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Longwood
By Susan Loden
Herald Stafr W rite r
A 18-year-old Eatonvlllr man.
accused of shooting a Longwood
man who gave him a four to
live-hour ride, was being ques­
tioned today by Seminole County
sheriff s d e p u tie s and the
Longwood man underwent sur­
gery lorarhest wound
Seminole County sheriffs Capi
Jav Leman said lawmen are
grtilfi! rnnnict.ng stories Porn
ilv null, but the alleged shooter
was Ix-lng held In lieu of $8,000

bond on charges of aggravated
buttery and use of a firearm In u
felony. Leman said charges of
robbery are pending, depending
o n w h ic h m a n 's s to r y I n ­
vestigators believe
The wounded man. Donald C.
Bonner. 41. of 841 Hlverbend
Drive, told sheriffs Investigator
Sgt. John Thorpe -thai as he
drove along Wcklva Springs Road
In Longwood lire suspect, riding
In Ihe bat! at. pulled .. you and
attempted to rob him.
Bonner. Thorpe said, was In

critical but stable condition at
South Sem in ole C o m m u n ity
Hospital. Longwood
The man accused of shooting
Bonner. Vince Rollins, told In
vestlgalors he was defending
himself from Bonnt r's alleged
sexual a d v a n c e s w he n he
allegedly pulled a gun and fired a
bullet Into Bonner s chest. Leman
said.
Thorpe said It Is too earlv to say
If charges rrlated to tire alleged
sexual advances may l&gt;e filed
against Bonner, who Rollins

»lir

was

M |

claims was reaching for him over
the backseat when he defended
himself.
L e m a n said In v e s tig a to rs
hadn't determined why Rollins
w’as riding In the backseat rather
than up front with Bonner. They
were the only occupants of the
car. Leman said
The wounded Bonner lost con­
trol of the 1984 rented Pontiac he
was driving and crashed Into a
six fool concrete fence at the
entrance of Crown Point Condos,
on Wcklva Springs Road. Just

north of Stale Hoad 434
Neither man was injured In Ihe
crash. Leman said, and Bonner
took the gun from Rollins who
fled on foot
Bonner fired two or three shots
into the air from the 22 -callber
hangurt lo summon help Wit­
nesses who heard the shots called
lawmen to the scene at 5 20 a.nr
today. Leman said
Sheriffs deputies along with
L o n g w o o d a n d A lta m o n te
Springs police mounted a search
See S H O T , page 8 A

Vince RoHIns
accused assailant

A ssistant M a n a g e r E lim in ated

City Trims Budget

By Deane Jo rd a n
Herald Staff W rite r
A Longwood widower who
wauls io collect 9100 000 in
.nsurunir compensation lor the
■li.iih nl Ills wife laces an
insurance company hoping lo
hold nil payment uiiill he Is
i leured nr charged In his wife's
di •till
Midland National Llfr Insur•nice ( oni|Mny Is asking Ihe
. in till court to forestall payment
until authorities decide what to
•In Dem anding payment Is
Daniel Joseph Di-Costa. 48. of
l td K K W illia m so n Itnad.
Lnogwond. according In a suit
tiled bv the Insuiance company
I uesdav at lh«- Scinlnolc County
( uurlhniisc.
DeCosla not Hied ihe i umpanv
"»t April 12 lliai he is named the
b e n e f ic ia r y ul h is w ile 's
S 100.000 Insurance policy Ills
wih llarburu Ann l)e('osia was
taken lo South Seminole Com­
munity Hospital Ian 27 suffer­
ing limit severe head Injuries,
according lo the suit She died
there Fch 12 DeCosla and Ills
wile were seen arguing at Ihelr
b e fo re

m m m m m m m m m m

AAanShot In Chest During Ride

Insurance Co.
Doubts Spouse
Entitled To
Compensation

.id d u -M

m m m m

Irsrta -

|s»rtcd in ihe hospital, according
in ihe soil She look the policy
mil Sepl 23, I5IH2. records
show
I he company stales a tsmaltde
Mw*M I I T*$$»«nf V!»&lt;•«(
dispute exists helwcen II anil
DeCosla The company main­
tains ih.il under Florida law li
d o e s mil have to pay II DeCosla
is eniivlcled of murder Th r stale
E m i l y R e ard on, 3, co n ce n tra te s on c o lo rin g at
law directs that such money
" C a rn iv a l for C h ris t" being held this week In Lake
wui11&lt;1 In lhal ease go lo Ihe
M a r y . Holy Cross Lu th e ra n Church Is holding the
■(tuple's children Daniel Jr .
su m m e r activity p ro g ra m for youngsters 3 years old
Sandra. Jean ami Denise
through sixth grade under a tent behind Driftw ood
W title DeCosla has not lieen
V illa ge on Lake M a r y Boulevard. The ca rn iv a l lasts
&lt;linrgcd nr connection wlih his
through Frid a y, 9 a m . to 11:30 a m. A p ro g ra m for the
wile's death II is a possibility.
whole fam ily will be field at 6:30 p.m. F r id a y featuring
a&lt; curding to Oct Smokry Parr,
c a rn iva l games and a C h ristia n music concert.
ul I he Lung wood Police De­
partment lie salrf Mrs l)rCosta's death is still under
mv esligallun
DeCosla was arrested In a
idated Incldrnt Ihe samr day his
wile wustaken In thr Imspiial
While Mrs DeCosla was In
surgery, a man demanding to
•we his wife In surgery refused la
L lllr r r r s beware. Seminole ordinances when li was updated
calm down In the emergency
Courtly s Acting Traffic Engineer .mil whether a special ael of the
mom and shoved three olllcers
Steven L Decker Is recommen­ Legislature for Seminole County
who had to wrestled him lo the
ding strong enforrernent of an­ adopted In 15)53 Is In rffect The
limn and eulfrd Ills hands and
special act allowed rewards
il tillering laws
led
All lhal Is holding up the i.mglng from 910 lo half thr fine
DeCosla was arrested lor bat- process Is research bv County impostd on the violator for
trrv on three Longwood officers Attorney Nikki Clayton and her liilormalton leading lo arrests
and was released on $5,000
staff. The county must learn If and convictions.
bund The battery cases are an ordinance adnptrd by the
In addition lo the ordinance
scheduled lo go lo trial July 29. co un ty 'in 1971. calling for
mid Ihr special a d Decker lound
Parr said
|Hii.illirs of up lo $500 and/or 60
No hearing dale has been set days In Jail for llllrrlng was In his research, be ulso found a
in ihe Insurance dispute.
Bee L I T T E R , page 8 A
included in Ihe im iniy's code of

Concentration In Color

County Told To Get Tough
With Anti-Littering Laws

By Rick Brunson
Herald Stafr W ilie r
In a move thai could trim
942.CKX) to $50 (KM) Irom next
year’s record budget, the Sanlord City Commission decided
Wednesday not to hire an asslslam citv manager
While the position will remain
on paper after acting Assistant
C ity Manager Mary HarkcyMeyer retires J u ly 31. the
commission said li will not fund
lire slot.
The money Is part ol about
97 I .(XX) the commission found
during day two of lls budget
discussions that ll wants to slice
olf City Manuger Frank Faison's
proposed $124 million budget
(or 15)85-86 The commission Is
scheduled to pull out Its paring
knife again today at 4 30 p.m. In
ihe city manager's conference
room at city hall
The proposed budget calls for
property lax rales to tie In­
creased from $3 44 lo $4.5)4 per
$1,000 assessed valuation. The
City's tax base Is about $300
m illion, although City Clerk
Henry*Tnmm said Ihcclty would
only receive 95 percent of lhal.
or about $378 million
Although the tool ml»* loners
scrapped funds for Ihe usslstatn

ettv manager's slot
Faison $145,000 which l:» earmarked in
managed lo salvage some ol the the proposed budget
money budgeted lor clerical help
The commission on Wedrtcaassociated with the position. Not da&gt; also eyed $'2().(XK) In the city
funding the slot would trim attorney s budget lor trimming
$42,000 lo $50,000 from the or elimination
I h&lt;- money was listed under
$114,000 earmarked lor ihe
other personal services"
assistant city manager s office. an
Faison said. But commissioners category in Ihe cllv attorney’s
John^Mercer arid David Farr said budget Commlsslnncrs ques
they wanted more than 950.(MX) llonrd the pur|K)M- ol the money
cut from thr llguir
but Faison said lie could not l&gt;e
Falson. giving up his uilempf sure until he talks with City
lo persuade the commission to Unirnex W illiam Collrert
Faison said the money could
lure an assistant i lly manager,
said he needs the secretarial in designated fm lighting the
help hudgrlrd hu slot to help multiple legal cases die city
him Implement a wide range ol •mild lace in Ihe coming year
projects next year
such as wage soils and wrangl­
Farr said II was F’alsou w h o ing with the stale Depuitmenl n|
Environmental Regulation over
told the commission the a s s ls
turn city manager's position I lie lily 's sewage d!x|&gt;oxal In
could Im- eliminated when he Lake Monroe
I he commissioners said they
recommended consolidating the
city stall and hiring four nrw wanted Ihe money cut unless u
substantial pur|Misc could I kproplr.
The commission, acting on csiubltnhcd for 11
Another $1.()(M) was trimmed
Faison's recommendation, voted
Iasi month to compile nine city Im-cuusc (he city won't have to
divisions Into two departments |ray for a ballet group's use of Ihe
— engineering nod planning and civic center. The group now uses
udm lnlstrstlve services The l.akr Miirv High Nr bool lo bold
commission also voted to hire a meet mgs. F art said.
On (he revenue side of Ih r
director for both departments. In
addition to two other |&gt;eoplr tu budget, un $23,000 will be
staff them. The move cost attorn
See T R IM S , psgefl A

Day Care Center G ets County OK
By Donns Estes
Herald Staff W rite r
I he p ro p o s e d c o n s t r u c t i o n ol a
i 200 square-foot day rare center on a I 711 acre
ri.i&lt; i at ihe northeast corner of Wayside Drive und
Orange Boulevard In the Paula area m ar Sanford
h a s the Seminole County Commission s blessing
bin lor less children than approvi d hv ihe Board
ol Adjustment
T h r commission alter a publii hearing Tues­
day night, modilled a special exception granted

Lake Mary
W ater To Be
O ff 2 Hours
All water customers In Lake
Mary will be without Water for
tw o hou ra tonight w h ile
emergency valve repairs are
made, according lo Barbara
G o r m a n , u tility b u ild in g
supervisor. Water wtU be shut
off at the main aupply at 9
p in., ahe said, ll should be on
again at approximately 11
p m.

In lire Hoard nl Adjustment for Ihe center by
allowing a maximum ol |(M) children The Ixiard
earlier approved 150 ehlldrrn Im die planned
t.u lilt v
I he Issue caim In-lure ihe cuiimilsslim alter a
iii-.uhv properly owner Patricia llurlwig ap
jH-.ded the Bourdoi Adjustment approval
M is ll.irlw ig .mil a hulf-do/en oilier residents
•old rnnmtlsslotifis there aren't HMi i luldren In
ilu u area and children Irom outside would have

See C O U N T Y . page BA

Boy Kills M om , Brother, Self
SEMINOLE. Fla (L'PH - In
vestlgalors searched for clues
today as lo whai led a military
honors siudenl to kill bis mother
.iiul 12-year-old brother and
I hen lal.illy shorn himself in the
Im .ul
Paula Rooney, 37. and David
Km nicy were found shot (trail III
ilndr home In a q u id residential
.ue.i Wcdnesdav morning hy
David s iwin slslrr J j n r l when
she rrlurned home Irom s |m - i k !
mg ihe nlghl ul a blend s home

ti oily. Paul did ll Paul did II.
said mu- urlghlNii who asked
mil lo he lilt-ntIfli il
\ s h o r t lim e I u l r r
IhllslHUougli Com m depolles
Sound Ihe l.uullv s rail parked
mar I S 512 and Taylor Road
•asi ol Tam|ta

Inside was Paul Room v. 14,
uiih a hullii wound In (be head
lb died several hours lulrr at
l.uupa Geuerul Hospital. A gun
also was found In ihr van and
mvesllgalors said Ihe wound
She was sin .lining so vlo­ was self mllli led

City Employees Up For 4 % Pay Raise

L o n g w o o d B u d g e t C alls F o r $ 1 .1 0 T a x H ik e
By Ja n a Casselberry
H erald Staff W rite r
Longwood City Commission Iras
had lls llrsi go at a proposed
$3,750,360 budget for Ihe 1995-86
liM.il year calling for a property lax
rale of $3 62 per $ 1,000 assessed
valuation
This would be a $1.10 per $1,000
im reuse over ibis year's rate of
$2 52 T h r proposed lax rale would
grrreratr $5)26.160 in revenues based
oil the revised lax trase as compared
lo $572,000 Irom thai source lor Ihe
15)84 85 fiscal year, or an Increase of
$354,169. The new fiscal year begins
Ocl. I
The budget, submitted by Acting
l i l y Administrator Greg Maiming,
was prepared by the cliy's new
finance director Burry Weeks and
former city administrator (now city
d rrkl Don Te rry
The total projected revenues for the
General Fund for fiscal 1983-86
(Including un estimated $150,000
surplus carryover! la $3,409,614 plus

an additional $57,000 from Federal
Revenue Sharing Th e figures do nol
Include die priqxrsed spending for the
utilities department which does nol
receive property lax revenues and Is
nol pari of Ihe grnerul fund
Other revenue sources Include
stale. $800,500 (sales lax. $420,000.
alcoholic beverage licenses. $ 10,000;
rig u rrlte tax, $56,800: revenue
sharing. $313,700: fuel tax refund.
$5 0001. ruunty. $285,000 (gasoline
lax. 9280.000: mud and bridge tax.
$5 000): local. 91.331.700 lint hiding
franchise lax. $489,500. utility lax.
$45)4.000. occupational licenses.
$ 1 2 5 ,0 0 0 ; b u i ld i n g p e r m its .
$130,000. zoning and annex fees.
$ 2 0 ,0 0 0 . fines and forfeitures.
$ 9 0 ,0 0 0 . se curity alarm fines.
$ 1 0 ,0 0 0 . puvtng assessm ents.
$20,000. rrerruilon and park Income.
$43.0001 and other miscellaneous
revenue.
Here is huw much ll Is estimated It
will cost In 1985-86 lo operate the
city’s various departments under Ihe

proposed budget The figures Include
ihe estlmutrd 15)84 85 expenditure,
followed by next tears estimate:
Police, $910 107 - $1,297,247
Fire. $ 7 1 9 ,7 5 2 - $812,811: Building
and Planning. $121 1 5 6 - $137,849
Street. $ 8 7 3 ,3 4 5 - $914,591; Parks
a n d R e c r e a t io n . $ 1 3 3 ,5 3 5 —
9 1 3 3 0 7 9 : G e n e ra l S e r v ic e s .
* 8 6 . 1 1 4 - $ 9 7 ,6 3 3 : F in a n c e .
$ 4 3 ,9 8 1 - $98,500. Legal. $25,000­
930.000: Land Planning Agency.
$5,168— 94 657. City Commission
* 3 1 . 7 0 0 - 9 3 1 .2 8 4 C i t y A d
mlnlsirator. $41 408— $58,098. City
Clerk s Office. $79 6 2 1 - $130,002
Code Enforcement Board. $4,750—
$2,359: and City Elections Board.
$ 1 ,9 6 3 -9 2 .2 5 0
The first Item to be taken up by the
commission Tuesday nlghl was the
proposed $1,190,411 Water and
Waste water Budget These revenues
come Irom the sale of water, sewer
(harges. connection lees and devel­
opment fees The revised 1964-85
budget totals $1.454 891. Weeks

TODAY
BA
Action Reports
3A, Florida .....
2B
Bridge .............. 2B Horoscope
Calendar....... .....3B Hospital ......
Classifieds
4,SB
2A
N a tio n .........
Comics
2B People.......... .........IB
Crossword ........ 2B
. 5 7A
Dear Abby .......... IB ! Sports............
3B
Television
....
Deaths
.......... BA
2A
I
Weather
.
Dr Golt
............2B
i World
Editorial

recommended that charges for water
provided by the city be adjusted lo
re d u ce i h r base a m o u n t for
minimum btllng from 5.000 gallons
to 3.000 gallons with Ihe charge for
minimum amount used lo remain al
$3 64 It was also suggested lhal
rates per thousand gallons In excess
of base amounts used be Increased at
5.000 gallon Intervals to a maximum
charge of $ 1.10 per thousand

Rerun For The Real Thing'

The city has 4.065 water customers
and thr proposed Increase would
generate an additional $73,170 unnually Additional fees to be obtained
by adjusting incremental charges will
grnerair sufficient funds lo repay thr
city’s $400,000 loan with Frredom
Bank. The loan was Incurred lo
finance Ihe new 750.000 ground
water storage lank and Improve­
ments on the water sysirni. The
annual principal and Interest charges
over a five-year period ts $82,060 and
present revenue from water custom-

A T L A N T A (U l’ll - The Coca-Cola Co..
Imwing to a consumer rrbrlllun against new
« ukr will ilusi off Its 99-yeur-old formula
.old relntruducr The Real Tiling In u few
week*as " t "m a-ColaClassic.
Cora Cola Classic.’” the new name for old
• n k r. will hr marketed alongside new Coke,
which ihe soli drink giant insists has won lls
s h a r e ol funs since being Introduced In April.
Kveryom w in s .” Coke spokesman
I hmuuxGray said Wednesday
'Thousands ol dedicated Coca-Cola con•unurs have told us ihey slill want Ihe
••rlginul laslc as an opium. Gray said

See TAX. pags 8A

4 • •

�JA — Evening H o rjld . Sontord, FI.

ThurtdBy. July II, 1 W

NATION
iN BRIEF
Reagan To Undergo Surgery
To Remove Benign G row th
W A S H IN G T O N |UI'I| — I’resldent Reagan enters
lleihrsda Naval Hospital Friday for what aides describe as a
purely elective surgical procedure to remove the second
non cancerous growth tn.be found In his colon In the last
14 months.
The White House said Wednesday Reagan will undergo a
polypectomy — a removal of the growth, and a colonoscopy
— a more thorough examination of the upper (torllon of the
large Intestine, to check for additional polyps
If ail goes as expected, Reagan will l)e hospitalized
overnight then fly to Camp David Saturday morning with
his wife. Nancy The procedure will he performed on an
out patient basis In the Gastroenterology Division at
Itelhrsda!
Although Reagan will he under the effects of a painkiller
and sedative. While House spokesman Larry fipeakrs said
there Is no need lor a temporary transfer of power to Vice
President George Hush because, "W e l&gt;clleve he can
. discharge his duties."

Nation's Top Officer Retires
W ASHINGTON (t IP!) — Gen John Vessey Jr. Is ending a
military career that took him from World War II battlefields
to the top uniform Job in the Pentagon and will tie
Succeeded by a Navy man with a different background and
style,
President Reagan congratulated Vessey Wednesday on
It* years of "dedicated service In bringing about a safer,
more stable world" as the soldler-turned-presldentlal
adviser confirmed beds returning to private life.
Reagan announced lie will nominate Arlm. William
&lt;’rowe J r,, a former submariner who now heads the
nation's largest unified military command, to replace
Vessey. whose irrrn as chairman of the Joint chiefs expires
July IH
In contrast to Vessey, 0,1. a combat soldier who earned a
halllrllcld commission on the benches of Anzln lo World
War II. Crowe. (It), is a Naval Academy graduate who holds
a doctorate in political science from Princeton

Who Will Replace Stockman?
W ASH IN GTON llll'J) - Commerce Secretary Malcolm
Daldrlge and former Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis
lop a long list ol possibly successors lo budget director
David Slockrunn. says While House chief of staff Donald
Regan,
Italdrlgr and Lewis, staunch Republicans who tiave
substantial credentials hum Ihe business world, have
Indicated an Interest In the key post, administration
nlllclals said
Regan, while stressing "no decision” has liern made on a
Siis kiiiati successor, named llaldrlge and Lewis as main
irmlcililers although several o t h e r s also are tiring
considered
( init ials said President Reagan is expected to make his
chulie Indore Slot Lilian leaves oilier Aug 1 In lieeomr a
managing director for the Investment linn of Salomon
Drothem — the largest on Wall Htrcer
Officials sat'd u new director of the Office ol Management
and flmlget must fieri person who can "f*c compatible with
the president, have a knowledge of government, be a good
comiminiralor and have it tough hide "
One additional qualification died was. “ He lias to be able
in say no." with It was Stockman's lortr considering lire
groups lie allcnalrd In pirjiarlng rind prmnollng austere
iedernl budgets

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Rescuers Continue Search
For Israeli A ir Raid Victims
HKIItUT, Lebanon JDPI)
Dulldozers worked late Into
Ihe night searching lor mote victims ol Israeli utr rulds that
killed at Icnsl 17 |K*op|r at two Palestinian refugee camjra
near Tripoli, 42 miles mirth nl Delrut
Suiml Moslem run Voice nl Ihe Nation Radio citing (xillce
and the Red Cross said the casualty loll rose overnight to
22 dead, I m inding six children, amt H7 wounded. The
reporl could not immediately hr confirmed,
('apt Ahmed Jlbrll. spokesman for the Palestinian Front
lot the Liberation of Palestine General Command, said
seven ol Its men were klllrd In the raid and 20 others
wounded.
The attacks Wednesday jininc as rival Moslem militias
clashed In Tripoli killing 21 people and Injuring 27 In Die
third straight day ol llghtlnglor control ol the j*ort
The Israeli raids — the llrst Into Lebanon since the Israeli
wllhdrawl last month — apparently went ordered In
retaliation lot ear ImiiiiIi attacks on*checkpoints manned by
an Israrll-bucked mtlllta lit Dir security zone along the
hrnrll Under

Robot Finds Plane's 'Black Box'
CORK, Ireland (tll'l)
A robot submarine searching
w m huge ol an An India jet a mile under the Atlantic today
Itcovcred the lllghl data recorder — the second of two
black Ihixch needed to delermliie II a ImiiiiIi caused the
11ash Dial killed 329 people uboard.
The llrst "him k l*ux'‘ — the cockpit voice recorder — was
recovered hv the remote controlled sub Wednesday.
Aviation experts llrst said a bomb was Ihe most probable
cause ol ihe crush Dot no evidence was found to support
the theory. Investigators said they hoped the recorders
could solve the mystery.
The Air India plane dlsupjicaied from radar screens June
2d. plunging I rum an altitude ol 3 1,000 tret Into the
Atlantic UX) miles southwest ol the Irish coast
A spokesman lor the salvage team mild Wednesday the
successful recovery of Hie device could provide "a major
due" In establishing the cause ol the crash, which klllrd all
32D people uboard the Air India Hoeing 747 |umbo]et.

HOSPITAL NOTES
(aklrklFIttido P**Mn«l H»ip&lt;l*l

wniMiit
A O M I t t lO N i
Lanti** v * i«m Coibort ( e w r l W aniir
Patkr M i m k x II i. William VS**

D*B*ry Chart**Voong
ballon*

\

Bttij *rx* Lrwidun* H i ,t i

CWoon L*n» Nofcokon
OltCMAROIt
Vantoea ZAam.« Bi*&lt;ti«r Cary Carnallut.
Jo*nu* Jan** and L Inda VI S and Saay feoy
l*k*Monro* Mail* 6ri*»n
Lwsjnoaa Barbara Mayo
CHraan. Jay N»*r

Rains Bring Relief
But Western Brushfires Rage On
\Jnllz': Press Inte rnstion -ca&gt;oi;r weather and v
tend
rain helped 14.000 firelighters
struggling against somr of the
m n stlvr wildfires that have
turned the West Into a flrepll of
smoke and flames, tail scores of
tires are still burning out of
control
With flames destroying about
I 5 million acres of Western
brush and timber, offlrlals also
began evaluating the damage to
the watershed and planning how
lo prevent flooding when the
autumn rains fall on the de­
nuded hills.
Several fires were burning
over 20,000 acres In the picture
j*ostcard Dig Sur area along the
northern California must, but
the most dangerous blaze was
ravaging Ihe Santa Cruz Moun
tains near the town of Lo* Galox
Cooler temperatures and the
week’s first drizzling rain Wed­
n e s d a y h e lp e d the 2 .5 0 0
exhausted firefighters battling
ilu hard-charging blaze that has
forced 4,500 people from their
homes.
"The weather looks llkr It s
giving us a real break today, and
wc re doing all we can to take
advantage of It We may l«- able
In gel tire upper hand soon
said fire spokesman Angelo
Chancellor
Some re sid e n ts said Ihe
evacuatton order was premature,
and one. pheasant rancher Skip
Emerson. said tl lie trad not
stayed tic would have lost his
house lie said he pul out u small
lire that started Irnrit a living
ember
T h e 14.000 acre lire, set
Sunday by an arsonist, was
slowed nollceulilv with the help
ol aerlul tankers ami the week's
llrst drizzling rain
A n o th e r m a jo r lire tn
r alifornla. which Iras burned
nearly fXLOOO acres near (ijat In
Ventura County was about hall
i urtlolnrd Wednesday night
Things lire looking pretty
good ." said I o r e s t Service
spokesman Sam Albino
The
weather wimn I as erratic today

as it has V m . Out malr. con­
cern*, us ihe fjre Stans to &lt;i!e
down arc the tlood problems
we'll face when the rains arrive."
State conservation officials
uerr at ihe flrr serne Wednes­
day to begin rvaulatlng the
damage to the watershed and
develop a plan to minimize the
danger
And In the college town of San
lulls Obispo, a 75.000-acre fire
was fin a lly fully contained
Wednesday, but not before it
drove thousands from their
homes and burned 24 buildings
T h e s ta te has o ffe re d
thousands In reward money for
information on the arsonists who
are believed responsible for sev­
eral fires,
In addition to California —
which bus lost more than a
quarter-million acres — fires also
burned unchecked In Nevada.
Idaho. Arizona. Utah. Montana.
Oregon Washington a there was
still no rani in the forecast.
At (.'anal Flats. Drltlsh Col­
umbia. authorities evacuated the
last of the women and children
Wednesday from Ihe small log­
ging community leaving only
75 men to protect thrlr homes
from a rampaging forest fire less
than a mile away
wildfires
burned out of control, charring
nearly 300.000 acres of range
land killing dozens ol head of
cattle, threalenlng 100 homes
and |M)sing a health hazard from
the clouds of thick smoke.
A 2(1. OfJO-acre lire norilt of
Reno threatened 1.000 Wild
horses tiring held lor adaption
but llie (lames were diverted and
no animals were Inirt

Firelighters In Idaho faced new
problem s Wednesday when
flames sjireatl through timber
near the east ami west bound
artis ot the River ol No Return
Wilderness Area,
In Oregon, firelighters made
progress Wednesday against the
rush r*l blazes that have charred
more than 3 1f&gt;.lMM) acres Th e
weather heljied by turning coolI tint there was still no rain in
tlie forecast.

H*r*M FWM ay Taranty Vacant

Optimistic Future
E rn ie Butler, left, president of the Sanford Optim ist Club,
presents Seminole H ig h School student K e nny Eckstein w ith
the Optim ist C reed Tuesday during the club's w eekly
luncheon. Sporting a 4 0 grade point average, Eckstein Is an
honor student. He was chosen to spend his sum m er vacation
in Washington D C as a Republican Page. Watching the
presentation, at rig ht, are his parents, P atricia and W hltey
Eckstein

Tutu Rescues Policeman
J O H A N N E S H I J H G . S o u th
Africa IUPH Nobel IV a ,.Prize-winner Bishop Desmond
Tu tu jumped Into an angry mob
and rescued a black policeman,
then. In tears, told enraged black
youths "Wc must not use the
tactics of the government."
Police clashed with young
blacks near a cemetery In the
black townshlj* of D udu/a
Wednesday after a funeral lor
four youths killed In hand go-nude blasts last month.
A hand ot youths confronted a
black undercover police officer
outside the cem etery. After
questioning the m a n. they
burned his car and doused him
u ilh gasoline
T hey were about to throw him
against the homing car when
Tutii arrived. grabbed the man
and jiushed film Into another car
d riv e n by it I s ti u p S im e o n
Nkoane. win* q u ick ly drove
away
Th e enraged vn u ih s s u r­
rounded Tutu — the llrst black
A n g lica n bishop ot J o h a n ­

nesburg — and argued with him
until he began lo weep.
"The government is trying to
strangle me lor the things I am
saving he told them. "Are you
living to strangle me tc*o?"
We are engaged lit a Just
struggle, the 1984 Nobel Peace
Prize winner told the mob. "We
have in show the world we are
decent people Wc must rug use
tin &gt;,ii in sof the government."
More than 20 000 blacks
gathered In a s p o r t s stadium In
D u d u /a . 25 m iles cast of
Inhatmrshurg. lor Ihe funeral
The service followed a similar
burial attended by more than
25.(XX) people to Kwa-Thrma
Tuesday lor four other youths
also killed June 26 when Sovl•t made grenades exploded in
iheir hands
Police said the youths were
pieparing sabotage attacks when
the grenades malfunctioned hut
rli&lt; victims' relatives blamed
authorities for the deaths

Big Money, Water A t I s s u e In Lawsuit

C o u n ty M a y A p p e a l 'G e n e v a B u b b le' C a s e
whether she will go to court and
icstrtctlons on Mrs ('animat k
dismiss the sections of her
lilun lo build a water plant und
wells on a 9-acre tract near Stale
lawsuit concerning damages and
Road 46 In Geneva to supply
attorney Ices.
water lo a development ol oneMarsee said the co u n ty's
chance of winning an appeal are acre estates.
lair." but be added that Hie
The commission granted a
appeal court Is certain to rule conditional use- lor the property
that the St Johns River Water to penult the wells, hut limited
tile size ol Ihe well pipe to four
M anagem ent D istrict " b u s
pnixdli lion (ovri use ol water) inches, not the right Inches
and you don't
originally planned The concern
lint M rs Catnm ack said of commissioners and Geneva
O n advice f t om lln w .m l Wednesday that she will have to properly owners as expressed at
Mat see. a s|x*clal attorney reprr
cuiiler with her attorneys before a meeting last October was
sent mg the coimi v In tin suit making a decision
whether the well field, planned
tiled by Margaiel t'aniinaik ol
for location on a patccl at thr
Her
attorney.
Jerome
DornsGeneva, the county commission
edge of what Is known as ihe
tent,
said
at
a
county
com
­
Tuesday rrronuitende.d the ap
"Geneva Hubble." would cause
mission meeting a week ago that
peal only tl the i minty and Mrs
lasting
harm to the fresh water
('a m m a c k cannot com e to Mis ('ammack had sjirnt more supply for the Geneva area
than
$13,(XX)
in
attorney
fees
in
agreement eliminating tin pox
The bubble ol tn-sh under­
the case so far
slhllltv ol damage payments
Marpre told commissioners ground water finals on a layrr of
Tuesday night that the suit as Mill water and Is considered the
II It were not lot the inonrv
damages, I would not recom­ filed earlier this year asks for sole source ol Irrxh. useable
mend an appeal. Mnrxce said
attorney fees, an undisclosed walrr to that area Geneva lor
lie said the enmity has until am ount ol damages (w hich some years has sullercd with
July ID to Die an appeal ol Ihe could t*e consider able sinre Mrs. salt water intrusion In wells
decision, adding tic would need a ('ammack has been prevented located otf the bubble
However. Salt! In a pair ol
day or two prior to that to hum beginning construction on
prepare the documents lor tin- her planned development lor decisions within the past two
appeal County Attorney Nikki nine monthsl, and one section weeks said Ihe county lias no
Claylon Insisted the county i ties a state law which permlls tight to render a decision con­
cerning a water source That
must have an answer from Mrs
triple damages
('a m m a c k by J u l y H i on
I he Hull involves the rounly's tight IH-Iongs solely lo I lit- Si

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff W rite r
Circuit Judge Dominick Halil's
decision that Seminole County Is
prevented by state law- front
legnlatlng the list- ol water from
the "Geneva Ihibb lr" may l*c
appealed to a hlgliei court unless
the Geneva developer who
hrnuglll (lie lawsuit gives up lie!
right to collect altorucv Ices and
damages hum the count v

WEATHER
AREA FORECAST) Today
partly sunny with scattered af­
ternoon thunderstorms. High
mid DOx Light and vartahlr
wind Rain chance 40 perernt.
Tonight slight chance of an
e v e n in g t h u n d e r s t o r m ,
otherwise fair. Low near 70 to
mid 70s Light and variable
wind Rain chance 20 percent.
Friday partly sunny with Mat­
tered afternoon thunderstorms
High In the low lo mid DOs. Light
and variable wind. Rain chance
50 percent.
NATIONAL REPORT! Storms
spewing heavy tain tornadoes
and dangerous lightning batterrd the nation cast ol thr
Rockies, while firefighters haul­
ing brushfires In the West were
abied by light rain and a respite
from record-setting heat. Storms
to d a y re a ch e d fro m New
England to Florida and from the
Mississippi Valley to the Western
mountains. Wednesday, West
Virginia endured more Ilian 7 *X
Inches of rutu and tornadoes hit
Alabama. Tennessee. Kentucky
und Nebraska, where a Lex­
ington twister dipped trucks und
damaged a mobile home Light­
ning In Lauderdale County. Ala ,
sparked fires und struck two
power substations In Jackson.
Ky . a lightning tire destoyed thr
interior of a funeral home and
forced the irunslrr ot one laxly lo

another town "This Is the llrst
time I have ever seen such
severe lightning In a storm."
Jackson police Sgt George Lee
said today, "Th e jxiwer rrews
and ihe phone ronqiany are still
out and they say they have u lot
ol outages around " In the West
Wednesday, no record highs
wen- reached lor the first lime
since June 29 Hut temperatures
remained In the 90s and lOOs
and meteorologists said the high
pressure system responsible for
the record heal had not moved
away However, the slight break
In the heat and the presence of
scattered showers Wednesday
did help those fighting fires that
have consumed more than 1.9
m illion acres ot brush and
Umber In the West
AREA READINGS (0 i.m.jt
temperature 80; overnight low
74: W e dn e sd ay's high: 94:
barometric pressure: 30 04. rela­
tive h u m id ity : 81 percent:
winds west at 6 mph; rain:
none: sunrise: 6:35 a.m., sunset
H 26 p m
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. 4 24 a in.. 3:02
p ut ; Iowa, 10 22 a m.. 1120
pin.; Port Canaveral: highs,
4 16 a m , 4:55 p m lows, 10:13
a.in.. 1111 p m.: Bayport:
highs. 9:04 a m . 11:37 p.m.:
lows. 2:54 a.m., 517 p.m.
BOATINO FORECAST: St.

Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Variable wind 5 to 10
knots through Friday except for
southeast wind around lo knots
near the coast during the after­
noon Sea 2 fret or less hut up to
3 lect In the afternoon Wind and
seas higher near scattered uf
ternoon and r v r n ln g th u n ­
derstorms,
EXTENDED F O R EC AS T:
Saturday through Monday —
partly cloudy days und fair
nights. Chance of afternoon und
evening thunderstorms. Lows
near 70 north to around 80
south. Highs near 90 to mid 90s

STOCKS

E iv n in g Ilcm Jd

rs«M quottliont p,0,O*i by iM n tri 0/
**•Mottono! AiMC&lt;*)*an ol toturlhot OM*tri
«'* rs'tl*il&lt;lia in*#r Ot+tor *rl&lt;H «• of
tiiOmotn.rf Wc, Intyr Or*'#, m«r*«rt
chong* Zhroughoul Si* &lt;t*i Pri.-yt do not
•ntlutmrytyil markup m*r*dp»n
I * AM
Atlanta Bank
American Pionwr SAL
B*rn*»«B«nk

F to, &gt;0*Pm»«r

Flo Pnfrtu
F randombring)
MCA
Hugh** Supply
Mormon «
NCR Carp
Pl*u*v
L&lt;ott, t
LoulSaail Bonk
SioiTruit

.Infills River Water Management
I lislr let. lie said.
I In- S JK W M D had already
issued a perm 11 lot Hit-right-inch
wells requested hv Mrs Cummack prior lo the county com­
mission considering the matter.
Marsee made n clear lo com ­
missioners Tuesday night that
i lie county Is pre-empted by
si.tic law from considering the
water Issue and that right Is
granted by law to Ihe water
management district
In a t lartl lea lion ol his original
i tiling issued In late June. Sail!
last week said that the county
shall Is s u e " well d rillin g
p erm its to M rs C a m m a ck
without tfie necessity of further
hearings or consideration and
i hut the county must proceed
with a new hearing on Mrs.
( aininaik s application for a
condlilonal use iM-rmll for the
well Held
It was also noted In the suit
that when the water manage­
ment district approved Mrs.
Cum uiacks request that the
county did not appear to protest
the approval
Marsee twice told commis­
sioners that henceforth they
should "keep rhetr ear closely
attuned to Issues coming before
tIn- St Johns River Water Man­
agement District" and go to
court II they feel a decision Is
incorrect or not In the best
Inte rests ol the people of
Seminole County
Settling ot the suit muy not
end the matter At Tuesday's
commission meeting, a repre­
sentative ol the Lake Harney
Water Association, which draws
water from the Geneva Hubble
lor Its customers, asked com­
missioners how they r an control
the association's number of
water customers when they ure
not allowed to slop Mrs Cammack front getting water from
till' bubble
II she gets hers we want
ours
said tin asMHiabon's
David Danzler

* 0 . *0’ i
C l zx,
lit. V H

i u m ««i iso*

Thursday, July tl. IMS
Vol 77. No 276
Publnhtd 0*i Iif *nd Lund*), tietpt
i*t«rd*» BV Th# Sontord H*r«ld.
•"&lt; 100 N French All,, Laniard.
FI* 11771
Wcond Clou Potlog* P*id *1 Laniard,

1IH
___ _ »§ fOl*
ASH 4f
.......Jti* its
II 91U
)ll« ]IH
90S It
I4t| UH
J2H XJ
It JtH

Flartd* i m i

Homa Oalivary Want. ll.IBi Month.
M ill 7 Monlhv U4 U: 0 Month*,
i l l M&lt; Vo*r. t il BO. Bi M*d: Wyyk
It H i Month. W Mi I Month*,
t i l Mi * Monlht. t i l Hi Y*«r.
MOM

Phan* (MSI 1111*11

�Southern States Begin Testing
For Pesticide-Tainted Watermelons
B ? Waited Press International
Agriculture yfficlals around the South say thyy
ji t-» "*fpect waie.melons L. the region so there
It. no repeat of the pesticide poUotilr.g that caused
more than 200 illnesses on the West Coast.
Agents In Tennessee. Soulh Carolina. Florida.
Alabama and Georgia said Wednesday they knew
of no melon growers using aldicarb. blamed for
Illnesses In Ihree states and Canada But several
said they will test crops anyway.
"At this point there Is no reason to believe the
pesticide has been used on Georgia-grown
melons, said slate Agriculture Commissioner
Tommy Irvin. "But In the Interest of safety we
want to check and make sure *'
Irvin said he knew of no Instancr of watermelon
Imports from California to Georgia, which
produces about *20 million worth of watermelons
each year. But hr said other California melons arc
shipped Into the stale year-round and his
department will check those as well
In California, officials blamed a small number
of growers for the contamination. Agriculture
director Clare Berryhlll said farmers found
responsible will be prosecuted.
Watermelons tainted with the pesticide aldicarb
— manufactured bv Union Carbldr — were
blamed for at least 200 cases or illness tn
California. Oregon. Washington state and British
Columbia. No deaths were reported.
Legally aid (card uwy not be used on melons,
but it is used to prevent bugs on such crops as
cotton, grain, sorghum, pecans, soybeans and

ornamentals.
People who ate the contaminated fmtt In
Cal'fornla complained of nausea', diarrhea, trem­
ors ana excessive perspiration.
Word of the tainted melons neither hurt nor
enhanced shipments from the Southeast, said
Rich DeMcnna. a spokesman for the U.S,
Department of Agriculture.
“ We don't ship melons lo California, and they
don't ship lo us." DeMcnna said. "Th e California
situation won't be of any benefit lo us Arizona.
New Mexico or some of the Midwest slates will be
able lo supply them '*
In Florida, officials have alrradv begun testing
watermelons but said they do not expect to find
any that are tainted.
There is no reason to suspeel we will find any
because of our strict control of the pesticide.” said
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner
In Tallahassee.
Conner said Florida requires aldicarb be used
only by licensed operators who must apply for
permission to use the pesticide a month In
advance of uppllcat Ion
Only In South Carolina did anyone admit
watermelons could make a consumer sick. But
Joe Bates, chairman of the slate Watermelon
Board, specified ihr melons In his stale arc not
poisonous.
"People might get slrk front eating Soulh
Carolina watermelons, but It won't be from any
pesticide." Bales said. "It’ll be from rating loo
much.**

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Longwood Fills Vacancies On Boards
Vacancies on two city boards have been filled • Gave final approval to amending the city code
by the Longwood City Council. The vacancies . lo provide a method of reviewing applications
were created by the resignation of Peter lor building permits for skateboard ramps and
Hoffman, district 1 appointee from the Tasks other unroofed surfaces prepared fo. sports In
and Recreation Advisory’ Board, ansi Buford residential arras on an individual basis.
Helms, district 3. and Charles Kennedy,
• Approved a siu* plan for the Island Lake
member-at-large, both of the Code EnforcerBuilding subjet i lo receipt of a letter releasing
mem Board
tlit- city of any liability should flooding occur.
Nominated by Mayor Harvey Smerilson at
• Tabled annexation of lot 1. Irenedale. located
Monday night's city commission meeting. Dale on Highway 17-92 south of Slate Road 434, al
Lilly. 415 Valencia Courl. was named lo the ihe owner’s request until Monday lo allow lor
Parks and Recreation Advisory Board. Com ­ approval of the site plan of the proposed East
missioner Perry Faulkner named Don Faulkner Longwood Commercial Center by the Land
Ino relation), a businessman who lives In
I’laiuilng Agency
Stiadow Hill, lo the Code Enforcement Board.
• Passed a resolution on a 4 0 vole taking
Charles Heffner, a former oceanographer now$8,500 from the |*nllce department budget and
employed by the Southland Corp . who lives ai
returning it to the building department budget.
1503 Meadowlark St., was chosen In a vole by
the commissioners as the at-large member of The transfer was made to purchase a police
department vehicle, but was later ruled to be
the code board.
Improper. Commissioner Ed Myers voted
In other business ih r commission
• Voted to spend S I .851.80 lor new office against the resolution because hr said *'no
furniture needed because of recent additions to lawyer has proved lo me II Is lllrgal to use
building department Income for other uses."
the city hall staff Including an *L‘ shape
secretarial desk, swivel chair, a live tier lateral
• Gave prelim inary approval to a policy
file, secretarial chair and an rlcclro n lc
permitting package sewage treatment facilities
calculator.
in commercial and Indusirlal zoning under
• Annexed Florida Avenue from Highland
guidelines to I k - set by ihr commission A
Street lo U.S. Highway 17-92 and lllgland
public hearing was set lor August 12 al 7:30
Street from Pasadena Avenue to Longdale
p m at the city hall ui 175 W Warren Ave.
Avrnue
— Jane Casselberry

A lt a m o n t e M a n S u rre n d e rs A f t e r F le e in g A r r e s t
An Altamonte Springs man
who broke away and fled from a
Seminole County sheriff's depu­
ty arresting him on a warrant
surrendered In a ball bondsman
who llimed him over to depu­
ties The man has been charged
with escape.
Sheriff's deputy Michael J
Marlin reported hi- attempted to
serve the suspect a warrant on
an aggravated assault charge
and two Orange County war­
rants lor check fraud when the
man made his escape.
Martin confronted the man ut
his home at 550 "37 Haltawuy
Ridge. Tuesday afternoon, when
he broke free and ran away, si
sherljTs report said
The suspect surrendered to a
bail bondsman and was charged
wllh escape at the Seminole
County Jail sit 9:30 a m. Wed
nesday.
Bradley Marshall Block, 23.
has Ih t ii released on $8,000
bond and is scheduled to appear
in court Ju ly 29
CO N TEM P T O r COURT
A Winter Springs man who
failed to complete his sentence
following a DUI conviction was
ordered lo spend three days In
the Seminole County Jail for
contempt of court.
Tracey Eugene Wheat. 23. of
208 Albert St., was ordered by
County Judge Alan Dickey to do
ihr time starting Friday.
Wheal was Judged guilty of
DUI on Oct, l He was arrested
Aug 17 after his car failed to
maintain a single lane oh Slate
Road 434 III Winter Springs He
pleaded guilty In October to the
DUI charge
According to court records.
Wheat did nol pay a $250 fine as
ordered, fulled to complete 50
liours of community service, did
not enroll in driving school for
DUI offenders and did nol makr
monthly reports to his probation
officers
Wheal was silent whrn Dickey
asked him why he did not fulfill
the conditions of his sentence.
Dickey then re-ordered Wheal to
fulfill I he sentencing require­
ments and to spend three days
In Jail, court records show.
PIOHT OVER WOMAN
Two men were arrested after
lighting with each other over a
woman at a Sanford bur early
Tuesday, according to a police
report.
The two men were arguing tn
the parking lot of Uncle Nick's
Bar. 2605 Park Ave.. at about 4
a m when they began fighting,
according to Capt. Herb Shea
Officer Gary Harrell was dis­
patched to the scene but when
hr irled to break up the fight one
man began kicking him. Shea
said.
Tw o other officers arrived to
help Harrell handcuff the man
and force him Into a patrol car.
During the brawl. Harrell suf­
fered a severely sprained hand.
Shea said
Kenneth E n d ). 29. of 111
Exeter C o u rt. Sanford, was
charged with battery on a police
officer, resisting arrest with vio­
lence and disorderly intoxica­
tion He was booked Into the
county Jail In lieu of *5.000 bond
after he was treated at Central
Florida Hospital for a nose Injury
und bruises on his chest. Shea
said.
Lawrence Sassman. 28. of
Lake Mary, was charged with
disorderly conduct and battery
on the woman. He was freed on
$500 bond
The woman they were fighting
over. Susan Moore, of Sanford,
was not charged.
JACK BATTERY
An Altamonte Springs man
'who allegedly broke into an
^Altamonte Springs home and
battered another man with an
iauto m o b lle Jack has been
charged with aggravated bat-

Action Reports
* ★ Fires
★ C o u rfs
# Po/fcc

after a sheriff's deputy In the
area to Investigate a dispute In
which Gay had allegedly been
Involved spotted him driving a
car with one headlight out and
slopped hts vehicle.
— Raymond Lee Lcnon, 28. of
Orlando, at 1:17 a,in. Wednes­
day on Interstate 4 Just north of
State Road 46A. west of Sanford,
after his speeding car was seen
(raveling easl In the westbound
lane, forcing other vehicles lo
take evasive action. He was also
charged with reckless driving
und fleeing and attempting lo
elude a Florida Highway Palrol
trooper.
-C a r l E. Erickson, 32. of 829
Woodstream Drive. Casselberry,
at 7 p.m. Tuesday after hts car
hit a pole along Sand Lakr Road.
Allamonlr Springs
BURGLARIES R THEFTS
A $434 chainsaw und u $86
cassette player were stolen from
the car of Wilson A. Knott. 23. of
250 Lake S e m in a ry Court.
Maitland, while the vehicle was
parked off U.S. Highway 17-92
in Maitland between June 29
and Wednesday, u Seminole
County sherlfT• report said.

_ Thursday. July 11, lf t i— JA

Ihc report said He was nol
found but an Investigation Is
continuing
Someone threw a rock al a
1985 black Cadillac, tearing a
hole In the vinyl roof. Sanford
police reported.
The car. which belongs to
Willie Whtpaet. 58, of Rix-hrsier.
N .Y ., was parked at 1502
Williams Ave.. Sanford, when
the Incident occurred 10 p.m.
Monday Damage Is estlinuted at
about *800, according to a police
report.

TOTAL INSURANCE
SERVICE
REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

tery.
NAAYIAND C A W A ltt
COKfAHl
Archie Lee Cuyler Jr., 27. of
310 Magnolia Si., told Seminole
County sheriff's deputies he wus
awakened by Ihc assailant early
Tuesday when hr was struck on
the left leg as hr lay In bed. a
T IR E C A L L S
sheriff s report said
IN S U R A N C E A G E N C Y i n c .
The Sanford Fire Department
C uyler chased the suspect
responded lo Ihe following calls,
from his home and Joined a
413 W. Firs! St.
Ph. 322-5762
Sanford
witness In a car to pursue the
Sunday
man to Disco Food Store. 420
William H. ” 0111" Wight C.P.C.U.
— 9 0 7 a.m.. 912 I'lne Ave.,
Osrsld W. Mayor
M a g n o lia S t .. A l l a m o n l r
f resident
rescue, A 59-year-old woman
Account Raprosantatlv*
Springs Cuyler and the witness
suffered a cut on her leg after
then reiurned to his home and
she bumped It on hrr bed. The
reported the Incident to depu­
wound would nol clot so rescue
ties.
workers bandaged II and took
H r gave deputies a description
her to Ihe hospital.
of ih r man and they picked up a
— 9:31 a m .. 1309 S. French
suspect und’took him lo Florida
A ve., rescue. A 55-year-old
H o s p ita l-A lla m o n lr S p rin g s
woman had difficulty breathing
where Cuyler reportedly Iden­
after hrr uirnul wus clogged with
tified him us l he ussallunt.
body fluid. She went to the
No reason (or the attack was
hospital on her own. followed by
given In the sheriffs report.
Simon Lee McGill,’ 43. of 2440 rescue workers.
Cuyler was treated at the honpl- -illway Ave.. Sanford, rrported lo -4 :1 1 p m.. 1400 W 13th St..
lul fur a deep cut on his leg. (he deputies that a *190 cassette rescue. A 16-yearaild boy re­
report said.
player and a *20 flashlight were ceived a cut on hts leg during a
Gregory Lynn McGaughy, 20. stolen from his car on Tuesday light. He was Ireatrd at Ihe
scene but refused to be taken to
ol 4 13 Magnolia St ., was urrrsted or Wednesday.
the hospital.
at about 8.30 a.m. Tuesday. He
was being held In lieu of *8.000
A *150 fan und a *375 —8 43 p m.. 1211 Lincoln Court,
bond
television were stolen from the rescue A person had a possible
T IP T O C O K E B U S T
home of Herman E. Short. 71. of stroke but rescue workers were
Acting on a tip. Allamontr 413 Melanie Way. Mall land, be­ unable to leave the scene of a lire
Springs police slopped a enr und tween June 30 and Tuesday, a on Hethune Circle. Cure A m ­
bulance paramedics bundled the
were grunted permission for u aherlfTs report said.
tall.
search that turned up 40 grams
of cocaine and *3,200 cash. Tw o
Tools V H l u r d al about $I0.0&lt;X)
Monday
m en In (he car have been and belonging to Warren D
—
12
22
a.m.,
S. Orlando Drive,
charged with trafficking In co­ Sampson. 27. of 7005) Easter St..
caine and possession of cocaine Winter Park, were stolen from rrscue. A person was drunk No
and drug paraphernalia, police 1535 Forest Ave., Longwood. action was taken
-8 :1 7 a m .. 605 W 25th St.,
reported.
according to a report Edward J .
rescue.
A 69-yrur-old man who
The car was slopped on In­ Olszewski. 41. of 330 Rockwell
OHS. as* v
os
terstate 4 near Slate Road 436, Cltcle. Lake Mary, filed wllh had chcsl pains was tukrn (o the
Altamonte Springs, at about sheriff's deputies The theft oc­ hospital.
- 9 44 a til.. 1800 W. First St.,
11 40 a.m. Tuesday. Alter find­ curred Tuesday.
fire. A trash fire was put out
ing the contraband police ar­
— 10 51 a in . 1209 K Second
rested the occupants of the car.
A man who rented a car from
Sb, rescue. A 57-year-old man
police said
C. Ray Lash. 38. of 653 Murphy
Devon Jones, 24, of Orlando, Road. Winter Springs, on May 22 who had a jmssiblr heart attack
and Shane H ow ard, IB. of and failed return ihr vehicle the went to Ihr hospli.il on his own.
9RIC
: AONlfHON
Miami, have been released on next day as scheduled has been — 9 1 4 p.m.. 1114 E Eighth St.,
.ft
PARKING
104 Acres of Bargains, |
$ 10,000 bond each and are traced by Seminole County rescue A 23-year old man was
scheduled to appear In court sheriff's deputies to Central sick after he d ru n k some
Produce &amp; Family Fun!
Ju ly 29
Florida Regional Hospital. San­ lurpentlne und antifreeze but
ford. where he Is being treated refused treatment
CAR RECOVERED
A 21 -year-old former parking for Injuries received In a Irafllc — 1122 p m .. 25th Street and
Between ORLANDO
*Voted •11 •argftlm
lol attendant at a Sanford car accident Involving that 1978 Grandview Avenue, rescue. A
And SANFORD
By Central Florid*
Ford,
a
sheriffs
report
said.
dealership was accused Monday
31 -year-old woman suffered a
UiQinnt Wader bo*
Lash
reported
the
*2.500
car
(3
0
5
)
M
S
I
792
of stealing one of the vehicles.
broken leg and the possible
The 1985 Ford Thunderblrd stolen Tuesday and deputies
was stolen from Seminole Ford, located and questioned the sus­ — 11:55 p .m ., 1201 Airport
3786 U.S. Highway 17-92. somr pect the same day. The car was U lvd ., rescue. A 29-year-old
time between Ju n e 24 and towed to a repair shop alter the woman burned Ihe tips of her
Friday, according lo Sanford accident and since Ihe suspect Is fingers lifting the ltd of a metal
W i
?u**
O' f r ' • *' tCASM t *
l*olicr Chief Steve Harriett. The hospitalized, sheriff's Capt. Jay dumpster. She was treated at the
* i t A * O H U )C * A '* v *•
t4,
* *-*
Leman
said,
an
arrest
has
not
car was found Saturday parked
scene.
at the Last Stop rooming house been m a d e . A w a rra n t Is
on Southwest Road. Sanford. expected to be Issued for Ihe
suspect's arrest ufter he Is re­
Harriett said.
leased from Ihe hospital. Leman
Detectives questioned a man
In room *3 who told them he said
had permission from dealership
A 14-fool boat worth *250 was
officials lo take the car. The man
turned over the *15,000 car to stolen from a dock In front of Ihe
home of owner Stanley Ruras.
{ml Ice.
Who Havt Honorably Sowed Thoir Country In Time ol War or Peace
78. of 3442 Holiday St.. Apopka,
But officials at Seminole Ford
tl*c*uM o* Ira kc* ol bunoi *p*co i-'d in* d a u n t*
beteween
Sunday
and
Tuesday,
told police the man no longer
al lh* K»l-on#l C*m*l*i» &gt;n Florid* ••
worked there and did not have a sheriff*s report said.
g&gt;*,« i p t : •• in V*t*r*n* Carton ol Vtkr, O to k o n
UwnorUI F t* A t tn honorabr, d&lt;»ch»rg*d &lt;*wun ol
Sanford police recovered a
permission lo take the car. Police
Iha united swwt Aim*d F o tctl ,ou **» b*
arrested the man Monday os he stolen three-whrel motorcycle
for Ft** Surut Sp*c* Ho**,#' ,ou m«*l r#gi|Ut tor
th.l you mutt b* *bt* lo »h o » prool ol HonortoU
rode a bicycle down 18th Street. Monday shortly after It was
ifw j
D&gt;u U &gt; 94 Th*r# it* « timdrd nomtor ot V*l***nf
Harriett said.
reported stolen.
toocoo *,t&lt;i*or* CsrtrticStM For i H i t t
b* i»»uOd
Anthony
Montgomery.
39.
of
Kenneth Fields, who lives at
Oh » full tom* tu»i M r,** o a t* lo
uto tu lio h .
iv
1601 Sanford Ave.. Sanford,
m«ii tn* coupon b*«J* lo
the Last Stop rooming house,
was charged with grand theft reported him 1983 yellow Suzuki
OAKLAWN MEMORIAL PARK
a u to and booked In to the stolen al about 3 pan., a police
FO »oi *». Lto* *o» Fi w a
Seminole County Jail In lieu of report said. About 45 minutes
Ploii* S*nd M, V.»sr*n ol »*r*ks EUgWUly Cortltksls
95.000
later, police received an anony­
mous call that someone was
BMISt
DUI AR R X 8 T B
The following persona have driving a stolen motorcycle near
been arrested In Sem inole Lake Monroe Terrace.
Lt. Ralph Russell spotted u
County on a charge of driving
man riding a yellow Suzuki at
under the Influence:
So k F»
18th Street and Southwest Road
-E a r l Robert Gay. 55. of 1328
t«
Buccaneer Court, Winter Park, and began chasing him In hla
patrol car. The suspect got off
was arrested at 10:41 p.m.
the cycle and ran Into the woods.
Tuesday on Bucacaneer Court

KARNS

y

WKOD,
HWY. 17-92

FRIPi Y -s a t, &amp;v§un. 8-5 PM
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HELEN THOMAS

Press Corps Kept Round-The-Clock Vigil

Thursday, July 11, 1985— t*
Warn* 0 . DoyI*. Publisher
Thom a* Giordano. fXtnj^r.i
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
llomr Delivery: V/rrk. 11 10 Month. I T 75 3 Month*
•14 25. 6 Month* 127 00. Year. 151 00 lly Mail Wrrk.

•I 50. Month. M DO 3 Month* 116 00: O Month* 132 50
Year. *fiO OO

Rambo
Movieland

In

In A rm y Jargon. It's the definitive longrange recon: A mission to V ietnam (hat
Inadvertently pinpoints the Individuals who
Blabbed A m e rlra In ihe back d u rin g the war.
"First Blood Part II: R a m bo " Is the holiest
film In the nation right now. unflinchingly
sounding the political message that the
m ilitary was betrayed by Congress. It's u
message suited for movieland.
"R a m b o ," the film . Is based on the ideu that
Am ericans are still being held prisoner In
Vietnam . J o h n Rambo, played by Sylvester
Stallone, Is the brooding V ie tn am veteran
unloved by his country. Sent to locate the
POWs, R a m bo asks. “ Do we get to win tills

timef*
T h e o p e r a t i o n Is o v e r s e e n b y a
m a n ip u la tiv e , civ ilia n b u re a u cra t. W hen
Rambo does find POWs and attempts to
rescue one. the civilian aborts the mission,
leavfng R a m b o and the p O W signaling
hrlplrssly as the rescue helicopter tiles away
It Is then Ihe audience learns I ha I the
mission was designed to fall, that the civilian
Is linked to a congressional com m ittee
desiring to end the POW Issue once anil for
all Some In Congress. It seems, fear that such
a discovery m ight lead to sentim ent for armed
Invasion or w ar-repuratlon dem ands from the
com m unists.
Rambo rescues six POW s and returns to the
U.S. base In Th a ila n d . There, he confronts the
cowering civilians and then strides away,
wanting o n ly for his country to love him .
The Im plication Is that R am bo was aban­
doned by the civilian Just as Hie Am erican
m ilitary was betrayed by Congress, and not
allowed to w in . T h is was the thesis of earlier
films. "U n c o m m o n Valor" and "M issing In
A ction" and "Missing In Action II ."
" F ir s t H lo o d Purl I I ," h o w e v e r. Is a
cinem atically powerful tilt. T h e I Dm opened
In 2,074 theaters, an all-tim e record, and
grossed m ore thun #100 m illion In less than
five weeks.
Th e film 's message Is p o pular w ith an
A m e rica s lo w ly e m b ra c in g Its veterans.
Whereas the m ovies "C o m in g H o m e" and
" Apocalypoc N o w " depleted hopeless, guiltridden vets and their war, R am bo Is the
veteran as w inner. Thanks to "R a m b o " and
Its three predecessors, Vietnam Is now a place
where A m e rica n s trium ph, w here Ihe cause
— rescuing U .S . prisoners — Is defined: where
Ihe enem y Is visible and Inept.
Ramlxi Is sim plicity In a com plicated age
In fuel, at one point, he Is s trip p 'd to the
waist and a rm ed with only how and arrow
and knlfr, usin g the guerilla tactics lh.it were
so effectively used ngulnat U .S forces
Moods sw ing , national attention wanders,
hut fhe I rust rations of jx iw rr never cease.
How Ironic that J o h n Rambo should surlace
Jusl as form er U .S . hostages dom luute the
news from another m urky com bat zone, the
Mlddlr East. Ram bo Is resolute, capable, and
yrt torm ented — a sociological m irror of
America tn these times. T h e difficulty Is that,
although fantasy lets him rescue the POWs.
chastise the weakknerd. um l obliterate the
enemy, little Is that simple, or easy. In Ihe
real world

Please Write
Letters to the editor are welcome for
publication. A ll tetters must be signed and
Include a m alting address and. If possible, a
telephone num b er. The E ve n in g Herald
yeaervee the right to edit lettcra to avoid
libel and to accommodate apace.

BERRYS WORLD

W ASH IN GTON (UP!) A loi of reporters,
cameramen and television icchlcians can now
say ihcy slept at the V. hlte House
Lived, might be a better word for It. during the
hostage crisis The press corps kept a
round-the-clock vigil on events In ihe Middle
East and ttie White House.
The six-hour time difference meant that the
big happenings at noon In fk-lrui occurred in the
wee hours of Ihe morning In Washington
Th e television networks. In particular
manned the barricades, going live at unusual
hours.
Th e hoslagr drama was all consuming
although the president tried to stay on top ot
some of itir domestic Issues.
Former While House press secretary Ron
Ziegler can Joke now about those dark days of
Watergalr In the early part of President Nixon’s
second term. And tie did at a prrss Institute

meeting In Madrid.
Sharing the spotlight on a forum were Joseph
Lt'iiln. former assistant sec tary of treasury lor
public afldlrs. who also had uecn a deputy press
secretary at the W hite House and the
spokesman at the Pentagon
When the moderator told each of the panelists
he would like them to speak for 20 minutes each
and lake questions. Ziegler said "I can only
speak for ! 8 Mr minules.”
It was a Joking reference to itie 18VY-mlmite
gap in ihe Nixon tapes during the Watergate
scandal To this day no onr has confessed to
erasing the tape
President Reagan bears no hard feelings
toward critical columnists, especially when they
.ire good friends
Conservative columnist George Will has
denounced the administration's handling of the
hostage crisis In strong language Hut Reagan

Invited Will and his wife, Madeline, an Educanot Department official, to dinner at the White
.. .(V on the Fourth of Ju ly and to sit on the
woman balcony to watch the fireworks.
The president was reciprocating on Invitations
to dinner at the Will home
Reagan continue* to make ofT-thc-cuff Joking,
but telling, remarks during his voice checks
before broadcasts Shortly before Ihe president
went on the atr to hall the release or the
American hostagrs hr said: "Hoy. 1 saw Rambo
last night Now 1 will know what to do the next
time It happens '
Hut his remarks were beamed around the
world and Moscow had a few words to say about
It
White House aides were unhappy, saying that
the remarks on an open microphone were
off-the-record." but that Is not the way It
works

WASHINGTON WORLD

SCIENCE WORLD

Leaders
Back Off
For Talks

Nature's
Ultmate
Coolant

By United Press International
W ASH IN GTON DPI) President
Rragun and Soviet trader Mikhail
Gorbachev have both barked oft a
bit to pave Ihe way for a summit
meet lug In Novemlx-r In Geneva.
Swllzerland
Hut w h o Is c o u n tin g
Thr
breakthrough came because both
leaders thought It was time to meet
and swept away any arguments
otherwise
The fact Is that bulb sides have
equivocated and talked for four
years ahotil the need for prepared
agendas and concrete signs of
success Irefore they could possibly
get together
Hut all tilings ate possible when
artificial barriers are removed and
when troth sides do not mind rating
tlielr words for bigger goals.
ll appears now that Gorbachev
Irels secure enough In bis position
lo venture forth and In inrct Reagan
w i t h o u t r o m i l l i o n s , a get
acquainted session dial could lead
t o tn or r m eetings, m ore un
derstandlngs. even agreements
which the president has loftily
shutmrd, particularly tn hts prrpresidential years.
Many factors have come Into play.
For one, Reagan dors not want lo
leave offire as I lie first president In
rnnlernfxirury limes who did not
meet with a Kremlin leader.
Gorbachev cleared the decks and
asserted tils politic-al primacy when
tie p u s h e d F o r e ig n Minister Andrei
Gromyko out ol the role he has
player! lor 2H years and gave him
the rrrcnum lal position ol president
U n d o u b te d ly, Gorbachev will
have in call on Hit- veteran diplomat
lor bis views and assessments, but
It appears that (lie Soviet trader
wants to start lirsh lie has chosen
as f o re ig n m in is te r E d o aril
Shevardnadze a Georgian, and a
newcomer to thr field of world
|Millties. which may signify tli.it
Gorbachev wants lo run bis own
show
Reagan himselt ha* come a long
way on the upward ellmli to thr
summit lie may Hunk it but lie no
longer speaks ol thr "evil empire.”
and while making no concessions to
tile menace of contmunlsm, lias
taken a more conciliatory approach
lo make a meeting possible
The Soviets loo are showing more
flexibility. and pulling away (rum
what they previously pul forth us
I m i i i o i i ) line positions
They are apparently Indicating
privately that they might go along
with thr U S |K&gt;sltton that research
nil "Star Wurs" Is (M-rmltted under
thr anil tiallasllc missile trraty ol
1972

EDUCATION WORLD

Moniker Madness
6 y Patricia McCormack

UPI Education Editor
NEW YO R K (UPtl — Moniker
madness may inspire a little heehawing or oinlgnshlng over ihe
weird. whimsical, unusual names
■m the nation's srhixil scene.
During a year long hunt by thr
\mrrir.in School Hoard Jotirn.il.
these were spotted Hlg Ugly. Hor
lug. (Hand
F a llin g . F rie n d ly.
Nodaway. Sweet Home Central.
1tody ('amp
Teachers and students al these
schools also earn the names, ol
course One assumes Hlg Ugly, lor
■mi- example h a s Hig Ugly students
and Hlg Ugly teachers
G a m in g oil as a Muring Hland or
Friendly teacher or pupil might not
la- so hail Mol imagine bring
idenlllled as a "Falling student" or a
Falling learlier"?•
texuH topsail In names deserving
ol sri ond looks, says a Journal
n |xirt on ilu- mid roll Ellen Ktrklrn
associate editor, pul It tilts way:
Malty ol thr schools there take
ilicit names directly from their
hometown*. and many of Ihe town
n.uni s ate tar from ordinary
"Dime [lux, Texas, for Instance,
has Dime Itox High Olliers ol tills
ilk tm lude Mulrshor High. Snook
High and Laztiuddle High
Hot that doesn't explain why the
lexas town ol Forsan lias an Elbow
Elemental y School. Corpus Chrlstl
lias Flour Hint! High. Texarkana has
Red Lick Elementary or Copperas
Cove has Miss Jewell Elementary
school

"Some folks are tickled, too, when
they find out West Columbia has a
W ild Prach Elem entary School and

the superintendent Is named How
aril Pickle."
The Texas person who enriched
the Journal's search with colorful
Lour Star Stale school names noted
I didn't rvrn give von the schools
named Ponder, Prosper or Maud
T h r rAundup showed there *
truth lu the odd-sounding names
So nevermind the strange
The evidence
— Hlg Ugly Elementary In Lincoln
County. W Va It's near Hlg Ugly
Stale Park. Hlg Ugly Creek and even
an Uglv offshoot. Little Ugly Creek
Fhe name sprouted around the turn
■it the century Railroad surveyors
Inund it an "ugly” Job to clear brush
In that neck of Ihe wtxrd* A creek
snaking through the area was
nicknamed Hlg Ugly And. by Huway. folks lu Hlg Ugly say Hie
schools not big (HI students) and
it's not ugly either. That part of the
mountaineering state, say they. Is
hrrathtuklngly beauUtuI In fall and
pleasant most anytime
— Hortng Grade and During Middle
School? In Boring. Ore
— Hland Elemenlurv and Bland
High? In Bland. Mo There's also a
Bland High In Merit. Texas
— Falling Elementary, christened
In Hu- Ijte IMOOs in Portland. Ore,,
lived up to Its name. It shut to 1959
— Friendly H igh Is in Prince
George's County. Md
— N «&gt;d a w a y S c h o o l Is i n
Ravrnwtxxl. Mo

By W illiam Harwood
UPI Science W rite r
CAPE CA N A V ER A L (UPI) - One
of the strangest liquids In the
universe, superfluld helium can
climb oul of Its container, has
virtually no viscosity and conducts
heal 1.OCX) times Frctter than copper
ll Is the ultimate coolant
An experiment aboard the shuttle
Challenger will help scientists un
dersland more about the physical
laws that govern Ihe supercold
liquid and more about how the
substance can be used to cool
sensitive Infrared telescopes that
must operate Just a few degrees
atxive absolute zero
A high-tech thermos bottle Is
mounted In Challengers payload
bay containing 26 gallons of liquid
helium In weightlessness, subtle
processes that would be masked by
Earth's gravity should be observa­
ble.
When helium Is rinded to ubout 4
degrees above absolute zero. It turns
into a liquid
"Hul ll you cool ll down a couple
more degrees to about 2 degrees
absolute, or minus 456 degrees
Fahrenheit. It all at once becomes a
very strange Hquid, tt's railed
superfluld,” said Loren Acton, one
of thrrr astronomers among the
shuttle crew
It has no viscosity. Stirring a
glass of superllnld liquid helium
would tie like stirring air There's
nothing rrsistmg your stirring stick
It has the most remarkable thermal
conductivity. It conducts heat a
thousand times better than capper,
which means you ran I build up a
temperature across It
Superfluidity Is only possible with
liquid helium, which cannot be
frozen unless It Is put under prr
sxurr. Both normal liquid helium
and superfluld helium — also
known as helium 2 — will he
present aboard Challenger,
The projx-rties ol superfluld liquid
helium are described by quantum
mechanics, the branch of physics
that Incorporates relativity theory
and describes the fundamental
lx-havlor of matter on the atomic
sealr
The purpose of the superfluld
experiment aboard Challenger 1b to
gain a betler understanding of thr
subtle quanlum mechanics that
govern the liquid's tx-havlor.
Sclent Isis are particularly Inter­
ested In finding out how the liquid
responds to slight shuttle move­
ments and whether surh space­
craft-induced motion affects tem­
perature stability.

JACK ANDERSON

C iv ilia n B uyers K ey To Ending P e n ta g o n W a s te
By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear
W ASHINGTON — Will woudrra
nrxri t ease? Someone at the Pentiiguu has tlii.illv idenlllled ihe
cause ol all Hinse scandalously high
cost* cli.iiged by defense eon
ll.i&lt; lot* It s ' Tlu-System "
While this ha* tx-ci) obvious to
-111x reasonably sentient observer ol
i lie Pentagon panjandrums — we’ve
Ix-cit sin mi mg it (rons every uxiltop
lor yeans — it's encouraging when
the truth (I null)' pc net rates the
concrete walls ol the five-sided
spending lut lory on ihe Potomac.
Maybe the next step will lx- to
actually do something about It
The refreshing revelation Is con­
tained in a bluntIv worded memo­
randum being circulated at top
level* in the Air Force Our associate
Indy hadhwargot a‘copy.
74
"By golly I II you wo/o lor real. Sly — would I
have ionts jobs lor YOU!"

f

Ihe heart ol the Pentagon's
*v stem — or, more accurately. Its
Achlllrs heel — I* the uullornied
procurement olftrcr. who is In­
variably Innocent ol either experi­
ence or rx|x-rtl»c The memo points

oni th.o they are not technically
trained, do not know contract law
and procurement procedures, and
ate no match for thr contractors’
engineers and lawyer* T h r memo
adds
It s like sending a lamb lu
slaughter "
These innocents typically stay in
their uuglumorous procurement
Jobs two or Ihrcc years, "hoping lo
get oul v i dial the cost overruns or
technical disasters don t happen on
their watch." the memo notes
At China Lake." the memo
c o n t in u e s , r e f e r r in g to ttie
w c a p o n s - 1e si In g c e n t e r In
California, "w r Inund ll took several
vrars (nr a gixxl engineer to develop
to ihe |M&gt;uit that wr could trust him
lo manage a program — somr never
could Yet we tiring tn officers with
no technical or specialized training,
send, them to a short course at Fort
tk-lvolr. and put them tn charge of
tmilll-mUllon dollar programs."
Venality and corruption aren't the
problem, the memo explains: "The
Incentives are all backwards The
hlg spenders are promoted and
rewarded with cushy Jobs alter

leaving thr govcrnmrnt Those wtio
do something (lo cut cosis) arc quite
frequently punished.”
Expanding on this point, the
memo lays out the "revolving-door"
phenomenon that grease* thr pro­
curement system
The average age of an officer at
retirement Is 43. the memo notes
He probably has kid* In nr ready
lor college, and a hlg mortgage, and
can't afford a cut in tn* income He
l* at the peak of his Intellectual
powers. Is emotionally Involved and
dorsii'l want to quit W'r throw him
oul anyway.
M a n y o l th e s e o l f l e r r s .
particularly the good ones, who
have spent most ot their careers
living aircraft, operating ships or
leading troops, do not have skills
thai are readily marketable tn the
civilian senior.
" T h is nice m an then comes
around and oilers him a job at &gt;50K
to 873K a year If he (the procure­
ment officer) stands up and makes a
fuss about high cost and poor
quality, no nice man will come to

I

v r him when he retires ."
Whal lo do? "Th e real problem,”
the memo stales, "Is that the
procurement process is completely
controlled by military officers and
dial no Improvement is possible
until the process Is controlled by
■iv limns."
A civilian employee has crucial
advantage* over a uniformed officer,
ihr memo explains "He can stay
on.
He has much more protection
against reprisals "
The memo recommends "hook­
ing" a program nian.yur "until the
program either succeeded or failed.
v&gt; that he would not be able to
move on und leave his successor
holding thr proverbial 5-pound bag
lull ol JO pounds of stuff "
It also urges "generous awards"
»o managers who control costs,
schedules and quality, and special
Ixmusrs to someone who will look al
a program and say: "Look. In spl(e
of all the hype, this program Is a
turkey and u never going lo get us
decent equipment Let s terminate
it."

�SPORTS
Basketball Restores Bounce To Klein's Coaching
By Rob L u l l
Special to the H erald
When Hill Klein accepted the
post as head boys' basketball
coach at Seminole High School
this spring, hts coaching career
took more than one turn Klein,
who had been the -freshman
coach at Seminole the past two
years, not only moved further
along the roundball road, but
he vowed to slay away from
football.
It Is a committment that
hasn't come easily.
Klein was a standout shoot­
ing guard.durtng his colleglatr
days at Indiana Stale Universi­
ty of Pennsylvania. Hy no
means was n the blg-tlme, bui
his enthusiasm and love for the

game showed through
Klein, though, also had a
keen love for the game of
loot ball He had played In high
school but said hr wasn't quite
good enough to pursue It
further on the playing field.
When given an opportunity to
coach It. however, he Jumped
at the chance For nine years
after graduating from college
Klein coached both sports In
Pennsylvania
Then in 1972 he moved
, down to Oviedo High 'School,
where he was strictly a football
mentor, first two years as an
assistant, then head coach for
three years Klein, who in 1967
lirst arrived In Sanford to coach
and teach at the Sanford Naval

‘Basketball practice is kind of
fu n . football isn't. Football
(practice) Is just band and run.
Not many like fo o tb all practice.'
—

Bill Klein

Academy, then returned lo
coach freshman football at
Crooms Junior High School in
I ‘*77 for three years

He tirctl of football, though,
and moved over to Seminole
when C room s was discon­
tinued as a ninth grudr center.

where for the past two seasons
he's been al the helm of
u n d e f e a te d n I n I It - g r a d e
baskcball trams
Now with the step up to the
varsity, he says he's finished
coaching football forever
"N O w ay," he savs em ­
phatically when asked ol a
possible rriurn to the gridiron
His decision lo replace good
friend Chris Marlette as the
Tribe coach was a lough one
but hr know plans to throw all
his energy into his roundball
coaching career
Klein, however, hopes in use
knowledge gained on lluit Reid
in his allrmpi to lead die
S rm ln o lrs lo glory on the
hardwood Talking with film

one can sense a somewhat
unique perspective he's gained
by coaching both sports
Varying psyches are Itmgvrd
and fie appears to h a ir grasped
the differences He speaks In
terms of how the players react
to the two sporls and what
keeps them happy The result
lie lias proved effective In
handling players
Athletic director Jerry Posrv
says that ability is one of Klein
chief attributes, an asset lhai
Itccumr elearly evident
Posey had coached football
against Klein when Klein was
at Oviedo The two also had
worked together when Klein
See K L E IN . Page 7A

A lta m o n te
'R a p s ' T a l e
A ro u n d

SW

B y K evin Gross
Special to the Herald
ORANGE CITY/DELTONA Even Charles Dickens wouldn't
buv I hts Tale of Two titles
Eor the second time In three
nights thr Altamonte Senior
League All Stars played In two
cities on two different fields in
complete a District 14 Division 2
All Star baseball game
U n lik e M o n d a y 's ft ea rl
breaking 4 3. 12 Inning loss to
Maitland at Mulilantl/Ovledo.
however, the ouleothe of Wed
nesday night's game was more
favorable as Altamonte pounded
oul a 24 4 victory over the
Southwest Volusia All Stars at
Orange City's Valentine Field,
then Deltona's Charlie I'uulus
Field

Having safely reached third base,
Altam onte's T.J. G iu tfrld a , left,
dusts oft his knee as Oviedo's Kevin
C oiart looks tor the next play. At

right, both are Intently watching the
batter's next move. Leadoff hitter
Giutfrlda reached base four times as
Altamonte blanked Oviedo Tuesday.

Somehow...It Dropped — Nationals Win
By 8 «n&gt; Cook
Herald Sports Editor
E U S T IS — The Altamonte
Natlonals weren't on ihr ledge
Wednesday night — they u rn over Ihr ledge, hanging prccart
ously by four fingernails With
Maitland bolding u 7-1 advan­
tage and pitcher Andre Johnson
ready to stomp on Altamonte's
tlugertlp grip, even lhe most
opllmislle of optimists would be
lonking for a soft s p o l tu laud
"Was It rver In doubt?" Alta­
monte manager Duke Plelcones
|&lt;iked after (he game
Only for five anti two-thirds
innings Then came Altamonte's
deep sigh of relief us Ricky
Johnson hroke perfertly and
hauled In a line d riv e by
Maitland cleanup hitter Hobble
Robison to end the game.
The Nationals, reaching deep
lo r that extra s o m e th in g ,
erupted for four runs In the fifth
and added three more after TW O
were out in the sixth to pull out
art H-7 victory over Maitland In
District 14 Division 2 Major
All Star baseball Wednesday.
The victory sets up a dream
match for Friday between Alta­

monte's Americans and Allamottle’s Nationals They are the
two only unbraleii trams led lit
Division 2. Th e game, originally
set for Pierson, lias tarn swlt
cited to Altam onte Springs'
East monte complex, said D o n

C raw fo rd . D is tric t

14 ad

mlnlstrator.
The Americans look care of Si
J o h n 's . 9 - 2 . W e d n e s d a y
Plelrnnes said he would go with
ace right-hander Andy Spolskl
American sklpjn-r Mike Morro
will probably counter with his
ace. Chris "Bulldog" Jackson
Friday's contest, nevertheless,
will take some doing to rival the
suspcnsrlul comeback ihr Nais
accomplished against Mall land
Wr Jusl never gave up," said
Plelcones. "Even when It was.
7-1. (he kids were right up
against Ihe fence veiling for us to
come hack."
Jo h n so n , a m echanically
sound left-hander, rapped an
over eager Altamonte hilling
crew with a tailing lasthall in the
early timings and then sllpi&gt;ed a
dipping curve hall for strikes
later on.
While Altamonte was biting at

B a se b a ll *l
Johnson's ladrawy. Maitland
showed Its patience against Neill
-James. Altam onte's Dwight
Gooden look alike right down to
bis No Hi The hig right-hander
couldn't Hod the plate in thr
early going and three walks to
open the game all scored
Danny Parkins drew a two-out
li.ises-lo.idrd walk lor the llrsl
run J J Graham who played In
the Altamonte league last year,
rilled a single op I tie middle lor
l wo mnrr and a J O lead
"Nelli was a III tic nervous In
Ihe first Inning since It was tils
(Irst all star game." said Allamonte catcher l’ele Joseph "But
lie came on after that arid threw
thr bull hardrrand for strikes "
James agreed "I got kind of
nervous," hr said "I was really
down afier they scored those
three runs but 1 built my con­
fidence back up during Ihe nrxl
couple Innings "
Altamonte parril the trad to
3-1 with a run In the second

With two outs. Johnson suit
(truly lost It us tic walked Ihe
seven (H ill R lppurdl. eight
(Shawn Spivey) and nine (Scotl
Davidson) Itltirrs
Mall Alttert made him pay as
hr slashed a single through Hie
left side to score Rlppard.
Johnson. Ihough. winded Chris
Plelcones to cut off any further
I rouble.
Maitland, managed by veteran
Sid Cash. padded Its lead with
two orr In Ihe Hurd and another
pair In the founh Each time.
Cush's crew scored alter James
retired Ihe first two batters
Chad Wegcman (allowed u walk
to Parkins and a single hy
Graham with a two ran double
to led center In the third.
Johnson helped hlmsrll with a
two-run single to renter In the
lourth to score Mcllryde and
Kohlson, both ol whom had
singled.
The Nationals began lo dis­
solve the 7-1 Irad In Ihe fifth.
Johnson had allowed Just two
litis and struck out live and two
defensive gems — a shoeslring
catch by right llrlder Purkins
and a great charge and throw by

shortstop Mcllryde lo a scooping
Robison at llrsl — hel|ted keep
All anionic In check
Johnsons conirol led him
again to the lilih . ihough
Davidson. Allx-rt and Plelcones
u|N*ned with s u i * r s s l v r walks
Spolskl lollowrd with a high
chop lo Ihe right side lor an Kill
Itillcld single. &lt;&gt;i i «- oul later.
Travis l.loyd ripped a liner off
the third baseman s glove tor a
single to cut llie lead lo 7-3.
Joseph thru coaxed a lire pass
lor another ru n and w hrn
Johnson went 2-0 to Kipp.ml
Cash called for Robison.
Robison completed Johnsu;i‘s
walk In Rlppard for a 7 5 count
bul then fanned Johnson and
Indured Davidson lo till into a
lorceoul to end thr Inning
James mowed down H im - of
lour hitters In Hit- (IlHi and
Altamonte came up lor lis last
grasp In Hit- sixth Robison
whllted Albert and Plelcones
popped lo second base. Spolskl.
though, singled and went to
second on an error by Hie left
llrlder James I hen loughl oil an
outside I'urvehall lo center for a
See SO M EH O W , Page OA

Radzak. who started a few
games for the Lyman High
School basketball tram us a
freshman luM year, said an
adjustment In bis stance made
the difference. "The last few
nights I’ve been pulling tny
bead Tonight. I Jusl tried lo
keep tny head on Ihr ball."
Talcsnlck then singled lo left.
Anson w ulkrd. and Metzger
lined a single touted lo plate
unolher run I'rotn then doubled
tu left-center lo drive In Alta­
monte's IJth run of the Inning
and give II a 14 I advantage.

Lamb Slams Door, Americans Roll
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer
OVIBDO — The way Deltona and
the Altamonte Americans came oul
swinging Wednesday It looked as If
the District 14 Division 2 Major
Tournament winner's brarket game
would be a slugfrst.
Hut. after giving up two runs on
three hits In the first. Altamonte
pitcher Chuck Lamb closed Ihe door
on Deltona Lamb allowed Jusl one
hit and only two baserunners the
rest ol Ihe way and the Americans
cruised to a 9-2 victory
Altamonte Jumped out to a 2-0
lead In Ihe lop of the first with some
aggressive baserunning and a
clutch double by Jeff Jackson
leading the way. T.J. Gluffrtda led
off Ihe game with a base hll and
then stole second With one out.

B a s e b a ll
Jared Solo walked and Gluffrtda
and Solo then pulled off a double
steul.
Gluffrtda scored the first run on a
wild pitch and. with two outs. Sole*
scored when Jackson rocked Tony
Niemesh's first pilch lo right center
for a double.
Dellona came right back with two
runs on three hits In the bottom of
the first. Chrts Eldrldge led off with
an Infield single and Wess Hewitt
followed by lashing Lamb's first
pilch lo right renter for a double,
putting runners on second and
third Eldrldge then stored on a wild
pitch and. when Ihe catcher s throw

lo third was wild. He will also scored
lo tie It at 2-2.
Deltona's first Inning only seemed
lo make Latnb tougher. For the
g a m e , Ih e f l a m e - t h r o w i n g
righthander struck oul 13 and
walked Just two Deltona had Just
two baserunners alter the firs:
Inning

"I knew their iDeltunu's) lirst.
second and third hitters could h ll."
Lamb said. "Hut I knew Hiat our
offense would score runs loo. They
did (seven more runs) and I felt
pretty stro n g throughout the
game."
Altamonte took the lead for good
in the top of the second when Eddie
Howard led off with a single, took
second when the ball scooted under
the Irft fielder's glove and scored on
William Thompson's single lo right.

Lute-arriving umpires, a ruin
delay and luck n( lights at
Orange City forced a move to
D e ltona , w h ich has lig h ts
Nearly six hours ulter Us sched­
uled 5:30 p.m. start It wus flnully
over.
Al turnout c, 2*1. meets Oviedo
Friday at 7:30 ul DeLund's Howe
Field. Mu Huger Woody Woodard
said he would go with Corey
Prom or Greg Metzger. Oviedo
manager David Ausiln said he
would summon Dwlghl Everett.
Don Crawford. Dlsirlci 14 ad­
ministrator. said Hie game may
lx- moved to Oviedo. A pre­
viously scheduled Junior game
betw een O v ie d o and We si
Volusia would have lo be moved
A lth o u g h A ltam on te und
Southwest were dr.ullockrd at
I I after one Inning Wednesday,
hut Altamonte quickly asserted
Itself In tlie second liming
ll blew the game wide open
with a 13-run outhuisi Penny
Slqurrlos. who has l&gt;rrn hit hy a
pilch In all Hirer games. Irad off
hy hiking a pitch In the left
shoulder A passed ball moved
her tu secontl and Craig Radzak
then ripped u double to renter to
score Iter, The next batter, Noah
Tulrsnlck. walked before Andy
Anson lollowrd witli a line drive
double to center lo score Radzak
and make the score 3 I
Metzger lollowrd wilh a double
to irft tu srurr two more runs, an
error by the second basemen
allowed Metzger lo score und
give Altamonte a commanding
f l-l lead. A n error by the
shortstop allowed Prom to score
Allumonlc's sevrnlli run. With
one out. Jim Krrrnrr walked.
Slqurrlos also wulkrd to pul
runners on lirst and second for
Radzak who promptly drove the
pitcher's second pitch over Ihe
center-field fence for n Ihrrc-run
homer.
,
“ I am a fastball hlltrr." said
Radzak “ It was a high fastball
and I got out In limit of It and
drove II."

Angels In Outfield?
George Wlsneski, left, said he doesn't know
II having an extension of the Lord — Rev.
Tom Campese — on his coaching staff will
help, but It can't hurt See the tournament
rundown for the Seminole Pony Baseball
program In F rid a y '* Evening Herald.

"Were a very good hilling
t e a m ," said coach R a lp h
Cochran. "W e teach Hie kids to
meet the ball firmly and not try
tu kill It.”
R a d za k w as A lta m o n te 's
leading hitter wilh two doubles
und a home run He drove In six
runs.

�♦A— iv x ilnf H tfiX , liirftrt, Ft.

Oliver
Returns
j
With Bang

Than d iy , July II. 1HS

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
*.

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Injured Guerrero Blasts Pirates
I'ITTS IIU H O H (U t’ll - Wi’diimtlny wn*t “ Tight
Nlghl" in Major l.t aguf M.iv h.tll
Nine of ilir l.'i giitiich jiliiytd were decided l»y one
m il. mid llie lour onr-rmi gmiim In Itx- Niiilonul
l.cugnc ilglilcnrd tmili dlvlBloiml niccu. l ightest ol nil
liowcvrr. wiih 1'rdroGiifrrrro‘sbuck
The Dodgers milflrldcr find to he helped from lhr
In Id In I'lllshurgh s Three Klvrrs Sladlum when
imisrlr spusins rrndrrecf him unable lo even walk
Aflrr Ihe Ifoinerlc feat that left him In I tint rondlllon.
fir deserved to he etirrlrd oil on Ills IcHinmales'
shoulilffs
The Inlilal Injury was Ineurred while •basing Johnny
Huy's double In liir fourlh Inning of Ihe lais Angeles'
h I vlt lory over Ihe Plrales llelween Innings. Guerrero
iidjnuriietl (o ihe Dodgers lockerroom lor emergency
ircutinenl.
When lie emerged In the filth. Ihe Dodgers had
i liiM'tl to within 4*3. with Mariano Dimean on ihlrd and
two mil Having till I f&gt; home runs sitter June I.
Guerrero wattled to allrm pl a plate appearance d e s p i t e
the pain.
"I JiihI wattled to go out there and tty one swing lo
see II I could lilt " h r said. "That's wlial | did — I look
one swing."
The hall landed civet the left-center held wall Inr
Gurrrvrn's Utsi homer ol dtp season amt I llh
game-winning HHt
"When I till Ihe bull I drop|&gt;ed my head because I
was In terrible pain," Ouerrero said. I knew I hit li
good All I was thinking was dial I bail lo gel to first

base. Th e n the tying run would store.”
Ih managed an agonizingly slow, limping )ng m ound
i lie bases, and barely made It to home plate.
I can't throw enough accolades at h im ." said
Dodgers manager Torn Uasorda "H e 's somebody who
has really pumped life Inin this c lu b ."

After Gorman Tho m a s spoiled
C la n cy's shutout hid w ith a
leadoll homer In the second, his
13lb homer, Toronto's Lloyd
M o s t by hit his sixth. In thF
third

Expos 6 . Braves 6

Cubs 4 . Padres 3
At Chicago. Duvcy Lopes belted a two-run homer and
Keith Moreland b i ll o w e d with a solo shot in the seventh
to rally the Cubs past San Diego Lopes went 3*for-3
with three Hit) and also threw out a runner at the plate
from left Held. Dave Dravecky let) lo8-5.

Met• 3, Reds i
At Cincinnati. Keith Hernandez doubled in the
winning run amt rookie Kick Aguilera pitched a
sts-httter to help the Mels extend thrtr winning streak
to nine, the club's longest m nine years, Hrtls
player-manager Petr Hose, who needs 3U tuts to break
T v Cobh's record of 4.101 hits, went 0-for-t.

Astros lO, Phillies O

Mike Fitzgerald
...Batters Sutter

Keith Hernandez
...Key double

At Houston.’ Mike Scott tossed a four flitter and Jose
C ruz and Hill Doran both collected three hits In a 14-hll
attack, dow ning Philadelphia. Scott, H-4. wrnl the
distance for Ills second complete game mul third
straight trium ph Je rry Koosinan, 3-2. failed to retire a
halter In Ihe llrst Inning

Cardinals 7. Giants 3
At St. Louis. Ozzic Smith and Jack Clark each
slugged tw o-run homers to carry the Cardinals post
San Francisco J r l f Lahti pitched the final t 2 3
tunings to preserve thr victory for Kurt Kepsltlre. fi*6.
and record his seventh nave. Vida H lur, 5-3. suffered
Ihe loss,

t

Sandberg, Lieflander Hurl Maitland Past Eustis
O V IE D O — J .C . Sandberg and Ikdthy
l.lefluildet ctiuiblncd on a live-hitter amt
i In Maitland Seniors 'took advantage ol
some early Eustis errors cn m ule lo a 0*2
v ic to ry WccliicNclay tu D is tric t 14
Division 2 winner's bracket action In a
game delayed twite by power sliortugrn
al the Oviedo Lillie League complex.
M a llla n d . w h ic h has w on three
straight, advances to the Division 2
Hunts Monday al 7 :3 0 at Deltona
Maitland needs pint one more win to
move on to th r District 14 finals.
Manhunt Is tu excellent position now
as It tan come hack with either lelty
W illy Dannie nr righthander Perry
Teague on Monday. Holh pitched well lit
thrtr Initial uutlngkof the iiiiinuitncnL
Eustis look u 1 0 lead in (la* top ol Ihe
' lust Wednesday on Eric lluxm an's HHI
single Imi three Fusils errors enabled

B a s e b a ll
Mallland to tnillil a 2 1 tract nllei one
liming
In the bottom of the first. T e d
SciUrffelln drew a walk, look second on
lluxm an s errant plckofl atlcmpl and
went to third on Llellander's gioundoui
n&gt; ihe right side Dannie's gnum drr lo
short was I mn&gt;Ic*iI anil Schleffelln scored
lo lie the game at |-|. Dannie took
second on a wild plteli and scored when
league reached on the shortstop's sec­
ond error ni the Inning. Mallland never
trailed alter Dannie scored th’’ second

run.
Sondlicrg set Kiistis down In order In
the lop ol ihe second anti Maitland added
another unearned m u In the holtmti half.

W ith two outs. Scdileffelm reached on a
iw t i-h n s r e r r o r a n d s c o re d on
Menander's single up (he middle lor u
3 -1 lead.
Sandberg gave up .« two-out double lo
Jo ey Fisher In Ihe lop ol Ihe third und
Fisher moved to third on a passed ball
Jam ie Carter then drew a walk and stole
second hut Fisher was caught off third
on ihe play and lagged out on a
well executed run down ’
Alter Maitland went down In order In
the third. Eustis pulled within 3 2 In the
top ol the fourth lluxm an reached on an
tillt*rl«i Ini to leadnlL stole second, look
Ihlrd im a wild pitch and scored on
a not her wild pitch.
Mallland then went with Lieflander In
relief and Ihe hard-throwing southpaw
got mil of ihe inning without any further
damage.

While Lieflander slim Fhistls down In
I lie* fourth, fill ti and sixth. Mallland
jilcked up one run Ui cacti frame to build
Its cushion to 6*2
In the lourth. Nate Hoskins singled
down the left Held line and took second
oft an error on the Irll llelder Hoskins
moved in Ihlrd on Sandlx-rg's sacrifice
hunt and scored on a passed hull.
Ill the lllih. Llrllander drilled a leadoll
single up ttie middle, stole second, took
third on Dannie’s Infield hit and scored
mi Kevin O ’Brien's 0 -2 sacrifice flyin the sixth. Hoskins led oil with a
walk, stole second and was moved to
th ir d on M ark P e te rs' gro un d n ut
Schlrflciln then stroked a two-out single
to center lo score Hoskins.

— Chris Flster

Gainey, Boston Belt Homers,
Veres Shackles West Volusia
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
E U S T IS — Willie Guluey and
Jnhn.ilhon Hn&gt;tun each slugged
home runs while Hon Veres
hurled a Ihree-hlller as Oviedo
i humped West Volusia, 1H-2.
here Wednesday night in the
District 14 Division 2 All-Star
Baseball Tournam ent
Oviedo, which was beaten by
M allland T u e s d a y , taken on
Altamonte Friday night at 7.30,
A l t a m o n t e s l r u m r o 11r d
Southwest Volusia. 24-4, The
game Is originally scheduled lor
DeLand but District 14 Ad
inlntstrator Don Crawford said it
would prutiahly lo changed to
Oviedo ll u junior gum r could lxtransferred the same night. He
said lie would try to clear tt with
Be Mind today and have a de­
cision tonight.

...Somehow
Continued from 8A
H*f *M FSalg Sg b i n Caafc

Altamonte National pitcher Neill James fires a tastball at a
Maitland hitter In Wednesday night's 8 7 victory over
Maitland. A lter giving up seven runs In the first four Innings.
James closed the door on M aitland In the last two to enable
the Nationals to comeback for the win

m

t

single to score Spnlxttl und pull
Altamonte w ithin 7 6
"Coach (Frank llurinctl told
me lie was going lo throw a
curve, so I was ready." said
James, who scampered lo sec­
ond as (he throw went belatedly

" I have the opportunity to
continue my career and Fin
looking forward tn It as long aS
I'm playing." he said. " I knew
before I got here that they havf
an outstanding h a llrlu b Fin
glad I can contribute.
Th e 11 runs marked a Torontp
high this season T h e Blue Jayp
tied a club record with five home
ru n s Hancc M ulllnlks hit p
two-out shot In the first for hip
sixth homer.

N.L. B a s e b a ll

At Atlanta, Mike Fitzgerald's homer off llrure Suiter,
l l on Ihe llrsi pin It m ihe I Ith liming lifted Montreal.
H e llrvrr T im Burke. 5 0, pitched three Innings. Hob
Horner's I2 lh home run, a two run shot off Jeff
Urardon. lied the score 5 5 In ihe eighth

S E A T T L E IUPII With
lum ber In his hands. Al Oliver
can still leave pitchers petrified.
"It felt very good to step rigid
in, especially since I haven t
played a game since May 5. tl'P;
well-traveted veteran said W ed­
nesday nlghl after driving in
three runs with his flrst homer
since 1983 and a single In hi*
debut with the Blue Ja ys, lead­
ing Toronto to an 11*1 victory
over the Seattle Mariners.
"I'v e stayed in shape." Oliver;
said. "Hitting ts something the;
man upstairs gave me and I
never took It for granted.
Th e victory extended
Toronto's winning streak to four
games and gave Ihe Blue Ja y s a
sweep of their three-game series.
J im Clancy and .H ill Caudill
c o m b in e d on a f lv e -h lt t e d
C la n c y . 6-4, won his fourth
straight decision Seattle has lost
four straight.
Oliver, acquired from t l* Lok
A n g e l e s D o d g e r s f o r Left
Matuszek Tuesday, hit his last
hom e run with M ontreal tft
1983 He last played In the
Am erican League, where he has
a . 3 19 career average, tn 1981.

walked, Veres helped lilmsell
with a single for a I I tic.
Oviedo look the lead (or good
m the Ihlrd when Alan G rrrn r
There wasn't much decision us walkrd. moved lo second on a
to whom would win Wednes­ w ild p itc h u n d th ird on a
day's game til FUtstls. Veres, a groundnut by C had Duncan
right hander, received a r o u g h Cobb then squeezed him home
introduction In ihe Mu tom of ihe with a hunt single
lust inning when leadoll hitler
Vcrrs was sailing by then as
Jo h n Patrick deposited his pitch lit- mowed down DeLand without
over Hu- center Held fence for a a hit until the lltih Inning. Be
I O lead
struck out 10 and wulkrd three.
My control could have been
Alter Ihat homer. I thought It
was going to lx- a long, long Ix’ltcr," said Vcrrs who hadn't
n ig h t." said Veres, who will pitch lit a game since the regular
attend Trin ity Prep this fall. "I season. "I walked too many hut
fell a little pressure after that but they didn't hurt me tonight "
Ovirdo started to pul the hurt
the team bucked me real well I
on West Volusia In Ihe fourth
relaxed alter we got the lead."
W hich didn't take loo long In when It used G ainey's tuler over
the s e c o n d . H lc h a r d C o b b thr center Held fence after a
w alked and moved to second one single by Derek Mays (or a 4 1
out later when Micah Kinnalrd lead

B a seb a ll

home try ing to nail Spolskl.
L l o y d Iolio wed w i t h a
gi mind ball to short hut ll was
hooted which sent Jam es to
third W ith Joseph facing a 2 2
count, a pitch got away and
.tames hustled home to tie the
game al 7-7.
T h e n came th r big break.
Joseph followed with a short pop
flv behind Ihe third luxe m an. As

* li»

thr shortstop angled In for the
rasv grab, fie and the third
sucker collided Th e ball fell
between them und Lloyd willed
Imine with the Be-breaking run.
Somehow. I knew It would
drop.” s.ud Joseph a left handed
hitting catcher. * I Just knew it
would."
Somehow ..It did

Toronto scored five runs In t 1mnrth. chasing Frank Wills, 4-2
Jesse Barfield lilt his 13th
hom er. T o n y Fernandez ancl
D am asn G arcia sing le d and
scared on M oseby's doubltj
O liver capped the filth with hip
homer.
" I felt good tonight. It’s Just a
matter of playing.” In other Af.
games. Detroit blanked Chicago
1- G, New York edged Kansas
C ity 6-5. Oakland beat Boston'
5-4, Cleveland downed Texas)
4-1. Minnesota edged Baltimore
21 a n d C a l i f o r n i a sh ad e d
Milwaukee 2-1
In the National League. It was;
Chicago 4. Sari Diego 3; Los
Angeles 5. 1‘ttlshurgh 4. New
York 2. Cincinnati I: Montreal 6,
A t l a n t a 5 in I I I n n i n g s ;
Houston 16. Philadelphia 0. and
St Muils 7. San Francisco 3.
'

Tigers 1. White Sox O

At Detroit. Lou W hitaker's
two- out bloop single In H it
eighth scored To m Brookens ana
lilted Jack Morris and the Tigers,
T o m Seavcr, seeking his 297tit
i arrer victory, had given up only
two hits and three base runners
until Brookens doubled sharply
to left wall two out In the eighth, j
Ysnkees6,Roysls5
At New York. Dave W infield's
bloop single to center scored
Hickey Henderson witti one oul
in tlie bottom of ihe ninth to
carry the Yankees Henderson -*
on base five straight tlrnrs —
stnglrd off Dan Qulsenbcrry. 4-5|
and stole second for his third
steal and 41st this season, self
ling up the run

A's 0, Med (tox 4
At Oakland. Dusty Baker hit «
solo homer and Mike H ratfi
threw out the potential tying run
al home plate In the ninth to
spark the A's Bill Krueger. 6 8.
worked six Innings. J a y Howell
pitched the final l 2-3 Innings
lor his 18th save Bob Ojeda. 4-5.
hurled only 2 2 3 Innings and
took Ihe loss.
I n d ia n s 4, H a n g e rs I

At Cleveland. Charlie Bough
tossed a two hitler and Pete
O 'B rie n slamm ed a tw o -ru n
homer to help the Hangers snap
a f o ur - g ame lo s in g streak.
Hough. 7-10. notched his third
v ic to ry over C le v e la n d th is
season and pitched his ninth
complete game

Twins 2. Orioles I
At Baltimore. To m Drunanstry
a two-run homer tn the
top of the ninth to help Frank*
Viola outduel Miks Boddlckei
and lead Minnesota. Viola, 106.
allow ed seven hits in eight
innings Ron Davis pitched the
ninth for his 10(h save
m i iashed

Angels 2, Brewers 1
At California. Heggle Jackson
hit his 518th career homer and
Dick Schofield also connected to
back Hon Romanlck's flve-hlttcr.
helping the Angels Homanlclc
K M wulkrd two and struck out
none to pick up his eighth
vk lo ry tn hts last 11 decisions
Ray Burris. 4-7. look the toss

�4

Evtnlnf FWrM, tantoed. FI.

Thursday. July 11, 1MJ—7A

SPORTS

U nreported Kiiis H urt Survey

IN BRIEF

Wildlife managers use annual statistics to
evaluate the quality and quantity of game
species and to provide readily understood
indexes of population trends. The data Is
then used for establishing fall hunting
quotas, developing policies, and com­
municating with the general public.
Unrcportcd game kills can render a local
wildlife survey worthless. Every sportsman
has a responsibility to assist with the
collection of data. Hunters need to be sure to
check-In their game to the check-slatIon,
This provides vital Information that wildlife
managers need to make proper manage­
ment decisions.
Non-hunting mortality of game may be
the most significant parameter In assessing
game populations. Unreported kills or
deaths are likely to exploit the population at
a higher rale than desired
Poaching Is the most elusive (actor In
assessing non-hunter mortality and is one of
the biggest problems In wildlife manage­
ment. The level of poaching In a given area
Is nearly Impossible to assess. It varies with
the poachers' technology and effort, which
arc Influenced by a variety of external lorrcs
such as the economy.
The magnitude of poaching Is one of Ihe
major unknowns of deer management and
to whut extent Illegal kills ailed deer
imputation* are two monumental questions.
Neither question can be answered easily
because datu arc exceedingly difficult to
obtain
People living In areas where deer are

Funderburk Powers O -Tw in s ;
Astros Split With Yankees
OR LAN DO — Mark Funderburk blasted hts 24th homer
of the season and a double and drove In five runs to lead
the Orlando Twins to a 10-8 victory over the Chattanooga
Lookouts Wednesday night In Southern League plav at
Tinker Field.
Sam Sorce contributed three hits to the 11-hit O-Twins
attack while JefT Trout and Bobby Ralston had two each
Orlando remained one game In front of Columbus In the
Southern League East Division
In Florida Slate League play at Fort Lauderdale, the
Osceola Astros split a doubleheader with the Fort
Lauderdale Yankees as the Astros took the first. 4-2. and
the Yankees the second. 3-2.
Bob Parker was I for 4 with his 19th stolen base In the
first game and wasQ for 3 In the second

Tw lgg Wins 3rd Challenge Race
K ETC H U M . Idaho IUP 1) — Olympic silver medalist
Rebecca Twlgg of Seattle won her third race out of four In
Ore-Idaho Challenge Bike Race Wednesday
Tw lgg retained the lead in the ovrtall standings in the
seven-day event that ends Saturday for the 72 participants.
She won the Galena Sum m it Road Race, a GO-mlle.
hlgh-altltude race between Stanley and Ketchum. with a
time of 2:43 IB.
Twlgg edged Rebecca Daughton of Carmel. N Y . and
Chinese national team member Xl Hul Mcl Daughton was
timed at 2 43.28 and XI In 2 43.38.

...Klein

Fourth was Nancy Sheldon, Boulder. Colo.. 2 43.48 and
Sue Colder of New Zealand was fifth In 2:43 48
In overall standings. Tw lg g was first with a combined
lime of 6:49 35 Inga Thompson. Reno, Nev.. was second at
6 50 03 and Madonna ilarrls. Park City. Utah, was fifth al
6 50 53.

Continued from 5A
was al Crooms Posey recalls
Klein’s trams were always well
coached The y weren't the
most talented or Ihe win
ntngrst. but he got the most
out of them and they stayrd
happy. Posey says.
"Being around him and
watching him you could see he
handled his players w e ll,"
Posey suggests "He made the
most out of his material He got
as much out of the kids as
anybody."
School principal Wayne Epps
agrees "Probably most tin*
(Miriam Is tliul the kids that
have played for him In ihe past
really seem lo enjoy Ihe game."
says Epps, adding that Klein's

Upsets A p lenty A t Challenger
K EY U1SCAYNE. Fla. (U I’ll — The top two seeds have
been eliminated during play In the 825.000 United Slates
Tennis Association's Challenger Series.
Top seed Laura Bernstein of Hollywood, Fla was beaten
Wednesday by unsceded Halle Cloffe of Knoxville. Tcnn .
3-6. 6-2, 6-4. Second seed Belinda Cnrdwcll of New Zraland
was beaten by unsreded Lynn Lewis of San IMego 2 6 , 6-4.
6-3.
Fifth-seeded Susan Rimes of Fort Lauderdale defeated
Tamaka Takagl of Lexington. Ky„ 6- 1. 6 0 : and seventh
seed Jane Foreman of Providence. H I . defeated Shelly
Aguero6-2, 6-3,
All winners advanced to the quarterfinals.
In doubles. Klrtsey Wenzel ol Australia and Tamaka
ilrfealed

the lop-seeded

team

of Kaye

MeDunlel

of

Shreveport. La., and Wendy White of Marietta. Ga.. 6-2. 7-6
17-2).

Taylor Makes Debut As O w n e r
INGLEW OOD. Calif. IUPI) — Actress Elizabeth Taylor
made her debut as a horse owner Wednesday, watching
her recently purchased 3-year-old colt Basle linage finish
second In the third race al Hollywood Park
Th e colt, bumped and steadied after the start, moved to
contention outsld- hors-s leaving 'be ba&lt; ksirrich, re­
sponded oulolde Variety Express In the final furlong but
could not catch the winner.
Wearing Taylor's chart reuse and pink silks for the
7-furlong allowance race was veteran Jockey Bill Shoemak­
er.

Seeds Keep Falling A t U.S. Pro
BROOKLINE. Mass. IUPI) — Seeded players are on the
endangered species list at the U S Pro Championships
No. 4 seed ami defending champion Aaron Krlcksleln.
No. 6 Josc-Luls Clerc and No. 7 Jim m y Arias all were
eliminated Wednesday In second round action ui the
Longwood Cricket Club.
No. 2 seed Andres Gomez withdrew Tursduy due to
Injury.
To p seed Mals Wllunder. playing his llrsl singles match
since his opening-round loss al Wimbledon, beat Hans
Glldemelster of Chile. 6-2. 7 6 (7 -41

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Colombians
Master Tour
LA N S-EN -V ER C O R S. France
IUPI) — For the second suc­
cessive day the Colombians
showed their mastery over the
mountains, a* Fablo Parra won
the 12th stage of the To ur de
France cycle race Wednesday.
He did It alongside teammate
, Lula H r r r t m who Tuesday won
the longest and most grueling
stage of the 24-day race. The two
covered the 167 miles of m oun­
tain roads In 8 hours, 25
minutes and 3 1 seconds.

L a rry
W illiams
abundant tend to be complacent about Ihe
poaching problem Others even accept It as
a part of the social scene. Some Illegal deer
killing is the work of organized poaching
rings supplying an underground commer­
cial market
Considerable poaching occurs as a type of
recreation*' done with full knowledge and
perhaps In part because ol Its illegality.
The presence and significance of disease
must l«- recognized as an additional element
in deer management programs. Diseases
and parasites can l»e drvustlng to wildlife
and can cause a heavy death loss to a local
imputation.
Sportsmen have a vital role to play In
wildlife management Your cooperation In
providing Informal Ion to wildlife biologists
at check stations, completing harvest report
cards, and participating In hunter ques­
tional res arc alt critical lo managing the
resources properly.
Dell

Abernelhv. owner of ihe Osteen

Th e Klein family has become
something of a coaching team
Ills wile Cheryl has coached
girls basketball at Seminole,
Oviedo and Sletson University.
Klein Insists he's learned a lot
from Ills wife, ailtllng that they
constantly discuss (lie game.
It's early yet. the season
docmi't siart until November,
but Klein Is charged Up. At 46.
he says he will stick with
basketball, hoping this will be

Lopez Confident
For Women's Open
SPRINGFIELD. N.J. (U l'll Nancy Loj&gt;rz Is enleting the U.S.
Wtimen'a Ojscn with a golfer's
greatest virtue: confidence.
The holiest golfer on Ihe L H IA
lour over die Iasi two mondin
wiih three victories and iwo
second-place Mulshes, Lopez Is
one ol die fuvarllrs to win Ihe
Women's Open, a tournament
she's never won
I think m y chances urc the
Im-si i hey have ever been." said
Lopez who hurst upon the
women's golf scene as a rookie
in 1978 with nine victories.
Ini hiding live In a row. "I like
the course. I feel comfortable
und m y game Is where It should
bt
Lopez M id she is coming Into
ihis 40ih U.S. Ojx-n with a new
altitude. Lojiez has never won
an Open und a victory would
probably earn tier Immediate
admittance Into ihe LPGA Hall
of Fame,
" I ’m approaching Ihls In a
ddlerrnt way. 1 dori'l feel I need

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i t i n i i i t r i n m 'i li
Sir sham fiahs* rmiiMn
m a n - 104 0 NS
'N AN IN

I O o l i a i O n I&gt; I I I II

SAVE ON CAS!
SAVE ON REPAlRSf

IS N fC ^m
IM
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He doesn't know the roster
especially well, like any Uralyear coach. Inn alter coaching
sophomores Craig Walker and
Andre Whit nev along with
Junior Hod Henderson. Klein
has an Inkling dial Seminole
can lie very good
That matters little at this
jtolni. His secret Is handling
jitayrrs and building dial team
Iceilng. Over the telephone he
quickly turns away from talk
about Individual jilnycrs. Then
he starts In again alMiul his
concept..." I' ni going to get
I hem Involved, make them
want to play and play us a
team. You can4 jiluy a team
game as Individuals — you
can't win," he says "No matter
how good the Individuals are
you can’t win dint way."

1

S y s te m “ 4 8 - P L U S ” !

SAVE THE LIFE OF
YOUR ENGINE!

uivtt t n ii i H t.»v m i i i m u
m i mi a m s
uiMi'HmioN asii mohsifowih

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MIAOUS sroucts WIAN
ASII ITSI1I OS ISliSSAI

•
vVV

p a h ts

lo win and I don't w.uil lo pul
that jircssurr on myself Fvr
placed well iiji to the Open, The
confidence Is there

io n losGtn
lAcasi u r n

n
ill Iftf'MI1V

L ojm / already has one major
title lo her credit dns year with
an eight stroke vlctorv over Alice
Miller In Ihe LPG A chamjiloiiahljr She prepared lor die Open
by winning the Hall ol Fume
i liani|ilonshl|&gt; last week by three
strokes over JoAune Cartier and
Allison Finney.

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One ol die players Lopez will
have lo walch out lor Is defendtug champion Hollis Stacy, a
ihree-iimr U.S. Ojw-n winner
Stacy prepared for the Ojirn
by completing changing her
swing
"I didn't play much the last
month and a-ha 11 said Stacy
who has won 0 |tcn lilies In
1977. 1978 and I9H4

He A I K I l N I N s n n A u rn iiM

n'OT-sCfiu

the first ol many successful
trains.

G o lf

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IN I N
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UN I N IN
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Bridge Fish Camp, had 23 boat* in Sunday's
Buddy [lass Fishing Tournament Del says
81 were weighed for 141 pounds and U
ounces.
Big Bass went to Roy Heinz, who caught a
/-pound. !3VY-ounrcr. First place went to
JefT Kremcr and John Soblk of Longwood.
The y caught 18 pounds and 15 ounces for
their eight fish Heinz and Marty llannu
were tn second place with 14 pounds and
I0 l v ounces. Third placr went to Bruce
Robinson and Boh Murray with 14 pounds
and 4 ounces Fourth place finishers were
John Bluer and Ed Desmarts with 14
pounds and 2 ounces.
Kremcr and Soblk pocketed 8177. Heinz*
Big Bass paid 8255 Heinz and Hanna
collected 8132.75 for second place.
Robinson and Murray picked up 888.50
Bitter and Desmarts earned 844.25 for
fourth.
t&gt;ell iwild he kept Ihe catch at an clght-flsh
limit and a penalty of four ounces for each,
dead llsh. "Tha .tavrd a whole lot ol flats,"
h r said "We onlv had seven dead llsh and
returned Ihe rest."
Dell said John Taylor and Allen E m ­
merich of W’lnicr Park enughl iwo big
catfish. One weighed In at 15 jhiuih I and 12
ounces and another weighed 12 jMninds and
13 ounces.
Along with ihe big eats, sjieckx are tilting
on grass shrimp and minnows. "A lot of
people are catching them by drilling over
Ihe deep holes In the lake." says Dell "They
aren't gigantic hut ihey'rr a good size.”

says, Without It. he adds,
failure Is assured "Defense and
a learn altitude — that's the
way you win." he says "In any
team HjMirt you win with people
|iluying their roles and having a
team attitude,"
Klein emphasizes Ihe polnl
by doing things like driving
players to a camp In Millersvllle. Ga. recently, efforts
which help build his concept

CORDOVAN JET STAR

eufina rmiMA uaiiiwA
M i w -U t ■■
i w tot
&gt;ia ** &lt;•
uso-'fM
He 'a
' ww Atv»4i
la
aiftins PUfirts rniriwa.
00an era
*«&gt;•&lt;• i s 0 nn
Ilfplw
114 IN IN
iA «,4 w r

HUNTING
WRITER

coaching versatility also was a
big jilus. "I see no reason lor a
kid lo play a game il he's not
going lo have Iun Bill makes
Ihe game fun."
As a foottiall coach. Klein
says that Job was sometimes
i s|M iiiilly dllflcull ’Basketball
practice Is kind &lt;&gt;l Inn. football
Isni. Football (practice) is just
band and ru n ," lie says "Not
many like football practice "
The big similarity, according
lo Klein. Is dial having sujvertor
athletes in both sports equals a
chance to w in. Alter that,
enthusiasm and solid defense
lake over.
Klein Is especially concerned
wiih the mental aspects of
sporl. no! Just the Xs and Os
but the m rntul outlooks of
players He seeks lo keeji I hem
satisfied and In v o lve d . A
jirnnary goal Ibis (all- Is lo
develop a team concept, he

SCOREBOARD
T V /R A D IO

F1SH IN O /

M O N - F B I. 8-5:30, 8 * 1

8-13 N O O N

3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
241 I S

FRENCH AVI

SANFORD

B

4 .'

�•A —Evening Herald, Linford, FI

Thursday, July

In R a p e Case

’ »**

Dispute Over Word Doesn't Change Verdict

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
After 18 Years Woman
Confesses She Killed Husband
MIAMI (UPB — Eighteen years aflcr Naming hrr lover for
the crime. Ileliy Evers confesses to shooting her fisherman
husband, butchering him and dumping the pieces into
Mlvayne Bay. pollre In Los Angeles and Miami say.
"She said she had Ihr gun. the rifle and that she tripped
mu) It accidentally went off," Metro-Dade County police
dried.ve Jim Kadellff said "Th e common thread was
guilt ll eats at you like cancer. She appears to be
remorseful.
Evers, now 55 and living In San Diego, walked Into the
Net Angeles' Pollre Department's Hollywood station two
weeks ago and told a detective about the crime.
"She said she couldn't have It hanging over her head any
longer and It practically destroyed her family life." Los
Angeles [ K i l l e r Lt Ed Hot king said
In 1967. Evers was the inline suspect, but she blamed
ih, murder on David KatX, 21. a University of Miami drama
student who she said was her lover.
Police arrested Katz on charges of first-degree murder,
but a grand Jury rrfused to Indict him State Attorney
Uli bard Gersteln's office had told pollre they had the
wrong man.

B y Deane Jord a n
Herald Staff W rite r
A clerical ommlsslon In a fury form
prompted a J u d g e to send a Jury back for an
extra hour of deliberation on a rape case
after t he Jury had decided t he Sanford man
was guilty as charged
Found guilty twice In the same day of
raping a woman once In a ditch after he bent
her up was Terrell Frank Brundldge. 25. of
HH ( astir ftrrwer Court He could receive up
to life in Jail when sentenced Aug. 13 by
Circuit -fudge Robert McGregor
Brundldge s trial took the strange twist
Wednesday after the Jure returned Its
verdict
In keeping w ith usual procedure, the Jury
was polled after the verdict was read and
each member of lln two-woman four-man
jurv -said tlietr verdict was guilty. At that
(Mint the trial was over McGregor then
thanked the Jurors advised them of their
rights as Juror to talk or not talk al their
discretion about their deliberation, and
naked them tl they had any questions A
ptmr then asked ll the language on the Jury
(non _ whic h Jurors use to record their
verdict — was the same as Ihc law

...Litter
Continued from page 1A

Shuttle Set For Launch
( APE C A N A V E R A L (UP1) Shuttle Challenger s
countdown ticked smoothly along today toward blastoff
Friday on a busy astronomy mission, hut one exotic
experiment ran Into equipment trouble and may not work
once the ship rear ties orbit.
The countdown, which begun al 11 a m. Wednesday, hits
proceeded smoothly and If all goes well, the veteran
spaceship will thunder away from Earth al 4 30 p m
Friday on the 19th shut lie mission.
Laic Wednesday, technicians discovered trouble with a
vacuum pum p In an experiment designed to study the
behavior of strange "superflttId" liquid helium, which has
a variety of technological applications.
The pump, which holds the temperature of the helium al
hImiiiI minus 450 degrees Fahrenheit, had to Ire turned off
and l| the I cm) rerat ure of the liquid rises Just a few degrees
the experiment will not Ire aide to operate

...Trims
Continued from page 1A
&gt;outing In Irom the Sanford
Housing Authority. Faison said
I Ik money Is the authority's
contribution to the city that It
makes Instead •&gt;1 paving propci tv taxes, Farr said
Mayor Iteltye Smith asked
Faison II ilie budget was
padded ’ by de|rurttnnU heads
win. may &gt;«■ M t k ln i what ihry
can get- tinping their blunted
figures may survive the commission s paring knife
Faison, whir lias worked with
federal, county and city budgets

m the past, said rut.
I've Item Impressed with the
tightness ol the Inidge Is I’ve
tumid here." fie said
The eomntlsslon Is rxp crtrd
J u ly 22 to adopt a proposed
budget and m illagc. Public
hearings are scheduled lo Ikheld itu the budget and millagc
rales Sept 0 and 23 Th e filial
budget Is expected lit be adopted
Sept 23.
T h e com m ission has rr
scheduled Us budget discussions
next week. Instead of Hireling
T u t -v r la y r \Vffin esd a v ancl
Fb u rs d a y. as planned, the
commission Is scheduled to meet
Monday at 7 p.ttt. and go unlit
midnight

AREA DEATHS
C E C IL A . B A IL E Y

S u r v i v o r s i n c l u d e trcr
hu sb a n d , Gits, sister. Opal
Soper. Chicago.
WiMxllawn Funeral Home. OrIttndo. Is in charge of arrange­
ments
T H E O D O R E R. G R U S H K A
Mr. Theodore It Grushka. 73,
nl 510-22 Orange Drtvr, Alla
monte Springs, riled Tuesday.
Horn In New York C ity, he
moved to Altamonte Springs
from Springfield. Mass., many
years ago He was an automobile
salesman und u m em ber of
Temple Israel. He was a Mason
and a member ol the Knights of
Pythias.
Survivors Include his son.
Kenneth. Winter Park: daughter.
Enid Guctte. Chicopee, Mass ;
two brothers. Carl, Plantation,
und Irving. Forest Hills. N.Y.;
sister, Estelle Sussinnn, New
York City: five grandchildren:
three great- grandchildren.
J I L L K. F R A N K
Belli Shalom Goldstein Memo­
Mrs Jill R Frank. 5(t. of (113
rial Ctuq&gt;cL Orlando
Burke St.. Altamonte Sjirtngs,
RONALD J. McCLEERY
died Wednesday al Florida Hos­
Mr.
Ronald J . McClecry. 42.
pital. Oil.mdn Horn MayS 1921)
(120 Lake Drive. Chuluota, died
in Evansville. Iml. she moved to
Wednesday Orlando Regional
Altamonte Springs train there to
IlHill she was a homemaker Medical Center. Born August 18,
1942 In Cleveland. Ohio, he
■iml a Protestant
m o v e d to C h u lu o t a f ro m
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e her
husband, Andrew: three sons. WtcUlffe, Ohio. In 1984. He wus
Kick Abercrom bie, Ormond a machinist und a member of
Mount Carmel Catholic Church.
Beach. Ron A b e rc ro m b ie .
Oklahoma City. Okla., Randall Wlcklttfe. He wu* a member of
Bowman, l.ongwood daughter. U A W Local 790.
Survivors Include Ills wife.
Lana Abercrombie. Dallas; two
ststeis, Elaine Kcnslrr. Orlando, Janice: daughter. Michelle Lynn.
and Corn Jrun Alien. KvaiUVlllei C h u lu o t a ; la th e r . J a m e s ,
C le v la n d : m o th e r. J e a n n e
lour grandchildren
Garden C hapel Home for Spence. Lyndhurtt. Ohio.
Union Park Chapel Funeral
Funerals. Orlando, is In charge
Service. Union Park. Is In charge
oi arrangements
of arrangements
E TH E L I. MILLER
Mis Ethel I Miller. 79, ol 141
Funeral Notice
L o m b a r d y R o a d , W in te r
Springs, died Sunday at Lite
( ’are Center. Altamonte Springs
tar M r C*CII A
Born Nov 24. 1905 in Decatur. ?*"•*. •&gt; ol » M t o n Blvd C m &lt; t .
TiMMtar, will bo *1 J p m Friday *1
Ill . she moved lo Wilder Sptlngs O'*4
Conov# Co«notaf&gt; wlta IS* N t , William
Irom Chicago lu 1903 She was a Mauldin gt(in«lm g Pittndt ma* t*ll a) I ha
homemaker and a m rnibrr of 8 l. lunoral ham* ThurMar Sam a I a m Britton
Funeral Homo, a Guardian Chap*I In
Mary Magdalen Catholic Church.
tharoo

Mr Cecil A Halley. HO. ol 23IKJ
Bass Hlvd . Geneva, died Tues­
day -it (Ytilrul I lui ti|,i Regional
llus|]|lat. Sanfotd Horn July 7.
Hk)5 to Ohio County hid , hr
moved lo G riirvu (tom llunMugion, Iml . in 1875 H r was a
•''I licit lilt nil ore si nrc owner and
was ,i Baptist
Sinvtuns Include his wife,
Dclnics, son James Parrish,
Santnrd, seven d au gh te rs,
I'.Hilda Lange. Huntington.
Pair Ida Prescott Sanford. Diane
Sollm clo, Winter Springs, Wilma
M e C u u g licv. I m l .. Doreen
&lt; rawlotd. Linda Jacobs, and
Annie Sclurudnlti, all of Geneva:
htollici Russell. Wabash. Iml.:
12 grandchildren) |9 great­
grandchildren.
Brlssuii G u a rdian Funeral
lltniir, Sanford, Is In charge of
arrangements

nnrrrrnn--------------------

F/owrra fo r .-u n Tra sto rl^™

(•Inllins
JMlhRJxtf

Sr."£.\

323-1204

OAKLAWN

n&gt;Rt*Al M0«K/Cf MCTlItV
O n leMttaa. M I M r a B Bortai u t a
la*o( Oooot i*aot Caot*

44A At l a m

Sd
t m S M ito w ih a a
1U - U U

UdtarWUAa U&gt;n

FraFta. S~

slate law prohibiting littering on
clilirr public or private propertv
unless the |K-tsoii had received
prior jMTtnlsslon Irom ihc pro[M'flv owner
Ihe stale law says thr court
may Impose fines or may !m
[ kim* the additional penalties id
picking up litter or jierfnnttlng
other labor commensurate with
ihcolfcnse committed
County Adm inistrator K m
Hooper said In expeels Ms.
{ (avion s oilier will have com­
pleted Us rescan h and have an
ojilnlnti lor tin commission In
the next Hirer to lour weeks.
I Ik scan li Inr an cllci live way
in i atch anil prosecute llltercm
lagan alter ( ’minty Cotmtilsalon
t'lililrmaii Bob Sturm received a
Idler Irom a Winter Springs

...Shot
C o n t i n u e d from page I A
lor Rollins and sheriff's deputy
Brent Davidson spotted him
talilnd the l.il Chump store on
Stale Hoad -Lilt al Sjirlng Oaks
Boulevard in Altamonte Springs.
Rollins l.cmait said tail Into
woods behind the store, but
surrendew’d without resistance
wtirii D.ivltlsiin i aught up with
him.
I.entail said deputies limi t
know how Hollins traveled to
Altamonte Springs He m ay
have gotten another ride, lie
said
Hollins wlm aritvcil In the

...Tax

McGregor said he thought so but upon
&lt;hecklng discovered that one word Included
in the law was missing from the jury form.
The missing word was "physical" which
is usually Included twice on Jury forms used
t»v Jurors lo record their verdicts On the
form the Jury had Wednesday, the word
physical" was inadvertently omitted once,
according to Assistant State Attorney
Steven Plotnlck Since each form Is pre­
pared for each case he said there are no
other In-error forms waiting to be used
According to Hie form, to find the
defendant guilty of rape the Jury must check
a portion of the form that says he used
actual physical force to cause sexual
battery.,." Or. if they opt fora lesser charge
It he used
physical force or violence not
Jlkclv lo cause personal Injury..." In the
second example, the word physical" was
omitted — thus reading: "...force or violence
not likely lo cause personal Injury..."
Alter McGregor ordered the Jurors se­
questered In the deliberation room, he
appeared milted at the mistake and spent
about 40 minutes determining what to do
In discussions at the bench Plotnlck
argued Hint the trial was over and the

homeow ner In April complaining Upsala transfer station Monday
about the "pervasive'’ littering through Saturday but on those
In the Tuskawllla Hoad area and days they must compete for
elsewhere In the county.
space with commercial haulers.
A l f r e d G l r &lt;1a o f 1 0 8 0
Deputy Couim Administrator
chokceherry Drive wrote Sliirm Richard George told Mrs. Glenn
that the frosting of signs forbid­ that from his experience in
d in g litt e r in g a n d d o lin g Volusia Courtly where he was
penalties for conviction might employed prior to being hired in
provide the impetus for citizens Seminole earlier this year pro
not to litter and for law rn- t id in g free dum p sites for
lurcement olllcrrs to ajrprehend garbage und trash disposal
those that are observed litter­ doesn't deter lllnrers He said
ing."
that generally lltle re rs a rr
Commissioner Sandra Glenn persons who do not have paid
said a way to stop the littering garbage service.
practice might be to provide an
C o u n ty Adm inistrator K m
incentive for people to lakr ibrlr
Hooper
said even mandatory
g a rb a ge and tra s h to the
Sanlando transfer station and garbage pickup doesn't neers
,-virllv mean lltlrring will stop
the Osceola hmdlill near Oviedo
on Sundays by charging no frc.
. Commissioner Fred Streelman
l ire fee now Is 82 and the two wondered If posting certain
I.n tittles arc o|&gt;&lt; it on Sunday areas against littering might
exclusively for residents Resi­ mean the lack of a sign would be
dents can also take their refuse an invitation to dump.
to those facilities and lo the
— Donna Eatea

&lt;ustody of sticrllFs deputies at
the Seminole County Sheriff's
Department for questioning al
a im tit 7 :3 0 u .m . to ld in vcsllgnllors Bonner had pkkrd
him up In front of the Hoohy
t rap topless bar on Lee Hoad In
Winter Park. Leman said.
Hollins claims lie was picked
tip at about midnight und rode
around with Bonner for four lo
(t vc h o u rs , w e n p a s s in g
Bonner’s house once, before the
trouble begun. Leman said. Ac­
cording to Hollins Bonner had
promised to lake lum to some
lia rs , hut t.e m a n said In ­
vestigators don't know where
the men might have been He
added that they had upjrurrnlly

lor centralized
t ill I Hv

jnirchaslng for

Terry also recommended dial
the data pnecsAIng equlpmeri:
nou lit use tre upgraited al a rust
of
8 2 5 .0 0 0
T h e proposed
system would provide the ettv
planner the capability ol root'
ii....... rating by computet* with
die University ol ren t rat Florida
data Irase
AI sir dine unwed w i l l I tie
100.000 gallons jrer day Skylark
s e w a g e ire a I m e n t p la n t
expansion estimated to cost
8050.000 including engineering
lees and contingency funds
Weeks lx recommending an in­
ti ease In monthly sewage rates
Had the budget been trased on
the requests by department
lie.ids It w ould huve been
84.249.386. according lo Hurl
department's budget request.
Weeks said lie t til a lot of their
R rro m m ended lot construe- requests and there were no
hidden" funds and the pro
itou In tire com ing fiscal year Is a
new jailtce cuiiipicx to be built [rosed budget Is light " It may
on d l y - o w n c d pr oper t y on lace quite a lew more cuts trelore
Jessup Avenue at an estimated getting Hie final stamp of up
(list ol $H(X).0O0 I lte llnantr provai Irom the commission
t in Idea nf a lax Increase got
dlrrelm Is tiivesligallng several
mixed reviews Irom the com­
itindlng alternatives
mission with outx twit rtf ttie five
Maiming told the commission
ers he will tre siilaiillllng (lie nllli tals actually favoring an
names ol several architectural increase.
Mv glut I* to keep Ilte mtllagr
Urals next ino n ih Irom whlcti lo
choose an art liitcci lor tltr iprojierty tax raiei the same."

Contlnueu from page (A
erx will not pay tin lute rest.
Weeks said
(iiitiinissloneis agreed they
wanted t|tc wait i and sewer
systems to be sell snp|M&gt;rllng
and asked Weeks to draw up a
rate schedule to assure Ibis
Other city funds anti their
proposed budget projections (thc
tlisi tlgiirr is tor this lineal year,
the second lor Ihe coming llseal
vearl Includ e the Cemetery
Fund $11.998 82 900 (there
w t ie s e v e r a l e q u ip m e n t
pun buses this llseal year that
won’I I h- nccrsM.tr&gt; next year,
hence ilte rlrasili m l m l ion In
atitli'liuiied expenditures). Se­
ttlor Citizen Fund so 8 1 raHr
It hr re was nothing budgeted lu
this account lids list al vearl

pro (rosed complex In addlOorr to
the new building tour additional
vehicles at n combined cost of
840.000 and a satellite receiver
at 83,400 are rccoinntritded as
capital e xpe n d iture s tor the
police department
Purchase ot two vehicles lor
itu Building Department was
rre o n in te n d e d at a east ol
818. 300. Rescue equipm ent
co stin g 8 8 .0 0 0 w a s re co m ­
mended lor the Fire Depamnenl
T h e Ftre Departm ent has a
897.032 debt service ta fund
repaymentsof three Ilte tracks
Terry recoin me tided Out the
F i n a n c e D e p a r t m e n t Ire
r e o r g a n i z e d to i n c l u d e
s u p e r v is io n o l Wa t e r . A d
■tlliiRtatlun, all Ultiltx hilling
and data processing and Plunnlug Zoning and Botldmg dcpattments lx- combined under
Hit s u p e iv ls ln u o| ilte c llv
engineer T h e addition of a
trover tor Fhiuru c was recorumended lo jrrovtrli Itu- capability

verdict In. H r said the question brought up
during Informal discussion alter ihe trial
had no Impart on the case.
"I realize that.* McGregor said Indicating
he could not Ignore 1he error.
"I've got lo deal with It... The question Is
what procedure." he said.
Th e Jury foreman said bclore they were
sequrstrred that the exclusion of Ihe word
physical ma\ have affecled ihrtr delibera­
tion because they discussed .it length the
physical force used In the act
McGregor thru sent a corrected verdict
form Into the jury and they returned a
second guilty verdict In less than an hour,
I'loinlck said
Plotnlck said
McGregor
bent over
backwards to be la ir." to all parties
concerned In ih r » ase,
Brundldge, In a bolding cell during the
development, was arrested Feb 3 by
Sanford police alter a 25-year-old woman
sold hr beat and raped her In a ditch while
he was walking her home around I a m .
Two boys heard her screams and got an
older man who ran lo the scene, broke up
ihc assault, and then followed Ihc coiijdr
until [roltrc arrived

not stop|M-d at any liars
Hollins claimed as they rode
l i ii hi S t a t e R oad 4 3 4 In
Long wood onto Wrklva Springs
Hoad. Bonner, while driving,
reached over the back ol the
Irontscat and began m aking
sexual advances which he re­
sisted. Leman said
Bonner claims he was shot
d u r in g u robbery a tte m p t,
la-man said.
Th e ease has hern turned over
to sheriffs Investigator Terry

Huffman.
Damage to the National rental
car Is estimated at $ 1,0 0 0 .
Leman said, and a 12 foot sec­
tion ol the fence al the condo
entrance was destroyed
Mayor Harvey Smcrllson said "I
think we should make lire users
pay and keep trie burden oil the
property owner* Our lax base
lias Increased and also the vatu
allort."
l . m i g w i K i d showed Ihr highest
i.it* ol growth to iln lax base ol
tin seven cities in the county
over the past year, according to
t omit v Property Appraiser Hill
Sober The taxable value ol
projrcrly within Ihe city rose
nearly 23 [rereent from 8238 2
million to 5300.5 million, un
increase ol 834 million
At thlsjKilnt Commissioner
June Lormann said. "I think we
cun keep the millagr where It's
al
Deputy MayorGommlsstoner
Larry Goldberg said he is re­
serving Iris opinion on whether
the increase Is needed until the
cnmrnlsalon gets lurthcr into ihc
Irudget. "Thrre're a lot of dollars
not In Ihe projrer place and a lol
ol places where *ids can be
made," he said
Commissioner I’rrrv Faulkner
-slid he was In agreement that a
lax increase Is needed "We have
to build u surplus loud so we
won’t have to run to (he bank
every time we have u major
breakdown of equipment or
Vehicles." he said "If we have
to we can raise (tie rale for the

...County
Continued from page 1A
to Ik transported into ilte center, creating Iratllc
problems tn their neighborhood*
However, when a sign of »uppuri for the center
w a s i cquested Irom Ihr audience the hands of
more than 20 jicopli- s h u t up
\tter the commissioners voted to uphold the
Hoard ol Adjustment tun to modify Its decision,
i tic supporters burst into applause
( ommtssloner Hill Klrrhholl who represents
the Paula area, assured Louise LuPrlers and
!te» k\ Hopkins, the planned ojieratoni of the
t enter, that if tht-v llnd a need to expand the
*i titer to IV lch lld rrn ibev may request anolher
modification.
V idor Hlehberg representing the two women,
showed commissioners during tie hearing a list
•l l » t.unillcN with 69 children in the nearby
Wilson School District who are on a watting list

Explosions
Kill 1, Sink
Activists' Ship
AUCKLAND. Nrw Zealand
lUPIl — T w in explosions —
"sabotage, murder nr terrorIsm" — sank the flagship of
the Greenpeace antinuclear
n io i T t n e n i . k i l l i n g one
crewmen, police said today.
"This could possibly be the
Itrsi example of International
terrorism lit New Zealand."
D rle ctlve C h ie f S u p e rin ­
tendent Alun Galbraith said
Two explosions late Wed­
nesday lore a hole In the hull
of the 160-loot Rainbow War­
rior. sending It lo the bottom
ol Auckland llartior and kill­
ing Fernando Pereira. 33. a
Greenpeace photographer
Irom Portugal.
"The explosions, Iwo of
them, blew an 8 -fnot hole In
the hull on the Icvrl of the
engine room.” Galbraith said
T h e e x [&gt; 1os 1on s w ere
possibly sabotage. possibly
murder, or possibly lerror

Ism."
A Greenpeace s[Mikesntan In
laindon said Pereira was the
tlrst Greenpeace member
killed during a Greenpeace
mission since ihe untl-mirlrar
and environmental group was
lortnrd In Canada In 1971.
The organization Is dedicated
to using confrontation tech­
niques to save endangered sea
creatures and prevent nuclear
testing

long range bcru-lii nl the ctlv I
Hunk all Hie uillillcs should pay
lor themselves and would like lo
set titles high enough to do tills
The city's going lo grow and we
have to manage growth and
ensure p r o p e r lutids to do It ."
( ’oniinlssiooer Ed Myers said
Ik dunks die lax Increase Is *
needed, tint also Hunks die city
could get money elsewhere "A
good percentage ot the people
are not [raying anything Irecauxe
ol ttic homestead exemption."
Myers said. "W e should raise the
water rales and taxes on tele­
phone and eleetrl* tty. We're the
•heajrest city around lur water
rates and always have liectl We
are going lo make a lol ol
progress this year with three
professional people on slaff.
They will make the city money.
W r have drainage problems we
didn't address last year and
we've been fortunate not to have
had major flooding *'
The jirojrosed Irudget Includes
up In c re a s e of fo u r c ity
employees, which will Increase
the total work force from 112 to
I 16 full-time workers Th rsr
un hide a buyer lor the Finance
Department, two puirolmen for
ihe Poller Department and a
cashier for the W ater A d ­
ministration.

'or admission to tlie* day care center us well as a
list ol 12 other mother* with 19 more children
who drive by ih* locution to wink each day from
ootsldr (h r area and are also watting tor Ilte
(enter's ronstniction and opening
Klrhberg said all those opposing the center's
construction and opening live In Hit- Center Street
area and since the entrance und exit to the lacilliy
will be from Wayside Drive, none of Ih r traffic
should In- going down ttu-lr street.
Since the tract Is already zoned commercial an
auto body shop could Ire constructed there tinder
die law. Hlehberg said
One of tire opponents countered that there
would be less trallte generated bv a body shop
than a day care center
The commission krpt in rtlret the [Motion of the
adjustment board's decision requiring the dona,
lion from the two women of additional rtght-ofwuv on both Wayside Drtv&lt; ami Orange
Itoolevurd and their agreement to relinquish u
special exception they received earlier for a day
- arr ( enter on Wilson School Road
Thai special excr pi ton permitted a facility large
•iiough for only 50 children

�PEOPLE

Evening Herald. V»n*or&lt;J. FI.

Thursday. J u ly I I . IffS __IB

Toastmaster
Guest Speaker
A t Graduation
Leigh Gorton, a member of
S a nIor d G a y br enkr rs
Toastmasters, is the district
winner of the Humorous Speech
Contest where she competed
against veteran aprakcre from a
five county area.
Ms Gortun was recently the
guest speaker at a Speech Craft
G r a d u a tio n C e re m o n y for
Daylonu Beach Toastmasters.
Her speech concentrated on
communication Ups and huw to
lx- an effective speaker.

Regent; Irene M ille r, Junior Graduate
Regent; and Sandy Moore, chaplain. Back
rr
ne Williams, left, treasurer; and
'Kjards,
.•lot Regent.

Woman Wants To Return
Sailor's Bracelet To Family
D E A R A B B Y : Thanks to your
column In the Fresno Bee. I
became aware I hat you were
able to help an American soldier
return thr Identification papers
lakrn from the body of a (lead
German soldier during World
War II Perhaps you can solve a
similar dilemma of 41 years'
standing.
I would like to return a sterling
sliver ID bracelet lo the family of
a young sailer whose liody my
liuslmnd helped lo prepare lor
burial at Naval Base Hospital No.
IH on Guam in 1944. The
b ia c rle l w as e n g r a v e d "M ic h a e l

11ml/v land Ills serial number)
33773514."
Sometime later, my hosbund
was horrified lo find Ills IG
bracelet In his jumper pocket
where he must have dropjied It
In order to free his hands for
other things, lie was afraid lo
turn II In lor (ear of being
nccusrd of thell. as he truly
didn't remember putting It In his
pocket. He kept It all these years
hoping that somehow, someday
he could return It to the boy's
family.
Through the years I have
written to the Veterans Ad­
ministration and the Department of Records In Washington,
asking for the boy's address
through u G I. Insurance policy
— anything — but my letters
were never answered
Not long before my husband's
death In 1978. he mentioned
again his desire to return this
bracelet, feeling It must mean
something to someone, some­
where.

Dear
Abby
I still have It. Can you help me
return II to the family of Michael
Hudcy?
I'm signing my name and
address. Please contact me If you
hear from his family and I will
send It to them.
M R S. J.P .W ..
FR ES N O . C A L IF .
DEAR MRS. J.P.Wi It's a long
shot, but If I hear from the
sailor's family. I will put them In
touch with you Bless you far
your perseverance.
D E A R A B B Y : In Jnnuury. I
sent an original manuscript as a
gill lo Woody Allen. I had
hand-lKiund the pages, und deccrated the hlrdlng with baroque
licarls and amethyst. I enclosed
m y name, address and telephone
n u m b e r. I had hoped that
Woody would either send me a
note or call me. or at the very
least, instruct his secretary to do
so.
To date. I haven't received
even un acknowledgement that
my gift was received. Abby. Is It
unrealistic of me to expect a
t h a n k -y o u Iro m a la m o u s
person?
DISAPPOINTED
IN CALIFORNIA

Leigh Dorton
The Sanford Toastmasters
meet every Tuesday at 7:15 a.m
In the tuck of Christo's Hcstaurant on First Street III Sanford
The public is invited to come
and observe and or participate.
Ms Hughes so vs

Photo Contest Winners

Women O f The Moose Officers
Sanford Chapter U04, Women of the Moose,
began a new season on July 1 under a new
slate of officers The newly Installed officers
are. front row. trom left: Ruth Smith,
Recorder; Johnnie Mae Robinson, Senior

Toastmasters is an Interna­
tional program that teaches such
communication techniques as
body language, speech organisa­
tion. and voice control, even to
people who don't plan to become
public speakers
A ccording to Toastm aster
Barbara Hughes.
Most people
who guln self confidence in
speaking before an audience,
both In prepared and Impromptu
talks, will radiate thui con­
fidence in every situation "

T h r Junior Woman's Club ol Sanford Inc. Is
.uinuunrlng I hr winners kmI.iv In the Children's*
I'hoio Contest the club sponsored to lieneflt an
A rts S c h o la rs h ip . A ccordin g to a club
H|Mikrsnian. Honda Baudcr. 18 children entered
the contest
The three top winners arc: Joshua Foggm.
Sanlyrd. age 0 1 category; Kindle Madorr.

Gainesville, age 2-3 category; and Kcgun
Ledford Ajxipk.i age S tic.itcgr.rThe winners received first place certificates
and gilts donated by Knights Shoe Store. Gills
b\ Nan. and Wee Kids Fashions, all Sanford
businesses, and Hurger Kingol (Y n ir.il Florida
The Arts Scholarship will be presented to a
deserving artist later In the year.

D E A R D IS A P P O IN T E D : The
recipients ol unsolicited materi­
als ure not required lo acknowl­
edge or return li. unless rrturn
(msiagr Is provided
Some famous people arc in­
structed hv then attorneys to
never acknowledge lor rcndl
unsolicited manuscripts, so even
though yours was elaborately
decorated, there's a gixxl chance
that Woody Allen didn't even see
ii

DEAR ABBY: I am writing for
ull the tea lovers and hope the
restaurant owners will take note.
Most restaurants olTer as many
refills a s a coffee drinker wishes,
but Just try to gel a refill for u
cup of hot tea — or glass of Iced
Ira — and see what happens.
The tea drtnkcr usually gets
one tea bag with his tea. and If
he wants to reuse the tea bug for
a second cup hr must ask for
more water, which he eventually
gets, but he can't exjiecl u
second lea hag at no charge. I
could tiring my owt lea bugs
and ask for water, but that
would look tacky
Maybe It's time for another
Boston Tea Party.
TEA LOVER
DEAR TEA LOVER: I think
your suggestion Is a good one.
and not at all "tacky." Since tea
bags take up practically no
space, carry a spare In your
purse or wallet.

Joshua Fo g gln

E m llie M adore

Regan Ledford

J A Y ’S

H A IR S TY L IN G

DEM

S P E C IA LS

Phil Pastoret

c ° u r,

E x p ir e * 7 -1 B BS

Youngsters who write neatly on the
blackboard can look forward lo
chalking menus on slates In fancy
restaurants

SHAMPOO
g Ml
atiAtoa
TOUCH ur

1

coaeun

A ro n 'e m p la llv e look ra n register
deep thougkl It ..an a lto m lrro .
doubts about taking that th ird helping
ol oysters on the haft shell.

cam

f

I

'

rm

CUIUS
CHILDMN UNOCR tO ftO O
12 iip im s aa -as J U
sinio « cituins
SS AND OlDta

3 2 3 -5 2 2 7
Electronic roulette Placing ill
your microchips on one number to
win the market

Walk Ins Al ways Welcome

FULL SERVICE SALON
272F Hwy. 17-W

C e n te rM a lL S a n fo rd

Kramer Open House
M r s . M e t a K r a m e r of
Casselberry will be honored at
open house by her daughters.
June Nelson and Meta Burgess,
on her 80th birthday. Sunday.
July 14 at the Central Florida

Zoo In Sanford.

M

Friends and relatives are In­
vited to rail and help Mra.
Krameer eelebratr during the
appointed hours. 1 to 5 p m.

▼

/

m

o

m

20% to 50% O FF
A LL SU M M ER FA S H IO N S

K N IG H T ’S

• D R E SSES • S H O R T S • S LA C K S
• S P LIT SK IR TS • S W IM h U ITS

•HOE
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SEMI-ANNUAL

SHOE SALE
W e ’ re
H o ld in g
Down
H ig h
P r ic e s
SAVE

•
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•
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Jockey • Norman
Gold Cup • Stetson
Norman • Duck Head

Arrow

Find Sired

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7 5 % OFF On

Further
■educed Shoes For
M IN . WOMIN A CHILDMN

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�'H u m p

IB—Evening H«r*ld, Sanford, FI

BLONDIE

Thurtday, July II, 1WS

by Chic Young
/.-**&gt; E fiio v a

**•

The Cracks About
Knuckles; No Harm Done
S to p

DEAR DR. G O T T — My son
has a habit of cracking his
knuckles, finger by finger. I keep .
telling him he's going to have
big ugly knuckles If he continues
this, but he says that's an old
wives* tale. Is there anything
w ro n g w ith crack in g y o u r
knuckles, aside from the an­
noyance factor?
DEAH READER - I am certain
by
Mort
Walker
BEETLE BAILEY
lhat your comments reflect the
concerns of generations of
b e e t l e , vo u ve
women whose sons cracked their
GIVEN WE TROUBLE
knuckles. As far as I know,
FROM THE MOMENT
knuckle-cracking does not cause
YOU JOiNEP THE
any long term harm The major
ARMY
problem Is the perception your
son may have thal you are
nagging him. I have yet to meet
a young man who is the slightest
bit concerned about having big
knuckles, and nothing you — or
I — say will make the slightest
difference. I suggest you drop
the subject and concentrate on
1 . z.r_ — flu a s n &lt;a i. i . i
more german" Issues If you are
by Art Saniom going to go down In history as a
THE BORN LOSER
"k n u c k le -n a g g e r." you w ill
I')
probably better expend your
HDUHOLCHfcfL Hm KLEFTC**AWU^ / l TJUno LOWfcEK HAVE KLEFlUVWiA:) / H0U MO
energy emphasizing more Im ­
—^TEUttWSlK,
--------- "
portant Issues.
&amp;&gt; ^r4v
D EA R DR. G O T T My
nephew came down with severe
— i
Intestinal pain when he was 13
and It was diagnosed as Crohn's
disease. He had three attacks
( " \\
w gM
/ since then and long periods of
\
j
V/fc
/
remission. He’s now 18 and
J \
healthy In every respect, except
^
lhat he's held steady at 5 feet 6
I'D W
v ' * 1^
W
■
^
w - ••
'*■
^
for the past two years. (His
by Bob Montana younger brother Is 6 feel 2.) Is
ARCHIE
tills I he end of his growth?
DEAR HEADER - lly 18. most
r . - W E W A TC H TH E
TH EN IT 'S A G R E E P .'
M U S IC A L C O M Z O Y
adolescents have reached their
TH E R E W ILL B E N O
A M I N O T T H E S E N IO R
[ O N C H A N N E L F I V E .'
Q U E S T IO N IMG M Y
adult height; the bone-growth
O F F IC IA L IN C U A « 3 e
A U TH O R iry."
O F T H IS C A M P f
plates have closed. Your nephew
Is unlikely to exceed hLs present
5 feet 6 . Although he may wish
S o u AtfE,
tri lx- taller, he Is going to have to
MR
W EATM ER3CC
accept his present stature. I am
t
sure thal you and his family
appreciate the blessing of his
good health, he seems lo be
handling a chronic intestinal
disorder very well. That Is Im ­
mensely lo his credit.
DEAR DR. G O T T - My hands
by
Howl#
Schneider
EEK &amp; MEEK
gel quite cold, sometimes even
In heated apurlm rnts or In
MACHO PDSTL'RikJG
E D 'C X ^ C K w
H M K M ItP
ARE. PRIVILEGED TOIW
moderate weal her Aside from
DEPftPTMEUT ..
With us this ftm?kjoou . THE. A&amp;tSTAIOTSECRETARYOf
causing other people discomfort
when I shake hands. Is (here any
D E F E N S E ...
health danger In having cold
DEAR READER — There Is no
danger In having cold hands
unless this reflects an undrrly-

ing disease. If the circulation to
your fingers Is really diminished,
tissue damage can result. I
suggest you have a medical
examination to make sure that
you don't have a form of arterial
spasm.
DEAR DR. G O T T Why do
some people have bad breath?
My uncle la the most meticulous
man; he brushes and flosses
iwlce a day and doesn't drink or
smoke, yet his breath Is power­
ful.
DEAR READER Halitosis
may result from a variety of

ACROSS
1 Co&lt;i«S«
I«bbr)
4 Mttncil U n it
9 Court ettt
10 Orumliks

13 ’ Auk) Ung
14 Srllk up
19 Compitt point
15 Sotli (&lt;«■

t 7 Got! 10 court
16
10
23
26
30

Engltth rt»#i
Corn lily
Molt unusutl
VoluntMr
PorUinmg to
down
31 Loud noiM

33 601, Rocrsn
34 Com poll point
35 PMippino no
tivt
36 Ignobl*
37 Mutcl* port
39 Stocking!
41 Roms’ mstoi
43 Stock gold
44 Mop
47 Doctrine
19 Elociricol
unit
52 Abi« to bo
o n mi not)
55 Ifith writing
56 6!onch
57 Sond
hill
58 Indion woor
59 Homan Uorun

diseases that affect the liver or
kidneys. It can be related to diet,
particularly lo certain foods that
con lain spices. It also can result
from dental disease, especially
infected teetn or gums. Your
uncle needs a thorough checkup
and. If he Is medically well, his
dentist should be consulted.

Answer to Previous Pul lie

8 Location

9 Com poll point
10 Moo
tung
11 Abominable
snowmen
12 These |Fr|
16 Thing in tew
19 Poebc
connection
21 Noble gas
22 Participle end
mg
23 Let
24 First rats |2
wdsl
25 Cut of beef
(comp wd |
27 Theorist
28 Read
29 Cans
32 Pertaining to
lu f f )
35 Cut the lawn
36 1051. Roman
38 One who owel

40 Day |Hebr |
42 Sediment
44 Female eemt

(•bbr|
45 Antiprohibition

lets
46 Huge continent
46 View

DOWN
1 Purchases
2 Made into thin
wire (como
wd |
3 Broke bread
4 Little devil
5 Accountant
(abbr j
6 Of the tool
7 Sloth

W IN AT BRIDGE
By
by Hargraavaa A Sailers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Warnar Brothara

BUGS BUNNY
1 &amp;MJ0V

p l a n in g

-

with diced cacpqts.

J im e i

Jacoby

In developing tricks lo inukr
your contract, you Instinctively
look to your long nulls By all
means, keep doing lhat: lt‘s good
bridge ilul remember, there are
.exceptions to every rule, so don't
I k - surprised lo see an occasional
de il where the right approach Is
lu go alter your shortest suit
Like right now.
Declarer won ihc opening lead
with dum m y's spade king uml
(pile kly tried Ihree rounds ol
clubs. When lhat aull lallrd lo
split, he went after diamonds! No
luck I here either
Now he finally played u heart
West w'ott the king, cashed the
diamond Jack, and played a
second s|wde When West got In

50 — Christian
Andersen
51 Madame (sbbr)
53 Son-in-law of
Mohsmmed
54 Stockings |Fr)
55 Hernm
room

with the heart ucr. two more
spade tricks set the contract.
Il Is safe lor declarer to play a
heart at trick two West will win
ynd play a second spade Should
East show out on that second
spade, declarer would have
choices. Hut when East follows,
the contract Is assured simply by
playing a second heart
If East did show mil on the
second spade, declarer should
then play out both minor suits In
the hope lhat one of them or
iKith would split evenly. If nei­
ther minor null spills. It Is
(K t s s lb lr that the second high
heart Is with Easl
If so. nine I ricks would still br
avallahle since East has no
spade left to lead.

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FRANK AND ERNEST
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INP^NTATION °N T H f
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by Jim Davis

GARFIELD

Y O U R B IR TH D A Y
j u l y ia . is a s
Persistence and determination
will he called lor to gain all the
rewards you'll be capable of
achieving In the year ahead.
Keep your shoulder to the wheel
lo be victorious
C A N C E R (June 21-July 22l
T o d a y , try not to let your
pleasurable Involvements drtrad from lime and a l lent ion
that should be given to more
serious Issues. Major changes
are ahead for Cancers In the
com ing year. Send for you
Astro-Graph predictions today.
Mall $1 to Astro Graph. Box 489.
Radio City Station. New York.
NY 10019. De sure lo stale your
zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) tm
p o rta n t o b je ctive s ca n br
achieved today, but not without
u struggle. If you really want
something, you must be pre-

ANNIE

pared lo go all out
harm ony. Ik- the one to suggest a
V IR O O (A ug 23 Sept. 22) compromise.
When conversing with friends
A Q U A R IU S (Jan 20 Feb. I9|
today, think before you speak or A way can now Ik- found lo get
you might let something slip out something you want that Isn't,
thal will Ik- difficult lo retract.
for you alone. Your desire will be
LIBRA (Sept 230ct 23) An to share It with those you love.
enterprise In which you're In­
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
volved may require more re­ Use a lesson learned from an
sources than you have at your unpleasant past experience to
disposal. Seek a wealthy ally.
yo u r advantage today. Th e
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22| A iK-nefltscould br substantial.
situation that you're negatively
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 191 A
anticipating Is going to work far financial situation In which
better than you think. Someone you're presently Involved has
who likes you will see lhat It more potential than early signals
does.
Indicated. Don’t write II off yet.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) If
211 A responsibility with which you encounter opposition today,
you'rr presently burdened will don't attempt lo meet It head on.
pass from your hands. Make You'll have better success If you
certain thut you don't put leave yourself ample room to
yourself In the same position maneuver.
again.
OEM INI (May 21 Jun e 20)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan
Today your Initial tendencies
19) There's a possibility today may tempt you to do things the
(hat your views will be In hard way. T r y to be more
opposition to those of some Imaginative and look for the
friends of yours. To restore lines of least resistance.

by Leonard Slarr

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

T H A T * A C TO R fc-W L K l A H SH O W
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Thuraday. July 11. IftS —)B

C o n c e rts E x p e c te d To D r a w R ecord A u d ie n c e , R aise M illio n s
By Frank Spot alts
United Press International
t The Live Aid rock concerts In London and
Philadelphia this Saturday could raise $50
million for African famine relief In a single day.
while at the same time attracting one of the
largest television audiences In history.
Some of the top acts In rock music — from Mick
dagger. Paul McCartney. Dob Dylan and the Who
to David Howie. Madonna, the Cant. Hall and
Oates, and Tina Turner — will appear during the
shows
The entire concert, scheduled to start at 7 a.m.
In London s Wembley Stadium and end at I I
p m. at J F K Stadium In Philadelphia, will be
carried live on M TV. the cable music stal ion.
Concert highlights will be broadcast on A BC -TV
from 8 to 11 p.m. More than 100 radio stations
and 105 television stations have arranged to
carry all or most of the Philadelphia concert
before the ABC broadcast begins.
The producer. Worldwide Sports and Enter­
tainment. said as many as 350 million house­
holds around the globe may tunc In to the
concerts, which would tie the vlewershlp of the
current recordholder — the 1982 World Soccer
Cup
Concert audiences will not see famine pictures
from Ethiopia or the Sudan, but hourly ‘'Inspira­
tional messages" from the likes of Jim m y Carter.
Bishop Desmond Tutu. Carl Sagan. Geraldine

Ferraro and others will urge people to make
donations. There also may be taped messages
from President Reagan. Po,e John Paul II and
urltish Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
The project Is the brainchild of Hob Geldof. the
rock m usician w ho triggered the charity
superstar recordings with the British single "Do
They Know It's Christmas?"
The British musicians he assembled for that
song, calling themselves Band Aid. Inspired
Harry Delafonte and manager Ken Kragen to form
USA For Africa, whose "We Are the World"
record and merchandising Is expected to raise
$45 million.
Even that figure which Is four times what Band
Aid's record generated. roulJ be surpassed In a
single day by money generated by the Live Aid
shows from broadcast rig h ts , co rpo rate
sponsorship, ticket sales and telethons In two
dozen countries.
Geldof. who considers enterlalnment an ironic
way of raising funds for famine, expects the
shows to raise from $ 12 million to $50 million.
Belafonte's original Idea had been to stage a
superstar benefit concert, but he and Kragen
nixed the Idea — considering the financial failure
ol such events as 1972's Concert lor Bangladesh
and the US Festivals In California
Geldof secs Live Aid as the logical culmination
of the relief efforts "Th e good thing about the
Band Aid projects — I Include USA For Africa and

Nude M adonna Playboy
To Be On Stands Tuesday

M adonna
the pictures wrre ol Madonna
alone, fully nude, very explicit
with everything In full view "
The photos have been dis­
played In a gallery, but have
never been published In a maga­
zine. Gucclone said

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S U N D A Y . J U L Y 14

Mull Dog Drrhv sponsored Its
A1 1un ion t e - Sou I li Se mi n o l e
Jaycees and W ill/ Radio. Supei
Seminole Greyhound Park al
2 0 0 0 Sem tnola llo u lc v o rd
Cassell&gt;rrry Reglsirallon lM-gins
at IO a m., ruces at I p.m To
pre-reglstrr call Cathy Cold at
E n tr y fee *t&gt;
LongwiKMl A A . 8 p.m .. Rolling 834* 10 7 h
Proceeds In
Hills Moravian C h u rch . SR 434. spectators. $t
Longwood. Alunon, snmr tltnr Hum ane Sw leiy of Seminole
und place.
Tunglewood A A . 8 p.m .. Si.
H lch u rd 'n Kplneoput C h u rch ,
laike Howell Road. Alunon. same
lime and place.
Sanford A A Step. 8 p.m .. 1201
W First St.. Sanford.

SATURDAY. JULY 13
Eust-Wesl Klwanls Club. 8
u m . Alrjxirt Restaurant. Sanford
Florida Antiquarian
Booksellers Association hook
auction. 11 a.m.. Old Seaboard
Coastline Railroad. Alexundrr

and .Third

Y in -r is .

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Dora

Previ ew. IO a . m . Open lo
IsMiksellers. collectors and Ihe
public
Metal Mania Cosmic Concert
Iraturlng Heavy Mrtal music.

County.

Sanlord Big Book AA . 7 p ut.,
open dtscusslon. Klorltln l*owrr
and Llglil htilltllng. N Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.
Alunon meeting. 8 p.m , 1201
w. First S t Sanford
M O N D A Y. J U L Y IS
Cenlrul Florida BIinx I I Link
Sernlnolc County Branch. 1302
E Second Si.. Sanford. 9 u.m lo
5 p . m . : Fl or i da Ho s p i i . i l
Allam onlr Branch. IX)I E Alla
monte Ave..Hu.ni l o 5 p m
Hi I n i s ('lull AA. iiimh ) and r&gt; 30
p.m , closed. 8 p m . step. 130
Normandy Hoad. Casselhertv
Clean Air Helms al noon, closed
Ovrrealers Anonymous, 7 30
p ill . West Lake Hospital, slate
Road 434. l.ougwiMid

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l aser vi sual s, and c u s t o m
artwork. 9 anil IO p m John
Y o u n g Planetarium. 8 IO E
Rol l i ns Si at the O rla n d o
Science Center Something in
the Air featuring Phil Collins and
Genesis al 11 p in Admission Is
$'2 50 |H-r show
Casselln-rry AA Step. 8 p to
Ascension Lutheran Church.
Overbrook Drive
Reims und Live Oak AA. nimn.
Reims C lu b . 130 Nurm anilv
Road. Casselberry (closed)
Clean Air AA for non-smokers.
Itrst floor, same room, same
place und lime

12:30

0 05

*30
4 l OVt CONNECTION

436 at 434. Altamonte Springs
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls
Club. 7 a i t ) Alr|Mirt Restaurant.
Sanford.
O p t i m i s t C l u b of Sout h
Seminole. 7:30 a m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altntnnntr
Springs
Central Florida Blood Bank
Fl ori da II os pi t al - Al t amont e
Branch. 601 E Altamonte Ave .
D a m In 5 p m
Gentle Exercise (or seniors.
10 30 a m.. Cassell&gt;erry Senior
Center. 2(X) N Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry
H an d ica p Si ngl es Dance.
7 .3 0 -9 :3 0 p m
Westmonte
Park. Altainonn- Springs Ail
mission Is 35 cents For In
lormallon call Claudia Harris at
Westmonte Park. 862 &lt;X)90
Weklvu AA Inn smoklngl. 8
p rn . We k l v a Pr esbyt er i an
Church. SR 434. at Weklva
Springs Road. Closed

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1:30
JIO D S C T V

THURSDAY. JULY 1 1
Alzhclmrr's bup|xirt Group of
Sanford. 7 p.m.. second Th u rs ­
day of monll). Howell I’l.u r. 2(X)
W. A irp o rt B lvd .. Sanford.
I Speaker— Dr Roger Y. Murray
of Maitland. Sharing and hup|Mtrl
for families and health givers of
Alzheim er's Disease victims.
Call 3 2 1 &lt;Xi8b
Arthritis Sell help program
presented by West Volusia Hos­
pital. 7 p m . Wrsl Voluslu Medi­
cal Services Building. 1881 Pro­
vidence B lvd .. Deltona
Rheumatologist l)r Gary Sludek
will speak nutrition, weightconirnl and exercise Ui&gt;'**tlnn
and answer period
Sunshine Cloggera. Intermedi­
ate II ll-week session. 7 p.m.;
Advanced. 8 15 p m . Maitland
Civic Center. Call 695-8437 lor
Information
In te rn a tio n a l T ra in in g In
Com m unication Greater
S e m in o le C lu b ( pr ev i ousl y
Tonstinlstress). 7:30 p m . Alta­
monte Chapel Educuttnn Build­
ing on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
S a n fo rd J a y r e e a ge n e ra l
membership inerting. 7:30 p.m.,
J a y c e e b u i l d i n g . 3t h a n d
French. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 1201 W First Si..
5:30 p m ., closed discussion, and
8 p.m.. open, speaker
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed.
First United Methodist Church.
Ov* renters Anonymous, open.
7 30 p.m. Community United
Methodist C h u rc h . Hi ghway
17-92 onr half mile north of SR
436. Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m.
FRIDAY, JULY 12
Central Florida Klwanls Club.
7 30 u m . . Florida Federal
Savings and Loan. Slate IJoad

12:05

I BAAPtABY JONES
1M) WALT 0*rS
J ( tOlSISAMS STASST (A )g
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01 the 49 acts Initially scheduled In London and
Philadelphia, the only black artists werr David
Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks. Stevlr Wonder. Hilly
Ocean. Sadr, Joe Leeway of Thompson Twins
and Tony Thompson of Power Station.
Apparently to give grraicr balance to the roster,
the Four Tops. Teddv Pendergrass. Tina Turner.
Ashford and Simpson ami tin* rap group
Run-DMC subsequently were added. IStevIe
Wonder will not appear, rejmrtedly because ol
prior commitments |

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Some critics contend celebrities are becoming
Involved In the efTort to advance their own
careers. And Live Aid has been accused of
ignoring black artists, whose music has more
rclrvancc to the tragedy In Africa. In favor of
more commercial white acts.
When the Live Aid shows werr announced In
June 10. Geldof and American promoter Bill
Graham said they asked "every major l lack
artist" to participate — Including Michael
Jackson. Prince and Rav Charles

Each act will perform nboui 20 minutes
Comedians such as Chevy Chase. Joe Piscopo
and Robert Guillaume will appear between sets A
mass finale Is In the works
The three-hour ABC special will lie hosted try
Dick Clark Hosts for those watching the
proceedings on local T V stations and overseas
will be Sheena Easton. Kenny Logglns. Melissa
Manchester. Bette Midler. Randv Newman and
Grace Slick
Television viewers undoubtedly will have a
iN-tter view ol whai Is happening In Phlldrlphi.t
i ban the 90,000 people In J F K Stadium
Gene Weed, dlrrcilng the ABC broadcast, said
he would tie using five or six cameras and a
Skvcaui In addition n&gt; a- many as la cameramen
Mining the musical prrlnrntancrx
“ I think I have heard Hie word 'awesome
overused In every situation until I encountered
this one." he said "It's the biggest gathering ol
music people In Ihe world for one milled cause
Scenes from smaller concerts across the globe
will appear on U S television screens. In
Australia. Men at Work. INXSand the Little River
Hand will perform at the Sydney Entertainment
Center Other bands will take the stage In Japan.
Holland and Germain
Geldof said no Mims or television specials are
planned with the hundreds of hours of videotape
that will lie left over after Salttrdav's shows
although ABC sold all of It will t&gt;c saved

CALENDAR

CH IC AG O (UPII - Fans will be
able to see nude photos of
Madonna, the rock singer known
for songs Including "L ik e a
Virgin." In Playboy's September

F rle d la n d c r and M artin H.
Schrelber when Madonna was
working as a nude model In New
York In 1979 and 1980
Playboy would not disclose the
I s s u e t h a t goes on t h e amount paid for the photos or
newsstands Tuesday, the maga­ the source.
zine says
P la y b o y said It and not
That means the magazine w ill, Penthouse was offered first
beat Penthouse to the public ch o ice of th e p ic tu re s of
w ith nude pictures of the Madonna, who skyrocketed to
songstress.
lame with her "Like a Virgin"
P enthouse p u b lish e r Bob album.
In New York. Gucclone said he
Gucclone announced earlier this
week his magazine had obtained does not care who first prints
nude photos of Madonna und nude photographs of Madonna
w ould pub lish them “ ve ry l&gt;ccause he got the "cream of the
crop" and will go ahead with his
soon.”
Playboy said the pictures to be plans for a layout featuring the
featured on 14 pages were taken singer "very soon."
by p h o t o g r a p h e r s Lee
The Penthouse publisher said

all the global things — is that every event has to
be bigger to attract people. It's the glamour It s
aneasy way for people to help,"
Money raised Irom Llvr Aid will provide shelter,
clothing and "long term solutions " In Africa, he
said. Thusfar. funds from Band Aid and USA for
Africa primarily have been used to provide food
and medical supplies.

5.00
CL NSWVYYYfO GAMS
o TNASSB COMPANY
O i r r t MAKS A 0SAL
(44) 0 U K U OP NAZZAAO
o ( Wl W A O M AAWSOW

i

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4

_____

i

�4 B — E v e r t in g H e r a l d , S a n lo r d , F I ,

T h u r t d i y , Ju ly I I . 1 W J

Sanctions Debate
Growing Bitter

Legal Notice

J.egal Notice^

W A SH IN G TO N (U l'll - Scnale debate on
lni|KAlng Hiinrtlnna to protest South Africa's
pidict nt racial scparntkrfi Is grow ng deeply
|K-rsonal ami bliter over the larger Issues of
racism and anti-communism.
Sen. Alan Cranston, I&gt;-Cal!f.. who Just a day
-cmHer had hinted that "racist" motives had
prevented the legislation from coming to the
Senate floor. Wednesday ridiculed statements by
V n . .Jesse Helms K-N.C.. that sanctions would
throw black South Africans out of work.
Hr says It's the Soviet Union — not racist
apartheid — that Is causing the upheaval In
All It a." Cranston said of Helms. "Incredible."
Helms, who m a ile d he once Hied to block the
t iirler administration from withdrawing support
i ' while-ruled (Ut'vteslu. said later: "For my
i 'forts. I was hooted down as a racist.
I lie same hllsierlng rhetoric (Is) beard on the
Hour today from senators who ought to know
better, a senator who follows a [Killtlral line.
ip|K alhig for him- voles." he said.
I fi lms plans to push a delaying action lo
prevent full consideration of Ihr bill loday.
Agalnsl him are Sens. Kdward Kennedy. D-Mass .
mil howell Welcker. HConn., who are promising
•veil tougher penalties than the hill Includes
Helms Wetlnesday sought to delay the bill for
an agreement In which the harsher penalties are
dropped in exchange for allowing Ihe measure lo
•min op lor debate and a vote.
I hr hill would lm|M&gt;nr an Immediate bun on
b a n k loans lo South Africa, block the sale of
computer equipment ihal police might use to
Hack dissidents and bun the sale of nuclear
ter hnology lo Pretoria.
Kennedy and Welcker favor sanctions Included
In a hill the House passed last month — bans on
raw American business Investm ent In South
Ah lea and on Ihe sale of South African gold
Ki iiggri rands In Ihe United Slates.
Helms said he had heard "pious protests"
against apartheid and. while he opposes ihe
•■y inn of racial separation, the real question of
the debate Is ih e folly of undermining Ihe allies
ol Ihr llnllrd States "
Wc did II in Iran. Tills chamber used lo ting
with condemnation of Ihe shah. The shah wusn't
pcrfeii." Helms said "How many Americans
loil iv would he willing lo embrace the Ayatollah
HUiomtiiil) II Ihr option was lo bring I lie shah
Inn k?
"Who denies we need Ihe minerals of South
Air Ir .1. shipping lanes Ihul are vital to Ihe
commerce amt drlcnse of the free world?" he
aid "I guarantee the lellows In ih r Kremlin are
saying. i)K . hoys, we hope you go o n .'"
Cranston ridiculed Helms for saying the
s a n c t io n s will cost blacks Jobs and the Soviet
I itilnti K behind opposition in Ihe Pretoria regime.
U the senator I coin North Carolina had been In
lln Senate 122 years ago, he probably would
hovi opposed emancipation Irecause It would
iloow l million slaves out of work." Cranston
said,
II Hussla had Ircen communist 122 years ugtt.
ih&lt;- senator (rum North Curullnu would protiably
have accused the utroltUnnlHts of Ixing Soviet
agents." tie s a i d

A ID S
How The Virus Dodges
f ile Im m une System
lit&gt;SIO N |UPI| — Researchers have discovered
ihr mechanism by which the AID S virus
hint tin ults the human Immune system, scien­
tists announced today.
Hrceiil experiments indicate the AIDS virus
pievctils specific cells, called helper-inducer
I cells. I i o i i i rrs|Mindlng to evidence of Infection
and cancer In body Holds.
i h r work was conducted on eight people with
acqultrd Immune drtlcirncy sym hom r by scirntlsts at the National Institute ol Allergy and
lulerlluus Diseases
Such Instghl will he crtltcal In our attempts In
develop therapies Inr the progressive and fatal
Immune deficiency ol this syndrom e." the
it -catchers said In a rr|x»rt In ihe \ r w Kngfanif
.Jour rial o/ MctUcInr.
I luce major ellecls are a drastic reduction In
l l n n u m b e r ol lii-l|ter-lnciucer T cells, ihe rrsull*
log change III Ihr ratio ol llirsr cells lu other cells
uiqKithint lo the Inntumr system and lowered
Ms|MinslveiirHs ol ihese cells to dissolved an­
tigen*, which are chemical Imllcaiursnl a disease
on nslna.
Ills Uli haul Kallsh ami Smart Schlossman of
Haivanl Medical School said lu an accompanying
•dlloilal. "Tile aulhors have rightfully concluded
■hat Ibis sclri'tive Immunologic defer! may be
&lt;i mini lo the Initiation ol other Immunologle
iliircts that iM-eur lu patients with AIDS
In fact many ol Ihr inanllrslallons ol AIDS
i an now I k* umlriHiood as a consequence of Ihe
iiilermilon ol the (AIDSI virus with ltui|&gt;rr
inilticeil lymphucytes," they said
Di II (illlort! Lane. Ihe rr|Mirt'» primary
atilhoi. said "T h e critical Insull serins lu be ihr
Inability of the Immune system to recognize
soluble proteins ll Is essentially gone In all
pallenla aud it cunuol Im* restored try enriching
i hr number of cells It's more diabolical."
Ihe human iminuue system contains clieml
i als i ailed hrlpei -lndurrr molecules that inusl be
ptcsriil lo sllm ulalr helper Inducer cells lo start
itlar king Invading germs
I bis does not Immediately give us any bright
Ideas itl/oul how lo cure (he disease," said lame.
Si III the best approach In treatment Is the
cnnerit approach ol developing drugs lu In­
activate tin- AIDS virus m comblnallon with
I Hilling the Immune system.
However, this may give us tdrus how Ihe virus
titlarks Ihr system and pruvldr us ways tu tell
how M-vrrely Ihr system Is ullrcteil by the AIDS
vltus." he said

F l.-T !T | O U | M * M t
N ul.t# it hereby given !h#» we
»'• eng*ged in bird nets » l HO 0
S F r e n c h A v a ., S an fo rd .
Semtnoto County. Florid* 17O l
under the fictitious M m * ot CAS
O IS C O U N T A U T O PARTS. And
that we Inltnd to ngistor 14»d
nt- t wlt&gt;, tt Cltrlt ol IS*
Circuit Caw t, Seminole County.
Florid* In accordance writW to*
prov It iont Ol IS* Fictitious
N t r s S l i M n To w lt Section
MS 0* Florid* Statutes 1*0
/»/ Cl*o V Combi
/*/ Bonn!# J Combt
Publish July II. It. 7$ A Augutl
I. I S I
OEM 07

IN T M I C IB C U IT C O U S T.
IN A N O F O S
K M It tO L C C O U N TV ,
F L O S ID A
CASE NO O tit* F ' OOP
IN l i t . Th* Merriagior
O C N N IS JENKS,
P*t 11lon*r /Mutband
and
B A R ftA R A JE H K S .

