E S Y GIVEN
that lha undersigned, desiring tg
engage In busiiwta under the
lief It foul name ol QUIK WOK at
number 110 E a i l
Broward
Boulevard. Penthouse B In tha City
ot Fort Laudardalt, Florida. In­
lands lo ragistor lha M id noma
with lha Clark ol tha Circuit Court,
Sfmlnola County, Florida.
Daitd at Fort L au d a rd a lt,
Florida, M lt am day ot January,

1741
COKELO RESTAURANT, INC.
Auihorittd
by
LOWELL FARKAS. Prastdont
SCOTT j . F U IR S T , ESQ.
Sudan. Barnett, McClotky,
Schuller A Russell
Attorneys for Applicant
P O Box 1700
Fort Laudardalt. FL 3)301
Publish: January 1), 70. &gt;7,
February ), latJ
OEDS7

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
F ill Number 11511-CP
Division
IN RE: ESTATE OF
THOMAS FULTON WILSON
Deceased
AM ENO ED
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS
OR
DEMAND5
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND A LL OTHER PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th a t
the
ad
m in is tra tio n o l the estate ol
Thomas Fulton Wilson, deceased.
File Number 41 51) CP. is pending
in Ihe C ircu it Court lor Seminole
County, F lorida. Probate Division,
the address ol which is Seminole
County C ourthouse, N. Park
Avenue. Sanlord. Florida. 33771.
The personal representative ol
the estate is Barbara A Wilson,
whose address is 774 Wilson
Avenue, Oviedo, Florida 17745
The name and address ol the
personal representative's attorney
are set forth below.
All persons having claims or
demands against the estate are
required,
W IT H IN
THREE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to tile with the
clerk ot the above court e written
statement of any cla im or demand
they may have Each claim must
be in w ritin g and must Indicate the
basis lo r the claim , the name and
addressotthe creditor or his agent
or attorney, and the amount
claimed. It the claim is not yet
due, the data when It w ill become
due shall be stated. It Ihe claim is
contingent o r unliquidated, the
nature ol the uncertainty shall be
slated It tha claim Is secured, the
security shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol the claim to the clerk to
enable the cle rk to m ail one copy
to each personal representative.
All persons interested In the
estate to whom a copy ol this
Notice ot A dm inistration has been
mailed are required. WITHIN
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
DATE
OF
TH E
FIRST
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
THIS
NOTICE, to tile any objections
they may have that challenges the
validity ot the decendent's will, the
q u a lific a tio n s ol the personal
representative, or the venue or
jurisdiction o l the court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED
Dale ol the firs t publication ot
this Notice ot Administration
January t , 1741
Barbara A. Wilson
At Personal Representative
of the Estate ot
Thomas Fulton Wilson
Deceased
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
JAMES T. G OLDEN. ESQUIRE
Post Office Boa 7302
Sanlord. F lorida 17771
Telephone: 1)051 1314000
Publish Jan I. 1). 194) DED 74
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 41-417-CP
IN RE ESTATE OF
FREDERICK E. SLADE
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEM ANDS A
GAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS IN
TERESTED IN THE ESTATE:
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
ministration ot the estate ot
Frederick E. Slade, deceased, Fit*
Number 41-147.CP, ll pending In
the Circuit Court for Seminole
County, Florida, Probata Division,
the address of which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, Santord.
Florida 17771. The p ttM n a l
representative ol the estate Is
Martha P. Slade, whose address is
117 Sheridan Way, Longwood,
Florida 17750 Tha name and
address
ot
Ihe
personal
representative's attorney are set
forth below.
All periont having claims or
demands against tha estate are
required,
W IT H IN
THREE
MONTHS FRO M THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE. 10 tile with the
clerk ol tha above court a written
statement ol any claim or demand
thay may hava. Each claim must
bain writing and must indlcatatha
basis lor tha claim, lha name and
address ol lha creditor or his agent
or etlomayi and the amount
claimed If tha claim is not yet
due, the date when it will become
due shall be Haled. If tha claim is
contingent or unliquldattd. Ihe
neture of Ihe uncertainty shall be
slated. If tha claim It secured. Ihe
security shall ba described. Tha
claimant shall dellvdr sufficient
copies ot tha claim to tha clerk la
enable the d a rk lo mail one copy
to each personal representative.
All persons Interested In Ihe
estate to whom • copy at this
Notice of Administration has boon
mailed ara required, WITHIN
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA
TION OF THIS NOTICE. Id file
any objections thay may have that
c h a lltn g t tha validity of tha
decadent's will, lha qualifications
ol tho personal reprasentailve, or
lha vtnua or jurisdiction ol tha

court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS, AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
Dele ot tha first publication ot
this Notice of Administration:
January 4, 1*13.
Martha P. Slade
As Personal Representative
of lha E H a lt of
Frederick E. Slada
OacMiad
ATTO RNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
Charles E. Mainer
14 Wall Street
Orlando. Florida 17401
Telephone. (305) I43S174
Publish: January 4. 13, 1713
DEO I I

legal Notice^

legal Notice

FICTITIOUS NAME
County Court
Notice is hereby given that I am
Orange County, Florida
engaged in business at 775 N
Case No CO 47 177)
Highway 17 73 Casselberry Fla
Desco Shoe Corporation, a cor
Seminole County, Florida under
poration. P la in tiff
the fictitio u s name ot DUN RITE
vs.
TRANSM ISSIO N AND M UF
The Booterv and Dancers M arkit,
F LE R SERVICE,andthal I Intend
Inc , a corporation. Defendant
to register said name w ith the
C ircuit Court
C le rk of Ihe Circuit C o u rt,
Orange County, Florida
Semmole County, Florida in ac
Case No Cl 43 7475
Justin Boot Company, a Division cordance w ith the proviiions ot the
F ictitious Name Statutes. To W it;
or Subsidiary of Justin Industries,
Section 465 07 Florida Statutes
nc . a corporation, Plaintiff
1757
vs.
Signature Gary R Walts
The Bootery and Dancers Market,
Publish Dec 73. )0 ,1742. Jan a. I).
Inc . a corporation. Defendant
1943
DEC 119
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'SSALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
N O fiC E
OF
A
P U B L IC
that by v irtu e of those certain
H EA R IN G TO CONSIDER THE
Writs ot Execution, as styled
ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE
above, and more particularly that
BY THE CITY OF SANFORD,
certain W rit of Execution issued
FLO RIO A.
out ol and under the seal ol Ihe
Notice Is hereby given that a
Circuit Court ol Orange County,
Public Hearing w ill be held at the
Florida upon a final judgment
Commission Room In Ihe City Hall
rendered in the aforesaid court on
in Ihe City ol Santord. Florida, at
the ?nd day ot November, A O
7 00 o'clock P M on January 74.
1747, in that certain case entitled.
1743. to consider the adoption ot an
Ju stin Boot Company, etc..
ordinance by the City ot Santord,
P laintiff, vs The Bootery and
Florida, as follows
Dancers M arket, Inc , Defendant,
ORDINANCE NO 1411
which aforesaid W rit of Execution
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
was delivered lo me as Sherill ol
OF SANFORD. FLORIOA,
TO
Semmole County, Florida, and I
ANN EX
WITHIN THE COR
have levied upon the following
PORATE AREA OF THE CITY
described property owned by The
Oh SANt-ORD, FLORIDA. UPON
Bootery and Dancers Market, Inc ,
A D O P TIO N
OF SAID
OR
said property being located In
DINAN CE, A PORTION OF THAT
Seminole County, Florida, more
C ER TAIN PROPERTY LY IN G
p a rticu la rly described as follows
NO RTH
OF
AIRPO RT
Inventory and Equipment ot the
BO ULEVARD .
SOUTH
OF
CxtenU anl, The Bootery and
RESERVOIR LAKE, EAST OF
Dancers M arket, Inc . including
OLD LAK E MARY ROAO AND
but not lim ite d to the following
WEST OF U S HIGHWAY 17 72;
One Sweda Cash Register
SAID PROPERTY BEING SITU
One Moore Invoice Writer
ATED IN SEMINOLE COUNTY,
One 3 drawer file cabinet
FLO RIDA, IN ACCORDANCE
70 Sections In d u s tria l Steel
WITH THE VOLUNTARY AN
Shelving
N E X AT I ON PROVISIONS OF
A p p ro x im a te ly 77 Western
SECTIO N 171 044, FLO R IO A
Shirts
STATUTES. PROVIDING FOR
Approxim ately 73 Miscellaneous
S E VE R ABILITY,
CONFLICTS,
Dance Outfits
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
Approxim ately 7771 Pairs Shoes
WHEREAS, mere hat been filed
Approxim ately 451 Hats
with the City Clerk ol Ihe City ol
Approxim ately 77 T Shirts
Sanlord. Florida, petitions con
Approxim ately 140 Tampa Bay
taming the name ol the property
Buc T Shirts
o w ner in the area described
A p p ro x im a te ly 770 Footwear
hereinafter requesting annexation
Outllts
lo Ihe corporate area ol Ihe City ot
Approxim ately 7576 Leotards,
Santord. Florida, and requesting
Leg W armers and Tights
lo be included therein, and
and other assorted property to be
WHEREAS, th* Properly Ap
sold in a tot Complete Inventory
p ra is e r o t Seminole County,
available Irom the Civil Division ol
F lo rid a , having c e rtifie d that
the Seminole County Sheriff's
there Is one property owner In Ihe
Department
area to be annexed, and that said
and the undersigned as Snenfl ot
property owner has signed the
Seminole County. Florida, wilt
Petition lo r Annexation, and
at 11 00 A M on the 71st day Ot
WHEREAS, it has teen deter
January A D . 1741. otter for sale
mined that the property described
and sell to the highest bidder, FOR
hereinafter is reasonably compact
CASH, subject to any and all
and contiguous lo the corporate
existing liens, at the Front (West)
areas ol the City ot Santord.
Door, at the steps, ot the Seminole
Florida, and It has further been
County Courthouse in Sanlord,
determ ined that Ihe annexation of
F lo rid a . Ihe above described
said property w ill not result in the
personal property
creation of an enclave; and
That said sale is being made to
W HEREAS. rn e C llyo f Sanford,
satisfy the term s of said Writ ot
Florida, is in a position la provide
Execution
m unicipal services to the property
John E Polk, Sheriff
described herein, and the City
’
Seminole County. Florida
Commission ol the City ot Santord,
Publish
Decem ber 10, 1747.
Florida, deems it in the best in
January 6, 11. TO. 1741
.
teresf of the City to accept said
DEC 14)
p e titio n and to annex said
property
County Court
NOW, THEREFORE. BE IT
Seminole County, Florida
ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF
Case No 41 1070 SP01
THE
C IT Y
OF SANFORD,
Florida Rock Industries, Inc , d b
FLO RIDA
a Kissam Division, Ptaintitf
SECTION I: That the following
described properly tilualed In
UfIMn Expansion, tnt
Semmole County, Florida, be and
County Court
ihe same Is hereby annexed to and
Orange County. Florida
made a p a rt ot the City ol Sanlord,
Case No COS) 41)1
Florida, pursuant to Ihe voluntary
Alpha E le ctric Supply Company,
annexation proviiions of Section
etc . Plaint ill
,
17 1 044. Florida Statutes
vs
A ll that certain lot or parcel ol
Urban Expansion Corporation, et
land lying and being In Ihe Sanlord
at. Defendant
Grant, form erly in Ihe County ot
County Court
Orange and now In Seminole
Seminole County, Florida
County, and Slate ol Florida,
Cast No 42 IOI7 5P01
described as follows, to wit:
C o n stru ctio n Fasteners Group,
Beginning a! a stake standing at
Inc., a corporation a subsidiary ol
the Northern point ot Intersection
Allied Products Corporation, a
ot three roads, twenty chains
corporation, Plam llH
North and eleven chains West
vs
from the quarter section post on
Urban Expansion Corporation, a
the South boundary ol Section 7.
corporation. Defendant
Township 70 Soulh, Range30 Easl,
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S
and running Ihence North seven
SALE
chains and titty links to a stake,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
thence West one Cham and eighty
that by viru te ol those certain
lour links to a stake, thence South
Writs ot Execution, as styled
th irty six degrees
thirty three
above, and more particularly that
minutes West live chains and nine
certain W rit ot Execution issued
links lo centre ol road, Ihence
out ot and under the seal of Ihe
South titty three degrees and
County Court of Seminole County,
twenty seven minutes Easl six
Florida upon a final judgment
chains and sixteen links to point In
rendered in the aforesaid court on
road, thence North twenty seven
the 71h day ot September. A D
links to point ol beginning.
1741, in that certain cate entitled,
Also another parcel of land
C o n stru ctio n Fasteners Group,
bounded and described as follow s:
Inc., etc . P la in tiff, vs Urban
A ll that certain piece or parcel ot
Expansion Corporation, a cor
land lying and
being In M id
p o ra tio n .
Defendant,
which
Santord form erly In the County ot
aforesaid W ril ot Execution was
Orange
and now In Seminole
delivered to me as Sheriff ol
County and Slate ot Florida
Seminole County. Florida, and l
described as follows
have levied upon the following
Beginning at a point twenty
described p ro p e rty owned by
chains north and eleven chains
U rban E xp a n sio n Corporation,
west ot tha quarter post on tha
said property being located in
south boundary
ol Section 7,
Seminole County, Florida, more
Township TO South ot Range 30
p a rticu la rly described is follows
East, and running Ihenca North
Sections a A 7. Township IIS ;
seven and fitly hundredths chains
Range 37E to ts 7. 44. 70. 107 and
to a slake, Ihence East two and
110. Wekiva Cove.
Phase One.
sixty six
hundredths chains to
Sections 4 A 7 Township 71 South,
staka. ihenca South seven and
Range 77 East. Seminole County.
titty hundredths chains to tha point
Florida according to the plat
ol beginning.
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
SECTION 7: That upon this
1). Pages l l . 47 A 70 ot the Public
ordinance becoming eflecllve the
Records o t Sem inole County,
property owners and any resident
Florida
on the property described herein
and
shall be entitled lo all the rights
One 1774 Jeep CJ 7, While in
and privileges and Immunities a t
Color, ID No J4F71E H0J14S1.
ara from time to lime granted te
being stored at Foster's Auto
residents and property owners ot
Clinic. Longwood, Florida
tha City of Sanlord, Florida, and as
and the undersigned as Sherill ot
ara further provided In Chapter
Seminole County, Florida, w ill at
171, Florida Statutes, and shall
It 00 A M on Ihe I41h Day ol
further b t subject lo the respan
January A D . 1741. otter lor sale
slbilltiesol residence or ownership
and sell to the highest bidder, FOR
as may Irom time to lime be
CASH, s u b ltc l to any and all
datarm lned by the governing
existing liens, at Ihe Front (W ail)
authority ol tha City of Santord,
Door, at Ihe step*, ol the Semmole
Florida, and tha previsions of u ld
County Courthouse in Sanlord,
Chapter 171, Florida Statutes.
F lo rid a , th e above described
SECTION 3i It any section or a
personal A Real property.
That u id sale is being made to portion ol a section ol this or­
satitly the terms ol laid Writ ot dinance proves to be invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional, It
Earcution.
shall not ba held to Invalidate or
John E. Polk Sherill
Impair tha validity, force or affect
Seminole County. F lorida
of eny section oc part ol this or
Publish: Dec 73, 30, 1741. Jan. A
dim ncf.
t), with the u le on January If,
SECTIONS: That all ordinances
1743.
or parts ol ordinances In conflict
DEC 70
herewith be and the same are
hereby repealed.
FICTITIO US NAME
SECTION 4:
That this or
Notice it hereby given that I am
engaged In business at P.O. Box dinance shall become effective
immediately upon itspeisaga and
1304 Orange City, Flo. 33743,
Seminole County, Florida under •dopt ion.
A copy shall be aviliebfe at lha
the llctlttous name at ARNOLD'S
HOME IMPROVEMENTS, and Office of Ihe City Clerk for all
persons desiring to examine tha
mat I intend to register Mid name
with Clark at lha Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordonce with the provisions at the
Fictitious Name Statutes. ToWit:
Section 145.07 F &gt;rida Statutes
17S7.
Stg. Elnora K. Arnold
Publish: Decem ber 30. 171),
January I , 13, 30, I f t l
DEC 140

u m i.