BMponden1/W&lt;to

N O T IC E O F AC TIO N
TO B AB B AttA JEN KS
Add'ott unknown
YO U APE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that * Pollllon lor
OlttoluUon of M arrlagi Sot
bawn tiled against you. end mol
you or# required lo tervo o copy
ol your retpont* or pleading lo
Ibo Pollllon upon m# P itl
liorser t eltornoy. Thomas C
Green*. Poll ONICl Bor 11]
Venlwd. Florldo 17771. *nd in*
me original retpont* or pleed
ing lo m# ollke ol m* Clerk ol
the Clrcul* Court, Seminole
County Courthouse. Senlord.
Florid* 77771. on or before to#
I Ilfi day ot August, 1*41 II you
tell la do to, * defeull ludgmonl
will b* token egelntf you tor Its*
relief demanded in Its# Pelifton
O A T E D *1 Sen ford, Seminole
County, * lor id* mi* tm day of
July. IMS
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
C L E R K OF THE C IR C U IT
C O UR T
By /*/ Vicki L Bolrd
Deputy Clerk
Publish July O. II. IS. Augutl
I. IMS
o e h *&gt;

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T,
IN AND FOR
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
FL O R ID A
CASE NO U &gt;01) CA 04 E
I N R E i Th* M s m a g io l I t WIN
M AYM AN C A M P B E LL.
Petition*' /Husband.
and
JOE ANN C A M P B E LL.
Retpondanl'Wito
N O T IC E O F AC TIO N
TO JO E A N N C A M P B E LL
c o Hulut Devin*
R F O S
Slalethar*. Georgia »s ie
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D Ihal * Petition ol
O lltolutlon ol Marriage h i t
been tiled egelntl you, end Thai
you ere required to terve e copy
ol your retpont* or pleading to
the Petition upon the Pell
llonec t attorney. Ttiomet C.
Green*. Pott O lfk# Baa 1*1,
Sanlord Florid* JJTM, and III*
the original ratpont* or plead
In* In The ottlce el Ihe Clerk ot
IB* C ircuit Court. Seminole
County Courthouse. Senlord
r lor Ida » U t . enor betor* the 7*
day *1 July IMS II you Ian lodo
to * Default Judgment will be
taken egelntl you tor me cell*!
demanded In the Petition
O A T E D *1 Senlord. Seminole
County Florida, m il 74 day of
June I*01
(S E A L I
DAVID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K o r t h e C IR C U IT
C O UR T
BY Cheryl H Frenklln
Deputy Clef k
Publlth June 77. July 4 1). II,

net

D E G I II

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO U 417 CA 00 K
J U L IU S E T T IN G E R . DON
71P E R N ond A L E X 2 1PERN
PlelntlNi.
vt
M A R IA E S M ILO A LONOONO.
* mor rlod women,
Defendant
M A R IA O O LO R ES P A S C U A l.
Third Party Plelnlltt,
ve
M A R IA E S M ILO A LONDONO
* m arried woman. J U L IU S
E T T IN G E R
DON 2 IP E R N .
end A L E X 2 IP EH N ,
Third Forty Detendentt
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
TO M A R IA ESM ILO A LOU
OONO
Hetldonc* Addrett Unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D mat *n action to
Quiet Title. Cancel * Mortgage
Seek an Accounting, a D*
liatatory Judgment end to S*l
Itty e Mortgage he* been tiled
agamtt you on the property
known •*
North *t of the Wait Ml IStoet
ol lo t IS* toll Wet I 17 S feet lor
rood E U R E K A H AM M O C K .
According to m* plat thereol *e
recorded In Plot Boo* I. Fog*
10* Fublk Record* ol Sominoi*
County. Florldo
And you a rt required to t*rv*
* copy ol your written detente*
II any. to R O B E R T K MclN
TOSH. F O Bor 11)0. Senlord.
Florid* 77777 IU 0 and III* Ihe
original with th* Clerk of Circuit
Court, Stmlneto County Court
hout*. on or tieI or* Augutl 4
l M l or other wit# o Judgment
may L* entered *g*intl you lor
IB* relief demanded in the Third
Forty Complaint
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F TH E C IR C U IT
COURT
By rt/C h te y lR Franklin
Publlth July 4. tl. It IS. IMS
OEH M

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New Voih it A Cits w hore evoiyono m utim ot but rto
d m ileoort*
H orry Hortcntieicl

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N O T IC E O F B U LK TR A N S FE R
TO
A L L C R E D IT O R S OF
CYCLC' O f S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y . IN C d/b/o R C
HILLS M OTORCYCLE
C E N T E R . .770 Norm Highway
17 t l . CetteIherry Florid*
P LE A S E T A K E N O TIC E OF
TH E FO LLO W IN G
Pursuer) to F tor MS* Statvtot
Section *7t 1ST. o bulk frontier
of oil th* asset) of Cyclet ot
Somlnol* County. Inc deb it
R C H lllt Moto»cycl# Confer It
about to b* mod*
The namet and oddrett** of
Ihe Tranttoror ond Tranttoro*
or* at tottowt
C Y C L E S O F S EM IN O LE
C O U N T Y , INC
d b/o R C H ILLS
M O TO R C Y C LE C E N T E R
770 North Highway 17 Ft
Caiteiberry. F lor Ido
T F F D . INC
C/oChartosR Morgan
11*0 Norm Highway 17 PI
Li qwood. Florida 777SO
' fClet ol Seminole County.
In c
d/b/o R C
H lllt
Morlorcycl* Cantor hot not don*
butmot* under ony other nem*
Th* debit ot the Tranttoror
ore to M paid from m* procoedt
*1 th* time ot ctollng end *11
creditor* should to ward their
bllll to the office* ol Oartd A
W tb tlo r , b q , l i t e r A
Hostetler. U00 Barnett Plat*.
P O Bor 111. Orlando. Florldo
17*01
All ot m* inventory, pent and
occottorloe, both new ond used
located at FTP Norm Highway
17*1. Cestaiberry. Florida art
to b* transferred to The Buyer
Th* lolel of Sailer's debit at ot
th* date ol Ih lt nolle* le
lt t .M II
Th* schedule 04 property end
tier Of creditors m#y be In
tpectod *1 m# offices of Oovld
A W obtior. E s q . Htkor A
Mot let lor. 1J00 Bam jtt Ploio.
P O Bor ill. Orlando. Florldo
17FP1
Th* Iranttor it to pay trillin g
debit ercepl tor th* dltputed
debit due and owing to Dynamic
Distributing and Motorcycle
Stuff, Inc Following It a lief of
creditor* ond Ihe #mount* of th*
debit duo endowing
C B I Equitoa
S
till
World Cheer Control I 107 *1
Equipment Resource* I
IMS*
AeroL If* Support
I
*0 00
Lake Howell
High School
S
*0 00
W ickilrom Publishing t 170 00
Adams Hout*
of Yamaha
S 1*1 a*
Sensor mafic
S 7*0 *1
Kee Transportation
S 7S* 00
O r moor L eating
S 477 SO
Carolina Freight
t IS* S7
Oyetron Corp
I I.SSS 7*
Industrial West*
Service
t
740 00
Bankers Insurance
S
707 SI
Barfield Fence
S
7)00
2*p Manufacturing
1
110 A*
Welderc Company
I
** 71
Valtar Product!
S
MO*
Solely K Iren
S IM 11
Hogue mor a Oil
t 70* )7
Local Industrie*
S 770 77
Kent Moor*
s
711*
Federal E .p m *
t 114 00
□isle UnUor me
I 7)7 N
Cycle New*
1
If»
C ryilol Water Co
S
17*74
Cycl* Treniporl
S 1*0 00
Bowmen Dlitr Ibuhon S
S4 *7
Orange Cleaning
Service
*
14 00
ProPed Product*
S I Si *4
E d Tucker
A 7.117 14
UPS
S
&gt;4 70
Kewetwki Motor*
Carp
t I.U7 M
S A O le e tln g
)
74 7*
Berkeley Federal
Soring*
* IT* M
Georg* P Me Broom *
IJ 00
Dynamic Dtttr touting * 4*7 11
Motorcycle Stull Inc ) 7.771 S*
Vaughn Mo lor* Inc SS4.M7 00
William W While
SU.1A7 11
The Iraneler It made lor
1)71 000 00 In new (on*.deration
to bo paid 1700 000 00 *1 doting
*1 the j l l l c t i of Oovld A
W e b t le r
E Iq , Baker A
Ho*l*tl*r. I HO flernelt Pier*.
P O Bor III, Orlando. Florid*
17007 on or betor* July 11. 1MI
There it ■ s i l l . 000 00 pro
m in o ry not* payable In **v*n
ly two 171) equal monthly In
(tollmen!* with en *dlulled In
i*r**l r ol* until paid In lull
C r g d llo r t may Ilia thatr
claim* ol mo otllce* of Oovld A
W o b t i o r . I *q . B a k e r A
Modeller lTOO Bernell Plata,
P O Bor I I ) . Orlando. Florldo
77007 within ton 110) day* from
mo doto ol Ihlt Nolico
Doled the tlh day ol July. IMS
C Y C L E S O F SEM INOLE
C O U N T Y , INC
d b 'o H C H ILLS
M O TO R C Y C LE C E N TE R
By R C H ILL, JR
Sworn lo end tybtcrlbod be
tor* mo mi* im day of July,
IM*
/»/ Nancy L Troeoll
Nolory Public
Stale ol F tor da
My Commlitlon E rpirte
Sepl If, It**
Publllh July II. IMS
O E H *4
IN T H 1 C IR C U IT COURT
FOR S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
P R O B A ig DIVISION
Fit* Number P R U 4 M C P
IN R E; E S T A T E OF
K E N N E T H O WOOORING,
D t ttiltd
N O TIC E T O C R IO IIO R S
l Summery Admlnltlrollon)
TO A LL PERSONS H AVIN G
C L A I M S OR O E M A N O S
AGAINST THE ABOVE
E STA TE
You or* hereby nobbed Ihal
an O rd er ol Sum m ary Ad
minltlralien hoe been entered In
me estate ol K E N N E T H 0
W O O O R IN G . defeated File
Number P R t)4 0 S C P by Ihe
C irc u it Court lor Stmlnol*
C o u n t y . F lo r i d a , P ro b e !#
Civilian, the oddret* ol which I*
Stmlnol* County Courlhou**.
North Pork Avenue, P O Drew
t r C. Sanlord Florida. 1)771.
mat Ihe total ceth value ol Ihe
etlato I* SiO.77* at and mat Ihe
name* and *ddr*te*t ol Ihoa* to
whom II M l boon ouigned by
tuch order or*
Key E Woodring
1077 Sandy Point Squat*
Orlando Slot HU 77*0/
All par tone or* required to III*
with m* ctork *1 u&gt;4 court.
WITHIN ) CALENDAR
M O N TH S FROM THE TIM E
OF TH E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N
OF TH IS I40TICE on claim*
ogoind the **1*1* In lh* form
and manner prttcrlbod by Sac
Iton 777 TOJ ol me Florida Slot
vie* ond Rul* ) 0*0 ol lh*
Florid* Rule* of Froboto and
Guardi onshlp Procedure
A L L C L A IM S A N D OE
MANDS N O T SO F IL E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R BAR R ED
PubHcolien of mi* None* hot
begun on July A IMS
» Michael L Mar tow*. E tq
Attorney
Graham Mar tow A Apple ton
PoatOfllc* Drawer 1410
Wmtor P*rk. F tor HS* 7) 70*
Telephone I MS 1447 kU)
Publllh July A 11. HAS

OEM M

Legal Notice

71— H * l p W a n te d

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
T * R S tV iJ&gt; IO I,s c o / i n r .
FLO R IO A
P R O B A TE D IVIS IO N
File Number to ASB-CP
IM R E E S T A T E O F
G E O R G E J H O FF M A N ,
Oecaeted
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* o d m ln lttn tio n ot lh*
etlato of G E O P C E 1 H O 1"
FM A N . decoawd Flto nun-tar
t* 471 CP. Is ponding In lh*
C irc u it Count fan Seminal*
C o u n ty , F lo r i d * . P ro b o l*
Division, m# address of which Is
Semlnol* County Courthouse.
Sonfprd. Florida 71771 Th*
nomas and oddrettet of m*
per tonal r*preeent*flve and The
p«rtonai repretanielive * at
tornay are tat form below
All Intorottod ponton* or*
required to flto with Ihlt court.
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
TM I F l r ST P U B LIC A D O N OF
TH iS N O TIC E M l all claims
against the **1*1* and 17) any
ob locllon by an I n l s r t i l t d
parson to whom mis nofk* w tt
mailed ihal challenges the valid
Ity ot mo will, the quail tleaf tons
ol lh# per tonal represent alive,
venue, or jurisdiction ol the
(OUfl
a l l C l a im s a n d o b j e c
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B AR R E D
Publication el this Notice he*
begun an July 11, IMS
Pertonei Representative
/s/Catherine B Collins
ISO) Boy Avenue
Senlord. Florid* 77771
Attorney (or
Personal Representative
/S' G Andrew Speer
700 E **l Commercial Street
Suites
Sanford. Flo rid- I T T )
Telephono (MSI 777 47*1
Publlth July II. II. IMS
DEM *}

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FOR SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
FLO R IO A
P R O B ATE D IVIS IO N
File Number u a lA C F
IN R E E S T A T E O F
M A R G U E R IT E D
BUCHANAN,
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
The administration ol lh*
ttla l* ol M A R G U E R IT E 0
B U C H A N A N , deceatad. Flto
Number SS 41$ CP. is pending In
ms Circuit Court tor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a , P ro b a le
Oirltton. Ihe addret* ol wnlch Is
Seminole County Courlhoute.
Senlord. Florida 17771 Th*
name* end eddrettet ol th*
pertonei repretanielive end lh*
pertonei representative's at
torney ere set torlh below
All interested person* ere
required to III* with Ihlt court.
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
TH E FIR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
THIS N O TIC E
(II ell clalmt
egelntl lh* ettet* end 111 any
abjection by en In le re tle d
person to whom Ihlt nolle* wet
mailed thel challenge* lh* valid
Ity ol lh* will, th* qualification!
ol lh* pertonei represent alive,
venue, or jurisdiction ol lh*
court.
A L L C LAIM S AN D O B JE C
TIONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Publication ol Ihlt Nolico hat
begun on July II, M H .
Personal Rapresantallve
zsr Ha ton Dotson
rot Chester Sir eel f 10
Bristol. V A 14101
Attorney tor
Personal Repreeontative
t Mock N Clave land. J r .
Esquire
C L E V E L A N D A B R ID G ES
P O Drawer 7
Sanford. F L J77T7 077#
Telephone IMS) 171 111*
Publlth July II. 14. IMS
OEM aa

N O TIC E OF E X P L A N A T IO N
Muck -berry P U D located In
East Orang* County with lh*
North taction ol lh* property
bordering on Eetl Colonial, with
the C e lt boundary on Lon*
Palm Road the Wett boundary
on O Barry Hoover Rood, end
th* South boundary abutting
proparty owned by O ra nge
County! Florida A more indepth
legal may be obtained *1 lh*
Huckleberry ottic# 1*7) Alalaye
T r a il. Orlando. F L . Orang*
County. Florid* containing 1*00
Acre* more or let*
Purpose To develop redden
tiel end commercial properties
Thu Department ol Housing
and Urban Development ha*
determined that there I* no
p r a c tic a b le a lte rn a tiv e lo
local Ing theta projects In Hood
plsln and wetland* areas Th lt
action &lt;onform* to applicable
Stale Hood plain protection
standards Supporting our de
cl don || the tact that the water
•able hat been altered over a
per tod ol year* leaving reia
lively small llood plain and
wetiondt areat Cummenri will
be received lor a period ol 11
day* from Ihe dato ot this
Nolle*, prior lo any further
action by this Department
Comments should be sen! to M
Jeanette Porter. Manager. U S
O eptrtm enl *1 Housing and
Urban Devetopmant, P O Bot
1*00 Orlando. F L 77*07
LS STYII4S)
Ju ty t. ISA)
Publlth Juty It. IMS
O E H 0*

S T A T E OF FLO R ID A
D IP A R T M IN T O F
E N V IR O N M E N T A L
R E O U L A TIO N
N O T IC E O F A P P L IC A T IO N
The Department announce*
receipt &lt;•* an application I
permit from Semlnol* County
Port Authority to construct live
(SI methanol l tor age lank* ten
( I t ) heeling all storage lank*
and two submerged (111 ty
loading rack* ter distribution ot
'he petroleum products This
bulk t tor ops facility ts a Mures
ot air pollution
This proposed prelect will be
located at to* Pert 04 Sanlord an
Orang* Bouieverd. a halt mil*
wail el the Intersection ol in
torstate a and Slat* Road 17 *1
in Lak# M anraa, ta m ln a l*
County. Florida
This appiicallan Is being pro
casied and Is available lor
public intpeewan during normal
busmess hours. I 4R a m. M 1 00
p m . Monday through Friday,
eacapt legal halldays. at T i l l
Maguire boulevard. Suite 111.
Orlande. Florida 77*0717*7
Persons wishing to com m ent
en any aspect *1 this action are
required to Submit their com
moot* tn writing to the address
above within thirty days at
public*banal this notice
Publish July i i . t m
OEN*S

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

i cdlvtduai h - I -It -- with
Real EHato Geoa perssmali
ty Fam iliar with Danone
Willing to work woekands
Phono__________________ 1/4 s30*

O r l a n d o - W in te r Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

INDUSTRIAL DRAHSU AN
Needed to
jlwmlnwm
profit# end pL#M dreerlngft
Mem bee ftground s ne&lt;rtt'V
or pen
C etl Lerw ftfit ftAt it &lt; f A ^ l id * *30
t nventer y Cenfrot/
Snipping A Rtctfvmg

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 flaw................. 67C a lino
HOURS
3 M C ! ! a V N tl*R* C ic ■ Ivm
t.y&gt;
r.M.
7 C4H»VFC-‘ )t&lt; CR4*f f a * • 5M*
MONDAY thru FTUDa T
SATURDAY 9 ■

10 coniRcutiy# times W a lino
Contract Ritas AtaiUbk
3 Lines Mini!

Eaperdwc* required tn product
confrtt. inventory control,
thtpping A recttvtng tor Sen
ford manufacturing ftrm
m QUO______________________ *
M a in ta n a n c a
M f ile r ig h t t .
conveyor machanict ftAeaf
matal avpananca a plut
Waga» commafnwata e*tt»
&gt; *per»#rKa All im r T Apply
♦n perfton at

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M onday • 11:00 A .M . Saturday

H —Personals

S C U T H in CYPRESS
PRODUCTS. IRC.

33—Real Estate
Courses

ABORTION COUNSELING
Free pregnancy tests. Indivtd
u*l counseling Cell for op
polntmenf 771 7*41

37— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B a b y s it tin g tn m y hom e
e v e n in g * A w e t k t n d *
Certified A E r p 771 4*1)
Babysitting in my home Re
tponsibto mother Hot meats
777 7*4*. anytime

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Nutlet It harsby given that we
are engaged In business at 7*77
H a rtw e ll A v* , S a n fo rd .
Seminole County. Florldo 17771
under lh* UcHIIOut name of
C R Y S T A L C L E A N EN
TE R P R IS ES . and that wg In
tend to register said name with
th* Clark of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County. Florid* In
accordance with th* provl lions
of too Fictitious Noma Statutes,
T o w n Section **) 0* Florid*
Statutes 1*17 •
/$/ Conni# A Lemons
/!/ Claudia M Duncan
Publllh June 70. 77 A July *. II.
IM )
D E G IIS
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Nolle* Is hereby given that I
am ongagod In butlrwtt al 704
Charles S t. Winter Springs.
Semlnol# County. Florida under
the HcHItout name ot NORRIS
S E C R E T A R IA L S E R V IC E S ,
end that I Intend to register said
name with too Clark of too
Circuit Court, Semlnol* County,
Florida In accordance with lh*
provision* ol Iho F lc llllo u t
Nemo Statutes. To w it Section
•at Ot Florida Statutes 1**7
/*/ Mary Norrlt
Publlth Junt 1) A July a. ll. II.
IMS
O E G 1*4

* * * *
s Thinking el galling a a
s Reel Estate Ucentaf a
We after Free Tuition
andcentinuewt Training'
Cell Dick er Vicki tor detail!;
471 l i t ! .777 77t« ..E v* 77* Its*
Kayes *f Ftortd* . lac.
I f T iers Eraertoncel

47— F o o d P r e p a r a t io n
BeawHIully derpretwl cakes In
my home I Erperienced. rel
erencet Call *70 0*7*

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d
ACCO UNTS R E C E IV A B L E or
Bookksaplng background
Good organ!rational quatiilas
Typing, filing, phon# skills
Call Mary Jo__________ *14 TIP
Acryilc Applicators needed fo
apply protective coating on
cars, boats and planes t l to
111 per hour We train For
work In Sanlord area call
Tampa 111 tag 7111
Actors Actresses Models Alt
•alent tor m ovi*t,TV A print
work
Serious only apply
P s rintoont Costing. 04)7*71
A I D E ) ctrlilied and or saparl
anted Day and evening shilts
G o o d a t m o s p h a r e an d
benefits E O E
Apply et
DeBary Monor. *0 ft Mwy
I ) 07. DeBory____________
ALL T Y P E )J O B )
1 TA R T W O RK NOW!

sfk
LA B O R
B tl

•

F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
Nolle* Is hereby given that we
are engaged In business ol 1401
W Seminal* Bird . Sanlord.
Semlnol# County. Florida under
to* Hcllttout noma ot C E N T R A L
F L A C R N A A N E S TH E S IA ,
and that w* Inland to register
said name with th* Clark of th*
Circuit Court. Semlnol* County.
Florida In accordance with the
provisions el lh* P ld llto u t
Name Statutes T d w ll Section
A il 0t F tor Ida Statutes I SI 7
l*J Jamas M Mllsom
rtJ Jack L Parc*
&gt;%) Gan* Fauerhahn
/*/ Thomas J BtrSs
Publllh June 77 A July 4 11. II.
IMS
O E G Its

*

FORCM
Mmt Nf

f HO
f lit
Rfport
for MrorlE «)' 4 AM
•C' W |%t V
Unford

32HM0
A U T O 1 A I t I M A N LtrgtrtfH *

t*blt U C firm rt«th horwit
*Bp*r
»#lt motivating
p «r ton

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
am ingagad In bustoae* at W illi
Springs Village. SM7 Rudbug
L a k e R d ., C a i t e i b e r r y
Seminole County. Florid* 77to*
under the Hcllttout name ol
D ANCE C E N T E R , and that I
Intend to register laid name
with Ihe Clerk ot Ihe Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with the pro
Villon* ot Mo Fictitious Noma
Statute*. Ta w it Section sat ot
Florida SlatutaslM)
DANCE AR TS OF
W IN TE R PARK. INC
/(/ B ealrli Aldanda
President
Publlth June 77 A July a. tl. II,
IM !
O E G ISO

^

C c m m m io n

«n d

btnaflU Apply vritfl rtwm#
to B LU E BOOH CARS C «n
« t AM I

Avon l«awfr Compan?

Full or p«ff lim# Call immrdl
• w y m m o o r m tan
B#By«itf*r W#«fcd*yi I 4 in my

home Sinlord 'Viiflihim
Wood% i'Bi
R#
9w t d m m * __________

iM t o y t / W i H n i w i/ W ii t t f »
Ov*r ll. dny L mghf ifiifti

Apply Holiday )rvn

jtftf Momrov U n f ord
C A IIN IT

M A I IA

pdftiMoi&gt;

oiptn for VBp«ri«ru»d cilrntyt

btnidrr Apply In ptrton #i
*01A Cornnf#ll Hnftd Unford

CARPENTERS HELPEft
Wanted Immediate opening
Apply In person
SHEDS A M E R IC A
771 Mwy I/O )
are tiso
C H ILD C A R E Full and pert
time positions avaltobla Me
turlty, common sent# genuine
lo ve , and k n o w le d g e ot
children a mutt Training and
aiparlanc* preferred To ar
rang* interview call Cindy

777 g a ll____________________
Couple or mature adult tor
Christian horn* tor abused and
troubled teens Call is* 1001
D E L IV E R T R A IN E E
ta hour Fun spot1 Maks people
h a p p y l D e liv a r flo w e rs
around town in company van I

HO* E 1 TA TE RD *4
D E L A N D , FL.
_
( M l ) f it T ill________
Maintananca Help wanted to
clean up attor performancts
toe Fred Mem at

Stminolt Greyhound Pirl
7*0* toiwfwwi* Rlvd CaStotbarry
Msmtenanc# Part lima work
available fo- general repairs
in a child car* centers Call
Sally &gt;77 Sal) ________________
AVO N E A R N IN G ) W BW HI
O P E N TE R R IT O R IE S H O W III
111 111! or 177 aalt
Needed LP N in d or R N Isr J II
shlH. lull lima good employee
be nfit* end stm o tph ere
E O E apply *1
OeBary Manor
SON Mwy 17 P|. OeBary________
NOW H IH IN O I
Toy P trfy Oemontlrstart
Free Kit Fra# Training
NO col lac 11ng NO 0*11var ing
Phono 77) 7 S » t d i
N U R IB 'S A i o i l i All shifts
E aptrlonctd or cartlfltd pro
to' r»d Apply in person at
Lake vo w Nursing Cantor. I l l
E 7nd SI . Sanlord______ _

NURSE AIDES ARD LIVE IH
Privatt duty, sta't duty, and
home car* positions available
E ic i ll o n t pay
M E 0 IC A L
P ER SO N N EL
FOOL
70S *1**111
E O E M 'F 'H 'V __________
P A N TR Y / O IN IN G ROOM
W O R K ER
Full Tim s lor Senior Retirement
Community Espertem i dr
i i n d Ptoesent
ippeerince
end personality required
Will consider training willing
toarnar Good wages
Apply e&gt;
H O W E L L PLACE
/DO Airport B ird
Senlord
Between J A 4 PM
Mon Frl
717 /TO*
Or t e l l ____
PHONE WORK
Psr I I11m t No #ip tr H#r»c• Puttm%
M# y, will tfY»in St I *pqo&lt;nI
from our Lorvsjwood
•Af*c# S tiff trig' u la ry from
l l SO to %* 10 p#f hour Im
rn«dfit# petY fA v n tor f^Kifi
who fry h«rd#r Potgffffil |ia
p#r hour within i wf*t * Gift
Jim Coo* « U ftftJO
f »f rd of J«b Hunting V
C il ! f u lu r tt
th fy f iiv t
huntfr##* ol lab opening* lor
fftotv who wont fo work
ftt% 4 no
CEM ENT
WORKEKi A
HE L BE IIS
E BCftllf nt p iy
Stiff right #w#y i7| «J00
OE t IV E IIY H f L P E H V no tn
ptrignc* rw&lt;«3Virr Foil lim#
Good tlttrlmq |&gt;iy 471 4100
G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
G r t il ifirlm g
[ob U « # r i i oo#nlng% Good
p iy i n 4J00
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y sn4
P B O O U C T iT N WORK Mo»f
thiffi op#n Good p iy ftCiNt
471 AJOO
I M M E D I A T E O P E N IN G S
G i n i f i l Conilruclion lite r
Good piy 47| 4XO
TR UC K D R IV E R S Long N*v&lt;
Imm#dt4»«l Good driving r#
cord O v tr t i 471 4)00
L O C A L D R IV E R S
Str4&gt;ghl
friKftft Good M r Stiff right
i w i y 471 4)00
R E C E P T I O N I S T . O F F IC E
H ELR ER S s C LE R K S . C R T
O P ER A TO R S
I m m t d iif t
opining* Good p#v K i i « i
C«H 471 4)00 N O W '
W E L D E R ! C irfifiid E ■ctifinf
piy M il# ! C ifl fudiy 474
4J00

ISJI Franck Avs
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
Nollca It hereby given the! I
am engaged in business al P O
B a i IS*. Sanlord. Seminal*
C eunty. F lo rid a under th*
fictitious name *4 S E M IN O LE
O I R E C T M A IL S H O P P IN G
G U IO E . and that 1 Inland to
'agistor said name with to*
Clerk at th# C ircu it Court.
Seminole County, F lor Ida In
accordance with th* provltlont
ol to* Pkttttout Nam* Statvtot.
To w lt ledum to] PS Florida
Statutes 1*17
H i William J Burgess
Publish July A ll. IS. 71 ISA)
O E H 74

F IC T IT IO U I N A M E
Notice la haraby given mat l
am angagad in businesa at F O
Bo« 171. Longwood. Semlnol*
Cewnly F lo rid a under lh*
f i c t i t i o u s n a m e ol
C H E C K M A TE , and that I intend
to register said name with the
Clark al lh# C ircu it Court.
Sum mol# County. Florida to
accordance with th* previsions
al lh* Fktlttou* Nam* Statutoa.
To w n
Section Is )O f Florid*
Statutes IPS)
/tr Lmd* J Cavanaugh
PuOtltfi July a. 11.1*. 2). ISA)
D E H 17

DRIVER \CLERH
Apply C H A M P IO N TV .
K M AR T Snapping

Untord______________
■XICUTIVIIICRITAAY
With or witfeewt fthortriAndl

At&gt;l#*t T#m por«ry W v K t t

« I lf«)

m

PAINTERS A PAINTER
HELPERS
Im m id lili
Op#mng% good 3tiffing p#y
t i l l »OddBg * 7ft OOO
D R Y W A LL
With or without
•■ p tn t n c i
Im m td H ii
op#oingt Good M f C il I lo
M r 471 4)00

NOW HIRING!
Outstanding Opportunity For

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION
( -W

c $}&lt;&gt;/&gt; CENTERS

5 LOCATIONS IN SEMINOLE COUNTY

• Auto / Truck Refueling
• Full Line Convenience Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens
Fried Chicken Subs Donuis

F IC T IT IO U I N A M E
Nolle* Is haraOv given that I
am angagad to businesa at M0
San M arl# Avs . Alternants
S p rin g s . S sm ln als C o unty,
Florida under th* Hcllttout
n o m a at R L G S A L E S
ASSOCIATES. I N C . and that I
intend to register said name
with to* Ctork *4 th* Circuit
Court. Seminole County, FtortdO
in accordance with lh* pro
visions *1 the Pkflttout Name
Statutes. To wtt Section AS) Ft
Ftortd* Statutos IM7
/* Robert L. Glltonwetor
Publlth July O l . to 11, ISAS
OE H U

•
•
•
•
•

Top Salaries
Free Life &amp; Hospitalization
2 Paid Vacations Each Year
Profit Sharing Plan
Other Benefits
MAKE APPLICATION IN PERSON
AT 203 N. Laura! Ava., Sanlord
Mgrutay Thru Friday B M AM 4 10 PM
NO PHONE CALLS. PLEASE

i
V •

�•&lt; gn
Earnings
Potential!
Modern ottrc* In a , cal Ian'
'oeafron Complete training
program M r* divtton ol old
aVabr.tnad Irrm
Call non
tor data, Is on pleasant
aorkmg conditions and to
M t u n your M u r*

ITadtH

m

i lt
cook* iw n T Io
? MPM A 11 00 Noon to • 00
PM IntllTirttanal cooking a .p
helpful Pm1 to* necessary
Good a tm o tp lto r*
EOE
Ap*tr al O tBary Manor, to N
Wiry. IT 41,
__________
M i l t PC « VON Erparwncad
with used car tala* Ercallant
commission Good opportunity
tor advanctnmant n i 1140
SEC“ E TA R Y tor gonarai ottlc*
■ I'
lo r an t l a c f r o n lc
m a n u fa c tu rin g co m p a n y
Call 31) •&gt;»
____ _
SUM M ER JO B S
Immedlataopenings
Day 4 aven.ng hour t I
aCiacital
* Warehouse
Na**r a Foot

TEMP PERM____ 774-I K !
S UR VEY CREW E .penanced
party chiefs A Inttrumont man
nan lad Rtf manant position*
nidi good pay 4 tic tlla n t
benefits In Orlando araa Sand
rrw m a to P E C Inc., too E
RaOintan SI . Suita ISO*. Or
landa. CL UtOI
W A N TE D
E XP A U T O M E C H A N IC
I T IR E C H A N G E R S
Apply al M O V F r .n t h * , ,
A OK T IR E M A R T
Wan lad
10 Drivart 4 Canvassers Call
Bandy attar I PM 372 O IK
W ild or Layout. A Fittart
Caata Star I Corporation
Over tlma 4 aitallant banatltt
Call 70) 01)0 or
Coma by
M l ) Edganatar Dr
Orlando
EOE
' Work WNan Want

AAA T E M P
Taking Application! Near
NOCEEt
CAII SALLY
»)N II

91—Apartments/
House to Share

Lg 1 'bdrm: *** carpel dNith
nether. Cent heat 4 elf U00
m o * m depot, t H T OHS

RIOGEWOOOARMS APTS
Limited Time Only
jo lfF m SVxiltit Runt
1SI0 A .ogawood A y «
Sanford. Fla
C A LL
» ) M W ..............................131 *421
Monday thru Friday
a to J »
.Saturday from

VANFOWD Fuffiitfted room i by
me dveeh UdAuxebie retet
Meid t#r vice Cell 133 4SO/
12 PM 41) Pel me Mo A v t
ienford ■Cornpittily Furntthed
Room with TV . end kitchen/
living room privileget plut
b*g yard with grill 2421 Elm
$1 &lt;Home after if
Inisef working acMf to rent
tkeeping room US per week
Cell! m I4ff efter %F M
TMF FLO R ID A H O T E L
S00Oak Avenue
I7 U »i
U•avertable Weekly Me?e%

Small 1 b d r m , 1 bath, "air*
kppllancn. carpal Ideal tor a
towila U » mo * 1700 -Sapor
it 93 USA, or 9 2 10W
Spacious Apartments Minutat
from Mwy #04 Lakatront
pool. Iannis, artu'tt no pats
laundry Starring al SMS a mo
Call H U H ) to la * ___________
Tirtd Of A part man! Living?
Eiparianca Iha privacy of
your own homo In ona of our
luiury duplaits Lg 7 bdrm
l bath, vaultad calling, appi
hook ups. privpta scroanad
patio, your own yard'malnt
traa Starting al U M Cali tor
dalaltt. I PM TPM. ) ! l m i
Wakivo Rtvar EHiancy Canoa
usa Carpal air Adults no
pa't 17)0 mo IT} opto
I and 7 hdrm Also Turruthad
efficiency from STS waak UIO
dapuslt No pats Call i l l 007
S 7 PM sis Palmetto
I Bdrm garaga apt on tha
rivar S77J par month Call
9 1 TOW
____________
i Badroom
t Bath
no patt
l.'SC a mo 1300 Security
________ 2 9 U * * _
ITT! S P E C IA L
1 4 7 bdrm from 1)10 Laka
Ada tla.ib lala ata 91*470

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

AVAI LABLE NOW

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR C IT IIE N S D ISC O U N T
RANCH STYLE L IV IN G IM

SANFORD COURT APTS.

32J3JOI

Condo Supar condition, nlcoly
turn Pool screened porch,
gat grill, tans micro, cabia.
, dan phone, maid Owner
ralalnt I bdrm 4 bath ai
olllca Tanrwtnl own bdrm 4
bath. A almott private uta
•ntiro unit Pratar tingla pro
l*s*ion*l no patt S)*0 mo .
ownar payk all 9)010*. or
4)1 )1 4 )____________________
Cura Apt, tar Samar Cltliant
)1* Palmetto A*a
J Cowan NoPbonaCallt
Lafct Mary I hdrm turnlihad
apt Smgia man no patt
Waady now Call W ) TWO
Lovaly Turn I bdrm &lt;* - air.
Hying room, kitchan. baltt.
Iirtplaca Qu&gt;a! araa
1)70
mo r 1)00 dap 7)1 1140
Lovaly ) Bdrm Hugh Roomi
Complaia Privacy 1100 par
waak • UtO security deposit
Call 9 ) 9 * 4 or ) ) ) t » ) )

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
4AM B O O CO V E A P T S
M ac Airport Bird
PHONE IT ) 0070.
I l l aka I

CHlclaacy from

....... t lt t mo

ptKauai lar Senior Cltliant

* COUNTRYSEniNC •
Lprga ! A t Ads m Apartmantt
Adult LaktvtawFamily Paaluda

A m lib l* Now Opon W ttk tm b
S E C U R IT T D E P O S IT....

H IO O E N L A K E
Baautlfully
dacoratad ) Bdrm
) bath
appllancas, ca llin g la n t
radical blinds, scraan porch,
lancad yard SSTS Call Ml

ms

___________

iim

w it h t h is a c

MASTERS C0VL..... 32*7500

B drm , furnished Mature
adults only No pets Perk Are
Mobile Perk m 3**i_________

117—Comn'ircial
Rentals

i» l i n ............

R*&gt;e&lt;i 4 Office Space )00 up to
7 000 *g ft also storage avail
at » 377 aaO)________________

121—Condominium
Rentals
191— Homes For Sale

S IN G LE STORY
LIVING
L«s* Teems to Ftl
Your Needs!
furnished ot Unlurntshtd.
Carport*
.... Prlrste Pattot
Lush Landvtaping Pat* Children
W A TE R B ED S A C C E P TE D I

Call.... ..... 321-1911
127—Office Rentals

By Ownar Lack Arbor. Santard
a Bdrm . 2 bath, pool, central
o lr/ h e o l. com p lete ly re
modeled. Owner financing
tea woe Cali toaarggiii or
W M42TRSH____
___
Micklan Lake lee Wildwood Dr
I bdrm /2 both, dbl garaga
p orch , contrel air Supar
Clean i Akkumabia US 000
R EA LTO R
AAARVI NKLAI L
*47 ItiS .. , .............. or 221 7M7
La k e M a r y
O ra at fa m ily
naighborhpad Pral 4 Iannis
naarby a bdrm , 2 batb PHA
atsumabl* martgag* Laka
Mary •chaaldtstricl.Mt.eM

Mill Street C *.......121 5005
Offices lo Rent
R M ton*bi« *r&gt;d convtffiliff!
201 N Map!# Sdntord
7310040

Ml —Homes For Sale
BACK ON M A R K E T
Prked rlghtl H ? 000 II you
naad a targ* hom*. this Is tt a
Bdrm ) bath mottiar In law
apt Hugh lancad comar lot.
hntst guahty many a, tr at til
Call to ta*

CALLBART
REAL ESTA TE
R E A L TO R
__ 121 144S

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie Real Eitst* Brakar
3*44 Sanlord Ac*

M* Qualifying Naw ] bdrm . 1
bath on 2 acre. Horses ok
Ownar financing, prim* area
174 400 144 |)1)______________
Sal* Or Rani W Optien 1 bdrm
near downtown Santard L32S
By appt (Pa 77* CSI7 kttar 2
Sanlord Nica 2 bedroom horn*
w th living room, dining room,
pun*lad family room, laundry
room, workshop Call tar In
formation 222 1104 or AM e ll7
S O .F00 or^bat* oftaf_____
S A N FO R D Naw ) bdrm , 7 bath
D S L garaga energy saver
114 400 Crank Construction
and Realty, PH ooaoel
S A N F O R D ......................... 124*0*
2 or 1 bdrm , Eel In kltihan
E «c#l lent fInane mg
T H E R E A L T Y S TO R E. *21 l»M

STEMPER

FI RE C R A C K E R S P E C l.ill
Summit alt otters on this 2
bdrm . I bath Fancad back,
c a r p o r t, established
neighborhood Owner linenc
mg Ilka naw Asking Sat 100

NEW HOMES TORRENT

I AC RE AS Gr ai sad and fenced
On paved road Assumable
mortgage, SS5 000

Priced Reduced I ) bdrm .1 bath.
Large lot. Now 12t 000

321-07S9.EV 322-7443

• B d r m . homo plus 2
B d rm .m obile hom t. both
turnishod Good ore*. SM 000

Energy Efficient 7 bdrm . )
beth P ile Hornet nettled in
qutet country vetting, neer
vhooping 4 tchoolt Cleve te
Leke Mery 1/4 Catt.
Check thete teeturet:
• Fret* Free Retrigereler
• Gertge
• Attic Storage

BY O W N ER MS Forrest Dr
LOCH AR BO R V A C A N T 2
Bdrm , I bath carport, screen
perch. *4.1.400 222 211*.
BY O W N E R 2 b d rm . 2 bath,
Pool, Fireplace. '» acr* an
canal lo Lake M arkham
Assume Mao monthly with
UOOO down Call Bill Rott*
1)1 Mao (d a y i) or 37) 7SM
|Nile*)

Large * bdrm Hem* Cat In
kitchen, O B L car garage
large corner let O W N ER
W IL L H O L D M O R TG A G E
Only l i t COO

O T H E R HOM ES. LOTS.
A C N E A O E . IN V E S TM E N T
P R O P E R TY
C A L L A N Y T IM E
r e a l t o r ...................... )7i ate i

1 M

321-3827
Nica ) bdrm , carpal
Ihrpughoul Step by 10)1 W
First saoo par mo First, last
dapotil Rat«r*nc» s I T ) 110*
SANFO R D ) bdrm
I bath
tancadyard SrOO mo
E N TE R P R IS E &gt; bdrm )b a fh s
Si Johns access sssomo
LANOSTOCK BRO KER S
H l lT fl
....................... Anytlnsa
) bdrm . I bath, no pals UTS par
month |IM security daposlf
Can aas I I 7»_________________
) Story ) bdrm ] bath, rang*
rttrigaralor washar. garaga
serranad porch, lancad back
yard Avallabl* Aug 1 SrOO
par mo
tlrkt 4 tacurlty
Rotorancas required R ) t W
7010 N Grandview 2 Bdrm
house in Rosa Court i*M mo
Call owner Orlando 7t) 0*04
I bdrm I bath Kids okay No
pats l&lt;0 wk , STM dapokit
1004 W P d Street Call 12)
1M7___ __
______
) Bdrm house tor ram saoo par
month plus saoo deposit Call
) ) ) 43)3

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
Laka M a ry . J bd rm .
washer dryer hookups appli
ancas. RUlot araa
SIX) discount Investors Reel
J y Service* Sit SOM
LA K E M A R T A R E A 3 Bdrm I
bath dupiaa Immediate oc
csparser SJSfl per month, plus
l KW security Call 241 aaaa or
esc 1444_____________
Sanlord Best A re a' 2 bdrm
Luaury Duple■ S27S Also. 1
bdrm hame sets 221 t i l l
SAHFORD
2 B d r m . . a ll
epplelnces. U4S per month
LuchenBoch Realty Inc .
R EA LTO R S
471 (000

HALL
N44II mt
§144104
If * U if i i n i m t i

TH E

Apartments
*100 Security
Deposit

COOL S P A R K L I N G FO O L
wrtoncad t* aero and largo )
bdrm hemal Hug* mat tar
bdrm
F trap la to I Centre I
k e e t / e t r t l w e r h ih e p s l
Assume no gualltytag •/ low
dawn I 111 ***
AFFO R DABLE!
I bdrm mt
Irg Kreaned parch, lancad
yard. F H A er VA Itnine in* I
SJ44M Call us gutcbl
H ID D E N L A K H ) bdrm 7 belli
split ptea w/ aatra Irg lemlly
raem Sparkling pant I Privacy

323-5774
31*4 MWY t ! t l

Qnfcjnc,

151 —Investment
Property / Sale

Mt TDUNMD
10 INON
IN MM (SIMI

S IX M O N T H S V O U N O l
Saaoaus 4 badroem. ) bath
■ at i* b ltc b a a . Scretnad
patt*. I car garage CMs* I*
shapping Mallvalad Belter
i7i.tee
UN IQ U E S badroem. It* hat*
Name an 7 acre* Cedar Name
wild m a d docks, dotechod
garage, nark ream Cathedral
callings. Hrtpiaca l i f t **#
CONDO, Camel***ly reaovatad
Interior I Bsdroiwt. IS* hath.
I story F H A financing avid
•*** tti.M d

(305) 321-0041
*!» W. 22tb Street
Santard. FI 22771

REALTOR

211 111 I . lit I T ............... 222 ta n
C AS S ELB ER R Y 1 acr* toned
PR i 1*3 OOC W SAaiictowsSi
R E A L TO R
127 74*)
Naar (a as II 17 cl TO O rangt
B ird Naar Pori ol Sanford c
acres 1 MO sg 11 C B Build
Ing
1742.400 31V down,
owner holds balance 10V
CaH 12) a»2) or S*C S cc3__
Santard a apis . 1)2000 In pasi
live cash llow Total price
S 77 000 A p re le td v a lu e
S42 000 Cell I 404 *44 1204

153—Acreage
Lots/Sale
O i l E I N 1 i ( r i bMifJtng “ofi
hfgh #fsd d ry 1 14 100 T v rm i
i|k«&gt;l#b!«

1*1 ic r« hem* li»t»
• nd grove
T lir m i

from

WtxxJed
| i| MO

DO N 1 WAi T f JO Acre* on
CochrArt Wd _ Geneve
4JS00
p#f Acre. 2 )\ dowrn. 10%
*rtf#Tpsf &lt;&gt;Mrk#f fin4n&lt;irrg 1
C O U N TR Y WIDE R E A L T Y
Heg R C Broker
)tt t ) ) )
♦70 Mwy 111. Ottren F lA
'SAinlofdi D llfre ii
I
birtteinG Holt 1)4 000 cAih
T .rrr 1)1 2Ut

155—Condominiums
Co Op / Sale
NEW SMYRNA B EAC H
1 bdrm . I bath b*acinus* col
lag* with commercial toning
Start your own business naar
its* ocean 147.400
beach side Really. R E A L TO R S
4*4 4)1 m i ...........Open 7 Pays I
SANDALW O O D VI L L A S
I
bd rm , I balh. u p t t a lr t .
carpals drapes appliances,
pool S3I OOO Cell *77 2122

27TMSTRfEl fURNITUNt
1*4 W 2714s 2t

R e n ta l Office*
' 323*2920
k 4 Z I 0 1 OQtBMDO DQTV11

223—Miscellaneous

til m i

brought iron GI a s i Top Pirung
Tab I# * 6 choirs l i h Gold
LAfy boy ChAir
Antique 1
d'.iAer cheat %so J twin lwi3%
(omplete ISO JJ3 S/f

1B3—Television/
Radio / Stereo
• .C O LO R T E L E V lilO N . a
Jervrth || taler t#f«vmon O ig,
»t*a I price over |§QO Be!Artee
di.j« |?M 00 ca tb or iifct over
l»AVmenf| f l ) month Slill in
sbArfArtfy
NO M O N E Y
DOWN fry# home trial no
ooiiQAt«on C aii §47 sjta day

157—Mobile
Homes / Sale
12*4© Sentry 2 Bdrm with e r
And Ail eppliAnctt M S0Q
C a ii )2t n n

* Where A nybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! *

199—Pels &amp; Supplies

Far mere details
I 404 7)) D M

Ability KtnfteU Dog boArcfing
Country AtmoH&gt;h«” v Meeion
Able H U n
) 1) JJJ0

* INSTANT CASH*
• *ME W IL L B U T • •
• • YOUR USE D C A R • •
• CALL P H Il B E T T I S *

201 —Horses
Cell ebouf bur summer ri&lt;J&gt;ng
progrem
H o y A l Ri d i n g
______
Aredemy. D )

Raida ta d

m erlgeit

r. aaaa-apt tan terms *v*d*M*

Da

sod

1*2 leal

ID till

235—Trucks/
Buses / Vans
14*1 D O D G E VAN
Oteblo Convarston. sink and Ic*
bo. mukl vva ta appf*&lt;iet*t
rots) end taka Over payment*
tell 1)1 007} alter V I'M
*4 T o»d Bronte X l t
I Wta.1 Dtlv*
Reduced'

satts

C O U R T E S Y P O N TIA C 111 111)
S) foyoto Pick Lip 32 000 tm t
spaed cru is e fill wheel.
AM f M air S2P42 121 lat7

239—Motorcycles
and Bikes

TH E H I S T IN T O W N
£ Z TERMS

213—Auctions
FOR E S T A T E
C om m e rcial or R esidential
Auctions 4 Appraisals Call
Dali s Auction i n 1*20

215—Boats and
Accessories
I I Ft Aluminum *’V " huft boAf
with ) HP Kicker tJ)0 )7J

C R E D IT H A S S L E S ?
•

BICYCLE
S ch w in n . Men s
Varsity. 10 speed Naw part* A
nany s .lfa e m i n i row
I I Yamaha2M
E tactile stall
SUOU ml
Wedutadf
2)442
C O U R TE S Y P O N TIA C . I l l 1111

le t u* w o n * slio u i your
ciadlt ptuhlam *

• Ws can finance almu.t
anyone
• Down fiaymenl at low aa

Hug Sale! Stereo tans a»r con
ditiOrting unlit, fresh- &amp; salt
water fishing *qu»p ol ail
kmds tools A misc 313 Tan
germ# D» I n A Sat I to J
M ) 1420

am ai&gt;«

USED C A R S

53 0 0 0 0
W # fall* Itadaa
Payment* lo hi y u « lu d g K

•
B

D IS C O U N T A t r iO S A I I S
I S O I I re n e Is A v e .
1 2 5 - 1M S

TR ACTOR W ORK
Bo. Blade
Bush Hog
Disc
M O M W E L D IN G
F re e ts t.................
9 2 1M7

Air Conditioning
4 Heating
Well Ptambfag A Hearing
tool South Santard Avenue
Santard Flood* 327! 1

Fence

MMOOCUNC SPECIALIST
B £. LINK CONST.

322 7029

Appliance Repair
M g e i A y y fiia c i S g n k l
M b r. Service Me Eetre U w rgal
17 Vr. Imp— tag-2**},..^274*422

Bookkeeping

I N S T A L L .-S I L L ...A ...B I P A I R
Cypress ...CAeRs U a b ..... Weed
Peace O F 1711

Carpentry
All typee d Cbrpentry A re
modsI tng 27 y rt tap Call
Rldiard Greta 91 2472

Cleaning Sarvica
W aX Cavpet Cleeatag LJvtag.
osaeag Raaat A Hall 224 a*
Saia A OsaSr, 222. 272 M** _
JU S T OENIEft

Home Improvement
CatStev-s BvtSdtag A I
SS* Jab Tee Small
I I I Aw lea Lena. Santard
TH O M AS A THOM AS. Haws*
repair, cleant**, law* car*.
CaH 91 ue*

Home Repair*

243-Junk Cars
A N T J U N K C A R i b TRUCKS
■auT*’* F r e m ll* 11*4 mat*
Call 171 l * » ............
I l l (111
I O P Dollar Paid lo* Junk A
Headier* trucks A heavy
acyulprnant J77 '440
WE P A T TO P D O LLA R FOR
JUNK CARS A N D TRUCKS
CBS A U T O P A RT S 741 42*1

eeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Build a Br«ge&gt; Auttneiei
L)ea Tha Hav aid Cl east trade
C A L L TO D A Y
2 9 91

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

ACE LAWN S E R V IC E
Maintenance Saddrng Pruning
Claaatag Thatching FarTtltitng
Fra* litlmatas .......
2*2 ITJI
Lawn Me inla nance
Lardscaping Bush Hog Mowing
___________244 &gt;042____________

Lm

b

Mewifif......... Low T rk M

__________ i n m t ____________

LAWNS UOWfO 4 TIIM M E O
spring Yard Clea* apt- 9 S I4 S J

Qtaikty Lowr C m b

Sowing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
AeNsertsed

ELECTROLUX
Salat and Service
Vacuum, sad Shampaeact
CALL
J R GREENS
2*1 24! M M
Sawing Machine Repairs all
mates 9 yrs •&gt;par tenet In
horn*I Retired 91 479

Sprinkle rs/lrrigafion
A POUT T IM E IR N IGA f ION
Nee Intlellallona
Free ( i t
E .pert Repairs ef Camptaf*
Sprinkler Systems
Timers
Pump*
Etc
*41 IBM

Mosonry
IA N Y TH IN O i n C O M C B IT E I
P a lta D rlv o w a y lld a w e l k E k
Fra* (sftmaSat (Madly Ohrael
B E A U M O ND E Ceaal. Ca
“We A n The B e e f . ...... 9 1 U * l
B E A L Ceetr*4p 1 M en Quality
Operation Pal roe Driveways
0 « e ^ l ^ 9 ;_ l * * * _ J j 7 &lt;U 9

Tile
A m T I l l Ceramic III*, setae
and mtlallauen. barns, ftaort
M l l 21th a t. Sanlord
9 1 19 9 ) 12*4 John Parker
Scad wars* Tile- Ceramic. Vinyl
Atbeitea. eta Installed A re
paired Sep . ref . Ik Fra*
estimate* 19*741

Nursing Cor*

C A B p T h IE R ™ B a p a ir ^ n d
Cell m tAaS
Malntartancs *1 *11 types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
msdatactrH 9 ) * B 9
W I L L II H O M I R E P A IR
Rarrtedalsag . M M Hass*....A....
All Type* Rapelr* Insured Ne
lab See small 91 F7a*

Cell
B ate Ctaanmg. laundry, art#)
&lt;gew4.CdbRsdH.Hta.e4t

Lawn Service

At AlSordabl* Prices 91*47)

___________m a a n ___________
ter yewr email buaRsetal
Call: 2)1 7441____ __________ J

Ig

1 bdrm /J bath Immediate ac
cupanc r F H A Nan duality mg
mortgau* Law dawn Ownar

COURT ESY P O N TIA C

Lend SCR ping

24% Dawn I* V r s s l i r X I
Pram II4 JM I

D id N Grandview. Rate Court
1 Bdrm I bath Large M
Shad* Flaw reel Ateumabl*
V A Man ».tn lew dewa A
earner I:nance Call owner

moo

C H R Y S L E R I M i^ lT lA L
Pa*t#\ * condition Asking |J Oft)
Ceil M» US0
*J P&lt;n»o runs good looks fair
Ne«t tires 1400 o' best otter
1.11 tltOene or weekends
H Buitk R tgai ) dr a&lt;» iwwer
AM FM cruise Good cond»
l
i L T D Landau a dr new
tires air cruise AM FM.
elet window s 4) COO ml
% m \ Ml )4 ) 7
ill Escort C«L
I. (lasted
St so Down Small Mo Pay men!
( H I C O A ?HE M AN
a§4 t m
H Pontiac TransA m Tufbo
T Top
loaded)
t/4t)
C O U R T E S Y P O N TIA C M l 11)1
hi PontiA'i f ie*o
l oaided
A One Owner i
Reduced
14441
C O U R T E S Y P O N TIA C 11)1111

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

E le c t r ic a l

L O T I 2 bdrm ) hath
with paddle leas, split
plea, central alr haal
ream, larga pah* Oaad

22*4 P AR K A V I ..

Or B arr AvVaAM ann* Salas
Acres* Its* river, tape!lull
ITS Mwy It at OaBary sea 42*2
Lusuneuk T Bird Drive in style
In this 1*7* Heritage Ed'hon
w in too man* oof ions ta list
Must ba seen ta be apprec'
4tad Call Dav* if 321 0041
days or J ) 10011. eves________
IHS P L Y M O U T H VAl I * N T
* cyl
22 . a door p s tinted
windows a.caltanl condition
two 371 M7,&lt;attar s PM
1471 Olds Cutlass Stamm Wagon
Runs good radio good lirts
1)72 JDOIfta or 1)1 2247
14TT Tovote fJOO r# built car
buretor, new lirea. new c M (ft
A prefttwe plate Motor runt
but knocks After 4 JO U J
OHO
It J f VYV R A B B I T 4 door 4
»p*ed O t a n inside runt
good X&gt; mpg MWY |t OCO,
Can M l i jeo after )P M
Itla f O R D G R A h A U A
) • » Call M J SAOO I Days &gt; or
)JJ D I M N dotl
I4 H Oatsun
JI0SL Station Wagon

EvtryW ed Nit# el 1 W PM

Aaymiag EtacTfUel I4ac* 147*1
IsHasatat . H Hr. Sarvlc* Calls
Tam's Etachrlc R rvrcs l l ) 2774
Contampovavy Etaclric Ouallty
w o rk , Naw C o n i!r u c tio n ,
Remodeling, Small Intlall*
Hon*. T V , Tklaphon* and
Rapdlr Sarvlc* » t H I 927
D A S Eloctrlc
222 *020
Naw A romodoling. eddiitan*.
•ant. tacunfy lights, timevt
plut all *i*&lt; servica* QuallTy
VarvK* Llcansad A Bonded

A d d it io n s *
R e m o d e lin g

F mane tng Available

322-2420

NATIONAL AUTOSActi
1120 SvjMfgtd.....321 4075

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

The Whota Ball Of Wte

taday at 222 242*
n&gt; tm

W« Nava a Limited Number ef
Ripo i tor a * L aw a * INM O m u l

To List Your Business...

a used as leant* ream,
ream Octal Aitum p

II yaa are laakiag tar a sue
Real Eilata.

%sns

12) 111)

Bid Credit?
No Credit?
m FINANCE

A N D LET AN EXPERT DO THE J OB

A P L E A S U M I I bdrm. I batb
Daubl* Wide M akilt an 2
acres, spill bdrm. plan, aat in
kitchaa. great ream Redacad
I* SST.Md

a O E N E V A O S C E O LA RO a
IO N E D FOR M O B ILE tl
2 Acre CeuaN y Ir s d s

COURTESY P O N TIA C

Mwy •)
OAftinA Beech
• • • • • Holds A e e e • •

IB M E it r d liv * Ty p e w rite r
VOC Cell 1JJJ4M At* lor
Dean ( nor mal b u t i n e i i
hourt)________________

S TA R T H E R E II 2 bdrm 1 bath
ham* with split bdrm (tan.
aat la bitchaa. saddle la at.
large utility, taacad cemptatw
ty Saa.tM

W IL L B U IL D TO S U ITI TO UR
L O T OR OURSI EX CLU S IVE
A O I N T F O R W IN S O N O
D E V . C O B P . A C E N TR A L
F L O R ID A L E A D E R ! MORE
N O M E FO R LESS M O N EVI
C A L L TO O A Y t

1}
Reduced

m

E

A LO V E N E S TI 1 bdrm I bath
ham* In aural nargkbarbaad.
aat la bltcbaa. irathly pata-ad.
large bach yard. *** ***

SH AO Y
ham*
bdrm
praat

Bonn*.ill* Pontiac
loaded

231- C

CONSULT OUR

W E L IS T A N O K L L
M O R E H OM ES TH AN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O L E C O U N TT

NO Q U A L IF IC A T IO N ! 12 bdrm
IS* batb beak* artlb split bdrm

23T —Cars

★ DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION ★

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipment

217—Garage Sales

C A L L A N Y TIM E
[SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE
APTS.

Baby Bedt, ll r f U t r i . C'lefb*!,
Pl Avpeniy i f e Paper beck
Book I I II i V f I J I es§4
NeedCribi. PlAypens Beby
furniture c lo th in g Good
P»tc»% After T PM
IJI |?4)
PAflng C ASH lor
Alumlniifnia C*n| Clipper
Brest L*Ad NewspAper
G»as * Gold Silver
Kokomo Toot 4?I W Isf
• s oo Sat * i m n e w

WILSON M»im FURNITURE

Santord&gt; Sales Leather

HM flVU 'lll m MR SkBtWIlllR

KISH REAL ESTATE

219—Wanted to Buy

STENSTROM

TTL . J Il 2 1 .

FR OM *315

&amp; 2 Bedroom Apts. A vailable
\d u lts and Fam ilies Welcome
nawaimsa »&lt;• 3 3 3 . 7 9 0 0

C O M M ER CIAL S P E C IA L IS T
BOB M B A L L JR P A.
R E A L T O R ............. ......... 2224111

sm sen

r e f r i g e r a t o r . 1100
wither dryer 1 100 lor both,
dishwasher 1*0 all hanmort
appliances Bunk bods UO
'awn mower. 212 ktuddnl desk
ard chair.SI2. broiler ovon 27
chair.SS Call: 222 HIS
•r e h t t o o m n .
Color TVs staroos washers
drytrs ralrtgarator Irtatars
lurnifur* video recorders
Special 111wee, s rani 12 00
Altarnaltv# TV A Appl Renlal,
/eyre. Shopping Cpntpr
212 two
Us»dW4*h«t» Per Is b Vvr «ici
Ser Kpnmorts
1)1 US 7
MOONEY A P P L I4 N C E S

REMTY*REALTOR

O P E N S U N D A Y S : 1 to I PM

E X C ITIN G N EW TH IN G S
ARE H A P P EN IN G A T

1 « —Commercial
Property / Sale

L IS T W ITH USI

E

Cell New ter More Intermetten

Gigantic 2 Fpsrilty V srd S . s
July l)th Sa: Only « 4 M t a ’
1)01 ScoH A&gt;* San tar d
Household Item s Ire e ie r.
elolhes quill scraps 2202
Princeton A y* Sal Only l_T__
M O V IN G S A L E
Everything
must go* Moving out of town
Wad 7 10 Sal 7 i ) n ’ PM
474 Summerlin A y* Sanlord
PORCH 2*1 E S o', ir d *
matching rocker recimar
N le g e ra * d | u i'* b l t bed.
badroem suit* and much
more F rl Sun . 4 S PM 2442
prang* B ird . Payol a ____
• family garage tala set* and
&lt;h*lr RV r t f n g . rocking
chairs, tlactrlc chord clothes
and toys Frl sal XX)I S Park
*v* 4 5 P M J77 4IT4

Apell*nc*s Far Sal* ell In
•scellenl condition 4 lull*
Boereataed................
)) ) * m
bacendilienad Applien— t
rent U 1 W A R B A N T i
B A R N E TTS ...C A S S E L B E P P T

...................... m t t t t

SA N FO R D Specious ) bdrm )
bath Condo Pool, neer shop
ping, s)7) month with only
STM sac )as east or see iq m

I me
Lot Rents

H I —Appliances
_/ Furniture

113— Storage Rentals

a a a IN D E L T O N A a a a
a a HOMES FO R BE NT a a
a a S74 14)4 • a
LAKE M AR Y | bdrm ) bath
larga cornar. shadad let
Central air heat
wallata Crass Raalty, Inc .
__
1)1 0277
Hr a}tor

Children 4 F t ft W# kerne.
Senior Ciftlent Ottcount

F Dfntvbed Studio Apwrtmwnf*
On* bedroom Apf%
two Bedroom Apf%

I

Giani Te&gt;d Sat* Sal July llfh.
4 ta * 10tl Oak Ave ibahind
housal M o to rcycle baby
iltm s b a ys I s u * 10 t l )
clothes toys 4 much more__

A.1»tt f Vfi ... .
Mtr} S ill
«nc»ud** Wi»t* C «rtA g e P i&lt; i up
Y A*d AIa m teAAwncA
i f f l^ d AteOcCVpAncy
GreferY KAebOe Hemet )2) S200

107-M obile
Homes, Rent

n e t Up
Naw 1 bdrm J bath condo
W ashardryr
pool S i n pa*
mo I N I P ] _____________

e Wether Dryer Cenitecftent
• On sight Meneegement

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

_

Thursday. Ju ly 1), IH S — SB

217- Garage SaL;

7 B D R M . It* bath, centra) air
*ashe- dryer hook up. M ty
carpeted no pets U W pe»
month Call UO talk attar 0
PM _______________________

Mini WarthMisci

93—Rooms tor Rent
ChritftkA Apt* i H om ti
TV . kitchdHI, lAutsdr f fTSAtd ISO
Ah Up Of 1421 M il 42) iAIO
F rtv «ft Mom# with p riv «f« room
IOf *n ttdfltfly per ton Cell
ni uv
ROOM FOR H I N T
E ld trly
preferred
F u l l h o u t*
privtleget tVQ per *eeh.!&gt;')
it Illy I'OOcViwnIf )2] 1141

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

to to )

! bdrm /I" i both, living &amp; dining
900*91%. country kitchen, le e r
gerege Cloee to thogping
center 4 uhooly 111 ll/a

LGNGWOOO Malyr# t*mai« fo
th#r* J Btfrm IAh • front
homt C a II I)f W«9__________

_______

105—DuplexT riple x / Rent

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOflE

j m IjWtftt.l

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

K IT ’N ’ C A R L Y L E 1b y Larry Wright

71—H«lp Wanted

Linde lea ring
O I M I V A LA M D C L E A 4 IH Q
Lo' Landctearing ....
Pill dirt
Tap**.I Pends Drain ditches
SIM Preperattan Call 9 4 H R
T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN O
F IL L D IR T # C L A Y •
S H ALE A H AU LIN G
19 M U

OUR R A TES A R E LO W ER
Use*, taw Nurs lap Center
414 « . l i n e d SI..
29 4742

Painting
F tarMe
22 y r i la p
Insured
1*1 9AJ
I A Wall I
Yea bey melon*11
W# seppfy labor T* S A V E 242

Traa E l l ....
W G T R IB R V

Trewkervlce
All Tree Ser* a
Aad He
4 PM

CaH Altar

■ CHOCS T R I E SE RV I C E
Fra* EaNatateai Lew Prtassl
.M Rsa stump Grinding.Teal
111 2724 ddy ar Mta
JOHN A L L E N S LA W N A T R E E
Dead Yaa removal Lie A mt
F rates I 9 1 2JM

_____
Plumbing
W h § N r | !l o rvH § •
• f t m I i m h Im • m i

•• •« %»

WBidlrvg/Sheet Metal
Iw rV v C r^ T ^ T B S S I
T' oatsi

MOHWEL0ING
19 71*7

�•B -Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.

Thursday, July II , IMS

r
1

1

V T . ;

1

36" Ocean Way CEILING FAN

52" Highlander CEILING FAN

42" Scottsmoor CEILING FAN

Four wood blades in w h ite or brown 3-speed pull
chain. Light adaptable,
w ith reversing switch.

Four wood blades w ith cane inserts, antique
brass housing. 3-speed, £
m
|
reversible motor. Light
^ B fH
||P ~ ^
adaptable.
MjgLm
'

Four wood blades w ith cane inserts. A ntique
brass housing. 3-speed
£ ^ a ^
m m
a
motor Light adaptable,
'
w ith reversing switch.
4

2 ' x 4 ’ Panel

FlBERGlAS

FIBERGIAS

Grid Mate
LIGHT FIXTURE

Special Value

INSULATED CEILING PANELS
2 ' x 4 ' panels with 5 / 8 ” insulated
backing Class A fire rating 10-year
lim ited w arranty against sagging and
w arping. _

(

w

e s t

i\i) m u c n s

Fiberglass SHINGLES

Pebble.....................
Nova (R19 backload
capacity).................

\

Locks directly onto T bar
ceiling grid Uses two 4 0 -w a tt
lam ps (not included)
4 8 " long x 4 V4" high
No 9 5 -2 4 1 1

Three-tab in w h ite and colors.
20-year lim ited warranty

S a v e
Sculptured. ..
Stonebrooke III
(3" backing)...

m

m

Bundle

Square....... 22. SO

|

Bundle

Square

—

iUAUANTEED.
Electronic
INSECT
KILLER

LipyWli

Anybody's Ad Price

• No Hassle!
• No Cards! I

SPRAY
ENAMEL
In w h ite and colors
12 o / net weight

100-foot lure
range No 2 2 1 0

Portable GAS GRILL
185 sq in. table-top grill Fold-over
w ire legs No. L 5 0 5

Pressure Treated

SEVIN 5 DUST
INSECTICIDE

Textured
S ID IN G
Weather resistant Double 5
■ «* ■ * ) 10" * 12' White.
| No PW4410

POST HOLE DIGGER

4 lb bag

Brentwood
STORAGE
BUILDING

Waxed handles prevent
splinters No 929.

5' x 4' No BW54

PLASTIC SHUTTERS
In white or black

1551!
H

I

I I

M H U

15-

X

^

—

39" (pair).

Unison

3 /8 " Reversing
DRILL
Double insulated 3
amp , 1/4 hp motor
Includes chuck key and
side handle No 457

13.99

V
t VMI*'1 A

\

4141

ft....... Rtf

1 cu

Ip«t ').........

R tf. 21.75

7%" C ircular
SAW
2 hp. 10 amp double
insulated motor with
burnout protection
Blade included
No 5150/576

IS .ft

ESWroOtULDCW* Wood Screen
nV

door

0

\ “ Ortho

1

S5 L_

499 3 4 f
-Rtf. 949 6 i9

6 ' x 8 ’ section

|
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4 panel door with
aluminum screening 1VV
thick. 6 -9 “ high No 1125
2 8 " or 3 0 "

P ressu re
Treated
STOCKADE
FENCING

•V

■

Diazinon Soil and
Turf INSECT
CONTROL &lt; _
oc
1 0 ib s

w

l i t

2 cu ft....... Rtf
4cu ft ..

R tf. M S I 1 1 .f t

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98% organic

?
15" x 51"
(pair).. ..
1 5 " x 63”

J79”

(SI) flffllffM
Sphagnum
PEAT MOSS

s'
* Wf

N [
. .

S up erfram e*
Storage
Building
FRAME KIT
Contemporary or
Barn style
No FS 88

H a m le t*
STORAGE
BUILDING
10 x 6\
No HM106-5H

5149”
OPEN

ORANGE CITY

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

2323 S Volusia Ave 1029 E Altamonte Dr
Highway 17 and 92 (Highway 436)
Phone 775-7268
Phone 339-8311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

875 West Highway 436
Phone 882-7254

O PEN
SANFORO

700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

�</text>
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                    <text>Evening

78th. Year, No. 8, Sunday, September 1, 1985— Sanford, Florida

Herald

—

(USPS

481-280)

—

Price

50 Cents

H u rric a n e W a rn in g
Central Florida Threatened
B y Jim Searls
its way across the state flooding
and
low-lying area with 10 or more
Deane Jordan
Inches of rain, forecasters said.
Central Florida braced itself
Red Cross emergency shelters
Saturday for the effects of erratic were open In central Florida to
Hurricane Elena poised offshore receive evacuees from Florida's
along Florida's west coast. It was west coast and local residents
expected to ram Into Florida from local low lying, flood-prone
Saturday afternoon somewhere areas.
betw een Panam a C ity and
At least 40,000 west coast
Sarasota.
, residents were being evacuated
The tempest, moving north by to Seminole and Orange counties
northeast in an unpredictable Saturday morning, creating a
pattern, was threatening to work stream of traffic along major

highways. Lake Mary High
School, with an emergency ca­
pacity of 1,500 people, opened
Saturday morning to receive
families fleeing the storm and by
mld-duy was housing local resi­
dents who left low-lying areas.
Maureen Sikora, disaster
public affairs officer in Orlando,
said several area shelters opened
during the night but there were
no figures available on the
number of people registering to
stay at them.

Elena
"I would like to encourage
people to make themselves com­
fortable at these centers by
bringing pillows and blankets,
folding chairs, special foods and
medicines and toys for the
children. We will be serving
coffee and hot food but we must
caution people not to bring pets
to the shelters. They must be left
at home," she said.
Sanford police officers as well
as Lake Mary’s officers were
See ELENA, page 6 A

Unltod P r a tt International

Dot shows eye of hurrica n e , w hile darkened area along
coastline shows area along w hich E le n a m a y com e ashore.
T h e threatened area extends from P ana m a C ity to Sarasota.

Deltona Teen's Death Draws Probe

H w a M Photo by T am m y Vlncaat

Th re e -w h e e lin g on an A T C
...1* It the d r iv e r o r the m achine that's
dangerous?

By Deane Jordan
Herald S ta ff W rite r
The death of a Deltona boy, thrown and
crushed by an all-terrain cycle, is under
investigation by the U.S Consumer Product
Safety Commission.
The commission is looking Into the June
14 death of John M. Christian, 13, of 681
Venson Court. beCause it Involved an ATC.
according to Edward J.‘ Morganto. an
Orlando-based Investigator for the federal
agency.
Morganto said Christian's death, as well
as 232 other fatalties involving the threeand four-wheel motorcycle-like vehicles, are
under investigation nationwide. The inquiry
is being conducted because of ATCs' poor
safety record, he said. Manufacturers and
retailers o f the vehicles, however, maintain
it is Improper use o f the vehicles that cause
d eath -and .In ju ry .- n o t -the v e h ic le s .
themselves.
Christian, the son of Herbert and Lois
Christian, died when he was thrown from a
1985 Honda ATC he was riding on a rural
road In Deltona. His death was unusual In
that it Involved a four-wheeled ATC which
are considered safer than the accident-prone
three-wheeled model. Morganto said.
Mrs. Christian said she believes it's the
way the vehicles are driven that make them
unsafe.
“ I told the Investigator I didn't feel there
was anything wrong with the machine. It's
how the vehicle’s handled," she said.
Mrs. Christian said her family purchased

Forty years ago Monday,
World War II finally ended.
The Germans had surrendered
four months earlier. And on
Sept. 2, 1945, the Japanese
gave up - V -J Day. mere was

the four-wheel ATC because they thought it
was safer than the three-wheel models.
Witnesses to her son's accident said the
speeding ATC John was riding struck a
depression on the unnamed road west of
Cheryl Drive and went out of control,
landing on the youth.
A Florida Highway Patrol report said the
four-wheel vehicle, which weighed over 300
pounds, was being driven too fast for the
condition of the road.
According to Morganto. the safety com­
mission wants manufacturers to engineer
safety features into the vehicles' design.
Failing that, they should be bpnned
altogether, although he conceded that
probably would be Impossible to do. About
three million of the vehicles are In use in the
U.S.
In 1982, 17 deaths were linked to the use
o f ATCs. 8P*tn 1984, and the commission
estimates 100 or more people more will die
this year because of them.
Morganto said 73 percent of the people
killed riding ATCs are 16 years old or
younger. Nearly a quarter of those killed are
under the age o f 12. Several ATC models are
designed to be used*by children.
The cortimission is also investigating ATC
use because of a dramatic increase In the
last four years of the number of hospital
emergency room cases associated with
them. Morganto said.
In 1980, there were 4,929 reported serious
ATC-related injuries requiring emergency

P e a c e

'Major' Drug
Doalor Gets
Fine, 30-Year
Prison Term
A "m ajor drug dealer" in
Seminole County was sentenced
Friday to 30 years in prison and
fined $250,000 for trafficking in
cocaine.
Brady "D icky" Austin. 34. was
sentenced by Circuit Judge
Dominick J. Salfl who ordered
Austin to serve at least 15 years
before being eligible for parole.
Austin was found guilty by Jury
in June. The six-member panel
a p p a ren tly d id n 't buy ;the
argument that he was entrapped
by undercover agents. #
Austin received the maximum
sentence and fine allowed by
statute because he is a "major
drug dealer" in the area, ac­
cording to Salfl.
Austin was arrested Nov. 16
after he served os a cocaine
middleman and bought a kilo­
gram o f the d ru g for his
Baa DRUG, page 6A

A lot of area residents were in
uniform as the fighting wound
down. They remember:

Tadpoles, that 1$. Je ra m y G re e n , 12, left, of
Longwood, and h it cousin fro m Hernando,
Miss.’, B ru ce Jack so n, 14, say the recent
ra in s have caused the tadpole population to

TODAY
A ction R eports.................... 2A
B rid g e .....................................4C
Business................................ BA
* C a le n d a r..............................4A
C lassified s.........................6,7B
C o m ic s ................................... 4C
C ro s s w o rd .............................4C
D m r A b b y .............
AA
D o a th i.....................
2D
E d it o r ia l........... .................. 2D

MsreMptMtetoyBfMVSoMHl

Tro llin g F o r

H o spital.......... .......................3A
N a tio n ..................................... 2A
O p in io n ................................*3D
P e o p le ............
M ^ '5
R e lig io n ................................. 5D
School AAenus,,
Sports..........
Int.
Vlewpolr
Weather

Military To Tori For AIDS
Men and women seeking to serve in the armed forces will have
to pass a Pentagon-sponsored AIDS blood test or be rejected.
Those already in service may have to tike the test. too. Page 2A.

" re a lly ju m p ." Tro u b le Is, the sq uiggly little
critte rs keep d y in g In the m ayonnaise |ar
the youngsters use as an a q u a riu m .

W hen. Japanese m ilitary
forces surrendered to the Unit­
ed States 40 years ago Mon­
d a y . V -J D a y . S a n fo r d
servicemen were among the
thousands o f soldiers ana sail­
ors dancing 10 the streets. For
them, the news meant they
would be. spared a muchsi o f ’ Japan
Lve have cost
that may well
them their Uvea.
"There was Jubilation, glee.
Joy. We Just didn’t think we'd

24-year-old naval ordnance'
man stationed at Okinawa.
On Sept. 2. 1945. which was
Sept. 1 U.S. time, Japanese
Gen. Yoshljlro Umezo surren­
dered unconditionally to Oen.
Douglas MacArthur aboard, the
USS Missouri anchored In
Tokyo Bay.
Sauls was listening to the
signing by radio.
T*That was Jubilee when we
heard MacArthur say. 'These
proceedings are finished ' We
knew it svas a matter of time
before we'd all go home."

Victim Hospltollxod In Sorlous Condition

Gator That Attacked Elderly Man Killed
been a frequent visitor of the park for the
B y J a a lsO a a t
last five years, according to Bernice Ervtn.
HsraM S ta ff W rlta r
A 6-foot. 4-Inch alligator that state officials the wife o f park manager D.C. Ervin.
Baker was wading in a small man-made
believe stir ’red a Kempton. Indians man
Thursday, has been destroyed, according to cove looking for fishing bait when some­
Lt. Terry Young of the Florida Game and thing grabbed him below the knee of hto
right leg and pulled him under the water.
Freshwater Fish Commission.
The gator apparently let go and Baker
The alligator was found about 10 p.m.
Thursday at Lake Monroe Park on the managed to swim to shore where he laid in
Volusia County aide of the lake, the scene of the tall grass yelling for help. About 2:30
the attack, by William Whfddcn, an alligator p.m. the Ervins heard Baker and Mr. Ervin
trapper hired by the rommtaeton for just went to tnveetfgste. Upon finding Baker.
Ervin and his w ie called fo r help using the
ouch emergencies. Young said.
Although "nothing opt of ths ordinary" emergency 911 number.
A helicopter took Baker to Halifax Hospi­
was found in the alligator's stomach during
a necropsy* Young stud the alligator was the tal In Daytona Beach where he remains in
only one found in the area and that It bad the intensive surgical care unit In serious
condition, according to hospital officials who
been seen by several wttneasesat the park.
The victim,- John Baker, in his 70s. has would not reveal the nature or extent of

Baker's Injuries.
Volusia County sherifTs deputies, game
wardens and Whldden searched for the
alligator until they found It at about 10 p.m.
Thursday. Young said. •
According to Mrs. Enin. Baker should
have been aware of the potential for attack.
"Th e old man knew the alligator* could be .
there." she said. "They come In and out of
here all the time."
The park does not allow swimming or
wading for Ash bait, she said, but "the
public Is going to do what they want to do
anyway. You. wouldn't catch me sticking
one foot In that water."
Mrs. Ervin said she called Baker's daugh­
ters In Tennessee and Colorado and that at
least one o f them la expected to arrive In
Florida today (Saturday).

�2A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sepl. 1, IMS

NATION
IN BRIEF
Police Identify Stalker;
Suspect A Drifter, Ex-Convict
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Using a fingerprint lifted from a .
suspected getaway car. police say they have identified the
so-called Night Stalker, who has left at least 16 people dead
in a random series of pre-dawn attacks that terrorized
much of California.
Sheriff Sherman Block said late Friday night that the
suspect was identified through fingerprints taken from a
stolen car the Stalker abandoned in Los Angeles after his
most recent known attack, in which he critically wounded
a man and raped his girlfriend in Orange County (Calif.)
last weekend.
“ We are satisfied that we now have the identity of the
individual." Block told reporters at a hastily called late
night news conference.
"W e considered not releasing his name so he would not
know that we know who he is," Block said, but added that
police decided it would bettpr aid the search if they
announced the suspect's name.
Authorities also released a photograph of the suspect,
identified as a drifter and ex-convict named Richard
Ramirez, 25. The police mug shot bears a remarkable
i?aemblance to the composite drawing that authorities
circulated throughout the state in one of the biggest
manhunts In recent memory.

Bert Lance In Trouble Again
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Former budget director Bert
Lance, three times forced to resign top Jobs because of
charges of illegal banking practices, faces new accusations
of check-kiting and other fraud.
The Comptroller of the Currency filed charges against
Lance In U.S. District Court in Washington Friday,
claiming the former chief of the Georgia Democratic Party
obtained hundreds of thousands of dollars from overdrafted
checking accounts at the Calhoun First National Bank,
where he is chairman.
In addition, the banking industry regulator said Lance
used his position to obtain and keep millions of dollars In
loans from other banks and questioned real estate and
insurance transactions he made.
"No shareholder, no matter how astute, could have
discerned ... that Lance had engaged or partiepated in
check kiting, nominee loans or diversion of credit life
insurance premiums owed rightfully to the bank." the
Comptroller said.
"AH of these non-disclosures Involve self-dealing or
similar breaches of Lance's duty as a director of the
Calhoun First National Bank." the court papers charged.
The new allegations, covering activities after 1981. in
some cases nearly duplicated what Lance faced during
similar investigations in 1977 and 1978. The government
charges then culminated in televised hearings before a
Senate committee, but he incurred no penalties.

M ilitary To Test For AIDS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In a bid to avoid AIDS
contamination in the military, the Pentagon says it will
give a new blood test to all men and women applying for
the armed services and reject those that fail the tests.
Dr. William Mayer, assistant defense secretary for health
affairs, told a news conference Friday that the Armed
Forces Epidemiological Board may also recommend that
the test be given to all 2.1 million men and women now In
the armed services.
Mayer said so far some 100 cases of acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome have been detected In the Army.
Navy. Marines and Air Force but there have been no
fatalities.
Any military person who is an AIDS victim and fails to
respond to medical treatment will be entitled to an
honorable medical discharge. Mayer said.
The tests will begin Oct. 1 on some 300.000 men and
women who apply each year for military service, he said,
and will cost an estimated $1 million a year.
Tests will also be administered to incoming personnel
from the service academies, the ROTC. the National Guard,
the Reserves and any special programs.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Police Battle Youths
In M ore Rioting Near Cape Town
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) — Police battled
stone-throwing and looting youths in black and mixed-race
townships near Cape Town for the third straight day in
racial violence that has killed at least 28 people.
The violence In the once-calm townships around Cape
Town was the worst since South African President Pieter
Botha declared a state of emergency July 21 in 36
strlfc-tom black districts near Johannesburg and Port
Ellzebeth.
Authorities said Friday 28 black and mixed-race people
have been killed in the townships In three days of clashes
between rioting youths and security forces firing shotguns,
rubber bullets and tear gas.
In Pretoria, three European foreign ministers, who met
Bishop Desmond Tutu Friday, were expected today to urge
Botha to undertake a program of political reform In South
Africa and end the apartheid policy of racial segregation.

A t Least 39 Killed In Train Crash
ARGENTON-SUR-CREUSE. France (UPI) - A mall train
slammed Into a derailed passenger train early Saturday,
killing at least 39 people and injuring scores of others,
authorities said.
Railway officials at the scene said they believed
passengers were still trapped In the twisted wreckage,
raising fears the death toll could mount. The crash was
France's third rail disaster in two months.
No foreigners were reported aboard the train, which was
headed south from Paris to the Spanish Mediterranean
town of Port Bou with more than 300 passengers.
At least 40 people were injured seriously and more than
50 were treated at the scene for minor injuries, said Jean
Michel Roulet, the local police chief. He said the last two
cars of the passenger train were "completely destroyed."
Officials said 38 bodies were pulled from the wreckage
and one passenger died at the nearby Chateauroux
hospital, where moot of the victims were taken.
The accident occurred about 12:15 a.m. shortly after the
southbound passenger train pulled out of the Argcnton-sur-Creuse railway station, about 150 miles southwest
of Paris, and derailed on a curve less than a mile from the
station.

Orlando Woman Raped In Woods
A 29-year-old Orlando woman
told Seminole County sherliTs
deputies she was raped Wed­
nesday by u man who Jumped In
her car when she stopped at a
tr a ffic ligh t in A lta m o n te
Springs.
The woman said the man got
in her car at about 10:30 p.m. on
Orinolc Street at Wymorc Road.
He pointed a handgun at her and
ordered her .to drive to an
isolated wooded area, she said.
There he forced her at gunpoint
to remove her clothes, a sheriffs
report said.
The woman said she feared for
her life and she didn't resist. The
man raped her. the report said.
After the attack the man ordered
her to drive him to another area
where she dropped him off. she
said. The woman said she was
not familiar with the area where
she was attacked, and'could not
pinpoint a location for deputies,
the report said.
She went to Winter Park
Memorial Hospital where she
met with a sheriffs deputy and
then later went to the Seminole
County Sheriffs Department for
questioning, the report said.
HOME GROWN
An Altamonte Springs man
h a s b e e n c h a r g e d w it h
possession of over 20 grams of
m arijuana a fter Altam onte
Springs police, armed with a
warrant, searched his home and
reportedly found two. four-footpot plants growing and addi­
tional pot and drug parapherna­
lia in u bag.
Michael Allen Droz. 24, who
was arrested at his home at 1058
Oricnta Avc.. at 6:51 p.m.
Thursday, has been released on
$5,000 bond and is scheduled to
appear In court Sept. 16.
BATTERED WIFE
Elizabeth Mcritt. of 27 Gale
House Court. Sanford, told police
her husband hit her in the face.
Officers noted she had a swollen
left eye and arrested the man.
Lawrence Benjamin Merritt.
46. was charged with battery at
his home at 1:21 a.m. Friday. He
has been released on $500 bond
and is scheduled to appear In
court Sept. 11.
PULLED FROM
FIGHT. JAILED
A Sanford policeman who
pulled a man from u fight with a
group of other men ended up
charging that man with resisting
arrest with violence and disor­
derly conduct after the man
allegedly struggled with the of­
ficer.
The incident occurred at Hig­
gins Terrace, at about 6 p.m.
Thursday. Norman J. Gaines.
18. of 23 Higgins Terrace I’ as
been charged in the case and
was being held in lieu of 85.000
bond.
COA8TED TO J A IL
A man who said his name was
"Coast to Coast" and who ref-

Action Roports
★ F ir e s
★ C o u r ts
★ P o l/ e e
used to give sheriffs deputies
information on himself* was
booked in to the S em in ole
County Jail as John Doe on a
charge of obstruction by false
information, a sheriffs report
said.
The man was questioned by
deputies because he was In an
area on 13th Street where San­
ford police had recovered a
stolen car. the report said.
He refused to cooperate with
lawmen and was arrested at 10
p.m. Thursday. The man has
b e e n id e n t if ie d as J e r r y
Dickerson. 23; of 59 Castle
Brewer Court, Sanford, Jail of­
ficials said. He was being held in
lieu of $500 bond.
INTERFERING MAN
A 29-year-old Sanford man has
been charged with Interfering
with police after allegedly re­
fu sin g a S em in ole County
sheriff's deputy's order to place
his hands on a Sanford police
car.
The man was being ques­
tioned by Sanford police outside
the Silver Tip Lounge when the
deputy stepped in to assist police
and ordered the man to put his
hands on the car, a sheriffs
report said.
The man refused and yelled
"Put me In Jail." the report said.
It took three deputies to
handcuff the struggling man. the
report said. Charlie Jones, cf
1305 W. 13th St., was arrested
at 10:34 p.m. Thursday. He has
been released on $500 bond and
Is scheduled to appear In court
Sept. 11.
BURGLARIES It THEFTS
Three salesmen told Seminole
County sheriffs deputies they
were robbed at gunpoint by two
men who entered their room at
the Quality Inn on State Road
434 at Interstate 4 in Longwood
at about 6 p.m. Thursday.
The bandits demanded cash,
ordered the victims into the
buthroom. took a $200 radio,
credit cards and about $135
cash from the room and then
fled.
The victims are: Michael Clark
Alberaon. 36. of Eustls; Thomas
Howard Hill. 42. of Smyrna. Ga.;
and Jack Lewis Hammond, 46.
of Mt. Dora, a oheriffs report
said.
Barbara V. Rcnnard. 40. of
1409 Alison St.. Altamonte
Springs, reported a video record­
er. 18 silver spoons and coins
with a total value of $546 stolen
from her home Thursday.

Deputies have the name of a
suspect who may have stolen a
$500 gold necklace with five
charm s from the home o f
Melanie Jane Williamson. 22. or
3482 Balsam Drive. Winter Park.
on Thursday.
SPEED ROUNDUP
Seminole County sheriff's
d e p u tie s w o r k in g In the
Wcathersfleld subdivision off
State Road 436 In Altamonte
Springs, issued 74 traffic cita­
tions to motorists between Aug.
11 and 17. sheriffs spokesman
John Spolskl said.
Four traffic patrol units were
operating In the area, he said,
and the bulk or the tickets went
to speeders.
Spolski said complaints by
cltizen s brought additional
patrol of the area and the beefed
up enforcement will continue as
needed. He said similar opera­
tions will be underway In other
areas at the request of residents.
SECURITY GUARD ROBBED
A Sanford security guard was
knocked down and robbed after
he opened his door to a stranger
because a man said he needed
help.
Williams F. Crowell. 67. who
lives in a mobile home at Truck

World. 317 W. First St., told
police a man knocked on his
door Just before midnight asking
for help. When Crowell opened
his door, a second man grabbed
the door und the men rushed
Inside knocking Crowell to the
floor.
The men tied Crowell's hands
with n bedshect nnd robbed him
of $205 worth of belongings
Including a watch.
Crowell freed himself as the
men were leaving nnd called the
police.
D U IAR R E ST
The following person has been
arrested in Seminole County on
a charge of driving under the
Influence:
—M. Frederick Robinson. 22. of
515 E. Scmoran Blvd.. *H-1.
Casselberry, was Jailed at 11:45
p.m. Thursday, after his car was
involved in an accident with
injuries on Lake of the Woods
Boulevard. He was driving cast
In the westbound lane of the
road when his vehicle collided
with an on-coming car. a Florida
Highway Patrol report said. The
driver and passenger In the
other vehicle, both from Apopka
were injured. Robinson was ulso
charged with failure to drive In a
single lane, the report said.

Jury Awards Woman $97,000
For Mishap At Disney World
ORLANDO (UPI) — A formerly
athletic St. Louis woman who
says she no longer can play
sports because of neck pain has
won a $97,000 Judgement
against Walt Disney World,
where a broken tram pinned her
against a wooden fence.
T h e a tto r n e y for S an dy
Ralston. 25. asked an Orange
C o u n t y c i r c u i t J u ry fo r
$225,000. which included Just
$5,000 for mcdlca) bills and the
rest for pain and suffering.
But after 3Vi hours of delibera­
tion s W ed n esd a y the Jury
awarded Ralston $100,000. She
may receive ‘on ly $97,000.
because the Jury found her 22

percent negligent.
Ralston's suit claimed she was
Injured in June 1981 outside the
River Country attraction. She
and a friend, the complaint said,
were told to get off a tram they
had boarded because it was
broken. When she walked In
front of the tram it bolted
forward and pinned her. The
friend. Nancy Mason, escaped
unharmed.
R a lsto n 's a tto rn ey. Mark
Horwltz of Orlando, said he was
"satisfied" with the Judgement.
A Disney spokesman declined
comment. Disney has the option
to appeal the settlement.

Ruling M a y Scare O ff G ays
A U S T IN . T e x u s (U P I) Homosexual men in Texas will
be reluctant to participate in
AIDS research programs now
that they have been labeled
criminals by a federal appeals
court; h gay activist said.
A coalition of gay and civil
rights groups charged Thursday
that the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of
Appeals In New Orleans was
motlvlated by "AIDS hysteria"
when it voted 9-7 this week to
uphold Texas' sodomy law.
which prohibits homosexual
conduct.
The case was appealed to the

5th circuit by Potter County
District Attorney Danny Hill,
with the support o f Dallas
Doctors Against AIDS, after the
law was decla-.cd unconstitu­
tional by a federal judge in 1982.
Don Baker, a Dallas homosex­
ual who filed suit In 1979 to
have the law declared un­
constitutional. said the national
hysteria surrounding AIDS af­
fected the nine Judges who voted
to uphold the law.
"There will be a fear among
gay men that If they participate
with state agencies, they could
be Incriminated und victimized."

Five Drivers Sentenced On DUI Charges
A miffed driver and a third DUI arrest
helped send a Longwood woman to Jail for
four months and get her license revoked for
10 years.
Denise Ann Humke. 27. of 112 Autumn
Drive, was sentenced by County Judge Alan
Dickey who also fined her $ 1.(XX).
According to court records, on April 4
Humke's car forced an on-coming car off a
road in Longwood. The driver of the car
turned around, and followed the car cat­
ching the attention of a police officer along
the way. The officer radioed for a backup
unit for u while three cars were pursuing
Ms. Humke's vehicle.
She was arrested and charged with DUI
after stopping on Georgia Avenue at County
Road 427.
The following persons have cither pleaded
or been found guilty of driving under the

Influence or having an unlawful blood
alcohol level.
The first-lime offenders have had their
driver's license suspended for six months,
been ordered to pay a $250 fine and court
costs of $27.50. and complete 50 hours of
community service. When a guilty or no
contest plea Is entered or if the defendant Is
found guilty of an alcohol-related charge,
other charges are usually either not pro­
secuted or are dismissed. Most of the
first-time offenders are allowed to apply for
business-only driving permits. In cases
where the sentence'differs, the actual
sentence is reported:
—Charles David Poe. 22. of 639 Marlin
Road. Winter Springs, arrested Aug. 9 after
his car wus Involved in an accident on
Albert Street in Winter Springs.
—Ronald Norman Evans. 39. of 120 S.

Sunlund Drive. Sanford. July 6 after his car
was seen weaving on U.S. Highway 17-92 In
Longwood.
—Franklin Dclanor Hensley. 41. of 1720
Angle Drive. Longwood. arrested July 4
after his car sldeswipcd a Casselberry police
caron 17-92.
—Edward Marshall Renfro II, 23. of 160
Elder Road. Sanford, arrested March 17
after his car was involved in an accident in a
parking lot at 3200 S. Orlando Drive In
Sanford.
—Paul van Leer Pierson. 46. of 1718 E.
Yvonne St.. Apopka, arrested Jan. 20 after
his car was involved in an accident In
Seminole County. His DUI charge was
amended to willful und wunton reckless
driving and he wus fined $250 and his
license was suspended for six months.
—Deane Jordan

Guilty Plea Entered By Drug Dealer
"Guilty” was the plea entered by an
Altamonte Springs man accused of offering
to make a marijuana deal with an off-duty
Seminole County sheriff's deputy.
"Sixty days." was Circuit Judge Robert B.
M cG regor's reply to Dwaine Arthur
Handford. 25. of 504 Oak St., who entered
the plea Thursday. McGregor also ordered
Handford to complete 5 years of probation
following the stint in the county Jail,
liandford. who must pay $200 in court
costs, could have received up to a year In
the county jail.
According to court records, deputy Dennis
Rudol reported the man approached his

pickup truck when he stopped at the
intersection of North and Marker streets.
Altamonte Springs o n Jan, fi-------------- --------The man said. "Do you want to buy tome
reefer?" The deputy asked. “ How much?"
and the man said. "I have as much as you
need," a sheriff's report said.
Rudol was returning home from a hunting
trip and had a shotgun in his truck. The
suspect saw the gun and some sheriff's
department equipment In the truck. He
said, "You ain’t no cop, are you?" The
deputy asked "W h y?" and grabbed the
man's arm. the report said.
x
The suspect pulled away and tried to (lee.
Rudol identified himself as a deputy, drew

his service revolver and ordered the man to
freeze. He did and Rudol searched the
suspect and- found several plastic bags
containing less than 20 grams of marijuana,
the report said.
In other court action:
—Dennis James Click. 27. of 1923 Park
Avc., Winter Park, arrested March 31 after
he ran out of the Oviedo Police station
following his arrest on a DUI charge and a
misdemeanor charge of possession of mari­
juana. Click, caught about 400 yards from
the station, pleaded guilty to escape and
could receive up to 15 years when sen­
tenced Oct. 18 by McGregor.

W EATHER
N A T I O N A L F O R E C A S T Springsteen's sold-out show at
While the leading edge of Hurri­ G ia n t s S t a d iu m in E a s t
cane Elena lashed Florida's Gulf Rutherford. N.J., for Sunday
Coast today as hundreds of because of the storms, which
thousands of people fled to the spun tornadoes in Long Island
north in anticipation of the and Connecticut.
The Long Island twisters
storm's 100-mph winds and
12-foot waves, in New York, a touched down in Rlverhead and
savage storm struck the National Southampton, where consider­
Tennis Center, site of the U.S. able dam age was reported.
Open, toppling trees, tearing
BO ATD fO FORECAST: St.
tops off tents and spawning Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
puddles 18 inches deep on the miles — Small craft should
courts. Afternoon and evening exercise caution. Southeast wind
play was canceled.
IS to 20 knots increasing to 25
Officials rescheduled Bruce to 35 knots by tonight then

Ewntng Herald
continuing through Sunday. Sea
4 to 6 feet increasing to 8 to 12
feet Saturday night. Wind and
sea higher in scattered thun­
derstorms along with a few
squalls mostly north part.
EXTEND ED FORECAST:
C lo u d y w ith sh ow ers and
thunderstorms north MondayOtherwise partly cloudy through
period with a chance or mainly
afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms. High upper 80s to
low 90s except mid 80s north
Monday. Lows in the 70s except
near 80 extreme south.

(USPS 411 }| 0 )

Sunday, September 1, IMS
Vol. 71, No. •
Publiahed Daily and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Santerd Herald,
Inc. M N. French Ave., Santerd,
Fla. mn.
Wcend Clan Featege Faid at Santerd.
Florida Jam
Heme Delivery: Week, 11.11; MMnth,
M.aii j Mentha, eia.JS; « Mentha,
U7.M; Year, ISMS. By Mailt Week
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�SCHOOL T A L K

Engineering Facility Nears Completion

with
Com m issioner o f Education
R a lp h D . T u r lin g to n

State Rules Govern Use
Of Animals In Classroom
0. A re there guidelines
which regulate the uae o f
animate In high school blolo g y o r o t h e r s c ie n c e
classes?
A. The 1985 legislature
enacted such a law which
prohibits surgery or dissection
on any living mammalian
vertebrate or bird by students
In grades K through 12. How­
ever. dissections which typi­
cally ar a part of biology
courses are allowed on pre­
served specimens which have
been obtained from a re­
cognized source. These labora­
tory activities must be carried
out under the supervision of a
qualified instructor and stu­
dents may be excused from
dissection activities upon the
written request of a parent or
guardian.
L iv in g n on -m a m m a lia n
vertebrates, excluding birds,
may be used In biological
experim ents provided that
physiological harm does not
result from such experiments.
Anatomical studies must be
conducted on models which
are anatomically correct for
the animal being studied or on
non-living non-mammalian
vertebrates. Again, students
may be excused from such
experiments upon written re­
quest of the parent or guard­
ian. Observational studies,
studies of vertebrate animal
cells acquired from proper
sou rces, and n orm al
physiological and behavioral
studies may be conducted. All
experiments must be con­
ducted under the supervision
of a competent science teacher.
Live animals on the premises
of public and non-public ele­
m entary schools must be
housed and cared for in a
humane and safe manner.
Animals must not remain on
the premises of any school
during periods when school is
not in session, unless adequate
care Is provided.
Q. W hat la the status o f
t h s T s a c h s r A ld a T a s k
Fores?

A. As you know, the T e a c h e r
Aide Task Force w a s
established by the legislatu re
to review the teacher a id e
function In our elem entary,
middle and secondary sch ools.
The task force, which I h a v e
ap p oin ted a fte r r e c e i v i n g
nominations from the e d u c a ­
tion community, is com p osed
o f five teacher aides, f o u r
teachers, three school a d ­
ministrators, and three te a c h e r
education center directors. T h e
group is composed of in d iv id u ­
als representing, not just t h e
various areas of responsibility,
but the various regions o f
Florida as well. The task fo r c e
will begin meetings this m o n th
and continue to meet o n a
monthly basis through D e ­
cember 1985. The work o f t h e
task force Is to conclude o n
January 1. 1986 at which t i m e
this group will make r e c o m ­
mendations to the State B o a r d
of Education.
The task force will be r e ­
viewing a great many a s p e c ts
of Florida's teacher aide p r o gram and w ill f o c u s
specifically on teacher aide a n d
teacher assistant t r a in in g ,
certification of teacher a id e s ,
the role of the teacher aide a n d
the teacher assistant, a n d a
comprehensive plan d e s ig n e d
to more fully utilize te a c h e r
aides and teacher assistants In
the educational process.

T h e U n i v e r s i t y of Central Florida's newest
b u ild in g , a five-story, $17 million project, is
still t w o w e e k s away from completion, but
c la s s e s a r e b e i n g held In it anyway.
C a lle d C E B A — Center for Engineering
an d B u s i n e s s Administration — the building
w ill h o u s e 3 .0 0 0 students, feature a "clean
room **
w h e r e s tu d e n ts can b u ild
m i c r o c h i p s , a n d have a computer desig­
n a te d f o r g r a d u a t e and faculty research.
A s p o k e s m a n for P.J. Goodwin, the firm
c o n s t r u c t i n g th e building, said only minor
d e ta il a n d c le a n u p work Is needed to finish
th e b u i l d i n g .
T h ere
a r e several other construction
p r o je c t s u n d e r w a y on campus: the Health
C e n t e r w i l l g a in approximately 25 percent
m ore r o o m
w hen construction on an
a d d it io n I s com p leted late next month. The
c a m p u s p o l i c e station is in the process of
h a v in g a d ou b le-w id e trailer Installed that
w ill d o u b l e Its current space. A student
g o v e r n m e n t kiosk, under construction since

A round
UCF
Richard
Tru ett

July is scheduled for completion by October.
L'r. Ruth Westhelmcr. host of cable TV's
"Good Sex,” Is scheduled to speak at the
UCF gym Sept. 9 at 7 p.m. Tickets are
$11.50 and are available from student
government.
Westhcimer, known simply as "Dr. Ruth"
on college campuses around the country, is
known for addressing sexually explicit
questions and problems called in to her
show.
Westhelmcr has been a frequent guest on

Sex O ffe n d e r
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If you have a question o r
concern about education in
Florida, please write U * 'R a lp h
T u r lin g t o n , c/o S C H O O L
TALK. Florida Department o f
E d u c a tio n . T a l l a h a s s e e .
Florida 32301.

FURNITURE SALE
SUNDAY 12-5
MONDAY 9-6

Juice Bar
Milk
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Sept. 5
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Lettuce w/Tomato
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• Secondary E xp ress L i n e s
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"The Tonight Show" and several other talk
shows and has gathered a large following.
The UCF football team has been active
with three practices a day. The first game is
against Bcthune Cookman College Sept. 7 at
Orlando Stadium at 7 p.m. BCC has won all
four games played against UCF. The football
program, in debt almost 91 million. Is going
to need some big attendance figures and
some winning points on the scoreboard this
year or new head coach Gene McDowell may
not have anything to return to next year.
There arc eight home games scheduled in
UCF'S 13-game schedule.
Due to the high rate of trafTlc accidents on
Alafaya Trail, new traffic signals have been
installed. There is an average of one
accident every 52 days in front of the
school. On August 26. the first day of
school, a two-car accident left a blue 1985
Dodge Colt totalled. Apparently the driver
did not notice the traffic light had been
Installed.

UBDA CHOICE, HEAVY.
WESTERN, let CUT

S S *19?.

LO S
A N G E L E S (U P I) C h r o n ic
sex
offender Weston
H ill, w h o
c re a te d a storm of
c o n t r o v e r s y a fte r he was shut­
t le d
b a ck
a n d forth from
C a lifo r n ia t o Florida, is now back
in a C a l i f o r n i a mental hospital, it
w a s r e p o r t e d Friday.
H ill. 4-4. w a s placed In Metro­
p o lita n
S t a t e H o s p ita l in
N o r w a lk
t h i s week after an
a r g u m e n t w i t h a female patient
a t th e M e n t a l l y Disturbed Of­
fe n d e r s d i v i s i o n o f Gateway Sat­
e llite H o s p i t a l in Los Angeles.
H ill, w h o h a s decade-long re­
cord o f s e x rela ted arrests, was
s h ip p e d
to
M iam i by Santa
M o n ic a p o l i c e .earlier this year.

There is no question t h a t _
teacher aides and assistan ts
have contributed sign ifican tly
to Florida's educational p r o ­
grams. doing their p art t o
m ove our schools t o w a r d
excellence. I think that t h e
task force is particularly w e l l
composed to study this is s u e
and I look forward to t h e
recommendations which w i l l
come to the State Board o f
Education early next year.

SCHOOL MENU
Monday
Sapt. 2
Labor Day
Tuesday
Sept. 3
Flcstada
Tossed Salad
Fruit
Milk
Secondary — Com
W ednesday
Sept. 4
Flshwish
Scalloped Potatoes
Green Beans

Sunday, Sept. 1, in s ~ 3 A

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B u ild in g Boom On Campus

m -im

i tanaamurn*

�4A— Evening Herald, Sanford, PL

Sunday, Sept. ), 1*13

Unions

| §ig

A fter 25-Year

1

By Prank Spotnltz
UPI Feature W riter
NEW YORK (UPI) - America s
unions, once powerful champi­
ons of the working class, arc now
fighting back — with some
success — against a shifting
economy, tattered reputation,
unfriendly federal regulation and
declines In membership.
Even as labor routinely Is
overwhelmed by massive layoffs
and demands for "glvebacks.*'
Industry experts say union lead­
ers slowly arc learning to combat
their Increasingly sophisticated
opponents at the bargaining
table.
Labor’s rising stars — such as
Richard Trumka of the United
Mine Workers. Lynn Williams of
the United Steel Workers and
3ohn Sweeney of the Service
Employees International Union
— arc bringing new polish and
strategy to the long-sluggish
movement.
Analysts have hailed the ex­
perimental contract signed by
the United Auto Workers and
General Motors Corp. for the new
Saturn plant in Spring Hill,
Tenn. — which exchanges lower
wages and benefits for a greater
say In how the plant will be run
— as a sign of things to come.
Other creative approaches.
such as a profit-sharing plan
proposed at AT&amp;T and a un­
ion-supported takeover bid at
TWA. also arc emerging.
Outside the bargaining room,
unions arc mapping ambitious
new organizing plans, commit­
ting themselves to greater politi­
cal and media exposure and
improving the services they offer
to their members.
But these bold Initiatives come
after a decade that saw union
membership at an all-time low.
contract concessions and twotiered benctlt scales accepted
and the air traffic controllers’
union crushed.
Union leaders say the policies
of the National Labor Relations
Board have changed so radically
under the Reagan administra­
tion that they avoid involving
the board in disputes, whereas
before they often looked to the
NRLB for help.
"It’s a difficult time for the
labor movement.” said former
UAW chief Douglas Fraser, now
a professor at Michigan's Wayne
Stale University. "But people arc
fools if they don't learn from
adversity and I think the labor
movement has learned from
adversity."

CALENDAR

W. First St.. Sanford.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 1
.Winter Springs Labor Day
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45
Carnival. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., a.m.. Western Slzzlln Restau­
Sunshine Park. N. Edgemon rant. Sanford.
Sanford Lions Club. noon.
Ave. Games, rides, food, rum­
Workers’ Trumka. who plans to mage sale and baked goods. Holiday Inn. Interstate 4. San­
ford.
broaden organizing to coal- Open to the public.
related industries and expand
Senior Citizens trip to Once
S o u th S e m in o le C ou n ty
the services offered union Upon A Stage dinner theatre, Kiwanis Club, noon, Quincy's
members to Include consumer Orlando, to see On Golden Pond. Restaurant. Highway 17-92 and
and legal advice.
Leave Sanford Civic Center. 3:45 L i v e O a k s B o u l e v a r d .
Trumka said labor became p.m.; pick up at Seminole Plaza Casselberry.
complacent in the ,1950s. losing 4:15 p.m. Return 7:30 p.m. Call
Central Florida Blood Bank
touch with its members and 322-9148 for reservations.
Seminole County Branch. 1302
failing to appreciate the im­
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. E. Second St., Sanford. 11 a.m.
portance of communications,
open discussion, Florida Power to 7 p.m. Florida Hospitalparticularly television.
"Corporations quickly seized and Light building. N. Myrtle Altamonte Branch. 601 E. Alta­
monte Ave., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
on television to mold favorable Avenue, Sanford.
Images of themselves, hiring
Alanon meeting. 8 p.m.. 1201
S e m in o le D og F a n c ie r s
public relations firms and^ spen­ W. First St.. Sanford.
Association intermediate and
ding billions and billions of
advanced classes beomg at 7:30
dollars," he said. "W e didn’t —
MONDAY, SEPT. 2
and 8:15 p.m., Secret Lake Park.
in some cases because we didn’t
Bowling league for mentally North Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
have the have the finances, in handicapped, 4*5:45 p.m.. Alta­
Call Eva Matheny at 831-0717
some cases because we didn’t monte Lanes. 280 Douglas Ave.
for Information.
rea lize its im portance. We Call 862-2500 for information.
must."
Sanford D uplicate Bridge
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
Unions, perceiving an attack
p.m.. closed. 8 p.m., step. 130 Club. 1 p.m., Greater Sanford
by the Reagan administration,
Normandy Road. Casselberry. Chamber of Commerce. 400 E.
also are more aware than ever of Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed.
First St.
the need to focus on politics.
Longwood C ivic W om en’ s
Apopka Alcoholics Anony­
"W e ’ve been compelled to
undergo some heavy-duty soul mous. 8 p.m.. closed. Apopka Club. 1 p.m.. 150 W. Church
Ave.. Longwood.
searching." a UAW spokesman E p i s c o p a l C h u r c h . 6 1 5
said. "Politics is our lifeblood in Highland.
Sanford Senior Citizen Club,
a way It never was."
Al-Anon Step and Study. 8
noon, Sanford Civic Center. Bag
Added UAW vice president p.m., CasselberTy Senior Center.
lunch and Bingo.
Donald Ephlln. who heads the 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
union’s GM department, "Many
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. closed,
p.m., closed. 8 p.m.. step. 130
problems that confront Ameri­ 1201 W. First St.
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
can workers cannot be handled
Fellowship Group &lt;AA. senior
Clean Air Rebos Club. noon,
at the bargaining table.
citizens, 8 p.m., closed, 200 N.
closed.
"There’s nothing about the Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 5:30, closed dis­
yen-dollar relationship, or the
Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30
cussion. and 8 p.m.. open dis­
lack of a coherent trade policy In p.m., West Lake Hospital. State
cussion. 1201 W. First St.
America — those questions can Road 434. Longwood. Call Mary
24-Hour AA group beginners
only be handled politically."
at 886-1905 or Dennis at 862open
discussion. 8 p.m.. Second
What successes labor will have 7411.
and
Bay
Streets. Sanford.
in parlaying its newfound de­
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m..
termination Into gains In mem­
TUESDAY, SEPT. 3
c lo s e d . M essiah L u th era n
bership and working conditions
Casselberry Kiwanis Club,
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
remains to be seen.
7:30 a.m.. Casselberry Senior
Road.
"In light of the fact that labor Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Overeaters Anonymous, open,
seems to be taking some bold Drive. Casselberry. *
7:30
p.m.. Florida Power &amp;
and well-thought-out steps. I
Light,
301 S. Myrtle Ave.. San­
Sanford
Toastmasters.
7:15
think It’p quite possible that the
a.m.,
Christo's
Restaurant.
107
ford.
rebound will occur." Harvard
University’s McdofT said. "There
are still the Issues of what will
happen In the political arena and
how management will respond
SAM PLE B A L L O T
to labor’s new moves."
C
I
TY OF LAKE M ARY
But Trumka said working
people this Labor Day can cele­
G E N E R A L E L E C T IO N
b rate k n o w in g " t h e lab or
S E P T E M B E R 3, 1985
movement has been shaken and
now it’s awake.”
"You’re starting to see the
cooperation and support of the
la b o r m o v e m e n t th at w as
common In the *30s, *40s and
*50s.” he said.
"W e’re actively helping one
another and not just giving lip
OFFICIAL BALLOT
service to solidarity like we’ve
OCNINAL ELECTION
CtTV OF LAKE MART. FLORIDA
done over the past 25 years."

Decline,L abor Is Fighting Back

Labor’s decline began in the with skepticism by all the major
late 1960s. according to New unions she approached except
York University economics pro­ for the Service Employees In­
fessor Bruno Stein, when the ternational Union, with which it
economy started to shift from is now affiliated.
m a n u factu rin g to service.
Nussbaum said the other ma­
Rampant Inflation and foreign jor unions, duunted by the
competition sped the demise of prospect of organizing women
and part-time workers, “ would
heavy Industry.
Workers at new plants increas­ have nothing to do with us." In
ingly shunned unions, partially 925’s two dozen attempts at
because wages had Improved organizing since then, only two
and firms knew better how to have failed.
"I don’t know that we’ve ever
resist union organizing, but also
because of the image of corrup­ experienced this level of antition and Inefficiency labor had u n io n is m on th e p art o f
em ployers and the kind of
developed. Stein said.
In the new book "What Do sophisticated methods to defeat
Unions Do?." Harvard Universi­ unions we’re witnessing today."
ty p r o fe s s o r s R ic h a rd B . Nussbaum said. "The fact that
Freeman and James L. Mcdoff 925 is starting fresh with new
argue labor's bad reputation is m e m b e r s , w i t h a v i r g i n
workforce, is an advantage."
largely undeserved.
Freeman and McdofT write that
Nussbaum’s 925 proved to be
"unions generally ’deliver the a harbinger of things to come.
goods.” by providing higher The service sector, the AFL-CIO
wages and benefits as well as a now c o n c e d e s , h o ld s the
voice on the bargaining table brightest hope for the future of
and on the shop floor."
*» organized labor, which now ac­
The professors said many counts for only 16.1 percent of
nonunion workers have higher the work force.
"Just as industrial workers
wages and better working con­
ditions because unions exist were the predominant organized
elsewhere, and that the pro­ groups In the ‘30s and *40s.
ductivity of a union shop often public employees were In the
hinges on how management *50s and ’60s and health care
responds to it.
workers in the ’70s and ’80s. I
Regardless of their value, un­ think the clerical and other
ions took a tumble. From a peak service workers are going to be
mem bership o f 1.4 m illion the fastest growing areas in the
members In 1969. the UAW hit ’80s and ‘90s," said Sweeney,
bottom at 900.000 in the late w h o h e a d s , th e S e r v i c e
‘ 70s. It since has rebounded to Employees International Union.
about 1.2 million members.
Unlike other major unions, the
Active membership in the 850.000-mcmber SEIU has seen
United Mine Workers slipped in steady growth since its inception
the 1970s from a 1942 high of in 1921. gaining a quarter595.000 to only 100.000. the million members in the past five
United Steel Workers halved in years alone.
size from more than 1,million in
An AFL-CIO committee con­
1975 to only 500.000, and the cluded in February that service
American Federation of Gov­ will account for nearly threeernment Emplovccs went from quarters of the labor force by
320.000 In 1972 to 220.000 1990, with most of the growth
members.
occurring in the largely un­
But while old-line labor's organized Sun Belt states.
membership was declining, an
Th e sam e co m m ittee re ­
Ohio secretary named Karen c o g n i z e d t h e n e e d f o r
Nussbaum was making inroads e x p erim en ta tio n . Increased
in unlikely territory for labor: the member participation, a more
nation's 16 million office and concerted effort to publicize un­
clerical workers.
ion accomplishments, improved
Nussbaum's 9 to 5. the Na­ organizing and guidelines for
tional Association of Working union mergers.
Women, has grown since 1973
But Sweeney cautioned that
to include some 12.000 mem­ unions cannot rely on the
bers who attempt to improve service sector alone. "W e can’t
"pay. promotions and respect" ignore the basic Industries of our
in (lie workplace.
country while the service sector
Five years ago. Nussbaum has been expanding," he said.
started District 925. a
The movement is counting on
7.000-member union greeted leaders like the United Mine

SEPTEMBER 3. 1*45

Stub No I

Stub No 2

Longwood Recreation Dept. Plans Colorado Ski Trip
With temperatures In the 90s it may seem
a little early to be getting mittens and ski
hats out of mothballs, but the Longwood
Recreation Department is planning its first
skiing trip. A meeting for Interested skllers
will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Longwood Community Building at Wilma

Street and W. Warren Avenue.
Anyone interested in being among the
40-plus sklicrs who plan to board a plane on
Jan. 4 to fly to Steamboat Springs. Colo., for
a week of fun on the slopes should plan to
attend Thursday’s meetingThe $670 per person trip package in­

cludes seven nights lodging in luxury
condos, five days of lift tickets, round trip
air and ground transportation, discount on
equipment rentals and ski lessons, and
complimentary wine and cheese parties.
The tab can be paid in Installments,
according to recreation staff.

TOP

OFFICIAL BALLOT
GENERAL ELECTION
CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
SEPTEMBER 3,1985

Florida NOW To Hear Nun Who
Advocates Pro-Choice Dialogue REALTY TRANSFERS
S T . A U G U S T IN E - Th e
Florida National Organization for
Women (NOW) will hear a dis­
cussion. "The Costs of One’s
Convictions." at their Sept. 7
statewide meeting at the Holiday
Inn of St. Augustine. 1300 Ponce
Dc Leon Boulevard.
Sister Jcannine Gramiek.
signer of an Oct. 7. 1984 A’ew
York Tim es ad stating ’ ’ A
diversity of opinion regarding
abortion exists among com­
mitted Catholics." will appear at
a 6:30 p.m. reception, and speak
at 7 p.m. The public is invited.
Sister Jcannine continues to

‘V

urge "candid and respectful
discussion" of the issue of abor­
tion. as well as the Issues of
pastoral and educational aspects
of lesbian and gay ministry.
Sister Jcannine is a board
member of the National Coali­
tion of American Nuns, and is
listed in the world’s Who’s Who
of Women in Education.
T h e F lo rid a NOW S ta te
Council meets quarterly. Further
information on Florida NOW or
on Sister Jeannlnc’s appearance
may be obtained by calling
904-829-2840 or 813-447-4094.

John Sotolk Jr. A W t B e ve rly I. to H N B
Inc. Lot* *• 14, M o ln e r't Addn LW , 1120.000
W llllom H. W alter A W t S ylvia to Dougle*
V. Alm alda. Lot 74 T u sk ew lll* Point, 101,000
Cal ton Horn** to Barnard J. Whaalar A W f
Cynthia, Lot 20 Shadowbay, Un. One, 0120,000
Paaria W. Troutman to Caorga S. Holland
A W t M arllynn L.. Lot 24 Shadowbay Un.
One, ltt.100
Samuel J. M oore A W f Judith to R obert C.
Steward A W t Diana S., N t * of Lot 100 Slavla
Colony co »/d, 01,217,100

G a lllm o re Hornet, Inc. to T rad ition al
C on lr. Co. A G .K . C h r ltle n te n , L I 34
Northridge, 77.900
James L. O rentki A W f Helen A. to W illiam
S. Brocket! A W f June W .. Lt 2 Blk A , Roann
Ests.. 112.000
Tom m y R. T aylor Sr A Barbara to Low ry
E. Rockett A P a tricia R .. L t* 14,17, Blk 12,
E vantdale. 0135.000
C o m m o n w e a lt h S a v . to D o n a ld B.
O'Rourke. Lt 171 B arclay W ood* 2nd Addn.

LABOR DAY HOLIDAY
REFUSE SCHEDULE
DEAR REFUSE CUSTOMER,
THERE WILL BE N O GARBAGE PICKUP FOR
CUSTOMERS SERVED BY THE CITY OF SANFORD REFUSE
DEPARTMENT M O N D A Y, SEPTEMBER 2, 1985.
M ONDAY'S PICKUP WILL BE MADE TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 3, AND TUESDAY'S PICKUP WILL BE
MADE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1985.

H erm itage, Inc. to Charles L. G iven * A W f
Robin, Lt 7 H erm itage Un. 3,
Bel A ire H om e*, Inc. to Kenneth W.
Boydtton A W f Sherry, Lt 40S Oak Forest Un.
Four,tll0.200
B o l- A I r o H o m e s In c . to R a n d y M .
Blegelm an A W f M arga ret A., Lt 403 oak
Forest Un. Four. 130.200
G alllm ore Hom e* to David J. Lovew ell A
W t m ary. It 54 Northrldge. *445.000
Jam es Brown A W f Sandra E. to Richard
M . A m lck Jr., Lt 2 Blk B Lk Kathryn W ood*.
*75.000
Im ogen * Jennings, to Llsbeth Plasterek.
rem ain d er to A lfred o Plasterek. Un. 274
V illa g e o l Wind meadows No. 3. *41.500
M ich ael T . Bryson A Wt Ann B. to G ary D.
H erdllske A W t susan K. Lt 40 Sabal Bend at
Sabal Point. *133,000
Longwood M arkham Dev. to Craven D ev.
Co. L t 10 M arkham Glen, *55.500
W illiam E . Dooley Jr A Wt Kathy to G a l* L.
Bandy A W f Doris S., L t 40 English W ood* 1st
Addn.t1l5.00u
Richard E. P ly m a le to Jack C Beatty A W f
H. Alison. Lt l i t Winter Springs Un. 3.
*230.000
D arryl L. Osterhoudt. A Deborah F. to
G a rry A. H iggins A W t Patricia A ., L t 47A,
Repl. P a rto t Sportsmans Paradis*. tM.000
R egina A re y to Edward Harey Jr., A
W dw ard Haret Sr., (M.000

(THIS STUB TO BE REMOVED BY ELECTION BOARD)
LAKE MARY GENERAL ELECTION
COMMISSIONER
SEAT 1

9/3/15
(VOTE FOR ONE)

A. R. -D O C " JORE

CHARLIE WEBSTER

Ethel L. C rew to John B. Kent A Wt Linda.
Lot 2. Blk 2. Cedar R id ge Un. 1, *95.000
Luther D. P otte r A Eugene K. Hall to M DC
Ventures. L t I I E n tim ln ger Farm s Add No.
*250.000
Laurel Hom es Inc. to MDC Ventures, from
S W cor. of S E U of Sac 17 21 30etc . *325.200
K ingsley E. Grant A W f E m ily to Dnr.eld
W . Owens A W f Ruth, L 1 1* Longdate Indus.
P ark , *333.300
Ben W ard A g en c y Inc. to Howard E. M abie
A W t Susan R . L t 4 W hispering Oaks. *129,000
U.S. Homo Corp la Russell W. W right, Un.
*04 North lake v illa g e Cond. II, *59,900
* T e rr y L . M cD anie l A W t Carol t * A .G . Slate
A W t A m P „ L t I*. Wefclva Club Ests..
Sac. Sis. 1173400
D ave L. Larsen A W f Lydia to W alter O.
R odgers A W t Jean, Lt 21, G rave Ests.,
*94A00

III

U.S. H om e Corp. to John F. M oran A W f
Corlnno. Un. 907 North lake VIII. Cond. I,

*51.900

L lo yd J. Boggle. T r. to I n et $. Andrew *. A
J e ffre y D. Robb A W f P e g g y L.. Un. a* Bl. O,
Summ it V illa g e U N . III. *44.900

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL THE REFUSE
DIVISION OFFICE. A T 322-3161 EXT. 285.
THANK YO U FOR YOUR COOPERATION.

68-101

I
* &gt;

�Evening Hr raid, Sanford, FI.

V o to r s T o M o k &gt; C h o ic e T u e s d a y

Sunday, Srpt. 1, IfSS-SA

Webster, Jore Vie For Lake M a ry Commission Seat
Bjr Janie Onat
Herald S ta ff W riter
Charlie Webster worries about
Lake Mary’s "m ushroom ing
growth." A.R. "D oc" Jore thinks
long-range planning should be
the city’s main objective. The
two vie for scat one on the city
commission In Lake Mary's
election Tuesday, the only con­
test on the ballot.
A rth u r "B u zz" Pctsos and
Kenneth King w ere elected un­
opposed to seats 4 and 5 respec­
tively.

Voters will be able to cast their
ballots Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 7
p.m. at Lake Mary City Hall.
G ro w th Is p ro b a b ly the
number one Issue In the cam­
paign. according to Webster. He
said he believes the city could
ex p e rie n c e "m u s h ro o m in g
growth” or "controlled, concise
development."
"W e need more planning and
less zoning," he said. "W e don't
need to be spot zoning."
Webster Is vice-chairman of
the city’s Planning and Zoning
Board. The P&amp;Z has Just com­
pleted work on a new com­
prehensive land use plan that
the board hopes will establish a
broader tax base for the city.
‘•'1 have an overview of what
could happen to Lake Mary"
should growth continue un­
controlled. Webster said, talking
from the screencd-in porch next
to the pool behind his brown
stucco home Just off of Country
Club Road, an area that is Just
now developing. The retired
crane operator's hometown of
Pittsford. N.Y.. grew from 6.000
to 60.000 In 15 years. "I saw
what (uncontrolled growth) can
do to transportation and taxes."
he said.
Webster's association with
Lake Mary started when he
came to Florida for a vacation in
1958 and met Eileen Keogh, a
long-time resident of Lake Mary
who in 1960 became his wife.
They lived In New York where
Webster was in the construction
business with C.P. Ward Corp..
but they frequently visited Lake
Mary and 12 years ago bought
property on what Is now Webster
Road. Two years ago Webster
retired and moved to that pro­
perty permanently and It was
then that he began his public
service as a member of the
Planning and Zoning Board.

ject individually."
Another aim for Webster is to
limit commercial development
on Lake Mary Boulevard to
professional offices, hold curb
cuts to no more than one every
400 feet (about one per block),
and limit most of the access to
that street to streets with traffic
lights.
Lake Mary's volunteer fire
department has been a source of
pride for the city but remains a
potential sore spot for city of­
ficials as long as some of the
volunteer firefighters keep leav­
ing their public works Jobs to
pursue their volunteer efforts.
Webster said.
"Lake Mary has the lowest fire
damage ratio and the best re­
sponse time of any fire depart­
ment, paid or volunteer, in
Seminole C ou n ty." Webster
said. " If the public works de­
partment loses a little time while
employees arc at a fire it's far
better than to have a paid fire
department." A paid fire de­
partment would cost the city
about $400,000 for a building
and two full time employees.
Webster said.
Webster would like to see Lake
Mary keep its small town at­
mosphere In spite of the Inevita­
ble boom town growth it is now
experiencing.
"It's a nice place to live and
what makes it this way Is the
hometown, rural atmosphere."
he said. "I would like to keep
that In Lake Mary.
" I’m not really a politician."
Webster said. "I Just have a deep
and abiding faith In Lake Mary."
Long range planning is the
main objective for Lake Mary of
seat one candidate A. R. "Doc"
Jore.
"W e need to look into what
we're going to do 10, 15, or 20
years from now." Jore said. One
of his long range plans Involves
getting a replacement for the
city hall he said he feels the city
will soon outgrow.

| 1
•2SE

s

A .K . *'Doc” Jo re

— I f « a r

C h a rle s W e b s t e r

grows we may need to look into
a paid fire department." A l­
though some o f the volunteers
do leave their public works Jobs
to answer fire department calls,
"they also answer those calls at
night on their own time. I could
defend the situation as it is now
easily.
"I come from a town up north
that is much more developed
than Lake Mary and they have
always had a volunteer fire
department." Jore said. “ The
time that I would look to a full
time fire department would be
the time there would be a
savings to our citizens on their
fire insurance."
Jore said before Insurance
companies set their fire insur­
ance rates they take into consid­
eration the fire department's
response time, the quality of the
equipment available, and the
number and frequency of fire
hydrants.
Jore said he was pleased with
the recent Board of Adjustment
decision that allowed the police
department to add an additional
1.344 square feet of space to
their already overcrowded build­
ing on Wilbur Road. That is only
a temporary solution, however,
The one-story building at 158 he said.
"A s the city grows we need an
N. Country Club Rd. is a 1920*s
vintage structure that was built administration facility but that is
by the city's Chamber of Com­ secondary behind the fire de­
merce. according to Barbara partment and police depart­
ment," he said.
G o rm a n , u t i l i t i e s b illin g
Lake Mary Boulevard, howev­
supervisor. It wau a community
center in the 1960's and then er. is the topic that receives the
lion's share o f nearly every
housed several com m ercial
ventures. Including an antique' public discussion at city hall
shop, until it was purchased by these days. As a public official
the city. Its woodwork was for Lake Mary already. Jore has
lovingly restored by citizens and some very definite thoughts
city nail workers, most on a about the Boulevard. Jore is the
volunteer basis, and it became citizen's representative on the
Salary Review Board, chairman
city hall in 1982.

In order to obtain the things
Lake Mary wants, "you have to
give up something." Webster
said. "W e need to allow for a
development along the 1-4 corri­
Jore said a new city hall
dor that would give us the tax
base to pave streets and develop should be a "two story where we
som e o f the pu blic works may not finish the second story
services that Lake Mary needs." ' but use It for expansion as we
need it."
Lake Mary has 21.9 miles of
Outgrowing a city hall was a
unpaved streets, he said, and
that's a "shame" for a city the problem Maitland had, Jore said,
offering to help Lake Mary learn
size of Lake Mary.
from that city's mistakes.
"W e need to get the tax base
Jore is a former Maitland city
broad enough to keep the
councilman (four years) and
burden of paving those streets former vice-mayor of Maitland
off the people who already live
(two years).
here." he said. Webster said he
A native of Hastings-on-thehopes to see the height restric­
tions now on buildings that are Hudson, N.Y., Jore considers
or would be built near 1-4 cased himself two-thirds Florida native
to allow taller buildings, thereby because he has been in this area
reservin g some o f the un­ for almost 30 years. He original­
developed land in that area for ly moved to Winter Park and
beautification. Webster would lived In Orlando and Maitland
also like to require more strin­ before moving to Lake Mary In
gent
fire regulations on the 1978.
taller buildings.
"1 came to Lake Mary with the
A problem Webster secs with idea of building a house back in
city government in Lake Mary is the woods" and staying out of
politics," he said. "I wanted
the lack of citizen input.
room around me. I was tired of
"W e'd have a lot more input sneezing and the neighbor cat­
from people if they had a ching cold."
comfortable place to sit down,"
Jore's banker's-gray suit de­
he said. His answer is a much
needed new city complex, also picts his profession: he is vice
on his agenda for Lake Mary. president o f Pan Am erican
That building would include a Mortgage in Orlando. Jore re­
fire department, police depart­ ceived a bachelor o f science
ment and city hall and would be degree in business administra­
located in the downtown devel­ tion from Columbia University in
the mid 1950s after a two-year
opment area.
stint in the service.
Initially the downtown area
Now that Lake Mary is grow­
was zoned commercial in the
ing. however. Jore wants to
proposed comprehensive land make its handling of explosive
jise plan, but such a designation growth a model for other cities to
would have allowed all types of
follow.
commercial development in that
Rather than including the fire
area. Webster said, and "then
people would be expecting us to department and police depart­
allow them to build things we ment under the same roof with
didn't want downtown Just c i t y h a ll, h o w e v e r . J o r e
because It was commercial." envisions a separate building for
Instead the plan was changed to firefighters and police.
"M y feeling is that we have an
Include downtown as a separate
development area "so we can outstanding fire department."
look into each development pro­ Jore said. “ As the community

'H

of the Code Enforcement Board,
and a member of the Capital
Facilities Committee.
He is in favor of "commercial
development on the Boulevard
that does not Impede the flow of
trafTlc" and would like to see
"quality development" there,
but to do that "w e must make
some sacrifices."
" If a man wants to come in
with a professional office build­
ing on the Boulevard we should
allow him to build so he doesn't
have to put something second
class up th ere," Jore said*
explaining his reasons for wan­
ting to ease the building restric­
tions.
As far as separating commer­
cial development from residen­
tial areas. Jore said the answer
is not to leave the land between
the two vacant but to construct a
wall of earth or brick.
"W e must take into account
the maintenance of it." Jore
said. "W e want Input from
citizens on what they want the
most."
Jore didn't want residents
thinking the city can do any­
thing about the four-lanlng of
Lake Mary Boulevard, however,
because the road is a county
road. “ We are not an island."
he said. "W e are part of an
overall system and much higher
authorities (than the Lake Mary
city commission) are looking at
Lake Mary Boulevard. It Is our
Job to work with them and get
the best for Lake Mary citizens."
"Th e biggest mistake you can
make is to keep it too small." he
said of widening the Boulevard.
"There will be areas where It’s
got to be six lanes and other
tlmeo you don't need more than
four."
What is best for those citizens

as far as sewage goes. Jore said,
is to have a city sewage system
only where there is high density
development.
A sports complex that was at
one time a possibility for Lake
Mary and the relocating of
WOFL, an Orlando-based televi­
sion station, to Lake Mary is
more “ pie in the sky" visions,
according to Jore. " If those came
to pass this would be a hell of a
big city." he said.
However, he is not against
such dreams becoming reality
because it would Increase the
tax base for the city.
"W e either increase the tax
base or Increase the mlllage.”
Jore said. He is in favor of
widening the tax base by en­
couraging commercial develop­
ment along 1-4 such as offices,

offlce/warehouse, and motels.
"Growth down there (at 1-4
and Lake Mary Boulevard) will
not impact on any residential
area of Lake Mary as we know It today." he said.
Of growth in general, he said,
"I'm not going to stop It."
"The land in the city is going
to develop." he said. "The pro­
jection is we will be a city of
39.000."
Whether Lake Mary should
retain a "rural" or "small town"
atmosphere Jore said he doesn't •
know. “ I don't know what you .
mean by that term." he said. " If
it means streets you can't get by
on when they’re dry or when
they're wet. no I don't want that.
"All I want to do is make sure
we grow so that the city can be a
place we can and want to live."

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Surplus Food Distribution Sot
LONGWOOD — Surplus food
will be distributed to Seminole
County .by the American Red
Cross on Sept. 4-6. Except for
the Chuluota distribution, sites
w ill rem a in the sam e. In
Chuluota. the distribution will
take place at the Fire Hall at 7th
and East Avenue.
Z ip codes 32746. 32747.
32771 and 32779: Crooms High
School, 2200 West 13th Street.
Sanford, on Sept. 4 from 0 a.m.
'l

to 3 p.m.
Zip codes 32701, 32703,
32707. 32708. 32714. 32730.
32733. 32750. 32751 and
32792: Altamonte Community
Chapel. 825 Highway 436 In
Altamonte Springs, on Sept. 5
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Zip codes 32732. 32765 and
32766: Fire Hall. 7th and East
Avenue. Chuluota. on Sept. 6.
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon.
For information call 831-3000.

r,
3

•: m
Sanford
Longwood

322-1242
834-3200

DcBary
668-8668
Orange City (904)775-6000

Forest City 869-6900
Oviedo
365-5641

�exiigis

U c o -'.r

6 A — Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Sept. 1, M S

Forecasters warned Elena was
capable of causing $1 billion
damage.
Hurricane warnings were fly­
in g from Panam a C ity In
Florida's Panhandle to Sarasota
south of St. Petersburg, and
hundreds of thousands of resi­
dents and vacationers jammed
highways In a mass exodus to
higher ground.
"Immediate evacuation Is nec­
essary to avoid the needless loss
of thousands of lives," Gov. Bob
Graham said.
Graham and the governors of
A la b a m a . M ississip p i and
Louisiana declared emergencies
T h u r s d a y . An e s t im a t e d
175,000 people fled Alabama's
coast, 40,000 people left homes
and o ff- s h o r e o il r ig s in
Along with wind and rain, Louisiana and another 50,000
forecasters also predicted an fled Mississippi.
Increased chance of tornadoes In
Graham sent 1.600 National
the area. Four funnel clouds Guard troops to direct evacua­
were sighted early Saturday tions of 350,000 people In 13
morning between Leesburg and Florida counties In the path of
Tavares, and one touched down the 300-mlle-wlde mass of fury.
near a m o b ile hom e near
E l e n a w a s 160 m i l e s
Leesburg causing damage and southwest of Cedar Key. Fla.,
Injuries. The extent of the dam­ early Saturday and churning
age and Injuries was unknown at cast-northeast at 10 mph toward
press time.
an expected m id-afternoon
By mtd-moming Saturday a landfall, the National Hurricane
tornado warning was In effect for Center said.
The projected path would take
Lake. Orange and Osceola coun­
ties. S em in ole cou n ty was the storm Into Cedar Key but
expected to be Included in an hurricane forecaster Bob Case
e x t e n d e d t o r n a d o w a tc h said, "W e still are not 100
throughout the day, as was most percent convinced on its mov­
of central Florida. During rain ement."
squalls Saturday morning there
The leading edge of the hurri­
was an unconfirmed report of a cane lashed the Florida coast
funnel cloud trying to touch with torrential rain and 55-mph
down near the Lake Mary exit of wind gusts, bending street signs
Interstate 4. police said.
and swamping roads.

"One minute It'll blow like I
don't know what and rain like
Hades, and then the next minute
it's calm as can be," said Lee
Rivers of Apalachicola. "It's
been hanging mostly ofT shore,
and looks like a fog bank or
something."
More than 600,000 residents
and tourists as far west as
Louisiana have fled the storm's
burgeoning wrath since It swept
past the Florida Keys Wednes­
day.
Early Saturday Hurricane
Elena bore down on Florida’s
Gulf coast with 100-mph winds
and 12-foot waves, lashing beach
resorts and fishing villages with
blinding rain In the first blow of
a Labor Day weekend attack.
" If the hurricane strikes the
Florida coast, coastal residents
face almost certain death, or
they can evacuate immediately
and protect their lives," the
governor said.
The hurricane center declared
the storm a "major hurricane on
the order of Frederic." which hit
the central Gulf Coast In 1979
and killed 13 people along a
$2.3-bllllon swath of destruction.
"It would certainly not be out
of the question to think of this as
a bllllon-dollar-class hurricane."
forecaster Mark Zimmer said.
Forecasters warned Elena
could hit the coast with 130-mph
winds. 12-foot storm tides and
10 inches of rain, spawning
tornadoes and flash floods.
Schools closed and residents
packed storm shelters. Motels
were booked solid as far north as
Montgomery, Ala.
"W e kept traveling until we

could find a motel. There were
none." said Debbie Goddard of
Destln. Fla., who stayed with her
newborn child at a state com­
munity center in Montgomery.
The storm began oil the coast
of Africa nine days ago and grew
to hurricane strength in the Gulf
of Mexico early Thursday.
Winds grew to 100 mph as the
storm turned north early Friday.

easing the threat to Louisiana,
M is s is s ip p i and A la b a m a .
The threat of Hurricane Elena
stomped out hopes for a prof­
itable Labor Day weekend at
Gulf Coast resorts as guests
booking rooms for more than
100 miles canceled reservations
and fled for higher land.
(Some UPI wire Information
was used In this report.)

about the accidents has been
sailor. I didn't have enough
collected and analyzed. He said
money to celebrate."
that decision-making process
When U.S. occupational forces
Involves six public meetings
arrived In Japan they saw Just
Continued from page 1A
C o n tin u ed from page 1A
around the country. Three have
how devastating an attack on
v e t e r a n s Interviewed expected. the islands would have been.
treatment, he said. By 1984, the been held and the next one is
T h e y were all preparing to be
Sanford attorney Mack Cleve­ number increased to 66,956 — s c h e d u l e d T u e s d a y I n
p a r t o f an all-out Invasion of land Jr., at the time a 21-year- an Increase that kept pace with Milwaukee.
j a p a n c a lle d “ O p e r a tio n old Army Air Corps radarman. the vehicles' rising popularity.
Joey Peterson, of Seminole
O l y m p i c " scheduled for Nov­ was part of the occupational
T h e s a fe ty , c o m m is s io n Honda, a sales outlet south of
e m b e r . More than 1 million U.S. force assigned to Japan Just after estimates that ATCs will be Sanford for three- and four-wheel
s e r v ic e m e n were expected to die the surrender.
involved In 100,000 serious Inju­ ATCs and motorcycles, said It is
d u r i n g the operation.
"People who say we shouldn't ries this year, Morganto said. He human error, not the machines,
C ir c u it Court Judge Joe Davis have dropped the bomb would said the number of actual inju­ that cuase the problems.
J r.
w a s In Cape Cod. Mass, have said, 'Thank God for the ries may be higher because
"Most of the people who buy
p r e p a r in g to board an aircraft A-bomb!' If they had seen how Injuries not requiring emergency ATCs don't take the time to
c a r r i e r for the Pacific when he the Japanese were prepared to room treatment probably are not learn how to ride them, they
h e a r d the news.
don't use safety equipment, and
defend their Islands. There were reported.
• ‘ S o m e o n e cam e running guns entrenched everywhere.
According to the safety com­ they don't ride sanely." Peterson
a r o u n d saying. 'The war's over! Thousands of lives would have mission, there were 2.5 million said.
T h e war's over!' Then we cele­ been lost,” Cleveland said.
He said a lot of the mayhem
ATCs in use nationwide as of
b r a t e d . I was thrilled to death,"
The days following the sur­ January of this year. By the end results from adults drinking and
h e recalled.
render were tense in Japan, he of December, that figure is riding, and- by kids zipping
b i k e Davis, retired restaurant recalled.
expected to increase to 4.3 around unsupervlsed.
o w n e r Jim Spencer underwent
He said the vehicles have been
"The Japanese were always million.
t r a i n i n g for the invasion in sort of obedient and subservient.
Morganto salt} the commission on the market for 15 years, both
M i a m i . A 34-year-old bom ­ T h e y respected m ight and has not determined how the as recreational vehicle gnd work
b a r d i e r In the Navy, he was power. But they stayed to veh icle can be made safer machine. Sales of the vehicles
b e i n g taught to fly low-altitude themselves."
because not all the Information have gone up 300 percent in four
n i g h t raids using only radar to
years, Peterson said, adding that
p i n p o i n t targets. Flying at a
would cost $34,000, enabling the four-wheelers are beginning
m e r e 900 feet.
within easy
him to pocket a quick $2,000. to gain In popularity.
He said to operate the vehicle
r a n g e o f Japanese anti-aircraft
He also told deputies he wanted
g u n s , he expected to be blown
to buy a second kilo an hour correctly, a rider should wear a
Continued from page I A
o u t o f the sky.
helmet, eye protection and
later.
“ I knew 1 was going to get my "clients" from Seminole County
•Austin then took $2,000 out of boots, be familiar with all the
b u t t killed when I went back. Drug Task Force agents.
a sack of cash, leaving $32,000 controls on the machine, and
B u t th ey (U.S. forces) dropped
According to his arrest report, for the agents. They took him to never carry a passenger (ATCs
th e
A-bom b (Aug. 6) which Austin told undercover agents a vehicle containing the cocaine. are designed to carry only the
e n d e d It and that suited me while in the parking lot of Austin checked the kilos, choae driver). He said children should
f i n e . " Spencer said. "1 was Bahama Joe's. 2508 S. French one. put It in a paper sack and be supervised when riding them.
Peterson said a national orga­
s u r e l y dancing I tell you that."
Ave., Sanford, that he had been left.
B u t he did a solo. Unlike other In contact with his "money
After agents radioed the code nization, Specialty Vehicle In­
s o l d i e r s who used their pay to people" and wanted to by one word to nearby deputies, Austin stitute of America (SVIA). is
i n d u l g e in wine, women and kilo of cocaine for $32,000. He was arrested and the cocaine planning to start training classes
nationwide for those who want
s o n g . Spencer said, "I was just a told his financiers, however, it and money recovered.

to learn to ride an ATC safely.
Edsel Jowcrs. a manager for
Honda o f O rlando, echoed
Peterson's position that the
problem is drivers, not the
machines.
"I don’t think they're any
more dangerous than anything
el se. . . m l n l b l k c s .
skateboards...."
Jowcrs said lnck of common
sen se, p a r tlc u la r y a m o n g
c h ild r e n , and a p e r s o n 's
assumption he handle an ATC Is
what causes most of the acci­
dents.
"ATCs handle different. Peo­
ple think they can just get on
and'haul."
Even though ATCs handle
dllferently than a motorcycle or
n snowmobile. Jowcrs insisted
they're not dangerous until
mishandled.
"They arc non-mobll. It takes
a person to move them."
Stuart M. Statler. a member of
the U.S. Consumer Product
S a fe t y C o m m is s io n , w h o
testified before a U.S. House
subcommittee on May 21. said
ATCs are unsafe because they
gnfe the appearance of being
stable when, in reality, they urc
not.
Statler said attempts by manu­
facturers to blame rider error as
the- cause o f the mounting
deaths and Injuries Is an Invalid
argument and an attempt to
sidestep the Issue of whether the
product Is safe.
He said the Injury rate lor
ATCs far exceeds other common
off-the-road vehicles.
In 1984. the estimated fre­

quency of Injuries associated
with ATCs was nearly twice that
for mlnlblkcs and trail bikes and
more than eight times greater
than that for snowmobiles, he
said.
Statler said the rate of hospi­
talization following an ATC ac­
cident is almost five times
greater than that of mlnlbikes ,
and about six times greater than
snowmobiles.
Statler testified that to turn an
ATC, some models are capable
of speeds up to 70 mph, a "rider
must Induce instability."
In a tte m p tin g to turn av
three-wheel ATC. one of the rear
wheels must be raised off the
ground, he said. The vehicle is
then balanced on two wheels, .
one in front and one In back.
"In doing that, the rider must
shift his weight, but not his
body, In the direction away from
the turn in order to permit the •.
vehicle to turn," he testified. •.
Thus, a rider wanting to turn left
must shift his weight to the right
or towards the outside of the •.
turn, causing instability. He said
It Is difficult to steer the vehicle
otherwise.
,
The unusual method of steer­
ing "...Is precisely the opposite
of what our natural Instincts tell
us and everything our experi­
ence with such other vehicles
has taught us," he said.
Statler said efforts by the SVIA
to train people In the proper use
of ATCs is Insufficient. He
estimated that only 1 percent of
ATC users would be reached by
such a program.

C on tin u ed from page 1A
p l a c e d on standby to help
e v a c u a te residents If necessary.
E a rly Saturday, Sanford police
o fT lc c rs were rousting national
g u a r d members to open the
S a n fo r d National Guard Armory
s h o u ld military personnel from
P a t r ic k Air Force In Satellite
B e a c h need to be evacuated.
T h e air base, surrounded by
d e p e n d e n t housing, Is on a
l o w - l y i n g beach pcnnlsula
b o u n d e d by the Atlantic Ocean
a n d Indian River.
S g t . W. H. Gibson, of the
b a s e ’ s command post said Sat­
u r d a y morning that no order had
b e e n Issued to prepare for
e v a c u a tio n or to evacuate the
b a s e , but should It become
n e c e s s a r y to evacuate, some
p e rs o n n e l would go to Sanford.
A l s o by mld-moring Saturday,
o n e o f Seminole County's two
h o s p it a ls had taken "precau­
t i o n a r y measures'* In the event
E l e n a caused injuries In central
F lo r id a .
S o u th Seminole Community
M e d ic a l Center called all of Its
m a in te n a n c e personnel to work
t o “ batten down the hatches"
and
m ove all possible loose
i t e m s inside, according to Sandy
S m i t h , nursing supervisor In
c h a r g e Saturday. She said all
m e d i c a l personnel have been
n o t i f i e d that If need be they will
g o o n a disaster status so they

E

...A TC

...V -J Day

...Drug

ifi

t

ff/ ff

...Elena

can provide service during the
storm.
Central Florida Regional HosItal as of mld-moring Saturday
iad not enacted any contingen­
cy plans should the storm pass
through central Florida. Nursing
supervisor Patricia Crawford,
however, said she has told her
stafT they were not going home
until the afternoon shift reported
to work so as to maintain
necessary stalling.
In preparation for the stonn,
local residents stocked up on
emergency supplies. Several
Sanford businesses reported
brisk sales of lamp oil. batteries,
masking tape, flashlights, and
foodstuffs.

H erald I

i by T om m y Vlweewl

Red Cross teen corps volunteers w ere at Lake M a r y H igh
School this m o rn in g planning a ctivity for using the school as
an evacuation site for hurricane evacuees. Some fam ilies
from low-lying* flood prone areas of Sem inole County had
a r riv e d e a rly S a tu rd a y for shelter. F ro m left, Scott
Stephens, K u rt H ilton, Seminole County Red Cross disaster
area coordinator; .Tony Fecaloro, and B ria n Hoffm an.

A R E A DEATHS
W a lte r A. Brown Jr.
W a lt e r A. Brown Jr.. 60. of
1 0 2 1 Sarlta St.. Sanford, died
F r i d a y at Central Florida Re­
g i o n a l Hospital in Sanford. Bom
M a y 7. 1925 in Loveland, Ohio,
he
m o v e d to Sanford from
P e n s a c o l a in 1956. He was
r e t i r e d from the U.S. Navy and a
v e t e r a n of World War II. He was
a m e m b e r of VFW in DeBary.
and
th e Duke Woody Police
R e s e r v e . He received the distin­
g u i s h e d Dying cross with one
s t a r , a ir medal. American cam­
p a ig n
medal, Asiatic-Pacific
c a m p a i g n medal, WW II victory
m e d a l , national defense service
m e d a l , and the sixth award of
g o o d conduct medal. He was a
m e m b e r o f Central Baptist
C h u rch .
S u r v iv o r s include his wite.
M a r g a r e t Brown. Sanford; two
s o n s . Larry Brown. Peebles,
P h i o . and T om m y Dillard.
A p o p k a ; his daughters, Patti
M a r t ln d lll. DeBary, Linda Cook.
G r o t o n . C o n n .. C h r is tin e
W e s t e r f i e l d . Joncsborro, Ga..
L o u i s e Brown. Lake Mary, and
P a t r i c i a D. Dillard, Sanford;
t h r e e sisters, Norma Cook,
M a r i l y n Brewer, and Betty
S y l v e s t e r all o f Ohio; three
b r o t h e r s . Ralph Brown, Ken­
t u c k y . Bob and Lytle Brown,
O h i o ; and 19 grandchildren.
B r l s s o n Guardian Funeral
H o m e . Sanford, is In charge of
t h e arrangements.
J A M B S EDWARD JENKB III
J a m e s Edward Jenka III, 15.
4 7 2 8 Swan's Neck Place. Winter
S p r i n g s , died Th u rsday at
W i n t e r Park Memorial Hospital.
B o r a April 5, 1970 in West
G e r m a n y , he moved to Winter
S p r i n g s from West Point. N.V.,
i n 1 9 8 4 . He was a student and a
m e m b e r of Redeemer Lutheran
C h u r c h . He was a member of

Boy Scout Troop 247.
Survivors Include his parents,
Jam es E. and Kathcryn L.
Jenks; brother. David S. Jcnks.
Winter Springs; sister. Melissa L.
Jenks. Winter Springs; paternal
grandmother. Lydia Jenks. Sellc r s v l l l e . Pa.; m a te rn a l
grandparents, Hope and Paul
Mood. Punta Gorda.
Baldwin-Fairchlld Funeral
Home, Goldcnrod. Is in charge of
arrangements.
THOMAS FRANCIS FINN SR.
Thomas Francis Finn Sr.. 80.
1008 Seventh St.. Casselberry,
d i e d T h u r s d a y a t S o u th
Seminole Community Hospital.
Born May 5. 1905 In Brooklyn.
N.Y., he moved to Casselberry
from New York In 1970. He was
a retired spray-painter and a
Catholic.
Survivors Include his son.
Thomas Finn Jr.. Casselberry; a
d a u g h t e r . A u d r e y Som merhalter. Oyster Bay. N.Y.; six
grandchildren: and five great­
grandchildren.
Baldw in-Fairchlld Funeral
Home, Goldenrod. Is In charge of
arrangements.
W ILLIA M R. HOUSTON SR.
William R. Houston Sr.. 74.
2 1 0 0 S u n d e r la n d R o a d .
Maitland, died Thursday at
Florida Hospital Orlando. Bom
October 8. 1910 In Muhlenberg
County, Ky., he m oved to
Maitland from St. Petersburg in
1983. He was a retired tax
consultant and a member of
Community United Methodist
Church.
Survivors Include his wife.
Erma Houston; a son. William R.
Houston Jr., Maitland: a daugh­
ter. E lizabeth Ann Coates.
B ran d on : and fiv e g r a n d ­
ch ildren . B aldw in -Fairch lld
F u n eral H om e, A lta m o n te
Springs. Is In charge o f ar­
rangements.

KATHERINE M. STEIGER
Katherine M. Steiger. 74, 559
H i g h l a n d S t .. A lt a m o n t e
Springs, died Thursday at her
residence. Bom August 29. 1911
In Oshkosh Wls.. she moved to
Altamonte Springs from Arizona
In 1970. She was a homemaker
and a member of the Southeast
Christian Church.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
husband, John H. Steiger; a
daughter. Beverly King. Alta­
monte Springs; a sister. Cora
Morgan. Wenatchee. Wash.; four
grandchildren; and two great­
grandchildren.
B aldw in-Fairchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. Is In
charge of arrangements.
SEAN MICHAEL KUTBUS
Sean Michael Kuybus, 114
Sllvermaple Terrace. Sanford,
died Thursday at Florida Hospi­
tal. Orlando. He was bom Aug.
29.1985 to Robert and Kimberly
Kuybus.
Survivors include his parents,
his maternal grandparents.
JoAnne Carr and Robert Remus,
of Sanford; and his paternal
g ra n d p a re n ts . R o b ert and
Shirley Kuybus. of Sanford.
G ram kow Funeral Home.
Sanford, is In charge o f ar­
rangements.
George B. "W o o d y " W oodruff
Mr. G eorge B. “ W o o d y "
WoodrulT. 65, 450 Wllford Ave..
L o n g w o o d . d ied F rid ay at
Humana Hospital Lucerne. Bom
Dec. 19. 1919 In Porterdale. Ga..
he moved to Longwood from
Orlando in 1962. He waa a
retired district agent for a life
in su ran ce com pan y and a
member of North-Park Baptist
Church. Orlando. He waa a
World War II Marine Corps
veteran and a past president of
Orlando Tennis Center.
Survivors Include his wife,
Bonnie Woodruff; a son. Dr.

George A. Woodruff. Titusville: a
brother. James Woodruff. Fort
Mill, S.C.; his sisters, Mrs. Sarah
S im m o n s an d M rs. R u t h
Canlpelll, both of Macon. Ga.;
and two grandsons.
Garden Chapel Home for
Funerals, Orlando, Is in charge
of arrangements.
Berenice E. Goed
Mrs. Berenice E. Goad. 72.
Highway 46A Sanford, died
Wednesday. Born in Grecnbush.
Wls.. she moved to Sanford from
Orlando in 1957. She was a
homemaker.
Survivors include her sons.
Philip Goad. Miami Springs,
David Bonan. and Richard
Worth. Sanford. Michael Worth.
Savannah. Ga.: a sister. Frances
Block. Waupaca. Wls.; and six
grandchildren.
All Faiths Memorial Park.
Casselberry, Is In charge of
arrangements.
VIO LET R. McELREATH
Mrs. Violet Katherine Labree
McElreath. 63. o f 1473 N.

Flowers Scent With Love

jj§r (Calling

m rn w
M N U W K
■ w e w ri
4 M

«

County Road 427, Longwood.
G ram kow Funeral Home.
died Wednesday at her resi­ Sanford, is In charge of ardence. Born August 13. 1922 in rangements.
Ames, Iowa, she moved to
Longwood from there In 1935. Funarol Notices
She was a homemaker.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e h e r -^M om orlol w rv lc o s for M a rga ret M o io n . J*.
husband. Dewey: daughter. Ann
N.J.. who d M August 1.
•• Holy Cross
Toth. Sanford; three sons, Episcopal Church, 400 P ork A 3'
vo .. Sanford.
Gerald D. and Don R., .both of K U YB U S, SEAN M IC H A E L
Longwood, and Paul M. o f
—GravesIda services for Soon M ichael
Brandon; two brothers. Bill Kuybus w ill bo hold Tuesday. Sept. 3 at • a m.
Oak lawn M em orial P ark with R ev . Joseph
Labree, Sanford, and Robert L. at
M arkovich o fficiatin g. G ram kow Funeral
Labree. Rockford . III.; five sis­ Home, Sanford. In charge.
te r s . B e tty Lou K e lg a n s , ■room, W alter A . Jr.
services for W a lle r A . Brown
Longwood. Gladys Rumlner, Jr..— Funeral
M , o f 1031 Sarlta St., Sanford, w ill bo II
Walnut Ridge, Ark., Lula Mae a m. Wednesday In the chapel at Brleaon
Hamilton, Hoxie. Ark.. Susie Funeral Homo with D r. Fred d ie Smith o f
Baptist Church officiatin g. Burial
Johnson. Sanford, Barbara Jean wCentral
ill bo at Oak lawn M em o ria l P ark In Lake
Hawkins, Longwood: five grand­ M ery. Brlsson Funeral Hom o. Sanford. Is In
charge.
children.

Find comfort, dignity and
understanding at your
Guardian Chapel.

When you call your Quardian Chapel in your time of
loss, you wont be alone
Last year, thouaandaof (Amities, very much like youra,
turned to their Ouardian Chapel to make sure that the
very difficult task of arranging a funeral would be
made less difficult.lee* taxing, but no leas dignified.
Because at OuardianChapels, we believe a family
should receive the a e rv ic e they want at a price no
greater than they canafTord.
6 U A R B IA N F b b c t b I R b m
$0S Laura) Ave.
SMfori. Florida 32771

.

922-2 1 3 1

ni/.T ; J * 7 y . y

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c h a p ix s

]

�SPORTS
Sam
Cook

Banks: I Reallv Like To B l o c h

SPORTS
EDITOR

Hey, Submit
Those Sports
Hall Nominees
Vou remember Bud Layer,
don't you? Former superin­
tendent o f Seminole County
Schools. Former Seminole High
School principal. Yeah, he was a
lot of formers.
Now he's spends his time
driving a white van down First
Street In Sanford yelling things
at sports writers. "H ey." he
yelled Friday. "Run a squid
about the Seminole County
Sports Hall of Fame."
I shopped around all I could for
a picture of a squid but I
couldn't find one. They were
several octopl (octopuses for you
•es fans), but no squids.
Then I started thinking, what
would Bud want with a squid In
the Seminole County Sports Hall
of Fame?
There's a couple baseball
players like Tim Raines and
Buddy Lake. There's coaches
like Joe Sterling and Whltey
McLucas. There an announcer in
Red Barber. T h ere’ s Emma
Spencer and Larry, but they are
tennis players. Although Mary
Rose said she's spent over 60
percent of her life in the water, I
don't think she'd qualify as a
squid.
Maybe it’s Bud that Is all wet.
The golf courses have been a
little damp lately. That’s his
primary occupation.
Then It dawned on me. Bud
docs has one other position. He
Is chairman of the Greater San­
ford Chamber o f Commerce
sports committee. He gets a few
free meals out of that one.
Yes. It's becoming more clear
now. Bud was on hls way to
another free meal and he didn't
want me to come along. But he
did want the readers to know
that they have until Sept. IB to
nom inate' som eone' for th is "
year’s election.
The SCSHF Is three years old.
Raines, Barber and Sterling went
in the first year. Spencer and
Lake went In the second. Castle.
Rose and McLucas, a long-time
coach at Seminole High School,
were Inducted last year.
There are a few leftovers on
the ballot from the past years
and they are ellglblle but the
com m ittee needs some new
names.
Here's the eligibility rules:
•Candidate must have live In
Seminole County for a period of
not less than three years or must
h a ve w o rk ed In S em in o le
County for a total period of not
less than five year.
• Must have made an out­
standing contribution to hls
sports field as a player, coach
adminlstrateror fan.
• Must be a t least 21 years of
age on the date of hls nomina­
tion.
Mall your nominations to Bud
at the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce. 400 E. First St.,
Sanford. 32771.

Mtf&amp;MPMifef TuMiy VImm

Quarterback Jeff Bloke rolls and looks for o receiver as defender Clint Boyles closes In for the tackle.

Scott Calls For A Break From Weatherman
BUI Scott has weathered a couple of
stormy seasons as football coach at Lyman
High School. Now. however, he'd like to
know whether the weatherman is going to
give hls Greyhounds a break.
"W e Just haven't been able to get much
done because of the rain." said Scott last
week, echoing the sentiments of hls
coaching buddies. "It seems like it rains
every time we want to practice."
In between raindrops, Scott said he sees a
pretty good battle developing at quarterback
between Incumbent Darren Boyesen and
Lake Mary transfer John Burton. "They're
neck and neck." Scott said. "Burton is
throwing the ball real well and Boyesen is
running the baU better." Gib Lundqulst Is

Pootball
listed as the third candidate.
Scott said the two biggest surprises have
been movc-ln Eddie Brown and transplanted
Bennie Glenn. Brown, who played at West
Orange last year, has joined Chuck Scheele,
Bobby Decker. Robert Thomas and hard­
hitting sophomore Scott Radcllff to solidify
Lyman's defensive backfleld.
"W e're real pleased with Brown." Scott
said. "He's a real hitter and he's going to
give us a lot of help in the backfleld."
Scott said he is not so much surprised
with the play of Glenn but that he had a

N FC Rivals Hope
To Slow Up 49ers

Talk about the NFC race in
1985 and two words keep pop­
ping up: franchise players.
Joe Montana of San Francisco,
Walter Payton of Chicago. Eric
Dickerson of Los Angeles. Roy
Green o f St. Louts or Joe
Theismann of Washington.
It Just seems that the cream of
the NFC has a superstar to turn
to when the game Is on the line.
As a result, those clubs all can
lay claim to having a shot at
reaching the Super Bowl.
But it is hard to look away
from San Francisco, the reigning
Super Bowl champions who
have won It all two of the last
four seasons.
Not only do the 49ers have
Montana, they have so much
firepower backing him up of­
fensively and defensively that it
Is hard to pick another club over
a team that lost just once last
year.
But repeating in pro football,
BUI Caughell and Mike Henley,
two Evening Herald All-County like any sport, is tough. After the
linebackers, were two of the 49ers* last Super Bowl champi­
fiercest hitters on the gridiron onship, they couldn't make the
last year. This fall, they plan to playofTs in the strike-tom 1982
continue their success together campaign.
The Bears, who rode the NFL's
at th e U n i v e r s i t y of
stingiest
defense one year ago,
Pennsylvania.
Caughell. the mainstay of thought they had the 49ers*
|-pk«» Mary's district champion­ number last year, but San
ship team, and Henley, the Francisco blanked Chicago 23-0.
"W hat can you say — they are
anchor for Lym an, w ill be
roommates at Penn during their an awesome team." said Bears'
freshman year. They leave for coach Mike Ditka. "B ut we
b elieve that we can clim b

Football
another rung up the ladder."
If the Bears can't stop San
Francisco's express, the Rams
are good candidates. So are the
‘Skins. The New York Giants
were a surprise last year and
there is always "A m erica 's
T e a m ." the Dalis Cowboys,
lurking about.
San Francisco coach Bill
Walsh, whose two Super Bowl
titles have added to his aura of
being a pro coaching genuls,
isn't likely to let complacency
set in. But no team has won
back-to-back titles since Pit­
tsburgh did it in the 1970s.
"There will be no talk of Super
B ow l X X a rou n d tra in in g
camp." Walsh said. " I f you start
thinking about it too early, you
can get tripped up."
Montana completed nearly
two-thirds of hls passes and
threw for 28 TDs last year. But
an injury to Montana could spell
troubles for the 49ers.
Walsh can turn to Wendell
Tyler, who rushed for a team
record 1.262 yards to overshad­
ow an o c c a s io n a l case o f
fumblltis. and Roger Craig.
Defensively, the 49ers allowed
th e f e w e s t p o i n t s and
touchdowns In the NFL last
year. Only Chicago appears to
have a defense to compete with

hard time convincing the well muscled
wrestler to change positions. "Bennie volun­
teered to play guard In the spring because
we needed some help there," Scott said. "I
told him that's a ‘whole different world In
that line.'"
Since then, however, Scott has switched
Glenn to fullback and he's prospered.
"That's where he needs to be.'' Scott said.
Lyman will hoot Thursday's Fall Jamboree at 7 p.m. Seminole will play Haines'
City in the opening quarter. Lyman meets
Wildwood In the second quarter. Seminole
comes back to play WUdwood In the third
and Lyman closes out with Haines City in
the fourth quarter. — Bass Cask
11
.

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v*. AFC

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Points (NFL Rank)

arm

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17407)

Opp. Points (NFL Rank)

1440)

is a

33400)

O tt 02)

(NFL Rank)

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V srS

Opp. VsrSs (NFL Rank)

(13)

m a t io) m .1 (it) 007.1 (4) 310.0 05)

Rush. YsrOs (NFL Rank)

1M.1 (3)

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13470)

0pp. Rush. VsrSs (NFL Rank)

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Pass. VsrSs (NFL Rank)

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the champions.
improving Nell Lomax to a 9-7
A look at the divisional races record last year, only to lose to
in the drive to stop San Fran­ Washington the last week of the
cisco:
season and miss the playofTs.
NFC East
Lomax has lightning-quick
The NFC's strongest division is Roy Green to use the big play.
also the one with the moot Defensively. Coach Jim Hanifan
balance. The Waahlngton-Dallas has Improved the Big Red pass
domination apparently is over rush with Bubba Baker. Just
with the rise uf both the Cardi­ how much defensive improvenals and Giants.
St. Louts rode the arm of the
E m NFC. Pag* 4 E

Fading Offense Makes McDowell Fret
Te n n is-Elb o w Ty p e Injury Shelves Slack; O vie d o 's Johnson W ill Play A Lot
B y Chris Fiater
■ M i l l a ports W riter

S a n fo rd r i i l d t n t i E m m i
Spencar and B u d d y La k a a r t
tw o m a m bars o f f h t Sam lnola
C o unty Sports H a ll of F a m a .

ORLANDO — University of Central Florida
coach Oene McDowell said he would have
been pleased if his first squad scored 60
points against the scout team In Friday
night's Black vs. Gold scrimmage at Or­
lando Stadium.
The Knights got off to a rousing start,
scoring on their first two plays from
scrimmage and rolling up 31 points in the
first half. But a sloppy second half. In which
the regulars outacored the scout team only.
13-6. left McDowell wondering what It
would take tor UCF to be a winner in 196ft.
" A ttitu d e la our b lggeat h u rd le ."
McDowell aald after the Black downed the
Gold. 44-8. "UCF has won only seven games
in the past three years. It doesn't know what
It'a like to be winners. I'm a little worried
after this scrimmage."

I IM IW W I

J im m y B r o w n . O . J . S i m p s o n .
W a lte r P a y t o n .
F ra n co
H s u r is .
E ric D ic k e r s o n .
A ll o f th e a b o v e H a d o n e t i l i n g
in c o m m o n . T h e y c o u l d p i c k u p
an o v a l- s h a p e d
b a ll
and
ru n
over, u n d e r , a r o u n d
and
w ay
fro m o th e r g u y s
w ith
fo o tb a ll
h e lm e ts o n t r y i n g t o s t o p t h e m .
They h ad
a n o th e r
t h i n g in
com m on, t o o . J u s t a b o u t a l l o f
th e m w e r e
H o r r ib le
b lo c k e r s .
T h e y re lie d o n a g o o d f u l l b a c k g o
g e t th e f ir s t b l o c k a n d a g o o d
gu ard , t a c k le o r t i g h t e n d t o a d d
th e re a t.
B ut w h o
r e m e m b e r a
fu llb ack s?
T h e fa m e
o f
m ost
r u n n in g
b a ck s' g a m e fta c a r r y i n g t h e b a ll.
S c o rin g t h e t o u c h d o w n s . S p i k ­
in g th e b a ll. D o i n g b a c k f l i p a . O r
Just c a r r y in g o n l i k e a c r a z y m a n
a fte r t h e y
a c o re
w h ile
th e
fu llb a ck o r t i g h t , e n d
w a tc h e s
fr o m a p r o n e
p o s itio n ,
a fte r
p a v in g th e w a y o f c o u r s e , s o m e ­
w h e re d o w n t h e f i e l d .
Y ea. r u n n i n g w i t h t h e f o o t b a l l
la w h a t m o a t
r u n n in g
hacka
w a n t to d o . B l o c k i n g i a t h e d u t y
w o rk . It's l e f t t o g u y a l i k e . . . W e l l ,
w h a te v e r t h e i r
n am es
w ere.
G uys w h o b l o c k e d
fo r B row n .
S im p s o n . P a y t o n .
H a r r is
and
D ick erson .
Then t h e r e 's
E d d ie
Banka.
H e 's a r u n n i n g b a c k a n d t i g h t
e n d fo r S e m i n o l e H i g h S c h o o l .
B anka is a J u n i o r a n d t h e r e ' s o n e
th in g d e f i n i t e l y w r o n g w i t h h la
fo o tb a ll m a k e u p .
" I lik e to b l o c k . * * h e a a y a .
S a id w h a t ?
*'I re a lly d o . I l i k e t o b l o c k . * * h e
m ain tain s.
B e fo r e
t u r n i n g
t o
D oc
T e r w llllg e r
a n d
te llin g
h im
B an k s m a y h a v e t a k e n o n e t o o
m any k n o c k s o n t h e h e a d in th e
S e m in o le s c r i m m a g e
F r id a y . I
p ro v e d d e e p e r
in to
w h y
th is
young m a n
lik e a
to
d o
th e
d ir tie s t —
a n d
p r o b a b ly
th e
h a rd est — J o b o n
t h e fo o tb a ll
field .
B anka, a s h a d e u n d e r 6 f e e t .

Football
UCF opens the season Saturday. Sept. 7
against B-CC at Orlando Stadium. Kickoff
time Is 7 p.m.
The scout team (Gold) took possession
first and couldn't move on the first team
defense and. on fourth down. EiJc Simpson
blocked a punt to set up the Black's first
score.
On the first play. Kelvin Collins rambled
14 yards on the end around for the game's
first score with 13:39 left In the first quarter.
Ed O’Brien's kick made it 7-0.
The Gold came back with s long drive on
Its next possession but a fumble stopped the
drive at the Black's 10-yard line. On its first
play after taking over possession, starting
m found a wide

open Elgin Davis in the Oat and the junior
running back scampered 90 yards for a
touchdown. O'Brien added the kick for a
14-0 lead with 9:41 left In the first quarter.
Lanham started for the Black team
because sophomore Darin Slack was out
witli an injury. Slack, who graduated from
Lake Howell High In 1984. was out with
what McDowell called, "something like
tennis elbow."
"H e (Slack) missed practice yesterday
(Thursday) and missed tonight but he'll
probably be back Monday." McDowell said.
"H e would have been In competition for the
starting Job but he may be out of the
running now. But I won't hesitate to put
him in against Bethune Cookman if we need
him."
The Black lacked on three more points

Beat

R o in

NEW Y O R K
(U P I) —
J im m y
C o n n o rs a n d P a m
S h r lv e r sent
th e ir o p p o n e n t s h o m e t h e n t h e
ra in s sen t e v e r y o n e h o m e a s t h e
fou rth d a y o r
th e
U S . O pen
c a m e to a p r e m a t u r e a n d s o g g y
en d.
C o n n o rs, t h e t h i r d s e e d a n d a
six -tim e w i n n e r h e r e , m o v e d i n t o
th e th ird r o u n d b y g r i n d i n g o u t a
6-3, 6-4. 6 - 2 v i c t o r y F ' r i d a y o v e r
H ank P fla t e r .
S h r lv e r .
seeded
fo u r th a m o n g
th e
w om en ,
ou sted H u N a 6 - 2 . 7 - 6 ( 7 - 5 ) . 1
N o. 2 s e e d
Iv a n
L e n d l w as
p la y in g t h e t h i r d f e a t u r e m a t c h
o f th e d a y
a n d
le a d in g
B ill
S c a n lo n 6 - 2 .
2 -0
w h en
th e
dow n pou r s t r u c k a t 3 : 2 1 p .m .
EDT. c a n c e lin g
th e
a fte r n o o n
and e v e n in g
s e s s io n s .
E le v e n
m a tc h e s w e r e
s to p p e d
in p roA s m a ll t o r n a d o p a s s e d n «
th e N a t i o n a l
T e n n is
C e n te r,
d re n c h in g t h e f a c i l i t y a n d b l o w ­
in g d o w n t r e e s , e l e c t r i c a l w i r e s
and cou rt f e n c e s .
O n e
m an
su ffered a f r a c t u r e d l e g w h e n a
te n t c o lla p s e d .
C o n n o rs, w h o
h a s r e a s o n to
ech o M a rk T w a i n ' s
s e n tim e n t
th a t " t h e r u m o r s o f m y d e m i s e
a re p r e m a t u r e . * * s t i l l s t a k e s h is
c la im to b e i n g a m o n g t h e h e a t .
" If e v e r y b o d y w a n t s t o b u ry
m e. m a k e m e a t o m b s t o n e . J u s t
d o n 't p u t i t o n
m e y e t . * * s a id
C on n ors, w h o t u r n s 3 3 M o n d a y
a n d h as r e a c h e d t h e s e m i f i n a l s

c e 1974.
o f every O p e n
T h e le fth a kder p u t in 71
percent of h is first -serves while
the h a r d - s e r v i n g
P f la t e r
managed Just 4 9 percen t and
double-faulted se v e n tim es.
" H e Just t r i e d t o t a k e e v e r y
b a ll an d h i t i t atm h a r d a a h e
C on n ors. " H e ' s g o i n g t o m a k e afe w . bu t h e*i
fe w . I f I
se rv e s in, t h a t
rig h t o u t o f t h e r e . * *

Shrlver fo u n d that H u
known for de fe c tin g to
ed States from h e r native
has few defecta in
"I found h e r
In the neck, fo r th a t’s th e side of
the court 1 lik e to ap p roach to,
especially w h e n the m atch is
tight,** S h r l v e r c o m m e n te d .
"You figure th e re ’s eig h t trillion
people in C h in a an d if

�SPORTS

Banks: I Really Like To Block
Hey, Submit
Those Sports
Hall Nominees
You remember Bud Layer,
don't you? Former superin­
tendent of Seminole County
Schools. Former Seminole High
School principal. Yeah, he was a
lot of formers.
Now he's spends his time
driving a while van down First
Street In Sanford yelling things
at sports writers. "H ey." he
yelled Friday. "Run a squid
about the Seminole County
Sports Hall of Fame."
I shopped around all I could for
a picture of a squid but I
couldn’t find one. They were
several octopi (octopuses for you
-es funs), but no squids.
Then I started thinking, what
would Bud want with a squid In
the Seminole County Sports Hall
of Fame?
There's a couple baseball
players like Tim Raines and
Buddy Lake. There's coaches
like Joe Sterling and Whltey
McLucas. There an announcer In
Red Barber. T h ere's Emma
Spencer and Larry, but they are
tennis players. Although Mary
Rose said she's spent over 60
percent of her life In the water, I
don't think she’d qualify as a
squid.
Maybe It's Bud that Is all wet.
The golf courses have been a
little damp lately. That's his
primary occupation.
Then It dawned on me. Bud
docs has one other position. He
is chairman of the Greater San­
ford Chamber o f Commerce
sports committee. He gets a few
free meals out of that one.
Yes. It’s becoming more clear
now. Bud was on hls way to
another free meal and he didn't
want me to come along. But he
did want the readers to know
that they have until Sept. 15 to
nom inate1 som eone for this
year’s election.
The SCSHF Is three years old.
Raines. Barber and Sterling went
In the first year. Spencer and
Lake went In the second. Castle,
Rose and McLucas. a long-time
coach at Seminole High School,
were Inducted last year.
There are a few leftovers on
the ballot from the past years
and they are ellglblle but the
com m ittee needs some new
names.
Here's the eligibility rules:
•Candidate must have live In
Seminole County for a period of
not less than three years or must
h a ve w o rk ed In S e m in o le
County for a total period of not
less than five year.
• Must have made an out­
standing contribution to hls
sports field as a player, coach
admlnistrateror fan.
• Must be a t least 21 years of
age on the date of hls nomina­
tion.
Mall your nominations to Bud
at the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce. 400 E. First St.,
Sanford. 32771.

Quarterback Jeff Blake rolls and looks for a receiver as defender Clint Boyles closes in for the tackle.

Scott Calls For A Break From Weatherman
Bill Scott has weathered a couple of
stormy seasons as football coach at Lyman
High School. Now. however, he'd like to
know whether the weatherman is going to
give his Greyhounds a break.
"W e Just haven't been able to get much
done because of the rain," said Scott last
week, echoing the sentiments o f his
coaching buddies. "It seems like It rains
every time we want to practice."
In between raindrops, Scott said he secs a
pretty good battle developing at quarterback
between Incumbent Darren Boyesen and
Lake Mary transfer John Burton. "They're
neck and neck." Scott said. "Burton Is
throwing the ball real well and Boyesen Is
running the ball better." Gib Lundqulst Is

Football
listed as the third candidate.
Scott said the two biggest surprises have
been move-ln Eddie Brown and transplanted
Bennie Glenn. Brown, who played at West
Orange last year, has Joined Chuck Scheele,
Bobby Decker. Robert Thomas and hard­
hitting sophomore Scott RadclIfT to solidify
Lyman's defensive backfleld.
"W e're real pleased with Brown." Scott
said. "H e’s a real hitter and he's going to
give us a lot of help In the backfleld."
Scott said he Is npt so much surprised
with the play o f Glenn but that he tiad a

N FC Rivals Hope
To Slow Up 49ers

Talk about the NFC race In
1985 and two words keep pop­
ping up: franchise players.
Joe Montana of San Francisco.
Walter Payton of Chicago. Eric
Dickerson of Los Angeles. Roy
Green o f St. Louis or Joe
Thelsmann of Washington.
It Just seems that the cream of
the NFC has a superstar to turn
to when the game is on the line.
As a result, those clubs all can
lay claim to having a shot at
reaching the Super Bowl.
But It Is hard to look away
from San Francisco, the reigning
Super Bowl champions who
have won It all two of the last
four seasons.
Not only do the 49ers have
Montana, they have so much
firepower backing him up of­
fensively and defensively that It
is hard to pick another club over
a team that lost Just once last
year.
But repeating In pro football,
Bill Caughell and Mike Henley,
two Evening Herald All-County like any sport. Is tough. After the
linebackers, were two of the 49ers' last Super Bowl champi­
fiercest hitters on the gridiron onship. they couldn't make the
last year. This fall, ihey plan to playoffs In the strlke-tom 1982
continue their success together campaign.
The Bears, who rode the NFL's
at th e U n i v e r s i t y of
stingiest defense one year ago.
Pennsylvania.
Caughell. the mainstay of thought they had the 49ers'
Lake Mary's district champion­ number last year, but San
ship team, and Henley, the Francisco blanked Chicago 23-0.
"What can you say — they arc
anchor for Lym an, w ill be
an
awesome team." said Bears'
roommates at Penn during their
freshman year. They leave for coach Mike Dltka. "B ut we
b elieve that we can clim b
'school Sunday.

Football
another rung up the ladder."
If the Bears can't stop San
Francisco's express, the Rams
are good candidates. So are the
'Skins. The New York Giants
were a surprise last year and
there Is always "A m erica 's
T e a m ." the Dalis Cowboys,
lurking about.
San Francisco coach Bill
Walsh, whose two Super Bowl
titles have added to hls aura of
being a pro coaching genuls.
Isn't likely to let complacency
set in. But no team has won
back-to-back titles since Pit­
tsburgh did U In the 1970s.
"There will be no talk of Super
B ow l X X a rou n d tra in in g
camp." Walsh said. " I f you start
thinking about it too early, you
can get tripped up."
Montana completed nearly
two-thirds of hls passes and
threw for 28 TDs last year. But
an Injury to Montana could spell
troubles for the 49ers.
Walsh can turn to Wendell
Tyler, who rushed for a team
record 1.262 yards to overshad­
ow an o c c a s io n a l case o f
fumblitls. and Roger Craig.
Defensively, the 49ers allowed
th e f e w e s t p o i n t s a n d
touchdowns In the NFL last
year. Only Chicago appears to
have a defense to compete with

hard time convincing the well muscled
wrestler to change positions. "Bennie volun­
teered to play guard in the spring because
we needed some help there." Scott said. "I
told him that's a 'whole dliferent world In
that line.'"
Since then, however, Scott has switched
Glenn to fullback and he's prospered.
"That's where he needs to be.*' Scott said.
Lyman will host Thursday's Fall Jam­
boree at 7 p.m. Seminole will play Haines'
City In the opening quarter. Lyman meets
Wildwood In the second quarter. Seminole
comes back to play Wildwood In the third
and Lyman doses out with Haines City In
the fourth quaiter.— Baa

j-..

\ K
V» 1 S 1
ehu

11
■‘ *

T
Fil
i

1

asms

IM

ISA

74

4-13

Steen* Has

M

S-S

4-4

1-7

vs. NSC Weal

e-o

M

14

3-4

vs. NFC

IM

r-s

44

34

vs. AFC

S-1

S-1

S-1

14

sl Heme

M

M

S4

sa

on Need

S-0

1-3

4-4

34

Point* (NFL fUnk)

ts.7(3)

U S (12)

144(20)

174(22)

Opp Point* (NFL Rank)

144(f)

144 (fJ)

ns (it/

33.3(22)

Yards (NFL Rank)

3S74(2)

m s no)

3144(13)

Opp. Verde (NFL Bank)

m s (io)

32S.1 (14) S07.1 (4)

32t.tr’ 5)

1744(2)

134.7 W

1344(19)

100SW

1334(24) 1344(21)

Hues. Varda (NFL Rank)

IM.1

(3)

Opp. NuaS. Verde (NFL ftwd)
Rase. Verde (NFL Hank)

S01(4) m aw? iTTS (24) (90S (20)

Opp Pate. Varda (NFL Ran*;

tU S (IT ) Z2S.1 (24) 1434(f)

Turnover

♦/- (NFL Ran*)

♦iaw

the champions.
A look at the divisional races
in the drive to stop San Fran­
cisco:
NFC Bast
The NFC's strongest division Is
also the one with the most
balance. The Washlngton-Dallas
domination apparently Is over
with the rise of both the Cardi­
nals and Giants.
St. Louis rode the arm of the

♦4

(ST)

-14(24)

|
!

!

1444(7)
-4 (2 2 0

Improving Nell Lomax to a 9-7
record last year, only to lose to
Washington the last week o f the
season and miss the playoffs.
Lomax has lightning-quick
Roy Green to use the big play.
Defensively. Coach JUn Hanlfan
has Improved the Big Red pass
rush with Bubba Baker. Just
how much defensive Improvef t « « NFC, Pag* 4 1

Fading Offense Makes McDowell Fret
Te n n is-E lb o w Ty p e Injury Shelves Slack; O vie d o 's Johnson W ill Play A Lot

S a n fo rd ro a ld a n ts E m m a
Spencar and B u d d y L a k a a r t
two m a m tw rs of tha Sam lnola
County Sports H a ll of F a m a .

B y Chris Plater
Herald B u r t a W rite r
ORLANDO — University o f Central Florida
coach Gene McDowell said he would have
been pleased If hls first squad scored 60
points against the scout team In Friday
night's Black vs. Gold scrimmage at Or­
lando Stadium.
The Knights got oft to a rousing start,
scoring on their first two plays from
scrimmage and rolling up 31 points In the
first half. But a sloppy second half, In which
the regulars outacored the scout team only,
13-8. left McDowell wondering what It
would take for UCF to be a winner In 1985.
" A ttitu d e Is our b ig g est h u rd le ."
McDowell aald after the Black downed the
Gold. 44-8. "UCF has won only seven games
in the past three yean. U doesn't know what
It's like to be winners. I'm a little worried
after this scrimmage."

Football
UCF opens the season Saturday. Sept. 7
against B-CC at Orlando Stadium. Kickoff
time is 7 p.m.
The scout team (Gold) took possession
first and couldn't move on the fln t team
defense and. on fourth do am. Erjc Simpson
blocked a punt to set up the Black's fln t
score.
On the fln t play. Kelvin Collins rambled
14 yards on the end around for the game's
fln t score with 13:39 left In the fln t quarter.
Ed O'Brien's kick made It 7-0.
The Gold came bark with a long drive on
ita next possession but a fumble stopped the
drive at the Black’s 10-yard line. On Us fln t
play after taking over possession, starting
quarterback Tony Lanham found a wide

open Elgin Davis In the flat and the Junior
running back scampered 90 yards for a
touchdown. O'Brien added the kick for a
14-0 lead with 9:41 left In the fln t quarter.
Lanham started for the Black team
because sophomore Darin Slack was out
with an Injury. Slack, who gnduated from
Lake Howell High In 1984. was out with
what McDowell called, "something like
tennis elbow."
"H e (Slack) missed practice yesterday
(Thursday) and missed tonight but he'll
probably be back Monday." McDowell said.
"H e would have been In competition for the
starting Job but he may be out of the
running now. But I won't hesitate to put
him In against Bethune Cookman If we need
him."
The Black tacked on three more points

J i m m y Brown. O.J. Simpson.
W a lt e r Payton. Franco Harris.
E r ic Dickerson.
A l l o f th e above had one thing
In c o m m o n . They could pick up
a n oval-shaped ball and run
o v e r , under, around and way
fr o m o th e r guys with football
h e lm e ts o n trying to stop them.
T h e y had another thing In
c o m m o n , too. Just about all of
t h e m w e r e horrible blockers.
T h e y re lie d on a good fullback go
g e t th e first block and a good
g u a r d , tack le or tight end to add
th e re s t.
B u t w ho rem em bers
fu llb a c k s ?
T h e fa m e of most running
b a c k s ' g a m e is carrying the ball.
S c o r in g th e touchdowns. Spik­
in g t h e ball. Doing backflips. Or
Just c a r r y in g on like a crazy man
a f t e r t h e y score w hile the
fu llb a c k o r tight end watches
fr o m a prone position, after
p a v in g th e way o f course, some­
w h e r e d o w n the field.
Y e s . running with the football
Is w h a t most running backs
w a n t to do. Blocking Is the duty
w o rk . I t 's left to guys like... Well,
w h a t e v e r their names were.
G u y s w h o blocked for Brown.
S im p s o n . Payton. Harris and
D ic k e rs o n .
T h e n th ere's Eddie Banks.
H e 's a running back and tight
end f o r Seminole High School.
B a n k a is a Junior and there's one
th in g d efin itely wrong with hls
fo o tb a ll makeup.
" I lik e to block." he says.
S a id w h a t?
" I r e a lly do. I like to block." he
m a in ta in s .
B e f o r e t u r n i n g to Doc
T e r w l l l l g e r and tellin g him
B an k a m a y have taken one too
m a n y k n o c k s on the head In the
S e m in o le scrimmage Friday, I
p r o v e d deep er Into why this
y o u n g m a n likes to do the
d ir t ie s t — and probably the
h a rd e s t — Job on the football
field.
B a n k s , a shade under 6 feet,

Connors,
Shriver
Beat Rain
N E W Y O R K (UP1) - Jimmy
C o n n o rs an d Pam Shriver sent
th eir o p p on en ts home then the
rains s e n t everyone home as the
fou rth d a y o f the U.S. Open
ca m e t o a premature and soggy
end.
C o n n o rs , the third seed and a
s ix -tim e w in n er here, moved into
the th ir d round by grinding out a
6-3, 6 -4 . 6-2 victory Friday over
H ank P fls te r. Shriver. seeded
f o u r t h a m o n g the w om en,
ou sted H u N a 6-2.7-6 (7-5). 1
N o. 2 seed Ivan Lendl was
p la y in g th e third feature match
o f t h e d a y and leading Bill
S c a n lo n 6 -2 . 2-0 when the
d o w n p o u r struck at 3:21 p.m.
ED T. ca n celin g the afternoon
and e v e n in g sessions. Eleven
m a tc h e s w e re stopped In pro­
gress.
A s m a ll tornado passed near
the N a t io n a l Tennis Center,
d re n c h in g the facility and blow­
ing d o w n trees, electrical wires
and c o u r t fences. One man
su ffered a fractured leg when a
tent c o lla p s e d .
C o n n o rs , who has reason to
echo M a r k Twain's sentiment
that " t h e rum ors of my demise
are p r e m a tu r e ." still stakes hls
claim t o b e in g among the best.
" I f e v e r y b o d y wants to bury
me. m a k e m e a tombstone. Just
don't p u t it on me yet." said
C on n ors, w h o turns 33 Monday
and haw reached the semifinals
o f e v e r y O p e n since 1974.
T h e le fth a n d e r put In 71
percen t o f h is first serves while
th e h a r d - s e r v i n g
P fls t e r
m a n a ged Just 49 percent and
dou b le-fau lted seven times.
" H e Just tried to take every
ball a n d h it it as hard as he
could a n d com e to net." aald
Connors. " H e 's going to make a
few, b u t h e 's also going to miss a
few. I f I c a n get a lot o f first
serves in . th a t knocks hls theory
right o u t o f th ere."
S h r iv e r fo u n d that Hu Na. beat
known fa r defecting to the Unit­
ed S ta te s fr o m her native China,
has fe w d e fe c ts in her game.
"I
h e r backhand a pain
in the n e c k , fo r that's the aideof
the c o u r t I lik e to approach to,
esp ecia lly w h en the match la
tigh t.** S h r iv e r com m ented.
"Y ou fig u r e there's eight trillion
p fo p lf in C h in a and If she was

�2B— Evening Htr«ld, Sanford, PI.

Rudy
Seiler
M AYFAIR
GOLF

Rain Helps
And Hurts
At Mayfair

Tewell's Record 64
Forces Tie A t B.C.
END1COTT. N.Y. (UPI) - De­
spite playing well In the PGA
ch a m p ion sh ip e a rlie r this
month. Doug Tewell took ofT the
last two weeks to prepare for the
B.C. Open and the traditionally
tight, treacherous course at the
En Joie Golf Club.
"This is my type of course. I
have good control of my driver
and that's a real advantage on a
course like this," said Tewell. an
llth-year pro who set a course
record with a second round 64 at
the PGA ch am p ion sh ip at
Cherry Hill, Colo.
"But when I got here, I was
putting extremely well. But
wouldn't you know. I can't
control the driver. Luckily the
rough Isn't nearly as severe as it
has been in the past and my
poor driving hasn't reallv hurt

From a players’ point of view
It’s been a tough week at the old
course.
The dally deluges of rain have
forced the can cellation o f
tournaments and created havoc
with all the afternoon leagues.
The good news Is that the course
has never been prettier or
greener.
Ted Daum. the greens superIntendant. has been extra busy
trying to control the mole cricket
problem. Obviously, he's doing a
good Job because you can sec the
pesky critters all over the place,
Continued from IB
in a "belly up" position, howev­
thought about it a while. "I can't
er.
really tell you why." he says. "I
Since we don’ t have any Just like it. That’s all. I like to
tournaments to report, we are play tight end and hit people and
starting a new feature called when I move to halfback it’s
mainly for my blocking, too."
"What’s the rule?"
Head coach Dave Mosure.
Here’s the first one:
Player A wanted to run his ball needless to say. loves his at­
from the fairway through the titude but most of all he loves to
greenside bunker and onto the put Eddie Banks on the scale.
green. To see if the sand was Just a year ago, Banks was a
firm enough to play the shot, he pretty good 160-pound running
brushed the sand with a club, back for the Junior varsity.
But as past years will attest.
but well to the side of his line of
play. His opponent claimed the 160-pound running backs grow
hole, saying the rules prohibit on the trees outside of Seminole
testing or touching the sand In a High School. In past years,
bunker. Player A replied that running backs have been most
there was nothing In the rules to
prevent him from doing this.
Who was correct?
Answer: Player A was correct.
Rule 13*4 prohibits a player from
touching or testing the sand
when his ball lies In the bunker,
but player A's ball lay outside
the bunker. Rule 13*2 forbids
Improving the line of play by '
"removing or pressing down
sand." but player A probed the
sand well to one side of his line
of play.