A ll parties in interest and
cit liens shall hava an opportunity
to ba heard at u id hearing.
By order of the City Commission
of tha City ol Sanford. Florida.
H. N. Tamm, Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: Dec 30, 1741, Jerv 4, 13.
30, 1743
DEC 143

18—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

SALESMAN
' Usrd Car Lot
Finance exp. preferred Ex
cellent opportunity tor right
person 331 4075 Eves 373 7174

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

RATES
H lm e
54c a
3 consecutive t lm e i 54c a
7 consecutive lim e s 44c a
10 consecutive lim e s 47c a
17.00 M in im u m
3 Lines M in im u m

line
line
line
line

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday Noon Friday
M onday • 5:30 P M F riday

5—Lost &amp; Found
LOST in vicinity ol Am erican
Legion and D A V and 17 97,
small white dog with brown
spots, short hair, hard ot
hearing, and answers to boy
Please call 323 4171

6—Child Care
W ILL babysit in my home Full
or part tim e Hour or weekly.
Judy 331 3076
W ILL babysit In my home.
Experienced m o th e r, fre e
meals Ret given 377 7)73
W ILL keep children in my home
535 per week.
__________ 331 37)3
BABYSITTING in my home for
working mother.
37)3613

13—Special Notices
SINGLE AGAINS
and Single Parents w ill meet
Saturday Jan 15th 7 p m . for a
s h a rin g
lim e
M o n th ly
meetings call 373 4777 333 7771

Legal Notice
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE EIGHTEENTH JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLO RIDA
CASE NO. 41.D4S-CC-I0-S
PATRICIA DAVIS, individually,
and f u b o H A M ILTO N IN
SURANCE COMPANY,
P laintiffs.
vs
N E LLIE LOCKHART,
Defendant
NOTICEOF ACTION
TO NELLIE LOCKHART
702 Easl Broadway
Oviedo, Florida
Last Known Address
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Statement ol Claim has been filed
against you and you are required
to serve a copy ot your w ritten
defenses, it any, to FRANKLIN T.
W A LD E N ,
ES Q UIRE.
ol
MASSEY. ALPER 6 W ALDEN,
PA.
355
East
Sem oran
B oulevard, Altam onte S p rin g s.
Florlde. 17701, Plaint tits' attorney,
on or before February 4. 1743 and
tile the original with the Clerk of
Ihe County Court, either before
service on Plaintiffs' attorney or
m m e d la te ly th e re a fte r; oth er
wise a ludgment may be entered
against you for ihe re lie f
demanded in the Statement of
Claim
WITNESS my hand and official
seal ol this Court on this the 3rd
day ol January, 1743
(COURT SEAL)
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.
A i Clerk of said Court
By; Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish Jan 4, 13, 70. 77, I N )
DED 31
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at US N
Laurel Ave Sanlord Seminole
County, Florida under the tictftio u l name ot TUCKER'S FARM
A GARDEN CENTER, and that I
intend to register said n a m t w ith
C lerk ol the C irc u it C ourt,
Seminote County, Florida In ac
cardanca with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Neme Statutes, T o W it:
.Section 445 07 Florida Statutes
1757
Signature*
Cecil A Tucker, II
Publish: Jan 4. 13. 70, 77, 1N3
DED 77

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OP
THE EIOHTEENTH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CAIE NO. 4I-144J-CA-47-K
FIR ST
F A M IL Y
FEOERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION, a corporation
organlied under tha laws oI tha
United States ol America.
Plaintiff
vs.
ROBERT J. WILLARD, JR. and
GLORIA WILLARD, his wlla,
ELDON L. WARD, HIGH VALUE
INVESTMENT CORPORATION.
INC . KATHRYN M. GAYLE, and
L IO N E L
H.
S IL B E K M A N .
Trustee,
Defendants.
CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALE
Nolle* is given that pursuant to a
final ludgment dated January e,
1743. in Casa No. *1 1443 CA 07 K ot
tha Circuit Court ol tha Elghteeryn
Judicial Circuit In and tor
Stmlnola County, Florida, In
which
FIRST
F A M IL Y
FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION it tha Plaintiff and
ROBERT J. WILLARD, JR. •
GLORIA WILLARD, h it wife,
ELOON L. WARD, HIOH VALUE
INVESTMENT CORPORATION,
INC., KATHRYN M. GALE and
L IO N E L
H.
S IL B E R M A N ,
Trustee, are th* Defendants. I will
sell totha highest and bast bidder
for cash at tha West front door of
lha Seminole County Courthouse In
Sanlord,
Somlnolt
County,
Florida, at ll a m. on January 31,
1741 tho following described
properly set forth In the order of
final ludgment:
Lot 7. Block G, Columbus
Harbor, as recorded in Plat Book
17, Ptgos M and 37, Public
Records ol Stmlnole County,
Florid*.
Dated: 1 413 •
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.
Clark ol tha Circuit Court
By: Carrie E. Buettner
Deputy Clerk ■
Publish: Jen. 4. 13. &lt;743
DED 30

modern home on 10
acres. 1175 mo
337 51)7

29—Rooms
SANFORO. Reas weekly &amp;
monthly rates U til &gt;oc etf 500
Oak Adults 1 441 714)

IB—Help W&amp;nted
NEED money? Sell Avon in
Sanlord, W ashington Oaks,
Midway and Geneva 373 5710
SOMEONE who likes to prepare
and serve good food, lo nice
folks in a pleasant atmosphere
can tmd a job at Ihe Runcible
Spoon Tearoom, Longwood
Hours 7 4. 5 days. For Appt.
431 4441 between 3 A 5 p m And
also need dishwasher 11 JP.m.

GENERAL
OFFICE ..

SHARE

SANFORD Furnished rooms by
the week Reasonable rates,
m aid s e rv ic e Catering to
working people. Unfurnished
Apartments 1 A 7 Qodrooms
.3}} 4507. SOO Palmetto Ave

JOApartments Unfurnished
M ariner's Village on Lake Ada, I
bdrm Irom S745. 7 bdrm Irom
5300 Located 17 77 just south
ot Airport Btvd in Santord All
Adults 3)3 4670
LARGE 6 rm a p t, 1)!h and
French, upstairs S350 m o. lirs t
and last. 313 1104.
GENEVA GARDE N
APARTMENTS.

ni-iete

.......$155

A ccurate ty p in g , Iro n ! desk
position, le g a l experience
helpful Shorthand a plus.
Excellent opportunity, great
boss
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
tfl7 French Ave.
313SW4
JOBSITE INC.
100 s lobs daily
Call 331 7740 Fee.

EXPERIENCED
IN DIRECT SALES
Netionel food service company,
7) yrs In business. F u ll
company benefits alter 70
days .A ll leads supplied along
w ith established account.
Draw based upon experience.
For Interview cell Bob Rector,
I 305 131 0046

AUDITING

C L E R K . . . .. $4.50 Hr.
Accurate typing, 10 key by
touch.
re c o n c ile
bank
statements. Federal and State
taxes necesury. W ill train
CRT Excellent opportunity
with potential.
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
1717 French Ave,
m u te
UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSET.
Sell those things that are lust
taking up space w ith a want ad
in the Herald 327 7aIt or 111
7773
RADIO S a le i
A ggressive,
grow ing S ta tio n
In the
dynamic West Palm Beach
market. We are looking tor a
sell motivated, experienced,
Radio Sales representative
Street sates. 570.000 draw Plus
s ta rte r t i l l
Trem endous
potential, lo r Ihe rig h t person
Resume In co m p le te con
lldence to; Box 14) c o
Evening Herald. P.O Box
1657. Sanlord. Fla. 37771,

DESK CLERK $4.00 Hr.
W ilt train rig ht person, ex
perience h e lp fu l
F le x ib le
hours and days.
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
1717 French Ave,
3)3-5174
NEED extra Money?
Why not set I AVO N!
711-0417
RESIDENT Manager position
available lo r Garden Apt.
complex ol 70 units, located In
Sanlord, Fla. Previous exp. is
desirable, good starting u la r y
and good benefits. Apply in
confidence to P.O. Box 17,
Panama City, Fla. 17401.
Alert intelligent individual to
look alter amusement center
in Sanford Plaia. M u lt have
m echanical
a b ttily ,
be
dependable, and bondable.
Part time 53 75 H r Call lor
Appt 3?t 4701

SECRETARY »OOWk.
Good typing, very motlvalad,
shorthand a plus, executive
position In near future
p os s ib le
C o n s tru c tio n
background helpful.
AAA EM PLOYMENT
1717 French Ave.
117-4)74
FIBERGLASS men for boat
repair. Must be able to match
color, make molds, small
parts, etc. We ara putlina
teak on boats for th* raf*i!
and wholesale trade end also
faking cere of any fiberglass
work at tha u r n * time. We
•Itom lg. fiberglass sett boxes
and have been In business for
11 yrs. Opportunity lor lha
right person in a growing co
Situated In the right retail
area
Seaworthy
Wood
Products, Inc. 1731 Slat* St.
IJusl so. of Santord Plata and
behind
Robson
M arine)
Sanlord, Fla.
PART TIME Man Women. Work
Irom home. Phone Program.
Earn SIS 1 100 par weak.
Flexible Mrs. Call 474 7104 or
447 0714.
SECRETARIES N E E D ED FOR
Temporary and part lime
positions. Excellent skills
necessary interview by ap­
pointment only. 111 544*.

legal Notict
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notict is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 477 S SR
477, Longwood Stmlnole County,
Florida under Ihe fktltlous name
ot F ULL COURT PR ESS, and that
I intend to register said name with
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Cdurt.
Seminole County. Florida in ac
cordanca with lha provisions of lha
Fictitious Nam* statutes. To Wit.
Section 445 01 Florida Statutes
1*57.
Sig Warren Samuel Miller
Publish: January 1), 30 , 77,
February 3, I f f ]
DED 41

______

LU XU R Y
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily A A d u lts section
Poolside. 7 Bdrm !. Master
Covr Apts 33) 7700 Oprn or
weekends
COMFORTABLE I bdrm car
peted, porch, children wet
come, no pels. Conveniently
located lo downtown area S65
wk. + util. 331 6747.
3 Bdrm convenient to down
town Cent HA. Carpet. S350
Mo 333 7767.
Furnished 4partments for Senior
C ltu e n i ) t | Palmetto A v e . J
Cowan No phone calls.
M EL LO N V ILL. E Trace Apts
spacious, modern 2 bdrm, t
bath apt carpeted, kitchen
equipped. CHA, walk to town
and lake Adults No pets
Available Jan t 321 3705
I. 2 AND 3 BDRM From S240
Ridgewood Arm s Apt isog
Ridgewood Ave 323 4470
ENJOY country living? 3 Bdrm,
Duplex A p ts , Olympic sr
pool Shenandoah V illa ge
Open 7 to 6 371 2V30
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E A irp o rt Blvd
I A 7 Bdrms
From 1330 mo
Phone 333 4420

SANFORD 3 bdrm 5100 down
appt S250 mo Fee 3)7 7200
Sav On Rentals, Inc Raaltor

31—Apartments Furnished
NICE a tlic le n c y apa rtm e nt,
furnished SS5 wk plus dep
‘
373 1477
BEAUTIFUL 7 bdrm, 7 blh apt.,
s p lit in to 3 separate jo in in g
units, ne w ly decorated and
furnished 1100 wk plus 1700 tec
dep Call 373 7761 or 371 4747
SANFORD 3 bdrm kids ok lu ll
carpet, 140 wk Fee 337 7)00
Sev-On Rentals, Inc., Reeltar
1 bedroom, I bath, upstairs, pel
or child 5775 1100 dp
331 0421
t

Bedroom cottage, electric,
water included. 1235 Adults,
no pets. 317 4470.

31A—Duplexes
DELTONA, country living, iult
minutes Irom 14. 7 Bdrm.
Duplex end quadrsplex. units
available. Carpeting,
fully
equipped kitchen, lots of (tout
space. Some with carports.
Call 574 1)14 or 333 4733
LAKE MARY 7 Bdrm, kids, lull
klt.,l*nc*d, *745 Fee. 337 7700
Sav-On Rentals, Inc., Reslltr
Have a room to rent? Let a
classified *d llnd a tenant lor
you I
NEW Duplex 1 bdrm bth ulil.
rm. carport hitch, appl., Leas*
33**547
CLASSIFIED ADS ARE FUN
ADS. READ A USE THEM
OFTEN. YOU'LL LIK E THE
RESULTS._____________
7 bdrm, I blh. No pets 5300 per
mo. 1st, last and sec.
44* 4S47.

32—Houses Unfurnished
LAKE MARY
3 bdrm. ] Bath Cent HA 5400 Mo.
glody Brown Realty 177 57)7
or 333 3*74.
Sanford 3 bdrm, kids, air, *ppl„
carpet, S350. Fee 337 7300.
Sav-On Rlntals. Inc. Reader
NEW 3 bdrm 3 b*lh, available'3
14). 5400 mo. call alter 4 p m.
Lake M ary area, i l l 4)44.
ST. JOHNS River, SSSO and 1450
M a Bob M . B ill Jr. PA
Raaltor 10-41I I or 333 5073.
CASSELBERRY Lkfnt 3bd air.
5175 Fee. 337 7700
5s v On Rentals. I nc. Raaitar
UNFURNISHED 3 ‘bdrm. housa
references required. R ant 1350
mo. + dip. 3713341.
MOBILE Home on private land,
kitchen equipped for 1 or
couple. Easy access in Lake
Mary. 5375 Mo. 337 411*.
MODERN 3 Bdrm, 3 Bath, with
CHA drapes, appl. furnished.
W7S Mo., 41V-S7SI or 134 4244

33— Houses Furnished
LIKE new, 1 or
carpel, air,
t l t t . . or with
pels, security

1 bdrm, porch,
appli, drapes,
turn., Slio No
1431104.

1/ *

r

�I.

&lt;

34—Mobile Homes
&gt;2x64 mobile home handyman
special, as is, reasonable o ile r,
by appl only 331 uso

P R IM E
O FF IC E
SP AC E *
Providence B lvd , Oeltona
2166 Stj FI. Can Be Divided
With Parklnq Days 305 574
I4’ 4 Evenmqs Ik Weekends
__________ 7Q4 m 4751

Classified Ads w ill always qive
you more
Much , Much
More than you expect

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

1400 Sq II Olfice. 115 Maple
A v e . Sanlord Avail Immed
Broker Owner J73 7309
SPACE lor rent Office, Retail,
Sloraoe French Avenue and
Airport 3:3 4403

The ?*c - w a l k e d
LIKE HE W A 6 Vi EARIN’
5 0M E 0N E ELSE*

t m W. 3rd S t. 3 Br, I bath with
e itra lol toned m uitM a m ily.
Close lo new hospital 130.000.
SANFORDREALTY
REALTOR
333 1334

37-B—Rental Offices

REALTOR MLS
3301 S French
Suite 4
Sanlord. Fla

24 HOUR 03 322 9283
YOUNG 3 Bdrm home Can be
used as residence or prolessional
ollices or com m ercial Only
112.000 down 5413 Monthly. Call
Broker Owner 331 1411

37C-For L ease
OFFICE SPACE
FORLEASE
030 7733

UNDER 13 000 DOWN
3 bdrm doll house Atlordabie
m onthly pa ym e n ts
Call
Ownrr Broker i n u p _______

O lfice space
lor Lease, on 17 93 ideal
location lo downtown area 705
S French Ave or call 377 3170

p r o f e s s io n a l

SUNLANDESTATES
Owner
fin a n ce.
te rm s
negotiable Large CBS home A
garaqc Many extras 543,000
333 9417

GET THOSE LUXURY ITEMS
FO R AFR AC TlO N O F THEIR
COST FROM TODAY'SW ANT
ADS!

B'FOCMi, BUT HE Vs*K£»

DANIEL AND WOHLWENDER

p r o x ie s

41—Houses

LAKE HELEN 30 acres S73.SOO

COVE Estates
Osteen, by
owner, l ‘ y years like new, ?4»40.
7 bdrm, 7 bin. Mobile and land
scaped lo! with permanent H k?0
Florida rm Many extras Low
530’S 373 8999

COUNTRY Living Lease Option
like new 3 3 wim or without
acreage
PfitCEO under to d ays market
3 3 fa m ily rm .. enclosed
garage, fenced back, a real
buy S48,900
NEAR new hospital Z C 3 Older
two story large lot asking
$79,900

* C m REALTORS

321 0759

Be UJwe

EVE

322-7643

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

CM Keyee

3144 S French
333 0731
Alter Hours 339 3910 377 0779
Serene end quiet locetion. Near
Dell. CC.Cathedra) ceilings
throughout, spacious. 3 bd 7
balh. Brighl kit., opens lo Ige.
porch, I YR WARRANTY.

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
OPEN HOUSE
173 Wildwood D r
Sanlord
Saturday, 1 lo 4 p m
JUST L IS T E D ! In b e a u tifu l
R a m b l e w o o d .
NO
Q U A L IF Y IN G ! Heated spa,
screened
room,
,
wChatahoochee stone. Sunken
qreat room. Too many e x lra t to
mention - must sect Michael
Lukas, Realtor Associate. A lt.
Hrs. 371 0973.