... Bonks

The pro shop carries the
Arnold Palmer line of clubs. If
you want to sec a new concept of
irons, ask In the pro shop to see
the new Palmer "Axiom " Irons.
They are designed for the golfer
who has a tendencey to slice
from an outside in swing, ft Just
might work for you.
T h e d e lu g e did su b sid e
enought Thursday to get in the
Men's Scramble. The team of
Ron Howell. Tom Ball. Wes
Werner and John Wellman won
it with a torrid 7 under. There
was a two-way tie for second at 4
under between the quartet of Bill
C ra ig , T ed Daum . Chuck
Baragona and Richard Barnes
along with the foursome of
Tommy Thomas. A1 Greene.
Carl Tlllls and Bob Willis.

Randolph's
Luck H o ld s•
In A m a t e u r

Sunday. Sept. 1, ltM

V

Golf
me." he said Friday.
"In fact, if I can drive this
poorly and still score this well, it
gives me confidence. If 1hit a few
straight drives. I know I can
really put some numbers up
there."

MONDAY
P r e v ie w s fo r
S e m in o le
C o u n ty 's fall
p re p te a m s
begin in the

Tewell shot a 4-undcr-par 67
Friday to tie tour rookie Jay
Delslng for the second round
lead at 7-undcr 135. Delslng.
who played Just after Tewell in a
constant rainstorm that would
later interrupt play, tied a course
record by shooting a 62 to go
with his 73 In Thursday's
opening round.

plentiful on Georgia Avenue.
But not the blocking kind. And
Banks made those blocks a lot
more crunchler with a strenous
off-season w eight program.
"Eddie was one of the most
dedicated we had." said Mosure.
"He spent a lot of time In the
weight room and you can see the
defense.”
Boy. can you. Banks came
back this fall at a robust 197
pounds. "And he hasn’t lost any
speed or quickness." Mosure Is
quick to point out.
How did he do it? "I was
taking weight gain. It's some
kind of protein, drink." he says.
"And I did a lot of lifting and
working out. I can take harder
hits and I can deliver them, too."
Banks also says this Is Just the
beginning of hls development. "1
think I can get up to 240." he

*-vl-

W .&amp;

HereM Pheto by Tam m y Vincent

D ave M osure likes w hat he sees at F rid a y 's scrim m age.

E v e n I n g
Herald.

says. "That would be good size
for a tight end in college."
Seminole's scrimmage was
dominated by the defense Friday
— and the rain. The wet going —
and the hard hitting — caused
several fumbles by the offense
which shortcircultcd scoring
drives.
"I was pleased with Just about
everything." says Mosure. "The
last scrimmage we had we only
fumbled once in 40 plays. I don't
think it will be a problem for
us.”
Mosure says he expects the
defense to be ahead of the
offense at this point. "W e gave
the offense a lot of new stuff to
learn but now we’ve got every­
thing put in." he says. "In the
next two weeks, it will really
show some improvement."
Sophomore Jeff Blake and
senior Daryl Taylor are fighting
for the quarterback Job. Taylor
scored the only touchdown Fri­
day when he rolled around the
left end from 13 yards away.
Blake kicked the PAT.
"W e have been trying to get
our quarterbacks to commit to
the c o rn e r." Mosure says.
"T h a t ’s when they become
dangerous. Then, the defensive
back has to fear hls running
ability."
Mosure rated Blake and Taylor
even Friday. He says Blake Is the
more polished of the two and the
better thrower but Taylor is the
better runner and more mobile.
Blake played on the freshman
team last year while Taylor was
the JV quarterback.
"W e would have liked to score
but we had 12 first downs." says
Mosure. "Our nucleus in the
offensive line did a pretty good
Job."
That nucleus is formed by
center James Rowe along with
guards Alan Kendall and Carl
Tipton. Wen Springfield and
burly John Jackson man the
tackles. "W e will be stronger in
the offensive line than we have
in past years." says Mosure. who
noted Rowe increased hls weight
from 165 to a solid 182.
Kendall, who received consid­

Jai Alai (Hi-Li)
Begins Sunday
By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor
The Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, which
celebrates its 25th year at the Fern Park location,
opens its doors for a Free Open House Sunday at
2:30 p.m.
Jim "Burs" Dussard, OSJAF’s parimutuels
manager, said the grand opening will be °
clinic-game type situation. Since there la nc
betting Sunday, children are welcome. Free t jf t
drinks and refreshments will be served.
Jai Alai (Hi-Li). a game which originated in the
Basque region of South America, is billed as the
fastest game in the world. It is a variation of
handball played with a cesta and pelota. A cesta
Is worn on the wrist much like a glove. The pelota
Is a rock-hard ball somewhat smaller than a
tennis ball.
The pelota is served and retrieved off a high
wall by the players, who perform in singles and
doubles matches. The frontcourt player must
/lave lightning-quick reflexes while the backcourt
player must have a strong arm and shoulder to
return the pelota.
Finesse and speed are trademarks of the game.
The pelota travels well over 100 miles an hour
and the shwred player can apply enough English
to make the pelota spin crazily off the wall.
After Sunday's open house, the fronton will
have 105 evening performances and 54 matinees
from Sept. 2 through Jan. 2. The evening
performances, everyday except Sunday, are
scheduled for 7 p.m. The matinees are Monday,
Wednesday and Saturday at noon. Advance

...Open
Continued from IB
number one there, it says some­
thing."
Besides Lendl, the only other
seeded player affected by the
rain was Miloslav Mecir, the
ninth seed, who was losing to
David Pate. 4-6, 0-6. 1-0 when
play was suspended.

erable playing time last year,
says the depth is much better
this year. "W e have more sup­
port this year." he says. "Our
strength and size is better too."
As was evident Friday, the
defense operated as a morccxperleneed unit, which it Is.
T h e s e c o n d a ry o f D ennis
Lawrence. Dexter Franklin and
Theron Liggons all started last
year. The addition of Horace
Knight makes it a solid group.
Liggons said he hit someone so
hard Friday that he knocked hls
own facemask loose. "I wasn’t
trying to hurt him." he laughed.
"I wasjust trying to hit him."
The linebacking corps should
be a strong area. too. Defensive
coordinator James Paul and
defensive line coach Roger
Beathard say the movement of
Bryan Brinson to linebacker
from noseguard makes It a more
dangerous unit.
Paul. 28. who moved here
after two years as head coach at
Coral Springs, was a former
assistant for Mosure at South
Miami. During the 1980 distrlct-ch a m p io n sh p season,
Paul's defense had six shutouts.
"This is a very similar group
to the South Miami one." he
says. "Except the attitude of
these kids is a lot better. I really
enjoy working with this group."
Paul says he watched the
Jamboree last year and noted in
a hurry that Brinson could be
quite a linebacker. "Bryan was
a l l o v e r t h e f i e l d aa a
noseguard." he says. "A ll we
had to do was stand him up and
teach him a few things."
Beathard i&gt;ays that the im­
provement of tackle Mike Luster
also paved the way. "Mike has
done a real good Job since Bryan
moved," says Beathard. "He's
become the leader of that de­
fensive line."
The rest of line includes Clint
Boyles and Ernest Lewis at the
ends and Terrence Landers at
the other tackle. Jerry Littles
and Rick Kelly are tough hitters
at linebacker. Kelly delivered the
best hit of Friday's scrimmage
on an end run by decking Mike
Levant.

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P18S/80R13
P19S/75R14
P205/76R14
P206/76R16
P216/76R16
P226/76R15
P236/75R16

UN

Echeva, left, and A ra m a y o w ill be two of the
talented frontcourt perform ers at the O r ­
lando-Seminole J a i A la i ( H i-L i ) Fronton.
wagering opens every momlng at 7.
Along with the popular Pick 6. the fronton has
added a qulniela double this year which will be in
matches four and five along with matches 11 and
12. The dally double will be matches one and two
along with matches 11 and 12.
General admission Is t l . Reserved seating is $2
and box seats are $5.
Here's a look at players manager Santl
Echanlz's 46-player roster, which is highlighted
by last year's wins champion Arra II:
Frontcourters: Arra II, Aramayo Echeva.
Eduardo, Galla Lecube. Gorostola. Castro.
Echano, Charola. Durango Kid. Rene. Zada.
Mlkel, urlzar. Fauato. Ricardo. Garay. Jesus.
Olea, Pita. Zugaza. Bilbao. Manolo and Gablola.
Bachcotti r t f l t Mendl, Laca. Angel, Irazabal.
Oanlndla. Zarre, Zubi II. Farah. Tomas, Area,
Bob. Andla, Zarraga. Reyes. Elorza. Zumaya.
Forurta, Calzacorta. Arana. Oyarl and Aguirre.

In the completed second-round
matches, both the men's and
women’s draws lost a low seed.
Scott Davis, the 15th seed, fell to
Brian Teacher. 6-3. 7-6 (7-4), 6-3,
and the No. 16 woman. Andrea
Temesvarl. was eliminated by
Caroline Kuhlman. 2-6.6-2,6-2.

.

1&lt;n

Lewis. 40, a Walker Cup
member along with Verplahk.
shot a 4-under-par 31 on the
second nine and birdied Nos.: 16
and 17 to catch Vcrplank and
force the playoff.
"I was playing the best player
In amateur golf today and I
played a little fiakey on the front
side. I shot 31 coming in on the
(par 35) backside, but it Just
wasn't good en ou gh ." said
Lewis.

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Stefan Edberg. the 11th seed,
reached the third round with a
7-5. 6-3, 6-4 victory over Ken
Flach. who played doubles for
the U.S. Davis Cup team.

MON.. S E P T . 2nd

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No. 8 Zina Garrison defeated
Pam Casale. 6-2, 6-4: No. 8
Kuhlman. 19 and a sophomore Manuela Maleeva ousted Isabelle
at Southern California. Is a Cueto, 6-0, 7-6: No. 11 Steffi Graf
wild-card entry into the Open beat Anne Minter, 6-3. 7-6: and
and does not carry a ranking No. 13 Caterina Lindqvist routed
having only played on the satel­ Amy Holton. 6-1.6-2.

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MONTCLAIR. N.J. (UPI) - jf
Sam Randolph wins the 1985
U.S. Amateur Championship,
even he will admit luck played a
part in the triumph.
Randolph beat Jay Slgel 2 and
1 Friday at the Montclair Golf
Club to advance to the semifi­
nals in a rain-delayed seebnd
day of match play at the 85th
Amateur Championship.
Randolph and Slgel were the
only players to complete their
quarterfinal match.
Still on the course were de­
f e n d i n g c h a m p i o n S c o tt
Vcrplank and Jack Kay who are
tied a fter 17 h oles; Todd
Hamilton and Chip Drury with
Drury leading 1-up a fte r. 17
holes: and Sam Farlow and Peter
Persons, with Persons leading by
one through 16 holes.
Quarterfinal play will resume
at 10 a.m. (EDT). with Randolph
to play the w inner o f the
Verplank-Kay match.
Randolph, the medalist in the
stroke play portion o f the
tournament, was even with his
Walker Cup captain at the turn.
On the par-5 No. 10. Slgel hit a
shot to the right of the fairway.
Randolph followed by hitting a
shot even further to the right,
but while he was able to pitch
back and eventually make par.
Slgel had an unplayable lie and
had to take a penalty and lose
the hole.
"I was lucky." said Randolph,
who lost in the final last yeat to
Vcrplank. "I hit it terrible; it
shoud have gone out of bounds,
but the tree stopped it."
On the next hole. Slgel/\yho
won the amateur championship
in 1982 and 1983. had an 8-fDot
putt for birdie, but took a bogey
and Randolph had a 2-strokc
advantage.
"He got a little bold." said
Randolph of Slgel's three-p'utt
and the resulting two-point pwIngAfter the match, which was
delayed 1 1/2 hours bccuaso' of
rain which hampered the golfers
the rest of the afternoon, Ran­
dolph admitted to some pain in
his back.
"I could feel it. but it didn't
start to bother me until I Was
walking to the 15th green." said
Randolph, who will begin hls
senior year at the University of
Southern California in the fall.;a
Vcrplank. who will be a aeiiior
at Oklahoma State University. . 7
beat Robert Lewis in the most
exciting third-round match Fri- In
day morning. 1-up on the 19th (it
hole.

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Children Welcome • No Betting
:

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.______ Sunday# Sept, b IMS— SB

Foyt Qualifies For Southern 500

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Fort Lauderdale Hold O ff Late
Osceola Rally, Takes 1-0 Edge
Fort Lauderdale jumped to an early lead and held off a
furious Osceola rally to claim a 4-3 victory in the first game
of the Florida State League semifinal playoffs Friday night
at Osceola County Stadium at Kissimmee.
The bcst-of-threc scries resumes Saturday night at 7:30.
Osceola ace Rob Malllcoat (16-6) will pitch the crucial
second game. In the other semifinal. St. Petersburg and
Fort Myers were rained out.
Mitch Lydcn was the hitting hero for Lauderdale as he
drove in three runs. Lydcn's one-out bases-loaded single
against loser Mark Friederlch was the key hit in the
seventh Inning.
Trailing by three runs. Osceola came alive In the eighth
with two runs. Gerald Young single with two outs and
scored on a double by Ken Caminitl. Jim O'Dell, whose
sacrifice fly had produced the Astros' first run in the sixth,
followed with a base hit to plate Caminitl.
After Mark Reynolds drew a walk, reliever Mo Gucrlco
came on and struck out Curtis Burke to retire the side.
Bob Parker had a single in four at-bats.
In other baseball, the Orlando Twins, clinging to fading
hopes of a second half Southern League division title, led
Jacksonville, 2-0, when their game was suspended In the
fifth inning Friday night.
Orlando, which will make up the game Saturday night at
Jacksonville, trails by 2*/i games with three to play.

Arlington Rise Needs Tax Break
CHICAGO (UPI) — Obscrvcrs callcd last weekend's horse
race the "Miracle Million." but now Arlington Park officials
say without tax breaks it would tuke another miracle to
rebuild one of America's premier racetracks.
Joseph Joyce, Arlington Park president, said there is a
"50-50 chance — maybe more, maybe less" that the
racetrack, which burned down July 31. will be rebuilt In
Illinois. He said, though, he and his partners have been
approached by Interests In other states.
Joyce said without substantial tax breaks, the track
would face 910 million to 911 million In operating losses.
"W e arc not willing to build a new plant without
economic conditions being met." he told a news conference
Friday.
Joyce and Richard Duchossols, chairman of the board of
Arlington Park, said they would need some guarantees on
property tax rates, a reduction In the state's cut of betting
revenue and some action on off-track betting.

Horford: I M ade Some Mistakes
BATON ROUGE. La. (UPI) - Tito Horford. the 7-foot-l
high school basketball star who ended the year’s bitterest
recruiting tug-of-war by enrolling at Louisiana State, says
he is sorry for the trouble he caused.
"I never tried to hurt anyone, but I did make some
mistakes and-I'm sorry about that." Horford told a news
conference Thursday, reading from a prepared statement.
"Coming to America was scary for me and very hard
because I had to leave my family and my country. I now
had to put. my trust In others and some of them gave me
poor advice, but I forgive them."
Horford. 19. was a star center at Marian Christian
Academy In Houston and had signed a letter of Intent to
play for the University of Houston Ias| November. However,
the NCAA said he was not eligible to play at Houston
because of recruiting violations by a coach.

DARLINGTON. S.C. IUPI) For a few hours, it appeared
four-tim e Indianapolis 500
winner A.J. Foyt might not
make the Southern 500.
That's because Foyt is making
h is f i r s t a p p e a r a n c e at
Darlington Raceway, and all
rookies at the track must pass a
test.
Rain Friday morning washed
out the rookie test scheduled for
6:30 a.m. and the afternoon
q u a l i f y i n g s e s s i o n s we r e
doubtful. Had rain forced can­
cellation of the day's activities.
Foyt would not have been in­
cluded In the 40-car field.
But the weather broke long

Like Calc (Yarborough) says.
'You've got to know how far you
can go at every point.’ I had
heard so much about the fourth
turn that I didn't pay any
enough for the test and quali­ attention to turn one during a
f y i n g . F o y t q u a l i f i e d his recent practice session and
Oldsmoblle 26th. posting a skinned the car In that comer.
speed of 152.470 mph.
You’ve got to get your act
Officials had offered to waive together."
the rookie test for the 50-yearFoyt said he would have liked
old Foyt but he declined.
to
have competed at Darlington
"I feel like every race I'm at
earlier
In his career but conflicts
I'm a rookie." Foyt said. “ I
got In the way.
should be treated like a rookie."
"This Is the first time we've
Foyt said the 1.366 m !le
speedway reminded him of a really had time to come here."
Foyt said. "I have always looked
half-mile track in Ohio.
"You’ve got to watch out for it forward to coming here.
Neil Bonnctt led Friday's quali­
all the way around or get bit.

NASCAR

...McDowell
Continued from IB
with 5:44 left in the opening quarter when
O’Brien booted a 41-yard field goal to make
It 17-0.
The Black would go on to score two more
times in the first quarter for a 31-0 cushion,
more than half of what McDowell had hoped
the Knights would score for the game.
Lanham connected with Bernard Ford on
a 15-yard touchdown pass with 4:06 left and
O'Brien's kick made it 24-0. With 1:15 left
in the quarter, Davis plowed over from six
yards out and O'Brien kicked the PAT to
make It 31-0.
Neither squad put together a threat In the
second quarter as the score remained 31-0
at halftime.
The Black picked up the slack early In the
third quarter as Oviedo's Tom Johnson
opened up a whole for Davis who scampered
25 yards for 'a touchdown. O'Brien con­
tinued his perfect performance as he kicked
the extra point for a 38-0 lead with 12:57 left
in the third quarter.
McDowell said Johnson, a Junior. Is
second on the depth chart at right offensive

Casselberry Needs Instructors
The city of Casselberry Parks and Recreation Depart­
ment is seeking instructors to teach the following classes:
Aenfblcs, After School Tumbling. Karate. Tiny Tots, Oil
Painting. Baton Twirling. Beaded Flowers and Beaded
Floral Arrangem ents. W oodworking. Sllmnastics.
Christmas Craft Workshop and others.
Anyone Interested in applying for a position is requested
to call the Parks and Recreation Office at 831-3551 Ex.
260.

Pow er Co-Ed Volleyball Offered
Seminole Community College's Ileana Gallagher said a
meeting will be held Wednesday. Sept. 11 at 7 p.tn. to
orgnanlze a Power Co-ed Volleyball class at the college.
The class, for experienced volleyball players, would run
for 10 weeks and cost 910. It would consist of four men and
two women per team. Anyone interested should contact
Gallagher at 323-1046. ext. 210.

Corrugated Asphalt
Do It Yourself Roofing
E asy - E c o n o m ic a l - A ttra c tiv e

On Saturday Sept. 7 Bowl
America Sanford will start all
youth leagues at 10 a.m. These
leagues are for ages five through
19. and arc in divisions accord­
ing to age. We have coaches to
help the youth, and can use
parent help to keep score for the
little ones.
BOWL AMERICA
For you tournament bowlers,
we'll be starting our Sunday
afternoon "N o -T a p Tourna­ has "Bowl one get one free"
ment" Sept. 8 at 2 p.m.. and special. This special will be
Max has plans for a guaranteed Saturday. Sunday and Monday
8700 first prize in the finals. He from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m.. and will
will run the tournament every give you a chance to warm up
Sunday at 2:00 p.m.
for the fall season.
Moonlight is a|so building up
Speaking of the fall season,
again so come on out tonight at there are still a few openings on
9:15 and win some money.
several leagues. Some of the
This weekend Bowl American leagues are fillin g rapidly

Roger
Q uick

Bobby Allison. Richard Petty
and Kyle Petty elected to stand
on Thursday’s times. They will
start 23rd. 24th and 25th re­
spectively.
Bill Elliott earned the pole
Thursday in a Ford, qualifying
at 156.641 mph. Joining him on
the front row Is David Pearson,
also In a Ford.

5 \ v‘
T o m Joh n son
...gu ard

D a rin S lack
...In ju red

though they had it made then played sloppy
in the second half."
McDowell said there were a number of
bright spots Friday night but he wants the
Knights to play like they did In the first
quarter in the scrimmage in the entire game
against Bcthune Cookman.
" If they can grasp the concept of what It
takes to win It will be a big boost
psychologically." McDowell said. "But. right
now, I don't think we're good enough to
beat Bethune Cookman. We have a lot of
things to Iron out."

though, so you should get
yourself of your team signed up
very soon. We start our full fall
schedule this Tuesday. Don't
procrastinate and miss out on
bowling in the league of your
choice — call us at 322-7542 for
leagues available to you.
The men's leagues on Tuesday
and Wednesday nights need a
few full teams. All our mixed
leagues Monday through Friday
'a re still accepting'teams and
individuals or couples. Also, our
vacation league on Sunday Is up
to 26 teams and filling fast, so is
you w ere planning on the
"Islander” vacation, you should
sign up this weekend. All day
and night ladies leagues also
have a few openings.

A few high scores last week:
BLAIR AGENCY Ron Allman
235-208/609. Tom Kelger 200.
Nancy Moyer 212 and 204. and
Lois Smith 215: CARDINAL L.
Pressley 206 and L, Morrison
207; SWINGERS LADIES Rosie
Framke 212, Pat Burkey 201
and Kathy Otto 224.
Also. SANFORD CITY
LEAGUE Charles Stlmely 201.
A1 Bowling 224. Ralph Hockenberry 209. A1 Beron 213. Bob
Powell 215. Bob Orwig 201. Don
Gorman. Sr. 221. Don Gorman.
Jr. 202. Van TUlcy. Jr. 202 and
Bobby Bradshaw 200: and CF
REGIONAL HOSPITAL George
M a n s f i e l d 221 a n d B o b
Richmond 204.

(■ ■ ■ • C O U P O N

TRIVIA
Most of the attention centered
around Pete Rose involves his
attempt to break Ty Cobb’s
career hit record. Seven years
ago. however. Rose was chasing
Joe DiMaggio's 56 consccutlvc-gamc hitting streak. He
reached 44 In a row before It was
halted. What two pitchers, both
sUll active, stopped the skein?
Sec SCOREBOARD for answer.

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guard. "Tom (Johnson) Is a very good
football player." McDowell said. "H e’ll play
a lot for us this season."
After running up the 38-0 lead, the Black
had a bit of a let down as it didn't score
again until the last play of the game and
turned the ball over on 5 of 6 possessions
after Davis’ TD run.
The Gold team got on the scoreboard late
in the third quarter when Mike Stansbury
sacked Lanham in the end zone for a safety
that made the score 38-2. The Gold came
back to score on its first possession of the
fourth quarter when Milan Martin scored
from 12 yards out. The two-point pass failed
and the Black held a 38-8 lead.
Later In the quarter, a 69-yard touchdowi.
pass from Lanham to Ford was called back
because of a holding penalty. But the Black
did score on the last play of the game on a
11-yard pass from Lanham to Ford to make
the final 44-8.
"Lanham has a long way to g o ,"
McDowell said. "He looked good in the first
half but turned the ball over on 5 of 6
possessions In the second.
"They (Black squad) acted like typical
frontrunners.” added McDowell. "They did
a few good things early in the game and

Calc Yarborough, whose Ford
suffered engine problems during
Thursday's qualifying, claimed
the 22nd starting spot. He was
clocked at 154.389 mph.

Youth Leagues Roll Into Action Sept. 7

Flag Football Tryouts A t Chase
Tryouts for the Sanford Recreation Department Flag
Football Leagues will be held Saturday. Sept. 14 at 9 a.m.
at Chase Park. The two leagues are Midgets (7-9 year olds)
and Juniors (10-12).
Cost is 93 while non-residents must pay a 910 yearly fee.
All new players must register and bring in verification of
birth date to one of the following offices: Recreation
Department at City Hall: Sanford Civic Center Youth Wing;
Westslde Recreation Center.
League play begins Sept. 30. Games will be played week
nights at 5:30.

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�41— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sept. 1, It &gt;5

Jays Drop Sox; Lead Swells To 5 Games
"
■
United Frees Internetlonel
The Toronto Blue Jays began Labor Day
weekend looking like a team that wants to finish
thejob.
Still atop the American League East despite a
couple of mini-swoons, the Blue Jays opened the
home stretch Friday night by increasing their
lead to five games over the second-place New
York Yankees.
Lloyd Moseby belted a solo homer and Garth
lorg drove In two runs to back Jimmy Key's
nine-hitter and lead Toronto to a 5-3 victory over
the Chicago White Sox. The Yankees lost to
California 4-1.
The Blue Jays roughed up Floyd Bannister,
who had beaten them last week In Chicago.
"W e didn't let him (Bannister) ofT the hook this
time." said lorg. "This time we were able to score
some runsofThlm and that makes It feel better."
Key, 11-6. struck out five and did not walk a
batter en route to becoming the first left-hander
in Blue Jay history to record 11 victories. He left
with two out in the ninth after Julio Cruz's RBI
single. Tom Henke finished for his eighth save.
"The last two or three starts I’ve given runs up

.larlrJack
Mnrri®
1aI.R14-8,
fnnlftook
thr In
.R.R.loss.
strikeout season.
Morris,
the
Orioles 0, Mariners 0
At Baltimore, Floyd Rayford figured In three
scoring bursts and Storm Davis tossed a
three-hitter to lead the Orioles. The victory by
Davis, 8-7. was his third without a loss In his last
four starts, his first shutout of the season and his
seventh complete game. Mark Langston. 7-11,
took the loss.
Rangers 4, Royals I
At Texas. Pete O’Brien's two-run double keyed
a three-run fifth and helped he Rangers break a
four-game losing streak. Charlie Hough. 14-12.
has posted a 9*2 record since July 5 and, In that
time, the Rangers have won only 17 games. Bud
Black. 8-14. took the loss.
Red Sox 7, Tw ins 3
At Minneapolis. Dwight Evans smacked a solo
homer and Rich Gedman hit a two-run shot to
give the Red Sox their second straight victory
after a five-game losing streak. Bob Ojeda, 6-8.
was the winner. Steve Crawford pitched two
Innings for his sixth save. John Butcher fell to
9-12.
Brewers 0, Indians 0
At Milwaukee. Jim Gantner broke a 3*3 tie with

.

a lr lU a m it a a a a n n

A.L. Baseball
early," said Key. "That was In the back ot my
mind tonight. It helped me only giving up one run
in the first, not four like In the last game."
Trailing 1-0 on Carlton Fisk's first-inning. RBI
single, the Blue Jays rallied for three runs In the
fourth. Moseby led ofT by driving a 2-2 delivery
from Bannister, 6-12, for his 10th homer.
Angelo 4, Yankees 1
At New York. Reggie Jackson drove In two runs
and collected the 1,000th extra-base hit of his
career to lead the Angels. Jackson had one RBI in
the first with a bases-Ioaded Infield out off Marty
Bystrom. 3-2. John Candelaria. 3-1. the first of
three California pitchers, earned the victory.
A 's 8, Tigers S
At Detroit, Don Sutton, buoyed by a four-run
first inning, notched his 293rd career victory and
Mike Davis singled home two runs to lead the A's.
Sutton. 13-7, struck out four and has 90 this
season. 10 away from his 20th straight 100-

L lo y d M o s e b y
...b e lts h o m e r

mi
SI. Louis
Naw York
Montreal
Chicago
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

L
41
5t
57
45
44
39 14

w
77
74
70
41
40

OS
Pet.
.414
.54* 3
.551 •
444 14V*
.474 17W
.312 31

West

74 51 ,SW
41 51 .535
47 5* .532
59 47 .441
55 71 .437
50 74 3Y7

L o t Angela*
San Diego
Cincinnati
Houtton
Atlanta
San Francisco

—
7
7’ Y
1SU
m i
24V»

F rid ay'* Result*
Atlanta 4. Chicago t
Cincinnati 1. Pittsburgh 0
Houston 1. St. Louis 5
Philadelphia S, Los Angeles 2
N ew York 2. San Francisco 1
S a t u r d a y 's O a m a s
(A ll Tim es E D I )
Atlanta (Bedroslan 5-11J at Chicago
(E ngel 1 J),4:0Sp.m .
New
York
(Gooden
20-3) at San
Francisco (Gott 4 10), 4:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (W alk 0 1) at Cincinnati
(M cGattlgan 11). 7:05 p.m.
Houston (Knepper 10-10) at St. Louis
(C om 14-7), 1:05 p.m.
Philadelphia
(R aw ley
104) at Los
Angeles (Valenzuela l i t ) . 10 05p.m.
Montreal (Gulllckson 12-t) at San Diego
(S h ow t l ) . 10:05 p .m .
Sunday's Gam e*
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Houston at St. Louis
Atlanta at Chicago
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Montreal at Chicago
N ew York at San Francisco

RE8ULT8

L fA G U E
W
(0
74
47
44
40
54
44

Toronto
Now York
Baltim ort
Detroit
Boston
M llw tu k t*
Cltvaland

L
41
52
54
St
44
47
42

P ci.
.425
.547
.534
.535
.474
.444
.35*

laattta
M M M - I it
latttasore
M tN M -lltl
Langston. Latorto III. Mlrabttle III.
Long III and Kearney: S Dart* and
Dempsey W—S 0erl» (I ft, L—
Langston (Mil. MRt-Roltlmert. Roy Nrd
(tl). (tempter IN)

FrMsy'i Mspr lessee Rststh
■r Uslttd Frew ItMrmrtMMl

OB
5
11W
lilt
1*
20V*
34

UM
w w n -1 1 4 1
decays
M IM M -1 II1
Johnson sn4 Isntdrt. ForNno*
FrtiNr It). Bnastff III snd Oortt WJohnton 111). L-Fonttnel III). Hkl—
Atlanta. Harper lit). Hamer (HI.

Wast
73 55 .570 —
California
« « 54 .557 3Vs
Kansas City
47 41 .523 6
Oakland
*3 S3 .500 *
Chicago
54 70 .453 15
StatHa
54 t9 .441 ISV»
Minnesota
47 40 .370 25U
Taxas
F rid ay’ s Rtsults
O aklan d!. Detroit 3
Toronto 5. Chicago 3
California 4, N ew York 1
Baltim ore a, Seattle 0
M ilwaukee f , C leveland 4
Boston 7, Minnesota 3
Texas 4. Kansas City 1
S a t u r d a y 's O a m a s
(A ll T im es E O T )
California (Rom anlck
134) at New
York (Whitson • 7), 1 p.m.
Chicago
(D avis
l-t)
at
Toronto
(Alexander 134). 1:20p.m.
Boston (Boyd 11-11 and Nipper 7 4 ) at
Minnesota (B lyleven 12-13 and Portugal 0-1).
2.5:35 p.m.
Oakland
(Blrtsas
10-4)
at
Detroit
(T errell 12-7). 7:35p.m.
Seattle (M oore
III)
at Baltim ore
(Flanagan 2-3). 7:35 p.m.
Kansas City (Lelbrandt 134) at Texas
(Russall 1-4),1:35p.m.
Cleveland (Heaton 1-13) at M ilwaukee
(H lg u era 1 1 4 ). 1:35 p m
Sunday's O am et
Oakland at Detroit
Chicago at Toronto
California at New York
Seattle at Baltim ore
Boston at Minnesota
Cleveland at Milwaukee
Kansas City at Texas, night

Oeeoiaad
III M M - I 111
MNwaebee
M M Ci-tlll
Waddell. Clark If). RuMa III and
Willard. Haas. GWson (II and Schroadff
W-HaatllSI: L-WaddaH If a) HRs-Cm*
land. Jacoby III): Milweuket. Gantner
It). Simmons ill).

Nee Tart
IN HI III - 111
lea Ffteases
M M IN -III
Daring and Hurtfa. KrvKov and
Scanty W-Oenmg n il); l-krvkse II Ml
WedtMNe
l| IIN «l- lll
let Aayatat
K Croat, inpano« (I) and Virgil.
Watch. Haeetl III. Diet It) and Srtoscla
W-K. Grots (lit); L-Wekti (St) HRs
-PWLadtipM. Schmidt mi: lot An yaks
Guarrere01).Marshall (if).
nmter*
M M M -ltl
daemon
WM N1-III
Rovtchei and Fane. Tab* and Dei W
-Tibet (Ml). l-Ravtchtl (1*71
Hoestea
111H I M - M i l
St M l
IM I1 IIII-IIII
Seen. DcPmo (f). Smith (SI and
taller. Kaytfira. Horten It). Camabttl If).
Forvh (|) and Porter, Harper W- Scott
(147); l-Koytffft (Ml) HR*-Houston.
Dm* I Ml. It laud. Codm (41.

lessee
HI M Ml - f I I 1
NMaewta
in h i h i —t i l l
Oieda Cranford III and Gedman.
butcher. Heat 111. Ciriemie 111. Fiteon (tl and
LeuWiar. Salat W-Opda (Ml; L-Butcher
(412) HRs-Bos*on. [etna (III, Gedman

111)

CeMerate
ININM-1III
Nan Tart
M M 1 N - I It
Candelaria. Clfcum III. Maori Itl and
Herron. Boone Byslrom. Shinty It) and
Wynogor
W-Condtlorlo It II: L Bystrom (111 HRs-CollWmla. Honell It).
Jones IItl
Kansas City
M M III-111
Tlie*
IN M Hi —411
Black. Racknrih HI. Jonas III and
Wathan. Hough and Heught W-Hough
Haiti: L-Rleck IS 111

LEADERS
Malar laagaa Laadars
ly Uattad Pratt latermatWaal
• a II I a g
I Rased aa LI pteta ipppprppcw a os at
•aMii aach I n * bia played)
HatWaal Laagaa
r k
i a
McO*. StL
1)4Ml 0*144
H*rr, StL
m ms 71)11
Gvffftro. LA
117412 17111
l i n t Mil
ININ 04IN
Gwym. SO
11I4N oust
Crut. Hou
111440 St U4
0*sNr. CM
114401 N ta
Sandtog CM
111404 NIN

tMUliCX U lfN

Oeblaad
OSMIN-lltl
Oetred
IN M M —I I t
Sutton. Atherton It) and Tettteton.
Mom*, logoi 111. Carey III. O'Neal III and
Parrish W-Sutton (157) l-Morrr* (Ul).
Ckugs

iN N iN i-tll

Tareola
M M IIi-ltl
Remitter. Melton If). Agoite III and Hill.
Kay. Honk* III and WWtt W-Key 11141:
l-lammer (am xSt-Cf.ee go. Fletcher
111. Toronto. Ataaby MU

act.
M7
m
no
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BO
m
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at

Mff*l4A4. CM
lit 414 SUN NO
IN HI H141 7*1
MurpHr. Alt
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loggs Saa
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MO424 10714] B7
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114104 71141 no
MattMfhr. NY
*4 NO 41124 JM
Lacy. 4*1
11430 54117 NS
G44M4A. An
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Coagor. Mil
1144N NISI N4
BaMn. CM
IN 471 71141 ra
fcriltr. Cl(«
IU 507 m u »
B'OdHy. 5*4

.NFC

Natmai
M^phy. Ati la.
Guarrtro. LA II: Homer, Atl. Farkar, CM
andSchmdt. Phil tl
American League - Fisk. CM tl:
Evans. Del It. baton. KC and bell. Tar
if: Kingman. Oak andG Thomas. Sea la

Renabaftodta
National League - Murphy. Atl It:
Harr, StL H: Porker, CM V. Clark. StL la.
Wilton. Phil B.
Amancen League - Mattingly. NY N4.
Murray, bait IB. WMfNM. NY N. ball. Ter
andRipken, bait If
SMaa bates
Notionol League - Coiemen. StL N.
Raunv Mtl SI. Lopes. CM41. McGee. StL end
Samuel. Phllfl
American League - Hendaracn. NY H.
Pettit. Col 41; Wilson. KC N. butler. CWv It.
Ntoby. Tor andSmith. KCII
P it &lt; bI a |
Victories
Notional League - Goodon. NY S»l.
Anduiar. StL S»l; MahNr. Atl If tl.
HavSMa. S0144. VoNntutM. LA144
American League - Guidry. NY and
Sabarhagan- *C Ml. luma. CM and
Mom*. Oat tab. Hough. Taa U It.
laraed baa Average
(based aa l Xv*xg ■ xaalff at games each
Naai hasparad)
National Laagua - Gaadwv NY I f*
Tudor, StL l it: Hffthlior. LA l IS.
Drovectr. SO13a. VaNntueU. LAt If
Amartcan League - Stub. Tor IS .
Labrand. KC 171; labarhipar. KC ill:
Gvtto.WTt SMUT. Twi n
National League -

ment could be the gauge of how
far St. Louis can go.
"I think we're at the point
w h e r e we can c o m p e t e
formidably with the top teams in
our division." Hanlfan said.
"That doesn't mean we're going
to go out there and knock the
bejabbers out of this team or
that team, but we've gained a lot
of respect the past couple of
years."
The Giants, which lost 21-10
to the 49ers in the NFC semifi­
nals. did get that defensive
Im p ro v e m e n t w ith a ll-p ro
Lawrence Taylor anchoring.
Quarterback Phil Simms became
only the eighth player In NFL
history to throw for 4.000 yards
last year.
New York tabbed Kentucky
running back George Adams,
the club's No. 1 draft choice, to
provide more running punch.
Again the cry that the Red­
skins are too old Is being heard.
But Washington was only four
points away from a return trip to
the NFC championship game
one year ago.
The acqusltlon o f George
Rogers from New Orleans should
r e l i e v e a n y p r e s s u r e on
36-year-old John Riggins.
Theism an n remains a master
but the Skins' defense showed
holes at the end o f last year with
the secondary allowing 235
yards per. game In the air last
year. 25th In the league.
T h a t cou ld s till m ean a
fourth-place finish far Dallas
Tony Dorset! had ofT-the-fleld
worries In the off-season but

I

r

Rada 1, P irates O
At Cincinnati. Jay Tibbs. 7-15. pitched
a flve-hltter and Max Venable doubled
home Ron Oester with one out In the
ninth Inning to lift the Reds and hand
the Pirates their 19th straight road loss.
Cincinnati player-manager Pete Rose
went O-for-2 and needs eight hits to
break Ty Cobb's career record of 4.191.

N.L. Baseball
top in 1979. ‘80 and '81. You Just
naturally get up for No. 1. We can’t go
anywhere but maybe we can stop other
teams from going somewhere too."
Mike Scott. 14-7, allowed seven hits,
struck out three and walked two in
pitching 6 2-3 Innings before giving way
to Frank DlPlno. Dave Smith got the last
out for his 20th save. Kurt Kepshlre.
10-8, took the loss.
"T h ey play us about as well as
anyone." St. Louis manager Whltey
Herzog said.

N IC
(T .N T K A I .

Continued from IB

EEU

£
s i !

Braves 8 ,Cuba 1
At Chicago. Terry Harper and Bob
Homer each cracked a home run to
propel the Braves to their fifth straight
victory under new manager Bobby Wine,
who is undefeated since replacing Eddie
Haas. Joe Johnson. 2-0. scattered 11 hits

£

ta4 o a

104

H

Second Hid

M

va. NFC Cantrai

j

j

0-10

4-11-1

3-12

7-1

3-5

1-0-1

1-7

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7-1

5-2

3-5

3-5

24

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V*. NFC

a~4

5-0

5-0

4-7-1

34

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vs. AFC

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4-4

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0-0

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204(10;

244(7)

204(74)

17.7(27)

174(24)

114(3)

154 (10)

234(27)

254(23)

204(20)

Varda (MFC Han*;

22*4(7;

2404(0)

3324(10) 3324(72) 2044(23)

Opp. Varda (NFL Rank)

2414 (i;

220.7(10) 342.1(20) 3224(77; 2074(20)

ftuah. Varda (NFL Rank)

1454(1)

1204(73) 1114(79) 1241 (74; 1154(70;

O ps ayah. Varda (NFL Rank)

• d i (»;

134.1 (20) 1204(25)

PoMa

(NFL Rank)

Opp. Potnta (NFL Rank)

1124(4;

1544(20)

2144(0)

&gt;214(0) 1043(737J 1754(22;

Opp. Paae. Varda {NFL Rankj

1554(2)

1004(0)

2024(73) &gt;204(27; 2254(20;

♦ 1(70)

♦ 1(7)

-11(247) -11(247)i -11(20;

{NFL Man*;

remains one o f the premier
backs.
If the Cowboys' quarterback
problem s rem ain settled as
promised with Danny White
back at the helm. Dallas might
be able to solve Its Inconsistent
offense.
Only Philadelphia, which still
won six games last year, would
appear to be out o f playoff
contention.
RFC Control
The weakest division In foot­
ball also helped the Bears cata­

S

1504(27;

Paaa.Var«arMFt.Man*;

Turnover ♦ / -

G a rth lo r g
r ib b le s

ess 2

Gooden NY tit.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Among
those who used to believe Ty
Cobb's career hit record of 4.191
was unbreakable was Pete Rose.
Rose, now on the biink of
shattering that mark, flatly de­
clared seven years ago there was
"no way" he could ever catch
Cobb.
The occasion for Rose's mis­
prediction was his 3.000th hit oh
May 5. 1978. At a news confer­
ence after the game. Rose was
asked If he could reach 4.000.
His answer was Immediate: "No.
noway."
"I do think I’ve got a shot at
3.600. though." added Rosei
meaning his goal was Stan
Muslal's National League rcconj
o f3.630.
Rose topped Muslal In 1981.

Ryan. Hau IN; Soto. CM ill:
VeNniueW. LA 111: Krukoe, SF IN
American Laogut - blyleven. Men
IN. bomisNr. CMandMorris. Dot 154. burnt.
CMandWitt. Cal 141
Stvet
National Laogut - Reardon Mtl a.
Smith. CMN. Gattogt. SOtl. Smith. Hauand
Sutter. Atl»
American League - OuHeitory. KC N.
HemtndtL Oet If; Moor*. Ctl 14. H**(l. Oak
ondRighattl, NYU

TIDBITS
botabok Coetral

B
bmo
^T^aA r ^ ^ X N E t^ W g l
Aa the stretch nn begnt. contend,ng clubs
or* making their bids N bolster Ihemsei&gt;«t tor
thepennant Wive
Thursday, the Toronto rtecqueod detig
noted Miter Clift Johnson from Tout and St
Louisp«hed upCater Cadent IremCincinnati
Jefmaon. aha left the blue Joys N xgn ailh
the Rongtrs at a ktt ogant Mthe o41atnon.
gives Toronto added poeer and otperitnet tl
It trlM N holdankr Hstint American Laogut
Eaattmo
St. Louis. MIts guetl to stove oft the Mats M
the Notionol League Eat!, odds Codm. aha
could bo used *1 first bast to fill M Nr Jack
Clark Clark a « recently plead onthe ISdOy
disabledlistmihopulltdrbcjgtnHncH
Hr plovers to bo ttigto Nr laogut pi*y«tfi
and World Sarto* camp*t,t«n they mutt be on
0 Norn'soctlvt/tlNr by Sop) I
s^—

Rose, who went O-for-2 against
Pittsburgh Friday night and
needs eight hits to pass Cobb,
said the first time he realized he
had a shot at the record was a
couple of seasons ago when he
was playing for the Philadelphia
Phillies.
£

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"The Phillies called me in and
wanted to re-negotlate my con'tract."1said Rose. "They said.
'We want you playing here when
you break Cobb's record.'"
"That really was the first tlm«
It made an Impression on me."
said Rose. "Not even three, four
or five years ago did I think
about It."

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TimRemoter* me Espot aert idle Friday

Astros Relish Spoiler Role, Upend Cardinals
United Frees International
The Houston Astros are using their
lost season to find motivation.
Out of contention In the National
League West race, the Astros hope to
Influence the East. Friday night. Glenn
Davis slammed a solo home run and a
double and Denny Walling drove In three
runB to give the Astros a 7-5 victory over
the St. Louis Cardinals.
"It’s been a tough year for us: we know
we're not going to go any place." Walling
^ ld . "Our season has been a real
disappointment. Everyone knows that.
"But we get excited about playing a
team like the Cardinals wHb are in first
place in their divlston. We get pumped
for that like teams did when we were on

--

Rose Originally
A Nonbeliever.

A M E R IC A N
fa it

LEAO U E

-

a solo home run in the seventh and Ted Simmons
drove in four runs with a three-run homer and a
single to lift the Brewers. Gantner's fifth home
run of the year made a winner of Moose Haas. 8-6.
Bob Gibson pitched the ninth. Tom Waddell. 7-6,
took the loss.

BASEBALL R O U N D U P
STANDINGS

-- - ■

.V 4 *

pult to the top. Chicago won
seven of Its eight against division
rivals.
Minnesota has Bud Grant
back: Detroit has a new coach in
Darryl Rogers and Tampa Bay
has a new skipper In Lee man
Bennett.
However, the new faces along
Uw sidelines aren't likely to
change the performances on the
field.
The ageless Payton la coming
ofT a 1,600-yard-plua year. The
Bears won the division going

As Rose nears the record, he
often thinks of his late father.
Rose attributes all his "deter­
m ination*' to his father, a
brilliant athlete who played a
rough brand of semi-pro football
In his mid-40s.
»
" I ’ m nothing m ore." said
Rose, "than my father In this
generation."

in his flibt major-league complete game.
P h illies 8, Dodgers 3
At Los Angeles. Mike Schmidt drove in
three runs with a home run and a triple
to lead the Phillies. Kevin Gross. 13-9,
allowed five hits in seven Innings for the
victory. Bob Welch. 9-3, was the victim
of Schmidt's tie-breaking triple In the
eighth Inning that drove In two runs.
Mate 2. Giants 1
At San Francisco, left fielder Dan
Gladden dropped Danny Heep's flyball
with two out in the ninth, triggering the
Mels within two games of first-place St.
Louis In the East Division. Ron Darling
tossed a flve-hltter for his fifth complete
game. Mike Krukow. 8-10, took the loss.

away despite losing quarterback
Jim McMahon, then backup
Steve Fuller to Injuries. Both are
back along with Buddy Ryan's
complex defensive scheme that
saw Chicago hold opponents to
single digits seven times last
year.
One year ago. Green Bay was
the favorite. But the Pack lost
seven of Its first eight and w e sb
out of it. Down the stretch.
Green Bay looked like a title
contender.
So much hinges on the health
of the offense. Lynn Dickey can
be as good as anyone throwing
the ball and Eddie Lee Ivery Is
the same as a rusher. But should
they again get hurt. Green Bay
could find Itself on the wrong
end of 38-37 games.
Tampa Bay has its first season
without coach John McKay. It
also has a potential "franchise”
player In tailback James Wilder,
who amassed 2.229 yards as a
receiver and rusher last year.
Detroit won this division In
1983. Billy Sims, also a potential
"franchise” player, was hurt last
year and so went the Lions'
season.
Minnesota should Improve for
no other reason that Grant Is
back. But the Vlkes were tn
decline when he retired back In
1983 and U'a doubtful Grant's
magic could turn around a team
that was 3-13 one year ago.
RFC W est
In San Francisco's division,
the Rams have Payton's suc­
cessor in Dickerson, who Is
coming ofT a record-breaking
2.105-yard rushing campaign.
The key to the Rams' season lies
with Dieter Brock, an 11-year
Canadian Football League veter­
an who reptaoes the departed
V i n c e F e r r a g a m o at
quarterback. Brock la a two-time

Rose, a native of Cincinnati
who says he "obviously would
like to break the record at
home." could wind up doing It.
on the road next week.
The Reds play at St. Louts
next Monday. Tuesday and
Wednesday.

J i
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11-5

5-7

5-7

5-7

5-0-1

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5-2

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54

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4-4

3-3

4-4

4-4

1-5-1

345(3;

147 (IP)

254(4;

154(74;

174(23;

Opp. PoMa (NFL Rank)

154(7 77)

154 o ;

514(77;

154(9;

140(74;

Varda (NFL Rank)

3344(9)

5345(73)

5554(3;

3324(77; 2514(20;

O ps Varda (NFL Rank)

335.1 (11) 5344(77)

9144(5;

3144(7;

3274(72;

157.1 (20

534(25;

Potnta (NFL Rank)

;

Huah. Varda (NFL Rank)

1441 (4)

1034(22;

1154(9;

Opp. Nuah. Varda (NFL Rank)

554(2)

1114(9;

1542(74; 1341 (24) 1354(23)

Paae. Varda (NFL Rank)

1524(19;

2274(5;

5541(3;

1344(0;

2104(77;

Opp. Paae. Varda (NFL Rank)

2345(25; 1104(70;

1554(9;

1745(5;

1504(0;

W )

-1(757)

Turnover

♦/-

(NFL Rank)

♦ 15(4;

CFL MVP but signal-callers from
up north haven't always found
the going as sunny In the NFL.
Perennial also-ran New Or­
leans •showed promise In 1983
with a .500 record, then slipped
to 7-9 last year. Coach Bum
Phillips’ team was fourth In
defense last year but lackluster
on offense. Dave Wilson, the
form er Illinois record-setter,
wanted out after U8FL refugee
B obby H ebert w as sign ed.
Wilson wanted to be the choice
over veterans Ken Stabler and

♦5(57)

-5(77;

♦»

Richard T&lt;3dd.
Atlanta stumbled last year,
winning Just four games, and
suffering through a nine-game;
losing streak. Tackle BUI Frolic
may be one of the best rookies in
the N FL and B illy "W h ite
S h o e s '' J o h n s o n anA
quarterback Steve Bartkowskl
are hoping to have healthy 1988
■easona. But having to play the*
49ert and Rams twice plus St.
Louts. Seattle and Denver may
make a team wide recovery dif­
ficult.

»

�•» •

Green's Return
Turns Off Bucs
TAMPA (UPI) — Comerback Darrel! Green
capped a stellar first-half performance 'oy return­
ing an Interception 42 yards for a touchdown
Friday night and the Washington Redskins
completed an unbeaten pre-season with a 20-7
victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Washington. 4-0. used Green's two thefts and a
fumble recovery to forge a 17-0 halftime
advantage and then coasted as the Buccaneers
ended exhibition play 1-3 under new coach
Lecman Bennett.
George Rogers scored on a 1-yard run and Mark
Moseley added field goals of 42 and 24 yards for
the Redskins, who begin their regular season
Sept. 9 on the road against Dallas.
The Buccaneers, who hardly appear ready to
open at Chicago Sept. 8. were limited to only four
first downs through the first three quarters. Alan
Risher flipped a* 4-yard scoring pass to George
Peoples with 6:25 left In the game to deny the
Redskins a shutout.
. Green broke the game open late In the opening
half with a fumble recovery and his Interception
return In the final 90 seconds. Green recovered a
Jimmie Giles fumble to halt a Tampa Bay drive
but his subsequent 62-yard TD return was
nullified by Darryl Grant's illegal block.
The Buccaneers quickly got the ball back on a
deflected Interception by linebacker Scot
Brantley, but Green then stepped in front of a
Steve DeBerg pass and raced 42 yards down the
left sidelines for a 17-0 lead with Just 47 seconds
left.
Green also Intercepted DeBerg earlier In the
second quarter, following Moseley's 47-yard field
goal at 1:42. That kick was set up by a 36-yard
penalty against John Holt for Interfering with Art
Monk.
The Redskins opened the game with an 80-yard
drive to go ahead 7-0. Joe Theismann found
Monk for a 21-yard slant on 3rd-and-5 from the
Tampa Bay 22 and Rogers went over on the next
play.
Theismann completed 8-of-14 passes for 84
yards before yielding to Jay Schrocdcr late in the
second quarter.
Center Steve Wilson, the last remaining original
Buccaneer still on the club's active roster.
sulTered a broken left leg in the first half. The two
other 10-year Buccaneers — defensive end Lee
Roy Selmon and safety Mark Cotney — were
placed on Injured reserve- .earlier In training
camp.
T A M PA SIGNS DEFENSIVE BACK
• TAMPA (UPI) — Safety David Greenwood, an
all-USFL performer with the Oakland Invaders,
signed with Tampa Bay of the NFL Friday after
the Buccaneers acquired his rights from the New
Orleans Saints.

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Legol Notice^

Legal Notice

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N O T IC K OF
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
B Y T H E C I T Y O F
LONGW OOD. F L O R ID A . Ihol
ttw Long wood City Commission
Will hold a Public Flooring on
Septem ber it. IMS. 7:10 P .M . In
(ho Long wood City Com m itt Ion
C h o m b o r t, IPS W . W a r r t n
A vom it, Long wood. Florida, or
as toon ThortaHor a t p ottlb lo. lo
con tld tr a Conditional U ta r e ­
quested by Sam Swop and Kim
Hackatt. Courtoty Pontiac, to
locate an automobile dealership,
now and used c a r to le t, In a C l
toning district, on the follow ing
legally described p ro p erty:
M jjTs t. 3. 11 and 12. E ntim
lOper Fa rm s Addition f t . as
{•c a rd e d In P la t Book S. P a go 0.
P u b lic R ec o rd s o t Sem lnolo
County. Florida.
‘ .B e in g m o ro g e n e r a lly d e ­
scribed as the vacant is acres ot
land located S o t Longdale Ava.,
W ot H w y. 17-02, N ot Florida
(Cve., and E o f Highland Strati.
1* A t this m attin g, a ll Intareslad
rile s m ay appear to bo hoard
th respect to Conditional Usa
Request. This hearing m ay be
Continued fro m tim e to tim e
gn lll final action Is taken by the
__ j Commission. A copy o f the
request Is on fit# with the C ity
Clerk and m ay be Inspected by

6

^ iT p e r e o n * a re advlaod that If
h ey decide to appeal any d o ­
ll sion m ade at th a w hearing*,
hay w ill naod a verbatim record
o f the proceedings and Eor such
purposes, th ey w ill need to
insure that a verb atim record Is
m ads, which record to Include
tha toati many and evid en ce upon
which the appeal Is m ade. The
C ity P i L e « f w e e d d e e s not
p rovide this verb atim record.
^ D oted this August I t . IN S
D .L. T e rr y . City Clerk
,, CHy r t Lan g wood Florid a
Publish: Sagtom ha r l and 11,
IMS
D EJ-I

4

IN T H I C IR C U IT C O U RT
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A
F R O B A T I D IV IS IO N
F ile Number (S - M - C P
Division F R O B A T I
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
SH ELD O N R A Y F U L L M E R .
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T h e a d m in is tra tio n o l lha
e s ta te ot S H E L D O N R A Y
F U L L M E R , d eceased . F lit
Num ber OS-SSS-CF. Is pending In
the Circuit Court for Semlnolo
C o u n ty . F lo r id a , P ro b a ta
Division, the ad dr n s o f which Is
Post O ffice D rawer C. Sanford,
F lorid a 32771. Tha nam es and
addresses o f the personal rep re­
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resen tative's attorney a re w t
forth below.
A l l In terested p erson s or#
required to Ilia with this court,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : ( I I all claim s
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parson on whom this notice was
sarvod that challenges the v a lid ­
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at the
venue, o r |urlsd!ctton ot- ttw

court.

A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C ­
T IO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Publication o t this Not Ice has

1.1
MARIE FULLMER
•12Far* Avenue. Apt. m
Sentord.PL 32771

SNm W u Or
MwiWTWy

Fw-eanal Representative:
LOUIS NOBTBO, ESQUIRE
BOGIN, MUNNS.
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P.O. BealMJ
Orlande. PL MEM
Telephone (M &gt; &lt;25-1112
Publish: Septombar I, (. IMS
D IJ -7

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ATLANTA (UPI) — Steve Bartkowski threw a
68-yard touchdown pass to tight end Arthur Cox
midway through the fourth quarter Friday night
to give the Atlanta Falcons a 19-17 victory over
the Miami Dolphins In their final exhibition game.
Bartkowski hit Cox at the Dolphins' 40 on the
first play after Tom Prldemore Intercepted a Joe
Pitiarclk pass at the Atlanta 32. Cox broke a
tackle immediately after making the catch then
raced untouched the rest of the way.
Bartkowski also threw a 16-yard touchdown
pass with four seconds left In the first half to wide
receiver Charlie Brown,
The Dolphins, playing without holdout
quarterback Dan Marino, built a 14-3 lead
midway through the second quarter. Don Strock.
who hit 9-of-14 for 122 yards while playing only
the first 24 minutes, threw a 9-yard TD to tight
end Bruce Hardy In the first quarter and a
20-yard TD pass to tight end Joe Rose with 5:43
left in the half.
The Falcons, who had only a 27-yard, firstquarter field goal by Mick Luckhurst until the
closing seconds of the first half, drove 80 yards to
their first touchdown. Bartkowski, who was
13-for-24 for 218 yards while playing the entire
game, hit Brown In the left corner of the
Dolphins' endzone to cut the Miami lead to 14-10.
Atlanta closed to 14-12 with only 1:42 gone In
the third quarter when a bad snap chased
Pisarclk back into the Dolphins' endzome for a
safety.
The Dolphins, capitalizing on a fumble recovery
at the Atlanta 16, widened their lead to 17-12
with 3:24 left In the third quarter on u 30-yard
field goal by rookie Fuad Revclz of Tennessee.

Legal Notice

DOGS

TV/I

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Geytw Syttmrc rtllcX** Deretofment. I X
ft*.

hntiMra SecueraOetiDWmf

TXern* lent OMrOf « . Tun Reum Cemec
Men

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IB C U IT COU NT
FO R SEAAINOLB C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
F R O B A T I D IV IS IO N
F IN Number ES-MI-CF
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
P IR I M A R K O V IC H .
D eceised
N O TIC B OF
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The a d m in is tra tio n o l tho
ostoto o f P IR I M A R K O V IC H ,
d o c o o s o d , F llo N u m b e r
•5 502 C P . Is ponding In fho
C ir c u it C o u rt fo r S o m ln o lo
C o u n ty, F lo r id a . P ro b a to
Division, (ft# address o f which Is
Som lnolo County Courthouse.
S an ford. F lo rid a 32771. Tho
nem os and addresses o f fho
personal raprasanfatlva and tha
p erson al ra pra sa n tatlva 's a t ­
torney are sat forth below.
A ll In terested parsons o r e
required to tile with this court,
W IT H IN T H R E E AAONTHS O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : (1 ) Oil claim s
against tho ostoto and (3 ) any
o b je c t io n b y an In ta ra s ta d
parson to whom n otice w as
m oiled that challenge* tha v a lid ­
ity o f lha w ill, tha qualifications
o f fho personal representative,
venue, o r |urI adlctton o f tho
court.
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B JE C ­
T I O N ! N O T ! 0 F IL E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B AR R E D
Publication o f this N otice has
begun on August 25, lto t
P o r tm o l ftoprotofttotlvo
YO LAND AC2CRW ,
also known os
LO LAC ZERV
lM N .H o w fh o m a !t .
North AAassapaqus .N .V . l ) 7 «
Aftom syB or
Personal (lap re sent o liv e :
F A IT H K 1 T A L N A K B R
F O Box MAI
C as sol berry. Flartda 32707
Talaphana 3EM 34t74l
Publish: A u gu ft M B I sa tim b e r

t.tws

D E I IBP

Evening Harald, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

N F L S t a n d in g s

N O T IC E O F P R O C E E D IN G S
FOR T H E V A C A T IN G .
' A B A N D O N IN G .
D IS C O N T IN U IN G ,
A N D C L O S IN O O F

RIOHTS-OF-WAV OR
ORAIMAOB BASEMENT
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
YO U W IL L P L E A S E T A K E
N O T IC E that tha B o a rd o l
C o u n t y C o m m is s io n e r s o f
Somlnolo County. Florida, at
10:00 o'clock a.m . on the 34th
d ay ol September. A .D .. IN S , In
th e C ou n ty C o m m is s io n e rs *
M ee tin g 'R o o m ot the Seminole
County S ervices Building. In
Sanford, Florida, w ill hold a
public hearing to consider and
determ ine whether or not the
County will vacate, abandon,
discontinue, close, renounce and
disclaim any right ol tha County
and tha public In and to tha
f o llo w in g r ig h t s - o f - w a y o r
d r a in a g e e a s e m e n t ru nning
through or adlacent to the de
scribed property, to wit:
That portion from Northeast
c o r n a r o l L o t I B lo c k M
T ow n slta o f N orth Chuluota
Platbook 2 P a g e 31. Considered
an alley running North 100 ft.
the East 20 It., then South 100 ft.,
and West 20 It. Also the portion
Irom Northeast corner o l Lot ■
Block L running 100 It. North,
the 20 tt. East, then 100 It. South,
and 20 ft. West, also considered
an alley.
P E R S O N S IN T E R E S T E D
M A Y A P P E A R A N D BE
H E A R D A T THE T IM E A N D
P L A C E AB O VE S P E C IF IE D .
BOARDOF
C O U N TY COM M ISSIO NE R S
O F S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
B Y : David N. Berrien
Clerk
Publish: Septem ber 1, IftS
DEJ 2
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U RT
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
File Num ber PS-BU-CP
M vtsten P R O B A T E
IN RE : E S T A T E OF
T U R N E R L L IN D S E Y .
Deceased
N O T IC E OF
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Tha a d m in is tra tio n o f tha
e s ta te o l T U R N E R
L.
L IN D S E Y , d e c e a s e d . F ile
Number U 514 C P. Is pending In
the Circuit Court tor Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a . P r o b a ta
Division, tho address o l which Is
Sem inole County Courthouse.
S an ford. F lo rid a 32771. Tho
n a m e a n d a d d r e s s o f th e
personal representative and tha
person al re p re s e n ta tiv e 's a t ­
torney are set forth below.
A ll Intorostod persons a r e
required to tile with tho court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
F R O M T H E D A T E O F TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : I I ) o il d o lm s
against tha estate and (2) any
o b je c t io n b y an In te r e s te d
parson to whom n otice w as
m oiled that challenges the valid ­
ity o f the wilt, the qualifications
o f the personal representative,
venue o r lu rlid lc tlo n o f the
court.
A L L C L A IM S A N O O BJE C­
T IO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
EE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
D ole o f tho first publication o f
this notice o f adm inistration:
August 25. IMS.
PersonalI Representative
I
F R E D O IE ROSE N E LS O N
14M K e y Avenue
Sanford. F L 32771
» n ------A n o m ty o r
Personal R epresentative:
Ro b e r t k . M c In t o s h ,
E SQ U IR E
F O . Baa 1230
SiftBard. F L 33771-1310
Telephone (M B ) 332 3171
BS34 111*
Publish: August M B September
I, I t M
O E II5 S

IN T H I C IR C U IT COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A H D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A .
CASE MO.i SS-2310-04-P
IN R E : The M arria ge ol
D A N N Y M . JO YCE ,
Fetllloner/Husband.
and
R O H A M A J E A N JOYCE,
Respondent/Wlle.
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N
TO: R O H A M A J E A N JOYCE
Route t, White Oak D rive
E asley. South Carolina
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action for dissolution o l m a r­
riage has boon filed ogalnst you.
You o re required to servo a copy
o l your written defenses. If any,
to the action on petitioner's
a t t o r n e y w h o s e n a m e an d
address Is G E R A L D S. RUTB E R G . Post O ffice Box *77.
Casselberry, Florida 32707 on or
before September 25, IMS. and
file the original with tha clerk ol
this court, slther before service
on petitioner's attorney o r Im ­
m ediately thereafter; otherwise
a ludgment w ill be entered to
the r e lie f d em a n d ed In the
petition.
W IT N E S S m y hand and tha
seal of this court on August 22,
19S5.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk of the Court
By: Jean Brlllent
As Deputy Clerk
Publish August 25 B September
1.1.15. IMS.
DEI-151

N O TIC E OF
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
B Y T H E C I T Y O F
LONGW OOD. F L O R ID A , that
the Board o f Adjustment will
hold a Public Hearing on Sep­
tem ber 5, IMS to consider a
Variance requested by Donna
and Ronald P lgott Irom the
required width of a com m ercial
d rivew a y (tw o-w ay) o f 25 teat to
U feet and t* feet, from the
required length ol a parking
space o l 20 leet to 15 feet end
from the required width ol a
parking space ol * teat double
striped tg S feet 6 Inches on the
fo llo w in g l e g a lly d e s c r ib e d
property:
Lot 3* (less the East 12.50 Feet
o t S o ld L o t 3 * ) P la n o f
Long wood os recorded In P lat
Book 1. P ages IS. t*. 20 and 21,
P u b lic R eco rd s ot S em inole
County, Florida.
B e in g m o re g e n e r a lly d e ­
scribed a* 133 W. Bay Avenue.
Long wood, Florida.
A Pub Ic Hearing will be held
on September 5, IMS at 7:30
P.M . by tha Board of A djust­
ment at the Longwood City Hall,
175 W. W arren Avenue (W ilm a
S tre e t e n tra n c e ) L o n gw o o d .
Florida, or as soon th ereafter as
possible. At this m eeting, all
Interested parties m ay appear
to be heard with respect to tha
v a r ia n c e s r e q u e s t e d . T h is
hearing m ay ba continued from
tim e to tim e until llnal action Is
laken by lha Board o l Adjust­
ment. A copy o l the variance
request Is on file with the City
Clerk and m a y ba Inspected try
tha public.
A ll persons o re ad vised that If
they decide to appeal any d e ­
cision made ot those hearings,
they w ill naod o verb atim record
o l tha proceedings and for such
purposes, th ey w ill need to
Insure that a verbatim record Is
m ode, which record to Include
the testimony and evldn ece upon
which the appeal Is m ods. Tho
C ity o f L o n gw o o d d oes not
provid e this verbatim record.
Doted this August 12. IMS
Donald L. T arry, City Clark
City o l Longwood, Florldo
Publish: August 22. September
1.1M5 ‘
DEI-107

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT OF
F L O R ID A . IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
CASE NO. U 2 4M -C A 4 4 0
O E N E R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
D IV IS IO N
A L L IA N C E M O R T G A G E
CO M PANY.
Plaintiff.
vs.
R O G ER E .P O U N C E Y and
M A R Y M . PO U N C E Y, his wife,
Defendants.
N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
Constructive Service
T O :R O G E R E .P O U N C E Y
R E S ID E N C E U N K N O W N
H E R E B Y
YO U A R E
N O T IF IE D that an action has
boon com m enced to foreclose a
m ortgage on tho follow ing real
property lying end being end
situ a te In S om ln olo County,
Florida, m ore particu larly de­
scribed as follow s:
Lot 40. Block B. T H E M E A D ­
OWS. U N IT NO. I. according to
tho plot thereof os recorded In
P lo t Book IS, P a ges M and (7 , of
tho Public R ecords o f Somlnolo
County, F lo rld o . m oro c o m ­
m only known os IT ! Totlgato
T ro ll. Longwood, F lorldo.
end you o re required to serve a
copy of your written defense. If
a n y , to It on W I E N E R ,
S H A P IR O B ROSE, Attorneys
for P lain tiff, whose address Is
S404 Cypress Cantor D rive. Sulfa
340, T em p o. Florida. 3340*. on or
b efore Sep tem be r I*, tit s , and
file tho origin al with tho C lerk of
this Court eith er before service
on P la in tiffs attorneys o r im ­
m ediately th ereafter; otherwise
o default w ill bo entered against
• you tor tho re lie f demanded In
tho Complaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal
of this Court on this ISth day of
August. IMS.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
^
CLERKO PTH E
^
C IR C U IT COU RT
B y: Solano Zoyas
Deputy Clerk
Publish August 35 B Septem ber
t.g , is. IBM.
OEI-157

legal Notica"
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U RT
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O K ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
F ile Number ts-SM-CF
IN R E : E ST A T E OF
W IL L IA M A. SALVU CCI,
Deceased
N O TIC E T O C R E D ITO R S
( Summ ary Adm inistration)
TO A L L PE R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
ESTATE:
You a r t hereby nltlfled that
an O rd e r o f S u m m a ry A d ­
m inistration has been entered in
the e s ta te o f W I L L I A M A .
S A L V U C C I. d o c o o s o d , FI la
N u m b e r B5-554-CP, b y th o
C ir c u it C o u rt fo r S o m ln olo
C o u n ty , F lo r id a . P ro b a to
Division, tho address o l which Is
Som lnolo County Courthouse,
Sanford. Florldo, 23771, that tha
total cash valua ot tho ostoto Is
B7,000.00 and that tha names and
addresses o l those to whom It
has boon assigned by such ordor
o re :
J A M S LYN N D EM PSEY
1314 W ait Smith Street
Orlando, F L . 23004
A ll persons ore requ lied to Ilia
with tha Clark ol said court,
W IT H IN 3 C A L E N D A R
M O N TH S F R O M T H E T IM E
O F T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N
O P TH IS N O T IC E all claim s
against tha estate In tha form
and manner prescribed by Sec­
tion 733.703 o f tho Florida Stat­
utes and R ula 5.4*0 o f the
Florida Rules o f Probata and
Guardianship Procedure.
A L L C L A IM S A N D D E ­
M A N D S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D .
Publication of this N otice has
begun on September t, IMS
K ennethM . Beane, Esquire
Attorney
3S5 South H ighw ay l7-*2
Casselberry, Florida 33707
Telephone: (305)(34-15)5 '
Publish: Septem ber t.a , IMS
D EJ*

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Whiter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATfS
1 U f t t d ........................ D 7C ■ H
HOURS
3 ca fiM cittiv a {ia ia s D IC a H

im
im

• : 3 0 A .M . • 5 : 3 0 P .M .

7 M R M C i f t i v t tim es 5 2 C a Hi m

M O N D A Y t f c w F R ID A Y

1 0 C M N C t r t h ii tim e s 4A C a Hi m
C o n tra ct R a t a s A vailab le
3 U fM S M inimum

SATURDAY D -N m r

D E A D L IN E S
N o o n T h e D a y B e fo re P u b lica tio n
S u n d a y • N o o n F rid a y
M o n d a y -1 1 :0 0 A . M . S a tu rd a y

33— R bbI Estate
Courses

21— PtrionelB
•A B O R T IO N *
First T rim ester Abortion 7-12
whs.- B140, M ed ica id &lt;130;
13-14 wks.-S250. Gyn services
12 J. P reg n a n cy Tost. F ra *
C o u n s e lin g . P r o f e s s io n a l
C a ro . S u p p o r tiv e
A t­
mosphere. Confidential.
CENTRAL FUHKM A
W O M E N 'S HEALTH
NEW LOCATION
17M W . Colonial O r........ Orlando
1-MO-S32-SM3
C R IS IS PRE G NAN CY CENTER
A B O R T IO N C O U N S E LIN O
F r a * P r e g n a n c y T e s ts .
C o n f i d e n t i a l - I n d iv id u a l
a s s is t a n c e . C a ll fo r
appointment- evening hour*
a v o lla b l*..........................121-74*3

* * * *
• Thinking e f getting a e
e Real Estate Licen se* •
W e after F re e Tultier
and continuous Training I
Call Dick ar Vicki tor details:
471-1447.. J33-12M... Eve. 774-1454
K eyes e f Flartda.. Inc. ’
j * Y e a r* E xperience I

55— Busintss
Opportunities
M IN IA T U R E O O LF COURSES.
Outdoors- Indoors. Im m ediate
In stallation . Fin an cin g A r ­
r a n g e d . S t a r t in g B4,*00.
M I N I - G O L F . 203 B r ld g a
Street, Jessup. P A 14434 ( 717)
4*44423
_____________

41— Money to Lend
N O T IC E OF
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
B Y T H E C I T Y O F
LONGW OOD. F L O R ID A , that
tha Board ot Adjustment will
hold a Public Hearing on Sep­
tem ber S. 'M S to consider o
Variance requested by Florldo
R e s id e n tia l C o m m u n itie s to
'allow o 5.3* side sotbock In lieu
o f the T.V required side setback
tor structure on tho follow ing
legally described p ro p erty:
Lot 10*. Tlberon H ills Phoso
III, according to tho plat thereof
os recorded In P lat Book 10.
P a g o *1. P u b lic R ecords ot
Somlnolo County, Florldo.
B ein g m o ro g t n a r a lly d e ­
scribed as 1757 Grange Circle,
Longwood. Florida, 12750.
A Public Hearing w ill ba hold
on Septem ber S. IMS at 7 :X
P .M . by the Board o f A djust­
m ent ot tho Longwood C ity Hall,
175 W . W arren Avenue (W ltm o
S tre e t e n t r a n c e ) L o n g w o o d .
Florida, or as soon thereafter os
possible. A t this mooting, oil
Interested parties m ay appear
to bo hoard with respect to tho
v a r i a n c e s r o q u o s t o d . T h is
hearing m a y bo continued from
lim a to tim e until final action Is
taken by the Board o f Ad|ust
m oot. A copy o f tho variance
request Is on fit* with tho City
C lerk end m a y bo Inspected by
the public.
A il parsons o ra advised that If
they decide to appeal any de­
cision m ade o f tfwoo hearings,
they w ill need a verb atim record
o f tho proceedings and tor such
purposes, th ey w ill need to
Insure that a verbatim record Is
m ode, which record to Include
tho testim ony and evldn ece upon
which tho appeal Is made. Tha
C ity o f L o n g w o o d d o t s not
p rovide this verbatim record.
Dated this August 12, IMS
Donald L. Tarry, City Clark
City ot Longwood. F lorida
•
Publish: August 23. September
t. IMS
DEI-toa___________________________
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N otice Is hereby given that I
am e n g a g e d In business at
1M-11S M agnolia A va., Sanford,
Somlnolo County. Florida under
lha fictitio u s n am e o f T H E
O F F IC E SOURCE, end that I
Intend to register said name
with tha Clark of tho Circuit
Court, Sam Inote County, Florldo
In accordance with the pro­
visions o f ttw Fictitious N am e
Statutes. To-w it: Section MJ.0*
Florldo Statutes 1*57.
/*/ U n d o J. Johnston
Publish August I I . 25 B Soptem ber 1,1. IMS.
DEI-102
IN T H E C IR C U IT COU RT
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
F R O E A T E D IV IS IO N
F ile Num ber M-SSS-CP
D tv M ee P R O B A T E
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
B E R T H A L E E THO M PSO N,
a/ k / e BE R T H A L E E
C H A V E R S . o/k/o B E R T H A L.
SH O R TE R , o/k/o B E R T H A C.
SH O RTE R.
N O TIC E O P
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T h o o d m ln ls tro tlo n o f the
• s ta te o f B E R T H A LE E
TH O M PS O N , o/k/o B E R T H A
LE E C H A V E R S . a/k/a
B E R T H A L. S H O R TE R , o/k/o
B E R T H A C. S H O R T E R , do­
coosod. F ile Num ber SS-S23-CP.
Is ponding In fho Circuit Court
for Seminole - County, Florida.
Probato Division, fho address o f
w h ic h Is S a m ln a la C o u n ty
Courthouse. Probato Division.
Sanford. P L 13771. Tho nemo
and address o f tho personal

rtprillfiililVD *90 inMfmtlMMi
----------- * * —s —S I . ——

rep resen tative’ s attorn ey

art

Hi *m i»i WWw•
A ll In terested parsons a re
required to file with lha court,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
P R O M T H E D A T E O P TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O P
T H IS N O T IC E : ( t ) all claim s
against the estate and ( I ) any
o b je c t io n b y o n In to ro s to d
parson to whom n otice was
m ailed that challenge* the valid­
o lf lth * w ill, th* qualification*
a

J

MW

vanua a r jurisdiction o f the
court*
A L L C L A IM S A N O O B JE C ­
T IO N S N O T SO P IL E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B A R B E D
Data o f lha hrs* publication o f
this notice at adm lntofraflan:
Auguaf IS. IMS.
lu g

P R E O TH O M PSO N
Attorn ey far
IRapraaantatlva:
F R A N K C .W H IG H A M .

ESQUIRE
P A B r n M lK

United Why

Sunday, Sapt. 1, 1M3-SB

SanBard^L 32771-1331
Tolaphan* (BBS) 332-2171
Publish: AugustSSB
1. IMS
OEI-IS4

23— L o s ljp i F o u n d
LOST- Small fem a le white poo­
dle, Lake M e ry area. K id's
pot, l-yr. old, untrlmmed, no
collar. 222-7*5*

NEEDM ONEY*
E veryone does at som e tim e. It
you own o hom e and have a
job, I f s ooslor then you think.
C R E D IT *

25— Special Notices
• M A R Y K A Y C O S M E T IC S *
Skin c a r* and color fla ir
C O N N IE ..........................322-7734
T L C Horn* Companions, Inc.
Duality Live-In s
D raco. mooaaaooaaaaaaaoaoaaa 222-11*3.

NO PRO BLE M !

F R E E D L A N D E R , INC.
714 C. A lls monte Drive
OIU C 1 W ID D k
a DMltaa
Wiu
Mto
n laDAH
W flD ir

7 1 -H e lp Wanted
27— N ursery ft
Child Care

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE C U M

A F T E R SCHOOL C H IL D C A R E
In m y Sanford homo. W ill toko
B pick up from school B care
fo r ‘ til * P M . N i c e
n eighb orh ood . A ft e r school
snacks. P le a ** ca ll Coltoon,
2214*71
Babysitting In m y home. R e­
sponsible m other. Hot m ools
223-7*4a,anytime
Babysitting In m y h a m
P r l. 4 :0 * a m to 4:
P a n c o d y a r d . H o t M e a ls

IJfmto
o n c a o , c l e a n f a m i l y a t*
masghara. hat lu r ches, ftoxlb4a hours. 20-47*4.

Legal Notice
IN T H R C IR C U ir C D U ir
O F T H I E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O K ID A .
CASE NO. B5-2524-CA-04-P
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E OF
SU ZA N N E H .B E L L M O R E .
Petitioner/W ife,
end
R O N A L D D A V ID B E L L M O R E .

Respondent/Husband
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO : R O N A L D O A V ID
B E LLM O R E
c/ oM r. B M rs. G erard Bellm ore
133 M argin Street
Law rence, MASS 01141
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action tor dissolution o f m a r­
ria ge has boon filed against you
and you a re required to serve •
copy o l your w ritten defenses. It
to It. on W IL L IA M M.
S TE R N , E SQ U IR E . P la in tiffs
Attorney, whoso address is 1750
N. M aitland Avenue, Maitland.
F L 13751. on or b efore Sep­
tem ber 17, IMS. and til* ttw
original with the clerk of this
court eith er bo tore s ervice on
P la in tiffs attorney o r Im m ed i­
a tely th ereafter; otherw ise a
default w ill ba entered against
you tor ttw re lie f dem anded In
th * petition.
D A T E D on August 14. IMS.
O A V IO N . B E R R IE N .
C lt r k o f C irc u it C o u rt of
Seminole County. Florida
B y: Susan E. Tabor
A s Deputy Clerk
Publish: September 1, 4. ( . It.
IMS
OEJ-4

IN T N B C IR C U IT C O U RT,
K IO M T E E N T M
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
C A S IN O .M -tO IB C A -aO -P
SUN B A N K . N .A .,
P lain tiff.
vs.
W IL L IA M L O N D O N O and
M A R IA E. LONDONO. his w ife.
*t*L .
N O T IC E O P S ALE
N O T IC E I* hereby given , that,
pursuant to the O rder o r Final
Judgment entered In this cauee
In to * Circuit Court o f Somlnoto
County. Florida. I w ill to ll too
property situated in Samlnato
County described a s :

Bogin 3MA3 teat Wart of too
SB earner at too NE 14, at
Section t. Township SI South.
Range !• East. Samlnala
County. Flartda) thence run S.
$3*4.5 teat; thence W SM ft;
thonca N 3M.S North ta U
Section Una; toonc* B. toP-O.B.
at public sola, to toe hlghert and
tort bidder, tor cart), to the
of too ~
County Courthouse, laniard.
Flartda at It s* am . an SapBamtorH. IMS.
WITNESS my hand and seal
of srtd Court an 3fto day of
AyHOOte M L

0AVIDN. BERRIEN
Clark aftoa Circuit Court
By: Diana K. Brummaft
Deputy Ctart
P u b llih : September l. B U M
O BJ*

Needed lor fast-pocad solos o r­
ganisation with good grow th
opportunities. E xperience In
accounts payable, calculator.
C R T B typing required. Good
pay B benefit*.
NO N-SM O KE I
C * L A t e M M L 322 -34 4 3
A IR C O M M T K M IM
M ECHANICS
IaoI a Ub N m
* *R‘ an&lt;
M
ftrafenei^Rt.
P
r y s^^pw
sxparlsnre p lia benefits P a id
v o c a t io n a n d b a lld a y a .
j Duct M echanic
E xporioncod anfy. U p to SPpar
hour. C a ll: MI-441*.___________

ALL TYPES JOBS
START WORK NOWI
L A m o m d / U tp o m c *
■M iam i
m um
I NO
FEB I
Report ready for work *1 4 AM 407 W. 1st. St.............. Sanford

32MSM

Legal N otict
N O T IC E OF PR O C K E O IN O S
FO R T H E V A C A T IN O ,
A B A N D O N IN G ,
D ISCO NTINU ING ,
A N D C L O S IN O O F
E IO H TS-O F-W A V OR
O R A IN A O K E A S E M E N T
TO W HOM IT M A Y C O NCE R N:
YO U W IL L P L E A S E T A K E
N O T IC E that lh a B oard of
C o u n t y C o m m is s io n e r * o f
Somlnolo County, Florida, at
10:00 o'clock a.m . on the 24th
day o l September, A.D .. 1*05, In
th e C ounty C o m m ls ilo n t n '
M ooting Room, at th* Semlnolo
County Services Building. Sonlord. Florida, w ill hold a Public
H earin g to consider and d e ­
te rm in e whether or not th*
County w ill vacate, abandon,
discontinue, close, renounce and
disclaim any right ol ttw County
and ttw public In and to to *
f o l l o w in g r lg h t s - o l- w o y o r
d r a ln o g o e a s e m e n t running
through or od|acont to ttw de­
scribed property, to- w it:
That portion o l Old Slat* Road
415 described as follows: From
th * Southwest corner ot Section
27, Township 1* South, R ang* 31
East. Sem inole County. Florida,
thonca N. N*43'21'' E.. along ttw
South lino ol sold Section. 0 4 *1
toot; thence N. **•43*23" E..
55.50 foot fo r o P O IN T O F
B E G IN N IN G ; said point being
on ttw E asterly right-of-way of
too now connector rood and now
Stato R ood 4IS; thence Continue
N . 4 **4 1*2 1 " E .. a lo n g lh a
Southerly right-of-way o f Old
Stato Road 4tS. 533-33' to too
P oin t o f Curvature o f a curVe
con cave Northw esterly, having
a radius at 441.44 foal; thence
Northea s terly along ttw o re o f
sold curve. MS toot m oro o r too*
to too Southerly shore o f too
Saint John* R iver, to a point

IIMIIlniTTVi TflVTTVD IDDl PDDII
A " ; th o n c * re tu rn to tha
P O IN T O F E E O IN N IN O ;
thanca N . M * 14*37" W . 30X0 tort
to to t North lino o f Oid State
Road 415; thonca N . 4**4I'S3"
E - along to ld North line. (33X3
to rt to ttw Point o f Curvotura r t
a curve concave Nortow attorty.
having a radius r t 411X1 to rt;
thane* Northeasterly along too
a rc e f said curve. MS tort m ora
• r test to lha Southerly shore r t
tha Saint Johns R iver; ttwnca
to toe a foresaid paint " A " .
P E R S O N S IN T E K E S T C D
M AY A PPE A R AND R I
H E A R D A T T H E T IM E A N D
P L A t e A B O V E S P E C IF IE O .
BOARD OP
C O U N T Y C O M M ISSIO N E R S
O P S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
B Y : D avid N . Berrien
Clark
Publish: Saptomhar t. IN S
D E J -3

�*B— E vtn ln g H arold, Sanford, F I.

71— Help Wanted
A c ry lic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
ca rt, boat* and plana*. IS to
111 par hour. W e train. For
work In Sanford area call
Tam pa m w a-7 11 1.
A S S K M S L Y H E L P E R S - Good
tta rlln g pay. Full tim e. Agent
674-4X6.
A V O M E A R N IN O S W O W III
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S N O W III

Sunday, Sept. 1, &lt;965

E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
W ith o r w ith ou t sh orth an d!
P r e f e r r a b l y W A N G w o rd
p ro cesso r*. N eed ed In Ih *
Lake M a ry Area.
Ablest Tem porary S ervice*
_____
111-1*40

m-uuer m-aut

TEMP PERM......... 774-1341
E x p e r ie n c e d S m a ll E n g in e
M echanic*. Apply In person:

A b le s t
Strvtcii
311**40

CASHIERS NEEDED
For convenience (to re with ga*.
Second 1 third th llt available.
Apply In pertent Tennece Oil,
49* Lake M ary Blvd., Sanford,
FI.

EXPERIENCED DENTAL
ASSISTANT
With expanded duties needed
for an exciting and challeng
Ing Dental Practice. P art time
hour* with full tim e benefit*
In Orange City- 10 minute*
from Longwood. Sand return*
to:
1 P in * M eadow Court, D eBary,
___________ F la ....31711.
Full and part tim e position* now
available. M utt be dependable
and display a pleasant p er­
sonality. Apply in person at:
R a x 't , 1000 W. H W Y 414,
Longwood

GAS ATTENDANT

CASHIER
Convenience (tore.. Top Salary,
hotpltalliatlon, I week v a c a ­
tion each t month*, other
benellt*. Apply:
M l N. Laurel Ave., Sanford. I : M
-4 ;M , Monday -F rid a y ._______
Avon Beauty Ce
Start yuur own business for tSI
373-5910........................... 131107*
Child c a r* needed after school.
0 * * lr * mature woman with
own fra n tp o rfa flo n . R e fe r ­
ence*. Call: i l l 1171 a fte r *

CHURCH 0R6ANIST
Wednesday evening* and Sun
day tervlce*. Send return*'
and church background to: SI*
P ark A v * .. Sanford. 11771.
Attn: M u*lc Director._________
CHURCH S E C R E T A R Y
Monday through Friday. 4 :X
A M . to S P .M . O ffice and
p u b lic r e la tio n * * k lllt r e ­
quired. Apply by calling 177417),____________________________
C L E R IC A L PO SITIO N S
G en era l o ffic e t k llli, typing
ao t. Perm anent petition
N ever a feel

TEMP PERH.„...... 774-1341
C L E R K S • Full and part tim e
help for convenience tfo re
W illing to work night* and
week end*. Send return*' to:
P.O. Box lll.O t te e n , FI. 117*4
C o m p u ter O p e ra to r A P r o ­
g ra m m e r C a ll N ew Horlio n * .1 7 l 7500_____________ .___
CR U ISE S H IP JOBS!
Great Income potential. A ll oc­
cupation*. F o r Inform ation
call: (1111741-MMext. IfS.
O E N T A L AS S IS T A N T Dental
experience n ecetta ry tor fa it
grow ing office. P le a t* call:
(*04)775-4100

legal Notice
IN T N R C IR C U IT COURT.
E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A .
CASE NO. tJ-7754-CA-#9-P
D IV IS IO N : JUD O E O AVIS
S PR IN G W O O D V IL L A G E
A P A R T M E N T C O R P O R A T IO N ,
P laln tilf.
v*.
D Y N A D U N C A N , a tin gle
w om an : M S. B A N D Y : SPRIN G W O O D V I L L A G E C O N ­
D O M IN IU M A S S O C IA T IO N .
IN C ., a Florida non profit con
dom inium atto clatio n corpora
tlon.
Defendant*
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O :D Y N A D U N C A N ,
a tin gle woman
H eidelberg. G erm any
P O. Box 1541
A P O N e w Y ork 0*0*1
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to fo rec lo t* the m ortgage
e n c u m b e r in g th e f o llo w in g
property In Seminole County.
Florid a:
U n it N o . 119-A o f S P R
IN G W O O D V I L L A G E CO N
D O M IN IU M , and an undivided
1/2** I n t e r e t t in the lan d ,
com m on elem ent* and common
expen ta t appurtenant to tald
Unit, ail In accordance with and
tub|ect to the covenant*, condl
lion*, rettrlction*. term * and
other p rovltlon * of the D eclare
tlon of Condominium o f Spr
I n g w o o d V i l l a g e , a C on
dominium a t recorded In Of
flcia l R ecord* Book l i l t , page
1 0 **. P u b lic R e c o r d * o f
Seminole County. Florida
ha* been filed by the P lain tiff
egaln tt you and other* in the
ab ove entitled c e u t* and you
a re required to te rv e a copy ot
your written detente*, if any. to
It on D O N A L D L
S M IT H ,
P la in tiff'* attorney. I t * Barnett
Bank Bu ilding, J a ck to n ville.
F lo rid a 17707. on or b efo re
September II. IMS. and file the
original with the Clerk of thi*
Court either before te rv lc e on
P la in tiff'* attorney or Immedl
a tely thereafter; o th erw it*. a
default w ill be entered again*!
you for the relief demanded In
the com plaint or petition
W IT N E S S m y hand and teal
o f thl* Court on thi* Mth day of
August. IMS.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk o f the Circuit Court
B y: A g n e tE . Sulek
Deputy Clerk
Publish: August II. 15. Sep
tem ber 1.1. IMS
D E I 104

T o p s a la r y , h o tp lta llia tlo n .
other benefit*. Call business
o ffic e for Info.: I21-M43.

UNDSCAPhMAINTENANCE

WORKER
Needed. Company seeks c a ­
reer minded Individual Inter
ested In working In a Christian
Environment. 111-4711

T R A D E S M E N - Im m ediate. A ll
phases, good pay. Call agent
671-4X4.________________________

Large 1 A 1 Bdrm. Apartments
Adult L ak evlew F a m ily Poolside

TRAFFIC ANALYST

Office Htlp- Ail Kinds!

PLANNING AIDE I
Graduation from an a ccred ­
ited high school with educat l o n a l e m p h a s i s on
a r t / g r a p h lc s / d r a ft ln g ; o r
graduation from an accredited
high school and on* ( I ) year
experience In planning graph ­
ics or related field. P referen ce
will be given to applicants
with knowledge/experlenc* In
te c h n ic a l Illu s tr a tio n and
cartographic drawing.
Apply by NOON. Sept. 10.
IMS.

Call 14*54*4. after 7 pm

LIVE-IN
M ature woman needed to care
for disabled ton. Must have
own.transportation and local
r e fe r e n c e s . M u tt b e nonsmoker I Call: 372 7994
Lacking For Housakaeeper 4
Babysitter, S days a week.
14*-ISIS, ask tor Brenda.
M A N A G E M E N T T R A IN E E S
Needed im m ediately for Local
Branch of Growth Oriented
C o m p a n y . C a l l : 121-5440
T u esd ay*- U N o o n o n ly .

Wanted. Must be certified or
e x p . A ll s h ills . A p p ly In
p erson : L a k e v le w Nursing
Center. * I * E . 2nd S t„ Sanford
Call N ew H orltons.......... 111-7500'

Ovtf Thi Road Track DrimCall N ew Horltons . . . .....13) 7500
P A R T T IM E
W ork from home servicing our
customers on new telephone
program . Earn up to 410 hr.
Call 6*^4771 or 674-5515.
P h o t o M o d e ls f o r p r in t ,
catalogs, etc. W ith or without
Exp, 1714*67 for Interview
P IN K E R T O N 'S now hiring full
tim e security o ffic ers In San­
ford area. Must be able to
work all shifts. W ill train,
uniforms provided. P aid Ilf*
Insurance, profit sharing 4
stock purchase program . Call
4*4-4761. EOE__________________
PLU M BERS 4 H E LPE RSGood pay scale. Call agent
674-4iae.________________________

MEDICAL OFFICE
INSURANCE BILLING CLERK
Submit resume to 1401 M edical
P lata . Suite 10*. Sanlord. F L
11771.
Q U A L IT Y C O N TR O L
IN S P E C TO R
5 y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e as a
m echanical Inspector. P e r ­
manent position.
N e ve r a fee I

TEMP PERM......... 774-1348
REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE
High
Earnings
Potentlall
Modern o ffic e In excellent
location- Com plete training
program - N ew division o f old
established firm . Call now
for
details
on
pleasant
working conditions and to
secure your future.
Jim R a ffe rty ................... 5746656
R E C E P T IO N IS T
F ro n t o ffic e , phones, filin g ,
ty p in g h elp fu l. P erm a n en t
positions. N e ve r a fee I

PLANNING AIDE III
Graduation from an a ccred ­
ited college or university with
a B a c h e l o r 's D e g r e e In
applied art or sim ilar con
centration and on* ( I ) year
experien ce; o r an Associate's
D e g r e e w i t h m a |o r
coursework In art. technical
Illu s t r a t io n , o r te c h n ic a l
draw ing and two (2 ) years
experien ce: o r an equivalent
combination of related train­
ing and experience. P re fe r­
ence will be given to appli­
cants with a dem onstrated
knowledge and experience In
tt'h n lc a l design, the d ev el­
opment and us* of data bases,
and geograph ic Inform ation
system s as they re la te to
planning and physical devel
opment.
Apply by NOON. Sept. 10.
IM5
Apply by NOON, Aug. 14, IMS,
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY
P E R S O N N E L O F F IC E
C O U N T Y S E R V IC E S
B U ILD IN G ,
1141 East First Street.
Santerd. Fla. 12771
A P P L IC A T IO N S O IV E N A N D
ACCE P T E D Monday through
Friday, 4 :X A . M . to NOON
E Q U AL O P P O R T U N IT Y
E M PLO YE R. VETERANS
P R E F E R E N C E O IV E N
ON I N I T IA L H IR E .
M E D I C A L
R E C O R D S
T E C H N IC IA N - 2 yrs. hospital
m e d ic a l r e c o r d s e x p
re­
quired. Coding, 4 abstracting
s k ills d e s ir e d . C o n ta c t
personnel: W. Volusia Mamarial Hasp., 7*1 W. Plymouth
A ve., DeLand. FI. EOE.

Welder With EiparitnctCall N ew H orltons.......... 111-7500

Yard Man- Handyman
Wanted On* Day per Week.

16/hour.......................... I l l 1470

10 Dalhtary Drivers •
N e ed e d . W a ge s , tips, and
commission. Must be 14 with
car and Insurance. Contact
Bob a lter I I : 377 41X__________

$25 Bonus with this adl
Needed Im m ediately • Nursing
Assistants and L iv e In C om ­
panions. I year experien ce
required.
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L
POOL
X 5 4*4 4*11.
E O E ...........................M/F/H/V
4X0 a week to train full and part
tim e positions. Call 121 2*12.
Business Dress Required.

91— Apartments/
House to Share
M ature Lady to Share 1 bdrm. 2
bath home with same. R e fe r­
ences. 5100 + (y utilities.
131 X 7 t

93— Rooms for Rent
Christian Apts. 4 Homes
TV, kitchen, laundry, maid. 450
w k .4 up. Orl 471 5444/431 1610.
R O O M FO R R E N T - 455 per
week, plus third of bills. Call
Sue 714-1700, Ext. 214).
Room w /prlvat* bath 4 refrig
erator. Complete privacy. 465
a week + 4100 security depos
It. Call 111-224* or 121*611.

S W IT C H B O A R D O P E R A T O R
P ort tim e W ed • Sunday.
Evenings and weekends. D e­
pendable. A p p ly In person.
Seminole Ford Incorporated.

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

TELEPHONE SOLICITOR
NEEDED

A V A IL A B L E NOW

H igh ea rn in g s . E x p e rie n c e d
only. Call Tuesday.

Furnlshed Studio Apartments
On* Bedroom Apfs.
Tw o Bedroom Apts.

Now acceptin g applications
for part tim e 4 full tim e
cashiers.
Tenneco Food Store
_______ Route 415. Osteen._______
T ired o f Job Hunting 7
C a ll F u tu r e s - th e y h a v e
hundreds ot |ob openings tor
th o se w h o w a n t to w o rk .
674 4100
CEMENT W ORKERS 4
H E L P E R S - E x c e lle n t pay.
Start right aw ay. 67t 4X0
D E L IV E R Y H E L P E R S - no ex
perien c* necessary. Full time.
Good starting pay. 474-4100
O E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
Great starting
|ob. S everal openings. Good
pay. 671 4100
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y and
P R O D U C TIO N W O R K - Most
shifts open. Good pay scales.
674 4100
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S G eneral Construction labor.
Good pay . 474 4100

M-THOIS 4
SH M M
xanoal.

121 7500

AAA EMPLOYMENT
HAPPY
LABOR DAY
SANFORD!
SAY

CLOSED M0N0AY

CALL 323*5176
EARLY TUESDAY!

1511 Franck A v *.

B re a th e d

e r-&lt; r * #•'#

1

x &gt; / -^-j- v •»

'URb€ HACK
COCKROACH OCtKS
A KAL HOTTAMAU.

AwtAimy vutoNor
9
11

r

2 bdrm. 1 bath newly redeco
rated, central alr/heat. wall to
wall carpeting. 4175 per mo.
4700 security deposit. A fte r 5
171 7611

Children A Pets W elcom e.
Senior Cltltens Discount
Call Now for M ore Information.

321*3827

2 b drm .,

I bath, furnished,
utilities. 41M per month plus
deposit. Call X*-5464

111— Resort/Vacation
Rentals
B e a c h fro n t Condo. O rm on dsleeps 4. Sept. 7-14th. D ay or
w eekly rat*. 1210742

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

D R Y W A L L - W ith o r without
e x p e r ie n c e . Im m e d ia t e
openings. Good pay. Call to
day. 471 4X0___________________

TEMP
322-0057

fa v m .5
40t

2 Bdrm. 2 Bath, central air. all
appliances, pool. First and
security. 4415 per mo. Call:
111 445?after 5 P M ____________

Check these features:
# F ro s l F ree R efrigerator
a Garage
a Attic Storage
aW asher/D ryer Connection*
aOn/Sight Management

107-M obile
Homes / Rent

AN D LE T AN EX P ER T D O TH E JO B

PAINTERS 4 PAINTER
H E L P E R S - Im m e d ia t e
openings, good starting pay.
Call today. 474 4X0

Call N ew Horltons

i

t and 7 bdrm. Also furnished
efficien cy from 475 week. 4250
deposit. No pet*. Call 121 4507
5 7 P M . 4t5 Palm etto.__________

Energy Efficient 1 bdrm.. 1
bath Patio Homes nestled in
quiet country setting, near
shopping A schools. Close to
Lake M a r y -1/4 Exit.

Large 2 bdrm., I bath, vaulted
celling, appliances, hook ups.
s c r e e n e d p a tio . 41*0-4400.
l i t 1251. b *tw # # n 4 P M A 7 P M .

CONSULT OUR

W E LD E R S- Certified Excellent
pay K a le s. Call today. 471
4X0

DRAFTSM AN
FLO O R T IL E R
S E C R E T A R IA L
PH O N E R E P S
M E D IC A L T R A N S C R IB E R

UASltUP
fottftMLS

Spacious ApartmentsLakefronl. pool, tennis, adults,
no pel*, laundry. Starting at
4X1 a mo. Call 111-4741 to see.

NEW HOMES FOR RENT

E xp erien ce Victorian Charm I
T w o Spacious 2 bdrm . apt*.,
central alr/heat. cellin g fans,
porch swings. M any extras I
C lo s e to to w n . N o p e ts .
4425/4475 -t- deposit. Phone *
to 4 w e e k d a y s . 42* 0015M a rg e ; nights 177 0757/1067

R E C E P T IO N IS T , O F F IC E
H E LPE R S , C LERKS, CRT
O P E R A T O R S - Im m e d ia t e
opening*. Good pay K a le s .
Call 471 4X0 NOW I

* N0FEE *

UASifi

$340- $350
Adults A Fam ilies W elcom el
SIM Security Deposit
C all................................... 1117*74

L O C A L D R IV E R S - S tra igh t
trucks. Good pay. Start right
aw ay. 474 4X0

A Division of A A A Employm ent

il*

2 Bdrm. Duplex with Pool

D U P L E X FOR R EN T - 2
bdrm.,1'1 bath. No pets. A ir
and appliances, washer/dryer
hookup. 4170 per mo. Call
after 4 p m -4 X 744*____________

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

Mfirtltoiis* A Factory-

;t, ■

Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 baths, fenced,
fan*, verticals, wash/dry. 4575
mo. 4300 security *34 1704 and
11*0901
_____________________

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

4 R o o m - e f f i c i e n c y , p e ts ,
downtown 41*0 00 mo 4150 00
deposit. 121 0421

CALL NON........... 322-0057

1 CANNOT HANPtf

L a rg e 2 bdrm . 1 bath, air.
Ilrep lac* 4X5 Owner/Broker
177 5**?. or 111 0495____________

lst/last^A^cleanlni^llMMI^^

2 Bdrm.- hug* rooms, com plete
p riva cy. 4 I K week. 4250 secu
rlty deposit Call: 171 726* or
111*611.________________________

REMODELING SPECIALIST

anothcr m&amp;r po ...

LAK E M ARY/SANFORD- 1
bdrm., 2 bath, double garage,
carpets, drapes, appliances.
44*5 per mo.. 214 Justin W ay,
O rovevlew . lll-*564.___________

1BO RM . HOUSE
640C per month plus deposit.
Call: 111-0)40__________________
1 bdrm/l bath. carpet, fenced. ’
Sunland Estates. 4415 mo.,

1 Bdrm. Deluxe- Adults, no pets,
air, quiet residential. 4175 mo.
+ deposit 121X19.____________

W A R E H O U S E W O R K E R S - Full
tim e, no exp. nac. Call agent
674-4X4.________________________

• W .lM m &amp; M l
&amp; m m e p fw

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE

HOUSE FOR R E N T- In city. 1
bdrm.. 2 bath. ISM per mo.
plus security deposit App.
1700 sq ft. Day 121-5107. Eves.
111-M51_____________________ ___

1 Bdrm., 1 Bath, fenced yard..
4475 par month plus deposit.
Call: 32107M A fte r 1 P .M .

L o v e ly o n * bdrm . C om p lete
p riva cy, sao per week plus
4X0 security. C all: 121226* or
111*411.________________________

Needed for on* gal o ffic e In
D elto n a . L e a rn com p u te r,
schedule patients, life typing.

MTSTmemtto ?
*m£AH€KP0.7

Sanford- Duplex- 7 bdrm .. I
bath, lau ndry room , back
y a r d . 4175 p lu s d e p o s it .
6110416 or 111-57)1.____________

*■

W eklva R iver V iew + A c c es sll
3 Bdrm., I»s acre, wooded,.private, fenced. H ors* OK.
4515 mo. Eve. I l l 4679_________
W IN T E R SPOS. 1 bdrm . 2 bath
carpet, porch, a ir + M orel
4445. Lease/optlon. 469-1711.

Furn. Apts, lo r Senior Cltltens
111 Palm etto A v *.
J Cowan. No Phone Call*.

Additions A
Remodeling

Icw n te m v e R , w r
tfT H K S H O H lim iV
m e w u v M firo N e

1120 F lo rid a A v * . accross
fro m Lak e Jennie. I A 2
B d rm *., carp etin g, cen tral
air. dishwashers, pool. 4115 to
41X per mo. No pets. R e fe r­
ences and secu rity. Phone
171-66X________________________

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

R E N TALS - 2 A 3 bdrm *. neat'
dwntwn. Sanford, Eves. I l l X45 or (904) 775-4511.__________

T R U C K D R IV E R S - Long haul.
Im m ediate! Good d rivin g re ­
cord O ver 25.674 4100

C O U N T Y

THOtSNT A

FRANKLIN ARMS APTS.

LA K E M A R Y - 1 Bdrm. cottage,
newly remodeled. Furniture
a v a ila b le . A d u lt* only, no
pets. 4100 per month plus
security. Call: 127 6147.

~

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323-3301

W * Handle
The Whole Ball Of Wax

B .L LINK CONST.
322-7029
Financing A vailable

Appliance Repair

Altera Appliance Satvica
14hr. Service .Na Extra Chargel
17 Y r. E xp.....664-5441,. ..574-4411

Carpentry
A ll type* ot carpentry A re ­
m odeling. 77 yrs. exp Call

RIchardGrossJlTMT^^^

Cleaning Service
Hee^Terpe^GeaaSng^SvIng?
Dining Room A Hall 429.M.
Sola A Chair, 415.11115a*

B LO O M

Sanford

• * • IN D E L T O N A # # *
• • HOMES FO R R E N T • •
* • 574 1414 • •

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

FLEXIBLE LEASES

MEDICAL TRANSCRIBER

NOFEEI

MASTERS COVE..... 323-7900
MARINER'S VILLAGE- 1
bdrm . 4110. 2 bdrm. 4160 and
upl Adults only. I l l 4670.

1 bdrm. I bath, air, K ree n ed
porch. S IM m o. 674 *743

S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S D ISCOUNT
R A N C H S T Y L E L IV IN O III

W A N T E O : R E C E P T IO N IS T for
beauty salon. Call: 121 5*51 for
appointment.

AAA TEMP

S E C U R IT Y D E PO S IT ......... S IN
W IT H TH IS AD I

DELTONA:

SU N LAN D ESTATES
Room
with bath for rent. Kitchen
prlvieleges. 460 per week In­
cludes utilities. Call: 177 57*4
T H E F L O R ID A H O T E L
500 Oak A venu e............... 121 6X4
Reasonable W eekly Rates

321-5440.
TENNEC0 FOOD STORE

Available Now.Opan Waaktnds

1 BEDROOM A P T . FOR RENT6175 month, no pots.
111-6X4.

S A N F O R D Furnished rooms by
the week. Reasonable rates.
M aid service. Call 131-4507.
5-7 P M . 415 Palm etto A v *.

TEMP PERM........ 774-1344

PLANNING AIDE II
Graduation from an accred ­
ited high school with emphasis
on graphlcs/arf/draftlng and
on* ( I ) year experience in
planning graphics o r related
field; or an equivalent comblatlon of related training and
experenc*. P referen ce will be
given to applicant* with exp e­
rien ce In technical design,
rese a rch m eth od*, m a in te ­
nance of data tiles, us* ot
m icrocom p u ter* and report
production.
Apply by NOON. Sept. 10.
1*45.

Le g a l N o tic e

L E G A L N O T IC E
On Septem ber *. IMS. at a
public sal* at 1} o'clock noon at
Central Florida Mack Trucks.
Inc.. 1100 N. Orlando Blossom.
Orlando. F L 17*04. the following
equipment w ill be o ffered tor
sal* to the highest bidder.
O n * ( I ) IM 4 M ack truck.
M o d e l R W S 7 1 1 L S T . s/n
1M7V31O4JEMO0I17S
Term s ot the s a l* w ill be Cash.
C ertified Check or M oney Order.
C .l.T . Corporation reserves the
right to bid and the right to
r*|ect any and all bids. For
fu rth e r In fo rm a tio n , con tact
Alb ert L ee or Ron Dennison at
C .l.T . C orporation. 5471 Bay
Center D rive, Suit* 105. Tam pa.
F L 11*09 (411)47* 7517.
Publish August 10 4 September
1.4.4. *. IMS.
D E I 14*

• COUNTRY SETTING*

Apply by NOON. Sept. 4 . 1M5

LANDSCAPE HELPER-$4 Hr.

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IO H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A .
CASE NO. tS 1901 CA49-P
C I T Y F E D E R A L S A V IN G S
A N D LO A N ASSO CIATIO N.
P lain tiff,
vs.
D A V ID M . R E A V I S and
P A T R IC IA A. R E A V IS , his wife.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
S T A T E O F F L O R ID A
TO D A V ID M. R E A V IS and
P A T R IC IA A. R E A V IS , h it w ife
Whose retld en c* Is unknown
You are hereby required to
file your an sw er or w ritten
detente*. If any. In the above
proceeding with the Clerk ot this
Court, and to serv e a copy
thereof upon the P la in tiff's at
t o r n e y s , w h o s e n a m e an d
address appears hereon, on or
before the 7nd day of October
1M5. the nature ot this proceed
ing being a suit tor foreclosure
of m ortgage against the follow
Ing described property, to w it:
Lot 414. S P R IN G O AKS. U N IT
1. according to the Plat thereof
as recorded in P lat Book 17.
P ages 74. 75 4 76 of the Public
R ecords of Seminole County,
Florida.
If you fail to file your answer
or written defenses In the above
proceeding, on P la in tiff's at
torney. a default w ill be entered
against you lor the relict de
manded In the Complaint or
P e t i t io n . D O N E A N D OR
D E R E D A T Sanlord County of
Seminole Stale of Florida, this
74th day ot August. IMS
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K OF THE C IR C U IT
CO U RT
By: Jean Brillent
Deputy Clerk
Publish: September I. 4. IS, 77.
IMS
DEJ 10

P.O. Box **7, Sanford, FI. 11771.

LUTEMAN

LAB O R E R S
R ellab'e w orker* needed
lor flrtt shift
Ablest Tem porary Service*
111-1*40

BAMBOO COVE APTS.
144 E. Airport Blvd.
1 Bdrm ., I Bath..............4X4 mo.
2 Bdrm., 1 Bath..............4125 mo.
P H O N E ........................... 1116461

NURSES AIDES

Completion of the elgth school
gra d * and at least two (2)
years experience working on
road asphalt projects as a
lu t e m a n o r r a k e r : o r
e q u iv a le n t com b in atio n o f
training and experience.
Must possess and maintain a
v a lid F lo r id a C h a u ffe u r's
L ic e n s e . (D e fin it io n o f
V A L ID : The Issued license Is
not expired nor ha*, within the
past three (1 ) y e a rs been
denied, restricted, revoked or
suspended.) A copy o f the
front and back ot the license
Is required prior to NOON of
the closing date.

O E N E V A A R E A - Need mature,
responsible wom an for after
school c a r* In m y home. Must
have reliable transportation.
Call: !4*-S51t., between 7 PM
4 * PM.

TITLE CLERK
OFFICE CLERKA
P a rt tim e. Excellent pay. Reply
to:

Apply by NOON, Sept. 9. 1*45,

O E N E R A L O F F IC E personnel
n e e d e d - F u ll t im e , g o o d
»ta rfln g pay. Agent *7&lt;-4100.

NURSES AIDES

103—HOUSES
Unfurnished / Rent

99— Apartment*
Unfurnished / Rent

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
SEMINOLE COUNTY
GOVERNMENT
Graduation from High School
supplemented by college-level
course work In Engineering
Technology: and two (3) years
p ro gris slv ely responsible e x ­
p erien ce In sub-professional
T ra ffic Engineering work, or
an equivalent combination ot
t r a in in g an d e x p e r ie n c e .
(E quivalent experience may
In clude re la te d su rvey in g ,
d r a f t in g , d e s ig n w o r k .
Equivalent training m ay In­
clude successful com pletion of
In stitu te o f Tran sportation
Engineers (I T E ) and/or G o v­
e r n o r 's H ig h w a y S a f e t y
(G H S ) courses.
Must possess and maintain a
v a lid F lo r id a C h a u ffe u r's
L ic e n s e . (D e fin it io n o f
V A L ID : The issued license Is
not expired nor has. within the
past th ree (1 ) y e a rs been
denied, restricted, revoked or
suspended.) A copy of the
front and back of the license
Is required prior to NOON of
the closing date.

A C TIO N M O W E R M A R T
IS M S . E LM A Y E .
SAN FO RD , FL. M77I

CARPEN TERSR
C A R PE N TE R H ELPERS
Im m ediate opening* In San
ford Area. F lrtt A Second *hlft
available.

71— Help Wanted

A ll shifts. Good atmosphere
and benefits. Apply at:
D eB ary M anor.. 60 N. Hwy I7/*1
D eB ary E O E .

W IT H

E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
F ro n t o ffic e , phone*, filin g ,
ty p in g h elp fu l. P erm a n en t
position. N ever a Fee.

B E A U T IC IA N - E x p e rie n c e d
Good Hwy. 17-*7 location for
growth. MI-7111,

NEVER A FEE

71— H tlp Wanted

71— H tlp Wanted

71— H tlp Wanted

Electrical

Landclearing

Paintinq

F u r n it u r e R e p a i r s A R a
finishing. Reasonabla Ratasl
3rd G eneral ion B u st.. 614 174*

N eed Bulldoier work done? Call
R icky Wynns D o ier Work »
yrs. exp Reasonable 14* *795

C U N N IN O H A M A N D W IF E
Inter/Exterlor/Pressure Wash
C a ll:.:............................. M l 7514

General Services

T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN G
F IL L D IR T • C L A Y •
SHALE A H A U L IN G ..... 177 141]

P ain tin g........ Any W allcoverin g
Vinyl Flooring R ef. A Resonable
V ery R eliable.....111-4*17 Ext. X

R O B E R T E .G R E E N E
C o n tr o ls A M a in te n a n c e .
S p e c ia lis t In E le c tr ic a l A
Pneum atic Control*. I l l 67*1

Handy Man
McCULLAR HOMES

Landscaping

Paper Hanging

HAUUNG....Fill Dirt...Top Soil

^^^Walipaperin^aTr™”

Sand.............Call MS-4144 after 1 .

Lawn Service

Now h o m es *' R e m o d e lin g * A ll
types ot r e p a ir s * Lie. con
tr a c to r * R R 0013761. Phone
M l 5660....................or 111 546*

HOME LA W N C A R E
M o w .... E dge ..Trees Trim m ed
John................................ 411 1529

Home Improvement

123-742*

Collier’s Building A R em edellng
66* Jab Tea Small
511 BurSen Lane, Sanford
M l-6471

Lawn Mowing...... Low Prices

Quality Lawn Cara
A t Affordable P rices. 121 697]

WANTED:— Lawns to Caro For*

Home Repairs

Masonry

JUST O E N IE S
Professional cleaning
C a ll............................... 121 4661

CARPENTEB
R e p a ir s an d
rtm odallng. No job loo sm all.
Call: 111*645.

Electrical

Maintenance of all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
and alactrlc. 171 SOX

IA N Y T H IN O IN C O N C R E T E !
Frea E stim ate* Oiadly Given t
B E AU M O ND E Const. Co.
"W a A re T he B e s t"........ 121-5001

Anything Electrical...Since 1*7*1
Estim ate*.... 14 Hr. Service Calls
T a m '* E lectric Servlca...l71171*
C O N T E M P O R A R Y E L E C T R IC
Com plete E lectrical Services
T V A Telephones............Ml-1577
D A S E le c tric .................1216050
N ew A rem odeling, additions,
fans, security lights, tim ers
* plus a ll elec, services Quality
Service Licensed A Bonded

W IL L IS HOM E R E P A IR
R em edelln g....... Addition*....... A
A ll T yp o * R ap alrst........ Insured
No job too sm all..............171 774*

Landclearing
O E N E V A L A N O C L E A R IN O
Lot/Landclearing.......... F ill dirt
Topsoil....Pond*....Drain ditches
Site P rep aratlo n ...C *ll...ia*'S *N

Paving
A -l Asphalt P aving, Inc.
Grading A paving, asphalt n
p airs, M a i coatin g, Ira ffl
markings, drivew ays A part
ln g lo t s .F r e e e s t .n l 14*6.

LAWNS MOWED ft TRIMMED
Spring Y *r d Clean up* .-121-1951

TH OM AS A THO M AS. H em *
rip a ir, cleaning, lawn car*.
C a iin t u e * .

Husband/wlf* team w ill clean
your home or o llic * daily,
w eekly or monthly. E xtrem ely
reasonable Call: 11) 7514.

F ree E st........Work Guaranteed
' H U M .................. .........111*113

Please call alter 5:172 7151

Music Lassons
Outtar Lessens
A ll agas/all levels. P ro Back­
ground. Call Julia........ I l l 4464

Nursing Cara

Plumbing
Wall Plumbing A Meeting
1007 South Sanford Avenue
_ _ S e n l o r d . F lo rid * M77I

Sprinklers/lrrigation
ABOUT TIM E IRRIGATION"
N ew Installations........ F ree Est.
E xpert Repairs ot Complete
Sprinkler Systems.......... T im ers

Trae Service
All Tree lent.*-...
And Hauling.......
4 P .M ...................

..Call
all Altar

nymt

E C H O L S TR E E S E R V IC E

Free Bstlmalesl Low Prk**l

,

Lie...Ins...Stump Orlnd1ng,Taef.
O U R R A T E S A B B LO W ER
1 afctvU w N g r t lm C tirtff
•1* E. Second SI., SanSard
121-6767

sll-m*dayarnMo
_"UtlhaPra4tsslaaaladair.
JOHN A L L E N S L A W N B T R I E
Ocad tree rem ova l. Lie. A Ins.
Free est. I l l 1X0

f

�Ivanlng Harald, Sanford, FI. '

KIT ‘N1CARLVLB &amp;by Larry Wripht
113— Storage Rentals

141— Homes For Sale
A V A IL A B L E NOW
Brand new 3 bdrm , 2 bath
H om at and V llla i In Hidden
Lake. Children o k., no patt.
M ov e In Im m ed iately upon
approval.

M in i W i r e b o w e i
I * Up
..n i- M N

117— Commercial
Rentals

R E A L E ST A T E
R E A L T O R _______________333-7499

ta n tard - 2 unlm provad lot*.
Zoned C 2. W. M ellc iew tk l,
R E A L T O R ................. 333-79*3,

By Owner- 2 bdrm , I bath
fram e houta. Good condition.
Close tu hospital and shop­
ping. Asking 329.000. C all:
(904) 313 3139 between 3 7
P M . ___________________________

121— Condominium
Rentals

By Owner- Charming 3 bdrm/2
bath split plan, fenced yard.
134,000 313-0474/ 3H-1729

R A N D N E W CONDO- 2 bdrm..
2 bath. 1375 mo. Call M3 3(39
or 74*0447._____________________
P IN E R ID O E CLUB

LUXURY CONDOS

imi) n \h \t11)m\tn«Mi«n s«ii ii

,2,3 Bdrm., 2 bath, washer,
dryar, v a rtld a i, rafrlg., dlth
w aih ar. Starting at 1373.
OO LD K E Y M O M T ., INC.
__________ 471-7222_____________

433 W. 23th Street
Sanford, FI 33771

P IN E R ID O E CLUB

Lake M ary- 3 bdrm ., 2 bath.
Adult section o f The Forest.
Central alr/heat. P riced to
sell I 144.300. R ota W alsh, R e ­
altor, 474-4077.

bdrm ., 2 bath, tcraanad In
patio, w aihar, dryar, retrigarator, d lih w aih ar. 1300 mo.,

“ iN O L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
Lam Ttrms to Fit
YourNoods!
Furnished or Unfurnisltod.

Call........ 3211911
123— Wanted to Rent
L o t for U * 70 N E W M O B IL E
-H O M E ! P rafar rant with op'tlon to buy . 3719344

125— Fo r Lease

3 bdrm ., t bath situated on 3
acres. CB. alr/heat, on Lake
B u tler In O steen. P ossible
owner financing. 340,000 total
price.

&gt;: MYHEAD CENTRE
flC tO O O iq.ft.............U par iq .lt.
v
322 2730
&gt;;
O ffic e s to R on t
''R ea so n a b le and convanlant
20t N. M aple, Sanford.....323 9090

C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A L T Y
R eg. R .E . Broker............321-4233
474 Hwy. 413, Osteen, Fla.

T i l — Homes Fo r Sale

SANFO RD /LAKE M A R Y
D ream
Hem es
A vaila b le
N ew t A ll Prices. Seminole
and Volusia Counties. G reat
T erm s.
Call
lor
Free
Computer Search Today 11

BATEMAN REALTY
v Lie. Real Estate Broker
’.
2440 la n ia rd Ava.
?:
fiefctva Springs3 bdrm . I
bath M obile with tty a cre
fenced. N ice utility building,
aSptlc tank A wall. Owner
fin a n c in g , d ik in g 121,900.

P R E -H O M E PU R C H A S E
IN S P E C T IO N

L ik e NEW I
C o m p le te ly
H m odolod.
3 bdrm . I bath
f e w carpal, lanced back. W alk
M sch ool, n u rsery sch ool,
(bopping a church.
&gt;:i4 3 7 Laurel A v e . 547,344

" L e t the b u yer b e w a r e " no
longer applies. A ll phase In
spactors. 449-7T71._____________
SANFORD REALTY
R E A L T O R ...................... 333-S314

&gt;

311-0759 E v a .-322-7443
B Y O W N E R - 141.300. 3 Bdrm.. 2
Sath. large kltcher. heat/alr,
fireplace, utility r jo m , 2 car
ga rage, quiet corner, big oaks.
Call 331 1100. or 333 0197

l* * * * ^ * -^

Al I TOO h i l l )
ID s h im

^

~7

IN Ml Al ( S U M

STENSTROM

P R E HOME PU R CH ASE
IN S P E C T IO N

REALTYsREALTOR

" L e t the buyer b e w a re " no
longer applies A ll phase In
spactors. 444-7771,_____________

S a n ford 's S ilo s Loader

O E B A R Y 3 Bdrm , 1 bath. FI.
rpom. utility, carport, large
lot.S14.900 A fte r 2 P M.
M l 4420

FH A V A S P E C IA L ! Lew dawn.
2 B drm . w / la rge screened
perch, fenced yard. 134,000.
Call us quick I
One Bdrm, hem e en nice let with
lew , lew dewn payment. Plus
lew . lew monthly paym ents!
G reat ter the sm all la m ily l
(29,944.
L A R O E C O R N E R LO T com es
wtth this 3 Bdrm. to m e In
gre a t leetlen. N ew reef, v ery
clean, lew dewn paym ent, lew
monthly paym ent. S37.S44

323-5774
3444 H W Y. 17 93
lidden Lake 149 W ildwood Or
3 bdrm/2 bath. dbl. garage,
p o r c h , c e n tr a l a ir . S uper
Cleant Assumable. 145.000
IE A L T O R
M A R V IN K. L A IL
47 4143....... ............... o r 241-7347

HANOY7
This one Is for you at the right
p rice 4 bdrm . hom e near
d o w n to w n b u s in e s s a r e a
G reat potential 133.900
.
S H A D Y C O TTA O E
N eat 2 bdrm . home under
large oaks on quiet street.
R e a r p a tio , fe n c e d . O n ly
144,000. G reat term s a v a il
ablet
R IC H A R D BOONE R O O ER S
Fam ou s arch ite c t design ed
this unique one-of klnd H om e
wtth 2300 sq.ft, en a large
m o r let. 2 bdrm ., ceram ic
l floors Must Seel 4100.100.
" I n Old Sen lo rd "- a great
p lace to live.

. K E V B S F L O R ID A . INC.
R EALTO RS. —

.T21 AH.T.T

HAPPY LABOR DAY*
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Historic Elegance describes this
r e s to re d 4 b d rm ., 1 bath
sparklin g peel hom e on a
treed corner let. (73,300.

Lake M ary- L a rge hom e on
canal to Crystal Lake. P erfect
lor the fam ily needing elbow
room . (129,944.

Osteen- 4 bdrm ., 2 bath on 3
acres with horse barn and
pasture. 174.900

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H OM ES T H A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
USE YO U R IM A G IN A T IO N !
3 Bdrm. I ' , Bath M obile en 1.4
acres! Renevatien in Process.
S p ill B d rm . P la n , E at-In
K itc h e n , la r g e w e r k th e p l
S15.999
S M A L L W O N D E R S ! 3 Bdrm.
2 Bath Hem e with large C ov­
e r e d P a tle , In sid e U tility
R eem , ga ra ge converted into
F a m ily R eem , Eat-In Kitchen.
Firep lace, Centrel alr/heatl

BESID E TH E L A K E I
2
B d r m . 1 B a th H e m e en
Beautiful Benlta Lake I Great
reem , Dining R eem , Central
alr/heat, Eat-in Kitchen, U &gt;
24 screened patlef 155,049
W A IT IN ' TO BE BO U OHTI 3
Bdrm . I BAth H em e with
Eat-in Kitchen, large Florida
R e e m , c e n t r a l a lr / h e a t ,
fenced ya rd l (41.444
IN V E S TO R S D E S IR E O I
2
B d rm . t B a lk R sm o d ela d
H em e wtth Firep lace, M adera
Beth with custom Tub. Dining
A rea, plus a l Bdrm. I Bath
O arage Apartm en t! 145,440
W I L L B U I L D TO SUI TI
Y OU R LOT OR OURSI
E X C L U S IV E A O B H T F O R
W IN S O N O D R V . C O R F.. A
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A LE A D E R I M O RE HOM E FO R
L E S S M O N E Y I C A L L TOOAVI
O O E N E V A O SCEO LA RD. a
ZO N E D F O R M O B IL E S I
S A c re Country tracts.
W ell treed an paved Rd.
34 % Dewn. t a V r s . a t l l % t
P ram 4144441
I f you a r e le a k in g fa r a
su ccessfu l c a r e e r In R ea l
Estate, l iens fro m R ealty Is
le a k in g te r you. C a ll Lae
A lb rig h t to d ay a t 222-2424.
Evening* 222-24B2,

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420

14 F T . Starcraft Runabout 1911
b o a t a n d t r a i l e r . S3 H P
M ecu ry engine. S3000 or best
o ffe r. C e ll; 1330475 (d ays) or
333 4447 (nights).______________

A ll

321-3833
Licensed Sales People Needed I
294 W . Lake M ary Blvd.
Veterans No Down Paym ent. 1
bdrm . 2 bath on 1.3 acres In
Geneva. 179,900.149 3717

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

COUNTRY VILLAGE

R efrtgerater-K en m oro.avecado.
19 cu. ft.. 3-door frost free,
SI30 or best o ffer. 323*419.
•R E N T TO O W N *
Color TVs., stereos, w ethers,
dryers, refrigerator, treaters,
furniture, video, recorders,
Special 1st w eek's rent S5.00
Alternative T V A Appl. Rentals
Zeyres Shopping Center
_____________ 333-5444_____________

Adult Mobila Home Parti
18 Hoia Goff Count
Under Construction

Double Bed with bookcase
headboard, fra m e; o r 2 Twin
Beds with m otel fram es. S123
cash. A fte r 5 : 221-4941__________

1*9 W . m

St—

221-2922

1A3— Television /
Radio / Stereo

* COLOR TELEVISION *
Zenlh 25" c o lo r television .
O r g l n a l p r ie s o v e r tIOO.
Balance due S344.00 cash or
t a k e o v e r p a y m e n t s S3S
month. Still In w arranty. NO
M O N E Y DOW N. F ree home
trial, no obligation. Call 442-

Lifetim e
Adult P ark ...................Let Rents
1144-ltlO
Includes W ater.G arbege Pick-up
Y a rd Maintenance
Im m ediate Occupancy
G regory M obile Hemes.323-5344.

_3294idj£ornljhf^BB^^^^^
191-B uilding
Matarials

B U ILD IN G S - a ll steel. 30 x 10DS1J.940; 40 x ISO- 129,440;
o th e r s fr o m 42.23 sq. ft.
1 291 4241 (c o lle c t)
W holesale T o Public- Kitchen
cabinets, vanities In stock,
counter tops available. F ree
m e es u rm en ts A tr a ile r .
323-4214, Bldg. «3, Sente rd

U I:A lu m ln u m Cans..Newspaper
N en -F errevs M etals.......... Glass
K O K O M O ....................... 333-1144
Baby; Beds, Strollers, Clothes,
P la y p e n s , E tc . P ap erb ack
Beaks. 333-4377 - 323-9544
N eed Cribs. Playpens, Baby
fu r n it u r e , c lo t h in g . G ood

• We ( % Finance
I
• Down P a y m e n t! 1300 „r&gt;d Up
• T ra d e-In ! Accepted
D IS C O U N T A U T O S A L E S
• 501 F re n ch A v e
1 13 1*13

'44 ON444 Suiukl Bast cash
offer. Box 31, B ritton A v e ..
b e fo re 2 P M , w e e k d a y s .
Anytim e, weekend*.

1972 Datsun 240 Z- A ir, am /lm
ra d io . E x c e lle n t con d itio n
except paint . 31900.221 3*71

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

1971 Cadillac El Dorado
S u n ro o f....................L O A D E D !!
N O M O N E Y DOW N It
S1995
C O U R T E S Y P O N T IA C ..3 3 3 H it

223— Miscellaneous

1944 M egn lflc*n t W hite Cadillac
Sedan- M int condition. M ake
o tte r .174 3330._________________

1974 Shasta Camping T ra ile r - 20
Ft., tandem axle, excellen t
condition. 12300. C ell: 321 402*.
197*23' S T A R C R A F T C A M P E R
A ir, sleep* 4, M il contained
C ell; 333-07)4,

243— Junk Cars

1941 Cadillac Coupe Do Villa
L O A D E O It .....N o M oney Down.
14995
C O U R T E S Y PONTIAC..31J 3131

T O P D ollar P aid for Junk A
Used c a n ,tru c k s A heavy
equipment. 323 5990.

WILLET TOYOTA’S

Thom as Hom e Organ perfect
condition. Walnut cabinet with
bend box. S350. Celt: 323-1*43
o r 444-4444

231— Cars

239— Motorcycles
and Bikas

1943 R A M B L E R C L A S S I C
41.000 o rig in a l m ile *. N ew
tire*, brakes, radiator, end
fro n t end re w o rk ed . Good
condition. S I500 or best otter.
C all: 1210*73 (D a y s ) or 373
4447 (n igh t*).__________________

1977 O R A N D M A R Q U IS Black
beauty . loaded. B e it o ffer.
C ell: E v e n ln g i323 7793.

IN S T A N T CASH
Oeld, S ilver, Diamonds, Coins
T reasu ry Island Jewelry
C e ll.................................. 333-433*

C H E V Y S 14 P IC K U P
'43M od*l-.............................. V/4.
Autom atic.....A ir, ....Rad Color.
S5995
C O U R T E S Y PONTIAC..333 3131
19*0 J E E P C J - 7
4W H EEL DRIVE!!!
S4993
C O U R T E S Y POMTIAC..333 3131

Special o f the W eek!
1944 Datum 310 OX
S399S
17*4 H wy 17-91................ 331-3144
in gw eod ................... 331-3534

Prlces^lfte^MM/L^jjMllTil

Com plete F oley saw-sharpening
e q u ip .; ‘ 79 M o n te Wagon,C a m p e r fo r P ick -U p , sellcontelned. *44-4474____________

'42 B U IC K R E O A L
SEE T O B E L IE V E I!
NO M O N E Y DOWNI
11995
C O U R T E S Y PONTIAC..313 1131

235— Trucks /
B u m s / Vans

P IN T O S TA TIO N W AO O N 1975
4 cyciinder. autom atic, a ir
c o n d it io n in g , m e c h a n ic a l
sound, body good. 3700. Call:
331-7124 after I P .M . Saturday
end e ll day Sunday.

USED TRUCK SPECIALS
4x2
1978 GMC Sierra Clastic

Bad Credit?
NoCredit?
REFINANCE

1981 VW, P/U

W A L K IN ............... D R IV E O U T

1982 Nissan King Cab, P/U

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

A/C, P/B, A M / F M .....................

Senferd A v e .A 13th St.....331-4471

★ DAYTONAAUTO★
★ AUCTION ★
H w y 92...... .

* ** * *

Daytana Baach

199-Pets A Supplies

Appliances
/ Furniture

3 K lttene and m other cat to good
homo. V e ry affection ate. 110.
C all: 323-3179a fte r 4 P JA.

S i ts- a lt In

guaranteed...................... 222-0244

208— Livestock and
Poultry

Brunswick Standard-Site P ee l
T ab le with accessories. 4400 or
best o ffe r. C a ll: 221-1741 o tter
4 P.M . Ask te r Lorlno._________

mOGRLVff
*******................. * * * * *

LONOW OOO • 2 Bdrm .. 2 bath,
utility room . 4400 p er month
plus deposit. C ell: 3394542.

211— Antiques/
Collectables

Reconditioned Appliances
tram S45- W A R R A N T Y .
B A R N E T T S .....C A S S E L B E R R Y

Antiques: Small R ockar; OakL ib ra ry Table, R ocker. Heart
C h a in . 323 7492

I (10-5113....................... 434-5433

A/C, P/B..............................

1982 Toyota P/U
P/B, AM/FM........................

1983 Toyota P/U
P/B, Blut, AM/FM.............

Hekti a * * * * *

4x4

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
■ v e r y T h u n . Hite at 7;24 P M

i l l —

t o

219— Wanted to Buy

C R E D IT H A S S LE S ? 1

Topptr, On# Ol A Kind___

2 bdrm ., M obil H om e with large
screened porch and built on
living room , shade trees, good
pump and electric, S230 per
month. (30,000 for sale. No
pets. Cell:232 4300

A p p ltx n ces

'4 4 C I T A T I O N I / O - 140
M erC rulser, 14* 4 ", bowrlder,
w a lk - t h r o u g h w in d s h ie ld .
Fu lly equipped A reedy to go.
St300 A take o ver payments.
323-3947. a fte r 4.

27TH STREET FURNITURE

FOR SALE - ’ 74 CheckMete- 3
bdrm ., 2 bath, air. M utt move.
S 3 9 ,0 0 0 / o r m a k e o t t e r .
331-4472.

Len d W an ted • P ro fe ss io n a l
Christian Couple looking tor a
few p riva te acres toned for
M obile Hom e. 1 or 2 ye a r lease
and/or option to purchase.
C e llJ 2 3 iS « t o r l 4 4 i7400i — _ _

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

t

JUST O F F 1-4
A T O R A N O E C IT Y E X I T *54

3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
Handyman Special I
300 sq It. W orkshop.....Huge Lot.
W allace Crest Realty
R e a lto r............................111-0377

Beachslde Realty, R E A L T O R S

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
311-115 E, 1st S T.............. 322 1432

105-447-4447.............. 904 775-3275
2500 E. C ra ve s .........Orange City

159— R tal Estata
Wanted

NEW S M Y R N A BEACHB each sld e r lv e r v le w hom e
with deck tor ecoan view in g. 3
b d r m t.. 2 b ath s u p stairs.
D o w n s ta irs has an o th er 2
bdrm t. A I bath and Is ready
to be m ade Into mother-in-law
q u a rte r s . T h is b ran d n ew
h ouse Is c e m e n t b lo c k A
stucco, with vinyl siding on
the top lloor. An excellen t buy.

Used Washers- Parts A Service
for Ken m eres............... 323-4497.
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S

MODEL CENTER OPEN DAILY

W ill Trade m y S4000 Equity In
m y home lor Cash or Nice
T ravel T railer. 321 7770. 321
4741____________________________

1 4 5 -Resort
Property / Sale

19 ft. R eln ell TH hull- 1*5 OMC
(lo w hours)
with Calkins
T ra ile r. A ll accessories In­
cluded. Must Sell! Excellent
condition. 13993.343 4441

157-M obile
Homes / Sale

i s

W e will list, advertise, sell
your home lor 4%. Why pay
m ore? Call USA today for
F R E E Computerised M arket
Analysis o l your home.

L g k t M ary Blvd.i

* '•

m

L o n g w o o d - F H A a s s u m a b le
m ortgage. 3 bdrm ., 1 bath, 1 W
ye a r young patio home. 2-car
ga rage. 179,944.

M A Y F A IR V IL L A S For sale by
. o w n e r- 3 B d rm ., 2 B ath ,
alr/heat. 2 car ga rage, C all:
311 3133 attar 3 P .M .___________

&gt;127— Office Rentals

D A V ID BO O UE. I
3233344........

:i

* LIST FOR LESS*
6%

W all S t Com pany___ 3 21 -50 0 5

IW iA c r * Indvttrlal Stta- 3 build­
in gs, to tal o f 3300 iq . It.
ifa n c a d A P rlvata. 322 4732.

r

h

Charming 1 bdrm . home, sun
p orch , fir e p la c e , o r ig ln ia l
w o o d w o r k .
G r e a t
neighborhood! Only 151,900.

Oeneva- 2-story fram e home sat
on 14 acres. Horses A country
living. 4 bdrm ., 2 bath A m ore.

Sears 13 H. Aluminum Boat with
f ' l Johnson M oto r, 12 lb.
thrust tro llin g m otor. 1330
Firm . 331-4411_________________

Rf Allot?

*

C arpartt..............Prlvata P a lle t
Lwih La ndicaplng. P a li. Child ran
W ATE R BED SACCEPTED I

215— Boats and
Accassorias

IV

R EA LTO R

N E W L U X U R Y CONDOS

S

\ss&lt;

‘ 44 Mustang O hl4...tt Escort OL.
L aed od l...... 4434 Dawn...... Small
Monthly payment.
C H IC O A T H E M A N ....... *99-4944

H w y 44, Just l e s t o f M
e n fe rd ............................ 223-2441

I C’M k W i M

I M i l l)
SAM S

(305) 321-0041

'74 Chevrolet- 4 Dr. Nova. 4 eyl.,
stan dard. 7330
m l. II7S0
Firm . 333-H47, or 333 3992

BRIDGESANDSON

O T H E R HOMES, LOTS.
A C R E A O E , IN V E S T M E N T
PROPERTY

KISH REAL ESTATE

1941 M E R C U R Y L Y N X • 4
t p e e d . r e d , c le a n , 41100.
C e ll:«*4 4497aH er 4 P.M .

7ita P.M .

D U P L E X - 147.344. You bring up
to cod e end s a v e. O w ner
f in a n c in g w ith m o d e r a t e
down.

R A V E N N A P A R K - 3 bdrm., 1&gt;,
bath, cent, heat A air, (49.900
By owner/salesman. 374 4294,
E ves A Weekends.

THE BEST IN TOWN
E-Z TERMS

SATURDAY, AUGUST 31TH

STemper

L IS T W IT H U S I

1944 F IR E B IR D - Runt great.
Must Seel Call after 4 P.M .
323 1424. Asking 43,430.

USED C A R S

PUBLICAUCTION

N| l| H l H S

C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ...................... 322-4991

231— Cars

2 3 1 -C a rs

FO R E ST A T E
C o m m e r c ia l o r R e s id e n tia l
Auctions A Appraisals. Call
D ell's Auction 223 3420._________

R E A L ESTATE
R EALTO R
321-7494

B Y O W NE R- Reduced To Sell!
4-room houte titlin g on 2 lo ti,
w it h g a r a g e a p t ., t r e a t ,
plant!, Irrigation wall. 309 W.
U lh St . Sanford_______________

NF0R D
2 yr. old W arahouM/Otllca
Complex. 1230 sq.ft. and up.
4343/mo. In d u d a t d rlva -ln
door. Good location.
C all: 331 3400

By^Ownar- 1344 Cypress- Im
m aculate 3 bdrm . w/ ga rage,
centr al alr/heat. new
C a rp e t/ p a in t. L o w O o w n l
Owner w ill hold 2nd I 313 2149

213— Auctions

SPACIO U S 3 B D RM . HOME
On large shady lot at end ol
street Quiet- yet very conve
nlent. P erle c t fam ily home
you will agree, at S49.900

CALLBART CALLBART

Ratall A O lflca Spec# 300 up to
2,000 aq.ft. a lio storage a v a il
abla. 122 4401__________________

Sunday, Sept. 1 , m s - 76

141— Homes For Sale

★ Where Anybody *
★ Con Buy or Soil! ★

1983 Toyota SR5

*7495
1983 Toyota SR5
•lack Packaga, Loadad......... *7595
1984 Nissan P/U
4/4 ST Packaga, Loadad------ *7995
Whitt, A/C, P/B, AM/FM Radio

F a r m ere det ail*
__________ M 4 M S M M I________
Do A e ry Auto A M a r f a Setae
A cross Wsertuer. tap at M il
174 H w y 17-92 Do B e ry *44 4**4

1444 Far* Braec* It

F O R D T - B IR D 1971
A ir , n e rueI, s e e d cendtHen.
H l o r t o « l s W a r . * 4 f 94J4.

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

★ INSTANT CASHW
e e W E W IL L B U Y # *
e a Y O U R U S E D C A R *a
a C A L L P H IL B R T T IS a

*1995
*3395
*4795
*4695
*5395

•01*0707

9

9

9

p t/7TT?ea

C O U R T E S Y P O N T IA C ..333-2131

C O M M E R C IA L S P E C IA L IS T
B O B M . B A L L , JR. P.A.
R E A L T O R ...................... 323 4114

153— AcreageLots/Sale
Sanford Building Lat
W ell with Pump. Septic, 14 x
40ft. Shed. Owner Flnanclngl
W allace C rest Realty
R e a lto r............................311-4377
3.3 acres In the City ol Lake
M e ry on the south end o l 4th
St. (within the city lim its)
340.000 cash If interested, cell
321 4470

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
3 bdrm . 3 bath, screen porch,
w a sh er/d ryer, mint blinds.
C I o m to shopping, schools. A
chu rch. P r ic e N e g lo ta b le l
322 9113

A T T E N T IO N
F A M IL IE S

Enjoy
Country
Living
Again

W ill y o u b e n e x t to w in
a

°lo
{W iOW 5*

$ 3 ,5 0 0 d o w n p a y m e n t

o n a

no'

n e w B a b c o c k H o m e ?

costs'

, *n fwr*

eW.4*
The Baboock Company oontinuea its celebration o f 50 years o f quality
home building with a spectacular offer to introduce their three newest
communities.
On July l , 1985 the Albert Black fam ily o f Sanford won $3,500 —
enough for a down payment on a beautiful new Babcock home at
Grant Station, Mayfair Meadows or Crane's Roost Villas.
And you could be next!
Simply oome to the preview center at any one o f these unique Babcock
communities and choose a key from our Golden Anniversary bowl. If
it's the righ t key, you win $3,500. To use as a down payment on a
beautiful new Baboock home. Or any way you want.
But hurry! Before that righ t key la gone.
N o purchase neoessary. O ffer good only at Grant Station, M ayfair
Meadows and Crane's Roost Villas. Entrants must be 21 years o f age.
Only one winner per fkmily.

4L &amp;
!© ■

N

N O N tt AVANJUK1
S p a d o u a 9 bed room ,
I bath, ao m e w ith g a ra g e
ifvTtiiy ro o m , i c r M n t o
p arch and m uch m ere.
From tSOO/mo.
O ffic e a p ace available:
BOO e g . ft. grou nd floo r,
D ailqpa Bhrd. visibility.

r ’nriiart Marrtannc
Al

A The Babcock Company
W eyerhaeuser Company

GRANT
’V l T l C ^

D e lt o n a
C o r p

Realty Ca.

An Irrcalatable New England
Community o f Blnglt’ fam lly
homes from th« $60e near S.R.
436and Curry Fbrd Road.
O p e n 1 0 a .m . - 6 p . m . M o n . - S a L
1 p .m . - 6 p . m . S u n d a y
2 8 2 -0 5 0 0

CRANESI

ROOST

y i

cTWayfalrMeadows
A ecdudcd community of alirie*
fam ily homes from the S60s
•cross from Mayfair Country
Club in the Lake Mary/Sanford
area.
O p e n 1 0 a .m . - 6 p .m . M o n . - S a L
1 p .m . - 6 p . m . S u n d a y
9 2 1 *4 7 6 0

9

A great new townhouae commu­
nity thatb dose to everything but
eo secluded It’s hard to rind
(behind the Altam onte M all)
with homes starting bb low ••
$73,200.
Open 10a.m. - 6p.m. M o o .- 8
1p.m .-6p.m . Sunday
330*6500

3345 P A R K A V E ereeHeeeetatMll
*41 Lk. M a ry B lvd ........ L h .M a ry

1

�*

T T

IB -E vs n in g Hsrsld, Sanford, FI.

• r ^ r T T -r -r

4

•

Sunday, &gt;spt. 1, It 15

SEC G etting M ere

BUSINESS

Wall Street's New Cop On The Beat Sees
More Companies Lying To Stockholders

IN BRIEF
W inn-Dixie Stores Report
Record Sales For Fiscal 1985
JACKSONVILLE — Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. reports
record sales for fiscal year 1985.
Sales were $7,774,480,000 for fiscal year 1985, up 6.5
percent from $7,302,369,000 for the fiscal year 1984.
Fiscal 1985 was the 51st consecutive year of sales
increases. Sales for the fourth quarter of 1985 amounted to
$1,846,157,000 up 7.2 percent from $1,722,728,000 for
the fourth quarter of 1984.
Net earnings for the fourth quarter of fiscal 1985
amounted to $30,073,000 or $0.73 per share, compared to
$31,926,000 or $0.78 for the fourth quarter of 1984. This
brings the cumulative earnings for fiscal 1985 to
$107,895,000 or $2.64 per share compared to fiscal 1984
' net earnings of $ 115.916.000 or $2.83 per share.
A. Dano Davis. President, stated: "Although fiscal 1985
saw slightly reduced profits, we strongly believe that the
programs initiated, facilities developed and actions taken
by our management team were necessary for Winn-Dixle's
sustained and profitable growth."
Winn-Dixie paid monthly cash dividends of 14 cents per
share, totaling $1.68 per share during 1985. During the
year, the company opened 98 new store locations, the
greatest number In the company's history, closed 67 store
locations and enlarged or remodeled 70 store locations. At
the end of fiscal 1985. the company operated 1.262 store
locations compared to 1.231 the prior year.

Season9 Becomes Village Inn
SANFORD—Village Inn Family Restaurant and Bakery Is
scheduled to open Monday at 2465 French Avc.. formerly
the site of Seasons Restaurant. The Seasons chain was
acquired by the Village Inn corporation.
On Tuesday. Sanford Mayor Bettye Smith and Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce President Jack Homer arc
to officiate at a ribbon cutting ceremony for the remodeled
facility.
Village Inn will offer a wide variety of menu items for
breakfast, lunch and dinner, restaurant manager Bob
French said, und will offer a special children’s menu with
Herns priced at $ 1.29.
More than 20 varieties of fruit, cream and specialty pies
will be baked each day at the restaurant and sold by the
slice or whole.
While Season's was a 24-hour restaurant. Village Inn will
be open 6 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday and
24 hours on Friday and Saturday.

Florida Pow er 'Most Efficient'
Florida Power Corporation's (FPC) power plants were
ranked among the nation's most efficient In a survey
published this month by Electric Light St Power magazine.
The survey rated power plants by how effectively they
utilized fuel produce electricity during 1984. Florida
Power’s cumulative power plant performance ranked tenth
out of the 100 electric companies surveyed - for the second
year In a row.
"Our plants are efficient because of how they were built
and how they are run." said FPC Executive Vice President
Billy Griffin.
The survey ulso ranked Florida Power third in the nation
in reduced dependence on oil as a power plant fuel. The
company’s oil use,dropped 49 percent from 1983, more
than any other Florida electric company measured.
"The move away from oil has definitely helped lower the
fuel charge the customer pays." Orlffln said. That, plus
declining oil prices, led to the recent Florida Power request
to lower the fuel charge. If the request Is granted by the
Florida Public Service Commission, the amount customers
pay for fuel will have dropped almost 39 percent since
1981 - from over $36 to about $22 per 1000 kilowatthours.

Social Security A id Firm Year O ld
Ward White &amp; Associates celebrates Its one year
anniversary In Sanford this month. Ward White opened his
fifth office in Sanford. 2201 S. French Ave. Sanford, to aid
people In the area in fighting government red tape to obtain
Social Security Disability Benefits. White, who Is retired
from over 38 years employment with the Social Security
Administration, operates the office with his son. Ward Jr.,
and daughter, Janet White Appcrson.
The firm assists people In fighting their claims by
developing credible medical evidence to submit to the
administration. They represent people at all levels of the
appeals process.

Irrigation Firm Names M anager
EL CAJON. CA — Jim Kline of Lakeland has joined
liardic Irrigation In Sanford as District Manager for the
southeastern United States. Kline will provide services for
dealers and growers In Georgia. South Carolina. North
Carolina. Louisiana. Mississippi, Alabama and Arkansas.
Prior to Joining Hardie Irrigation. Kline was Engineering
Manager for Perma-Raln and Hydro-Tech.
Kline is a member of the American Society of
Agricultural Engineers and the American Society of Civil
Engineers.
liardic Irrigation manufactures micro-irrigation systems.

Taco Bell Names M anager
Jocllne Anstead has been promoted to store manager at
Taco Bell at 2700 S. Orlando Avenue. Sanford. She's been
with Taco Bell five years. Four yfcars were spent at the
Maitland location; her fifth year here in Sanford. Jocllne
lives In Sanford with her husband Tony and two children.
Jocllne is stepping up Into the position vacated by Dirk
Main. Dirk has been promoted to District Manager for the
local Taoo Bell franchise chain.

result of the long hours under his two
predecessors. Stanley Sporkln and
John Fcddcrs.
Sporkln was outgoing and accessible,
k no wn for his we l l p u b l i c i z e d
crackdown on company bribes used to
help sell exports, and went on to be
chief counsel of the CIA.
Fcddcrs. who vigorously prosecuted
Illegal "insider" trading, made Lynch
his deputy. Then Fcddcrs gave up his
government career laBt year after
admitting some of the charges of
physical abuse made by his wife In
divorce court.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The new
federal cop who patrols Wall Street, the
Securities and Exchange Commission's
Gary Lynch. Is looking for companies
desperate enough to lie to their stock­
holders and investors — and finding
plenty.
"I think there was an Increase In
financial fraud In the 1981-1982 period
as y o u w e r e In an e c o n o m i c
downturn." Lynch - said. "A lot of
companies sim ply couldn’ t bring
themselves to level with shareholders
and tell them the bad news."
The economy recovered. Yet some
financial reports have been slow to
regain their Integrity. "I thought that
as the economy picked up we'd sec
fewer Instances of possible financial
manipulation to Investigate. That has
not been the case," Lynch said.
"W e're taking on so-called cute
accounting more aggressively now."
Lynch told United Press International.
" I don't like the term because It
suggests there Is something less
nefarious about using invalid account­
ing principles than there Is about Just
phoneylng up numbers through adding
zeroes." he said.
Lynch, appointed director of the
SEC’s Division of Enforcement April
29. looks older than 34. perhaps the

Lynch, cautious and reserved, keeps
his official biography cleansed of all
personal detail — Including his age.
The prosecution of financial fraud
cuses widens the SEC's net to include
not only compnny- managements but
tflclr accounting firms.
"In. every case where we have a
company that has mlstatcd Its finan­
cials we ask the question why the
auditors didn't discover It." he said.
Either the company withheld In­
formation or "the auditors knew every­
thing that was going on and Just
cooperated with the company." A third
possibility: "They did a lousy audit."
But accounting firms arc finding that

the absence of quality control Is no
defense.
Accounting flrmB wbre SEC en­
forcement targets 18 times last year
and the number of cases is building
this year. In 1982 there were only three
such cases.
Lynch makes It clear that although
the commission remains intensely In ­
terested In Insider trading abuses he Is
not Inclined toward relatively easy
prosecutions only for their publicity
value.
" T h e Insi de r t rading cases,
particularly the insider trading cases
that people find sexy for one reason or
another, get a lot o f publicity, a
tremendous amount of publicity."
Lynch said.
"W e can bring another case that was
much more difficult to put together,
probably at least as important to the
Integrity of the securities markets, and
It will get a paragraph In the New York
Times, two paragraphs perhaps in the
(Wal/ Street) Journal and maybe if
we're luckv. two sentences on UPI."
The primary reason people buy
stocks. Lynch said, “ is the financial
performance of the company." But to
the extent they arc misled about how
the company is performing, "then the
market breaks down."

Judge Dismisses
Most Charges
Against Sears

w

O n Lin e
Custom er A lb e rt Isaacs, left,
is s h o w n a n e w lin e of
telephones at a recent Page
T e le c o m m u n ic a tio n s , In c.
g ra n d o pen in g b y G a ro ld
P a g e , shop o w n e r. P a g e
Teleco m m unicatio ns, located
In S a n fo rd 's C e n te r M a ll,
2927 O rla n d o D riv e , Is offers
phones and accessories for
purchase as w ell an Installa­
tion and re p a ir service.

V *

H traM ftw t a By T im m y V in ctflt

'Don't Know How We'd Get Along Without Her'

Employee Exemplifies
Electone Philosophy
fellow employees. (Her maiden
name was Rhodes and she was
in high school Just about the
time Dusty Rhodes was swing­
ing a home run bat for the New
York Mets.)
Huddleston said Dusty, whose
main function In an assembly
department is mating modules
and shells Into finished pro­
ducts. is well-versed In all
phases of the production and can
perform at least 15 different Job
functions
“ For a person who actually
determines what the end pro­
duct will be like, she Is very
reliable, very dependable, and.
most of all. she Is very quality
conscious." Huddleston added.
Electone President Manny
Gltlcs was very succinct:
"I don't know how we'd get
along without her and people
like her."

Special To The Herald
According to Electone Com­
pany officials, a basic factor In
the company's success is the
attitude that all employees, at all
levels, are members of the
Electone family.
Exemplifying this perhaps as
well as anyone can Is Vourvon
Marie Mitchell of Sanford whose
almost 14 years of service with
Electone reflects the firm con­
cept that positive treatment of
"fa m ily m em b ers" reduces
e m p l o y e e t u r n o v e r and
enhances production skills and
dedication to their Jobs.
And Ms. Mitchell, who started
with the firm in 1971 building
case) for personal amplifiers,
still sounds excited when she
tells about her amazement upon
learning that millions of people
need heating aids.
"1 get a good feeling by doing
my job as best I can because I
feel that I am helping so many
people who need assistance and
I feel like I will help make life
better for them if I do the best
work 1can." she said.
And that is Just what she has
been doing for years, according
to the people who work with her

A

y

v

V o u rv o n M a r ie M itc h e ll
and according to some of the
firm's top executives.
"Extremely knowledgeable,"
is how Manufacturing Manager
J o e H u d d lesto n d e s c rib e s
"Dusty" as she Is known to her

Marc McLarnon. vice president
of manufacturing, described her
aa " a super girl. She does
everything for us and docs It
well."
And what does Dusty think of
Electone after 14 years with the
c o m p a n y ? " J u s t fine —
everyone knows everybody and
we all get along."
That's the Electone version of
"family style."

AUGUSTA. Maine (UPI) - A
Judge Thursday ruled Sears
Roebuck &amp; Co. violated state
consumer law by selling main­
tenance agreements on appli­
ances by telephone.
But Superior Court Judge
Donal Alexander dismissed a
second part of the suit, brought
by Attorney General James
Tierney, which claimed Sears
had engaged In "balt-an d*
s w i t c h " p r o m o t i o n s by
advertising some items that
were In Sears warehouses but
not In Sears retail outlets.
He also rejected Tierney's
claim that maintenance agree­
ments essentially duplicate
existing product guarantees that
Sears gives with Its appliances.
Alexander. In ruling the chain
violated Maine's Consumer So­
licitation Sales Act when It tiled
to sell maintenance agreements
on appliances by phone, gave
the company 45 days to present
a plan for complying with the
law.
The Judge stopped short of
Issuing a restraining order that
would have required Sears to
immediately stop selling the
maintenance agreements over
the telephone, saying such a
move would be unfair to the
telephone solicitors who work for
Sears.
Attorney John O’Leary, who
defended Sears against the
charges, said he was pleased
with the decision.

BU ILD IN G
PERMITS
The Sanford building de­
partment Issued the following
permits.
— F a r ta k l* In te rn a tio n a l, t u t and &gt;441
Poln M tta A v e .. to build a duplex. *40.000.
— A rm e d F o rc e* R ecruitin g Center. &gt;411
A irp o rt SI vd., to e rec t a »ign , *1,400.
— Don B ale* AM C Jeep. *41* Orlando D rive,
to e rec t a ttg n , *1,000.
— N e w Horizon*. 210 French A v e .. for interior
rem odelin g of a com m ercia l building, t&gt;*0.
—M a o '* Fabric, &gt;*44 O rlando D rive, to e rect
a tem p orary »lgn . •
— Sanford Auction, 1 }I* French A v e .. to erect
a tem p orary tlgn.
—Orville ReIley. &gt;007 Maple Ave.. to erect a

fence, ***♦.

— R obert Johnson, 140 Hidden Lake D rive, for
a screen enclosure. *000.
— P h il R icker, 1U W ax M y rtle Court, fo r an
Inground sw im m in g pool, (7.000
— Jehovah's W itnesses K ingdom H all. IS O W.
T hird St., for an addition to an existing
building. *10.000.
— Dan Broyles, &gt;11 Sum m erlin A v e .. to e rect
a fen ce. (740.

High-Tech Firms Modify Equipment To A id Blind Workers
By Ken Frsnckllng
UPI Feature W riter
WORCESTER. Mass. (UPI) - The calls come In
at a rate of two or three a minute at American
Telephone fit Telegraph Co.'s long distance
service center, and operator Lisa Lavallee handles
(hem with speed and good cheer.
There arc credit card calls that need code
numbers entered, hotel calls where the operator
must ask the room number for proper billing,
people asking how to spell company names,
asking for emergency phone numbers.
"Lisa, may I help you?" Lavallee says.
"Can I have the correct time, please?" a male
caller asks.
The operator flipped up the crystal on her
wristwatch. read the time in Braille with her
fingertips, and said: "Yes. it's 10:46."
Lavallee. 22. of Webster. Mass., has been blind
since birth.
She is working proof that technological

modifications by employers allow blind people to
do the same Jobs as sighted employees — and Just
as well.
She learned the Job this summer through a
federally funded pilot program to Identify and
place 60 blind and visually Impaired adults in
high-tech Jobs in New England.
The Perkins School for the Blind in Watertown.
Muss., coordinates the program, which began
with AT&amp;T. New England Telephone Co. and
Wang Laboratories, the computer-maker. It now
has 17 participating firms. Including Honeywell.
Raytheon. Lotus and Harvard University, and 40
people placed In Jobs ranging from operators like
Lisa, to computer programmers, machine opera­
tors. and stock traders.
"The major Issues in our minds are the number
of adults nationally who are either unemployed or
underemployed. This is a model program to show
other rehabilitation agencies that blind people
can be integrated into today's Job market." said
Perkins Director Kevin Lessard.

Valcrtc Hartt. AT&amp;T assistant staff manager for
training. Bald Bell Labs designed and modified six
TSPS operator consoles at a total cost of
$300,000. the program 's most expensive
modification so far.
Because Lavallee can't see the lights •which
show the operator what kind of call is coming in
— so he or she can request a credit card number,
u room number, or money deposited In a coin
phone — a synthesized voice gives her that
information in her headphone.
In addi t i on, she has a c o m p u te ris e d
VersaBrallle system that allows her to find area
codes and emergency phone numbers in all of the
communities her office handles.
Lavallee was given a two-week evaulation
arranged by the state commission for the blind,
had four days of training on specialised equip­
ment. and then received three weeks of site
training AT&amp;T gives to all of its new operators.
Even the vending machines In the operator
lounge nave braille indicators to Indicate what's

y

available for snacking when Lavallee's goes on
lunch or coffee breaks.
"She's really a pleasure to work with. We never
have to repeat anything. She went through the
course In the same amount of lime a sighted
person would. That, to me. is incredible." said
Supervisor Candv Partridge.
Under the "Project With Industry" program,
consultants make a site analysis for each
employer, study what Jobs could be handled by
blind or visually impaired people and help plan
appropriate modifications, which can range from
the simple to the complex.
At Wang Laboratories, those hired have
included a blind systems analyst, a deaf and blind
progammer, and a blind staff writer.
"The Perkins Project With Industry " means
making special efforts to Include in the work force
those who. in the past, have not been Included."
said Glen A. Costa Sr.. Wang senior affirmative
action representative.

V

�PEOPLE
Kvsnlnf HsraM. Sanford, FI.

C o n so rt To

Sunday, San*. 1, IMS—1C

T h e K in g

Bodyguard To Elvis Was Tu n While
It Lasted' For Sanford Hairdresser*

L

By 8naan Loden
Herald S ta ff W rite r
Ken Hicks who settled In Sanford 10
years ago after leading the life of a
millionaire without spending a nickel as
part of Elvis Presley’s entourage
wouldn't trade his family for Elvis'
kingdom. But he admits It was fun while
It lasted.
A good ole Lakeland boy. reared In a
religious, middle class family, Hicks who
had taken to the road at age 20 as base
guitar player for the gospel Stamps.
Out net. found himself in the Las Vagas
spotlight when Elvis' backup group
bowed out of the act after the first year of
his 1969 "comeback." The Stamps were
tapped to take the place of the Imperials,
Hicks said.
Thirty-six-year-old Hicks, who was 7
when Elvis first swiveled and sang his
way to the top In 1955, had never
thought too much about the "King of
Rock 8t Roll," his dream was to spend his
life performing gospel music. A goal he
now meets as baritone for Sanford's Four
Fold gospel group.
But as Hicks maintains his gospel
music connection and operates his Bram
Towers Beauty Salon, he looks back on
his days as consort to the King, a role few
know he played, he said. And one that
made his wife, Brenda, refuse to date him
when he first came to Sanford as a $50 a
week church choir director after he left
Elvis.
Hicks was persistent. He and Brenda
have been married 10 years. He con­
vinced her he was more than a muslcman
and they have a daughter Stephanie. 2.
who he tells about the time when Elvis
was king, he said.
Hicks has his memories and a few
mementos, like the diamond studded
lightening bolt skirted by gold letters,
TCB, which to Elvis insiders, meant take
care of business, nowl and play later,
Hicks said. He also has a book Elvis gave
him. The Impersonal Life, which outlined
a religious phllosopy Presley adopted.

One that was more tolerant than the
teachings of Elvis' Southeren Baptist
background, he said.
Although many have an Impression of
Presley as a religious man, Hicks said.
Elvis' lifestyle didn't conform to strict
religious teachings, and was a source of
personal conflict.
"I can see." he said, “ where the Bible
says It's easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle than It Is for a
rich man to enter the kingdom of God,
cause when you got money you don't
need God. because you can have every­
thing else."
One night when he and Elvis were on
the rooftop of a Las Vegas hotel, Hicks
said Elvis looked out over the city and
said, 'There ain't a thing, a person, any
object I want In this town I can have It
with my money. If I could Just walk out of
here and never have to come back I’d
love It. I can't do that.'
"That’s sad." Hicks said.
And few would ever hear such words
from Elvis, Hicks said, because he was
Isolated by his Insiders, members of a
famlly-llkc band of old school chums and
army budles headed by road manager
Joe Esposito.
A group Hicks was singled out by Elvis
to Join, not on the basts of his ability, but
because like the rest of Elvis' group. Elvis
saw something In Hicks he liked. He I
trusted him and wanted to have him
around.
Hicks, a "real Jerkey 20-year-old kid"who had no Idea what he was doing, was
tapped to be Elvis' personal valet and
armed bodyguard with instructions that
If anyone ever shot Elvis he and other
armed members of the entourage were to
make sure the assailant didn't live to
make It out of the building.
"I had never had contact with that type
of lifestyle." Hicks said. "I was to live
with Elvis wherever he was. Twenty-four
hours a day I was to be there. It was
Christmas everyday," with gifts of cars
from Elvis and an overflow of fans, not

teeny-boppers, but wives of lawyers,
doctors and engineers who had grown up
with Elvis on their minds and as their
fantasy.
The fans were ripe and were there for
the picking when Elvis' male entourage
rounded them up after a show to attend
EIv Ib' parties, his only contact with the
public, where they would settle for a
substitute just to be close to their Idol,
Hicks said.
But Hicks* career as a gentleman's
gentleman which lasted for a "fantastic
five years" almost ended the day It
started.
His first duty was to serve Elvis a
sizzling hot steak dinner in bed. Hicks
didn't notice the step up to the ledge In
the hotel suite that held the bed. He
tripped and the steak sailed from his
hands Into Elvis' lap.
"I had never served anybody. I have a
new respect for people who carry multi­
ple plates of food," Hicks said.
"U n d erstan d , here's the w orld 's
number one rock and roll star of that
date. This is 1971. He was sitting there
cross-legged with a pair of baby blue silk
pajamas on with a hot steak In his lap.
Grease everywhere and he's screaming
and hollering. We're trying to get him out
of the bed and get him cleaned up
thinking he’s absolutely barbecued.
"Immediately tears came to my eyes.
I'd been working 30 minutes. I’d Just
gone from a $200 a week Job to a $1,000
a week Job and I'd Just dropped a hot
plate in the boss' lap. He wasn't hurt,
God was smiling on me." Hicks said.
When Elvis had calmed down a bit
Hicks called his attention to the $26 steak
lying on the carpet. Elvis told him what he could do with the steak, and said he
sure wasn't going to eat it. Hicks ‘had
another Idea.
"I said. ‘Do you care if I eat It?' He said,
‘Do what you want to with It.'
"S o." Hicks said, "I sat down there on

Ken Hicks holds a
book given to him by
Elvis Presley, right,
and the
diamond-studded
necklace he wears
constantly, imft,
also a gift from
Elvis.

Move Over, Winter Park, Here Comes St. Johns River Festival

2

Days

Jack Hornar, president of flit ereaver
Sanford Chambar of Commarca dl$cu$$o$
the Oct. 2$ and 27 StJohns River Festival

&lt;

O f Arts, Crafts, Family Fun Coming

wtvn two committee
Judith Abernathy.
Collett.

J

B y Doris Dftstrieh
PEOPLE Editor
Move over, Winter Park, for Seminole County's
St. Johns River Festival, scheduled Oct. 26 and
27 at Fort MeUon Park on Lake Monroe In
Sanford.
The Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
has Joined forces with Sanford-Sernlnole Art
Association for the Inaugural festival which will
hopefully set the pace for an annual event,
nothing short o f sensational, according to Jack
Homer, president of the Sanford chamber.
The gala fun-filled festival promises something
for everyone In addition to arts and crafts for
exhibit and for sale. Art show entries are
expected from throughout the southeast which
will also Include crafts In the Judging. Several
awards plus thousands of dollars In purchase
awards wUl be presented. The Best of Show
award Is $500. Seminole County schools will get
Into the act with special prizes given students'
winning entries.
Homer says that more entries are needed. "In
the beautiful setting we have, we can accom­
modate more entries. Crafts are dragging," he
said.
And In conjunction with the arts and crafts
displays and exhibits set up around the park's
Lake CaroUa will be an antique auto show under
the chairmanship of Jim Jernlgan, director of
Parks and Recreation for the city o f Sanford. Add
that to a street dance with live music and
everything's coming up action and festivity In the
heart of Sanford.
During the 2-day festival, food for sale will be
supplied by LaVan's Catering Service. Winter
Pant, from a 20X60 foot tent. Cold and hot

sandwiches, beverages and barbecue dinners will
be sold. Beer will be available separately from a
beer truck.
A LcVan's spokesman said a percentage of the
profits wUl be returned to the festival planning
committee which Is operating on a shoestring
budgest this year. Homer announced that the
future festival projection Is "a first class art
show " featuring such celebrities as Louise
Mandrell for a drawing card.
Not only will artisans be in competition for
prizes, but a variety of door prizes will also be
awarded during the two days. The best of the
community's live entertainment is scheduled
continuously and the festival will be broadcast
live on radio. Local entertalnmet Is needed.
Groups who would like to participate are asked to
contact Bill Mac Lauchlln. Celery City Printing,
Sanford.
Ashby Jones Is in charge of purchase awards.
Anyone who would like to sponsor a purchase or
special merit award in memory of a loved one
may contact him.
Deadline for the art and craft show entries Is
Sept. 15. For Information and entry forms, write
or phone the St. Johns River Festival. Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. First St..
Sanford 32771. Phone: (305) 322-2212.
The committees and chairmen arc as follows:
Art Show. Bob Garcia: Crafts Show, Geneva
Marlowe; Schools. John Blair: Facilities. Jim
Jernlgan; Entertainment. BUI Mac Lauchlln:
Conceaalons. Jack Homer: Awards. Ashby Jones:
Seminole Community College. Alex Dlcklson:
E xhibits. John Percy: Pre-School. Cindy
Robinson: treasurer. Virginia Longwell; and
public relations and marketing. Craig Orseno.

�Sunday, Sapt. 1, 1W

2C— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Engagements
M cD on ald •Guiles
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S.
McDonald. 1382 Bristol Park
Place. Lake Mary, announce
the engagem ent or their

daughter, Cynthia Randolph
McDonald of Sanford, to
Blake Hunter Guiles of Alta­
monte Springs, son of Mr.

Cynthia Randolph M cD on ald

nnd Mrs. Jeremy S. Guiles of
Sarasota.
Born In Sa nf o r d, the
brldc-clcct Is the maternal
granddaughter of Mrs. H.M.
Dufflll and the paternal
g r a n d d a u g h t e r o f M rs.
Morton McDonald, both of
DeLand.
Miss McDonald is a 1960
graduate o f Tri ni ty Pre­
paratory School. Orlando,
where she was a member of
track and cross sountry
teams. She graduated from
Florida State University In
1984 where she was chaplain
of Alpha Delta PI sorority.
She Is employed as title
searcher for Lawyers Title
Group.
H e r f i a n c e , b o r n at
W atervlllc. Maine. Is the
maternal grandson of Stanley
Beal. Sarasota, and the
paternal grandson of Mrs.
Louise Raphael. Atlanta. Ga.
Mr. Guiles is a 1979 gradu­
ate of Gorham High School.
Gorham. Maine, where he
was a member of the tennis
team. At Florida Southern
College where he was gradu­
ated In 1983. he was presi­
dent of Sigma Chi fraternity.
Mr. Guiles Is employed as
president of Stockdale
Tech n ologies. Al tamonte
Springs.
The wedding will be an
event of Saturday. Nov. 2. at
3 p.m.. at First United Meth­
odist Church. Sanford.

RossDunbar
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Ross.
450 Rosala Drive. Sanford,
announce the engagement of
their daughter. Jennifer Kay.
to Albert W. Dunbar of Vero
Beach, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Backs!rom. 907 Park
Avc.. Sanford.
Born at Waynesboro. Va..
th e

b r 1d c - e I e c t

Is

th e

maternal granddaughter of
Mrs. M arjorie Sim m ons.
Sanford, and Robert Breeden,
Waynesboro. Her paternal
grandparents are Mrs. Mary
Ross. Waynesboro, and the
late Mr. Gilbert Ross.
Miss Ross Is a 1983 gradu­
ate of Seminole High School
and a 1985 graduutc with
honors from Seminole Com­
munity College where she
was a visual arts major.
Her fiance, born In Kansas
City. Mo.. Is the maternal
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Walfrido Sun. Burnaby. B.C..
Canada. He Is the paternal
grandson of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Ralph Dunbar. Ccntralia. Mo.
Mr. Dunbar Is a 1977
graduate of Seminole High
School and a 1983 graduate
of
Seminole Communitv

Jen nife r K a y Ross, A lb e rt W . D unb ar
College where he received an
A.A. degree In mechanical
engineering. He attended the
University of Central Florida
and Is employed as a sendee
representative for Decco

Tlllabelt Pennwalt Corp,
Vero Beach.
The wedding will be an
event of Sept. 20. at 7.30
p.m.. at Nativity Catholic
Church. Lake Mary.

Ten (10) Seminole County 4-H’ers recently
returned from u week at the University of Florida
for Florida 4-H Congress. Over 500 4-H'ers from
around the state of Florida participated In this
year's State Congress.
While at State Congress 4-H'ers participate in
State Demonstration competition. Those com­
peting are county and district demonstration
winners. This year Seminole County had a record
number of 10 4-H'ers participating In state
demonstrations. Frandne Huggins. Altamonte
Springs, placed first in clothing demonstration
and Jaime Bojanowski. Sanford, placed second in
mechanical and electronic science demonstration

in state competition. Tiffany Moore. Altamonte
Springs, placed fourth In the state fashion revue.
Also representing Seminole County demonstra­
tions at Congress were Barbara Ann Bucclno.
Long wood. In horse public speaking. Debbie
Sargent and Tiffany Wallace. Sanford, in horse
team demonstration. Wesley Nunnery. Chuluota,
In horticulture demonstration. Mike Lyon. San­
ford. In photography demonstration, and Kristi
Meriwether and Lori Hill. Sanford. In team
consumer education demonstration.
Local support to send this year's Seminole
County 4-H'ers to Congress was provided by
Seminole County Farm Bureau. Sanford Klwanis
and Navy Wives Club of Orlando.

gracefully." Hicks believes Elvis
would have developed an en­
during. mature career along the
lines of Frank Sinatra, "had the
Continued From 1C
fans let him get out of the
the floor beside the bed. I got a swivel-hipped, rock &amp; roll giant
piece of bread off the tray and 1 he was. and let him progress
ate beside him. We got to talking Into a singer of love songs, a
and I sat there and ate that piece giant movie star. Elvis could
of meat on the floor Just like have easily been another John
nothing had happened. That Wayne.
always sticks in my mind."
"But they wouldn't let him
Hicks' conservatlslm probably break from 1955. They wanted
appealed to Elvis, who had gone the Image and the body can only
from a $35 a week truckdrlver to take so much of that." Hicks
be propelled into a multi-million said.
dollar idol, a role Hicks said
Elvis could never take his
spelled doom for Elvis.
happiness Into the streets. Hicks
"There was never a time when said, and he lost what was most
he was in public that he wasn't important to him. his mother,
on stage." Hicks said. Elvis' blue his wife and his daughter.
eyes, black hair, pretty face and Things money couldn't buy.
little-boy crooked smile drew the
"Having been In that circle
women and the men liked him and seen a little taste of it."
because he brought back memo­ Hicks said. "I would not give up
ries of the ‘55 Chevrolet they what I have as a family man. as
once owned. Hicks said.
a person."
"It was a beautiful, neat rela­
But Elvis lost his family. His
tionship," Hicks said. "It was an dark-hired wife. Priscilla, who
all-American guy that made It mirrored Elvis' own good looks.
through the system. They could Hicks said, couldn’t live the life
all relate to Elvis," and they of "Scarlet O’Hara, hang out at
made him king.
the mansion, spend the money
"The image of Elvis will never and I’ll call you if I need you.
tarnish in the minds of the That was his philosopy. Elvis
fans." Hicks said. But the fans was your basic live-in-the-South
"would never let him grow old
redneck.

"But she ain't that kind.
Priscilla didn't put up with It
long. She has taken a lot of flack
from women fans, but he pushed
her to do what she did. They
drifted apart and 90 percent of It
was his fault.
"I respect her." Hicks said. " If
there were bad times she never
took It to the public. She kept It
to herself."
But Hicks is willing to share
his memories. The trouble is he
has no way to prove his connec­
tion to the king. "You'd have to
ask the IRS." he laughed,
because " I don't have any
pictures and I never was in a
movie magazine or anything like
that, but I was there."
Hicks found his new career as
a hairstylist after Elvis* hair­
dresser who gave him tips on
how to handle Elvis' hair when
he wasn't available told Hicks he
was a natural to the Job.
Hicks said he's lucky he had
the foresight to see that his life
with Elvis couldn't last forever
and he found a niche which he
said is almost like being In
showbusiness. The smiles he
sees on the faces o f those
satisfied with his hairstyles, he
said, are almost the same as
applause a performer receives on
stage.

to Levelle Thom pson, " T h e w ide va rie ty of
plants If listed by botanical nam e would
cover the entire botanical spectrum from A
to Z in this unique settin g."

In And Around Lake Mary

Scouts Honored Upon Return
From 5-Week Camping Trip
Boy Scout Troop 831 returned July 20 from a
5-wcek camping trip and crlcbratcd with a
welcome home party at their Friday night
meeting Aug. 2 .-They were served Ice cream,
soda pop. and cake that was made and donated
by Christo’s. The troop would like to thank
everyone for their support.
They will begin their fund raisers to support
their trip next year to Canada. At a more recent
scout meeting, scoutmaster Wavcrly Dowdy
presented Senior Patrol Leader Rusty Miller with
an "Outstanding Scout" award. When Rusty first
joined the troop he was an extremely shy young
man nnd now he leads the entire troop.
Scout Mike James also received an "outstand­
ing Scout" award, lie earned his uward because
of contributions to the troop und to the trip.
Scoutmaster Dowdy says the success of the trip
was greatly due to Mike's hard work and
determination.
The Lake Mary Chamber of Commerce will hold
Its first meeting of the year Sept. 4 at 8 a.m. at
Cafe Sorrento. Linda Sawyer, curriculum
spc&amp;lalist for career development, for Seminole
County School System, will be on hand
to
explain Business Education Day. and also the
partnership program.
Kay Bartholomew. Public Relation Director for
Central Florida Regional Hospital, will also speak
and explain the program, from a "business

4-H'ers Attend State Congress

...Consort

Yard O f The M onth
T h e y a rd of M r. and M rs . Ja m e s H lck a m ,
220 O d h a m D riv e , Sanora, w as selected by
the Sanora H om eow ners' Association for
" Y a r d of the M o n th " for A ugust. A ccording

Bonnie
O lv e r a
Lake Mary
Correspondent

321-2209
person" viewpoint. Coffee will be served.
A very special anniversary will be celebrated by
Harvey and Lois Pugh Sept. 3. It will be their
68th wedding anniversary. Congratulations to
these longtime resldentsof Lake Mary.
Madelyn and Ron Mins recently returned from a
trip to New York and Indiana. While in New York
Ron met Madclyn's family for the first time. They
also visited Rockefeller Center. St. Patrick's
Cathedral. China Town. Little Italy, and Atlantic
City. They also visited Madclyn's aunt that still
resides in the same house Madclyn's father was
born in. In Brooklyn.
From New York they went to Peru. Ind. to visliA
Ron’s parents. While there they attended the
Indiana State Fair and went to dinner and
dancing ut the Moore Lodge. Madelyn says Ron's
81-year-old father outdanced them both.
Don't forget to vote Sept. 3

Boy Scout Troop
507 To Sponsor
C!o w n -A -Round
Clown-A-Round. the show that's more fun thun
a circus, is coming to Sanford at the Sanford Civic
Center on Sept. 7 at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.
Clown-A-Round Is a collection of zany clowns
who will amuse their audiences with clever clown
routines, adroit Juggling and mysterious magic.
Featured In this year's edition of Clown-ARound Is the clown team of Cooker und Pickles.
This comedy duo will entertain those In atten­
dance with a salute to ‘cooking shows.' 'the
world's strongest clowns,' und the fumous
‘painting the fence’ routine!
Jay-Jay. the Juggling fool, will present his
amazing displays of Juggling skills. Also making
his dehut Is 5-year-old Tony Baloney, the world's
youngest professional clov/n.
Mongo, the almost human gorilla, will ulso
appear.
Master Mugician Dlrchficld will present his
illusion show as an extra udded attraction.
Birchfleld will make doves, pigeons, chickens and
rabbits uppear and disappear. The mystery of the
linking of the rings will be performed us well us
astounding levitation of an assistant. Birchfleld is
now in his 26th year In magic und has appeared
coast to coast as well ns Canada und Mexico.
Twelve-year-old Sean Hizcl. the world's
strangest boy. will cheat Injury by reclining on a
bed of nails and walking on broken glass — a feut

'

•

- W

.

.

B irchfle ld and M iss M ag ic
that will not be duplicated.
The 90-mlnutc stage show Is being sponsored
by Boy Scout Troop 507, Grace
United
Methodist Church. Sanford, who will received the
profits.
Admission is S2.50 for children to age 12.
adults are $3.50 at the door. However, save $1.50
per ticket with advance purchases. Advance
tlskets arc available through members of Boy
Scout Troop 507 or by calling 322-7823 ufter 5
p.m.

Class Helps Parents Teach At Home
The preschool years arc the
most Important 'in u child's
education. This message Is the
focus of a course In parenting to
be offered Thursdays sturtIng
Sept. 5 and continuing through
Sept. 26 by Central Floridu
Regional Hospital.
Parenting is based on the
Bowdoin Method, an award­
winning educator's program thut
helps parents become teachers
and ciilldren become readers.
Over the course of four classes,
to be held from 7-9 pm at the
hospital on U.S. Highway 17-92
in Sanford, parents will learn
techniques that will bring them
closer to their children and will
prejiare children for school.
Interested persons may regis­
ter for Parenting by calling
321-4500or668-4414.ext.607.
Though the course Is primarily
for parents o f preschoolers,
grandparents, day care workers

or any adult with an interest In
preschoolers Is welcom e to
enroll. The fee Is $10 per person
or $15 per couple. Participants
may elect to purchuse u scries of
workbooks which ure used
throughout the course.
The Parenting progrum Is
presented by CFRH und Hospital
Corporation of America (HCA).
HCA. which owns and operates
more than 380 hospitals in
addition to the Sanford hospital,
developed Parenting under the
direction of noted Educator Ruth
Bowdoin.
Mrs. Bowdoin. a classroom
teacher of 35 years, developed
her concept of parental training
classes und tested her Ideas In
the Murfreesboro school system
m Tennessee. She found re­
markable results. Over a fiveyear test period children from
B ow doin-trained homes
performed better In school.

scored better on tests and had
fewer discipline problems than
children from homes without the
training.
Bowdoin won an educational
Puccscttcr Award for her work.
Her ideas und leaching methods
have been udapted by HCA.
which is based in Nashville, and
made Into the Parenting pro­
grum.
The Parenting program has
two major emphases. The first
half Is devoted to developing a
child's intellectual capacity. The
purpose of this study is to help
parents create a home
environment that stimulates
learning and creativity.
T h e secon d focu s Is on
psychological und emotional
stability. This portion of the
program helps parents interact
with their children In ways that
produce good behavior and posi­
tive acirjm uge.^,.
. .

�In And Around Sanford

Evening Herald, Senford, FI.

S u n d a y , S e pt. 1, 1 fl5 — 3C

Concert Association Membership Drive Underway
I Itc 1985-86 Seminole Coinntuoily Concert Association season
was nlTicInlly launched at at a
eolTec for hoard members at the
Mayfair home or Mickey and
Sully Fleming* when renewal
packages were distributed.
According to SCCA president
Annette Wing, three conccrst
have been booked for the season
to Include: Miran Florcn. Empire
Brass Quintet and Romberg
Remembered. All of the concerts
will be held In the auditorium of
Lake Mary High School, begin­
ning at 8 p.m.
The annual membership drive
will gel underway on Sept. 16 at
a dinner for association workers
to be held In fellowship hall of
the First United Methodist
Church. Sanford. Rubyc King Is
chairman of the dinner, assisted
by her husband Leo.
Newcomers to the area, as well
as former subscribers to the
concert association arc welcome
to the SCCA. Subscriptions can
I k * purchased from Sept. 16-20,
from 10 a.in. to 5 p.m., in the
lobby of Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Sanford, or In the lobby
of the soon-to-open Altamonte
Springs Hilton Inn and Towers.
For I nf or mat i on on m e m ­
berships. sunscriptlons and re­
n e w a l s . cal l m e m b e r s h i p

Doris
Dietrich
PEOPLE
Editor

High School announces that tInclass will have its fifth reunion in
the early part of 1986.
Mike says class members will
receive n newsletter in the near
future. Help Is needed to to
organize the event. Classmates
who can help are asked to call

Mike. 322-4734.
The Civic Affairs Committee of
Sanford Lodge 1851. Legal Or­
der of Moose, staged a 50's-GO's
dance on Aug. 10 for the benefit
of the Arthritis Foundation.
Committee Chairman Neil Moore

chairman
Craig Orscno. 3317606. For general Information,
call Annette Wing. 322-5134.
Sheila Stanley announces that
T w i g g y , the wat er - skl l l ng
squirrel, will make a public
appearance at Howell Place. 200
W. Airport Blvd.. from 2-4 p.m.
on Sunday. Sept. 22. Twiggy’s
performance Is under the direc­
tion of his founder and trainer.
Chuck Best.

and bis wife Darlene served ns
disc Jockeys for the event and
provided games of hopscotch,
ball and Jacks, and hula hoops.
Plenty of popcorn was made
available and pantomime skits
w e re p e rfo rm e d w ith the
assistance of coworkers from
Sanford Chapter 1404. Women
of the Moose.
Moore, who is also Civic Af­
fairs Chairman for District 9 of
the Florida State Moose Assocalion, said that Sanford Governor
Ralph Garcia. Jr. will present a
check In the amount of S278.67
as a result of the dance. The
contribution will be given during
the "Musical Extravaganza"
being held on Sept. 14 in the
Sanford Civic Center to raise
funds for the Arthritis Founda­
tion.
The Heart of Florida African
Violet Society will meet Sept. 5
at 9:30 n.lri. In the home of Mrs.
F r a n c i s G o o d r i c h . 1379
Whltcwood Drive. Deltona.
An evening group will also Inheld at the home of Jean Norris.
115 Larkwood Drive. Sanford,
on Sept. 10. at 7:30 p.m. A slide
presentation on "Pest of the
African Violet" will be pres­

A portable pool will be set up
on the premises. The event Is
open to the public.
Also. Howell Place will host a
candlelight dinner-dance on
Sept. 27. The event, by Invita­
tion. will benefit the Golden Age
Games.
Michael A. Meadors, president
of the 1980 class of Seminole

M em bers of the board of directors of Seminole C o m m unity
C oncert Association Sully Fle m in g , from left, M ickey
Fle m in g , Annette W ing, president, and D r. Kenneth W ing
show concert renewal package containing inform ation about
the 1985-86 concerts.

ented.
For further Information con­
tact Mrs. Goodrich at 574-2062
or Peggy Nolcs in Sanford at
322-4076.
The Klwanis Club of Sanford Is
looking for an outstanding
person In the community who
will be nominated for the Ran­
dall Chase Award to be pres­
ented sometime In Oct. at the
annual service dinner.
The deadline for nomination is
Oct. 1.
Send the name and address of
vour nominee and full biograph­
ical sketch of Ills accomplish­
ments to: Lewis C. Dcllarco.
Awards Committee Chairman.
204 Old Monroe Rd.. Sanford.
Florida 32771. Phone: 323-5620.
The Junior Woman's Club of
Sanford Inc. In conjunction with
W C P X - C h a n n e l 6. is
sponsoring a blanket drive. " We
are in need of any type of old
blankets, if they are still usable.
All blankets are to be shipped to
Africa lor the needy." Honda
Bander said.
Blankets may be taken
to
Carll's Dell. 2911 U.S. Highway
17-92 in Sanford.