The Wall SI Company
Realtors
371 1001
3 Bdrm Balh, convenient lo
schools, shopping, $47,000 Bill
MalictOWSki 372 7983

O rtU K _
JUNE PORZIG REALTY

S49W L a ke M a ryB lvd
Suite B
Lake Mary, Fla 33744
333 3300

NEW Listing! You’ll want to see
this 3 bdrm, 1 bth. I yr old
home on 19 acres in a
be a utifu l n a tu ra l s e llin g
Located in Paola 171 voo
REALTOR
80? S French Ave.

MLS

3 2 2 -8 6 7 8

STENSTR0M
REALTY -

REALTORS

HAL COLBERT REALTY
REALTOR
787 E. ISIh 51
77171)2

S a n f o r d ’s S a le s L e a d e r
WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY!
BEAUTIFUL 3 Bdrm 3 Bath
home in esc. Maylair. Pan.
Fam. rm ., with fireplace,
Sunroom, equip, kit. and many
extras. 199,900.
CHARMING 3 Bdrm I balh
home completely remodeltdl
Cent HA, Fam. rm , equips kit,
and more. 139,100.
COUNTRY LIVINO 1 Bdrm. 3 •
bath dbl. wide Mobile on
fenced corner loti Screened
porch, eat-in kitchen, dining
room, and lots morol Horses
welcome) 138.100.
ATTRACTIVE 3 Bdrm. 2 both
home near downtown areal
Panelling, family room, eol-ln
kit. lanced, end an cosy
assumption 1)1.9081
JUST FOR YOU 3 Bdrm. ) balh
home near Lake Monroe and
shopping) Specious living and
family rm. large M br„ Cent
HA, wall-wall carpal, enjoy
your own pool and polio.
S IM M .
MAYFAIR VILLASI 3 A 3 Borm.
2 Beth Condo Villas, next to
Maylair Country Club Select
yeur lot. floor plan A interior
decori Ouollfy constructed by
Shoemaker lor 147,980 A up!

CALL A N Y T IM E
iw t
P«rk

322-2420

Let a Classified Ad help you lind
more room lo r storage
Classified Ads lin d buyers
last

KISH REAL ESTATE
321 0041
REALTOR
Alter Hrs 333 7441 A 373 6917__

HAROLD

HALL

R E A LTY , IN C

REALTOR
323-5774
I 31 YEARS EX PERIENCE
CUSTOM
B U ILT
CEDAR
HOME
E n e rfy
efficient
custom throughout. Terrtllc
owner financing. Potential
guest home In rear. 12 citrus
trefS. Loads ol storage. Take
48A East to left on Rl. 419. 3
houses on right post Osteen
Post Otliee. $49,100.

SYLVAN DR., Sanlord,
maculate 3 2. $45,000
SANDY WISDOM

BUT AFTER HE
WON, HE HAP
IT TOWED FOR
LEAKIN' OIL IN
THE PARKIN' LOT!

W ORKER

:

TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk 6
Used cars, trucks &amp; heavy
equipment 377 5990

HAY 17 50per bale,
25 or more tree del
Other teeds avail 349 5)94
y

copper,

75 Ford Super Cab
reasonable,
468 8773

days 8 4 30, Sat 9 1 K K0M 0
TocolCo 9t8 W 1st St 373 1100

FOR ESTATE C o m m e rce ' o r
Revdenliat Auctions K Ap
prasats fa ir Dell s Auction
173 5670

CONDOMINIUM in Sahara 3
Bdrm . 7’ j balh Beautifully
decorated 73 4 .- f ir s t m or
tgage, assumable, owner w ill
consider second m ortgage
$42.S00 by owner 323 5944
evening A 377 6445

198? DatSun pickup truck, 4 Sp
air cond M ust sell best otter
371 6978

75—Recreational V ehicles

47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp;Sokf

42—M obile Homes

E U R E K A
HOOVER
PANASONIC on sale Ihis week
only Cash or term s We finance
Seminole Sewing, Winn Dixie
Fid,a 1/ 97 A Lake Mary Blvd.,
322 9411

PRE OWNEDHOMES
7 Bd Fam Park
17x45
$10,500
7Bd Fam Park
14x57
112.300
1 Bd 24x64 Must See
$14,900
2 Bd 12x60 Nice
S6.495
2 Bd 12x65 Furn
111,500
7 Bd 12x60
14.500
7 Bd 14x64 Ad Pk
S73.500
GREGORY M O BILE INC
3801 Orlando Dr 17 97 S Sanlord
305 323 5700

62—Lawn G arden

I960 Scotty tra v e l tra ile r. II II .
s e ll contained
L ik e new
15 000 3JI 1350

GRAVELY tractor
with mower call
349 5528

•73 SUPERIOR M H 75’ Root A
cab. a ir. g e n e ra to r
Low
mileaqe. rear bdrm
SL 6
$10,500 373 6811. 373 1874

66—Horses

77—Junk G irs R em oved

SEIGLER Healer w tan, 120
q a l. fuel oil and titty gal
drum S250 372 4249
■ ___ -_
L E V I Jeans A Jackets
ARM Y NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanlord Ave. 332 5791

1 7 plus able mobile home on
acre Many extras I m ile Irom
Rl 441, M l Dora 135.TO
323 2545
1980 M O BILE Home 14*140' set
up m adult section ol mobile
park Day 831 2473
Evenings 831 5116

MUST sell 4 Shetland ponies
Great with children Please
call 371 7091

We buy Cars and Trucks.
M artin M otor Salts
1 .411 French__________ 37) 7834
19M Portiac Bonnbrgm diesel all
the extras 75 m iles per gal
Exc cord wholesale price,
call 377 5564
1980 Chevy pickup C 10 AmFm,
air. auto, ps exc
cond
wholesale price call 377 5566

50—M iscellaneous (or Sale
BOX Springs and m attress.
Simmons Beauty rest, good,
you haul. $70 123 0106

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
NoCredil Check Easy Terms
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 Sanlord Ave
371 407S

WE PAV top dollar for
Junk Cars and Trucks
C US Auto Parts 79 J 4505

5E t SK f U N F 5 NEWEST
P ,lm ip , ,nqv 6 Palm Manor
GREGORY MOBILE MOVES
JSOlOrlando Of
171 5200
VA 6 E HA f nant

LOVE Seat, green apt site, exc
cond S7S Coltee lableSIS. 830
1488. 8 30 S p m.

/ ♦

' r

x

“* i v

y . j fe ' -v”i

7

• DID YOU KNOW? *
You can buy or lease a new car
in the p n v a ry ol your home or
otliee Fla Auto Brokers
331 7066
Deflary Auto 8 Marine Sales
across the river top ot hill 17a

Hwy 1? 07 D eBar, 668 15*6
196? Cadillac Sedan D e v illt all
original Excellentconditlonin
and out One owner car Estate
sale 668 1074 or 17? 7088

■* v -**
DA’ ’ TON A AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 97. 1 m ile west ol Speed
w iy . Daytona Beach w ill hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday A Wednesday al
7 30 p m I t ’s the only one In
Florida You le t the reserved
price
Gall 904 )5$ 8111 lor
further details
76 MG M ID G E T Call a ll 6 p m
373 107 7 New paml, excellent
condition

To List Your Business...

-S _ J

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

52—A ppliances
Kenmore parts, serv.ee.used
washers 333 0697
MOONEY APPLIANCES

Aloe Products

JUST received shipment ot good
used refrigerators. 30 Cay
guarantee Sanlord Auction,
1715 S French. 323 7340

53—TV Radio-Stereo

ST JOHNS River frontage, 3' I
acre parcels, also Interior par
cels with riv e r access 513,900
Public w ater. 70 min to Alta
monte M a ll 13 •• TO yr
lin a n c ln g . no q u a lify in g
Broker 421 4833

HAVE YOUR 'imanuAl dreams
become a reolily wilh Aloe
P I, no investment 373 7788

KEPOSSESSEDCOLOR TVS
We s e ll repossessed color
televisions, a ll name brands,
consoles and portables EX
AM PLE Zenith 25" color in
walnut console Original price
over $750. balance due SI98
cash or payments Slk month
NO MONEY DOWN Still in
w arranty Call 21st Century
Sales867 5394 day or nile. Free
home tria l, no obligation

Gel Cash Buyers lor a small
investment place a low cost
classified ad lo r results 322
2611 or 831 999]
KICK THE STORAGE HABIT
Sell thsoe useful, no longer
needed items w ith a Herald
Classified Ad Call 377 7611 or
131 999]

Modernising your Home? Sell no
longer needrd bul useful items
with a C lastifled Ad

43B-Lotj&amp; Acreage
Wanted

54—G a ra g e Sales

COUNTRY 5 ACRES
For a low down payment and low
interest I " r owner you can
own this hig i snd dry acreage
east ol Sanlord M obile home
o k with perm it 577.500 lor
quick sate

3 Fam ily garaqc Sale
at 105 SaAora Blvd
Jan 15. 9 4, Jan 14 2 5
— ;------------------------------------aYARO F u ll. M u lti Fam ily. LOIS
ot stu lt 3114 S Sanford Ave,
Friday and Saturday, 9 till.

CallBart

JAN 14 16.9 3 Car parts, wheels,
tires, hubcaps, starters, belts,
brie brae A m ore 19] Evansdalt
Pkwy , Lk. M ary 373 25*5

REAL E5TATE
REALTOR U i 7448
WANTED
About 11 acre ol land fo r house
tr a ile r l l l e . R u ra l p ro p e rty
preferred near Sanlord Can be
contacted at C a nF lea Food
Store 111 W 17th SI , Sanford.

SATURDAY 9 a m , 207 Forrest
D r . Loch Arbor area. Tools,
lumber, 2 dining room tables,
and m ite, articles.
It

47 Real E sta te W anted
WE BUY equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LU C KY
IN
VESTMENTS P O Box 7500,
Sanlord. Fla 32771 327 4741

you are having difficult*
lindmg a place, to live, car to
drive, a job. o r some service
you have neeq ol, read ail our
want ads every day.

Etmlpnwtt

CGe Stereo installation Repair
a
Auto Sound Center
A &gt; V 7109 French Ave
37? 4131

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
BATHS, kitchens rooting block,
concrete windows add a
room, tree estimates 171 8443
NEW. REM ODEL.REPAIR
All types and phases ol con
slruction, S G Raimi 371 4837.
37? 1645 State Licensed
A L L TYPES CARPENTRY
Custom Built additions Patios,
screen rooms, carport Door
locks, panelling, shingles,
rerooling For last service.

can 323-4917,365-2371

Aluminum Siding &amp;
Screen Rooms
A LU M IN U M Siding, vinyl siding ■
sotlit 8 lascia Aluminum
gutters and down spouts
Fr ESt 305 3*5 5363

Appliance Services

Clarence s Appliance Serv
We serve a ll ma|or brand ap
pliances Reas rales 15 yrs
«P
123 0331

Bc.iufy Cue*
TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H a rrie tts Beauty
Nook 519 E l i t St . 372 574?

Daytona Auto
Auction

WE p a y cash lor 1st A 7nd
mortgages Ray Legg Lie
Mortgage Broker 788 7598

CEILING FAN INSTALL AT ION
Quality Wqrk
We Do Most Anything
795 9378
677 4781

Auto CB Stereo

EQUIPMENT AUCTION
SATURDAY, JAN. 15
10AM
Farm Ira c to n . doters, loaders,
backhoes, bu cke t trucks,
trucks, tra ile rs and mowers. At

Ceiling Fan Installation

Ceramic Tile

Good Used Tv s 125 8 up
M ILLERS
2619prlandoDr
Ph J22 0357

Hwy. 9 j Daytona Beech
804 255 8111

Boarding &amp; Grooming

A N IM A L Haven Boarding and
G roo m in g Kennel* healed,
in iu ia trd . screened. Ily proof
inside, outside run i. Fens
Also AC cage*. We cater to
your pets Pit 322 5752

Brick A Block
StonaWaric

DESCRIPTION: Over 1,700,000 tq. ft. of prlma Dutch-Type greenhoueee •
Warehouses • Otliee Bldgs." Maintenance Shops • Oflared as Individual paresis or
groups ol paresis • 120 aerss. ALSO 203,000 sq. tt. grasnhouss on 14% aerss •
Quincy, Florida.
LOCATION: 2% mllss south ol Apopka, Florida on S.R. 435 • 10 milas north of
Orlando, Florida.
( TERMS: 10% down (cash) 20% additional at closing (60 days) w/bal. flnancsd 9

P IA IIA MASONRY
Q uality Work Al Reasonable
Prices Free Ettimaies
Ph. 149 5500

MEINT2ER TILE E xp s.nte
K M New * old work comm 8
rend r ree estimate *69 856?

,C

Home R ep airs
PA iN t INC,andrepa r patioand
screen p o rch p u'H
Call
anyt.me 17? 9481
SEAMLESS aluminum gulltrs,
cover those overhangs waluminum sotlit A lascia. tt*4l
m iQtO collect. Free est.
C O L L IE R 'S
c a rp e n try ,

H om e
f o o lin g ,

window repair 371 6427

COOD r A sriN s
TileContrattors
321 0157

Child Care

CARPENTER 75 yrs exp Small*
remodeling |obi. reasonable
rales Chuck 323 9645

THE HAPPY ELVES
Quality child care and pre
school Infants a specialty
In d iv id u a l a tte n tio n Stale
licensed 170 E C rystal Lake
Ave . Lk Mary 3?t 7384

Cleaning S ervices

Mamtenanceol a ll types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 37) 6038

Lawn Service
* A -1 L A W N S E R V IC E *
Mow. wind 'rim haul Regular
Serv.te
*ime clean up 74
hrs best rates. *71 *4J8.

HOMEOWNERS, relax on y o ir
days oil Let us clean your
home at atlordabie rates. Call
now 321 3566 P a llv ’s Home
Pampering Service

Shamrock Landscape
Prepare your lawn A plants lor
winter now Complete Lawn
sarv. 171 057*

A M. Kelly cleaning service.
S p ccia llilni in restaurant A
otliee buildings. 412-0311.

Lawn Mowers

CARPENTER repairs end
additions 20 yrs. exp
Call 3I7.I1J2.

P.O. Box 1930
MattJand, FL 32751
-

Carpet Cleaning

I

• TRIPLE A *
Price special 114,95 tor
Fam ily or Living Rm 8*2 27*0

SPENCER PEST CONTAOL
Comm . R eid . Lawn. Termite
Work 377 IM S Ask lor Champ

Plastering
AIL
Phases c4 Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
ente. sim ulated b ritk 371 5993
C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS of merchandise
every day

R e m o d e lin g

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle The
Whole B allO f Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322 7029
F inancing Available

Rooting

A &amp; B R O O F IN

C o n n &gt; f f W o t (&lt;

MISTER. Fix It Jo« McAdams
will repair your mowers at
your home Call 327 7055

3) yrs. experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Free E slimate* an Roofing,
Rl-Rootlng m d Repairs.
Shingles, R uilt Up end Tile.

BEAL lo n c ir tr l man quality
operation oaten drivew ays
Days 1)1 1333 Ev«s 32? 1)71

Major Appliance
Repair

JA M ES ANDERSON
G. F . BOHANNON

SWIFT CONCRETE worn all
types Foolers, d riv e w a y s ,
pads, floors, pools, complete
Free e il 327 7101
FOR all your concrete needs cell
322 3477. Free estimates No
builders please.

JOHNNIES A p p lia n c e s
We
service refrig e ra to rs, wash
ers, dryers, ranges
Rees,
rales 3?)833*

Nursing Care
DogTraining

Sundown Dog Training
O beditncelraining in home
and group 371*7]|

LOVING HOME Excellent care
A companionship for elderly
woman 31) 4305

Draperies
CUSTOM MADE In our Shop.
Installation Sarvlce. Dorothy
A Vincent Bliss 349 542s

Excavating Servlets
V IIN O (XCAVATINO
*80 Cate Backhoe Loader w
extender hoe 9 yd. dump
truck low bed serv M1S87).

Handyman
Services Painting,
repairs, etc
Reasonable
guar work 425 0*51. *77 8711.

handym an

\

Built up and Shingle root,
licensed and insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. LEE INC
T V Repair

Lakeyifw Nursing Center
719 E Second $t . Sanlord
377 *707
Will cere for elderly
in my.home
123 5125

Oil Heaters
Cleaned
OIL Heater cleaning
and servicing
Ceil Ralph 3217111

Painting

FIREWOOD 140 i up. Tree
trim m ing, rem oval. T ris h
hauled Free c s t. 122 9410

REROOFING, carpentry, root
repair A painting 15 years
exp 377 197*

Nursmq Cfiitor

Firewood

poR INFORMATION OR COLOR BROCHURE

Pest Control

R e p a ir s
p a in tin g ,

WINDOWS, doors, carpentry.
Concrete slabs, ceramic A Hoar
tile Mm«r repairs fireplaces,
miufafion Lie. Bond 333 1131.