REGISTER NOW FOR CLASSES
AT OUR NEW LOCATION
CALL 321-4299
Classes Start September 3
niRHICIIUlM o f f curD ACROBATIC, b a l l e t , b a l l r o o m , b a t o n . b o d y a l ig n m e n t
CMt l RLKADING. CLOGGING ORAMA WORKSHOP HAW AIIAN. JAW . MODELING POINTE
SPANISH. SYLLABUS AND TAP THESE. CLASSES ARE OFFERED TO
ALL AGE GROUPS AND DEGREES OF CAPABILITIES IN BOTH CLASS
AND INDIVIDUAL BASIS COMBINATION CLASSES ARE OFFERED
IN PRESCHOOL AND BEGINNER TAP AND BALLET ONLY

S &amp;bty Q / a cca x o * s
WORLD OF DANCE AND
PERFORMING ARTS
2585 PARK DRIVE

SANFORD

THORNHILL INTERIORS, ETC
SELECT

VERTICAL BLINDS

50% OFF
Suggested Retell

SPECIAL ORDER

. . 7 5% off

10% OFF
Thru 0-7-05

2927 S. HWY. 17-92, SUITE H-8
IN THE CENTER MALL ACROSS FROM ZAYRES
. . . .
HOURS: Mon.-Frl. 10-5:30; Set. 10-2:00; Closed Wednesday 321-0979

End O f Sum m er Beach Party
T h e Dow ntow n Business Association of Sanford sponsored
an E n d of S u m m e r Beach P a rty at the M agnolia M a ll on
historic F irs t Street. Beda M a rin e presented a boat
exhibition and several fun contests w ere held. Left photo
shows M a rth a Y a n c e y, w inn er of the gag prize for the
oldest bathing suit as well as Best of Show — Judges
A w a rd , a cru m b lin g sandcastle, and T i m Donahoe who

won a prize for the best-decorated lounge chair. In right
photo, judge Ja c k H orn er checks out the legwear of M innie
Kane w ho won the gag prize for her outrageous beach hat
w hile B ill P ainter looks on. O ther gag prize winnere were
L iz M cD o n ald , most outrageous beach shirt, and M ike
Stubblefield, most outrageous beach shorts. Downtown
Sanford businesses donated the prizes.

Willie B. Newman M.D.
A n n o u n c e s

The Opening of his New Office
at

South Seminole Medical Center
for the practice o f

Political Science Lesson Is No Bull
DEAR READERS: It all began
when I run the following:
DEAR ABBY: A friend gave
me these definitions of the
various forms of government,
and I thought you might want to
share them with your readers: . .
COMMUNISM: You have two
cows. The government takes
both of them and gives you part
of the milk.
SOCIALISM: You have two
cows. The government takes one
and gives it to your neighbor.
FASCISM: You have two cows.
The government takes both
cows and sells you the milk.
NAZISM: You have two cows.
The government takes both of
them and shoots you.
BUREAUCRACY: You have
two cows. The government takes
both of them, shoots one. milks
the other, then pours the milk
down the drain.
CAPITALISM: You have two
cows. You sell one of them and
‘ buy a bull.
Abby. what happens In a
democracy?
M B8.J. McC.

Dear
Abby
Whatever the majority decides
you should do with your cows,
you do — unless the government
pays you not to raise cows,
shoots one. milks the other one.
and pours the milk down the
drain.
In a republic, you have two
cows. You can sell one and buy a
bull, have ope or both cut up,
into steaks, or sell both and'
m ove Into a condom inium
because under a republic each
person has the Inalienable right
to do whatever he dam well
pleases to do with his property.
And th at’ s no bull either.
Around here, we call It liberty.
JON A . HOLIDAY,
HOLLYWOOD. CALIF.

search to find out why your
neighbor’s 10 cows aren't worth
as much as your two were.
Then the government milks
the cows, makes cheese and
gives It to the poor people, who
Would rather have a cow.
BARELY MAKING IT
DEAR ABBY: In a recent
column, a reader compared
communism, socialism. Nazism,
fascism and capitalism.
Abby. comparing such tern s
is like trying to compare pizzas t
to piccolos. •’Capitalism." "so­
cialism.” and "communism" are
economic systems: they are not
forms of government.
The term s ’ ’ d e m o c ra c y ."
‘ ’ monarchy.” "dictatorship."
and "anarchy" refer to forms of
g o v e r n m e n t — t hey have
nothing to do with the economic
svstem.

BARBS
P h il P a s to re t

pot
is what ancient, wealthy
DEAR ABBY: I hate to con­ Will power
tradict your definition of democ­ relatives are able to exert over the
racy. but everyone In America reel of the family.
call ’em “standby” passengers
does not have two cows. A more They
hacaass what they do mostly is stand
accurate description of how the and wavt gaadbye to the folks holding
ayatem works would be: You tha airline reservations.
have two cows, one neighbor has
10 cowa and another neighbor
doesn’t have any. The govern­
ment taken one of your cowa and
use* It ^ colla tera l to get ftlaU ).

DEAR MRS. &gt;1. McC.: In a
democracy, everyone has two
cows, then a vote Is taken and
whatever the majority decides to
do. you do. and that’s no bull!
Did I get letters! Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Our founding
fathers did not establish a de­
mocracy: they established a re­
public. Let’s use the two cows to
illustrate the difference:
0 &amp; ? ? 3 2 r F 'A * * h w ntcethin* about your newspnIn a democracy, you have two
cows. A vote Is taken among all remaining cow — given one-third f i r Y w doo^hav* to buy a rooftop
~E lU ilgB j w i . a 4 ^ T l U Itilti Ashman to get a claar picture of
the people. 99 percent of
, never saw a cow: they think mill
i f Tfrom * got'riff
am f ‘
00
PAFia s n t c iu w is c s assn
•IMS. I
comes from the supermarket. - spends the other third on re-

• OBSTETRICS • GYNECOLOGY • INFERTILITY
521 W. SR. 434 Suite 204
Longwood, FL 32750

England. for example, has a
limited monarchy as a form of
government, and socialism as an
economic system.
I hope tills clears up the
confusion.
C.R.M. IN MISSOURI
D E A R C .R .M .: It
Thanks for the political
lesson. Lei’s not pursue
the cows come home.
we've milked them dry.

v'* T

*2

Office H o urs B y A p p o in tm e n t O n ly

305-339-8959
SANFORD O FFIC E
1403 Medical Plaza Dr. Suite 104, Sanford

303-331-7630

d oes.
science
this 'ill
1 think

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\

4

�4C— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE
I MAOB YOU
A SANDWICH

UVEHWUdST
NEVER GOES
NEXT TO
SALAMI

Sunday, Sapt. 1, ifM

b y C h ic Y o u n g

YOU ALWAYS SEPARATE
THEM wnw SAUERKRAUT

YOU CAN'T
'POOL AROUNO
WITH
.TRADITION

I SHOULO*VE
R6MEM0EREO

ACR088

HOROSCOPES

1 Mad* grid play
7 Theater area
13 Aetraaa Dahl
14 Group of nln*
15 Food*
16 Poaltion
17 Horntd viper
18 Large tea duck
20 Orel'* river
21 Next to kidney*
23 Borough (auff.)
26 Noun auffix
27 EJact
31 Vinaa
33 Japan***American
34 In lowtr
poaltion
35 Joined
36 Formal dance
37 Vehicle
40 None (Scot)
41 Needlework
44 Cry of aurpria*
47 Florida city
48 Boor
51 Jokad
53 Canadian
capital
55 Redacoratad
56 Prayar
57 Strong point*
56 Mark with
apot*

W hat The Day
Will B ring...

by Mort Walker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y
C H A P L A IN STA h/EtG LA S S
IS T R Y IN © T O IN C R E A S E
CHURCH A TTE N D A N C E

COME TO CHURCH
O N SUNDAY
S E T TICKETS FOR
6 FREE BINGO
GAMES ON
FRI DAY

T H E B O R N LO S E R

by Art Sansom

WHMB/EfcSW CO, OULIAW,
CDtfT BE A FOP-OFF!

PEWeWgER.OULM FOOLS
MAKE POSITIVE
STATEMENTS'^ PEALLV?

f..

vf b s m v E W !

— 1

A R C H IE

by Bob Montana
L O O K W H O 'S H E R E ,
E V E R Y B O D Y .'

NO W AV A M I
C O M IN G 'V E R O N IC A 'S
FW R TIB9 B O R E M E S T I F F .'

B U T SH E ’S
^
SERVTAAS LOAPS O F
REFRESHMENTS.
JIAGHEAPF

E EK A M EEK

by How ls Schneider

BARTENDER, THIS MAW
IS AMuoViwe ME...

I GOT A RIGHTTOMV
OPOOfO! IMIS (SSTIUAMERKA...R(SMT?[ RIGHT...)

SO 1ELL ITTD7H&amp;
C-XITPOX

y-~a£wi
.* *

M I N A N D LfTTLC MISS

by

S S M b n

12 L

BUGS BUNNY

by W a m tr B rothtrs

DAKN THAT WABSm

J ORDERED A DUCK
CALL AND HE SOLD
ME A FISH LURE-

FR A N K A N D E R N E S T

by Bob T h i w a

iTO LS&gt;

Q A R F IE L D

by Jim Davis

MERE COMES MU
SIDEKICK, SLURP

* MEV, SLURPL M A YBE V 00
should c u t s o m e e y e h o le s

IN UOUR M ASK

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YOUR BIRTHDAY
SEPTEMBER 1, I9 8 S
Conditions look extremely fa­
vorable In the year ahead for
developing Income from a source
other than your normal chan­
nels. Search for new ways to
make money.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Your greatest opportunities to­
day arc likely to come from
situations thnt others have
begun. You’ll be Invited In
because you answer a special
need. Trying to patch up a
romance? The Matchmaker set
can help you you understand
what It might take to make the
relationship work. To get yours,
mall $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. Box 1846, Cincin­
nati. OH 45201.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) In
your involvements with friends
today, your share of expenses
may be a tad larger than theirs.
Don’t make an Issue of this
because all will even out later.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22)
Substantial achievements arc
possible today, provided you
don’t lose faith In your own
abilities. Reject all forms of
negative Input from yourself as
well as others.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Competitive Involvements
with friends today will be more
enjoyable for everyone con­
cerned If they aren’ t taken
seriously. Play the game for the
game's sake.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) It could prove unwise If you
try to conduct business today
wlh people with whom you're
associating on a social basis.
Don't Introduce mundane topics.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Select your guests carefully If
you’re entertaining at your place
today. Avoid bringing people
together who may not mix well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 19)
You could be quite lucky In your
matcrlnl affairs today If you run
the entire show yourself. YieldYOUR BIRTHDAY
Septem ber 2 ,1985
Material conditions look favor­
able for you In the year ahead.
Money will be available to get
some things you 've always
wanted but never felt you could
afford.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be a
good listener today, especially If
you're talking to someone who
knows how to make or save
money. The Ideas he expounds
will click for you. Major changes
are ahead for Vlrgos In the
coming year.
Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today.
Mall 81 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. Box 1846. Cincin­
nati. OH 45201.
LIB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
Judgment regarding the outcome
of new ventures Is good today.
Have faith In your assessments,
even If they appear a bit too
hopeful to associates.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22) An
Important goal you arc eager to
achieve Is within your reach, but
It only can be attained one step
at a time. Be content with your
progress.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You may be the recipient of
some happy tidings today from a
person of whom you’re quite
fond, but who now resides a

Answer to Pravioua Puiil*

7 Take umbrage
•t
8 Inalde of
(comb, form)
9 Literary
miacallany
10 Typ* of fabric
11 Small nail
12 Concert halls
19 Lion'* horn*
21 Ancient (comp,
wd.)
22 Not winning
23 Lattuca
24 Layer of aya
25 Small stream
28 Farm agency
(abbr.)
29 Noted
30 Rise and fall
32 Compasa point
33 Exists
1

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37 Nawlywed
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38 Actress Msrksl
39 Violent wind
42 Catkin
43 Explosive (si.)
44 Edible green
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45
46
48
49
50
52
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Military fugitive
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Female deer
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10 11 12

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( C) t eas by N IA . Inc

ONI

Ing authority to others could
dilute your possibilities.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Direct your elTorts today toward
trying to satisfy the majority.
Jealousy or hard feelings could
result If you select one or two
pals for special attention.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It
may be necessary for you to
protect your self-interests today,
especially If someone tries to
take credit for something you've
accomplished.
OEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Don’t let the negative thinking of

others pul a damper on your
aspirations today. You can
achieve what you believe, even If
they can’t.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Important achievements arc
possible today, provided you
match your methods to your
optimistic projections. Don’t let
doubts do you in.
L E O ( J u l y 2 3 - A u g . 22)
Ag r e e me nt s will work out
favorably today for everyone
concerned If no one tries to alter
the terms once they have com­
mitted themselves. Hold the line.

considerable distance from you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Conditions are changing for the
better today; a problem you
thought would be difficult to
resolve will be erased.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
A change of scenery will serve as
a healthy tonic today In re­
furbishing your attitude and
outlook. Go places where you
can see new faces.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
new Idea for Increasing your
holdings may be presented to
you today. It might not make
you rich, but It could bring In a
few extra shekels.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You'll be happiest today doing
som ething that brings you
together with friends who know
how to enjoy themselves. It
doesn’t have to be anything
special.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today you may be surprised by
the candid comments of an
associate whose confidence you
didn’t think you enjoyed In­
timately.
OEM INI (May 21-June 20)
You're apt to be more at ease
today deeding with a small group
than you will be In a crowd. Seek
quality relationships, not quan­
tity.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You may derive a modest return
today from something you do on
your own Initiative. Pride of
achievement will mean more
than profit.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
words and Ideas will have con­
siderable Influence on others
today. In fact, two admirers will
carry out your suggestions to the
letter.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C t o bmy Captor cryptogram* a ,* cratlad from quoMUona by tamoua paopta. paat and piaaant
Each tartar m tto ciptor atanda lor onoltor. T a d n 'i eAm O a gu e* S .

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PREVIOU8 80LUTION: “W* all know Individuals who make their Uvea the exact
realization ot what they ere afraid of." — Waldo Frank.

WIN AT BRIDGE
By James Jacoby
If you lend to see trees more
often than lorcst. you had better
start underbidding a little. South
was super-aggressive to hid on
over four hearts, and Blackwood
really didn’t help him. It did not
matter that Ills side was not off
two aces. What the slam would
depend upon was the heart and
club strength In North’s hand.
At best, South could have bid
live hearts over four. leaving the
final decision to North. Instead.
South propelled himself Into
slam.
Alter the ace of spades. West
switched to a low diamond. Too
Intent upon the tiees, declarer
attempted to execute one of the

worst plays In bridge. He tried a
practice finesse. East happily
g o b b l e d up t h e k i n g o f
diamonds. Later on, when the'
club finesse worked, declarer
was down only one.
It is true that declurer would
save something if West held the
diamond king and East the club
king — one trick. But with the
situation turned around, de­
clarer simply deprived himself
and his partner of a slam that
depended only upon the club
finesse.
A point to remember: Whether
you're In a part-score or a slam
contract, take your time and
plan the play.

NORTH
anas
♦ Q 10
4KQ107
♦ AQ7
4 A QJ 3
WEST
EAST
4 A 987
4 J 532
454
462
♦ 1065 3
♦ K J 82
4 K 74
4852
SOUTH
4 K 64
4 A J 983
♦ 94
41096
Vulnerable: Eaat-West
Dealer: North
Weil North East South
14
Pais 14
Pau 2#
Pass 2NT
Pan 44
Pass 4NT
Pan 54
Pau 64
Pau Pau Pau
Opening lead: 4A

i

n w r*

A N N IE
TU M B LE W EE D S

by T. K. Ryan

TO KrtOvY IF I COOLrSOGGBST

V W A T P IP H E IV A M T ? ^

REM01E SPOT WHERE HE CAN
PRACTICE Hl5 WAR SQ0EAK.

*

•V

by Laonard Starr
H A N # WE'RE GONNAHAVE
TERRIFIC TIMES, NOf |
I'VE GOT GR»T
PLANS/

YOU'RE GOING TLET .
HUCMY RUN OFF HOT H fig K L
FLVNN?- EVEN IF •
HE tS MIS SEAL
FATHER?

Hi

*» ' •

*» •••*»« *•• 4

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

Sunday, Sept. 1 , m s — 5C

TO N IG H T'S T V
SATURDAY

Alto Hart Gary Sandy and Sydnty

AFTERNOON

0 ®

2:00
©
(35) MOVIE "Underground
A c **" (1980) Dtrk Benadicl, Frank
Gorthm Parking alU.-vdantt wreak
havoc at a twank Beverly Hill* ho­
le!
0 (10) MOVIE "The Devil Hora*“
(1932) Harry Carey. Noah Beery A
ruthleit outlaw leader tchem et and
murder* in order to capture a wild
italuon
Q ) ( I ) MOVIE "The Oppotile S e i"
(1956) June Altyton. Dolores Gray
A happily married woman leave* lor
Reno on the advice ol her Inends

2:30
® O MOVIE "The True Story Ol
Jesse James" (1957) Robert Wag­
ner. Hope Lange Jesse James' ac­
tual life it seen through his
brother's eyes

3:00
S ) (10) PRESENTE

3'30
*
O U.8. OPEN TENNIS CON­
TINUES
CD (10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
Black him producer Oscar Mitaux's movies from the 1920*
p I ‘30s are highlighted (R)

4:00
O ® SPORTS WORLD Scheduled
Carlos Santos (29-1. 20 KOs) vs
Davey Moore &lt;14-2. 11 KOs) lor the
IBF Junior Middleweight lllle,
scheduled lor 15 rounds Irom Ro­
berto Clemente Stadium in San
Juan. P R
(Z) O MIGHTY MEN AND MAGIC
MOMENTS This preview ol the up­
coming National Football League
season includes profiles ol tome
NFL draft picks.
91) (35) CHIPS
ID (10) ON THE MONEY Featured:
calamity insurance, teaching chil­
dren about money, tax loopholes.
(R IO
© BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at
Chicago Cubs
(B
( I ) GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO

4:30

10:00 .

HUNTER What teems to be
a routine murder Investigation tor
Hunter and Dee Dee turns mto a
terrifying case Involving a ten et of
murders. (R)
INDEPENDENT NEWS
10) DOCTOR WHO

CD O

WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled Carl "The Truth" Wil­
liams (16-1. 12 KOs) vs Jesse Fer­
guson (13-0. 10 KOs) in a heavy­
weight bout scheduled lor 10
rounds, live Irom Atlantic City, N J.
(35) BJ / LOBO
(10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW g
f lD d ) MOVIN' ON

5:30
® ANYTHING FOR MONEY
(10) WALL STREET WEEK
Guest Geraldine Weiss, editor and
publisher, "Investment Ouality
Trends "

8

EVENING

6:00
® ® Q ® O NEWS
(35) BLACK SHEEP SQUAD­
RON
S
(10) FLORIDA COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BRAIN BOWL
Q ) ( I ) JOE FORRESTER

6:30
I ) NBC NEWS
) CBS EVENING NEWS
I ABC'S WORLD NEWS SAT­
URDAY g

740

•
®
DANCE* FEVER Celebrity
lodge* Anson Wiliams. Phyllis
Dilief Performance by Rauy bat-

3-18HEE HAW Featured: Tom T.

Halt. Jim Glaser (R)
(D O SOLID GOLD Hosl Ray Par­
ker Jr Guests Freddie Jackson.
LR8. Rene and Angela. Tom Jones.
'Til Tuesday. Rosanne Cash, come­
dian Dennis Blair
a(35) BUCK ROGERS
) (10) THE GLORY OF THE GAR­
DEN James Mason narrates a doc­
umentary lilm describing how Phil­
lip do Rothschild designed and
created one of the world'a most
spectacular gardens •• the Gardens
of Exbury
91 WRESTLING
i
( I ) TALES FROM THE OARKSIOE Mitttng college transcripts, a
lost social security number and a
mother who doesn't recognise him
cause a young graphic designer to
slip into paranoia

7:30

8

11:00
® ( S O NEWS
_
(38) PUTTIN' ON THE HITS
Songs- "W ak* Me Up Before You
Go G o," "I Feel For You." "Mule
Tram," "9 To 5" and "Boogie
Down" and "D o You Wanna
Touch." Judges Misty Gold. Rob­
bie Kneger. Charlie Wilson.
0 ( I ) HONEYMOONER8

11:30
O
®
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Host: Joan Rivers Musical guests:
Musical Youth ("Pass the Dutehie,"
"Never Gonna Give You Up"). (R)
® O LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
ANO FAMOU8 A profile of billion­
aire Adnan Khashoggi that includes
a tour ol hit luxurious )et and a look
at his mountain villas in Spain. (R)
© (38) MOVIE "How To Break Up
A Happy Divorce". 11976) Barbara
Eden. Hal Linden.
(Q) NIGHT TRACKS: CHARTBUSTERS
0
(8) VISIONS AROUND THE
WORLD David Bowie, John Cougar
Meliencamp. Men at Work. Madon­
na. Duran Duran. Tsars for Fears
and Robert Plant perform thetr hits
In countries around the world.

12:00
®QNEW 8

12:30
® O STAR 8EARCH Finals. Host:
Ed McMahon. (R)
®
O MOVIE "Western Union"
(1941) Robert Young. Dean Jagger.
92 NIGHT TRACK8

1:00
® 2 ROCKS TONIGHT
(38) MOVIE "Humoresque"
(1947) John Garfield. Joan Crawlord.

1:30

2:30
® O MOVIE "The Proud Ones"
(1956) Robert Ryan, Virginia Mayo
92 NIGHT TRACKS

3:10
0 ( I ) MOVIE "Orloft Against The
Invisible Man" (1965) Howard Ver­
non. Britt Carva

3*30
©
(38) MOVIE' "Hell's Kitchen"
(1939) Ronald Reagan. Dead End
Kids
© N IG H T TRACKS

4:30

®
o MOVIE "Pinky" (1949)
Jeanne Cram. Wilkam Lund&gt;gan
92 NtGHT TRACK8

ISUNDKf

8

5:00
(NEW S
(AVENGERS

iiSWS

5:30
© M O O T TRACKS
•K »
) 0 LAW ANO YOU
) O AGRICULTURE UA A .
ig jlM P A C T

JH W o
) (9) FOCUS

6:30
|® NEWSCENTER MAGAZINE
) 0 SPECTRUM
) O VKWPOtNT ON NUTRITION
) (38) W.V. GRANT
) WORLD TOMORROW
) ( I ) JACKSON FIVE

7:00
2*8 COMPANY
ROBERT SCHULLER
PICTURE OF HEALTH
) OS) BEN HAOEN
)IT IS WRITTEN
) (8) JAMES ROBISON

S

7:30
HARMONY AND GRACE
ESSENCE ON TELEVISION
5(38) EJ. DANIELS
) SUNDAY FUNNIES
) ( • ) W.V. GRANT

B

® OUR TIME Guests include
Tina Louis* ("Giiligan't Island"),
Anthony Eisley ( Hawaiian Eye")
and Darby Hinton ( Daniel Boone")
Paul Petersen ("Th e Donna Reed
Show ") and Karen Valentin*
cohost
0
(10) ARTHUR C. CLARKE'S
MYSTERIOUS WORLD

9:00
®

Q M M E A BREAK Juke and

Jonathan hop* to solve the prob­
lems n thee tometimes-rocky rela­
tionship by running off to Las Vegas
and gelling married (R)
(D O N fL PRE-SEASON FOOT­
BALL Houston Oiler* at Danas
Cowboys
®
LOVE SOAT Romance, in­
trigue and mytlery sail the high
seas aa the Love Boat travel* to
Am sterdam and Copenhagen.
Guest start include Eileen Brennan.
Patrick Casaidy, Tan Copley. Pal
Harrington. George Kennedy. Cions
Leechman and E * e Sommer (R) g
(10) FRANKIE ANO JOHNNY
T N * 40th anmvaraary tribute lo the
first American beam mdudaa an In­
terview with Ruth Pag*, the original
Frankie, and chp* Irom the 1030
production

0

0

9*J0

0 ® HURTS ISLANDDorothy
Lyman alert aa Johnm- Baylor, a
a * * * parent trying to maintain her
sanity w M e holding down several

sir

AFTERNOON

12.-00
O ®
LORNE GREENE'S NEW
WILDERNESS
( T ) 0 MORE REAL PEOPLE
© (38) MOVIE "Thaddaut Rose
And Eddie" (1978) Johnny Cash. Bo
Hopkins. Two rural Texas buddies
part company when one ol them Is
tricked into trading hit ranch lor a
citrus grove in the Rio Grande ValiS&gt; (10) NI8EI SOLDIER: STAN­
DARD BEARER FOR AN EXILED
PEOPLE Veterans ol Ihe much-dec­
orated 442nd Japanese-Amerlcan
Regimental Combat Team of World
War II discuss their feelings of con­
flict as liberators abroad while their
famine* were imprisoned at home.
O (9) MOVIE "Life With Father "
(1947) William Powell, Iran* Dunne
A woman and her four sons manage
to manipulate their otherwise tyran­
nical patriarch

12:30
0 ® MEET THE PRESS
® ©
U.8. OPEN TENNIS Third
round, live from Flushing MeadowCorona Park. N Y.
® O WALL STREET JOURNAL
REPORT
0 ( 1 0 ) HEALTH MATTERS

12:50
1:00

0

® KEYLIGHT: M.O.A. In an in­
terview with Barbara Walters, Jerry
Lewis talks about his involvement
with the Muscular Dystrophy Asso­
ciation
® 0 WRESTUNG
0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"The C itadel' Andrew laces a aenou* challenge to hit professional
career when he becomes the subfeet of an official inquiry by hit fel­
low physician* (Part 10011 0 )(R )g

1:30

0

8:30
1 8UNOAY MASS
I DAY OF DISCOVERY
(O R A L ROBERTS
. ..8 ) PORKY PIG
P BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENOS
j ( ! ) THUN0ER8IR0S SOBS

® TO BE ANNOUNCED

® WORLD TOMORROW
® Q SUNDAY MORNBM Sched­
uled profile ol )axz singer Jo* We­
berns; report on veterans who
served m the Pacific during Work)
War It and an interview with author
Studs Tarkel ("Th e Good W ar")
®
O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANOO
© ( 3 8 ) TRANSFORMERS
0 (10) PABtTBtO CERAMICS
0 (8) VOLTRON, D 0ENO ER OF
THEUWVENSE

9:30
) VIBRATIONS
(M O RAL ISSUES
I0 0 B 0 T 8
(10) FOLKWAYS
K U N S P E C T O R GADGET

9:35
©

ANOY ORIFFITH

10.-00
) TAKING ADVANTAGE
) I T S WRITTEN
_
) M O VC "Aunt Mary" (1979)
Jean Staptaton, Martin Balsam.
Based on the true story of a handi­
capped Baltimore woman ertw or­
ganizes and coaches an inner-city
Little League team
0 M 1 O ) MAGIC OF WATERCOL*

0

(9) M OVC "M y Man Godfrey"
(1957) June Alfyson. David Niven A
bum who is given a (ob as a butler
m a society woman's house luma
out lo be a member ol Austrian roy­
ally

1046
© O O O O NEWS

Kh30
) WRESTUNG
I FACE THE NATION

II*
sis

) FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
| ALOHA CHBiA

1041

© MOWS “ Owl M For Murder"
(1984) Ray Matand. Grace Ka#y Al­
tar learmng ol lea wds's MidaMy. a
man daddea to have hat -

•4-

/

11A )

®0TH W T&gt;M B&lt;UTES

8:05
©
VIETNAM: THE TEN THOU­
SAND DAY WAR

9:00
0 ® JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON Jerry Lewis is |oined by
Milton Berle. Liberece. Frank Sina­
tra and other celebrities m the Mus­
cular Dystrophy Association's an­
nual
fu n d -ra ita r.
N a tion al
broadcasts Irom New York. Allantic
City and Caesars Palace m Las
Vegas
® O CRAZY LIKE A FOX When
Harry inherits a few feet of 1906 film
and tom e old baseball cards, he
discovert that some people will
stop al nothing to have them. (R)
© ( 3 8 ) QUINCY

9:05

8

2:15

© BASEBALL Atlanta Braves al
Chicago Cub*

2:30
O (9) MOVIE "Congratulations. It's
A Boyf" (1971) Bill Bixby. Dane
Baker A carefree playboy gets
turned around when a teen-age boy
appears claiming to be tut son.

10:00

8

3:00

10:05
© 8 PORTS PAGE

10:30
© ( 3 8 ) BOB NEWHART

10:35
© JERRY FALWEU.

11:00
® O ® O NEWS
© ( 3 8 ) FISH
0
(10) ADAM SMfTH'8 MONEY
WORLD
0 (9) HONEYMOONER8

11:30
f l D Q MOVIE
® o AT THE MOVIES Scheduled
"Vietnam in the Movies" A look at
"Apocalypse Now." "First Blood."
"Rambo: First Blood Part II." "Un­
common Valor" and "Misting In
Action " (R )
) (38) CHICO AND THE MAN
_ J (8) MOVIE "The Prince Of Cen­
tral Park" (1977) T.J. Hargrave, lisa
Richard

11:35

0 ( 1 0 ) MUSIC IN TIME

© JOHN ANKERBERQ

3:30
® O U S. OPEN TENNIS CON­
TINUES

490

© (M l HAW AM FIVE-O
flu (10) MUSIC IN TIME
0 ( 9 ) SWITCH
4 :3 0
® BPORTSWORLD Scheduled
Taped coverage of the International
Bicycle Classic with men and wom­
en amateur class cyclists from 14
nation* racing from San Francisco
to Boulder. Colo
® 0 GOLF Taped coverage of the
U S Amateur Championship from
Montclair Goil Club. N J.

0

5:00

5:15
©NEW S

5:35
©

12:00

0 ® JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON COamNUEB
CD0 START OP B O IM T H B tt BIG

Host Steve ASen look* et how auccessful people and popular things
got started. This week: Marietta
Hartley, Andy W a r n s . Unde Blair,
Sid Caesar, novelist Barbara Taytor
Bradford: Crack* Jucas, horo-

© (38) WILD KINGDOM "DJamma
At Horicon" Wildlife biofogistt at­
tempt lo solve the perplexing prob­
lem of a too-successful retug* for
g **s *.(R )

12:05
© R O B E R T SCHULLER

© ( 3 8 ) DANIEL BOONE
0 (10) FIRING LINE The Role Of
Song At School" Guests: the 14member singing group The Whittenpoofs ol Yale University. C lstt ol
1985. (R)
0 (9 )B A R E T T A

WILD, WILD WORLD OF AN!-

12:30
© (38) SEEING STARS Scheduled
interviews with Tina Turner, Chevy
Chase and Roger Moor*

1:00
® O MOVC "The Secret Inva­
sion" (1964) Stewsrl Granger. Raf
V illon i
0 ( 9 ) THE AVENGERS

1K)5
© JIMMY 8WAQOART

2KM
( D O CSS NEWS NIOHTWATCH

EVENING

2:05
© L A R R Y JONES

6:00
® ® 0 ® 0 N E W 8
(38) GRIZZLY ADAMS
(10) SURVIVAL On location in
Sri Lanka and India, cinematogra­
pher Dieter Plage explores the life
ol the endangered Asian elephant
(R » q
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PORTRAIT OF AMERICA: ILU-

6:30
NBC NEWS
CBS NEWS
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FUNKY BREWSTER A
young, orphaned thief la torn be­
tween fws loyalty to tvs new-found
Inends and his promise to help a
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Hal fPart 2 of 2I(R)
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WHISPERING HOPE: UN­
MASKING THE MYSTERY OF ALZHOM CirS DISEASE A documen­
tary about people afflicted with the
degenerative tram disease
© (99) FAME Th* upcoming prom
has no affect on Hotly who reacts lo
her par ants' breakup by becoming
anorexic
(M ) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Jim­
my Buffat t performs "Margaritavia*" and "One Particular Harbor."
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his laundry lo a unique dry cleaner •
• one who dean* shuts and washes
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0 ( 9 ) MOOT GALLERY

0

6:00

®
OC8AMQUE9T Shawn
Waatherty and Al Glddinga are
lomed by Cuban Premier Fidel Cas­
tro as they prepare to secret! tor
sunken treasure off me coast of
Cuba; also, expeditions m me wa­
ters of Santo Oommgo and Micro­
's T n * lagoon.
| MUADErTshE WROTE Jea—r ir r - sabers asm a KOS
(W * * m Conrad) when th *
involved With a defecting
Soviet betel dancer accused ol
murder. (W Q
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Susannah York

0

6:05
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2:35

7.‘05
© A L V IN SHOW

7:15
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TELETHON CONTINUES
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10:30
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COLLEGE BRAIN BOWL (MON)
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0 ® « SANTA BARBARA (TUE-FRO
® o &lt; OUKXNO LIGHT (TUE-THU)
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(3 8) BUGS SUNNY ANO

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SALE OF THE CENTURY

12:30

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SEARCH
FOR TOMORROW
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3:05

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LESS (TUE-THU)
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(36) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

(QTBUOS BUNNY AND FRIENOS
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3:30

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DAYS OF OUR LIVES (TUE-

n n o a l l m y c h il d r e n
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0 (10) MOVK (MON. TUE. THU)
0 (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN

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TINUES (MON, FRI)
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
(8) INSPECTOR GADGET

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0

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© (38) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE
0 (8) VOLTRON, DEFENDER OF
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4:35
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5:00
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NEWLYWED GAME (TUE-

M *A*8*M (TUE-FRI)
LE TS MAKE A DEAL
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kVK&gt;R(TUE)
0 (10) NEW LITERACY: INTRO­
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(10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
(10) ART Of BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
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0

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0

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2:30

CAPITOL (TUE-THU)
© (38) GREAT SPACE COASTER
0 (10) INNOVATION (MON)
0 (10) CALLIGRAPHY WITH KEN
BROWN (TUE)
0 (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(WED)
0 (10) MAGIC BRUSH OF GARY
JENKINS (THU)
0 (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOLORS(FRl)

® JERRY LEWIS LABOR OAY
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9:35

0

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~ Q ONE LIFE TO LIVE
ANDY GRIFFITH
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(10) ON THE MONEY (THU)
(10) FOLKWAYS (FRO

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4:30

2:00

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LOVE CONNECTION (TUE-

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0 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
0 ( 8 ) SUPERFRIENOS

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) (10) FLORIOA8TYLE

8:35
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TELETHON CONTWUES (MON)
j ® DIVORCE COURT (TUE-FRI)
) © DONAHUE
)0 B A H N A S Y JONES
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(tO) SESAME STREET (R) 3
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FRIENOS
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1:30

WHEEL OF FORTUNE (TUE-

11:30

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MOVIE (TUE-FRI)

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7:35

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8:30

SKI

(TUE-FRI)
RYAN'S HOPE
(10) VOYAGE OF THE MRfN
(9) NEW OfCK VAN DYKE
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7:30
) TOM ANO JERRY
) SESAME STREET (R) 3

©

® O TRAPPER JOHN. M.D. J.T.
is stunned when he discovert that
the wives cf two patients bear an
amazing resemblance to on* anoth­
er. (R)
(38) INDEPENDENT NEW8
(10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"The Irish R M " Al the turn of th*
century. M*| Sinclair Yeates re­
signs his commission as a British
officer lo take a post in th* west of
Ireland a* Resident Magistrate.
(Part t of 6 )(R )3
0 (8) MANNIX

2:00
®
O
MOVIE "The Grapes Of
Wrath" (t940) Henry Fonda. Jane
Darwetl Bated on the story by John
Steinbeck. The great Okie migra­
tion to California during the Depres­
sion leave* a lasting impression on
young Tom Joad.
© (36) MOVIE Roman Holiday"
(1953) Gregory Peck, Audrey Hep­
burn. A princess falls in love with a
newspaperman while on vacation in
Rome
(10)MU8IC IN TIME
ATLANTA BRAVES PREGAME

9:00

0

finds himself caught up in attempts
to foil a nefarious enemy plot to vic­
timize Britain by meant ol germ
warfare (R) 3
© (38) BENNY HILL 8HOW In this
one-hour special. Benny portray*
the Gay Caballero tinging about the
women of Spam, and a gawky
clown who brings chaos lo a
menswear store
0 (10) MY8TERYI"Rumpole't Re­
turn" Horace Rumpole leave* re­
tirement in Florida and returns lo
London to defend a client on a por­
nography charge (R) 3
0 (8) MOVIE "Ooldengirl" (1979)
Susan Anton. James Coburn A
young woman it put through a bitarre training program to become
an Olympic champion, but the plan
goes tour when a theatrical agent
uncovers the plot and the girl's
framing threatens her life.

©
VIETNAM: THE TEN THOU­
SAND DAY WAR

© HIGH CHAPARRAL

8:00
I ® VOCE OF VICTORY
) 0 WORLD TOMORROW
) 0 B O B JONES
) (38) WOODY WOOOPECKER
) (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
) ALVIN SHOW
) (8) SUPERFRIENOS

8:30

0

0 ® )eBOBBY BOWDEN
|BLACK AWARENESS
THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
0 (10) GOURMET COOKING

MOIfrJIMQ

6:00

®
DIFF'RENT 8TROKE8
Drummond secretly works on the
assembly line in one ol hit lactones,
and hit suggestions almost cost
turn hit (Ob ( R ) g
® O AIRWOLF Reprise of the se­
ries premier* A Vietnam vet (JanMichael Vincent) and hit partner
(Ernest Borg nine) are called upon to
S ly* a state-of-the-art tighter plane
Irom falling mto Soviet hands. (R)
® O T J. HOOKER When Corri­
gan it accused ol shooting an
unarmed suspect because ol an old
grudge. Hooker sett out to prove
the officer's innocence (R | g
© (38) MOVIE ' I Wanna Hold Your
Hand" (1978) Susan Kendall New­
man. Marc McClure A group of
I960* teen-agers is completely
caught up m the mass hysteria
caused by the musical and cultural
success of The Beall**
(10) PROFILES OF NATURE
COLLEGE FOOTBALL Oregon
al Washington Stale
0
(■) MOVIE "The FBI Story"
11959) James Stewarl. Vera M4*t
The workings ol the FBI affect on*
Agent and rut family

0

91 NIGHT TRACKS
0 ( I ) MOVIE "Night Caller From
Outer Space" (1965) John Saxon,
Palricia Haines

® NEWSCENTER MAGAZINE
( ! ) NIGHT GALLERY

0

11:30

10:30
© (38) BOB NEWHART

(D (10) HEALTH MATTERS

5:00

0 ( 1 0 ) NEW TECH TIME8

®

PEOPLE'S COURT (TUE-

FRI)
® Q NEWS (TUE-FRI)
® O NEWS
HU (tO)OCEANUS(MON)
0 (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
0 (10) NEW LITERACY: INTRO­
DUCTION TO COMPUTERS (WED)
(10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
(10) ART OF BEING HUMAN

8

) (8) MORK ANO MINOY

4:00

®
LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (TUE-FRI)

5:35
© BEVERLY HILLBILUE8

Bill M oyers Asks: 'Whose
Country Is It A n y w a y ? '
Bj Joan Hanauer
UPI T V R eporter
NEW YORK (UPI) - There are
anywhere from 2 to 12 million
Illegal aliens In the United States
today — most but not all or them
from Latin America — and the
U.S. has become the seventh
largest Spanish-speaking
country In the world.
That's the problem Bill Moyers
addresses In his latest documen­
tary. “ CBS Reports: Whose
Country Is It Anyway?" to air
Sept. 3. 8-9 p.m. Eastern time.
The questions he raises and the
issues that must be decided
make thls an Important, absorb­
in g and trou b lin g hour o f
broadcast Journalism.
"There are angry voices In the
promised land." Moyers says In
the opening of the report, and he
proceeds to Illustrate.
Moyers, who evolved from
preacher to politician to reporter,
has a way with words. He also
can empathize with the very real
e m o t i o n s f e l t by t h e El
Salvadoran "Illegal" who lost so
many family members lo her
country's death squads, to the
Texas building trades union
men who feel crowded out of
their jobs by undocumented
workers, and to the native Amer­
icans who feel like aliens In their
own city.
The first segment of the show
concerns Dade County. Fla.,
where Miami Senior High School
is referred to locally as Havana

High, where 40 percent of the
population now Is Hispanic and
w h e r e th e re are w h o le
neighborhoods ‘where English
isn't spoken at all.
In the past, immigrants had to
learn English to take advantage
of the "land of opportunity." but
never before have there been so
many newcomers who speak a
single language other than
English. In Miami, even in a
biology class, the subject Is
English. And in Miami, men ran
become millionaires without
ever having to learn It.
F iv e states a lread y have
passed laws specifying English
as their official language and a
movement Is underway to paaa
similar legislation In Florida.
That brings cries o f racism,
but this is not a movement that
can be dismissed so simply.
Moyers interviews two black
sisters. They need second Jobs as
cleaning women and could not
gel them because they do not
speak Spanish.
"Don't tell us we have to learn
Spanish to gel a Job In our own
country." one of them said.
Incidentally, they sued and the
court ruled that a knowledge of
Spanish is not a valid require­
ment for a cleaning Job.
"The ‘golden door* has turned
to barbed wire.” Moyers says In
the second section, as he looks at
the special problems of the
illegals, sm uggled Into the
country by profiteers of despair

called "coyotes." and hunted
down by helicopters and border
guards like herds of cattle.
The Illegals tell sod stories of
desperation: the border guards
arc almost as desperate In trying
to stem the flood that increasing­
ly Is being masterminded by
smugglers who derive big profits
from their prey.
Then In the third segment
there is the question of whether
Illegal aliens take Jobs away from
Americans and arc willing to
work for lower wages, often
sending their pay back to their
native lands.
In Texas, unionized construc­
tion worker* aay that la what fa
happening: In California's Sillcone Valley, employers say the
valley would die without the
labor of Illegals, including Aslans
as well as Latin Americans.
The unions want a law fining
employers 82.000 for every un­
d o c u m e n t e d w o r k e r : the
employers say they should not
be made responsible for enforc­
ing the law.
Congress, meantime, has been
trying to come up with a new
Immigration bill for three years.
Politics, of course, has its own
priorities.

gg« EDDIE7:JS-fcJB
MURPHY
Beverly Hills

Tips For Business Travelers
On Looking Out For Terrorism

DOBBS FERRY. N.Y. (UPI) Terrorism remains a continuing
3:30
threat to all travelers, especially
© L U C Y SHOW
those on business.
4KM
Potential victims can do much
© AGRICULTURE U S A
to
avert attacks before they
4:30
® O MOVIE "Murder Once Re­ leave, however. "Travel Smart
moved" &lt;1971) John Forsyth*. Bar­ For Dust ness" magazine offers
bara Bam
/
these precautions against terror­
ism.
— Contact the U.S. Depart­
ment of St ate's Citizens
E m e r g e n c y C e n t e r in
W ash in gton . D.C. at (202)
5KM
632-5225. to see if a current
(38) NEWS
Travel Advisory exists regarding
GET SMART (MON, WED. THU)
the country you are visiting.
5:10
— Call the Foreign Commer­
© WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)
cial Service's Information Center
5:30
at (202) 377-0332 for alerts
0 ® 2*8 COUNTRY (TU6-FRQ
affecting the conduct of business
© BEVERLY MUBHJJES (MON.
WED-FRQ
In that country.
© B O B NEWHART (TUE)
— On arrival, follow an un­
6KM
predictable
routine.
0 ® JERRY LEWIS LABOR OAY
— Use travelers checks. Carry
TELETHON (MON)
NBC NEWS (TUE-FRI)
as little cash aa possible and
SBS EARLY MOB
don't use a wallet which displays
credit cards.
EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
OOOO DAY)
— Don't wear expensive Jewel­
n
ry
or flashy clothes.
(8) BATMAN
Fall in Masaachuactts
6:30
The
changing of colors and a
NEYYS(TUE-FRI)
‘ CBS EARLY MORIBIIO changing of the guard combine
this fall in Massachusetts.
® 0 ABC'S WORLD NEWS THM
On every Saturday and Sun­
MORMNGQ
day beginning Sept. 15. the
©aS)POBSVB
©FUNTIME
Massachusetts Horae Guard. In
0(9)ROBOTECH
Revolutionary War costume, will
MS
ride Boston's Freedom Trail to
® 0 EYEWITNESS (M
the State House for a flag-raising
0(W)AJ4.WKATN0I
ceremony. The original U.S. flag
7KM
will be lowered and the pres­
) TODAY(TUE-FRB
ent-day flag flown.
im o m b n o m
Autumn, of course, is moat
noted aa the season when leaves
.turn from green to orange and

gold. Festivals marking the
s p e c t a c u l a r d i s p l a y In
Massachusetts will take place in
towns Including:
— North Adams: "Fall Foliage
Festival Week” runs from Sept.
28 to Oct. 6 and features horse,
pet and art shows, a (lea market,
and a parade on the last day.
Call (413) 663-3735 for details.
— Charlemont: "Foliage Trail
Craft Fair" on Oct. 5 and 6 will
include craft sales and helicopter
rides. Call (413)625-6729.

BREAKFAST
S P E C IA L

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Sunday, Sapt. 1, m s

PRICES

W/
VD

GOOD
SEPTEMBER
1 A 2, 1985

A m e r ic a ’s S u p e r m a r k e t

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PACKS ON FRESH MARKET

GROUND BEEF

C O U P O N S

$ | i»

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SAVE YOU MORE AT WINN-DIXIE!

10 LBS. OR M ORI PRYIR PRIMIUM ORADI
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PINKY PIO PRISH PORK LOIN SPLIT POR
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Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sopt. 1, IMS— ID

Dollars

Born-Again Lawyer

f t

(Non)Conts
Tim othy
Tregarthen

Casselberry Attorney Forsakes Business For Conviction;
Tries To Save Floundering Marriages Through Counseling
By Sussp Loden
Herald S ta ff W riter
Divorce cascs'havc long been the
bread and butter of attorneys Just
starting a practice. Even most
established lawyers still count such
cases as a sizable part of their
workload. But Casselberry attorney
John E. Jones has found that divorce
Isn't for him ... cither personal!" or
professionally.
Since 1980 Jones has refused to
handle divorce cases. Not willing to
stop there, he has even offered to help
potential clients llnd another solution,
hoping lo save their marriages
through counseling.
It's cither that or find themselves
another attorney, one who has a
greater taste for the adversary role a
lawyer takes .when he becomes a
combatant In a falling marriage, "a
wedge between a husband and wife,
or between a mother and children, or
a father and children.” Jones said.
It wasn't always that way. however.
The 42-ycar-old Jones has been an
altorncy for 17 years, practicing In
Seminole County since 1971.
"When I first started doing cases
like that I did the best Job I could for
my clients...."
Add there Is "a very real need” for
domestic legal action, such as pro­
tecting wuincn and children from
violence In the home. But Jones suld If
a couple Is willing to "m ake a
conscious choice that it's really worth
It to know one another, to love one
unothcr and to be loved." they may
have a salvagablc relationship that
shouldn't he Just casually tossed
away.
"I don't mean to be a hypocrite. I do
not like people who have a do-gooder's
attitude, that T m above this ami
you're below It and therefore I’m
better than you,’ or some concept like
that. That’s not what I'm trying to
convey at all.
"I never Intended to stop doing
divorce cases. It Just kind of evolved
as my convictions became stronger. I
don't desire lo be known as an
altorncy who because of his Christian

A ttorney Jo hn E . Jones tinds his desk piled w ith
divorce case tiles trom the past, but no new ones w ill
be added to the stack because Jones has tound
convictions has stopped doing certain
eases and has limited his practice and
(hose other people who would come to
that moral position should do the
same.
"It was an Informal thing from Just
being a person who cares alxnit other
people. If we (he and wife Carolyn) can
help them (with free layman counsel­
ing or referral to professional counsel­
ors). If they arc open lo us helping
them, we'll do It. because I began to
realize in representing people if I
didn’ t look at the whole person,
emotional and spiritual. I really
couldn't take rare of their legal
problems." he said.

The Case O f
The Inscrutable
Trade Deficit

another w a y out ot unhappy m arriages. He w orks
through counseling to try and save failing m arriages.

" I ’m not erltizlng other attorneys.
Most arc trained only lo handle legal
problems.
"But I began to realize what hap­
pens when a family disintegrates —
juvenile problems, emotional pro­
blems. children who don't receive love
and attention, poor school work.
They're all connected. I realized I
wasn't really helping these people.
"The cases never ended. The people
would think. 'Well, my problems will
end al the courthouse steps. Once I
get that divorce I'll be happy.'
"What would happen If there were
children Involved and often even If
there weren't, there would be such

emotional scars that If those weren't
handled or taken care of through
counseling or a spiritual renewal they
would take those scars into the next
relationship and repeal the same
mistakes."
Divorce Isn't always the easy out II
may seem, but "often an attorney
looks ut Mrs. Jones who doesn't like
Mr. Jones and Mr. Jones Is a slob, or
(hey Just don't love each oilier. Sign a
form and they're divorced." Jones
said.
It was a lucrative market for him to
give up. Domestic cases make up 55
percent of Seminole County's rivll
Ses LAW YER, page 0D.

Fortunetellers' Futures Are Under Legal Siege
By Alan Dcrahowlts
Fortunetellers In California and
elsewhere are worried about the future.
The nay-sayers among them predict
that they may be put out of business by
a case now pendi ng before the
California courts.
Several cities have enacted ordi­
nances banning the "foretelling of the
future." either for a fee or for free.
Fearing that such ordinances may shut
down the hundreds of fortunetellers
who read palms, tea leaves and cards In
nearly every city, a Gypsy couple. John
and Fatima Stevens, have challenged
an ordinance banning forlunclclllng.
Their Jawycr Is arguing that the
ordinance Is unconstitutional on sever­
al grounds:
— It violates the First Amendment by
prohi bi ti ng free expressi on anil
freedom of religion.
— It's so vague and broad that It
rould be applied to Biblical prophecies,
newspaper horoscopes and weather
forecasting.
— It discriminates against Gypsies, a
specific ethnic group lo which many
fortunetellers belong.
If the lawsuit succeeds and (lie
ordinance Is declared unconstitutional,
"(h e floodgate will open." says a
detective who specializes In preventing
fortunclclllng rlpoffs. In an interview
with the Los Angeles Times. Detective
Jose Alcnnlaro — one of the officers

assigned to the Los Angeles "Gypsy
detail" — prcdlrlcd that without the
antl-forlunctelllng law on the books.
"California will be crawling with
fortunetellers looking for people sus­
ceptible lo the con games."
lie believes that there's no such thing
as an honest Gypsy fortuneteller, and
he can tell horror story after horror
story of how people have been have

CO JH M ENTARY
been "gypped" (the term Is an elhnlc
slur) during the 16 years in which he
has conducted Ills open campaign to
closedown the fortunclclllng parlors.
Even If the ordinance is ultimately
upheld — and a long court fight that
may end up In the Supreme Court is
foreseen — II won't he easy to control
the flourishing trade In fortunetelling.
The relationship between fortuneteller
and fortunesceker is consensual and
generates few complaints. As with all
such prohibited consensual rela­
tionships — gambling and prnst'tullon
are other examples — the authorities
must send undercover cops to pose as
gullible customers In quest of the
future.
In a recent case, a member of the
"Gypsy detail" went Into n fortunctellIng parlor, compl ai ned about a

Q u irk s
ULOUISVILLE.
M iKVitJjr rvJn
1
the world's longest noodle.
Colo «I
(U1 W
t i)'
Slmson sold his wire and
— A group o f neighbors is
three friends will tqakr the
getting ready for an at*
dough. He and two other
tempt i t * mak|nA .what
m en c o n s tru c te d the
th ey $ «y .will Ke^'ihe
cooker out of wood and
w orld's longest noodle,
which they, promise wlU be
steel.
600 feet long and weigh , : i\*lt holds 300 pounds of
charcoal, On top la a water
morrihan SO pounds.
tray, holding 80 gallons of
" to be the longest
water. W e'll exude the
cooked, edible
n o » 4 lc . V p a r tic ip a n t
ir' ^ ‘ “
L o M llS U n »o n . who la
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W
toWfr th e ‘ tray
■ ir t h is iW ^ r lw S w r iS iir
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for

cnee for a particular type of religious
experience — requires equal treatment
for any set of "beliefs" thal "occupies
In the life of its possessor a place
parallel" lo (hat filled for others by
traditional religions.
No stole may declare that a Gypsy
who sincerely believes (hat he can
prophesy is being any less rational than
were Biblical prophets or current re­
ligious leaders who fill the airwaves
every Sunday morning. Recent at­
tempts to prohibit religious groups
from administering Biblical therapy
have failed.
The stulc docs have lhe power lo
combat religious "fraud." bul It must
prove thal the practitioner doesn't
sincerely believe In the doctrine he's
selling. It's obviously quite difficult for
ihc courts to determine who Is sincere
and who Is exploitative, since these two
characteristics aren't always mutually
exclusive. A great danger to religious
freedom Inheres In ihc likelihood thal
Jurors will be more ready to find thal
non-tradlllonal and unpopular beliefs
— like those espoused und practiced by
Gypsies — lack sincerity. '
In the end. our national commitment
to religious freedom requires us to
tolerate a certain degree of hypocrisy,
and even exploitation, lhai cloaks itself
In the mantle of religion. An even
M s SIEGE, page 6D

by B trk t Breathed

BLOOM COUNTY

‘ ’- • - - T h ^ O l d N oodlm

he and

backache and told the fortuneteller (hat
he had recently come Into 82.000 that
might be "cursed." The Gypsy sug­
gested that he bring In some of the
money — $200 — for a blessing.
Suddenly the fortuneteller realized that
tills might-be a setup: The "customer"
was practically throwing his money at
her. She touched his leg. felt a recorder
and changed her tunc, urging him lo
seek medical udvlce. The case was
dropped.
"W e're the poor man's psychiatrist.”
, one Gypsy said. "People who can't
afford 8100 an hour come here to talk
about thrlr problems ... and we do help
a lot of people."
Those who enacted and enforce the
antl-fortunelelllng ordinance obviously
disagree.
The Issues raised by the challenge lo
the anti-fortunctelllng law transcend
Gypsies and forlunclclllng parlors.
They involve the constitutional right of
every Individual lo reject "rational"
solutions to the existential problems of
life and to seek solace In the irrational,
supernatural or parapsychologlcal
world — a world whose premises arc
not subject to empirical validation.
The First Amendment surely cannot
be Interpreted to limit "religious"
freedom lo conventional, accepted and
established religions. The "establish­
ment clause" — which has been
construed to prohibit any stale prefer-

NEW YORK — I had never seem the
great man looking so depressed.
Fernlock Holmes, ace private de­
tective specializing In economic In­
vestigations and a distant cousin of the
probabl y-l ate Sherl ock H olm es,
slumped despondently In the old dav­
enport. The green of the davenport,
where It showed through chunks of
emerging stuffing, seemed more unfor­
tunate than ever.
Nothing would stir him. I suggested
we go up to Lincoln Center for the
Mostly Mozart Festival, ordinarily one
of the famous detective's favorite
summer diversions. He shrugged off
the suggestion weakly, and continued
staring at the celling.
"You know my powers. Timothy.
They must be used. I have not had a
case of note for months. Nothing has
come my way since that little matter of
the commodities market.
"It has been months. Months!, since I
was able to be of some small service In
that case. My powers, and with them
my soul, fade with disuse like Ice cream
on a hot August sidewalk."
Even the great man's metaphorical
abilities seemed to have left him.
At that moment, the gloom was
broken by a hesitant knock on the door.
The man who presented himself
before Mr. Fernlock Holmes should
have looked resplendent to his pin­
striped suit and singularly tasteful red
tie. But there was a sense of puzzle­
ment about him that offset any
personal attractiveness he might have
had.
Our guest's confusion was Holmes'
tonic. The det ect i ve leaped en ­
thusiastically from the couch.
"Pray seat yourself. Mr. Secretary."
he said delightedly.
Holmes Introduced me to Mr. James
Baker, secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
Holmes examined his uneasy guest
excitedly. He looked like a cat about to
pounce.
"I see you've spent the last few days
making bold progress on tax reforms
that represent ‘America's Second Revo­
lution." that you've been taking dra­
matic step* to bring the deficit under
control, and that you dined this
morning on the excellent bran muffins
at the Fluffy Donut shop," Holmes
announced triumphantly.
"H olm es, you astound m e !" I
exclaimed, thinking It best to humor
him. The long layoff had clearly
affected his mind.
"Mr. Holmes, let me get right to the
point." our guest said suddenly. "As
you are no doubt aware, we are
running a $30 billion trade deficit with
the Japanese.
"Now. we know that to buy all these
Japanese goods, we must be selling
dollars. But we also know that what
goes out must come In. Those dollars
must come back. That means we must
be selling the Japanese something to
make up for all that we're buying from
them.
"The government, Mr. Holmes, wants
to find out who it is that Is experiencing
such uncanny success In selling to the
Japanese, so that the rest of American
Industry might emulate the example. I
needn't tell you that this Is a matter of
the greatest urgency."
The Secretary sank back heavily in
the chair. Holmes took a long puff on
his pipe, a look of disappointment
clouding his face.
"A trifle. A trifle," he said dis­
gustedly. "It Is too simple. There Is
only one firm with the expertise, the
experience, the competitive zeal to
B «e DEFICIT, page 6D

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�Evening Herald
(USPS 411-210)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322*2611 or 831-9993
Sunday, September 1, 1905 — 2D
Wayn* O. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas O lordano, Maoaf log Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Week. 01.10: Month. 04.75: 3 Month?,
014.25: 6 Months. 027.00; Year. 051.00. By Mall: Week.
01.50: Month. 06.00:3 Months. 018 .0 0:6 Months. 032.50:
Year. 060.00.

Bob Thomas' Idea
Still A Good One
W hen Sanford City Com m issioner Robert
"B o b " Thom as suggested back in April the
establishment o f a human relations com m it­
tee w e thought it was a good idea.
Thom as' colleagues on the city commission
apparently did not. T h ey knocked it down,
som e saying they were upset because T h om ­
as had not consulted with them before
proposing such a com m ittee; others saying
they questioned whether suc h a com m ittee is
needed in Sanford; and still others wondered
what, particularly, would be the purpose o f
such a com m ittee, which one com m issioner
termed a "bi-raclal" commission.
T h o m a s h a s o n c e a g a in p r o p o s e d
establishing the-human relations com m ittee,
an d w e s till th in k s it 's a good id ea.
Apparently so do his colleagues now: T h ey
voted unanimously In favor o f creating the
com m ittee and at M ayor Bettye Sm ith's
suggestion gave Thom as the honor o f m aking
the m otion to establish It. Thom as was
gracious enough after the m eeting to say that
the com m ittee is not his. but "th e whole
com m ission's." Thom as is learning quickly
the political finesse necessary to bring about
harmonious and unanimous relations at the
city com m ission level. His human relations
com m ittee m ay be the icing on the cake.
T h e com m ittee's purpose, as Thom as sees
it, "is to stress the prevention o f intergroup
tensions and to continue the maintenance o f
harmony and unity am ong the citizens o f
Sanford while other changes o f a rapidly
growing city take place."
He also envisions the com m ittee fostering
understanding, respect and equal opportunity
am ong all o f Sanford's citizens, regardless o f
age. race, religion or social status. Sounds
delightfully familiar.

DICK WEST

It's The Most Kindest Cut Of Them All
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Agriculture re­
searchers are reported to have found a littleknown chemical that Increases the life of cut
flowers.
Fine. Now if they can find a chemical that also
Increases the life of uncut flowers, they really
will be performing a public service.
The chemical anlmooxyacctic acid (AOAA) Is
said to make cut flowers last longer by
suppressing a hormone that causes aging in
plants.
I suspect the hormone Infests uncut plants In
my flower beds as well, they age so quickly.
I am thinking In particular of some geraniums
I put out last spring. They seemed to grow old
almost overnight.
One day they had the bloom of youth about
them. The next day they were wrinkled and
doddering.
How nice It would have been to have been able
to douse them with a chemical that would
suppress the production of ethylene, which the
Agriculture Department identifies as " a
hormone that starts the ripening and aging of
flowers, fruits and vegetables."

L etters to the editor are welcome for
blicatloa. A ll letters m ast be signed and
dade a m ailing address and, I f possible, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald re­
serves the righ t to ed it letters to avoid libel
and to accommodate space.

C

"S WORLD

hortlculturallsts tell us.
To that I can only add: Aren't we all?
The news release warns that unless cut
flowers are treated with AOAA they will release
hormones which, once airborne, "triggers the
aging of all nearby cut flowers, even treated
ones."
That paragraph says a lot.
Some of the ethylene probably also gets In the
nostrils of untreated cut flower sniffers. But we.
have geriatricians to take care of those pro­
blems.
Thus far. however, only a few research
projects have dcnlt with cut flower geriatrics.
The news release doesn't say how the
preservative Is applied — whether added to the
water, sprayed on or what. When anti-ethylene
chemicals are developed for outdoor use. I
assume they will be available in pellets that can
be burled in the soil.
It surely would be great to stick a few pellets
Into a flower bed and know the geraniums arc
going to stay young all summer.
As for cut chrysanthemums, let them look out
for themselves.

RUSTY BROWN

SCIENCE WORLD

America
Getting
'Mailed'

Copter
Blade
Braces?

Some years ago, a young friend in
the East complained to me that her
p a r e n ts w e r e m a ll J u n k ies:
"W h e n e v e r 1 go back to my
hometown, they always want .to
take me to the newest mall."
Her disdain for their addiction is
rare. Most Americans are magnet­
ically drawn to the citadels of
consumerism — those regional
s h o p p in g c e n te rs w ith th e ir
multitude of stores, crowds of peo­
ple and tons of merchandise from
which to make tempting choices.
We don't even mind the parking lots
Jammed from Thanksgiving to
Christmas.
Shopping centers are where
b r o w s in g an d b u y i n g h a v e
burgeoned into a national charac­
teristic. Aided and abetted by the
profusion of credit cards, of course.

By R ath Youngblood
NEWINGTON. Conn. (UPI) - The
high technology used to produce
stronger but lighter helicopter
tail-rotor blades is turning out leg
braces enabling the victims of
muscle diseases to walk without
shackles of metal.
Instead of braces forged from
cumbersome steel or the bulky
c o m b in a tio n o f p la s tic and
aluminium, prosthesis specialists
and engineers are confident the
composite material used to reduce
the weight of helicopters will revolu­
tionize supports for the handi­
capped.

Only now are there signs that the
proliferation of new malls is coming
Commissioner David Farr, w ho previously to an end. A change in lifestyle
opposed creating the human relations com ­ could be in store for all of us.
mittee. said he's changed his mind because
In the course of time, malls have
he now believes such a com m ittee would become community centers.
im prove Sanford, although he also said he
A place for couples to meet for
still has som e "reservations." But Farr adds: dinner and do a little spending
" I f It im proves the quality o f life In Sanford. afterwards. Perfect for Yuppies and
their intent on acquisition. A place
I'm for it."
for the elderly to meet on a bench —
i f It fosters understanding, respect and not to buy. but to benefit from the
equal opportunity for all o f Sanford's citizens, air conditioning on u hot summer
bar none, how could it not Im prove the day. A place for teens to congregate
around the big fountain, then head
quality o f life?
to the mall movie. A place for
T h e ordinance drafted to create the com ­ aerobic walkers to check in early
m ittee must now withstand two additional and pace the dimly lit promenades
city com m ission meetings before it can be before the stores open.
officially established. T h e city commission
In his book. "The Mailing of
should unanimously approve the measure at A m e r ic a , " W illia m S e v e r in l
those m eetings with the same dispatch it did Kowlnskl says malls replaced Main
at the last m eeting and get this overdue panel Street and became the new town
centers. Spawned by sprawling
created.
suburbia and the subsidized federal
highways leading to them, malls
sprang up around freeway in­
t e r c h a n g e s an d a w a y fro m
downtown.

Pleas* Write

It was good of the department to explain what
ethylene Is. I would have guessed it was a
petroleum additive that hastens the ripening of
gasoline.
Anyway. I am not so sure of the need to delay
the onset of senility in vegetables. Some carrots
I know remained immature long past the time It
said In the seed catalog they would ripen.
But flowers definitely need something that
will prolong their actuarial callowness. And
anlmooxyacctic acid looks like it.
"Tests of carnations showed that AOAA
tripled the number of days after cutting that
flowers stayed fresh and attractive, compared to
leaving the cut plants only In water." says a
department news release.
The question of whether carnations are
attractive at any time Is. of course, a matter of
taste.
A neighbor suggested I failed to water to the
geraniums properly. But I think 1 can recognize
senescence when I see it. And if those plants
weren't suffering from superannuation, how
come they needed artificial blossoms?
"Flowers are very sensitive to ethylene."

Their design and management,
Kowlnskl theorizes, is based on
three principles: enclosure, protec­
tion and control. Shoppers are
p ro te c te d fro m w e a th e r and
guarded by a private security force.
Malls are privately run, controlled
environments, which the author
calls "capitals of suburbia."
Now. the business pundits predict
a trend away from large, regional
m alls and a return to sm all
neighborhood shopping comers —
the so-called "strip center." usually
a collection of small shops around a
superm arket and a discountretailer. Reasons for the turn­
around are said to be lower rents
and operating costs in strips and a
better cash return for investors.

ItJ

JULIAN BOND

Boycott Pretoria Gold
it isn't surprising that -the Rev.
Jerry Falwell has returned from a
state-sanctioned visit to South
Africa an "expert" on all things
A frica n and an ap ologist for
apartheid.
After all. Falwell Is a supporter of
President Reagan and Reagan's
policy in Southern Africa. It is those
policies that Falwell is supporting In
an attempt to rally conservatives
and the religious right-wingers to
th e d e f e n s e o f t h e w h i t e supremacist state.
Among other things. Falwell has
promised the South African gov­
ernment he will attempt to marshal
opposition to a final congressional
agreement on the anti-apartheid
legislation that has passed both the
House and Senate. Most interesting­
ly. he has pledged to urge Ameri­
cans to buy Krugerrands, the South
African gold coin that helps provide
A m erican i nvestment for the
apartheid system.
The coins are named for Afrikaner
Paul Kruger (1825-1904). Kruger
once said. "The black man must be
taught that he came second and
that he belongs to the inferior class
and must obey." Today, the coins
minted In his name help keep black
men and women in the place Paul
Kruger's descendants want them to
be.
Even though Africans are 72
percent of the population, they arc
able to live permanently on only 13
percent of the total land in South
Africa, and cannot vote or own
property.
In 1982, the average monthly
wage was $1,136 for whites: for
blacks U was $250. In 1981-82, the
government spent $1,199 on educa­

tion for each white child and only
$145 for each black child. In 1980.
13 of every 1.000 white children
died in infancy; in some rural areas.
240 of every 1,000 black children
died In Infancy.
Although Krugerrands are legal
tender in South Africa, they are
minted primarily for the Investor
market. "More than any other coin,
the world buys its gold In the form
of Krugerrands," said the Interna­
tional Gold Corp. It should know.
The corporation — known as In­
tergold — is a subsidiary of South
Africa's Chamber of Mines, which
directs the production of gold. The
chamber then sells its gold bullion
to the government for export. The
government mints Krugerrands,
which arc then returned to the
chamber to be sold through In­
tergold.
Krugerrands accounted for almost
one-quarter of the value of U.S.
Imports from South Africa in 1983
and 1984. In 1983. U.S. Krugerrand
imports were $450.2 m illion.
Worldwide, almost $4.7 million
were sold in 1983 for $1.5 billion.
That is the system that Falwell
wants all Americans to support. His
argument, like that of the Reagan
administration, is that the United
States is dependent upon South
African gold. But world gold stock is
equal to 100 years of South African
gold production. According to Alan
Davison, precious metals analyst at
Shearson Lehman in London.
America can easily do without
South African gold.
And Jerry Falwell can do without
his newly minted association with
white supremacists.

"Progress In braces has been
fru stratln gly s lo w ." said Ron
Altman, director of orthotics at
Newington Children's Hospital. "In
everyday life we're exposed to
wonderful technological changes,
but I'd come in here and the best
modem medicine could offer was
out of the Dark Ages."
It is particularly frustrating for the
y o u n g v i c t i m s o f m u s c u la r
dystrophy, Altman said, with the
progressive wasting of the muscles
requiring increasingly heavy braces.
"The extra energy required to .
stand and walk becomes more
exhausting with the additional'
w eight," Altman said. "A s the
m u scles becom e w eak er and
weaker, the braces become bigger
and heavier until they actually
hamper movement.”
Altman wondered if there wasn't
some way to keep the youngsters on
their feet without weighing them
down. Upon reading about the
stronger, lighter blades produced by
Sikorsky Aircraft. Altman thought.
"Walt a minute! Why can't we try to
use the material for bracing?"
Engineers at the nation's largest
supplier of military helicopters were
intrigued.
"It's turned out to be the best
program I'm working with." said
Adrian Cooper, senior design
engineer. "Here are these patients
with an irreversible disease. They
end up with braces that are so
h e a v y t h e y h a v e to u s e a
wheelchair."
"Hopefully, they’ll be walking for
two additional years with the lighter
ones."
One of the first considerations was
whether the new composite materi­
al would cause skin problems.
Altman said. It did not.
"W e make sure the graphite fiber
have no contact with the skin.'
Cooper explained. "The part tha
does is made of epoxay or polyestei
resin."

JA C K ANDERSON

A s b e s t o s C l e a n u p Is .H in d e r e d

"Look at th0 size o f that crowd! What group Is
this Pops guy with?"

By Jack Anderson
And
Joseph Spoor
WASHINGTON - Removal of
asbestos material from thousands of
the nation’s schools has come to a
virtual halt because insurance com­
panies are canceling the policies of
the firms that do the messy and
dangerous Job. This means that
millions of American children will
continue to be exposed to the risk of
cancer and asbestasls as the fireretardant material crumbles with
age.
"The plight is a most serious one
in this nation, with more than
31.000 schools, to say nothing of
1.400 governmental buildings and
hundreds of thousands of private
structures, which contain asbestos
and must have it removed." Henry
Nozko. president o f AMCAT. a
leading asbestos-removal company,
warned White House officials re­

cently in a private letter we've seen.
In other high-risk areas, insurance
companies have reacted to poten­
tially ruinous payoffs by raising
their premiums. But In the case of
asbestos removal, which entails the
threat of injuries or illness that
might not surface for vears. and are
thus difficult to plan for actuarlally.
the companies have simply can­
celed the policies.
"C IG N A Insurance Co. p re­
cipitously canceled all of AMCAT's
insurance — liability, property
damage, auto and others — because
they wanted no part of Insuring
anyone who removes asbestos."
Nozko wrote, adding: "AMCAT's
Insurance agents went to more than
80 insurance companies in America
and found that none are interested
in underwriting this risk."
AMCAT finally found one com­
pany that would sell it Insurance,
but at an extremely high premium:

20 percent of AMCAT's revenues.
That's almost 10 times the pre­
miums it had been paying. "It has
practically destroyed the com ­
pany." Nozko told our associates
D o n a l d G o l d b e r g a nd I n d y
Badhwar. "W e will make no money
this year."
Nozko said that hundreds of
removal firms have had their Insur­
ance canceled, either Immediately,
like AMCAT's. or when the policies
expire. "It's a disaster: there are no
two ways about it." he said.
In his letter to the White House.
Nozko said remqval of asbestos from
schools is "a serious national pro­
blem. which Is now at a standstill
unless government Intervention
resolves (It)." He estimated that 40
m illion you n gsters are being
exposed to asbestos danger, and
said asbestos removal contractors
"must be insured."
The insurance crisis has not gone

unnoticed at the White House. The
situation was outlined In June in a
Cabinet Affairs Memorandum dis­
tributed to several federal agencies
for comment. Officials familiar with
the problem confirmed that many
asbestos-removal firms are also
having difficulty finding affordable
insurance.
So far. the Reagan administra­
tion’s response has been to support
legislation sponsored by Sen. Bob
Kasten. R-W ls., which would
establish a pool of funds to provide
insurance coverage. But the bill has
failed to get out of committee.
CLARIFICATION: In a recent col-"
umn on air traffic safety, we left the
Impression that there arc onlyAUx
Air Route Traffic Control Centers In
the nation. Actually, there are 20;
the six we Identified, including the
one at (slip. Long Island, are the
busiest.

�»r\

■

OPINION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sept. 1, IMS— 3D

Making W orkers O ut Of W elfare Mothers
been devoted to helping abandoned,
widowed, divorced and unwed mothers
make the transition from the welfare
rolls to the workplace.

They screen applicants to determine
iskill levels and basic Interests. Each
woman goes through a thrcc-wcck
employment readiness training pro­
gram. If necessary, additional prepara­
It began In 1973. when Lupc
tion is provided through continuing
Angulano organized 100 San Antonio
education programs and local commu­
mothers In a "L et’s Get Off Welfare
nity colleges. The employers agree to
Campaign." About half of the women
provide final training for hirccs.
returned their welfare checks and took
The organization provides assistance
Jobs that had been arranged for them.
with transportation and child care.
The remaining women soon made the
.Those Interested In child care as a
Lupe Angulano would like to change same transition.
career are offered training at communi­
those welfare cheeks Into paychecks..
ty colleges In child development and
Bouycd by her success. Angulano
Angulano was born In Colorado of poor
business management. Upon gradua­
immigrant parents who had fled the f ounded the Nati onal W o m e n ’ s
tion. they are assisted in opening child
Mexican Revolution. Her family spent Employment and Education. Iric.. an
care facilities.
the summers as migrant farm workers organization she still heads. It exists to
The organization has built an Im­
hi California. At age 20 she became a assist welfare mothers In finding work.
pressive record of success. Local chap­
nun but left the convent 15 years later Over the last twelve years. Angulano
ters place an average fifteen women a
because "efforts I was making for and her volunteers have helped
bousing reform were hindered by my thousands of these women find pro­ month. At the end of a year. 88 percent
ductive employment.
are still on the Job. and many woman
official position."
have moved on from entry-level to
The organization Is more than a Job
In the following years, she worked as placement service. Angulano and her
better paying positions. Some have
a youth counselor, an official In the volunteers actively recruit local busi­ even begun their own businesses.
Johnson administration and an orga­ nesses and national corporations,
Angulano has created the Women's
nizer for Cesar Chavez. For the last 12 twisting arms where necessary, to
Employment and Education Model
years, her considerable energies have create entry-level Jobs for their clients.
Program, funded primarily with private

The American welfare system and
the benefit or harm it brings to the poor
Is a hotly debated topic these days. But
the disputants will agree on one point
— the feminization of poverty. Most
households below the poverty line arc
headed by women. For most of these
women the primary source of Income Is
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children (AFDC).

sector money. The objective Is to
convincingly demonstrate the e f­
fectiveness of their approach In order to
convince Congress to change AFDc
from an Income maintenance to an
employment and skills training pro­
gram.
The National Women's Employment
and Education's ultimate aim is to
"reform the American welfare system
nationally." Given Lupe Angulano's
energy, dedication and creativity, they
may Just succeed where others have
failed.
Lupe Angulano received the George
Washington Honor Medal for Individual
Achievement from Freedoms Founda­
tion. The National Awards Program
seeks to honor Individuals and organi­
zations whose activities support and
perpetuate the Ideals Inherent In the
American political, social and economic
system. Nominations from the public
arc welcome and should be directed to:
Director o f Awards. Freedoms Founda­
tion at Valley Forge. Valley Forge. PA

19481.

O UR READERS WRITE
Memory Jogged
The recent stories about the
Olympic Village have Jogged my
memory to asking about the progress
of the 63.000 scat football stadium to
be built at the Sanford Airport?
Robert Daehn
Sanford

More Ramps, Please
On behalf of the trem endous
amount o f boaters In Seminole
County and with the higher taxes our
Commissioners are receiving (Includ­
ing property and gasoline), wouldn't it
be nice and also tasteful If for a
change the (the Commissioners) be
thoughtful enough to repair and
acquire new boating ramps.
At present there arc only two (2)
ramps in service on the St. Johns
River In Seminole. Anyone crossing
the bridge on 17-92 can see the
dangerous congestion especially on
weekends. I am sure I write for
thousands In the area and the many
retired who look forward to this a*
their only recreation.
Gil Ogllne
Lake Mary

■ T fls iw .

Selling Blood Way Of Life, Death In India
By Patricia Cohen
NEW DELHI. Indlu (UPI) Thin and ragged. Mohlndcr lies
on a dirty sheet, his blood
draining through a tube In his
arm to a milk bottle-shaped
container.
The 35 year old has lived the
past 16 years by selling his
blood. Four. five, sometimes
IO limes a month, he travels to
one of India's commercial
blood banks, earni ng 50
rupees, about $4. j m .t visit.
Mohlndcr. whose weight Is
down to ubout 100 pounds. Is
one of thousands in India's
squalid blood trade whose
poverty drives them to risk
death from the continuous
depletion of red blood cells.
"When there’s no Job. what
else can one do?" said Palu.
33. who for the past six years
has sold Ids blood about six
times per month. "1 started
giving blood because I had to
support my children.”
Sellers are threatened by a
variety of Illnesses linked to
frequent bloodletting. They

also, face unhygenic blood
banks.
People who receive the blood
are little better off. For lack of
adequate screening, blood sell­
ers who have diseases such as
malaria, venereal disease or
hcpatltus arc rarely caught.
And to compound the pro­
blem. India's hospitals have
little choice but to use suspect
blood because there arc few
voluntary contributions to of­
fset the acute national short­
age.
"I don't know If a blanket
ban (on professional donors) Is
ver y he l pf ul . " said P.R.
Dasgupta. Health Ministry
Joint secretary. "Voluntary
(donations) cannot make up
the need and there may be a
critical shortage of blood."
The Red Cross and World
Health Organization limit the
number of donations a person
enn make to one every 90
duys. "Three months is the
world standard, but we don't
have to do what the world

does." said Dr. V.B. Lai. who
has operated a blood bank for
38 years. He allows donations
every two months.
By comparison. U.S. guide­
lines for blood donation are
very strict. Almost all blood Is
collected by the Red Cross and
Ame r i c a n Assoc i at i on of
Communi t y Blood Banks,
which first screen donors and
then test the blood. Suspect
units are discarded.
In India, some donors travel
500 miles every month to sell
blood In different cities, while
others depend on blood banks
to overlook the date of their
last visit or the fresh puncture
wounds In their arms.
Some sellers say they were
lured Into the trade by blood
bank agents who prowl bus
terminals, railwny stations and
the slums of old Delhi.
Bloodsellcrs who gather In a
park In old Delhi said agents of
a blood bank owned by Dr.
Arvind Lai — no relation to
V.B. Lai — recruit voung boys.

even though bloodletting can
stunt growth.
"There were two boys with
me (on regular trips to sell
blood)." said Mohlndcr. "One
about 13 and (lie other about
15. The younger one died.”
The two Dr. Lais vehemently
denied taking blood from un­
deraged boys nr using ngents
to find donors.
An inspection of a blood
bank register showed donors
rejected because they were
f o u n d to h a v e a n e m i a ,
hcpatltus. malaria or VD. But
critics say large numbers of
sick donors go undetected.
Puri said commercial blood
banks fall to adequately test
for disease and often use Im­
properly sterilized equipment.
"They ure playing not only
with the lives of those people
who arc giving blood, but the
lives of those receiving It." said
Purl.
A viral hcpatltus outbreak
killed nearly 1.000 people in
the southern city of Ahmed-

abad last year and India Today
magazine linked the disease to
dirty syringes and Infected
blood.
" T h e legal requirem ent
d o e s n ' t spel l out whi ch
methods (should be used) to
run tests on blood." said Dr.
M.L. Gupta, director of the Red
Cross Blood Bank in India,
citing one reason for the resale
of bad blood. Another Is that
professional donors desperate
for money lie about their
medical histories.
Blood bank operators Insist
they follow regulations and
government officials deny the
sale of infected blood is fre­
quent.
There have been no apparent
attempts to prosecute sellers of
tainted supplies.
While ackn ow legln g the
dangets of the blood trade,
officials argued that pro­
fessional donors are a neces­
sary evil. It is better to have
low-quality blood, they say.
than noncat all.

n

Taking
Cara
Cheryl
Jensen

Medicare Unlikely
To Pick Up Tab
For Nursing Home
In a recent survey, the American
Association of Retired Persons found
that 79 percent of Its members thought
that Medicare and the Medicare sup­
plement would pay for their nursinghome care.
They were wrong.
"I think It really shows the lack of
knowledge about what Medicare cov­
e rs ." says Jack Christy. AAR P's
legislative representative.
In reality, of the $25.1 billion spent
for all types of nursing-home care In
1984, some 51.9 percent came directly
out of Individual's pockets. Of the 48.1
percent that the government paid.
Medicaid's portion was 41.5 percent
and Medicare's was only 2.1 percent.
Medicare wasn't designed to cover
long-term care. Medicare benefits are
meant to cover only the need for
" s k ille d " nursing or skilled rehabllitaton services after hospitaliza­
tion.
Instead of skilled care, people In
nursing homes more often need cus­
todial or intermediate care — help with
such personal needs as eating and
dressing.
Further. It Isn’t easy to meet the
requirements Medicare has set In order
to pay for skilled care. These are:
— The patient must have been
hospitalized for at least three days for
the same Illness that requires the
skilled care.
— The patient must be transferred to
a skilled nursing facility within 30 days
after discharge from the hospital, with
the transfer certified by a doctor.
— The facility must be a Medicarecertified. skilled nursing home.
— The care provided must be defined
as "skilled."
— Skilled nursing or skilled re­
habilitation services must be needed on
a dally basis, and can only be provided
if the person Is an in-patient In a skilled
nursing facility.
— Generally, the patient must show
potential for recovery.
Christy says the definition of "skilled
care" and the decision about whether a
patient qualifies "vary ao much from
region to region and state to state that
it is a very unreliable benefit.
"Medicare pays only 1 percent of Its
budget for skilled care." he says, "and
nursing homes don't want to partici­
pate In the program. There's no in­
centive for them. There Is a real accessproblem to skilled nursing faclllles for
Medicare beneficiaries."
If a person manages to meet all of
these requirements. Medicare will cover
services for 100 days In a benefit
period. This means that:
— Medicare pays for all covered
services for the first 20 days; and
— For the 21st through 100th days.
Medicare pays for all covered services,
except for $50 a day. (That's the
amount as of Jan. 1, 1985; it changes
each year.)
Once the 100 days in a benefit period
Is used up. the patient must be out of
the facility for 60 days in a row before
another benefit period can begin. How­
ever. this may not be a major factor,
says Christy, since studies show that
28 days is the average length of stay In
a skilled-care facility.
What about Medicare supplemental
(Medlgap) Insurance?
"Don't look at that Medlgap to ball
you out and pay for something that
Medicare won't pay for." says Christy.
" I t only kicks In to supplement
Medicare, f o l l o w i n g Medicare
guidelines."

What News£a£ers Across The Nation Are Saying

Staged Mayhem Good Test Of Airport Security
By United Press International
The (Providence, R.I.) Journal-Bulletin
Airport security, designed to keep armed
hijackers off airliners. Is no game. But police In
San Francisco recently Improved security at San
Francisco International Airport by adopting a
proven technique from the sports world: scrimmuglng.
Acting on orders from Mayor Dianne Feinstein.
|M)licc smuggled a gun and a hand grenade
through security and onto planes at the airport.
Several officers staged a fist fight to divert the
guards' attention while other officers sneaked
through security. The ruse worked, and as a
result, uirport officials tightened security suffi­
ciently to foil subsequent attempts by police.
Stopping potential hijackers with sophisticated
metal detectors and X-rays is. after all. much like
stopping the opposing team by way of fancy
defense plays ... Mayor Fclnstein's scrimmaging
is an inexpensive and effective antidote. A gun or
Itomb successfully carried through security helps
pinpoint the system's vulnerabilities. Every
airport with a security system should be
surreptitiously challenged — frequently — by
locul police.
No one needs the Rev. Jerry Falwell stirring the

South African pot of trouble.
Vet. the resolute reverend has been on the
move, carrying on the unhelpful tradition of
private diplomatic Initiative. He's been to visit
Pieter Botha and emerged as a new apologist for
the misunderstood South African regime. He's
going to unleash a mllllon-dollar campaign to
Inform the American public, and he's urging
people to buy krugerrands. He's called Bishop
Desmond Tutu a phony because the bishop
wouldn't Include himself in a meeting of church
leaders with Botha.
Falwell Isn't much of an example of the spirit
that made America great. A segregationist until
he got religion. Falwell has adopted as his own a
simplistic vision of the world based firmly on
19th century political thought. He's a good
salesman, and therefore convinces thousands of
decent Americans, who confuse sincerity with
virtue and send funds for the propagation of his
dubious doctrines.
Unhappy Liberia has Its own version of one
man. one vote. There, only one man's vote
matters. The man is Samuel K. Doe. the former
sergeant who at age 28 ensconced himself as
president In I960 after tils soldiers bayoneted a
civilian predecessor. Mr. Doe Is now a five-star

general whose most conspicuous victory is over
the calendar. He has added two years to his age
so that, officially, he will be 35. as required by the
Constitution, when the people of his West Africa
country choose him as president in November's
election.
To assure that result, all serious opposition
parties have been ruled ineligible, their leaders
jailed, their newspapers silenced. His most
formidable challenger is Ellen Johnson-Slrleaf ...
Citibank's representative In Nairobi.... Last week,
incredibly, she was put on trial for sedition.
... General Doe's erratic despotism now outdoes
his predecessors'.
Nonetheless, since his coup. U.S. Foreign aid to
Liberia has quadrupled to $83 million this year,
the highest per capita figure In Africa.
The general ... assumes that the Reagan
Administration will put up with anything so long
as he makes anti-communist noises ...
T M D aily O H i I w m , Ohlsh— C ity
As pressure mounts on President Reagan to
back away from his threatened veto of sanctions
against South Africa, another government study
emphasizes the heavy U.S. dependence on that
country for vital minerals.
The Commerce Department's Office o f Strategic
Resources confirms earlier studies In concluding

that any disruption o f supply from South Africa
would have a severe Impact on the U.S. economy
and our military preparedness....
Consider the following figures from the study:
platinum. 49 percent; chromium, 55 percent;
manganese. 39 percent, and vanadium. 44
percent. In addition. 61 percent of U.S. cobalt
usage comes through South Africa from Zambia.
' We should have learned from our experience
with ill-advised sanctions against Rhodesian
chromium. We had to pay higher prices for
chrome of lesser quality from the Soviet union.

Chicago Tribune
For the last nine years, the KGB has been
tracking the movement o f Americans in Moscow
by putting a dust-like chemical on their
doorknobs and steering wheels ... which seem to
have been added to telephone taps and poisoned
umbrella tips as standard KGB equipment.
According to the State Department ... this
rhemical Is potentially carcinogenic.
The Soviets deny all this.... But what cannot be
discounted is another issue raised by the State
Department announcement. The U.S. govern­
ment seems to have been aware o f this devil-dust
since 1976. but said nothing until now. Why not?
And why now?

�Sunday, Sept. 1, 1985

4 U — evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Adventist
m UVtNTM DAY
ADVtHTtST CHURCH
Camay al 7th A It*
No Agfa)
Paitar
Saturday Serricet
l ahhath Schaal
9:10am.
Warahtp Saratca
11:00im .
Wadnatday Night
Prayar Saratca
7:00am.

...THE HOPE
OF OUR COMMUNITY,

The
Church...

Assembly Of God
riRST A s s m i r or coo

Camay 27th A Ilaaa
Phaaa 122-9222

PIN!CRIST OAPTIST CHURCH
119 W. Atrpart Otad.. Saalard
122-1717
Raa. Tam lacaki, 0. Mia.
Paitar
Raa. Staaa Idnirdt. RUaiitar al
121-0099
Idacatiaa and Tenth
Ratca Ran an
Paitar
Oikte Study
9.45 am.
Warning Saratca
11:00am.
11:00 am.
laaatag Saratca
7:00pm. Mamtng YYarahtp
laaatag Warahip
7:10 pm.
Wadaaaday
rttlOO M ASUMAIY Of COD
5:10 pm.
ISIS W. Sth St.
(:10 pm.
lianata L lahai aa
Paitar
Haraary Praatdad far
Saaday Schaal
9:45 am.
AN I
Warahip Saratca
0:15A 11:00 am.
laaatag Warahip
4:00 pm.
Wadnaidayr family Right
7:00 pm.

Fredgir Smith
Sunday Schaal
Meniieg Warahip
Church Training
[&gt;Mia| Wertkip
Wag. Freyer S ank i

2914
Paitar
9:4S am.
11:00 am.
S:00 pm.
7:00 pm.
7:00 pm.

COUHTRYSIDI OAPTIST CHURCH
Canatry Ctah Raad. laha Mary
Alary M. Lang
Paitar
Sunday Schaat
9:4$ pm.
Preaching A Warthiplag 10:45 am.
Oikte Study
4:10 pm.
Sharing A Praclataung
7:10 pm.
Wad. Prayar Meat
7:10 pm.
Hnrtary Praridad
FIRST OAPTIST CHURCH
519 Park Aaaaaa, Saalard
Raa. Paal I . Murphy, Ir.
Paitar
Kan Onaai, Miaiitar at tducattaa
aad Tenth
Radaty Oraaht
Miaiitar al Mntic
Saaday Schaat
9:4S am.
Marutng Warahtp
10:55 am.
tanning Warahip
7:00 pm.
Wad. Prayar Saratca
4:10 pm.
MROAH 1APT1ST CHURCH
920 Upiale Rd.
EIgva Hemthy
Paitar
Saaday Schaat
10:00 am.
Marutng Saratca
11:00 am.
laaatag Saratca
7:10 pm.
Wedaatday Saratca
7:10 pm.
Old Truth! tar a Nan Day
LAKtVKW OAPTIST CHURCH
124 Laheaten, Laha Mary 121-0210
lachia Hii
Patter
Sunday Schaat
9:45 am.
Warahip Saratca
11:00 am.
tanning Warahtp
7:00 pm.
Wadnatday Oikte Study
4:10 pm
Haraary Praridad
FIRST OAPTIST CHURCH
OF 10MW00D
I I k Wait cl 17-92 an Huy. 414
ISeatbemi
Raa. laawa W. Haaaaack. 0. Mm.Patter
Raa. Rich Chatfla Miatatar al t dacetoe*.
Tenth
Raa. Preaten Craana Miaiitar al
Malic aad Acbaitiai.

Wai Irwung
Prayer Serric#

IRtdSi
IM S a
740 p

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040 0 1 1 4 0 a m
0:49 a m
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9409m

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141

1140 am.

Maa'a Prayar I
lit Thai
Maa'i FaOawahip
9rd Thnraday
AM p.m.
Haraary Praatdad Far AR Saratcat

1040 am.
74 0 pm.
1140 am.

riNRTtO
Huy. 17-92 at Plnay Hdga Od.
C m iOirry
Rat. A Wight UrMey

HOST CROSS
401 Pmk Am .
11m Ran. Laray 0. Sapar
1040 am.
1140 am
ST. SITU S IPfSCOPAL CHURCH

M W MOUNT CALVARY
MISSIONARY OAPTIST CHURCH
I1 IS Wail 12th SL
Raa. Caarge W. Warren
Saaday Schaat
9:10 a m
Weening Saratca
11:00am.
laaaiag Saratca
5:10 pm.

Paitar

Patter
040-11 am
AM am

Episcopal

FaRauMdpCaflaa hrtuaaa aarak aa
ffTart
ADO pm
RMTF
ADO pm.
ItaMat Warahip
740 pm.
ADO pm
740 pm

Laha Mmy, Fla.
TRMRTT UW m HSTHOOIIT CHURCH
S24 Saalard Am . A Siith SL
Oat. Tray Raid M
Paitar
dl
Otractar af Hank

14*4 01

Moth

FIRST OAPTIST CHURCH
MARKHAM W000S
5400 Markham Waadl Raad
Lake Mary. Flerida
Dr. Rahert (Oak) Parker
Paitar
Oibie Study
9:45a.*.
Warahtp
10:45am.
Tenth Chair
5:00 pm.
Charch Training
4:00 pm.
Warahtp
7:00 pm.
Wadaaaday Serrtcai
Prayer A Rihle Study
740 pm.
Adult Chair
A 00 pm.

Denominational
Wad. OAta Study

AM am
1140 am
740 pm.

tVAOSnJCAl
219
1040 am
1440 am

WertMp

ORACt I
Raa. Mm A 1
2144 ||, Sfgftrvl I n ,
221-0004

Catholic

Christian

1140 am.

A4S am
1A4S am
i Sendee (Wad.)
740 p m
-j| a
— »---MNuMy rTwVTOOO a.
IW_I m
ooftiw *

U S Maple Am .

Saalard. 221-2297
AOaa W. NaRmlat, Ir.
| Santee 1040 a m
i laaatag Saratca
740 p m

Presbyterian
FIRST PRURVT1RUN CHURCH
0 4 Am A 2rd Street

1AM i
A M pm
740 p m
Friday laaaiag BMe Study 740 p m

They're convinced the key has
been Faith. Family life was built on a
religious foundation. Children had the
vital blessings of spiritual training at
Church. Now the grandchildren are
growing up with d e e p - r o o t e d
convictions.
Accept the Lord's help In raising
your family!

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
IDiactplaa 01 Chrtatl
1407 4. Saalard A m .
S. t guard Manna
Pantar
9:45 am.

Aea.
Patter

SANFORD HOUSt OF PRAISS

Maybe that's an exaggeration. Things didn't always work out right. Dreams had to
confront reality. But in the deepest relationships of life Frank and Blanche truly have no
regrets.

OUR LADY OF THE LAKES
CATHOLIC CHURCH
1110 Nailauliaa SL. Detleaa
Father WiRtam KIHiaa
Paitar
Saaday Mattel A 10 am. 12 Mean
Saturday VigM Mattaad pm. (EagHth)
7:10 pm. ISpaaiakj
Weekday Man
LOO am. Haa.-Fri.
Caalaniaai
Saturday aad laaa cl
Haty Daya
1:00-1:45 pm.

Nazarene
2101

A4S am
1140 am
74 0p m
740 pm

Saa. iMaiag Warahip

Frank and Blanche find the "senior citizen " scene a mighty happy one. Not just
because of discounts and other thoughtful breaks. Rather it's that with children
grown-up and grandchildren brightening every visit they can look back over the years
with no regrets.

A U SOULS CATHOLIC CHURCH
902 Oak Am .. Saalard. Fla.
Father Lyle Oaaaa
Admiaiitrater
Sat. Vigil Man
5:00 pm.
Sen Mail
A40. 10:10. 12:00
Caeleitiaa, Sat. 4 pm. ta 4:50 pm.

Raa. Or. WgR L Oryaat
Oaa. A RWtard OaaMaA

Mane 222-2002

Lutheran
UnW RAN CHURCH OF

rAaWMNe

Yaagh “ — g- ja i Aad M
040 pm.
*nd Study

740 |

SANFORD CHRISTIAN CHURCH
117 W. Atrpart Obd.
Phaaa 122-0900
lea iehatea
Miaiitar
Sunday Schaal
9:10 am.
Warahtp Saratca
10:10 am.
teaaiag Saratca
(4 0 pm.
Prayar Maattag Wad.
7:00 pm.

Sunday
John
6:60-65

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
S C K m S T , L0H6W000
075 Markham Weedt Rd.
Center 01 I I . WlltUmaaa Rd.
Sunday: Church Saratca
and Sun. Schaal
1040 a.m.
Wadnatday
7:50 p.m.
Haraary AiallaMa At AH Saratcat
Reading Ream: M-F.104; Sat. 1-4
7AA-7700

Monday
Luke
13:23-25

Tuesday
Hebrews
12:14-17

Sc'cXuret leaded by the Amencan Boe Sooety

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WtSTYKW OAPTIST CHURCH
2741 Canatry Ctah Raad
Or. Regtr W. Maitta
Paitar
Saaday Schaat
9:45 am.
Marutng Warahtp
11:00 pm.
Church Traratag
4:00 pm.
laaatag Wanhlp
740 pm.
Wad. Prayar Saraka
740 pm.

7:00 pm

FALMtTTO AVIHUC
OAPTIST CHURCH
2C2C PetnMtla Am .
R »». Rrymeag Cracker
Patter
Sunday Stkeel
M S am.
■•rning Warahip
11:00 am.
Caangatiatac Varateal
(0 0 y.m.
Wad Prayer A (aWa Study 7:10 pm
Ingepeageet Mittianary

419 Park Am .
1224171
A. OadaM
A. Thaaaaa Otractar at
C M m, Otractar at

larcaas?

Baptist

122-

9:49 pm.
W ant# Saratca
1149am.
Vpu* FeOewthlp
S:M pm
Taaaday MMa Study
1040 am
Haraary praatdad tar aH aarakaa.

Church O f Christ

RNtMA ASUM01Y Of COO
Camar al Caantry Ctah Hand
aad WHbar Aaaaaa
Laha Mary

C tN TIA l OAPTIST CHURCH
t i l l Oak Am .. Saalard

SRACt UNITI9
MTNOMST CHURCH
Atrpart Mad. A Weedlaad Or.

OUR NATION!

Daaid Aahannan
Paitar
Saaday Irtiril
Par AN Agat
1:30am.
Werthlp Saratca
9:45am.
tracing Saratca
S:00pm.
Call Charch tar farther iafamattea

Baptist

Methodist

Wednesday
Deuteronomy
5:6-10
Copyright

Church O f God
CHURCH OF GOO
CHURCH OF 000 OF POOPMCT
001 W. 22ad Street
2509 A Urn Am .
Raa. AR Thamate*
Paitar
Oaa. Star an L Qthaar
Paitar
Saaday Schaal
A4S am.
mal
A4S am.
Merulag Wanhlp
1AS0 am.
I Warahip
11:00 am.
IraagaSatk Saraica
440 p m
traagatatk Saratca
7:00 pm.
Faadty tarlchmaal
Wadaaaday Tenth Sen-tee 7:M pm.
Sanrka Wadaaaday
740 pm.

1965

Thursday
Matthew
7:13-14

Friday
Mark
10:23-27

Saturday
2 Corinthians
5:1-5

K*i$i#f Wiiu*m« Nawtpapai Somcoi P O Bor 6005 CHartodatviMw VA ??Q06

Congregational
COMAE (A TONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
2401 S. Part Am .
122-45(4
Oaa. Bayd A IRafta*
Miaiitar
Snaday Schaal
A M am
FaOavthip
10:30-11am.
Waning Werahif
1140 a m
Wad. Prayar Maatlag
A Sihte Study
1100am.

Spanish
I0USIA ORSTIANA
Patter, PaMa Faaaat
221-1707
277S Akada Or.
laniard. Fla.

OF LAOS MARY

7401
1040 am
iTMM f u l laa.M ay

7I

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AVAILABLE I
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ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
Sanford, F I m .
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter

SUN BANK Mnd StMff

JCPannay

200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

Sanford Plaza

GREGORY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE

KNIGHT'S SNOB STORK

500 Maple Ave., Sanford

THE McKIBBIN AGENCY
Insurance

PANTRY PRIDB
DISCOUNT POODS

STBNSTROM RBALTV
H * r b S tan a tro m and S ta ff

and Employ***

D owntown Sanford
Don Knight and Staff

MEL'a
GULF SERVICE
Mel Dekle and Employees

HARRELL A BEVERLY
TRANSMISSION

L.D. PLANTS, INC.

OSBORN'S BOOK
AND BIBLE STORK

David Beverly and Staff

Oviodo, Florida

2599 Sanford Ave.

PUBLIX MARKETS

WILBON-BICNBLBBRQBR
MORTUARY

and Employ***

E u n lc * W ilto n and S ta ff

SBNKARIK GLASS
A PAINT CO., INC.

WILSON MAIBR PURNITURB CO.
M r. and M ra . F ra d W ilson

J*rry S Ed Sankarik
and Employ***

. WINN-DIXIE BTORBS
and E m p l o y * * *

■SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY!
I - . U I N I OF COO
Firtt Atteahiy el teg. 21th g (le
Rheme AaeaaWty el (eg. Career el Cauetry Ch* Reek tag rnmm 4»e.. lake Mery
Freegem i iu a t ly el Ceg. 1515 W 5th 5L. ieuterg

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(mCOPAL
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Aeraatiea LuHwraa Church. OearkraaA Ir.
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�RELIGION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly
University of Central Florida
Offers Judaic Studies Program
The history and culture of the Jewish people and a study of
the Jewish national movement In the 19th century ore two new
courses this Tall at the University or Central Florida.
Introductory Hebrew courses also will be taught for the first
time, said Dr. Moshc Pelll, director of UCF's new Judaic studies
program.
Prospective students In any of the four courses are asked to
contact Pelll at 275-2466 as soon as possible for further
Information.
■ The first course will cxaminlc Jewish history from its
Inception In the Biblical period through the Greco-Roman and
rabbinic periods. The second will explore the roots of Zionism
and the Jewish national movement In Europe that resulted
from social, cultural and religious developments.
All of the new courses arc offered during the day by the UCF
Department of Foreign Languages.

'School Daze1Brunch
Altamontc-Maltland Christian Women’s Club will have
"School Daze" as the theme of Its monthly brunch to be held
9:30-11:30 a.m.. Sept. 12.-at the Maitland Civic Center. There
will be a "Show and Tell" time for the members to share
hobbles and crafts, "Music Lessons" by Larry Willis of
Orlando; and "Lessons of the Day" by special speaker. Linda
Moore of Gainesville.
1
Brunch and nursery reservations may be made by calling
JoAnne Hammond at 339-3&amp;56.

Church Honors Mrs, Morgan
Mrs. Eleanor Morgan was honored by the First Baptist
Church of Oviedo on Sunday. August 25. She and her
husband. Frank, were the first family to occupy the church's
new pastorium In 1952. He served the church from 1949-1953.
She has been a member of the Adult Choir and served as
sanctuary flower chairman for 37 years. Four weeks ago she
celebrated her 82nd birthday. She was presented a plaque to
commemorate the occasion and flowers were placed In the
sanctuary In her honor.

H oly Communion Observed
Holy Communion will be observed at the 8:30 and 11 a.m.
services Sunday at Community United Methodist Church.
Casselberry. The Rev. Wight Klrtley, pastor, will preach on The
Labor o f Love. Associate Pastor Jim Hebei will speak at the 7
p.m. service in the chapel.
The Wednesday catered supper at 6 p.m. followed by singing
and classes for all ages will continue Into the fall. For supper
reservations call 831-3777. There is no dinner charge for first
time visitors.

Baptists Bible Study Begins
New Bible study classes are being offered for preschool
through senior adults at First Baptist Church of Oviedo. The
church's new year begins Sunday, Sept. 8. at 9:45 a.m. A
visitor's station will be set up to help those attending find the
class of their choice. The Bible study open to all — you do not
have to be Baptist, or a Christian, to attend. The church is
located at the center of Oviedo at the Intersection of State
Roads 434 and 426.

G oa l Surpassed

U.S. Clergy Urges Release
Of South African Cleric
By David E. Anderson
separate statements urged Reagan to seek
UPI Religion W riter
the release of Boesak, president of the World
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S. church Alliance of Reformed Christians.
leaders arc asking President Reagan to
Clerk James Andrews of the Presbyterian
Intervene on behalf of South African re­ Church, a colleague of Boesak’s In the World
ligious leader Allan Boesak, following a Alliance, said the denomination has sent
State Department protest of the cleric's messages to both Reagan and Botha urging
arrest.
release of the anti-apartheid activist.
And Rep. Howard W olpe. D-MIch..
"The main concern that 1 have Is that in a
chairman of the House Foreign Affairs terribly tense situation, the removal of
subcommittee on Africa, has cabled both moderate leadership makes the possibility of
Reagan and South African President Pieter extremists taking control much greater and
Botha urging that Boesak be released from that is very frightening." Andrews said in
Jail..........
an Interview.
State Department spokesman Charles
"People like Boesak. (Anglican Bishop
Redman said Tuesday the United States Desmond) Tutu, and (South African Council
"h a s f ormally protested this action of Churches President C.W.) Beyers Naudc
(Boesak's arrest) to the government of South arc men c o mmi t t e d to a Christian
Africa."
nonviolent negotiated settlement." Andrews
Leaders of the 3.1 million-member Pre­ said. " If they are removed, where else do the
sbyterian Church (USA) and three Lutheran people turn?
bodies with more than 5 million members In
Wolpe, In his cable to Botha, said: "The

arrest of Dr. Boesak only emphasizes the
brutality of your government's violent
repression of nonviolent opposition to the
apartheid system by the majority of South
Africans."
Separate but similar messages were sent
to Reagan and Botha by the American
Lutheran Church, the Lutheran Church In
America and the Association of Evangelical
Lutheran Churches.
The U.S. Lutheran message urged Reagan
to "use your influence to secure the
Immediate release of Dr. Alan Boesak. His
arrest by the South African government can
only delay further the evolution of a
multiracial society In South Africa with
equality for all."
In Geneva. Switzerland, the executive
committee of the Lutheran World Federa­
tion. which Joins together 99 Lutheran
bodies with 55 million people. Interrupted
its meeting to Issue a statement demanding
Boesak's immediate release.

U.S. Christians To Teach In China
The National Council of Churches is
sending an "ecumenical goodwill team" of
12 U.S. Christians to China for a one- to
two-year period.
It is the first request of its kind from
Christians In the People's Republic of China
since the mainland government began to
take a more tolerant attitude toward the
church five years ago.
The 12-member team will Include 11
teachers of English and one professor of
Western philosophy for schools in China's
Jiangsu Province, according to council
officials.
But they stressed the team would not be
Involved in missionary activity.
"This Is not a return to missionary effort
In China." said the Rev. Franklin Woo.
director of the national council's China
program.
"The teachers will be encouraged to be
'learners' when It comes to their interaction
with the Chinese people and the Chinese
church." he said. "When they return to the
United States, they will be expected to share
what they have learned from their experi­
ence living alongside Christians In the
China context," he said.
While China haB greatly relaxed restric­
tions on the church In recent years and
greatly expanded the Interchange of

Chinese and Western Christians, both
church and state have made It clear they do
not want to see a return of the "missionary
era" that prevailed before th Chinese
communist revolution of 1949.
Less than 1 percent of the Chinese
population Is Christian. The "ecumenical
goodwill team" is the second significant
undertaking of the Amity Foundation, an
organization created by Chinese Christians
to provide health, education and social
welfare services for the broader Chinese
society.
Earlier this year, the Amity Foundation.
In association with the United Bible
Societies, announced plans for a modem
printing facility to be built on the malrfland
to be used for the printing of Bibles and
other Christian materials.
The foundation was formed In April by
Chinese Christians under the leadership of
Bishop K. Ting, president of the China
Christian Council, a government recognized
association of Chinese Christians.
"The goals of the Amity Foundation arc to
contribute to China’s social development, to
make the fact of Christian presence and
participation more widely known to the
Chinese people and to strengthen the
ecumenical sharing of resources and pro­

mote friendly relations between Chinese and
foreign peoples." Woo said.
"B y sending teachers, the overseas
churches are enabling Christians In China
to play a more active role in the upbuilding
of the country." Woo added.
Han Wenzao. executive secretary of the
Amity Foundation, said the foundation
represents the first time since 1949 that
Chinese Christians "will Join hands with
friends in our nation and all around the
world to create an organization specifically
designed to serve the humanitarian needs of
the broader society."
The foundation, Woo said. Is also recruit­
ing language teachers from Germany and
Japan.
National Council officials said that foun­
dations similar to Amity are being formed In
other provinces of the People's Republic and
that efTorts are being made to coordinate
their work.
Chinese Christians have stressed that the
church In China must be Independent of
foreign control both In evangelism and
finances.
"W e do not seek help from overseas In
matters of church finance." according to
Han.

-

Southern Baptists surpassed the Florida Baptist Children's
Homes' annual Mother's Day offering state goal of *325.000
with 1.049 churches giving 9363.414. "This the largest
Mother's Day offering the Children's Homes have ever received
and It Is also the earliest In the year that the goal has been
met." Richard Phillips, executive director of the Florida Baptist
Children's Homes said recently. The Mother's Day offering
represents 14 percent of the operating funds for the homes.

Weekday Services Resume
After a summer break. Holy Cross Episcopal Church.
Sanford, will resume weekday services on Wednesday at 10
a.m. followed by teaching In the lounge of the Parish House.
Thursday evening services are at 7 p.m. In the chapel
beginning this week. The Rev. Leroy Soper will resume his
teaching on the Book of Revelation on Tuesday. Sept. 10 at
7:30 p.m. In the lounge.

Youth Club Dinner
The Youth Club of First Presbyterian Church. Sanford, will
klck-olT Its fall season with a covered-dish dinner for youth
clubbers and their parents at 6 p.m. on Tuesday. Parents will
have an opportunity to learn about this year's program and
register students from grades 3-8. The cost is $35 per semester.
For information contact Bruce Kreutzer at the church office.
322-2662.

Teacher Installation
Messiah Lutheran Church, 2610 S. Highway 17-92 (south of
Scmlnola Boulevard). Casselberry, will observe the 14th
Sunday of Pentecost this Sunday. Holy Communion will be
served at the 8:30 and 11 a.m. services. Teachers for the new
Sunday School year will be Installed at the 11 a.m. service and
a balloon festival will follow.

M en, Women Set Meetings
Sanford Free Methodist Church. 500 W. Fourth St.. Sanford,
will hold a men's breakfast for devotions and prayer on Sept.
14 at 8 a.m.
The women's missionary fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. on
Sept. 12 at the home of Helen Richey. 138 Country Club Drive.
Sanford.

Trash O r Treasure Sale
The Congregational Christian Church is sponsoring a "trash
or treasure" sale on Saturday. Sept. 7. from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to
help finance their project. An added feature will be home baked
goods. The church Is located at 2401 S. Park Ave.. Sanford.

Ex-Chaplain To Speak
The Rev. Charles E. Fix of Orange City will be guest speaker
at the Congregational Christian Church of Sanford this Sunday
at 11 a.m. at 2401 S. Park Ave.. Sanford. He was an chaplain in
the army for many years.

Singles Gam e N ight
The Community Singles group, for ages college through 45.
will hold a movie and game night Saturday. Sept. 7 In Room
19. Community United Methodist Church. Casselberry.
Visitors are welcome.

Sharing Cantor Sunday
This Sunday is Sharing Center Sunday at most Sanford
churches when members are asked to bring non-perishable
food items for the Sanford Christian Sharing Center.

Sandmrs To Proach
The Rev. Ray Sanders will be preaching at the 6 p.m. service
Sunday at the Sanford Church of God. 8ril w. 22nd St.

• a

Sunday, Sept. 1, IMS— SD

Just How Confidential Is Confession?
Can you trust your minister to
keep a confidence? Maybe he
won't shout it from the pulpit,
but will he tell his wife? Is there
anything that binds a clergy wife
from telling?
How about the church secre­
tary who might overhear some
Juicy gossip when a parishioner
comes for counseling? Are her
lips always scaled?
A woman In Colorado went to
her pastor for marital counsel­
ing. During the visit, she ad­
mitted to some sexual Indiscre­
tions. A year later the pastor was
subpoenaed by the woman's
husband In a divorce action for
the purpose of getting him to
relate her admissions In court.
If the minister refused to
testify, he could be subject to a
contempt-of-court citation and a
possible Jail sentence. What was
the right thing for him to do?
If something is said to a priest
or clergym an during " c o n ­
fession" — a sacramental rite In
such churches as the Episcopal
or Rom an Cat hol i c — the
minister’s obligation Is clear. He
cannot divulge it to anyone.
"The secrecy of a confession Is
morally absolute for the con­
fessor (meaning the minister to
whom the confession Is made)
a n d m u s t u n d e r no
circumstances be broken." says
the rubric concerning confession
in the Episcopal Book of Com­
mon Prayer.
The same absolute moral ob-

Salnts And
Sinners
George Plageaz

ligation rests upon a Roman
Catholic priest who will be
excommunicated and defrocked
If it Is ever proved he violated the
conf i denti al i ty of the co n ­
fessional.
An E p i s c o p a l p r i e s t In
California Is being sued for $5
million by a woman who has
accused him of breaking the
secrecy of her confession. She
revealed to him that she had
embezzled church funds. He
went to the police and the
woman was tried, convicted and
sentenced to Jail.
What the court will have to
decide Is whether she told him of
the crime In the privacy of the
confessional — in which’ case
what shr. said would be privi­
leged Information — or some­
place else.
The Inviolability of the con­
fessional extends even beyond
the prohibition against telling
someone else what was said.
Catholic seminarians sometimes
are asked in moral theology
class what they would do If a
person came to them In the
confessional saying he had put

poison In the wine which the
priest would drink at mass 30
minutes later.
The primary confilct here isn’t
over whether the priest should
tum the criminal over to the
police. It is over whether the
priest can do anything In this
situation to save his own life.
The answer Is no. He not only
cannot tell what he has heard,
he cannot use that Information
In any way.
"H e must regard it as if
nothing had been said to him."
says the Rev. Eugene Mcgycr.
who teaches theology at Pontifi­
cal C ollege Josephi num. a
C a t h o l i c s e m i n a r y ' In
Worthington. Ohio.
A French novel, said to be
based on an actual event, tells
the story of a murderer at large
In a community who goes to a
Catholic priest to confess his
crime. The priest, of course, can
say nothing to anybody, even
the authorities. Meanwhile, the
search for the killer goes on. The
finger of suspicion eventually
points to the priest. He is

.A tte n d . . .
CELEBR ATIO N O F W ORSHIP IN
T H E SPIRIT AND T H E WORD.
SUNDAY SCHOOL.......................................... *4 5
MORNING W O R S H IP...............................................10:50A M .
EVENING W O R SH IP.............................................. 6:00P.M.
William Thompson, Pastor

Sanford Church of God

Dlaconlal M inister Joins Staff
Josephine "J o " Tyler. Joined
the staff of First United Method­
ist Church of Sanford on August
15 as dlaconlal minister o f
Christian Education for all age
groups. Since Joining the Florida
Conference she has served In the
children's and family ministry at
First United Methodist. Orlando.
O r ig in a lly from North
Carolina, she graduated from
Greensboro College and worked
In Orangeburg. S.C.. as a Chris­
tian Education director and
church and financial secretary
for 15 years before earning her
master's degree from Scarritt
College. Nasvillr Tenn. In 1978.
she was the first dlaconlal
minister consecreated in the
Yellowstone Conference.
Billings. Mont., where she served
before working in to Overland
Bark. Kansas, for five years.

accused and put on trial and
convicted.
Some states exempt from dis­
closure "information confiden­
tially communicated to the
minister In his professional ca­
pacity." But what does "In his
professional capacity" mean? If
a parishioner confides some­
thing to his minister at the
church picnic In the course of a
conversation, is that Information
privileged?
Another unanswered question
Is this: When a person entrusts
his minister with Information of
a personal nature, how long
must the minister keep It private
— until the person dies or even
after death?
A California statute allows the
minister to disclose the contents
of a privileged communication
once the other party to the
conversation dies, providing
"disclosure would help an innocent third p a r t y . "
But would anyone be willing to
confide an intimate secret to a
clergyman knowing it could be
"all over town" once he dies?

•01 Wsst 22nd Street___________________________

New Life
Christian School
A MINISTRY OF FIR8T ASSEMBLY OF QOD

KINDERGARTEN AND GRADES V 1 2
•
•
•
•
•

S tron g Phonics Program
Teach Reading In Klndarg
rgsrtsn
High Academ ic S ta
indlvtduslliod Curriculum
Inform ed Parents A re The Rule
Rather Than The Exception

•
•
•
•

Patriotic Emphasis
Concerned, Dedicated
Character Training
C oal M otivation
On The

SCHOOL BEGINS SEPT. 3rd
ENROLLMENTS NOW BEINQ ACCEPTED
FOR 1985*86 TERM
Josephine Tyler

Call Pastor David Evans.
Administrator

t

�*D— Evtnlng Htrsld, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Stpt. 1&gt; 1H$

Doctor Turns Cold Shouldor To firewalking Fad
By Peter H. Gott, M.D.
Sometime back. I wrote a
column on firewalking, an an­
cient religious ritual that ap­
pears to be a flaming success
among certain well-behaved,
middle-class American souls.
The purpose of the article was
twofold: to make an appeal for
scientific investigation about
how normal people perform this
feat with their feet, and to point
out that what we call ''modern’’
or traditional medicine has
much to learn from practices,
that arc common to other
cultures.
I have been taken to task, in a
polite and civilized manner, by a
mechani cal e ngi neer from
Massachusetts and by scientists
who arc members of a West
Coast o r g a n i z a t i o n cal l ed

Southern California Skeptics.
Because I feel obligated to grant
equal time for second views, 1
am herewith summarizing the
opinions of my learned col­
leagues.
Apparently, firewalking In­
volves a basic but crucial law of
physics: the relation of thermal
c a p a c i t y to t h e r ma l c o n ­
ductivity: that Is. the difference
between temperature and heat.
For example, consider a cake
baking In a 450-degrcc oven.
The air In the oven, the cake and
the cake pan arc all the same
temperature: yet. If you reach in
the oven and touch the cake, you
will not be burned as you would
if you were foolish enough to
touch the pan. Air and cake have
low conductivity, the metal pan
has high conductivity.

The situation with firewalking
is analogous. Since fluffy carbon
embers have low heat capacity
and human feet have relatively
high heat capacity, when hot
coals touch skin, they cool faster
than the skin heats. The secret
of firewalking is to wait until the
embers have burned down suf­
ficiently so that, although hot.
they conduct heat poorly. I am
told that anyone can firewalk if
he or she moves quickly enough
from coal to coal and if the
embers have been allowed to
reach a sufficiently poor degree
of thermal conductivity.
According to the Southern
California Skeptics, firewalking
gurus arc flim-flam artists who.
with the promise of mind-control
techniques, burn their sub­
scribers for several hundred

dollars a foot.
I think we would all like to
believe that ’’special” and unex­
plainable events happen outside
the rules of natural order. How­
ever. nothing defies the laws of
physics and it is humbling to be
reminded of this fact now and
again. The Southern California
Skeptics (P.O. Box 7000-39.
Redondo Beach. CA 90277)
characterizes itself as a "small
group of academics fighting an
uphill battle against a huge,
ooz i ng mass o f unveri f i ed
mysticism that threatens to
exploit or defraud ..." The orga­
nization Investigates "E S P.
spontaneous human combus­
tion. dowsing. Bermuda Trian­
gle. biorhythms, creationism,
psychic surgery, ancient
astronauts, reincarnation, relics.

psychokinesis, parapsychology,
astrology, ghosts, psychic de­
tectives. PSI. UFOs, remote
viewing. Klrlian auras, emotions
in plants. Ilfe-after-death expert-.
ences. psychics, m onsters,
graphology, cryptozoology, per­
petual mot i on, pal mi st r y,
superstition, psychic
archaeology, iridiology.
numerology, psychic arms race,
clairvoyance, mediums, psychic
metal bending, pyramid power,
dianetlcs. levitation, pseudos­
cience. poltergeists (and) faith
healing." They must have their
hands full.
I'm not about to test the laws
of thermal conductivity by
skipping across a bed of hot
coals: I’m too old and Insecure.
Although the whole idea Is
intriguing. I’m content that a

group of scientists is keeping an
eye on things and offering an­
swers.
What we seem to need, as a
nation. Is a little more explana­
tion based on valid scientific
approaches. I will sleep better at
night knowing that skeptics the
world over are ruthlessly stam­
ping out vestiges of inexplicable
wonder. For example. I — for
one — would like to know how
the heck some people cure their
cancers without treatment. Is
laughter truly the best medicine,
as the Readers' Digest pro­
claims? I expect to be told that
falling in love is merely a
chemical reaction. No doubt the
fatherly figure of God is simply a
necromantic conjuration of our
overextended imaginations. Isn't
He?

Meet America's Most Coddled
Children— They're Born Free

Personal Look A t Alzheimer's Tragedy
Another Name tor Madness, by Marion
Roach, (Houghton Mifflin. 241 pp..
$14.95)
Memory loss, behavioral changes and
disorientation arc all classic symptoms of
the neurological disorder Alzheimer's
disease. "Another Name for Madness” is
the story of Marion Roach's mother's
struggle to deal with the effects of this
debilitating disease. It tells of her tragic
transformation from a vibrant and vital
51-year-old woman in control of her life to
a completely dependent woman, lonely
and sad.
The Neurology Institute of the National
Institutes of Health estimates that up to
1.5 million people are affected by
Alzheimer’s. The increasing average age
of America’s population suggests the
need for a book such as Roach's to
Increase public awareness of the scope of
the problem.
It Is apparent from the very first pages
that the author very much needed to
write this book. As a Journalist as well as
a concerned daughter. Roach seems to
pour her heart out as the pages unfold.
Her sadness, frustration, anger and relief
can all be sensed as she tells of the effects
of her mother's disease on her life and her
sister's life.
Roach endured a great deal of personal
sacrifice to keep her mother away from
the sheltered environment of nursing
homes for as long as possible. She and
her sister designed signs and placed them
strategically so that her m oth er w ould
not forget where things were, where she
shouldn’t go and how to do things.

•&gt; \ •

Best Sellers

s'

By United Press International
Fiction
1. Th e T w o Mrs. Gr e nv i l l e s
Dominick Dunne
2. The Hunt for Red October — Tom
Clancy
3. Lake Wobegon Days — Garrison
Keillor
4. The Fourth Deadly Sin — Lawrence
Sanders
5. Lucky — Jackie Collins
6. The Lover — Marguerite Duras
7. Skeleton Crew — Stephen King
8. Less Than Zero — Brett Easton Ellis
9. If Tomorrow Comes — Sidney
Sheldon
10. Too Much Too Soon — Jacqueline
Briskin
Non-flctlon
1. Yeager: An Autobiography — Gen.
Chuck Yeager and Leo Janos
2. The Mick: An Autobiogray — Mickey
Mantle with Herb Gluck
3. Hammer of the Gods — Stephen
Davis
4. Fit for Life — Harvey Diamond
Roach further tells of how her mother
disappeared for four days, had the cats
killed for no apparent reason and lost
complete Interest in her personal appear­
ance. These normally bizarre happenings
became commonplace In the Roach
home, with euch day bringing Its own set
of challenges to the ability of the two

4/

5. Women Who Love Too Much —
Robin Norwood
6. Iacocca: An Autobiography — Lee
lacocca
7. Smart Women. Foolish Choices —
Dr. Connell Cowan
8. Funny Money — Mark Singer
9. Martina — Martina Navratilova with
George Vecsey
10. The Amateurs — David Halberstam
1. Julie — Catherine Marshall
2. Full Circlet— Danielle Steel
3. Everything We Wanted — Lindsay
Maracotta
4. Twin of Fire — Jude Dcveraux
5. First Among Equals — Jeffrey
Archer
6. Brainchild — John Saul
7. "... And Ladles of the Club" - Helen
Hooven Santmeyer
8. lacocca — David Abodaher
9. Crescent City — Belva Plain
10. Th e Passion o f M olly T. —
Lawrence Sanders
sisters to cope with their mother's Illness,
while still retaining separate lives.
The book is well worth reading because
of the Information It provides on the
mystery of Alzheimer's disease from a
very personal perspective. It Is both sad
and happy to read and well worth the
time.
—Anne Shields

First Novel A Spellbinding Thriller
The Red Fox. bv Anthony Hyde. (Knopf.
321 pp.. $17.95)
Ever have one of those days when it
seems that everything everyone Is telling
you Is full of lies?
One of those weeks when a fib from
your ex-lover leads to a few white lies
from a Cunadlun doctor, which leads to
various and sundry prevarications on the
part of a retired U.S. diplomat and a
Soviet internal exile?
A fortnight In which even a dead man
comes up with a whopper of a tale and
Just about the only person volunteering
anything vaguely resembling the truth is
a KGB agent, for crying out loud?
And someone is trying to kill you. or at

least mess you up a bit. and you're not
even sure why?
Yes? Then you know what poor,
bemused Robert Thorne Is going through
and you don't have to read "The Red
Fox."
If not. pick up a copy and find out.
Canadian Anthony Hyde's first novel is
also a first-class thriller, full of deft twists
of plot and character.
This Literary Guild muln selection is a
globe-circling tale of newsman Thorne's
inquiry into the disappearance of an old
llame’s father — an inquiry that leads
him unwillingly into international
derring-do and a confrontation with the
secrets of his own troubling past.

Along the way Is a crash course in the
Russian Revolution and Its aftermath —
an Interesting taste of the politics and
terror of the Soviet Union’s early years
that may well convince you to reach for a
history of that era when you finally put
this book down.
Particularly compelling Is Hyde's at­
tention to detail, both in his Intricate plot
and in his evocative description of the
parade of cities — Harrisburg. Toronto.
C h a r l o t t e s v i l l e . Hal i f ax. Detroi t.
Washington. Paris. Leningrad — In which
(Ik book is set. Robert Thorne feels at
home in all of them, and — thanks to
Hyde — so does the reader.
—Dennis O'Shee

'Mole' Experiences Divided Loyalties
"T h e Buried Men.” by Norman Stahl
and Don Horan. (McGraw-Hill. 256 pp..
$14.95,
A smull steel-mill town In Pennsylvania
Is an unlikely place to find a mole, a
Russian KGB agent with no Immediate
assignment, but who lives and works for
years In a designated location, building u
posit Ion of absolute trust.
At some time, such agents may In­
activated to complete a special mission.
Such is the case of Father Stephen

...Lawyer
Continued from page ID
court cases. And on a national
level the divorce rate Is closing
in on 50 percent with Florida
leading the way. - It's an "easy
out,” Jones said, with no-fault
divorce in effect here for about a
decade.
And after Oct. 1984 divorce in
Florida became even more sim­
ple for those with no property or
children and no dispute.
"Y ou don’ t even need an
attorney." Jones said. "T h e
court clerk's office will prepare
the papers for you."
Jones claims that ideally a lot
of bad marriages, and resulting
divorces, would be prevented by
pre-marital counseling. It's Im­
portant. he said, for couples to
share their goals and expecta­
tions before they tie the knot,
although many enter into mar­
riage today without making a
true commitment, whether its a

Glasgow, pastor of Our Lady of Jasna
Gora parish in Lost Hessian.
Father Gl usgow has c ompl et el y
charmed Ills parishioners and his com­
mu n i t y of h a r d - w o r k i n g Pol l shAmericans. who support the Iron Fist, a
radical offshoot of Solidarity, and its
leader. Stanislaw Kuzlanak.
Twenty years alter tits indoctrination.
Father Glasgow finally receives his or­
ders. But he has become a man of divided
lovallies. His devotion to the Church Is

committment based on econom­
ic necessity, or a spiritual or
emotional commitment.
"The attitude is if it doesn't
work out. we’ll get a divorce. In
other words." Jones said. 'I'll
love you as long as you’re pretty,
as long as you keep your figure
and meet my needs and cook my
meals.
"And you say. i ’ll keep you as
long as you economically pro­
vide for me. as long as you stay
in shape as long as you don't
lose your cool in anger and don’t
freak out or something like that.'
“ So we enter into that kind of
relationship. That's not com­
mitment. It's obvious my hair's
not all still there at 42 and I'm
not quite as slim as I was. Those
are the realities of life.
“ But what a woman needs and
what a man needs Is to love and
be loved. They need a commit­
ment not Juaf for one day or two.
but for a lifetim e. But the
problem with a lot of people is
they don’t continue that com­

1

being undermined by Ills love for a
beautiful widow, and his devotion to his
cause is being undermined by his love for
his parishioners.
Though at times the premise of "The
Buried Man" seems farfetched, cramming
too many elements into too small a place,
its characters arc drawn in bold strokes,
and the level of suspense flags only
slightly. This tale of intrigue, romance
and international politics in the best
tradition of the thriller ger, -c.
—Kathleen ttilvassy

mitment. continue the romanc­
ing and continue to appreciate
their mate."
Jones said that maintaining
his own marriage of 19 years has
at times been an uphill battle,
especially before he and Carolyn
participated in some group
counseling sessions which, along
with extensive reading, has
given them a basis from which
they counsel others.
Of earlier days in their mar­
riage. Jones said. "W e did not
communicate. During those
times there were some hurts."
Mrs. Jones would withdraw, he
said, and "I couldn’t understand
that because 1 wasn't in touch
with my feelings. My whole goal
was to be a success.
, "I had my goals and was
probably a workaholic. I had my
life planned through age 65. so
she was Just part of this plan
coming along with me."
But then came the counseling
which Jones said tor the first
time made turn aware o f some o f
the feelings both he and his wife

were suppressing.
"Th e sessions were painful
and I sometimes wondered if it
was worth It." he said.
This personal probing
solidified his marriage and en­
couraged he and his wife (who
have three children — Randy.
14. Julleanne, 12. and Andrew.
6) to offer the same type of
assistance to others.
In J u l y o f 1984 J o n e s
p u b l i s h e d hi s f i r st b ook .
Reconciliation, which in it's first
year of publication has sold
25,000 hardback copteq and
came out in paperback this
month. Jones Is working on a
second book, which he said will
be a more comprehensive look at
how to mend broken rela ­
tionships.

( He also co-hosts, along with a
psychiatrist, a radio talk show
on Lakeland's W CIA which
covers the legal and emotional
ramifications o f divorce. The
show airs one Friday each
month. Broadcast dates vary.

By Tom Tiede
ROCHESTER. Vl. (NEA) - A
lot of attention has been paid
recently to the problems of
children growing up In America.
And the evidence is that it's hard
to be a kid these days. It's not so
uncommon for young people to
be physically and sexually
n b u s e d . f or i n s t a n c e , or
otherwise brutalized by their
ciders.
But there Is at least one
certifiable exception to this kind
of thing. And it's taking place at
a private community here In the
isolated mountains of New
England. The children of the
community are protected from
harm by an extraordinary set of
rules that govern the conduct of
the adult residents.
That Is to say. the kids can't
be spanked, bullied or badgered
about. They can't be yelled at.
called names, or verbally threat­
ened. They must be loved and
cherished and given proper care,
and they have to be accorded the
respect, dignity and security
that they arc said resolutely to
deserve.
In short, the kids in the
community must be treated
equal with the adults.
Perhaps even more equal.
The community is located at
the end of a dirt road, exactly in
the middle of Vermont. It was
organized after World War II by
a New York writer named Irving
Fiskc. It was called a commune
then, because the residents
pooled most of their resources,
and Fiskc laid down the regula­
tions for the group.
One regulation concerned
children. Fiske thought they
should be handled with com­
passionate enlightenment. He
was raising a son and daughter
of his own at the lime, and he
believed kids must be allowed to
develop In an environment free
from the hostilities of regimenta­
tion and discipline.
That meant they had to have
rights of their own. The same as
adults, as it were. Fiskc ruled
that children could not be struck
for any reason, nor even verbally
abused. He said they must be
permitted to make mistakes, and
lo form their personalities,
without the fear of retaliation
from big people.
The rules were unprecedented.
But they stuck. And they arc still
in effect today. Fiskc is now 70
years old. his community is
going into the fifth decade of Its
existence, and there arc 65
remaining adults here who make
it possible for 35 remaining
children lo grow up without
worry of parental punishments.
Oh. there is supervision. And
direction. But there Is no
authoritarianism. Fiskc says the
adults are In charge of the
community, yet the children arc
not kept In any form of subjuga­
tion. "I believe in the Bible in
this matter." he notes. "God

...Deficit
ID
export in huge volume to the
Japanese."
"Tell me. tell me. Mr. Holmes.
I implore you!"
Holmes turned suddenly, fac­
ing the anguished Secretary.
"It is none other than yourself.
Mr. James Bakerl The only firm
that is selling in volume to
Japan is the U.S. Treasury. You
are exporting our debt to the
Japanese at a record pace. They
are buying up ten percent of all
the debt you are producing. You.
Mr. Secretary, are the leading
exporter in this country!"
"You mean." the Secretary
stammered, "w e are expecting
debt and importing goods?"
"For every action," the de­
tective explained, "there must
be an equal opposite reaction.
When we import more goods
than are export, we must export
something else. And that, dear
sir, is debt. Our huge surplus on
debt is allowing our huge deficit
on trade: indeed, it is one cause
o flt."

made it clear that we should not
olfend our children."
So the kids arc attended with
careful circumspection. Not to
mention u good deal of delicacy.
Fiskc says ihe children of ihc
community arc given u full rein,
where possible. Including the
liberty lo follow their own Incli­
nations. As a result, they ntuy
well be the most coddled'group
of lots in the country.
They have talked the udults
into bringing television lo the
community, for example. And
many of them set their own
guidelines for personal behavior.
They also hold some controls
over the community schooling,
and. from time to time, that
Includes telling tcuchcrs how the
clusscs should be conducted.
Last winter the kids told one
teacher that they wanted to go
out in the snow In the bull'. The
t eacher obj ect ed, but the
children had the power to over­
rule. Ergo, they stripped down to
their underwear, and spent part
of a very frigid afternoon runn­
ing over the icy landscape on
bare feet.
Naturally the teacher was up­
set. Even Fiskc says the outing
wus a dumb idea. But adults in
the communi ty believe Ihe
children must huve a right to
make poor decisions, if they are
ever expected to muke good
ones. und. needless to say. no
child was brought in from the
cold that day fora thrashing.
Good thing, too. The kids here
do not lake adult abuse lightly.
And they have lhcli*our court
system lo extract Justice. Fiske
says the Iasi lime someone hit a
child in Ihe community wus in
1981: it wus u mother: Ihe
children. found her guilty us
charged, and ulmost expelled
her from the group.
That trial proved to be sober­
ing for some community adults.
And a few of them still resent its
Implications. One long-time res­
ident points out that children
can try adults In this regard, but
adults can not try children: the
conclusion, he goes on. is that
the kids have more clout than
Ihc parents.
Irving Fiskc shrugs al the
point. He says that may be the
way It should be. And he goes
back to biblical verse lo support
his view: "Jesus said the little
children should lead us. He said
they are the one’s who hold the
truth. With that in mind. I don't
think it's wrong to give them a
little authority."
Indeed. Fiskc says he would
rather give authority to kids
than adults. Because ihe latter
arc more apt lo misuse it. And
very often against the former.
"Most of the violence In the
world stems from the violence
toward children." he insists,
"that's why we arc doing things
somewhat different In our com­
munity."
"I don't suppose the rest o
American Industry should wan
to follow that example." th&lt;
Secretary sighed.
" I trust not." Holmes salt
sternly. "But enough of this. Le
us cool off with a cup of hot tea."

(T im o th y Tregarthen wel
comes the opportunity to c o m
nd with readers. Write him a
Evening Herald.)

S

...Siege
Continued tram page ID
greater danger than the oc
cantonal defrauding of a fortune
or salvation-seeker would b
granting the government th
power to pick and choose amon
alleged religions, saviors an
prophets. Let’s leave It to th
consumers of salvation to b
wary, test we find the polic
confiscating our astrologies
charts, our horoscopes and evet
our fortune cookies.
I predict that the courts wl
• t r i k e d o w n t h e b a n oi
fortunetelling. Qo ahead, anet
met

l

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                    <text>30 Cents Per Month Per Phone Line

Optimist Honor
E rn ie Butler, right, presi­
dent of the Sanford Optimist
C lu b , p re se n ts Sem in o le
High school student Kenny
Eckstein with the Optimist
Creed Tuesday at the club's
weekly luncheon. Sporting a
4.0 grade point average.
Eckstein is an honor student
who has been chosen to
spend his summer vacation
in Washington D C. as a
Republican Page. He was
nominated for the honor by
his h!itory teacher, Anna
M cCarthy.

C ounty S e t To Le vy F e e F o r 911 System
An extra 30-cent charge will begin
appearing on Seminole County tele­
phone bills Oct. 1. unless county
commissioners change their minds
alter a public hearing. The fee will be
used to pay equipment and service
initiating costs for the Enhanced 9 1 1
emergency system.
The charge will he 30 rents monthly
|jcr telephone line
Commissioners. In a work session
Tuesday, agreed to levy Ihe fee for 18
months, us perm itted under law
adopted during the 1985 session of the
Legislature and signed by Gov Bob
Graham June 17
The county's E 9 I 1 coordinator.

Koannr Kubln. told the commissioners
an ordinance selling the fee must be
adopted prior to Oct I .
Commissioner Sandra Glenn said the
pr* posed o r d in a n c e w o u ld be
advertised and a public hearing would
la* held prior to Its adoption.
County Administrator Ken Hooper
said ihe fee would be charged against
the 110.000 telephone lines In the
county. At 30 cents per line, the county
would receive $33,000 monthly.
Last year the commissioners dls« ussrd whether to ask the voters If they
wanted such a system and werr willing
to pay a monthly fee for Its Initiating
CCJStX.

That Idea was rejected because legis­
lation would be required to authorize
Ihe fee on telephone bills and commis­
sioners decided to pay the costs from Its
general fund.
The new law gives commissioners
ihe option of setting a referendum on
the issue or of voting without referen­
dum to levy the fee. The commissioners
opted to levy the fee without referen­
dum
T h r system Is to be Installed and In
o p e ra tio n w ith in 18 m onths by
Southern Bell Telephone Company In
&lt;ooprratlon with United Telephone Co.
—Donna Estes

A sp h a lt Firm A s k s
C ourt To O vertu rn
P&amp;Z On F u e l Tanks

»

legal rights to keep them out."
Barrette said
He said residents would
meet with their attorney to
discuss what action they could
take.
The company, apparently
disgruntled by the turndown,
was compelled to file an ap|M-al because II w-as prohibited
by city regulation Irom taking
Ihe Issue before the city
commission The regulation
stales If six members of the
nine member I’AZ body vote
against a proposal It cannot lie
apjieal to the city commission.
The vote ugulnnl Orlando
Paving was 7 7
According to thr civil suit,
ihe company, which has an
option to buy fi7 acres. In­
cluding thr 18 lor thr propnnrd asphalt plant, wanted
Ihe conditional use penult tor
ulMivr-ground storage of petro­
leum Storage of the fuel Is
prohibited without permission
from the city.

Industry.

Orlando Paving states In thr
suit such a plant requires
altovc ground tanks holding at
least 5&lt;X) gallons of jietrolcum
each
Orlando Paving states In the
suit that thr PAZ commission
ollrred no "competent" or
substantial evidence" to
support their denial of the
conditional use The company
I a b Ie d th e d e n i a l d Is -

That meeting was attended
700 residents bitterly op|M&gt;srd
to the the pro|xmed plant
Hubert Barrette, of 137
Country Club Circle, who led
op|Misltlon to the plant, said
Tuesday Ihe residents would
light the suit.
"We don't want them here.
We'll light them all the way
We II do everything w ithin our

S c e n i c B o a r d F u n d s M a y B e T r im m e d
W ayn e E vans

.. 'P&amp;Z not consistent'

R obert B arrette

...'W e’ll fight them'
crim inatory, arbitrary and
capricious.
According to an argument
presented In the civil suit,
other companies In the arru of
the p ro p e r ly have been
granted conditional uses for
above ground storage und case
law supports such storage as
an acceptable conditional use.
Wayne Evans, executive
vice president of Orlando
See A S P H A L T , page 2A

Longwood OK'd For Park Grant
B y Ja n e Casselberry
H erald Staff W rite r
After Ihrer extensions over three years.
Longwood has finally qualified lor an $I8.(XX&gt;
matching state grunt by meeting Its Ju ly 6
deadline for completion of facilities at thr city's
Krlter Park
All bills urr In hand and necessary documents
are being prepared to send to thr Florida
Department of Natural Resources later this week
In order to receive the grant funds, which will hr
upplted toward the cost of the |&gt;urk. Parks and
Recreation Department Director BUI Goebel told
the city commission Monday night
Although he does not expect to have thr llnal
flgurr until next week. Goebel said cost of the
park Is expected to run close to the projected total
of $54,000 with the city's share being $30,(XX)
The amount of the $18,000 actually received will
de|ieud on Ihe actual cost of the park
Open to the public as of Monday, the olflcUtl
dedication Is set for 10 a m on Ju ly 20 Goebel
hopes to have thr Shrtnrr clowns and camel and
u cakreuttlng at the dedication
When the city failed lo meet the April 1
deadline, the commission appealed to State Rep
Carl Selph IR-Casselberryl for the second time lor
help In getting another extension The city was
given an additional 90 days to complete thr park.

Over The Limit
W A U K E G A N . III. IUPH - T w o
motorcyclists have earned the distinc­
tion of setting a possible Illinois record
for speeding.
James Afecarotta. 21. and Dean N.
Darrus 20. both of west suburban
Riverside, were penalized Tuesday by a
Lake County Judge for going 83 mph
over the speed limit when they went
screaming down Interstate 94 toward
the Wisconsin border. They were
clocked on radar at 138 mph.
Lake County Circuit Judge Steven
Walter lined each of Ihe men $300 plus
court costs. The citation for going 83
mph over the 33 mph speed limit may
have set a record In Illinois, police said.

t

which Is located next lo thr fire station on West
Warren Avenue
When a lalxrr shortage was cited for the delay
in April, two employees were assigned full-time to
Parks and Recreation at that time under Goebel s
direction Another delay was caused when soil
Ixirlngs at the $27,850 tennis court site proved
unsatlslactory und proponed courts had to be
relocated. It was found Ihe two acres to the west
that were obtained from the owner. Jim m y
Reiter, after Ihe original five-acre piece, were u
more, nullable location.
A disagreement with the contractor. Dennis
Brubach. owner of Varsity Courts. Inc. of
Longwood. threatened the project’s meeting Ihe
deadline, but that was worked out und work got
underway on the two tennis courts
Changes In layout, addltonal chalnllnk fence,
and hiring u soli testing company cusl Ihe city
$1,495 move than originally planned for Ihe
courts.
The gate to the fenced In courts will lx* locked,
but Gcebrl said residents can secure their own
key for u $5 lee.
Other facilities ut the park Include three
handltall/rucquet lull courts, solthall field, sne­
er r/fool hall field, und playground equipment

TODAY
Action Reports ... ..SA
B rid ge .............
Classifieds .... '0.1 IB
8B
Comics............
Dear Abby......
6A
Deaths. . ...........
Dr Gott. . .......
4A
Editorial.........
Hospital
......2A
Nation
People.............
Sports.............
Television.......
Weather......... ...... 2A
World..............

VMCMil

Sanford W e igh s
Budget O p tio n s

Residents: '...Keep Them O u t’

By Deane Jordan
and Rick Brunaon
The city of Sanford will be
forced to grant a conditional
use allowing above-ground pcIroleum storage at a proposed
asphalt plant II an Orlando
company w ins a &lt;is il null
But a spokesman for a group
of homeowners ojqiosrd to the
plant said thr rcnldrnln will
try to make nurr the company
doesn't get Its way.
Sanford wan named as de­
fendant III a null filed late
Monday by Orlando I'avlng
Inc. The company sei*kn to
overturn u June 6 ruling by
ihe city's Planning and Zoning
Commlnnlon denying the firm
Ihe conditional unr for an
18-acre site It may buy near
Country Club Hoad and 19th
Mirrvt. The company wants to
rmmt~a I T T million plant
Including three storagr tanks;
two designed to hold 30.000
gallons of fuel oil and thr other
10.000 gallons of dtrsrl fuel.
The site Is zoned for heavy

*«S P M Sr

Israel Retaliates
B E IR U T. Lebanon (UPI) Suspected Israeli warplanes
txunhed two Palestinian refugee
r u m p s n e a r ih e n o rth e rn
Lebanese city of Tripoli today, a

Car bombing, page 3A
day after two suicide bombers
allarked the Israeli security zone
in southern Lebanon, security
sources said
The sources said five Jets
iHirnbed the camps of Urddawl. I
mile south of Tripoli, and Nohr
.VI Bared. 12 miles north of the
city. There was no Immediate
indication of casualties.

By Rick Brunson
Herald Staff W rite r
The Sanford City Commission
may chop ihe asslstani city
manager s position Irom the
payroll and trim |&gt;art of ihe
money earmarked lor beautify­
ing the city, but ihe savings
would probably &gt;lx- diverted lo
other departm ents such us
public works.
In thr first day ol budget
hearings Tuesday, the commis­
sioners hunted for ways to boost
revenues and trim expenditures
In City Manager Frank Faison's
proposed $12 4 million 1983-86
budget.
Commissioner David Farr said
ihe roinmtsalon should carefully
scrutinize the budget for savings
lo prevent. If possible, a 43
percent Increase In property lax
rales. But the other commission­
ers and Mayor Bel lye Smith said
Ihe commission should br cou­
rageous nnd hike taxes If neces­
sary to raise Ihe rlty out of Its
neglected state.

I'm willing to raise
the millage, but let's
make sure we
absolutely have to.'
-Dave Farr
Fa rr found one potential
|mm krl of savings on Ihe city
spending sheet H r said. "W r do
not need an assistant city man­
ager" because of Ihe recent
consolidation ol ihe city stuff
The commission last month,
acting on Faison's rerominrndulion, consolidated nine city
divisions Into two departments
— engineering and planning and
administrative services. While
Ihe move only resbulllrd already
existing divisions, four nrw
workers are expected lo lie hired
to bead the two departments.
Thai will cost about $145,000.
which Is earmarked In the pro|M)srd budget.

Money staled lor the assistant
city manager's post is about
SI 14.000. which Is (or salary
and other expenses. M ary
Harkey-Meyer serves as assis­
tant rlty manager but Is sched­
uled lo retire July 31.
Faison said money lor the
position Is "v u ln e ra b le " lo
commission's (taring knife, but
added br could use the help
around city ball, especially lo
Implement all the projects slated
(or Hie coming year
Ollier commissioners voiced
agreement with Farr's proposal,
but lormal action will wait until
the commission slurts a line
Item review of Ihe budget Hits
week or next week
F u rr nlsn que stione d Ihe
purpose of ubout $152,700
tagged for the Scenic Improve­
ment Ikiard. Faison said about
$ 1 1 9 ,0 0 0 w as fo r h i r in g
gardeners, one of the recom­
mendations In Hie board's report
See OPTIO N S, page 2 A

Car Bomb Kills Socialite, Son
NAPLES. Fla. fIll’ll — A car bomb explosion In
a g u u rd rd s u b d ivis io n killed a w e a lth y
Pennsylvania soclalltr and hrr 21-year-old son.
seriously Injured her daughter-in-law und sent
investigators scrambling for a motive
A Federal Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and
Firearms agent said the Tuesday morning blast
was raused by an "exploslvr device" apparently
triggered by the Ignition key.
NJargarrt II Benson. 63. and Iter son Scott,
both of Lancaster. Pa., were killed in thr blast
that demolished a four-wheel drive vehicle and
rocked neighboring homes In Quail Creek, u
guarded subdivision of homes costing $400,000
and more In North Naples
Carol Kendell Benson. 40, of Boston, was
rushed to Naples Community Hospital In serious
condition und officials said she would br
transferred to a burn center today.
See BOM B, page 2A

2-Cent Gas Tax On Way
A resolution of Intent to levy a 2 -cent-pergallon gasoline tax beginning Sept. 1 for a
30-year period was adopted by the county
commission Tuesday night Just before Its 11
p m . adjournment.
The tax levy will become official after
commissioners hold a public hearing and
udopt an ordinance later this month or early in
August.
The proceeds from Ihe lax will be shared
with Hie county's seven cities based on s
formula called for In slate law. Under the
formula the county's share and the shares of
each of the rules will be determined by
calculating how much money each of the
governmental units have spent (or transporta­
tion over the past five years.

Tampa Firm To Expand Jail
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer
A contract for $12 million was
awarded by the county com­
mission to the low bidder. Great
Southwest Corp of Tuinpa. for
rrn o va ilo n s of Htr 212-bed
existing Seminole County Jail at
Five Points and construction of
live pods to provide space for
480 additional Inmates
The lour commissioners presrnt voted unanimously lo award
ihe bid, the lowest of three
s u b m itte d by c o n tra c to rs .
Com m ission C h a irm a n Bob Architects' concept ol how the county's |all complex will look
Sturm Is In France w ith a alter renovations and expansion.
Central Florida delegation look­
ing inlo the light rail system al prisoners for a five-year cells The precast rells will arrive
there.
at the job stir with the floor,
|M*rlod.
Commissioners also agreed
Construc tion of the 480 bed walls and detention components
another 96-bed pod may be additions and the renovations is Installed The floor of the second
added lo the contract If federal expected lo begin In August and level cell creates the celling of
funding of $700,000 for housing ftc completed by August. 1987. the lower level cell. A two level
federal prisoners comes through said Dale Nrderhofl of Watson A control station wgl be located
as anticipated bv Shrrtll John Co ol Winter Park architects of within the center of Hie hexagon
Polk.
(jod. providing direct vision lo all
the project.
Hrnovations will provide an cells at both levels
The board also volrd lo accept
a grant of $300 000 tn federal e n la rg e d In ta k e area, a d ­
In addition to the $12 million
money to guarantee housing (or ministrative offices, medical, construction and rrnovatlon. It
30 federal prisoners at the facili­ inm ate p ro g ra m and court is expected to cost another $1.6
ty. In addition the county will be spaces.. The new construction million to furnish thr facility,
paid $34 per day for each day a will Include five housing pods, a build a new road Into the
control-visiting renter and a complex from U.S. Highway
federal prisoner Is hired.
T h r $700,000 federal grant, s e rv ic e b u i ld i n g w ith an
17-92. pay architect fees, pro­
offered Informally to Polk, would enlarged kitchen and laundry.
vide a contingency lund of more
The pods are to be constructed
guarantee the federal govern­
See JAIL, psgs 2A
-J.
ment space for another 66 feder­ with precast concrete modular

*&lt;^CVxxr m vr

^ r .* ^ r

• •••»' # »•^
s • %

a -1
I-

�I

lA -E vtn in g M«rold. Sanford. f\.

Wt4n«iday, July 10, lfts

Charge Dropped
Against Judge's
Son-In-Law

T a k in g S to ck

NATION
IN BRIEF
Walker May Have Been
Officer In Soviet Navy
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Former CIA official* say accused
spy John Walker may have hern have made an admiral In
the Soviet navy an part o( a ploy by KGB agent* to keep
him In line supplying them with military secrets
"It I* not rare by any means for a rase officer lo say. 'The
way to p lra v my agent Is to promote him In military rank,
especially, one he could not get In his own country,"' said
former CIA agent David Phillips
Walker. 47. retired from the Navy In 1976 as a warrant
officer and during his career workrd us a communications
specialist and servrd aboard submarines.
Court papers Hied by the Fill say Walker, the alleged
m asterm ind ol a family and Irlrn d spy ring that
purportedly passed secrets to the Soviets lor nearly 20
years, marie deliveries lo Soviet agents at several foreign
locations

More Tainted Cheese Recalled
LOS A N G ELES IIJI’I|
A second brand ol Mexican style
cheese has l»een ordered removed from supermarket
shelves beruuse lesls show ll is tainted with the bacteria
linked lo nearly 0 0 deaths nationwide since April
Cheeses made before Ju ly I by Cacique Chrese
Company were recalled Tuesday when state food and
agriculture officials discovered they were contaminated
with listeria monoeyiogenrs
Discovery of the tainted Cheese conics during ihe
century's deadliest food-poisoning outbreak. Tons of
Juilscn cheese have hern buried and Its manufacturers face
|x&gt;sslhlr manslaughter charges

WORLD
IN BRIEF
15 Jewish Settlers
Convicted Of Terrorism
.JERUSALEM (Ill’ll
A llirec* judge cmiri today found If)
Jewish settlers guilty ol waging a deadly terror campaign
agalnsl Arabs In I lie West Hank and Golan Heights and
convicted Hirer ol murder, which carries a mandatory lilr
sentence.
All 15 were lound guilty ol participating In a Jewish
icrrorlsl underground responsible Im (lie slayings ol three
Arab siudenis and bomb aiiaiks tlicit maimed two Aral)
mayors
they hud pleaded Innocent, arguing Ihey ucted In
self defense
ih,it thry were forced lo defend ihcmselvrs
because of la* security In the occupied Arab territories
The trial, which began June II, 1984, was Isrurl’s
longest slni r Nu/t Adolf Klchman was convlcled ol crimes
against humanity in a 15 moil I h trial rh.il ended In I M il.
I he i mill was recessed mil ll I hursday morning wilhoul
senieutes bring Imposed Israeli law makes life Imprison
menl mandatory lor anyone convlcled ol murder Hut there
has been public pressure lor clemency or pardons lor the
dclcndanis

Part Of Jet's 'Black Box' Found
t ’OHK, Ireland (Ill'll — luvcsllgalors searc hing the txrun
liemit today rrcovcied die voice rrcnrdrr Ihey ho|ie w ill help
determine whelhcr a bomb caused the Air India crush ih.n
killed J2!&gt; people Iasi mouth. Indian nlllcluls said
The Indian Investigating leant In fork said seanhers.
using a rolmi submarine upended Irmii die Frencli vessel
l.con Ihevcnln Immd ami recovered the reccmlei al a
dr pill of6,500 feel
Irish cilllc I.i Ih said tIn* cockpit voice recorder was in be
sent back In India, where invrsllgators would sludy ll tor
c lues In the cause ol I hr June 2d crash

( ounlry ( 'lull f licit- area rieur
die piopoM'd plant slle cih|rc led
lo the asphalt plain saving Its
lucl tiniiieis would slink bulk
Continued from p*ge l A
deliver! ducks would inc rease
r.title anil stockpiles ol dusty
having, sunt (nctnv I lie iom|iuny
in.m i cats wciuld post- be.clili
shmild have been granted |&gt;ci
mission iu build the tanks pinblcilis Im people vs iIII rcsplra
beruuse oilier plaidsnrur Ihrsiie toi\ allmenis They also said
die! wctc alrald dial the plant
Use lllem
'basically, we don I led they t mild esplmle
Miranda Franks alloiuey Im
Ida PAZ tioardi are consistent
with ronlug In that am i " Evans Orlandu I’avlng. lold the resi­
said, "W e tcel dial d they dents dial gasoline si mage lauks
grained dial (permission lo use ai eoiivrtilriil stores near the
lanks) In the past and have them neighbor timid pose a grrutrr
end t h n r now they slioidd grain ha/.tul Ilian Ihe jiiojMiard plain
ami storage (•inks
the conditional use "
I he ease has been assigned In
According lo a I lull script ol
die June 6 inerting ol ihe I'AZ ( in nil .lodge S Joseph Davis
commission, u snli nis ol die .ll \n tllul dale has been sel

...A s p h a lt

...J a il

Continued from page 1A
Ilian 9500(XX) and pat Other
expenses
I he Jail renovations and addi­
tions are lielng paid lur with the
pirn ents hum the line ecu I sales
tux approved liv die county's
voters Iasi November lor tin
provemrnis of |.nl laellllles I ta­
levy ol (lit* spiel.11 lax began
Ian I and Is Inend Dee 1) I
Meanwhile, eminiV Manage

m em amt liudget D lre rio r
l.lraimr A m letson reported to
.timinlssltincis Wednesday dial
latest esilmairs show the proit eds limn die sjM-etal la* will
total M !l 7 million by vrarsrn tl
And lUirhara O ’Hare ol Mrs
Anderson's office said by In
vesdllg Ihe motley the county
will real lie 91 2 million In interi si and these additional hinds
will Is- used to pav lor courthouse renovations, now u n ­
derway ,

HOSPITAL NOTES
(■■tiel ll«a &lt; a**unel K*.ptl»l
Teeeder
ADMIIII0N1
IdAtord
Memte L Hred'er
AugvtleA h S a
MimueC Pertet. OeIMn*
WiVi.l Itnn IM i Mw m
OlKHAROhl
laniard

XU-eeBran*
T V ) Gelm en

Gehet* Mlllery
lhirier ( Mon**
C r e te M Phillip*
D&lt;i m N Well*
I * r lix O e la n d
Donald II Abel Oeltone
M ildred B H o n D elian *
L in d * V M o n o , Loh.M o niB O

Budget Director M akes
Long-Expected Departure
W ASH IN G TO N Il l'll - David
Sinckrnan. w ho reaped lame and
frustration as the uunderkind of
R eaganom ics. Is m aking a
long-expected evlt from govern­
ment to pursue prestige and
stx-figure pay arnurig the flnani lal wizards of Wall Street.
With the White House In the
throes of budget negotiations
with Congress. Slockman an
riounerd Tuesday he will end his
tenure as President Reagan's
budget director Aug I to join
the higgesi Investment hanking
lirm on Wall Street,
Ihe announce men i came as
no surprise in the While House
where Stockman has been re­
garded lor months as a prime
wiidldatr lo |oln the staff exodus
under way slme the start of
Reagan's second term
Speculation swiftly turned lo
possible successors wldi Reagan
expected In look for someone
adepi ai numbers and politics —
and less prune lot onlroveray.
Among those rumored lo be
ud e rrsictl or under consid­
eration were Commerce Secrrlary Malcolm D Fringe, preslihuiial assist.mi John Svahn
and Joseph Wrlghl Stockman's
No 2 mail al the Office of

Management and Budget.
Stockman will herome a man­
a ging d ire cto r ol Salom on
Brothers. Sen Alan SImpxml
K-Wvo Joked that the onellme
divinity fitudeni and iw o lrrm
congressman m ig h i see his
S75.100-a-year salary Increase
fivefold.
Rragan. who look Stockman
lo "die woodshed for all-loocandid assessm ents of his
policies and the economy, had
nothing but praise for his budget
director
Dave Stockman has served
with drdlcallon and distinction.''
Reagan said, “ His tireless efforts
to bring fiscal discipline lo the
Irdrral governmem and ensure
econom ic s ta b ility for the
•■ounlry are deeply appreciated '
On Capitol Hill. Stockman
received bipartisan ac colades (nr
Ids grasp of an almost 91 trillion
Inler.il budget and Ids candor
Stockman's greatest iriurnpbs
and most serious troubles came
early.
As Reagan savored a heady
scries of victories on budget and
lax cuts In late 1981 Stockman
In a magazine Interview, labeled
Ids supply-side economics "a
fro)an horse'- thai cut luxe* lor

D avid Sto ckm an
die rich and did lldle for ihe
jxmr.
Slockman offered Ids reslgna
dim Reagan refused ll The
humbled budgri director. Ids
m ire quavering, expressed grail
irnle "fur dlls second chance lo
gci on with the Job the American
|M-ople sent President Reagan
here lodo "
But Slockman s sometimes
pugnacious manner resurfaced
:u February with a double
barreled attack on lartti support
programs and military pensions
Government, be said, should
mil lr\ In prrvriil lariners troiii
&gt;h mg Ion eel otii u| business
ticca use "dial is the way a
dynamic et-onomv works ' The
military pension system hr said
Is a scandal an murage

A spouse abuse battery charge
has been dropped against the
son-in-law of Seminole County
Judge Fred Hitt
The decision nol lo prosecute
Ricky Karl McNamara. 20. of
1 1 3 -C C o n c o r d S q u a r e .
Cassclbcrr. was announced In
county court Tuesday.
Assistant State Attorney Kathy
Slmcoe
said
the
alleged
victim. Amy McNamara. 18. said
after her husband was arrested
ihat she did nol want lo pro­
secute. and that Mrs McNamara
refused to return prosecutor's
calls.
According to court rrcords,
Casselberry police were called to
dir McNamara home May 27 by
a citizen who heard a woman
screaming.
Mrs McNamara. H ill's daugh
trr. told police her husband had
till her III I hr fare. She said shr
didn't want to press charges and
only wanted to leave the home
with hrr baby. S h r also asked
dir officers to call hrr lather
Hitt arrived and jx-rsuaded
Ricky McNamara to Irt hi*
daugiiler and her child leave.
The mall also agrerd tu seek
counseling and work towards a
recuncillutlon. police reports
•wild When the woman lx-gan to
leave, however, thr man re*
(xirlrdly grabbed her by thr arm
and thrn refused to hand over
the baby which led to hls arrest
— Deane Jordan

Longwood To Pay Manning $36,000 For Double Job
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff W riter
l.ongwood Poller Chlrf Greg
Manning will hr rrcrlvlng an
•uinual salary ol 93(1.000 while
In also doubles as acting illy
.utiilinlstralor — more dmu r i ­
cher ol Ihr iw't previous ad
minlstrautrs
M.toning salt! hi Ihnughl he
deserved Ihe raise since he was
doing iwo jobs and saving die
•nv 940,000 a vear Anything
less and I'd lake ullc-nse I would
lie giving Ihe cltV a tree ride.-' he
added
When Manning was titling
iclmliitslraior Jan 7 lo April H,
lie derived die same salary as
hpiner city ailmlolstrittor David
c liacev, 934.2IM) City Clerk Don

Ferry, who resigned from Ihr
administrator post effective June
28 was paid 935 (MX) Manning
ditik over again when Terry
resigned Manning's salary as
police eh tel was 930,-IDO plus
9HOO Intel ulve pay
Prior lu promoting Terry from
clly clerk, Ihr t timinlsslon had
uffared W illiam T
Powers,
assistant illy iidnilnistrator amt
finance director for the clly of
Perry, $35,000, bill balked al
Powers' demand lor 9-10.000
with a $5.(MX) pay raise In nine
months,
Al Monday night s l.oiiguttod
Commission meeting, commis­
sioner Larry G oldberg, who
cimile die motion thul the raise
be redout live to the date Mann

lllg trxik over soul hr would like
■o give Manning Ihe tits ad
tiiltilMlrMlnr's salary and may tie a
little more heraiiM- he was also
serving as (toller chlrl When
Manning was previously acting
adm inistrator Captain le rr i
Baker was ac ting clilel. hut lids
dine Manning said he would nol
gdt' up hls dcpurimrii! anil
allow him lo run It
M a n n in g asked the t om
mission Monday night to set his
salary as administrator and the
effective date He wanted a
written agreement lor how long
lie would be expecteil to serve
and it lie was replaced as
ailintnistrulor tie would still have
Ills job as poller &lt;lllil
You are going Imlrt-lclr in the

in *i two weeks al the budget
healings win dier you want one
person iii do two |olis and wind
die administrator s salary will
lie liv October you arc going In
know il I can do the |nh lit your
satisfaction.-' Manning told the
&lt;ommisslnn
t he commission unanimously
.•(iproved the Increase, bill
Commissioner June Lormuiin
said stir was still nol Iii lavnr ol
•oinlilnlng Hie two (ntis
"I
would never vote tor not having
a i it! administrator, tint I will
siippori you." she lold Manning
I lie yotnm ission apjiruveil
(ic-rl Z.unbrL former city clerk,
being made asstsiant t liv clerk
and |M-rsonnrl director assigned
im Ferry 'suffice.

slated (ur the city ccunmlsslon to
cpvrr travel expenses to Florida
la-ague of Cttle* meetings, Mayor
Smith agreed, saying what ttuContinued from page 1A
commissioners Ira n i at Ihe
n&gt; thr rommlsslon last month
I tie rest of the iniinry Is for inertings Is worth ilie money
spent to attend them.
lioarit projec ts. Faison said
Willi die additional $5,(MX) the
I tut Faison said dir heaudllruclty
enmmisslciu would still txlion money was the swing Item
In the budget dial eouid tie gelllng about SI 4.500 less than
dimmed lie said lie would like It did dils year because of money
lo see some ol dt&lt; money for Ihe saved cm Insurance and election
Si elite Improvement Hoard, as costs The new commission up
well us Iriotti Hu- asslstunt city j i a re n 11y Is y uu n gc r and
manager's posilltui. tunneled licalthlcr. therefore it costs die
into the Pulille Works Depart- &lt;It! less In Insure thrill said
menl wtileti needs more vehicles City Clerk Henry Ta m m
I lie commissioners were trow
.uut equipment The other com
inlsshiiKTs voiced approval of tiled liv die luck ol taxable laud
and lhr drop lit revenues gener­
dn suggesllcm
Faison also suggested dial ated Irmn building Inspection
sritHH) lx- addril lo ttu- 938.726 permits.

Faison s:tld alMitii 40 percent
ol ihe properly in S.mlord —
oioslly governmem land — ts
utx exe m pt. That means a
smaller lax base which creates a
strain on &gt;liv linids.mil leads to
lax Increases. Iii- said

in I.mo.try stijiportnig President
Reagan's call (or a balanced

...O p tio n s

...B o m b
Continued form page 1A
Asked about a motive for
im m t it n g , C o lli e r C o u n t y
slierttFs Capl Curds Mills said.
It s a mystery, really,v
A con si ruction worker who
was .d mi it 2(X) tret aw ay from
die Denson home sold lie heard
l wo explosions
I lie first was qttllr loud, and
die second explosion happened
one minute ur two minutes
taler.“ he said. ' Alter the second
explosion. I heard a woman
m learning It was Just a lot o(
blood and guts "
Investigators were trying to
determine whether there were
two bombs or whether the sec­
ond explosion was the car's gas
tank
Chuck Martin another ronsiructlon winker, told a reporter
lie heard the blast, rushed tu thr
si i-ue and dragged Caiol Henson
away from the sm ouldering
wreckage ol I h r car
tic IScottl just turned on the
kev and It blew up.' Martin said
Carol Henson told him
Martin theorized Curol Henson
s u rv iv e d because the c u r
exploded Just us she was openlug one ol Its doors
The blast tossed debris 200
leet Police covered the wreckage
w ith p la s t ic sheets. T w o
expensive sports cars and a
luxury car were also parked In
the drivcw'jy ol Henson's home
on While Vtolel Way.
Margaret Henson was d e ­
scribed as an active civic and
six lal leader In hrr humrlown of
Lancaster, Pa She was first
president of the Town Club and
active In thr Episcopal church.
Iix.it country club and the Iris
&gt; l ull

Her huxbund. Edward Henson,
died in I960 Hr was board
chairman of Lancaster Lease
I o Im ic o ol Pennsylvania Inc., u

t ile stra in
Ihe h o u s in g
• x p e rie n c ln g .
in t w o y e a rs
sta rts to llin g
F u n iiti

c o u ld In- ctllsct bv
I mmim 'i tile c it y is
Itui ii co u ld lie u p
tx 'liin la x im iu e y
In Iroiti ll. sa id

t.ag lliiii- was also blamed on
the $3.(xx) droii to revenues
tro n i t n it ld in g In s p e c tio n
|m m ills Monei inun (x tmlts In
the 1 9 H 4 -H 5 b u d g e t w a s
S115.(XX) while mill SI 12000 is
priijec ted lor next year Mayor
Sm ith asked, it Ihe clly Is
h e m m in g
w h y a d ro p in

|mmiitV'

l alson said developers trough!
major,industry In Lancaster lie oji pet mils Iasi year when they
also was a director of Universal ticant the city was going raise
Lease Tobacco Co nl Richmond. the lees The dcvc-lo|M'rs have
Y.i . and the Americ an Dank and lict-ii lianglng on lo the pt-Miills
t rust Co of Pennsylvania and a using them as Uu-i timid instead
trustee ol I lie Lebanon Valley ol paying lor tin higher prlc rd
permits he said Permits arc
&lt;'allege
Margaret Denson was thr gomt lor six months and can lie
daughter ol Harry Hitchcock, renewed wlihoia charge, Farr
a nol her prominent Lancaster said.
Flit city look Hie loss u|
resident. Her sister. Jane Lee
Murphy, said ol the explosion $327,000 in ledcrnl revenue
It's such a shock We are all money on Hie chin Farr re­
distraught about ll We can't m ind e d Ills colleagues the
liellevc It happened."
commission passr-cl a resolution

n-tlerw l b u d g r i . k n o w i n g a ll i h r

time Reagan would probublv cut
i tic lrctcr.il subsidies im tiles
We oiigtii In Im (ire it id we're
•miing it out nl ihe budget,''
Farr said
Hut Farr also -..ml the dim
mission should examine H|c
liudget closely and try to pass
Ihe illy budget wltlmm a lux
me tease, it possible.
t in w illin g to raise tlie
mlll.ige, lint let’s make sure W’c
alisolutely have to ‘
Itm Mayor Smtili. rumpatiiig
Hie illy to an old home to need
•■I repairs, countered the m m
m is s io n s h o u ld h a ve Ihc
cmirage'' to raise taxes
Commissioner Jo h n Mereet
added the commission should
have the "guts and wllljKiwvr
in raise taxes lur next vear, and
dicn tower the taxes over, them xl couple ol years as Ihe
i-ltrc is ot the building Imnuii are

lilt
Commissioner Rollert 'I hennas
said people may tx- remorseful
.■limit a tax Increase, but will feel
lx ttei once ihey scr dietr money
at work Commissioner Milton
Sm ith said the commission
could maintain the status quo
ttm it we expect to accomplish
what we need to
it's going to
cost more."

WEATHER
AREA FORECAST! Today 8 26 p m
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet —
T H U R S D A Y TIDES:
mostly sunny w ith u chance of
Wind variable 5 to 10 knots
in u I n I y a f t e r n o u n t h u n • Daytona Beach: highs. 3:31
thinugh Thursday rxerpt for
derstorms High low lo mid 90s a.nt.. 4 1&lt;&gt; p m . lows 9:36 u tn . southeast winds 10 to 15 knots
Light and variable wind rxrrpt 10:31 pm.: Port Canaveral: near thr coast In the afterruxms
strong and gusiy near Hum highs. 3 23 a in
4 02 |i ill . Sea I lo 2 leet except up to 3 (eet
10 22 p m .
derstorms Rain chance 30 per­ lows 9 27 a m
In the aftrrwxms Wind and seas
cent Tonight fair Low In Hie B a y p o r ti tilglis 8 0 4 a m
h ig h e r tn s c a tte re d th u n
mid 70s Light and varluhle 10 20 p.m.: lows, I 53 a m.. 4 06 derstorms
wind Thursday mostly sunny p m
EXTENDED FO R EC AST;
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet Friday through Sunday — Partly
except for scattered aliermxtn
thunderstorms High low to mid out 50 miles — Variable wind 5 cloudy days and lair nights.
ik)s Light and variable wind. to IO knots through Thursday Chance of afternoon and evening
except for southeast lo south thunderstorms. Lows near 70
Rain chance 40 percent
AREA READINGS (0 a.mjt wind 10 to 15 knots near thr north lo around 80 south Highs
temperature: 80; overnight low- count during the afternoons Sea near 90 ip mid fK)s
7 5 : T u e s d a y 's h i g h : 9 3 ; 2 feet or less but up to 3 leet in
barometric pressure 30.01. rela­ the afternoons Wind und seas
tive h u m id ity ; 88 percent; higher near scattered afternoon
llc iu k l
winds west at 5 mph; rain ,69 and evening thunderstorms,
BOATING FORECAST: St
lUVPt Ml IM)
Inch; sunrise 6 35 a m . sunset.
Wednesday, July 10. t m
Vot 77, No 275
Published Dolr
Sunder exept
uturder dr Tk* ieioerd MtrOd.
tiw Mt N French Are lenterd.

STOCKS

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u x lu to r* t* il m e lict m e t J i i w
Atlentlc Bens
Am erican Fteneer SAL
Mernett le n t
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WtdrwMUy. July 10, IttS -lA

Suicide Car Bombers Kill 17 In Lebanon
BEIR U T. Lebanon (UP!) — A Svrtan man and
Lebanese woman w ent calmly before T V cameras
to salute Syrian President Hafei Assad, then set
off In TNT-packcd cars on suicide attacks, killing
themselves and as many as 17 other people.
Both attacks Tuesday were aimed at security
- het'rtptinls in southern Lebanon manned by the
South Lebanon A rm y — the Israeli-backed militia
headed bvGcn. Antoine Lahd

"l warn Lahd that his fate wtll be the fate of all
irallors The best martyrdom Is the martyrdom of
blood." Ibtlssam Harb. a university student from
Ghartfa In the Shouf mountain;., said In a
television Interview taped iriOmrru* before she
emharked on the suicide mission
Beirut television said the attacks occurred
seven minutes apart at the Bayada-Naqoura and
Masbaya bridges

In Prune Minister Rashid Karuml of a "new
national plan" that calls for the rewriting ot
Lebanon's constitution In a bid lo end IO years of
civil w ar
Both bombers were tdcntllicd by Beirut tclrvt
sum as members ot the Syrian Popular National
Party, an extreme nationalist group that earned
out a similar attack at Batr aShouIgn April Two
Israeli soldiers were killed and two wounded

The bombings — the first In the SLA patrolled
security rone around the Israeli border since
Israel withdrew from Lebanon last month —
came amid bloody fighting between rival Moslem
militiamen in Tripoli Eleven people were killed
and 13 wounded - bringing the two-day toll for
the fighting In the northern port city to 19 dead
and 2H wounded
Tlie violence overshadowed an announcement

Smith, Moore Named To United Way Board
Sanford Mjyor Bcitve Smith and Susan Moore
, of Long wood have been appointed lo the United
Way executive committee, according to Dave
Joswlck. United Way president,
Mrs. Smith ts to fill ihe unexpired term of Bob
Whltehlll Mrs Moore will replace Jim Montcgny.
Mrs Smith tsan adjunct Instructor at Seminole
Community College and Is owner of ihc Park
Avenue Diet Clinic In Sari lord She Is on the
Ixiard of directors of the Salvation Army, a United
Way agency.
Mrs Moore is executive director of the Central
Florida Community Health Clinic iirSanford She
has agrerd to serve as chairman of the United
Way Social Planning Committee She served on
last year's budget committee.
Whltehlll and Montcgny. active in |tant United
W'.iy campaigns have been promoied by their
companies and no longer are winking In the
county.
Sherry Gould ol Orlando has bren appointed to

A ll Coins up lo

105

WEEKLY SPECIALS

fill the unexpired term of Bob Ew ing who has
icsigned front the United Way board because of a
i hangr In employment. Mrs. Gould is branch
manager of Carol Gables Federal In Ihc Alta
monte Mall.

“— —

Spray Effluent Site Sought

Buy Any Large Sub And Get A {
Small Sub For
l/a Prlco &lt;

^COUPON •—

EQUAL VALUE
Negotiations are underway to purchase a
9.5 acre parrel on Red Bug Lake Road, between
the Red Bug Elementary School and Red Bug
Park, as a site for spray Irrigation of effluent from
the county-owned Consumer sewer plant near
Casselberry
County Environmrnlal Services Director Jim
Bible got the county commission's blessing
Monday to continue negotiating fur the parcel
which has a $300,000 price lag and lo litre an
appraiser lo determine the value of the property

EXPIRES M7-85

All Ronzoni Macaroni
On Sale REQ St.10

Give You a Taste Of
Feasting Italian Style
Featuring Imports fromItity

FAIRMONT PLAZA
600 Hwy. 17-92 N.
_________Longw ood, F la .

l.831-1108

Years Old

r S. Coin Reserve, a division of Verret
Enterprises Inc., a chartered distributor of
Ciovemment Currency, has found over
15,000 Original Silver Dollars dating as far
back as 1878. These treasured coins will lxreleased lo the American Public for one
week only at a guaranteed price of $54.90
each..Jill incredible $25.00 less Ilian a major
national advertiser. Orders received later
may not be honored due to volatile
fluctuations in the precious metals market,
and checks may be returned uncashed.

CONGRESS MELTS
M ORGAN SILVER
Created by the U. S. Mint over a century
ago, more than 270 million Morgan Silver
Dollars were melted down during World
War I by the Federal government increasing
the value of these coins dramatically. After
only one more minting, Morgan Silver
Dollars were never issued again Their silver
content then as today is almost one Troy
ounce ot .900 fine silver. D espite
fluctuations in the price of silver, Morgan
Silver Dollars have had an average annual
appreciation of 26.4% in value over the last
10 years alone!

PRIVATE INDUSTRY
MELTS U. S.
SILVER DOLLARS
In January of 1980, silver hit a record
breaking $50.00 per ounce, triggering a
second massive melting of Silver Dollars.
The combination of these two major
meltings has resulted in Silver Dollars being
more scarce than ever. We have bee t
approached by the European Markets for
these rare coins, but we feel they should be
in the hands of the American Public. In
consideration of the fewer number of these
coins available, we guarantee an increase in
value that could be over 60% yearly. Which
means in five years they could be worth up
to $575.66 apiece.

Conveniently Located
J u s t t* Ml. N o f 434
II tou Iik0 italic you'll lev* u«*

Handled by B an kers and M in t Personnel

GENUINE
UNITED STATES
SILVER DOLLARS

U. S. COIN RESERVE

I

SILVER DOLLAR
STOCKPILES FOUND
Our find of over 15,000 original Silver
Dollars will lx* released from guarded vaults
to the American public only through this
notice! Most coins are up to 105 years
old and guaranteed to lx* in brilliant
uncirculated condition. Also, these coins are
guaranteed to be genuine U. S, (io v’t Issue
and are accompanied by a numbered
Certificate of Authenticity to that effect. We
can only guarantee this price for one week
due to the volatility of the precious metals
market.

STRICT LIMIT
Since our price of $54.90 each is an
incredible $25.00 less than a major national
advertiser, we expect an avalanche of orders
to come pouring in. Therefore, we advise
you to get your order in early before the
strictly limited supply at this price is sold.
We offer a 10-day examination period for
each order at which time they may be
returned for a full refund. A limit of five
hundred coins per order will be strictly
adhered! Avoid disappointment. Act now!

All Com* licit! at the

UNITED STATES COIN
RESERVE BUILDING
VISA &amp; MasterCard,
Check or Money Order

1-800-321-8700
CALL

TOLL FR E E

24 Hours a day
7 Days a week including Sunday

I

a

vo •

’Bbti

REASONS TO BUY NOW

C om plete listing.
Dates w ill be selected
at random.

l .T h e C hrist inns investm ent of u lifetim e.

1H78S

1889CC 1899S

2 . Rare• coins are
ate the only investmer
investment which has paid 264%
.tally over the last 10 years.
annua"

1879

18890

1900

3 . If you don’t own real silver money, you should.

1879CC 1889S

19000

I87!K&gt;

1900S

• I.These are among the last Morgan and Peace Silver dollars
we have available in this country.

1890

1879S . 1890CC 1901
1880

1890S

1880CC 1891

1902

5 . Each min is accompanied with a numbered Cert it irate ol
Authenticity and Grading, and all coins are guaranteed as to
silver content by the United States Government.
(LC o in analysts state that in the case of a market explosion these
Gov’t Silver Dollars could lx* worth $1000 each in only 5 years

1903

18800

189 ICC 1904

1880S

18910

1921

7 . In o u r o p in io n , th e s e co in s ha v e o n ly been h an d led
by b a n k e rs a n d m in t p e rso n n e l.

1881

1891S

1921 ID

8.

188 ICC 1892

1921

COIN DEALERS LIMITED TO 500 COINS.

18810

1892CC 1922

1881S

18920

1922D

1882

1892S

1922S

1882CC 1893

A L IM IT O F F IV E H U N D R E D COINS PER
O R D E R W I L E HE S T R IC T L Y A D H E R E D ! AV O ID
DISAPPOINTM ENT. ACT NOW!

1923

18820

1893CC 1923D

1882S

18930

I923S

1883

1893S

1924

U, S. Coin Hm crve, I
St, 450 Bowie, Beaumont, It-na* 77701
hi; invurarite purpose* you must call (or mailing munition)
I'lrate tend mr by insurrd mill_____
Sihrr IMIais .it S&amp;l-M Nth
plu* pontage. ham)Iiiik and Imurancr » indicated below 1 have til day* lo
in»peet my mint, at which time I will trieivr a lull rrtund tl I rrturn them

to you by uiMjrrd mail
□
□

I883CC 1894

I924S

18840

18940

1925

188 IS

1894S

1925S

1885

1895

1926

□
a
□
n

1 United State* Silver Dollar
|ilu* 1.1 postage, handling and insurant r
5 1'tilted State* Silver Dollars
plut 15 pontage, handling and insurance
1(1 United State* Silver DolUl*
plu* $ 10 pottage, handling and insurance
20 United State* Stiver Dollar*
plu* $15 poitage. handling and mturancr
40 United State* Silver llolUr*
plut $27 postage. handling and mauranre
60 United State* Silver Dollar*

1926D

18850

1895S

1926S

1885S

1896

1927

1886

1H960

1927D

18860

1897

1927S

1886S

18970

1928

1887

1897S

1928S

Charge 0 VISA
AcxT * -------------

1887S

1898

1934

Signature _ _ _ _ _

1888

18980

1934D

18880

1898S

1934S

1888S

1899

1935

1889

18990

1935S

a

&lt; * vr a

$274 50
$54900
$1098.00
12196 00
13201 (Hi

plu* i l l pottage, handing and miurance
14102 (X»
O United State* Stiver Dollar*
a Hplu*
i.1A postage, handling and insurance
tr.'mx 00
□ 120 United Stair* Sliver Dollar*
plus iVi postage, handling and miurarne
11(1,900.00
□ 200 United Stat&lt;&gt;* Silver 1Julian
plu* |70 postage, handling and mturancr
»27.4:&lt;0(X)
□ 500 United State* Silver Dollar*.........
plus 1150 postage, handling and inturanrr
Total amount eminted I

1885CC 18950

.r±i -,- a-

S51 'Mi

Telephone number
Mr Mn
M i Miu _____

1»

MasterCard

Lift date

�Evening Herald
(USPS ««1 JM)
300 N. FRENCH A V E .. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322 28 j I or 031 9993

Wednesday, July 10, )$S5-aA
Wsyns O. Doyle, Publisher
Thornes Giordano. Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director

Home Delivery Week. SI 10: Month. M 79 3 Month*.
SM 25: H Month*. S27 OO. Year. S5I 00 Hy Mall Wrrk.
SI 90. Month. SO 00. 3 Month*. $18 00; 6 Month*. S32 50
Year. S«0 00

S ta tu e O f L ib e rty
i N e e d s O u r H e lp
More than S 155 million has been collected
toward n $230 million fond to restore two of
our national symbols — the Statue of Liberty
und E llis Island.
The statue stands on 12-acre Liberty Island.
It and 27V4-acre E llis Inland lie close to one
another In New York Harbor's Upper Hay.
Contributions, w hich are tax deductible,
are bring raised from the general public and
e from corporations and foundations.
The Statue ol Liberty was a gift from
Frunce to the j&gt;eople of the United States, a
monument to Franco-American friendship.
The 100th unnlversary of the statue's dedica­
tion will be next year, and restoration work Is
expected to Ire completed In time for the
centennial celebration.
Restoration Is extensive. The torch neld by
the statue Is being replaced. The structural
skeleton Is being renewed. The copper skin Is
being cleaned und treated with ontl-corroslvr
materials. Various stairways are being re­
stored. elevators replaced and ventilation
Improved. It Isa m assive tusk.

DICK WEST

These Questions Can Cut Years Off Your Life
wasn't certain whether to add three months to
my score.
In years past. I have driven more than 20.000
miles and the autos I owned back then didn't
even have seat belts Should I count off for that,
and for the fact that I might end up driving more
than 20.000 miles this year?
Honesty compels me to give myself an "I" for
question No. 19.
And what about question No. 21. which asks:
"Do you use prescription or over-the-counter
drugs only when prescribed, following Instruc­
tions carefully?"
Candor obliges me to admit that no doctor I
ever consulted prescribes over-the-counter
drugs. And what of the prescriptions 1 have
thrown away unfilled?
To be frank about It. most of the over-thecounter drugs I have taken were prescribed by
my m other-in-law, who never attended a
For Instance, statistics Indicate people lose 15 medical school.
And by "Instructions." does Caldwell Davis
months off their projected life span If they drive
more than 20.(XX) miles annually without seat mean the directions printed on the bottle or
Itells: 12 mouths If they huckle up
hers?
I seldom drive that far anymore and always
Once again. I drew a blank, although I might
fustrn my seal Ik-|i even for short hauls. Hut I have lost a couple of years, depending on how

W A S H IN G TO N IUPI) - "E ve ry day. 30
Americans turn 100." says a questionnaire
prepared by a New York advertising agency.
'W ill you be one of them?”
Well. 79. which, according to the accompa­
nying actuarial table is my "average life
expectancy." Is a nice age. But the questions
posed by the firm of Calwell Davis Partners are
not reassuring for anyone hoping to turn 100. a
good round number.
The questionnaire asserts that "you can add
months, years, even decades to your life, or
foreshorten It. depending upon your family life,
personality, fitness, work. play, health und
heredity."
Amen to the foreshortening.
It was not. however, the actuarial pluses and
minuses that actually did me In. It was the
Indecision.

that last question Is answered.
Up to nine months can be lost, and no timegained, by the 24th question: "Are you exposed
to air pollution?"
I am a regular habitue of the Senate press
gallery. Just off the Senate chamber, and
occasionally visit "the cave of the winds" Itself.
Does this mean I am "regularly" exposed to
air pollution "In substantial amounts?"
It depends. I suppose, on which senators are
orating and what your own political philosophy
might be.
Contrariwise, up to 12 months can be gained,
but no time lost, by the 26th question; "Do you
have regular medical checkups?"
Th e only possible answers are "complete" and
"partial." Hut what of the person whose medical
checkups are spasmodic, or episodic, rather
than regular'.-* And what If you have no medical
checkups at all?
Since most of the questions were Impossible,
or impractical, lo answer. I gave up trying to
figure out how long I might live.
I simply concluded I had been dead for six
years, and let It goat that

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

SCIENCE W O R LD

Incans:
Who Were
They ...?

W ary
Of Tax
Reform

Until the tux reform Issue is
willed III Congress, llltle rise Is
likely to receive close public
scrutiny. If the outline of the future
I,.' E llis Island was an Immigration station
lux system is unclear. Individuals
* between 1892 and 1954. During that time 17
amt business organization* won't be
l million Immigrants arrived at the Island from
llkrly to make new investments
t their native countries and passed through to
Indeed Investors already are worried
- Incom e new Am ericans. An Ellis Island
that they will Ik- |&gt;enallzed (or gains
{ ‘.Centennial will lie celebrated In 1992. with
achieved under the existing tux
±'(he opening of Its refurbished buildings and a
code
t : ticw historical museum.
W li.tt c o m p a n y w ill o rd e r
t-C; Those who came to America from Europe
ex|K-nslve new Industrial equipment
If they won't Ik- able lo drprrrlulr It
»;l|allcd by the Stutue of Liberty on thrlr way to
as rapidly as ul present? What
jlfellls Island. The statue became a symbol of
Independent oil operator will be
t-Ropc and freedom, and It represented home to
enlhuslasllc utront exploratory dril­
tjAm erlcan servicemen returning from Europe
ling If the drplrtlon allowance won't
{ lilt r r two world wars.
Ik- pul to work effectively In l he
*!■*.' Those whit wish to oiler llnanclal help to
months ahead while the lux features
f lltcse two great restoration projects can send
remain undecided
Mrunwhllr. Congress Is hearing
J ch ecks to: Statue of Llherty/Ellls Island
disturbing news In mid-June, the
» Foundation. 1* 0 . Iktx 1980. Terminal Annex.
House Ways and Means Committee
Lo s Angeles. C A 90051.
heard l)r Martin Keldsteln, former
head of the President's Council of
Economic Advisers, warn that the
a d m in is tra tio n 's lux proposal
"would probably cause a recession
in itiH ti." He pinpointed the
pluuned end of the Investment lax
Sportsmanship basically Is fairness and
credit as the proti.ihlr cause of such
self-control.
a recession, lie recommended thut
We have to remind ourselves of that
the move be |M&gt;sl|&gt;oned In Ills view,
whenever Jim m y Connors und John McEnroe
removal of this Incentive lo Invest
play tennis and rngage In thrlr foul-mouthed
would cut U.S. cnrn|K'tlllvrness In
Confrontations with linesmen and spectators.
world markets.
Or when basket hall coaches become so ugly
Dr. Fcldstcln also blasted a pro­
with referees thut they get teclmlcul Inula, or
vision lo lake buck $57 billion In
revenue lost through current,
when baseball managers kick up dirt and
spccded-up depreciation write-offs,
scream at umpires.
saying this Is "unfair and absolutely
The recent U .S. Open Golf Tournament
unprecedented."
provided something lor the tennis brats, bully
Tilts Is a lax provision to recap­
coaches und crybaby managers to think
ture alleged windfall* Irom acceler­
about.
ated depreciation li woidd strike a
O ur competitor led all the way, right up to
heavy blow against a variety ol
the end. Hut he was nosed out on the last hole
capital-intensive industries, the oil
by Andy North, who l&gt;eat him lor the title by
industry, transportation industry
one stroke — a penalty that the novice had
and othrrs. It is a vrry unfair
pro|M&gt;sal and smai ks ol ex post
been given.
facto law Companies rnude their
He received a one-stroke penalty on a weird
Investment decisions on the basis of
shot In which he popped the ball upwurd
the ucccleruted depreciation pro­
while In the rough and by accident hit It a vision. They should not tie In­
second tlmr on his swing.
formed, after the fad. th.il tills
provision won't Ik- o|&gt;erutlvr und
T ills broken-mirror luck on the last round
that addlllou.il lax Is due the federal
cost him the title. Hut did he throw Ills clubs,
scream , and yell that he was cheated out of government. This recapture pro­
vision would come Into ellcet six
the championship'*
months prior lo the setting ol new
Not at all. All tills true s|&gt;ort said was that
lax rates In an editorial. Hostile.**
Ills second-place finish "wasn't too bud for
W'crk says "Th is Is not lair: gotal
the llrst time." No demeaning ol the cham pi­ and hud should fcr phased In
on or the umpire who assessed the penulty
together" Whtrevcr dreamed up
that cost him many thousands ol dollars.
this provision had no Intention id
playing fair with Investors who
T h a t w as s p o r ls m u n s lilp . A n d u lso
create jobs.
curiously enough. T .C . Chen, the good s|&gt;ort.

S p o r ts m a n s h ip

I TbLD You w e
C O U L D N ’T a FFo R D
a H ouse/ but n o

/

Y o u FOUND u s a
L P a N w ith p z w m g n t s
w e c o u l d ii a i o e .
THeRe w a s j u s t o n e

L iT T L e C3TCH: 3

ftokiooM ar THeeND/
________ __________ '
W ILLIAM RUSHER

M r. Reagan's Critics
Reading the comments of some of
my conservative colleagues on Pres­
ident Reagan's handling of the
hostage crisis, one gets the Im­
pression that their haste emotion on
the subject Is an obscure but
(Kiwcrful sense of dissatisfaction.
Since no other convenient means of
venting this dissatisfaction suggests
Itself. Hu y are ratling at Mr Reagan
like a flock of angry blackbirds
They urr wrong
In I hr llrst plat e. as I have pointed
out. Mr Reagan managed to bring
the hijacked passengers home
without yielding to a single one of
thrlr captors' demands — a remark­
able leal In the circumstances. The
decisive factor was probably the
i I n . .ii id a fresh U .S mllltury
intervention in Lebanon — some­
thing dial holh Syria and the Soviet
Union would give a great deal to
avoid
In ihr second place, to crlllclre
Mr Reagan ul this point Is like
living to review u play at the end of
Hu lust .ul Hie siory 1s patently
not over The whole retaliation
scenario remains to be played out —
and II may well tie delayed sub­
stantially by thr nerd to weigh the
late ol those remaining seven hos­
tages In the Hekau Valley. If no
retaliation ever ensues.' that will
Indeed Ik- the time, and the oc­
casion. for condemnation Hut It Is
scarcely hrrr yet. and such spasms
a* Noimun Podhoretz’s cx |&gt;ost facto
pru|Misal of "an ultimatum followed

by military strikes of great severity
tf the hostages were not Immediate­
ly released" (a course that would
probably have resulted In tlie
slaughter of all cd Ihrtnl are simply
embu trussing.
T h ird ly , the American public
would do well lo liear In tnlnd the
distinction between sentim ents
appropriate lo a highly satisfactory
outcome of Acl I ol this drama and
the understandable exasperation of
Israel and Its friends over some of
the dialogue that managed to get
onto American television during the
crisis A weary, befuddled hostage
or two spoke syni|&gt;utliettcally of Ihe
Shllte cause (whatever that Is):
somebody In thr udmlnlstrutlon
drew, or allowed lo I k * drawn, an
unjustified parallel (George Will's
co m p la in t) between kidnapped
Americans and drlalurd Lebanese;
Syrian President Assad manugrd to
appear transiently benign, despite
hls own long record of complicity
with terrorism Is Israel's case so
frugtle that II Is vulnerable lo
pinpricks of that sire'*
Fourth, thr slrudlasi refusal ol
people who ought to know heller
land let * start again with leading
conservatives) lo conlemplulr thr
Implications of the unsuccessful
attempt on Qadctall* llle In May
1984. or of the mysterious iKimb
blast ul the home ol the head of (hr
Party of God movement In Helrut In
March this year, Is beginning to
b o r d e r o n I n I e 11 e ct u a 1 I r •
responsibility

By C h a rle s J . Cannon
BOULDER. Colo (UPI) - A literal
and figurative cloud covers the
ancient city of Gran Pajaten. nestled
amid dense mountain foliage high
In the i hick rain forests of northern
Peru.
A team of more than two dozen
scientists has started the first stage
of a University of Colorado effort to
shed light on the civilization that
nourished there and then diauppearrd.
The university announced earlier
this year that It had signed u
five-year contract with the Peruvian
government to excavate and study
thr one-tim e m etropolis often
shrouded In clouds'
A learn of Peruvian scientists did
preliminary work there In 1963. and
American explorer Eugene Savoy ol
R e n o . N e v . . v t s 11 e d t h e
H.GOO-fert-hlgh site In 1965 and
gave II Its name (pronounced Grahn
Puliliuh-tayn).
Rut thr Colorado effort is the llrst
extended m u l t i d i s c i p l i n a r y ctlort to
sttidv the etty a n d It* u n k n o w n

civilization, believed to tie a p rr-i
Incan people. T h r Incas dominated!
most of civilized South America
Irom 1476 until thr Spanish conqursl ih.it ended In 1535.
Hy contrast, a CU scientist said
preliminary evidence Indicates Gran
i'ajalen may have hern Inhabited
from 500 A D. to 1500 A I). But the
Identity of the residents Is u n ­
known
Wr want to Irani everything we
can alMuit them ,” said Tom Lennon,
an arrhueologlst who. with a n ­
thropologist Jane Wheeler. Is codlrrctlng the C U tram working
lotntlv with Peruvian scientist*
"We will try to learn about Ihelr
lal organization. Ihr Impact of
environmental stress, how they
adapted to the extremely wet
weather — up to 230 tnche* ol rain
uniiuully — what (hey ale. which
crops they raised." he said "All this
will require extensive study over a
period of at least 15 lo 20 years."
Lennon said the Peruvlun gov­
ernment's goal Is lo "find how to
use this kind of urea w ithout
ecological damuge."
mm

"The rate of destruction of trop­
ical lorest worldwide Is a scandal."
lie said. "T h is area has had no
major Impact, and wr want to ftgure
oui how to avoid destruction, how
to make It a model for management
and analysts of pristine areas "

Is not American. He Is Taiwanese.

JACK A N D E R S O N

BERRYS W O RLD

Military 'Fiasco' Was Really A Success
I
4'

Central

a m l iu c a

£
I

r?

'“ Woof)' OK. good Lucky — then yo u , agree
with Weinberger "

By Ja c k Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
W A S H IN G T O N While the
Reagan administration weighs its
opium* lor dealing with terrorism, it
Is rrlrvunt to examine ihr lessons
learned from a remarkable U S
mllltury operation nearly 15 years
ago: the commando raid on Son
Tuv. North Vietnam
The raid was widely rrgardrd us
an Intelligence Masco, since the
Am erican prisoners who were
supposed lo Ik- rescued were no
longer there, hi lad. It was nothing
of the sort. U.S Inlclllgrnre wu-i
quite accurutr, und the raid Itself
was curried out with su|&gt;erb skill
What the Pentagon planners
knew before the Son Tsy raid und
the surprising results have never
been revealed Here's the story:
On Nov 21. 1970. a force of 60
rille com m andos landed In a
secluded compound 23 miles west
of H a n o i, deep Inside N o rth
Vietnam. The men were told their
mission was to libcrutc us many us
NO American POWs being held

J

there
Not a single POW was found Only
N o rth Vietnam ese (an d some
Chinese) soldiers were on the pre­
mises A brisk buttle ensued. The
enemy suffered up to 10Q casu­
alties. not a single American was
killed In lad. the only U.S "casual­
ty" was a commando who sprained
.m ankle
T h r raiders were bitterly and
understandably dtsappolnlrd. They
had apparently risked their lives for
nothing Who hud blundered?
T h r overwhelming evidence Is
that no one hud goofed. U.S.
Intelligence was reasonably certain
iht ra were no American POWa at
Son Tay by thr time of the raid. So
why send Ihe raiders In?
The chief plunnrr of the raid. Gen.
Donald T . Blackburn, told our
associate Donald Goldberg years
later "Wc knew they (the POWs)
had been moved. Wc didn't want to
give up Ih r dem onstration of
power." The real purpose of the
raid, he said, was to show the North
Vietnamese how vulnerable they
were.

There were Intelligence gaps,
though not over Ihr central qurs
lion of thr presence or ubsence of
Americans In Ihr camp. An Arm y
Intelligence ofTIcrr who worked on
the raid told us recently that thr
Pentagon deliberately held down
I h r num ber of rrconnutssance
drones that flew over the camp for
fear of tipping off Ihe North Viet­
namese loan Imminent raid
"T h e btg thing was not whether
there were POW* there or not." he
explained, "but whether there was a
North Vietnamese regiment there or
not. We had to tnukr sure that they
would not set up a trap for thr
raiding force or wr could have had
60 more POW*. which would have
been disastrous."
The large number of troops the
raiders encountered was a surprise,
as wan the quality of their weupuns.
In fart, a CIA analyst later resigned
over the raid, complaining that his
boss, not wanting to admit he had
no spies In the area, "estimated"
that the enemy soldiers at Son Tay
were armed only with old Japanese
and French rifles. pitchforks and

machetes. In (act. they had machine
guns.
Uut. In retrospect, the raid wus
both a strategic and tactical suc­
cess R netted maximum military
gain (rum a minimum risk of men
und m aterial. There were four
important results;
• K n rtn 'y le ad ers w ere so
frightened at the demonstration
that U S. raiders could strike with
impunity so close to Hanoi that they
withdrew from thr capital and
avoided gathering together, which
hampered their planning ability.
• Some of their best troops weie
pulled back from Ihe south to
piotect Hanot.
• Devastallngly effective surlace-to air missile batteries were
also recalled from the south to ring
Hanoi.
• The treatment of American
POWs Improved dramatically as
l hey were moved Into Hanoi for
security. It was "less likely that
some sadistic sergeant out in the
Micks" would mistreat them, a
source explained

�Evtiilnfl Htraid, Sanford. FI

Wodiwsday, July

10,

ms-SA

323-5454 V I L L A G E

Also Fined $500

Ex-Lake Mary Mayor Reprimanded
Gov Bob Graham has fined former Lake
Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson *500 and
publicly reprimanded him for using city
telephones and automobiles for personal
use.
Sorenson was also reprimanded for taking
a *900 expense advance without city
commission approval.
Graham took the action came Monday
based on a recommendation of the state
Commission on Ethics
Former city commissioner Ray Fox
brought Sorenson s actions to the attention
of Lake Mary's city commission In Sep
tember 1983. but "elected officials lacked
the courage and integrity and the local press
adopted a head-ln the sand altitude." Fox
said When the commission did not take
action. Fox pressed thr matter with the
elhlcs commission
Sorenson. 42. scrvrd as Lake Mary's
mayor for 10 years. He lost his post in
November lo Mayor Dick Fess
"Walt Sorenson was 100 percent candid
with the citizens of Lake M arv." said

Michael Gray. Sorenson's attorney.
Gray said that although Sorenson is guilty
of some "technical violations" the case Is
not a criminal one.
"It appears to be a personal vendetta by
the party who made the charges." Gray
said.
Sorenson was accused of making long­
distance phone calls from Lake Mary City
Hall to his business In Orlando, and using a
city vehicle to drive to Port Canaveral.
Lake Mary C ity Commissioner Colin
Keogh started a defense fund to help pay
Sorenson's legal bills. Keogh said the fund
had about $900 In It and that It would
almost cover Sorenson's legal expenses
According to Keogh, the dispute between
Sorenson and Fox came about over the
purchase of new fire truck for the city.
"After Sorenson broke a tie vote denying
purchasing the truck. Fox said to Sorenson
'You will never be elected In Lake Mary
again."’Keogh said.
Fox then brought Sorenson's actions to
the attention of the cltv commission and

F L E A

local press.
When commissioners heard the charges,
"there was little we could do." Keogh said
"The attorney said that we could send It
[the easel to the ethics commission, but If
we announced It I Intentions to refer the case
to the stale) publicly, we would have been
guilty of a misdemeanor "
But Fox Insists that he only wanted to sec
justice done and that there Is no personal
vendetta against Sorenson
"I did not oppose Sorenson, but philo­
sophically we are miles apart on what Is
right and what Is wrong He did not think It
was wrong to use city property for personal
use 1 feel that Justice has been done.' Fox
said.
Fox said that the support Sorenson has
received Indicates that many people also
must think he (Sorenson 1 did nothing
wrong
"But I took an oath of office to uphold thr
laws of Lake Mary ami this state, and that's
w hat I did," Fox Mild
— R ichard T ru e tt

ing and unanimously agreed lo
make an oflrr for the land
B e n n y A rn o ld , a s s is ta n t
supervisor for facilities and
iransportion. said that school
iMiard guidelines call (or elemen­
tary schools to be situated on 15
a m-s of land Geneva has about
It

Arnold said that the land,
valued at *14.900. would be
used to Increase the school's
capacity from 250 to 790 In a
lulurr construction project. He
said some of the land would lie
used for a playground facility.
In a related construction mai­
ler. the state Department of

M A R K E T

SANFORD’S FIRST AND ONLY
REAL FLEA MARKET
NOW FOLLY PAVED

1500 FRENCH AVE.
SANFO R D . FLA.
OPED WED.-FBI -SAT.-SUk MIN OR SHINE

Homeowners Insurance?
O

ik * m um *

s a v s it b e s t.

T TONY RIISSI INSURANCE
it
P h . : i 2 2 -0 2 » 5
_

1 2 5 7 5 S . F r e n c h t v p (, S n n f o r d

\yitito~ O w n e r s In s u r a n c e
I itr. H»mi t jr Hialnn* One n-um

»l all.

PUM P BONUS

S c h o o l B o a r d S e e k s To E n la r g e G e n e v a S c h o o l S i t e
The Seminole County School
Board Is expected lo approve a
rccom m rndat.ou by Superinlet dent R o b e rt H ughes to
purchase 1.26 acres of land
adjacent to Geneva Elementary
School at Its meeting Monday.
Board members discussed I lie
purchase at their .lunr 19 meet­

323-5454

Kdurallon gave the school board
Itnal approval lor Its proposed
rcrooflng project for sections of
Oviedo High School and Mtlwee
Middle School
T h r Job wlllrosf $231,219 No
date has been sei for construc­
tion lo begin.

2 TON l \IT38Vr
NOTHING DOWN

—Richard Truett

‘I Have To Go To The Restroom,’ Woman Tells Rapist
thlel c re p t In to L in d s e y 's
A 24-year-old Osteen woman
bedroom where he was sleeping
who turned up nude and asking
and toon $270 from his wallet
A c tio n R ep o rts
lor help ai a Sanford home at
which was in his pants pocket, a
alMiul 9 30 p m Tuesday told
fxillce report said The thief then
★ F ire s
Seminole County sheriffs depu­
ielt th ro u g h Ihe hathroom
ties that she was raped by a man
★ Courts
window.
who offered her a ride
The victim said tlie- suspect
* P o lic e
Someone broke into Ihe Day
had picked her up ai Ihc corner
and Night Grill. 1300 S. French
nT Sanford Avenue and 3rd
Sirrcl In Sanford He w as to lake and were nabbed as they were Avc.. Sanford, Saturday night
her to her grandfather's Sanford driving from the area at about and stole an undeterm ined
home hut Instead drove to u 2 16 a m Tuesday, the report number of boxes of meat. The
value of the meat was also
remote urea at tin- dead end of wild.
Narcissus Avenue In Sanford
Ms. Coole has been released on undetermined, according to a
where he reportedly raped the $500 Ixind and Is scheduled to [Miller report.
woman, a sheriffs report said.
appear In court July 23. O'Shea
Tools worth about $313 were
The victim escaped after tin- was being held In lieu of $5,000
stolen Saturday or Sunday from
attack by telling the man she twmd.
Boyd Parker's pickup truck
had lo go to the restroom. She
D U IA R R E S T S
fled nude to a home at 2330
The following person has been which was parked at his home.
Narcissus Avenue, and sheriffs .triested In Seminole County on 500 S. Oak Avc.. Sanford, police
deputies were called to the a charge of driving under the reported.
scene, the report said.
influence:
T w o w e d d in g b a n d s, an
Deputies searched the urea but — Kobrrt David Loflln. 34. ol
Imind no sign of I lie suspect, the 1709 Lee Road. W inter Park, electric guitar and colna valued
rrport said.
was arrested at 9:22 p m. Mon­ together at about *1,580 were
day
ufler he was found sleeping stolen from Sandra DeCaprlo's
THIEVES ATTACK
In
h
is ca r a lo n g s id e U .S . home at 145 Sand Pine Circle.
In sepurate Incidents, two
Sanford, police reported.
Seminole County men reported Highway 17-92, Sanford, The
car's
engine
was
running.
to sheriffs deputies that they
An outboard motor worth
CAR THEFT ARREST
were attacked by thieves.
9225 was stolen from Carlos
A
n
employee
of
Seminole
Raymond Burnatn. 2H, of 391
Frunclso Mcndo/er. 33. of 1806
E Altamonte Drlvr. Altamonte Ford. U S. Highway 17-92. San- Linden Road. Winter I’.irk. on
Springs, fold deputies tic was lord, has been charged with Sunday or Monday, a sheriffs
attacked (rom behind when he grand theft In connection with icport said.
approached the front door of his the stealing of a 1985 Ford
between June 24 and J u ly 5,
About *200 cash and a 910
home at about 2 .cm Tuesday.
rash box were stolen Sunday or
Btirnam wild the attacker or Sanford police reported
Police spotted the car parked Monday from a desk In the olflce
Uilarkers turned him and pun­
c h ’d him in the left eye. He was at the Last Stop on Southwest of Warren T u m r r at Artistic Tile
temporarily blinded and was Hoad. Sanford, and found the Co . 1045 U.S. Highway 17 92.
also pimchrd in the sides, a suspect In Room *3 there at Longwood. a sheriffs report
uboul 11 a m. Monday, a police said.
sheriff s report wild
Mum.mi's wallrl was taken rrjxirt wild.
T h e suspect said he had
Yard worker Michael David
and *45 stolen (rom II. The
wallet was left behind when the permission lo have the vehicle, Mann. 21. of 378 Pine Tree
attarkrrls) (led Murium who but dealership management in­ Road, Lake Monroe, reported to
could not describe any suspects sisted the car had been stolen, sheriffs deputies that his *120
wred rater was stolen from a
was treated at Florida Hospi­ the report wild.
Kenneth la-on Fields, 21. of trailer while he was working at
tal Altamonte Springs for Inju­
Room *3. Last Stop, was ar­ Ihe Lake Monroe Post Office,
ries to his eye. the rrport said.
In Ihe otlirr case. Brian Lee rested at his home and was t-akc Monroe, on Monday.
Fansler. 27. walked Info his being held 111 lieu of $5,000
A 22-caliber revolver and a
home at 1660 Sipes Avr.. San­ bond.
B U R O L A R IE 8 *1 T H E F T S
txix of bullets were stolen from
ford. on Monday and spotted a
T w o spoke wheel hubcaps Ihe home of Pete Finch. 21. of
man armed with a kitchen knife
under the kitchen (able The worth *60 each were stolen 550 E. 4th St., Chuluola. be­
suspect told Fansler lo come on Friday from a 1973 Ford Thun - tween Friday and Sunday, a
In. hut Fansler lied with the drrhlrd at National Auto Sales. shcrtfr s report said,
1120 S. Sanford Avc . police
suspect In pursuit, a sheriffs
rr)*irted.
O ra n g e C o u n ty Slate A t ­
rrport wild.
torney's Investigator Jam e s
Outside Fa n sle r ran into
A thief broke into Benjamin Ballard. 32. of 1507 Hlrkory
another suspect who hit him In
L
i
n d s e y 'a h o m e at 1306 Drive. Altamonte Springs, re­
thr head with a Ixurd. The
thieves lied with *30 iri change Williams Avc.. Sanford, early ported to Seminole C o u n ty
takrn from a dish on a bedroom Sunday police reported. The s h e r if f 's d e p u tie s th u l a
dresser. Ihc report wild
F a n s le r w e n t lo C e n tra l
Florida Keglonal Hospital. San­
W HATEVER THE
ford. for treatment of a cut on his
TEMPERATURE
1
DAY
SERVICE
left car. thr report said.
|0N M OST C A S H )
C O U P L E C LA S H
I
An a pp aren tly intoxicated
FREE
ESTIMATE
ro u p le w h o cla sh e d w ith
Also Available
yi*
iYsathsrtron Csntrtl
Casselberry police who tried to
Air CondlUonarlHsat Pump
culm them In a shopping center
• Rspairt * S titt
Won’t Lst You Down
were eventually arrested after
• Nsw * Uttd
mmm m e m
p iu m s in o s
the man rrjiortrdly tried to drive
V a cu m tl i St wing M tch lnt*
n M
U
h e a t i n g in c
away alter being warned not to.
"M l&gt;U I
IKI Uo’f't M . !*«*•»&lt;
is x u is n
a police rrport said.
m in tui
The man. Patrick P. O'Shea.
33. of 732 Addilar Road. Winter
Springs, was charged with driv­
FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
ing under the Influence. Denise
Louise Coule. 29. of Clermont,
now *
who allegedly tried lo swap seals
Frequent Headaches
In the cur with O'Shea when It
Low Back or Hip Pain
was apparent he was going lo be
D im ness or Loss of Sleep
Numbness ot Hands or Fsst
arrested, was also arrested,
Nervousness
Ms. Coole was (barged with
Neck Pstn or Stillness
assault on a police officer and
Arm end Shoulder Psln
resisting arrest without violence
alter allegedly drawing back her
1*1 Tnt. Shed Ans T«t As* Tdk Mtfe Dsrtsr.
fist In a threatening manner and
refusing to calm down
- IM| O I K M AMO M l OTM (JI P3AA0M M U O N M l I BOM P A TM lN t MAS * AOHT »0 M ’ U M TO
M I C M O l BAItMMI cm M H M U S I D BOM P »H * tH f IO A SMI G ’ » « A M » &lt; t l I l M N U
O'Shea alao was charged with
TOM CM ’ M O W IN ' I M C H a M U O M N D A t A A * lm T 0* AMO M ’ MN N HOUSB OB M U O N
buttery on a police officer, re­
D M 10 iH f A O I i m i U f e l M I CM TMf I P( I U M K I KAW iM A’ iOM OS TMATMtMf
sisting arrest and driving with a
u a m S A N F O R D P A I N C O N T R O L CLINIC
suspended license.
-to
O P C H I R O P R A C T I C , I N C . "&gt;•” * * » *
T h r pair had first been spotted
8PM
' zan s AIRPORT BtVD — SANFORD *•*
* *•"
at a shopping center at Red Bug
SANFORD JJJST6J
' Ai Utual
FREE- ORLANDO 84V0JB9
Lake Road and Stair Knud 436

SEMINOLE SEW&amp;VAC

322-9411

W•* *4*4

__

3 8 -ca llb e r re v o lv e r and a
shotgun wert stolen from his car
while parked at his home Sun­
day or Monday.
FIR E C A L L S
The Sanford Fire Department
responded to the following t o!Is.

Saturday

PER M O N TH

Carrier

* U s in g e ria ting •Isctrleal
, - dtsconnscl

A Carrier High-Efficiency Air Conditions
Heat P u m p at a Special Price! .

— H 35 a m . 305 E First St..
*27. rescue. Joseph Lovell. 68.
of the same address, was found
dead He died ol heart disease,
according to u spokesman for the
Seminole County Medical Exam ­
iners Office
- 8 53 a m . 1807 W. 12th Place,
rescue. A 66-yrar-old woman
had a rrurtion lo her medication.
— 12 42 p.m., 2835 Gale Place,
rescue. Ail 87-ycar-old man who
had a general Illness was taken
to the hospital.
— I 03 p in.. 1403 W 16th St.,
lire. A lire sparked by a pot Ielt
burning on a stove gutted thr
kitchen and mused smoke dam­
age th rouglintil the house.
Firefighters battled the blaze
almost two hours before putting
It out. The uniount of damage
was not determined und there
were no Injuries.
— 2 43 p m . 210 S Summerlin
A v r ., e m ergency-re la ted. A
possible electrical short was reported but firelighters did not
liud II when they arrived at thr
scene.

• IUpl.it c* unit oiJ. inefficient unit regardless ol make or nnuli l
• High eltutrim healing - Produces over iwnr as rtuivh Heal per
a Att
electric rrsisume heat me cien when temperature o

freeing
• High I Muieru\ (.doling too - High S I I II Mime mean* lower
summer i online hills!
,
• l ong lading spau-age uimponents

- —

b

'.» ■

With 60mo. revolving credit termsof 18% A PR

,

, mr
- jja

,

»*■» smi
unroBo me.

100 N. MAPLE

ie * 3 . 9 8
SAVE II ftl Lft

FAMILY AAA

PATIO
STEAK

UftOA CHO«Cl HEAVY RKIf I AN WILL
ri
HAVORIO TENDER &amp;TRA AtAft.hsin’
MISHIT
OA SNORT Alt
BEEF STEW
lb 9 9 e
&gt;Avi r* is
ft IB SOI
U80A CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN
WELL FLAVORED. TENDER
100% LEAN

c

l&gt;

9 9
SAVE 60* LB.

aiMtNtc

BLEACH

6 8 c

aiNiiuc

YOU RAA

BATHROOM
TISSUE
TOWELS

SHORTENING
DETERGENT

OtAMT 42 02 SOI

*2.28

RED GRAPES
NECTARINES

BANANAS

iih ii m a t!

AHIWIUWOAAOI

FRYER WINQS
OR THIGHS

$

.4 8
9 9 '

t'S .

• »» **

3 , s m , $5 . 9 8
u in i;

BUY 1 G ET 1 FREE

CHUCK
ROAST

99

IB

IA V I W LB.

FAMILY FA*
0WAL1NII 1 If AN
AOSA

SAVS M 00 PAIL
to IS PAIL

CHITTER­
LINGS

* 3 .9 9

’ AIMIUMOSADI

FR YER BREAST

i. 9 8 '

« ts SOI

(AVI I f IS

MEATY PORK

29'

SAVE SO- LB.

RC COLA or NEHI
ASST. FLAVORS * 1 . 5 9
s ii or s o m is

plus iak a dip

BUDWEISER
BEER

T| It 02 CANft
4 .6
LIMIT 2 WITH lft OROCR OR MOM
PREMIUM QRAOE

9

I LB. BOX

5 lor 9 9 e

CUT-UP
FRYERS

LB.

4 ,..* 1

COMBO FAK

SAVC *1- LB.

OHM LAND AlCH t CAIAMl

9 8 ' JUMBO
Q Q C
FRANKS
is 6 9 ' CREAM .* oAi 5 3
LG. EOQS ooz 1 8 ' ’ MMNAUOSAOI MM A A
ISAS
l/t OAl
FRYER
* 1 . 6 9 PIT
ORANGE
« a n u w i liAVOS K A (
GIZZARD
ns
mi
FRUIT DRINKoal ( 5 0
JUICE
9 8 '
couon i w i m an
WINQS
iii
*
1
.
5
9
RC COLA OR NEHI
BREAD 3 10A» 6 9 '
f
(UNNT’LOAM*1AlCHLOWFAT AISOAI FIAVOA
OAMOMOOINUI
s iio z son
8 8 '
MARGARINE &gt;hls 2 ' MILK OAl * 1 . 9 8 PIUS TAX I DIP

I PA

(AVI II to SOI
, ______

’ASTI AIK AOS’

SAUSAGE
PATTIES

i. 7 9 *

SUOAR list
’lOSMAOAAOI A

ilia 4*-*#

0 .9 5

i t i soi

5 YOUOf T 1sun RlONUft COUPON
*
fpRfVINT |1 YOU Ml NO
riftTi m fturiR BONuft
COuriTNft ON IACH CIRT(f »CAT«

u a os m r

FAMILY FAS

SAVE St- IS

OOIMM Ai’ I

* *U Pftftf SUMR SUNUft
f MfiriCITI* AT
Ch i - p im ud u kh a

BONUS
CASH

SIRLOIN
•
CO
S TE A K
ls ’ Z . D O

S IB 80*

PR O D U C E
U IO IIS I

USDA CHOICI HEAVY WESTIRH
WILL FALVOMED B IIF , CENTER CUT

BONES,
J I jOO NECK
FEET, EAR
lb

1
QtANT 41 02 CAN
OINIRfC heavy duty laundry

IA V I t r IB.

I LB. BOX

2 ROLL

QINCftlC

USDA CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN
WELL FLAVORED, TENDER BEEF
lb

7 9 c

OrMIMC JUUAO

It (AVI (IMIS

CUBED
STEAK

IAVI U M

G E N E R IC S

* 1 .8 8

ROUND

SANFORD

FIRST CUT

BUY 1 O ET 1 F R E E

U10ACHOVCI MIAIT WUHAN Will
UAVOAIB TIMMS I &gt;LIAM
GR O UN D

(AVI II I0 1S

I IB SOI

FAMILY PAR

S LB*. UP

* 2 .4 8

IS

PATTIES 3 i . so* * 5 . 9 8

*2.98

„

save mr lb

UtOA CMOtCt Ml AVI U lS tt’ N
M ill 11AVO’ I D TIMOIA

save nn lb

GRO UND
BEEF

t» * 1 . 3 8

UftOA CHOlCt HEAVY WlftTIRN
WILL FLAVORED TENOtR
FAMILY FAR
ORIAT TOR fHI QRlLl

LB

PH.322 8321

*&gt;ur Neighborhood Carrier Dealer

CHUCK STEAK

CLUB or
T-B O N E
STEAK

;

s

»100 HONI) WITH n Rl MCXfc Ol- IStjF

UftOA CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN WILL
ElAVOAEO TINDER CENTER CUT

USDA CMOtCt HEAVY WESTERN
WILL FALVORIO t l t r

u

$100

DELMONICO
STEAK

PARK AVE. I 35th ST.
SA N FO R D
Open 7 Days 8 AM 9 PM
July 11 •July 17. 19SS

n

US SAVING BO ND

UftOA CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN Will
FLAVORED TINDER SICE

PRlCtS ARE BORN HIRE
RAISED ELSEWHERE

o

49‘

i WHIN YOU I MILK OVT iRIflNT
J ONI. TILLIP SUriR SONUft CM
. tlPiCAfl TOR I ACM turiR
SONUI IRtClAt YOU SILICf
SUOWIlllA

BEER
•ItlOZ CANS * 3 . 9 9
LIUS FAVOSITI All MAt
SMOKED l§ Q fle
SAUSAGE ho 2 0
T lfU M C l 099

THIGHS
I IS SOI * 1 . 5 9
(Alts
LEG QTRS.
Sll SOI
* 1 .5 9

r* *V (
1 1-

�4A— Evening H*r«ld, Sanford. FI.

Wedneidsy, July 10. IMS

The West A Cauldron O f Sm oke A n d Flam es

United Press International
STrr.idy ravaged toy
wildfires that have ritarred 1
m illio n a c re s a n d d riv e n
thousands from I heir homes. Is
br a r Ine f o r m o r e of I he

•rforrhlng weather that Is fueling
I h r inferno
In the worst fire season in the
m e m o r y of m a ny v e te ra n
firefighters savage grass and
forrsl fires continued to crackle

across Ihc region Tuesday, and
forecasters said the searing tem­
peratures — m nrr than 100
degrees In many Mates — and
absence of rain could last at least
another 10 days.

Frances Hlanlon, Amerigo. Ohio.
Mrs. Rena Jones. Canton. Ohio
and MarianStlffler.Slrrllng, Va
E S T E L L E LeBEUR
Mrs Eslrllc S LeSeur. 71. of
1305 Sa mile wood Drive, Fern
Park, died Monday at Florida
H o sp ita l-A lla m o n ir Springs
Horn Nov I. 1913 In Taylor
County. Ga . she moved to Fern
Park from Mar on. Ga In 196b
She was a homemaker arid a
m em ber of FairvIIIji Haptlsi
Church
S h e Is s u rv iv e d tiy her
h u s b a n d . Stephen L . son.
G e ra ld llo rlo n . H rernertun.
Wash.: daughter. Pattt Wyatt,
Orlando: two sisters. Florence
C a lh o u n . G riffin. G a ., and
Mildred Sheehan. Thomaslon.
Ga . seven grandchildren: nine
great-grandchildren
H a h iw ln -Fa lrr lillrl Fun eral
Home. Altamonte Springs, Is in
charge of arrangements.
J E N N IE J . M cCORM ICK
Mrs Jennie J Mc Cormk k, 07
of 222 Columba Road, Dcttnry,
died Monday at Central Florida
Regional Hospli.il Sanford. Born
Ju ly 25. 1915 In Jacksonville,
site moved to Hdiary from I&gt;s
Moines. Iowa In 1977 She was a
Proleslunl and a homemaker
She was a member of the Order
o( Eastern Star. Dcs Moines
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e h e r
husband. Clifford W daughter.
Janet I. Wolier. Sanford, three
sisters. KlUalx-lh Hodge. Motile
Morrison, anil Madeline Fletcher,
all of Jacksonville: seven grand
c h i l d r e n : e ig h t g r c a i
grandclillrlirri
G ra m k o w Funeral H om e.
Sanford, is in charge of ai
rangcinenlk
A N N A M A R IE S E N O E W A L D
Mrs Anna Marie Scngetiwald.

9 1. of 950 Mcllonvllle Avc..
Sanford, died Tuesday ai San
ford Nursing and Convalescent
Center Horn August 25. 1H93 In
Germany, she moved to Sanford
from Orlando in 1984. She was a
homemaker and a Lutheran
S u rv iv o rs In clu d e a son
KOwartl Forest. Orlando, three
grandchildren.
Hawthorne Funeral Home.
Orlando, is in charge of ar­
rangements

AREA DEATHS
R A L P H H. A H R E N S
Mr. Ralph II. Ahrens. 77. of
'*910 Hear Lake Road, Forest
City, died Tuesday at Florida
Hospital A ll a m onte Springs
Horn Dec. 25. 1907 In Crrle. I ll.
he moved to Forrsl City 15 yrars
a g o . He w a s a r e tire d
ownerfoperator of a trucking
company and was a member of
Si Paul L u th e ra n Church.
A|iopka He was a memlier of the
Young at Heart C lub and the
lllinllrrs
Survivors Include his wife,
Lvelyn; son Ralph H Sieger. Ill ,
daughter. Patricia J Anshurg.
S im

V illa g e ,

III

f iw

g ra n d

children, one great grandchild.
lialdwln Fa irch ild Funeral
Horne. Forest City, Is In charge
of arrangements
O IL E R CM AM PM AN
Mr. Giles Chapman. 03. of
2310 Sanford Avc., Sanford,
died T u e s d a y at L u ce rn e
Humana Hospital. Orlando. Horn
May 22. 1922 Iri Evergreen. Ala.,
hr was a rellrrrl salesman In Ihe
Florida area for the Harris Seed
Co lie was a veteran of World
War II and a Prolestanl
Survivors Include his wlfr.
Anna Mae; two daughters. Pat
Rockett. Altam onte Springs.
Harhura Carol tun. New Smyrna:
mother Trw rlle Chapman, San
lo rd ; I wo s is te rs . J r w r l l c
Rahurti, Plant City. Lois Tyre.
Tnxawny Falls, N C , brother, *1
Harold Chapman. Sanford; five
grandchildren.
llrlsson G u a rd ia n Funeral
Home Is In charge of arrnngrments
C L IV E n. D A N IE L
Mr Clive Hrnnks Daniel. 50, of
Crnlre. Ala , died there Monday.
Horn March ID. 1929 In South
Williamson. Ky
he was a
former resident ol Orlando He
was a Preshy ter la 11 and a tour
bus driver. He was a member «f
the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
( hlando
Survivors Include (our sisters,
Mrs Pal Wiseman. Oviedo Mrs

Funeral Notices
C H A P M A N G IL E S
F u n t f il
for G*.#*
A) of
J I U Sonfovd A w
Swntord
d od Tu#»
r i«r will b* «t 1 p m T h vr w ia , of »h# rh*p«i
of ftfltton Fun#«-#t M®m# wit* fh# R#* Roiph
Rr*w*v officiating Bwf «•' w ill bo in Os town
Com tftCy VlSittdfipn ft I p m ladOy And t
A m unfil i s f v it t tim # Thursday Fritnds
*ho &lt;si%h m#y m i l l d u n jh o n t to th# H t f t
F und Hntson f un#f n Horn# * Gu«fd«an
f hop# I, rr&gt; (h «rg *
A HR I N I . R A L P H M
PufMKftl M H V lcn tor M f Wi#(ph H ' V # n t,
II , of Fo rttI1City, who di#d Tu * s d «y , will tm
ConduClAd Th u rtdA f « l ( p m
•! IH# F o rvil
City chApal of BAidw ln F Airchild with lh#
R av M u AMAF of Si P*ui L uffYAF An Chwfth
ofhciAhng V i|it«hon w ill tm on ThursdAy At
•h# F or as ! City ch#p«l 3 4 And / t p m In I iau
ot tlowAfl lh# fam ily |rA(k&gt;osly rAqcwsIl
donAtions bA m »dA to M v S«minofA County
F|a VAnfovd. FI
MumAOA Socitly P 0
Jf t ]
BAldwln f A ir c hi &gt;d F u n § r «« H o m i
FoTAStClty, InchArg*
M cC O R M IC K , J C N N IK J
F unAr«l saf vie a i lor M rs J t n n it J Me
Corm lt l Da B#ry. who died MondAy will bA
iwid f h u rid iy «f It m m in t'h« G fim turw
t unAfAl Homo t h-ApAl with lh# R*'V MiehAA-l'
F rionfc offklAhng VititAhow #t ih# funwrAi
horn# toddy 1 &lt; *nd F t p m
B u ri#l In
F v#rgrf#n Ctm #fAry
G f i m l o a F u n A fil Mom* SAnford. is In
rhArgA of A»r AngAm#rif%
D A N I I L . C L IV E ft
FunAfdl SAfvlcti for CfivA Brooks O a h ia I,
% of ContfA A I a who di#d MondAy will bA
hAld Fftddy At 10 i m
At th# GrAm kow
Funerdl Horn* thApAl wifh th« N av GAry
IlfW f otfh idling
V is itin g hours will bd
fhursddy I t p in H u n # ! will b# in OviAdo
O m i i i i f GrAm kow Fundvdl H o m i Sdn
for d, In ch#rgt

FUNCHAL HOAK CIMUIHY
Oh

It iilH

AN ( h

i

I ■ SwM* *****

I m i I 0— « !*••&lt; C**li
441 at aiMturl w

Ilb J iJ iiS

w a * U

3231204

Ctmlrtl /IwUU

1 2 1 -4 7 6 J

SWwVUS* «UfT

Thanksgiving
Novena
To St. Jude

NOVENA
TO TH E
H O LY SPIRIT

OM ot» 51 Ju d * . ip o v lla m w ly i y i* * l In
firtufl tnd ilr.ti in m ira rl* *, i s v kinm iw i
J * » u * C h r lt l l*HMultnt*rr.***&lt;&gt;f ntalt
who Invok* ro o t » p *cl» l p*1ton*ga in
I i'i&gt;« ol n * * l , to you I h *» * i w o u ' H horn
Ilia doplh o l my in ,a tt «rul homtily t&gt;*g
lo whom Q od h»« y i , * „ *u ch y,« *i
powai lo c o m * lo m y • • • i i t a n t * H *ip
m * in my pr*»*nt «nd u iy * n l (Million In
l* lu in . I pro m t** lo m * k * youl N *m *
known *nd c a n t * to h * Imrokad 8*y
lh i* * O o r F * lh * i» | h i* * M ill M *iy* *nd
O lo rl** toi mow c o n ia c u llv * dayt
fubhcaitcm m u tt tiw pro m ltad SI Jud*
p r*| tor u t *11 w h o In yo k* your *ld

AMEN

SHOP AT THE ALL NEW

0F1R
[VERY
DAY
IXCtPT
MONDAY
8 A M.-6 P.M.

M P O

M E A T S

hm c is
GOOD
THRU
IULY 16

MEAT MARKET • FISH MARKET • DELI AND C H E E S E STORE
IN REAR OF VILLAGE FLEA MARKET
1500 FRENCH AVE.
321-2398
SANFORD

SPARE RIBS

POM OS H IT

SMOKED BACON
U.S.D.A. CH04CT (WHOLE POiXdl 3-5 Id. Attract

BEEF TENDERLOINS mu
SMOKED PICNIC HAMS
U S OX CMOKt

GROUND BEEF PATTIES
10 PATTltS rtlt POUND 1100 PATTIISI
OR
4 PATTltS PTR POUND |40 PATTIES

FRESH DRESSED PAN READY

WHOLE CATFISH
FRESH WATER •SOFT SHELL

TURTLE MEAT
FRESH

LARGE SHRIMP
EXTRA LARGE

HEAD OH

ROCK SHRIMP

IN S LI. BAG

SYSTEM.

Hcily « frii111 yo y w ho solve nil pfolilftm e
w h o light ell ro a d t to that I r t n el lam m y
go al* , fo u veho givn mu I ha divine yell lo
fiifyiva and In torgal «M «vil d g a in tl rna
and m u in all in slant a i ol my iifa you aea
with m a l want in this thort prayer to
thank yo u for ad Ihm ga and lo c o n firm
nnea again that I navar want to t&gt;a
ta p a ra la d from you avan in apifa of ail
m ala ria l illusions I wish lo ba w ith you in
•tarnai glory Thank you for your m ercy
Io w a n ) ma and mina A M IN fh a paraon
m ust ta y Ih t t prayar for 3 c o n a a c y liva
da ys Tha favor will b* graniad avan if d
ta a m s difficult This prayar m u tt t&gt;t
putiiisnat) imm-adiaialy ahar mm favor m

|1ln* N o v t n t tiw* n « vo, tHi*n known to
t ill |

Ca na d ia n authorities said
Tuesday they fear a series of
lorrst Drew In the western pro­
vince could explode without
warning Inin a giant fireball,
trapping IOO people who relused
to ller their homes In a logging
town

Q U IT P U M P IN G M O N E Y
IN T O Y O U R I N E F F I C I E N T
C O O L IN G A N D H E A T IN G

OAKLAWN

(Eullittu

hi a i c lo b la a r. N e a r ly a
q u a rte r-m illio n acres have
burned In California In thr past
week.

SOCCO 1 LI. VACUUM P*C.

HUNT MONUMENT CO.
DISPLAY YARD
Hwy. 17 82 — Fsrn Park
Ph. 339 6988
Gone Hunt, Owner
Bronze, Marble &amp; Granite

Flown* For ■ A im : cuslom*

A record 13,900 firefighters —
O u r re so u rce s are being
'-JO percent of the professionals In strained We still have available
the country — were cm the lines manpower but It s starting lo get
ill the American West on Tues­ in short supply."
day. with another 3.000 lighting
Major fires were raging out of
550 blazes In British Columbia.
control In California. Oregon
’ We are currently coordinat­ Nevada and British Columbia,
ing the largest short-time fire and crews were coming In from
suppression effort In the history' is far awav as New York and
of firefighting " said Hill Bishop Alaska About 250 California
of the Boise Interagency Fire National Guardsmen, trucks and
Center that coordinates man­ h e lic o p te rs w ere fe rry in g
power for the lower -1H states bone-weary firelighter* from

yianlad without manlionmg tha favor

r io/ss t o

ftlO / M J G

W HAT ABO U T
PRE-ARRANGING
A FUNERAL?
Thla l» sometimes pttideni.
However, If you ate thinking alimit
pie-diMnging a spei (lie fimeitil
you die uiged tu coni Act dn e.peikitted I imri.il Director. Cdielul
counseling with liim can avoid un­
wise planning with a salesmen.
We oiler a method ol FHFfi/INO
IODAYS FUNERAL C O S IS through
out new Pie need Funeral Plan; brief­
ly, here are some of the (ilans ina)oi
features:
&gt; You Make Die Decisions today About
Youl Funeral Arrangements And Costs
&gt; Convenient Installments II Needed
Without Finance Charges
&gt; The Plan Is Nol Insurance
II YOU WIHH IO CANCEL. 100% OF THE
MONEY PAID WILL HI REFUNDED

F P L w ill pay you up lo $600
to in stall a h igh efficiency central heat pum p.
Vou will also saw up to 60% on your electric
cooling costs this summer, iiy ix i replace \uur
old energy-hungry air conditioner w ith a higliefticiency Iteat pump And since the treat pump both cools
and heats your lk&gt;me. you continue to saw all
r long.
In the summer, the lieat pum p a w ls by a-m ov
in g heat and hum idity from your home. In the w in ­
ter, it extracts heat from outside and pumps it

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F U N E R A L HOME
u o m s r AiHwmr ttuuu v a m i )
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I

I

iik lm i t k in it it# •aUftiton

NAME
AODHISB
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2IP

J*

indoors. (F o ra detailed explanation, contact an FPL
participating contractor.)
And for m ore information about our other
Cashback incentives, fm m ceiling insulation to solar
water heating, just call our 24-hour toll-free line.
Or w rite Energy Conservation Department,
Florida ftjvw r &amp; Light, P.Q litre 02910Q Miami,
Florida 33102.
Call right ntny 1 -8 0 0 -8 2 1 7 7 0 0 .

F=PL$RSt£&gt;
We’re working hard at being the kind of power company you want.

PHONE

j

�SPORTS

*r

■— ■

■ ■

Evtnlnfl Herald, Santord, FI.

■

'

W td^iday. M y It.

IA

Teague Rediscovers Strike
B y C h ris F ilt e r
OVIEDO - The Maitland Se
ntor League confident Tuesday
night (ell it might have needed
radar to locate the strike zone in
the latter innings here Tuesday
night. Pitcher Perry Teague and
manager Bruce Johnson said
they felt the strike zone had lost
a couple of sizes
Alter walking a pair of runs
which enabled (he Oviedo Se­
niors to pull within 7-5 in the
Ixittom of the seventh, Teague
bore down and threw strikes to
the dangerous Derek Mays and.
with the liases loaded and two
outs, induced him to pop out to
short right field for the final out
as Maitland escaped with a 7-5
victor)- in Little League Baseball
District 14 Division 2 Tourna­
ment action.
"Il (the strike zone) got pretty

small in the seventh inning. '
Teague said. "It got to me a little
hut I just tried to keep calm and
throw strikes."
"You couldn't ask lor any
better pitches then he (Teague)
was throwing," Johnson said.
But he wasn't getting any calls
Hr. hung In there though and
gutted It through a very tough
situation. He really played his
heart out."
M aitland re m a in s in the
winner’s bracket where It will
take on Eustls tonight at 7 30 at
the Oviedo complex Oviedo
drops to the loser's bracket and
will travel to Eustls tonight for a
7 30 battle with West Volusia.
Although Oviedo made It close
in the last two innings. It was
Maitland that gol off to a quick
start and took away Oviedo's
running game

e
n
o
Z
, Maitland

glove and was safe wnh Dannie
taking second on the throw
i Imnigh
Cleanup man Kevin O'Brien
worked Greene for a walk,
Maitland rocked Oviedo starter bringing up Teague with one out
Alan Greene for three runs on and the bases lull Greene
three hits in the top of the first
quickly got two strikes on
"Our game plan was to put the Teague and, alter a curve
liaison them in the first inning." missed, he went back to ihr
Johnson said "We knew Greene last ball and Teague blasted the
would probably lie pitching so 12 offering deep to right center
we look two days of hitting lor a two-run double and a 2 0
n o th in g hut hard heal in Maitland lead
practice "
Chris Norton followed with an
Greene hit leadolf man Ted Infield single to reload the bases
Schlefleltn with a pitch and. with a n d . w ith tw o o u ts , J C
one out. Willie D.tuulc ripped a Sandberg walked on a 3-2 pilch
single to right SchiefTelln was to force In O'Brien with a 3*0
waved around second and the lead Greene went 3-2 again on
throw from right fielder Mlcah tin- next hitler but got the paynll
Ktnnard had him brat but fittch over and Wayne Kemp
Schieffelln knocked the ball grounded back to the mound for
loose from (he third baseman's the third out.

B a s e b a ll

singtr lo letl center to drive In
l.lrflander lor a 5-0 advantage
Greene Ihen w alked O'Brien and
Daunlc and O'Brien pulled ofT a
double steal on a missed bum
altempi With one out. Norton
smashed a single past a drawn
in infield, lo drive in two more
runs as Maitland took command
70

Over the first lour frames,,
l eague had Oviedo shut out on
three lilts Oviedo tlnallv cracked
league lor two runs In the
bnitnin of the filth with help
Iron) two Maitland errors Wnh
.me out. Mays singled down the
Iclt field litre, went to second on
a wild piekott at tempi and stole
tiiud Wttfi two outs Mays
scored when W illie Gainey
reached on an error Gainrv look
See M A IT L A N D . Page 9A

Jitters, Jackson
Spoil Davis Gem

A g g ressive
N atio n als
Z a p V olu sia
Andy Spolski tossed a fourhiller and was tracked by an
aggressive offense as the Altamonle Nationals opened Lillie
League Baseball's Major District
14 Division 2 Tournament AllStar play with a 12-3 rout of
West Volusia Tuesday night at
DcLand
The Nationals return to action
tonight at 7:30 against Maitland
al Eustls Nr lit James will be on
the mound for Altamonte.
Spolski struck out nine and
walked four In the game and the
Nationals gave hirn all he needed
with four runs in the first inning
Andy {Spolskll pitched really
well," Altamonte manager Duke
I’lelcones said. "He was around
tile plate all night long And we
had some good defensive plays
behind him by Chris Pleiconcs.
Hill Klppard and Mail Albert."
Altamonte used its aggreslve
hascrunntng lo come away with
four runs In the lop of Ihe first.
With Albert on second and
Jam es on first, the pitcher
caught a short pop up near the
first base line. The pitcher didn't
notice (hat the runners had
lagged as Albert moved to third
and James to second. Then, the
throw to third was wild and both
runners scored for a 2-0 lead.
Klppard added an KBI single
later in the Inning as Allamuntc
built a 4 -0 lead
“ Our aggressive baserunning
accounted for al leasl five runs,"
I’lelcones said "We had them
IWest Volusia) throwing the ball
around all over Ihe plarr."
Spolski stmt West Volusia out
the first three innings while
Altamonte increased its lead lo
9 0 with one run in the second
and four In ihe lop of ihe fourth
S|M)lskl's solo home run was Ihe
highlight ol the fourth-Inning
outburst.
The defensive play of the game
was made In the bottom of the
fourth With a runner on third,
Klppard speared a line drive to
center, relayed to Albert who
tossed to catcher I’ete Joseph lo
null the runner at the plate.
West Volusia scored single
runs in ihe fourth, flfih and sixth
frames hut It was loo little, too
late
Altamonte had nine hits In the
game Including Iwo each by
Travis Lloyd and Klppard and
one each by Spolski. James.
Joseph. Sean Spivey and Scott
Davidson

"You've gol to give Maitland
credit." Oviedo manager David
Austls said "Th e y took it right
to us and look us out ol our
game "
Teague and Greene breezed
through the next three Innings
as neither team threatened again
until the IWlh At one time
Greene struck out six consecu
tlvc hitters and retired nine
straight going In to the top of the
fifth.
SchiefTelln looped a single to
center to start oil the filth, took
second on an errant pickoll
attempt by Greene and went to
third on a wild pitch Bohhv
Lleflander followed with a walk
and stole second Grerne then
tried to pick Schlellclin oil third
but again threw w ild and
Mail land took a 4 (Head
W illy Dannie ihen lined a

f

*W

v - TfJ, J

j

,

-*
1*. 3

By Ssm Cook
H erald Sports Editor
A L T A M O N T E SPRIN GS
The opening game of a lourtta
ment is always guaranteed to
brlngoul one tiling — jlilert
Oviedo's delense h.nl them,
c o m m u tin g six errors The
Altamonte Americans' usually
p&lt;Ucni offensive attack had ilirm
loo. mustering |usi three hits
The umpires weren't immune m
ilie jitters either The three man
crew appeared to blow al leasl a
hall a dozen calls
Altamonte, taking advantage
ol every Oviedo drleiislve lapse,
used a big five-nut ilnul tuning
en route lo a it o victory in the
first round ol liie Lillie League
Baseball District 14 Division 2
All-Star Tournament at Alta
m onte's Eastmniite complex
Tuesday night
The Americans I 0. go to
Oviedo tunlghl fur a 7:30 game
against Deltona. I 10-1 winner
over Si John's Chuck Lamb
will hurl lor the Americans
Oviedo. 0-1. goes track to Alta
monte for a 7:30 p m game with
St John's. Marvin "Hubba" Fore
will pitch for Oviedo
A lta m o n te m anager Mike

B a se b a ll
Morn* and Oviedo coach Kenny
tulp were critical ot (he umpir­
ing tail II was ( K tcdiis defensive
lapses which put it in the hole
carty. spoiling an rxrellcnl ptl
chlng performance by Russell
Davis
Davis who plavcd hi Alla
iiionic Iasi year overflow crc&lt;1
lilt- Americans
Russell just
threw smoke
said Oviedo
coach Kenny T u lp
Ills curve
wasn't working litii in- didn't
need il He |usl smoked them
Davis allowed pisi three lilts
and jusi one — T J GlufirliLTs
KBI double in i lit- filth — was till
hard Th e lug light hander
struck out Mill- walked seven
and lilt one Six ol ilic strikeouts
wi re called
Ills undoing, however. came in
the third Leudnll Inner Gird
trull wlio played his rule lo
|u «l« i tloti try reaching base lour
Hines gni abo.ml on an error by
the xhutlHlop. John Jum p then
i • a* b e d

when

th e

second

Imsi mail dioppcd a thinw oil a
See J I T T E R S . Page 9A

M e t z g e r 1 - H it s D e l t o n a
By Kevin Gross
Special to the Herald
D E L T O N A — Greg Metzger
shrugged nil a sure shoulder to
hurl a one hitter and lead III*
Altamonte Springs Seniors in a
It) 2 victory over Deliona in i!»«•
Little League Baseball District
14 Division 2 Senior League
Tournantrnl Tuesday night al
Charlie Panins Field
1 was just living lo throw
s irlk e s ." said Mel/ger w ho
struck oul 13 billers and didn't
allow a walk
I hail a lol ol
confidence in mv *urvclrall, I
llirew a lot ol thrill mi 4 and 2*
My fastball Is my main pitch
luii my curvcball was working
well lonigbi set I stuck with it "

y i V i i'll
H w tU n * S H T»m m , V K o rt

Chris "Bulldog" Jackson took a bite oul of
♦he Oviedo offense Tuesday night. The

Altamonte right-hander struck out eight and
shut out Oviedo on two hits.

B a se b a ll

I* i
said Co* liran
We iljdn i
i im file bases well ilui I think
wi- re si.ii ling in jdl
Allarnnriie's Chad C im ' I i i . i i i gm
filings siartefi with a our-out
walk in Ihe first nmtng CiK'hran
then stole second anil i ante
.■round in score when Kenny
lackvin stnushcil a single in
nglii A llrr Corey Prom ihe star
■il Monday's 4-3 loss lo Malll.uid
(nipped mil lo ililrd. Jackson
stole seiimtl and moved lo liilril
mi Jim Kroner's swinging hunt
single B u lb ru n n e rs were
stranded though as file nrxi
Altamonte. I i lakes on halier sliurk out
Southwest Volusia today at 5:30
hi file third. Mel/ger and
ai Valentine park III Orange C lly
( is liran walked lo siarl filings
Aliamunle coach Ralph (*ik bran lolling again Jackson ihen
said he will go wnh either Penny plated a run with Ills second fill,
Slqucrlos or Shane Siulll*,i on, a (me drive doulili- to renter,
tin- mound
Prom added an Kill single in
We played a teal good gamr
hut we could have played betSee M E T Z G E R . Page OA

Coaches, Parents Are Key Link To Little League Success
Granted, baseball managers gel most of the
Ink Alter all. they are the managers while the
rest of the staff Is assigned Ihe title of coach.
Any manager worth his salt, though, depends
religiously on his coaching staff lt‘s Just too big
of a Job to watch everything He'll br ihe first to
admit, loo. that supportive parents make It
easier lo sleep at night
The succcssfnl teams have everything orga
nlzed. They'll be as many as four coaches taking
care of v a rio u s duties Only two are allowed in
ihe dugoul bul you'd be surprised how some
effective some coaches can be on Ihr fringe.
Parents are at the opposite extreme. It
hampers the manager's situation when parents
are throwing their two cents onto the field or In
thedngout
l.ust year's Altamonte National League learn
was one such example on a finely tuned unit
Manager Jerrey Thurston was Ihe organizer and
motivator. Greg Ebbert was the pitching coach
and motivator Jim Barfield was the Infield
coach and motivator. Rudy Callahan was ihe
outfield coach and motivator. Nate "T h e
W itchdoctor" Junies was the trainer and
motivator. Doug Hclser was the scorekeeper and
motivator.
Yes. there Is a bit of redundancy in that last
paragraph Bui motivation is a redundancy lhal
is very when dealing with Little Leaguers. Their
emotions and confidence level runs up and
down like a seesaw Any coach can scream and

. **•» 1**4

Sam
Cook

©

HERALD
SPORTS
EDITOR

veil Sometimes II works Bui does it work with
12 year olds? Nol loo nflrti Baseball Is supposed
to Ik- lun Positive strokes usually promote a
1tetter outcome.
But Thurston promoted logrtherness from the
llrst day of practice and il was one ol ihe mo«l
together teams you'll ever see.
This team also had another Ingredienl which
was very Import an l to Its success II probably
had the greatest Little League parents ever
assembled And how many team* ran say that?
As most of you know, dissension on any train
can usually be started by an Intrrfcrring parent.
H U son or daughter Isn't playing. He frrls badly
lor the boy and (udmlitrdly or not) worse for
hlmsell. He Is embarrassed by the fact his
sibling lsn l good enough lo crack the starting
lineup
He starts to shoot his rnouih off to Ihe other
parents. They don't want to hear hut they put
up with it. The rnouih sounds off a little too loud

— ** A

on occasion and puts Ihe manager, coaches and
players In an uncumlortablc situation Pressure
u leli by all and mistakes pop up on and off Ihr
field.
Dissension. Interjected by a frustrated parent,
has been the bad seed which has destroyed
many learns. It's something lhal doesn’t usually
show up In the box score bul those close lo the
team know about Us detrimental alien on the
team.
Il may be a little farfetched to list cooperative
and promoting parents as one of the ingredients
lor a visit to Williamsport. Pa but Thurston,
who couldn't say enough good tilings about Ills
players’ parents lust year, lists ihrtr support as
one ot the cornerstones of his National League
All Stars'success
'I love every one of them." said Thurston last
vrar alter his boys finished second to Seoul.
South Korea. ’ They came to every game
Always cheered Jor every boy and never caused
any trouble. You don't know how comforting
that Is lo a coach. It's Just one more problem
area that you don't have to worry about."
And their unfailing support should be used as
a role model as this all-star season continues. A
tip of the cap to the Radcllffs. Thurstons.
Wallaces. Jameses. Musslewhlies. Varlteks.
Alberts. Carlsons. Diehls. Conklins. Martinos,
laiarolas. Ilelsers and Wasulas. Hopefully, your
jioxilive role will be followed by every team's
parrot* which attend a game.

k 1 A

- . i .It : :

It's parents like i Iu -m - dial a manager doesn't
mind leaning on Ihe dugoul screen
Jim ' Hru Brubaker, Ihe pitching couch for
Ihe Altamonte Juniors, has been wearing his
smile from earlobe lo earlobe lately And what
pitching couch wouldn't II his tram was
averaging almost III runs per game
Altamonte has IM 2. 25 0 and 13 3 victories
thus far Thai's 5&lt;i In fiirec Irlrk The pitching
hasn't been lo shabby cither i lots Kadi till
no-hlt Deliona. Jerrey Thurston one hit Oviedo
while Aaron latarola and Curl Prom combined
lo subdue Maitland Sunday
Another familiar name has |&gt;op|&gt;eh up wnh
ihe Altamonte 13-year-olds Roger lieaihard.
I*etier known lor his footbul! and wrestling
loathing exploits at Seminole and l.ake Mary
high schools, is also on manager Kelly
Walnscod's staff with Thurston and Brubaker
Heaihurd said he expects Maitland or O cU n d
to resurface for Monday's winners' brackrt final
al Oviedo. "Maitland brai DeLaml but thrre of
DeLund's briier players got their late." said
Ifeathard. "It might he diliereni ihe next time
I hey play."
You would think lhat elementary schools
principals would br ready for the isolation ward
Sac SUCCESS. Page 10A

I P- • "« i-

�• A — E v e n in g M g r a ld . S a n lo r d , F I.

G uidry

W * d n a « t a y , J u ly I I . 1M 5

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
A

S T A N D IN G S
N A T IO N A L
E ,* l

m e r ic a n

l e a g u e

E att

LtA O U C
w
a
44
47
41
V
77

L P ci
0B
n 400
is
144
14 544
M 131 S'^
44 4s; l l ' *
S3 m 11

44
U
41
41
IS
11

IS .17% _
34 ISO r-y
so
If
!'■&gt;
47 4f 4 7
44 413 11
S1 i n 11

Sr Lau it
N *w Ygafc
Moa*tra*l
CKJcSfr
e a ttb v fg s
W»*l
San 0t*go
L « * Ang*l*«
Clnclnngfl
Houtfon
Attant*
San Fran elK O

TwN&lt;r'i *•««»»

w
SI
44
44
&lt;7
41
34
17

Toronto
Dgtretl
N * * YorX
BnlTlmor*
Ucolon
M il*,* j * * *
Cleveland

L Ftl
GB
77 «t* —
34 5T1 1V»
14 n o
34 m
80 i n
%•»
il
* u 13
S4 IM 31

W ttf
C a ia o rm *
44 14 U l ■as
O akland
47 41 i d
4
Chicago
to* 4 ’1
40 I f
K a n t** C lt ,
41 40 to* i ’ 7
S **ttl*
41 41 n o
7
Mlnn**oTa
14 44 *M 11
T»»«t
11 57 i n
I7W
Tuavdar l P a iu lti
Detroit 4. Chicago 1
C leveland 7. T e re t 1
B altim era 11. AAinneiota 4
New York 4. K e r n e lC lt? 4
C alilorm a 1. M itw aula* 4 (tO Inningi)
Bolton 4. Oak land 1
Toronto t, Seattle 4 t i l Innlngil
W a d n e id ir 'i G a m a i
(A ll T lm e l E DTI
K e r n e l C ity (Cublcta 4 1 ) at New York
IR iim u t t a n 1 41, tp m
Boilon
to ie d a
III
at
O akland
IK rueg er S | ) , } . t ip m
Chicago ISeaver 111 a l Detroit (M o rrli
1 4 ) . I 11 p m
T e r a i (Hough I 101 at Cleveland (R eed
0 I) . / l i p m
M innaast*
(Viola * 4 ) at Baltim ore
iB o d d lc k e rl T l, 1 1 1pm
M ilwaukee (B u rn t I at at C alifornia
1Rom anlek » I t . 10 » p m
Toronto ICIaney 11) ol Seattle (W illi
i ft, 10 1 1 p m
Tku ridetr’i Gam ai
M ilwaukee at Oakland
Mlnnaaot* at Detroit night
K an aat C ity at C level and. night

ChK »go T, U n 01*90 j
L o i Angela* I Pifttborgh 1
U * * Yovk II. Cincinnati j
Montf»«l S, Atlanta I
Phll*d*lghi* I, H Sutton ]
S* Lout* ]. San F r a n c i k o t
W ii" u m ,,i O am at
I All T l i w i E O T )
U n Diago (O ravacky * 4 ) *1 CMtago
f Sander io n 4 4 ).? JOprn
l m Angela* (R a u tt 4 41 *1 P lttib ursn
(T u n n * llt l|,M S p m
N *w York (A guilera 7*9I *1 Cincinnati
I Browning 141,1 It p m
Montr*«l
(M ahler
| .J )
*1 Atlanta
(Shield* 1 ) l , I (Op m
Philadelphia IK o o im an 9 1) at Moulton
lic o t t t 41.1 11pm
San ( r a n d ie s I Blue 9 9) at Jt Loui*
I K a p ih lr a 1 4 ). I 11 p m
T X v rtd a r'i O am at
l o t Angai*« at Chicago
la n F ra n c ltro a f Plttatourgh. night
Monltaal at Cincinnati, night
*
Now York at Moulton night
Philadelphia *1 Atlanta, night
S a n O iag o atSt L o u ll. night

RESU LTS

Tai/I

r«n*rv i aaw Ue*w I n a e » ~ n
I f Vwt*4 h i l l Iftrujlwwl

•weian l i m a III. Imwar* III am
Aa*ra
I r a n * am W r t
m~
I r a n * i l l i L-naMa aIt Hl-CWra
am Trnnwnll)

kfiwur Lm* w
Nr. T r l
■! iR aw - It M
rw » f*
M a t t e - : 11

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&gt;•**» lit

r il Nf Ypl («w (141 ‘r - r k

IN HIM -1141

lawaat Cm
■ ■ ■ - ill
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IS

U n ite d Pres* International
Ron Guidry kept hW-hot streak
alive and as a result the drought
goes on for Bud Black.
Guidry won his 10th straight
ImM •&gt;t
1 naiir 11imn nd
decision Tuesday ntght leading
the New York Yankees to a 6-4
L t t ii 1* t *
&gt; M T l( 10 I M W 4PEF Cm I *| Cqb
triumph over the Kansas City
Sa 1 m le Mhaf m,
Royals and raising hLs record to
U J»
11*3. Black. 5-10. lost hLs sev­
R A IN E S G A U G E enth straight decision. T h e *
left-hander has not won a game
•* i l l 64UC( -vtuf Jrtf!
since May 26.
Cjrtifft
__ 0 tt
0 0
G uidry, who won hts fifth
4*ftwn
m «•
straight start, hits Yankee fans
fdW|
0 0
*1'W)
ft! 0
rem iniscing the left-hander's
••
0 0
1978 season when he compiled a
c«aii
1 I
Dh4wi
f • 25-3 record.
) 1
"I've had a couple of outstand*
'an|
r i
\-***u%n
tng streaks." said Guidry, who
n rr
I 'f i
i i
was 10-11 last year. “ In '79. I
0) jw
think I was 6-7 at Ihr All-Star
Ta» ia w t ’ « n k v u g n &gt; i e i &gt; * n
it ”» 1 ipw WaH we P am laraa an
break and I won 11 straight and
t*ae m i i w n e a |i a*.-am am earn ■
wound up 18-8. This Is the best
am nn t*t lawaN in g n *4** P * h *
,*** ap lanat .at [ a y iW ig % «■
streak In a long time."
''t&gt; v*f B v tl UCMH H*tegwl a Mar
Black, who was 17-12 last
rkah
season, was victimized by three
Kansas City errors
"G u ldrv pitched pretty good
and otadr good pilches when he
had to," Kansas Ctty manager
Dick Bowser said "B u t we
didn't play well defensively. You
can't give a team that many outs
and that many runs and expect
to wtn. not a good club. You
can't do It.”
Rickey Henderson nod Don
Mattingly each had two hits and
an RBI to support Guidry.

Gooden Keeps Reds Reeling — Raines Gets 4 Hits
U nited P r t i i International
The

In a l

jM TtM tn

(h e

M t i i ^ j j l l i i j j H e c lt i l l f c c i c d

N.L. B a se b a ll

In B e e

I u t 'h d n y r11p*111 w n t i I l w l ^ h t O o c x t e n .
" T h is

w aa

l o n l i i l i l ’H

a

r o iij{ h

({ a n if

th a l

p la y e r t iia iu ^ r r
Y o rk

M ill

n am es,
Ia s i

one

In n lf t h l,

Ix t t h e iB

I'e lr

h ill

m e ."

tt'n

saU I

Mu m 1 t i l l e r C l t x x J e n

handed

h it*

te a m

It.s

r e a lly

s ix t h

tin t

C ln c liu ia ll

a n ti

th e N ew

lo s s

In

e lK h t

1 1 -2 . " I l ' s ( h e w a y t h in g s h a v e h e r n g o in g t h e

w eek

w o r k in g

" It

m i

seem s

U n it

e v e r y t h in g

w e 'v e

been

h a r d lo r I s s lip p in g a w a y Ir n n i u s . "

M e a n w h ile , fo r t h e

M e l s , t h i n g s a rt* c o m i n g t o g e t h e r .

A l t e r g e l l i n g n n d e r i s i o n s In t ils p r e v i o u s t w o t u n i n g s .
G o o d e n t ill w h a t h e d e s e r lt i e d a s I lls b e s t g r o o v e e v e r
N o w I h a t '» s c a r y
N e w Y o r k s o f le n s e , r e c e n tly r e s u r g e n t, got p le n t y ol
t ie lp fro m C i n c i n n a t i p t lr h ln g , r e c e iv in g
M e ls

have

w on

e ig h t

s t r a ig h t ,

th e

I I w a lk s

lo n g r s l

The

w in n in g

s t r e a k In I h r N n l lo n .il l.e a g e t i l l s y e a r
" Y o u r a n ' l w a lk

I O h a lt e r s a n d g iv e u p n in e t ills a n d

i s p e t i In w in . n o t w h e n y o u 'r e p l u y ln g a g a i n s t D w ig h t
G o o d e n ."

s a id

H o se.

"Th o se

w a lk s r e a lly

k ill y o u

The

w o rm

e u t p r ll

w as

seven

p asses.

lo a d e d

S o lo s o b e r e d

w a lk in g

ih e

lia s e s

I l l s s l x l h s t r a ig h t lo s s . Ih e lo n g e s t

s t r e a k o l Id s e a r e e r , a n d h a s n 't w o n s lo t e J u n e 4 .
On
liv e

Ih e

o th e r e x tre m e

t ills

r e m a in

and

stru ck

u n h e a te n

Is G o o d e n ,

m il

s in c e

liv e

M ay

w ho

over

su rre n d e re d

e lg lt i

2r&gt; w i t h

s ix

In n in g s

lo

v lc lo r le n

In

n in e s ta r t s
"T h ro u g h

Ih e

H is t

g r iK iv e

I ’v e

le a g u e

le a d e r In

a v e ra g e

at

ever

seven

h e rn

t im in g s .

In ."

s tr ik e o u t s

I 7H

"H ot

In

s a id
w it h

ih e

Al Chicago. Kvnr Sandlierg fieltrd a pair of Iwo-run
homers In Ihr fltsi two Innings and singled and scored
In the fourth lo slop San Diego Sieve Trout. H 4. and
George Prazlrr. who earned his litsi save, combined on
a lour hitler Eric Show 7 fi, was the lose r

I w as

G ooden.
142

e ig h t h

and

In

ih r

Ih r

m a jo r

earn e d

In n in g .

Ih r

In s i
ru n
heal

N EW

YO R K

|n r

le a g u e

2&lt;i

r e v ie w

c lu b s '

o w n e rs

1HH4

lo s s

f ln n n r iu l
lu e s d a y

r e n ll/ e d

—

8* 1 G

to

a

827

m illio n

le s s

Ih u u th e o w n e r s c la lt u
H o w e v e r.

G e o rg e

S o rte r,

p ro -

le s s o r o l a c c o im llu g a l N ew Y o rk
U n iv e r s it y 's G r a d u a t e

H ch u o l ol

Itu s In rs H A d m in is t r a t io n , a g re e d
w it h t h e o w n e r s d i a l Ix is e lw d l, a s
.* w h o l e , w a s a i l i n g l l u . t i n t a l l y .
" I t ' s n o t III g r e a t
lo s in g

In d u s t r y

lo s in g

In ih is lr y ,"

w ho
it it l

r m p h a s lr .'d
not

s h ii| &gt; e , I t ' s a

Il's

d e a r ly

s a id
d ia l

re p re sen t

a

S o rte r,

t ils

th o se

v ie w s
ul

th e

t iw n r iH
lit

so m e

t e rp re ta tio n
s ia le m e n u .
I he

M a jo r

P la y e r s

p a rts
ol

ol

i lie

S o rtci

A a s a c h it lo n .

In ­

lln a n c t a l

a g re e d

L ru g u c

n e g o lla lln g a n e w

h ts

w it h

llu s r h u ll
w h ic h

Is

L i Ik ii c o n lr u c l

w ith Ih e o w n e r s

I'he

P la ye rs

A s s o c ia tio n

die Montreal record set by Steve Kenko In 1972 Haines
also stole a base his 27th of the year and drove In a

run.
C a r d in a ls 3 , G ia n t s

E x p o s 0. B rav e s 1

P h illie s 9 , A s t r o s 3

At Atlanta, Tim Haines rap|M&lt;l four hits. Mike
PIt /get aid belted a solo homer nod Andre Dawson
drove in iwo runs, lining Montreal. Bryn Smith. 10-3.
allowed live hits arid struck out a career-high IO over H
2 3 Innings. Including six Mntlghi. falling one short of

Al Houston. Hli k Schu Ignited a five-run fourth
Inning with his second double of the game and Kevin
Gross won his third straight derision to Improve to 8 7
and pace Philadelphia Kent T rk n lv r gained hts eighth
save. Bob Knrpper. 8-5. was Ihe loser.

T V /R A D IO

1iMw C »

••Miwuiif i T•*
■■*&lt;■»
TtMYlwa

B a se b a ll

’Wwaftmibmm

ftAIIM U

t

It pm - « m

Mlcmm- H AD It 0
14 9 10 10

Man*1

I ipm tft

M i|M «|lM I ILI

miiiift
claims from Its analysis ul the
V'lf' t(P.* i If'M W N88CAi*i&gt;r«u40|pbfi
OilMfKI
llnuuclal data dial the owners
11 1 * - n m
m
at-|unity realized a collective 89 Tf*ti 4( w# BiHCfl *i»
m u
million profit III 1984. rather
Iam UiA Caifm
i Orm
Ilian the 843 million In losses
Mi
UIIULL
shown oil thrIr llnanelal state­
f » I * - * u l j AM 'Mli
ments
fipiiiiiMlfMi
S o rte r was hired by the
f A il
M * - M ill AM IM).
owners lo provide an Indcprndtjit explanation ol their coo
itTdltm Hud the industry Is D O G S
N tillrrliig massive llnanelal
losses, He briefed reporters
TMAitM«M
iMrao- 1/14. D II H
I ttesday on Ids conclusions
1M « • JM
He sold he found in* evidence
1M IM
IM
thal ttir clubs were using ticQIHMIM AIIIIW M T d H lltlM
i-minttiig U'ctmlipien in Inflate
M hu H D IR
tm m 19
i heir rx|tetises ami thus enlarg­ ’
'fauaJM
«M IM
ing I Ill'll losxses
I Di
IM
o nn iim f nn ini m in nm
The major disagreement he
oonniM*
had with the owners was on Ihr
M '8 i h a m ii n
Issue ol Initial roster deprecia­
’
Vsn
4 M I I I 10
I
’atAMan
|M | 0
tion — 8 12 m illion of the
10
owners' *43 million In loss4-s
O lllin a i i l » HUM T | l i ! l i n 0

11 19

• Dm I#i nnf
10
Q II I) 14M, f Ilf) *1». I l l f 4J H M
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in m 0

Tooke D rives In 10 Runs
— R eneg ad es Sn are 4th
The Prut l*«ik Renegades, &gt;i
IA and under ull-stur team
composed ol Seminole County
players, won five games ami lost
dure lids pust weekend to Hr tot
lour ih lit Ihe I'lantaltun Central
Hark Tournament
file Renegades, who wen* Just
formed In late May. got oil to a
gtNid start In the tournament by
winning their first four games.
In die opener. Storm! Llttrell,
Laurie Rivers and Susan Hayden
hanged out iwo lilts each and
Marcle Tooke smacked a home
tun and drove In three runs as
the Renegades u|tended Lake
Worth, 13-3 Tooke. a Seminole
High sophomore-to br, cupped a
six-run second Inning with a
ihree-run homer
In game tw o. plnch-ldttcr
Sherry Shod a drove lo the win
nlng run In the lop of the
seventh as the Renegades
trimmed Miami. 7 6 Took** ami
llaydtfl had two tills each to
uowrr tlie 13-htl at lack.
The ‘Gudcs t o o k It fp Ihe
Tampa Mualuogs m game ihrre

t

1

Al St, Louts. Tom Herr rapped out two bus and drove
in two runs lo lmpruvc his National League-leading Rill
total to 65 and defeat San Francisco. Danny Cox, 10 4.
pitched a flve-htlter and tits eighth complete game, Hill
Laskey fell to I •1 I .

At

O F S A N FO R D

S o ftb a ll

y j.

P7

2 0 5 0 S. O r la n d o D r. (H w y 1 7 - 9 2 ) ^

and came oui with a It) H
victory, Denise Burke's plnch-hil
iwo-run single In a four-run
lourill liming was die higllghl of
the game lor Pern Hark
Tooke kept on sizzling In game
lour as she rlp|ied a single, triple
and borner and drove In two
runs to bock die shulmri pit­
ching of Melinda .Irickaon In a
lo t) victory over Sunrise
The Renegades then entered
the single elimination round hut
Ixiwed out early as Ihe Tampa
Mustangs tinuged out 18 hits eu
mule to a 15 A victory. Dr ana
Jrffrm drove In two runs for the
Unties and Laurie Rivera col­
lected two hits
For ihe tournament. Rivera
was ih r leading hitter will) 13
hits In 26 at bats ( 500 average)
and six Kills. Tooke drove In 10
runs m the tournament and hll
448 with 13 hits in 29 trips.

, j

Mon.-Prl.

Sat.

B-to

B-5.

___

323:6684

T T

v.

15.000 M ill WARRANTY I 24.000 MILE WAIRANTY
MHMIUM RtTRUOS

MUMIUM SIITIO FOi YIITI1

i*n

OBNUg

tu s a » n

KHiDutio* men
TYr *1a CxS*Nnt

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D e tro it,

ba-srs-loaded single scored Alan
Tram m ell and cupped a four-run
ninth Inning that lifted Detroit
past Chicago. Allan Trammell
and Kirk Gibson hud singled to
tie the score off loser lk»h James,
4-3.
Angels 9. Brewera 4
A l A n u h rlm . C a lif., J u a n
Henlquez singled home Rob
Wllfong from second base with
none out in ihr bottom of Ihe
lOth Inning to cap California's
come-from-behind victory over
Milwaukee. Donnie Moore. 7-3.
pitched the non! Inning for the
victory.
Red Box 6, A*s 3
At Oakland. C a lll. Dennis "Oil
C a n " Boyd pllchrd a sevenhlltrr and ikmloo took advan­
tage of three Oakland errors to
score three mns In the ninth
Inning Boyd. 10-7. pitched his
1 1th con*plete ga m e . S t e v e On­
tiveros, 0-1, die third of four
Oakland pitchers, took the Ins*.
Blue Ja y a B. M ariners 4
A l Seattle, George ltell s
13th Inning grand slam off Ed
Vande Berg. 0-1, lifted Toronto
(her Seattle. It was Bell s 17th
h o m e r of the season. Ron
Musaclman. 3 0, worked the
final three innings for Toronto.
The Blue Jays collected 20 hits,
the first 17 ol w hich were
singles. The Mariners totalled 16
hits, all singles

SCOREBOARD

at

t t y in n *

c o n c lu d e d

In d u s t r y

n illllo n

A ll

h ir e d

b a s e b a ll

s ia t c m e u t s
th e

lU P il

p ro fe sso r

B ry n Sm ith
...w h iffs 10

Al Pittsburgh. Sieve Sax singled In two runs and
Irii k Honeycutt and Torn Nledenlurr combined on a
six hitler, pacing f,os Angeles Honeycutt Improved to
i*7 Nlcdrnfuer earned his seventh save The Dcxtgrrs
tied lliclr season-high for hits with IH Hick Khodrn.
f i - O . w a a l h
c l o s e r .

O w ner Losses A re Less
B u t I n d u s t r y Is A Loser
* m im in g

Tim R aines
...4 singles

D o d g e r* H. P ir a t e s 3

s t a r t e r M a r t o S o t o , H - ! l. w h o

In c lu d in g

Ind ian s 7. Rangers 2
At Cleveland. Andre Thornton
clubbed a iwo-run homer and
drove In four runs to support the
four-hit pitching of Bert Blyleven
and defeat Texas Blyleven. 8-8.
struck out five and walked five
In n o tc h in g Iris A m e ric a n
League-leading 12th complete
game.
Orioles 11, Tw in s 6
Al Baltimore. Eddie Murray
slammed his 10th career grand
slam lo the sixth Inning lo bral
Minnesota In a game delayed 36
minutes In the ninth Inning by
rain Nate Snell. 3-1. earned the
victory hut suffered a broken rib
when a line drive struck him In
tlie ribs.
T lg a ra 6. W hite Sox 6

C u b s 7 , P a d re s 3

I 'd

r a t h e r g iv e u p I I I h i t s t h a n w a lk 1 0 ."
Is s u e d

really got in me, I was gasping for air.
"Il fell like I was on ihe disabled llsl the last two
weeks, like I wasn't even a pari of ihr Irani It's great
lo get bark In (tie groove and help the team again
George Poster drove lit four runs with a solo homer, a
iw o-run single and a bases-loaded walk Keith
Hernandez hll his second two run homer In iwo nights.
New York scored four runs In the eighth Inning without
grltluga hit, thanks to two errors and four walks

"

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�E v e n in g H e r a ld . S a n fo rd . F I

SPORTS
iN BRIEF
Mecir: Kernfors Quite Good ,
But Not Good Enough 6 -3 ; 6-4
HNOOKMNE. Mann. IUPI) — Mlloslav Mcclr doesn't know
w hy h r Is a winner these days.
The Czechoslovak who won barely half his matches In
1981 is now ranked 11th in the world. After his
opening-round victory Tuesday In the U.S. Pro Champion­
ships. a 6-3. 6-4 dismissal of Mtckael Pemfors. Meclr
claimed Ignorance concerning the reasons for his rise.
"I feel I can win now. but I felt that last year too," added
Meclr, "I have more confidence, but I don’t know what’s
different. I'm Just winning more matches."
Pernfors. a student at Georgia University and two-time
N C A A champion, was "quite good, but not good enough."
said Meclr.
Unlike the South Americans who usually dominate the
day-court circuit. Meclr does not slug from the baselln'r
with high to|&gt;spln groundstrokes. but relies on varied
speeds;placement and sharp angles
Ills chances of reaching the finals at Longwood Cricket
Club Improved greatly when No. 2 seed Andres Gomez,
who was In the same half of Ihe draw, withdrew late
Tuesday dm- lo a recurring Injury in his right thigh.
Tournament physician Dr. Robert Leach diagnosed a lorn
(piadriccp muscle and said Gomez, of Ecuador, would be
unable lo play on lour for at least two weeks.
The same injury had kept the fifth-ranked Gomez out of
Wimbledon Ills plare In the Longwood draw will be taken
by Stanislav Blrnerof Czechoslovakia
In . the only other match involving a top seed. No. 5
Henrik Sunrislmm of Sweden overcame flrst-sei mistakes
to erase qualifier Thomas Muster of Austria and score a
4 -6 .6-2.6-1 victory and move Into the third round

24 Dolphins Remain Unsigned
MIAMI IUI'll — Speculation before the start of training
camp usually centers on which mokles will make the team
and what veterans will be either forced Into retirement or
released.
For the Miami Dolphins, however, most of the talk has
centered on the 24 players they have not signed to
contracts.
The defending A FC Champions open camp Monday, blit
have yet lo sign I I of their 13 draft picks. Thirteen
veterans also arc without contracts. Four of them are
starters — safeties Lyle and Glenn Blackwood, linebacker
lioh Hrud/lnikl and tight end Dan Johnson.
The lack of signings Is common throughout the league
and Is mainly due lo the lack of competition for talent from
t he financially strapped United States Football League.

W e d n e id a y . J u ly 10. I t t J — * A

Becker Another Borg? Be Serious
I can't resist writing one more time about
Wimbledon It's on the mind of must every
tennis fan Most everyone Is still talking
about It and I'm Just still very confused
about the whole thing.
I'm talking about the men's singles, of
course The wo .cn's championship was as
predictable as u .ual Martin*. and Chris mc
in the finals, and. by the way. had another
good match As you know- Martina won In
three « t a .
These two have now met a total of 66
times Martina has won 34. Chris 32 Ho.
hum so what else Is new? I’m rather tired of
seeing these iwo in the finals but they are so
far above the rest of the field that It is going
to happen over and over.
None of us was ready for what happened
In the men s singles ti was wild and II was
crazy. 1 warned you last week that anything
could happen In a grass court tournament.
Well anything and everything did happen
and what transpired during this great and
glorious tennis event will go down Inlhe
history of tennis under the heading of
bizzare,
Who would have ever dreamed lhat a
17-year-old kid from Germany would win u
all. lions linker was little known In Ihe
world of tennis and was not even seeded In
lids tournament In fact, he had in qualify to
even get in ihr main draw.
Ills booming serve and go-for-ll-ull IVpc

..

.M e tz g e r

Continued from 7 A
renter lo close out the scoring to
Ixxist Altamonte's lead lo 3-0
Deltona came buck with Us
only two runs in Ihe bottom of
ihe third. Slqucrkm. however,
lead oil ihe fourth with a wicked
double down Ihr lell held line
Siuftlei followed with a walk and
hoi It runners adva n ced on
M e t z g e r 's s a c rif ic e h u n t
i 'ochran then hhxipcd a single to
center lo score Slqucrios
One nut later. Prom singled to
i enter lo drive in another run
I Tom then stole second and
when ihe catcher s throw sailed
into center. C o ch ra n came
around lo score for a 5-2 edge.

are writing ihai he might dominate the
game like fV-rg 'r Laver ot McEnroe, Well 1
enjoyed his style and It was great tun to
watch him. but another Borg0
Come on folks, let’s get this all In proper
perspective This, was his first big jurnum rnt win Let s wal, a few years and se»
what happens. T H s young player may
never win anotheiTuumameni.
In fart, he almost lost a couple of times In
the early rounds against some unknown
players I believe he will be a good solid pro.
make lots of money but I really doubt that
he will ever be a lop 10 player.
Probably not even the top 25 consistently.
I believe we will see him really fade during
the clay court season. Some of these clay
court boys will simply uutsteadv him and
his serve will not hurt them on clay.
Still Boris Becker won Wimbledon, he was
the only unseeded player to ever do 11, and
the youngest No one can ever take lhat
away from He lought hard and deserved lo

Larry
Castle
HER ALD
TEN N IS
W R ITE R
game was perfect for Ihr slick, fast grass
courts and his calmness under pressure was
surely something lo behold.
In the finals, against Kevin Currcn. Becker
served over 20 aces and many, many more
unreturnable serves
The ball moves through the court verylast on a grass court and ihe bounce Is very
low Any attempt to return a really good
serve Is a scrambling, lunging, skaling
exercise In luillUy Curren himself is a really
tun server and gm to the finals on the
strength of Ins big boomer.
Actually, in beating McEnroe and Connors
Ills serve was almost Impossible lo return.
Most experts rated hts serve belter than
Becker s and gave Curren the edge In the
mulch The hustling I 7 -year-old kid was not
ttj be denied, though, and won thr finals in
lour hard fought sets
Now everyone is saying this new player is
uomg lo lx- the next great champion They

Altamonte carne op with one
tilli In tin- lill ti as t 'ralg Radzak
doubled lo deep t&gt; It rcillcr Noah
lalrsniek, who turned In several
so liar defensive plays at third
hasc. loi lowed with a If HI single
to right

win
I in kmda glad Wimbledon is over I like
|M&gt;wer tennis hui not the bash, grope and
slide variety Those courts were |usi too fast,
too slick and loo dry lor really good tennis,
riu- clay court season siarls soon and later
some gixxl hard court tennis at Cincinnati.,
ttie L’.S. open and Toronto I ihlnk we'll see
things gel lx k to normal In ihe weeks to
come

...M a it la n d
Continued from 7A
second on a w lid pitch and
s&lt; ored when Greene hhxipcd a
single lo right lo cut Maitland’s
lead to 7 2
O v ir do w c n t w IHi G a r v
( , niwall In relief ol Greene In the
top ol the sixth and he got mil ol
ihe Inning with relative ease
un li the help ol catrhcr John
Ikistnii who gunned down a
tinnier stealing.

Prom led oil tin sixth wiili Ids
third hit. a single lo Irh. and
advanced to sn ood as the (tall
goi by the left liclilct Krcim r
lollowed with a single to m ite r
to move I’rom io tlnid One out
lalcr. Talt-stilck tin a sacrifice By
lo store Prom and advance
Km iu-r to ilitid Siqucrlos then
walked and siol&gt; second once
again «fit- caiclu-r s throw rolled
into center allowing Krcmci to
score W illi lu n outs Mel/ger
singled to crnli i lo drive 111
Uiaiiioiiie s iinal i un

w h .il c o u ld h a v e lieen a log
lim in g l e a g u e goi M ays on a llv
m il to c e n te r lor I he th ird out,
lio t w .ill gm out ol a lo st an d
second Jam m die top ol th e
s r v c m h b y s tr ik in g out p in c h
In n er R le lla id f l a i l s alte r he had
lo u lrd o il lo u r straig h t p itc h e s

I till x M o n rc liro d sm a ck e d a
single to le ll c c n t i i lo IcadolT an d
iliiln c v fo llo w e d w nh a w a lk
le a g u e re a c h e d h ack and s tru c k
out G re e n e o n four pitches hut
w a lk e d p in c h l i l l i c r D w ig h t
K\ C trl I in lo ad th e liases
P ix x h le K in g then lopped one
down Ihi- th ird hose line a n d li
fragile smiled lo lx- tiring in went lot a n In lle ld sin g le a s
tin I miiioiii ot the sixth when hr
M om e h e a d s i o i c d l o t r i m
w alked lhe bases loaded with no M.in la n d 's le a d m 7 3 R ic h a r d
mils Then however. Teague was ( ■ilitt lh e n c o a x e d a w alk lo fu rc r
ilit- hcoetlclary ol the pitchers in G a in e y to m a k e n 7-4
he si Irlrod — a dim lile play
H a g u e ilie n look Mime tim e
Teague quickly got ahead on the ■m i lo calm d o w n a m i got
count on Boston and. on an t&gt; I G o tw a ll to lilt ,i enm ehaeker
pm h Boston bail tired one back I ■a g u e 's ilir n w polled Norton o il
io I lie mound lY.iguc threw lo ihe p la te h u t he lagged It In little
the catcher who hied to Dannie loi the h ir e r Im l G n lw a ll heat the
ai hrst to complete the twin d iio w io h is i lo avo id Ihr d o u b le
killing and take Oviedo out ol plav

Mayor Sees Marathon Changes
BOSTON IUPI I — In an effort to maintain the Boston
Marathon's status as one of the world's premier mara­
thons. Boston Mayor Raymond L Flynn reportedly plans
to recommend major changes for nest spring's 90th
running.
Prize money totalling 9292.600 would be awarded and
ihe race — ihr oldest continuously run marathon — would
be slutted io Ihr Sunday of Patriot’s Day weekend under
i hi proposals, the Boston Globe reported today.
Historically, the rare has been run on the Monday
cciebnitcd in Massachusetts as Patriot's Day. drawing
iTlllcism from runners from other states where ihe holiday
was not celebrated. Moving the race lo a Sunday would
increase the race's chances of being nationally televised.

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...

O-Twins Split; Hold Onto 1st

We also m ake 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Commercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.
Personal loans are available Including
Revolving Credit Line.

The Orlando Tw in s clung In a one game lead in Ihe
Southern League's East Division by spilling a doubleheader wtlh Chattanooga at Tinker Field Tuesday night.
The O-Twins outsluggrd ih r Lookouts, 13-9. In Ihe first
game hut dropped Ihe nightcap. 7-4
Nl.irk Davidson and Greg Morhardt powered homers In
Hie first game to propel Orlando. T h e Tw ins host
Chattanooga again tonight ai 7:30.
In other minor league play. Osceola was rained out at
Fort Lauderdale The Astros, who lead th r Florida Stale
League's Central Division by 2 Li* games, play two tonight
ai Fori Lauderdale.

Knight, FCA Attend Retreat
Twelve members of the Seminole High chupler of the
Fellowship ol Christian Athletes, along with sponsor
Donalvn Knight, lell Sunday morning to attend the
National FCA Conference In Black Mountain, N C.. at the
VMCA Blue Ridge Assembly on July H-12.
Those attending Include Beth Nelson. Leslie Crabtree.
Suzl Nyc. Julie Nye. Shawna Cole. Karen Edgrmon.
Christy Gonzales. Lori Swain. Michele Hlstgnl. Jennifer
McKlhbln. l.orl Hall and Rose Speer

...Jitters
Continued from 7A
ree play Davis underslanihly rallied, walked Ju rrd Solo
load ihe liases
Altamonte was sllll hitless
lien ferry ’Downtown" Blown
t a pop fly uptown In short
ghi field The second baseman
mldn'l locate Ihe lull and It fell
) h-ci behind him for an RBI
nglc and 2 0 lead Altamonte
,rd picked up a run In the
•( O lid on another Oviedo ctror.
Davis then regrouped to get
ell Jackson on a imp fly lo third
ad Chuck Lamb on a called
rtkr three. He appeared lo be
ui ol trouble w hen C h ris
ackson till a slow roller lo the
ghl s i d e but Ihe llrsl baseman
ilsplayed tl. allowing Iwo more
mis to score for a 4-0 lead
Jackson, somewhat unglued,
alked Eddie Howard lo reload
lie liases and then passed Chris
ax-pke to force In another run
ilutlrlda. up lur ihe second lime.
Iso drew a (rrr p a s s lor an HUI
nd 6-0 lead Davis finally got
ut ol Ihe Jam by catching Ju m p
Hiking ul u called third strike,
diamonte scored us live runs on
ust one hit — Ihe lost |x&gt;p fly
•*Wr |ust didn’t have any
ntruslty." said Tulp about his
cam s showing "Maybe we left
i all at practice. We really
corked hard for this game

R u ss e ll p i t c h e d a g re a t
game. It's a shame "
Altamonte added (wo Insur
anee runs In Ihe sixth when Solo
singled. Brown reached on an
rirur and Jeff Jackson walked
Pinch hitter William Thompson
pi.iicd Solo with a gronndoui
and Jackson alertly hustled
home on a wild pitch
• Pitching as well bill almost
m ctlixiked because ol the errors,
lack of hits and p&lt;x&gt;r culls was
Allauionte's Chris Jackson The
hig right-hander turned In a
heady performance. using his
i urvcb a ll and sp o ilin g his
lusihall to keep Oviedo oH
balance

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Htfiid Photo by Tommy VlACtRl

Oviedo right hander Russell Davis fires a fastball.

’ Chris Jackson Is a gainer.''
Altamonte manager Mike
Morro That's whv we call him
Bulldog Did you see lhat Uxik
on his fair? He realty wauled II
tonight."
Jackson, who hurled a noinner and one-hlllrr In Ihe Top
fcam Tournament which Ins
Tigers won. shut down Oviedo
on two hits He struck mil eight
Kevin Blagg and Shelly Killoll
had the Oviedo tills Blagg
singled In Ihe second and Elliott
Itxqx-d a hll |usi out of Ihe
shortstop's reach III the sixth. He
and Oviedo were erased on a
controversial 6 3 5 double play
m end the game.

A 2 3 Cixtijuny

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�10A — E v e n in g H e r a ld . S a n lo rd . F I. W e d n e id a y . J u ly 10. IH 1

...Success
Continued from 7A

by June. The Iasi place you would expect to find
them would be with 11* and 12-y"ar-old bavhall
players
Not so with Longwoori Elementary School's
Dave Scott, though The personable principal
has taken an active r.»le as ru »rh for the
Altamonte L.ttle Americans for manager Mike
Morro.
“ It's been a living for m e." sa’d Scott who
never tires of hi* (filin g s a lth the youngsters
His son. Kevin, is *ta. 11-year-old alternate loi
the Americans. Scott served as a coach for the
second-place Indians who he hopes will win It all
next year.

LI i k
..

l

■. ■re.

mr - * 1

Deltorni little* I imhuv

Charlie Paulus Field

Charlie Paulus. right, was honored for his
contributions to the Deltona Little League

recently by president Don Maddox, who
named the field in Is honor.

ago and Little League president Don Maddox
and his group recognised the veteran umpire
this year.
Charlie U a stickler for the Little League rules.
He said he reads the rule book as religiously as
the Bible. There Isn't ever an question as to a
call or an interpretation when Charlie pulls on
the blue.
He takes pride In hts work Something all
umpires should do as an integral part of the
game. Little l. ..gu&lt; needs more men In blu ttke
hla
3y the way Charlie, keep those players
from stepping out of the batter's box so often. It
slows down the ga
The Batter i— **t.02. paragraphs A and B.
Right Charlie?

They don I know baseball field after Just
anybody. Charles Comlskry and BUI Wrlgley
were two names in Chicago That's why It was
quite an honor for a good friend (as friendly as
you ran gel with an umpire) of mine that a Little
League Field was named after hint.
Charlie Paulus. a pressman at the Evening
Herald, had that distinction earlier this year
when Deltona named Its Little League Field tn
his honor. Charlie was one of the cornerstones of
the Deltona program when It started 10 years

Jim Brubaker

Dave Scott

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FL O R ID A M A JO R L C A O U I
F m il List* M . |tr A ll l i a r
taurnamant Sub D ilf r k t
. 1 Tavarta
Monday. July I
Ssntord NationalJ. Laatb urg I
‘.an lord Am arlran 4. T a r a r a t J
I w U l ) . July &gt;
Sanlord National }0. OrlandnO
T a . l n l 4. Laatburg 4
Wadnatday. July 1
l a i i r n l . Orlando I
Sanford A m .r l.w i 4, Sanford NaNorvalO
Frld 4y. J v ly f
Sanlord National 4 Tavaraa 4
Saturday, July #
Sanford A m trk a n I, Sanford National J
Flat Ida Lim a Ma|or A ll lia r
D iltr k t 4 Taurnamant
a l Orm .nd Baach
Monday. July II
• pm
Sanford A m a rlca n , i Holly Mill
Final Juniw M a|ar A ll lia r
Dftlrlcf 4 Ta«rnamant
at F a r! Or any.
Monday, July I
Naw Smryna Baach F, Orm ond S ta c k 4
Sanlord 4. P ori Oranga I
Tuatday, July I
N an Smyrna Baach I. H olly H ill I
Ormond IH ach /, Por I O ranga S
WMlnaaday, July I
Sanlord f N .w Sm ryna B aach 4
Ormond BaachV. Holly H ill I
Frid a y , July I
Ormond B r .c h a. Nrru Sm ry n a B aach I
Valor day. Jvly 4
Ormond Saar Fi 1. Sanlord 0
Ormond Boat h lo ila t a lournam ani

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D IS T R IC T 14 L I T H E K A O U C
M alar Laagaa A ll lia r
Tavrnam anti C iv ilia n J
f uaaday, July 4
Allam w ita A m arlcan f , Oviado •
Allam onta National IJ, W a il Volutla J
Wadnaaday. Jvly II
f W p m al Oviado — A lla m o n l. Am arlcan
«t Dalhma
t 10 p m al E m it !
Allam onta National
v l Maitland
I X p m at Altam unla
Oviado v t St
John I
Junior Laagva A ll Star
Tournam anti C iv ilia n I
F rid a y , July I
Allam onta II, Oallona 1
Saturday, July 4
Allam onta IS. Oviado 0
Sunday. July &gt;
Allam onta 11. M aitland 1
Frid a y . July 11
T 10 p m al Oviado
Oviado v i Watt
Volusia
M andat. July I I
F n p m at Oviado — Allamonta vl
tufvivor o llo ta rt’ brackat
Saniar Laagua All Slat
Taurnam anli C iv ilia n !
Monday. Ju ly *
Oviado II. Oallona I
Maitland 4. At14monla 1. I I Innmgt
T u ttd a r Jaly •
M ailland t.O viado t
Allam onta 10, Oallona 1
Wadnatday. July 10
1 » p m at Oranga City
Allamonta v«
Voulh matt Volutla
&gt; » p m a l E u t lli
Oviado v l Wat)
VaJwtla
&gt; W p m al Oviado
M aitland t t Euan a
Futura Tournam aati/SH air D a la i
Ma|ar Dtviitan
Sac lion I — Wlntar C ard an , July IJ
Stata to w namani - Rock ladga July TV
Southarn Maglon - St Polar atrurg, Aug IJ
W orldSariaa
Wllliamaarort P a Aug If
Juntar Drviatan
Sac I 'on | — N icavllla. Ju ly JJ
S la t , tour nam ani - M a rn tt (aland July IS
Southarn Rag km
lu llit A u g a
World Sanaa - Taylor. M ich . Aug IJ
Saniar Otvtiiaa
SactIon I - Oallona J u ly J J
Sla la lour nam ani • B o caH a lo n , Ju ly IS
Southarn Nag ion - Fo rt Lau darala. Aug 1
World Sotiaa
C ary . Ind , Aug IJ
Big Laapua Dlvliaan
SactionT — Invar n a n Ju ly JJ
Stata Taurnamant — Dunadln. July JS
Southarn Hag urn - O rlanda. Aug 4
World Sanaa
Fort Laudardala, Aug II

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PONT BASEBALL
Multan* OtyttMd
Dealt h i Tournamaat
Friday. July II
4pm
a* Wlntar S p rin g i Samlnoia Pony
. umpiaa — Samlnoia v l Watt Samtnola
II a m al W m ltr S p rin g i Saminaia Pony
■ompiaa
Samlnoia v i W ait Samlnoia III
•aam t ip lil. a locond gam a arid to piarad
immadlataty to! lowing I
*
Stata Tour nam ani
.1 H lalaah Frid ay.
July K
Branca Orrlaian
Daitrict Taurnamant
Frid a y . July II
a p m at Wlntar Spring* Sam i nola pony
i ompiaa - Samlnoia r t C a ln a tv llla
II a m at Wlntar S p rin g i Samlnoia Pony
&lt;ompiaa - Samlnoia v i OainasvIlW lit
t ia m i ip lil. a tarand gam a uolll to playaJ
imrnadialaly following I
stata Tour nam ani — W a il Samlnoia Pony
C am p tai. For 0*1 City. Wodnotday July 14
Pony D m Woo
O ralrK l Taurnamant
S a tu rd a y, July I I
I pm
at G a ln a fv illa — Sam inaia vs
O aM d w M t
II am
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C aln a tvllla III taama tptil a tacend gam *
will to play 4d im rnadialaly loi toning |
Soutnaait Rag ton - W att Sam inaia Party
Complex. Fore it City W adnatday. July Jl

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�PEOPLE
Evening Htrald. Sanford. FI.

W*dn«t4ay. July 10. l t d — IB

Cook Of The Week: Chef Prudhomme
Claim ad 'The Greatest-Practitioner of Louisiana Cookeiy'
By Tom Giordano
Herald Managing Editor
It's tough to find Just the right
superlative to describe one of
America's leading chefs, because
all of the ones I found In Roget's
Thesaurus are applicable — to
hltn and to his dishes.
Th is magnificent chef Is none
other than Chef Paul
Prudhomme. author of Chef Paul
Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen
and owner-operator of K-Paul's
Louisiana Kitchen In the French
Quarter of New Orleans.
Chef Prudhomme has that
indefinable quality possessed by
great actors, great authors, and
olherwlse men and women of all
types of greatness, and yet. he
also possesses the warmth and
charm that makes anyone feel
comfortable In his presence. At
the same time, he has the ability
to tukr control ot a situation, as
does a n y good e x e c u tiv e ,
without displaying animosity
(while I was Interviewing him,
two wine salesmen came In to
congratulate him on having re­
ceived a recent award. They also
tried lo sneak In a sales pitch for
their product. He politely, but
firmly, let them know he'd talk
with them after he finished
talking with me. (hough they
didn't know who I was or what
we were talking about. The two
young men walked sheepishly
over to 'another corner of the
restaurant to all and wall pa­
tiently until the chef and I were
through).
I arrived for the Interview early
that afternoon, aboul 15 minutes
earlier, actually, to sire up l he
restaurant and klichrn for photo
opportunities, and to also give
me a chance lo speak with Ills
general managrr and some of
the help. I sensed, as I'rn sure
others did, an air of anticipation
as those who were there to see
Prudhomme for one reason or
another walled anxiously for hts
arrival.
tils popular restaurant Is open
only for dinner — long lines form
early an d extend (b e entire block
at limes — hot hr arrives curly
Its the day lo supervise the
kitchen for that night's activity.

Adjacent to the restaurant Is a
garage with a tiny ofTlce in front
and a sort of training kitchen tn
the rear, where several of his
e m p lo y e e s were g a th e re d
around u table working dili­
gently to prepare lor the evening
meals. Chef Prudhomme finally
drove up — In u pickup truck of
sorts — skillfully hacking It Into
the garage with a little help from
hts general manager, confidante
and trusted assistant. Puulette
Klttcnberg. who drew him tn like
a traffic cop. her palm extended
lo slow hlth down, or turned lo
the side waving him u little to
the left.
I was sta n din g near the
entrance to the tiny office at the
fro n t of the garage w h e n
Prudhomme got out of the truck
... slow ly, tie extended hts
walking stick — a beautifully
hand-carved "Itallun B room ''
with an Intricate design on the
stiver handle — to the cement
door of the garage, supporting
his massive hulk as he placed
one foot at a time gingerly onto
the floor. As Prudhomme walked
toward me. hts pudgy hand
extended for the handshake. I
could think of no other compari­
son to make to describe him. but
to liken him to Jose Ferrar's
portrayal of Toulouse-Lautrec,

Prudhomme eased his hulk Into
hts favorite chair at a small table
he uses to conduct his daily
business.
Once we settled tn for the
Interview, Prudhomme spoke
nnsialglcully of his youth and his
Induction by his mother Into
kitchen servlcr Prudhomme
was 7 years old when his Iasi
sister left their home In Acadian
(Cajunl farm country south of
Opelousas. La., to get married
As ihc youngest of 13 children.
Prudhomme worked closely In
the kitchen with hts mother,
p lu c k in g chickens, stirrin g
gravies and learning the speclui
relationship between field, barn
and table
With seven or eight kids still
at home. It wax like running a
small restaurant W r didn't have
electricity, so we didn't have
rrlrtgrrallon This meant we

used only what was fresh. In
season: I've continued lo do this
tn my enreer as a chef I know
ihat fresh ingredients of good
quality nre the most Important
factor In prrparlng exceptional
food " W h e n he w as 17.
P ru d h o m m e trie d a sm a ll
d r lv c -ln re s ta u ra n t In hts
hometown
It failed miserably
Me left there and went to New
Orleans where he worked as a
bus boy and a cook. Eventually
lie ended up In Colorado as u
cook, mostly at resorts, and
when the lx»*s wasn't looking,
he'd sprtnklr onto customers'
dishes special blends of hot
peppers in- carried around In
plastic hags
That little trick caused him i i o
&lt;n&gt;l ol grief with management
And alter 12 years of apprentice

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Chef Prudhomme, seated, plans day's activ­
ity with some of his cooks. The chef holds his
prize Italian Broom walking stick and wears
his favorite "bebop” hat, which he says are
P ru d h o m m e Is d e c i d e d l y
Ixiwlrgged, and an early knee
injury requires him to use the
walking stick for support, nut to
mention to support hts 390
pounds of body-weight All these
combined cause him lo walk
hum side to side, shifting hts
txwly weight from one leg to the
other, using the walking stick on
which to rest some of the weight.
Chef Prudhomme speaks ad­
miringly of his walking slick. "I
colteet them." and points out he
has several from around the
world, gift* he’s received from
admirers who've read hts book.
He also speaks freely about hts
weight. "I used to weigh five
hundred pounds When I was
fifteen 1 tripped while carrying a
one hundred-forty pound sack of
green coffee and fell on my knee.
It's never been the same since."
At -15 ( Til tell vim how old I
am. hut It's nobody's
bust
ness."I Prudhomme. who has a
birthday Ju ly 13, has no pro­
blem with hts apparent obesity.

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WIDDINQGOWNS • TUXEDO • INVITATIONS
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popular In New Orleans. Various pins with
snappy sayings are attached to the cap,
including his favorite given to him by his
wife which reads: "Hot Stuff."

"I learned al an early age not to
consider It u problem ... not
mine, tn uny case. If lt’» a
problem to others, then It'* their
problem.”
1 f o 11o w r d P r u d h o m m e
ilm m gh the garage, heading lor
the kitchen, As we passed the
table where hts employees wenworking. I got the feeling I was
walking with a superstar held tn
awe by those In hts service. One
by one they greeted him: "Good
ultrrnoon. ctief." “ Hello, chef."
“ Hey. chef, how’s It goln'Y" I
sensed that the greetings, with a
great deal of admiration and
affection In their tone, were
genuinely sincere ... nothing
phony Prudhomme responded
warm ly lo them Individually,
giving this one a pat on the hack,
another an affectionate squeeze
on the arm. He knows the value
of touching. I thought
We passed through the doors
leading to the kitchen, greeted a
tew more employees — cooks,
o b v io u s ly — th e n pusacd

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through another door, ending up
at the rear of the main dining
room ot K Paul's There. Chef

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Downtown Sanford
L O IS D Y C U 8 • O w n er

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E v e n in g M e r* ld , S e n fo r d , F I.

W e d n e ld e y , J u ly 10, I f t )

...C h e f
Continued From IB
ship — and a lot a arguing with
hie superiors — lie left Ihe area,
convinced Ihe world was ready
'nr o j u n rooking.
back In Loul&amp;iana he became
executive chef at some of the
more famous restaurants and by
1079. he was ready to go It on
hfe own. opening K l’aul'a with
t.la wife, K. "That's l i ... K, that's
whal her rnolher named her.
She dtdn‘1 want anyone to label
her with a nickname."
It didn't take long for the
lengthy lines to assemble at
H-Paul's, the customers having
heard-a limit the mouth-watering
dishes of blackened redlish. Ca­
j u n p o p c o rn (bat t r r - f r l r d
crawfish lalls), silrky chicken
with rice and rabbit Jamhalnya
wllh sauce plquantr
In May 19H3, Prudhomme was
one of Ihe few chefs — all
Americans — to lie Invited to
prepare special meals for the
leaders of seven western nations
who met at the economic sum ­
mit conference In Williamsburg.
Va. Chef Prudhomme served a
C a ju n feast of h u lle r -f r lr d
crawfish and crab dawn, broiled
rrdflsh with oyster sauce amt
roast duck with pecan sauce
A l t h o u g h P r u d h o m m e Is
apolitical, he's mrl sevrral world
leaders. Including President
Reagan. "I met him twice,'' he
says, w ith an unmistakable
touch of adinlrutlon In Ids voice
What's he tlilnk of Reagan? "I
think , he's the most wonderful
president we’ve cvrr had. Hr
Just knows how to lie a good
president, and people ran lell hr
does He's really down to earth.
When I was iilwail to meet him
for the llrsl time, tliry had given
us directions on how lo strp up
ami greel him. Hut tic never let
us worry about that He took I tic
Initiative and walked up dose to
all &lt;d us so we didn't have to step
mil of (hr line one al a time I
don't know alanil onvborlv else,
hut Keugun just makes me feel
comfortable... secure."
When Prudhomme agreed fi­
nally to |iut many ol Ills (avorllc
recipes In hook form. Ills prime
goal, h r said, was to lake
otherwise complicated recipes
and simplify them so the general
p u b lic co uld lic n rlli
C tirl
P ru d ho m m e says too m any
cookbook* aren't written (or ihr
average American kitchen
" T o explain somrlhlug In the
Itook, &lt;(iinparrd with explaining
something to one of my experi­
enced cooks arc two e o m p ln d y
different things,*' says Chef
Prudhomme.
When he ts-gan the project, In­
set up an experimental kitchen
next In the restaurant and In­
stalled an everyday stove and
what he calls a E 11 &lt;)!&gt; set ol pots
— complete wilh painted yellow
llowcrs
Hut lirfore the hook was
finished, || would cost him much
mure than that: "It prnhahly will
make me a millionaire, hut II
cost me Nomcwherc In the
height* i hood ol •775,000 In
equipment, nuilrrluls and |m*ii
(dr's lim e.” From siurt to linlsh
It took Prudhomme llvr yearn to
complete. About liner of those
y e a rs tie was assisted by
Paulette, tor whom the chef
doesn't run out ol praise. ''She
was absolutely amazing She
lollow rd me around, writing
down everything I did w hrnevri
I put together a recipe And each
time we'd test It. we'd try again
and again, with Paulette taking
It all down until wc p rrfrrlrd It I
was amazed at the question*
she'd ask whenever I did some­
thing Stic was aide lo put on
|M|&gt;er things I was doing when
preparing a recipe that I never
w o u ld have even th o u g h t
about."
Prodhomiuc Is proud thut an
American chel has touched the
(amtly kitchen wilh appurrnl
success He insists on "freedom

a b o u t. T ru s t yo u rs e lf, but
always have a little doubt. Know
that anything can always be
Improved upon ... even the finest
cooking. And remember that
you're never there ., each day
that you get up. commit youaclf
to doing an even better Job that
day than ihe day before. If you
lived to be a hundred, you'd
probably learn only about five
percent ol what there is to know.
There are a hundred arid-fifty
Ingredients In thr entire wortd
that we use. like pvpp ». herbs,
chickens, yet each cook In each
home will take a chicken and
make It taste different than ihr
guy next door T h r variations In
taste arc endless
"A n d yet. even though we are
constantly erratlng new dishes,
new flavors. I'm absolutely
amazed al times when after
spending a few years serving
whal we thought was a totally
new dish, someone comes In.
orders It. then says. What a
great dish! I used to eat lhal
when I was a kid'.”
SHRIMP C R E O L E
Makes 10 nerving*
Shrim p Creole was created
tieforr the days of refrigeration
Like most great dishes of Ihe
world. II was made only during
the season when fresh Ingre­
dients were available — In this
case, whole fresh shrimp and
Creole tomatoes The (at In the
shrimp brads Is an Important
lastr and color contributor. The
fresh Creole tomatoes and fresh
shrimp fal give the sauce a
natural swrrtnrss and an Incred­
ible flavor. Drowning the onions
until caramelized Is also an
Intrgral pan of Ihe dish, as II
brings the sugar In ih r onions to
the surface. THic use of butler
enriches Ihe sauce further, and
l he red and white ground pep­

from European siraltjackets."
and has an abiding love for fresh
produce and seafood and various
lypes of peppers that "explode
like lime capsules In the mouth.
I've always believed In. first of
all. American regional food."
IP 's been acclaimed by food
writers as one of America's
greatest chefs. Indeed, on the
cover of his book. (Chef Paul
Pnidhomme’s Louisiana Ditchu, M o rro w - 9 1 9 .9 5 ) C ra ig
Claiborne, food writer for the
New York Tim es, writes "Paul
Prudhomme Is the grralesl
practitioner of Louisiana cookery
his book Is absolutely essen­
t ia l."
Amt Just which kinds of wine
go with this magnificently spicy
food of I’nidhomme's? "Nothing
weak, of course, something
robust, else Its flavor will get lost
In my cooking and one may Just
as well have swallowed a glass of
wider."
Prudhomme says simple (able
wines are liest. (hose which are
blended Irom a variety of grapes,
rather than nlnglr-grupe wines
which, he said, lend lo be loo
lame lo complement food with
Its own kick
Prudhomme got something of
a kirk himself out of describing
the meaning of his name to me.
It means proud man In Frenrh.
bin I understand tl was given In
the 14ih Century lo a man who
ucgotlulrd wilh labor for Ilie
king, hence. It also means nego­
tiator," a label Prudhomme ob­
viously considers applicable lo
Ills own style,
Dors he have any children:
"Yes, I do, of course. I have
sixty-seven of them, and I'm
working on one hundred." he
jests, rclcrrlng In ihe munlier of
employees at K Paul's
Whal are Ids favorite foods?
"Usually anything that's lo front
ol me,'' he nays, giving tils
stomach a little pal. II he's out of
town and can't find a restaurant
to (red on Ids favorite Cajun
cooking, what kind ol restaurant
udghi lie rat In
looking lor
whal kind ol food? "Mexican
IixmI I love II
uol that Iasi fond
shill ihe real stall, of course ”
A typical work day lor Chef
PrudlKimine runs Irom &gt;i a m
until midnight, live days a week
"On weekends I usually gel
Involved with civic activity."
What's the attraction lor the
lifestyle of a cher? Where's thr
lulDllmrnt? "Cooking is caring,
•airing about people Think
about It
How.luijKirtaid It Is ...
water, food and air. they cause
cancer, other diseases
we
seem lo have water and air
under control, wc need to runtrol
our food, loo. that's how Impnrlaid lluil Is."
Wind's a prime piece of advice
10 short-cut « cooking lo ac­
complish good laslr and good
dishes? "M ake a darn good
slock That's Imperative. You
don't need to get (uney; you
don't need a tiouqct garni, tint
von do need good quality Imiiics
When you go to tire market to
buy chicken, llsh, shrimp, et
1 1 o-ra, you can use all ol It lor
making slock flul you must
insisi on quality. Then Iry to
agree tin the particular laslr
you're searching tor. lor you can
pul onythlug in your stock, so
long as 11 gives you the sought
alter flavor. Then lei li simmer
and cook down as much as you
cun. because Hie longer II rooks
down, ilit- more cuiicetdralrtl ihe
flavor becomes.
"And For Hod's sake, don't
iluow any loud away ... pul It
Into ihe stock pul llrown your
tsines In Ihe oven llrsl. because
dial will cause a canunrllzatlon
process and give your stock a
rich, dark color naturally, rathrr
tlliin using gimmicks or ad­
ditives."
W h a l a d v ic e d ocs C h e t
Prudhomme have lor us|&gt;lr!ng
young cooks? "l«nvr |&gt;cnple. II
you don't love ihr-m, you cnn'l
understand them And 11 you
can’t understand them, you’ll
never know whal conking Is all

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J U L Y S P E C IA L

v ita m in , H e a lt h y F o o d s , &amp; C o s m e t ic S a v in g s !

SHU CRIST SHOPPING C IM IU iN UT ID JIMIL Tl
i n u m r OPfN MON THURS 9 6, FBI 9 7. SAT 9 6. SUN I M
|"TV
CASH l CARRY Wf ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS
Jj
Pnrr» Good Ihtu luh 16

SHOULDER ROAST ___

ECONOMY DENTURE
CLINIC

Truckload,

27th St. &amp; 17-92 Ph. 323-0180 Sanford

It 4k E O N I t m

able. buy 2 pounds of shrimp bottom well. Add the tomatoes;
without heads (but with shells turn heat to low and simmer 10
minutes, stirring occasionally,
for making the stock).
Rinse and peel shrimp: re- and scraping pan bottom. Stir In
frlgeraie until needed. Use heads Ihe tomalo sauce and simmer 5
and shells to make the Baste minutes, stirring occasionally.
Add the remaining 2 cups stock
Shtimp Stock.
Heat the chicken or other fat and the sugar Continue sim­
over high heat In a 4 quart mering sauce for 15 minutes,
saucepan until melted. Add I slim ng occasionally.
Coo) and rcf.lgerate If m a jc
cup of the ouoris and runk o.er
high heal 3 minutes, stirring Ihe day before Or. If serving
frequently, until onions are a Immediately, turn heat off and
rich brown color but not bur ted. add the shrimp: cover the pot
a'xjut 3 to 5 minutes. Add the and let sit Ju . until shrimp and
dump and pink, snout 5-10
remaining HA cups .onions, the
celery, bell peppers and butter minutes. Meanwhile, heat the
Cook over high heat until the serving plates In a 250° oven.
bell peppers and celery start lo Serve Immediately.
T o s e rv e , center VA c u p
gei lender, about 5 minutes,
stirring occasionally. Add the mounded rice on each heated
garlic, bay leaf, salt and peppers: serving plate: spoon I cup
stir well. Then add the Tabasco, Shrimp Creole saurr around the
thyme, basil and VA cup of thr rice and arrange B nr 9 shrimp
stock Cook over medium heat on the sauce.
Basic S h rim p Stock
a bo u t 5 m in u te s to allow
2 quarts cold water
seasonings to m arry and vegeta­
bles to brown further, stirring
See C A JU N . 3B
occasionally and scraping pan

&lt;25 General Nutrition Centers

LEE'S M EA T
*\

pers are Important stimulators of
the taste buds. The completed
sauce may have white specks of
shrimp fat In It and should be an
antique red color. (In Ihr old
days, whole shrimp — heads,
tails, shells and all — would go
Into the pot: then the shrimp fat
rrally did show lr *he sauce.)
T! viuce Is best If made a day
i-efore serving. Make ihe shrimp
sloe', ilrst. then the sauce. W hrn
ready to serve, skim off ihe oil
from the surface and reheat the
s- uce lo a jell. Lower the heat to
very low. add the peeled shrimp
tails and cook covered Just until
ihe shrimp turn pink, about 5
minutes.
3W pounds large shrimp with
heads and shells, as fatly as
possible (see Note)
2 'A cups. In all Basic Shrim p
Stock
W cup chicken fat. pork lard or
beef fal
2VS cups finely chopped on­
ions, in all
1 cups Dnely chopped celery
I'A cups finely chopped green
!*ell peppers
s tablespoons unsalted butter
2 teaspoons minced garlic
1hay ieaf
2 teaspoons salt
I Vi teaspoons while pepper
I teaspoon ground red pepper
(preferably cayenne)
'* teaspoon black pepper
1Vi teaspoons Tabasco sauce
I tablespoon dried rhyme
leaves
I'A teaspoons dried sweet
basil leaves
3 cups finely chopped peeled
tomatoes (preferably Creole)
1Vi cups canned tomato sauce
2 teaspoons sugar
5 cups hoi Basic Cooked Rice
Note: Shrim p fat Is Ihr orange
substance In the heads. If
shrimp with heads are not avail­

• Altamonto Springs • Winter Pork

�• • •

Evtnlrtg H t n M , Sanfcrd, FI.

C ajun

Continued From 2 B
Vegetable trimmings from rec­
ipe. or:
1
medium onion, unpeeled'
and quartered
1 large clove garlic, unpeeled
and quartered
1 rib celery
j
H6-2 pounds rinsed shrimp
heads, and/or shells
Always start with cold water
— enough to cover the other
stock Ingredients Place all In‘ gredlents In a slock pot or a
large saucepan. Bring to a boll
over high heat, then gently
simmer at least 4 hours ipre*
ferably 8|, replenishing the
water as needed to keep about I
quart of liquid In the pan The
pot may be uncovered or set a lid
on It askew Strain, cool and
refrigerate until ready to use
N if aid Ph&amp;H i f Tftfn
Basic Cooked Rice
Makes 6 cups.
2 cups uncooked rice (pre­ The author of a cookbook.
Chef P a u l P r u d h o m m e 's
ferably converted!
21* cups Basle Shrimp Stock
L o u i s i a n a K i t c h e n , the
I
tablespoons very finely world-fam ous chef has a
chopped onions
prime piece of advice for
l 1* tablespoons very finely good cooking: "M ake a darn
chopped celery
good sauce...And for God's
I VS tablespoons very finely
sake, don't throw any food
chopped green bell peppers
I !* tablespoons unsalted but­ away...put it in the stock
ter (preferred! or margarine, pot."
meltrd
'* teaspoon sail
'» teaspoon garlic powder
Chicken. Beef or Pork Stock
A pinch each of white pepper,
4 tablespoons margarine
ground red pepper (preferably
1cup evaporated rntlk. in all
cayenne) and black pepper
2 eggs
In a 5x9x2lV loaf pan. com ­
In a large sklllrl combine (he
bine all Ingredients, mix well
buller and oil with the corn,
Seal pan snugly with aluminum
union*, sugar, white jrepper. salt
foil flake at 350° until rice Is and red pepper. Cook over high
le n d e r, about I h o u r. 10 heat until corn is tender and
minutes Serve Immediately
starch starts to form a crust on
However, you can count on the ihe pan bottom, about 12 14
rice slaying hot for 45 minutes minutes, stirring occasionally,
and warm for 2 hours To reheat
and stirring more as mlxturc
leftover rice, use a double boiler
starts sticking Gradually stir In
or warm the rice In a skillet with
I cup of the stock, scraping the
unsalted butter
pan bottom to remove crust as
CORN MAQUE CHOUX
you stir Continue cooking 5
M a k e s 1 0 1 2 a I d r ■d I a h minutes, stirring occasionally
servings
Add the margarine, stir until
My mother cooked a lot of m elted, and cook about 5
sweet or semisweet dishes One
mlnules. stirring frequently and
of these was Corn Maque Choux,
scraping pan bottom as needed.
which we ate with rice and
Reduce heal to low and cook
gravy. Every Cajun family has about 10 minutes, stirring oc­
lls own recipe for Corn Maque casionally. then add hi cup
Choux
additional stock and cook about
15 minutes, stirring fairly fre­
4 tnhlrs|XKitis unsullrd butter
'« cup vcgetuhlr oil
quently. Add the remaining 1
cup stock and cook about 10
7 cups Irrsh corn cut off Ihc
cob (about seventeen 8-Inch
minutes, stirring occasionally.
S ilr In lit cup ol the milk and
cobs), or frozen corn kernels
continue cooking tihlll most of
I cup very finely chopped
onions
(lie liquid Is absorl&gt;ed. about 5
minutes, stirring occasionally.
1« cup sugar
Remove front heat.
1 teaspoon white pep|ier
I
VS te a s p o o n s a il
to a bowl combine the eggs
Ytr teaspoon ground red |&gt;ep|x-r and the remaining Vs cup milk;
beat with a metal whisk until
(preferably cayenne)
very frothy, about I minute. Add
2 '4 c u p s . In a l l . B a s ic

lo ihe com. sllrrtng well. (The
heat from the com Is ample to do
everything necessary to the eggs
to give the dish a rich, frothy
texture.) Serve Immediately,
a llo w in g about Vk cup per
person.
Basic Chicken, Beef or Pork
Stock
Same directions as In Sasic
Shrimp Stock
• Beef: use I W-2 pounds beef
shank (preferred) or other beef
bones
• Chicken: use 1*&gt;*-2 pounds
barks, necks and/or bones from
chickens
• Pork: use i VV2 pounds pork
neck bones (preferred) or other
pork bones
BARBECUE SAUCE
.Makes about 5 cups
This sauce Is super used to
barbecue chicken, pork or ribs
Seasoning mix:
1Vi teaspoons black pepper
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon onion powder
1 teaspoon garlic powder
teaspoon white pepper
teaspoon ground red pepper
(preferably caycnnel
VS pound sliced bacon, minced
1IV cups chopj&gt;cd onions
2 cups Basic Pork, Beef or
Chicken Stock
1W cups bottled chill sauce
1 cup honey
4V cu p caarsely chopped
pecans, drv roasted
5 tablespoons orange Juice
(also slice and save rtnd and
pulp front 'V the squeezed or­
ange)
2 tablespoons lemon Juice (also
slier and save rind and pulp
from V« the squeezed lemon!
2 teaspoons minced garlic
1 teaspoon Tabasco sauce
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
Combine the seasoning mix
ingredients In a small Ixiwl and
set aside
In a 2-quart saucepan fry the
bacon over high hrat until crisp
Stir In the onions, cover pan.
and continue cooking mill) on­
ions are dark brown hui not
burned, about 8-10 minutes,
siirrlng occasionally Si lr In the
seasoning mix and rook alxmt 1
minute. Add the stock, chill
sauce, honey, pecans, orange
Juice, lemon |uiir. orange and
lemon rinds and pulp, garilr and
Tabasco, stirring well. Reduce
heal lo low; continue rooking
about 10 minutes, stirring fre­
quently Remove orange and
lemon rinds Continue cooking
and stirring ubuut 15 minutes
more to let the flavors marry.
Add Ihe butter and stir until
meltrd Remove Irom heal Let
cool ubout 30 minutes, then
pour Into u food processors or
blender and process Just until
pecans and baron are finely
chopped, about I0-20seeonds.

W*dr»*»d»y. Ju ly II. i n } — JB

Obituary Not The Place
For Health Instruction
DEAR ABBT; I have great
respect for your reasoning, and I
especially admire your long an
swrrs. but somellines your short
ones don’t measure up
Specifically, when someone
wrote to say that whenver she
read In the newspaper that
someone had died of lung
cancer, she wondered ll that
jierson had been a smoker Then
she added. "I think that should
be Inrludrd In the report of
death, don’t you?"
Your reply; ’ Yes. I'm sure
most people would like to
know "
Why stop there? I suggest the
following:
Died John Doe. ol liver dis­
ease after years of drinking like a
fish Survivors Include Mary l&gt;oe
and the Doe children, several of
whom are drunks
Died Jane Doc of a heart
attack Grossly overweight. Mrs
Doe never took care of herself
Survivors Include her husband
Joe "Fatso' Doc
Died Tim othy Doe. ol a drug
overdose, a mixture ol heroin
and Drano Survivors Include his
parents, who lake too much
Vallum
Died Richard Roc. ol Injuries
sustained In a traffic accident
Mr Roe had live speeding llekels
In the Iasi three years
I don't think you gave very
much ihoughi to your reply,
Abby Clearly, obituaries are not
I tie place to provide health
advice
CHARLES L. SMITH
SEATTLE. ATTORNEY AT
LAW AND PIPE SMOKER
DEAR MR. SMITH: You are
right, ol course I permit ted my
vehement antt-smoklng bias to
cloud by tiettri |udgmenl Mra
culpa
DEAR ABBY: I've tiocii going
with lhts fellow lot over a year
and we're planning to be mar
rled in September My problem
is I'm always gelling an ex lover
or gullrlend thrown In my fare
Hc tells me about the atlalrx hr
has had. and thru wants to
Introduce us I keep finding their
tx-longlngs (Intimate apparell all
over hts apartment Yesterday
was the Iasi straw when 1 found
some nude pictures of one of his
girlfriends — taken at hts placcl
I really love him and keep
forgiving him. but I don't know
how much more I can take.

D ear
Abby

Please give me some helpful
advice. I already spent $8(X&gt; on
our wedding, and nothing can ta­
n-turned
HEARTBROKEN
ANDCONrUBED
DEAR H. AND C.: Call olf the
wedding and consider the $800
tuition In the school of expert
n ice Marriage lo this man
would have cost you much more
than $hoo in anguish, pain,
regret, headaches, sleepless
nights and arid Indigestion

sense — and a more beautiful
ceremony — If ihe hrlde and
groom were lo face tr con­
gregation during ihe &lt;.- emony?
This might not go over so well
with some ministers, but I'm
sure Ihe congregation would
appreciate It. What do you
ihtnk'’
SAN DIEQO PARENTS
DEAR PARENTS: I think It's
a great Idea Hut as soon as this
hits print. I'll probably hear from
someone saying. "That's not art
original Idea. We dul that!”

CONFIDENTIAL TO LOVES
TO TRAVEL: Don't take too
many vacations or your boss
might suddenly realize be can
get along without you.
DEAR ABBY: I dearly love the
English language, but tt appears
that either our Fnglish teachers
aren't leaching or their students
DEAR ABBT: Our daughtrr aren't learning I am upp.dlrd at
was recently married In a tradi­ the number of teen-agers who
tional Protestant church wed
use the veil) "gix-s " instead of
ding Her mother and I sat In the "says Example In point
front i»ew on the Irlt and the
"Butch and I were discussing
groom's parents occupied the this problem, and Butch goes.
front jx-w on the right
But you promised you'd do It
We arranged to have a blend Then 1 go. 'Well. I changed my
videotape the entire ceremony mind ' So Botch gix-s. 'That's
Irom an obscure position tx-hlnd om lair, a promise is a promise '
the minister
Then my mom gix-s. 'Will you
Alter Ihe honeymoon, the kids slop lighting'" and l go. 'We
bride and grrxim and txtlh sets of aren't lighting "
parents viewed Ihe tape ol the
Abhy. please point out Ihnl
ceremony ll was beautiful! We
goes'' is a verb rnra nln g
were able to see the faces ol Ihe forward motion In movement,
bride and groom as ihev pledged not speech
their vows — not lost the ttacks
We are producing a nation ol
ol their heustls. which Is ihe im h e c ilie s o u n d in g y o u th s
view we (and everyone clsc| had holding bachelor degrees' Anil
diplng Ihe ceremony
they can't spell either'
Abby wouldn't It make more
A. IN PHOENIX

You Say You l.ike Hot Dogs?
Then You'll Love...

HOT DOGS &amp; TOPPING
M

'Hu*

N o w A v a lla W c A t

DAY &amp; NIGHT GRILL
1 3 0 0 S . Fren ch Ave., Sanford

3 2 3 -6 7 2 8

(H igh w a y 17 M A n d l M h l U

J
’s
MEATS
$26,000 JACKPOT
THIS IS THE 2ND BIG WEEK FOR YOU TO REGISTER TO BE
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B E E F at L O W
FULL
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ROUND $ 1 9 9
(M:
LB.
STEAK
65 OUNCE
ARM &amp; HAMMER

HEALTH AND
BEAUTY AIDS

Tussy 2 oz cream or 2 25 oz. roll on
doodoranl. S oz
Cars. 9 oz
Miss Brack t Coipala loompasta.

Regularly *}• Roll. Marcal 2-ply
papar towels Limit 2.

Regularly 1.4*. Haavy duly laundry
detergent Umll 2 boxes

FRESH CENTER CUT

BONELESS LEAN

STEW

B R IEFS &amp;
PANTYHOSE

Reguledy 2.39 Lace or crleacroae
styles, afzea 32A to 40C

Pricaa Good Al All Family Dollar Storaa
Through Thlt Waakand. QuantIliaa UnUtad
On Soma llama. Mo 1M— To OaaMrt.

STORE HOURS
MON SAT « AM •6 PM
SUNDAY 1PM 6 PM

413 E. FIRST ST.
(N a il

To Winn DUla)

BOILED $ J 6 9
HAM
FRESH

QQC
PORK
$ 1 7 9 BULK
l.
CHOPS
1 l. SAUSAGE

PORK
STEAK

COOKIN' GOOD PREMIUM

COOKIN' GOOD PREMIUM

i * -

Rag. To 1.4g. Briefs, bikinis &amp; hipster
pantlea or regular sue pantyhose

)| 6 9

LEAN SLICED

J'S HOMEMADE

COOKIN' GOOD PREMIUM

FRYER C A C FRYER
. WINGS
THIGHS 5 9 c
FASHION
BRAS

no. wait
for your
convenience

Joggers and athletics
In men’s, boys', ladles'
and girls' sizes.

FULL CUT BEEF

,

OUR NEW
SELF-SERVICE

SPEC IA L GROUP
ATHLETICS

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL
To 1.19.
HDTK) Of 1QW40 Oil
Limit 5 quarts.

Vn

P R IC E S

p r ic e s g o o d
thru
S a t. July 13

CQC
9 9 l.

WE ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS

* 1 4*

SPLIT FRYER
BREAST 99°
W V ia
Located on Hwy. 17-92
2 Blks. North of 434

339-7337.

830-1297

�«B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wadnetday, July 10, IMS

Light A n d Lovely
Finish To Meal

Dozzle Without Fraizle

Spectacular
Desserts To
Make Ahead
Summer r-ntrrtuinlng ... In
the* balmy month*. backyard
barbecue* frequently fake lhe
place of rliilxirale eight-course
dinner*, and rlr**r-rt more oflrn
Ilian not mean* opening a
half-gallon of h r cream. Hut lor
really d a zzlin g your guext*
wllhnul reducing ymrr*ell to a
fraz/le, rift ahead summer tie
sseri* are Jus! die answer.
Spectacularly prclly, each of
llieae rlesserl* will top off a
quirk and raxy main course with
m em orable style (.‘ocoltlbe
Summer 1’uddlng Is a captlvaflug new approach lo bread
pudding. Ibat traditional dessert
making a comeback on the
tnenu* of many sophisticated
re s tn u ra n t* . S tra w b e rrie s
hlurherrtrs and raspl«-rrles give
ibis dessert a lovely Jewl-llke
hue And cia-onut rum. a dr
III Ions combination of rum and
natiital coconut, brings out a
sensational new dimension in
these fresh fruit flavors A
whlp|&gt;ed cream and fresh I nut
garnish tops oil this lovely ere
ullon
Kro/cn Lime Souffles In Indl
v ld u u l s e r v in g dishes are
another surefire way lo Impress
guests These lovely Iro/en &lt;te
allous have an appealing lari
ness that's delight lull v enhancer I
by die nx'tinul rum Chopped
nuts pressed around die edge ol
die soullles and a whipped
cream and lime slice garnish
make th is rlesserl p ictu re
perfrcl
Ami l&gt;est ol all. you can make
these frozrn little soullles well
ahead of lime — on a rainy day,
|ierhap*7 — ready lo debut til
vuur next company dinner
C O C O R IIIE HUMMER
P U D D IN G
Id 12 slices while brearl
ci usls removed
2 cups fresh strawberries,
hulled anil quartered
2 cups fresh hluclrcrrlen
I package (10 nunrr*) frozen
rusphcrrlra. Ihnwed. drained
'■«cup sugar
I cup coconut rum
'V cup heavy cream. whlp|H*rt
Line Ihr hnltnm and slrlrs ol a
I '."j rpuiri ImiwI with overlapping
slices of bread, reserving 4 slices
lor lop of. bowl In medium
saucepan romblne strawberries
blueberries, raspberries and
sugar. Cook over mrilliim brut
stirring unlll sugar Is dissolved
Simmer Id minutes Remove
IIIini heat, cool Sth In coconut
i mu Spoon nilxliire into pre
pated ImiwI. cove i with remain
lug slices ul bread I'lurc a plate,
nllghlly smaller Ilian die top ol
tin- bowl, directly onto Ihc pud
ding Place a 2 pound weigh) on
the plate Chill overnight To
seive. luin pudding mil onto
serving plate Uunilsh with
w h ip p e d c re a m and Irr s li
raspberries, blueberries or
sirawlierrles. II desired.
V le ld

*i

in H

M

cream S|ioon Into prepared
souffle dishes. Freeze overnlghl
In serve, remove collar: press
i hop[&gt;ed mils around edges of
snuffle. Garnish wltli additional
whipped cream and lime slices.

ii desired

BARBS
Phil Pastoret
"ln"come li that portion of your
mourcei »peril for the latoil faxhlon.
Ireml, fail or whatever.
(iw in r lr y mad# r u &gt; The tb o rtn l
dIt l ante between two pint. h ulitm n
a «tr»l*kl hoe.

IS* C*«hl *•*

Fro»h Homogenized

Klngtfotd

Publix Milk
gallon slz*

&lt;|M&lt;1*(»I t \ | * * f | t * i

f lu u

Hallmann's Rasl

All Vegetable

Mayonnaise

W esson Oil

32-oz. Jar

38-oz. bol.

Charcoal
Briquets

$409

$&lt;f 4 9

$2 39

lilt litziM W
fl*O**l»t*Rxn ►****

l*.**&lt;

*1*1

Biids Eye Extra Creamy
or Regular

Cool Whip

Breakfast Club
Florida Grade A While

Large Eggs
per dozen

8-oz. bowl

10-lb. bag

3 5

A

19°

Make the livin’ bright and breezy

sewwU *

From Concentrate,
Sacramento

Tomato
Juice
46-oz. can

29*J
Si V re a s p fc w s
U
e .. 1—* MB* mm* **■
▼ ummm a toa&lt;« t a t *

0

Publix Ozonated

Drinking
Water
gallon bot.

9
ICandyl
Hershey Kisses or Assorted
or Reese Cup

Miniatures......
THIS AD
7 7 C EFFECTIVE:
* f
THURS...------JULY 11
5 7 C
THRU
WED..
JULY 17.
1 9 0 5 ...'

Fresh Pork

Shoulder P ic n ic ...

lb

Rockingham (3-Lb. Average)

p«(

Roasting Chicken

lb

Bananas
por lb.

25'

Orange Juice

$449

C a d b u ry .........

B iscu its.............. . H4

Publix Beef
G ov’t.-Inspected B o n eless

Kraft Assorted

C h u ck R oast

Citrus Punch......

*

/TTT1

•2*®

Ij4 9

Trout....................

i

a it ia v ii

Ice Cream
...* 2 1 9
gal

im mam

Shrimp,................ Sf *8BB

•OLD

Soft Drinks

(15-0 z.)
Deli Custom Made Pepperoni

Pizza..................

2

mmm
Assorted
Publix Reg. or Diet

t 0 LMMf

OUAMVlf If |

Large

2-liter (
bottle

*3”

| M

Publix

Boiled Ham.......... Z »1BB

Klondike Bars........

. |b4 9 °

Chicken A
Biscuits................ Z »2”
Yams A Apples ... Z *2"
Blueberry Pie...... *.“ h«2”
Plain or Seeded

Italian Braad....... £?i 69*
Low Fat, Low Cholesterol Cheese

Moxzaralla........... Z 75*

V lid fir s
COOKBOOK
COLLECTION
Thu &gt; « G fexlurr
VOLUM E it

CocklaiLTlnw
Cookbook
VOLUME l»
Picnic A
Pa do Cookbook

*1.79
tb in k k« N ta B e i l

*-jo«

6p* $ 1 „

Thl» Ad E lf .c lit . At T h a t. Location. Only:

bag

Reg. or Light Beer

Old Style

SANFORD PLAZA,
SANFORD

$459

12-oz. cens
(
6-pk. ctn.
3
(Limit 4 Plaaaa. With Othar
Puichaaaa ot IE SOor Mora.
E .eluding aHTobacco Itamal

LONGWOOD
V ILLA G E C TR .,
LONGWOOD

Bread....................2 lum

Potato Salad....... *' 89c
Hot to Go!

64 O l

139

Rain, Chocolate or Knspy

Publix Special Recipe Thin Sliced
White or Wheat Sandwich

Flavorful

B a r-B -Q ................. Z *2M

$1 te

lice Cream

Cracked Ice

Deli Lean

Boneless Zesty Beef or Pork

a oi

P o lk , H ig h la n d s, O ra n g e ,
Lake, Seminole I Oeceola Co.

16-oz. bots.
B-pk. ctn.

Assorted Publix Premium

Perch...................

Sunny Delight Florida

99*

Coke

roe t* iiniA

half gal.

Fresh Frozen Fillet of

Cheez W h iz .......

«*'■
cans

(Plus Tax &amp; Deposit) Tab,
Sprite, Mr. Pibb, Mello Yello,
Caffeine Free Diet Coke,
Diet Coke or

CO N VtN tM Ct
▼ oucAM BAiet o e

Fresh Fillet of

££* 69*

Pillsbury Buttermilk.
BuMor or Counlry

Publix
-feller

ISeafoodl

*15B

Assorted Large Candy Bars

*

Made From Concentrate,
Publix Brand Chilled

Dell Fresh-Baked

Don't knock the Navy tor Hum*
auper expensive ath tray* They need
muiclhing In which to throw away
1Virtue Department secret!

For more acnmtptloui* banana
desserts, send for Dole Swrel
Treats Dept MH5. P.O. Box
775M San FranNsou. CA 94120

n tn n n if

1^1 x l **« — «•*

l v ln g s

FR O ZEN L IM E H OUFFLEH
:&gt; large eggs, sepal alril
cup sugar , divided
I cop CocoRlbc coconut m m
I lables|MMitis Itiitc |ul&lt; c
I leuspnmi grilled lime |H‘d
Green h«&gt;d coloimg opiioual
I cup heavy cream whipped
Wt cup finely chopped mils
Prepare eight 2 im It w hir
slilpsof wax paper m alumlmim
loll long enough lo go urmiml
flo iiiiir Individual soulllc ills
hes Fasten securely with stung
ot i u|h* lu loim a collar to hold
soulllc mixture above dlsli until
II srls In small mixer Itowl beat
egg yolks wtdi '« cup sugat until
thick. alNiut ft lu 7 minutes
Gradually stir lu commit nun.
lime Juler. Ilmr perl and 3 or 4
rlrops ol green IimhI miming II
desired In large mixer Imwl linil
egg whites until loamy, gradu
ally adrl rrinaliilng b cup sugar
lie.itlug until whites are still and
glossy. Fold egg yolks Into
iieulrn while* Fold m wlil|i|&gt;ed

In a &lt;mall saucepan, mell
marmalade over low heal: stir In
brandy, ginger and lime peel,
cool. Peel grapefruit and cut Into
sections. Peel tangerines and
slice Into cartwheels Peel and
slh r bananas In serving dishes,
a rran g e fru its along w ith
s live re d k u m q u a ts Spoon
marmalade mlxitire over all.
Slakes 4 servings

M A N D A R IN D E S S E R T S A L A D
1&lt; cup mange marmalade
I tablespoon brandv
I leaspoon crystallized ginger,
minced
I teaspoon grated lime peel
1 large grapefruit
2 tangerines

Fruit* combine in ologant dessert.

Yield H servings

_

3 large Dole Bananas
2 tablespoons silvered kumquats optional

If you are trying your hand at
a Chinese dinner, this easy
d e s se rt salad ‘s especially (or
you Sjirnd your i.me o" a more
difficult m «.n dish and ».... nave
an impressive confection lo end
ihe meal with flair For a light
and lovely finish lo any meal.
Chinese or not. Mandarin De­
ssert Salad Is dell gill lu I.

Eagle Snack

Pretzels..................... ' I S M 09
Nabisco Cookies

O r e o s ........................ t V *1”
Nabisco 16-Oz Fig Newtons
or 12-Oz. Assorted

N ew tons................... ,?• *15B
Keebler Chips Deluxe
or Pecan Sandies

C o o k ie s..................... 'ZV *1M
Wise Puffed or Crunchy

Cheez Doodles......

*1,B

In 12 Oz Cans. Lager or Liaht Beer

Old T a p ....................... X

*1BB

�E v e n in g M s r s I d . S a n K lr t . F l. _ W * d r &gt; * t d « y , J u ly 10. 1 U J - S B

Rich Homemade
Ice Cream Takes
The Sizzle Out
Of Summertime

Homcmad* Ico cream is the centerpiece for summer's festive occasions.

Celcbratr a festive occasion
this summer with homemade Ice
cream Your guests will enjoy
hearing the churn work and (he
anticipation of Ice cream's good
taste. Someone Is sure to tell a
when I was a child' story about
making Ice cream, and that will
start a nostalgic conversation.
All Ice creams, of course, carry
good nutritional value because

THIS AD E FFE C T IV E :
THURS., JU LY 11 THRU
WED.. JU LY 17, 1 9 8 5 ..

Fresh Firm

Green

Publix
Fresh Crisp Western

For Salads or Slicing,
T a s ty (Large Size)

Tomatoes
per lb.

IT '
V

Press up your
’a y
summer salads with natures ^
beautifully designed prinluce from
I’uhlix. Pick from a display of exotic
colors that will tempt every taste.
Spice up mealtime with international
style. Go Greek. Italian, Mexican.
French. Oriental, or mix and match;
the possibilities are endless. This
summer, haw it made in the shade.
Create an original with l\ihlix produce.

T h e Natural Snack
Thom pson Ta sty

Perfect For
Bean Salad,
Fresh Tender

Green

W inderful produce.
One of the little things that makes
shopping at IHiblix such a pleasure

join o u r su m m e r festival of p ro d u c e
Fresh Tender

Broccoli
large bunch
All Purpose

California Ripe,
Ju icy (7 0 Size)

Nectarines

Ripe, Juicy, Tasty Fresh

Peaches

Ripe, Sweet, Tasty

H oneydew s

Produce
California S w aat. Juicy SunKiat

Valencia
Oranges.............4 »*.. 9I s*

Florida Flavorrul

Freeh Mangos..... m 70*
"Naw Crop"

Red Potatoes.... 5 »*. W*
Fresh Plump Flavorful

IPlants &amp; Flowers I

Blueberries

Colorful Fraah

Cut Rosas............ ^

*3"

hjauiMMitvil THC JfcOMT

Wisconsin Cheese B ir Mild or
Medium Cheddar. Colby Hartmoon
Monterey Jack or
11-M.

Mozzarella...

Serve with Fresh Fruit
Assorted Dairi-Fresh

Vin Rose, Rhine
or Chablis Blanc

Tasty-Lite
Ice Milk

Petri
Wine

TO UNIT OUAMflflf ft ftOtO

PM

Poty-0 Cheese

Mozzarella.............
Breakstone s Lowfat. California
Style or Smooth &amp; Creamy

Cottage Cheese....

where shopping iso pleasure 7days a week

Publix
-

«

their basic Ingredient Is milk,
hut homemade Ice cream has
ihe bonus of fresh flavor along
w ith protein, c a lc iu m and
rltMiflavIn
Homemade Ice cream will
come smooth and creamy from
your free/er If a few tips arr
followed Determine the right
ratio of rock sail to crushed Ice
for unlfonn freezing If the mix
ture freezes either too Inst or too
slow, a coarse Irx tu rr or a
spongy buttery trxturc result*
So It's Important to know how to
iqx-rute your Ice rrra m (rrc/rr
tx*fore you assemble thr ingtr
dlcnls tor your own dairy de­
sserts
If yours Is one ol (hr half
gallon electric Irrr/rrs that uses
Ire cubes and rork salt, you ran
rut any of these rrripcs In half
Two of these rect|x-s feature
favorite Ingredients such as
bananas, m arshm allows and
rrunrhy |&gt;eamit brittle opening
new taste opportunities In Ihe
homemade category Special
V.mill.i Is Included for I hose who
savor the simpler flavors A
version fxipulur In Philadelphia
adds grated vanilla bran Instead
of vanilla extract
Add to your party tattle some
tug chocolate chip or sugar
cookies and appropriate decora­
tions Th r event will l&gt;r one In
remember!
MELLOW BANANA
MARSHMALLOW ICE CREAM
3 cups milk
1 package |IO oz 1 large
marshmallows
2 cupspttrrrd ripe bananas
I tablrs|MM&gt;n frrsh lemon Julcr
A eggs
I ‘ticups sugar
3 cups whipping cream
I lahlrs|Nxm vanilla extract
' &lt; truxpooli salt
I cup chopped maraschino
cherries (optional)
llrat milk and marshmallows
In a 3 quart suiter pan. stirring
constantly, until marshmallows
are melted. C o o l Combine
hanurta purer uud lemon Juice.
Heat eggs until foamy In a large
mixing bowl. Gradually add
sugar, beat until thickened Add
cream, vanilla and sail; mix
t h o r o u g h l y . II l e n d I n
marshmallow mixture, bananas
and maraschino cherries Chill
Chum-freeze. Yield.- I gallon
CRUNCHY PEANUT BRITTLE
ICECREAM
I quart rnllk
ti egg yolks, ftealen
1cupsugar
h leus|xx&gt;n salt
3 cups whipping cream
2 tuhlrsponn* vanilla extract
2 cups crushed |&gt;eanui bridle
Com hlnr m ilk egg yolks.
sugar and salt In a 3 &lt;pi.ui heavy
suucrpan. blend thoroughly
Cook over medium heal, stirring
const.iiiilv. until mixture, coals a
spoon (about 15 minutest Do
not boll Cool Add cream and
vanilla Stir In I cup peanut
brittle. Chill I to 2 hours
Churn freeze. After freezing, lxlore ripening, siir In remaining I
cup peanut bridle VARIATION
FRENCH V A N ILLA Omit jx-a
nut bridle Yield approx 3
quarts
SPECIAL VANILLA
ICE CREAM
(I cups milk
-I cups whipping creum
2 cups sugar
2 lahlespixms vanilla extracl
1« Iraspoon salt
Combine all Ingredient* In
freezer can. Sllr until sugar Is
dissolved Chill ('b urn freeze
Yield I gallon

Biscuits Top
Peach Cobbler
I'earh Cobbler and I'each
Pan Dowdy have a folksy early
American ring itasliully. they
are Ihe same, a deep dlsti peach
pie. but with a biscuit type
lopping rather Ilian u pastry
crust.
PEACH COBBLER
0 cups peeled, pilled, sliced
peaches (about I2|
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
*s cup sugar
2 V* tablespoons corn starch
•s iraspoon ground cinnamon
I package (7.5 oz.) refrigerator
biscuits
In large bowl, toss peaches
with lemon Juice. In small bowl,
sllr together sugar, corn starch
and cinnamon. Add to peach
slices: loss w ell. T u r n into
greased HxMx2 Inch tasking dish.
Uakr In 400*F. oven 20 minutes
Arrange biscuits on top. Hake 10
to 15 minutes longer or until
g o ld e n b r o w n
M a ke s 10
servings

**ZT

j

�*B - E v e n in g M «r « ld . Sxn lord, T l

W -d r v u d j y , July 10, !»•',

Food Processor Makes Life
In Kitchen More Enjoyable

Scallops combine with
mushroom* in a lirht

Quick and cs»/ rwal* are In
n der now that nt.c weather ha*
arrived
Whether you’ rr trying In *ave
lime for outdoor arllvlllrn nr
• reate a culinary *en*atlon for
entertaining gue*ts, the home
rconomtata at Kite heriAld *ay a
food processor ran make life In
the kitchen simpler and much
more enjoyable

Here are somr suggestions
rom lhe*e expert* oil how to gel
the most from your food pro•e**or

‘ « teaspoon oregano
'A iea»|x&lt;r n ba*il
Sail and pepper
Hot rooked rlr «•
l’o*ltlon slit log rbv In work
I k i w I Sllre mushroom* Remove
from I k i w I iind s e i aside
Kxeh.mge silt ing disk for work
blade Add tomatoes and parsley
lo howl Pulse 4-5 lime* to
eoarsely rtiop Remove Irom
Ixtwl and set asith
Heat olive oil and holler In a

17 1nth sktllel over medium
l.t at Add garlic and saute 1
mantle Add scallop* and saute
I minute Add mushroom* and
&lt;ook another minute
Add tomatoes and reserved
|uler with parsley, rrd wine,
lemon juler. oregano, basil, salt
and pepper. silr well Reduce
heal and simmer 5-7 minute*
Serve Immediately w ith hot
rr&lt;okrd rtf c
Vleld 4 serving*

• When adapting a favorite
recl|»e. «lerlde with It Ingredient*
« .in Ik- prepared in your food

bui spicy *omato
sauce for quick, easy
and tasty Scallops
Provencale.

“Letme personally
see how we’ve made
and cleaner.”

p ro m iso r

• If sultablr chop or slier
fiKid* Instead of dl&lt; log
• T o nave llrne washing
blade* and Ihiw Iv proce** dry
Ingredient* Itefore food* with a
high water content
• To avoid overpriK e**ing,
add dry mgrrdlrntn Iasi when
preparing a ipili k bread, rake or
i ookle halter
• When chopping a large
amount of fowl. avoid overload­
ing the txiwl Uneven i flopping
can result Check frei|iirntlv and
*• raj*- down Hide* ot I hiw I to
redistribute food If ncce**ary,
proecH* III several batches
• When slicing a single pier e
ol land such a* a carrot or stalk
of celery. |mi*IIIoii It to Ihe right
side of the feed tube to avoid
uneven slices
The leed lutxpusher and rotation of the dls&lt;
will hold the food In place and
prevent it from falling over
during processing

SCALLOPS PHOVENCALE
U pound Iresli mushrooms
I can I2 Mor I Italian Initiator*,
seeded. Juice reserved
.'I sprigs Iresli parsley
I tablespoon olive oil
I tuhlr*|&gt;oon butter or inorga
line

-I cloves garlic, minced
1 pound hay or sea scallops
2 t a b l e s p o o n s r e d Wine

I tablespoon lemon juice

Yogurt
Desserts
lari and lungy Irn/en yogurl
steps Into |lie* dessert s|Milllgbt
lor ific summer When the mer­
cury soars, even non yogurl Ians
melt al Ihe slglil ol Ihe lemplliig
Ural lhat tastes like lx- cream
with a "bit** "
( flier the amount ot ctpilp
inetil amt r llo t l II look to
|ilodu&lt;f- Iro/CII voguit desserts
at home made preparation dl*
(milaging to all lull the lliosl
ambitious cooks For today’s
yogurt Ians, however, these light
and luscious Iree/er pleasets ate
whliln easy reach With the
secret In g r e d ie n t . " Kr al l
m a r s h m a l l o w e r r m e . In
streamline preparation, smooth
and c r e amy lexlured Iro/en
yogurl dessert* ate a hrrr/r lo
make wttlinul spe« lid eipil|)inenl
or &lt;r.inking (III your arms ache
II you have a bivurlle tlrsM-ri
01 snack ptr|tarril &lt;|til&lt; kly and
easily wllli marshmallow cteine.
oi II you’ll like lo crralr nor. you
cnuld Ik- a winner In ihe 11185
KHAET Marsh mallow Creme
Kasy Sirrri Ingredient' Mrclpc
( onlcsl
bullies musl Ik- jxislinai ki ll
liy uildnlghl. Se|ii ltd I Ills year
( h e r e ate l l u r r al l l i eu
tale guiles in ruler "Candles.

&lt; mikies and Snacks" Incluilcs
let i|&gt;es hit all ihcst- special
lawn lies except Ittl lutlgr Keel
|k - s etilcrcd III lilt- "Rcssrtls
iiakrd. Krfrlgnalctl or Kto/rn"
category tail range Iriiiu tpilck
la m lly la vo rllcs In elegant
iliealllinr llntilrs "Sweet bi
ceirras ’ can Include ircl|irs fur
bevel ages stnijis. sutler*, dips,
bosllngs, eit Almnsi any orlgl
nal miirslimulltiw i rrm r re«-l|K- Is
a |Milrnllal winner Complete
lilies lor I hr rrcl|ir cnnlcsl
Itillow. or you may ublaln atltll
lltinul copies by sending yum
name anil uddtrss to HULKS.
K K A K l Marsh mallow Crem e
Kasy Secret Ingredient" Recipe

C o n ic a l. I’ O

lion

FRESH
RED RIPE

Water­
melon

1 LB PKG.

PER POUND
PLANTATION

Sliced
Bacon

11*

Boneless
Chuck

FRESH

LARGE
r

--------------~

-

n

Hormel
I
Chopped * 7 C | &lt; :
Ham
I hf
HALF POUND

IN THE DEtl/BAKERY STORES ONLY
k—

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

................................... —

Red
Slicing
Tomatoes

14*

Stew
Beef

PER POUND

u

49*

&amp;o a

to p

exxer

Slaw or
Salad

4

ANY SIZE
PACKAGE

Mr. Turkey

$|69

Turkey
Breast

lb

PER POUND

C A L IF O R N IA

Sliced
Ham

U S D A TOP QUALITY

59*

Sliced
Qtr. Pork
Loin

PER POUND

$139

99*

Lykt
AMt \&lt;/m \ oljAi/rv

Steaks or
Roasts

1 LB PKG.

VJCU) 0* SMOKED

UNLS. BEEF

PACKAGE
FRESH

Skinless

Franks

u &amp; o a to p c m o c t

PER POUND

Green
Cabbage

$|39

Hygrade

Gwaltney
Great
Chicken
Hot Dogs
or Bologna

0 4 J Z . H tM j

n 39
12-OZ PKG

$219
|202
^
u &lt; u . rrvu

59*

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, JULY
11 THRU WEDNESDAY. JULY 17. 1965.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

Rawsons Where Our Name is Your Guarantee

I 1192.

Chit ago. IllinoisIkkil I

TKOPICAL TOOUKTEHEEZE
I cup milk
1 7 -o* |ar Krall marshmallow

err me
2 cups ptiira|i|ilc llavnred

yogurt
1-j cup toasted cocnnul
G r a d u a l l y utl d m i l k l o
marshmallow rrrm r. mi xi ng
with electric mixer ot wire whisk
until well hlnuled Silt In yogurl
and coconut I'our Into OxS-Incti
It Ml pan. freerr mixture until
almost llrm Coarsely chop mix
lute: *jMton Into chilled bowl.
Iteai with eleclrlc mixer until
slushy, re free/e until llrtn
f» serving*
Variation Suh*lltutr banana
or lemon lluvoird yogurt fur
pineapple llavorrd yogurt

\

SANFORO 2944 ORLANDO ROAD. ZAYRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER O F 17-82 A ORLANDO ROAU

i
7 • i

&lt; I

•V *

*J'

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI

Faster Ways With M icrowaves

Wedneiday. July 10. It U — IB

Bananas Foster Breathtaking
Finale To Tantalizing Entree
Curried Fru it Ham Ring Is a delightful dish that requires a
total cooking time of 13 minutes

jet the stage for a summer minutes to cook, it will lx- a
xpeetal party or brunch by scrv breathtaking finale to your ex
ing these elegant yet economi­ iravaganza
cal recipes from a Whirlpool
BANANAS FO STER
microwave oven cookbook
(Total cooking time:
Fruit lavished Curried Fruit
3 minutes, SO seconds)
Ham King has a succulent spicy
1quart vanilla Icecream
sweet glaze and rooks In Just 13
1 1 cup packed brown sugar
minutes
« clipbulter or margaruu
A n d a l t h o u g h fIa m tn g
2 labicspoon* milk
Bananas Foster takes only a lew
'« teaspoon ground cinnamon

3
cups sliced bananas it me­high for l l i im iuitrs fill butter
dium)
melts and mixture In bubbly,
cup light rum
stirring oner Add banana niters
Scoop ice cream Into ti b..' \ and cook at high lor 2 minutes
Place ice i ream lit sherbet dis­ till bananas arr warm, stirring
h e s. freeze. In 1*1 -quart casse­ oner In I-cup glass measure
role combine brown sugar, but
place rum Place In microwave
ter nr margarine milk and oven
cinnamon Place in microwave
Cook rum al high for 20
oven
seconds, pour rum over banana
Cook brown sugar mixture at mixture Ignite rum using a long
match Spoon sauce over Ice
cream and serve Immediately
Makes t&gt;servings
CURRIED FRUIT HAM RING
1 rgg
t« cup soli bread crumbs il
slier)
l » eupfinely chopped onion
l * eup milk
v« pound ground fully rooked
ham
|Miund ground jxtrk

invite you to come
our stores brighter

2 iahlrs|toons brown sugar

I lablrsptMin butter or marga
tine. Mtflened
' l l teaspoon curry powder
1 17-ounce can I rolls lur salad,
drained
Cashews 'optional)
Fluked coconut Iopt tonal I
t'huiney lopiioual)
In a mixing Ixiwl cotnblnr rgg.
breud crumbs, onion, and milk
Add gmtind meats and mix writ
In H\Hx2 Inch baking dish shape
meat mixture Into a Cl inch ring
III desired, place a bounce
custard cup. light side up. In
center of dish and mold mixture
around the cup ) Cover with
waxed paper and place in ilir
microwave oven
Cook meat ring at high lor 7
minutes till thoroughly rooked,
add more cooking Mine, ll nrces
sarv Remove from microwave
oven (Remove custard cupl
Drain oil meat Juices Combine
brown sugar, b u itn . and rurrv.
spread over bam loal Cover ami
return meal ling to microwave
oven
Cook meal ring at high lot 3
minutes N j h h i i i ft n il over and
around loal Cook, covered, at
high lor 3 minutes Transfer
meat ring to srtving plate, sjioon
on Juli es and trulls Serve with
cashews, coconut, and chutney
sprinkled atop. II desired Makes
•l servings

BOB L O N G A C R E
P R ESID EN T

p UU

TIPS * TECHNlOUEa
Flaming: lo flame a sauce lot
dessert, jtlare 2-4 lublrspoonx
liquor In glass measuring cup
Ileal al high lor 15-20 seconds
■III hot Carefully Ignlie with a
long mulch, jsittr over dessert
I 'sc caution w hen rooking with
liq u o r

D o n 't J o u h l r re e l pen
w in e am I liq u o r,
especially those ili.it use o n ly
sm all ainourtls of oihct liqu ids
H rn u tn h c i that wines .mi/ ll
quors arc a lco h o l anil as su ch
arc really a form ol lo c i
Shape: Foods that ate shaped

ro/ilalitfng

mi

it

» K m , i n u m am s j a » m i s i i m v v w

s m n&gt; n w

M.Mnt&gt;'□Hsus m■
-vvuwki &gt;■»w i * s * iv»«

---------------------- N

p~
30 2

Nestea
•WDH

Instant
Tea

6 ROLL PAK

$ 0 7 9

£ £ £ $ 1 7 9

bd

Tissue

9/

4002

Nestea
Tea
Mix

$3

Nestea
WITH

Nutra
Sw eet

A .

9

9

ySpaghetti
= os

3^02

BRIGHT

$ 0 9 9
bd

12-02 FROZEN

*

Q/

s
Food
GOLDEN
CRINKLE CUT

9

c

9

9

«

E

$ 0 9 9
„

LIQUID
DETERGENT

J

PICNIC STYLE
CHICKBN NDPPP.P

« err label

$ 1 8 9
J&amp;.

FnS ^

Q C

Drinks

^202 FROZEN

9

fUtn/ c o o k in g t i me 3D
tn/nnfes
I 2*1 3 pound broiler Irycr
■Ini ken, cut uji
I -I '2 mince |iut kage crispystyle eoallllg mix lol ■hit ken
l l i r s l i ears i&gt;( corn

•

3 PACK

U

9

m™

in ring molds nr other round
shajM-s (such as ground meal
patties) will ciMik more evenly
titan square. oblong. &lt;&gt;t ir
ir-gulat shaped (noils, sitter
microwaves penrlrale equally
(torn all sides

ONE GALLON

CAN

CX3NAl_D0UC*

Orange
Ju ice

r

Downy

15-02 CAN

8

.

c

B u tch or
N a tu ra l.
Lig h t
SUITCASE
PACK

24 PACK
12 o z . c a n s

$ /W?W5 9

1 lb ounce can ticniiaii potato

sidad

Pepsi,
D iet Pepsi,
M L Dew, Pepsi
Free, Diet Pepsi
Free, Slice or
Diet Slice

6 PACK
1202 CAN
*

$ -1 3 !*
JL

4

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, JULY
11 THRU WEDNESDAY. JULY 17, 1985.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.

~

~

~

~

Rawsons Where Our Name is Your Guarantee
b Id o w b
| SB

2 to miller jiai kages frozen
halved straw lx-rues [lit quicklhaw | m i u i III
I pint vanilla l&lt; c cream
Coat the chicken will) the
seasoned coaling mix according
lo ilx- jiackage directions I'lacr
I lit- chicken pieces skill side tip.
wi t h meatlrsl j&gt;orl Io n s lo outside
ol pan on microwave rousting
rack in 12x714x2 inch huklng
dish Cover chicken loosely with
waxed jtajKT I’lacr the chicken
to the far light on rack In Hie
microwave oven Wrap each ear
ol corn In waxed puj&gt;er. twist
rods to close [’lace ears of corn
on Irhr ruck nrxl lo the chicken,
leaving sjiacc between ifie ears
Place the potato salad in a
f)x5x3-lnch loal dlsli Cover
|Hitalo salad loosely with jdusllc
wrap Place the potato saiad on
Ifte bottom of the microwave
oven below the r.irs of corn.
Cook al high lor 15 minutes
Rearrange ttie chicken piece* in
•he |ian Also rearrange Ihr ears
of corn Stir the jkiiu Io salad
Remove straw berry pouches
Irom Ilie |&gt;ackagcs: cut an " X "
In each slrawlierry pouch Place
the pouches on the bottom of the
m icrow ave oven below ilie
thicken
Cook ai high for 15 minutes
till the chicken ami corn are
done. Pour I he strawberries Into
a serving bowl At dessert tlrnr.
sjMxni the alrawlxirtrs over the
Ice cream to make sundaes.
Makrs 4 servings.

�* * ' I*

IB — Evening Horald. Sanlord, FI.

BLONOIE

Wadnawlay, July II, IMS

by C h ic Young

DEAR DR. G O T T - I have the drugs are harmful. Second,
heard that going on an all- what are you going to do when
protein diet for a couple of weeks the drugs run out? You can't
will cause a large weight loss, keep t sing a medical crutch
•"hlch may serve as a good Indefinitely. Th ird . If you realty
Incentive to continue on a more can t lose weight on your own.
nutritious diet. How healthy Is It go to a dieting organization
to be on :in all-protein diet for They're cheaper and safer than
two weeks?
most diet doctors. Weight Wat­
D EA R REA D ER - I don't chers and the Diet Center come
encourage anyone to go on an most readily to m y mind, but
by Mort Walker
all-anythlng diet for two weeks. there may be equally effective
Protein Is essential, but so are
other nutrients. Without any fats
or carbohydrates In your food,
Having en
ACROSS
you'll lose weight, all right —
offensive odor
about half of It fat and the rest
1 Oust
Greek goddess
muscle. You heard me correctly:
4 Otmand
of agriculture
You w ill b u rn about equal
paymant
One (Fr)
amounts of fat and protein
7 Payabla
Time being
during a pure protein diet or a 10 Canint Cry
Record
fast
12 Adam •
Mormon Slate
grand ion
A more appropriate approach
Superlative suf
would be to keep your protein 14 It (cont)
fu
Intake high. and. al the same 15 larrt) t pen
11 Rest
name
lime, lo eat some com plex
13 Place to trt
carbohydrates — like grains — to 16 Word on tha
19 Auto
by Art Samom prevent muscle wasting. Th e
wan
21 Nautical rope
carbohydrate you can rut out Is 17 Rtttod in chtir 23 Fools
X fT &lt;JASl£&gt; IVJA 6CX AND HOU
the “ s i m p l e " t ype — In 18 Cut tuck
24 Month
HAVE TO A&lt;6EA\FLE ITRCUtfELF. particular, sugar That's hard, 20 Hitch
25 Equal (F r)
22 Satisfaction
though, since sugar seems to be
27 Nest of
point
In everything these days. Even
pheasants
24 Booed
table salt has sugar (dextrose)
2B
Day iSp |
26 Inner (comb
added to keep It (touring when It
29 lubricate
form)
rain*. Check labels and. to the
30 Degree lebbr |
30 Mada hoi#
extent you can. avoid sugar. T r y 31 Tmy ttite
35 Background of
lo m a in ta in a diet that Is
a play
(Ibbr |
balanced with other foods.
38 Abate
32 3 Romen
DEAR DR. G O T T - Several 33 Old mu»«el
years ago a diet doctor put m r
note
on dexedrlne to help curb m y 34 Bone
ap|&gt;etlte and lose weight. This 36 Swedith river
really helped. Recenliy I was 37 Fermenting
considering trying lhal again,
egent
yrt I heard lhal It Is now Illegal 39 Tentolites
for doctors lo prrsrrlbc dex­ 42 Coerie he*
edrlne Is this true? Will I be 45 Boot
wasting my money by going 47 Piece of chine
back to u diet doctor, or do they 51 Oemilitenred
/one |ebbr)
have something else that works
52 Greek itlend
as well?
DEAR READER - Don't use 54 Bill of fere
dexedrlne; It's poison No. I'm 55 Peddle
understating the case Dexedrlne 56 Adoletcent
Is one of the most dangerous 57 Venetien blind
perl
compounds available It will kill
5B
Civil
Wer
you It should only lie used
imtiels lebbr I
by Howl* Schneider under close medical su|&gt;crvlslon
for u neurological disorder called 59 Weite cloth
60 King
NOTHING PUT VUKf&gt; STlPlD
KPTUNATUY, I HAVE. narcole psy and Its related
DOW N
equivalents
vJUNKOOTV. 1 JUST T O T
A V&lt;TR ..SO 1U WJATCH
Don't go lo a dirt doctor who
1 Clothes tinier
IT LATEP
2 River in the
prescribes drugs To begin with.
WJATCH IT AWVMCRfc...

B E E T L E BAILEY

THE BORN LOSER

r

ARCHIE

EEK &amp; MEEK

y

r

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
f «&gt;•&gt;.*«• &gt;,M4».

P ie tm q is m e re ly
t h e r.t'renqth o r
m in d o ve r m a tte r

M R .G R K l i D Y V l
G U I PE TG&gt; D IE T IN G
1

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BUG S BUNNY
X T M 1M 1C -t h a t s

£NO u S H ,D O C -

groups, by other names. In your
community.
1 u really would be wasting,
money on diet medicine — and
(hose drugs cc u i' vusle you.
St'iid tour questions to Dr,t
h i m b n o Ro\ 155/ Radio City
Station. .Yen York. ,V l 10019. [j
Answer to Previous Putrle

i i G
o l A
B t i

s

19 Two toed sloth

40 Pub beverage
4 1 Sewing lines

*

50 Green shot

43 Remainder
44 More frigid
45 December
holiday (abbr)
46 Poet Pound
48 Breton

Congo

kA

___71

Forget All-Protein Diet;
Eat Well Balanced Meals

51 What s up
f
S3 My Hat)

Idie e s t&gt;, h i* i-t

WIN AT BRIDGE

B y Jam e s Jacoby
The bid of tlircr spades by
North was not a lull flrtlgt-d
r if
rr*|Minder's reverse. Instead. In
their partnership methods. It
by Hargreaves A Sellers
wan simply rhecklng back lo see
II u 4-4 spade III existed (South
might easily have Jumped to two
D ie t in g is a
no-trump while Mill holding four
lo s in g b a ttle '
spades)
North and South also had an
agreement that North would bid
thiee clubs uver two no-trump to
elicit three-card support for
hear t s fro m South S o u t h
therefore knew that his partner
did not hold five hearts, and so
bid three no-trump
V v^rs T h e d i a m o n d sui t w a s
by Warner Brothers established for the defense on
the opening lead Al first glum e,
declarer's problem seems to be
simply which black card to look
(or. IhF club king or the spade

queen. The odds are even for
llndlng a specific card well
bx'alrd
Hut If that chance cun tie
Improved upon. II Is worth doing
even al the risk of bring set an
extra trick
Following I h r sound bridge
axiom lhal two chances arc
(letter than one. declarer played
the king of spudrs at trick two
and a spade lo Ihc acr al (rick
Ihirc. Probably the quern of
spades was not going to drop,
but lound behold. It did!
Thai gave declarer nine tricks,
even though the heart suit split
badly. Ol course, more ollrn
Ilian not. South would have had
lo resort to the club finesse, but
on the occasional deal where (hr
s p a d e quern comes down (foiltile ton las here), he Is spared that
ircrsslly.

NORTH
♦ AJtH

T 1»»1

10 7 3
*5

AJ ltd
WEST

FAST

• 744 7

♦ U*

• S4

♦ J »6 7

♦ AJ » *I

♦qt J 2

♦ K7

♦ b 42
SOI T il

♦ K I0 1
• AK4
♦ K 10 7
• AWM

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer North
ttn l
r«u
Pau
Pass

North
Paw
IV
!♦
t'au

O il
Pau
I'au
Pau
Pau

South
14
2 NT
1 NT

Opening lead 46

HOROSCOPE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
J U L Y I I , 1988
Your leadership qualities will
lie greatly enhanerd In the year
ahead. In your sphere ol Influ­
ence. you will experience strong
ur ges to take char ge and
manage the show
CANCER (June 2 1Ju ly 22)
Per sonal Interests cun he
advanced I i h 1.i v . provided you
act while (h r odds urr tilted In
your favor. Don't dillydally when
o p p o r t u n i t y knocks. K n o w
where to look lor romance and
you'll find ll. The Astro Graph
Matchmaker set Instantly re­
tain which signs are roman­
tically perfect for you. Mall $2 to
Astro-Graph. Box 483. Radio
City Station. New York. NY
10019.
L E O lJuly 23 Aug 22) U n ­
usual. but favorable, conditions
arc stirring today that can bring
you and your loved ones unex­
pected benefits Keep the source

secret.
VIROO ( Aug 23-Sept 22)
Something for which you've
hern hoping hus excellent
chances of becoming a reality.
However, II can't be left to
chance. Work for your drratn.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct 23) You
should do well In your career or
nnunrtal dealings today If you
are alert and on your toes. He
ready to act promptly once you
spot an advantage
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) II
your mo t i v a t i o n Is strong
enough today, you'll be capable
of remarkable achievements. Fill
your thoughts with positive ob­
jectives
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Conditions that affect your
security and financial well-being
will start taking a turn for the
better as of today. The change
may not be too obvious.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
19) Your greatest benefits today
a re l i k e l y to c o m e f r om
partnership arrangements or
joint ventures Act In concert
with strong allies

ANNIE
TUMBLEWEEDS
0 F F T D IN E 5H6f^lFP5 ANPGQOP
GUVS C O N V EN T IO N ,S H ER IFF]*

.HNOWiNti ABOUT THAT )OCP ON/

I H EA R PHILO rHlNNV,THE
SEC RET SERVICE AGS NT IS
THE MAIN S P EA K ER AGAIN.

MMFE6H0UP C.NHAT POES IT
TEU. YOU WHO SfNCN THE
I AM.HUCMY- escuTc«eoff?r
t7?

[ on the | the u r n e rietac
HHAT?) PLATE ON ThC MAfttE/
iNATfiffE TfE IN ITIA LS?

£

* 1 * fr

1 |

#'1#*

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19J
A m b ition s have better than
nsuul chances of tiring fulfilled
today. New heights can be
achieved, even If there anj
obstacles In your path.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Whether thr slakes are large or
small. Lady Luck tends to favor
you In competitive situations
today. Think win and you will.
ARIES (March 21 April 19) If
you mattugc your fin an ce s,
wisely today a situation (hai;
wasn't totally to your advantage,
could turn out to l*e surprisingly,
profitable.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20}.
An old friend who has con side r
able confidence In your abilities
may request assistance from y6g!
today. T h r way you'll ItamUfi
matter* will justify his faith IQ?
you.
GEMINI |May 21 Jun e
You'll be much more adept
coping with complicated slti
(tons today than you were y&lt;
trrday. especially In financial
career arras.

�E v e n in g H e r a ld . S a n fo rd , F I.