Carpentry

305/ 339-4333

1

78 FORD Granada All extras
In c lu d in g auto Ira n i, $450
down Cash or trade 339 9100.
834 4605

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

J A ‘n

WILSON M AIER F URNlTURE
311 31$ E FIRST ST
317 5627

43—Lots-A creage

YOU AT T H E O R L A N D O &amp; M IA M I S H O W S

1974 Toyota Celica. exc cond . 4
brand new tires SI.700, can be
seen at 1109 S Sanford Ave

V.

51 A—F urniture

YEAR ENDCLOSE OUT
1981 SKYLINE Mobile Hqm’e
?4«S2 tt screen enclosure
porch u tility shed Central
heat and a ir } r.drm , 2 Batn
Lol sue is SOalOO Sale price
541 900 tin a n on q available al
80 « ot sales p rire interest rate
I7’ a ar » 2 Points Canbeseen,
at. 126 Leisure Dr
North
DeBary,
F ia
In
the
M eadowlca on the R ive r
M obile Home co m m u n ity
Please contact Tom Lyon or
G&gt;b Edmonds F trsl Federal ol
Seminole 305 372 1247

SUNDAY • JANUARY 23rd • 1:00 P.M.
RALSTON PURINA COMPANY
2525 S. Park Aura. • Apopka, Florida

— SEE

p le n ty
ot
prospects
Advertise your product or
service in the Classified Ads

15 It. chest type Ireerer, in good
condition $125
322 0310

AUCTION

m v t

Get

CONSULT OUR

o urratesarelo w er

12% Intarsst.

75DATSUN?dr with auto trans
and other extras Good con
dition 599 down Cash or
Trade 339 9100. 134 4405

80—Autos fo r Sale

1975 Tarus travel tra ile r t9 It
sleeps Six new carpet and
upholstery J73 8301 after 4
p m______
_________

F ILL OlRT 8 TOPSOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clerk 9, H lrt 313 7580. 373 2821

pickup,

1974 GMC
T ru c k .
77 If
Aluminum box 6 brand new
M ithelin tires. $4,800 firm ,
exc cond 373 406? from 9 5

72—Auction

4 i-B— Condominiums
For Sale

47-A— Mortgages Bought
A Sold

1963 Chevy Pickup Runs good,
good tires. $500
373 2183

lead, brass. Silver, upld Week

Tomorrow may be ihe day you
sell that roll a way bed you’ v*
nowhere to ro ll away
It you
place a Classified Ad today

W E N E E D LISTING S!
CALL US NOW) 111

cans,

80—A utos to r Sale

79—T ru ck s-T railers

W a n te d to BuY

A LU M IN U M ,

869-4600 or 349-5698

N EE D io s e ll yo u r house
q u ic k ly !
We can
o ile r
guaranteed sale w ith in 30
days Call 331 1811

1*0* HWY. 17 M

CARR
'X P O R
F E lL C V

3UYJUN *. CARS A TRUCKS
From SlOio $50 or more
Call 322 1624

Wilco Sales Hwy 44 W
172 4170
B a lrd s h a v in g i 54 jo
2nd culling clover hay
Ird cutting alfalfa hay.
Northern Timothy m ixed hay.
Check our prices.

im

HUGE CORNER LOTI Priced te
sell lost! ) bdrm, family rm.,
CHA, lenctd yard w-wetl and
sprinkler systems, m ature
citrus trees, deuble site polio
under sprawling campkor
tree. Large assumable low
Interest mortgage. Celt todeyt
$43,988.

323-5774

osxulx

Thursday, Jan. II, ItlJ— JB

77—Junk G ars Removed

Hay lor Sale
12 and upper bale
327 5177

SNOW STORM !

country

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Raal Estate Broker
3440 Sanlord Ave.

H I*
j CHRISTM AS

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

67A—Feed

HE EVES PUT HI* ^
FUR COM OYER MY
CAR PURiN' A

he
Y
6U JN EP

S R E A T COMPANY.11 T &gt;
L IK E T H E T I M E T HE
30*5 N E E P E P T H E
EM PLOYEE s to c k
G EN E VA 2 Story
comtort 4 1. 140.000

wilh Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

41— Houses

BILL'S P A IN T IN O
interior Exterior paini ng tight
carpentry. Homes p rtlturo
cleaned Business 8112*33
Home 111 H I * Bill Sleinar
Wonder what to do wirn fwo?
Sell One - Th* quick, easy
W*nt Ad w ay. Th» magic
number is M2 7*11 or g il 9991
HOUSE pointing 1500
a house Any t i l e
411 m e . 42$ 4009

tun TV Servica Center Service
charge s /.f) plus parts. All
makes 7111751
MAKE ROOM TO STORE-:
YOUR W INTER ITEMS
SELL "D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAST W ITH A WANT AD
Phone 122 2*11 or | } l eetl xnd
8 friendly Ad Visor will help
you

Tree Service
S K IM P S ground out.
Reasonable, free estimates.
788 0*41
JOHN A L LE N YARD A TREE
SERVICE. We'll rim ov* pin*
I r m . Rees, price l i t SW.
Letourneeu Tr#e Services
Removal, trimming, demaxim
Licensed and insured. 134 44*4

Upholstery
LORENE’S Upholstery Free
Pck up. del A est Car A bod
seels Furn M l-M M

r

�4 B—Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Thursday, J«n. 11,1983

by Chic Young’

46 Poultry
product
47 Cereal
1 Brothers
50 Doctrine
(abbr)
52 Industrious
5 Foreheed
creature
9 Weep eloud
55 Nard
12 Organs ol
58 Vanity b o i
hearing
59 Inordinate
13 Housetop
self-esteem
feature
14 Flightless bird 60 Smallsword
61 Post a letter
15 Tarry
62 Fled
16 Send
63 Yeltowjacket
IB Compass
64 Abstract
point
being
19 Oil-grading
number
DOWN
20 Cats and dogs
21 Cereal grass
N non pal
23 Travel on
Reboio
horseback
Precipitation
26 Pick out
Hospital
29 Dripping wet
workers
33 Way out
Compass
34 Mild oath
point
36 Prehohday pe­
Greek letter
riod
More scarce
37 Imitate
Egg*
38 l l ____ tar
Skin tumor
Sown (Fr)
pits
39 Sounded horn 10 Elide
11 Conjunction
40 Hurls
42 Patron
(Pi)
44 Home of Eve 17 Went quickly
across

Answer to Previous Puiile
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□

Gallstones: Remove
O r Let Them A lone?