W e d n a td a y . J u ly 10. I t t J — f B

Passage To Hollywood: Banerjee Tackles Tinseltown
B j D tc k K le in e r
He was. he says, at the lop of
H O LLYW O O D (NEA) - Victor hls field In India, where the
Banerjee. the Indian actor who movie business thrives He has
w u such a Joy to watch In David won awards, worked for the best
Lean'a "A Passage to India." Is of India's film nmUrrs. starred In
an &gt;qual Joy to talk to. He mixes the most successful Indian
English and Hindi with hls idea movies
of American slar.g and what
"I was at rhe t&gt;.p " hr says.
rom te out Is pure hanerl re.
"But no* there Is a totally new
Hls thoughts, these days, are environment for me. Now there
mostly on hls career, which Is Is the West! And I'm off lo a
only natural. " A Passage to flying start."
India" automatically lifted him
Banerjee claims to be (he first
out of the crowd of Indian actors Indian actor to make II In
into International stardom.
International films since Sabu.
"If you're on a good wicket." the Elephant Boy. (Although Ben
he says, "you must stay with It."* Kingsley, who was "Gandhi." Is
And then, a moment later: "It I ndi an- bor n. Banerj ee d is ­
tiould be chicken of me not to qualifies him because he Is only
ijy to make It here In Hollywood half Indian I
tipw. 1 have to try. even though I
"Actually. I am also the only
was very successful In India."
Indian actor In A Passage to

India.'"' he says "Th e British
unions have such a stranglehold
on the Industry lhat they made
Mr Lean flv actors out from '
l.omlon to India — even those
playing Indian guides are actual
iy frpm England, flown out for
t he film ”
But Banerjee Is Indian, all the
way And. because of that, he
has become something of a
national hem In India He says
all of hls friends anil relatives arc
Itrslde themselves with ecstasy.
"We Indians are a very sentl
mental people." hr says
He Is also proud of " A Passage
to India '* He thinks It will do
better In India lhan "Gandhi"
did. and nol merely because of
hls presence In the cast
" Gandhi' Is a history lesson."

EYtM N Q

6 00
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it (14»JC&gt;reasons
S3
O

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i » la

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9 30
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•uaoacta a awaftf-y oatanuta I Mm.
dy Conn) ia ataaang hm daargn oara (R|

v tS M t t SM ia trr

60S
T t FA THCN KNOWS SC3T
6 :3 0
O
II' iiN a C H C W S
O c a s ncw s
O ABC NCWS q

£

t(M) Alice

it) h a p p y curs
633

tta a cc N

a cres

700
• (£l SA LS OF TUE CENTURY
il o
P M UAQA71NE TNaa a*
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W n t i C IK h i i wtOo*
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kgad n v tic •■•cutty* Ooean t Ml
* 0 »•* «n n m
(
ff l HO) THC HEART OF TNI ORAIO N An •apttvMion 0&lt; conlampo
try CNnaaa art. laatising p o r lo i
Huang Tung Yu and l a Zhonga and
•totaga ol rural Ctuna Q
f f l (B) HARRY DAYS AGAIN
70S
X I SANFOOO ANO SON
7 :3 0
O 1/ ENTIRTAJNUENT TONKJHT
etaryw * *nti Catty Sanon
t J i O w h e e l o f fo r tu n e
7
a
StOO.OOO NAME t h a t
TUNC
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ffllB ) AU. IN THE FAMILY
7 :3 5
U S A S C S A IL Montt*al Eipoa al
Atlanta B ia n t
800
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( £ HIGHWAY TO HCAVCN
JtfK lh m and Marl try to convwc*
•
feeftootf H i H U M v I M M a
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tofeptegic Ouaat alar Oyrnp*
Bart C o m a (Bari 2 of
5 O

C H A M 1 I M CHAMM J f l i
hoana oatra
c7»oeoa tor Chariot - tea tong
Ituco wnth th« boya
on • data
•Hh fwa latoat gwftnand |R)
7 O f a l l GUY Con purauM a
M ajfngmg ungai mho a auwaad
•I muxMt G u*au Itta Fout Toe*
K * Tamptatona and laToya Jack,
•on |R ) q

t (M| DALLAS

i0 (1C|

GREAT PfSFONMANCeS
IN * Front Lincoln Cantar Moatty
M oiatl U m i i Saltan
Gataid
k t a i r t l conduct* tna Mot tty Mo
tart F*tt&gt;iN OcttM lra m watt by
Wodgang Amadaua Mojart and An­
tonio Satan Quad aotonta ar*
•ograno l» y A n tin g and pan el
Horatio Gut a n a l
CD (•) M O W Jaranuan jotnaon
Robert Sadtord WatOaar A
Linar at tna American aadarnaaa
taaaa an tndwn ada but andangar*
Nimaan and rua I array by braaamg

UP O

toward Prtnca Mcfiaat Dal la
tnockad mat raa farad pun to t'a «
B u t a a or taaaaa r a t ruffled
AJant a •aattiart (R |:j
I t (M l QUINCY

630
I / R Or ShamUtd &gt;* raunt-

•0 «wfh • grateful Vafnam buddy
•ho •a n ti lo rapay hvn lor aav«ng
tea fete (R)

-r m
900
( I ( £ FA C TS OF U F I Afl« ran i
ttg a tamoua ma t r g a k obituary
Tooha and N auru ramatuca about
lha aumnur ahan thoy NM nut tha
•mgmgtagand |R |q
H O M O W ComngOut Of tha
C a | IM F) John Savaga W M Natton Baaad on a trua alary Whoa
rutting SVuau with hu paranta a
young man haa a ruiMn arm tha auIhwitua and M ttantancad lo 10
mart at a S-bartan labor camp |R)
O DYNASTY BUka Mat pho­
to* of KryatU at Raaca a arm*
Amanda caata an amorcua aya

10:00
O
®
ST ELSEWHERE Al ha
puna hit rafurn to Attca. Wy*a
N a m gorarnmant troop* ha«a da
atroyad M cane turoran codacla
mndanca that could thraatan Mornio n I madtcal caraar |R|
9 ) O MOTEL M*l Cabot IMa m
toy* anth Chntttna a godfaihar an
-Hagai than d-accvar a • trua toy* at
tna St Gragory an actor pragaraa
•or a row by Mtchmg Fatar (FL) q
I t (M | MOCRENOENT NCWS
f f l ( K&gt;) HAPPY JAa Parlor maneaa
by Pat* Fountain a N r* Ortaana
group metuda Mgt\ SoCWty and
Tha Wohrarma BAiaa
ma Jmt
CuNum J a u Band ttom San Anto­
nio Taiaa partorma "Fat and
Graaty
My Daddy Socaa Ma
and Uthar turwa
(Z) (S) POLICE WOMAN

10:20
12 M O W
On* Mora tram To
Bob ' (U T 1 | Gaorga Pappard John
Varnon A rataasad pnaonar aavaa
a gold lortuna man ahoota ma man
•h o doubU-aoaaad hart
10 30
M (M ) BOB NCWMART
0
II
ED
(S

1100
4 i i ) 0 : 7 0 n ew s
(MlSCNFTY HKL
( 10) DAYS ALLEN AT LANGE
(O HOGAN'S HEROES

11:30
0
4) TONIGHT Quart ho*! Joan
Rryara Schaduwd actraaa Natl
Crrtar actor Rob lo aa
I I I o TAX)
(7J O ABC NCWS MONTUNC
11 (M l C H C O AN0 THE MAN
CD (■) HOGAH S HEROES

1200
( I ) O PROMT HSAT A lay artnaaa
at a guvamuggang trial • murOarad aTtra imdar tha protaction ot
O Brian and Qumbona (R)
( 1 ) 0 tHC SAINT
I I (M )RH 0O A
( S (SI M O W Boom lo a n ' ( tS3B|
Clark GabW Spantar Tracy
1230
O
f l LATE NIGHT WITH DAVIO
IETT ER U A N SchaduUd yataran
c array at guaaaar DaMd Gloykky. Co
madrwt Martin Short TV par aorta*
ty Nikki Haakak
11 (M )l LOVE LUCY
12 M O W
(Mr ) Man On Tha
Rut (IDTJ) Palar Grama Kama

100
(7 lO M O W
YaroaSky |t»41l
Gragory Pack Anna Bttilar
I t (M l AFRICA CONTINENT IN

1:10
® a
M CCL0U0 McCloud i m
v®fetiQKl&lt;on of an awto-ttol nng it
•teddted by tet n toK oT url «B4lh
tvoaromon

200
I t (M l SUARRC
2 :0 5
12 M O W
Tha Daadtr Gama
11t FB) David Barwy Aaan Garfutd
230
15 &gt;O C S S NEWS MGHTWATCH
ilU M IG U N S M O K I
250
(7 Q M O W Woman O b a a aM
I ISSSI Suaan Hayaad Staphan

3 30
11 (M |FA M K Y AFFAIR
400
11 (M l RHOOA
4 :1 0
12 OCT SMART
4 .3 0
1 t (M l RHOOA

1100

440
U WORLD AT LARGE

___ TH U R SD AY___
MONN.NO

1 1 :3 0
( | I SCRABBLE
&gt; O RYAN'S HOPE
f f illO IF L O R O A S r r .E
AFTERNOON

500
H (M l NEWS
12 A U IN THE FAMILY

1200

525
® O HOLLYWOOO ANO THE
STARS (MON WED-FRI)
530
f ) r { THIS WEEK *• COUNTRY
M USClMON)
( ] &lt; M COUNTRY (TUf-FRI)
I I SO S NEWMART
600
(4 NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE
o MORNMO STRETCH
O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(M) 0 0 0 0 DAYI

I I NCWS
(D (I) AM BARKER
630
O ' l NCWS
)
n
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
(C
ABC NEWS t h is MORNING

a

(Ml POPEYE
11 FUNTIME (MON-THU)
635
12 FUNTIME (ERF)
645
® a EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(D (IO )A M WEATHER
0
1
if )
1)
®
(D

( WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O R R C e a RIGHT
O A M O C (R )
(Ml DOMT « ENOUGH
1101W TRE COOKINO NOW

(D in F A M K Y

4 55
® O HOLLYWOOD AH0 THE
•1TARS (MCN. THU. FRO

a
)
I
1)

a
J
(&gt;
11
ffl

700
( T to day
o C SS MORNING NEWS
0000 MORNING AMERICA
(Ml FUNTSTONES
(10) FARM DAY
(I) SURERFR*NOS

a

0 I M O CAV
J O T O N EW S
11 (Ml BEWITCHED
ttl (10) NATURE OF THINGS
(MON)
tt) (10) M ASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
(D lW IM YSTERYI (WED)
® (10) NOVA (THU)
W (to) t h e h e a r t o r t h e dfla .
Q0N|FW)
(D (l)M A H N n
1205
11 L i n i E HOUSE ON THE PKAI
RfE
12 3 0
( I 4 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
J 0 y 0LP#Q AHO THE REST.
LESS
i.f O io v w a a
11 IM IB E V E R L Y H IIL B IU IE S
100
( | 4 OATS OF OUR LIVES
if U A U m y c h i l d r e n
11 (MlOlCK VAN 0YKE
ffi 1101 MOVIE (MON. TUE, THU)
(D (101 THE JOURNEY INWARD
IMAGES OF THE BRAIN (WED)
ffl |W| FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRM
(]) III MOVIE
105
11 MOVE

hanks!

7 :3 5
12 FUNTSTONES

2 :0 5
12 M O W (FRO

600
1 1 (M l WOOCY W OOORECKER
® (I) m e a t h c u f f

2 :3 0
1 O CAPITOL
I t (Ml 0REAT SPACE CO ASTER
ffl (W) INNOVATION (MON)
ffl 110) CALLIGRAPHY WITH KEN
BROWN (TUE)
ffl (101 MAGIC OF OK. PAINTING
(WED)
ffi (10) MAGIC OF WATERCOL
ORS (THU)
ffl (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FR|)

605
12 I DREAM OF JEANNIE
830
0 (Mi PINK PANTHER
ffi(N » MISTER ROOERS(R)

CD (I) FAT ALBERT
6 35
12 BEWITCHED
900
0 ( DIVORCE COURT
. 1 ) 0 DONAHUE
J O|iBAAMAST JONES
11 (M l WALTONS
® (101 SESAME STREET (R) q
a
III CAROL BURNETT ANO
FAN N0Q

in n
1

si

O F F ON YOUR

NEXT PURCHASE OF
ANY 16 INCH PIZZA

9 30
0 0 LOVE CONNECTION
(D tllO fO O CT
9 35
12 I LOVE LUCY

1000
Q 4 SAVER SPOONS (R)
) O HOUR UAGAFINE
1 f O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
I t (M l BIG VALLEY
1101 REAtKNO RAINBOW
(I) MV THREE SONS

S

1005
,

1030
O P SALE OF THE CENTURY
&lt;7 O ALL ST AR BL/T2
S lIO IR O W tR H O U S C
Q
(!) NEW DICK VAN DYKE
SHOW

3 05
12 BUGS SUNNY ANO F Rif NOS
3 30
ffl (10) MISTER ROQERS (A)
CD(II INSPECTOR QAOGCT
400
4 U TTLE HOUSE o n t h e
PRAIRIE
) O S T A T IT R E K
f a M IRV GRIFFIN
11 (M| SCOOSY OOO
f f l (Wi s e s a m e s t r e e t iR jq
d ) III SURE RFRIE NOS

a

■

H O 0 0 S t W C I C ha*g a o n M«Hu«n«d Ctteckfe
9

B

H

00

B

I

■

co upo n

■

■

!

«

I

O F F ON YOUR
NEXT PURCHASE OF
ANY 18 INCH PIZZA '

§

One Coupon per Pizza, please

■

Not valid *ftf» a " r oth«f cou|XX4 of di%4 ount
S1 0 U 0 Srrv ii r C ^ aig » un Ftetu*ngnl C^r*
■ ■

■

■

■

&amp; KATHY'S

J

mm wm m a m

co upo n

2690 S. ORLANDO DR., SANFORD, FL
I ib alfi I he nr*f A ( ^•mainf ff» |knrt8 4 Aalfii Itfliiiifif

OPEN 7 DAYS 6 AM 10 PM 323 4950

u jX i

ANO

ffl (10) f l o r i o a s t y l e
(1) (SI m e a t h c u f f

905
maul

l

N ot valid with any oth«i co u p o n o&gt; discou nt

2 :3 5
11 WOMANWATCH (WED)
300
f ) 4 SANTA BARBARA
1 O G U O N Q LIGHT
» O GENERAL HOSPITAL
It
(M l BU O S BUNNY
1 RENOS

322-8330

869-8777

One Coupon per Pizza, please

7 :3 0
(U (M l TOM AM) JERRY
ID I '01 SESAME STREET |R ) q
a&gt; (•) MSRCCTOR O A o a r r

11 M O W

l.OS A N G E LE S (UPII - Actor
I&gt;.m Haggerty, convicted earlier
this year of selling cocaine, has
pleaded guilty to charges he
tailed lo (lie federal lax returns
lor (he years I07H and 1981,
when he earned more lhan
S&amp;tiO.UOO while starring In the
"G rlrx ly Adam s" niovlr and
FOR SPECIAL SAVINGS WITH THE
television series
MOST POPULAR TOPPINGS TRY OUR
Adams. 4.1. (aces up lo two
years In prison ami u $'20,000
KW1K K O M B O
l i ne on i he m i s d e m e a n o r
with
charges U S magistrate .John l(
P«pp«roni, Extra Che«*i, Sausage,
Kiiincntx-rg accepted the pleas
Monday and srtirduled senienMuihrooms, Graan Pepper, Onion
ring Gel I I
12”
16*
18’
Ikrause of Haggerty's guilty
$12.00
$14.00
$16.00
pleas. Assistant U S Attorney
David Nlinmcr said Ihc govern­
ment w ill nol prosecute Ihr arlor
2499 O LD L A K E M A R Y RD
lor allrgedlv also lading to file
BSl W SR. 436
irt urns lor 1979 and 1980
SA N FO R D
A LTA M O N TE SPR IN G S
Last April Haggctly was senIrn rrd lo IK) davs In Jail alter
bring convicted III March of
l.lm llrtl f V / o r r e 4 r r . i
selling a small amount of co■ i ■ coupon h m i |
rnlnr lo undercover (Miller ofllrers al hls Heverly Hills home.
o f f on your
Hr Is tree on hall pending ap|M-al
NEXT PURCHASE OF
W M ichael Mayock, H ag
grri\ s allornrv saitl Haggerty
ANY 12 INCH PIZZA
had (axes withheld |rom hls 3
o
Good
One Coupon por Pizza, please
salary during the two years, bul
T h ru
Not » a I k I w tti any o lh ai . i ) u i « « im iliktiH int
dial dir actor left preparation of
A u g )0
S • 0 LX) SattY'ca C bA iga un l l f l u ' i w l Cf'tt' &gt;&gt;«
hls tax returns to an act'milliard
■ ■ ■ BBS WM m &lt;:o u n &gt;n ■ mw wm a a i
and lo hls wife, from whom he Is
now dlviurril

1 :3 0
I O AS THE WORLD TURNS
I I (M lO O M C R P Y lE
ffl 110) MAG»C OF PAINTING
KEEPSAKES |FRI|
11 * ANOTHER WORLD
OLi O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
ItlM IA N O V O RW riTM
ffl 1101 ALOHA CHINA (WEOI
ffl 110| ON THE MONEY (THU)
ffl (10) JOY OF PAMTMG (FRI)

12

Just Make Your Choice
Our Delicious TOPPINGS Include:
Black Olives
and
Pepperom
Greon Olivos
Sausage
Gtoen Pepper
Beef
Give Us Ground
Onion
Ham
Jalapeno Peppers
Anchovies
A Call!
Pineapple
Mushrooms

200

7 :1 5
a&gt; HOI AM WEATHER

"Is only so I can gel back lo that
place scKiner. and stay longer."

For a G R E A T Pizza
Delivered FA S T &amp; H O T ...

Haggerty Pleads
To Tax Charges

TONIGHT'S TV
WEDNESDAY

he says. "Most ol us Indians are says. Is nothing but tranquility.
"So my move here." he says,
surfeited wi t h lhat history
lesson Also. In 'Passage.' Indi­
ans are not made out to he utter
fools."
Now Victor llanerjee w *«&gt;.-ig
to trv hls lurk In the Hollywood
lmol. He and hts wife and two
daughters — 10 and H — will be
moving from India to Hollywood
soon.
"It will lie illflti-ult for us to
.idJuM." hr says "My wife Is the
kiiul of person who only shows
one emotion — pleasure — but I
know thut uiuirtneath she Is
apprehensive '"
Hls ultimate goal Is to go back
and live peacefully the rest of hls
days In the collage the family
has .it the 8,000-foot level, high
in the Himalayas There he

A H ELP FU L SMILE IN EVERY AISLE
WE W ELCO M E FO O D STAM P SHOPPERS
Price* In Thl* Ad Oood Front July 11 To Ju ly 17.

MEAT SPECIALS FOR THE WEEK ENDING JULY 17th
N.Y.
1 Boneless
Strip Sleek

Boneless
Chuck Roaat
* 1 .2 9

* 3 .5 9
lb

* 1 .4 9

lb

* 2 .9 9

(ToneleM

Shoulder
Sleek

I Lba Ot Mo«a

• 1 .7 9 ib
Fresh
Ground Beef
89* ib

lb

Boneless
Whole
N.Y. Strip

Bone,' b b b
Chuck Steak

BonolOSB

Beel Slew

ib

) lb a

* 1 .4 9

Lb

Boneless
Shoulder
R

Ot M oi*

o b b

!

• 1 .3 9

Pork Boston
Butt
* 1 .2 9 ib
Pork
Steak
* 1 .3 9 ib

Fie. Prem
Lea Ouerters'
49* ib
Jeneo’e
Turkey Hem
* 1 .2 9 ib

ib

Lyktt Salami Or
Splcad Lunch Maal

4 05
12 FUNTSTONES
4 30
I t (M | HE MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE
CD II I VOLT RON DEFENOER OF
THE UNIVERSE

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

S u n k ia l

B4 O l

Orange Juice*!

C ln

-49

$|

Mr*« F « *

Eggs

1 . /

*/

C

6/99*

Limit 1
With S10
Food
Purchaa* or

WITH t

S IS
Or
B lit

White
Potatoes

feme|» 1*04*0 m v if

feteC Il 1 * 0 6 * 0 A* 17 11

39

€

DELI DEPARTMENT

99

U t *1

• I k ■&lt;*

25*_5

South
Carolina
Peaches
3 u ,.* 1 .0 0

Mora

Pfe» life PtetIH 0»
* * * * * * 0 fee#** Cte

0 Oh
Can

Tub

99*

Margarine

3 u.91 . 0 0

Coke C ola
And Flavors

-VQC

Applo Or Cherry O /$1 f| Q
Turnovers ...... L I l a U 3

Latgi 0&gt;*aa a

Z4 O *

M r . F i lb e r t *
W h ip p e d

California
Nectarines

6 e « . * 1 . 0 0

BAKERY DEPARTMENT

Chocolate Chew
C o o k ie s .........

3 f *1

Pot Pies

Fresh
Yellow
Corn

4 u&gt;. * 1 .0 0
Each

Boi

Froth

Golden
Ripe
Bananas

8" Coconut
Meringue Pie

a Or

Banquat
A ll F la a o r a

WITH 1
0 OH
Can

Boiled H e m .............. l b

4 .8 9

Pastrami Or

£

Corn B e e t.........
Haa

Cole Slew Or
Mecaronl Saled

l3.29
*69*

7 7 Z ----------------

Bounty
Towels

Ground Chuck
WITH f
Fl

with i

*1. 19 t t
5FMClayH^JWUKKY^
9
0 Dm
Can

f e * C I I INOtHO M

l tr

�' -7-Fk^

H B — tveninf H f Id, SetvBecd, FI. WbgtsxAay, July 10, i n i

Unincorporated Rato Up

Legal Notice

County Tax Rate
Same As Last Year
Uy Doan« E i t o
Herald tltaff W ittar
t r r Miration nf the Seminole County property
i.tx rales lor floral 1985 86. whlrh begin* Oct 1.
nl $4.18 per $1,000 nvtcsvtl valuation countywlde and of an additional $2 50 per $1,000 In
the unincorporated arras has l&gt;rrn approved by
i he county commission.
The rates are the same as last year county wide
but will mean additional revenues to the county
Irecause the tax base — the taxable value of
property In the county — Is up by 14 percent
compared with the 1984-85 year.
T h r lnrrea.se In the tax base for the most Is I be
result of new construction while the balance Is
Irorn reappraisals of some property, parcels
County Property Appraiser Hill Suber says are
scattered throughout the county.
The lax rale In the unincorporated area Is up by
19 cents per $1,000 for fire protection
Once ihe certification Is approved, the county
cannot raise the lax rale but the rate can ixreduced after public hearings are held In
Sepieinber on ihe budget.
Under (he certlflratton coitnlywlde lax rales
would be as follows: general fund, nearly $3.79; a
newly rm ttrd county wide transportation tax.
nearly 18 cents; debt service on the jail almost 4
« enta and the libraries nearly 18 cents for a total
of $4 18
for the unlncor|x&gt;ruted area (Ire protection and
rescue. $2. up from 81.H1; anil transportation. 50
cents, the same as last year. While commission­
ers earlier had tentatively approved a reduction In
th r transportation rale of 2 cents for the
unincorporated area. Commissioner Hill Klrchhofl
urged that the rale remain the vtmc as last year,
reminding his collragurs that It can be reduced
alter the public hearings on Ihe hiidgrl scheduled
lor September

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
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
Fila Number t l b l l C P
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
P A U L A G U Y TO N TM C.RSE M.
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IfH STR A TlO M
j
I r * A-jmtnitTratlor* or
a
| a t t a l l ol F A U L A G U Y TON
TH O RSEN
d a c a a ia d . F i l e
Number i t O il C P It pending In
rha Circuit Court tor Sam inola
C o u n ty
F lo r id a . P ro b a t a
Division tha addratt of w hich It
D ra w tr C. Sanford. F lo r id a
73771 Tha nam at and a d d ra tta t
oT the P a'ional Representative
a n d lh a a t t o r n e y f o r th e
Pertonai Rtpretentarive ara tat
forth below
A ll in te r file d p e 't o n t a re
required to file wirh th it court
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FR O M THE D A T E O F T H E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O TICE
( It a ll c la im s
a g aln it tha ttla ta and ( ! ) any
o b la d lo n t by an In ta r a t t a d
par ton on whom thit notice wet
tarre d that challenge* tha valid
ify ot lha will, lha qualification !
ol tha partonal rap ra tan ia tlv a .
vtnua or lurltdlctton ot lha
Court
A L L C LA IM S A N D O B J E C
TIO N S NOT SO F I L E D W IL L
BE FO R EV ER B A R R ED
Publication ol thit N ctica hat
hagunon July IB. I N I
Partonal Rapratan lallva
M ary Thomas
n ay Winfield Street
Orlando Florida J7BIB
AII or nay lor
Partonal Representative
M aik W tytl E vq
Howard L Reyes, Cr.j r tarad
IIQ N P artA van u a
Sanford Florida. 77771
Publlth July IB. 17 IN S
DEM 41
U N IT E O S T A T E S D I S T R I C T
C O U R T M ID D L E D I S T R I C T
O F F L O R I OA O R L A N O O
D IV IS IO N C O U R T N O :
• I t I C I y O r l U N IT E D S T A T E S
OT A M E R IC A
P la in tiff, v t
THOM AS « S C H U L Z E , E T AL
D a le n d a n t lt l
N O T IC E O F
S A L E NciUca It hereby given
that purtuani to a Fin a l D acraa
ot Foraciotura entered cm June
17, IN S by lha above entitled
Court in lha above ro u te , tha
u n d e r tlg n e d U n it e d S t a t a t
M arshal or one of h it duly
authorlted depullet, wilt ta ll lha
piopacty utuate In Sam inola
County, Florida d e v r ib e d a t
LO T S It and 70 latt lha Soulh IS
leaf ol LOT 70 G I N D E R V I L L E
H E IG H T S at recorded In P lat
Boot 4. Page i l Public R a co rd t
ol Saminola County. Flo rid a at
public outcry fo the highest and
bet! bidder lor rath at I I o clo ct
norm on Wednesday Augutt r
IttS al Ihe Wetl door ot tha
Sem inole County C ourthouta
Sanlord Florida Dated 04 If I t
R IC H A R D l COX J » U N IT
E D S T A T E S M A R SH A L M ID
D L E D IS T R IC T OF F L O R ID A
R O B E R T W M E R K L F U N IT
ED STA TES A T TO R N f Y
M ID D L E D I S T R IC T O F
F L O R ID A
Publlth July J. IB. O . I t , IN S

CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY,
J U L Y 10
Sunshine d oggers,
beginner*— 7 p m. (first
night frrr|. Maitland
Civic Center. Interme­
diate I, H :iO p m. For
Information call 6956437.
Florida Trull
Association C e n tra l
Florida Chapter. 7:30
p . m . , Goodings
Su pe r ma r ket , sl ate
Hoad 436 at Krd Hug
Hoad. Casselberry. For
hikers, campers, and
thosr Inlcrested in getl i n g to k n o w t he
“ o ilie r’1 Florida. No
charge.
THURSDAY,
JULY 11
S a n f o r d A A H I’
Chapter 1977 meets at
noon In Sanford Civic
Center. Covered dish
luncheon followed by
talk by Sally Dykes of
the Seminole County
Federation of Senior
Citizens on services for
senior udulls
Alzheimer's Support
Group of Sanford. 7
p in., second Thursday
of m o n t h , H o w e l l
Place, 200 W Airport
III v d . . S a n f o r d .
Speaker— Dr, Itogrr Y.
Murr ay of Maitland.
Sharing nml support
lor laudllen and hr all h
givers of Alzheimer's
IIIsense victims Call
321-0686.
Ar l hr l l l s Self-help
piogrum presented by
West Volusia Hospital,
7 p.m., West Volusia
Medteal Senders Hullillug. 1681 Providence
11 1v d . , f) e 11 o n a .
K h rim iu lo lo g tsl D r
Gary Slailck will speak
n u t r i t i o n , wei ght *
control and exercise
Uuesllon and answer
period.
, Sunshine ( ’loggers.
I ntermedi ate II I I *
week session. 7 p.m .i
Advanced, 8:15 p.m .,
Mall laud Civic Center.
Call 6956437 for inlor mu l Ion
International T ra in ­
ing In Cuinmunlrallott
Grruter Seminole Club
( p r e v i o u s l y
To n st in 1st less), 7: 30
p.m.. Altamonte Chu
|n I Education Hulldlng
oil Stutr Hoad 436.
s econd and f o u r t h
Thursdays.
Sanford Jayeces
g ru rra l m em bership
meeting. 7:30 p. m. ,
Jayere building. 5th
and French. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 1201 W
First St.. 5 3 0 p m ,
closed discussion, and

Legal Notice

8 p in., open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m ,.
closed, First United
Methodist Church.
Overeutrrs A n o n y ­
mous, open, 7:30 p.m.
C o m m u n i t y United
Met hodi st C h u r c h .
Hi ghway 17-92 onehalf in lit* north ol SH
436. Casseltxrry New
Comers meeting. 7 p.m
F R I D A Y . J U L Y 12

Central Florida
Kl wants C lub, 7: 30
a.m.. Florida Federal
Sav i ng s amt L o a n .
Slate Knud 430 at 434.
Altamonte Springs.
Se m in o le Su nr i s e
Kiwanls Club. 7 a.m
A ll port H r s t u u r n n t .
Sanford.
Op t i mi s t C l u b of
South Seminole. 7:30
a in. . Hol i day I n n .
Wymore Hoad. Altumnnte Springs.
Sanford AA Step, 8
p m.. 1201 W. First St..
Sanford

Legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
I N A N D FO R
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID *
C IV IL ACTIO N NO
I I U O CA H O
riRST F E D E R A L S A V IN G S
AN D LOAN ASSO C IA TIO N O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . * cor
poriH on or gam red and a listin g
under tha Lew s ol the Uni lt d
M t i i i of A m tr i&lt;a
H e iiritft.
vl
R IC H A R D L
K IN Y O N a n d
HI 1 1 Y C K IN Y O N .S it * lla .
Defendants
N O TICE O F T A LE
N O T IC E 11 H E R E B Y G I V E N
thal pursuant lo Final Judgm ent
ol fo ra d o tu r* rendered on lha
•lt&gt; day ol July. I N I In m a l
certain cawva pending m in#
C i r c u i t C o u r t In a n d l o r
S a m in o la C o u n ty , F l o r i d a
w h a ra ln F I R S T F E D E R A L
1 A V IN C I AN D LO A N
ASSO C IA TIO N O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y a torpor a I ion orga
n iia d and tsltfln g undar Ina
L a w * ol Tlw Unliad Sta lat ol
A m e r ic a . It P l a l n l l l l . a n d
H IC M A R D L
K IN Y O N a n d
B E T T Y C KIN YO N K it w lla
a ra O altndanlt C 1*11 A ctln no
•1 nor C A O tG
I. D A V ID N
B E R R IE N
C la r k o l lh a
alorataid Circuit Court, w ill a l
11 00 A M on lha tin d a r ol
A u g u ll, I N I o lltr lor tala and
ta ll lo rha highatl biddar lor
cash al lha Watt Ironl door ol
lh a courthouta In S a m in o la
County, Florida in Sanford,
Flo rid a lha following da ter ibod
property tiluatad and being in
Saminola Counlr. Florida, to

.UUI U _______________
IN THE C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R SE M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
F C O R ID A
C A S E NO tt JIM C A O t O
N U M E R IC A F IN A N C IA L
S E R V IC E S . IN C . l/k/d L IN
C O LN FIN A N C IA L S E R V I C E S
P la ln llll
G C H A P L IN ! H E E D . J R . and
S T E P H A N IE R E E D hit wlla
and A B E P IC M EN V , R O B E R T
F P IC H E N Y and SA N D R A A
P IC H E N Y
and
JO H N D O E
and or M AR Y DOE I tha n am a t
baing llctlboui the true tdan
tit its ot Daltndantt baing un
known lo Plaln llll, tha p a rtiat
inlendad baing tha p a rtia t In
pottatlion
Defendants
N O TICE O F A C T IO N
TO G C H A P LIN E R E E D . J R
IMS Oak C e n t C l
M anatt* Georgia Moas
S T E P H A N IE R E E D
iMSCJak C r t t IC I
M a n illa Georgia m o m
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
tebon In loreciote a m ortgage
cm the following properly in
Seminole County. Flo rid a , to

wit

L a i It
COUNTRY C LU B
V IL L A G F UNIT TWO Sam inola
County. Florida according to tha
P lat lharaof at ratordad in P la t
Boot I I P ag ai 7# through ao ot
lha Public flacordt ol Sam inola
County. Florida
S a id t a la w i l l ba m a d a
purtuani to and In ordar to
ta lit ly tha tarmt ol ta id lin al
ludgmonl
I SEA L I
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
C L E R K OF TH E C I R C U I T
COURT
By Jean B'Hiant
DapuTy Clark
PvBH ih July 14. IF. I N I
D IM to

ell

Lot I. Clutter F W ILD W O O D
A Planned Uni I Development
according lo lha plat thereof a t
retarded In Plat Book it . P ag e t
1 ■ la n d IB, Public R a co rd t ol
Saminola County Florida
hat bean bled agam tt you and
you are required lo te rv e a enpy
ol your written defentet if any
lo II on B A R R Y M E L K I N
E t q u lr * P la m lill t attorney
n hot# addratt It VSOO Kogar
B o u le v a r d . S u it a 111
St
drie r iburg Florida 11707 on or
tie lore Augutt J IN S and Ida
lha original with lha cle rk ql thit
court either Lwiorv se rv ice on
P la ln llll t attorney or im m adi
Ita ly Ihereilter otherw ise, a
d alauli will ba entered e g a m il
you tor lha rebel dem anded in
lha complaint o' petition
W ITN ESS my hand and ihe
t o il ot Ih il Court on Juno J7
IN S
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
C L E H K O F TH E
C IH C J IT COURT
BV
t Chatyi R Fra n k tln
Deputy Clark
Publlth July J. IB. U . 7* IN S
DEM I)

SOWnOFU ISB*
M Y \m TOa * Eli (MR TOWI
lOtXKFWB

onfBwowKrnH
nWJSARMkRt^UR
• t W w Fn s i d Or b s tu n
by (uJkE Oustfoc) fist

w w H o w a w tn .
C all 111 I t l l

I it-nlitjt IIt’inItI

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Iw nw IM r nlKanphac Htndilw tnayhtr ' . u a l i u r I ach.ee c
b) C O N N f Wi( N fn

’$ H J

ZCBV

T AL WSWHK
IO IIZ

WK
OAL

a

N WL Z

SC

C$11

JEHUH

HMHBZC8H

FHKHBLK."

-

IH B K NEPWHUF.

PREVIOUS SO LUTION The motnp txikmobt to an mean* protein on but il buy*
a lotla ptzza " — Giant ar hi (Jianrwst

4

C IT Y OP S A N F O R D . P LO R I OA
HOT 1C I TO P U B L IC
Hottet i» h tftb y
that o
Public M###l«® win b* h#«d by
th# Placming ond Zoning Com

in thf City Comrmttcon
Room .

C »♦r

M a li.

S o n fo rd .

7 1 -H t lp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Orlando - W in ter Park
831-9993

Seminole
322-2611

P io*id* if I 80 P JW on Thufl
doy July I I ittS to com m #r ft*
io " 8 * i" 3 C h in a n
a id
a m * d/ntntt *o t*» Zoning. O
d)«Af C# » rd ®rr#n.dim®
e
Land; lit* f **
®f fh*
^^f"^rthannv- f»lan of It * ' L' y
of lan iard ia m ln o l* County.

Florida
Rttoning from SR 1A Singly
F a m ily Rttid®nti®l OwtHm®
D ttlrk f
To ffiaf of SR I. S»ngty F a m ily
Rffiidynfial Dnyllfng O ttfricf
That pfogorfy t k v f itxwj at
TRACT# f
U t f Wl Through 74. Amandad
Piaf of Oranga H aig hlt. Plat
Booa 4 Pago 14. Public Racordt
of Saminola County Flo rid a
and
W#zoning from S F 1A Singly
F am ity R y v d a n fia f DnoMing
O litrict
To that of C C - I i G anyrat
Com m yrciai D ittricf
TRACT#!
LoH 70 through }7 and thy
aMyy adiacanf to tha a a tf ot L o ti
jf ftirough if and »•* of vacafad
allay abutting )Of% 7$ through 34
A m an dad P l a t of O r a n g t
NaigMt, Pta* ftoo* 4. P a g * 44.
Pub lic Racordt of Sam inola
County Florida *
Baing m ort g a n a r a lly da

icribad at locatad S of )$th
Shaat N ot ifth Sfragf. B ol
Franch Aranua and W ot E lm
A v»nuM»
Tha piannad u»a of thit pro
party it lor ratidan fiaf dupiaa
«nd a com m arclai and rytatl
$ar c‘r# ranfar and a park
Tha P lan n in g and Zoning
r a m minto-1* wl'l lu b m if a rac
ommandalton lo fha C ity Com
m&gt;f«ion in favor of or againtf.
fh a r a g u a i t a d e h a n g * or
am andm ant Th a C ity Com
m in io n *111 ho ld a P u b lic
Maarmg *n fha C ity Com m ittton
Room in iha City Mall. Sanford
F lor.da a» 7 00 P M on Monday
Augutt »I. Iftt to contidar aairf
r ar om mandat ion
All partial in 1m tar a it and
( if riant ihail hava an opportune
ty to ba haicd at MUri haar ingt
fly or da? of fh# Planning and
Zoning Com m itt ion of ft* City
of Sanford Florida thit Ifth day
of Juno tMl

John Mor r it. Chai rman
City of Sanford Planning

and IanmgCommittlQn

A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L I C If
a par ton dacidat to appaai a
dacipon mada *»fh ratpac f to
any maMar contidarad at tha
atwva mavtingi or ftaanngi. ha
rnay n#ad a verbatim raru rd of
lha pr(headingl including tha
fatlimony and a v id a n ra , which
record It not provided by the
City of Hanford ( F S 714 01011
Publlth July 1. 10 1f i t
DEM It
COUNTY C O U R T
O R A N O IC O U N T Y .F L O R IO A
Cat# « CO 44 I» JJ
fhom at l umbar C om p*riy lr&gt;c
Plaintiff
vt
C t rf a in ty C o n tfru c fio n Cor
pnration d b a Certified Con
t fr ijc flo n C o m p a n y
R L
S c h m id t a n d D o r o t h y T
Schmidt, fdtnfly and tavrcaify
Defanda nit
C IR C U IT C O U R T
O R A N O IC O U N T Y ,F L O R ID A
Cata • C l 44 144]
MM ft A N t h r u i t a L u m b a r
Company and M ill* A N ab raih a .
Door A Trim Com pany, P lain
fifty
vt
Ragm aiiJ L t c h m l d l d b t
C erlibadConttrucllon.
Dalandam
N O TIC E O F S H E R I F F ' S S A L E
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
le a l by virtue ol Ibota terrain
Writs ol E ta cg llo n a t styled
abova and mort p a rticu larly
Ibel tarla ln Writ gl Execution
ittuad oul ol and undar lha seal
ol tbe Circuit Court of Oranq#
County. Florida, upon a linal
lu d g m t n l r e n d e r e d In lh a
alorataid court on tbo atn day ol
Sapitmbor A 0
IN I
In Ihe!
to rlain c a n entitled, M u lt A
N e b raska L u m b a r C o m p an y
and Mbit A N ebraska Door A
trim Co Ptainllfl, —v s — Re
g.rulcl L Schmidt dbe C erlitled
Construction Defendant which
alorataid Writ ol E .e c u I ion was
delivered to me at S b e n lt al
Seminole County Flo rid a and I
have lay lad upon ihe tobowinq
deter Iliad properly owrwd by
Certified Construe Hon C o . said
p r o p e r ir b e in g lo c a t e d in
Saminola County. F lo rid a more
p a r t ic u la r ly d e s c r ib e d as
follows
Ono IN ' Walls C arg o Troiier
w it h C o n • a n l t , ID I
C JUOLi IB M ) MM
being s'oted a l D a v e Jones
Wrecker S arrica
F e r n Park
F lor Ida
and lha undersigned a t Shorlll
ol Saminola County
Florida
will al II 00 A M on lha J lih
day ot July. A D IN S oftar lor
tala and tall *o tbo higbetl
biddar FO R C A SH tub |ect to
a n , and all a ilstin g tains, at tha
Front IW rsti Door at the steps
ot the Seminole County Court
house in Sentord, F lo rid a the
ebo .e described personal pro
parly
That sa d sa&gt;a is being mada

•osabsly lha terms ol sold WtH
of E sac ution
John ( Polk. Sheriff
Saminola County. Flo rid a
To tie edyarbted July J, IB. 17,
It with lha tale on Ju ly JS IN S
D E H JJ
U N IT E D S T A T E S D I S T R IC T
C O U R T M ID D L E D I S T R I C T
O F F L O R 10 A O R L A N D O
D IV IS IO N C O U R T NO
• S f I C l y O r l U N IT E O S T A T E S
01 A M E R IC A . P la m lill
vt
S H IR L E Y H O P K IN S
E T AL
O fle n d a n llt l
N O T IC E OF
S A LE Notice it hereby given
lhal pursuant Iq a Sum m ary
F ia n i Dacraa ol F o reclo su re
entered on June If. I N I by tha
abova entitled C o u rt in the
abova cewte the undersigned
United Slates M arshal, or one al
hit duly authorlted deputies
will Mil lha property situate in
saminola County F lo r'da da
scribed as LO T S » 7 and IN
M A P OF M IO W AV according
•o ths P ial thereof a t recorded
in P le l Boot I. P ag e a I, e l the
P u b lic R t c e rd t o l Sam inola
Caunty. Fiarida at putslic outcry
lo the highest and b a il bidder
tor cash al I I o'clock noon on
W tdneidat August 7, IN S al
tha West door ol the Seminole
County Courthouse
Sanlo rd .
Florida Deled N l l l t
R IC H
AMO L COX
JR
U N IT E O
S T A T E S M A R SH A L M ID D L E
D IS T R IC T O F F L O R ID A
R O B E R T W M E H K L E U N IT
CO STA TES A T TO R N EY
M ID D L E D I S T R I C T O F
F L O R ID A
Publish July &gt; 10 IT. J4 IN S
D EH |l

CLASSIFIED DEPT
RATES
1 tins* . ....................o?C t Hn«
HOURS
1 c « a t u c )r t lY * tintsK S IC l line

$:M A M .-fcJC V.H.

UtOHDMY 6 m ritlCAV
SATU,: JA V 9 - Hoots

7 r-nsctutlyB t i» » . 52C • Utd
10 consdcutlvg times 4&amp;C a ting
Contract R ita s Available

3 Unas Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday • 11:00 A M. Saturday

A U T O S A L E U M A N Largs rspu
tab's D C B rm needs honest,
# t per lanced, salt motivating
p a r s o n . C o m m ls s la n a n d
benefit* Apply with resume
to B L U E B O O K C A R S Call
m 47*1
Aron Beauty Canspaay
F u ll or p art tim e Cun Immadi
ater, J77 N lB o* J U 1J71
Babyttftoe Week days • a In my
hom e
S an F o r d 'M a rk ham
Woods a rea References ' l l
Ou.red 1X1OOPS__________________
■vtbay s/W a It re s ses/W * tttrs
O ver I I . day A night shifts
a v aila b le Apply Holiday Inn.
Lake Monroe. Sanford

URfEHTERS HCLfEI
Wanted Immadtoto opening
Apply In person
S H E D S A M E R IC A
175 Hw y 17 F7
*** T140
Carpenter* and carpenter help
a re w anted
F o v tb u r Sub
dlvlson lot 10. days Or call
W1 7BIF nights

25—Special Notices
A T T E N T IO N C U S T O M E R S
D ykti
4 Atr C m #

To t*t V4»u*d CutfOm«f| of
W4yn* C Dyktt. Sc.j D/b'«
4i
M#«ting 4 A ir Cond
D vB*ry F l*
#444 4444

f would Ilk* fi
you for
you* butInttl for f*v§ p*%\ 1|
yfI Hiving f® ttiw» Fit for
ftti'ffN r p tto n t
I *fn no
ioogtf in b u ir i* $ i in rh t Mot*
ot F&lt;4 For thmo of you Wtso
h«v# C*lf*d m y ®4d ngffitMr

*444*44 *c&gt;d h*v* b**n r®
t*ff4d fo tbo num ber J ] | U44

I would ilk# f® m#k# If cl**r
ffi4f if it lr» no w iy connoct*®

with mo W#y no C Dy4#%, oc
my f*v»‘*#4§ Dyk#* M##ftng
4 Air Cond

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care

71-Htlp Wanted
ACCO U N TS R E C E I V A B L E or
B o o k k e e p in g B a c k g ro u n d
Good organltatlonal qualities
Typing tiling p tone skill*

Call Mery Jo

Acrylic A p plicato r* needed to
apply protective coating on
cars boats and p lan ts t ! to
111 par hour Wa train For
work In Sentord a re a call
Tam pa i t s aaa 7ISI
Actors A c t re s s e s M a d sl* All
Uiant lor m ovtos.TV A print
wore
S e rio u s only apply
Paromaoad Cefttwg, *47 K M
A ID E S certified and or ovperi
srcod Day and evening shifts
G o ad a l m o t p h i t i and
benefits
E O E
Apply at
DeBery M anor 10 N Hwy
17 W. O e B e ry
A L L T Y P E S JO B S
S T A R T W O R K NOWI

■svtwrt
B 4 b y t lf f ln g

•vt nl ngi

in

my

bom #

A wtvkindt

C k fM w d fcF e p 131 441!

33-Real Estate
Courses

BlanST

r

pyt tti

I NO
^
FEE I
Rrport ready lor wore at s AM
*07 W 1st St
Sentord

321 1590
Indivldu4l N#*d*d f*m&lt;M*r «(ffi
«74i E lt a t # Good p*r*yv#li

F'.jkmll1*r with Dfllfoni
Will)rt{f to work w*#k*rKh

* * * *
• thinking a l getting a •
« R ta l E ila t e L ic e n s e r •
W t o lltr Fre e Tuition
and centlnueus T t fin in g !
Call Otck a r V ic k i tor dafallt
171 l sal
JTO0 . .E v e 77* DM
K syts a l Flo rid a , Inc
I f Y a a n B a p arta n cal

m

47 -Food Preparation
B«4uttMly cl#cor#»»d c*k # t in
my horn# I C * p * r it n c * d tot
oronrot Coil 4X&gt; 0474

Phon®

S74O04

industrial draftsman
iN«*d#d fo m ak#
profll* and plant
M#tn back®round1a
Tull or parf Mm*
I
I AA4 I* 4 P M

aluminum
drawing*
r*&lt;#««i1y
C all bt
J ! ) 1X0

Inventory Confrol/
SJiippm® It R ic a lv ln f
E ip *rt*n c« r*&lt;|u»r#d in pcodud
control, in v e n to ry control.
iMppln® ZL roctlvin® tor San
tord m o n u fa c tu rin ® firm
71) 0940

Legal Notice

Coupi# or m atur® ®dutt for
Cfiriiflan hom® for ®bu**d and
iro\Aitod f®*nt C a ll 149 V099

IN THE C IR C U IT C O U K I
OF THE E I G H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C I R C U I T .
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
CASE NO I t 17b CA Of E
I Wf f DOM S A V IN G S AN D
LOAN A S S O C IA T IO N * F lo o d *
cap ilsl slock association,
P la m lill
vt
I F Wise JO N F S . and
DAN H SM ITH ,
D alendanls
N O T IC E O F S A L E
tO WHOM IT M A Y C O N C E R N
YOU A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D fh a * u n d a r th e
power of sale In the m a ile r now
pending in lha C irc u it Court of
S a m in o la C o u n t y . S t e la ol
Florida pursuant to a final
dacraa in foreclosure In lha
above styled cau sa signed tha
lain day of June I N I . nunc P ro
Tunc May It . I N I . the un
danignad Clerk w ill offer tor
seif at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash , at lha
Was! from door of lha Sam inola
County C o u rth o u ta
Sanfo rd
Florida on lha If t h day ot July.
IN S at II 00 a m a parcel of
lend date c .bed a s follows
E a s t 101 t e a l o f L o t 7.
E N T Z M IN G E R F A R M S
AD
OITION NO 1. accordin g to the
Plat fhtneot a t te to rd e d in Plat
Book i Page f . P u b lic R e co td i
gl Seminole County, Flo rid a
T o g a lh tr w ith a ll Im p ro v e
merits la n a m a n ls , h e ra d lta
m e n lt
and a p p u rte n a n c e s
ihactlo belonging or appertain
Ing
D A T E O this 1st day of July
INS
IS E A L I
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
Clark of lha C ircu it Court
By t C heryl R Fra n klin
Deputy Clark
Publish July 1 10 IN S
D E H II

DRIVER'CLERK

IN I H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF TH E E I G H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
• F L O R ID A
CASE NO i l I FBI C A M P
C R E D IT H R IF T . INC

Plaintiff
vt
JA M ES l
K E L L Y
and
MARSHA D K E L L Y Nit wife
C Y R IL J
S A N IG A e n d
W IN IF R E D S A N IG A h it wife,
JA M E S B A L L I N G E R and
A R LEN E B A L L IN G E R

Defendants

N O T IC E O F S U IT
To
Tha D vlandantt
JA M E S
B A L L IN G E R and A R L E N E
B A L L IN G E R
and A LL
O T H E R S W HOM IT M AY
C O N C ER N
YOU A R E
H E R E B Y
N O ! IF IE D 'hat an action to
lover lot# a Mortgage an tha
following d escrib ed re a l pro
p a r ty f a c e t e d In S a m in o la
County Florida to wit
L o t &gt;1. B lo c h C . L A K E
KATHRYN
according to tha
P ie ' thereof a t reco rd ed in P lat
Book If Page IJ and I ] , Public
Records ot Sam inola County.
F lor ida
h a i been filed against you and
you ara required to se rv e a copy
of your W itten defenses It any.
to it on C h a rles E Mqinor. t|
Wall Shoal O rlando. Florida
JltB I, Attorney tor P lain tiff, and
lilt the original w ith the Clerk ol
tha above styled Court an or
baton August I . IN S. otherwise
a Judgment m ay ba entered
agamtt you tor Hie rwllel do
mended In the Com plaint
W ITN ESS m y hand and keel
• I said Court on th is J im day gl
June INS
iS E A L l
D A V IO N B E R R I E N
Lla&lt;* ol tha C irc u it Court
SaminotoCounty. Flo rid a
By Jean BrHtont
Deputy Clerk
Publlth July 1. 10. IF .la . IN S
D EH l|

Apply C H A M P IO N TV
K MAH T Shopping C*nt*r
Sanford

Legal Notice
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
OF TH E IIO H T R IN T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N NO
14 m i C A *♦ 7
t I
K lS L A K m o r t g a g e
S E R V IC E C O R P O R A T IO N
at* .
P la ln llll.
¥I
O A Y B O R N E A R M I T A C e . *1
u . at al.
Oatandanrt
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O TIC E 1s hereby given thal
pursuant to the F in a l Judgment
of Foreclosure and Sale entered
•n the causa pending In tha
C ircu it C e u rt ol the E I G h
T E E N T H Ju d ic ia l C ircu it, In
and tor S E M I N O L E County.
Florida C iv il A c llan Number
fa I7JI CA 0* P tha undersigned
C llth w ill ta ll tha proporty
tituattd In *aid County, do
ter ibad 4t
Lot a. Block R SU N LA N D
E S T A T E S accordin g to the Plat
thtraof as recorded in P le l Book
II Pago 14 to 77 ot the Public
Records ol S E M IN O L E County.
F londo
*' public sale to the highest and
bast b'ddar tor cash a l II 00
od o c k A M on lha Jl day of
July Ito l al I ho W E S T FR O N T
door ol mo S E M IN O L E County
C o u rth o u se
SA N FO RO .
Florida
IC O U R T S E A U
D A V ID B E R R I E N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
CO U RT
By Cheryl R F ra n k lin
Deputy C la rk
P ub liy, Ju ly IB. 17. i n s

OEH ft

_______'__

F IC T I T I O U S N JLM I
Notice 1* hereby given that I
am engaged In business st 1*7
Matter t B lvd . Winter Path
Saminoto County. F lo rid a JJ7YI
under the fictitio us nam e st
C O N TEM PO R A R Y
IM
P R E S S IO N i. and thal I Intend
to register said nam e with tha
C la rk ol tho C ir c u it Court,
Seminole C o u n ty , F lo rid a In
arc or Panes with tha provident
ot Ina Fictitiou s N am e Sleluto*
To wit Section BAS BB Florida
Sietutot l*S7
*/ Fo rrest W illard
S Deborah W illard
'*/ Judith flom ansk y
Publish Jung IS A Ju ly i, IB. 17.
INS
D E G ISS
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Notice IS hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 1174
B s n n s t t D r l v t . S u l l a I1B.
Long wood. S a m in o la Ceunty.
F lo rid a u n d e r Ih e H cllH ou*
name ol S E M IN O L E WINOOW
A DOOR and that I Inland to
register sa id n am e with Ihe
C if f k ol lh a C ir c u it C eurt.
Saminola C o u n ty . F lor Ida In
accordance with fha provision*
ol toe Fictitiou s Nom e Stofvto*.
T o w ll
Sec'ion a*S0« Florid*
Statute* 1*17
/A John W M arO
Publish July ) . 10. 17.14. tHS

filM J L
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
NolH* la h ereb y I'v o n that I
am engaged ui butlnas* *1 |*J
E s a ta r A v * . Langw aod
Sarnmoi* County. F lo rid * n7M
under tho fictitio us nam# at
JM E G R A P H IC IN D U S T R IE S ,
and that I intend to register said
nam* with th* Clerk of to*
Circuit Court. Saminoto County.
Florida in a cco rd a n ce with to*
p ro v isio n s ot lh a F ic t it io u s
Nam# Statutes. To w it Section
■St 0* F tor Ida Sle lu to * IM7
i\l Jeffrey M E K h a r
Publish July 10.17. 34. J l . IhM
D EH J*

JOIN THE
EMPLOYED
GENERATION !
JOIN
AAA EMPLOYMENT
BE EMPLOYEE)
TODAY!
V IT IIIIN A IIY
R E C E P T IO N IS T
T h it ipo« It a d rtam coma
tfu® for any a r f m ii lavart
Ari»war phona l . fH® 4 ii®hf
typm® Fu n !
C A S H IE R
Good com m on *** ** it atl you
naad’ Start work In® *od#y'
F u" tr®imn® pre«id®dt
D E L IV E R Y GAL
O F F IC E H E L P E R
Fun spot' D eliver light pro
duct in com pany car Learn to
help In p fflce . tool T rain
com pletely Needs now I
T R A V E L AO EN T
Whether you lust h e rs tha
b asics, or it your an old hand
at sending people around tha
world we have a lob tor youl
E id lin g career aw aits!
W A REH O U SE
D R IV E R
14 JO hr W ork In warehouta
be backup d riv e r Nicest boss
In Sanlord w ill train capable
learner &gt;
E L E C T R IC IA N
H ELPERS
S e re-al openings wlfh one of
F l o r id a * la r g e s t e le c t r ic
com panies! Open fha door to
being a skilled tto cfrld an
P A R T S R E B U IL D E R
T R A IN E E
W ill train with any mechanic
sc h o o l or b a c k g ro u n d '
E ic e lle n ! opporlveufyl B 'g lt i
to ba m ada Learn tp e d e liie d
trade'

TOO MANY TOOLIST!
AAA EMPLOYMENT
H U S . Fre n ch Ave.

323-517$
D tice w il Few I W it Salary
Low I t SR Reglttratlan Fee
Me P aym ent Tift Mired 11

71—H«ip Wanltd
NURSE AIDES ARDUVE IN
P rivate duty, stof* ftoty- R"d
homo care positions ovollobl*
E a c o llo n t pay
M E D IC A L
P E R S O N N E L POOL
J8SBSBOF1I
E O E . M /F/H 7 V
N U RSES N E ED ED
IM M E D IA T E L Y
R N . L P N and N A. I . Atl
shifts avaiLabN. V » bonus iur
allnow om ployaos
N U R S E W O RLD
C A L L : 47*11*1
IPSO Lao E d ., w inter Pork
P A N T R Y / D IN IN G ROOM
W O RKER
F u ll Tim e tor Senior Retirement
Com m unity
Eaporionco lb
sired Pleasant
appearance
and personality required
W ill consider training willing
learner Good wages
Apply at
H O W ELL PLA C E
TOO Airport Blvd
Sanlord
Between 7 A a PM
Mon F r l

Or call

M3 7MB

P art lim e Mouse hasping and
ccadilng tor retiree* Tran*
portotlon and reference* r e
qulred Good pay 3T7SB7*

PHONE HOIK
P a rt tlrna No t a p e rlenca rvacst
le v y wilt train Sal appoint
m in is from our Long wood
oftlca Starling salary from
la SO lo 17 so par hour Im
m ediate pay ra ise s lor those
who try harder Potonlial SIB
per hour within S weeSk C ell
Jim Cook U * tUO
T ire d s f Job Hunting!
C a ll F u tu re s
th e y h a s *
hundreds at |ob opening* lor
•h o t* who w an t ! * w ork
S7I a m
C E M EN T W O RKERS A
H ELPERS
E a c a lia n l pay
Start right away STS a m
D E L I V E R Y H E L P E R * no ta
parlance necessary Full Hm*
Good s i* r ting p e r |7t4JOO
G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
G reat starting
Iob Several openings Good
pay 471 a m
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y and
P B O D U C T IO N W O RK Mott
shift* open Good pey scales
STS a m
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S
G en eral Construction labor
Good pay *71 a m
T R U C K D R I V E R S Long haul
Im m ediate' Good driving re
cord O ver 71 s r g a m
LO C A L O R IV E R S
Straig h t
trucks Good pay Start right
away 47t a m
R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
H ELPER S
C L E R K S . CRT
O PERA TO RS
Im m e d ia te
openings Good pay scat**
C a ll 471 a m NOWI
W E L D E R S C srtilie d E s c a llt n l
pay K a le s C all today 471
am
P A IN T E R S A PA IN TER
H E LP E R S
Im m e d ia t e
openings, good starling pay
C a ll today 1 7 1 a m
D R YW A LL
W ith 0&gt; without
t iy a r t a a c a
im m e d ia t e
openings Good pay t a il to
day 47* a m

E X E C U T IV E S E C R ET A R Y
Wilts or without shorthand)
Ablest Tem p orary Services
M i J*to

S A L E S P E R S O N Eaperientad
with used c a r salat E acalian l
com m ission Good opportunity
tor advancanm anl 77111*0

JoAnn F a b r ic s w ill ba opening a
f la r e In Sanfo rd
Wa era
seeking a p p lica n ts tor tho
positions of store manager A
sawing m achin e sales manag
ar
S to re m a n a g e r II ra
iponiibto tor com plete opera
Hon of Iforo A supervising
s e v e ra l em p lo yee*
Sewing
m ach in e s a le s m anager Is
r e s p o n s i b l e t e r s e w in g
m echllno sa le s Good salary
benefits A fram ing program
It inferostod. sand resume to
JoAnn F a b r ic s . SI* Volusia
M alt. 1700 V olusia Avenue.
O e r to n . B each, f l y j q u .
M a in t e n a n c e
M illw r ig h t s ,
co n v e yo r m e ch a n ic *, shaat
m e ta l a a p e r la n c a a plus
W ag*s co m m e n su ra te * H h
vvper hence A ll shifts Apply
in person at

S E C R E T A R Y tar general oftlca
w o rk to r an e le c t r o n ic
m a n u f a c t u r in g c o m p a n y
C a ll 733 7718
______
S U R V E Y C R E W : Eaporlancad
party chief* A instrument man
wanted Perm anent positions
wlfh good pay A aacallant
benef it In Orlando era* Sand
resum e to P E C. Inc . TOO E
I I . . Suit* ISSB. Or

SOUTHERN CYPRESS
PRODUCTS, INC
jsoe E S T A T E R D *4
D ELA N O . FL .
&lt;*A*I i &gt;4 m i
M aintenance Help wanted to
clean up a lter performance*
Sr * F re d M ain at

SafRimtg Ci»y(&gt;oun4 Part
atvd Catsatbs r ry

jeea lemtaioaa

AVON E A R N IN O S W O W III
O P E N T E R R I T O R I E S NOWI II
n t is t io r n t a a i*
N U R S E S A I D E S : A ll shifts
E .per torned or certified prv
tarred Apply In person al
Lekevfew N ursing Cantor, S I*
E Jnd S I . Sanford

FLTHlle

w anted Desk Clerk taparlancad
w lfh M ic ro C a sh R e g iste r
p referred but will train Apply
in parson D ays Inn. I 4 A SR
44, Sanford
W AN TEO
E X P A U T O M E C H A N IC
I T I R E CH AN GERS
Apply atl 1*11 S French Ave
A O K T I R E M A R T______
Wanted
IB Or Ivors A Can vassers Call
Handy s l b r 1 PM 333 B33B
W AREH O U SE W O R K E R *]
Need 10 Im m ediately able toH!1
» lbs M usi b# reliable own
tra n sp o rta tio n
P trm o n a n l
position Never a Fa*

TEMP PEIM ______77*1141
W ilder Layout. A Fitters
Foote Stool Carporsttoa
O ver Hmo A sacoitont benefits
C a ll 7*3 #110 or
Com * by
MTS Edge water Df
Orlando
E 0 I
W ar* Whan Want

AAA TEM P
Taking AppHcetleat New
N O FEEI
CAM S A L L Y .............. . . . 333 001

NOW HIRING!
Outstanding Opportunity For

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION

(

W

&lt; D o /) CENTERS

5 LOCATIONS IN SEMINOLE COUNTY

• Auto/Truck Refueling
• Full Line Convenience Store:
• Fast Food Kitchens
Fried Chicken Subs Donuts

• Top Salaries
• Free Life &amp; Hospilalizafion
• 2 Paid Vacations Each Year
• Profit Sharing Plan
• Other Benefits
M AKE APPLICATION IN PERSON
AT 202 N. Laurel Ave., Sentord
Monday Thru Friday 1 10 AW 410 PM
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
-

�99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

71—Help Wanted
«Au$rm

1 and I bdrm Alto tk-m thad
efficiency from 17! wee# 1710
dapotil No pe»i C a ll 271 *1*7
S 7 P B L *11 Paimatto____________

H19*&gt;
Earn ing *
Potential'
Modern effic* m tacoitenf
■otefion Comptoto n am in g
program Men dlvtaon of old
•ttobilkhad firm . C a ll n x t
•or
data) it
on
r-aatont
-o rkin g rand m an* and la

I

l Bedroom
I Dam
no p itS7M a m o . S700 tac urlty
_____________ 177 leaf

wan ror utoro.

Jim Rkftorty

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

Bdrm garage apt on ma
riro r SI7J p a ' m n -m . C*H
121 tort

U fiiu

STtS S P E C IA L
I A 7 bdrm from U t * Lake
Ada Fteiibto taata 771*470

91—Apartments/
House to Share

Chriifian Apt* A Ham *t
TV . klfchan. laundry, m aid. DO

574-1040

g* ugQri a n a t in »»io

* bdrm l&gt;y bam living A dining
re o m t country kitchen. 7 car
g a rag a C lo ta ta thoopm g
canter A t c l w t 771 *17*

fv rm ih a d Roam P ar Bant So*
at m i G a l* PI ] b lo ck ! oft
It o l SI A San lord A y * ________
P rivate Homo olffi pri*ato room
tor an aldany parton C all

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

n&gt;iu7

S A N F O R D Purolahad raom t by
the » * a l Baatonabia ratot
M aid torvica Coll 771 *707
U P W *17 Palm atlo A y*

Country largo two ttory home
HOD par month

Sanford Completely Furm thad
Boom n lfh TV, and kitchen/
Hying room privilege*. plut
big yard a im g rill 2*31 E lm
SI I Horn* attar 7 1 __________

C E N T U B V It
K ISH B E A L ( S T A T E
M A L T O B ......................... 771-toTI

Sober, working ado it to rant
il toping room U 1 par m l
Cali 771 7*** after 1 t » t o ____
T H E F L O R IO A H O T E L
TOOOak Arenue
Mi 110c
Baetonabi* O w k ' i B a la*

H ID D E N L A K E
B a a u lltu lly
decorated 1 Bdrm
I bath,
a p p l ia n c a t . c a llin g fo n t
va r'ira l blind* tc'aon porch
fenced yard 1541 C a ll H I
l*4S______________________________ _
4 4 # IN D IL T O N A a a a
• • I - • • - l « O B BEN T . a
a a l i t 1414 a a

J7—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

NEW HOMES FOR RENT
C n * rfy EM tcwtf ) M r m . J
both P itio Hemes nettled In
c te n frf M ttin | fseer
tho»f«n| A »&lt;hoots Close »e
L ik e Mery 1/4 Eat!

A V A ILA B LE NOW
Fufnl*h#d St 1X1*0 Ap4'»fT&gt;#nt%
On# R#&lt;3room Apts
Two Badroom Apts

FLEXIBLE LEASES
S E N IO B C IT IZ E N S O ISC O U N T
B A N C H S T T L E L IV IN O 'lt

SANF09D COURT APTS.
323 3301
F irm Apti tor Samar Cllltana
H I Palm atlo A*a
J Cowan No P no naC a ll*

Chech these Features
• Ernst Free Aetr ifwee tec
• M ecrtweve
• Cerege
• Attic Iter eye
e thrasher DrY«r C#nw#&lt; toons
• On stfht Me nee fom ent
Children A P it s Welcome
Senior C ltlie m Discount

lo&gt; aiy F u m I bdrm w a ir.
tiring room, kllchon. bam .
•iraplaca Qutot araa
1220
mo ♦ 1200dap U l IIto

Cell New tor Mere In for met ten

Lovely 2 Bdrm Hugh Boom*
Complata P rivacy S 100 par
m l . S2S0 tocurlly dapotlt
C all &gt;2) 77*4 oc 221 K 23

N ice 1 bdrm
carpet
throughout Stop by 1071 W
F lrt t WOO par mo F lr t t . latt
dapotil B *tarancat
HQ*

SP A C IO U S CONOO. tirper ton
dilion All ttw good*** m icro,
cabla. v ldao
phona.
w aafior/dryor. pool Ow nar
la la in t on# bdrm and batti lor
&lt;x cational uta a* olflca Ta
nanf ha* p n v a la bdrm
A
bam Virtually p riva ia wte of
a n llr t unit A vailab le now.
t i n g l a * o n ly , no p a t t
Baatonbla. rogollabla ran i

SA N FO BD
&gt; bdrm
tv need yard W00 mo

172010*________ _______

321-3827
ni

I

bath

( N T E B P B I S E J bdrm I both!
St Jo h n ta cco tt SIM mo
LA N D ST O C K ( B O K I B S
14117*7...............................A n ytime
7 bdrm I bath, no patt S74S par
month |IM ta c u rlly dapotil
Can 4 *1 * 1 7 4 _________

I bdrm . uMIHat lu rm V w d WOO
p e r m o n th p l u t d a p o t lt
Ca ll 171 M il altar 1 PM
t B drm apartm am porfact tor 7
pc op la I I I par weak p lu t 1200
t a c u r lly
C o ll
777 77tt or

7 Story 1 bdrm 7 both, range
n trlg a rato r. w athar. garaga
tcraodod porch lanced bach
yard Availabto Aug I WOO
par mo
flrtt A ta c u rlly
Htfacanca* required M l 47*0
7 bdrm . I bom K id* okay No
p*tt tea Wh . S7M dapotil
1004 V* Jrd Street C a ll M l
*M 7_________________________________

99— A p a r t m e n t s

1 Bdrm houaa tor rant woo par
month p*vt 1*00 dapotlt C all
771 4771

V ary privata I Bdrm noar town
SM par waa* SM dapo*H
131^*741 a ran*
_______________

BMM

Unfurnished / Rent
■A M S O O C O V I A P T S
tot E Air per I Bird
P H O N E 1174*74.
77744*1
tllic ie n c y from ......... U t ! ma
D&lt;tc av*l tor Saruer Cllliaw t
L g I bdrm w w carpal, dial*
watftar. Cant hael A Olr. SMO
mo t tac dapotil 111071}

RIOGEWOOO ARMS APTS.
Limited Tim* Only
Sanford

FlS

CALL
12) #421

105—DuplexTriple* / Rent
Lake M ary- 7 bdrm
,
wathar dryer hookup* appli
a ft c 1 1 . g u l a t a r a a
SMO,dlecount In vattart Baal
ty l* r v i&lt; * l t f t *c&gt;«
L A K E M A R Y A B I A 1 Bdrm I
belh duptor Im m odiat* oc
cupancy U M par month plut
SMO tocurlly C all 741 *4*4 or
M l M X _____________________ ____
Santord B a il A raal 7 bdrm
Luxury Dupla* S17S Alto. 7
bdrm home W»1 171 H it

'10(1 F irs t Month* R tfll
2930 Ridgiwood Ay#

) ) ) #441

Monqqy thru Frid ay
1 fo ) JO
Vatu'(My from
&gt;o fa J

7 bdrm . I bam Ovptoa off 7Sfh
tt.-aot Lik a Now 1170 par
month Ratonabie ta c u rlly
C all 4*1 HOI after t PM
7 B D B M . l i t bath (a n tral air.
wathar dryar hook up fully
carpotod no patt U70 par
month C all *7* 7*** attar 4
PM__________________________________

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

i COUNTRY SETTING •
La rg e I A I Bdrm Aperfmewft
Advil Lekevtow Fem ily Peeltide

AtmIaM* Non Op*n NteUnRs
S E C U B IT V D E P O S IT
W IT H T N IS A D I

SIM

I

B drm . furn ished
M e tu rt
edvifs on If No peN Perb Avt
M of. N Peru m i n i

113—Storage Rentals

MASTERS COM......123 7900
New I bdrm 7 bem condo
Mfatfwr/dryor. pool S4M per
mo aet t i n
Sm all 7 bdrm ,. I bath, a ir,
appliancat. carpel Ideal for a
couple tftO mo « 1200 depot
II 777 US*, or 172 lOtl
Spec tout Apert m an r* Minute*
tram Mwy 1*14 Latetron t
pool, tarmlt. aduitt no pett.
laundry Starting at S70S a mo
C all U 7 *7*7 t o t * * ________________
Tired Of A aertm eat L iv le g f
E a p a n a n c t the p r iv a c y af
your own homo In ane af our
•unary d L p ie rtt Lg 7 bdrm .
I bam vaulted celling, appl .
hooh up* p rive t# trra e n a d
petto, you* P en yard m ain!
free Storting at SM* C a ll tor
d a t a lla .S P M lP M .n i 1711
W tbto* Bfvor Ittto a cy C a n e
uta C arp al, d ir Adulft. no
patt U » m a 177 **7t

MOO to ft offica tpaca avail
a b la . ta c on d floo r of ad
m m ittrttlve build mg Sanford
A lrs c rf. U I * par to ft Ir.
t lu to t afr. hear lanitoriat and
parklnq Ca l Santord Airport
, vlhorlty J jr d a tallt 71*7771

Mini Warttaftat
tip A Up_____________________I I ) 4*24

117—Commercial

_____Rentals_____
Baton S Offica Spaca MO up I*
iq ft also H o re g i e*e&gt;i
IN # P I M P

2$00

121—Condominium

_____ Rentals_____
S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
l**s* Turns to Tit

Ysof Jt«±!
F»intsh*d m UafarRislwrf.
C ar parts
Prfvato Pattot
Lo th Londiraprag N h C tutor a*
WAT I B * I D 1 A C C E P T * Ol

Call_ _ _ _ _ 321-1911

EXCITING NEW THINGS ARE
HAPPENING AT
THE

M

s

»

s

f

a

&amp;

C

&lt;

*

B Y O W N ER l t ni *
; Tarn
Poot Firep lace. ’ » acre on
(« n # l to L a b e M a rk h a m
Assum e
monthly with
M 000 down C ad BUI Roffe
• It fOaO (d a y s) or I?2 U90
(Mites)
■ IlitO IS

STemper
la rg e l bdrm
Heme E a t tn
b itchen
O R L c a r garage
larg e co rn e r lot O A N E R
W I L L N O LO M O R T G A G E
Only I f f GOO
Priced Reduced) I bdrm I bath
Large lot Now 121 000
1 Bdrm
hem e plus )
B d rm m o b ile hom e both
furnished Good a rea 150 000
O T H E R H O M ES. LOTS
A CR EA G E. I NVESTMENT
PROPERTY
C A L L A N Y T IM E
H I At TOR »
m 4tSI
L I S T W IT M U tl

REALTY»REAlTOR
Sjnfotd s Sales Leader
WE LIS T A N D S E L L
M O RE H O M ES THAN
A N YO N E IN NORTH
S IM IN O L E C O U N T Y
H A N D Y MA N S P E C I A L ! 2
bdrm
I 1! bath ham* with
lir a p la c * . L th a p a d parch,
rattled*!** kite ha* Submit i l l
•tt*M SI*.***
D O L L H O U SE tt 7 bdrm I hath
home in the ceuntry E a t in
k itch aa . 2 p * r c h * i. utility
raam M l S4*
P B E S T I O I O U S A R ( A 11 7
b d rm
I b a th h am * w ith
fira p la ca . c a n tra l air/haat.
cam m vm ty poal. clubhavtv
* n d |* c » lll U S .***
F A M IL Y D E L IO H T lt I bdrm I
balk k i n a w llb brick
lir a p la c * . t a t In k it c h a a .
ca n tra l a lr / h a a l. b ra a k la tl
b a r. larg o la m ily raam
t&gt;* *40
B E S T B U Y ON M A R K E T t l I
bdrm I bath ham * with a *I u,
b itc h * * , fir a p la c a , c a n tra l
a lr/ h a a f. a ll new kitch en,
parch If* .* **
M IL L B U IL D TO S U IT I Y O U R
LO T OR O U R S I E X C L U S IV E
A O E N T F O R WINSONO
0(V
C O R P . A CEN TRA L
F L O B IO A L E A D E R ! M O R I
HOM E F O B L E S S M O N E Y !
C A L L TOOAYI
• G E N E V A O S C E OL A BO *
t O N I O F O B M O B IL E S !
I Acre Country tract*
Mf*ll Hand an pavad Rd
N N D t w n I* V r* at U N I
F r o m l lM M I
II rau era la ib in * tor a tuc
catttol t a rta r In B aal (tle to .
Stonttram B a altr It leaking
tar y*u C all l a * Albright
1*0*1 at 177 MT*
I vantage
n» m* i

322-2420
m fPARKAVt
n\ Lb M ery Bled

Sowford
U Mery

SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE
APTS.

$100 SECXJRETY DEPOSIT

3 2 3 -7 9 0 0

BV O to N E B 70S Fa v fe tl D»
LO C H A R B O B
V A CA N T 1
Bdrm 2 bath carport screen
porch |A&gt; aOQ 222 2Slf_________

HALL

n « f v IOC
" 9 tU to
FI » t lt * | m s t« e c t.

]

FR O M *315
J le n U l O ffice
3 2 3 -2 9 2 0
U M IM U M O O N M

lAJVoeo

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sell! *
For mere details
l K4 m b ill

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipment

Owner Financin g Santordbu&lt;to
ingtot Saptic t " w*M
to a lla c a C r a t i B a atty . la c ..
Baaltor____________________771*117

I Story Tewnheute 2 bdrm , !'*
bath Cent?el he*' end #»r
Kitchen equipped Community
pool' W *lh to frocory storef
Ee sy fm encing* | ) f M i

199— P e t s 8 S u p p lie s

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

Ability Kennels Dog boarding
Country Atmosphere Reason
able R ates
12 2 2 2 2 0

* NEW SMY4NA btSCH *

211— A u c tio n s

AFFORDABLE!
) bdrm w/
Irg screened porch fenced
yard * HA or VA financing•
1)1 000 C e lle tg u w b f
On* bdrm home en nice lot with
low low down payment Plus
low. few monthly payments!
Greet tor the tm a ll family f
t2 ttN

Wa»or front town homos with
garage from i f f V00 ConvO
n*fnt single story from | U f00
Pool
locum
clu b h o u se
Groat Conteoi locatio n Boat
doc be op*1on * I f HA and VA
t*nan&lt;lng available Must sou
tor yourself' Open every day
Rentals a lso avaiiabi# Cad
t04 4 2 t# lM for complete do

2*00 MWY I » t ;
H.rtden Labe i#« W'ldwood Dr
) bdrm 2 both dbl garage
p o rch
c e n t r a l a ir
Super
C'ean* Assum able U t 000
REALTOR
M AH VI N K lA IL
or 2 fl TUT

r ___m

C O U R T E S Y PO N TIAC

JU S T L I S T E D
) Bdrm
2 bath lam ily room,
dining room, central air and
heat. I i r o p l a c a . lanced
Assum able Mtg
You won t
find one bettor at M t fM

O V IE D O
Walb to hiah school « Bdrm 2
bath New carpet and paint
inside
F e n c e d bacb yard
Garage s t r u t
H A N O V E R WOODS
• Bdrm
home with a ll the
am enities Pool, spa screened
p a tia
H uge f a mi l y room
o v o rlo o b in g s h a d t d yar d
Ov t r s u e d double garage
Form at Dining Room Largo
inside utility room | ) ) M N

__ and Bikes

12)1121

1t?b f O R D O R A N A D A
C all U ) iaoo iD a y s i or
m • ) ) ’ (N itasl
IV)| F O R O R A N C H E R O I W
ist Cleveland C 4 Trans p s
p b a ir. cruise control air
shocks no rust new pamt.
sacrifice lor %wso Can Greg
OQ, 122 1)2#before SPAA

17 F 1 alum inum
V hull boat
wlfft 1 H P K ic k *. 1310 111

21/—Garage Sales

92 Y a m a h a DO
E ‘e ctn c Start
sooo mi
Reduced!
S im
C O U R T ! 9V t MNf l A C )1) ]1)'

2 0 —Junk Cars
ANY JUN K CARS A T R U C K S
Bevght F r t m l l # S la b m ere
Cat t H llb H
9934111
TOP Dollar Paid for Js.nb 4
Used cars trucks b heavy
equipment 222 91Q0
W f P A Y TOP D O L L A R F O R
JUN K C A R S A N D T R U C K S
CBS AUTO P A R T S 21) #S0)

c m
•

4 fam ily garage sa'r sofa and
u , - e'7 |
9oc king
ettefr% electric chord clothes
and toys Frt sat MO? S Park
Aye s i PM 122

•
•

219—Wanted to Buy

•
•

Baby Beds Strollers. Clothes
Playpens
Etc
Pa p e r b a c k
Beaks 129 • ) ) ) )]) m «

1979 RENAULT

t )ir

*

h a s s l e s

?

l e t u s w n i t y ab o u t vour
c re d it p ro b le m s
W e r a n fin a n c e a lm o s t
anyone
D o w n p a y m e n t a s lo w a%
W e t a k e tra d e s
P.ryntenfs to fit yf*»r t*Mb|e&gt;t

1976 CHEVY
1113

CAM AR0

1982 JEEP

AMC JEEP

32&gt;IM*

,.

A p p lia n ce s Far Sale e ll in
e • l el)enf candittan A tally
....................JI2 42YS

223— M is c e lla n e o u s

Recendittaned Appliances
I r o m ilJ W A R R A N T Y
BARNETTS
CASSELBERRY
•Mill)
1)0 94))

Wrought Iron G lass Top O'nmg
Table w / A chairs M29 Gold
La / y boy Chair Sf9 Antique 1
draw er chest S » 2 tw o beds
com plete 190 27)

SM S. Frtnch A w .
1114M1

NO CREDIT - BAD CREDIT /
WE FINANCE

*H'»&lt;(///

WITH
PAYMENTS
TO FIT YOUR
BUDGET

78 Olds Cutlass Wfn 5250 DN.
77 rofd Pinto . 5300 DN.
'73 Dodf* PU TiuckS300 DN.
77 Ford T Bud
5250 DN.
‘ •MECHANICS SPECIAL
76 Fiat X-19 S300 CASH

*•7/1 i't ,«L'1

231 —Cars

'321-4075

ISst C H R Y S L I R I M P E R I A L
P erfect condition Asking I ) 000

a

SANFORD
MOTOR C

) P.nto runs good ioohs lair
New tires MOO or best olter
NO eve or weekends

' "'

•8 3 0 0

C M R O K Il

I SO I I tens h A ve .

.
Alum inum C an s Copper
B ra s s Laad Neespaper
G la ss. Gold. S »ver
b u k o m o T c . f . U W Isf
• S 00 Sal t I I I ) 1100

r e f r i g e r a t o r
t l 00 .
washer dryer flOO tor both
dishwasher 110 a?l ken more
appliances
Bunk beds M0
lawn mower f t l s»uden« desk
and chair S&lt;9 broker Oven |2
cheir i f C a ll )2) m t

*1295

1981 OLDS CUTLASS
LS
*4993

DISCO UN T AUTO S A I li *

Need C rib s Playpens Baby
furniture
c lo th in g
Good
• Altai ' I'M
U l V S?

•9*3

MONARCH. 4 N

SJOOOO

La! Rents

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

1975 MERCURY

USED CAR S

r t ®

MOVING SALE
Evert
must go* Mo« r\g out O* town
Wed 1 10 Sat Y/l l I I 1 PM
42$ Summer lm A y r Sanford

IIM tIU
Includes Water Gerbng# P»cb up
Ye#d AAamtenance
Im m ediate Oc cupanc y
Gregary Mobile Homes 22) DtO
/•k0 Sentry ] Bdrm with e&gt;r
and a ll ap p lian ce s. I# MX)
C all 221 F U )

*4 3 0 0

AC

11 CAE

H o u se h o ld i t e ms I r eef er
clo th e s quilt s cr aps
ISOS
Princeton Ave Vat ()m , • ’

_ ■^^Lttetima

1984 FORD RANGER
FU

Tf f E B I S T I N T O W N
«, C l K H M S

Gigantic 2 Fa m ily Yard Sate
July Dfh SaL Only | A M l o &gt;
IJOt Scol f Ave Santord

157- M o b ile
H o m e s / S a le

Adult Park

239—Motorcycles

ID S V W R A B B IT 4 door. 4
speed
C le a n m s'de
ru n s
good X) mpg MWY |t 000
•WC after \ I’ M

Accessories

SANOALWOOO VILLAS
&lt;
bdrm
I bath
upstairs
carpets drapes appliances
pool S2S 000 Cell
SSS2

KISH REAL ESTATE

t ) Toyo'O P ck Up 14 000 m l . I
speed c ru is e
m t wh e e l

Luaurteus T Bird Drive in style
in this ib^Y Heritage Edib on
w ith too many options to lilt
M usi be seen to be apprec)
a ted C an Dave a* )2? 0041
d a ys or 111 OOH eves
♦sag P L Y M O U T H VAL I ANT
• c y l . 22S . 4 door p % tinted
windows eaceiient condition
as n after a PM

715- Boats and

N I W S M Y R N A PI ACM
2 bdrm
I bath baachside cot
♦age with commote ial ion mg
Start your own business near
the ocean %a ? 900

M O B ILE g f

balls

teto

•

•Mursviuvttf iWSM* IV

235-Trucks/
Buses/Vans

• • W E W IL L BU Y • a
a a YOUR U L f O C A R • e
• C A L L P H IL B E T T I S *

FOR ESTATE
C o m m e r c i a l o» R e s i d e n t i a l
Auctions A Appraisals C a li
P a ll s 4i*c*'on i n s*x&gt;

Baachside Realty R E A L T O R S
H 4 4j ? U l ]
Open 1 [fays'

323-5774

SJae*
C O U R T E S Y PO N TIAC 111 2121
14 Pontiac F ier©
Loaded
A On# Ow ner •
Reduced
Stw s
C O U R T E S Y PO N TIA C 22)212!

★ INSTANT CASH ★

IB M E s oc wt i v o Ty pe wr i t e r
S ’00 C a ll
222 2# II ask tor
Dean (normal butlhess
hours)
______

Sanford O ittra tc Saiai II
S
building lot* 11* 000 cath
F irm U l 7771

Turbo
Loaded'

C O U R T E S Y P O N TIAC 919 2121

OeBary AuN A Mann# Sates
A cress the river ♦oeothill
i ' t) Ike bar y k4d l i U

. .. •

Tr in s Am

\Hi DODGE VAN
D abio Conversion smb and ice
bo« must see to appreciate'
l?0OO and lake Over paym ents
Can J2J 002_Sa»*er ' r M
M Ferd Brant o X L T
4 Whee' D *'*e
R ed uced 1

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

Zemfh 2S color feieviffon O &gt;g
•nql price Over HOC Be'A^ce
du# S2M 00 cesh or tAbe Ovor
pdymewts S2S month Still *n
w irrin ly
NO M O N E Y
DOW N Fre e home tfidl. no
obhgekFon C e il M2 Side doy

153—AcreageLofs/Sale

• ' Por'l *ac
T Top

Mwy t ] ....^..^. Oeytena Beach
e e * e * Heitfsa a a e e a

VENETIAN VILLAS

National Auto Sales

1120 Sanford Avt., Sanford

Call i l l t)94

in lin e •

O P E N S U N D A Y S I to t PM

CONSULT OUR

(305) 321 0041
#2s W n th Street
Santord F I I2FII

R EA LT O R
SaN Or Rant W/Option 2 bdrm
noar downtown Santord SITS
By appt h&gt;4 11% a s 12 after I

A N D L E T A N E X P E R T D O T H E JO B

S A N F O R D Now ) bdrm 2 bath
D BL garogo energy savor
l i t too C ran k Construction
and Realty P m gioaoai

To List Your Business-

SA N FO RD
it t ta t
2 or J bdrm . C a l m kitchen
E tceHonl financing
TH E R E A L T Y S T O R E #M ItM
No Qualifying New ) bdrm
J
bath on 1 w&lt;ros Horses ok
Owner flnpnclng prim e eree
ir e too u a s m ___________________
i td f'n ; t,«'H im medie*e o&gt;
cup ancy F HA Non qualifying
mortgage Lbwr down Owner
h a I d I 2nd m o r t g a g e
L o o m option term s available
SV4 too U2 2t4l___________________

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
C O M M E R C IA L S F E C I A L 1ST
BOB M B A L L . JB F A
BEALTOB
111411*

1S1— Investment
Property / Sale
CASSELBERRY
I 4 (f4 . lonad
F B I SA1 000 W M a ix ia w tk l
REALTOR
JT174*1
Near I * 4 llt U tlto O a n g a
B l.d . N aar B a rf of Santord *
a c r a l ! too i * ft C 'B Bu&gt;W
■
«*
11*100*
21% da«"t
Owner hold* B a lan ce !*%
C all 771 M i l or *4* 44*2
* apt* H M M M B B U
t.va catfi I tow fatal pr.ca
1 7 7.00*
A p r a n a d v a lu e
S41 000 C oil I 40* 444 U0*

153—Acreage
Lots/Sale

A PA RTM EN TS

2714 R IO G EW O O O A V E ., SA N FO R O

HI —Homes For Sale

E X E C U T I V E HOM E
Perfect tor entertaining Canal
front to St John's River Built
•n g rill tn screened ceortyerd
4 bdrm
I ' * both heme |u*t
r i g h t f or F l o r i d a liv in g
% m .m

STENSTROM

★ DAYTONA AUTO a
a AUCTION a

mu

(v a r y Wad Nit* at f M PM

L A R G E HOM E
L A R G E LOT
Qutot t'raat F i t up A tav * b g 1
J bdrm } bath a* 2*71 V a n
P n cad to tali S*4 too

Venterd Nice 2 ted'oo m tteme
with living room , d&gt;ning room
paneled fam ily room, laundry
room worbshop C ell tor in
formation )2) HOI or I U AiV
i l l fOO or best otter
By Owner le&lt;n Arbor Vanferd
4 Bdrm | bath pool (antral
a f f 'h a a t
c o m p l e t e l y re
modeled Ow ner financing
U i *000 C all *04 421 n i l or
S°4 47* Off &gt;
________

13

Raducad

S14*»
C O U R T E S Y PO N TIAC 111)121

• • COLOR T E L E V I S I O N * .

321 0759. Eve 322-7643

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
1J1 M R

flo n n v.il'a Pjnltoc

Loaded

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo

t M I1.U I —

CALL BART

NATIONAL auto sales

______ 173 1427

in

• I E sco * G L
Loaded
Sa90 Down Small V u P aym ent
C HI C O 4 THE m *.n
i h eeo#

7 .. Saahrd _.321 4«75

77TH STtEET FUINITVK

t A C R E a s G rassed and fenced
on pa re d rood Assumpbl#
■^♦tjege ft* 000

Will Street Co........... 321 5005

W* Hava « Lim ited N m k n at
F t * , t tor 4- lo w a t I'M Dav.nl

WILSON MAIER rURNITURE

F I R E C R A C K E R S P E C IA L !
Summit #11 otters on ftws 2
bdrm
| bom Fen ced bocb
carpo rt, establish ed
Fwighfcorhood Owner fmpnc
•nq t ee new Asbinq | d *00

Lebetreot Beautiful J bd-m j
bath heme Sw im A fish Item
v e e r •W«I v e r d
Large
screened perch le cate d an
« « u t ( u ld e i# c M tN O

No Credit?
m FINANCE

Head W athar* P a rt! A Su rvK a
tor Kanm ora*
. . .U i* * 4 f
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S ____

ta* w im s t ............

*1 Ford L t u tan dau a or new
tire s a*r crv«se
AM F M
e le c
w indow s
42.000 m l
12119 921 2412
___ _

Bod Credit?

_________ m t m

»U H I ■ t it ST

e

1 &amp; 2 KDR0OM APTS. AVAILABLE
ADDLT^AN^FAIMUE^VE^Mtt!

CwSN'T Litt O ft

231—Cars

331-Cars

• R E N T TO OW N*
Color T V c
ttoroot n a V w r*
d r y o n r#!-vga.a»Or ftOftori
furnifuro v'dao -acordar!
Spoctol li t waa* I rant U 00
Attarnativt r v A Aa*&lt; Bantalt
Z * y r * t S h o rn n g Cantar

141—H&lt;xnes For Sale

C A L L A N Y T IM E

«

'IHOCS No Rcksccl

ft*.Vaj'TblH,UK-to(!.T“

ItC Reel Estate Brober
)**• U n M rd Are

O CLTO M A 2 Bdrm l a r ^ cor
r+t ?©♦ rmmr to park*. U IS p#r
month. It?, ib s * 1700 ttcu rity
AvB«lBt&gt;t« now No pat*

93—Rooms tor Rent

Baatonabia and con von tent
701 N AAapta. Sanford
771 4848

BATEMAN REALTY

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent

IO H G W O O O M atora tomato to
t f ia r t &gt; B drm
I ah • front
Call U t l o a t

231—Cars

1

Otficn to Rim

SALES PEOPLE

Evening Harold. Sanford. FI. Wtdrtoiday. July 10. IHS —1IB

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE 1by Larry Wright

127—Office Rentals

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
RIMOOCLINC SPECIALIST
Wo Hand!*
Tha Whole B all Of Wsi

8 E. LINK CONST
322-7021
F Inone in* A v a ila tla

Air Conditioning
A Heating

ACE LAWNSERVICE
Maintonanca SoO*in* Pruning
C tanning Thai, king fa r tun in g
Fra # E H Im a to*................IM 1711
L a &lt;m Malntananc a
Lard vr aping 6 j*ft Hog M ooing
1*4 10*1

IN S ’ A L L
C |* rttl

_________ mtm

LAWNS MOWED &amp; TRIMMED
Spring Y a r* C to*a up*

71) m i

Af A lto .&lt;Jol.iv P n c a t 771 *471

W ail ftfvMton* • Haaiin*
007 Sou in Sontoc* Avonwa
Sgnlovd F lo rid * 177/1

Home Improvement

Appliance Repair
Allans Applijnc* Same*
) « hr S e rv K a Ne l i t r e Charge!
IFYflag
Mb M4I ..... SM M i l

Cofftor * BwM to* A «»(ito**ling
No Tab fa * Small
I I I Barton Le a *. Santo.«
111 4*11
TH O M AS A THOMAS Horn.
ttpoit. (la th in g , town c a r*
C all &gt;H IS&lt;4

Home Repairs

Bookkeeping

CAMFENTta

Naad beet I aao.n«
tor rour *m *n b v t.n a tt'
Call m r * * i — ...........7i"

•**•!»» an*

ramodolmg N* ink too tm all
C a ll 171*4*1__________________
M amtonanc* of *u Irpot
Ca panfry pomling plumbing
*nd alec trie 171 401*________

Carpentry
All irp o t of c * r * * n ir y A r*
moctalmg I f rf» aa* C*H
B ic fio rd C ro a t 711 SY71

Cleaning Service

JUST G E N U S
P'»l»»*ional (loaning
C a l l _______________________ 777 *441
S c a e le f * H e v u CtoOMag
e * » r C toanw * totoXry **«
d o ** , c a b in .it III*. •*»
Goo* Work la w Koto* H 74*to

Bv.to• Big*ar Bv*‘n#*»l

SELL
4 If I f*AIM
Cham Link
Woo*

Lawn Mopiny.........Lm Pncts

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners

ELECTROLUX
SaN* »n* Sai vie a
Vacuum * an* Shampoo.
CALL
j B ORIENE
MS 741 M l*
Saoing Machine M apair* all
m akat 10 y n v .p a ria n c# In
horn*' H *lira0 U l *771

n

Quality I n n Car*

I'y otro Bant# nto»
and * r a v a
tra m
Taarrn*

C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A L T Y
R a * R ( Braaar _______ 177(711
___«7»f4wy * IS. O ila v x Fla

Anything E le ctrica l Since ItM i
Esti mat es
) l Hr Service Call#
Tom 't Rlectrtc lecvfce I I ) If/1

Fence

Haa* Carpof Ctooma * L iv m *.
Omho * Ooom A Hall S7«M
Sal* a C hair SM 771 77*4 _____

D O N 'T W A I T I 70 A c r a t on
Cochran R d . Gonava
S1M0
pa' a c re
71% down 10%
mtoraaf Ow nar llnancm **

Lawn Service

O b llta c t r K
N pw 4 rem odtlm g eddihong
tan%. security lighfA timer i
plut e (I elec t e rv e e t Quality
Sa rv ica L'te n te d A Bonded

O S T E E N I a cre hu&gt;td&gt;ng toft
h-gti and dry I 14 M
Term *
a ri'ia b to
Wooded
t l* .H *

Electrical

.

u ta Tha H a .a &gt;0 C a it foo t
C A L L TO O A V
1717411

W I LL I S HOME IE F A IB
RanuaOalin*
AM Hw n*
A
A ll Typo* Rap* '* injured No
jo * M o ^ m * I M 7 ^ 7 * &lt; ^ _ ^ _ _

Landclearing
OENEYALANDCLEARINO
Lot lancK taar ng
FIM O.rI
Top*0.1 Pond*
0 * 4 ‘« d''cr&gt;o»
Si to PrapgrgftoA Coil 1*» W f
T H O R N E L A N O C L E A R IN G
FILL 0IBT * C L A Y *
S H A H A H A U LIN G
777 U l '

Landscaping
T ■AC TOM WOR K
So * Blade
Bvaft Ho*
O itc
MOM W E L D IN G
Fco o Fkf
771 77*7

Masonry
i ANT THI NG IN C O N C R E T E i
P alm O riv a o *y Stoawalk E l*
F r t * ( jiim a la t OtoBly Otvani
B E A U M ONOE C ao tl C*

Sprinklers/lrrigation
A*our time ir r ig a t io n
toao ln*laitolran*
F ra u E *1
E apart Raporr* pi Comptoto
Sprmaiar Syttom*
T im e r*
Pum p*
E lc
**S 7*7*

Tile

-w* Ar* ta* e*«r........ n i saaz
B E A L Cancrtto 7 Man Q ualify
Operation Patio* O r iv a o a y t
D o y* U l 7717 C v * t
777 1111

Nursing Care
OUR S A TE S ARE L OW ER
Lakavtao Nur kin* Cantor
S l f E Second SI . San tor*
111 *747

Painting
f to rto *M a to * Matoao
Spacialikl*
7Syr» l a p
Fro * ( * l
Sondod
'n*ur#d

woTRiaav

. its m i

Modtd Pp*a«tog S W ill R a p a u
Yaubuy m alaria l'
W . *upp*V labor Ta S A V E M*

m mi

Plumbing
• Buddk Pfumtong Sarvica a
R a p e d a Raptor* a Ram adal
a Fre e (tlaaoato* • I I I MR* •

AmTlLE
Ceram ic Ufa. totot
• r d intf«ll*flon bam * ftoort
M l I 17m *1 . Sonlo&lt;d
M l IS* U l IT**
laftn P o rkar
Sc a n mama Tito C o ro m l*. V u iyl
Atoaktok aN Inttaltod 4 ra
pa •rad f ap . r e f . He F r a *
•ktimatok 171*7*1

T re e S ervice
All I r t o t o r v .4 ........ __W uaktog
And Hauling ..........
C a ll Altar
« P M
■C M O L l T R E E S I R V I C k
F ra * ( iimkatoal Low P n c a k l
LM In* Stomp Orkaadkaag. Taal
I I I 1174**r ar nato
- L o t Rto Fra tokkaanglk 0 a n
JOHN A L L I N S L A W N * T R M
Ctoodtra*ramovof L k I N
f r a a t j i U l SMO
to%

Welding/Sheet Metal
Sac urlty Sark
Froafkl

Raaluig*
M *M W I L O I N G
I7 J 1 M '

�11B— Evening Herald. Sanford, PI. Wednesday, July &gt;0, I H i

W-D BRAND USDA CHOICE BEEF BLADE CUT
U. S. CH O ICE

W-D BRAND USDA CHOICE B E E F BLADE
SAVE 70c La - W D BRAND
USOA CHOICE BEEF
CENTER CUT 7 BONE POT OR

PRICES GOOD JULY 11-13, 1985

The Only Choice is U.S. CHOICE!

JU IC Y SW EET
PEACHES

IN»n't rnmpate p rim until you &lt;orr&gt;j»ar«* grade*' Many of our tom
petitor* no longer aell b rfl that'* goternmrnl graded US.
C H O ICE Their beef ju&gt;t doesn't tome rlo*e to uhat you'll find
at W IN N -D IX IE .
The flator and tendernea* of M inn Diaie'a U.S. CHOICE beef ia
unaurpaaaed One bite and you'll be ronainred
the Beef People
•ell the beat beef

W O tlA N O USOA CHOICI l i l t

DEL M O N TE
CATSUP . .

BONELESS
$14!
C H U C K . . . Nt
I
COriUTn Of i m o« mom romi s u m . sick

SHOULDER
ROAST...

u

wo

k

bm a no

utOA Ch o c I

n ip

MAYONNAISE

ROOT
BEER . . .

WHITE
POTATOES

CALIFORNIA ROAST

rnoetcAi oruet. rnmr

F B U rT D R IN K S

ECO NO M Y
CHOPS. . .

CELESTE
P IZZA S . . IS
* * Q A M O T C M A M .lt M H M f CM A O f l

b in Chops

$2J* Spareribs

M49

GALLO P R E M IU M W INES

SPLIT
BREAST

Uvci\\
yuVtlU

BANQUET
CHICKEN .
ta im t

tf/c

TETLEY TEA BAGS

C L0R0X
BLEACH

i roaco wtM au uuonaiN
r euii NHMtn Mean entri n

VEGETABLES

mu

Ouaurt uaoa c

P ta rr

ROAST BEEF

d u ty

uoyo

W ISK DETERGENT

HERTS HOW IT WORKS

LARGE EGGS

CRISCO

CHEK DRINKS

$199

MAXWELL HOUSE MASTER BLENl

COFFEE

TISSUE

4 (u. FREE BONUS PAR
HERSHEY S CHOCOLATE

SYRUP

$169

RAGU SPAGHETTI

T R A D I T I O N A L Of HOMESTUE

GLAZED DONU

^ A L L VARIETIES

ICE CREAM

$129

i

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crop ever
SPO U TS.

7/»h Year, No 296 Sunday, August 4, 1985-Sanford. Florida

K i d s '

Evening Herald —

(USPS 4S1 280)

N a t u r a l

C u r i o s i t y
L e a d

IB

T o

50 Cents

122 D ie

C a n

In D e l t a

D e a t h

By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
With a toddler's curiosity. 2-yearold Bobby
explores a rloart and digs out a box of moth balls.
A simple mistake he thinks they're candy and
gobbles them down. Caught with the tell talc box
In hand and an odor on his breuth that ensures
his mouth won't be Invaded by moths, Bobby's
panicked mother rushes him to the hospital
emergency room.
A dose of syrup of Ipecac admlnlsteied to
Induce vomiting apparently clears the poison
from Bobby's system. But Just to be sure, his
stomach Is pumped.
While exploring m ommy's purse. 3-year-old
Mary
downs half a bottle o f Tylenol. In a fast
rail to Sanford pediatrician Dr. Marltsa C. I'aslls,
Mary's mom learns liming Is critical If her tot Is to
be saved. Tylenol. Dr Pastls warns. Is fully
absorbed Into the system within 20 mlnules o f
Ingestion.
Kvrn If the dose Is large enough to do damage,
signs of [miaouing may not appear until a week or
more later, but Ihc results are severe, creating
blood disorders and a m ultitude of other
problems over a period of time. An overdose of
Tylenol Is sometimes fatal. Dr Pastls said.
After a dose of Ipecac at home. Mary vomits
enroute to the hospital where a blood lest later
shows the medication did not get far enough to do
serious damage.
Al the rale of two or three a week youngsters
like Bobby and Mnrv are rushed to Sanford's
Central Florida Regional Hospital Most are 2 or 3
years old. an age group that accounts for IK)
percent of the accidental poisoning cases treated
See POISON, page 8A

Price

Je t C ra sh
Airliner Only Seconds
From A Safe Landing
GRAPEVINE, Texas |UPI| — A Delta Jumbo |rt
with 161 people aboard, trying lo land In a
vicious storm and only seconds away from a salr
touchdown, crashed within 200 yards of a
runway and exploded In a monstrous mushroom
cloud, killing at least 122 people
Thirty-one
people survived the crash and eight others M ill
were unaccounted for early today, v ild Delta
spokesman Jack West man
The plane was on a lllght from Fort Lauderdale
and was lo have continued on to Los Angeles
-It was al least the sixth worst air disaster In
U.S. history

• N a m e i of Ihe Injured. BA

B •

• It flying ta fe ? Opinion, 3D

Among the dead was thr driver of a car
smashed by the plane as It bounced over a major
highway.
Carnage was strewn across the grass and
tarmuc at the northern end of Dallas Fort Worth
International Airport - the nation ■ fourthbusiest which, until Friday, had not experienced
M#»lld P»ltfs fry Tammy Vln&lt;»M
a major crash In Its 12-year existence. The airport
The cabinet under a sink can be a death trap for a curious youngster
did not shut down, although some flights wt-tr
delayed.
A fe w passengers walked away from thr grim
scen e virtually unscrutched T h r lucky ones had
b een sitting In the L - 101 I s lallseitlon, which
rip p e d free from the fu s e la g r on impact und
•k W d e d a w a y from the names.
g r o w t h " before th e fe e * w ere agreed
O th ers w ere trapped In th e in fern o thut rn grtl
upon.
briefly In the pouring rain and then, partially
A resolution selling the fees was lo doused by the deluge, smnldrrrd as rescue
Also, the county stuff smoothed
So far. no one has refused to puy. be adopted by the commissioners workers raced Iti-the scene. The thrashing storm
things over with builders beforehand,
according lo Commission Chalrmun Tuesday, but with Couniy Attorney had boiled up In Ihr Texas heal only a few
keeping them Informed as the Idea
Bob Stunn "T h e y know their pro­ Nikki Clayton on vacation prepara­ minutes earlier and dissipated as qulcklv as it
moved through the bureaucratic
jects will create u demand for sendees tion of the resolution has been had formed
process nnd actually conferring with
und they voluntarily commit (he delayed a week. Hooper said.
Dullas Couniy Medical Examiner Dr Charles
them on Just liow high the fee should
money necessary. We don't twist
Petty said Ihr crash site "looks like thr liodles
The
temporary
fees
will
remain
In
be.
their arms/' he said.
had been spilled down Into a huge g a ib a g r
"T h e Issue boiled down lo what
But what I f u builder boiled and effect until an ordinance setting dum p."
permanent
Ires
Is
adopted
within
the
Is fair and equitable.'' Public Works
rrfused to pay up? Sturm refused to
He said 111) bodies had hern recovered. "T h ey
next six lo nine m onths. After
Director Larry Sellers said.
talk In hypothetical " I don't have a
a re still In Ih r pror-rs* o f p ic k in g up more and
adoption
of
permanent
fees,
the
Another difference between the
crystal balf." he Insisted. “ I don't
some fragments of bodies." Petty said
builder will have no choice but to pay
Orange County und Seminole County
know what the commission would
He said determining the Identities of some
or
take
the
Issue
to
court.
fees Is that Seminole's, as proposed,
do.’*
victims could take several days
will be voluntary. That Is. developers
Both Sellers and Hooper said the
County Administrator Ken Hooper
Although Ihe c.tqse of thr crash was not
will know what the county expects
said staff m em bers held seYeral permanent fees are likely to be known, several witnesses who watched from
but will have the choice of paying nr
meetings with the Homebuilders o f somewhat higher than (he Interim nearby hotels, mails and the airport said they saw
not.
Mid-Florida's "group for responsible
See FEE. page 8A
See CRASH, page BA

Passage Of $500 Road impact Fee Expected
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff W riter
Developers balkrd Iasi week when
Orange County commissioners tried
to adopt an Impact fee on new
d e v e lo p m e n t to h rlp p a y fo r
growth related road needs The pre­
ssure was so Intense the Issue failed
when It came to a vote.
But Seminole County commission­
ers and stall are confident there will
lie no problem whrn a resolution
levying similar Impncl fees lor roads
comes up for adoption on Aug 13
Why the difference? One reason Is
the cost.
Orange County was proposing a
transportation Impact fee of 91.500
per housing unit while Seminole Is
proposing u temporary lee o f 9500

Similar M ove Failed In O range County

Lake Mary Families Abandon
Homes As Condominium Sinks

New Right Turns On Shultz
WASHINGTON (UPII - New
Right organizations are trying to
get President Rrag.m to fire
Secretary of Stale George Shultz
for "m a k in g deals with thr
devil" in other countries at U S
expense
After spending Ihe past few
years on such fumlly Issues as
school prayer and abortion, thr
conservative groups now are
focusing on world uffalrs and
want President Reagan lo dump
Shultz as an ''Inept vicar of
foreign policy.”
Al a New Right summit m eet­
ing Friday, held umld |tosters
that read, "Slate Department
Held H ostage,” speakers a c­
cused Shultz of undermining
Reagun by being soil on com ­
m unism and terrorism und
heading a helter-skelter agency.
"T h is Is very frustrating to
m any o f u s.” said Richard

V lg u e r le .

p u b lis h e r

o f the

ConaervMtlve Dltfcat.

A l th e W h i t e H o u s e .
s|M)kcsman Larry Speukes said.
"T h e president thinks George
Shultz Is an outstanding secre­
tary of stale. He enjoys the full
support of the president and he
w ill remnln us lon g as he
wants.”
Howard Phillips, heud of the
Conservative Caucus, smiled
when he was told the words of
support for Shultz.
"Thai's good news.” he said.
"You always endorse someone
Just before you get ready to
dump him."
There Is no Indication Reagan
will get rid of Shullz. who he
seems to view as a devoted team
player. But there Is plenty of
dissatisfaction with the secretary
outside Ihe White House
In C o n g re s s . H ou se c o n ­

servatives Iasi month overrode
Stute Department opposition to
what they considered lo be
anti communist amendments to
the foreign aid bill.
In J u n e . 52 R e p u b lic a n s
signed a letter asking Shultz to
uppeur before the House Re­
publican Conference to answer
criticism of his stewardship.
Thus far. he has declined, citing
scheduling conflicts
D a v id F u n d e r b u r k , a m ­
bassador to Rumania from 1981
to earlier this year, said In
explaining the line that foes of
Shu ltz have drawn between
Reagan and the secretary of
state:
"Reagan has done a lot of
things domestically that con­
servatives are pleased with But
Shultz Is the titular head of
See SHULTZ, page 8A

G e o rg e S h u lt i

. .. c a lle d 'I n e p t
foreign p olicy'

v ic a r

of

1 wo of lour lamllles living al a
condominium In Hidden Vlllagr
at the Crossings near !.ake Mary
have tem porarily abandoned
t h e ir homes as a potential
sinkhole developed and ground
beneath the building settled
three to four Inches.
The two remaining families
are out of town on business.
S im ln o le C ounty Building
Director Don Fllppen said that
99 cubic yards o f grout, a type of
concrete, was dumped Friday
Into what a spokesman for thr
developer called a "crack In thr
soil" extending from Ihe yard of
the building through the con­
c r e te slab u n d e rn e a th the
eight-unit apartment building
The grout disappeared Into the
depression and more fill materi­
als are expected to be pumped in
Monday, according to Sam Con-

Igllo of Del American Properties
Inc.. Casselberry
Conlgllo said 200 cubic yurds
or more of grout may l&gt;c used
before thr crack Is sealed
” 1 wish we knew exactly how
deep It Is." he said
Fllppen said engineers from
U n iv e rs a l Testin g and
Engineering Laboratories. O r­
lando. Friday were drilling and
testing thr soli at 948 Bird Bay
Court trying to determine the
depth o f the crack and ihr
stability of the soil
T h r en gin eerin g firm was
scheduled to return lo Ihe pro
prrty for m ore drilling and
testing Monday. Fllppen said
A security guard Is patrolling
Ihc developm ent aruund thr
clock to keep sightseers uway.
See SINK

page 8A

Sanford M a n Convicted Of M u rd e rin g Wife A t W ork
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W rite r
Basil Green d ld n l seem surprised Friday
when a Seminole Couniy Circuit Court Jury
found him guilty of shooting his wife to
death.
As the second-degree murder verdict was
read. Green. 28. ol 301 E 5th St.. Sanford,
slowly moves his clasped hand from behind
him to the truck of a chair In front of him
und then glanced at co-prosecutor Tom
Hastings.
Green could receive up to life In prison
when sentenced by Circuit Judge Robert B.
JttcGrrgor Sept. 13 for the death of Ruby
IHyerly Green. 28. of 1200 W Hlh St..
Sanford.
Green wus charged with flrst-degrec
tnurder but the jury opted lo find him guilty

of the lesser charge. According to stale law,
second degree murder ts not a premeditated
crime, although It carries a possible life
sentence. First-degree m urder requires
premeditation and Is punishable by death or
ilfe In prison. In Green's cose, however.
Hastings and Semlnolc-Brcvard Stale At­
torney Norm Woltlnger were not seeking Ihe
death penalty. If sentenced to life in prison.
Green would not be eligible for parole for 25
years.
In hla defense. Green argued that hr was
an abused spouse, that his wife used drugs,
and threatened to liave him killed if lie did
not comply with her sexual demands. He
testified that he did not remrmber shooting
his wife.
According to court records and testimony.
Mrs Green was working at SAH Fabricating

and Engineering. 2660 Jewett Lane. San­
ford. when Green entered the company on
Feb 25 around 4:30 p.m . about an hour
after he quit a Job at the same company
because of on-the-job arguements with hla
wife.
Witnesses said Green walked over to his
wile and shot her In the back with a
.25-cullber handgun She turned, fell face up
on the floor whereupon Green leaned over,
said something, then shot her twice In the
chest.
After the shooting. Green turned, and still
carrying the pl»-.ol. walked out of the
building. A Sanford police officer located
Green at the northwest corner of the plant.
He was still holding the pistol at the time.
Mn» Green bled lo death when the third
bullet ripped through her aorta

•

„ ,• .

TODAY

Business.............
Classifieds..........
C om ics................
E d ito ria l.............
P e o o le ................ .......... 1-3C Weather

......
5D
..........1-4B
........... 5C

M o n C h a r g e d W ith S h o w i n g H it 'C m le ttla l' B o d y
About 15 lair night diners at thr Vlllagr Restaurant and truck
stop near the Farmers Market on French Avenue In Sanford got
more for their money than they expected Friday. Shortly before
midnight a man shocked the diners when he got up from Ills
seat, dropped his pants and "shot the m oon." police said
Charged with disorderly Intoxication was Edward Ralph
Maslngalr. 29. of 226 W. 19th St.. Sanford. He was released from
custody early Saturday on 9100 bond
.

+

•*» A-

�2A— Evonmg Msr*»d, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Aug. 4, 1W

NATION
IN BRIEF
Policeman Criticizes State
For Dropping Child Sox Charges
ST. PAUL. Minn. (CJPIJ — The slate had an excellent case
against some of fhc 24 adults charged with child sex abuse
In Scotl County and should not have dropped charges
against them, a Jordan police officer testified.
Ofricrr Larry Norrlng made the charge Friday during a
hearing held to ronslder whether Scott County Attorney
Kathleen Morris should be ousted for her handling of the
rase, centered In the river town of Jordan.
Hut Norrlng agreed with n defense attorney that Ihe child
victims werr "v e r y upm l" by having to tesllfy In one trial
and that therapists did not believe they could go through
the ordeal again.
A three-member commission named by Gov. Kudy
Perplrh Is holding a hearing on a petition by a fotmer
defendant In the case to remove Morris from ofTlce. The
prill Ion accused Morris of malfeasance.
The hearing recessed late Friday and was scheduled to
resume Monday.
Morris charged 24 adults with more than &gt;100 counts of
sexually abusing 40 children. James Rud. a Jordan trash
hauler, pleaded guilty, and one couple stood trial and was
arqullted.
Morris then dropped charges against 21 others, saying
she wanted to avoid a judge s order to turn ovrr documents
she said could Jeopardize another case.

5 Dead In Head-On Trains Crash
WESTMINSTER. Colo. (Ill'll — Firefighters today hosed
down the twisted, smoldering wreckage of two freight
trains that collided head-on In a deafening exp'oslon.
killing five crewm en and collapsing a bridge carrying a
major hlghwuy.
The crash occurred about 7:30 p.m. Friday beneath an
overpass carrying U.S. 30. the main Drnver-Boulder artery.
Ileal from the fire or the force of the collision buckled the
bridge, and a State Patrol officer said that section of the
highway would "b e shut down Indefinitely."
Illll Joplin, a Hwrllngton Northern spokesman on the
scene, confirmed live crew members died In the crash. He
said tlitre of the dead were In Ihe rnglne of the northbound
train and two were aboard ihe southbound train.

Montgomery Ward Drops Catalog
CHICAGO (t il’ll — Montgomery Word Ar Co., the nation's
sixth largest general merchandising ( halt), is Junking Its
famed catalog and going out o f Ihe mall order business,
bringing an end to an era dial began In IH72 when Ihe
store was founded.
Ward's raining business has been on the decline, losing
•270 million since 1070. and ban forced company officials
to fix'd* rnr|x&gt;rotr and llnanrlal resources on a chain of
contemporary specialty stores.
The closing of Ihe catalog business mrans a loss of about
5.000 Job*.
Montgomery Ward will Issue Us flnul catalog In
December.

No More O n The Nose
WASIIINOTON (DPI) — The W h ile House damped a
news blackout on Information about Die skin Irritation on
President Rrugun's nose, saying reporters had made a
mountain nut nl a molehill
Deputy press secretary Larry Sja-akes refused to answer
any more questions Friday concerning (hr removal of a
skin Irritation Iroin die president's nose.
He declined In say whether a biopsy dud been (xrformed
lo determine II cancer was present

Families Not Being Asked , Doctors Write

Organ Donations Often Blockedj
By Reluctance Of Hospital Staff
EJOSTON IUPI) - The fears
and superstitions o f hospital
staff are preventing the healthy
organs of braln*dead paUents
from getting to thane who need
them, said n report released
today.
Even when people have signed
organ donor cards authorizing
medical personnel to remove
their organs If they are pro­
nounced brain dead, hospital
personnel will not do so without
the permission o f the patient's
family. Those families are Just
not betng asked, according to the
report.
‘ ‘ P a s s i n g l a w s and
establishing clear-cut require­
ments will not necesoarlly solve
the problem." said Dr. Stuart J.
Youngner, a psychiatrist writing
In lhr N e w E n g l a n d J o u r n a l of

M e d icin e. "W e also have to deal

with the feelings of superstition,
prejudice or understandable re­
actions."
Although about 20.000 Am er­
icans die each year In ways that
make them Ideal candidates for
organ donors, only 2.500 pa­
tients donate their organs.
Tens of thousands o f people
with kidney failure await kidney
transplants and many people
with falling hearts and livers
watt as thetr lives slip away for
lack of donor organs.
It Is estimated that 50.000
people are awaiting transplants.
Youngner said Inadequate at­
tention Is paid to the feelings of
p e o p le perform in g th e p ro ­
cedure.
In Ihe article, Youngner and

seven other authors make five
recommendations for alleviating
the organ shortage.
—Provide education. The staff
should understand thal human
death and brain death are syn­
onymous.
—Recognize the legitimacy of
emotional upset and provide
appropriate support
— Protect Inexperienced or
otherwise vulnerable staff. Staff
members who do not want to
participate should nol be made
lo do so.
—Consideration for families.
Fam ily m em b ers should be
given the opportunity to see
their loved ones after Ihe organs
have been taken, the machines
and tubes have been discon­
nected. all life functions have
ceased, and the loved ones seem

to be at peace.
—Establish new rituaLs and
practices appropriate for this
new class of dead patients.
Youngner said the situallori
could be Improved Immensely If
hospitals and organ donatlori
groups give lectures to hospital
staff and provide counseling
when needed.
"What you read In the general,
literature are all of the positive
aspects about organ
transplants." said Martha Allen!
a head nurse at University How
pltals In Cleveland and a coi
author of the paper. "Moat pen!
pie haven't given consideration
to the psychological and moral
considerations o f staff, patients
and families Involved In organ
donations,"

50 % O f Cases Fatal

AIDS Spreading
Through Europe
A TLA N TA (UPI| Federal
health officials say the AIDS
epidemic sweeping the United
Slates has also spread to Europe,
where more than I,COO cases
were reported In t7 nations on
both sides of the Iron Curtain.
The World Health Organiza­
tion. In a report released by Ihe
natlonul Centers for Disease
Control, said 940 cases were
reported In Europe us of March
31 nnd Ihe number was climbing
at a rate of 14a week.
Half of Ihe victim s have died,
the CDC said
"T h e AIDS epidem ic continues
lo sprrud In Europe,” the World
Health Organization said in a
report to the CDC.
" A total of 468 deaths were
reported for the 940 cases — a
rase fatality rate o f 50 perrrnt,"
WHO said, "rlfty-tw o percent o(
the AIDS patients diagnosed one
year ugo and HO percent of those
diagnosed Ihrre yearn ago have
died,”
In the United Slates, where the
incidence of acquired immune
deficiency syndrome la much
worse, there have been 12.007
cases of AIDS and 0.079 deaths
as of July 29. Ihe CIX,’ said
The U S. death rate from AIDS
reached 50 percent last June In
the last week o f July, the CDC
received rr[xirts o f 190 newly
diagnosed AIDS cases In the

United States, or 2H a day.
Th e disease was reported tn
both East and West Hloc nations.
In clu d in g Austria. H rlgiu m ,
C z e c h o s lo v a k ia . D e n m a rk .
Finland. France. Wesf Germany.
G r e e c e . Icelan d . Ita ly , the
Netherlands. Norway. Poland.
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and
Great Britain.
But the Incidence of new cases
was highest In France. Great
Britain and West Germany.
France reported 47 new cases
since the beginning of the year,
or three to four a week; Great
Britain had 32. or two to three a
week; and West Germany had
27. or two to three a week.
AIDS ts caused try a virus that
destroys the body's immune
system and leaves It prey to a
host o f diseases The virus Is
spread hy sexual contact and
through blood and b lood pro­
ducts.
Not all of Ihr European cases
originated there, ihe WHO said,
listing 124 eases that begun In
IH A fric a n countries an d 32 that
sta rted In Ih e Caribbean.

The WHO said AIDS eases
related to Ihe blood clotting
factor given hemophilia pallents
or to blood Iransluslons werr
also Increasing In Europe, with
cases among hemophilia pa­
tterns bring reported lu seven
Euro|rran enuntrirs

Brick Toss Aftermath
Rosa Lee Freeney looks out through the broken panes of a
window of her apartment, 06 Cowan-Moughton Terrace*
Sanford, F rid a y . Windows w ere broken out e a rly Thursday
In the Santord Housing Authority com plex by brick-throwing
vandals. Windows were also broken at her daughters'
apartments, nos. 19 and 27, and at H iggins Terrace
Apartments as well. P olice have made some arrests In
connection with brick-throwing violen ceat the com plexes.

Thieves M ake Off With $5,615 In Tools From Construction Site
Thieves struck In a big way,
removing over $5,000 In tools
front u conslruction stir between
Th u rsd a y night uml Friday
morning.
A Seminole C ounty sherlirs
report said 13 pneumatic nail
guns and one pnnim alic staple
gun were stolen hum a con­
sl run Ion Iraller at Drrntwixxt
Condominiums, located ai Hie
Intersection ol Red Hug and
l Todd toads In Casselberry.
lore Emil Poppa, a construc­
tion supervisor (or Hie llcstc Co.,
lold a deputy that lire tools arc
valued at $5.(115.
A sheriff's report said the
llilrvrs entered the trailer by
kuix kingoul a window.
Poppa lold police the tools
were placed In the trailer 9.30
p.m Thursday and were discov­
ered missing al M 30 a m . Friday.
Deputies found fingerprints In
the trailer and un Investigation is
underway, the report said
BURGLARIES «l THEFTS
Jewelry, tlrranrts. a camera, a
tapepluyrr ami other Items will)
a total value o f $2,350 were
stolen hum the home of Ulysses
C u n n in g h a m . 52 , o f 3004
Washington St.. Midway, on
Friday, a sheriffs rejxirt said,
Bruce C. Harter. 3H. o f 4984
Courlluiut Loop, Winter Springs,
lold deputies 10 tiottlra of liquor,

a ski Jacket and u propeller with
a total value of $400 werr stolen
hum tils home treiwern July 21
and Thursday.
A $500 television was slolrn
from the home o f Hetty Hrcxiks.
39. of 310 Magnolia St., Alta­
monte Springs, Thursday, depu­
ties reported.
A thief look the purse of Jewel
Elaine Simmons, 3H. of 100
Central St.. Altamonte Springs,
horn tier home on Monday or
Tursday. Deputies rrporird the
purse contained aboul $150.
About $1,000 worth of Items.
Including a television, w ere
stolen from the model home of
Kyun H om es, Inc. at 5651
Gurdcn G rove Circle. Winter
Park. The theft occurred Mon­
day. a c c o rd in g to a rep ort
salesman Robert 0, Park filed
with deputies.
A $35 emergency road kit and
a .22-callbcr revolver were stolen
horn the car of William R
Nomood. 41. of 417 Beth Drive.
Sanford, on Monday or Tuesday,
a sheriffs report said.
D EPU TY BEES SLAP
A man who allegedly hit his
wife In the face while a Seminole
County Sheriff's deputy who has

14th St.. Apopka.

Action Reports

B U O K E Y C A R

One of two men Sanford Police
spotted In a parked cur where
* Fire s
police tx-llcved marijuana wus
being smoked has been charged
★ C ourts
with possession of less than 20
★ P o lic e
grams of (xtl und possession
with intent to deliver.
Police reported sm ellin g a
been called to settle a domestic burning odor coming from the
disturbance watched has been cur parked at Starke Park on 5lh
churged with battery.
Street ul about 1,30a.m. Friday.
The deputy reported as he
The suspect got out of the car
approached the home at 802 and In a search police reported
Pine St.. Sanford, Kathy Bell. 30. finding a purtlally smoked pot
and the suspect came to the cigarette and five envelopes of
front of the house. The two were pot tn his car.
arguing and the deputy said the
Rodney Marshall HlUsman. 20.
man slapped Mrs. Bell In the of Castle Brewer Court. Sanford,
face.
was being held In lieu of $5,000
Jesse Bell J r . 25. o f 1402 W
bond.
11th St.. Sanford, was arrested
HOMEGROWN H ARVEST
at 7:45 a m. Thursday. He was
A Seminole County sheriffs
betng held In lieu of $500 bond.
deputy who spotted what he
believed to be a marijuana plant
FIGHT W A T TO JA IL
Tw o men reportedly fighting on the property of a Sanford
In the parking lot o f Club 436. man reported Ihe find to drug
Lake Howell Road. Altamonte task force agents, who reported
Springs, have been churged with finding three plants at the man s
affray und were being held In home and arrested him.
Agents unned with u search
lieu o f $500 each.
The pair were nabbed at about warrant found the 4 frail plants
1:10 a m Frlduy by Seminole und arrested the suspect ut
about 6:30 p.m. Thursday, a
County sheriffs deputies.
Arrested were! Duvtd Lester sheriffs report said. The plants
Barnes. 21. o f 312 Teakwood were confiscated.
Thom as L. Herbert. 30. uf
Lane, Altamonte Springs, and
Wendel J. Calller, 28. ol 323 W. Route 2. 64A Richmond Ave.,

Cheyenne Recovering From Floods That Killed At Least 12
Plains storms packing winds Cheyenne were 5 (eel deep and
o( nearly 100 mj&gt;h Hooded roads hull drifts were up to 10 feel
und homes w Itli up tu 4 Inches of high At least 12 people were
ruin tu Nebraska today, while killed. Including a sheriffs depu­
Cheyenne, Wyo began lo rrcov- ty who died trying to rescue a
rr from llootls that killed at least child from a submerged vehicle,
12 people
AR EA FORECAST: Saturday
Thuiidersiomis In the nulIon’s
nildsectlon raged Unlay tn North mostly cloudy Scattered mainly
Dakota Iowa. Montunu, New ultcrtioon thunderstorm*. High
Mexico und Nebraska, where around 90. Light wind. Ruin
chance 50 percent Sunday vari­
Hood warnings were ponied
In Cheyenne. oHIctats said It able cloudiness Chance o f af­
was InijMHMlhle lo estlmulr the ternoon and even in g th u n ­
damage from u storm Thursday derstorms. Low in low to tnld
night that dunijK-d 6 Inches ul 70s. High around 90. Light
rain and large hall. Floods In wind. Rain chance 20 percent

Saturday night
Sunday.

and 40 percent

AREA READINOB |9 a.m.J:
temperature; 79; overnight low:
74; Friday’s high: 91; barometric
pressure: 30 03. relultve humidi­
ty: 87 percent; winds: north at 0
mph; ruin: .03 Inch; sunrise:
0 :4 8 a m .sunset 8:18 p m.
SUNDAY T ID E S: Daytons
Beach: highs. 11:25 a m . I t 47
p.m.: lows. 307 u.m , 5 :19 p.m.:
P o rt C aaavsrnl: highs. 11:17
a.m., 11:39 p in : lows. 4 58
a.in.. 5:10p tn.: B a y p o rt: hlgtu.
4:16 a m.. 3 58 p.m.; lows. 10:12

a.m.. 1046 p.m.
M ONDAY TIDES: Daytona
Baach: highs. 12 08 a m.. 12 24
p.m.: lows. 5 47 a m . 6 04 p m.:
Port Canaveral! highs. 12 00
u.m.. 12:10 pin.: lows, 5:38
a in . 5:55 p in . Bayport: highs.
4:38 a.m.. 4:35 p.m.; lows. 10:51
a m .. 11:09 pin.
BO A T IN G FORECAST! St
Augustine lo Jupiter Inlet out 50
mtlrs — Wind variable 5 to 10
knots Suturday becoming east
around 10 knots tonight unu
Sunday. Sea 2 (ret or teas. Wind
and sea higher near w idely
scattered thunderstorms.

has b e e n c h a r g e d w i t h
m an u factu rin g a co n tro lle d
substance and possession of
more than 20 grams of mari­
juana He was being held In lieu
of $5,000 bond
G UARD PUNCH ED
A Sanford man arrested by
(Miller for disorderly Intoxication
allegedly punched a Seminole
County jail guard after the tnltal
arrest and had a charge of
1m Uery added
The man wus arrested after
refusing a Sanford police order
to leave the parking tot of Uncte
Nick's Oyster Bar. Park Avenue,
at about 3 a.m. Friday.
While betng booked Into the
Jail the su sp ect rep orted ly
became disruptive and banged
on a table with his Hsts. a police
report said.
Corrections officer Thomas
Price attempted to put the susjxet Into a holding cell at the Jail
and the man allegedly punched
Price In the eye, bruising his
face, the report said
The battery charge was added
ami Jorge Charles Councils, 27,
of 3416 Sanford Ave.. was being
held In lieu o f $8.100 bond.
MAJOR M OVIE THEFT
A burglar who broke through
Ihe wall of a neighboring busi­
ness to enter Movie Review.
3828 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford,
got away with $20,000 worth of

HOSPITAL
NOTES

l U i P l 411 I M I

S u n d a y . A u g u s t 4, IM S
V o l 77. N o 796

FrtOar

Pub'.Oted Daily tn 4 Sunday, n c t fl
Mfurdiy Sy rite Santera HorsM.
In*. MS N. Fronch A** , Witter*.
f m . urn

A D M IlD O M t

Robin W W illia m ton
Goratemo Z a c Vary
M :l«&gt;a* H B a a rd D a llo n a
L ClauOt Cutter. O otten*

lantoni

Vantend

k o t e C lio Poll**# Pate si Muter*.

d iic h a s o ii

ttephonteJ B w rka
l M ite C C h a p m a n
It e it a C G ood
Viola te H otter
C attan dra V M a n n in g
D iana M W a n t
Jattte L H u g n a t Longw ood
C a tta n d ra M
P ln k n o r and b a t r

video taped movies.
Sanford Police C h ief Steve
Hurrictt said the thief broke Into
Used Hook World and kicked $
hole In the south wall to enter
Movie Review between 7 p.m!
W e d n e s d a y and 9 :2 0 a.m,
Thursday,
Movie Review owner Brian Ik
Donaldson. 30, of Deltona, re­
ported the break-in and Harriett
said no fingerprints were found
at the scene.
DU1 AR R ESTS
The following [»eraon* have
been a rre sted tn S em ln olg
County on a charge of driving
under the Influence:
— Dallas Wright. 33. of Deltona,
wits arrested at 2:30 a.m. Friday
after driving erratically an Party
Drive. Sanford. He was also
charged for failure to appear on $
previous DUI charge.
—Thomas Troy Boemer, 19, o(
524 Lombardy Road. Winter
Springs, at 1:35 a.m. Friday
after he was found asleep tn his
car with the engine running. Th«
car was parked across a sidewalk
on N. A ld erw o o d S treet In
Winter Springs He was also
charged with failure to carry hla
driver's license.
—Jeffrey Allen William. 22, of
P.O. Box 640. Geneva, at 2:30
a.m. Friday on State Road 46,
west of Sanford, after hts car was
Involved In an accident.
t

E v e n in g Ilc iu J d

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�W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Blacks Plan Mass Funeral
To Defy Ban On Demonstrations
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa |UPI) - Anti-apartheid
activists vowed to defy new government orders against
mass burials at a funeral today for IS victims of recent
violence In Port Elizabeth.
Government rules announced earlier this week ordered
only one burial at a time In the 36 areas covered by a state
of emergency Imposed by President Pieter Botha. The July
21 decree was aimed at halting racial violence which has
killed some 500 blacks In the past 10 months.
Slcelo Lutywantsl. local secretary o f the Congress of
South African Students, said the services today would be
held Indoors at the Apostolic Church In the Zwlde
township and mourners would lie taken to the graveside by
bus — concessions to the new regulations
But he said burying the victims singly "would take six
months" and "despite all restrictions we are going to have
a funeral for 15 people.”
Organizers said they expected 10.000 mourners at the
services.
Mass funerals have attracted crowds o f up to 60.000 and
have become a platform for militant black opposition to
apartheid, the system of Institutionalized racial segregation
of the whlle-inlnortty government.

Contras: 'We Are Reagan's Cubs'
MANAGUA. Nicaragua IUPI) — Contra rebels, shouting
"W e are Reagan's cubs." attacked a nonhem city In the
first such utleinplcd takeover In four years of civil -.var.
Nicaraguan authorities said.
Members of the U.S.-financed Nicaraguan Democratic
Front, or FDN. fighting to overthrow the six-year-\Jd
Sandlnlsta government, stormed La Trinidad, 72 miles
northwest of Managua. In the Estell province Friday. They
were thrown back by Sandlnlsta troops
The contras began the attack Thursday morning and
spent almost a day fighting In and around the town of some
14.000 Inhabitants, authorities said.
The defense ministry said that four rebel task forces —
some 1.000 contras In all — took part In the offensive.
Civilian militiamen and government reinforcements
arrived In La Trinidad und repelled the FDN attack, a
Defense Ministry statement said. Slxty-one guerrillas were
reported killed In the fighting
Al least 18 Sandlnlsta
troops died, as well us nn undetermined number of
civilians, the report said.

Police Killed Communists?
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) — Gen Rodolfo Statige was
Installed as chief o f the national police and as a member of
the military Junta as President Gen. Augusto Pinochet
threatened "drastic measures" to maintain order.
Pinochet appointed Slangc btte Friday to replace Gen.
Cesar Mendoza, who resigned after a court Investigation
this week Implicated 14 police officers — Including two
colonels — In the murder of three Communist Party leaders
In March.
Troops armed with automatic weapons patrolled San­
tiago Friday night after a day of violent demonstrations In
the etty center w h ere h u n d re d s o f p e o p le sh o u te d
' ‘ murderers" at riot poliee,

Evening Hrr jid . Sanford. FI

2-Cent Tax
D istribution
Form ula
Uncertain
By Donna Bates
Herald Staff W riter
A 2-centa-per-gallon gasoline
tax. expected to bring Seminole
county $2 million annually for
road construction. Is staled for
official approval by the county
commission Tuesday.
But It will be Aug. 13 before a
resolution Is adopted showing
how that money will be shared
by the county and the cities.
C ou n ty A d m in is tr a to r K en
Hooper said.
Hooper said the cause of the
delay Is uncertainty at the state
Department o f Revenue on the
exact formula for distribution of
the funds. W hen the state
authorized counties to levy a
4-ccnts-per gallon gasoline tax In
1982. the law called for percent­
ages of the revenue to the county
and the cities to be determined
by the amount of money each
had spent for road tmprovr
ments In the previous five years,
exclusive o f funds received from
gasoline taxes.
Hooper tudd the state agency
has not responded lo a county
request on whether the gasoline
tax receipts are to be figured to
determine percentages for the 2
cent distribution. Hr added,
however, he believes the formula
probably will not Include gaso­
line tax receipts
The deadline for designating
the method of sharing the reve­
nue m-'st be adopted by Aug. 15
and action on thr I3lh will meet
this d ead lin e. Hooper said
Motorists tn Seminole will start
paying the new tax on Sept. I
While the new lax Is not
expected to become olflrlal until
Tuesday, the county commis­
sioners have made no secret that
they Intended to levy It.
During workshops in earlyJuly anticipated revenues from
the tax were Included In the
p rop osed b u d g et for fis c a l
1985-86 and the county's cities
were asked to endorse the lax
and to agree to a spill of the
p ro c ee d s to g u a ra n te e th r
county 65 percent of the reve­
nues, The cttlrs were also asked
to agree that the percentages of
the revenues turned over to the
cities would change each year
dependent upon how much each
had spent for road Im prove­
ments.

Sunday. Aug 4. 1»M— 3A

GOOD SUNDAY. AUGUST 4- MONDAY. AUGUST 5- TUESDAY. AUGUST 6
AND WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1965 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

TOP QUALITY FRESH

P o rk B u tts

CALIFORNIA WHITE

T h e c itie s o f W in ter S p rin g s
and A lta m o n te S p rin gs a g reed

F LO R ID A
IN BRIEF
You M ay Soon Be A b le To Get
Driver's License A t D rug Store
C LEARW ATER (UPlI The slate Department of
Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles and Jack Eckcrd Corp.
have agreed to participate In a lest program aimed at
making ll easier on Floridians to renew driver's licenses.
James Sewell, director of management and planning lor
the department, says driver's license bureaus will tie set up
In two Eckcrd drug stores In Pinellas County this month,
but said he did not know which slorcs would be Involved.
Sewell said If the test Is successful, the state may open
driver's license branches at Eckrrd slorcs In other counties
where there arc long lines at the driver’s license offices.
Tom Hlllstrom. spokesman for ihc department In
Tallahassee, said the bureaus tn the two stores will In­
stalled by slate personnel.
He said the bureaus will be for use only by people
renewing licenses, and those with fairly clean driving
records Drivers with suspended or revoked licenses, or
those needing road tests still will have lo go to a state
branch.

Governor Sued Over School Bill
TALLAHASSEE (UPJI — House Speaker James Harold
Thompson has asked the Supreme Court to settle a dispute
with Gov. Bob Graham over u $232 million school
construction hill.
The row over the Public Education Capital Outlay bill ts
parity over Ihc $5 8 million In projects Graham used line
item vetoes to kill.
Bui Thompson believes the Issue goes beyond the
projects themselves (o Ihc const 11ut tonal line separating
(he powers of (he governor and Ihc Legislature.
Thompson said Friday that the state constitution limits
line Item vetoes lo grncrul appropriation bills only. The
1985 Legislature passed (he Public Education Capital
Outlay bill separately from Its main state spending plan.
Graham argued In killing the projects on June 14 that
his power to veto Individual Items tn budget bills Is
Intended to prevent legislative logrolling. He said that
unless his line Hem veto authority extends to all budget
bills, legislators could evade that check on their power by
splitting the stale budget Into 5 .5 0 or more separate bills.

Gun-Toting Dogcatcher Charged
LEESBURG (UPI) — Public outcries of rage have led to
the resignation and filing ot animal cruelty charges against
a dogcatcher who is accused of killing a handicapped boy's
pet poodle.
If he It convicted. Doug Berwick, 33. who has admitted
shooting and killing about 30 stray pels during hts four
years us a dogcatcher. would face a maximum penalty of
one year tn Jail, a $5,000 fine or both, state attorney’s
Investigator Bruce Haldeman satd Friday.
Haldeman said Berwick shot an B-yeur-old poodle
belonging to Billy Vickery, a youngster who Is bedridden
because of a birth defect.
"Hts action ts clearly a violation of state statutes." said
Haldeman
Police Chief Jim Brown suspended Berwick for five days
wltltmil pay and recommended he be transferred after the
shooting was revealed. But public protest grew and
Berwick resigned.
I

but the other five cities rrfused.
Meanwhile, adoption of a reso­
lution setting a "vo lu n ta ry "
Impact fee on new construction
for road building and Improve*
ments. which was schcduLd for
adoption Tuesday, has also been
delayed. Hooper said.
Hr said County Attorney Nikki
Clayton Is on vacation so the
resolution setting thr fees has
not been prrparrd for consid­
eration by the commissioner*.
Thr voluntary frrs. Informally
upprovrd by commissioners at
workshops with thr concurrence
of representatives of developers,
are $5 per square foot for
housing units and $1.50 per
square foot for commercial dev­
elopment Th r voluntary fre ts
expected lo remain In effect until
an ordinance setting permanent
fees ts adopted within the next
12 months.
While thr two gasoline taxes
— the 4-cents-per-gallon adopted
In 1982 and th r the new
2-cents-per-gallon — Is expected
to bring the county commission
about $4 million annually for
road Im p ro v e m e n ts . P u b lic
W orki Director Larry Sellers
estimates the voluntary Impart
fees will total $2 million In
revenue for a total of $6 million
per year.
The problem o f road neetls Is
still greater than thr revenues
from these tw o sources can
solve. Sellers said

P ills b u r y F lo u r
5 LB BAG- PLAIN OR SELF RISING

BES1

xxxx

*Flour

T o w e ls
3 ROLLS

Senior V o lu n te e rs
S e e k in g M e m b e rs
If you are 60 years of age or
older and would like to get
Involved In our community, the
Retired Senior Volunteer Pro­
gram has many openings for
meaningful volunteer service.
Help Is especially needed at
the Information desks of the
S h e riffs Department. Health
Department, County Services
Building and the Courthouse.
Another special need Is for
volunteers to help In nutritional
education. No special qualifica­
tions are needed. Training will
be provided by the agricultural
extension agent.
For Information on these and
other volunteer opportunities,
please call the RSVP office.
327-2151.

suptn ttaoHG tO W tl*

HALF POUND
OLD FASHION

German
Style
B o lo g n a
IN THE DELIBAKERY DEPT

SANFORD. 2944 ORLANDO ROAD, ZAYRE PLAZA AT
THE CORNER OF 17-92 A ORLANDO ROAD
C A LL TO LL r a n

1-aStM-MZI

l

�&lt;A — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

Sunday. Aug. 4, INS

Seminole Self-Reliant Housing
Gets Boost With Federal Funds
By Donna Estes
Herald S taff W riter
A Farmers Home Adminis­
tration grant of $1(11,700 Isas
been aw arded to Sem inole
Self-Reliant Mousing Inc, to
help 30 low Income families
build their own homes In
Oviedo.
The two-year-old - firm has
assisted 33 fa m ilies build
homes In the Oviedo area since
11183 and all nre now com­
pleted and occu pied. A .A .
•’ Mac" McC'lanahan. executive
director o f Ihc organization,
said
The average cost of con­
stru ctin g those homes, flnane'ed by the Farmers Home
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , was
$31,121.70 and the market
value of each Is $45,000. MeClanahan Mild.

legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N olle* l* htrtby g iv e n that I
i m engaged In b v tln e tk ■ ! * K 0
B ryant A v *
South. Sanford,
Sem ineif County. F lo r id * u n d o
the Ik t lllo u t n * m * of E N E H G Y
C O N S E R V A T IO N L I G H T I N G
and that I Inland to r e g u la r taid
n a m * with tt» C la rk ol th*
C ircu it Court, S a rn ln o l* County.
F lo rid * In a c c o rd a n t * with tho
p r e v lt lo n t ot t h * F lc t lt lo u i
N * m * S tatute * T o wit Section
M S 0 * F lo rid * S t e t u '** ttS/
/*/ M a r k H ud ton
Pufellth July 1* A A u g u tt 4. II.
II. IM S
O E M IS*
F ic t it io u s n a m e
N o lle * It h *r*t)y g iv e n thel I
•m engaged In b u tln e tt *1 ZOJ
W M i h l r e O r ., C e t t e l b a r r y .
.eminole County, F lo r id * 11W
under Ihe fictitious n am e ot
D I R T Y D E E D S , en d that I
Intend to register said n a m *
with th* C le rk o l the Circuit
Court. Sarn ln ol* County, Flo rida
In acc o rd an c e w ith th* pro
vision s o l th * Fic titio u s N a m *
Statutes. To wit; Section M S Of
Flo rId e Statutes IFSt
)%' F lrm d * J H e ig h
P ub lish August *, M . II , I I . IM S

O il n
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * It tw reby g iv e n the! I
cm engaged in b u sin e ss e l &gt;1*
Lucerne D r D e B e ry . [m ailing
a d d re ss ) V o lu s ia C o u n ty .
Florida n i l ) under Itt* lictllkrut
n a m * ol G R A N N Y S A T T IC ,
and that I Inland lo register said
n a m * with th* C la rk ot th*
C ircu it Court. S a rn ln o l* County,
Flo rid a In a cc o rd a n t# with Iha
p r o v is io n s ot t h * F ic t it io u s
N a m * Statutes, t o w i l Section
kal Ot F forte* Statuses I f St
/*/ E d n a N (D o lly ) B ra d fo rd
P ub lish A u g u s t*. II, II. J» I M )

DEI It

B ig

(SEAL)
D A V ID N I S E R N I t N
A s Clark o l Ilia C ourt
tty D ia n a K Beem m ett
A s D eputy Clerk
P ub lish Ju ly la, 11, &gt;1. A ugust
a. IM S

D E M i l ______ __

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

IN T H E C I R C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY,
F L O R ID A
C A SE N O t) M i l CA M P
,N R E i T H E M A R R I A G E O F
S H A R O N G P H I L L I P S , #0t/#
SH A R O N G T E M P L IN
W ile
and
D A V I D L E E T E M P L IN .
H usband
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO D A V I D L E E T E M P L IN
A d d re ss unknow n
YO U A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an action lor
D iss o lu t io n ot M a r r ia g e h a s
bean Iliad a ga in st you end you
are required to se rve a copy ot
your written dalansat. It any, lo
It on D o n a ld L M arb lo tto n *.
E s q , wll« T attorney, w hoso
iS J eat It t&gt;; W C h u rch A v * ,
t o n g wood. F lo rid *. JUS®, on or
botor* A u g u tt IS, IM S , and II I*
the o riginal with the clerk ot this
court either before service on
w ile 's attorney or Im m ediately
thar ta lle r, other w it * a detault
w ill b * entered e g a ln sl you lor
Ih e r e lla l d e m a n d e d in t h *
Pet 11Ion
D A T E D o n Ju ly II. IM S

_

N O T IC E
OF FO R EC LO SU R E SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
pursuant to a f i n a l Judgm ent ol
foreclosure d eled Ju ly 14. A D
IM S . and an le re d In C a sa N s
a s a i l C A O f S C at the C ircu it
C ourt ol the Eightee nth Judicial
C irc u it In an d for Sem inole
C o u n t y . F l o r i d a w h e re in

(

H A R R Y R E IN A R H E A R E IN .
J/ W / R / O / f. H A R R Y R E I N , as
T r u s t * * tor H A R R Y R E I N .
M D P A P E N S I O N P L A N , and
R E T I R E M E N T , I N C . T r u st **
lor H A R R Y R E I N . U ndar T ru st
for H A R R Y M 0 R H 10 P la n
did P laintiff ... and M A R I A E.
L O N D O N O a M a r rie d W oman,
end B R U C E R O B E R T U N
D E R H I L L era Defendants I
w ill sell lo th* highest and bast
bidder lor cash In th * lobby ot
t h o C o u n t y C o u r t h o u s e In
S e m in o le County. F lo rid a a l
t l 00 o’clock A M on th* Ifth
d a y of A ug u st. A 0 . IM S. the
follow ing described property as
sa l forth In said F in a l Jud g
m an!, fo w l!
P a rc e l I, T ra c i I. all ol that
p art ot Lot la. Sen lo rd Sub sien
Hal F a r m s . Tract N o I. *c
co rd in g to th* P lat thereof as
recorde d In P le l Book S P a g e s
0 ] an d 14. P ublic R e c ord s ol
S e m l n o l * C o u n t y , F lo r i d a ,
log*then with th# Im provem ents
thereon end the natures and
e q u ip m e n t the re in contained
and w hich p re m ise s e / k i* 4 M S
C o u n try C lu b Boulevard. L a ke
M a r y , F lo rid a
D A T E D this U lh d a y ot July,
IM )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F S A I D C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y S e le n a la y a s
D ep uty C le rk
P u b lish J u ly 1*. A u g u st t. I M )
D E H 144

INTUI Ctftlm
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY,
F L O R I DA
C A S IN O s u m C A M 0
J IM M Y 0 W IL L IS e n d
N O R M A T W I L L I S , h is wit*.
»v
•
Plam siffo.
vs
-I C H A R L E S M A H O N EY . »% It
C H A R L E S E M A H O N E Y end
M A R IA N N E M A H O N E Y .

hlsw tfo.
D efendants

CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALE
Notre* is hereby g iv e n thei
p ursuan t to th* Fla n l Ju d gm e nt
In Fore c to su r* and S a t* entered
In the cause p e n d in g In th *
C i r c u i t C o u r t In e n d I p r
S E M I N O L E C o u n ty , F lo r id a
b e in g C iv il N u m b e r
• s e i f l C A ot G. tho u nd ersign ed
C le rk will sell th# p ro p e rty
Sltuotod In S E M I N O L E County.
F lo rida , d rscrib e d as;
Lo* I S . In W inter S p rin gs.
U nit 1. City o l W inter S p rin gs.
Sem inole County, F lo rid * , oc
co rd in g to in * Plot I hereof o t
recorded In Plat Book 7, p a ge s
•a and M ot th# P ub lic R e c o rd s
ot Sarnlnol* County, F lo rid a
at public sa l*, th * h ighest bidder
for ca sh at 11 00 a m , on the led
d a y of Septem ber, IM S . at th *
W att front door ot th * court
house. Sem inefo County. S a n
ford. F lo rid #
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
C la rk at th * Court
B y Selene F a y a s
D eputy C lerk
P u b lish Ju ly M . A u g u st A IM S
O E H 141

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereb y giv e n that t
a m engaged In b u sin e ss al 4700
S o u th H ig h w a y
17 S 3
C a sse lb e rry , Sem inole County,
F lo r i d # u n d e r Ih e fictitio u s
nam e ot C R O S S R O A O S P O R T S ,
an d that I Intend to register told
n am e with C le rk ot tho C ircuit
Court. Sem inole County. F lo rida
In a cc o rd a n c e with th * p ro
v isio n s at the fic titio u s N e m o
Statutes. T o W II Section 4,1 Ot
F for uto Statutes
/ s / f la M B Stafford
P u b lish Ju ly It. I I . 34 . A u g u st
a. IM )
0 4 HAS

S t ill

WASHINGTON (LTD - The ranking of the
nation’s largest 10 cities remains unchanged In
new U.S. Census Bureau population estimates,
but the figures show continued growth In the
Sunbelt.
New Yotk, t«os Angeles and Chicago continue to
be the nation's three largest cities, the bureau
said In a new report Tuesday. New York’s July 1
estimated population of 7.164.742 makes It still
twice as large as runner-up Los Angeles, with
3.096.721. Third-place Chicago has a population
of2.992.472.
While New York and Los Angeles showed
population gains over their July 1. 1982,
populations. Chicago showed a loss of nearly
5,000 people.
Fourth-place Houston, with a population of
1.705.697. also showed a drop from Its 198?
figure of 1.725.617.
The estimates are walched closely by local
officials because ihey are used In numerous
federal funds distribution programs.
Other cities In the top 10 Include Philadelphia,
with 1.646.713; Detroit. 1.088.973; Dallas.
974,234: San Diego. 960.452; Phoenix. 853.206
and San Antonio. 842.779.
Philadelphia and Detroit, while holding their
rankings, showed population losses while Dallas,
San Diego. Phoenix and San Antonio all showed
gains.
But the shift In rankings, often Involving only a
few thousand people, were most dramatic In the
eases of mid size Frost belt and Sunbelt cities.
Allentown, Pa., for example, dropped from
158th place to 1641 It place even I hough ll»
population loss was only 425 people, bringing lls
1984 population to 103.899.
Ann Arbor. Mich . dropped from 155 to 165
with a loss o f 1,000 people. Dayton. Ohio, lost a
III lie more than 7.000 people and frll from 75(h to
82nd In Ihe rankings with a 1984 (topulallon of
181,159 people.
Mesa, Arlz.. on the olhrr hand. Jumped from
89th place to 75th place with a 1984 population

Me said the 30 new homes ing and do all the palming.
will be built over an 18-month T w o co n stru ctio n s u p e rin ­
period. The first 14 will be built ten d en ts (from S elf-R elian t
H ou sin g p ro v id e w h a tev er
on Tyson Street In Oviedo.
McClanahan anticipates the advice and help Is necessary."
homes will lie built in groups of
McClanahan said construefour with Ihe first and second lion usually takes six months
groups building eight ‘homes w ith (h e o w n e rs w o rk in g
each, Ihc third seven homes basically' on Saturdays and
and the fourth eight.
Sundays and during the early
The process used by Self* evening hours after their regu­
Krltanl Is that ail the pro­ lar Jobs.
spective owners o f the first
Permanent financing Is pro­
eight homes will work together
vided by the Fanners Home
on all of I hem and so on with
Administration.
the remainder.
“ We have some openings left
"T h ey work as a team, using
whatever talent they have,*’ for this block of 30 homes.
McClanahan said. Persons with
McClanahan. "Som etim es In
group there may be roofers, an Income of $15,000 a year
carpenters und landscapers are eligible.
Dr. David Dees of Oviedo Is
and they use their talents. All
the prospective owners set the president of the non-profit
trusses, nail all the roof sheet­ corporation.

Legal Notice

A p p le

Average New House: $99,200
WASHINGTON (Ul&gt;l| - Sales of new houses,
benefiting from lower mortgage rates, slipped
only 0.1 percent In June while the average price
fell by $1,000. In $99,200. the Census Bureau
said.
The annual rate o f sales remained In the fairly
strong range, at 669,000 — 5.2 percent above a
year ago after seasonal adjustment.
At the end ot the month there were 359.000
new unsold houses on the market, about a
6,6-month supply.
The South was Ihe only rrglon to show an
Improvement In sales, 8 .H percent.

OFFICE SKILL CLASSES
(TYPING, SHORTHAND,
BOOKKEEPING, ETC)
PATTERN FITTING
TAILORING
REAL LSTATE 1
INCOME TAX 1

T A L L A H A S S E E |UI*I| Florida posted a 7 percent un­
employment rate for June, with
18,000 fewer person s working
than did one month ago.
Glenn Hobertson. Gov. Bob
G rah am 's bu dget ch ief, a t­

DRAPERY
REUPHOLSTERY
NURSE'S ASSISTANT
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
MEDICAL RECORDS
TRANSCRIPTION

TRAVEL AGENCY
WORD PROCESSING

FIRE FIGHTING

OUTBOARD ENGINEERING

FLORAL DESIGN

FOOD SERVICES

MECHANICS

PARENT/CHILD COOP

BREAO BAKING

ELECTRICAL ASSEMBLY

INFANT TODDLER LAB

ENERGY SAVING FOOD
MICROWAVE COOKING
WELDING

AUTO MACHINING

WATER/WASTE WATER
PLANT OPERATION

AUTO BODY REPAIR

ELDERLY/DISABLED
CARE

HORTICULTURE/
LANDSCAPING

ELECTRICAL WIRING
DRESS MAKER WORKSHOP

SEWING
(BASIC, INTERMEDIATE.
ADVANCED, SPECIALTY)

t. N*»Ve8
La* Angel**

3.
3.
4.
3
4

7,
i.

9
10,

O k ego
Hevtken
PWodefofoc
Oekrerl
Debt
LentXeg*
Ztioenii
SeeiAnaem*

POPULATION Change
(7-1-82)
from 1982
+0.71%
7.161.742
+ 1 13%
3.096.721
2.992.472
d 3%
1.705.697
- 5%
1.646.713
-1.75%
1.088.973
-1%
974.234
+ 421%
+ 4 41%
960.452
+ a l*%
853.266
+ 4 03%
842.779

(Source U S Cansv* Bureau)

N E A G R A P H IC

M arilyn P o t t

I
o f 193,931 and Arlington. Texas. Jumped from
77th to 70th. with a 1984 population of 213.832.
an Incrraer of nearly 30.000.
San Francisco, ranked 14ltl In 1982. assumed
the No. 13 spot with 712.753 people, a growth of
abut 21.000 over 1982. Indianapolis, which grew
by about 3.000 people to 710.280. fell to the N th
ranking.
One of the biggest Jumps was by Ontario. Calif..
In 1982 al the bottom of the 176-clty list with
96,790 people. The new census tabulations
shows that Ontario has added nearly 10,000
people and now Is the 16lat largest city In the
nation.
At the bottom of the new list Is Livonia. Mich.,
ranked 169th In 1982 wtlh a ' population of
101.366 compared to the 1984 figure of 100,363.
Rounding out the top 25 and following I Oth
place San Antonio are Honolulu. Baltimore. San
Francisco. Indianapolis. San Jose. Calif,. Mem­
phis, Term., Washington. D.C.. Milwaukee. W ls ,
Jacksonville. Fla., Boston. Columbus. Ohio, New
Orleans, Cleveland. Denver and Seattle.

Sales fell 15.4 percent In the Northeast, off 5.8
percent In the Midwest and down 3.5 percent In
the West.
The sales rate lor the first half of the year
remained above the 1984 level of 639.000 new
single-family houses but many analysts are
looking for gradual declines from now on.
Th e average price o f a new house In June was
well below the record $105,200 In April and
only 1.6 percent higher lhan last year's average.
Slightly lower rales for mortgages fueled a
mini-boom In Northeastern slates but failed lo
relgnlte the earlier healthy sales In Ihc South
and West, hard lilt by an oil-industry slump

ASSOCIATEINSCIENCE
DEGREE PROGRAMS

MARINE ENGINEERING
MECHANICS

HOME DECORATION

B IG G E S T U.S. C IT IE S

LilMtr force." Robertson said
The Florida Joblessness rule
remained below the national
tributed the Increased Jobless average, which held steady at
7.3 percent. The state figure In
ness to u “ growth recession."
"A ll thut means 1st our growth May was 6.9 percent — Ihe same
Is continuing after the 1981- as in June. 1984.
Of the 11 la r g e s t . sVtrtess,
lOH'J recession hut It’s not at the
Florida ranked 5th In terms «r
strength to be able to accom­
modate the p e o p l e Joining the Joblessness. Robertson said.

EMERGENCY MEDICAL
TECHNICIAN

CHILD DAY CAR!

B ig g e s t

Florida Jobless Up Slightly

ONEYEARCERTIFICATE VOCATIONAL-TECHNICAL
EDUCATION COURSES
PROGRAMS
CHILD DEVELOPMENT
DATA PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY
DRAFTING TECHNOLOGY
ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY
INDUSTRIAL MANAGLMENT TECHNOLOGY

T he

AIR CONDITION/
REFRIGERATION

AUTO MECHANIC

INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS

AUTOMOTIVE SERV. TECH.
ALLIED HEALTH &amp; MEDICAL SERVICES
TECHNOLOGY (PARAMEDIC)
CHILD DEVELOPMENT
CRIMINAL JUSTICE TECHNOLOGY
DATA PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY
DISTRIBUTIVE MID-MANAGEMENT
ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
CONSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGY
ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY
INDUSTRIAL MID-MANAGEMENT
MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
FASHION
FIRE SCIENCE
FOOD SERVICE MANAGEMENT
INTERIORS
SECRETARIAL SCIENCE
NURSING

MANY VOCATIONAL PROGRAMS
ALLOW REGISTRATION
THROUGHOUT THE TEAR

CARPENTRY

TERM I REGISTRATION IS UNDERWAY
CLASSES START AUGUST 26
Contact the Admissions Office For Schedules and Other Information.

SEMINOLE COUMMUNITY COLLEGE
SA N F O R D , F L O R ID A 32771

(* 0 S ) 323-1450 (SE M IN O L E CO.)

843-7001 (O RLAN DO )

A N E Q U A L A C C E S S/ E Q U A L O PPO RTU N ITY C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E
&lt;

�Evening H .r.ld , Sanford. FI.

Sunday. Aug. 4, IttS— JA

20 Y e a rs A fte r Riots, D e sp a ir Still P la g u e s W atts
w

B y A u r e llo R o ja s
L O S A N G E L E S |U PI | —
Twenty yearn after the riots In
\Vatts. that black community
;Vemalns largely shrouded In
•despair.
^ In fact, living conditions have
deteriorated. In Ihe view o f some
black leaders, with new His
com p ou n din g the intractable
social and economic problems
that have long plagued Watts.
&gt; Gang violence and drug ad­
diction. relatively minor con­
cerns In 1965, have Induced fear
In a community that has long
struggled with poverty.
"In 1965, at least you could
leave your housr without wor­
rying about your safety." said
Emma Brown, an attorney and
long-time activist. "N ow along
with all o f the other problems,
we have dope houses and gangs
fighting for control of the drug
market, with Innocent people
caught In the cross-fire.”
False Hope
Tom m y Jacquctte. organizer
of the Watts Summer Festival, a
memorial to the six days of
rioting that branded the com ­
munity Into the American con­
sciousness. said the Insurrection
brought on short-term antipoverty government programs
that inspired false hope.
"L ittle or no change has oc­
curred In the community." said
Jacquctte.
A report issued earlier this
year In Los Angeles by the city
and county Human Relations
C om m ission concluded that
most of economic problems that
Ignited the riots remain unresolvrd.
In 1965. nearly a quarter of
the city's black families sub­
sisted on Incomes below $3,000
a year; more than half were on
government relief; 34 percent
were Jobless.
The city-county commission
report found that nearly 20
percent o f the black adults and
50 percent of black teenagers In
W u tts are cu rren tly u n e m ­
ployed, while school trst scores
remain Ihe lowest In the city and
crime and gang activity have
Incrruscd sharply.
Ted Watkins was working us u
body and fender man at an
automotive plant In 1965. T o­
day. he Is administrator o f the

'In 1965, at least you
could leave your house
without worrying about
your safety. Now along
with all of the other
problems we have dope
houses and gan gs fight­
ing for control of the
drug market, with in­
nocent people caught
In the cross-fire.'
Watts Labor Community Action
Committee, a $30 million a year
non profit corporation that owns
and operates grocery stores and
600 houses.
The venture, started with gov­
ernment assistance. Is one of the
few jKiverty programs left from
Ihe days that followed Ihe riot­
ing.
J o in t V en tu res
Watkins, a much admired
le a d e r In ih e c o m m u n ity ,
believes there has been ad vancenter!* In the relationship with
the white business community
and In hiring practices.
"There’ s a different approach
to com m ercial concerns. In
1965, there were no Joint ven­
tures In v o lv in g blacks c o n ­
tractors and developers. The
order of the day is that whites
have to have Joint ventures tn
order to build here.”
The holers, he said, deliber­
ately torched businesses that
discrim inated against hiring
blacks.
"The banks. Ihe major de­
partm ent stores. Just about
e v e r y b u s in e s s w as d is ­
crim in a to ry ,” W atkins said.
“ They did nol respect those
blacks that were giving them
business. Th ey were making
killings In the community and
not pulling anything back."
That has changed, he said.
"I think there's been n dramat­
ic change In the hiring practices
throughout the city," Watkins
said. “ Banka have black manag­
ers and clerks, so do department
stores."
The current high Jobless rate
In Walts, said Watkins, stems
from Ihe numerous closures of
plants that previously employed

unskilled laborers.
" A lot o f It Is because o f the
fo r e ig n m a r k e t .” he sa id .
"Another thing is the consolida­
tion of plants. Modernization has
caused some of this.
"T h e corporations moved Into*
Ihe Southern stales for economic
reasons and Into states that had
rtght-to-worM bills where wages
were much tower."
C ou n terprodu ctive
Whether the Wfatts riots had a
beneficial Impact on the com­
munity is an open question. One
black leader who thinks the
violence was counterproductive
Is the Rev, James Lawson of
H o lm a n U n ite d M e th o d is t
Church.
"Y o u don't reverse 200 years
o f discrimination through bottles
and rocks," said Lawson, who
was then director of non-vtolent
ed u cation on th e Southern
Christian Leadership Conference
staff of Martin Luther King Jr.
“ Th e rioting Increased the
oppression and Increased police
and FBI surveillance. It led to the
development of a Pentagon plan
to put military forces Into riot
arras. It also gave credence to
Ihe white btacklash — and we
are. of course, still suffering from
(hat.

Costumed animals and mimes
will lie roaming Ihe grounds
Some guests might even round a
corner and run Into u few live
(supervised) anim als outside
their cages. Several educational
exhibits and displays will also be
offered.
Coming less than one month
after the Zoo Board of Dtirctors
voted to m ove the facility to
Orlando's Turkey Lake Park, the
Zoolebration will also serve to
irlehrale u bright future for the
Central Florida Zoo. Executive
Director, Al Uozon. Board Presi­
dent, John Smith and several
board members will be available
to discuss future plans.
Maude will truly be earning
her keep al the Zoolebration
when she offers elephant rides to
any courageous guests. She and
trainer Phil Brvanl will be avail­
able for media appearances,

Jewish War Veterans
To Attend Convention
More than l ,500 delegates will
participate in the (JOth national
convention of the Jewish War
Veterans of the USA. to be held
August 18-25 at the Hyatt Or­
lando Hotel In Kissimmee. The
JW V Ladles Auxiliary will be
holding Us 58th national con­
vention simultaneously.
The Jewish War Veteran* of
Ihe U.S.A. ts the oldest active
veterans organization In this
country.
This year's convention will
fe a t u r e an a rra y o f g u e st
speakers. Neal Sher director of
. Ihe Justice Department's Office
of Special Investigations fOSI).
{w ill be speaking at 10 a m. Aug
; 21. Sher. whose office ts re­
sponsible for the tracking down
o f N a z i w a r c r im in a ls In
America, was one of the experts
who recently traveled to South
{A m erica to examine the remains
j o f Josef Mengelc
On Aug. 22. W olf B lllle r,
noted author and Washington
Bureau Chief for the Jerusalem
{Post, will deliver an address at

10 a.m. B llizer. who Is re­
cognized as an expert on USIsraeli relations, has Just finished
penning lit* nrxt hook. Drfwrrn
IV'ds/iingfoM a n d Je ru sa le m A
R e p o rte r'* N otelxxik. which Is
expected out In the fall. Richard
Kfirgrr, Ihe Stule Department's
C o o rd in a to r o f R efu gee A f ­
fairs, will speak Ihe same day ut
2 p m He will discuss the plight
of Ihe Jewish refugee.
H a r r y W a lt e r s , th e A d ­
ministrator o f Veterans Affairs,
will occupy Ihe podium at 10
u ni. Aug. 23 to discuss the
policies and future of the Veter­
ans Administration. Florida Gov.
Bob Graham will open Ihe con­
vention at U a m. whrit hr
officallly welcomes Ihe JWV to
the Sunshine Stale, following
naturalization ceremony for new
Americans
The convention will tie capped
off by a banquet honoring the
out-going National Commander
Samuel Greenberg, followed by
the rletHun of the new National
Commander

frustrated people — the ones
w ho rioted tti 1965 — nrc
physically capable because of
the foreign substances they have
been absorbing during the past
20 years." Watkins said.

Could
Watts?

He said the relationship with
police department — one of the
major reasons given for Ihe 1965
rioting — has Improved. Officers,
he said, have become more

riots flare anew
*

M ore S en sitive
” 1 d o n 't think the

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COUNTRY STYLE

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OPEN
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sensitive in dealing w llh blacks
"T h e greater demand here Is
for more taw enforcement — not
less — to crack down on crime
and drug dealers." Watkins said.
“ More police officers In higher
positions are black, and w e've
h a d a b la c k m a y o r lT o m
Bradley) for the past t2 years,
which Is a real phenomenon. In
'65 we were trying gets clerks
hired In banks "

10

O C
is

G O LDEN
BANANAS

,
1

9

lb

NO EN D O W M EN TS
NO

EN TR Y

F E E S

The Best Is Still Available

'Zoolebration' Set
For 10 Year Fete
A ten-thousand pound ele­
phant blowing out the candles
on a ten-fool birthday rake
h a p p e n s about once a decade
On Aug. 10 you can see li In
person as the Central Florida
Zoo celebrates Its tenth birthday
with a full-scale Zoolct.mil ion.
Properly alilred In birthday
tiai and bib will be Maude. Ihe
Z o o 's w o rk in g for peunuts
pachyderm . Beginning at 10
u ni. with the cake ceremony,
the Zoolebration Festivities will
continue till approximately 2
p,m.
It may become difficult lo
decide who belongs In the Zoo
when local artists paint animal
faces on chlldirn. Just one of the
many free activities offered at
the Z o o le b ra tio n . In clu d in g
tethered hot-air balloon rides,
helium balloon give-aways ami
of course birthday cake.

"T h e flow o f gains continued
until the early 1970s. but the
Nixon administration stopped
the gains and to began to reverse
them. Now Reagan has system ­
atically reversed almost every
gain."

HOWELL PLACE
SEN IO R A M E R IC A N CO M M U N IT IE S

Howell Place-Sanford, one of Robert H. Little’s new wave of Adult Congregate Living Facilities
in Central Florida has alw ays been recognized a s the leader and Innovator in se rvice s to senior
adults.
And now it h a s become even more attractive a s experience has added additional program s to
Robert H. Little’s basic and constant policy of "N O E N D O W M E N T ”, " N O E N T R Y F E E S .”
What se ts Howell Place-Sanford apart from the more com m on senior adult facilities is not only
the am azing affordability of entry but the range of amenities and services w hich Instantly enrich
the lives of everyone w ho b ecom es a m em ber of the Howell Place family.
The d in ing facility Is m ore properly recognized as a fine restaurant with selection and variety
equal to m any private c lu b s and special dietary requests and preferences are accom m odated
and even anticipated by a careful and dedicated staff.
A range of am enities from beauty salon to jacuzzl, from crafts to cards, from laundry facilities
to a m agnificent audio visual center with large screen TV Is just part of the lifestyle at Howell
Place. A n d all this wealth of amenities is y o u rs when you becom e a member of our family. H ow
m uch nicer to sit In our jacuzzl than to be caught out in the su n doing yard workl
And of c o u rse there is all the warmth and friendship one find s at Howell Place; the spirit and
security of a comfortable atm osphere with people you like. Ju3t to know there are folks around
to help and p rofe ssion als to call on If noed be, gives an additional reassuranco to dally living
and lets you welcome the added excitement of all the new activities at How ell Place.
One or two bedroom apartments are available, oither furnished or unfurnished, and all with private
balconies or patios. Involvem ent In the m any activities available is left strictly up to you and
Robert H. Little's philosophy of Individual freedom and respect leads to a richer and more m ean­
ingful life at Howell Place-Sanford.
Our staff is on hand for consultation to make your change in lifestyle sim ple and easy. W e can
lend our experience to help sm ooth th in gs over and answ er any of the natural q ue stions you
may have. W e can reassure friends and family m em bers that Indeed when w e say "N o e n d o w ­
ment, no entry fe e s" that Is exactly what we mean. And w hen you come over to visit, you will
be com pletely convinced that yes, for a short time at least, "T h e best Is still available."

Come to Howell Piece B in go Tuesday, A u gu st 6th from 2*4 PM. There's to be a fantastic grand
prize end, of course, all the normal Bingo action end profit. Call Sheela for additional Information.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Sou* Btaunt la lu v n a Davit Lot 1. Bik C

CWoodiamtoWc Ftva.tsi.MS

Cavarnari Paint ltd la Thomai J
Mariiwufc*. lot 71 Geramori Point Ph J.
‘ Sun Rug* ltd t* Kavto B Hatucht. Cra&lt;g
It

S GUnn t . Un SO t l

.end . ur too

1. tun Rtffr* I.

Winter tpfc» D*» *• I0m Cwdury Hamm.

LaTUTMCMllI*. Un It. UO.MO
0*1 Fro* te Davte H Fam.il L Wt Judy

A . Un .1 Hi 10. HUdtn Villa*. Cond ,
ua sa
Oti Prog lie te Edn*rd L C*rg*nter A
Wt M*ry l P . Un *1 B« 18. Nutten vm**a
Cond. Ml. MO
E d g a r C. W u g

te w n it e m J

HOWELL PLACE

200 W. Airport Blvd., Sanford, FL 32771

(305) 323-7306

Iter m an A W t

Lind*. Ur I I I A. Ctefrym dGdu MO000

1

�*A — Evsnmg M rrrid. Sanlord. FI

Piedmont
Unveils Plan
For Florida
Expansion

Sunday. Aug. «. 1*1*

Grand Opening Glory

MIAMI (UP1) — Piedmont Airlines
President William Howard unveiled
••phase tw o" o f a $45 million expansion
In Florida that will pul Piedmont In at
least a dozen Florida cities by mid-,
December.
j

Thursday
witnessed
a rare event
in Sanford three business
grand openings
downtown
in one day.

Howard said Piedmont, based In
Wlnslon-Salem. N.C.. will blitz Florida1
with a $12 million lo $15 million
advertising campaign over the next six
months.
The airline ts Introducing new servlcn
In Tallahassee. Gainesville. Naples. Key
West. Fort Lauderdale and expanding
service In Miami. Orlando. Jacksonville
and Tampa. It also flics to Daytona
Bearh,
j,
Howard said Thursday Phase 2 wilt
come Dec. 15 when Piedmont will add
another three to five cities In Florida.
By (hen. Piedmont will have about 100
flights In Florida, will have expanded
Its stalT from 475 people to 1,500 and,
will start a pilot and flight attendant,
base In Miami.
"It Is our Intention lo dominate the
Jel transportation system In Florida.
With 100 flights we will be at or near
No. 1," he said
Piedmont will fly 65-seat Fokker F28
aircraft, a twtnjet airplane Piedmont
bought used and Is redesigning.

A T R IG H T, sharing a toast fo the
su ccess of p a rty fa v o r s store
Balloon M agic are owner Linda
Sapp, left, and Kathy Kinney,
president of Sanford's Downtown
Business Association. The store,
carrying all types of p arty goods
and offerin g clowns for birthday
parlies, Is located at 108 E. First
Street.

He said Piedmont never discloses
revenue predictions hut the airline
expects to make a profit on Its ‘ Florida
Intrastate Connection" service withinsix months.
Piedmont's advertising slogan has
been "th e up-and-coming a irlin e."
Spokesman Don McGuire would not
reveal what the Florida ads will say. but
said Piedmont plans lo position Itself,
with "som ething different In Florida.”
"W c plan to come In with a major
multi-media campaign that will make
people, when they want to get somc-|
where In Florida, think Piedm ont." he
said.
Howard said Piedmont will nu&lt; cced
In the competitive Florida market by
filling a need for long haul commuter,
jel service. "W e think for the most part
it's a matter or filling your niche a n dtherr Is very little Jet service being,
operuled where we are going." he said »
H eg lm iH u tO tt - tbf-wtrttne w ill m id several dally round-trip let flights to
and fr o m M ia m i, T a l l a h a s s e e .
Gainesville. Jacksonville. Naples. Key,
W e s t . O r la n d o . T a m p a , F ort
Lauderdale, and Daytona Beach.
The cities that will added In D r-'
cember have not been disclosed.

D IA N A SHOP national v ice president Jack Palm er p its a w arm
w elcom ing handshake trom Ms. Kinney after rlbban c jltln g at the
ladlos fashion store at 104 E. First Street Palm ot Is joined by Diana

Shop store m anager Cheryll Ott. to his right, and Charlene M oore,
district m anager for the chain. Photo at right shows browsers during the
Diana open house.

AT L E F T , Olde Tymes Connection
owner M a rgie Belne, with c e re m o ­
nial scissors at hand and co owner
husband Bob cheering from behind,
takes a s lic e at ribbon w h ile
Sanford M ayo r Beftye Smith, to
her right, com pletes the job with
m ore s e r v ic e a b le shears. O ld e
Tym es Connection business assr*clates a r e N an cy Frye, to the
m ayor's right, and Ruth Gaines, to
Mrs. Belne's left holding ribbon.
Others on hand for fhe event are
m embers of the Greater Sanford
Chamber ot Commerce w elcom ing
com m ittee and other well wishers.
The antique business Is located at
108 M agn olia M all, just behind
Touchton’ s Drug Store and across
the m all from
Sanford's First
Computer Store.

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Herald Photos
By
Tommy Vincent

S a m p le fa re s w ill be $99 u n -j
restricted, and $69 with restrictions,
o n e w a y b e t w e e n M i a m i a n d.'
Gainesville. The unrestricted fare be­
tween Tallahassee and Miami will b e '
$119 and $79 restricted. Key West to,
Miami will be $65 unrestricted and $45 ,
restricted.

Martin Marietta -.
Bestows Its
'
Highest Aw ards;
I

Two Orlando Aerospace employees
have received Martin Marietta's coveted'
Jefferson cup in recognition of out­
standing job performance.

-|

J e r r y J. M aym an . d ir e c t o r o f
udvanced program s, received the
award for outstanding contributions to
winning the Supersonic Low Allltudc
Target program.
\

William M. Joyce, associate counsel,
was honored for outstanding contribu­
tions toward
winning the Multiple!
Launch Rocket System terminal guid­
ance warhead progrum.
The awards were given ut the car-1
ixiratIon's annual honor's night held In
Washington. D C,
The Jeffrrson Cup Is a sterling goblet
fashioned after the ones produced by
Thomas JelTeraon. Il Is the highest
award bestowed by Martin Marietta
Corporation.
The awards were presented by ihe
Corporation s Chairman and Chief Ex­
ecutive. Thomas O. Pownall.
Muyman lives at Springrun Circle/
Longwood.
Joyce lives at 1241 Oxford Rd.4
Maitland.
S

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Signs Of Safety Awareness
Linger At Sanford Rich Plan
SANFORD
Signs ol Halety Awuiem ss Week
linger al lltc Rich Plan In Sanlt&gt;rd which Iasi
nunilli set aside one week to promote ami
establish n Ix-urr. suler working environment

In addition to CPR pamphlets In desk drawers
ami new flrst-uld supplies, safety posters,
designed bv employees, are hanging In their
icsprcUvc departments.
" I believe.” »altl M Warren Day. Jr., executive
vice president, "that It's because our employers
have become so involved In safety awareness
that we have cxirericticrd such u tremendous
improvement In miron-lhe-|oh safety record."
As an example. Rich Plan claims reported
during Ihe first six months of 198ft coni|&gt;arcd to
the last hull ol 1964 have decreased by about 90
jx-rernt according to Slgrld Mrssemer. loss
control counselor with the Florida Conslruetlon
Cuminrrcr and Industry.
Other activities during Safely Awarrnrss
Week also included a blood drive which brought
IH pints and dcmunslruttuua in CPR .

Joint Venture At Heathrow
ORLANDO — Heathrow Land and Develop­
ment Corporation and Cabot, Cabot A Forbes
Co. have announced a Joint venture to develop
uppruxlmutrly 350 000 square fret of office
spare In a 25-acre tract In Heathrow.
The Jeno F Pauluccl family ts developing
Heathrow, a billion dollar community located at
Inlerstate 4 and Lake Mary Boulevard near Lake
Mary.
Cabot. Cubol A Forbes Is a national, commer­
cial and Industrial teal estate ttrm head­
quartered In Boston The Arm Is |&gt;erhaps best
known lor Initialing the planned suburban
business parkruncept In the late 1940's.
The find building Is expected lo tie under
construction In the fall according to spokesmen

(or both Anns. The initial building, at the
International Parkway and Oridewater Drive,
will be three stories, oflerlng 66.000 square feet
of offices.

Inn Will Donate Lodging
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Central Florida's
newest suite hotel. The Residence Inn will
donate suttc-nlghls to families of patients at
Florida Hospltal/Altamonte. Katherine Sonn
Director of Sales for the 60 unit hotel on Douglas
Avenue In Altamonte Springs, announced the
plan.
The suites will be provided on an "as needed"
lias Is with families o f patients ut the hospitals
Cancer Center and patients flown m for
em ergency treatments as the most likely
rec Ipients of free lodging
3

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v*c

Sunday, Av*. 4, m s - 7A

Evealnf Hsrald. tantord. FI.

'C l a s s i c

C o k e ' A lle g e d ly

SE ATTLE (UP!) - Classic Coke, the
product now promoted by Coca-Cola as
having the original flavor of the popular
beverage, la slightly different than It used
to be, the Intrepid retiree who led the fight
against the new Coke says.

N o t

Q u ite

the old Coke, which the company now bills
as Classic Coke.

Gay Mullins sparked a nationwide pro­
test against the Introduction of new Coke
and even took his case to a federal court.

The difference between Classic Coke and
the old familiar Coke. Mullins said. Is the
sweetener. Whereas the company used
sugar prior to 1980. It now uses a high
fructose com syrup, he said.
He said Coke with fructose tastes less
sweet as It gets warmer.

He said at a Wednesday news conference.
" W e got what we fought for. All I can say Is
we won. but we won a formula that's
slightly different than In our youth."
He was referring to Coca-Cola's revival of

Mullins blamed the switch to fructose on
price supports that keep the cost of sugar
refined from sugar cane or sugar beets
artificially high In this country. He said
Just about all soft drinks sold In the United

'O l d

■ 'CO UPON'

C o k e '

S E R V IC E
CALL

States have made the switch.
But Mullins said he was happy the old
Coke was back on the market.
" I can't tell the difference Ir. the taste
when I take It straight out of the Ice box.”
he admitted.
In fact. Mullins said It was his Inability to
distinguish between old Coke and new
Coke In a taste test In June — after he
started his campaign for the return o f
Classic Coke — that led to his research Into
the switch from sugar to fructose.
" I was shocked I couldn't tell the
difference,” he admitted. "I asked m yself
why I couldn't tell the difference.”

long range ramifications of lift­
ing the restriction.
Deputy County Administrator
Woody Price said today that the
developer has been asked by
staff to show what It will be
doing In a five-story building
that could not be done In a
three-story facility, to show the
Impact the two buildings will
have on traffic and to demon­
strate how the buildings will
Impact fire protection at the
property.
Price said If that Information Is
not gathered In time for the
planning and zoning meeting. It
surely will be submitted lo the
county com m ission before a
hearing It holds at a future time
on the tssue.
He added the developer will
have to show that the public
safety hazard will be no greater
with the taller buildings than It
Is now.

The developers are also asking *
for a change In the one parking
space requirement for each 200
square feet of office space to one
per 285 square feet where the
46-foot tall Ithree-atory) building
Is to be constructed. Also re­
quested Is a variance from one
parking space per 200 feet to one
per 300 square feel where the 68
foot tall (five-story) building Is to
be built.
While the staff is not opposing
the reduction In parking spaces
the siaff Is not recommending
npproval of the height Increases
unless the developers answers
the concerns Price expressed.
The developer Is also asking
that a 16.1 acre tract west of
fnterstate 4 on which the two
office buildings are ptannrd be
rezoned from light Industrial to
planned unit development and
be Included within the Heathrow
PUD expanding It from 1.267.5

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Homeowners InstirilrfcP? * *
One ilium*

Taller Buildings O n Horizon?
A change In zoning regula­
tions to permit the construction
o f taller buildings In the unin­
corporated areas o f Seminole
County will be considered at
Wednesday's 7 p.m. meeting of
the Seminole County Planning
and Zoning Commission.
Regulations now call for a
maximum building height o f 35
feet.
But the Heathrow Land and
Development Corp. has asked
the county to approve a variance
from the limitation to permit
construction of a five-story build­
ing and a three-story building In
t w o d i f f e r e n t s e c t io n s o f
Heathrow and lo reduce parking
requirements at both sites:
In February Heathrow asked
the county commission for a
variance to the height restriction
to permit a 95-foot tall building,
but the request was denied to
give staff time to look Into the

$
$

acres to 1.283.6 acres.
In other business, the plann­
ing and zoning commissioners
Wednesday will consider a re­
quest from Seminole Partnership
fo r rezon ln g the 529 acres
northeast of the Intersection of
State Road 46 and S. Oregon
A ven u e from a gricu ltu re to
planned unit development.

s ii\ s

il lust.

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
It _
*

Ph. 322*0285
2 5 7 5 S . F r e n c h A v e ., S a n f o r d

x ^ u t o - O w n e r s

In s u r a n c e

I tfc llumr 1 j r Hurinrxv Onr lumr

It all.

The proposed master plan for
the development calls for 1.780
drrllln g units, 19,5 acres of
commercial and a 110.4-acrc
golf course.
Staff ts not opposing the re­
quest If the developer commits
voluntarily lo [laying Impact fees
for school, fire and sh eriffs
departm en t, and Installs or
funds all road, traffic &lt;Ig-ial and
Intersection Improvements re­
c o m m e n d e d by the cou n ty
engineering department
— Donna Estes

Surplus Food Distribution Schedule Set
Surplus food com m odities o f butter,
cheese, cornmeal. flour, honey and rice will
be distributed to some 5.000 disadvantaged
families In Seminole County Wednesday.
Thursday and Friday.
The food Is supplied by the U.S. Depart­
ment of Agriculture through the state
Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services. It Is distributed by the Central
Florida Chapter of the American Red Cross.
On Wednesday from 9 a m. to 3 p.m. food
will be distributed at Crooms High School,
2200 W. 13th St.. Sanford, fot persons living

In Sanford (ZIP Code 327711. U k e Mary
(32746), Lake Monroe (32747) and the
Springs area (32779).
Thursday from 10 a m. to 3 p.m. ut the
Altamonte Community Chapel. 825 State
Road 436. Altamonte Springs, for persons
liv in g In A llam on te Springs (327011.
C asselb erry (3 2 7 0 7 ). W in ter S p rin gs
(327081. Forest City (32714). Fern Park
(32730). Goldenrod (32733). Longwood
(32750). and for those living In Seminole
County but whose m ailing address Is
Apopka (32703). Maitland (32765). or
Winter Park (32792).

Friday 10 a m, lo noon. Baptist Church.
Lake Mills Drive. Chuluota. for those living
In Geneva (32732). Oviedo 132765) and
Chuluota (32766).
Seminole County residents who believe
they are eligible, but have not yet rcglslerrd
fur I he surplus food program may do so at
ihclr ZIP Code locution and may receive
food the same day. Those wllh questions on
eligibility m ay call the Red Cross In
Longwood al 831 -300

Twanty IhrM mist cU wicto smooth undy btWMi
Ocvant ol fun and world* ol antartammant Saa lor
ion alt
yOu'MH Sand *or your traa vacation information
Alt

Recipients arc asked lo bring a bag or box
wllh them lo carry their food home. '
Mama

CALENDAR

City _

Hospital, state Road 434. Longwood.
Auditions for Theatre-ln-The-Works will be held
at 7 p.m. In the Loch Haven art Center. The play
"The Feast o f Reason." written by nationallyknown author Mordecal Gorelik, will be presented
at the UCF Black Box Theatre August 29-31.
A cast or six men. three women, two boys
(10-141 and one girl (6 -8) is required for the play.
All must be capable o f an Irish accent.
TU E S D A Y , AUGUST 6
Casselberry Ktwanls Club. 7 a.m., Casselberry
Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
Casselberry.
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15 a m., Christo’s
Restaurant. 107 W. First St.. Sanford.
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45 a.m., Western
Slzzlln Restaurant. Sanford.
Sanford Llona Club, noon. Holiday Inn. In­
terstate 4. Sanford.
South Seminole County Ktwanls Club. noon,
gulncy's Restaurant. Highway 17-92 and Live
Oaks Boulevard. Casselberry.
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. Florida Hoapltal-Altamonte Branch. 601 E.
Altamonte Ave., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sanford-Duplicate Bridge Club. 1 p.nt.. Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. First St.
W E D NE SD AY, AU G U ST 7
COPE Support Group of Seminole Area. 7:30
p.m.. Sem inole Com m unity Mental Health
Center, Cranes Rooal Office Park. Suite 377.
Pelican Building, Altamonte Springs. First and
third Wednesdays for families and caregivers of
long-term mentally disabled. Free o f charge.
F R ID A Y , A U 0 U 8 T 9
Handicap Singles Dance. 7:30-9:30 p.m..
Westmonte Park. Altamonte Springs. Admission
la 35 cents. For Information call Claudia Harris at
Westmonte Park. 862-0090 Second and Fourth
Fridays.
Central Florida Metal Detecting Club. 7:30
pm .. Golden rod Civic Center. 4763 Palmetto
Ave., one block south of Alom a Avenue in
Goldenrod.
Arts and Crafts Show. Aisle U exhibit area. Flea
World. Highway 17-92, Sanford.

Churchill Wanted To ‘Drench*
Germ an Cities With Poison G a s

"W e could drench the cities of
the Ruhr and many other cities
tn Germany tn such a way that
most o f the population would be
r e q u ir in g co n stan t m ed ica l
treatm ent." the British Prime
Minister said in a note published
■ E4
* WiiRl|iiiF— r t i l !■ n r

— Up —

. Monlh ot Irip .

s

Sand to Daytona Baacti Raaort Araa. P O Bos 3775, Daytona Baach. FL MOtS-

S A T U R D A Y ,A U G U S T 3
East-West Ktwanls Club. 8 mm.. A irport
Restaurant. Sanford.
National gulltlng Assn. 16th Annual guilt
Show and Competition. Seminole Community
College. Sanford Workshop*, lectures, exhibits,
and fashion shows. Through August 10.
Sanford Womens’ AA. 1201 W. Flrit St.. 2
p.m.. closed.
Casselberry AA Step. 8 p.m.. Ascension
Lutheran Church, Overbrook Drive.
Rebos and Live Oak AA. noon. Rebos Club. 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry (closed). Clean Air
AA for non-smokers, first floor, same room, same
place and time.
Sanford Senior Citizen Club. noon. Sanford
Ctvlc Center. Bag lunch and Bingo.
SUNDAY. AUG UST 4
Allam onte Soulh-Semlnole Jaycees Variety
Show. 2 p.m.. Jal Alai Fronton. Highway 17-92.
Fern Park. G eorglo the C low . Sea W orld
Polynesian revue, and amateur Jai alal exhibition.
Call Cathy Cold at 834-1078 for free tickets for
community organizations working with children
or the elderly Tickets *3 50 at the door to thpublic.
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. open dlscuaalon.
Florida Power and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.
Alanon meeting. 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St.,
Sanford.
M ONDAY. A U O U S TS
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St.. Sanford. 9 a.m. to 5
p.m.: Florida Hoapltal-Altamonte Branch. 601 E.
Altamonte Ave.. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
CPR class. 6:30 to 9.30 p.m.. American Red
Croaa Seminole Service Center, 705C W . State
Road 434. Longwood. Class continues on August
7 and 12.
Reboa Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m.. cloaed. 8
p.m., step. 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Reboa at noon, cloaed.
Apopka Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m.. closed.
Apopka Episcopal Church. 615 Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study. 8 p.m.. Caaaelberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. cloaed. 1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior citizens. 8 p.m.,
cloaed. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Caaaelberry.
Overeaters Anonymous. 7:30 p.m.. West Lake

i NEW YORK (UPI) - Declaring
It "absurd to consider morality.”
a raging Winston Churchill told
advisors he wanted to "drench”
German cities with poison gas In
retaliation for the Nazi bombing
o f London, a published report
■aid Tueaday.

Addiaaa.
. S ta la

of A m e r ic a n H eritage magazine.
The Issue, which features an
extensive a n k le on the history
and morality o f the use of poison
gas. quotes Churchill as telling
military advisors:
*'ll is absurd to consider
morality on this topic when
everybody used It In the last war
without a word of complaint
from th e m o r a lis ts or th e
church."
On July 6 . 1944 — s month
after the Normandy Invasion —
Churchill asked for a "coldcalculation" ot the ef­

fect Iveneaa of such an attack,
according to au thor Barton
Bernstein, a Stanford University
historian.
But his advisors told him gas
warfare dould divert the Royal
Air Force from strategic raids
and would not be "decisive.”
probably prom pting an even
more deadly German retaliation.
Bernstein said
And President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, who approved the
d e ve lo p m en t o f the atom ic
bomb, remained "com m itted” to
a moral code against the use of
poison gas. he said.

Evening Herald
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Please call between 8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. M o n d a y th ro u g h Friday.

4*-:-*. m in &lt;%m

&lt;*+*+m*

�Sundjy, Al»$. «, IMS

•A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

...Poison
Continued from page 1A
in I he EK
A d u lt p o is o n in g v ic tim s
usually have been exposed to a
pesticide In an unsafe quantity
or are elderly persons who lake
their medication, forget atxuit It
and lake It again. Dr Hubert
G a y, ch ief em e rg e n cy room
physician, said.
It's the tots, curious souls who
by nature give everything Ihe
old laste test, that wind up in the
most serious trouble. Ilul Dr.
Day, who haa worked In San­
ford's emergency room since
1974. can't recall a single ac­
cidental poisoning victim who
didn't survive, flul there have
been some very dose calls.
Y ou m ay th in k It w on 't
happen to y o u r ch ild, and
chances are you're righl. Sieve
Meyer, coordinator of a Tampa
jxilsoti control center, said no
reports of children dying from
accidental polstonlng were rejxjrled to his agency las) vear.
About 70 percent o f his calls urr
for assistance for children tinder
5. And from .January through
March of this year over 20.0(H)
calls were received. Meyer said.
Accidental poisonings make
up only one percent o f the EH's
rases. Dr, Guy w ld .
Ilul for 111** victims o f that one
percent, being rescued from
death by poisoning Isn't a pleas­
ant experience.
Although In most cases there's
no long-term physical rfleds.
CFRH't emergency room head
nurse Bruce Rasor said. "Ini
dally It's very, very Iraurnallc.
"Adults don't like things sluck
down their noses (lubes for
stomach pumping). Kids ate
terrified. We have to put them In
some lype of restraint to hold
them. It's terrifying I think dial
In Itself probably" goes a long
way In making sure they don’t

do something like that again
The best way lo deal with a
poisoning crisis Is lo avoid It.
That. Dr. Gay said, calls tor
common sense caution on the
part of adults- Don't leave ihe
cholortne bleach under the sink
where Susie Is sure lo sneak a
sw ig Don't tempi a tot by
putting gasoline or other poslons
into food or beverage containers
such as pop bottles. Keep all
ined leal Ions out o f the reach of
youngsters, and don't confuse
tots by calling medicine “ candy"
lo make It go down easier.
Mommy's purse should be of!
limits and a loddlrr shouldn't tie
confronted wl*h ihe temptation
lo tasle Ihe furniture polish left
behind by a housekeeper who
goes to answer the door or
telephone.
Parents should become famil­
iar with Ihe fatal potential ol
some common decorative plants,
such ns oleander, polnseltla.
holly and daflodlls. CFHK Is
hom e lo a "poison garden"
planted by the Sanford Ixora
Garden Club, The garden Is open
for guided lours In which volun­
teer garden club members point
out the dangerous flora.
Instructions on pesticides
should I&gt;c followed carefully to
ensure Ihe youngsters don’ l
frollr loo soon on a freshly
sprayed or fertilized yard, or
return too soon lo a home that Sally Rosenmond, co chairm an of the Ixora Garden Club,
has been bombed for hugs
examines some of Ihe d ea d ly flora In the Cenfral Florida
Despite these precautions, and Regional Hospital poisonous plant garden.
others which most adults are
aware of bu' often forget. Dr.
Gay said the absolute best safe­ especially under the sink; m edi­ said, what youngsters will sam­
cine cabinets. Ihe garage, and ple. "They'll lake things thal
g u a rd Is ed u ca tion . T each
children lhal certain things and purses, which m addltori to you can't understand how they
places arc strictly forbidden, medications may hold poisonous drink. How can a child drink
kerosene? But they do "
because locks are only good If cosmetics.
H o w e v e r , even If y o u 'v e
However. Kasor said, they
you remember to lock them
And It's unreasonable, Kasor secured all these, you may be don't usually drink a big dose.
They take a swig and then spit It
said, to iry lo whisk rvery surprised by a kid's ingenuity.
Like those so-called ’ ch ild ­ out. leaving doctors to deal with
potential poison out o f (hr reach
proof lx it tie tops that frustrate the small quantity lhal slipped
of little lingers.
T h e obvious danger spots a d u lls . but are often |xippcd off down their throats. That, he
said, may be why the death rate
likely to hold an enticing array of easily by u precocious loddler.
It’s also surprising. Dr. Gay In accidental poisonings Is rclaloxlna, are: kitchen cupbourds.

trying to maneuver around the
storm ."
Authorities at Ihe alr|xirt said
the facility Is rquipprd with stale
Continued from page 1A
lightning strike I hr plane, l-'llghl of Ihe art equipment designed to
ulrrt pilots to wind shear condi­
191.
One of Ihr surviving passen­ tions
T h e sp ok esm a n sa id the
gers said hr Ihnughl the tragedy
wus brought about by wind equipment Is operated try the
shear, a phenomenon In which Federal Aviation Administration,
there are mtilll directional shifts but II was not known If FAA
In wind speed or direction. Such officials had rlrtrrlcd any wind
nhllts can cause drastic alter­ shears or Issued an alert.
Ihe plane emerged from the
ations to Ihr nrrrxiyuumlrs of a
■lark Hinrm cloud and first hit a
plane.
"1 think we lilt what they call a major highway. Texas 114, Just
wind shrar," said Jay Slnsher. north ol ihr airport. One cur was
34. of Phoenix, who spoke on • t r u c k a nd u n o t h e r w a s
smashed. Ils driver decapitated.
ri.illiin.il (rlrvlslon from his hos
"T h e rain was op hard you
pllal bed lair Friday.
"II seemed like we were IxTiig couldn't see 30 feel ahead of
forced lo Ihe ground much faster you ." said Anthdiiv Rogers, who
limn Ihe pfloi wanted. Hr kepi said he saw Ihe plane's lire and
Increasing Ihr engine speed I (ell a (oil as Ills car was nudged
by ihr alrcrult.
guess he was trying lo pull up
Alter striking the highway the
On the wruy down we starlet)
trying lo make some pretty plane apparently bounded hack
drastic turns. I ihoughi hr was into Ihe air Wllnesses said a

...Crash

...S in k
Continued fro m page IA
Conlgllo said.
He said (hut while Ihe (our
families occupying (hr apart­
ments, which were purchased
only a month ago tor $38,&lt;KX) lo
$0 1 ,000. were glvctt Ihr option
of moving Into new quarters at
the developer's expense, only
two accepted the offer.
The condominium, one ol IS
buildings In Hidden Village, was
fully Insured with sinkhole cov­
erage. Conlgllo Mild, adding lhal
such coverage is a requirement
ol stale law
Cuulgllo insisted that cracks In
Ihr soil ol Ihe ly|tr seen at
Hidden Village ate common and
usually not publicized He said
he doesn't expect II lo develop
Into a lull llnlgi d sinkhole
" I anticipate we will lx- able to
lakr care of II." hr said.
Conlgllo also stressed thal Ihe
developers look all normal pre­
cautions prior lo construe!Inn to

a n o th e r r e s c u e w o rk e r, J im
Porter. " S o ll m u il h avr b een
coming apart before the r r o s h ."

As ambulances rushed to and
Irom the scene, area residents
turned uut try the hundreds lo
donate hltxHl and community
a gen cies w ere pressed Into
service to help as they could

drtrrm ltir whether (he building
site was localrd over a pnirnilai
sinkhole. And during construelinn he said Ihey made sure

everything was dune according
lo Ihe county building code and
Federal Housing Admlntstrullon
sprclllcalloiis
—Donas Estes

"In Angola, with the support ul
the Slate Department. $130
billion In Export-Import Bank
Continued from page 1A
loans bus gone to help subsidize
foreign policy and he has failed "
an oil operation that pumps gas
Said Phillips. "In country alter lor Cuban (rnop* and Soviet Jets
country. George Shultz Is mak­ und provides $2 billion u year (or
ing deals with the devil al (he ihr Soviet pup|K-l governm ent."
expense of the United Stales."
Phillips acknowledged that the
As un example. Phillips said: Nrw Rlghl, which conceniraled

on d o m e s tic Issues d u rin g
Reagan's first term. Is now
putting more emphasis on world
alfalrsand. In particular, Shultz.
"W e have also been Interested
In InlernaUoiuil mutters but now
more so." he said "There Is no
guuramee we will succeed In
gelling rid ol Shultz, but we
have a duly to try."

fee wound up being $500 per
housing jridl and $1 50 per
square tool ul commercial space.
The county commission has
hired al a cost of $50,000 the
Tallahassee ami Titusville law
Itrm ol Nalxirs. Gibbtu A Slellens, considered rxprris in the
Held, to draft ihe permanent
lm|uu*t Ire ordinance.
Sellers estimates ihe Interim
linpuct lees will raise $2 million
annually.
Revenues from the countyImposed 4 cents-per gallon gaso
line lux adopted In 1982 and an
additional 2 cents pcr-gulton tax.
scheduled lo lx* adopted by Ihr
commission Tuesday and go Into

rile d Sept. I. will bring In
another $4 million for a total of
$6 million a year to be used
solely to help solve road pro­
blems
Sellers said ihr rounly will
nerd a minimum ol $100 mllllun
over Ihe next five years to build
30 miles o f four-lane roadway.
O b viou sly , the $60 m illio n
expected to be raised from Ihe
Impact Ires and Ihe gas taxes
will not lx* enough
"T h e problem ts still bigger
than th r amount of m oney
available." Sellers said.
"T h e s e revenues may not
solve all the problems but they
will make a real dent In them "

...Fee
Continued from pags 1A
ones, bill neither could say Just
how much
County Engineer Jerry Mc­
Collum and Sellers originally
recommended Impact lees of
$1,000 per housing unit und $4
Ix-r square loot ol commercial
space. Bui after a representative
ol the homebuilder* association
protested und hinted Ihe build­
ers might tukr ihe county lo
court on Ihe Issue, commission­
ers sent ihe stall back to huddle
with the group and come up
with another figure, The interim

h eren ce an d com a. E a tin g
nightshade can cause Intense
d ig e s tiv e d istu rb a n ces and
nervous symptoms. All parts of
the azalea and rhodedendron
produce nausea and vomiting,
d e p r e s s io n a n d d i f f i c u l t y
breathing
,
j

llvely low*.
PHIs. he said, which go down
easier and oflen In a larger
quantity, are usually a grralei
hazard than a deadly beverage.
Most esses seen at CFRH
Involve a caustic liquid and If It
has been swallowed. Dr. Gay
c a u t io n s a g a in s t In d u c in g
vom iting because gasoline, kero­
sene. bleach, lye or other such
poisons will burn the throat for a
second time on the way out. and
m ay be forced Into the lungs,
causing additional injury.
Syrup of Ipecac, an over-thecounter drug. Is a must for any
home with preschoolers, Dr
Pastls said. It's very effective In
Inducing vomiting but
In a
pinch salt water or mustard
water will do Ihe trh ?t. Kasor
said.
Once poslontng Is suspected,
even If you aren't sure the toxin
has been swallowed. Dr Pastls
said. "It's better to err on the
side o f caution." Attempt to call
the child's physician and poison
control almost at the same lime,
depending on which you can
reach first.
CFRH relyson a poison control
center In Tampa — 1-BOO-2823171 — which Is hooked to a
national network. Orlando Re­
gional Poison Control Center can
also be reached at 841 -5222. bul
Dr. Gay said Its Information Isn't
as In clu sive as the Tam pa

center’s.
The calmest person on the
scene should make the Initial
call and Instructions given by
the doctor or the center should
be followed to the letter. Dr.
Pastls said.

Add the bulbs o f the hyacinth,
daffodil, narcissus and the leaves
o f th e p o tn s c lt la and th e
oleander and you have amassed
quite a collection of deadly
plants. Each one can be fatal.
And all arc common around the
home and garden.

If vomiting must be Induced
the procedure should be started
at the home so the child may
have vomited by the time It
reaches the hospital, she said.
"Don't wait for the child to
vomit. If you don't have Ip e c a c
take a spoon and a papcrsack
w i t h y o u and s to p at a
pharmacy. If It Is closer than the
hospital. G ive Ihe dose at the
pharmacy and let the child
vomit in the bag "
The container of the suspect
su b sla n r-e s h o u ld a ls o be
brought to the hospital. That,
Kasor said, will give emergency
workers an Idea of Just what
they're dealing with.
''A n y t h in g you do b efore
coming to (hr EK Is going lo
speed what we do," Rasor said.
If a youngster makes II to the
first grade without an accidental
poisoning rptsode. Rasor aald.
t h e y 'v e h e rn lu ck y. “ T h e
parents are to be commended.
They've been careful. They've
taught ihe child well The kid Is
lucky he husn't had to come
through here and have Ills stom­
ach pumped, It's no fun."

Injured Listed; Names Of Dead Not Released
GRAPEVINE. Texas IUPII • The following Is
Della Airlines latest list of survivors.
Names of the dead have not been released.
1. Arnatulll. Jenny (flight nttrndanl), 35. Fort
Lauderdale. Fractured neck, leg and ankle. Harris
Hospltal-HEH Origin and destination Miami,
Stable condition.
2. Coke. Paul. 02. Sun City West. Arlz
Second-degree burns, fractured leg llurrls Hospltal-HEB Origin and destination Phoenix. Serious
condition.
3. Dew lit, Mark, no age, Dallas. Arm Injury.
Parkland Hospital. Origin and destination DEW.
-1. Edwards, Annie, no age, Pompano Beach.
Fla Released from Parkland Hospital Origin Fort
Laudrrdulr. Destination DFW.
5. Ford. Knth!. no age. no home (own. Burns.
H u m unit, I’z r k U m l H ospital. Origin a n d destina(lon DFW . Critical com) Ilion,
0 , Freeman. Gregory. 48. Boca Raton. Fla. Bark
and neck Injuries Irving Hospital. Origin Fori
Lauderdale. Destination Las Vegas. Good condi­
tio n

7. Garcia, Anita, no age. Miami. Northeast
Hospital Origin and destination Los Angeles
Crllieal condition.
8. Goldberg, Jean, no age. no home town.
Northeast Hospital Origin Fort Lauderdale
Des! Inal Ion Las Vegas Critical condition.
9 Good kin. Amir la. 16, Fort Lauderdale.
Fractured leg and fool, abrasions, bruises Harris
Hospital HEB O rigin and d estin ation Los
Angeles Fair condition.
10. Greene. Glltx-rf. no age. Fort Lauderdale
Released from Parkland Hospital. Origin Fori
Lauderdale. Desllnatlon DFW.
II
llurrls, Ron. no age. Oklahoma City
Northeast Hospltul. Origin and destination
Oklahoma City. Critical condition.
12. Katz. Debbie, no ugr. Fori Lauderdale. Head
and neck Injuries. Parkland Hospital Serious
condition. Origin Fori Lauderdale. Destination
San Francisco.
13. Hull. Robert (husband ol Debbie Kalz). 42.
Fort Lauderdale. Parkland Hospital. Origin Fori
Lauderdule. Destination San Francisco
14. Keller. Alvin. 30, Henderson. Nev. Burns.
Trunslm ed lo Parkland Hospltul Origin Fori
Lauderdale. Destination lais Vegas
hh » m nwMtr twswr viMMt
15. Lapebua. Gregg. 23. Miami. Third-degree
bums over 80 percent of the body. Taken to
This Is the only exterior Indlcp'ion that a Hidden V illa g e
Harris Hospltul -MED. then transferred to burn
condo near Lake M ary Is sink.iig. The ground beneath the
unit at Parkland Hospital. Origin Fort Lauderdale
building settled, exposing the ra gged concrete slab un­ Destination Denver. Crltlral condition
derneath.
16 Laver. Richard. 16, Delray Beach. Fla.

...Shultz

t

wing frll off. ihe craft burst Into
11,ones and then rammed Into
Ihr g r o u n d . It a p p a re n tly
glanced oil a large water tank
near a freight storage area on the
airport’s perimeter and disinte­
grated along a half-mile stretch.
I.title more than rubble and
ashes remained
" I sa w b o d ies that w ere
charred und bodies |nn the
ground) that were absolutely
normal." said Thomas Dunn,
one of the first lo arrive on ihr
scene. " T h r whole plane was on
lire before II hil I lie ground, ll
was Just a big ball ol fire.”
" T h e r e was lols of m rlu l
(Hying) before the crush." said

Just taro, maybe even one. of
(hose pretty red berries from
that mlaletoe hanging above
your door at Christmas spelts
death.
Eating holly berries can also
be fatal. It takes about 20. but
they are pretty and the kids have
watched you pick atrawbrnics,
haven't they?
Apple aeeda. In quantity, cause
cyanide poisoning and can be
fatal. The leaves, tw igs and
seeds of peach and cherry trees
can kill. Chewing on Jlmson
weed causes abnormal thirst,
distorted sight, delirium. Inco-

Pediatric Trauma Unit. Parkland Hospital. Origin
Fort Lauderdale. Destination Los Angeles,
Serious condition.
17 Ledford. Ester, no age. Fort Lauderdale.
Released from Parkland Hospital. Origin Fort
Lauderdale. Destination El Paso.
18. Malloy, John. 29. Redondo Beach. Fla. Eye
injury. Released from Parkland Hospital, Origin
and destination Los Angeles
19 Marsh. Elizabeth (flight attendant), no age.
Deerfield Beach. Fla. Northeast Hospital Origin
Fort Lauderdale. Desllnatlon Lo* Angeles. Fair
condition.
20. Mclcr. Christopher (Johnny), no age.
T e m p le , Texas L a cera tion *. Parkland H ospital.
Origin ana destination Temple. Texas
21 Mixirr. John, no ugc. no home town
Parkland Hospital Origin Fort Lauderdale. Desti­
nation Los Vegas Fair condition.
22. Robinson, Wendy (flight attendant), no age.
West Palm Bearh. Northeast Hospital. Origin
Miami. No destination. Good condition.
23 Schuvls, Vickie (flight attendant), no age.
Miami Lakes. Northeast Hospital Origin Miami.
No (irstlnulion. Good condition.
24. Segal. Sidney, about 74. West Palm Beach.
Third-degree hums over 35 percent of the body,
fractured (x-lvls and clavicle Transferred from
Harris Hospital-HKII to burn milt. Parkland
Hospital. Origin Fort Lauderdale. Desllnatlon lour
Vegas. Critical condition.
25. Slusher. Jay. 34, Phoenix. Arlz. Si. Paul
Hospltul Origin and destination Phoenix. Stable
condition.
26. Steinberg. Marilyn, no age. Miami. Treated
and released from Parkland Hospital. Origin Fort
Lauderdale. Destination San Francisco.
27. Steinberg. Mike (husband of Marilyn
Steinberg), no age. Miami Treated and released
from Parkland Hospital. Origin Fori Lauderdale
Destination San Francisco.
28. Vlclch. Mike. 60, Dallas, while male. Burns.
Burn Center. Parkland Hospital. Origin and
destination DFW Critical condition.
29. Werner. Leonard. 64, Pompano Beach. Fla.
Irving Hospital. Origin Fort Lauderdale. Destina­
tion Las Vegas. Serious condition.
30. Williams. Juanita, 55. Pompano Beach. Fla.
Parkland Hospital. Origin Fort Lauderdale Desti­
nation DFW
31. Wright. Kathleen, 49, Fort Lauderdale
Serious burns, fractures In surgery. Parkland
Hospital Origin Fort Lauderdale. Destination

DFW.

AREA DEATHS
HENRY JA M E S BURNS
Mr Henry James Burns. 81. of
2191 Jltwny Ave.. Sanford, died
Friday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Oct. 9. 1903 In Tallahassee, he
moved lo Sanford from there In
1918. He was a member of St.
Matthews M issionary Baptist
Church. Ihr Brotherhood of
Deacons and Pallbearers Society
• I,
Survivors Include his wife, Ida
P., Sanford, und a sister, Mrs.
Lottie Lee Burns. Brouklyn, N Y.
Wilson Elchclbcrgcr Mortuary
Is In charge of arrangements.
IRIS S. EMERSON
Mrs. Irts S. Emerson. 66. of
2100 Oak Ave., Sanford, died
Friday al Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Nov. 27. 1918 In Jessup. Ga .

OAKLAWN
FUNERAL HOME CEMETERY
Om butt**: M l m , l l Bartki •..««
la u l t » H &gt; U w

Ca»t»

44A Al Rlasfcsrt Rtf.
s*rM« m c— u n n * m
U24M1
laal »ri Ltk » Mar p

she moved lo Sanford from High Memorial Seventh day Adventist
Point. N.C. In 1949. She was a Church.
homemaker and u Baptist.
Survivors include his wile,
Survivors Include two sons. Olga, a son. Shclion. Germany;
Johnny. Longwood. and Jimmy. two daughters, Shirley Rose
Lake Mary; a brother. Eugene Tyson and Merle Rose Facey.
Edenfleld. Brunswick. Ga : two both of New York City; a brother.
sisters. Lucille Stolba. DeLand. Perclval. New York City, and five
and Dean Padgett. Savannah. grandchildren.
Ga.; four grandchildren.
H u ldw ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Ouklawn Funeral Home. Lake Home, Forest City, ts In charge
Mary. Is In charge o f arrange­ of arrangements
ments.
SYDNEY LLOYD ROSE
FunorolNoticM
Mr. Sydney Lloyd Hose. 79. of
508 Northwestern Ave.. Alta­ E M C S I O N . M R 1 . t a i l % .
monte Springs, died Friday ut -fu w iiH iiK a ilw W i lot t Emarian.
F lo r id a H o s p lia l-A lla m o n le M . o» I ISO O a k A v s . VknMrd. wfta a a d
Friday, will ba S a id at Id a m M a n d a t af ftw
Springs. Born Jail. 10. 1906 In O a il a s n F u n a r a i Horn* c h a p x *&gt;&lt;h m # R « y
Jamaica, he moved to Altumontr a a ip S F r y o llit - k tin f B u ria l will b. in
Springs from New York City in O a k ia m n M a m a rla J P a r k V lkita tia n tar
a n d In a n d k will M M p n lu n d d y
1977. He was a retired electri­ O•amity
aklavm F u n a r a l H am a, (.aka M a ry , is la
cian and was a member of Kress iK a r j a ol a rr a n sa m a n tt
A If Occasions

(Collins
n m

m

Er,TT.\ 323-1204

I

�• •

SPORTS

E v * flin g H e r a ld . S a n to rd . F I .

Sunday. Aug 4. 1H5 — tB

Little League Vs. Pony: The Debate Rages On
I editor ■ n o **
Llttla Laagua a n t f*onr
Batabsn hava both boat tu tc a n lu ' In
iamlnola County But utilih o / V l r s * bait
program tor a playar to loam and d r r * l e v
baiabail U IIItT Today. In ma tin t ot a
taro part tanat. tha b a d ro u n d i d lrttiem
and playing dimantlant ara ataminad I

B y Sam Cook
H era ld S p o rt. Editor
Th ere a no question Little
League Baseball Is more popular
than Pony Baseball. But Is It a
better-suited program to teach
the fundamental skills for a
young baseball player? That
debate has raged as long as an
umpire In each program has
bellowed "P la y Ball "
A survey conducted by Major
L ea gu e B aseball sets L ittle
League's participation at 2.5
million players annually. Little
League claims to be the world's
largest youth sports program.
Pony Baseball, along with
Babe R u th. Dixie B aseball.
A m erican Am ateur B aseball
Congress and American Legion,
makes up Just 40 percent of the
total for Little League More than

twice as many youngsters play
Little League than any other
organized type o f baseball. Pony
Baseball has 150.000 partici­
pants.
O f c o u r s e . L it t le L e a g u e
Baseball was there first. It was
founded In Williamsport. Pa. In
1939 by Carl Slots, who worked
at a lu m ber com pany. The
original three-team league has
grown In 48 years to encompass
over 15.000 lea gu es In 31
c o u n t r ie s a n d t e r r i t o r i a l
possessions.
Peter J. M cG overn. L ittle
League's first full-time president.
Is given credit for the organiza­
tion flourishing, lie presided
over Little League for 31 years.
"H e taught us all to dream." the
Little League brochure said.
McGovern passed away last
year. Creighton Hale succeeded
him.
Rigidity Is synonymous wllh
the 46-year-old program. Little
League Baseball, Inc Is steeped
In tradition. It has strict rules

which It expects Its district
commissioners to carry out to
the Irllrr of the rule book. Rule
changes are utmost nonexistent
It s t ill In s is ts on p la y e r s
c o a c h in g the bases at the
12-year-old level.
Lillie League has five compel!
live divisions — Minors. Mujors.
J u n io r s , S e n io r s and B ig

lo-agucrs. Four of (be divisions
have a World Series The Majors
play In Williamsport. Pa.: the
Juniors play In Taylor. Mich .
the Seniors play In Gary Ind
and the Big Leaguers play In
Fort Lauderale
The first Little League World
Series was held In Williamsport
In 1947 ll has been uii annual

Savages
Derail
Miami
By C hris Plater
H era ld Sp orts W riter
When It has counted most, the
Seminole Savages have come
through.
After a not so sensational
tournament season, the Savages.
Seminole Softball Club's 15 and
under all-star team, put It all
together In the Metro Tourna­
ment. winning lour straight and
qualifying for the ASA Southeast
Regional.
F r id a y n ig h t. S e m in o le ’ s
opening game of the Southeast
Regional at Boca Raton, a sixrun third inning, keyed by
tw o -ru n s in g le s by C o r r le
Lawson and Katrina Shuler,
paved the way for an 8-3 victory
over the Miami Tigers.
The Savages were back In
action Saturday afternoon at 2
against the winner of Saturday
morning's game between Boca
Raton and the Jacksonville Re­
bels.
"T h e girls played a heck of a
ballgam e to n ig h t." S avages'
munager Don Jonas said. "T h ey
beat a really good team In
Miami."
Now. Jonas and the Savages
w an t r e v e n g e on th e
Jacksonville Rebels During the
summer season, the Rebels won
tw o and lost none a ga in st
Seminole and they knocked the
S a v a g e s ou t o f th e ir o w n
to u rn a m en t. First, th o u g h .
Jacksonville must get by host
Doca Raton.
" W e have not beaten the
Rebels." Jonas said. "W e owe
them something. We didn't play
too well against them the two
limes they beat us. We’re due to
get them now ."
Alter two Innings Friday night,
the Savages and Miami battled
to a scoreless tie with Nlkl Burke
on the mound for Seminole.
The Savages broke the tie In a
big way as they erupted lor six
runs In the bottom of the third.
Laurie LelfTer led off the Inning
with a single and consecutive
singles by Caroline Chavis and
Burke loaded the bases Lawson
then stepped up and drilled a
single to drive In both LelfTer and
Chavis and. when the throw
went to the plate. Burke alertly
took third.
The play wasn't over there
though as Lawson tried to get
caught In a run down between
first and second. When Lawson
drew Miami's attention. Burke
scampered home wllh the third
run of the Inntng. Since they
didn't have a play on Burke, the
Tigers tried to get Lawson but
(he throw to second skipped Into
cenlcrfleld. Lawson motored to
third and never stopped as she
raced-home for a 4-0 lead.
Shuler, the youngest player on
the team at 12-years old. capped
off the six-run Inning by lacing a
two-run single.
Miami came back with two
runs In the top o f the fourth and
scored another In the fifth. Still
In the fifth, the Tigers had the
bases loaded with two outs when
a bloop hit looked like It would
fall In behind second base. But
LelfTer. Sem inole's shortstop,
made a nice diving grab to save
at least two runs and keep the
' Savages comfortable lead Intact.
The Savages the added two
. runs in the bottom of the sixth
and Burke shut Miami down In
the lop o f the seventh.
" I f we keep playing like this
we’U be In good shape "

event since then, drawing .i
w orldw ide television audience
on a special Saturday In August
The "D ream " has been an
Im p o rta n t a sp ect In L it tle
League’s popularity In what
other tournament structure can
a Held be whittled down Iroin
l5 o n n n, the final two Alia
monte's National League All
Stars realized that dream last
year, finishing second lo Seoul.
South Korea
L it t le L e a g u e B a s e b a ll's
greatest asset Is Its name and Its
organization. I.llile League has
become a misnomer for a young
ballplayer A vnungster In a
bnsrtiail unilnrm automatically
represents a Lillie Leaguer lo the
unknowing public, regardless of
league affiliation
hs organization is lieyoml repmuch Again, the mere fact that
ll lakes ail ol the Lillie Leagues
in the world lx-gins tournament
plat and in those six weeks lias
eight teams lor lls World Series
is tc-marknhlc

Considrr. II would lake Major
League Baseball 17 YEARS of
regular season play lo equal the
numlier of games plaved In Just
six weeks o f Little League's
tournament season
Pony Basct&gt;ull. Inc., on the
other hand, does not have the
tr a d itio n o f L it t le L e a g u e
Basclinll nor Ihe Intense organi­
zation In fact, ll was formed in
1951 because Little Leaguers
had no where to play after Ihe
12-year-old age l.lttle League
later added lls Juniors (1980).
Seniors 119 6 11and Big Leaguers
11967)
In 1951. Lew Hayes,
sports editor ol the Washington.
Pa Observer Ke/nirler. started
Ihe llrsl Potty League Ponies (13and 14-year-olds) o f six learns.
Haves, now 68. was Ihe presl
deni of Ihe league for Hirer
years In 195-1. Joe* E Brown, a
famous comedian, assumed Ihe
presidency. "H e lent his name lo
the program and also travelril to
Bee D E B A T E . Page

4B

Talks Resum e,
D eadline N e a rs
NEW YORK llll'll
Wllh onlv
60 hours lo go Itrforr Tuesday's
strike date and ow tiers Indignant
o v e r C o m m is s io n e r P e le r
Ueberroth's pru|x&gt;snl*. nrgntlu
tors planned a resumption ol
baseball talks tod.iv
The talks are scheduled for 2
p m KI&gt;T No negoti.utons took
place Friday and the only sub
slanllve comment came Irom the
owners, who werr in "sharp
disagreement" with two ol the
pro|ms.ils made Thursday bv
Ueberroth

Baseball *I
MaePliall said some suggrs
lions Uelierroth did not make
public Thursday were "more
constructive, and hu|K-lully will
provide Ihe basis lor discussions
with ihe Players Assoc hit Ion "
Ueberroth had no comment on
M.u Phall's statement

The owners' lout mail exccti
live committee met In New York
Kililay to lurtlier review lletier
The players have sei an Aug 6 m ill's plan which was given to
strike deadline it a new cnllrrllvr the owners and players Friday
bargaining agreement Is not morning, arid in plot addiitnnal
strategy
reached
I lie executive committee. Bud
Lee MaePliall. Ihe owners' Scllg ul M ilw aukee. Edward
clilel negotiator, rrttlct/ed the Dennett Williams of Baltimore.
commissioner's pn&gt;|xi*al to put Peter O'Malley of tais Angeles
*45 million In television reve­ and Houston's John Me M ullen.
nues In escrow until a settlement w « » e«|M &lt; led lu M-liiaUI III N ew

F iv e o f S em in ole H igh 's fin e fresh m en to be A re th a R iggin s, L e tic ia Strickland. B ottom

huddle arou n d g ir ls b a s k e tb a ll coach row, from left, Angel Bass, coach Steele,
Charles Steele. Top row, from left, Liz Long, Nicole Mitchell.

SHS Gets Top-Notch Frosh
luturc. we'll have two or three really strong
By Chrla Plater
guards and a big girl."
H erald Bporta W r ite r
Of the four who will probably play varsity.
Usually, a coach can be satisfied If he or she
gets two or three good freshman players In a Riggins could be the first to win a slatting
season. And It would be even belter if one of th«&gt;se assignment. The 5 6 guard out o f lutkevtew
Middle School has been playing SYSA or AAU
voting players eventually made ll up to varsity.
Consider the plight, or delight. If you will, of ball for a longtime
Along wllh that experience, she Is also one ol
one Charles Steele The first year Seminole High
School girls baskett&gt;alI coach doesn't have one or the fastest girls In Seminole County. As an eighth
grader ut Lakevlcw. Riggins ran the 100 yard
two lop notch freshmen — he has eight
And four of those could be big contributors lo dash In 10.9 (without starting blocks) which was
better Hum any county high school runner in
the varsity In the 1985-86 senson.
The four frosh who will most likely still up for 1985.
"Aretha (Riggins) has been playing a long lime
varsity at one time or another this coming season
Include Aretha Riggins. Adrian Hlllsman. Leticia and will be able to help out right away." Steele
said. " I think she could play point guard She has
Strickland and Liz Long.
Adding strength to the Junior varsity squad will • the type of altitude to play the point."
Another Jet quick guard lo add to Seminole's
lie freshmen Nicole Mitchell. Angel Bass. Chlnela
rosier Is Hlllsman who played SYSA ball at
Gilchrist and Jewell Simmons
"This Is hands down the besl freshman group Sanford Middle School. Hllisnian Is 5-4 but plays
I've ever seen." Steele said "Those are the best much taller and also has much the same
four (Long. Riggins. Strickland. Hillaman) to ever quickness as Riggins
Bee FROSH. Page 411
come over at one time. Especially looking at the

c o u ld be re a c h e d on th e pen sion
issue, an d said U eberroth had

"m isstated" club owners' |xvillion on (Inanrlal losses.
'W ith resfieel lo the piu|x&gt;s.il
to escrow a portion ol the d u ll
national television revenues, this
money less am amounts III unvl
which may t&gt;r dltrclly ncgoii
alrd wllh the Players Assoclu
lion
lielongs solely lo lllr
clubs. " MucPhall's statement
read.
MaePliall said hr "appreciates
Ills (Urt&gt;rrroih'n| desire to do
everything possible to prevent a
tiusrhall strike
In Ills p r e s s c o n fe r e n c e
T h u r s d a y . U e b e r ro th a ls o
scolded owners lor hlamlng llielr
lln.tncl.il losses on high player
salaries.
"W e are not asking the players
lo solve club economic pro­
blems." MaePliall -ild "W e arc
simply asking llieui In join wllti
us In constructing a proper
system lo control costs and
share revenues on an rquliuhlr
busls Elleetlvr action may only
In* taken by Joint agreement with
Die players."

York

llila

w eek en d

Ueberroth. Inactive In the
nine-month negotiation process.
Intervened Thursday when II
up|irarrd no solution was In
sight
I lie Players Association had
no commeril oil Ueberroth's
su ggestion s Further details nl
Ills pro|s&gt;sals. other than those
addiessed Thursday, were not
disclosed

Urlicrinlli also asked owners
lu otter players a 50 In 100
percent Increase over llielr pres
cut &gt;15 5 m illion annual con
i i ll&gt;u11&lt;&gt;ii over a live-year |x-rlod
ulsiul $23 million lu *31
million The plavrrs have askril
loi *60 million, imr-third ol the
owncis national television rrve
lines.
In exchange, playets would
give owners Ihe salary arhllra
linn extension llicy want hum
two years lu three, and Itmll
awards made liy arbitrators lo
no more ilum double a player's
current salary. A superstar
clause would lx- Included In 111I
restrictions on tup athletes'
salaries. No active players would
lie ullrctrd by the change lu
salary arbitration.

West Sem inole Can't Match
M uscle O f Powerful Foes
By Chris Plater
H e r a ld Bporta W riter

FOREST C ITY - To call ll
home run derby would be put­
ting mildly what transpired In
the Pony Baseball Southeast
Regional Tournament Friday at
th e W e a l S e m i n o l e P o n y
Baseball complex.
It was a fireworks display of
Walt Disney World calibre or. as
Duvld Lettcrman might put It.
"It was a hitting fethtlval "
The powerful East Cobb Astros
out of Marietta. Ga.. got the
alugfest going Friday afternoon
as. led by two tremendous home
runs off the but of Marc Plarlotlu.
the Georgia champs trounced
West Seminole. 204). In a win­
ners' bracket contest.
Then. In the losers' bracket
final Friday night. Shune Smith
hammered round trippers In
three consecutive plate appear­
ances to offset the two homer
barrage of West Seminole's Jim
Morse as Gadsden. Ala., claimed
a 12-8 victory at Richard Coffey
Field.
That set the stage for Saturday

Baseball
night's final.between unbeaten
M a r ie t ta and o n c e - b e a te n
Gadsden Murictla needs just
one win lo advance to the South
Zone Tournament In Tuinpa
while Gadsden must win two
straight. Saturday’s action starts
at 6 p in. with a second game. If
necessary, at 8 .
In the losers' bracket final
Friday night. Gadsden broke up
a scoreless lie wllh seven runs
on Juat three tilts In the lop of
the second. Gadsden had u
chance to break It open In the
first Inning os It had one hit. two
walks, two stolen bases and a
wild pitch but couldn t score.
Shane Patty took one on the
head from hard-throwing Morse
to lead off. D ex ter H arrell
followed wllh a single off (he
fence In right renter and Dale
Simmons drew u walk to load
the bases
Smith then came up for the
second time In the game. In the

lop of the first. Hie hard hilling
lefthander ripped a single off the
fence In center (Irtd. This time.
Morse got a pitch up on Sinllh
and knew It. Morse could only
hung his head as Smith's shot
went out o f the park In right
center for a grand slam home
run and a 4-0 lead.
Todd Harrell then went on In
relief of Morse and got one out,
but then West Seminole had a
defensive lapse. Fuur consecu­
tive errors by West Seminole
enabled Gudsden lo push across
three more runs for a 7-0 lead.
Gadsden gave West Seminole
u run In Ihe bottom of the second
us Morse reached on an error
a n d s c o r e d on tw o m o r e
Gadsden errors on Gene Drvaney's grounder
The Alabama champs picked
up another run In Ihe top o f Ihe
third as Smith crunched Har­
rell's first pitch of the frame over
the fence In fight center for an
84) lead.
Morse put West Seminole right
8 «e PONY. Page 4B

-

» »

'Vfek-

ru st,

iim i

VMK*«a

Jim Morse m ay have looked bad on this pitch, but he made
up lor It twofold by crushing a pair ol home runs Friday
night.

* u* m m

�IB—Evening Herald, tantord. FI.

Sunday, Aug. 4, I f U

SPORTS

Dye Claims New
Rules Hurt Blacks
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UPI) Auburn football coach Pat Dye
believes tougher academic rules
w o u ld m a in ly h u r t b la c k
athletes.
But we couldn'l have taken
Discussing an NCAA proposal some o ' those under the pro­
callin g for stricter academic posed rule."
standards. Dye said. “ If they
Vanderbilt's George MacIntyre
even enforce the rules we have said tougher academic standards
now, w e ll have smaller, slower would also hurt hts school — but
people — more whites. It will be fora different reason.
like when I played (at Georgia In
"T h ere's a limited pool o f true
the late ‘50sj."
sch ola r-ath letes out t h e r e ."
Dye claims lhat If the proposed MacIntyre said. "W hen the rules
rule had been In effect last liar recruiting the poorer stu­
winter. Auburn would have been dents. other schools will start
unablr to get a third o f the high looking at our kind of players."
school football players It re­
While not concerned about the
cruited inio school.
N C A A ra is in g en tra n ce r e ­
"I'm not just talking about q u irem e n ts . V an derb ilt has
Auburn." Dye said. "Aside from spent th e past six m onths
Vanderbilt, we have as good an overcoming a steroid scandal.
academic program as anyone In
"T h a t's no longer a problem ."
the Southeastern Conference. said MacIntyre "W e are now
W e signed Ihe lieat group, aca­ testing for all drugs. Steroids are
demically. since I've been here. the least of our thoughts. I can

N CAA

IN BRIEF
A m ateur Verplank Holds
O n To Lead A t Western Open
OAKOKOOK. 111. (UPI| — Amateur Scott Vrrplank's
3-stroke lead after tw o rounds o f the 1985 Western Open
cannot be described as a wild dream come true,
" I don't have wild dreama," said Verplank. who stands to
shrug off B90,000 If he remains In the lead through the
final round Sunday. " I won't win u penny If I finish first or
last,"
Verplank shot his second consecutive 4-under-par 08
Friday for a two-day total of 8 -under par 136, three strokes
belter than Steve Jones, a 1984 qualifying tournament
graduate Who had a 5-under-par 67 Friday for a 139.
Jim Thorpe and Ihive Harr were tied for third at
3-under-par 141, wllh Thorpe shooting the tournament's
best round of 66 Friday und Harr getting a 67. Craig
Stadler, Scott Simpson. Ernie Gonzalez and Corey I’avln
were tl**d at 2 under-par 142.
Verplank started his second round on the bar k nine and
double-bogeyed the 14th hole. He got one o f the strokes
back al the 16th hole and made the turn at 3-under par for
Hie tournament.
He bogeyrd the No. 1 hole, but blrdlcd six o f the last
eight holes.

Walker Tied With Peterson
TOLEDO. Ohio (Ul*l| — Colleen Walker refuses to look
bark on her mistakes or ahead to payday.
Walker and defending rhamplon Laurl Peterson shared
the lead of the Jamie Fiur Toledo (.'lassie Friday wllh a
second round 4-under-pur 140
Walker rntrrs the last two days of the 1175.000
lournameni as the only survivor of Thursday's three-waysi niggle during Which she shared a 70 stroke lead with
Nancy Lope/ and Lauren Howe.
Walker broke loose of Lopez und llowe. recording 34*36
to maintain her position. Walker said her secret Is not
looking bark.
*’I started out today as if nothing had happened
yesterday." said Walker, who has not won a tournament
since joining the lour in I9H2,
" I just hud to do the best I could, i’ayduy Is not until
Sunday," she said.
Peterson, saying she was hilling, thr bull much belter
Friday, shot 32 on the first nine al the Glengarry Country
Club
"It was nice to jump otf to a good start out there," said
Peterson, who carded par. birdie, eagle on her first three
holes to go down 0-under at that point.
Lopez slipped from her previous day’s ellorl by a slrokr.
shooting 35-36 tiefore a crowd of 7.(XX) Friday for a 14 I
total at 3-under-par
Howe, carding 70 In the first round and 72 Friday, will
tee off Saturday 2-under

Tampa Bay Slam s A WS, 23-4
Tampa Hay exploded for 13 runs In the fourth Inning
Frlduy. highlighted by a pair of grand slants, rn route to a
23-4 trouncing of A|&gt;opka-Wral Seminole In the Slate
Junior Little la-ague Tournament Dual ut Merritt Island
Apopka-West Seminole bulb a 4-0 lead after twti innings
but Tampa Hay euinr back will) six In Hie lx it toot of (he
(hint off losing pitcher Jim m y Mussel white.
Matt Snyder pul Tampa Hay In control when hr shiggrd
a grand slain nfT MusnelwIdle In the hollom o f Hie fourth.
Later III (he Inning, which saw Tampa Hay send 18 trailers
to the plate. Mike Harlan blasted a grand slam oil reliever
Tim Krler.

tell you. we're the cleanest team
In America — or at least Med for
fir s t"
Dye thinks too much emphasis
has been placed on athletes who
fall to graduate.
"There Is a lot of merit In
going four years to college even
If you don't graduate,” he said
"It gives those who do a social

grace that stands them In good
stead In the outside world. I
graduated from Georgia, but
that Is not (he reason I got m y
job at Auburn.
' There are a lot o f athletes
who have become better people,
(letter citizens, because of their
exposure to college even If they
don't wind up with a degree.

Stewart, Gibson Excel At Masters
C e n tra l F lo r id a 's se co n d
Masters Track and Field Meet,
held this past Sunday at Lake
Mary High School, featured a
World Class mile by Hill Slewarl
of Ann Arbor. Mich.
The stag*- had been set lor
Stewart to attempt 4:10. but
circumstances were less than
favorable. Pacesetter Lindsay
Hodden of Orlando look the race
through the first quarter In 58
seconds and relinquished the
lead after a 2:04 half.
Slewarl went through al 63
and 2 0 H a lon g with S teve
Gallagher of lamgwoixt who look

Track
It through three quarters at 3-15
Stewart ran alone for Ihe last
lap, finishing In 4:23. far off his
Masters personal besl o f 4:11
which had been recorded In­
doors In 1983.
Ullra-dtslance. cross continen­
tal champ Jay Birmingham, of
J a c k s o n v ille , who had just
turned 40. won Hie 5.000 meters
In IH:07.
Sixty-seven year old Donn Hull

of Fort Orange won eight events dash (6 8 ). 100 dash (12.3) and
highlighted by a 2B.5 220 yard high hurdles (20.99). Gibson was
dash. Hull also took firsts in the second In the shot put |38-0| and
shot pul (38'/i). discus I94VS). the long jump 112 6) and third In
long Jump (12-8). high Jump the 220 dash 134.2)
(4-0|, 50 yard dash (6.9). 10O
Also. In Ihe Special Invita­
yard dash (1 2 .9 ) and high tional Mile lhat Stewart ran in.
hurdles |21.231
three Lake Mary High im in er,
On Ihe local front. Lake Mary followed Stewart to Hie finish
H igh g ir ls truck and cross Ken Rohr, a scnlor to-bc at Lake
country coach Mike Gibson won Mary, was second overall with a
or placed In eight events In Hie time o f 4:34 followed by gradu­
ate Malt Palumbo, who received
35-39 age group.
Gibson, trying In work off the a cross country scholarship to
added baggage nfter a trip lo Ihe University o f Central Florida,
Hawaii, took llrsl In the discus ut 4:36 and sophomore-to-be
190-11, high Jump (4 2). 50 yard Erie Petersen at 4:38.

Officer's Jamboree Set
August Is with us so all you fall and winter
season bowlers gel your howling balls out o f
(he closet and come on out and see us.
You'll need some practice If you haven't
tmwled this summer. We have special rales
on Satu rday a ftern o o n s and Sunday
mornings Also, com ing up on Ihe 17th und
IBlh of August we are going lo bring back
"T h e Good Old D ays" with 254 bowling
both days We will have hosts and hostesses
lo greet you und Inform you of all our
planned fall leagues so you can sign up fnr
the leagues of your choice
League Presidents and Secretaries and
their spouses are Invited to our League
C lltlrer'a ,/mnU/n-r on A a K “ *&lt; I 1*6 •*&gt; l M l
p in. W r plan to fe e d y o u lunch and h a ve n
run In u riiam en t — a ll on Howl A m e ric a !

W e’ ll also be handing out league materials
and getting your status on your leagues. If
you haven't tx-en contacted yet about the
Jamboree, call us at 322-7542.

Aug. 11
Is your name among our high scores this
werk: STAR OF SANFORD LEAGUE Dun
Dougherty 224. Wayne Lively 212 A 204.
Max Sinllh 209. George Mansfield 200. Mike
Vldcttii 212. Della Garner 200. Dee Hogan
209. Charles Elbcry 221; D RIFT INN
LEAGUE Milton Hannar 203, Eddie Borges
21 1 A 210; HLAIH AGENCY LEAGUE Vince
Cara 215 A 213. Claudia Jana 224 Ivnrv
Whllaker 207. Ron Allman 21B. Lrs Hudden hagen 213. Dirk Mlnlck 224

We had a good turnout for our Summer
Sweepstakes last weekend and expect many
m ore th is w eek en d . R em em b er, the
toumamrnt ends the 15lh of August so
com e In soon lo participate. We have s q u a d s
at QiOU p '.rn. to d a y And S u nday und w ill run
Naswaua again fo r those w h o are Interested.
Our bowling classes have all atarlrd and
are having "a ball". If you wanted lo takr
the lessons hilt couldn't make It Hie first
week, you can still calrh up. Just give us a
call and we'll enroll vou.

CARDINAL LEAGUE Tony Shuhcn 231.
Don Pace 233 A 218/598, Norman Kiiuel
210: UNPROFESSIONAL MEN S LEAGUE
Danny Hale 215. Harold Sutidvall 222. Let*
Grover 212, Warren 216, Tony D u n k tn e o n
224. Marlin 200 A Sleplowskl 203; C.F.R.H.
LEAGUE Lon H. 213 A Cassle A. 204;
TUESDAY N IO IIT MIXED LEAGUE W&lt; ndv
Gorman 190-201-195/586. Don Gorman 196
A 203. John 200. Sharon Kirkpatrick 204
and Hill Kirkpatrick 216.

M a y f a ir W e lc o m e s B a m b i B a c k
Boy. It surr Is good In see (he smiling face
of Hamhl Daniels In the clubhouse again.
Hamhl took time olf lo have her first child, a
beautiful i M i u n e t n g girl that Hamhl and
Husband Jeff named Jennifer. Welcome
)&gt;ack. Hamhl. wr all missed you.
Nredtrss lo say. Amy (Ihe other Gal Huil
works In the cluhhuoac) Is also glad to srr
her hack
As a lot of people know, the reason Hie
course was so dry last week was not only
because we didn't have any rain, but we lost
Hie big pump lo lightning This Is the pump
that controls the entire sprinkler Bystrm. It
was finally llxrd and operating by Monday
night, July 29. Ted Damn. Ihr grrrns
supervisor was much relieved. He says It
works belter now than U ever did before.
tin Saturday, July 27. Hie Mayfair Men's
Gull Association held a four-man. ties! ball
to u rn a m e n t w hlrh w as w on by Ih r
foursome of: Churk Bantgona. Rich Barnes.
Art Harris und Wes Werner Tills group shot
an excellent 17 under par — 55. Nice going,
guys!
Frlduy. August 2. Mayfair Imsled u
Pro-Am Tuuruumrnl. By the time ibis
article goes lu press, It will lx- history hut,
Hie results will be In next week'acohmm.
Both Kim Young and Grover Todd will

Rudy
Seiler
M A YFA IR

GOLF

have two teams each In Ihe eompclIHon.
Let's ho|ie our Iwo professionals play well.
The nrxl Mayfair Men's Goll Association
event will lx- on Saturday, August 17 Iksure In gel signed up for this "Heat Hie Pro"
lournument. Tills Is Hie member's op ­
portunity to see luiw well Hiey can stack up
against the Mayfair Head Pro. Kim Young
Hy the way. effective on Monday. Augusl
5. the course will again lx- open lor play all
day. As you know. Maylulr has been closed
until 3:00 pm . during June and July lo
allow Ihe maintenance crew time to catch
Up on work on (hr course.
The results of Hie Tuesday dogfight on
July 30 were as follows:
Low Net Team (26): Ernie Harrell and
Harold Davis
Second laiw Net Team 129): Hud Richards

ICBA Seminoles 1-4
In National Tourney
The Inter-County llankeHsill
Association competed In HitNuHnnal AAU 11 und under
Ikiys lournam eni this past week
and lout id out how Ihr rest of the
country pluys hall ut that young
anil tender age.
The ICBA Seminoles' big man,
5 7 Ikihhy Anderson ol Maitland,
had an outstanding lournameni,
•coring (X) jKilnls til tlvr games,
hut tmind himself out-hrlghtrd
In each contest
A n d e r s o n m udr th e A llTournament tram but Hie ICHA
won only one gumr of the flvr
played and (1nlshrd lUlli ol 24
teams entered trout 20 dlUerrul
•talcs. The Seminoles were out­
classed only once. 47-22 ugulnsi
Arkansas
In losses to Maryland 141-27)
a n d M is s o u r i (3 4 - 3 1 ), th e
Seminoles led going Into the Iasi
quarter. Against luwa 144-341.

Basketball

and Dick Elam.
Third Low Net Team (30) Buddy Williams
and Herb Pitman.
Our golf tip of the week Is provided by Hie
Mayfair head professional. Kim Young (The
"Elements of the sw ing" tips that have been
given hy Hill " R e d " Addison will be
resumed next week because "R e d " Is taking
a few days off).
Through my years of teaching. I've found
a very common error that most players do
regardlrss of their handlcup. The left knee
must slay hi a Hexed (slightly bent) position
during the entire golf swing. The area I am
most concerned with Is the area at Impart.
The led knee must stay flexed through the
point ot Impact so the player can stay
through the hitting area longer. Try this and
you will llml yourself hitting the hall more
solid and more consistent.
In the Thursduv night (Aug 1| scramble,
a pair o( foursomes battled It out for first
place hut neither could break loose as there
was a He for the lead.
Tw o foursomes recorded a score of four
under par for the He. They Included the
foursome of Doug Hatley, Hod Taylor. Joe
Pruudfoot and Rich Barnes along with the
team of Grover Todd. Carl Tlllls, Dave
Wheeler and Hob Willis

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Htr Seminoles came luck strong
In the Htmlr hut didn't have
enough left to lake It.
The ICHA victory was against
Inland Empire frum Grandview,
Wash. The Seminoles claimed u
4636 victory hy having that
elusive gtxKl last quarter when
they outscorcd the hoys from Hufur northwest, 33 9.
Aiulrtsoil |uivrd llie wuy by
ixmrlng tn 23 points. Including
nine lit (lie Iasi quarter. Kelly
Kuhn added 1 I points amt
T h rrott P e r k in s ow ned Ihe
twckbuurds with 14 rebound*.
He scored tlvr |xi(nt» Chuckle
Aikins tallied three. Cade Reaves
2 und Seth Rubin 2

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500 S. Maple A»e. Sanford

L U M B E R
Tel |305| 322 0500

G I S C U U N T

389 N. HWY. 17-92
LONGWOOD, Ft
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C O .

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

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P h ila d e lp h ia at S I Lou lt
San Otago a l Moulton, night

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Rested Tibbs Shuts Down Dodgers
A frw years ago. a scries between Ihc Reds and
DodRnrs would evoke such competitive feelings from
players that they would fly to the park.
Jay Tibbs hasn't been a Red long enough to know
what tl was like when Los Angeles ana Cincinnati
hooked up for those crucial series, so he took his time
and drove to Riverfront Stadium for Friday's doubleheader — all the way from Denver.
The right hander, who earlier In Jhe week was
recalled from the Reds' Trtple-A club In Denver o f the
American Association, pitched u flvc hltter to help
Cincinnati post a 5-2 victory over the Dodgers and
salvage a split of their double-header.
" I don't know why I did It.” Tibbs said o f his
cross-country trek. ‘ I slept from I I last night until 10
today (Friday), so I gol plenty o f rest "
Tibbs, who spent the last 3 W weeks In the minors,
raised bis record to 5* 11
The Reds scored five runs In (hr third, all with two
out. liuddy Hell doubled home two runs and Tony
Perez singled heme Bell. Ikibby Castillo relieved and
surrendered Esasky's home run. his 10th, to make It
5-0.
In the First ).amr, Pedro Guerrero hit a three-run
homer and Orrl llershlser. 12-3. and Tom Nledenfuer
pitched the Dodgers to a 5-3 victory.
E xpos 3, P ira te s 2
At Ptltahurgh, Tim Waltach atoned for an error with
u two run double and Joe Heskelh and JefT Reardon
combined on s two-hltter Friday night to lead the
Montreal Expo* to a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for
Montreal.
Heskelh. 9-4. went fi 1-3 Innings, allowing two hits
and walking five. Reardon pitched 2 2-3 Innings for his
major-league leading 26lh save. Pllshurgh starter Rick
Heuschrl fell tuH-4,

N.L. Baseball
The Pirates took a 2-0 lead with two unearned runs
In the third. With one out. Renschc! walked and moved
to third on Bill Alm on’s double. Johnny Rny groundeil
lo third, but Wallach's Ihrow lo the plate uttrmtlng (o
nail Reusehel was wild. Almon then scored on Bill
Madlock s grounder lo short.
Montreal came back with three runs In the fourth.
Andre Dawson hit a one-out double and scored on a
single to center by lluble Brooks. Terry Francona
singled and both he and Brooks moved up on a double
steal. Wullach followed with his double lo right to give
the Expos a 3 2 lead.
Braves 12, G ia n ts 7
At Atlanta, Bob Horner and Terry Harper drew
consecutive two-out bases loaded walks and Krn
Oberkfell singled home two runs In a five run eighth
Inning Friday night to send the Atlanta Braves to a
12 7 victory over the San Francisco Glanis.
Gene Garber. 2-3. pitched 1 2-3 Innings for the
victory. Bruce Sutter tossed the finul Inning. Frank
Williams. 2-3. look the loss.
With the score lied 7-7. pinch hitlers Milt Thompson
and Ciaudcll Washington singled. They advanced on u
groundnut by Rafael Ramirez and Dale Murphy was
IntenUonaliy wnlknl to lottd the tutsw. Horner walked
nn four pilches to score Thompson. Williams went io u
2-0 count on Harper before yielding to Mike Jerk-oat.
who completed the walk to force In Washington
Jeffcoat uncorked a wild pitch on an 0-2 pitch to Ken
Oberkfell to score Murphy. Oberkfell then drilled a
iwo-run single to make the score 12-'T and give him
four RBI In the game.
Cards 3. P h ils 2
Al St. Lotila. Ozzle Smith triggered a three-run

Garrison Overcomes
All-Around Obstacles
BATON ROUGE. La. |UP1) Give Kelly Garrison u 10 for grit,
not performance.
On her way lo the gold medal
for Ihe ull-around In women's
gymnastics Friday nlghi al the
National Sports Festival, Garri­
son overcame two falls, a lapse
In concentration and a faulty
score hoard.

Garrison won the all around
crown despite falling off both the
uneven bars and her specialty —
the balance beam.
"1 lost my concentration for a
little bit." she said. "T h e pre­
ssure was definitely on for the
Boxers Kelelc Banks and Brian floor exercise — I knew I had lo
Lonon also displayed plenty of hit my routine."
determination on a busy night of
A fter her floor event, the
co m p etitio n as the Festival scoreboards read 9.4. a mark
heads Into Its final twu days. Ice which disturbed Garrison.
hockey will resume today with a
"M y coach, John Wojlcztik,
pair o f gam es while boxing told me that my routine was a
observes a day o f rest In pre­ 9.6 even when the board read
paration for Sunday's finals.
9.4.” she said. ‘ ‘ I thought that
Garrison, a dominant figure at score |9 4) took the cake. I fell on
the last two Festivals, slightly the bars. 1 fell on the beam and
t r a i l e d 1 4 -y e a r -o ld J o y c e
then this. I let out a little scream
Wllbom of Paterson. N.J.. after of disgust."
three rounds. Wllbom, who had
Garrison's score was quickly
2H 35 points heading into her altered ... and so was (he order of
final event, registered a 9.20 Ihe top spots. Wllborn's East
score on Ihe balance be urn to squad took the team all-around
finish with 37.55.
title with 103.70 points.
Banks, a 20 -ycar-old
G a irtson . IH. from A liu s.
Okla.. then wrested Ihe gold featherw eight from Chicago,
away by scoring 9.6 on her floor gave Lyndon Walker a thorough
rxrrclse. finishing with 37 60 to boxing lesson as he stopped his
edge W llbom by .05. Atyssa 20-yearold Washington. D.C.,
Solomon. 14. Wayside. N.J.. opponent with 45 seconds left In
the second round.
took the bronze wtlh 36.75.

The Detroit Tigers are hoping
the junkman can salvage their
season.
W o rk in g m asterfu lly w ith
breaking stulT. Frank Tanana
allowed one hit — Ben Ogllvle's
bases-empty home ntn In the
fifth Inning — to give the Detroit
Tigers a 4-1 victory Friday night
over the Brewers.
"W hen you throw the stuff I
throw, you have to be sharp."
Tanana said.
Tatiana's effort moved the
Tigers within a half-game o f
second place In the American
League East but left them 10
g a m e s b e h in d f I r s 1•p 1a c e
Toronto.
Tanana. 6-10. faced one baiter
over the minimum — Oglivle —
and stntck out eight. He walked
one batter, who was taken off the
bases when Oglivle grounded
Into a double play.
Blue J a y s 5, Rangera 3
A l T o r o n t o . G eo rge B e ll
clubbed a grand slam and Ranee
MulUnlks added a solo shot to
rally Toronto to Its 12lh triumph
In Its Inst 13 games. Doyle
Alexander, 116. won tils fourth
slnilght decision Tom Henke
earned a save. The loser was
Glen Cook, 2-3.
Orioles 8, Indians 6
A l C le v e la n d . Cal Ripken
doubled home the tying run and
scored the winning ntn on Eddie
Murray's single In Ihe seventh
In n in g, r a lly in g B altim ore.
Sammy Stewart. 4 4. pitched
onc-hlt rellrf over live Innings
Rich Thompson. 3-5. took the
loss. Brook Jacoby lilt Ills 121 It
homer for Cleveland.
R oyals 4. R ed Box 3
Al Kansas Clly, Mo . Loitulc
Sm ith's one-out hascs-loadcd
single In Ihe |0th Inning lifted
the Royals. Murk Clear. 12. was
the loser. Dim Qulacnbcrry pit­
ched the lot It liming tn raise his
record B O
W h it e B o x 0 . Y a n k e e s 5

Al New York, Ozzle Gulllrn
seventh Inning with an RBI single lo npark the scored front second base on an
Cardinals and Increase thrtr lead In the N L East to 2 Vg Infield hit by Luis Salazar in the
games oVer the Mets. John Tudor. 13 H. notched his 11th Inning to lead Ihe W hile
12th triumph In his Iasi 13 decisions. Charles Hudson, Sox Salazar hit a grounder
down the llrst base line that Rich
5-9. was ihe loser.
Bordl, 2-4. fielded. Hordt bud no
Cubs 2. Mets 1
At Chicago. Gary Matthews' third home run In five play al first mid Gulllrn never
games — a hases-empty blast Into the wliul In the fifth M o p p ed running Juan Agosto,
Inning — snapped u 1-1 tie and lilted the Cubs. The 3-2. was the winner.
A 'a 3, M a rin ers 1
lo a a a iM |&gt; (w tl (li e M e l *
i h i e c - g a o u ' w i n n i n g o d re a k .
At Oakland, three pitchers
Matthew*' alien cam e olT Terry Lraeh. 1-1. (Tennis
Eekrraley. 8 8, won his flrai game since June I.
min bitted o n a four-hitler amt
Mlkr Davi* hit his 201h homer lo
A s tro s 1 2 ,Psdres 9
At Houston. Joe Nlekrn defeated San Diego for the lead the A's. Rick Langford, who
25th I line In his career and Bill Doran highlighted u pitched three scoreless Innings
four-run second Inning with a three-run homer to [Nice uflrr taking over for Ihe Injured
the Astros Nlrkro. 9-8, ran Ills career record ugulnsi Tomm y John, was credited with
San Diego In 25-10 Dave Smith recorded his Itilh Ills first victory since Sept. 12.
19H2 T h e loser was R ick
save. LaMarr llovl. 13 ti. took the loss
Langford. 1-4.
A n gels 3, T w in s 1
At C a liforn ia , rookie Kirk
McCasklH. 7 7. limited M in ­
nesota lo two hits over H 2-3
Innings and Brian Downing d e­
livered a two run homer In the
I UIH. CSO i On.* Can
•DjI wi"*#
)■ I*
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sixth to keep Ihe Angels, who
T ua.lkt iM . . C a » t « C u * * w I *
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IX
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have won only two of their Iasi
t m ln n lM lt a
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eight games, two games ahead ol
S l s * 4 M l * ’ * * )&gt; « m Mmn
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IB I S IX
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Festival

Tim W a llach
...A tones fo r E

Pedro G uerrero
...2 more ta tera

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35 YEARS
HEATINQ A AIR
CONDITIONING
EXPERIENCE

FTCS&gt;WaTWB€
PAO0UCT3 PROGRAM

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Summer Como*
Early In Florida
G«rt Ready Now I
C A L L : 8 6 9 -1 5 3 7

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Sunday, Aug. 4, i m

Solid District 14 Seeks World Series Berth
The District 14 Big League has assembled nome
pretty Impressive latent In the past and sent three
team* to the World Series In the past four years.
Ujoklng to udd to the district's long list o f
accomplishments Is the 1085 squad which will
host the Southern Regional Tournament starting
Sunday at the University o f Central Florida.
This year's Dlsirlct 14 team has everything It
takes to make It to the World Series Most o f the
players were starters on either a high school or
college tram this past season and many will go on
to play college ball In 1086.
The tournament gets under way Sunday
afternoon at 1 with Division 3 (Florida champion)
laklng on Division 4 (North Carolina. South
Carolina. Virginia. West Virginia champ). In
Sunday's second game, scheduled for 4 p in..
D ivision 2 (A lab am a , G eo rgia . K en tu cky,
kiulslann. Mississippi. Tennessee champ) battles
Division 1 (Texas champ),
District 14 drew a first round bye and will play
the winner of the Division I Division 2 game
Monday night ai 5 The double elimination
tournament Is scheduled to run through Thurs­
day (Aug. 8) with lhe winner advancing to the Big
League World Series which starts Aug. 11 In Fort
Lauderdale.
Herr Is n look at the District 14 all-stars:
Jason Andrews — (6-2. 205) llard-hlttlng
outfielder who helped Apopka-Wrsl Seminole to
Ihr District 14 regular season tltlr. Andrews
playrd high school ball al Apopka and will go on
to Carson Newman College.

Baseball
Kevin Bass — 16-5. 220) The big righthander
also played for Apopka-West Seminole during the
regular season where he was one of the tram's
top run producers and also an effective relief
pitcher Mass Is a 1985 graduate nf Lake Brantley
High and will go on lo the University o f Central
Florida
C lint Baker — (5-11, 150) Another Seminole
County "product. Baker played for the Oviedo
Linns during Ihe District 14 regular season. The
lefthandrd first baseman outfielder, who Is also a
switch hitter, graduated from Lyman High In
1985.
John Canfield — (5-11, 165) A versatile
player. Canfield started at shortstop for Lake
Howell High before moving to Ihe outfield for the
Maitland Big League learn. Canfield plans lo
attend Gloucester (N.J) College.
Joe C ardw ell — 16-1. 195) A 1984 graduate of
West Orange High. Cardwell will Ire an Important
man In the pitching siall for District 14. The big
southpaw, who played for the Octree Big League
tram, will attend Rollins College In 1985-86.
Msrk C o ffe y — 16-0. 178) Played on Ihe
Altamonte Springs Senior League learn that won
Ihe World Series tllle last year. Coffey started at
third base at latke Urantle&gt; High as a Junior In
1985 and was one of Ihe club's lop power hitlers
Coffey, who played for Apopka-West Seminole
during ihe regular season, will play third, second

or shortstop for District 14.
Mike Davis — (6-2. 180) An outstanding line
drive hitter, Davis was one o f the top prep hitters
in Seminole County In 1983 as a Junior at Lake
B ra n lle y H igh. D avis, a n oth er player o ff
Apopka-West Seminole. Is a catcher and out­
fielder.
Craig Duncan — (5-10. 140) Was one of the top
pitcher's on the Oviedo High staff In 1985 as a
Junior. Duncan, who played for the Oviedo Big
League, will be a top reliever for District 14.
C h ris E llis — (6-0. 180) Another Important
pari nf the pitching staff. Flits played high school
ball and Big League In Eustis.
Todd Maufroy — (5-11. 195) Starting catcher
on Iasi year's District 14 Big League (ram that
went 10 the World Series. Maufroy. one o f the
lending hitlers In District 14. Is a Eustis High
graduate and played for Stetson University In
1985.
Mark Merchant — 16-0. 1G0) As a sophomore
at Oviedo High. Merchant was one of Ihe leading
hitlers in the county this past season. The
switch hitting righthander plays shorslop and In
Ihe outfield. He played for the Oviedo Lions
during (he District 14 regular season.
J e ff Morgan — (60. 175) A graduate of West
Orange High. Morgan played for Ihe Ocoee Big
League team this season. Morgan, who plays
third base and shortstop, played for Methodist
College In the spring of ‘85.
Chuck Moseley — (5-7. 160) The fleet-fooled
outfielder Is a 1985 graduate of Eustis High and

Slaney
M isses
Record

...Pony
Continued front IB
back In :he thick of things in the
bottom of the third. Don Nestor
started off the Inning with a solid
single lo center oft Gadsden
starter Dale Simmons and. with
one out. Jayrne Burke beat out
an Infield single and Jason Kroll
walked to load the bases.
Morse, who drove In all four
runs In Thursday's win over
Gadsden, then fell behind. 0-2
Simmons elected U&gt; come back
with a fastball and Morse Jacked
it over the fencr In center field
for a grand slam homer, cutting
Gadsden's lead lo H-5 Ironically.
Simmons had an 0-2 count on
Morse In Thursday's game and
came In with a fastball Ilial
Morse ripped for a two-run

LONIXJN (UPI| - Mary Decker
Slaney lulled lo recapture the
world mile record she last held
In 1982 despite winning ihe
c v r n t In Ih e In te r n a tio n a l
Athlete's Club Grand Prix rnecl
by more than UX) meters Friday,
Slaney. running al a wet and
w indy Crystal Palace track,
finished In
4:19.59 Ihr
fastest ever run by a woman In
Britain.
Hill II was 8-1Os of a second
slower than she clocked In Uslo
lust Saturday and more than
four seconds off ihr World record
o f 4 : 1 5 8 sr t b y N a t a l y a
Artyoinova o f Ihe Soviet Union
Iasi year.
Slancy's ran a then-world re­
cord 4 .1H 08 on July 9. 1982 In
Parts. The record was broken by
Mnrtclcn Pulru of Romania later
l h a l y e a r a n d a g a i n by
Artyomovu lust year.
Slaney looked In commanding
form In this ninth Grand Prlx
meet o f Ihe season, even though
she was nursing n slightly sore
ankle.
“ I frrl strong enough lo break
Hit 11cord right now. but I Just
need a nice nlglil lo do it."

homer.

W t«M S

West Seminole pitcher M ark P rice confers
with catcher Gene Dcvaney In F rid ay's Pony
Baseball Soulheast Regional Tournament.
West Seminole dropped a pair ol games
Friday, 20 0 to powerhouse M arietta, Ga., and

...Frosh

Continued from IB
vu rlou s to u rn a m en ts." saltl
Abraham Key. siall assist.ml fur
Pony Ilast-ball "H e attended
every World Series until he died
In 1954 "
Puny Duse bull Is synonymous
with Ilex Utility
Ihe brochure
said IVmy Baseball offers pat­
terns of n|»eralluii which muy br
adapted to Ihr needs o f Ihr
community rather than existing
as an Inslllullon lit which the
comnuiuliy ittusl adapt Itself
L l k r w l s c . Its p l a y i n g
dimensions ure adapted to Ihr
ugr group The distances (or the
bus* path and piichmg rubber
grow gradually larger as the
player grows older.
Puny Baseball lias six rampetllive divisions — Pinto, Mustang,
Uronro. Pony, Cult and Palo­
mino. Of lltr six. four hold a
W o rld S eries U n like L ittle
League, where the site ts sta­
tionary. Pony B u m k ill uses dll
fervnt clllv* The |*011y World

Series, howrvrr. has Im-cii at
Washington. Pa. 22 of the 34
years. This year. Ihe Colt Series
is in Lui.im itr lud. The Palo
mtno Scries is In Cincinnati. The
Bronco Series will Im- In Sun
Jose. Cal
Whereas, there are major dif­
ferences between Ihe iwo pro­
grams on mosl levels. Tec-Bait,
where Ihe k ill Is till oil u kilting
lee, is ukm i the same. It's an
Instructional level for ages 6
through 8 where the emphasis Is
on education and not competi­
tion Each player kits once ait

inning.
Here's u comparison of Little
L ea gu e am i P o n y Hasehull
divisions und dimensions.
M I H O R l v t N IN T O *
urn*
Mmmm:

A«*» *. f. W. It an*

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P in t * l i I m B a ll S * a Sa lt * « * lo t s *
pat I ton S a t ktOt m a g p U cS at T * * Bail

MAw ait*.
M U lt A N O l B S O O C O I
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I

12 8 lo Gadsden, Ala. P rice started Ihe first
ga m e then cam e on In relief In fhe second.
D evaney caughl both gam es. In two ga m es
Friday, West Sem inole's opponents com bined
to hit eight home runs.

well, loo."
With three excellent guards
moving up In high school lit
1985-88 all Strrlr needed to
C ontinu ed from IB
build a solid franchise for Ihe
Hlllsmnu played AAU ball Hits lulure was a big girl. There
summer on Ihr Seminole iH and
weren't any at either Sanford
under leant although she Is Just
Middle or Lukrvlrw so Steele
14 -year* old. In ihe IH and
figured lie might have to wall a
under Inurnam cnl. Illltsman
year or two.
played Impressive I&gt;- for the leant
Then, almost nul of Ihe blue,
S tee le co ach ed , scoring 13 came 6-1 Lit Long. Since she
points In one game and 10 In
attended Sanford's All Souls
another.
C atholic School and hadn't
"She's going lo be real lough,"
played organized ball lieforr. no
Strrlr said of lllllnman "She
one knew much uboul Long.
nerds lo sharpen Mime aspects
But. alter she won u stale free
o f her game hut she's very
throw shooting content. people
aggressive and roarhahlc. She's
started to take notice. Ami, ultrr
vrry compel live and willing to
playing for the AAU 14 and
leant."
under leant for Steele, Long
Another jilayer out ol Sanford
proved she has the potential to
Middle School Is Strickland who
tie a force in Seminole County
uveraget! over 30 points per
bask -l ball In the years to come
game in SYSA play. The 5 8 ,
A good-looking 14-year-old.
14-yearold has the ability lo
Long could very well lx- on the
play either guard nr forward.
varsity Irani when ihr season
"She could play varsity right
starts but, because o f her lack of
awuy." Slrclr said or Strickland.
experience. Slrclr wants her lo
"She's an excellent Blunder and
start out on Ihr Junior varsity.
also has a real good vertical leap.
But he's confident she'll be up
And she handles the kill real
on varsity before the season's

...Debate

plans to attend the University of Florida.
Mike Passllla — (6 2. 1751 One of the top prep
pitchers In Central Florida this past season.
Passllla will be a key figure In the District 14 stnfT.
Passllla. who played Big League for Winter
Garden, graduated from Bishop Moore High and
will attend Notre Dame University.
Randy Snodgrass — (5-11. 170) Another top
notch hurler. Snodgrass played for the Winter
Park High and the Maitland Big League. He plans
to attend the University of Central Florida.
Kyle W hitaker — (5-8. 150) Whitaker was the
starting second baseman on last year's District 14
all-star team. He is a graduate o f West Orange
High and played Tor the Ocoee Big League.
David W ea tg ate — (5-10. 190) Another
product of the successful Euslls Little League
program. Westgate. a third baseman and pllcher.
will be a senior at Mount Dora High this school
year.
The manager o f Dlsirlct 14. laklng over for
Oviedo's Howard Mable who Is now District I -I
Big League Director. Is Max Westgate o f Eustis
Weatgate has 12 years experience coaching
all-stars and he was also assistant coach for
Umatilla (Iwo years) and Mount Dora High (three
years).
Westgaie’s assistants will be Bob Flcquelle ol
Winter Garden and Richard Coffey o f ApopkaWest Scmtnole. Flcquctte has managed the
Winter Garden Big la-ague the past five seasons
whle Coffey had six years of experience In ihe
Pony Baseball program.

p * * t M *| I*I&gt; # |
A g a t t a n g t# I S *
b*k*|Ht-St * r * to l* * t t s * ptfching O ut* x «
tt i * t * * t T S * M u k lp n g t S * y * tK&gt;«* option!
D *p *n U in g on IS * ob a ity o l ISO p ittrtrt it con
b * p l« T *u Uh# L ill i. L * * g u * co n b * p i . r«U
n it s m oOitiod first a n d tocond tn d third
ttootin#. to n bo p lt y t d Ilk * pretotktontl
ba to b oM
io m ln o lo P o n y u tod t s . third
option
P o n y B r o n c t t i o g o t It a n d I I
Tho
b o to p n th i pro W W
Tho pitching d u to n c t
It t t Toot
J U M IO B lv t . PON H I
t i l 'l l I t t f i r t Jw m .rt
A g * 11 T S t
t&gt; ot*p « 'S&gt; a rt optional M o tt t M m i u m to
tool, although M ttot it a om a lim o t v w d tar
h a ll o l * taaton d u rin g tho trantlU anal
par tod A ittm o n tt and O vto do do not t u , *
i t n a i 'o r l i t i d i to TSoy u to t s . TO tool
d ik ta n c .t TSa pitching d u U n c o It at taal t
In c h t k
T S a p it c h in g d l l t a n c t It M l
n o g o lia b l*
P * n y Pankat: A go I ) en d It T ho b o w p a th i
a r o t S t a o l T h t pitching d u t o n c t u It ta*l
I B N IO S t . i . CO LTS
l i n t * L a a g v * W ntnrt: A g o t It and It T ht
b lw p d t h i * r * 10 tool T S * p itch ing d il'o n c .
UtO l p . l t Me So I
P a o y CaITt A g o t It a n d I * Tho b a w p o lh t
a r t *0 tool Tho pitching d tt la n c * it *0 l * * i t
inchot
B IO L C A G U B B t . t
P A L O M IN O S
B g Laaguo
A g o t M . I&gt; and IS T S *
b a ta p a ih t a r t to N ot Tho p itch ing d itla n c t
i i H l c . i t in c h **
lA L m la y
L i i n * L a a g u o D u n n I It A d
n tln u rra ta r D a n C ro w ta rd r v l P o n y S d to b o n
T o u rn rn v n r O w c t a r Jutt W ith ro w d it r u t l
Ihp U ronpThi and M U n t u r i ai IS * two
p ru p ro m t I

over.
"I think she may start out on
JV, but la-fore Hie season Is over,
she'll help out on v a r s ity ,"
SI eric said o f Long. "She hasn't
pl a y e d much com pel Hi v e
basketball, She playrd AAU and
did n great Job. She mixed II up
underneath the basket prrtiy
well against sornr bigger and
more experienced players."
S lid e Mid Long also bus u
nice shooting touch, makes her
free throws and rebounds well.
And. us If that wan t enough,
Long Is also developing u hook
shot, k a li right and Irli handed.
"L iz Is fundamentally sound
us lur as using her led and right
hands g o ," Steele said. "A n d she
Is working on her hook shot. I
don't think she's strong enough
right now to get right out there
on varsity. 1 want lo get her
some playing rxprim er so she'll
Ik- ready when we need her. If
she gets some strength with the
IlnrsAc she displays she'll be one
of the most sought after athletes

around"
The four remaining freshmen
will play Junior varsity bull In

Alter M orse’ s slain, Chris
Simmons went on In relief for
Gadsden and got out of the
Inning without any further dam­
age.
West Seminole gave away a
run In the top of the fourth to
enable Alabama lo lake u 9-5
lead. Tony W hile reached on an
error to lead off. stole second,
took third on a balk and scored
on an errant ptckofT attempt.
Harrell sclllcd down lo strike out
the next thrre hitlers to end Ihe
Inning.
West Seminole left Ihe bases
loaded In Ihe bottom of the

fourth and Gadsden added two
more runs in the top o f the fifth.
Smith was the teadolf man again
and he slugged his third homer
o f the game to make It 10-5.
With one nut, Mark Hamilton
pounded a solo shot lo left center
for an 11-5 lead.
Morse picked on an 0-1 pitch
and cracked his third homer of
the tourney to lead o ff the
bottom o f Ih e fifth , shaving
Gadsden's lead lo 11-6.
Mark Price went on In relief for
West Seminole In the top of the
sixth and. after striking out the
Ira d o H man. E frem M aron
blasted a home run In deep
center field for a 12 6 lead.
West Seminole scored Iwo
more runs in llie bottom o f ihr
sixth lo pull within 12-8 but left
runners on second and I bird,
West Seminole got a one-out
single by Mark W hile In the
b o ttom o f the seven th but
G a d s d r n 's third pitcher.
Hamilton, struck out the next
two hitters to nut tin- game.
In Marietta's 20-0 rout of West
Seminole Friday alb-moon, Eric
Smith tossed a o i k - hitler and
was barked by a 14 bit offensive
attack. The only till lor West
Sem inole was Morse’ s tb'raInning s i n g l e ,
P tsclotla hit th e lo n g est hom e

run o f the day ns he u n load ed a
m a m m o th shot o v e r the center
fie ld fen ce which c le a re d another
fe n ce some 75 fe e l away and hit
on lo p o f a b u ild in g In Ihe
d ista n ce.

1985-86 and. If lbey continue to
Improve und mold w ith the first
four, Seminole High eould have
a slate jKiwerhoUHe In a couple of
years.

One of the four who will start
out on JV Is Mitchell, a 5*5
guard who played at l-akrvtew.
"She's real aggressive, has a
nice outside shot and handles
the ball pretty w ell." Steele said.
"She could probably play varsity
hut will start out on JV ."
The smallest ptuyer of the
group Is Bass, a 5-0 guard who
a ls o p la y e d S Y S A b a ll at
Lukevlrrw.
"Site’ll probably start on J V ."
Steele said of Bass. "She shoots
well and plays defense well."
While Mitchell und Bass will
handle guard spots, Gilchrist
und Simmons. tx&gt;(h 5 10 will
play forward.
"Chlnelu is going to be real
tough." Steele said of Gilchrist.
S i m m o n s , w h o w e n t to
Lukrvlew. played on Ihr AAU 14
and under irum for Sleele ihts
summer.

Nicole Mitchell

Marino's Dem ands Rejected
MIAMI |UI*I) — Dan Marino's
m u lll-in llllon dollar contract
dispute with the Miami Dolphins
deteriorated only hours after
owner Joe Hobble (old u news record. I will cheerfully reveal
conference he was optimistic he Ihe excessive demands that he
c o u ld g et Ih e t e a m 's s ta r made ... April 10 and subse­
quarterback to end his week- quently. They would make Dan
long walkout.
Marino the highest paid player In
Robbie opened Ills news con­ professional football history.
ference Friday afternoon by T h ey would far exceed the
llatly rejecting an offer (rout compensation received by Joe
Marino's ugem. Marvin Drmoff. Montana or anyone now play­
lo submit the dispute to binding ing."
arbitration. Then Robbie added
Marino w alked out o f the
that hr viewed Ihe offer as a Dolphins' training rump July 25
good sign that Irft him o p ­ because of a lack of progress In
timistic.
the renegotiation cf hts contract.
But hours later, the feisty The disgru ntled quarterback
Dolphins owner Issued u state­ caught a (light to (Mltsburgh.
ment he said was prompted by where reportedly he has re­
IX-muirs "Inaccurate and dis­ mained ever since. Robbie has
torted rhrouology (of the negoti­ said hr would not resume con­
ations) lliul he sent local news
tract talks until Marino Is back
papers,
tn camp und Murtno has said he
" T h i s rh rou olog y Is self- would not report without a new
servin g . m isleading und In ­ conlrsct.
com plete," Kuhble sale!. " I f Mr.
Hobble said his lust offer was
Drmoff persists In distorting the In the same ballpark us (hut paid

Football

to S a n F r a n c i s c o 4 9 e rs
q u a r te rb a c k J o e M on ta n a ,
whose six-year contrac t pays an
estimated $1.3 million u year,
one o f the richest tn the NFL.
Marino, a record breaking
quarterback w h o en joyed a
"G olden Boy" Image with fans
until hts walkout, said thruugh
hts agent that he would return
Immediately 11 the dispute was
submitted to binding arbitration.
Robbie would have nothing In
do Friday with arbitration, hav­
ing fought lo keep tt from the
collective bargaining agreement
during negotiations with the
N F L Players A sso cia tion In
1974.
"... We art unwilling to submit
to binding arbitration by outsid­
er* who know little nr nothing
about our business or about thr
umouni ol com|K-nsaiton pm
(rsalonu! athletes should re­
ceive," Robbie told the news
conference.

T:

V.r

m

*'

�IT T

legal Notice
T h c c ir c u it c o u r t
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U O I C I A L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
F L O R ID A
C I V I L D IV IS IO N
C A SE NO H N I I C A H S
F E D E R A L n a t io n a
in

m o r t g a g e

a s s o c ia t io n

l
a

co rp o ra tio n organ lied under th *
L a w s o l t*»» United S t a i n ol
A m e ric a .
P la in t tit
F R E D R B A N D Y and L I N D A
A B A N D Y , h it «n«.
D efend ants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N o t tea l« hereby give n tttat
p u rsu a n t to Ilia S u m m a ry F in a l
J u d g m e n t ot Foreclosure a n d
Sa le dated Ju ly » . lag) a n d
an ta ra d In ttia ceuse pending in
th# C ir c u it Court ol the E t g h
le a n m ju d ic ia l Circuit, in a n d
tor Sam lnote County. F lo rid a .
C i v i l
A c t i o n
N o
U 2 4 !) C A 0 * E. in# und ersign ed
C la r k w ill tall the p ro p e rty
a ltuotad In aald County, da
acrlb e d aa
T hat p a rt ot L a i 1 B lo ck O.
S A N l A N O O S P R IN G S L A K E
O A K S E C T IO N , aa recorded In
P la l Book *, Page M . P u b lic
B ee or da ot Sem in oN C ounty.
F lo rid a , daacrlbad aa lollowa
F r o m lt » Soultieaal corner of
aald L o t 1. Block D ru n I
• **7 )W
* I 7 J N et along the
S o u H i lin o ot aaid Lot to the
Potnt ot B eginning, thence con
lln u * S
l* * 7 J W
t t »t teat
thence ru n o r * l »
W t l aj
•eat thence run N *4 '4 P ) 0 W
I S S ( 0 t e a l, t h e n c e r u n
N orth erea a terly ef ft teal a lo n g
the a r c ot the curve ot W h ite
O a k C ir c le w hich hat a radlua ot
IAS 00 'o o t and a c o ntra' an gle ot
I S I a SJ and a chotd ol at a}
leaf that In a r a N &gt; i*W O f E
1hence r u n S
X T ' £ 1*7 17
leaf a lo n g I ha Northeasterly Itna
ot S a id Lot J thence run S
f l l O l ' E t l I ) feel to the P o in t
of b e g in n in g
at p u b lic tale, to the highetf a n d
bett bidder tor ceth at I I 00
A M on ttw M !h day of A u g u tt
l*t$ . at ttw W att Front D o o r of
the S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u r t
houto. S a n lord F lor Ida
D A T E D Itut H a l day el Ju ly ,
m s
(C O U R T S E A L I
D A V I D tt B E R R I E N
C le rk of the Circuit f o u r I
B y D ia n e It Brum m ett
D e p u ty Clerk
P u b lis h A u g u tt 4. II. IM S
O E I IS

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y.
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
F ile N um b er IS t i f C P
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
C D N R A O MENKEN.
D eceaaed
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN I S T R A T IO N
T h e a d m ln la tre tlo n ot the
eatale o l C O N R A D M E N K E N
deceaaed
F ile N u m b e r
AS t i l C P . la pending In the
C i r c u i t C o u rt tor S t m in o ie
C o u n t y , F lo r id a . P r o b a t e
D lvla lon . the address ol w h .ih la
P o e l Of lice D raw er C. Sen ior d
F lo rid a , n r n o t tt
T he n e m e t and ad d rttaaa of
Ih e P e r a o n a l R e p re se n ta tiv e
a n d th e P a ra o n e l R a p r e
a a n t a t lv a 'l attorney a re aet
forth below
A M In te re a le d peraona a r e
re q u ire d te tile with Nua court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H *
f r o m
thr
date of
th *
f ir s t

p u r l ic a t io m

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Legal Notice

o f

T H IS N O T IC e
M ) ail c la lm a
a g a ln t l I ha eatate and O l a n y
o b | e ct!on a b y an In t e r e s te d
p a ra o n to whom, notice w aa
m a ile d that chalitngee Ihe valid
Ify of Iho will, Ihe q ualification s
of Ih e peraonal reprvaenlatlve.
o r Ih e venue or lu rlid lction ot
the court
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C
T IO N S N O T S O F I L E D W I L L
BE F O R EV E R BARRED
P u b lica tio n of thla Notico haa
b e g u n on July 2* IM S
P e ra o n a l Repreaenletive
ED Y T H E J CURRY
1 * 0 South Boulevard
M a itla n d . Florida, m il
A ttorn e y tor
P a ra on a t R rpretentative
H O W A R D W COOPER
m ao L a k o E lienor D r . Suite U S
O rlon d o. F lo rid a 17*0*
Telephone I M S) li e M e t
P u b lla h ; July 7*. A A uguat A
IM S
D E H teo

IM T H E C IR C U IT C O U RT
E I G H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C I V I L D IV IS IO N
C A kC HO U H i* C A M P
IN R ■ i T H E M A R R I A G E O F
V I C K I E M W ATRCHJ1,
W iIf Petitioner
and
C R A IG A L L A N W ATRO U S.
H usb and Reapondent
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO
C R A I G A L L A N
W ATRO U S. P O
Boa M l .
L ecanto. F lo rid a n e o l
Y o u o re notified lhal an a ction
lor diaaolullon ot m a rria g e haa
been riled agam al you. and you
are re q u ire d ta ter re a copy e l
yo ur w ritten detenaea. it any. to
It a n F R I E D M A N
A
F R IE D M A N
P A . J
Oon
F r i e d m a n , P e t lt lo n a r ’a a l
torne y whoaa addreat la It /
R t i l C h u rch A v tn u a .
L o n g w o od Flo rid a 177)0. on or
b oktro A uguat I*. IM S. and Ilia
Ihe o r ig in a l with ttw clerk el Hue
C ou rt either be fort M r vice an
P la i n t if f s attorney. Or im m ad i
ately tharaetter otharwiaa a
d e fa u lt Will be entered a ge in t i
you tor Ihe rellel dem anded In
♦ he C o m p la in t ur Petition
D A T E O e n J u t y H IM S
D A V I D N B E R R IE N
ee C le rk of the Court
B y A g n e a C Sutek
A t O eputy C lerk
P u b lla h Jety It. Auguat A I I .
IB. IM S
OCH Ml

N O T IC E O F A
P U R L IC H E A R I N G
OF PRO PO SED C H A N G ES
AND A M EN DM EN TS
IN C E R T A I N D I S T R I C T S
A N D B O U N D A R IE S OF
T H E Z O N IN G O R D I N A N C E .
A N O A M E N D IN G T H E
FUTURE LAND U SE
E L E M E N T OF T H E
C O M P R E H E N S IV E P L A N
O F T H E C IT Y O F
SA N F O R D , F L O R ID A .
N olfco la hereby g iv e n that a
P u b lic H earing will b e h eld al
Ih e Cammlaafon R o o m in the
C ity H ell in the C ity ot S a n fo rd
Florida, at 7 00 O 'clock P M on
A uguat II . IM S . to co n sid e r
ch an ges and a m en d m e nts to the
Z on in g Ordinance, a n d am en d
m g the Future Land U ta E he
m ent ol the C om p re he nsive P la n
ot the C ity ot Sanford. F lo rid a
aa tel tows
A p o rtio n of that c e r ta in
p ro p e rty tying b etw e en U 5
17 *7 (Fre n ch A venue) en d E lm
Avenue end between W eal isth
street end W est l|th Street la
proposed to be reron ed trOm
S R IA (Single Fam ily- Res&gt;den
tial D w elling D istric t to S R I
( S in g l e F a m ily R e s id e n t ia l
O w t U ln g D llt r 'c t l a n d G C I
iG eneraf Com m ercial D istric t)
S a id p ro p e r ly b e in g m o re
p a r t ic u la r ly d t l c r l b t d at
•oUowa
Tract t l F ro m S R I A IS m g lt
F a m ily R e sid e n tia l D w e llin g
D istric t! to S R I (S in gle F a m ily
Residential D w elling D istric t)
Lota S4 through! ft am en d ed
P la t ol O range Me g h tt P la t
Book 4 P age A4 P ub lic R e c o rd s
of Sem inole County. F lo rid a
AND
T i e d rj F ro m S R I A (S in gle
F a m ily R e sid e n tia l D w e llin g
D i s t r i c t ) lo G C J ( G e n e r a l
C om m e rc ial D istrict); Lola ]g
through 17 and the a lle y ad|a
tent to the E a st ol L ots 7*
t h r o u g h ST a n d E a s t n o l
vacated alley ab utting lets IS
through M Am ended P la l o l
O ra n g e Haights. Plat B ook a.
P a g e IS . P u b lic R e c o r d s ot
S rm in o ia C o u n ty F lo rid a
A ll parties in interest and
C llliena shall have an op p o rtum
ty to be heard at said h e a r ing
B y order ot the C it y C om
m issio n of the City ot San fo rd
F lo rid a
A D V IC E T O T H E P U B L I C II
a parson decides to ap p eal a
d ecision m ade with resp ect to
an y matter considered a I the
above m eeting or h e a r in g he
m a y need a verbatim re c o rd ol
the proceedings. In clu d in g Ihe
testim ony and evldance. w h ich
record It not p ro v 'd e d by the
C ity ol Sanford ( F S 7 U 0 1 0 S I
M N Tamm . Jr
C ity Clerk
P ub llah July IS and A u g u s t 4
IM S
D E H ja O
______
DOCUMCNTMRM
i n v i t a t i o n t o B IO
Bidder
S e a k d Bids will be received
b y District B oard of Trustees.
Sem inole C om m u n ity College,
harem elter called the O w n e r. In
the Pre sid e n t's B o a rd R oo m ,
l A 100. lo c a te d Its th e A d
m in&gt;tlrative Building, until 1 00
P M , August II . IM S lo cal lim e
when ell p roposals re c e ive d will
hw publicly opened a n d read
aloud tor lu rm shing ot labor,
m a la ria l, and se rv ic e s lor the
construe lion ol
ROOF R E P L A C E M E N T FO R
S C IE N C E / L IB H A R Y B U IL D
IH G S E M I N O L E C O M A A U N IT V
C O L L A G E
S A N F O R D .

FLORIDA

A ll work Shall be d m
In
accordance with me C e n t r e d
D ocu m en ts p ertaining thereto
D r a w in g s S p e clB ca tlo n a . In
atrucliena. form of C on tract and
other Contract D ocu m e n ts de
sig n a lin g Bid and Contract s lip
ulatlona m ay ba se c u re d or
eaam lne d al t h e e lt k e o l
A N C A S S O C IA T t S
IN
C O R P O R A T E D A r t h i tec lu r e
Root Consulting A C o n structio n
T e c h n o lo g y * t s N o r t h M i l l *
Avwnue Orlando. FlorR Sa &gt;1*0)
J O lt M r a n
Bidder m ay secure C on tract
D o c u m e n ts tor a d e p o sit of
i r t 00 per sat. with a lim it ol two
tats per Bidder The cost ol
depot I tor each sal w ill be
refunded to P rim e B id d er upon
subm itting a bona tide B et and
returning the D o c u m e n ts to me
u n it e o l Iho A r c h ile c Ir H o o l
Consultant in acceptable condi
than within ten cale n d ar d a ys
alter H it dale A d ditiona l s a lt ol
Iho Bid d in g D ocu m en ts m a y he
p urch ased lor S 7 I 00 per tab,
cost nol refundable A ll ques
n a n s relative to the B id d in g
D ocu m en ts shall be a d d re sse d
•• Ihe Arche N et Root C o n su l
lent
E a c h Bid m ust be sub m itted
in accordance with the P ro p o sa l
F o r m and In stru c tion s, fu lly
c o m p le t e d , w h ic h P r o p o s a l
F o r m and In structions will be
Included in the p ro io ct M a n u a l
A n y Btd recti red alter the tim e
sat here lor B id O p en in g will not
be considered
The B d d e r will nol re v o a e or
cancel Ihe Bid or w ith d raw from
the competition toe a pec iod ol
thirty ( M l calendar d a y s after
the opening ot I M i . a n d lh a l In
t h t e v e n t Ih e C o n t r a c t It
aw ard ed the Bidder w ill, w ithin
len ( lot consecutive calen d ar
d a y s alter it is subm itted, enter
into a written Contract with the
O w ner In accordance with the
accepted Bid and g iv e to the
O w n e r a P e rfo rm a n c e an d
Pa ym e n t bond with go o d and
sufficient sureties sa tisfa c to ry
to the Ow ner us Iho a m o u n t ot
100% ot Iho work ord e re d The
B id d er s pgr to m en! s In c e rp o
rated In the P ro p e l I term
D re w m gs S p ecificatio n* and
other Contract D ocu m e n ts w ill
ba Is iu a d o n ly b y th e
Architect ' Root C onsultant
President
Sem inole C om m unity C ollege
O r E a r l S Weldon
C h airm an
B oard of Trustee*
Swmmate C om m u n ity C ollege
M s D o ra Lea R u ssa ii
P u b lish August A IM S
DEI M

BLOOM CO UNTY

CLASSIFIED A D S
S e m in o le
322-2611

71— Help Wanted

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
CLERK

O rla n d o * W in t e r Park
8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

C L A S S IF IE D DEPT.

RATES

1 t in s *

HOURS
* 3 0 A.M. • 5.30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

................... 6 7 C * U n *

3 CBitMcntiy* time* 61C * lint
7 cons*cuti*« times 52C * lin*
10 CBRtKHti** times 46C a lin*
Contract Rata* Available
3 Una* Minii

DEADLINES
N o o n Th e D oy Before °u b lic a tio n
Sunday • Noon Friday
M o n d a y - 11:00 A .M . S atu rday

W a are eoeking e well orge
n ito d in d iv id u a l with ) to )
y e a r s A cc o u n ts P ayab le t i
p e r ie n c * In a computer lied
e n v iro n m e n t E a cel ton I sa la ry
a n d b e n e fits If into-ested,
sa n d re su m e to B o * 264 c o
E v e n in g H e ra ld . P O
Ben
1*5?. Sanford. F la H 7 T I M S?
A C C O U N T IN G C L E R K S
E v p e rto n c o m accounts payable
r e c e iv a b le s , o r p a y r a ii
C o m p u t e r e x p e rie n c e pro
ta rre d
P e rm a n e n t position
N e v o r e Fee

TtMP PERH_____ 774-lM*

ARE YOUR READY
TO WORK??!!
THEN

21—Personals

3 3 -R e a l Estate
Courses

AAA EMPLOYMENT

★
W W W
e T lu n k tn g e l ge tting a a
a R e a l E s ta t e LIcansaT a
W e after F re e Tultlen
and cw ntinueut Tralnlngl
Call LHck o r V ic k i for BetaiH
*11 1*47 r o u e *
E v a JM It s *
K e y e s at F lo r id a . Inc
1* T e a r s E vpertowcel

IMMLDIATt OPENINGS’

•AB0RII0N*
F irst Trim ester A b o rtio n 7 It
wfcs
|l*0. M a d ic e r d 11)0
t ) 14 wkt I is o G y n se rvice s
S I ) P r e g n a n c y T est
F re e
C o u n s e lin g
P r o f e s s io n a l
C e re
S u p p o r t iv e
At
m osphere C o n fid e n tia l

CENTRAL ELOROIA
WOMEN'S HEALTH
NEW LOCATION
m e w Cetenlwl O r..___ O r U n d o
to) * 4 * 0 * 7 1
_________ i m i n i R )__________

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A B O R T IO N C O U N S E L I N G

F r e t P r e g n a n c y T e s ts
C o n iId s n tle t* I n d iv id u a l
assistance
C a l l tor
appointment evening hours
available

READY FOR YOU!

55— Business
Opportunities
Law n m a in te n a n ce I years old
C o m m a rc la l'r e s id e n tia l con
tracts *11.(KIO g r o s s b a w d on
I f hour w eek A ll equipment
enclosed traitor. IM 4 Pick Up.
IJ J . M O
C a ll
111 1 2 *0
(e ve nings), I I I U S ) (work!

............. H I 70*5

W A N T E D T O B O R R O W t l 000
C o lla t e r a l Ip a v a b le I I
months I I X » S a n d re p ly to
Bov 20), C o E vo n m g Herald.
PO
Be. 1*57. Santoed, F I
» m las?

23—Lost &amp; Found

41—Money to Lend
N EED M O NEY?
E veryona dews at tom e lim e If
you ow n a h om e and have a
|ob. It 's e a sie r than you think
C R E D IT ?

• REW ARD*
Lott whir* poodle with blAtk
ofler Cell m n o

ORDER TOUR BOOKS FROM
Osborne s B ook and B ib le
Special book o r d e r s taken
O ssie end Joanne ...... 11) SOS*

71— Help Wanted

Legal Notice
AGENDA
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
BOARDOF A D JU ST M EN T
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC H E A H IN O
A U G U S T I* . IH ) .
*0 0 P M
TO W H O M IT AAA Y C O N C E R N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
T H A T H it S e m in o le C o u n t y
B o a rd ol A d lit lm e n t w ill con
duel a public h e a r in g to consider
Ihe loliowlng H em
T h is (torn
w ill be adped to the H t O U L A R
A G E N D A p u b lish e d J u ly IS.
IM S II wilt b e the test item en
E
S P E C IA L
E X C E P
T IO N S / O T H E R (co n i I
*
E N V IR O N M E N T A L
S E R V IC E S - S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
B A ( I I * * ) ) *JE
A 1 Agriculture l o n e - Public
Utility .Use E fflu e n t D isp o sa l
on th# hollowing d e scrib e d pro
party The South ' 4 o l Ih o N W to
of the N W 'e o f twctlon I S 11 70
lest 'he ft 200 71 If . la ss Ihe S
2*0 II o l the E U S tt o l the W
142 tl It thereof
ly in g N ol
D ike Road on the n orth side ot
D ike Road west ot G r a n d R oad
I O u t I)
This Public H e a r in g w ill be
held In R oo m W 120 ot Ihe
Sem inole County S e rv ic e s B u ild
Ing. H O I E F ir si Slre e l, San
ford, Florida, o n A u g u s t 1*. IM S
at * 90 P M or a s soon thereat
tar as possible
Written co m m e n ts filed with
the la n d M a n a g e m e n t M a n a g e r
will ba considered P a r so n s ap
peering al the public h e a rin g
will ba heard H e a r in g s m a y be
continued from lim a to tim e as
taund n e re ite ry F u rth e r deta.lt
availa ble by c a llin g 211 IIM ,
E » l 441
Pereoni arc a d v ise d tnal. if
they decide to appeal a n y da
cition made at this h ea ring, they
will need a re c o rd of the p ro
ceedm gi. and. tor su c h purpose
they m a t need to in su re that a
verbatim record o l the p roceed
m g s Is m ade, w h ic h re c ord
includes Ihe testim on y e n d ovl
dance upon w h ic h the appeal Is
lo b e based, pee Section M t 0101
F lo rid a Statutes
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
BOARDOF A D JU ST M EN T
BY R O G E R P E R R A .
C H A IR M A N
Publish A ug ust 4, t M I
D E I &gt;4
N O T IC I U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E L A W
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
lh al the undersigned, d e sirin g to
engage In b u s in e s s under ihe
fictitious nem o ol IN A C O M P
F L O R ID A . IN C at n um b er H I
E Altamonte D riv e . In Ih e City
e l A il 4m or.lv S p rin g *. Flo rid a .
Intends la r e g ist e r the sa id
nam e wllh the C le rk a f the
C i r c u i t C o u r t a t S e m in o le
County. F lo rida
Datod al B ir m in g h a m . Hue I I
day af June IM S
I C C O F F L O R I D A . IN C
D a vid D uka s P re sid e n t
R onald K D o lb y. S e c re ta ry
Pub lish July la. I I . 2* A u g u st
A IM S
DEH (I

C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E
T o M K H o f spot I M ature at
litu d e to deal w llh custom ers
B e n e fits geiore! H irin g M on
d a rt
W O R D P R O C E S S O R T R A IN E E
T o *e hour P lu sh otlire hugh
c o m p a n y I S m ile , t h e y 'r e
w illin g to train you tor word
p ro c e ss in g and general office
d u tie s I
D E L I V E R Y O F F IC E G A L
E n t r y level spot, greet tor High
School g r a d that s looking lor
a care er sta rt Com pany car
p ro v id e d for deliveries I

FRONT DESK

F R E E D L A N D E R . INC.
The M o rt g a g e People
T l* E. A lta m o n te D rive
•Lieanted M o rt g a g e Broker

. M 4 H t K A Y C O IM f T IC S .
Skin care and co lo r flair
C O N N IE
&gt;717714

P R IC IN G G AL
S I hou r. N o ffp ln g iw rel Guod
w it h f i g u r e s ? W o rk on
c a lcu la to r and prepare eve
t o m a ro rd e rs ) E a s y !

NO P R O B LE M I
U « **oo

25—Special Notices

NE IL PUT YOU D NOKK
AS QUICK AS POSSIBLE!
ANY X » YOU WANT
WE LL DO OUR BEST
TO FIND!

B u s y m otel needs now I Evp eri
on ce a p lu s but will train If
yo u like fig u re s I
M E D IC A L r e c e p t io n is t
A n y m e d ic a l school or b o s k
k n ow le dge of term inology will
g a in Ih le filia l Train also to
a s s is t In bee k wllh patients

323-5176

ARE YOU A CLOSER?
W t h#v# u l « 4 p#opt« m aking
tJO 000 ■ y * # r on com m illio n
W t M i l « c o m p u tt f ii« d tilling
4 eoltoeflo n% % #rVlet to butl
nt%! 4 p ro ftM to rttl ptoptt
T h t M A f t ou r b tn t flt t
• B t yo ur Own bott
• V t r y h ig h c o m m im o n t
• Ntif ion wride Com pany
• Ha w t t'k t n d m t ytuning work
• P r o m o H o n t fro m within
• U nllm M w d irsresm# po»#«tt#t
# T ra in in g p rovided
A P r o l t c M It r r M o r lt i
• H ig h r t A r d t f b u t i n n i

• FMil bAMAlll pACkA^t

i O r e u n # r i w apporfunlly
W t need Am feltlou* #a#&lt;vtlv#
typ# In d iv id u a l# w h o want to
build fn # lr o w n b u tln tk t In tht
t ic I ting fine ncle! w orld
FO P F U L L D E T A IL S *C A L L i

Al Ttrk W4 IS) 04*1
Sunday,
d ty

Ilf P M .

M onday

til

Legal Notice
IN T H C C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY.
F L O R ID A

CASE NO •) 1)01 CAM 0
T H E A M E R I C A N B A N K OF
M E R R I T T I S L A N D e corpora
Hon evicting und er the law s ot
Ihe Slate of F lo rid a .
Plaintiff.
v*
E A R L W E B E R L Y and D E A N
J O AKLEY.
D e fe n d a n ts
R U S H I N V E S T M E N T S IN C .
D e lender,: C r o s s Plaintiff,
vs
EARLW EBERLY .
C r o s s D efendant
C A S E N O *4 O H S C A C
ISG
J E S S E E G R A H A M , as Trust
at.
P la in tiff.
vs
E A R L W E B E R L Y and T H E
A M E R IC A N B A N K O F M C R
R IT T 111 A N D .
D e fe n d a n ts
SECO ND
A M E N D E D N O T IC E O F SA L E
I
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
lhal. p u rsu a n t ta the Order of
F in a l Ju d g m e n t entered in this
cause In the C irc u it Court ol
Semirwto C ou nty. F lo rida . I will
sell Ih e p r o p e r ly tH u te d In
Sem inole C ounty. F lo rid a de
senbed a s follow s
The W e si » S toot of Ihe South
Se ol the N C 'e ot Ih o S W . ol
Section J t T o w n sh ip Jl South,
R a n g . 1 * E a c t . S e m in o le
County. F lo rid a , le ss me South
*S toot a n d la ss rig h t of w ay of
Lake H o w e ll R o a d
al public sale, fa the highest and
best bidder, lo r cash, a l the west
fro n t d o o r o f Ih o S e m in o le
County C o u rth o u se In San lord
S a m inote C o u n ty , F lo rid a at
I I 90 A M on the jam day of
August. IM S
O A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B y D ia n a K B ru m m e tt
Oeputy C la rk
Pub lish J u ly 2*. A u g u s t A IM S
D E H l«t

by Berke Breathed

P A IN T E R
SSS P e r m a n e n t ' Start work to
d a y l Som e e . per tern e needed
C O U N T ER PERSO N
B u s y o w n e r lo o k in g lor re
sp o n sib le person to run sho p'
R e t i r e d p e i s o n w o u ld be
gre a t I
D E L IV E R Y
l l *0 w eek
N s c h a u f l t u r 't
license m n k d This company
h a * lots of a d va nc ing in m ind
tor yo u I C o m m o n Sanaa is all
yo u need I
A P P L IA N C B t A L K I
Te I t s w eek
C e m p e n y car
p ro v id e d ! L o c a l sa la * to can
Ir e c t a r i E icelieo t com pany I
A n y know ledge of appliances
or co n stru ctio n Held Is go o d '
RECOVERT SEP
12)0 * c o m m issio n Fu ll train
In g p ro g r a m I know ledge ot
a u t o m o b ile * h e lp s! T ra ve l
e x p e n se s p a id E i d l i n g ca
rear a w a its I

MANY MANY MORE!

AAA EMPLOYMENT
DiicwnI Fh 3W##kt Ulltf
L#«p I I M M #^litr#tt## F t#

2523 S. French Ave.
323-5176

SB

71—Help Wanted

A c r y lic A p plicato rs needed to
a p p ly protective co a lin g on
ca rs, boats and planes U So
I l f par hour M e train F o r
w o rk in S a n lord area call
T a m p a H )*** f ill

COUNSELOR
ALCOHOL SPECIALIST
E &gt;p en anced part lim e p osition
In Sentord B A D e g re e o r
e q u iv a le n t e i p e r l e n c e r e
q ulre d For appt . Cat! M r
M o q m r *. H I a m _____________

A ir CandrttoM ng D u d M e ch a n ic
E xp e rie n ce d only 'Jp t o t * per
h o u r C a ll 121*111_________

AJN CONDITIONING
MECHANICS

CRTO PERATOR
D a ta entry e ip e rle n ce tar per
m anent positions W ith g ro w th
potential Never a tee I

In st a n a l ton Salary b a se d on
e ip e r w n c e p lus benefits P a id
v a c a t io n and h o lid a y s
» m * S * 2 __________________

TEMP PERM.........774-134#
D AT A PRO CESS I NO M G R
RPG
II
System la
P e rm a n e n t
position Never a Fee

3 y r s eip erlen ce D AA A S

A L L T Y P E S JO »S
S T A R T W O R K NOTH
A *

TEMP PERM.........774-13*4

LA
BomYV vr Vr rortce
■ Mt VOM
MIT MV

Avon Beauty Co.
S le rt your own busin ess tor 1 ) '

IN O
▼
F ttl
R e p o rt read y tor work at * A M
9 V f .H t .il
Santoed

M2 5*10

» &gt; 102*

EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY

3211590
ASSEM BLERS

K n tid id

____ ^

In th#
N o « « p #rl

71— Help Wanted
CLARK A P P A R E L
H D Stole St
M l IU 0
E sper lanced t e w in g m a c h in e
operators
' E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
F r o n t a ttic *, p h o n e s, tiling,
t y p in g h e lp fu l
P e rm an e n t
position N ever a F a *

TEMP PC— _____ 7741341
E ip e r lanced L a w n AAaintanance
m an
M u t t h a v * d r i v e r '*
license P a y depends on e ip e
n on ce C all M l M * 7 _________

EIPFRIENCED CLOSERS
Needed to m a k e *40 000 and up
selling the best cassette t e n e t
en toter srk v lln g ttto t skills.
D a y s only no w eeken d s O n
St Johns R iv e r In O e B a r y
Im m ediate pay
M u tt h a v*
good work h a b it* and attltud*
and be self m otivate d C all
20) «S4 40)4___________ ________

Grill l Counttr Person

W IT H

Lfth# A A *ry A f t i
to t* n t c t iu ' I
A M t i t Tem porary k r v i c t i
________ I H I M t
___

SEMINOLE COUNTY
GOVERNMENT

ATTENTION TELEMARKETERS
T he E v e n in g H erald has post
lio n * evellabto tor phone sollc
I to rs to work M onday through
F r id a y betwen * P M a n d »
PM
Id e al tor toe ind ivid ual
w ith a friendly voice end kom e
sa le s a i per lent e This position
p r o v i d e * w a g e p lu s c o m
m iss io n Intectsted ap p licants
sho uld contact The E v e n in g
H e ra ld at (JOS! J t J M I I . and
a s k tor the Circulation D e
it
A V O N E A R N IN O S W O W I It
O P E N T E R R IT O R I E S N O W I It

niMUer man*__ _

B e e o tic Ia n
E a p e rla n c a d
**
P.M The K itrcvtttn g Sletton
L a k e M a r y ____________ m m i

BUILDING i DEPARTMENT
ACCOUNTANT
R e sp o n sib le tor m aintain in g all
construction records tor In
house construe I ion craw tor
Sem in ole County Sc hoot b oa rd
F o c llllia *. Planning A Con
ttruetton D s p l W ork In clud e s
tiling, typing A accounting
H i g h S c h o o l D ip lo m a , o r
e q u iv a le n t w ith S e c r o t a r l
al/Accow nling Training o r ol
t ic # a ip e r le n c a rela te d to
construction Is desirable Sal
p ry . *7 M per hour, w ith n o
School B oard berwllts Post
H on Is tem porary C a ll )77
t i l l . E a t KM or JJt S u b m it
r e s u m e ' by A u g *, IN S

CARPENTERS
F o r Sanford Orlando a reo
M u s t h ave own transportaiton
C a ll Brian, early m o rn in g o r
e v e n in g s r u m a x ’
C ity of L a k e M a r y Public Safety
D ep artm en t h e* an op e nin g
tor a police officer In d iv id u a l
m u st ba stale certified S le rt
In g S e le ry Is tla.tSJ an nu
a lly The
Public Safety D e
p e r lm e n l It also accep tin g
a p p l leaf Ions loc reserve ot
H eart, w h ich Is a non p a y in g
p osition This Individual m u tt
a ls o b e s ta le c e r t if ie d
A p p lica tio ns lor both position s
m a y be aptetoed fro m Ihe
L a k e M a r y P e t it * D e p a r t
m ent. la * f . WlIRwv Asm..
L a k e M e ry . P i u ? m
Dead
itna tor appHcattena w ill ke
A u g u st plh It * ) Eq u a l O p p er
♦ unity E m ptayer____________

DENIAL OFFICE
RECEPTIONIST
N e a l appearance Eip a rle rsce
r e q u ir e d 22) H IS . ask lor

DRIVERS'HELPERS
Sa nitation Com pany M u s i ha ve
v a lid F la chauffeur s license
N e e d r e lia b le fa m ily typ e
p a rso n
Steady work G o od

pay Call TIP Ilk?_______
D R IV IR / W A B I H O U SE M A N
H a v e a know ledge ol C en tra l
F la M u s i have a valid F la
C h a u l f a u r 'i lic e n se
C a ll
W I0 * ) 1 from I to 4 P M

20 to JO h r* par week M u t t be
h o n e st a n d a b le te w o rk
weekends A pply In person
Stuckey s. 1/4 A S I R d 44*
between I p m A J p m

E X E C U T IV E D IR E C T O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
E X P R E S S W A Y A U T H O R IT Y
G rad uatio n from en e ccred
I ted college or u n iv e rsity w llh
a B achelor t dogroee In C iv il
E n g in e e rin g . B u s in e s s A d
m inistration or F in a n c e en d
tour 14) years e ip a r tenet In
engineering or p la n n in g with
transportation e m p h a sis or a
M a t t e r 's degree In p la n n in g
and two (!&gt; ye a rs experience
In local governm ent p la n n in g
or a B a c h e lo r's degre e in
P la n n in g and tour (4) y e a rs
espertenct In k x a l go ve rn
m e n t p la n n in g , o r an
equivalent com bination ol ro
te'e d training and e ip e rle n ce
A p p ly by N O O N A u g It lt«S

t r S T O V P A R T Y T IM E
A O A IN t
House Ol L lo yd now h irin g todies
to d e m o n s t r a t e T o y / G l i t
p a rlie s E a r n *2000 F R E E kll.
supplies C a r P h o n e W inter
S p rgt W 2*4) S a n fo rd La ke
M e 'y 122 2 * )0 C a s s e lb e r ry
D ? 244)
________________

ROADFOREM AN
IB R IC K / C E M E N T C R E W )
G raduation trnm H ig h School
supplemented by at least two
y e a rs eip erlence in the m a in
t in *n e e end construction ot
m od *, bridges, and high w ays,
one year of which m u tt h ave
been In a sup ervisory c o p e d
ty. or an oquvatont co m b in e
tlon ot Item in g and e ip e r i
a n te
A pplicants m ust h ave two ( I )
y e a r s e ip e rle n c e In fin ish
concrete work and or in la y
In g b rick and concrete b lo ck
a * a professional b ric k la y e r o r
equivalent eip er lenci
M u t t possets and m a inta in a
v a lid F la
C h a u f f a u r 's
L ic e n s e
I D t lln a t lo n o l
V A L I D The Issued license It
not expired nor hat. w ith in the
past three (11 y e a rs bean
denied, restricted revoked or
suspended I A copy ot the
lio n I and bak ol the license is
required prior to N O O N o l the
closin g d*to
A p p l, by N O O N A u g I I . I N S

__________ Mt 1*40___________

LANDM ANAOEM ENT
T E C H N IC IA N
G rad uatio n from H ig h School
Supplemented b y co u rse s in
d ra fting or engineering, end
one ( I) year ol e ip e rle n c e In
r o d * com pliance o r c iv il d ra t
lin g work, or an eq u iva le nt
combineHen of re ie le d tra in

Ing endeiperlence

.

Appty by N O O N . A ug. I A I N *

KITCHEN UTILirV WORKER
P art lim e Kitch en c le a n in g and
tood prep W ill tra in w illing
learner A p p ly betw een * A 10
A M only Senior C ltlton Re
lirem enl Center I t ] I N 4

__________E . O I __________
LABO RERS
Reliable w o rk e rs needed
•or tirtl shift
Ablest T e m p o ra ry Se rv ice s

LO AN P R O C E S S O R
W ill l '* m with light e ip e rle n c e
with M o rtga ge L o a n s Salary
negotiable N ever a loot

TEMP PERM_______ 774-134B
m a id s

H elp u l clean up C a ll ? * ? * ? l l
Or Iv e 't h c e n i e r e t i r e d __
M a rke ting A t lllt o n t
Personality and p lo esa nt tola
phone m anner a m ust Senior
Clllren m arket
I I y o u like
people a n d a r e n ea t and
a ttra ctlv *. c a ll u t tor a *
pointmonl P a rt tint*. H I t*40
M onda y thur F r id a y _____ __

MECHANICYRUCK DRIVER
W aiy M I tor floor orKtorltym o n!
Contact

Gypsumfloors ol FU., Inc.
___t aaa ta a ia a a / W e e k d a y s

MEDICAL OFFICE
INSURANCE BILLING CLERK
Subm it resum e to 140) M *d iC 4 l
P i n * S u it* 10*. Sanford. F L
t ilt ] __________________________

NURSE AIDES AND LIVE IN
P rivate duty. H a lt duty, and
hom e c a r* p osition s a va ila ble
E &gt; c * llt n 1 p * y

MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL
» )» t t**ll
E O E ..................... M / F iH / V
N U R S E 'S A l O E S t A l l t h in s
E ip * r t o n c * d or ce rtllie d p ro
ter red A p p ly In p a rso n el
L a k e View N u r s in g Cantor, *1 *
f 2 n d ! I S a n fo rd

A P P L Y BY NOON OP THE
A B O V E C IO S IN O D A T E .
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
P E R S O N N E L O F F IC E ,
CO UN TY S E R V IC E S
B U IL D IN G ,
1101 F A S T T IH S T S T R E E T
Sanford. F la I j m
A P P L I C A T IO N S G I V E N A N O
A C C E P T E D M o n d a y throu gh
F rid a y. I M A M to N O O N
E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y
EM PLO YER VETERAN S
P R E F E R E N C E G IV E N
____ O N IN IT IA L H I R E

O RDERLY
Com p (el ton ot a cuta c a r * n u r t *
• id t r a i n i n g c o u r t * o r
• q u lv a lo n t h o s p ita l a a p a rl
e n t * A p ply P » rlo n n * l. W esi
V o lu sia M e m o r ia l H osp ital.
701 W P ly m o u th A y * , O *
le n d FL_______________________

E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
W ith or w llh a u l s h o r t h a n d !
P r e fe rr a b ly W A N G w o rd
p ro c e s s o r s N eeded In the
L a k e M a r y A rea
Ablest Tem porary Se rv ice s
121 1*40

P la stic t ip a r t to d e v e lo p a
plastic trim tor w in d o w s and
d o o tt
B a c k g r o u n d s k ill*
should tw In t h * scie nce of
plastics M ai! r e t u r n * '
lo
M F C
P O
b o i 1**4.
M a itla n d .F L U 7 ) l.

NURSES RIDES
A ll thittt G ood atm oephere
and benefits A p p ly a l
De
B e ry M an or, 40 N H w y 17/tl,
D slto ry E O F _______________

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions#
R e m o d e lin g
REMODELING SOCIALIST
Ttw em ote B e il Ot W et

B. E. U N I CONST.

322 7029
^ ^ ^ ^ n o n c t o j^ A v a it o b t o ^ ^ ^

A i r C on d ition in g
1 H e a lin g

Appliance Repair

General Services

Lawn Service

Painting

L o v in g C a ro for Tour f l i t . - ',
W e h a ve years of a ip a rto nca
A good ref &gt;7) l ) » after 1 or
M e 71* 111*

Lien Mm ’R|........ Ij m Prices

Ftorlda M * M B M ikto w
(p tc ie liift
J) y r s E i p
7 re * f i t
Bonded
In su re d
W G T R IE B Y
7a) M i l

R O tE R
C o n tro l*
t p * c i* H il
p ne um atic

T I. O R E IN E
A M a ln t o n a n c *
in E la c t r lc a i A
Controls 12) * 2 * *

Home Improvement
C e n te r's tu t Wing a R este d ! I lag
H e J*B Toe Sm ell
l i t Burton Lane, le a t o r *
____________ t h a « n

m?»i*
LAWNS MOWED i TNIMMED

Vo ting Y a rd Ctoan a p t

I I I It S l

Quality Lm r Cart
At AftardlAI* PrtC*« Ml 4*77
SUMMER CLEAN UP
MbQdtolno
*khruti PrunmuQ
F R E E E IT ( M A T E S
Mt UM

Masonry
i A N Y THINO IN CONCRETEI
R«h*. Drtv*w«y..Sidie*ta. Els.
Fr** Etlimatot 01*41, Ofy*nt
• f AUMONOE Cans! Ca
"W» Ar« Ttw Salt"
III &gt;0*7

Paper Hanging

rT T r^ T o T T n ^ r
•need. F r a * la llm a to t. G uar
an teed 771 t u t o r 7i&lt; I7*B

Paving
A l A ip kett P a yin g , In *
G ra d in g A pwvtng. atphatt r a
p a in
seal co a tin g , traffic
m a rk in g*, d riv e w a y s A p erk
ing loft F r * a * * f l i t le t *

Allens R p p lia A C E Sarrwt
1 4 hr. S a e v k * tie E l b a C k * r * * l
It T r lip
44B 5441. 174*411

T N O M A S A T H O M A S . M aaa*
repair. ctoenMg. tow * care.
C a ll m u * *

Carpentry

Heme Repair*

Moving# Hauling

Sprinklers/ Irrigation

A ll ty p e * of ca r pantry A r *
m o d e lin g 17 y r s a ip Call
R i c h e r * G r o s s H I if ? )

C 4 U ^ ^ rr^ n *M lrt ^ n d
rem od elin g N o fob too s m e ll
Call 1 0 * 4 4 1 ________________

Music Lessons

Cleaning Service

M aintenance of all types
C a rp e n t ry . painting, p lu m b in g
an do to cto g a i a i a t

A lt a g a s&gt; *ll tovals. P r o B a c k
jrsm n W C a J U u fto ^ ^ J lt^ M a a

A B O U T T IM E IR R IG A T IO N
New Installations
F re e f i t
t ipe« 1 R ip e l t t o f C om p lete
Spymktor 5 , ste m s
T im o r*
Pum p*
EN
. * * ) IB M

C a rp e l C le a s t s * LtvtoA
loom B H all t i t * * .
Seta B C k e t r t t l 121 n a l
JU ST G E N IE S
P 'e to s t to n e l ctoan-ng
— ..
n t aaa)

Electrical
A n rttM n f C to c b ic a l
1*7*1
E s lim M e t .1* Hr. torvkta Call*
T i W i I b c t o f Sanrtoa.. O T 171*
C O N T E M P O R A R Y E L E C T R IC
C am p toto E toctricai tarvlcaa
A T ila p h a n a t _______ H I 1)77
D A S E t o c b lc
771*9)0
N o w A ra m o d a lin g. adriitwna,
Ia n *, se c u rity iig M s. ttmert
p tu * all a toe l a r v a * * Quality
S a re to * L k e r w e * A Bonded

I

Sunday. Aug. 4. m s

71—Help Wanted

W IL L IS H O M E R E P A IR
R e m o d e lin g ....JUdittowt....... A
A ll T yp es R e p a irs I
In su re d

Nursing Care

Tile

OUR BATES ARE LOWER

Car
a m ic
ir til*,
A m T lL I C
e ra
and installation, bath*. I
TO? E J im S t . Ia n lo rd
2271 *
m 2)04
John P a rke r

Landclearing

Lakavtow N u rsin g Cantor
* I * B Itc a n d S I . U n t o e d
____________ 177 47*1____________

O f N I V A L A N D C L I A R IN O
L o f/ L a n d c to a n n g
F ill d irt
Topsoil
P on d s D ra m ditches
U ta P re p a ra tio n C a ll to* W TO

4 tom e to beds a vaila ble tor d ay.
weak, or m onth c a r t C a ll tar
inform ation at Southern H * m *
Retirem ent Center. I7 7 IT 7 1

T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN O
F IL L D IR T 4 C L A Y B
SH A LE BHAUL1NG
127 14)1

Painting
Expert remits* Wall Papering

Lawn Sarvice

F r * # etftmetet 17 • ro ll 1/1 eft
aa P a w lin g I 777 |«B*_________

L a w n c a r * and tree t e r v K o
B y ttse tab or m onthly contract
F ro d V R I m ...........
777 7*41

I 'm pro ud a l m y w o rk ' N a lob
So* sm a ll F r e a e tt 777 77w

fnh*n WaiipAptor i fo a iiR t

Tree Service
A il Tree t o r t
Alto Hooting ......
4 F M

P r u sin g

I7HW4
ECHOLS THEE SERVICE
Ft** I slimelet I law Pttcoil
LM . let Stump Gr utoteg. Tee I
III ItTtder er nife
"Let the Preta11»e»e tide l»".
JOHN ALLENS L A W N A T R fi'
Dead tree 'emevol Lk A In*
F re e e st 711 IldO

�* B — E v e n in g H g rild . S *n » o ra

71- H « I p Wanted

N o * &gt; p * r l * r w * n * &lt; * t M r y M w *l
h o v a trantporlalton to A from
tfaop A p p ly a ft o r ! X P M

A A A Reefing Co
J»*l Moore'* Station Read
t a n ter g ................. ... . . n i te tf

tA M - tl.

TELEPHONE WORKER

at* 4ioo

E vparlancad pratorred. but will
tra in Eecaltont b a n a lllt with
com petitive pay A p ply al
T l» L a w a 'i T r v t i Plant
m i AltortwCtrcto (A irp o rt)
Sentord Ind uttrlal P erk

F A C T O R Y A 1 S I M R L Y and
P R O D U C T IO N W O R K M o d
•hlftt open Good pay x a l a t
a rt u n

305-7J7 7S55
Prod uct tor Partannal
A u to p a r t i rabulldaf

mi

T Y P IS T
10 P lo t W P M G a n a ra l O ttic*
Sk Illo11 Perm anent petition
N ever a F t *

IM M E D IA T E O F E N IN O S
G e ne ral C anttru cllon labor
G ood p a y t f f CKO

I N or L P M tor M 0 office
Im m a d la to potlllon full tlma
C a l l ; l i t I f l O b a 'w a a n t
11A M Mruwlay i f ' 1 ■

TEMP PERM........ 774-13*1

T R U C K D R I V E R S Lon g h aul
Im m a d ia to l Good d riv in g r *
co rd O ver 11 1FI 4M0

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE
E a r n in g *
Potential!
* offlc * In aacallanf
location Com plete training
p ro g ra m Maw d lvltlon ot old
attaPH thad firm
C all now
tor
d e tail*
on
piaatanl
w o rk in g condition* and to
t a c u r* yo ur future
Jim H a lt .ft y
1/4 M M
H ig h

W A N T E D Retired m a n to do
light carpentry w o rk
C a ll
111 M M attar 1 P M

L O C A L D R IV E R S
S t r a ig h t
tru c k * Good pay Star) righ t
a w a y 4 F I &lt;M 0

W ORD PRO CESSO R
S I to M per hour Im m e d ia te
o p e nin g*
P e rm a n e n t po*i
tion H aver a F a *
* I B M D IS P L A Y W R I T E R
* L A N IE R # f * W A N O

R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
H E L P E R S. C LERKS. CRT
OPERATO RS
Im m e d ia t e
o p e n in g* Good pay tc a la t
C a n art 4 X O N O W !

Aacepttonlvt/fyptvt F u ll H m *
good bonafltt, C F l In d u tt'l**..

TEMP PERM.... — 774-1341
J25 Borm with this »d!
Needed Im m edletoty
N u r t ln g
A * t lt ! * n lt and L l v * l n C a m
p a n Io n* I year a e p a r la n c *
required
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L
POOL

W E L O E R S Cerliltod E c c e lle n l
p ay n e 'e * Call today 4/1
4100

llteteo
R E C S P T I O N I1 T
P lu t h o f flc *. p h o n e * tilin g,
t y p in g h e lp fu l
P e rm a n e n t
p o tlllo n * M e re r a fee'

P A IN T E R S A P A IN T P R
H E L P E R S
Im m a d la t *
opening*, good Ittrtlng p a y
C a ll today t f * 4 K 0

TEMP PERM........ 77^134«
S E C R E T A R IE S
W all o r g a n lia d
Good typing!
S a la ry negotiable
N ever a teal

K im e t n
EOC

i n ) * « • * * to train lu ll an d p art
tim e potlllon* C a ll H I 7*11
B u tln a tt O r t t l R e q u ire d

O RVW ALL
W ith or without
• ■ p a r la n c e
Im m e d ia t e
o p e nin g* Good p a y C a ll to
d a y 4/1 4100

TEMP PERM_____ 774-1341

M/F/M/V

7J-Employment
W a n ted
E e p a r l t n c t d H e m e C le a n e r
w lth et day work. M F Rater
•ne e* H I t i l t . 1 ) 1 1 » »

NOW HIRING!
O u ts t a n d in g O p p o rt u n it y For

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION

(

)//{'c

!?&lt;&gt;/}

CENTERS

• Auto /Truck Refueling
• F ill! Line Convenience Stores
• F.isf F o o d K itc h e n s
S u its D

o m u

91—Apartments/
House to Share
FEAAALE W AN f E O TO S H A R E

1 bdrm apt Cell Dabble alter
S. H I ttao

*5 LO C A T IO N S IN SEM IN O LE COUNTY

F f in if C h ic k e n

R elia b le end erp a rla n ce d h om a
a n d efflce ctoe nlng
D a lly ,
w eakly, or m onthly R a a to n
able retot C all H I M U

Ib

EXPERIENCED
SEWING MACHINE
OPERATOR
• MU O TtlUVO M i OPEN

• V’OOCIN All
CONDITIONED FACILITY
• PAID VACATION
• 7 PAID MOtlMTS
•Ml Aim CARE MAH
• PIECE WAR EARNINGS
• STEADY NORA
• OVERTIME AVAILABLE

• Top Salaries

• Free Lite &amp; Hospitalization
• 2 Paid Vacations Each Year
• Profit Sharing Plan
• Other Benefits
MAKE APPLICATION IN PERSON
AT 202 N. Lnurol Ave.. Sanlbid

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
____________ m t m

R a fa il Store/ Office A p pro v *00
t q ft S M 0 m e H I 9*10 before
f X e m eftor I X pm ________

r e a l t o r

O E B A R Y 1 Bdrm ., I bath. F la
room , utility room , a ir and
heat, carport, large lot SX .ktO
eftor } P M A*4 M X

S a n to rd R*ta&lt;l or * H ic * epacat
up to 1.000 tq ft with eddi
t lo n a l t ta r a g e tp e ce
Im
m e d ia l* o ccu p an cy
C a ll
1)1 0444 A M or 104 M l 1000
after 1 P M

121—Condominium

321-3827

Rentals

• PorHc1lor »»nf l« or CiwpMt •
1 b d rm hom o, contra! a ir'h o o f
U 1 J m 2*t&lt; 221 f%fi attar S

91—Apartments/
House to Share

99—AparTmenf i
Unfurnished / Rent

F e m a le t a e k * r a a m m a t * t *
• For* 1 b d rm
HOD * h all

BAMBOO COVE APTS
m s AlrpwIBIvd
I Bdrm , t Bath I toe me
1Bdrm., 1 Bath 1111 n*e

atoctrk m in i

PHONE

91— Rooms lor Rent

111*411

• COUNTRY SETTING*
C h rn tla n A p t* A H a m a *
T V. kitchen, la u n d ry , m aid. SJO
W* 1 up O rl 411 laaa c j i *410
Clean. Cem tortekto R ea m M a id
tar vice S41 w k . In clud e * all
wtilltla*. C a ll n i H i t or H I
tec/
F u rn ith a d R e a m In P r iv a te
home I pertorv M i a waek
Utllittot includ ed 17) tS/E
S A N F O R D F u rn it h a d ro o m * by
the wee* R e o to n e b to rate*
M a k t w r v lc * C a ll M l 410/
1 f P M 411 P a lm e tto A v *
Sleep*nj Reem w ith kitchen end
laundry p riv ile g e * 140 par
week Call 171 M l /
THE F L O R ID A H O T E L
XX)0 4 * Avenue
1)14)04
Reetoneble Wee k ly R etot
F u rn ith a d ro o m tor
rtn t Lake lron t horn*, m ature
par ton l i t M e t

Aniliblt Not* Open MtgktRtft

A t Ctoan I b d rm
Com plete
p riva cy Pacteci lor l ' 1*0'
week p lu t 1100 tec C e ll
17) n e t or T O M l )

A V A IL A B L E NOW
F urnlthad S tu d io A p a r fm antt
O n * B e d ro o m A p t*
T wo B a d ro o m A p t*

FLEXIBLE LEASES
S E N IO R C I T I I E N S D IS C O U N T
RAN C H S T V L N L IV IN O III

SANFORD COURT APTS.
323-3301
Efficiency S 2 I 5 mo S 200 sec
N epato N o c h lld r o n t71 late
E a rn Apt*, tor Sentor C ltlie n *
J it P a lm e tto A v o
J Cowen N o P h o n e C e ll*
Lake M e ry - D o yo u w ant a cwto
furnithad apt lo r a h um */
L e w o tt ren t, u t ilit y b ld g .
palto. tcreana d p a r c h * u u a
w areing m a n H u r r y ) t t t I
La v a ly f B d r m w lm ecraanad
porch Cam ptato p r iv a c y tvo
weak p lu t S I M t a r dap 11)
/ M e o r n it o l)
B d rm apt S k i weak U tllllia t
In clu d a d
S a c u r it y d ap okit

m*tz*

I bdrm . edultk. no potk, eir.
quiet retidenttol tXO/ month
plukdepotil 11) 101*

&gt;ob( Nm 4s !

Fyrnrvhtd of URlNMtshod.
C a r p a r t i__ _____ Prlvato Paftot
t u * h L a nd tca a m g Peto Chtldran
W ATER BEDS ACCEPTEOI

U 7 S par m onth

127—Office Rentals

Iff. latf and

tlfO tacurlty Coll t R N M
) B d rm
I bath and dan How
a p p ll o n c a t
C a ll
477 1)50
attar a P M

L o v e l y 1 b d r m . c l o t * to
dow ntown 1100 w t . includot
u l i M K t 1250 w &lt; dop Cell
J J iH J Io r J it 4&lt;47
N oer D o w n to w n J bdm t b sth
e p i C e r p o t A e p p lit n c e t
P»r»t m o en d eecurlty No
_ p#»l J l) 4&lt;00 or W 1 &gt;117_____

S3A0 S350

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

Adult* * E a m ilia * W alcam al
I I * * Se c u rity D apatM

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

ill l»ie

S p a c lo u t A p a rt m e n t *
Lekefro nl. pool, tonnlt. adult*,
no patt. la u n d ry Starting at
I7S1 a m o C a ll 111 0/4) to ta*
I and 1 b d rm A lt o furnithod
offlc tone y from S / l wwot S IM
d tp o til N o p att C a ll m 410/
1 / P M 411 P a lm e tto
mg
I Bdrm lor iingla.
it
per ton tit* par mo t

M l/ E lm Ava

Leke

M a ry

1 B d rm

.

wathev dryer hookup* epp'l

• mat.

qui et area

Lake tee W ild w oo d D r
) bdrm ) bath, dbl ga ra ge ,
porch
c e n tre ! a ir
Super
Ctocv-1 Attorn able M l WO
REALTO R
M A R V IN K L A IL
44/ BIBS
Of le t t u t

Lie R u t CttaU l/BkRF
N V E S T
I N H O M E
O W N E R S H I P I bdrm I bath
Condo N ice tor • tingle or
retired couple Cell to be •
p roud owner U / .tM
i A C R E S lately tor • M o bile er
new hem e to be built
B e it otter I
W O R K I N O
M O T H E R S
O R E A M I I blk Irene C le m e n
le ry School ) k lkt Iro m D ay
C a ro Canter I bdrm I b *th
n ew ly decorated hem e
A ct
N a w Batore Schoal O p a n ti

‘OPEN HOUSE, 1-4

t m S P E C IA L

2 bdrm I Dith 3350 mo

I A 1 bdrm from S1I0 Lake
Ada F totibia laata 11) k*/0

WOOtac 111 &lt;44*

107-Mobile
Homes / Renl
1 b d rm I bath tu rn , ullllttoe
U M par m p ilt i plut dppatil

bom

hrily c a r p * la d ecraanad petto

suemo Depikit roe/it

111— Resorl/Vacation
Rentals

IV* a cre prlvato

1

b k l h . f a m i l y r o o m w ith
lirtp la c a H o r t a O K RS/S Call
D l 44/t

N «w S m y rn a B a a ch Affra&lt;fiva
1 b d rm F u r n Apt Pool 100
ydft from baach Avatiabi#
long fa rm m onthly 1 waahly
&lt;04 477 0tJ7

I Bdrm Cottage Complete
privacy U l m l with SX 0
ttcu rlty Call
11) m e or
MJ to ll

HIDDEN LAKE:

321 0759 Eve. 322-7643

ItOI B M a ilo n v ilto 1 bdrm I
both, air, appliance* S K ) per
m o p lu t S H S ta cu rlty d ep ot'I
Call M t H A S eve nin g*________

woextod and lanced ) bdrm

BATEMAN REALTY

l arpa J bdrm
I bath, vaulted
ctllin g. appliance* hook up*,
t c r e e n e d p a tio
1)10 1400
D l D U between a P M A / P M

I bdrm I bath D a lu a a ’ Apt 11/0
m o O ep o tit D M
O N E M O N T H F R E E R E N T II
T O * I *4

W aklva R lv o r

323-5774

S A L E S A SS O C W A N T E Dt
1*40 Santord A va

1 bdrm . ) bath. Sandlawood
W e th e r/dr y a r . pool, SJeO •
«a&lt; 1/S Il ia , taa r a il, attar 1

i

141 —Homes For Sale

Inveitar• Realty Service
C e ll ■ * ) » » ) *

NIC*, quia! Laka Monroa Area
Duplaa SMS mo firtt toll 1
:urlty H i g j / J

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

LOCATION!

A ttu m e . na g u a llty ln g tow
intorelt m ortgage ) B d rm . 1
bath, central air/hart, carpet,
g e ra g e l Fenced w ith lr ee l I
W alk to &gt; n *p *io g l * * * * * *

U X / d lK O u n t

171 to n

O W N E R F IB d rm . I ’ i bath.
Reem t L a rg e
w/ fruit tre a tl
He q u a litytn gl

jeo eH W T i / e i

B d rm
with ga ra ga N aw iy
ca rp a ta d 1 p a m tad No p a n
W o uld &lt;onaidar 1 m o option;
b uy Hts/ waafc 1100 aacurity
d a p C a ll M l n ^ f o r W H J J
] b d rm
2 bath l a r g * living
ro o m with f i r t p l # '* ) b i n
fro m L a d a M o n ro a Kttchan
a g u ip A v a tia b i# A ug t M50
first. I««t A w&lt; v/rlfy 222 t 0 71

I ftdrm D v p t e i with Pool

Only M l . * * *

TERRIFIC

Officts to Rtnt
R e a w n a b to end conrentenf
X I N M e p to Sanford
111 «0k0

)

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE

D R E A M C O M E T R U E I 1 B d rm
Central etc. L a rg e tcreanad
p e r c h ' C o it e m d e c g r l
G arage e itr e la rg e lanced
ya rd w/towermg tre e *I Klfch-

EXCELLENT
N A N C IN O t 1
w / F e m lly
fenced yecd
*4.*•• dewn
141*04

Cali_____ 321-1911

2 B d r m . I bath fanca. garaga

•IM

MASTERS COVE..... 3237900

Call

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

Leis * Ttrms to Fit

SAN FO RD
Naadad
L a rg a
fa m ily or fa m ilia l to rant 5
bad ro o m } bath hout* IVOO
par m onth p lu t ufllttiat Saa at
fOt M a g n o lia A v a Call H I
aaai or t h tOtJ

Larga I A 1 B d rm A p artm en t*
A d vil L a k e v tow F a m ily Paaittda

S E C U R IT Y D E P O S IT
W IT H T H IS A O I

S IN G LE STO RY
LIV IN G

R a nt 2 b d rm l#fc#fro*f
O a B a fy
23S A r g a l a i R d
Baoutlfut vtaw good fi*hing
U 4 M i 7 or m S77S
S a n fo rd 2 B d rm l-y b#m. living
room , carpatad utility room,
ca n tra l a»r haa* Sacurity da
p o t it 1*00 1421 m o Call ba
twaan 5 4 • P M M l W t
la lord j b d rm / P-J bath cant
air haa* w athar fry or in c l ,
a p p h a n c a i . c t l l i n g fan «.
fancad y a rd M W m o ♦ dap
M l S0O4

TEMP PERM
.J L IW
TRUSS ASSEMBLERS

O E M E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
Great M a rlin g
|ob Several opening* Good
pay 4FS 4K X

B A C K OH T H E M A R K E T
P ric e d right! **/ 000 It you
need • large homa. this It Itl 4
B d rm . 1 bath, m other In tow
apt H ugh fenced c o m e r tot.
tinatt quality . m a n y a e t r a tt l
C a ll to tar

R e ta il A O ffice Space X 0 up to
/ODD tq n *••* l tor e g * a v a il
able m 4 K 0 _________________

C a ll N a w tor M a re latermelM

S H E E T M E T A L M E C H A N IC
E e p a rltn c t d S h t tf M t f t l.
W t ld ln g . S H e a d in g
B lu ap rintt P e rm *.**n l potl
•ton* Never e Iw l

O E L I V E R T H E L P E R S no * •
par tone* n * c * * w r y F u ll lim a
G ood ttartlng pay 4F I 4100

141—Homes For Sale

117—Commercial
Rentals

C h ild re n A Pet* Welcame
Sa m a r Cttliene O tc e v n i

W anted M l time I f yr» or
older i t 00 hr p 'u t eecellent
b o n u te l M u tt h a re ow n
tf antportelien C all a** 1141

C E M E N T
W O R K E R S A
H ELPERS
F t c e lio n t p a y
Start righ t a w ay H I c W

CORAL CABUS FEDERAL

i t * B U R ........... .. ..... - T O B O B

Check there toaturvt
a Prati Prae Refrigerator
• Garage
a Attic Storage
a Wether/Dryev Cannedton*
• On' Sight Management

•*&gt; mi

A n o p p o r t u n it y to la in a
c o m p a n y « llh
t v c a llt n !
b a n a l l l t a n d f in * w o rk in g
co nd itio n* C o ll and In g u lf* If
q ualified

o o a IN D E L T O N A a e a
a a H O M ES FOR RENT a a
• • 1/4 M M a a

E n e r g y CfPctowt 1 bdrm . 1
bath Petto H em et nettled to
gutot co u n try teftlng. near
»h e a r in g A tchaat* Ctota to
L a k a M a r y 1/4 Celt

K ID iT U F F C H IL D C A R E

T lr o d e l Jeb ftynflngf
C a ll F u tu re *
fh e y h a v e
h u n d re d * of lob opening* for
t h o t * w h o w a n t to w o rk

C o r a l G o b to * * • * • '• ' S a v in g *
A L o a n It w a v in g an a rp a ri
o n ca d L o a n P rocattor
Hr
c a p llo n llf lo r ou r L a n d in g
A gony y In D a lto n * M u * ' typo
41 W P M a c c u r a lr ly
G o od
p u b lic contact and triapnon*
ta li lt
K n o m la d g a
of
M o r t g a g t l o n d ng a m utt

Call

E a r l y C h ild h o o d E d u c a t io n
P ro g ra m In child c a r * can
t e n O pening* In 4 c ity In
Longw ood ere* M u t t h e r *
d e g r e e
H o u r *
I J O A M If W P M . M o n d a y
F rid a y Prefer m other lo oking
fo r port time w o rk
W o rk
public tchool calendar o n ly

LABORER

PROCESSOR /
RECEPTIONIST

113—Storage Rentals

NEW HOMES FOR RERT

M in im u m J y a a r* E uparlanra

P r a K h o o l too th in g pokltton tor
t l u u t * l yaar H o u r* ara
t X to M l P M A p p 'y G i«
g a r b r a a d M o w **, I t M I ' m
A y * . io n t o r d
_________

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Mini WirRhdBWS

TEACHERS

ROOftR

•________

KIT ‘N* C A R L Y L E ‘ b y Larry W right

71-H e lp Wanted

71— H elp W anted

S a l A G e n e ral Maiafenafice
M an
C e r t i f i e d le m i n o t #
C ou n ty F o o l C a r * N aed* to
k n e w vartowt o«po&lt;t* o* m *to
'• n o n e t
T h o C lu b at fbo
Crau*»«f». l a t a M a ry , m

nti.

kundky, Aug. 4, INS

FI

B A IN C Y O U R B O A T ! 4 Bdrm J
b a fh cutfom co n fa m p o
r a ry
Lo v a ly ip rm g fad U i
ia&lt;a R E O U C F O TO ft 141000
A th for Jarw G n g g t R a a ito r
A « « o c ia fa E R A G L O B A L
P rop a rfi# 4 171 5a00 or I K J f l f
la v a n in g a i
B Y O W N E R U ) Wu. 1 B d rm 1
B a th large kitchen h aal a lr
llre p la c * utility room. 1 ca r
g a r a g a q uiatcornar b ig o e k i

Call HI 11» or TOOt*/____
iV O W NER
C u t lorn bull!, energy attic rani
m a d a m homa, t y a a r* old
Split plan. ) b d rm . 1 full
bathe ttudy. large dan w ith
Ilo n a fireplace. I I X X P la
R o o m a a l in klfchan. indoor
la u n d ry room, a a lra la r g a 1
c a r g a r a g e w ill* b u i l t In
k h e lv e *. w ork b en ch , etc
L a rg e khaded yard, p r iv a c y
tancad in back with lull m otor
h o m e h a o k up
E le g a n t
la n d kca p ing lo ca te d el 1*4
P lu m o t * D f . Santord tee too
C A M TO S IM

- M l H ID D E N L A K E
) b d rm ib a t h M l. e g *
M i l O A K R ID O E C O U R T
) bath v illa Eree hly
d e c o ra te d
A ll a p p lia n c e *
Ow ner m otivated 1*4 *00

1 b d rm

•1*1 W I L D E L M C O U R T
1 b d rm . 1 bath tcree na d paho.
tancad S I* 000
•11/L I V E O A K B L V O
) b d rm 1 bath tancad. blind*,
tow down M l . *00
*M 1 L I V E O A K B L V D
1 b d rm 1 bath O aap tot. b lin d *
tolar tea too

L a k a M a ry C a rd in a l O a k t Jut
lu t e d Traditional I b d rm . ]
yr young hom a Im paccebM
condition thadad tot Offerer
el Mt.ee*
Santord Lack Arbor 1 b d rm
bath with livin g roam , hitch
a n . f a m il y r e e m c e m b e
tcre e n e d p e rch . Ir e t h li
p rim e d tee.***

Will St. Cooiptny... 321 500!

SAN-DEL MFG.

Monday Thiu Fnday B JO AM • 4 JO PM
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

2240 Old l ' . Nary Rd.
Sanl ttd, I . 321-3B10

W ill you be next to w in

O p e n in g S o o n !

a $3,500 down paym ent
on a new Babcock Home?

D i s c o u n t Do pe ir tm e n t S to re
Sem inole C e n ter
U . S . H w y . 17*92, S a n f o r d , F L

Wo're accepting applications for

F u ll-T im e , P a rt-T im e
D ay an d E v e n in g E m p lo y m e n t
Inlgrelgtelng lor
• M a ij i a la i C a s h i e r *
• H a c n iy ln g C lg t k g

• NiQht Mainlgnancg
P g ig o n n e l

S *l*» Pgrtonnal for
• Ladioh Watt
• Curtains Dtapatigt
• Applianias Haidwaie
• Camaras
• Coimallcs
• Llngng PlBcg Goods
• Infants Girta Wgat

• Toy* Pals
• Aulomolivg
• Sporling Goods
• J a w a lr y

• Shogg

The Babcock Comjiany continues its celebration o f 50 years o f quality
homo building with a spectacular offer to Inlnxluco their threo newest
communities
On July I. 1083 the A lbert Black family o f Sanford won $.1,300 —
en ou gh for a down paym ent on a beautiful now Babcock home at
O rant Station, Mayfair Meadows orCrano's Boost Villus
And you could bo next!
Sim ply oorno lo tho preview center at any one o f these unique Babcock
communities and chouse a key from our Golden Anniversary howl If
it's the rijfht koy, you w in $3,300 To uso as a down payment on a
beautiful now Babcock home. O r any way you want
B u t h u r r y ! B e fo re th a t

right key

l _

. „

0

1 »

l

is g o n o

N o p u r c h a s e n e c e s s a ry O f f o r g a x l o n ly a t G r a n t S t a t io n , M a y f a i r
M e a d o w s a n d C r a n e 's R o a s t V i l l a s . E n t r a n t s m u s t b e 21 y e a r s o f a g v

O nly ono wtnnor per fam ily.

W o o n c o u ro g o o p p lic a fio n s from an y and all
in to re sto d son io r c itiz e n s .
We Ollai
•
............ 11 v 6 •AsiO&lt; IBIB D*K mint
........... .. ' ,
*Ql i Hn W
_

•

• •'
•

' i, ■ i .
. i ,

• t o il I r i n i Di

Insutunctf

,| &gt;ily

D U E TO C O N S T R U C T IO N H O L D -U P S
W e are again accepting applications. Anyone
who had previously applied is not required
to re-submit an application.
APPLICATIO NS NOW BEING TAKEN BY THE
JOB 3CHVICE OF FLORIDA
200 SOUTH FRENCH AVENUE
SANFORD. FLORIDA
MONOAY THRU THURSDAY
60 0 A M TO 600 P M
FINAL INTERVIEWS CONDUCTED BY W AL MART PERSONNEL
(q u a ! O p p ortu nity Im p lo y e ' - W t Ita tn Q u a lilia d A p p lic a n t*
Em p lo ye r F t d A d

k

The Babcock Company

Oppoitiiflily
•! «i oUvnl wo'k.tg
Condtions

kA Weyerhaeuser Company

GRANT

y i
c 7 V Ia y f a ir M c a d o w s

An Irreslatablc New E ngland
C om m unity o f iln g lc - fa m lly
homes from the $60s near S.R.
438 and Curry Fbrd Road.
Open 10a.txL-6p.in. Mon.-SaL.
1 p.DL-0 p.HL Sunday
284-0500

A secluded community of Unclefam ily hom es from the 8 uOa
•cross from Mayfair C ountry
Club In the Lake Mary/Sanford
area.
Open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-SaL,
1 p.m.-6 p in. Sunday
321-4760
11-4

A great new townhouse commu­
nity thsli close to everything but
so secluded I t ’s h ard t of l nd
(behind the A lta m on te Mall)
with homes startin g a t low as
873.200.
Mon.-frL 12 noon to 8 p a
Sat 10 b. rl to 6 p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m. to G p.m.
fa

r

i
♦

•

•»

• # * # #

t

9 f

AN

�Evening HariM . Sonford. FI

r n - P e t s &amp; Supplies

183—Television /
Radio/Stereo

1S1— Homes For Sale

Ability K t f flili

S A N F O R D D U P L E X 117)2513
M lg h la w n A r t Ow ner tlnanc

• C O LO R T E L E V I S IO N * •

KISH REAL ESTATE

201 —Horses

SAN FO RO
O ld ar C h a r m
]
b d rm . I bath L a rg a liv in g
ro o m with tirapiaca F o rm a t
d in in g ro o m
R a fln is h o d
h ard w o od ttnors U 7 000 Good
f a r m s or laasa optton m
IJA*. or s2o a n a

S a t a iiit a l y s t y m t
S ta ra a r a t a Iv o r.

1B7—Office Supplies
/ Equipment

straat

L A K E S Y L V A N A R E A New 1
b d rm , 1 bath, p ad d l* tans,
m ic ro w a v e large inside util I
ty. w a lk to la k * . c o u n try
• sotting. F M A A ssum ab ia. no
q u a lify in g m o rtg a g e W o n 't
Iasi at u a .u c u
J o t s * N o lan Realtor
H O REALTY
13 * t t * *

m ase*

203—Livestock and
Poultry

Sanford. F I I j m

REALTO R

ta tt M a g ic T ilt g a lr a n lt t d
tra ito r, n a v a r u sad
t * tt
M a g ic T ilt ga ira m ca d traitor,
n a ra r usad M u s i Sail! C a ll

tuoo Can m n i t

(305 ) 321 0041
ais tar his

c o m p la t a
d ish , ate

C a ro lin a C usto m Flatting B o a 's
A b so lu t* c io s* ou*1 1: &gt;0 ft t 's
m an. I 1J tt 2 man, t la
tt ao Inch bottom I U ft a*
Inch bottom A ll prlcad baton
cu rra n t cost

O w n both s lio s of lu su ry duptos
S a r a aa 000 In Real estate teas
|7a 000 H I 1111
___________

B U S I N E S S T E L E P H O N E S IT T
* A t t ButSan w ith w a rra n ty
*17 fttt

t E R R IF IC L O C A T IO N ! B u ild
s r / O a n t r reduces to iig a soo1
C u sto m a bdrm . 2 's bath on
quiet straat overlooking golf
c o u rse E s t r a s Include screen
p orch , a ll new m in i blind s,
m ic r o w a v * C reative tm anc
in g a v a ila b le C a i i e l b a r y
* * s t a il

Litad Orhca F u rn D esks, chairs,
tables, bookcase
II I* ca b .
t y p e w r it e r , p h o n e y , a n y
m achine M l a 'S S

173—Lawn &amp; Garden
Like new Riding Mower Sim
pllclty HOI Etac

L a y in g M a n s S a s longth.
s a l* 170 O ra n g e A r e w
I a 172 104*

211— Antiques /
Collectables

l * F I W sllcra tt B ow nd a r 70 H P
M a r c u ry with n * « tta ln la ti
p rop g a iv drive on trailer
E s c a l le n t co n d itio n 17000
HI U N
_____________
IS iy * C v n t u r y M u s t a n g
tilt
t r a il * '. 1*0 1 0
H i v a n 's
naw
£ s c e iia n t c o n d it io n
C all H I 1*70 altar a P M

Sunday, Aug 4, ItES — 7B

217—Garage Sales

215— Boatsand
Accessories

Dog boarding

Country A tm o sp h e re Reason
a b le R a t a l
32 3 3 &gt; &gt; 0

o ld
K lt c h o n a p p t l a n t o a .
co ntrol boat and air. carpot.
d ra p a s R tn la l Incom a UOO
m o n th ly
Appointm ent only

215— Bolts and
Accessories

♦ I M a rc u ry V a ry m e * 3 's H P
Sears. Ilka naw I M P S a a rs
V a ry good Call 12} t i t *

217—Garage Sales
B ig S a ia ll F u m ltu r*. d is n * s
c lo t h in g , h o u se h o ld a p p li
ancas m isc t f l Stsaryl D r .
D E L T O N A O tl D o y l* R d N o
phono c a ll* betora I A M 'I
a r a g a S a l* Som a furniture
a n d m isc e lla n e o u s Sunday
A u g u st ath to * 2SS0 G ra n a d a
A y * IB a h m d B a h a m a J o * sl
M a y i n g t a la
H o u s a lu ll of
lu r n it u r*, antique ic * bos.
m iscellaneous A u g 3rd A ath
J*»J K u r lh Rd Sanford ( I I
m ile s from I a W est on at I
A lter A u g attv C a ll M l 112*

Annua l J fa m ily G a r a y * S a l*
B ra 'd a d oval rug t X t f , earth
to n a t tao. O B L bad . 550.
atartrtc yaw ing m a c h in e with
a tta c h m e n ts , t a b la m od al.
• » c*'t*r** w erklng condition,
U V twin bad spre ad curlalny.
books. lira s car m a t clothes
ym a ll to la rg a
an d m a n y
h ou se ho ld Itam y. b o a ' and
traltar, tJ ’ C ourtnay with b ate
seats H ig h la n d ! traiiar. Ilka
n * » tlna t u n in g boat 5 C 5
t a n O attu n . ItO 1 door co up *
1 t p a a d s t a n d a r d
tranymtyylon. a cy tlin d a r. fual
In |a 1 11o n . A C
AM FM
ytarao. s * 000 a ctu al mlias.
Ilk * now H O T 1*7) D utyan
SIO t tpoad a door A C and
A T , g ra a l condition good tor
student l i r a
C a ll l U M t
101* S a n t a it
b a lw a a n
H a rd # * s and B a h a m a Joa*.
ra in or yMna. F r l S a t 1 1 P M
D *a i« ry walcom a

217—Garage Sales
M O V I N O S A L E H S a tu rd a y A
S u n d a y
A M
D a y i
F u rn itu re housahold goods A
toys I t * E s c a m b ia 0 * , San
lord
v * r d S a l* Sat
grill, livin g
a p p lia n c e .
m i sc r j * N
CASH O N LV

A Sun f s B B O
room sat soma
tta ra o
books
C har ok * a C irc le
PLEASE!

Y a r d Sat* L ots Of chitdran s
clothing, typewriter. a sa rc isa
m a ch ln a m ic ro w a v e
m lsc
t it M c K a y B ir d W ashington
O a k s I ' F r l t Sat
Y a r d S a l* A lso w a s h * ' d r y * '
«* M u sta n g
2 (a m ity s a l*
h o u s e h o ld it e m s , c lo t h a s
M yrtle A v a n u * oft &gt; » h St
S a t . Sun , M o n O r tL V

t r antique oak lib ra ry ladder
*0 It o l tra ck an d hange rs
C a n 377 SSA*_________________

213—Auctions

Start tsoo
FO R ESTATE
C o m m e r c ia l o r R o s id e n t io i
Auctions A A p p r a is a ls Call
D o ll's A u c tio n H I la id ________

1*5—Machinery/Tools
145— Resort
Property / Sale

HEWHOMES FOR SALE!

V down, no qualifying Call
A nita. F7* 1747 o r 77* &lt; 2 K

N * « H o m e * N « tr O i» « n
I
Bdr m „ I ib«1h„ * l r t
137 000 13300 down Irclu d vt

doting costs Plymtfiti of
(310 month

O C E A N V IE W
L u x u r io u s 1
ito ry. 3 bdr s s . 1 bath. I year
old horn# with sa p a ra 'a guest
ap t
L a v is h ly lu r n lsh e d In
rattan and wlckar, tirapiaca.
balcony, p a d d l* Ians. O B L c a r
g a r a g e laundry room, (w ith
• ashar d ry o r I Im m a cu la te ly
d a c o r a t a d a n d f u r n is h e d
A m e n it ie s plus, show c a t *
h o rn * s i r s *00 O w ner tlnanc
m g . O p en Mousa Sat
Su n .
t l 3 P M 1110 S Atlantic A v a
N aw S m y rn a ! 1041*23 lOOi or
M l 3 7 1 7 _____________________
OCCANFRONT
U n fu rn ish e d naw 1 b d rm C on
d o m in iu m
M l *00 P o ssib ly
n o m oney d o w n '

F a r m Tractor M F ta* disk
bush hog b ack blade, dual
a i l * trailer. I le n t * c h a rge r
A ll a sca lN n t cond ition call
3 » 7*01 attar I P M
P o rta b le H r c o m p r e s s o r
M P B rig g s and Stratton
cu tt Quincy. 10 ton
C lp p C ra n *
Ivy ton
hoist Cali m i i a a

197— Pets A

215— Boats and
Accessories

10
1*

a la clric

Supplies

^

Equal
Professional

LIKE NEW HOME - 3 BEDROOM. 2 BATH
HOME NEAR COUNTRY CLUB. OVERSIZE
LOT ON CUL DE SAC IN A QUIET AREA.
10*10 P A T IO .................................. *53,500

Complete Kent.11 And Management Department

Service

F r y # to good h o m # « yr o 'd
W tim # f4 » n# r
G r » « f fa m ily

NEAR PROVIDENCE PLAZA - 2 BEDROOM,
2 BATH HOME WITH ENCLOSED PORCH IN
FINE CONDITION FURNITURE NEGOTIABLE
WORTH SEEING.......................... *52.500

A lFO M
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
A O AR O OF
REALTO Rl

REALTY C O M PA N Y
R IQ BEAL ESTATE B R O K ER

101 D E L T O N A BLVD., D E L T O N A . FL

(305) 574-6656

149—Commercial
Property /Sale
R A V E N N A P A R K I B d r m . l 's
bath, c e n tra l air and heal
g a ra g a . drape s, carp al W all
ca re d tor
Beautifully land
sc aped B y ow ner 111 kalS
S A N F O R D 1101 Palm etto A v a
3 B d rm , | bath H u gh corner
lot Sep arata doubt* garage
Zoned G C J. U * WO
W a lla c e C ra s s Realty. Inc.,
R ealtar
311 a37T
_

" I ■ I I HR1

STEMPER
1 B d rm . 3 Bath Villa B ailor
than naw I V e rtical blinds In
a v a ry ro o m N aw r a n g * and
r a f r lg a r a t o r
B ra n d naw
c a r p a t l C o r n e r u n it w ith
g a ra g e M S 000

L t r g * Immm w ith
in
UvTng room ,
la u n d ry, d o u b t* c a r
c e n tra ! a tr
haat
O w ner will finance

O ffice B u ild in g at 1*13 S P a r k
A v * 3017 sq tt A m p la p a rk
In g S la t .000 Call 311 S IM

151— Investment
Property / Sale
C A S S E L B E R R Y 1 acre toned
P R 1 U S 000 W M a l'c iP w sk l.
REALTO R
H I 7 *tl
3 1 A C R E S Slat# R d * * and I a
a rta
Incom e property with
ca sh flow I hom es and I
m o b ile s on p ro p a rly
A ls o
lu tu ra co m m ercial area C all
H I *008_______________________

153—Acreafle
Lots/Sale

hlfchtn.
tfl door
garaga
119.006

L IV E O A K
155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

STENSTROM
REALTY*REALTOR
S a n fo rd 's S a its Leader

Adult Mobil* Horn* Path
18 Hoi* Golf Course
Under Construction

Lot Included
In clu d e s W ater G arb age P ic k up
Y a rd M aintenance
Im m ed iate Occupatncy
O ra p a ry *AabtN H am a* H I 1 3**

P a y C l o s i i i ” CoH tM
I 'll) lllflll llnoral O n '2,050 Down I'a j

3 b d rm I bath, cantral haat and
air. carpa*. appliances V a ry
lew dawn, assum e p a ym e n ts
H I fa st attar 3 30 P M ________

A t

IO H 9

liiirrt kt Itiitr For 30 \m r»

181—Appliances

/ Furnltur*
A p p lta n c o * F a r Sale
a ll
• •callent caadittaa A tally
W I L L B U I L O T O S U IT ! Y O U R
L O T O R O U H il E X C L U S IV E
AGENT
F O R W IN S O N O
DEV
C O R F . A CENTRAL
F L O R IO A L E A D E R ' M O R E
H O M E FO R LESS M O N EY!
CALL TOOAYI

In

14

M o d e ls P r ic e d

F ro n A *4 2 ,9 0 0
■*004LJ
OffH...

H a rd R a c k M a p le D m u sg Sat.
tabla. * cha*rs and hutch 1300

MOP -SAT. 10 AM.4:00 P.M.
SUN. 12 NOON-8:00 P.M.

3% B R O K E R ’S C O O P
./.I, u s n o w ; 5 7 4 - 4 2 8 5

CALLANYTIM E

111 IMlonu lllvat.
I tritium. Fin. 32725

Hum* K.trrs E arrant •

t
•~ s » “ “ W |*k«k**ss *\S» W *&lt; S vt. u r . j g svw *T*r&gt;*VA

�r \

I B — Evening Herald. lanford, Fl

Sunday, Aug. &lt;, I W

MR. ASH’S AUGUST SPECIALS
ON YOUR LOT HOMES

237—Tractors and

Trailers

517— Oarage Salts
a r t S a le 104 F l r t T J f . la t e
M a ry Awe J 'd A « h I le t .
Sun I * la 1 R a d ia l arm ten.
h o v ie h o ld Ite m *, w o rtth o p
•had w / b g h it A alec Iran be
m o v e d ). p ictu re s, mltc.______

■ It*. 1 't ft aidae with a |t*#i
fleer u s e
O n ly mferetted
cell
n t l » e after ( P M
Read CIS. a e ra te Iro m l a t a
M o n ro e P o t t O ffice . Often
trailer.

HflCfidiH

4 F a m ily Y a r d la t e Furniture,
c a r a m ic i a e u * m itctllaneot/t
S a tu rd a y a n d Sunday, f S
P M 1 1 1 B u rto n L ane
M u t t Sell! &gt;fTJ F ord R e n c fie 'a
elr. rune pond iron or bett
otter lew Chevrolet Citation
a m / lm . a dr hatchback 11*00
or b e lt of ter TJJ t * U

•1 B U IC K R I O A l 1 O r C O U P
A I R A U T O M A T IC I O W N E R
R ed uced!
Ste al
NO M O N EY D O W N III
C O U R T E S Y P O N T IA C IJ T IIJ T

139—Motorcycles
and Bikes

OVER 50 PLANS
2.3.4 BEDROOMS
TO SELECT FROM

&gt;&lt; o r

ie ep • W O , d e i t y
c h ro m e trlm /m aga, a m / tm
ca tta il*, d oth lap SO too See
at 1 1 1 1 * H I Sheet. H I » m

LOW PAYM ENTS
AND
WELL. SEPTIC &amp; LOT PAY OFF MAY l i
INCLUDED IN YOU MORTGAGE

CALL
MR. ASH
TODAY!

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans

l i f t O L D S i t Begewey
• c e lle d engine, new radio.

N eed C n b t . P le y p e n i. Baby
( u r n lt u r a . c l o t h in g
Good
P r k e t A lte r T P M
H I IN I

C O M P LE T E
FRAME AND
CO NCRETE BLOCK

newtlree. Can in me_____

IF YOU REQUIRE

223— Miscellaneous
4 f V W F o r S a l*
F ic e tle n t
r u n n i n g c o n d it io n
G ood
ste re o ( lt d negotiable H I
M SI

A ir C en d ltte ne f
1 )4 0 0 B T U
I l f S T V C o n to l« w/ ptano A
A A S / F A M IO B C a ll H I SI4)

Complete lm ini Room Set.
•m___

3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS
UNDER ROOF 1333 SQ. FT

3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
LIVING AREA 1084 SQ. FT

m im
' l l C ad illac E l Decode. Sen R e e l
M u t t S e c n fe c e l
le t s
C O U R T E S Y P O N T IA C I ) ’ I I I !
' I f C a d ill a c C o u p * D t V Il l e
lo a d e d . 41.000 ml T rad e I or
a m a llt r c a r or la p a n e t *
p ic k u p tru ck of equal value

13too HI fl»S __________

U SED C A R S
THF

ie rj

c h iv y l u v p ic k u p

W IT H T O P P I R l

LIKE new i ............. IN N
COURTESY POHTIAC-.milll
I f f ! Chevy cutlom ven tor t . *
I f f ! C h e v y P ic k U p C a ll
H I 1414______________________
I f t I D odga Va n C u t lo m lie d
to la bed. 4 c j p lla n t c h a in ,
lin k . Ice boa. leble I owner
14 C h e v y Ven, I Io n
N *w
m o to r B lo w n h e a d g a t * * !

11too in list

Nwy f l ..... ........ D eyfen a B *ach
e a * e a tte ld i a e * a t •

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
E v e ry W ad N ilt e l f la F M

* Where Anybody *

♦ Can Buy or Selll a

C R E D I T H A S S LES ?
e W* &lt;*!an F inane*
e Down Payment! 1)00 end Up
e Trada Int Accapled
d is c o u n t a u to b a l k s

F o r m e re dele lit
I 444 111(111

FAMILIES

____________

E n jo y

»J D adg* P ic k U p
U t a New !
IJ O n O m lle i
SaffS
N o Mone y D o w n I
C O U R T ESY P O M T IA C - M lim

IB O I F re n c h A re

1 1 1 1 **1 1

J F O R D V A N 4 c y l . eu lo
Ir a n i . th o rl w h e a l b a t *
ia ( T O m l , | c e p ta ln 't c h a ir i, 1
regu la r w eft i w in d o w ! all
a ro u n d A tk ln g 14,100 (34
I t t I r a r d D ranc* R ed. H.fOO
m
or a f f i i H
A t e tor

Jim

COMPUTE
BLOCK

COMPLETE
FRAME ONLY

H.ooomi tii.ooo h i enr

B E S T IN T O W N
F G *, [ 7 T E R M S

B A R R IN G T O N

H IC K O R Y STILT

Country
Living
Again
DCIT0NA RIMTAL
HOMES AVAILABLE:
Speclout 3 bedroom.

) bath, aome with garage,
family room, aertenad
porch and much moro.

N o rth la k e
^ V illa g e r -

ONLY

from S5003mo
Office ipaea available
100 aq tl. ground floor,
Callont Bird ftflblllty.

LIVING ASIA 1641 SO FT TOTAL UN DIR ROOf 2234 VO
FT THIS IS A 4 KDROOM HOMI C O M IS WITH CiNTRAl
HIAT k AIR WITH HEAT RUMP, 2 CAR OARAGE. WALL
TO WALL CARPET. SELF CLEANING OVEN WITH VENTED
HOOO, DISHWASHER. DISPOSAL. PADOU FANS. COM ­
PLETELY STUCCOED A ll AROUNO QUARRY Till FOYER.
MARVLE SILLS
7 7 0

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH INCL. CARPET,
FULL PLUMBING AND ELECTRIC RANGE
ALUM. FACIA \ SOFIT. 12B4 SO. FT.

C o n l^ c l Mania find
At

COMPLETE
ONLY

D e lt o n a
C orp .

COMPLETE ONLY

i t

7 D AYS 9 To 7
5 M odels To See
ORLANDO MODEL CIR
351 W. Hwy. 436
. Altam onte Springs
|
'/. Mi. W. ol M

[R e a lty Co.
flG IIT E R ID
, IR E A L E 1 T A T I B R O K E R

*

POOL

CALL
MR. ASH
TODAY!

(3 0 5 )

7 4 -6 6 5 6

ORLANDO MODEL CENTER
351 Watt Highway 4)6
Allamonla Spring*, Florida 3771 *

( j Ye n / m / ./ /(.H t/ a

S in c e 19 5 5

•TENNIS

• RACQUETBALL
• N A U T IL U S
• SAUNA

Bob Dance Says "Everybody Rides" During My

SUMMER TR U C K SALE BLITZ!!

N O M T H L A K K V ILLAO K . Thd A ffo rd a b lt L a b e sid e Community.
OfM And Twotlctinimti Condominium* Will) Flrrplarr*. Priced from Ttir
EO'fl
Telephone' (JOS) 311 1*11 In Sanford (303) B4100N In Orlando

NEW TRUCK VALUES
1 9 8 5 DODGE D 100
PICK-UP

1 9 8 5 DODGE
MINIVAN

Dcxlg* *&lt;.» i irvch. A cyt 175 C I 0 engine tttcfc
t f t r t . cuBtcMis radio

us-Home
IH IS Y

DODGE
CUSTOM VAN

, * U o * »nC*

$11,988

USED TRUCK VALUES
&amp;

’85

^

1979 PLYMOUTH
TRAIL BUSTER 4x4

0. C H EVR O LET V
W C H EV E T T E S "

10 TO CHOOSE
FROM

1983 FORD F100
EXPLORER
CMI AM 9U

85 C h e v r o l e t C a m a r o
84 C a d i l l a c s
84 L e b a r o n C o n v e r t i b l e

ST-

top, A,*C Pr« P/9. awlo

*6 9 8 8 *

*4 9 8 8

*4 6 8 8

*6 9 8 8

1982 DODGE
RAM 150
Cwetem, iwg. a tawed ( cyl *u » u

E

*4 1 8 8 *

1984 NISSAN
PICKUP

LftU Ayit) A/C. campar lop QtrUf
24 QUOmilet
|
“ * ««
lC
4flQ*
ramua coror
U lO O

BASEO ON $199 00 CASH DOWN, PLUS TAX AND 10 25
TRANSFER FEE WITH TRADE WORTH $1200
BASED ON $199 00 CASH DOWN, TAX. *1200 T R A D E ^
ON 48 MONTH CLOSED END LEASE.

stock* uaats

Many ulher makes and models available at urrwlai savings
IMF AVIS LIMITED POWER TRAIN WARRANTY is included al no e.lia coal
with every

cm

II a good lor I

montha or T2 OOO mile* whlchyrer tom e* Inal

fitem mg aradatM lo (Uaiheo Urytxt No other decourua aiiky

331-3837

Where Everybody Ride i

1 Block N. 01 419
V * Hb W b l l p o n v l

* • t e*

INSTANT
CREDIT
APPROVAL
423-3822
OR
327-0400

BOBVANCE

5676 S. Hwy. 17 92
Caaaelbetry, FL. 32707

HU

hw y,

W

it ai tONGWOcb

(

�PEOPLE

Evsning Herald, San lord, FI.

Sunday, Aug. 4, l M l — 1C

Dying B re e d
Law Enforcement And Ranching Go
Hand In Hand For Pioneer Family
By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
When you think cowboy
and lawman you may think
of the Old West. But you
don't have to go west to find
a family with deep roots In
both Reids The C.W. Becks,
both junior and senior, have
carried on their fa m ily 's
tradition in Seminole and
Volusia counties.
" L a w en forcem en t has
always hern my main love,"
30-ycar-old Charlie Beck, a
Volusia County sheriffs deputy. said, while working cat­
tle on his family's 4.(XX) acre
ranch Just across the Osteen
Bridge, cast of Sanford.
"It's been a big Influence."
he said, having a father (C.W.
Beck Sr.I who was Seminole
County’s chief sheriff's depu­
ty. sometimes the county's
only deputy, from 1945 until
1952.
Bark In those days things
were a bit different. "You
were paid for what you did.”
C.W. said. " I f you carried n
fellow from the Jail to the
courtroom, you got paid for
It. You got so much mileage
to bring him In.
" A lot of them didn't make
a go o f It back then because
they hadn't known what they
were doing. I had a lot of
pretty good people helping
me. Thai's the reason I held
the Job."
During that time. "I had a
few cows." he said. " I worked
for my daddy here for I guess
50 years. I didn't work for u
wage from him, only for what
cattle I had."
C.W ., whose old fam ily
homestead row puatuir once

*A Mystic M asquerade
iRcvonda Caldwell strikes a m odel's pose In preparation tor a
bock to school fashion and talent show to benefit Seminole
County Chapter of the N ation al A ssociation fo r the
Advancement ot Colored People. Sponsored by a local group,
Pizzazz, the production, " A M ystic M asquerade," w ill be
h f Id on Aug 10, at 9 p.m., at the Sanford Civic Center. See
rt lated story by M arva Hawkins on Page 2C.

W om an's World

Women A t Top I
Salute Parents
A n d Husbands
By Patricia McCormack
United Press International
NEW YORK (UPII - llrltlml
every successful man. I hr saying
goes. there's a woman
So whal'd lhe word on what's
behind every successful woman?
F iv e w ords- " P a r e n t a l e n ­
couragement and spousal sup­

port."
Some 10.OOO women In 47
nlrlrs, 59 percent of them
Tiled. &lt;wiid so In a survey
rbetj askrd the most significant
tors spurring females on to
Urress
Egged on by ihclr moms and
and. umong the married,
d up by their husbands, these
tnnrn readied their goals, ac*
tifding to the survey sponsored
Zonta International — a
hlea gobased global service orl antral Ion of women who have
I btred I business, science and
be professions
This first International Status
if Women Survey eontalned few
| urprtses. Sample: the achievers
access to rollcgc unlocks
of business and the pro­
mt in women from Africa to
W Zealand. The same obvious
t may be said of males at the

fnnacle.
On the m atter o f spousal
pport. bur trig) i Gardner, who
reclrd the survey conducted
Social Hcscarch Inc.. Onda It
ally not surprising
"T h e successful women up* r to be the types who attract
,d marry men who are sympa
r i l e with their drrains of
compllshnient."
ther h igh ligh ts from the
rvey:
—Most of the married women
Id n e ith e r h u sb an d s nor
lldrrn Interrupted their ca­
rs.