DEAR DR. LAMB —Iain a
52-year-old m ale and in
generally
good health.
Recently I found (rather by
accident) th a t I have
gallstones. I have never had
39 Oversited
19 Dry,as wine
any sym ptom s or any
41 Transmitted
22 So far
discom fort
from
my
24 Jacob s father 43 Astronaut s
gallbladder.
25 Defense de
ferry
Second,
what
about
My physician advised that I
partment
45 Ooien less
dissolving your gallstones
(abbr)
have my gallbladder removed
three ( p i)
with m edicine’ After an
26 Booth
now before I have any
47 Afrikaner
exceptionally long delay in
27 Montreal
problems with it. Another
48 Latvia s
world s fair
national
studies,
capital
physician advised the op­
28 Brief in
ch en o d c o x y c h o lic
a c id
49 Shortly
speech
posite. He said I may never
(CHENO)
has
not
proved
to
30 Representa­
51 Pace
have a problem with it but if 1
be
very
useful.
In
more
than
tives
53 Sisters
do that would be the time to
31 Of equal
two years there was no
54 Current
have the operation. Whal
score
evidence of a decrease in
56 Cat sound
32 Triton
would you advise?
57 Environment
stone size in 60 percent of the
35 Germanium
DEAR READER - I’m not
agency (abbr)
cases. But there may be
Symbol
surprised that you obtained
58 Noun suffn
38 Flower plot
o th er, more successful,
two different answers. There
medications in the fulure.
10 11
9
8
are
different
opinions
7
6
5
4
3
i
2
To give you more details 1
regarding which Is the best
am sending you my new Issue
14
13
course. And there Is very'
12
of The Health U tter number
recent Information that bears
20-6, Your Gall B ladder:
17
16
15
on what to do about gallstones.
Stones and Attacks.
First, In a perron like
DEAR DR. LAMB - Why
20
19
18
yourself who does not have
docs an alcoholic drink help
and never has had any
23 24 25
some to sleep, or calm them
21 22
symptoms and really has
down when it Is said to be a
silent
gallstones,
the
30 31 32
29
stimulant? If one drink is
26 27
likelihood that you will ever
_
good, Is two better?
develop problems from the
36
35
33
DEAR READER - Alcohol
stones Is small. In a recent
3‘
is definitely not a stimulant. It
39
study at five years only 10
38
37
is a depressant. It has even
percent of patients In that
been used as an anesthetic
42 43
group
ever
developed
41
40
because it depresses sen­
problems. By 10 years only 15
sation. Its depressing action
45
44
percent, and after 15 years or
on the brain rem oves
more only 18 percent had.
54
53
Inhibitions which may result
51
so
49
47 48
S tated another way, that
f
In a person being ovcractive,
study Indicates that you have
58
quarrelsome or loving. It
57
56
55
a better than 80 percent
depends on the person.
chance of not having any
61
60
59
Alcohol is not a good
problem from your silent
sleeping medicine. Studies at
gallstones
for
15
years
or
64
63
62
the University of F lo rid a
• 1 longer.
Medical School at Gainesville
Only 2.5 percent of the
show that men who drank
entire group developed acute
alcohol before going to sleep
c h o le c y s titis
(a c u te
were prone to attacks of sleep
gallbladder attack) or panapnea. In 20 subjects, 18 men
creatitls.
had periods of not breathing
That is why one doctor
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL
for 10 seconds or longer.
- advised against an operation
Such attacks of sleep apnea
In your case. But there are
For Friday, January 14, 1983
have been found to be a
still may physicians who (eel
frequent cause for insomnia.
may not be attained too that gallstones should come
YOUR BIRTHDAY
They are more apt to occur in
easily. However, If you are out, because In older studies
January 14,1983
men.
there was an Increase In
Alcohol’s action as a
Don't be afraid to involve persistent you should enjoy
cancer of the gallbladder or
substantial rewards.
by
Howie
Schneider
depressant
Is why it Increases
yourself
In
projects
or
ven­
E E K &amp; MEEK
_________
liver In such people, and the
tures this coming year which
the
actions
of sedatives and
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) concern th a t you might
tranquilizers - which can be
are
large
In
scope.
You
are
W
t’R
D
B
U
ILD
U
G
BMGAIUIU6
Do
not
m
ake
major
M E t'S BEEU fcSUBlU. SHIFT Ik) 1 Wt'RE NOT WJUDING MU.T1MILU0U
require surgery In later years
downright dangerous or even
more likely to succeed where judgments In haste today. when your health is not as
CHIPS K)R DISARMAMENT m s
DOLLAR
m
\
\
L
SYSTEMS
FOR
OUR UUOEAR TERMIMOUJfli' IAIELV
your ambitions are grand in There's a possibility you could
fatal.
good as It Is now.
DLFEUSt AUVM CRE-...
scale.
’
overlook
some
key
points
In
r
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jam. your initial evaluation.
19) Com plications may
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
develop In areas which nor­ A situation presently not to
mally run smoothly, while you your best advantage can be
could be extremely lucky In adjusted today so that it will
two no-trump Like most
experts she added a point for
matters where Dame Fortune come out in a manner to yield
her one 10-spot, or maybe
sometimes ignores you. 1983 you benefits.
because it was a good day
predictions for Capricorns are
for her biometrics In any
LEO
(July
23-Aug.
22)
Be
NORTH
lull
now ready. Send f l to Astroevent, she found herself in a
♦ K94
Graph, Box 489, Radio City tactful and diplomatic when
very normal three no-trump.
V J9J
dealing
with
co-workers
Station,
N.Y.
10019.
Be
sure
to
She could count nine easy
by
Ed
S
ulliva
n
♦
Q
J
4
J
PRI SCILLA'S POP
tricks after the diamond
specify birth date. Send an today. With a little extra
♦ Q9I
^
I THINK I JUST ^
MOU RE NOT
lead, but knew that she
consideration,
you
can
turn
BARRING SOME
additional (2 for the NEW
WEST
EAST
BOOKED PASSAGE
would nrcd 10 for a good
PLAVING POKER
MONUMENTAL
those who now oppose you Into
Astro-Graph
M
atchm
aker
♦ A 8 7S
♦ 10 J 2
ON THE TITANIC.
score arid that 11 tricks
TONIGHT'
CATASTROPHE
wheel and booklet. Reveals allies.
*A 6
VQU7J4 J
would be close to a top She
OVER WHICH I
♦ 9 8 6 13
♦•--•
romantic combinations and
got her 11 tricks with a little
VIRGO
(Aug.
23-Sept.
22)
In
HAVE NO CONTROL.
♦ 43
♦ J 10 7 2
compatibilities for all signs.
Help from her opponents
*
areas where you are con­
SOUTH
Dummy's
queen
of
dia­
cerned
about
only
your
own
AQUARIUS (Ja n . 20-Feb.
♦ Q J6
monds held tne first trick
19) Clarify your objectives needs, results might be slim
VK8
and East dropped (he heart
♦ A K 107
today so that you don’t waste today. However, you should
five-spot. Obviously, it was
♦ A K6S
the start of some sort of
time going after something be quite lucky when you try to
strength signal.
Vulnerable: East-West
which might not be what you help others.
Betty Ann led a diamond
Dealer: East
want after you get it.
to her ace and East complet­
LIBRA (Sept. 2M)ct. 23)
Weft
North Eail
South
ed the signal by playing the
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Social activities or fun
Pan
heart deuce. Now she lea her
2 NT
Early developments might diversions will be what you
Pau
3 NT
Paw
queen of spades. West
Pass
not be totally to your liking need today to refurbish your
Pau
grabbed her ace and contin­
ued with the ace and six of
by
Stoffel
A
Heimdahl
today, but don't let this upset psyche. Don't be trapped by
bugs bun ny
_______
hearts.
you. Before the day’s over you dull routines.
Opening lead: +9
Betty Ann's king had
3U6S BEUEVES in THE SO H£ PU&amp;V HA HA
SCORPIO (O ct 24-Nov. 22)
should get hoped-for results.
become a winner and she
Your possibilities for personal
Ol0 SAVIN5''A WAN S HIMSELF W ff DUMB
was up to 10 tricks, trying
' ARIES (March 21-AprU 19)
gain look very good today, but
By OawaM Jacoby
HOME S HIS CASTLE.* A MOAT /WABBiT.
f o r ll
It’s possible today that you
■•4 James Jacoby
She got them with no trou­
'VM BR&amp; 'S
may not see ey*to-eye with potential returns might not
ble. She simply took the rest
arrive until the last minute.
friends on specific issues.
■IS PWAW*
It tikes skill to win a by cashing her spades and
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Rather than risk any un­
World P a in championship, diamonds. On (he la st
B L V ID S E ?
Dec.
21)
Things
should
go
but the winner needs some diamond, poor East had to
pleasantness, change the
quite smoothly for you todsy,
luck also. Here we see Ken­ chuck a club in order to keep
subject If things heat up.
provided you don’t get self­
nedy and Sanden picking up the queen of hearts over
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) doubts cloud your thinking.
extra tricks for another top dummy's jack and all four
clubs were now winners.
score.
Important
goals
are You're a winner, so set like
Note Betty Ann's 20-point (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
reachable today, but they one.

■

J■ ■

■

E

■

□

L■

■

■

■

■

P

HOROSCOPE

r

WIN AT BRIDGE

GARFIELD

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thavet

F R A N K A ND ERNEST

HEY, GARFlELP. WHAT BAY
WE GOTO THE VET ANP
GET VOO DECLAWEP?

$AY,
A MISPRINT
I i | HBPP/ T fW
W AD
THE Pl«H T
lT O

'/ A

U

BAPS

ARM

U*iTi Hi

t w « w &gt; l* * |« IW IV I»

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

—ARE THOSE

WHEW H E S O T M A R R IE D '
HE PHOM ISEPIDLOV^/

HONOR A W P O l J .

TriE 1CW
MODIFICATIONS.
e z R ft? [g

Y E P / 1 THINK I
FINALLY 6 0 T Ttf
KINKS OUT OF 'ER,
— ^W W B U C K S /

0URNE0 RIGHT IT

AN' W E IL PUT TH' BABY
, 7 T ~ l Tt1Ko u e t i ER PACES/

v r iw * -

J:lM4 \

• w

f

QOES'COte

OVER TO T H 'V IP E O SCREEN

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                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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