—Of the 18 percent who never
married, half are 50-or-older.
The hunch, Gardner says. Is lhat
the older age would Interfere
wtlh their careers.
—31 percent o f the successful
women showed entrepreneurial
spirit and willingness to take
risks by developing their own
business
— Most o f the w om en are
professionally stable and not Job
hoppers. Forty-one percent are
In their first careers; 32 percent
tn the second; 22 percent In the
third. Twenty-eight perrent of
the w om en w ere p ro m o ted
within the company In which
they began their careers.
—In the main, the women said
they were attracted to their
careers by personal Interest In
the field, desire for Indepen­
d e n c e . p l e a s u r e In a c ­
complishment. nred for personal
fulfillment and confidence In
their abilities In a particular
area
—Women suggested pursuing
your own dreams, not those of
your parents Explore options
and be responsible to your
ch oices. Decide as ea rly as
possible exactly what you want
to do. then set goala and de­
termine to achieve them.
— It Is best to delay marriage
and children until you finish
your education Rut If you marry
while In college, do not sacrifice
your education so your husband
ran continue tn school.
—Before you commit to mar­
riage. discuss with your pro­
spective spouse what you want
out of life, both personally and
professionally.
—Do not Mcrillce your career
because your husband's work ts

stood o n L a u rel A v e n u e a i '
25th S tre e t tn Sanford, w h e r r

some now shop for beef at
Winn Dixie, began driving
cattle at 14.
" I couldn't get an educa­
tion because of riding the
cattle from Winter Park to
25th S tre e t." 76 year-old
C.W. said. "I'v e Iteen al It a
long lim e ." And he still
hasn't stopped.
C .W . m ay not be th e
wrangler he once was. but
Charlie said he'll never lx- 1he
cowboy his dad was Ami
C W was on hand al Ihc
corral with advice when the
Becks' herd was recently
rounded up for a stute or­
dered blood test.
T h e la w e n f o r c e m e n t
tradition may have been car­
ried on by the Beck men. but
C.W .'* wife Inez. In tbclr 51
years of marriage, hus always

H sra M

fcr V v u n L a S a n

Inez Beck and granddaughters, Kim berly, Kelly and Brenda B®ck
had a hand In a roundup.
She. usually slnglehandcly.
fixes lunch lor 15 to 30
cowhands. A major frat that
can roll her out al 6:30 am .
and send her bark bed at
8:30 p.m.. long before her
usual 11 p in. bedtime, 'she
said.
Hut It’s a chore she enjoy*
And Charlie's wife Sheila and
Ihelr three daughters Kim­
berly. 9. Brenda. 7. and
Kelly. 3, are all horse riders
who love outdoor life on the
range.
K im b e r ly r e c e n t l y lo o k
part In H er n rst roundup.

riding along with her dad and
other wranglers to forre the
herd from the prairie Into the
corrals.
"M y whole family since my
great, great grandfather has
been In law enforcement and
r a n c h i n g , " C h a rlie , (h e
Heck’s only child, said. "It
has run hand in hand. I've
been In law enforcement one
way or another since 1972."
Charlie has worked for
both counties' sheriff's de­
partment* and is Volusia
County's rlverman. "Which
Is a good I keep the alrboal."
And part of his boat patrol
Is along Ihc St. Johns River
shores o f the Beck property
where he can keep an eye out
for poachers of deer or wild
t ur keys o r ru stlers who
might have an eye on the

Sheila Beck and C.W. Beck Sr. observe cattle roundup
activities In the corral at the Beck ranch.

B eck's 1,000 head cattle
herd.
"W e have wild hogs and a
lot of deer we try to protect."
Inez said. " I t 's a Job to
protect them. W e’ve had a lot
of problems They arrest u lot
of people on the river shoot­
ing the deer."
The wild hogs are C.W,’a
special pels, " T v c got a few,"
he sakl. “ If 1 ain't got 35 or
40 In the bunch I ain't got
any. I'd say."
"T h e hogs are Just n hobby

for my h u s b a n d ." In e z said.
••He'll d rive th at o ld truck
d o w n in the w o o d s a n d they

c o m e from e v e r y w h e r e ,
because he carries com.
"They'll follow that truck
as far as they can follow It If
he doesn't stop and feed
them, lte Just enjoys fooling
with them."
Inez, a city girl from Palm
Beach, who suld she's now
been on the Beck ranch,
which has been In the family
since 1902. for so long, ” 1
hardly remember anything
else. I was so young when I
married. I often look track
and think 'that 's lni|&gt;oslhlc .*
"I'v e enjoyed It I love the
outdoors. I used to ride back
when I was a young lady."
70-year-old Inez said. She
met Beck when she was
visiting relatives In the atea.
C.W. said he and Inez have
been m a rried 51 years,

"Because I lei her be the
boss."
"W e 'v e gotlen along pretty
good," Inez said. " I guess
•inylxidy who says iliey don't
have some ups and downs Is
telling a story. I get mad
every once In awhile. I'm the
one that gets mad and 1
scatter them all out.
" W e share ev ery th in g ,"
hut some of the duties are
spilt along traditional lines.
" H r (C.W.| couldn't fry un
r K g ," Io c s said. “ I sa y , 'If
s o m e th in g h a p p en * to m e
b e fo re you . y o u 'll s ta r v e to
d e a th .' H e ssys. 'N o . th e re 's
r e s ta u m n is f"'

A Rve-generatlon Klortdlan.
one who grew up with Rvr
brothers. Inez said It's a
change of jatcr lo have three
gran d dau gh ters. But she
dotes on the girls and said
daughter-in-law Sheila. 29. Is
like a daughter to her. "I love
hri Jusl like she was m y own
"W e were married 19 years
beforr Charlie was born."
Inez said. "1 never enjoyed
anything as much In my life
(having a soul I had a gong
o f Itoys al my house all the
time
" I raised hall of Sunlord Ills
age and my health was good.
I was younger than a lot of
other mothers In w ays." she
said.

Sac RANCH. 2C

George Benton, left, administers worm medicine to a cow
while Charlie Beck Jr. holds the anim al's nose.

Sea WOMEN. 2C
.1

V
MB 1 &lt; ! » ■

I
'
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} C — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

...Women

Sunday, Aug. 4, IMS

Flea World
Wedding Called
Country Social
Event Of Year
Hundred* of Ihe area's finest
folks witnessed the country
social event o f the year, an
old-tim e sou th ern w edding,
staged In elegance, on stage at
Flea World. Sanford. Saturday.
Aug. 3, at 2 p m . according to
Flea World spokesman Debbie
Pettit.
Costumed In their best, Old
South Sunday finery. Miss Sally
Marie La Hue and Koberl Merlin
Mullen, two longtime Flea World
employees who found true love
•il the murket. exchanged wed­
ding vow s on stage to the
toe-tapping, knee-slapping beat
of Ihe Jug Brothers countrywashboard band.
The radiant bride chose for her
vows a long white gown printed
with roses fashioned along the
Southern Belle silhouette with a
full hoop skirt nnd ruffled off-the-shoulder necklin e. She

wore short lace gieve* and tar­
ried a lace, ruffle-trimmed um­
brella.
The bridegroom was attired In
formal tails from the Old South
Era complete with a top hat.
Attending the bridal couple
were hci sister as maid of honor
and his brother as best man.
H a v i n g w atch ed the oldfashion love blossom between
Miss Sally and Mr. Dob In their
courting days, the Flea World
dealers wanted Ihe wedding to
be e x tr a fa n cy an d ‘ ' hi g h
flutin'." Ms Pettit said. "So.
they all chimed in to add their
own personal touches to the
countrified ceremony. Including
decorations and flowers. Even
the ceremony was performed by
Notary Sheila Copeland, one of
the market's dealers." Ms. Pettit
said.
Following a private reception.

Continued From 1C
more Important. To you. your
work is most Important.
—I f you choose to m arry,
select a male who Is support.ve
o f your career aspirations and Is
secure enough not to feel threat­
ened by your success.
—Although many women suc­
cessfully Juggle marriage and a
career, be aware o f the fact that
a career does not come without
costs. If you focus on your work,
you wtll Inevitably have to sacri­
fice some aspects of your family
life, such as spending as much

WALLPAPER, DRAPERIES
AND FLOOR COVERINGS
CHOOSE FROM AN EXCITING
SELECTION OF COLORS
AND TEXTURES
•TTI (A B IT

FREE HEAVY PAD

Tire TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
m eet each M o n d a y at 6.-30 p m . ar C a lv a ry

Baptist Chureh on Country Club Road. For
more Information call 323-7718 or 830-

M r. and Mrs. Robi-rl Merlin Mullen
the newlyweds will make Ihelr
home In Sanford. The bride­
groom manages a concession

Bonnlo
Olvera
Lake Mary
Correspondent
32 1-2200

7018.
Noel Blnley left July 23 for Paris Island
South Carolina where she will take her haste
training for the U S Marine Corps Noel Is a
1985 graduate of l-ake Mary High School
and Is the daughter of Sue Barrett of Uikr
Mary.

stand at Flea World and the
bride Is assistant mannger of a
concession stand there.

Gulcll. Jerry Wise. William Collard. Kay
Wlsley, LarTy Munme. Cindy Arms. Anna
Decker. Tula Wescott. Elizabeth Poole,
Chuck Sassmun. Frank Arms. Wayne Hof­
fman. Vern Feddersen. Lynclle Pauley. Bill
Thompson. Kathy Klee. Barbara Kussell.
J R . Griffin. Dick Fess. Charles Gassinan.
Alice Schuster. Chuck Wise. Kevin Wick.
Joe Llelrert. Storm Richards. .Jennifer Dale.
Mildred Sandusky. Shirley Kipp. Mary Jane
Durycu. Barbara Gorman. Betsy Canal.
Cathy Ekern. Roger Kipp. Delores Muse.
('Indy Dale. Evelyn Donaldson. Carrie Sand­
ers. Barbara Carroll. Renee Wise. Hazel
Perlnchlef and Matt Klee.

Cindy and Dennis Bmwn entertained over
100 guests Sunday. July 22. In their new
home In West Sanford.
The guests enjoyed the delicious food Ihe
Browns prepared, had fun playing tuul
million and enjoyrd Die lake near ihrlr
home.

Birthdays for Ihe month of August: Grace

Those celebrating August Anniversaries
are Ed and Paulette Suggs. Yankee and
Elaine Marshall. Ron and Patty Kipp. Larry
and Cindy Dale. Steve and Janet Gregory.
Bob und Laura Vinson. Dennis and Cindy
Brown. Chuck and Mildred Waller*. Judy
and John Higgins. Storm and Jennnlc
Richard*. Cieoigr and Ora M ae Swan. Terry
and Kadiie Ituguii, Larry and Ethel Monroe.
Illtlie und Junel Kipp, und Gerrt and Richard
Weber
Congratulations to all.

Back-To-School Show
Set To Benefit NAACP
The group. Pizzazz, Is busy gelling ready for Its
buck to nchonl fashion und tulent show under the
supervision of Marvin Henderson, production,
und Kumcltu Phillips und Revoudu Caldwell,
modeling directors.
Like the previous years, tills show, " A Mystic
Masquerade." Is expected to be a triumph,
according to Henderson
Plzzuzz will make Its drhul on Aug. 10. ut Ihe
Sanford Civic Center, ul 9 p m. The muster und
intMresn of ceremonies are Eddie Stiles and
Sheryl Boykin. Some of Ihe ureu's finest young
udults have assembled together to present to the
public u spectacular, thrilling evening. This
production will Include Rachel Adutns. Petty Boy.
the Pizzazz Players, und of course, ihe Pizzazz
Models.
Some of Ihe fashions will be provided by
Sanford's Men's Den and Merle Norman us well as
other area stores.
Tickets are available for u donation of 83 In
udvunce and $4 al Ihe door. Tickets can be
purchused from any o f the participant* or contact
Marvin Henderson. 322RIU1: Samellu Phillips.
3 2 1 0578. Revondu Caldwell. 323 6504
or Eddie Stiles. 425 8873.
This show will benefit Ihe Seminole County
Chuptrr of the NAACP. Gel your tickets early for
this memoruble evening.
The afternoon

at rvlce

ut The Springfield

...Ranch
ConUnusd From 1C
Despite the addition of Shells
and s trio of Beck granddaugh­
ters. the Becks' ranch remains a
male domain and not Just at
roundup time when C.W .'s and
Charlie's pals become volunteer
cowhands
" In hunting season ." Inez
said, "I'v e gotten up In the
m orning and w alked In the
kitchen and there would be 10 or
12 men In there drinking coffee.
I've gotten to where I don't keep
house anymore. I Just let them
hsve It."

Marv a
Hawkins
r a s »t*

Missionary Buptist Church on the third Sunday
was In honor of Deacon Willie K. Steele. This
service will long Ire remembered us many ol
Deacon Steele's family und friends gathered to
share this appreciation day presided over by his
friend Umihcr D.C. McCoy, spiritual devotions
were conducted by Deacons J. CorlM-n und J.L
Bryant.
Guest choir und ushers were Choir No Tw o of
New Ml. Calvary Missionary Baptist Church.
The message of the evening was delivered by
the Rev. J. Banks of the Si. John Missionary
Baptist Church. Allumonle Springs. Rev. Enoch
Rivers is the pastor. Deacon Steele Is very Active
In his church und community. He Is a member
and officer of the East-West Klwunls und Is active
In other community projects.
Happy birthday to Karl Jennings. Lillie Gcorglc
und Daddy G eorge J en n in gs. Tracy H ill.
Juudolyn E. Adams. Larry Stewart. Grace Miller
and Ruby While.
force the market value o f tied
down, while producing a lower
grade of beef, C.W. said.
C.W. said he doesn't know If
Charlie stuck with ranching
because "h e saw what was over
here, or he saw he could take olf
If he wanted to. It was his choice.
He likes this "
Charlie said he does like the
lifestyle of the cattleman and
want his daughters to grow up
on the runge as he did. But as a
businessman, he said. " I f * get­
ting harder to make a living at
It." and eventually he'll sell out.
Hut not tomorrow, he's headed
for a few morr roundups

Business Communicators Set M eeting
The Intnnatlonal Association
o f Uuslnrss Com m unicators.
C en tral Florida C h apter. Is
holding Its August dinner meet­
ing at 0 p m ., Aug 8 at the
Altamonte Springs Inn A Rac­

• -w

quet Club. 151 North Douglas
Ave.. Altamonte Springs.
G a ry Bunce o f A d va n c ed
Human Performance Systems,
will discuss "Th e Tw o 'Q*' ol
Communications — Duality va.

Quantity." The cost Is $15 for
m em bers und $17 for nunmembers.
For reservations, call Leah
Gcanopulos. 305/238-0144 on or
before Monday. Aug. &amp;.

l

321-8579

2i

e~s

t r

*

f" :* .

ECONOMY DENTURE
CLINIC
AUGUST SPECIAL
ECONOMY DENTURES
DELUXE DENTURES..

'i « n

♦249TS

Same D ay Repairs A n d Rclincs
5 4 5 H W Y . 4 3 4 , W IN T E R S P R IN G S
0 07 1900

NO APPOINTMENT

JZ/lZUL

NECESSARY

Gerald W. Carsn D.M.D.

I t

Loch Lowe
Preparatory School
Loch Low® Preparatory School it a non-sectarian,
co-educalionui collage preparatory day achooi with
students In grades six through twelve.
The school prepares boys and girts (or college
career, with emphasis on personalized and
dividualized instruction

and
In­

The curriculum is designed to provide students with
a broad body of knowledge in all subject areas and the
academ ic skills requisite lor success in various educa­
tional settings
Call (305) 321-3030 lor more information or write

LO CH LOW E P R E P A R A T O R Y SC H O O L
P.O. BO X 786, L A K E M ARY, FL 3 2 7 4 0
Now Accepting Applications For Fall 1089

TRADE IN SALE
I t s * I* I

n i

014 W .I.i C aaftti*

We Will Give
You Up To

As far as cows go. Inez said. "I
can lake them or leave them. It's
Interesting to take them to
market. In this day and time It's
something people don't see."
And C.W. said It's a sight that
won't be seen much longer In
Florida, or even in Texas, which
he said, la a late bloomer com ­
pared to Florida as far as cattle
raising goes. "There was cattle
In Florida long before there was
rattle In Texas." he said. But
times are changing.
The American cattleman Is
being driven out of the business,
battered by government regula­
tion*. which don't apply to
foreign cattle producers who

m

2927 S. HWY. 17-92, SANFOtO
In The Center MaN • Suit* H-J
3evr»: Me*4»y • S tW iy 10-5:30 Ivtstag* »y A» »lsf irt

LBHS Class Marks 10th Reunion

Xrtu XI chuptcr o f Ihe Beta Sigma Phi
sorority met Monday evening at the home of
Mid Thompson. Officers were elected and
co m m ittee ch a irm en were appointed.
Members decided that Ihe Ihe lirsl social
event would hr lunch on the Star of Sanford.
Plans were discussed for events of the year
and com p ilin g o f the scrapbook and
yearbook. Helreshmrnls were served.

ii N

THORNHILL INTERIORS, ETC

In And Around Lake M ary

Clint Walts and his wife Laurie attended
Clint's 10th class reunion at Lake Brantley
High School. The 1075 graduates were the
first class to graduate from Lake Brantley.
It was u full weekend beginning Friday
evening with cocktails ul the Sheraton In
Mullland. Saturday there was a dinner and
dance also at the Sheraton arid Sunday
classmates met for a picnic and cookout at
camp llcrunwood In Casselberry.
Theic were 310 o f the 400 graduates that
attended and Clint says, he enjoyed seeing
his former classmates.

time as you would like with yot
husband or children. Also
aware that In most cases, th
wife Is expected to take mot
responsibility than the husban
for the home and children.
—Understand that you wll
probably have to work horde
than males In your field to prov
that you are as good as or bette
than they. You may have
work longer hours than the met
In your place of business.
—Expect to be patronized
some men In your field. Don't le
It bother you. React to It will
Integrity and confidence.
—Learn every phase of you
business.

* 1 0 0 00
Tsward* A N«w
Culkgan Wattr
C«*4ltWn*r

r

|P

■HerCULLMANa*N!"
904-734-3784

Mid-Florida Obstetric &amp; Gynecology
Specialists

• O . Im Z

• 4U tm

Phil Pastoret
you
always the promise of something
exciting around every bend In the
road After 40. you expect speed
traps
Itefore smiting your *pou»c ol
«oorlng with ike wklae ol a circular
tsw, check is see If the kid* are playlag made videos.

Stephen Phillips, M.D., F.A.C.O.G.
Juan L. Ravelo, M.D., F.A.C.O.G.
David C. Mowere, M.D., F.A.C.O.G.

Obstetrics, Gynecology &amp; Infertility
arc pleased to announce the
opening of a new office at

521 S.R. 434
Suite 308
Longwood, FL
761-8881
(Next To S. Seminole Community Hospital)

in addition to their current

n«w
Sheer optimum Is what makes you
think you can possibly drive Into any
line but the slow-moving one at the
auto teller
mresr*rtx crm niuc u »\ ,

1403 Medical Dr.
Suit* 102
Sanford. FL

916 Deltona Blvd.
Deltona. FL

3225313

574-5900

PARK AVENUE DIET CLINIC
2425 PARK AVE. SANFORD
ft Personal Attention And
* Medically Supervised By A
Support
Seminole County Physician
* Programs Tailored To
a No Drugs Or Pr* Packaged
Your Ufa Style
Food
* FREE Maintenance Visit*
* Individual Food Choices
* Complete Labratory Analysis
« Daily Vitamin Supplement*
* Counseling And Behavior Modification

HOURS
M O N . T H R U FR I

C A LL TODAY FO R
FREE NO OBLIGATION CONSULTATION

8 i m l p m. 2 p.m-5 p m.

323-8177

j

:

�Sunday. Aug 4. 1HS-1C

Evtntng Msrjld. S a n fo r d . FI.

In And Around Sanford

Club, Nearly 100, Takes On A 'Pinkish Glow'
ki nd t h e s o l a h a s b e e n
Robin Scott was awarded a
ireupholstered.
Jazz scholarship
Sparkling formica counter tops
Valerie said she was pleasantly
[have been added in thr kitchen
surprised that the dancers took
and all the cabinets have been the top honors among such stiff
PEOPLE
repainted, The ladles lounge has competition.
another c o m m o d e and the
" It was a real breathtaking
____________
boardroom has new carpeting.,
experience." Valeric said
I Bcih W e le b o b . the club's
cofler In late September, Ann. house chairman, ts chairman of
Accortng lo Tom m ye Johnson,
sa)c*
the building com m ittee assisted
ihe Iasi call approaches for those
Com m cndlng the workers andl tjy ih,» following: Ann Urlsson,
planning to attend Sem inole
contractors highly ‘ ‘for
for going! pat Foster. Em y Hill. Martha High School's 35lh class re­
beyond the call of duty." Ann l Yancey. Florence Korgan and union...the class of 1950.
And although It’s quite anti­ more than pleased with th
Reservations are due no later
quated and a bit weather-worn, $15,000 renovating and deq Vivian Buck
The Woman's Club of Sanford than Tuesday to attend the
the lovely, stately and charming corating project.
was organized In 1913 and fe s t iv it ie s at Lake G o ld en ,
old building Is definitely In the
Funds for the project canu continues to euntrtbutr to ihe beginning at 5 p m. Th** cost for
pink. According to Sanford from the sale of property In 198;
growing Sanford Community
dinner and activities Is $30 per
Woman's Club president, Ann that was deeded to the club It
couple.
Urlsson. the e x te rio r o f the thr 1920s. Ann said. She wen
Dancers o f Ballet Guild nl
For Information, call Tom m ye.
clubhouse has been painted an on to explain that the Interior t
San
ford-Seminole
and
School
of
3
2
2 -3 6 6 0 : Jean A n d erso n .
off-white color with a "pinkish painted "a pale gray with dar
g lo w ." It Is very pretty," Ann gray accents" and Ihe origin;: Dance Arts have returned from 322-3374; or Phyllis Senkarlk.
Atlanta where they attended the 322-4054
said.
hardwood floors have been rt
National D a n ce M asters Of
The Interior and exterior o f the finished. Th e new draperlr
America annual meeting when
Mr. and Mrs Kdwunl T. Wells
building are bring renovated and feature a creamy white b ad
com petition fo r awards amt Sr.. 5566 W First Si., will
thr work Is nearing Ihe comple­ ground Imprinted In a pink, gni
scholarships was the order of the celebrate Ibrlr 25th wedding
tion stages. The newly renovated and taupe floral pattern, si
anniversary on Aug. 14.
week.
club will lx- formally christened said. Kumed skirts have bee
The local dancers walked off
at the club's annual membership added to several serving tab!
with two of 20 awards presented
Sanford will Ik* buzzing with
am ong 'lie 5 0 0 dancers In quilling cntlilslastsall next week
competition from across Ihe na­ when the Itith annual National
tion. The danrers won the tx-st Quilting Show takes place In
in Junior tap dancing for Ihelr Sanford at Seminole Com unity
‘ 'A la b a m a J u b i l e e " p e rfo r­ College.
mance. and the best In senior
L e c tu r e s , w o rk sh o p s and
tap dancing for "H alf ol Six­ demonstrations will Ik- featured
pence."
dally I (trough Saturday. Aug It),
The artistic directors
For Information, call Rar Harper.
Instructors Valerie Weld ami 32 I -6821. chairman.
Mtrtan Wright, accompanied the
Midge MyeofT. home economist
dancers (among others) and look al Seminole Contmunliv College,
classes also.
Is co-chairman
The Woman's Club of Sanford
Is getting a sparkling facelift for
its 100th birthday celebration.
The historic landmark, nearly
a century old. was the First
Presbyterian Church, located at
Third Street and Oak Avenue,
until the present church was
built in 1920 Th e quaint little
church was moved to the lot
next door at 309 S. Oak Ave. to
b e c o m e the h o m e o f t he
Woman's Club of Sanford.

Doris f/f
Dietrich

Sanford W om an's Club building committee chairm an Belh
Welebob and painter Rob Hunl, take a break from the club's
renovation project.

V a lerie Weld is all sm iles over a w ard s dancers won
Dance Masters ol A m eric a competition in Atlanta.

E xtra G u e s t
N o t W e lc o m e d
By R o o m m a te
DEAH ABBY; My problem Is
sharing s j m k t with m y room­
mate who Insists on having her
boyfriend over up to five nights a
• week, lie often slays overnight
I've come home from work lo
find them eating — Just enough
lor themselves, nothing for me!
Sometimes I'd like lo Just rest
and watch TV. hut I can't
because her boyfriend Is doing
his homework (He's 35.1
I have guests, too. hit I never
this often. Occasionally I go to
their place. My roommate says
she doesn't like her boyfriend's
place, so he comes here. I said
this Is unfair lo me. My room ­
mate Insists ll's her right to have
guests whenever she pleases.
Recently I was Informed that
her mother Is ruining for a
month's slay. This I can tolerate
because there's d e fin itely a
beginning and an end: with the
boy friend, there's no end.
She may want to live with
him. hut I don't I've tried to
communicate with her. but get
no rr«|M&gt;nsr. What should I do?
NEEDING SPACE
IN SYR ACUSE
D E A H N E E D IN G ! If you
haven't heard of "assertiveness
training." find a therapist who
teaches It to people who (ul make
u habit of letting other people
push them around, (b) are loo
passive (or Ihelr own good. (c)
arc tired of being ubused. but
write to Dear Abby asking bow
to put a slop In II
DEAR ABBY: I witnessed a
. minor crime. Since then I have
been subpoenaed three Mines lo
appear In court. I don’t get paid
when 1 miss work. The court­
house ts quite a few miles from
m y hom e, and the nearest
parking I run get Is five blocks
away. Each time » costs me
$12.50.
So far It's cost me $487.50 lo
be a good citizen. is this Justice?
I'll never cooperate again.
(Tease print Ihls.
THE R E A L VICTIM
DEAR VICTIM: Consider this:
Let's say a crime was committed
against yuu. and the one witness
who observed the crim e refused
lo come forward for whatever his

Dear
Abby*I

C A L C IU M
COM PLETE"

buy o n e

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VITAMIN

G ET O N E . . .

ONCMAS D4WlOPf DAMADVANCED
CALCIUMPNOOUCT Of HOMO TO
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ABSORPTION

reason In thr absence of a
witness, the accused was pre­
sumed Innocent and was set free
lo comm it other crimes. Was
I h.ti Justice?

^

•OBIT
IvWvBtf In PttU

U N I rto o u c &lt; t ill « so rfw c r

400 I.U.
VITAMIN

iR h fh»B# CALCIUM COMPL11|

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500 - £4.89

HS 1 79.
2 5 0 • £ 4 .3 9

LECITHIN

DEAR ABBY! So much of
your spare has been devoted to
the smokers vs. non-smokers
controversy, how alxrnt equal
lime for those of us who don't
drink, and are uppallrd at the
number o f fatalities resulting
from drunk drivers?
I think H is the height of
hypocrisy for a person lo com ­
plain that m y smoking is a
threat to his health, then go
forth lo u less than sober condl
(ton to becom e a potential
highway murderer.
My dam age to another's health
by secondhand smoke ts u ques­
tionably valid theory. A drunk
behind Ihe wheel of a car ts an
unquestionably greater hazard
to greater numbers.
It la Interesting that so many
o f t h e a c t i v i s t s In t h e
"d a inn th e-sm okers" crusade
have kicked the habit, and are
now determined lo frustrate m y
enjoyment.
I can assure you that as a
recovered alcoholic. I have no
Inclination to deny Ihe pleasures
of socially acceptable levels of
drinking to others.
I believe that I have a right to
equal tre a tm en t from nonsmokers. Please give us smokers
a break, and print this.
FED-UP FEM ALE
IN L .A .

BUY ONE
OCT 2nd ^ J V

IM T M H t lU *

LEDERLE

2 / $ |1 9 2 / $ 2 * 9

o ff

I

CENTRUM*

IM

|■

1-

fe jR

RtOIMATION Of COUPONS LISMTtO TO ONI Of I ACM KINO MS * AMil V
C O N F I D E N T I A L TO
‘ ‘ R E A D B Y O U I N
C LEAR W ATER . FLA.": Humor
ts often hurtful. It's laughingly
called "kidding on the square."
The grave o f love ts sometimes
dug with little digs

© General Nutrition Centers
lo a f

V

locations mat m timnosamilv out

SO SAINCMCCKS W

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QLAOLV I f f U

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S A N F O R D P L A Z A 3 2 3 -9 9 7 5

• A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s • W in te r P a r k

�#"a

BLONDIE

4C—Evening Herald, ianlord. FI.

Sunday. Aug. 4, let!

by Chic Young

What The Day
Will Bring...

by Mon Walker

BEETLE BAILEY
THANKS FOR THE
WOHPEKFUL T/ME. ..THe
PEACE...THE QUIET...THE
PDPK CHOP5 -.THE APPLE
PIE...THE ICE CREAM—

J U S T W R IT E IT
L IK E &gt;fc?U SAlP
IT —l7Y\
Y d f io S s r

THE BORN LOSER

11 D I R BU T
THE P A P ER
S E T S ALL
'V
W ET

.

by An Sansom

T)

IF ARCHIE ADDS
OWE MORE RECORD
ALBUM ID MIS COLLECTION,
X THINK THAT CEILING IS
OCIMS TO START COM IMS DCNVN'

by Howl# Schneider

EEK A MEEK

b y H irg re a v e e A S e lle r s

MR. MEN AND LITTLE M ISS

A M P t w o o f L&gt;s
TH IN K H E * A S CUTE
A « A BUG'S E A R '

Answer to Previous PuKte

■ Suth tense
(ebbr.l
9 American
soldiers
10 Epochs

ACROSS

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1 Imsrum
7 Governor
1 ] Rowboat pari

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15 larguaga of
12 Ivan the
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16 Ando*
19 Negative
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Cl E

entwer
S T
T O U R B IR TH D A Y
17 First copai
21 Qaological deO
H
O
A U G U S T 4. 1003
labbr)
petits
T 0 U T E n
Tour prospects for succesl
16 Thoto i« off*# 22 River in South
t n
look very Rood for the com ini
20 Weight of India
Carolina
year, provided yon are consist
21 Washington
23 Egg dish
lent In your endeavors. Don’ j
S T I R S
lawmaker
start things and leave them ball
24 Infrequently
25 f a it i
finished.
25 Popular songs
45 Hoarfrost
37 Auto workers'
LEO (J u ly 23-Aug. 33| Be 28 Pa«t&gt;an pnatt 26 Russien city
46 Christmas
union (Ibbr)
47 Conjunctions
36 Run-down
Imaginative and visionary todayJ 32 Tahoran native 27 Emit coherent
49 Comedienne Ar
40 Cries
but also ta* able to distinguish 33 Dote
light
41 Hawkeys State
between what Is feasible and 34 Trait
29 Made gift of
42 Makes angry
50 Islet
what Is not. Daydreams w on’t 35 Irrigation dka
30 Puta to work
52 Cote sound
43 Fateful time for
work. Major changes are ahead 36 Waathe.Oesar
53 Bulhy clump
31 Looks
for Ix o * In the coming year, j
fortcatt
1
4
t
•
&gt;
)
Send for your Astro-Graph pre- 137 Of no value
(U n io n s to d a y . Mall S I to| 39 Ikense foe
11
Astro-Graph. Box 489, Radio 413, Roman
City Station. New York. NY 44 Farm animal
it
10019. Be sure lo state your
45 QonotiC
IT
It
zodiac sign.
material
VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept. 32) It
will prove wise today to stay out 48 Severe
aiponanco
of the confidential affairs of
oilier* and also to bar them from 51 Oeod
yours. Complication* could arise 54 Small baatla
15 Roared
In either Instance
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) 16 Owned itamt
Don’t pretend that you're willing V7 Sum longs
10 share something equally if
OOWN
you’re noi. People you try lo kid
1
W
anda1
will see through your hide de­
i
Com
plant
ception.
parts
SCORPIO (Oct. 34NOV.23)
Objective* for which von aim I Merdi
today could la* llluslonary. The i Police lieu
(abbr)
prize y o u ’ re eagerly seeking
might be )u*i an empty package.
52. Roman
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 2 3 Oak
Dec. 21) Do not speculate flnan*
Throw »ut
«)'• • * by nu i «
dully today in unfamiliar arras.
PISCES (Feb. 20 March IB) Talk m ailers over first with
Your lack o f cxjiertlse could
cause you to make expensive CmquinUins with whom you pal Ix’oplc whose Judgment you re­
.found loday might tar In a siled.
mistake*.
GEM INI (May 2 1 J u n c 20)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. tfllcr financial position than
19) If you are responsible for w u . h o don't try to match them Try not lo dawdle your time
household chores today, don't riil.tr for dollar If they go on a a w a y t o d a y on e x p e n s i v e .
Irivoious pursuits. You’re a bit
shirk these family duties. People sending spree.
ARIES (M irch 2 l A p ril IB) loose with your money and you
who are depending 011 you will
be severely disappointed If you (htlc.d situations must Ik* faced might spend more than you
riul I it Rally lod ay. D on't be intended.
lei (hem down
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. lJIII) of pulling (lie wool over
19) This m ay not Ite one of your y u r own ryes. Analyze things Be mindful of your behavior
loday. especially If you associate
more productive days
You'll I am every angle.
TAURUS (A pril 20 May 20) with people who could either
know what needs in In- done, but
you could Ite such a slow starter Yttir hunches and |trrrepllon» help or hurt your career. A bad
that you'll never gel off the 1kill) lx- I,inlly today and com* Im p ression w on't be e a s ily
l&gt;4 you lo make unwise moves. erased.
launching pad
YO U R BIRTH D AY
A U G U S T 3. 1083
Lim itation s that you have
placed on your thinking will t&gt;c
Idled In the year ahead. Yon will
broaden your vlslnx and thereby
enjoy greater success.
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Your
assor lutes will (te WUI&lt; hing you
earcfully today lo rlclrrm inr
your views arid outlook If you
have a (toslflve atlllude, It'll
inspire them to think similarly.
Trying to patch up a romance?
The Matchmaker set run help
you understand whui It might
lake to m ake the relationship
work T o get yours, mall 62 lo
Astro-Graph. Box 489. Radio
Cllv Station. New York. NY
10019
VIR G O ( Aug 2:1 St pi 221
Upi&gt;oti unities could come your
way loday through the good
auspices of two |&gt;eoplr who are
concerned alioiil your welfare
These are Individuals yiju've
helped.
L I B R A (S ep t 2 3 ‘Ocl 23)
Partnership arrangements you
have will) friends today havr
excel lent chances for sicccss
I (old good thoughts and everytiling w ill tall In line
S C O R P IO (Oi l 24 Niv.221
Don't pul o ff until toriorrow
anything that should lx done
today, especially where your
career Is concerned. Sucres* Is

litre likely If you strike now.
IA Q IT T A R IU 8 (Nov 23-Dec.
21 Tilings shoidd work out
iisrr lo your liking today If
vtft'rt* Involved wl lh people with
w)om you havr strong emoIicial bond*, rather than with
lidding acquaintances.
1A PRIC O RN (Dee 22*Jan
Itp There are some shifts In
r-rxrtllInns loday that will work
ml to your ultimate advantage.
Tlcse are the changes for which
yrk've been hoping.
sQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. IB)
Ths Is a giKid diiy lo arrange a
l.ie* to fare meeting II you have
anlmportant m ailer you 've been
anxious to discuss w llh another.
llst-KS (Feb 20*March 191
Ytnr earning potential is greater
Htai usual today, so don't sell
yoir laleiils or services short If
yoi air performing tusks lor
o ilrrs Ask for what you de­

serve.

A R IE S (March 21 April 19)
Exercise your Initiative loday In
situations that require prompt
action. You'll want lo protect
your Interests, as well as those of
others wllh whom you're In­
volved.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
This Is a good day to llntsh up
several projects I hut you have
Irfl dangling. Complete the old
to y o u r sat l sl act l on b e fo re
tackling the new
G E M IN I (May 21 June 201
Today, strive tn associate with
Irlrn d s who Inspire you to
explore new horizons, rather
than wasting lliiir with pals who
Inhibit your vision
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
It's to your advantage to set
loll ter mat cl t you want more.
Ibis will encourage you tu try
harder to get It.

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

C4**t*ttr C'CrfW* (4v(,iugrms

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tor «norh«t

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P REVIO U S SO LU T IO N A critic is • n u n who knows
Ihe way but can t Onus in# car " — Kenneth Tynan

W IN A T B R ID G E
B y J a m e s Jacoby

What's one rule about np-nlug
leads? Lead your partner‘d suit,
unless you have a good gilt of
your own. Poor West cctnlnly
thought he hud a good suit Thai
A K J-9-2 certainly qu*ihft*s in
my book, but look what hup*
|k*tied.

Alter the heart king. West
continued wllti the lieart ad: and
In i ,1 low h rm t. lu lled ti\ F..1*&gt;I

South won Easts lead d( the
king of diamonds with till ace
and played three rountk o f
spades, ending in dununyf
y Vwith
l
the 10. He rullcd a dlauum( and
begun running Ids remaining
spades. O 11 the tilth spade
ic West
wesi
shed a heart and dummyt sicd a
club On the Iasi spade,
r. West
had lo hold on to his hlglij
[h |Jr.»rt

tu keep d u m m y's eight-spot
Iroin becoming a winner, so hr
threw a club. Declarer discarded
the now useless heart eight from
dummy, and East was ut the
moment of truth The diamond
jack was slurlng him in the face,
so he had lo keep the queen
East ciune down to only two
dubs Der lurt-r played a cluh to
the king and came truck to the
cluti ace. and the lowly five of
« lots* look the last trick.
II you'd like the name of what
happened lo the defenders,
tlull's a 1Inutile squeeze Bear In
iniml that It never would have
worked If West's opening lead
had been the diamond eight.
Th at’s why. after thousands and
thousands of deals, we still keep
coming back for more.

ANNIE
TUMBLEW EEDS
TXi* MONTH m e C0VE1W FLACK

- i Gue66 HUC85 $0C6nr

MS PAP HVm rm TFU'

FBA-meK GOW S'SDlHR'TOFeS

WHY TH F/VAJC
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t f :' - T ^ S = = i =

INPIAN O P T H E MONTH I

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West N « U

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16
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Pass
Pats
Pass Pass
Opening lead V K

SMta
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46

by Leonard Starr

TM0 $ C (SROCEHlEii I n f O T

TDM-TOM MAKER! TH*1 F lO M
HUSH BUSTIN' PERCUSSIONIST?)
OWTRRPCROUVOWL, I NAME TO1J

NORTH
♦ m is
TI7II

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that foop?'-8f cam?
K IN T * 0 v a i £ 'SHOUU?
I FOLLOW HrM
---#T UNO O O T V j^ r ’*

73

�Evening Harald. Sanford. FI.

Sunday. Aug. 4. i n s - J C

TONIGHT'S TV
SOLO GOLD Hoata Laura
B m ia Aa, Partar &gt; Ouaatt
BW, Ocean. John Cadart, ana eta
Baavar Braaa Band Ht a v f
Jaw* TO Snappard. Graham
Naan ShaNatta. fnmaWan A t aarao HaO. TataTtmar (xaaritaaV
(1* BUCK BC.4EAB

2) O

too
MOV*
Th* Count Of
C n a to " |i l f S i Richard
C fw nbartan. Tony C u t s D M
o n • « rtovH by U u M n Ou u m
A n m o w n (non m m % n o w
onoo to» 20 |MTt m m ** ■ dating
---------H
&lt; D o i l M O V * U t t n o r (Pan 1 Of
*1 l * l f t l Chariton Maafon Hurry
F o n d a J a p a n *** and Am oncon
• V K a gw a coma to o pit, aa a crucaaf World Wat • na&gt;M and a a rw
b o n a cantata around U d a a , *■
land h tha PaoOc
GD ( W ) M O V *
fto Or a n d *"
I f l a i l S«maaf Carton la a Morgan
f c n t n b n j t a ctooaad watdl and
to* gang to pjaoca m a bcrdar lo a n

®

2:30
W E * WORU) OF EFORT*

O

8

(M lu v e a m L O T h a

: Haadxg tha admoa of a lothma Ndor. a aoman kom a mat
lotaa Wan tala out la Bnd the SagAtartan of har Oaama

2:45

32 MOV* The Groat Sour Uaa
aacra ' 11tail Joaapn Conan PtMp
Cara, An account of Cotta a (Aa
aatroua controntanon arm the
Stout nation and tna event* aiding
up foil
3:00
a (1 0 )P * C t t M T l

3)

12:30
BTAA

O

(A)
ad Ta Oaoryr"
FtaWN March. LianW Ear-

12 BASEBALL San Froncwca Qtt tt at Atlanta urttaa

8

OD MOV*

•
r

1:30
Ml M O V * -Tha H|rpnoac l r *

208
12 fEQHT TBACXB

Tro, Donahue Donna
Dad Anar Jr and Tlpp,

200

300

bon ado ( aanaaof *«dd*ra (A)q
11 041 MOV* UacArthur ( t»7T)
Grogor, Poo. Dm 0 north, Tha
•arnoua. Narad tnd bomba, ant toear, Nadar Of Wend War Natpanancat brWant combat nctonaa ba•ora ■ final har, conhontaton atm
Praardant Harr, Trunan
81 ( XX P A 0 FU S OF NATUAS

O Mi MOV* Shoo Draaaad To
K«" (ISTSl tManor Parker. Jttaca
Praltar A aanaa of iwadark mart
ma ramon of tamrU lop faWaon
-hodara aho gathar to caiabraia tha
ona.nptad comaback of k oned-ra-

31 0 * MOL* Flea,
11*4*1 W fna Mayro Tachar,
Scon
a m MOV* "Cal O Mm. Tua
(1ETI) Kart f
305

12 fdQNT TBACKS
405

O faQNT TRACKS
(J ] O

(isst) I

4 :1 0
MOV* ''Fatater.i Hour* '

0

0

4.00
BFOATBWOAU) Scheduled

tha USBA middaaaigfit champronanrp ima achadetad lor 12 foemda
Oaa bom Scranton Pa
(I ) O PGA OCXS hattorn Oparv
ford round h r from Bunv National
God Chip n Da* Broca a
31 (M) MOV* tAdaa, iPart 2 of
21 MITfl Chariton Hatton Manr,
Fonda Japanaaa and Amancen
atratagma coma Into pia, aa r cru­
cial World War N na.al and aariM
bama cantara around Udaa, *lond at eta Pacrtic
® (XX ON THE HONEY faalurad
mutual hmd xmating tha laaua of
ronttng ra buying propart, an *aof tha Goa Jona* anr
(R)Q
M)
OACATtST
AMERICAN
3*
4:30
8 ) (to) HEALTH MATTERS
500
( D |10| W ASHdiOTON Wf IX M
w v n g
( S M IM o v e r o n
505
12 FWHdT WITH OALAMOO W KeoN
5:30

O (D THE PATSY AWAAO* Bob
Baraar hoall tht taardk program
honor.*) (ha baal parforirancaa ki
motion ptctiaoa and latanamn b,
(101 WALL
IW L

i Baada, k Co. to*

535
1 2 M O TO AW EIK XLUBTM TFO
CVENdtQ

•00
« B 3 ) ( D O &lt; 2 ) 0 NEWS
ac Mu

110) NATIONAL OEOOAAFMK
A took at tha aiturti of US and
ala lo m t tha
ahoopa*g crana kom oakncoon (A)
d ) Ml VEGAS
• 05

12 waeehmq
• 30

• 0 )
I ABC NEWS q
70 0

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3)

dance

Fivtx Catatax,

ludgaa Caaa, Kaaam Marta Cubha
Char Ha Nation FNat, Parlor manca
by f dd. Grant (X)
(Jj O
M IE E f io x io *

PAGEANT

From tha P a ta r p m ,
i h Ft LaudardoN I t l young
t ko m arotmd ma Mata com
chance W raproaant
Florida n mo ISES M u U S A
Pagoanl (ntarUtnmant b, ungar
T , H am don Cahatts Vagaua TV
paraonatrtr Otct Lamb, -'tie r
S earch modal Barbara Bean

B 0 ITS Y0UA MOVE Man Inaa
to boot! n i tad aataam b, i
mg Norman MW taring rum
tacond atnng on ma tu o
a

(SOI ANTHUA C C L A A K F B
mteteakxm world

eoo
a

&gt;]) O AJM E A BA EA X N aan, h a

cvmba to an outbraat of loud pot•onmg. m Noi and Add, Ngn on aa
tamperar, copt (A)
0)
MOV* Tha Charter ( ISTS)
Jon VotgW Flit Dunatto, A d*.
•ortad at prirahgntar atlampta a
comapack Up ratan cuatod, of No
fmaxi ton (A)
2 O LOVE BOAT Lea « reunited
arm a ahaatchaa bottod Inand. t
marnad COtpN aA tr, an,irung to
baal ma cigaran* Knottrig habit, t
tathar and daughtar team up to

c

i (R|g

Of (XX OWCOVtA THE WOALO
OF BCKNCf faaturad aWctrontc
imptantt 10 art tna deaf Mount
Sant Hatan rtvwtad. a nau Ngnt
amdator bab, tt* Q
0:30

t ) 0 MAMA S FAMILY Vht and
Naomi i tong aaadad honaymoon
■a ntarruptad atian Mama t car
braait doam and A t mutt apand
tha mght mth thacoup** (A)

500
I I o n NEWS
IIMTHEAVENOEM
O r
5.0 5
32 fdQNT TA A C M

ooo

O LAW ANO YOU
I O AGACULTVJAE U A A
o n U P ACT
IM ) FOCUS

0 :3 0
FVOAKSAt W ATCHma
•FCCTAUU

i

V*W FO sa ON NUTAfTlON
t on W V. (MANY
) WOALD TOUOAWOW
) Ml JACKSON FFVt
700
) ( | ) « COMPANY
A0BEATBCMUUEA
PXnUAE OF HEALTH
o n sen k a c e n
: FT ■ WAfTTlN
I (I) JAMSI A O M O N

8

7.-30
a 3 ) NAAMONV AMO QFLACE
’ O ESSENCE O N TELEVISIO N
i t (24)L J D A N K LS
) (*) W V GFLANT
M O

10:00
O (£ HUNTtA Huntar and Daa
Oaa wa hot on Wa baa of an m e n tat aho uaua*r lorchaa t*Kf roar
kuddhga (A|

an o

FdtOEA OF LOET L O V E * A

pjdga War* Na tancaa ■ aid h Wua
mth har aa kaiktand. Darn,* cot-

tvoctOFverowv
I WOALO TOkSOAMOW
! (M l WOOOY W O O O FSCKEA
) ( «X BCBAMS STAdET (A la
) ALVBf SHOW

1100
O BLACK A WAAXNESS
O Ties WEEK WITH DAVE)

( fEI OOCTOAWHO

S Ml HAWK

day of o m o o v e a v

I

ClAAL AOBEATS
(M1FOAKYPK2
: BU04 SUNNY ANO f
1M) TYMCEABW OE BBSS

1020
32 TME WEEK M EASEBAU
1030
a j(J S ) N B M O n t NBW E

0(«O |O O LM M ET COOKMQ

1050
32 MQHT TAACXB CHAATBOE-

1100
® 3 ) (D O ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
11 (M| PUTT PC ON THE HfTB

Grand hnaf Lp-xmcad randNwna
of I Foal tot You." 0M You
Mai." Sat Say. Se,' "Baaut,
School Dropout and louaf Gat ~
(B (SI HONEYMOONSAS
11:30
O 31 BATUAOAY MKJHT LTVE
"T ha B a il Of S N l t»»J sa
HighhgMa atcArda appaarancaa b,
Mr T, Aobrn Wtkamt and Staua
Wondat (X)
3 ) O AlAwOLF Mama t leteei

a Mat nunuta at
lamp! w prauant .Ya atari of World

Ww w (A)
2) O

Act
0
O
FWST PAESEYTtAMN
CHUNCH OF OALAMOO
dlMOTAAMBFOAMCAS
j j (Mi MAQC OF FAMTBIQ

a Ml VOLTAON.

0 ( *| HEALTH MATTERS

1.00
0 3 ) LOVE BOAT
( T O M O V * Ha, Abben (ISTSl
Abbott and Coattap a atm co n p a *
non of IT* boat earned, routmm of
O W A O TU N O
t •OSMASTtAFtBCE THEATI*

S

200
0

M OV* Serptco" (ISTSl Al
Ton, Aoban* An honatt

corruption n tha Na* York Poke*
0 O MOV* -Caaa* Of 42~ ( ISTl)
Jama* Brotn. Jam Mac*an Whan
a women atlanda a cue* rawaon.
Nat* har luraband tor an otd cot
■ T o s T m O V * Th a Da, ChrNt
(had HSbOl Cht* Sarandon. Coan
Biat tty A dramatic rocontlruckon
of mo arrow trta and crucdtoion of
Jaaua in ma pooocaL, uoubtad
homan occutmd city of Jar j l dam
0 (16) EVENPtQ AT POP* Catkal
V*Yo Maa partormanca hcArdaa
Kratatar a
Ltabaafraud." "Tha
Sam” bom la m Sta u •CamnrW
of p* Arm an and atempt! kom
Haydh t Concarto at C
I -ThaFanmda lH
Marian Brand*. Oaorg* C
Waaa hmadpadng d a *tn *tr at a
conepaacy atuottaig m* a t o m
dan of a tynihmc krai tornada k ,
2:0 5
a BASEBALL San Frwmaca Gr­
ant! at Akanu Br a m

MS) MOV* "Tha
1| Oaa WaSaca. Patrick Mac

0

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2:3 0
MOV* "fiptormg Tha U *
(1STT) Narrated by Burl

3 .0 0

0 (M ) SURVIVAL PYotographmt
Tan, and Id Bomtord i m a (ha
tra* of M apactaa of a M tound h
oft Scotland I

0:3 0
(2S| P*tX PANTHEA
(Y O IF O U W A Y B
M IB f E F E C T O A O A O O rr

0:3 5
12 ANDY (MFFTTH

10:00
TAM NQ AO VA JfT A Q S

(T M WAFTTIN
MS) MOV* IM n g k U p (1SS4)
i t ME
bean Markn. Jarr, lam* AtMkoad
mraar gati « kaa trip lo ma cit,
•Aor I doctor U y l ha * auAarmg

3 :3 0
0 O M O V* Badund Th* kon
CwtadT litadi Dan*
Gan*
dan (mpaaa, m On***

4 00
0 0 PGA GOLF Waatorn Opan.
knd round Pm kom ButHr Nadanat
God
ua C»r* h Omt Brook. ■
(JS( HAWAd FYVE-0
(W IM U B C B IT B 4 E
Ml SWITCH

i

4 :3 0

000

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( H | IE M M B E T R E E T ( R ) Q

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8
008
13 MAZ&amp; (MON WIO-FAq

705
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12
1 3 1LOVE LUCY (M O N W tD-FAq
1000

0

M O
o 0 OUGHT ACER Uchad b*
coma* amtrodad m a apy ptot
barng halchad h th* h*ndty con
knaa ot a hearth tpa run by t beauM a o n a n |R|g
3 ) O MUAOSM. SHE WROTE Ja*
aca mhmdi a tty par cantaga of a
protoaatonel tootbad team and knda
hartart purawng th* otanm I &gt;*tr
(" IO
0 U M OV* Tha Barn* Broth
mt" ( tPdOl John BotuaM. Dan A ,
can.
kroyd Taa
to*

U rn,
CM nao Nat* and th* U S Arm,
to pul together a b*n*kt concert to
rato* mona, tor thmr orphanage (X)

ft MB) BENNY HAL (HOW h mu
an* how tpacur Barmy porkayrt a
M m PI lob-hoppayg. man tmteha*
to m* rot* of a mamac torronong a

0 110) NATURE ForMl In Th*
Cloudt' An aaamnabon of th*
kopern ran ForatI n Pm Coala AtC t M) M O V* Otn, Harr, (tSTt)
Cam laaneood Harr, Qumdho A
datmmmad pokca datactn* dahae

a tmrortting San Frdnotco

M O
d 0 MOV* Raragart |ISTS|
tochmd Hama. Ernaal Bmgntna M
ma poat-mrtoar hotocauat aond of
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mN t daam mm me hap *1a bane
of aurrhrort aha ar* anampung to
la, m* towtoahon tor t na* cmaia-

0 1 3 CRAZY LB(S A FOX Hmnaon
It kadgmad P, angry acam ncbm*
ahan on* of hu lather a toady c»
anti ahom up at
mop* dead (Al
^(Jb jO L k N C Y

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10:30
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11:30

8

Top Daytime Emmy Awards
NEW YORK (Uri) - CBS and
"T h e Young and The Restless."
o n e o f the n e tw o rk 's soap
operas, were the big winners In
the 12th annual daytime Emmy
awards. Talk show host Phil
Donahue and game show host
Dick Clark were among the other
big winners.
CBS won 2 3 of the 3 9 daytime
Em m ys handed out Thursday —
some of them previously an­
nounced on July 27 — while
ABC captured eight, and NBC
took home only one. Syndicated
shows won four Emmy awards
and the Public Broadcasting
Service won three.
"T h e Young and the Restless"
w as named the ou tstanding
drama series, and two o f the
s h o w 's performers also won
Em m ys. Beth Maitland, who
plays Traci Abbott Romalotti.
won as outstanding supporting
actress In s drama series. Tracey
E. Bregman. who plays Lauten
Fenmore Williams, won as out­
standing Ingenue.
Th e 17 top awards were pres­
ented during televised cerem o­
n ie s at the W a ld orf-A storia
H o te l. O f those a n n ou n ced
Thursday. CBS won 12. ABC
two. NBC none. PBS one and
syndicated shows, two.
Darnell Williams, who plays
Jesse Hubbard In ABC's " A ll My
C hildren." was named outstand­
ing lead actor in s drama series.

Kim Zimmer, who plays Revs
Shayne Lew is on CBS's "G uid­
ing Light" was named outstand­
ing lead soap opera actress.
Outa'andlng supporting actor
honors went to Larry Gates, who
plays H.B. Lewis In "Guiding
Light." and outstanding Juve­
nile-young man In a soap opera
was won by Brian Bloom as
Dustin Donovan In "A s Th e
World Tu rns" on CBS.
The tea m from ‘ ‘ G u idin g
L ig h t" w on fo r soap opera
directing, while the writing team
from "A ll My Children" won In
their category.
"The *25.000 Pyramid" on
CBS was named outstanding
gam e-au dience participation
show and Its host. Dick Clark,
was named outstanding game
show host. Marc Breslow of "T h e
Price Is R ight." also on CBS. was
named outstanding director In
that lategory.
"Donahue" won as outstand­
ing talk service show and Phil
Donahue won the Emmy as Its
host.
"All The Kids Do It." a CBS
Schoolbreak Special produced
by Henry Winkler, won as out­
standing c h ild r e n 's special;
"Sesame Street” of PBS was
named outstanding children's
series, a n d " J lin H enson's
Muppet liable.*" on CBS was the
outstanding animated program.

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Sunday, Aug. 4, 1*M—ID

Dr. Lurlene Sweeting
x

Back To Her Roots . . . A Century-Old Tree And Sanford
By Rick Branson
Herald Staff W riter
A 100-year-old oak tree on Pine Avenue In
Sanford holds special meaning for Dr. Lurlene
Sweeting. In a sense, Its thick, protruding roots,
which sink deep Into Sanford soil, and the life of
this 58-year-old school counselor are Intertwined.
Ms. Sweeting smiles when she gazes up at the
tree, shielding her eyes as the afternoon sun
pokes through Its sprawling branches.
.
"I used to play around this tree when I was a
little girl," she recalled recently. " I guess you
could say I've returned to my roots."
Ms. Sweeting returned to Sanford In 1983 from
Philadelphia after being away from the city
almost 50 years. When she came back, she
moved Into the rustic house she grew up In — a
two-story relic, adorned by the old oak. at 400 E.
Pine Ave.
And although she is retired, she has quickly put
down new-roots In the city for which she has an
age-old selection. She Is a counselor al Seminole
Community College and a member of Sanford's
Scenic Improvement Board. She has also rapidly
Immersed herself In the religious and social life of
the community; becoming pr. ildent of the
women's circle group o f her church and a
chairperson of the local chapter o f her college
sorority. She is also on the education and
legislative committees of the Greater Sanford
Chamber o f Commerce.
Instead of just enjoying the leisure associated
with a Florida retirement, she has chosen to stay
busy because o f a principle she says guides her
life — "W hatever talent you have, use It. because
It wasn't Just given for you but for others,"
And moving from a huge, bustling metropolis
like Philadelphia to smaller Sanford hasn't slowed
her pace, because people In all communities, no
matter what the size, have needs, she says.
Ms. Sweeting traces her Sanford roots back to
her grandfather. Richard McPherson, a Sanford
postman. He twught the land where her house
now stands In 1906. He bulll the the two-story
house Ms Sweeting loved but had to tear It down
In 1983 because It was lermllc rldden. She built a
new one shortly ufter she returned that year.
Ms. Sweeting, an only child, attended grade
school at Harper s Academy In Sanford until she
was nine years old. She and her mother then
moved to Philadelphia.
Ms Sweeting frequently returned to Florida to
visit her grandparents and utlended high school
In Winter Haven. She enrolled at Florida AAM
University. Intending to be a doctor. "But I
couldn't stand to see people suffering."
She ended her medical pursuits and returned to
Philadelphia where she attended Temple Univer­
sity and earned two degrees — a bachelor's In
psychology and a master s degree In counselor
education. She later received her doctorate In

leadership In education.
Her experience In education and counseling
made her a ripe prospect for many boards and
organizations when she returned to Sanford.
Calling on that experience she draws a bead on
what she believes arc the prlmaiy Issues for
Sanford residents.
Ms. Sweeting's goal is to see human relations In
Sanford Improved at every level — In families,
city government and schools. She especially sees
a need to Improve (he lives of youth and children.
"Children are overstimulated today," said Ms
Sweeting, mother of one child and grandmother
o f four. "Th ey arc always watching TV or playing
video games. Education must seem boring after
that."
Because television Is a passive medium. Ms
Sweeting says children arc more passive and
apathetic and don't learn to cultivate their
Intellects or Imaginations.
"W e didn't have that (videogames) We read,
w e Imagined Today they Just look, "she said.
And what they're looking al worries Ms
Sweeting, loo The sex and violence saturating
many of the television shows and much of the
rock music Isn't compatible with values needed
lo hold families and society together, such as
faith and love and respect for others, she said.
Television Is not Intrinsically evil, she added,
but Us Influences must be leavened with other
values and activities.
First of all. Ms. Sweeting said, parents and
teachers have to stress lhai education does not
Just happen at school. At every turn — home,
school, work or play — children should be
presented with Interesting reading and viewing
material that challenges (heir minds, reinforces
"positive" values and trains them for life, she
said Children need more than "book" knowl­
edge. she said.

HaraW M a t * V r R k S Ir t M M

Dr. Sweeting stands before 100 year old Oak
tree w here she frolicked about as a child

"Children's minds arc like sponges. They soak
up everything. They need to be absorbing Ihe
love o f God and their fellow man. not the brutality
wt* see on T V ." she said.
Parents and teachers also play a role In this by
being loving examples, she said.
Ms. Sweeting lauded Ihe city commission's
creation of a youth advisory committee lo study
alternatives to Ihe parking lot "cruising scene."
But she said rccteullonal needs of children, not
(ust teenagers, need to addressed.

educational administration from Penn State.
She worked for 15 years ns a counselor and
administrator In Ihe Philadelphia school system.
She was also secretary of the Philadelphia Child
Guidance Clinic, considered a model clinic In Ihe
counseling profession. Ms Sweeting ulso enjoyed
a close relationship with Philadelphia Mayor
Wilson Goode, who met with her many limes and
Invited her to speak ut his church, she said.

T o start with, she said, the etty needs a
s w i mmi n g pool and a program lo teach
youngsters how to swim, which she said Is a basic
life skill.
" I couldn't believe It when I moved here and
saw that there was no program to teach
swim m ing." she said.

S ite warn cited by the a lly ui P h ila d elp h ia and
th e s ta te n f P e n n s y lv a n ia In 1983 fo r her

SaufurU used u&gt; h a v e (w u s w im m in g p o o ls but
th ey w e re closed In Ih e IflO O i b ecau se th e y east

too much money to run. according to Jim
Jemtgan, parks and recreation director.
The recreation department Itself needs a
change In direction. Ms, Sweeting said She Is a
member o f the Scenic Improvement Board which
Issued a 16-page report in June calling lor,
among other things, the reorganization of the
Parks and Hecreallon Department.
In the report, the board said the department
spends too much money on recreation und nol
enough on maintenance of city parks Ms
Sweellng said the board has "n o Intention" of
'aklng money away from recreation but wants
more money spent on park maintenance.
"There's enough room for both In Sanford,"
she said.
On another Issue — race relations — Ms
Sweellng said Sanford Is progressing at a steady
pace. As for Ihe special committee Commissioner
Robert Thomas Is backing to study race relations
In Ihe city. Ms. Sweeting said. "1 don't know
whether It's needed or not needed ... but anything
that helps people get along better should lie
appreciated and supported."
"Qualified people, whether they are black or
white, is what Sanford needs to be all about. Race
Is not the Issue. If Ihe city Is going to move
forward It needs to have qualified people
regardless o f race,” she said
Ms. Sweeting enjoys being Involved In (he life of
the city, serving on various (wards and commit­
tees, But when talking with her. conversation
always returns lo what she calls her first love —
counseling.
Years of living among and drullng with people
from (he mean streets of Philadelphia host)'I
toughened Ms Sweeting's compassionate coun­
selor's tone of voice.
She sees her role as helping people find
solutions lo their own problems
"So much of counseling Is really listening and
being able lo empathize and help Ihe person find
his own solution." she said,
Ms Sw eetin g's philosophy o f life blends
psychology and faith While the tw o tttay seem to
conflict, she said they don't.
"Many people seem lo feel the more knowledge
you acquire the less you attribute to God. but I
feel Ihe opposite. The more knowledge you
acquire the more you have to attribute to God."
she said,
Ms. Sweeting says she Is not nbuul to sit down
und become u "retiree ." She Is ready lo tackle
more tasks In the city us she Is asked In
participate, she suld. But for all her ac­
complishments she discounts that she is a
"m over and shaker."
, "1 don't think 1 have done anything. God uses
me — at leaat I h op e he does "

Budget Cutting: Impossible Task; Ordinary Mortal
Ace Budget Director David Stockman

Dollort

has gone the way of all public officials.

He Is off to make big bucks on Wall
Street, wrile his memoirs, and await
the Verdict of History on his (enure In
office.
Actually. Mr Stockman Isn't the sort
of person to await anyone's verdict on
anything, fie has already been lo
Mount Olympus to visit Clio, the muse
of history.
It Is hard to get In to see Clio, busy as
she Is with verdicts on the Carter
administration and Ihe appeal that Is
pending from Richard Nixon. Mr.
Stockman was. however, able (o pull
strings with the Greek government to
arrange an appointment.
Mr. Stockman found Clio sitting on a
cloud near the top of the mountain,
feverishly poring over a scrolled com ­
puter printout detailing Ihe foreign
policy record of the Nixon years.
"Umm. excuse me. your Muscshlp."
Mr. Stockman stammered hesitantly.
"W ho are you?" Clio asked Impa­
tiently.
"M y name Is David Stockman. I just
wanted to sec how you were coming

A

(Non)C«nts
Timothy

wth the Verdict of History on my work
In Washington."
"You and a thousand other people."
she snupped. "C an't you see I'm busy?
Daddy said that If I don't finish up this
darned Nixon thing soon, he won t let
me go out with Apollo for a century
We've been planning a train'trip across
America and a stay tn our cabin In
Southern California. I'll Just die If I
can't go!"
"W ell. gosh. Ms. Muse, surely If you
tell him who I am. he'll understand
your taking out a little time for my
case."
"You don't know Zeus." she said.
"Oh. well. Arntrak has been cut back
and (Just found out the cabin burned In
a forest fire anyway. What did you say

Quirks
NEW ORLEANS IUPI) A Ant-lime novelist who
faked a suicide In Lake
Pontchartrain to boost sales
of his book agreed to reim­
burse the Coast Guard for
the 924.000 spent In a
frantic two-day search for
him.
Thirty-nine federal, state
and local offtcera were in­
volved In the air and sea
search before Edward D.
Grant III called to say his
disappearance was a hoax
to promote "Saints In the
Shadows.” hts novel about
New Orleans.
Grant pleaded guilty to s
misdemeanor charge of
causing a false report lo be
filed with the Coast Guard.
He agreed to repay the
Coast Guard and still faces
up^ojjjnejrtra^

opposite of all those things."
"W e muses don't err. Mr, Stockman.
The rap on you is that you talk a good
game of fiscal restraint, but that the
numbers show you haven't performed.
" T h e f ederal de bt d o u b le d —
Doubled! — In the time you were In
office. Mr. Stockman. It took 200 yeors
to get where It was when you took over,
and In four years you doubled It. That
doesn't sound like fiscal restraint to
m e."
" I ran explain. Ms. Muse It wasn't
my fault the debt exploded. It was
those big spenders on the Hill, and, for
that matter. In the White House. They
Just wouldn't listen."
" I see. I'll Just add 'Ineffectual' to this
list."
"Th at's not fair I managed to slaw
up some spending."
“ On what, pray tell?"
"W ell. I had some luck getting cuts
on Am Irak and on federal subsidies for
state firefighting costs."
"You mean you're the worm that
ruined my holiday!" Clio screamed,
f l i ngi ng her sc ro ll dow n at Mr.

Stockman's (cel.
"But. your Musellneu, all those little
things add up. We can't say 'yes' to
every special Interest that comes along
and still ex|iecl lo do anything about
total spending,"
"Muses can," Clio replied haughtily.
"Hul I’m Just un ordinary mortal.”
Mr. Stockman pleaded.
"H m m , I like Ihe ring of that line.
And you do seem earnest enough, even
If you are overbearing..."
"Thank you. Ms. Muse," he replied
quickly, sensing an opening "And, If I
may say, thal'a a lovely dress you're
wearing."
"T h is old thing?" she said, blushing
" I'v e hart It for 2.500 years. Well. I
suppose I could mukc a small change.
How does ‘ordinary mortal. Impossible
task’ sound?"
" I'll take It."
David Stockman's place In history Is
assured.
( Timothy Trrgartbrn welcomes the
opportunity to correspond with readers

Write him ut the Evening Herald),

by Berko Breathed

BLOOM COUNTY

Writer's Suicide Scheme
By United Pt i m
International

your name was?”
"David Stockman, m a'am ."
"W ell, let's see."
Clin pulled out unother scroll.
“ I think II might be here. Sacco.
Schultz. Sinatra ... Ah. here II Is.
'Slockman. David A., director, ofTlce of
inunagemrni and budget.' Is that
you?"
"It sure Is. Clio. May I call you Clio?"
"M y friends call me Clio You may
call me Ms Muse."
"O f course. Well. Clio. I was Just
wondering If you had come up with
anything on me. Verdict of Historywise."
" L e i me see. W e've just got a
preliminary workup so far. It's a little
early for a Verdict of History, you
understand,"
“ I'd surely appreciate hearing any­
thing you’ve got.”
"Oh, all right. W e've got you down as
a big spender, reckless disregard for the
m ost b a s ic p r i n c i p l e s o f f i s cal
prudence, hypocrite ... do you want me
lo g o on?"
"Oee. are you sure that stuff Is about
me. Ms Muse? I've always been the

a 910.000 fine when he la
sentenced Aug. 14.
Grant and hla girlfriend.
Pandora Crane, were driv­
ing across the 24-mlle Lake
Pontchartrain Causeway
Nov. 12 when Gram pre­
tended to hear a fan belt
noise and stopped the car.
He lifted the hood then
slipped out of Crane's sight.
He hitched a ride back to
New Orleans and caught a
bus for Shreveport while lus
girlfriend read the suicide
note he had left In the car.

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G ra n t sa id la t e r he
wanted to cull attention to
the plight of the (Usl-llmc
novelist. He tlaened hts act
to the real-life suicide of
John Kennedy Tooie. the
New Orleans writer who
killed Jhlmseti before his
book. "C o n fe d e ra c y of
Dunces." was published

•v * •

*#** i*

�E ve n in g Herald
IUSPS 411 ItO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9903

DICK WEST

What Happens If We Have A Spice Glut?

Sunday, Aug. 4, 1985 — 2D

Wayne D. Doyle, Pvblltqgr
Diom** Olordano, Managing Editor
Malvin Adkins, Advertising Director
H.*«ne Delivery. Week. 81.10, Month, &gt;4 75; 3 Months.
814 25; 6 Month*. 827 OO Year. 851 00 Uy Mall: Week.
8 1.50. Month. W OO; 3 Month*. 81H00.6 Month*. 832 50
Year. 800 00

Keogh Owes
An Explanation
T h e cltlzcni o f Lake Mary are entitled to an
explanation. An explanation from City Com*
mlaaloner Colin Keogh who la being sued by
the Lake Mary C em etery Association over
921,340 the association says belongs to It and
which, It further claims, Keogh has "c o n ­
verted to his own u se."
Keogh vehem ently denies the Association's
claim . He says the m oney Is In area banks In
the form o f certificates o f deposit. The
recetpts for those CDs, Keogh says, were
turned over by him to Cemetery Association
Treasurer Evelyn Klee (not to be confused
with Kathy Rice, Lake Mary's city manager.
T h e y 're not reh ted. either). Mrs. Rice said she
d o e s n 't h ave a n y C D receip ts In h er
possession nnd has never seen any. Mrs. Rice
also says she checked local and area banks
and savings and Rian associations nnd found
no record o f any certificates of deposit In the
cem etery association's name.
T h e civil suit was filed July 19. nnd there
has been nit attempt by Keogh to confront
Mrs. Rice at a city commission m e e tin g to
b rin g the entire matter Into the public eye.
W e think Keogh owes thut much to the
citizens of Lake Mary, as well as to his
colleagues on the city commission. This,
despite the fact that City Attorney Robert
Petrce says the civil suit and the dispute
between Keogh and the cemetery association
are In no way connnected to his duties as a
public servant.
That may be true. H owever, n public official
w h o engages In other activity, such us Keogh
has as chairman o f the cem etery association,
and who deals with funds solicited from the
p u b lic for a non p rofit orga n iza tion , Is
operating In a position o f tmst. Doubly so.
since In this case he also Is an elected official.
According to som e cem etery association
m em b ers, the associa tio n ’ s bylaws g iv e
K eogh, as Its chairm an, "fu ll discretionary
p o w e r " to do what he wishes with the
a s s o c ia tio n s m on ey, and to Invest that
m on ey as he sees fit. Even, apparently. If
w hat he Invests It In goes bust.
Keogh should give a hill and open account­
in g at a city com mission meeting — to which
cem etery association members have been
Invited — nnd disclose where the money was
Invested. If it Indeed Is In banks or other
savings Institutions in certificates o f deposit,
he should be able to tell the public at that
m eeting which banks they're In. and rem ind
Mrs. Rice, to her face, when exactly It was
that hr gave her the CD receipts.
A n yth ing less than such an open discussion
on the entire mutter Is derelict.

WASHINGTON (UPt) - OPEC's troubles with
petroleum oversupply started me to worrying
that the next big global crisis might be a
worldwide glut of nutmeg oil.
That the world produces more nutmeg nil
than It consumes Is apparent to anyone who
examines the situation objectively. But whether
this will result In price drops Is not so clear.
My own objectivity was challenged some time
ago when I apparently Implied that I had
something against nutmeg oil. Antipathy, at
least, was Inferred by a r-w nutmeg Importers,
and who am I to argue with the experts?
All I did. actually, was question whether this
product should be designated by the Foreign
Agricultural Service as an "essential oil."
I pointed out that I had been known to live for
days without nutmeg oil, and raised the
question. "Essential to whom?"
You can. of course. Infer anything you want.
It's a free country as far as Inferences are
concerned. All I can say Is that I meant nothing
disparaging.

He formed an association with the Grenada
Cooperative Nutmeg Association, one upshot of
which was the creation o f a Grenada Nutmeg
Kit. which Includes a stainless steel grater.
Vem azza currently Is touting nutmeg as a salt
substitute, but I better not get Into that, lest m y
objectivity be challenged by some of the salt
miners.
Grenada nutmeg also Is billed as "grate for"
sexual stimulation, settling nerves, curing
headaches and sprinkling on egg nog. But I
doubt the future lies In any o f those directions.
Unless graters develop a rescue mission
souvenir value at least as high as Soviet
weapons, the world likely will see a nutmeg
Or mayb* they'll start growing It In Nicaragua
as a substitute for bananas.

HELEN THOMAS

Start
Of The
End ...

Is This Smart?

BERRYS WORLD

producers. When the Americans pulled out.
there* were about 5 million pounds In Ihe
warehouses.
The problem o f what to do with 3 million
pounds of nutmeg largely was left to the likes of
Ben Vemazza. an Aptos. Calif., accountant.

JULIAN BOND

More than 500 people, all but two
of them black, have died In South
Africa since the current protests
against the white-supremacist re­
gime began.
At least another 400 have been
detained under emergency powers
adopted by the Pretoria govern­
ment.
Some o f the dead died at the
hands o f black Insurgents. These
victims have usually been whlteuppolntrd black council members In
the tow n sh ip * that house the
low-wage labor force that fuels the
South African economy. Only five of
38 local councils are now operating.
Nearly 250 black council members.
Including 27 mayors, have resigned.
An estimated 78 percent of those
killed In the recent violence were
killed In clashes with ihe poller or
armed forces, often at funeral
services for other blacks killed the
same way. On several occasions, the
police have fired, without provoca­
tion. Into groups o f peaceful blacks.
At least four blacks were murdered
by official or unofficial agents of the
white state.
The sometimes sketchy nature of
these figures Is p r o o f o f the fragility
of black life In South Africa. There Is
rigid white control of the black
population, forced resettlement, and
a bizarre licensing scheme that
requires blacks to carry a passbook
at all limes or face eviction to
remote arras set aside to drain the
black population from " w h it e "
areas. But despite all this, no one
knows how many black there are In
South Africa or how many have
really been killed.
Two of the four whose deaths are
charged a ,aln*t u secret "death
Fourteen percent o f the electrical energy In ■quad'' of he white government arc
the United States Is generated by nuclear
Matthew Gonlwe and Fori Catalu.
plants.
whose burned and mutilated bodies
were found with the IkkIIcs of two
Ninety-four such plants arc licensed to
colleagues In the sand dunes of the
operate und 33 m ore are being built. Hut
Indian Orran.
s in c e 197H no fu tu re n u clear e le c tr ic
Gonlwe nnd Calais, both schoolgenerating plants have been planned in the
teachrrs. were Involved In South
United States.
Africa's longest school boycott. The
Around the world 2(J countries arr produc­ police say the four were victims of
in g nuclear-gcnerutcd electricity, and seven
the wur between rlvul political sects
m ore plan tojoln them by IlffX).
In South Africa, but blacks say
•Countries that lead the United States In the
In co n sisten cies In the o ffic ia l
version of their deaths (mint to
percentage ol nuclear-generatrd electricity
police Involvement.
ure France with 5D percent: Belgium, 51
On May 14. a court and a court
p ercen t: Finland and Sweden, each 40
messenger's olTlce In Hrukpan were
percent: Switzerland. 37 percent: Japan. 23
attacked. On May 28, the head
percent: West G erm any. 17 percent, and the
quarters of the South African de­
United Kingdom. 17 percent.
fense forces and the Southern
France can build a nuclear generating plant
Transvaal Medical Command were
In ubout six years, half the average tim e It
bombed In Johannesburg, and two
tukrH the United Stales to build one,
days later, the offices of a fund thut
Japan has 28 nuclear plunts operating. Is
provides financial and m aterial
usalstance to South Africa's security
plunning right m ore and has firms w orking
forces came under siege.
on new designs that could far outpace the

United Stairs In nuclear technology.
Coal, natural gas and oil are much m ore
ubundant In many countries. Gas and oil
have better uses than fueling pnwrr plants.
Coul provides 50 percent o f U.S. electricity.
Hut as demand Increases, so will the need for
supplemental energy sources.
T h e United States, which pioneered In
nuclear research, is now lagging behind
m any other nations In nudeur applications.
A s time goes on. If present attitudes and
policies prevail, the lag will Increase.
Is this smart?

I was. therelorc. a bit shaken when one
Importer told me, ” 1 noted with Interest that you
have been known to live for days without
nutmeg oil. Once you taste and use freshly
grated nutmeg from Grenada you will not be
able to say this any longer!"
At the time. I decided to adopt a philosophical.
Ilve-and-let-hve approach. If Importers and the
Foreign Agriculture Service likes to think
nutmeg is essential, they are perfectly at liberty
to do so. All I ask In return Is that I be allowed to
live a nutmegless life without having my
objectivity challenged by the nutmeg nuts o f the
world.
Frankly, not much has been heard of Grenada
since U.S. troops left the Caribbean Island In
1963.
The most newsworthy event Involved a U.S.
Navy admiral and several lower-ranking soldiers
and Marines who brought home souvenirs.
Note that they were accused o f packing ofr
Soviet-made automatic rifles — not nutmeg
grinders.
Despite Its size (only 133 square miles).
Grenada la one of the world's leading nutmeg

No More
Health
Reports I

RUSTY BROWN

Female Of The Species
I sec the error of m y ways.
I've been assuming the behavior
o f my dog Is obviously female: She
twirls on her hind legs like a
ballerina when she wants a treat.
Lap-allllng Is her favorite way to
spend an evening. She seems so
gentle and polite. It surprises me
when people ask. "Is Peanut male
or female?” I think to myself.
“ Can't they tell by the way she
acts?"
Now. I've learned. I've been Im­
posing my stereotyped definitions of
"fcm alcness" on my dog. It's a
disservice to do that to another
specie — even to ourselves.
Females o f other species fre­
quently behave quite differently
than women In our culture. And two
scientist* have made precisely this
point In th eir b o ok , "F e m a le
Strategies" (Walker flt Co.). Evelyn
Shaw, former curator of animal
behavior at the American Museum
of Natural History tn New York, and
Joan Darling, a biology researcher,
wrtle that we "tend to project our
own stereotypical expectation* of
male and female behavior" on other
species. In so doing, "w e distort
their reality and we distort what
they may have to tell us."
Ms. Shaw and Ms. Darling reveal
that selentlsls have also made this
m i s t a k e In t h e p a s t . W h e n
behaviors differed from precon­
ceived Ideas of how males and
femules should act. they were called
"s e x role rev ersa ls." Scientists
assumed too long, for example, that
Ihe mule was the active and domi­
nant (Mirtner In sexual behavior.
"T h e female was stereotyped as
passive, a receiver without u mind

of her ow n ." the authors write.
Much of the research o f the last
decade lias been an attempt to
correct Hull oversight and give Just
us much attention to the analysis ol
female biology. It Is now noted that
there are some species o f females
wtio are brawnier and bigger than
the mates, females will) huge sexual
appetites nnd females who get the
males to carry the egg* or care for
the young as single parents. None of
these can be described us coy.
meek, passive or submissive.
Witness the praying mantis who
euts her mate while he Is In­
sem inating her. Or the fem ale
lowland gorilla who comes on like a
h u n g r y tiger when s e x u a l l y
aroused. A female laboratory rat In
heat will endure stinging electrical
charges to get lo the male.
The female grebe, a seabird. 1* as
active as the male In courting
behavior — bowing, stretching,
vocalizing and crossing bills.
One of my favorite examples from
the book Is Ihe female seahorse,
who puts her egg* In the brood
pouch o f the mule's abdomen. It Is
hr who must move around with a
swollen belly.
Another llsh story Involves the
com m on aquarium fish, lemon
tetra. The female prefers to spawn
with male* who have not recently
mated — sort of like choosing a new
car Instead of a used model.
It was thought thut u dominant
male was always master o f Ihe
hurem. revered by und controlling
the adoring members of the species,
Not true. It turns out In some cases.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The White I
House has stopped Issuing euphoric
h e a l t h r e p o r t s on P r e s i d e n t
Reagan's convalescence.
During Reagan's hospital stay for
removal o f a Intestinal tumor found
to be cancerous. W hite House
spokesman Larry Speakes and the
president's doctors resorted to lan­
guage found only In Hollywood
movie ads to describe his condition.
So much so that on the eve of
Reagan's departure from Bethesda
Naval Hospital, the White House
report Included the fact that he was
packing his bags.
But back at the White House with
all apparently going smoothly, there
are no reports on Reagan's health
unless solicited by reporters. Even
then, they are dismissed with casunl
references.
" I can assure you” he la doing I
w ell. Speakes said at a news ;
briefing. He said he had not seen I
Reagan nor talked to his doctor, but I
added that If th e new s w ere I
otherwise, he would hear about it.
*
The president has been operatlngi
on a curtailed schedule and holdlngl
hla meetings In the state rooms or*
family quarlers where he can be
relaxed and dress more casually.
There la always a doctor In the
house If needed, and White House
physician Dr. Burton Smith looks In
on the president.
But White House doctors tradi­
tionally have been low key and
although they are around they
seldom check up on a president
unless asked to do so. or unless the
president Is not feeling well.
Nancy Reagan did a yeoman's Job
carrying the family banner at the
state dlttner tn honor Chinese Presi­
dent LI Xlanntan when the presi­
dent. recuperating from his surgery,
retired early, leaving her to preside
at the entertainment In the East
Room.
Li's last word to her as he was
departing was: "W h en are you
coming to China."
She w as relaxed and had a
personal word for many of the
guests who she had known over the
years. One of her longest conversa­
tions when guests mingled after the
entertainm ent was with actress
Elizabeth Taylor.
T a y l o r had b e e n on the |
Washington scene when she mar- j
ried Sen. John Warner. R-Va.. but I
since then has returned to her
Hollywood haunts.
She came unescorted.
The first lady says the president Is
hard to "hold down" and la anxious
to get back Into hla regular routine.

JACK ANDERSON

Foreign A id Contract A Tangled W eb
W ASH IN G TO N - Behlnd thcscene* scrambling for u relatively
modest fo reig n -aid contract bus
a l r e a d y e n t a n g l e d t wo U .S .
saiulors. a form er ambassador und
an Inspector-general In a thicket of
accusation* — cronyism. Improper
InlUicnce, malfeasance — and the
contract hasn't even been awarded
yet.
Some of the etiarges were made
anonymously, and have been nei­
ther disproved nor confirmed, One
key participant refused to comment
on thr record, Our associate Vicki
Warren lias sorted out the confusing
tangle. Here's what she learned
Thr contract at stake ts for a 85
million, live-year program modeled
alter the International Executive
Development Project, which trained
young C osta R ican und oth er
foreign businessmen In the fine art
ol selling their products to Am eri­
can companies. The program would
Involve working with thr young
executive* troth In their countries
and In Ihe United Stales.

Thr project was thought up by the
Washington. D.C.. consulting firm
o f Kerne. Monk and Associates,
which sold the Idea lo the Agency
for International Development In
1982. Keene, Monk was awarded a
81 million contract by AID to run
the program for three year*.
David Keene, a partner In the
firm. Is a dose friend o f Sen. Robert
Kastcn. R-Wts.. chairman of the
Appropriations subcommittee that
funds AID.
But In late 1983, Keene, Monk
wua told by AID administrator Peter
McPherson that ruture contracts for
executive training would be put out
for competitive bids. The following
spring. AID evaluators studied thr
Kerne. Monk project and concluded
that "tangible results ... have been
relatively limited to date" and "the
cost per participant does appear to
br higher than that o f comparable
programs "
Keene. Monk contacted thenAmbassador Curtin Wlnsor In Costa

Rica, but be was far from en­
couraging. He wrote the firm that
AID Intended tu award the contract
for any extension of the develop­
ment project to a non profit group tn
C osta Rica, which would sub­
contract the work lo be done In the
United Stairs. It looked as tf Keene,
Monk would be out In the cold.
U was about then. AID source*
told us, that they were told by a staff
aide on Kusten's subcommittee,
that unless Keene. Monk "got some­
thing" In Ihe way o f a contract,
m oney for other AID programs
would be held up. Kasten has
refused to comment on Ihe record.
In July 1984. Keene. Monk of­
ficials told the AID Inspector general
they had been told by an anony­
mous caller that their firm had been
"unfairly written ou t" of consid­
eration for the $5 million extension
of the development program. They
also reported that Ihe anonymous
caller said that the AID chief In
Co*ta Rica may have offered to cut
an agency evaluator in on pan ol

the project by subcontracting work
to him.
T h e IG rep orted fin d in g no
hanky-panky, in fact, the ^valuator
had even recommended another
Costa Rican group to handle the
contract. But the IG questioned the
ability of that Arm to do the Job.
M ean w h ile, W lnsor w rote lo
Kastcn to complain about what hr
viewed as Keene. Monk's pressure
tactics. Wlnsor told us he thought
giving the contract to Keene. Monk
would be "ripping off the taxpay­
ers" because the Costa Rican group
could do Ihe work cheaper.
At about the same time. Senate
Majority Leader Robert Dole. RKan., also wrote a letter to AID.
asking about Keene. Monk He said
he was Interested only in Ihe
"substance o f the program ... not In
Ihe selection o f a contractor or the
competitive bidding process."
Keene. Monk now says It wants
ihe en tire project put out for
competitive
bidding.
* » * • mW It* a i ■ ■ I* *■ illSi t * ii »
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E v e n in g Herald, Sanford. F I.

Sunday. Aug. i, I H 5 — 3D

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Historical Perspective Armament For Future
F reedom s Foundation F eatu res
We. as a nation, are caught up In a
buret of zeal for educational reform.
Thls has been the case since the
publication, a little mote than two
years ago. of A S Alton at Rink, the
widely-noted report of the National
Commission on Excellence In Educa­
tion. The Commission's stated concern
with a "rising tide of m ediocrity" was
the catalyst for a number of actions and
proposals designed to Improve the
product o f our educational system
S ecretary o f Education W llllatn
Dennett Is. for a number of reasons,
deeply concerned with the direction
and shape of educational reform. In a
recent address to the Conference on
C i v i c V i r t u e and E d u c a t i o n a l
Excellence, sponsored by the Ethics
and Public Policy Center. Secretary
Bennett called for an "Intellectual
Initiative." at the core of which "lies an
enhanced appreciation for the role and
value of the study of history." W hy the
emphasis on the study of history?
Democracy Is a unique form of

government. Like some delicate plant.
It requires constant care and attention
In order to flourish and grow Because
democracy ts government of. by and for
the pyoplc. that support must come
from the citizens In form o f confidence
In the Inherent virtue of the system.
Yet. the respected philosopher Sidney
Hook has observed "that faith and
belief in the principles of liberal democ­
racy have declined in the United States.
Unless that faith and that belief can be
restored and revivified, liberal dem oc­
racy will perish." Professor Hook Is not
alone ip this opinion Eminent political
philosophers both In this country and
In western Europe have come to the
same disturbing conclusion.
The erosion o f "faith and belief* Is
particularly evident In America's young
people It is reflected not only In a
f ai l ure to unde r s t and t he ba sic
mechanics of our system o f govern­
ment. but also In a failure, In Bennett's
words, to “ know the long procession of
events that gave rise to modem dem oc­
racy."

. Secretary Bennett believes that a
significant ponton of the blame for this
state of afTalrs rests with the education­
al system. He asserts. "After all. one of
the tasks o f a school system — Indeed,
the p r im o r d ia l task of any school
system — is the transmission o f social
and [xiIU leal values."
The reasons for our past failures In
this area are numerous and complex,
but the current Interest In educational
reform provides an Invaluable opportu­
nity to reverse course. A renewed
emphasis on the teaching of history ts a
way to begin to restore to the American
educational process the Important
function o f transmitting this nation's
precious heritage to rising generations.
History Is more than a record of past
events. As Bennett stated, "history Is
organized memory, and memory. In
turn. Is the gtue which holds our
political community together." This
nation did not Jusl happen It was
created with a vision, a purpose. In
mind. Through the study of history, we
ucqualnt ourselves with those Ideals.

the times we have met them and the
times we have fallen short of them.
History ts also a method of Intellectu­
al Inquiry which helps us to a determ i­
nation of the truth. Armed with a sense
ol historical perspective, we can devel­
op the criteria necessary lo make
critical Judgments about the present.
This part o f the Intellectual prepara­
tion of our young people Is of critical
Importance to our future. As Secretary
Bennett concluded; "L et It never lx*
said that we failed as a nation because
we neglected to pass on this legacy to
our children, to all of them ... Let It be
said that we told our children the whole
story, our long record of glories,
failures, aspirations, sins, a ch ieve­
ments and victories. Let us leave them
to detenu Inc their own views of It all:
America in the totality o f Its acts If we
can dedicate ourselves to that en­
deavor. I am confidant that our stu­
dents will discern In the story of their
past the tnith. And they will cherish
that truth. And It y tll keep them free."

OUR READERS WRITE
Aviation Safety: Pilots' Perspective
Is (lying In an airplane safe? II il Is.
then how safe Is It? If II Isn’t, then
how unsafe Is It?
Actually, the answer to those ques­
tions probably depends on your Indi­
vidual prospective. If you have never
been In an airplane before, then you
may think that those who do fly are
nuts. On the other hand. If you arc a
regular air traveler or are a pilot, your
opinion of aviation safety may be
quite different.
It w as recen tly reported that,
because of administrative foul-ups.
the Federal Aviation Administration
under reported the number o f re­
ported “ near misses" which occurred
Iasi year. A consumer organization
has charged that FAA's action was
I nt ent i onal . T h e Depar t ment o f
Transportation has been asked to
investigate. Even the United Stales
Congress Is scheduling u full-blown
Investigation of Its own
But. Is flying safe? Well, you be the
Judge.
* T w o years ago. more than 65
million flights were conducted In the
United Slates, or more than 178.000
flights per day. On only seven oc­
casions did two aircraft run Into each
other resulting In fatalities. Therefore,
statistically, therr was only one fatal
midair collision for every 9,285.714
flights. Yet. during the same lime
period, there were nearly 6.000
highway accidents, collisions and
otherwise, which resulted In more
than 42.000 traffic deaths.
Last year, approximately 60 million
flights were conducted. 13 of which
resulted In fatal midair collisions - an
average of one fatal midair evrry
4.615,384 flights Yet. more than
44,000 motorists were killed on our
nation's highways.
It often Is said that driving to the
airport Is far more hazardous than the
flight you'll take.
By definition, a "near m iss" has
occurod whenever two aircraft come
within less than 500 feel of each other
or whenever a pilot believes an unsafe
con d ition occu rred betw een two
aircraft, Yet. 500 feet Is standard KAA
separation between many flights and
has. thus far, worked well enough to
produce an exceptional safety treord
for aviation. Imagine how dramat­
ically the highway safely record
would be Improved If automobiles,
which regularly come within Jusl u
few feet •• even inches - of each other,
were required to adhere to the samr
stringent safely criteria as aircraft!
The point la. airplanes do not. with
any statistical or demonstrated fre­
quency. run into each other.
Aviation safety Is serious business

If there ts a genuine safety problem In
aviation which clearly threatens the
national well-being of America's citi­
zens. then It should Ire fixed, but It
also should be kept In proper pro­
spective.
As representatives of the largest
pilot constituency In the United States
- 265.000 -- Aircraft Owners and
Pilots Assoc tat Util (AOPA I and the
AOPA Air Safety Foundation (ASFI
also are very much Interested In
a v i a t i o n saf et y. Last y e a r , the
association's pilot members spent
more than 29 m illion hours In
cockpits of general aviation aircraft. In
fact, on average, members of AOPA
regularly log more tban 116 hours
annually behind the controls. That s
probably mftre flight time than the
most frequent of the airlines "F r e ­
quent F lie r s ." And. since pilots
usually gel to the scene of the aircraft
accident first, the motivation o f selfpreservation naturally inspires them
lo lie the first ones lo cry "fo u l" and
take on the federal government or
anyone else responsible for the safety
of the skies If they believe the safety of
their passengers or themselves Is In
Jeopardy.
So. the next time you drive lo the
airport, whether you are going to fly
on a small airplane or large, re­
member that you have a 99.99915
percent chance ol arriving at your
destination safely. Not Itad odds! _
Stephen K. Bassett
Vice President
Aircraft Owners And Pilots Assoc

SEVEN U SA G ES SIT U IN BHWJT

Estes' County Budget Coverage Helpful
Just a lew words lo let you know
how much I appreciate your method
of reporting Seminole County's pro­
posed budget.
Donna Estes' writing Is clear und
concise — must understandable. I

know It took her a lot or lime und
study to do It — It shows.
Thank you for yttur approach.
Janet Funkhouser
Altamonte Springs

'Public Servant' Resents Special Interest Labeling By City Manager
Having lived the greater [tart of my
life In Sanford, or the Immediate
Sanford area. 1 have had the distinct
and pleasant opportunity o f having a
front row seat to a good deal of
Sanford's history.
In fuel. I may harbor a small
amount of prtdr In the fart that
somewhere along the line I may have
made a positive contribution to our
way of life and the healthy growth und
en viron m en t w e're blessed wi th
through the various civic and charita­
ble organizations I've supported with
my time and financial contributions
Almost 11 of the 26 years that I
have resided here have been spent In
public Service with the Seminole
County Port Authority Allow me to
hasten to point out. however, thut this
letter Is not written by the A d ­
ministrator of the Port Authority, but
by a citizen of the Sanford area
My attendance at the July 22. .'985
Sanford C lly Commission meeting
was pr e c i pi t a t e d by l o ng t er m

association with local Industrial dev­
elopment elTorta. and motivated by
my sense of public service,
Our s y s t e m p ro v id e s " P u b l i c
Hrurtngs" lor Just that purpose, so
that the voice of the people may be
heard. I was pleased that the com ­
mission politely welcomed me. und
were attentive lo my Inquiries and
comments on proposed Ordinance No.
1767 (requiring sprinkler systems In
certain types o f commercial and
mulU-fumlly structures). Behold Bu­
sy stem works!
Shortly thereafter Iprlor to the vote),
the system short-circuited, and a
small group (four to be exact) were
publicly chustlzcd and ttaptlzrd Into
Involuntary membership In a "special
Interest group". I have no binding
relationship with the other three
Individuals who spoke In "opposition"
lo passage o f 1767, other than a
professional admiration us honest and
respected local businessmen.
Allow m e to make one point clear

Taking
Care

and precise The only special Interest
group that I Itching lo Is one which Is,
In my estimation, a very elite group
We have a name, and It ts "public
servants".
I personally resent the remarks Clly
Manager Frank Faison made at that
public forum which labeled me as
partisan to self serving Interests
I stand to neither gain nor lose from
the passage of the subject ordinance,
and although I remain actively Inter­
ested In the healthy expansion of
economic and Industrial development
efforts, the ordinance will have no
effecl oil the future o f the Fort
Authority or my personal financial
status
I sincerely hope that this Incident
was an Isolated one, and that the
general p u b lic Is not routi nel y
chastized for speaking out al “ Public
Hearings" If their viewpoint Is In
opjtoslllon lo thut of the city's ad­
ministrative stuff.
Dentils K Dotgner
Sanford

Cheryl
Jensen

Elder Abuse
On Increase
"Elder abuse Is one o f the fastest
growing crimes o f our times, but It Is
mostly unre|xirted and almost totally
neglected In the budgets of local, state
and national governm ent." says Gloria
Cavanaugh, executive director o f the
American Society on Aging
"Cases o f elder abuse." she says.
"Include beatings, starvation, and e l­
ders lie Ing tied to their beds or not
ullowcd to come out of their rooms.
And rape ts not uncommon."
About 1.1 million cases of cider abuse
have been reported, affecting about 4
percent of the nations' elderly. H ow ev­
er. the a ctu al number Is higher,
liecause for every reported case, four
more go unreported, say Mary Joe
Quinn and Susan Tomlta. authors of
the book "E ld er Abuse and Neglect
Detection and Intervention."
Ms Quinn is a court Investigator tor
ihc clly and county of San Francisco.
Ms Tomlta Is a clinical assistant
prtifessor o f social welfare al the
University o f Washington School ail
Social Work
They say that 20 percent of all ciders
art- being abused In some way —
physically, psychologically, financially
or by having their rights violated.
The typical victim Is a woman over
75, The two authors say (hat elder
abuse cuts across class and racial lines
The causes vary, but many cases
Involve a family history of child und
wife abuse, or the abuser Is a care giver
under extreme stress. In almost all
cases, the victim knows thr abuser,
who Is either a relative — a son.
daughter or spouse — or a trusted
care giver.
Thirty-seven slates now have laws
that require re|xirtlng of elder abuse
"However, not all those slates require
investigation ol reported cases," says
Martha Holstein, ihc American Society
on Aging's deputy director und public
pollcy specialist, “ and most stutes don't
have the services necessary to do
anything alMitit It once a case is
Investigated and confirmed.”
According lo findings of the recent
congressional report. "Eider Abuse: A
National Dlsgrnee." almost 40 percent
of all reported utilise eases Involve
adults und elderly. However, only 4 7
jiercenl of slate budgets for protective
services Is earmarked for elderly abuse
victims.
"W e need a range of services to
address this rising phenomenon." says
Ms. Cavanaugh "W e need respite for
care-gtvcrs. counseling fur ubusern und
victims, in-homc support services, such
as Meals on Wheels, and we need
temporary shelters lor victims,"
"W e also need criminal prosccullou
when II Is appropriate," says Ms.
Holstein
More public awareness of the pro­
blem Is also needed, says Ms. Tomlta
"Most o f the cases are reported by
someone other than the victim," she
says, "liecause In most cases, the elder
Is unable or ashamed to admit that he
or she Is being abused by a family
member."
"Be alert to symptoms," she says.
"You may see a uclghtmr with unusual
Injuries he or she doesn't want In talk
about, or the eare-glver may prevent
you from ever entering Ihe elder's
house or spcuklng with the rider
alone."
To report a case of abuse, call your
city or county department of social
services and ask for Ihe telephone
number for the adult department of
protective services.
S e n d q u e s t io n * lo C h e ry l Jensen.
T A K IN Q C A R E . Newapitfier Enterprise
Association. 2 0 0 P a rk Avr,, N ew York.
NY

10106

V o lu m e o f m all prevent a

personal replica

What Newspapers Across The Nation Are Saying

Urgent Action Needed A s A ID S Becom es Epidemic
, Ths (Norfolk) Virginian Pilot
Who was not shocked by the hollowed and
drawn face of movie actor Rock Hudson as hr
&gt;t ■entered a Parts hospital? ...
The horror of AIDS Is Hurt there is no known
. cure for It. The hope of finding a way to arrest the
disease has driven AIDS victims to France, where
/. doctors are testing and administering drugs now
unavailable In the United States....
;
Increased efforts must be made tu develop an
- AIDS vaccine and lo support a more vigorous
,. program of public education about Ihe disease.
For three years Ihe Reagan ad minis! rai ion has
, attempted to rut funding for AIDS research. Last
4. week, responding to threats by Congress, the
,! administration requested a 50-percent boost tn
research funds. Even with that increase, the total
, for the 1986 federal budget would be Just &gt;126.3
. million. If that seems like a lot of money, consider
' ‘t ihla: Th e U.S. Public Health Service estimates
that 40.000 new AIDS cases can be expected
within the next two years. That qualifies AIDS as
t an epidemic — an epidemic that needs immediate
treatment

Tbs Sacramento (Calif.) Union
The Boy Scouts of America has raised troubling

civil rights questions, and thrown a damper on Its
75th anniversary celebration, by ousting a
15-yrar-old scout who was truthful enough to
admit hr did not believe In God.
Puui Trout, a Boy Scout from West Virginia,
was denied promotion to the rank of Lire Scout
and dismissed from membership when lie told a
review board that while he respected the religious
beliefs of othrrs. he did not believe In God
Ben II. Love, chief executive of Ihe Boy Scnuls
of America, has written the Trout boy and his
parents that "Youth and-or adult members of the
Boy Scouts of Am erica must meet certain
membership requirements. One of these re­
quirements Is belief tn a Supreme Being."
As a private organization, the Boy Scouts would
be entitled to setting Its own membership rules.
Bui the problem Is that the Boy Scouts Is not
really a private organization. The BSA receives
generous public assistance In the form of rent-free
use of schools and other government buildings.
T h e Trouts, w ho pay taxes which help
subsidize the Boy Scouts, have good reason to
believe thal Paul Is being unjustly discriminated
against...

Tbs Hartford (Coon.) Coa r sat
Every blind American should be grateful to
Rrp. Chalmers P. Wylie of Ohio
Without Mr. W ylie and his Ilk. ihr blind might
continue to have their morals corrupted by
having Playboy magazine available to them In
Braille through the National Program for the
Blind and Physically Handicapped of Ihe Library
of Congress.
The vigilant Mr. Wylie may Imve to pul a slop
to that with his proposal, approved by the House,
to cul funding for Playboy from the tlsl of 36
magazines offered by the library in Braille.
Americans will be appalled to discover, as did
Mr. Wylie, thal Playboy "assails traditional moral
values and peddles licit as well as Illicit sex."
Licit sexl Th e very possibility that a blind
person might be provoked to thoughts of licit sex
by a magazine ts a real shocker, and certainly
demands Intervention by the Congress of the
United Slates o f A m erica....
So what If Mr. W ylie Is gui l ty ‘ of presumptuousness. arrogance and condescension for
trying lo censor material available tu the blind?
He at least Is proof that the gift of sight does some
people no good.

0 # 'f

H lbbiag (U ln a.) Dally Tribune
... taking people to court rather than settling
differences In some other way seems to be thr
national pastime....
A few states have tried to correct the situation
with laws that forbid groundless or frivolous civil'
suits. In a place called Show Low, Artz., one
lawyer learned a very nice lesson from this taw.
The uttorney, representing a client who tiad a
gripe against the locul mayor and the local radio
station, brought a libel action asking &gt;10 million
in damages The lawyer made a number of
tnlatakrs. He didn't understand what libel law
en tails....
The Judge considered the case's merits, and
then Issued ... an &gt;8.177 Judgment — against Ihe
lawyer.
The Judge was very unhappy that the lawyer
had not researched the law. and said he should
pay the legal costs for the other side.
Now. this sort of thing isn't going lo happen
very often, but it Svould be nice If there were
something built Into the legal systrm tu prevent
useless law suits that drive up the cost of the law
and
to choke up our court systems.

�4D

S u n d a y , Aug

E v rm n g H t r j l l S rn lo rd , Ft.

4, 1985

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Church Of God
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Congregational

Christian Science
M i l l CMUftCN 04 CMfttlV
IC W N ttlf. lOfKWOOO
971 H atftkaa M a M i Rd
01 ( I WHIliatan Rd
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OURNATION!

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Irti»

...THE HOPE
OF OUR COMMUNITY,

The
Church..

• M m lif Night

CNAa UN1T1D
■CTMOOtlT CMUNCN
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IUHI I IU1N4HAN CHUNCH
1R 479 A l#d Bug ftd
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iHtarwri fitaykddd

JOIN THESE SPONSORS
AND HELP KEEP'
THIS DIRECTORY
AVAILABLE
SJ SO P E R W E E K
C A L L 32? 2611

NOtT CftOII UJfMIRAN CHURCH
0# 1AM HART
Drift*#ad Vitiaga 0#
Ufta Har, ftlad
Raul H#y#r
Pa*1#«
S*« M#r ihip Wfiw a
1 00 a a
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Ad.it ftrha Cb*»
10 00 p a
ro t wrotHAnoN c a u 1 2 2 2 1 1 2

iThe Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possiblei
A T L A N T I C N A T I O N A L B ANK
S a n fo rd , Fl a.

SU N D ANK and St af f

J C Pan n ay

TH E Mc K I B B I N AOENCY

200 W. First SI
3000 S. Orlando Di

Sanford Plaza

Insurance

Howard H. Hodgas and Stall

Q R K Q O R Y LUMBER
T R U E V A L UE H A R D W A R E

500 Mtiplo Ave

C O L O N IA L HOOM
RESTAURANT

.

Sanford

STENSTROM R E A L T Y

P A N T R Y PRI DE
D IS C O U N T FO O D S

Herb Stenstrom and Staff

and Employees

Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Staff

MORTUARY

MEL' s
Q U LF SERVI CE

K N I G H T ' S SHOE S T ORE

W ILS O N -E IC H E LB E R O E R

PU B LIX M A R K E T S

Eunice Wilson and Staff

and Employees

Mel Dekle and Employees

W IL S O N MAI ER F U R N IT U R E CO.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson

Downtown Sanlord
115 East First SI.
Bill &amp; Dot Pnintar

H A R R E L L A BEVERLY
T R A N S M IS S IO N

L.D. P L A N T E , IN C.

Oviedo. Florida

SENKARI K OLASS
A P A I N T C O ., INC.

O S B O R N 'S BOOK
A N D BI BLE STO RE

Jerry &amp; Ed Senkarik
and Employees

2599 Sanford Ave

David Qovoily and Staff

W IN N -D IX IE S T O R E S

and Employees

‘SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
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�R E L IG IO N
E v e n in g H erald. Sanford. FI

Briefly

System At Core Of Recent Violence

Lutheran Leaders Attack Apartheid

Family Film Series Continues
A t First Baptist Of Oviedo.
"O f Srlf Debt and Peer Pressure and Sexuality
ilir third in
a series of fam ily films. Is scheduled for a 5 45 p in
presentation Sunday. August 4 at The First baptist Church ol
Oviedo
The him features family expert James C Dobson I'll .0. who
wrote several best selling Ivxiks Including. Dare To Dim iplm r
and What Wives Wish Their llusbanJs Knew About Women
Dobson also hosts a syndicated radio show carried hi I 34
stations nationwide.

Soul Travel Seminar
Eckankar. the ancient science of soul travel will be
presented Monday at 7 30 pm by Steve Kornegay in the
Eckankar Heading Hoorn located at '210 Park Avc North
Winter Park II you are interested in having lucid dreams, or
out-of the body experiences, you can learn from this inlonnal
gathering

VBS, Willamson To Speak
Kev Raymond Crrvckrr. Pastor ol Palmetto Avr bapttnt
Church 2026 Palmetto Ave Sanford, lias m hrduled a Vacation
Bible School August 5 0 Children ages 4 II will meet '» 30 to
I I 30 a m Monday through Friday For more information, call
the church at 323-1583
Evangelist Spencer Williamson w ill address txitli m-xhIoiin ol
the August 4 meeting ol Palm tto Church's &lt;■ ir r igation
Williamson, a preacher lor 45 years, lias founded many
churches. Including Calvary baptist ol Fort l.auderdale Ills
messages come from a foundation that embraces city with
Evangelism

'The Prodigal' To Be Show n
The Prodigal, a last paced, modern dav allcgorv akin lo t tu­
m ble story. Is scheduled to In- presented Wednesday Aug 7 at

First Ava-niblv ol Gml Sanlord. at 7 p in The him stats John
Humtnond II o |h- Lange, and John Cullurn Set in roniempo
rnry urban framework. 1'he Prodigal Intamately examines Ihr
grudual spiritual and emotional framework ol an American
fumllv 1 hr Him was made by World Wide Pictures, which
produced 'The Hiding Place' and the I V miniserles Idle blue
And The Gruv World With- is the him organization ut the bills
Graham Association. Graham has a i ann o role m the him

■

\

S u n d a y . Aug 4. l e t s —5 0

W ASHINGTON |UPI| - The violence In
South Africa is caused by the nation's
system ol apartheid and the current state ol
em ergency will not change the "lu n
damrntal Injustice" of that system Luther
an leaders say
"They (the South African government)
cannot change the fundamental Injustice ol
apartheid, which ts the core of ilir current
violence." three Lutheran bishops said In a
statement released Wednesday
"Unrestrained (roller and military tactics
violate the very principles while South
Africans profess to uphold "
"The news of the government Imposed
stale ol em ergency in South Alrtc.i causes
all jN-oplr of g«N&gt;d will lo grieve lor tlmsc
w or king lor a peaceful cud lo apartheid
the bishops statement said
The statement was prepared hv the
Lutheran umbrella organization the Lo
theran Council in (hr l' S A and signed hv
bishop James H Crumlrv ol (hr Lutheran
Church in America. Presiding bishop David
W I’rrus ol the American Lutheran Chun h
and the bishop Will I) llcrzfeld ol the
Associ at i on ol Evangel i cal Lut her an
Churches The bishops lead 5 4 million C S
Luthrrans
Stale President (Plctrr) Ikiiha says now II
Is tlnir lor law and order and discussion anil
m gotlulion can w ait." the bishops said
We cannot applaud an apj&gt;eal lor law
and order where apartheid is (lie law . wht-rr
nrilrr means death, oppression or separation
lor millions ol people Thai is the law which
nughl not exist order which denies God's
will lor |M-nple lo live together in a |usl
community
The bishops said they rrmeinl&gt;eted a
similar stale ol emergent v un|M&gt;sed In I'HiO
adding " Fhe eurrenl irageillrs leslltv lo the
hitlllty ol sin h action
"The powers the slate ol emergency
provides I he government .ire espet tally
harrowing lo us tiecause they are similar lo
the powers the South Alrleun military
already wield with such terror in Namibia
the bishops said
The majority black jNipulallon ol Namibia
Is largely Lutheran and l.iilheruus have
iH-eii among (hr leaders In sup|Mirling tin
lilac k drive lot the Hide|»eiuleiice ol Namibia

Irnm South Africa
The Lutheran bishops said the prrserva
lion of apartheid in South Africa
will
ensure a national disaster

argued that France had let I I I n - known"
beforehand ih.it It was going to call lor
sanctions in the U N
brltlsh Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey
Howe and others complained sharply, how­
ever. dial this had nut In-i-ii Ihc case, the
diplomats said

"The preservation of apartheid
hv the
widespread detention of the very leaders the
South African government needs to hsirn to
and talk with will ensure that peaceful
ch mge will not occur " the bishops said
The foreign ministers of the IO European
Community nations condemned the state ol
emergency In South Africa but angrily
disagreed on whether lo linportr economic
s.inctions

The statement sate!
"The ministers
e x c h a n g e d Intorrnailiin about Ihr measures
taken o r en visa ged with respect to South
Africa " and "th e y noted that all member
sta les a p p ly certain r r s ir lc iio n s in ihrtr
rela tio n s with South Alrtru

The

del egat es niei. along with the
ol forthcoming new memliers
Spam and Portugal, imlll early in ihe
morning al the Dutch cinbass)

" T h e m in isters asked Hie |Milhleal cum
in lttee to estatilish an In ven to ry o f these
m easu res, and lo hold a lull discu ssion ol
|Ni||cles w h ich Ihe Irn in ig h i pu rsu e and ol
m ea su res lo lak e in order lo c n n lrlh iilr lo
Hu- .i I n i I iiio u ol apartheid
ih e s l.ile m ru l
said

m in isters

The group was galbrrril m the Klnnisli
capital l o ati rnd Ilir conlcrrncr com
mrrnnntllug the lOih annlvrrsarv of the
Helsinki .iccords
In a statement Issued a lew hours alter the
talks ad|ourned. the ministers reiterated the
Cormnuntly’s strong condemnation" ol Hie
slate ol emergency m Soulh Africa

h said lltc political committee of Hie
l ommunitv has iH-rn instnuied u&gt; rejsirt lo
Ihe ministers al thrlr next meeting The
foreign ministers also agreed lo ask ihe
aintMss.utorsol im-ivtx-r nations

They also
condemned
the govern
menl's rcfus.il to hold i.ilks with NoI m-I
l.oorate Itlshop Des .ted l ul u and called
on South Africu to o|M*n a dialogue with all
Hie represrniailvcs ol ihc black commimi
iy ."

Martin To Deliver
Lectures on Cults

but lhere was ail angry spin on how lo
jM-nalize Soulh Attica and the lln.tl stale
mrnl did not even mention the word
"siincilons
Several members, btii.mi m particul.u
ci lllclzed France slwuplv toi I.tiling In
ronsull wnli the Commmiilv lN-tore pres
eiiling Us saucllons rcsolullon lo Hu- United
Nallims
brllaln. along with Hie United States and
sevet.il olhet nations while condemning
South Africa's apartheid |Mdlrv ol racial
separation have op|Misnl cconoinii sam
lions and call instead loi diplomacy in ellei l
■li.iugr
t'otnim iuity illploniats disclosed Hi.it
Freni h Foreign Mlnlslri Holand Dumas

Dt William Marlin an aeelulinril .oilhot
ami leiitirri is •» heiluled to speak oil culls
and the i m i i i Ii Scpl H I I ,u Trlim\
Liilheian l im n li 123. K Livingston Si
Orlando
Mai im
ton mlc i and illreetoi nt Hu
l luisii.m Research Insiiiule is wulrly ac
kliowiedgcd a s Hu- oiiisiaiulinl Evangelical
iiuihorllx on pseudo L'hrisilan culls and Ihe
siiulv ol i oui|&gt;arllive religious in Amrrrte.i
H e h is willlen 1(1 iMMiks. six pamplllels
.mil o v e i I N I at I I d e s l o t n.ilinnal magazines
Marlin s IIIh s i selling l u n i k K/rigi/om of Hu
&lt; ii/ is c i s ilu- primary reference Isxik In ilie
held and lias I n - c i i s e l e i led as one ol Ilir I n - s I
luniks ol t h e year by I'hrtsii.milv Tinlav
m .iga/inr For more mlorrnutlou call
122 57i »4

American Congregations Active
'A In Religious And Social Issues
United Fr ees International
Two Unitarian bishops Irnm
Eastern Europe who recently
toured Ihr Uilltrd Stales say
American church memliers arc
much mor e ac t i v e lit ‘m ill
llirologlcal and social I s s u e s
than during their Iasi v Intt
bi shop J o s e t Fer enc/ ol
Hungary and b ish op Lapis
Knvacs ol Romania were In tillt lulled Stales Im Hie Unitarian
Universalis) national cnnvrnllon
In Atlanta in June and also
visited chur ch officials and
congregations In several other
clllrs
I think there is tnorr Inleresi
Inside Hie Unitarian movement
In tNilli llirologlcal and Aortal
problems " said Ferenc*, who
Iasi visited Hie Unltrd Stales hi
Ultitl "U nitarians arc much
more devoted to disarmament
and peace Ilian Ihry used lo Iw
*1ft years ago "
There are alMiul HO.(MX) tin
H a rla n s in Rom ania, where
Kovacs lives In a 553-year -old
residence and Ilir o lllc la l church
language is Hungarian

The Church of God of Prophecy has reappointed the Pastor,
Bishop Steven L Gilm er to begin a second year at Ihe
church Gilm er, his w ife Vonnie, and their two sons Stuart
and Kyle stand in front of fhe new Parsonage af 2500 S. Elm
recently purchased by Ihe church.

There are about 20.000 Un
Marians In Hungary, where Hie

overwhelming religion Is ('alhol
Iclsrn Hungarian corii|Niser I tela
l l arl ok was alt or gani st al
Ferenc/' l i r a i l i | U a r t r r s clilirch m
liuda|M-si and Ills sou. lug liela
It.irtok Is n o w I l u - l a y president
ol Hu* church
Itoltl bishops are hum Ihe
I ransylvanl.m region in ihe
northwest corner ol Romania
also oiu e mult i Hungarian title
where Unilarlaninin was Ihsi
established more Ilian lour i en
Iurles ago
The key evenl incurred m
15tiH bi l l owi ng one ol t lie
Irngihirst debates in hlslory
about religious Irerdom
I lie
parllaiiirnl.irv ilrbalr. l oi i vcni d
hv King John Slgism und ol
Transylvania lasted lo days
tu-ginning each morning al f&gt;
o'clock
Following the dr hale ilir king
Issued a dec ire dial said In pari
In every place Ilir prrarhri
shall prrai li and explain Hie
G osjn-I. each a&lt; cording lo his
undrrslunihng ol II. and It the
congrrgallou likes It writ ll not.
no one shall i o i u |h-I i l i e m . lor
I h e i r soul s w o u l d not hr
satisfied hill they shall hr
|N-rmlltrd In keep a preacher

whose traclilng they approve
As a result the Unitarian
rrllglon was lxirli ll holds Unit
(■od exists In only our |n - i s o i i
.hi epilog Hu- mural leaching Inn
irp-ctlng Hie dlvlllllv ol Jesus
Kxerpl lor Poland Eastern
Euro|M-.iu chilli lu-s have worked
mil agreriueuis m which Ihr
i hull lies are allowed lo ii|H-rulr
m limited sp lin es In Romania.
Inr example. 14 religions are
li-rognl/rd hv the slate as legll
Dilate In return, they must
accept certain resirlciluns —
p.irilcularly avoiding any polhi
cal activity
Wr know we havr lo ies|M-i l
the law Wlllilii dial limit, wr
have the rlglll lo rxen Ise our
irllglous Ilir.
said Hoiu.mla's
Kovacs
"Nobody i onirnls our sermons
nr how w r preach llui all ol out
sermons are in mimretlon with
dally Ilir," Kuvucs said
He explained dial hr would
never preach uIniii ! Hu- Soviet
Union's nuclear aisrnal. lor
example drspllr Ihr lat I Unit
disarm am ent and peace arema)or issues ol concern to d ll
/rnsol Eastern E iiiujmS uId Kr re ne *
W e as
churches ran tiMiprralt- with
many u d lviiirs ol Hu- stair, such
as Ihr hgtu against alcohullsm.
social services, and caring lor
aging people
All ol Ihr legal" churches In
bulb countries arc Involved
with Ihr stale — In Ihr |N-acr
muvrinenl

l.asl year, c hur c h r e p r r
senlatlves from nevrral Easlrrn
European c o i i ul r l r s met m
buch.iresl lor a mass peace
drmiinslrullon AuoUu-r one is
planned Hus S ep in n lN -r
In our church most ol Uir
coiigirgatlolis are village eon
gtrgallons and the tradition Is
si l o n g
said Kovacs
From IHa producers ol
Tho HIDING PLACE and JONI
/Aelrevr J H l rK O O IC A l n u y
be the moil /srwrr AJ Mm
eve i niAtlr to rear h /texytle Aw
CArtil
—-

CaaArun

How tony I vr longer I Aw Mrm
o t tht\ rA id *i lo t&lt;e /wotlur er 1 the
reaAim o l the iftwy trie — the
ifUAiyi/e the televAn &lt;y o l the
V »si o/rrw tongi At o t it a Hi m
i U o (Vu* rAe » h lettlbie
n iri ia.i&lt;r
— l o f t e lA n th n f. Authoi
THl n tO P IC A l h a pto/outHl
t ommenlAty rwi our preten1nuittl

rswi

a m rm w in

whk h we

At

ter

oui\eh/e* ll it a CA/twu/i Mm m the
hen Anti tieefteM tente /hofte
A n d im y it A it rrar A a wsle
AudleiHe
— le*. Oortit O UiKM uii

del Alt rte x b y te iu n Chun A
lot Anuriev CtlUomiA

. At mti. m i is H a n artiAM

PfJ 4 0

Plots! SANFORD FIRST
ASSEMBLY OF COD
Time: WED. AUG. 7 • 7 PM

Unity Church of Four Townes
N o w U n d e r T h e L e a d e r s h ip O l

REV. NANCY HENSON
Kecriil (iradualr Ol Unlly Mlnlxlrrul School
Unity Village. Missouri
S e r in r » l l r l i l A l

123 S. INDUSTRIAL DRIVE. SUITE 103
ORANGE CITY. FLORIDA
10 AM SUNDAY AND 7:30 PM WEDNESDAY

^Ute/u/.. .

xW
J r
^

C E L E B R A T IO N O F W O R S H IP IN
T H E S P IR IT A N D T H E W O R D .

SUNDAY SCHOOL ............................................ 9.45 A M.
MORNING WORSHIP
10:50 A.M.
EVENING W O R S H IP ............................................
6:00
H tnN PM t * f Tm

Church is scheduled
occupancy by Dec. 24.

A new church, the First Assembly Of God, located on west
Stele Road 46
is starting to take shape Two giant cranes
.v/- put in place the first roof support Tuesday afternoon. The

\

to be

com pleted

and

ih i

read y

Vwksal

tor

W illiam T h o m p s o n , P a s t o r

Sanford Church of G od
601 W «t l 22nd StrMi

322 3942

P.M.

�» D — Eve ning Herald. Sanfsrd. F I.

Sunday, Aug. 4. IMS

Jungle Spaceport Competes With America's Shuttle
By A1 Rossiter J r.
UF1 Science Editor
KOUROU. French Guiana (UP1) — A m odem
all-European spaceport has risen from (he edge o f
the Am azon jungle in thin UuKely undeveloped
land previously known best for its prison colonies
and butterflies.
With the enthusiastic support o f France. Arlane
rockets launched from the Guiana Space Center
on the northeastern coast o f South America have
already become the primary competitor o f the
American space shuttle for the world's c o m ­
munications satellite launching business.
And a second launch com plex, using mobile
launch platforms like those pioneered by the
United States 20 years ago. Is undergoing final
testing and will receive Its first rocket section In
September for launching In December.
"W e can ofTer to our customers for the next 10
years one of the best services found In the world.”
said Charles Bigot, director-general of the French
company that runs the Artane program.
More expansion Is planned and If the French
have their way. astronauts o f the European Space
Agency will be flying Into orbit 10 years from now
In spaceplanes launched from the base.
The once-sleepy fishing village of Kourou. Just
south o f the space center, is now a bustling city o f

B ooks

8.000 and still growing.
Little white Renaults bearing the label of the
Centre National d'Etudes Spatlale. the French
government agency called CNES that built and
operates the space center, seem to be scurrying
about everywhere.
In contrast to the town's old native section,
where descendants of slaves live In wooden
shacks, many o f the 600 space center workers
live in attractive pastel-colored houses with
concrete block walls and metal roofs. More are
under construction and all are air conditioned
against the heat and oppressive humidity.
During a launch "ca m p a ig n .” a modern
three-story hotel on the mouth o f the muddy
Kourou River and Its two annexes are Jammed
with Europeans, although the activity does not
appear to disturb cows munching grass along the
river front. The hotel's beach Is crowded on
sunny days w ith families of space workers.
When the French government, at the behest of
President Charles de Gaulle, commissioned CNES
to construct a new launching base In Guiana In
1964. Kourou had a population o f 400. The whole
country then had only 50.000 Inhabitants and Is
now up to m ore than 60.000 — the size of a small
city In the United States.

Work on the base started In 1965 and CNES
spent $40 million building living quarters, a
school, hospital, a water treatment plant, power
station and telephone lltv s as well as roads and a
harbor.
Kourou then w as isolated from Cayenne, the
capital 36 m iles to the southeast, by two
northward flowing rivers that had to be crossed
by ferry.
Now bridges speed transports along the twolane highway Unking Kourou with Cayenne.
There Is little trafTIc. however, and virtually no
tourism — a sharp contrast to N A S A 's Kennedy
Space Center that has become one o f Florida's
m ajor tourist attractions.
French Guiana's link to the rest o f the world Is
Air France. The airport at Rochambeau outside of
Cayenne was expanded In the late 1960s and now
A ir France 747 Jumbo Jets regularly fly there. A
supersonic Concorde flew a load o f VIPs In from
Paris for the last Arlane launch July 2.
There Is a dally flight from Paris to Rocham­
beau. usually by w ay of Martlnquc or Guadeloupe
In the Lower Antilles. But there Is only one direct
flight a week to the United States.
Artanespace. the company that launches
Artanes. delivers the rockets to Kourou by ship

from France. The voyage takes two weeks.
France's first successful satellite launch, using
a Dlamant A rocket, cam e In 1965 from Its
Hammagulr missile range In Algeria. But the
agreement ending the Algerian War In 1962
called for France to close Its Sahara base In 1967.
W hy did France go to South America to
establish a new space base? Because Guiana has
close to an Ideal location for space shots, better
than that of Cape Canaveral.
Rockets can be launched from Kourou to the
east or north without endangering land masses
and the base’s location Just 5 degrees 23 minutes
north o f the equator means rockets going east can
take optim al advantage o f the sling effect
provided by Earth'ser. .‘ ward rotation.
Most satellites launched by Arlane are bound
for stationary orbits 22.300 miles above the
equator. In--such an orbit, a satellite's speed
matches Earth's rotation and the spacecraft
remains over one area o f the globe to serve as a
radio relay station. The closer a launch base Is to
the equator, the easier It is to place a satellite In
an orbit paralleling the equator. Rockets laun­
ched from Cape Canaveral, at 28.5 degrees north,
have to use 17 percent more energy to reach
equatorial orbits.

'Mad' Magazine
Founder Says
He's Going 'Nuts'

fy

Breuer
DoesCredible Job Detailing
Germany's Second Most Serious Defeat
D aath o f a Nasi A rm y , by William B.
Breuer, (Stein and Day: 328 pp.; $19.95).
Seven weeks after D-Day, more than 1
million Allied troops remained stalled
near the beaches of Normandy. They
w e r e h e m m e d In b y t he natural
hedgerows of the French countryside and
by fanatical German troops ordered by
Hitler to fight to the death and not give an
Inch.
But Allied commanders had conceived
a brash plan to break out o f the trap,
focusing massed tank columns on a
narrow strip of land 3.5 m iles long
The attack, named Operation Cobra,
misfired at the start. Many of the 3.000
Al l i ed planes ordered to bomb the
break-out point to weaken German re­
sistance dropped their loads short, killing
and Injuring hundreds o f Gla. Bui the
A llied Juggernaut, postponed several
lim es by weather, was launched on July
24.
Th e German forces withdrew in the
face of the massive armor attack. By July
30. the Allied offensive had reached
beyond the wildest dreams of Its plan­
ners.
But Hitler. Ignoring the advice of his
field commanders, ordered a counterat­
tack to push the Allies back Into the sea.
T h e Naz i offensive reg a in ed much
ground, although Allied spearheads re­
mained to the west and south of the
German counterattack.
Allied commanders now conceived a
plan to swing those spearheads to the
north, encircling the German armies
which were faced on the north by British.
Canadian and Polish units. The success
of the plan depended on the Germans
continuing the attack for several days to
give the Allied forres tim e to complete the
encirclement.
Hitler again Ignored the advice of his
experienced generals, w ho sensed the
Allied plan. He ordered the attack to
continue rather than withdrawing his
troops through a narrow gap between the
towns o f Falalse and Argenlan.

By Frank Spotnltx
UPI Feature W rite r
NEW YORK (UPI) - It turns
ou t A lfred E. N e wma n , the
devilish little brat whose freckled
face has popped up on Mad
magazine covers for three deendes. delighting adolescents
and disturbing their parents,
isn’ t so bad after all.
N o. explains Harvey
Kurtzman. who helped found
Mad and Invent 'its mascot.
Newm an was simply a 1950s
film score arranger whose name
became Identified on the old
Henry Morgan television show as
any "nothing, nobody, or nebblsh."
Mad's readers somehow at­
tached that name to the fare In
the magazine. Kurtzman had
appropriated the likeness from a
bulletin board, where It was
pinned with the title "W h a t Me
W orry?"
"H is Image goes back to the
turn o f the century." Kurtzman
said. "W e tried to track him
down In our letter column and
found out he was a tyke who had
top much Iodine In his system
and (his picture) cam e out of a
medical text."
He added with a mischievous
smile. "W e choose to believe
that's the story."
Kurtzman. 61. Is a soft-spoken
man. He draws a laugh by
finishing a sentence with an
unexpected, sometimes bitterly
Incongruous remark — and then
sm iling quietly.
He has made his living oul of
satirizing popular culture and
society, poking fun at the way
we look at ourselves In a string
o f satirical magazines, from Mad
lo Trump. Help). Humbug and
National Lampoon.
His private life is anything but
counterculture, however. He and
his wife live In a house In
suburban Mount Vernon. N.Y.,
with "lots of trees, a lot of
squirrels and a skunk or two."
T h e y have their hands full
raising the youngest o f their four
children. 14-year-old Nellie.
It la Nellie — described afTectlonally as a "fem ale rat" — who
p ro v id e s the In sp iration for
K u rtzm an 's latest project, a
comic strip named "L au rie and
Versclla" that appears In a new
series of books called "N u ts."
The $1.95 paperbacks, edited
by Kurtzman. feature several
different cartoonists parodying
different aspects o f teenage life.
A thin plot loosely ties together
each o f the cartoons.
Although "Nuts” pokes fun at
the teenage audience Kurtzman
hopes will buy It. he said people
d o n 't seem to rea lize when
they're the bull of a Joke.
Rather than taking the parody
aa a collective Insult, "they'll
say. Hey, look, this la m y friend
so and so.' It’s never me. It s
somebody else.” Kurtzman said
Kurtzman has spent hla life

Best Sellers
By United Prasa international
Fiction
1. The Fourth Deadly Sin - Lawrence
Sanders
2. The Hunt for Red October — Tom
Clancy
3. Skeleton Crew — Stephen King
4. Lonesome Dove — Larry McMurty
5. Lucky — Jackie Collins

6 . The Lover — Marguerite Duras
7. If Tom orrow Comes — S id n ey
Sheldon
8. The Cider House Rules — John
Irving
9. Leas Than z-ero — Bret torsion Lilts
10. Fall From Grace — Larry Collins

Non-flctlon
1. Yeager: Ah Autobiography — Gen.
Chuck Yeager and Leo Janos
2. lacocca: A n Autobiography — Lee
lacocca
3. Martina — Martina Navratilova with
George Vecsey
4. Nutcracker: Money Madness —
Shana Alexander
5. Fit For Life — Harvey D iam onds
6. Smart W om en. Foolish Choices —

On Aug. 14. the American First and
Third armies had reached their objective.
It remained only f-*r British troops under
Gen. Bernard Montgom ery to move south
and close the bap. But Montgomery sent
Inexperienced Canadian and Polish units
against the Germans, and would not
allow Gen. George Patton's third Arm y to
m ove northward to complete the en ­
circlement.
The trap was finally sprung on Aug. 18
when the Allied forces met. but the delay
cost thousands o f lives on both sides of
th e lines. T h e de l a y also a l l o we d
thousands of Germ an soldiers. Including

Dr. Connell Cowan
7. D a n g erou s Sum m er — Ernest
Hemingway
8. Women W ho Love Too Much —
Robin Norwood
9. Passion for Excellence — T o m Peters
and Nancy Austin
10. Hammer o f the Gods — Stephen
D
a
v
i
s
Mass Paperbacks
1. The Passion of Molly T. — Lawrence
Sanders
2 "... And Ladles of the C lub" — Helen
Hooven Santmeyer
3. Full Circle - Danielle Steel
4. Julie — Catherine Marshall
5. First A m on g Equals — Jeffrey
Archer
6. Star T r e k No. 34i K illin g T im e —

Della Van Hlse
7. lacocca: An Autobiography — Lee
lacocca
8. Silver W ings. Santiago Blue — Janet
Dailey
9. Cocoon — David Sapersteln 10.
Tough Guys Don't Dance — Norman
Mailer

most of H iller's generals In France, to
escape from the "Falalse pocket" and live
to fight another day. But the Germans
paid a heavy price, with 10.000 soldiers
killed and 50.000 more captured.
William Breuer. a m ortar platoon
sergeant In one of .the first w aves to hit
Normandy on D-Day, Interviewed Allied
and German veterans for this book. Ills
extensive research Is obvious In this
fascinating tale of a battle that was. next
to Stalingrad. Nazi G erm any’s most
serious single defeat of the war.
-C h a r le s J. Cannon

40 Years To Surface ... But It's Fresh
By U aittd Press International
Deliverance at Los Bonos, by An­
thony Arthur. (St. Martin's Press. 320
pp.. $15.95).
In the beginning of this special book.
Anthony Arthur tries to explain why
1985 readers should be interested in
reading 320 pages about an obscure
historical event that took place four
decades ago on Feb. 23. 1945.
He Is like (he encyclopedia salesman
who tries to tell you at the door why you
should let him In and at least give his
product a shot. Arthur says hts tale has

human appeal, is interesting history, can
be compared and contrasted to modern
hostage situations, and tells of American
virtues, which the country la finally ready
to hear after years o f self-incrimination
over the Vietnam War.
What he doesn't say la that the book la
also worth reading because he has done
hts homework so thoroughly that the
reader can see and hear and smell the
civilian camp where 2,147 businessmen,
nuns, scholars, prostitutes and other
European and Am erican residents o f the
Philippines were held captive by the
Japanese during W orld War II.

The spectacular and daring rescue of
the Internees went largely 'unnoticed In a
world overloaded with wartime destruc­
tion and bravery. On the sam e day the
Internees were rescued by the Eleventh
Airborne Division and Filipino guerrillas,
one of the moot striking Images o f the war
was caught on film: six Marines raising
the American flag at Iwo Jlma
It has taken 40 years for the story of
Loo Banos to be told to the public In
detail. It Is to Arthur's credit that the
story Is as fresh and Interesting today as
It would have been four decades ago.
- M l l l y McLoaa

learning the rules of satire. He
began cartooning os a child tn
Brooklyn and the Bronx, discov­
ering It was an effective “ gim ­
mick to win approval."
He attended the High School of
Music and Art and put In a
couple years at Cooper Union
b e fo r e e n t e r i n g the A r m y .
"N ever saw combat." he said.
"Did a lot of dlsheo. though.
That was combat of sorts.”
Out o f the military. Kurtzman
found cartooning work with
Stanley Comics, where he met
the woman who would become
his wife, and then with EC
Comics. Mad Magazine came
along around 1954.
" I was Inspired by the college
humor m agazines." he said.
"W hen I was Inspired to do Mad,
that’s where it came from ."
Mad g o t " s t a t i c ” f or Its
parodies, "but we never really
got sued, we never really got
condem ned.” Kurtzman said.
"There was u little bit of re­
sis ta n c e, but gener al l y the

REVIEW
public was friendly. Still is.”
Kurtzman left to start a scries
of other magazines that even­
tually went belly up. He still
contributes to Mad occasionally,
but he said "It's probably got a
certain amount of hardening of
the arteries."
“ It's been loo long on the same
form ula." he said. "Since I've
been working for Mad lately. I
can't condemn all of their work,
after all. I think Lampoon has
the same problem."
Kurtzman works In the attic of
his house, where his Ideas come
lo him. "You choose a blank
spot on the wall and you stare at
It for an hour, a day. a week, a
month, 'til something appears.
Then you cry a little. And sooner
or later you get your Ideas." he
said. " I t ' s a l o n e l y and
mysterious process."
He never considered becoming
a comedian or a standup comic
("I'm not a standup type — more
a sit down, or lie down"), but he
has known some of the best of
them.
Ernie Kovacs used to tell
Kurtzman hr carried a copy of
Mad with him to the 21 Club.
Woody Allen once appeared In a
photo layout for Help! as a favor.
And Mo nt y Py t hon' s T e r r y
Gilliam was Kurtzman's gofer at
one point. He got the Job after
Gloria Stelnem left It.
Kurtzman Is not pleased with
the current state o f newspaper
comics, most of which he con­
siders "Imitations of Imitations
of the original." although he sees
great prom ise In a cu rren t
"com ic renaissance" In Europe.
He said he continues to refine
hts craft after four decades of
professional cartooning.

Foreign Debt Pushes Africa D eeper Into Cycle O f Crisis
jects that could help avoid, or at
B y Josep h G am bardello
ADDIS ABABA (Ul'l) - Alrlca least belter deal with, future
must stop us spiraling lorrtgn crises.
According to the SOnallon
debt If the eonilnrnl Is lo recover
from fam ine and avoid lorn! Organization of African Unity,
emergencies In (he future, u lop the continent's foreign debt will
reach $170 billion this year,
Internal tonal aid oflldal says.
"T h e conllncnl's debt burden compared lo an estimated $158
Is assuming Intolerable pr»|iur- billion In 1984 The Interest
llons,” said Edouard Suoumu. payments this year arc project! d
director general of Ihe U.N. Food lohll $20 4 billion
"This Is a stale of poverty
and Agricultural Organization
Hr- said Iasi year's debt service crippled by debts.” Saoumu
alone swallowed more ihun 25 said
He said the economic crisis,
|m m cm o f the revenue Iroin
expor t s by A i m an nati ons, and ihe uhlliiy lo repay debt,
draining lorcign currency re­ was f urther com plicated by
serves. I h e need lor A im s lo worsening trade terms and lull­
service ns debts limlis Its uhillly ing prices lor ugrteulurul c o m ­
lo invest In development pro­ modities cx|Htrtcd by Africa

I

The situation prompts African
nations lo Increase cash crop
production Instead o f food crops,
said Saouma. who stressed Ihe
need lor Africa lo look beyond
ilu current crisis to future dev­
elopment.
"African countries need to be
able lo meet their debts and pay

ANALYSIS
development bills oul of their
own revenue* Hut turn can they
when their term s o f trade grow
worse wi t h e v e r y day l hal
| M *n c H ?

"The market lor the few com ­
modities they export is now ul

rocV bottom, and likely lo re­
main so for ihe rest of the
decade." Saouma said "T h e
prevailing spirit o f protectionism
deprives them o f outlets and
undermines their jdlem pis at
selling up processing Industries
ol their own.
"Thu s Africa lose* from one
Itund wlial she receives In Ihe
othcr. and slides deeper Inlo
poverty In Ihe process."
Saouma stressed lhal curing
Alrlea's debt problem was nol u
panacea and that the Internalional community must still give
th e r n n i l n c n l " b i l l i o n s of
dollars" lo m ake agricultural
reborns and Ix-comc more de­
veloped.

"Everyone agrees that they
need some additional oxygen
and help.” he said. ''U n til now
the whole operation for Africa
has been a charily operation. I
am pessimistic about the future
o f African countries crippled by
d ebt."
He said hr supported an OAU
call for creditors to renegotiate
Africa's debt on more favorable
terms, and even cancel some
loans.
A precedent lor such a move
was established In 1978 when
17 creditor countries look uclinn
lo help 58 mutcrdcvlnpcd na­
tions by cant cling $3.5 billion In
debt.
" I belong lo Ihe category ol

I
- -or

^ *1

people who believe that neither
A frican nor Lalln A m erican
countries — many of thrm. moal
of them — will be able lo pay
Ihelt debts."
He said Africa was In a better
position, however, because most
of lls debt was In Ihe form of
gov e r nme nt lo gove r nment
loans while In Lalln America ihe
major creditors were commercial
banks.
Saouma said he was aware
lhal his hopes for debt cancella­
tion and Increased aid were
uloplan.
" i know II Is politically not
time and very near lo utopian
thinking, but for Africa It is
utopia or death." he said.

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                    <text>Police Kill 6 In South Africa

JOHANNESBURG. South Afrlra IL'PH — Police
killed six people In racial riot* near Cape Town,
raising to 19 the number reported killed In the
worst two days of violence since the government
Imposed a state o f emergency In black areas last
month.
Amid the violence Thursday near Cape Town.
President Pieter Botha prepared for a meeting
today with three European foreign ministers on a
fact -finding tour of South Africa.
Dutch foreign Minister Hans van den Broek
and the foreign ministers of Italy and Luxem­
bourg left Europe Thursday to meet with

Elena Looks Ferocious;
May Hit Land Saturday

government officials and blark leaders They
described their visit as one of "Inqu iry and
pressure."
Their lour was to begin in ihe midst o f the
worst outbreak o f violence In Cape Town since
South Africa’s apartheid policy of strict racial
segregation was Instituted bv tile National Party
In 1948
Police said they killed six people In nationwide
racial rioting Thursday, bringing to 19 the
number of people reported killed since Wednes­
day — the bloodiest two days in South Africa
since March

PENSACOLA (U PI) — Hurricane Elena, a
potential killer hurricane that sent 120.000
residents and Labor Day holiday tourists fleeing
Inland from Gulf coast resorts, flung Its 100 mph
w inds and 12-foot tides today tow ard the
condominium coves o f the Florida panhandle
Hurricane warnings were posted from Morgan
City, La., to Apalachicola. Fla., a span o f about
See E L E N A , page 12A

First 'No' In SEA Bargaining History

T e a c h e rs
By J im S earls
H erald S t a ff W rite r
For the first time. Seminole
7 find the
County teachers have rejected a
contract negotiated for them by
teachers'
their union, the Seminole Edu­
vote very
cation Association.
By a 780 to 728 vote, tabu­ disturbing.'
lated late Thursday, the teachers
voted down a contract that
-E. Cowley
would have g iv e n first-year
tcarhers about a 13 percent pay
hike and teachers with 15 or
more years experience a 4 per­
rejected contract arr the samr as
cent Increase.
Although the turn down was t h o s e o ffe r e d t e a c h e r s In
Seminole for the last 20 years
unexpected, disgruntled veteran
But It was that fact that Irked
teachers had been vocal In their
opposition to the part calling It so marry experienced teachers
Seminole High School geome­
a "slap In the face” to experi­
try teacher Hill Klein, a Seminole
enced educators
County teacher since 1972. said
SEA negotiators will now have
he thought the vote was indica­
to come up with a new proposal
tive of teacher Irustratlon with
to present to the school board
bargaining tra m , said chief Just that lack of change In their
pay scale
school board negotiator Ernest
Marshall Ogletree. executive
Cowley Cowley said the SEA
director and chief negotiator for
members' voles marks the first
the SEA. said the contract o f­
lime teachers have turned down
fered the teachers was another
a contract proposal since the
In a long list of lalsc promises
school district began collective
starting with the governor to the
bargaining In 1974 By law.
teachers are not permitted to legislature and on down to the
school board. "Long time teach­
strike.
ers are angry and frustrated and
" I find the teachers' v o lt very
this vnte expresses thnt feeling."
disturbing." Cowley said "We
(the negotiating teams) had a Ogletree said.
Of Seminole County's 2.200
tentative agreement and I am
teachers,
about 500 have 15
very disappointed In the re­
years experience or more. Not all
sults." He said the basics of the

T u rn

D o w n

C o n tra ct
not 4 percent "
While a new contract prupos.il
Is put together, leat her salaries
will be (roteii at their 1984-85
levels No disruption ol the
schixil year Is expected, Cowlrv
said

T h e defeated salary plan,
called by negotiator* a 15 year
step-plan’, culled for pay raises
averaging 0-7 pen'rni according
to a teacher's education and
level ol experience For example
a teacher with a bachelor's
degree and two years' experi­
ence would receive more com­
pensation than a teacher with
similar education and one year
ol rxprrlencr The pay raises,
that would have coni the st hool
district $3 7 million more than It
paid lor teacher salaries Iasi
year, would have Iteneflted Inex­
perienced teachers most, whose
base salary would Jump Irum
HtraM P M fry Tmubji VUsc#*M $ 14.280 to S 15.1Hi It approved
Cowley said Ihe idea Ix-hlnd
C ounting teachers' b a llo ts at the S em in ole
Rahm lng, tre a s u re r; Debby W h itm ire , pres­
giving new teachers a greater
E d u ca tion A ssociation o ftlc e late T h u rsd a y
ident; H e le n G oodson, p a s t p re s id e n t;
rate of pay hike In to alirurt
a ftern o o n , from left, S E A o fficia ls N a n c y
M arshall O g le tr e e , ex ecu tive d ire c to r. The
them to Seminole County. He
W h e e l e r , u n l- s e r v e d i r e c t o r ; L o u e l l a
linal v o te : 728 fo r the con tract, 784 against.
said out of 07 Florldu counties.
Seminole ranks near the bottom,
teachers are memtiers o f ttic* y ea rs’ e x p e rie n c e , suld the
member* stuck together and 56th. In beginning teachers' p.ty
SEA und some mi-mlx-m may voted-down contract was "te r r i­ defeated II."
But for veteran teachers' pay.
not h ave voted, accounting for ble."
Uut. Holt her said, "a s long as those with 15 years or more
Ihe total vn tcof 1.314. about 700
"W hat It was telling us was
w e don't have binding arbitra­ experience. Seminole ranks 8lh
less than the total number of they aren’t Interested In the
tion. Ihe school board will do
older teachers. They'd rather
what II wants to do. You notice for (hose with bachelor degree*
teachers.
and Sih from Ihe top out o f 07
Ih e s u p e rin te n d e n t (Robert
H ow ard Butcher. S em in ole have the younger ones.
Hughes) got a lO percent raise.
"I'm pleased to see the SEA
8 « * TEACHERS, p a g e 1 a A
High School teacher with 10

Escapees Still At Large

17% Of Florida
Lakes Surveyed
High In Acidity

Three felons who escaped from Broward County.
Lopez and Moreno are Ix-llrved
the Tomoku Correctional In­
stitute near Daytona (teach were to have come lo the United
still at large early today. Volusia Slates during the Martel Boat
Lift
County sheriff s officials said
Prison officials say all three are
Sheriff's deputies checked out
num erous lip s provided by c o n s i d e r e d e x t r e m e l y
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A fed­
Volusia County residents hut dangerous.
A n y o n e with In fo rm a tio n
eral survey shows a greater
n o n e o f I h r m le d l o Ihe
percentage of lakes In south
whereabouts ol the escapees, altnut the whereabout* ol these
men Is asked to rail the Volusia
Georgia and Florida have rela­
said a Volusia sh eriffs deputy
County
Sheriff's Department at
tively high acid levels than lakes
Television news report* In­
In the Northeast, the Environ­
dicated Ihe three were sighted In 904 252 0485 or 904 734 3441.
m e n t a l Protection Agency said
the Jacksonville urea after buy­ or the Tomoka Correctional In­
Thursday.
ing stole a courtly truck thal had stitute at 904-257-1314
—R ick Brunson
The survey sampled 151 lakes
Its keys left Inside, but a Tomoka
from south G eorgia through
prison official said those reports
Central Florida and found rela­
have not been confirmed
tively high acldliy In 17 percent
The three felons, all serving
of them. Of 77 I lakes sampled In
lon g prison term s, escaped
the Northeast, ubout 4.5 percent
sometime between 6 a m and 8
showed relatively high acidity
u in Wednesday, according lo
EPA officials stressed thal Ihe
p ris o n o f f i c i a l s
T h e y cut
Action Reports ........... 3 A
limited findings do not show
through an Inner fence In the
Classifieds................. I0.HA
what caused the high acid levels,
compound and then used a
Com ics......................... BA
whether those levels — recorded
Hh i U Son V* Jtmmr V « w l
ladder left behind by a construc­
Dear Abby
.............9A
in one-lime measurements — ore
tion crew to scale anouler fence
Deaths........................... I2A
consistent, and how likely other
topped with colls of razor wire
Dr G o f f ....................... BA
lakes are to develop similar
a c c o rd in g to P o lice C h ief S teve H a rrie tt.
The three escapees are
A c r o w d g a th e re d at H ig g in s T e r r a c e
Editorial.....................
4A
problems.
C
h
a
rg
e
d
w
ith
resisting
a
rre
s
t
with
v
io
le
n
c
e
Humberto Lopez. Cuban male.
a p a rtm en ts Th u rsd ay at about 7 p .m . when
Florida
Findings also do not meosurr
and d is o r d e rly conduct w a s N orm an G ain es,
30. G feet tall 1B5 pound*, with
a tigh t brok e out and handgu ns w e re
Horoscope
.... ........... 8A
the overall Impact of acid rain on
black hair and brown eyes He
18,
of
*23
H
iggin
s
T
e
r
r
a
c
e
H
e
was
|alled
In
re
p
o
rte
d
ly
draw
n.
Sanford
p
olice
a
rr
iv
e
d
............ 2A
Hospital
lake acidity levels, they said.
has a tattoo o f a mermaid above
lieu o f $5,000 bond.
Nation.............. ........... 7A
and broke up the tigh t but found no guns,
A d d rain has been blamed lor
the right knee and u scar over
VA
People ............
See ACID, page 12 A
hts left eye. Lopez was serving a
S 7A
Sports................
15-yrar mandatory sentence for
Television .......... Leisure
trafficking cocaine und three
Weather.......................... 2A
counts o( battery on a law
World
2A
enforcement officer. Hr Is from
Miami and was sentenced In
L a b o r Day C lo s in g s
Rogers said Special steps should be taken
Broward County.
virus infection.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — In an attempt to
to
mtnlmlxr
contact
with
such
children's
"W e get questions about whether school
Clly. county, slate and
quell worry am ong parents and school
Jose Moreno. Cuban male. 24.
showers are safe." Rogers said, pointing out secretions
federal office* will be closed
officials. Ihe government Issued Its first set
5
fret
6
Inches
tall.
147
pounds,
Anyone with an open cut or wound should
there was no way a child could contract
Monday tor Labor Day
of guidelines on children with AIDS and said
with a ruddy complexion, black
w ea r gloves lo p reven t contact w ith
AIDS
from
normal
use
of
such
facilities
Banks, post o ffice s and
there was no reason lo keep them home
hair
and
brown
eye*.
He
has
a
In one celebrated case. 13-year-old AIDS childrens’ body fluid*. If only to avoid
school*
will also be closed,
Irom school
tattoo of a female on hts upper
sufferer. Ryan White of Kokomo. Ind. — who contracting other diseases, the guidelines
as will Ihe Seminole County
right
arm.
Lopez
was
serving
The U S. Centers lor Disease Control in
already had hemophilia and contracted said.
l i b r a r y b r a n c h e s in
"Mandatory screening (for HTLV-3 virus nine 20-year sentences running
Atlanta reiterated there was no evidence the
AIDS from use of blood clotting fat lor made
Casselberry and Sanford
concurrently
for
armed
burglary,
disease could be transmitted through casual
from contaminated blood — ha* been kept Infection) as a condition for school entry Is
There will be no city
not warranted." the guidelines said, but armed robbery, false Imprison
contact In the classroom, school showers,
out of school
refuse collection Monday In
ment.
kidnapping,
grand
theft,
foster-care
and
adoption
agencies
probably
day-care centers, gym * or elsewhere, and
The boy has been permitted to participate
Altamonie Springs or San
burglary of a dw ellin g with
recommended com m on sense hygienic
tn classes at Western Middle School, but should screen children since prospective
ford. In Altamonte, resi­
assault,
He
Is
from
Miami
and
parents
will
have
to
make
decisions
about
procedures he followed tn situations where
only by telephone
dents who normally have
was
sentenced
In
Dade
County.
there might be any doubt.
tits mother, who ts appealing Ihe school s the youngsters medical care.
their trash picked up on
Vincent James Caplzzano. also
Children with AIDS or related Infections
decision, said Thursday she ts glad the
Monday will have It col­
known
as
A
n
ton
io
Vincente.
"Most (children with AIDS) pose no risk tn
government Is advising school* to let might be more likely lo be harmed by
lected on Ihelr next regular
Mexican male. 35. 6 feet I Inch
a school setting." said Dr. Martha Rogers, a
a
tten
d
in
g
school,
since
their
Im
mune
AlDS-strlcken children attend classes hut
pickup day Th ose who
tall. 178 pounds, with ruddy
CDC medical epidemiologist. In a telephone
doubts It will help her son attend hi* systems are unable to battle disease ef­
usually are scheduled on
interview. Therefore, mosl of them should
fectively. Decisions ubout them should be complexion, black hair, green
seventh grade classes Immediately
Monday's route In Sanford
attend regular school. There's no medical
eyes,
and
when
last
seen
had
a
made Individually In consultation with
But Ryan's mother. Jeanne White, said
will
have ihelr lrash picked
s a ll- in d - p e p p e r b eard .
reason to keep them out."
"This more or less sounds to me like a* doctors, the CDC said.
up on Tuesday and Tues­
Caplzzano was serving four life
A
*
ol
Aug
20.
183
ot
ihe
12.599
reported
close as you can get If you have the CDC
day's customer* will have
Rogers said ihe guidelines, the govern
cases of AIDS in the United States were sentences and one 30-year sen­
backing you I think that's pretty great "
pick-up on Wednesday
m enl't first, were drawn up In response to a
tence for armed robbery and
am
ong
children
under
age
18.
The
number
Exceptions might be made for dcvclopdeluge of calls lo Ihe CDC from parents,
kidnapping.
He
Is
from
Port
incntally or neurologtcally retarded children was expected lo double within the next
teachers and school officials with questions
Charlotte and was sentenced In
who have poor control of bodtlv functions. vear.
about how to protect children against AIDS

Northeast Rate Less

Police Quell Fight

U.S. Issues Guidelines For Kids With AIDS

+

�IA — ly n t in Herald. Sanford. FI.

Friday, Aug &gt;0. IH I

Inflated Travel Costs Alleged

Fe d e ra l G r a n d J u r y Probes
M a rtin -M a rie tta D e fe n s e Billing

NATION
IN BRIEF
Daughtor of Notion Mandola
Accepts Donation In Washington
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The daughter or South African
black actlvtat Nelaon Mandela. In Washington Thursday to
accept a check from a group o f U.S. senators to rebuild her
mother's house, which waa recently destroyed by a
firebomb, said growing up without a father waa not easy.
Nelaon Mandela has been Imprisoned for 22 years In
South Africa and la the symbol of black resistance to
apartheid In that country.
Mandela’s eldest daughter, Zenny, as she Is called, and
her husband. Thumbuinuzl Dlamlnl. live In Swaziland but
periodically return to South Africa to visit her mother and
father. She la 26.
Her (rip to Washington was sponsored by the Center for
Development Policy, a non-profit research organization
concentrating on developing nations.
"W hat's happening today In South Africa Is quite
terrible. 1 think the youth are very, very angry ... " she
said.

WASHINGTON - A federal grand Jury Is
Investigating allegations that the MurllnMartetta Corp Inflated Its travel costs billed
to the Defense Department In a "very
im aginative" way. Pentagon sources say.
The sources said the Investigation will
look Into the creation of subsidiary compa­
nies by the Bethesda. Md . firm and IVI
Travel Inc., o f Northbrook. III., to handle ihr
defense contractor's taxpayer-paid travel.
Evidence Indicates that Martin-Marietta
charged the Defense Department full price
for Its travel fares without disclosing relunds
It recovered from the travel agency through
business transactions Involving the sub­

sidiaries. sources said.
Officials connected with the Justice De­
partment Investigation Thursday declined
to say how much money was Involved. But
In an Internal memo obtained by United
Press International, a Martin-Marietta of­
ficial asserted the company devised "a very
Im aginative" way of avoiding federal restric­
tions against travel rebates.
William Harwood, a spokesman for the
firm, the Defense Department's 12th largest
supplier In 1984 with m ore than 82.26
billion In contracts declined comment as
did an official Pentagon spokesman.
In the memorandum. Martin-Marietta

Better Reporting Cited

FAA Reports Airline
Near-Collisions Up 40%

Economic Indicators Up-Slightly

“ Il Is Important lo keep these
statistics In perspective." Engen
said. "There are about 200.000
flig h t s e v e r y d a y In U.S.
iilrsoacr. which means there Is
approximately one report of a
near miss for every 122.000
(lights — If we use Iasi year's
total of about 600 reports as the
base."
Engen said general aviation
attend! — private and corporate
planes — accounted for 373 of
the rep orted ncar-colllslons
through July 1985. comparrd
FAA chief Donald Engen at­
with 251 In the same period last
tributed the Increase to renewed
year.
emphasis on pilots reporting
The FAA w ill continue trying
neur misses as well as to Im­
p r o v e d p ro c e d u re s b y th e lo reduce the number of such
Incidents through pilot educa­
agency for auditing sueh reports
tion and an Improved air traffic
T h e F A A defines a near- control system. Engen said.
collision as an Incident In which
Autom ated radar terminal
a collision hazard exists between systems are being updated at
two or more airborne aircraft
120 airports by adding such
because separation Is less than features as conflict or collision
5&lt;X) feet, or becfiusc al least one alert, and Ihr FAA Is replacing
of the pilots reports u collision computers at all of Its ulr route
hazard.
traffic control renters, he said.

WASHINGTON (UPII — The government’s sensitive
Index of leading Indicators moved up a weak 0.4 percent in
July following three months o f barely perceptible Im­
provement. signaling (he absence of any big rebound on
the economic horizon, government economists said today.
The composite Index, designed to anticipate trends, had
n hard lim e finding any. Only two o f the 11 Indicators —
stock prices and money supply — moved more than
one-tenth of u percent.
The accumulation of liny changes added up to a 0.42
percent Increase for the month, only slightly stronger than
June's revised 0.36 percent advance.
The Index, like a variety o f other economic Indicators,
reflected no special strength In July that would appear to
be the prelude to an economic rebound In the second half
of the year.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
Federal Aviation Administration
reports a 40 percent Increase In
the number of airplane nearcollisions, but says the Jump
dors not mean the skies arc
becoming less safe.
There were 439 ncar-collislons
In the air during the first seven
months of 1985 compared to
313 In thr United Slates during
the January -through-July period
of 1984. preliminary FAA figures
released Wednesday show.

Bums Hired To Buy Tickets
DALLAS (UPI) — Seedy-looklng transients, who spent
one night In line to grub all the Ilruce Springsteen concert
tickets they could, have been hired for another nlght'a
work.
Ticket scalpers hired street people — bartering with
cigarettes, food and money — to buy the tickets for
Springsteen's Sept. 13 show at the Cotton Bowl. Scalpers
raided the Salvutlon Army Wednesday, promising cash for
anyone w illing to sit In line.
The 80.(XX) tickets for the Sept. 13 show were gone In
just 4 tli hours so promoters arranged for a second show
Sept. 14.
With tickets going on sale this morning and limited to six
a buyer, sculpcrs again turned lo the transients, who
earned as much us M O In uddltlon lo the perks of smokes
and chow.

Lodge's 'Musical Extravaganza'
To Benefit Arthritis Foundation
Any Port In A Storm

W O RLD
INBRIEF

It has been rain in g cats and d o g s the past couple of d a ys but
this kitty a p p a ren tly Isn't o n e ot them because It doesn 't like
the w et stutf. Th e fa ir-w e a th e r felin e was seen Thursday
afternoon seek in g shelter u n der a bench In fron t o f the Good
S am aritan H o m e In Sanford.

Th e Sanford Civic Center will
play host to the Florida Stale
Moose Association. Loyal Order
o( th r Moose, stagin g o f a
"M u s ic a l E x tra v a g a n z a " on
Sept. 14. from 1-6 p.m.
Th e program la to benefit the
Arthritis Foundation In Central

Florida. The extravaganza will
Include song, dance and music
consisting o f Jazz. CountrvWcstcrn. I’op and Gospel. Tick­
ets. as for adults. M for senior
citizens, are available al the
Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce. 400 E. First SI.

If Treated With Pesticide

Police Increase Patrols
On Solidarity Anniversary
GDANSK, Poland (UPI) — Police stepped up patrols
around the home of Solidarity leader Lech Walesa and
elsewhere In thr port city o f Gdunsk today — the fifth
aunlversury of the founding of the outlawed trade union.
Walesa, who works us uti electrician nt the Lenin
shipyards In Gdunsk. said he would commemorate the
annlversury by visiting a monument erected In the
memory of more than 50 workers killed by police during
1U70 food riots In Gdansk.
" I will try to say u few words ut the monument on leaving
the Lenin shlpyurd and lay flowers ut It," Walesa said.
"Everything depends on the situation."
Sources dose to Wulesu said the Nobel Peace Prize
winner would releuse u 150-pugr document today calling
on the communist government to open u dialogue with the
outlawed trade union.

Hostages Freed A m id Fighting
HEIHUT. Lebanon (UPII — Rival militias freed 22
kidnapped Christians and Moslems In an exchange that
came after u rash of ubductlons led to the closing o f key
highways linking the divided cupltal
As the Lebanese victims were released Thursday,
broadcusiers In France pleaded for the release o f four
Frenchmen k id n a p ed In Lebanon since spring. They are
among 12 Westerners — Including seven Americana and a
Briton — missing In Lebanon.
Fighting continued unabated between gunmen In Beirut,
east of the southern |&gt;ort of Sldon and In the northern port
of Tripoli.
Representatives ol the Shiite Moslem militia. Amal. and
the Chrtstlun Lebanese Forces mllltlu traded 11 Christians
for 11 Moslems Thursday night ut one of the closed
crossings between Christian rust and Moslem west Beirut.

EPA: Apple A Day May Cause Cancer
W ASH IN G TO N (Ill'll - T h e S P A IS
concerned that ruling an apple u day lh.it
has b e r g Ire u lrd with Ih c ch em ical
tlamlnozldr could cause cancer over one's
lifetime, and Is acting lo turn (he pesticide
from Ihc market.

use the chemical to extend storage life and
enhance color. Il penetrates Ihe frull and
cannot Ire washed olf.

mental

The pesticide Is used on an estimated 50
percent of America's apple harvest. The
ERA said a ban could reduce the supply
from -l percent to 7 percent and raise
consumer costa by up to 81.90 a bushel
It rsllm alrd ib.it a ban could cost thr
apple Industry 831 million and Ihr peanut
Industry $2 million

The agency recommended to Us Sc Ir nee
Advisory I'unel that ihr hull and vegetable
pesticide, first Introduced In 1963 und
primarily used on upples. Ik- banned.
The El*A concluded, based on animals
studies, that lifetim e consu m ption ol
pesticide residue by humans could cause up
lo one cancer deal li per I O.(XX) |&gt;ersons
TTTTrWTTN o f f r t R u . vegetables and peanuts

Paul Lapslcy. chief of Ihe EPA's special
review branch, said Ihr agency's advisory
panel will likely art on Ihe recommendation
lo hurt next month, will) the prohibition
taking effect as early as this fall.
lie said, however. If there Is an appeal. Ihe
process could lakr up lo a year.
Unlrnyu! Inc.. Ihe major producer of
damlnozlde, disputed Ihe EPA's findings,
saying they are bused on Inroncluslvr data.

In announcing the action, the Environ­
Protection Agency also said ib.it
cooking damlnpzldr treated fruits degrades
Ihr chemical Inin UDMII. a more potrnl
carcinogen chemically related to hydrazine
rocket (url

S A T U R D A Y T I D k JTi
Da y to n a Baachi highs. 9:35
a m.. 9:57 p.m.; lows. 3:16 a.m..
3:27 p.m.; P o rt C a n a v o r a li
highs. 9:27 a.m.. 9:49 p.m.;
lows 3:07 a m.. 3:18 p.m.;
B a y p orti highs. 2:40 a.m.. 2:33
p.m.; lows, 8:37 a.m.. 9:15 p.m.
BOAT1NQ F O R E C A S T : St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
intles wind southeast around 15
knots today and tonight becom­
ing south 10 to 15 knots Satur­
day. Sea 3 to 5 feet. Widely
scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.
BXTBNDBD FO R E C A ST:
Sunday through Tuesday cloudy
w ith sh o w era a n d th u n ­
d e r s t o r m s n o r th S u n d a y .
Otherwise partly cloudy through
period with a chance o f mainly
afternoon and evening showers
and thunderstorms. High upper
80s to mid 90s. Lows In the 70s
except near 80 extreme south.

The EPA said In a statement thai Us
conclusions were based on "lifetim e animal
fe e d in g stu d ies w h ic h sh ow ed that
dam lnozlde caused carcinogenic clfects In
m ice and rals
A s for humans, Lapslcy said In an
Interview. EPA researchers concluded lhal
"Ih e use of damlnozlde presents a signifi­
cant risk of developing cancer over u 70-year
lifetim e."
Lapslcy said. "W e make our derisions on
benefits versus risks and we consider Ihr
' risk In this rase unacceptable."
Th e EPA also found that damlnozlde
causes kidney, lung and blood vessel
tumors In laboratory animals.
Dr. Jack Moore, an EPA assistant ad­
ministrator. said. "T h e risks associated with
d a m ln o z ld e are rrlu te d lo long-term
exposure. Thr risk to public health during
Ihe lim e nreessary lo cancel uses ol this
product will be minim al."

M obile Home Must C o,
Lake Mary Tells Resident
Lake Mary's Code Enforce­
ment Board gave a city resident
60 days to sell or m ove her
m obile home Illegally parked
next lo her house. After lhal
time she will tie fined 820 a day
for every day l( remains Illegally
parked
Th e mobile home Is owned by
Evelyn Van Duhm. 237 Third
St.. and Is parked on property
zoned R-IA. which does not
allow mobile homes, said Kathy
Hire, elty manager.

WEATHER
A R E A F O R E C A S T ! Today
variable cloudiness with a good
chance of show ers or Humderatorms. H igh around 1H).
Wind southeast 15 mph. Ruin
chance 50 percent. Tonight und
Saturday partly cloudy with a
chance of showera or thun­
derstorms Low In thr mid 70s.
High near 90. Wind soulheusl 5
to 10 mph tonight und south
around 10 mph Saturday Rain
chance 30 percent tonight and
50 percent Saturday. Remainder
labor day weekend chance of
afternoon sh ow ers or thun­
derstorm High In lower UOs.
Low In mid 70s
A R X A HEADINGS (0 a.m.|i
temperature: H3, overnight low:
7 8 : T h u r s d a y 's h ig h : 88;
barometric pressure: 30.10; rela­
tiv e h u m id ity ; 85 percen t;
wlnda: southeast at 9 mph: rain;
.23 Inch; sunrise. 7:02 am .,
sunset 7:49 p.m.

official William Vetter wrote: "In order to
lower travel costs without giving money
back to the government. MM Corp. created a
novel business relationship."
In the memo, dated March 20. 1984.
Vetter wrote that IVI set up a subsidiary
called Performance Travel Inc. to book
travel arrangements for Martin-Marietta,
which established a "special subsidiary" to
provide office space, staff and computer
services to the travel agency.
"T h e arrangement Is neither Illegal nor a
violation of (ticketing rules), although It's
certainly very Imaginative In getting around
the rebate restrictions." Vetter wrote.

Mer*M Shako hy Tmmmf V hkm M

M obile h om e perk ed al 237 T h ird St., Lake M a r y . Th e c ity ’s
Code E n fo rc e m e n t Board took Its first o ffic ia l a c t orderin g
♦he tr a ile r m o ve d

HOSPITAL NOTES
Caatral Florida M*«te««l Helen* I
Thoriday
ADMISSIONS

Im M

Joann* HufcMnaon. 0*t#*«
DISCHAROBS

laniard

Awguilve Brown

On* A GI**A*pp

CsBMInaCartl*

ll*n*C Oun

SMI* M Me litfyrt
AH* V Bevwr Dot. and
Raymond C &lt;ia» i r Dolton*

RaWAC Carver. Al lament* Sr *

10* M TtnOa.1, Ganav#

Yvonne R Welder and baby boy Senior*

The board met Wednesday to
discuss (he mobile home, the
first official act of the board. Ms.
Klee said.
G en era lly , alter Ihe board
notifies a person thul they are In
violation of a city code, the
violator will correct the Infrac­
tion without the board having to
meet to decide punishment, she
said.
In this cose, however. Ms. Van
Dahm did not respond to letters
sent to her by the board Inform­
ing her the was In violation of
the zoning restriction. Ms Van
Duhm told board members sire
m oved the mobile home onto the
property next to her house lost
year after her house burned. She
lived In the mobile home until

Ihr house was repaired and has
been trying to sell the mobile
home. Ms. Klee said. Il must be
sold or moved by Oct 28. for Ms.
Van Duhm to avoid paying uny
fine.
In other action. A H "D o r"
Jore was elected chairman and
Joel Ivey vice-chairman of the
code board. The board, which
enforces all o f the city's codes,
usually meets once every two
months. Legally, the board can
line code violators up lo 8250
.per day for violations.
—Janie O oat

Eimlng llcruld
IUSPS Ml IHI
Friday. August 30. IMS
Vol. 78. No 7
Pwhiiahad D ally and Sunday, • • c iy t
Saturday fey TKa San lord Herald
Inc. M l N. Franck Ave . Sax lord

Fi* jam.

Sacaad Clan N iltyy raid al laniard.
Florida m il
Ham# D elivery Week. I l . t t i Meats.
M i l l 1 Month* &gt;14 1 1 , * Manlbt.
U7 M i Y ear. 1II M 8y Mail Week
tl.M i M onth. I * M i J Manthi,
SIS Mr t M oats*, a n Mi Year
M M

Fkana (MSI 1X1 1*11.

�Evening Herald, San lord, FI

Friday. Aug. M. 1H 5- 3A

Woman Jailed For Tossing Bottles Through Window

Hogcr Sermon flagged down a
S a n fo r d p o lic e m a n e a r ly
Thursday morning and lold him
a woman was throwing bottles at
and through the windows of his
room at the franklin Boarding
House on 13th Street. The oineer
nabbed the suspect, but she
didn't give up without a fight, a
police report said.
Officer R.C, Hart blow con­
fronted a woman at the scene,
who according to hts report,
appeared Intoxicated. She was
belligerent and pushed her
finger Into Qarthlow's chest as
she screamed and .timed.* (he
report said.
The woman ran across 13th
S treet a n d h e r c o n tin u e d
screaming and yelling drew a
crowd. W hen Bari blow con­
fronted her again she became
violent and struggled with him
and bit his thumb, the report
said
ll look Barthlow three minutes
to ItandcufT the woman who
then pulled him Into the street,
the report said.
Before being booked into the
Seminole County Jail on charges
o f disorderly Intoxication, re­
sisting arrest with violence,
battery on a police officer, and
throwing a deadly missile Into
mi occupied dwelling, the sus­
pect was transported to Cential
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. rhere she refused treat­
ment for a cut shoulder and a
burnp on her head, the report
said.

Sylvta Claudette Davis. 22. of
113 Castle Brewer Court. San­
ford. was arrested at 2:36 a.m.
She was being held tn lieu of
#13.000 bond.
F IG H T S A R R E S T

A Seminole County sheriff's
deputy trying to serve two civil
w arrants on M arlon County
charges against a Sanford man
charged the suspect wtth battery
on a police officer after the mail
allegedly attacked him.
Deputy James Virgin reported
that when he confronted the
suspect at hts home at 310
Kimberly Court. Sanford, the
m an b eca m e h o s tile and
abusive. He reportedly hit Virgin
on the chest with the palm of Ms
hand. The two Ihrn struggled
and they both fell to the floor
where the suspect hit Virgin on
the head with a glass table top. a
shcrtfTs report said.
The suspect then picked up a
small child to hide trehtnd and
V irg in watted fo r a Florida
Highway Patrol trooper to arrive
before he again tried to take the
suspect Into custody, the report
said.
The man was subdued by the
two officers.
Reginald Smith, 39. was ar­
rested at 8:13 p.m. Wednesday.
He wm Ix-lng held tn lieu of
#5.000 bond.
PO TATHOM E
A Sanford couple has been
charged with possession and
cultivation o f over 20 grains of
marijuana. Sem inole County

Action Reports
★ F ir e s
★ C o u rts
it P o l i c e
drug task force agents who
searched their home Wednesday
reported finding a bag o f pot
tnsldc the house and 19 plants
growing In a shed In the back
yard.
The agents, with a search
warrant, entered the home at
200 Lake Markham Road at
atxmt 5:45 p.m. They reported
llndlng the paper bag of pot on
the floor In a bedroom, a sherlfTs
report said.
The pot crop was found when
the shed was searrhrd. the
report said
John Raymond Milligan. 33.
and Deborah Hudson Milligan.
28. were arrested at their home
at 6:48 p m. They have been
released on #5.000 bond each
and are scheduled to appear in
court Sept. 16.
FLED BUT JAILED
A Longwood policeman in­
vestigating a vehicle parkrd tn
front of the open gale ol a closed
business on E.E. Williamson
Road arrested the driver o f the
vehicle but not until after the
man Jumped In the car and
made a short-lived getaway.
The chase began In front of

Tree Scape at about midnight
Wednesday when the suspect
was spotted by the officer as he
ran back toward the vehicle The
man slowed his pace when tic
saw the police car. but when the
policeman Identified himself and
asked the suspect to stop, the
man Jumped in tin* car. made a
U-turn and sped south, a police
report said.
T h e o ffic e r p u rsu ed and
chased the suspect to Bearss
Circle. Longwood. where the
man stopped and got out of Ills
car. the rejiort said.
The policeman questioned the
suspect and spotted several cans
of beer In the teenager s car, the
report said.
Several items o f drug par­
aphernalia and a bag ol mari­
juana were found in Hie vehicle,
the report said,
Jason Todd Kern. 18. ol 2KX)
Howell Branch Road, *181).
Maitland, was ch argrd with
loitering and prowling, fleeing
and attempting to elude police,
possession of alcohol by some­
one under 19, anti possession ol
less Hum 20 grains o f marijuana
and drug paraphernalia He was
being held tn lieu of $5.(XX)
bond.
DU! A R R E S T
The following person has Iicen
arrested in Seminole County on
a charge of driving undci the
Influence:
—Charles Webber Frizzell. 35. ol
101 E. Altamonte Drive *1226.
Altamonte Springs, was oriented

at 2:01 a.m. Wednesday after hts
truck was seen weaving on State
Road 436. Altamonte Springs.
B U R G LAR IE S A TH E FTS
Gregory Woods. 31. of 2550
Crawford St.. Sanford, reported
to sheriff's deputies that a $500
video recorder and a S25 televi­
sion antenna were stolen from
hts home Wednesday.
A diamond pendant, two gold
chains, a gold bracelet and two
small pieces of gold chain of an
undetermined value were stolen
from a Jewelry Irox In the home
o f Patricia A. Hill. 44. or 1 1 9
lehabod Trail. Longwood. on
Wednesday, a sheriff's rrpori
said
Merle V Frit. 66. of 101.5 U.S
Highway 17-92. Longwood. re­
ported to deputies that #210
worth of fishing gear was stolen
Itom hts car on Tuesday or
Wednesday, The rear window- ol
ihr car had been broken out.
The 1979 Plymouth of David
I. Thornhill, 35. of 1831 Linden
Hoad. Winter Park, was stolen
Tuesday while parked at his
home. Deputies reported the car
is valued at #2.522
Clerk Martha J. Montgomery
reported lo deputies discovering
S20H missing from the Texaco
station at 3498 W Stale Hoad
436. Apopka, when she arrived
at work Thursday. A thief had
ton e open a door of the station

1a t c W e d n e s d a y or e a r ly
Thursday, deputies reported.
Thieves broke Into Bojangle's
restaurant early Thursday and
stole $1,100 and did about #600
tn damage to the building, ac­
cording to Sanford police Capt.
Herb Shea.
The person or persons got Into
the building by breaking a
window after the restaurant
dosed at 12:30 a.m., Shea said.
The restaurant's strongbox was
battered and forced open wtth
some kind o f Instrument. Shea
said.
A S a n fo rd p o lic e o f fic e r
noticed the broken window at
about 2 a.m. and Investigated.
Shea said The officer called the
store manager who confirmed
$1,100 was In the box. An
Investigation Is continuing
FIR E C A L L S
The Sanford Fire Department
responded lo the following calls.
W ed n esd a y
—5 33 p m.. 13th Street and
Olive Avenue, rescue. A 3-year
old boy suffered a cut lip after he
fell out of a car. The car was not
moving, lire oil Ida Is reported
- 5 39 p m . 1101 E First St.,
false alarm.
Th ursday
— 11-38 a m., 1301 Sllvrr Lake
Drive, rescue. A 27 year-old
woman who had a cut on her
arm was taken to the hospital

Only Animals Will Be Involved

Preliminary AIDS
SAN ANTONIO (UPI| - Scien­
tists at the Southwest Founda­
tion lor Biomedical Research
said a preliminary version of a
vaccine against the deadly dis­
ease AIDS Is ready for testing In
laboralory rabbits and infer.
Information from the experttnents at the San Antonio Indllty
would lead to the second strp In
the fall — testing o f the sub­
stance In chimpanzees. consid­
ered the best animal models for
rcseardi Into acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome.
Gordon K. Dreesman. director
of virology and Immunology at
the foundation, discussed the
developm en t W ed n esd a y In

challenging assertions by some
physicians that a vaccine to
protect against AIDS was de­
cades away.
"W e do things In a couple « f
months that used to take ns lo
years." the scientist said, ad­
d in g. however, that hum an
te s tin g ts still " s o m e tim e
a w a y."
Dreesman also said several
drug companies had approached
•he foundation about trying out
other potential vaccine formulas.
A $89,887 grant received In
Ju ne from the N ation al In ­
st It utes of Health Is supporting
vaccine research at the San
Antonio facility.

Ready For Testing
The foundation s scientists al­
ready have attracted Interna­
tional attention for their work In
sui-cesslullv infecting (h im
panacea with AIDS related virus,
all hough the animals have yet lo
show outward symptoms they
have the disease.
Dreesman said research has
allowed lahoraiorv synthesis of
two tiny proteins — |iepl!dcs —
found on the surface of AIDS
viruses. Scientists hnjie these
peptides will make the body
produce an arsenal of unldrodlr*
lo defend Itself against the virus
that causes AIDS
"W e can take It and tnnoculaic
a chimp with the peptides and

then challenge the eh Imp will)
the AIDS virus. W e can sec If
they (the peptides) can prevent
this infection." Dreesman said.
He bases hts optimism on Hie
availability ol the synthetic pep­
tides, as w ell as new gene
splicing and cloning techniques
and a greater know ledge ol
naiiiml defenses to disease.
This additional know-how has
allowed AIDS resarchers lo un­
ravel the proteins In the AIDS
virus In about u year, a neces­
sary strp (or modern vaccine
synthesis that would. Iii earlier
years, have tnkrn a decade to
develop. Dreesman said.

Im p r o v e d D ru g s M a y R e s u lt

Scientists Find New Clue To Epilepsy
By L id ia W aaowlcz
UP1 S cien ce W riter
STANFORD. Calif (UPI| - Scientists have
found unusual brain cells that may trigger
epilepsy, a discovery they say could lead to
Improved drugs for the 2 mllilmi Americans
who suffer from the disorder.
"The unique ability of these cells to
rcndlly discharge a volley ol electrical
Impulses makes them likely Instigators of
epileptic seizures." Dr. Barry Connors,
assistant professor of neurology at Stanford
University School of Medicine, said Wed­
nesday.
Seizures result when large numbers of
nerve celts in the brain suddenly synchro­
nize lheir electrleul activity. The abnormal

rhythm produces the convulsive m ove­
ments. fainting or episodes o f confusion
characteristic o f various forms o f epilepsy.
Most victim s live normal lives with the
help of drugs that prevent seizures by
stopping fhc spread of alicrrtini electrical
a c t iv it y , s c ie n t is t s sutd
But th es e
medications can cause side effects and are
Ineffective In 10 jrerrent to 20 percent of
patients.
"If proved conclusively that the burst log
cells Indeed are the ones dial start an
ntiack. learning more about ihem could lead
lo the drslgn of drugs lo stifle epileptic
discharges at their source."Connors said
"W e could tat gel a drug towards them to
shut them off sjieclfleully. rather than

depress the whole central nervous system.
This Is the way aiill-convulsnot* lend lo
work now ."

COMMUNITY CARNIVAL
AUGUST 31 &amp; SEPTEM BER 1
* RIDES * CLOWNS * RUMMAGE SALE
★ GUS THE CAMEL
NEXT TO VFW IN WINTER SPRINGS, BIG PARK
4 2 0 N. Edgcmon A m .
Phone 327-3151

Mew Life
Christian School
A MINISTRY OF FIRST ASSEMBLY OF QOD

KINDERGARTEN AND GRADES 1-12
S tr o n g P h o n ic * P ro g ram
T e a c h R e a d in g in K in d e rg a rte n
H ig h A c a d e m ic S t a n d a r d s
1 In d lv td u a tlia d C u r ric u lu m
&gt; In fo rm e d P a re n t* A r c T h e Mule
R a th e r T h a n Th e e x c e p t io n

C a ll I ’ tta lor D a v i d E v a n s ,
A d m in is tr a to r

* 1 9
( V w

9
w

f k ( S &lt; 1 &lt; 1
l v i w w w

S r tying The fln r a l In

featuring NICK MONTH
singing old lime favorite songs.
A lvi enjoy dancing lo ihr music of
I.OII n iK S T H .E and
The Gaslight Ensemble (Big Band Sound)
OPEN FOR LUNCH MON KRI 11-2
D IN N E R H O U R S 4 pm - T ill? ? ?

TRA N E

Um § mi&lt;» f

■ Strong Emphaala On The Baalc
Fundamental* Of Education

S rafu od. W i n * Hit) S ir « k » •rul S p ecia lly IhUu-a

l « w a !&gt;••■

•

• O o al M o tiv a tio n

119 SO MAGNOLIA • DOWNTOWN SANFORD

W s a th s r tr o n
H * a l Pum jVA Ir C o n d itio n a l

ta

• C h a r a c te r T r a in in g

G aslight Suiter Club
&amp; R estaurant

Don't G«t Caught
Cold...
S it * l M

• Concerned, Dedicated Teacher*

N EW K ID ON T H E B L O C K
NICK MONTE'S

These eells. which send out a network ol
spidery fillers that form an extensive wehol
connections with oilier nerve cells in the
brain, normally lire tine pulse at a lime
when activated. When bursting cells are
stlmulutrdlhry fire in rounds of three in five
pulses.

Overcaters Anonymous. 7:30 p.m . West Lake
Hospital, Slate Road 434. Longwood Call Mary at
886-1905 or Dennis at 862-74 I I
TU ESD AY. SE PT. 3
C a s s e lb e r r y K lw a n ls C lu b . 7:30 a m .,
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N Lakr Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15 a.m . Christo's
Restaurant. 107 W First St.. Sanford.
Sanford Optimist Club. 1145 a.m., Western
Slxzlln Restaurant. Sanford.
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn. In­
terstate 4. Sanford.
South Seminole County Klwanls Club, noon,
Quincy's Restaurant. Highway 17-92 and Live
Oaks Boulevard. Casselberry.
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St.. Sanford. 11 a.m. to 7
p in. Florida HoapIlalAltamonle Branch. 601 E.
Altamonte Ave.. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Seminole Dog Fanciers Association Intermedi­
ate and advanced classes bcomg at 7:30 and 8:15
p.m.. Secret Lake Park. North Triplet Drive.
Casselberry. Call Eva Matheny at 831-0717 for
Information.
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Club. 1 p.m.. Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E First St.
Longwood Civic Women's Club. I p m.. 150 W.
Church Ave.. Longwood.
Sanford Senior Citizen Club. noon. Sanford
Civic Center. Bag lunch and Bingo.
Reboa Club AA. noon and 3:30 p.m., closed. 8
p.m.. step. 130 Normandy Road, Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos Club. noon, closed.
Sanford AA. 5:30, closed discussion, and 8
p.m.. open discussion. 1201 W. First SL
24-Hour AA group beginners open discussion. 8
p.m., Second and Bay Streets. Sanford.
17-92 Group AA. B p m , closed. Messiah
Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Doglrack Road.
O vereatcra Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m.,
Florida Power &amp; Light. 301 S. Myrtle Ave.,
Sanford.
W EDNESDAY. SE PT. 4
Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship In­
ternational breakfast meeting. 6.30 a.m,. Holiday
Inn. State Road 436 and Wym ore Road. Alta­
monte Springs. For detsUs call 656-4233.

• P a trio tic E m p h a a la

S C H O O L B E G IN S S E P T . 3 r d
E N R O L L M E N T S NOW B E IN G A C C E P T E D
F O R 1 9 8 5 -8 6 T E R M

In their research, funded by the Nation.ii
lustllutes o f Health. C onnors and Ills
colleagues found that bursting cells me n
subsel of pyramid sha|ied nerve cells In the
cortex, the outer shell of the brain ntperlally
prone lo epilepsy.

CALENDAR
F R ID A Y . AUGUST 30
Wekiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m. Weklva
Presbyterian Church. SR 434. at W eklva Springs
Road. Cloned.
Longwood A A . 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian
Church. SR 434. Longv-ood. Alanon. same time
and place.
Tanglewood A A. 8 p.m.. St. Richard s Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same time
and place.
Sanford AA Step. H p.m.. 1201 W, First St..
Sanford.
S A T U R D A Y , AUGUST S I
Theatre-ln*thc-Works will present The Feast o f
Unreason, a play by Mordecal G orelik at
University of Central Florida Black Box Theatre.
7 p.m. Open free lo the public. Symposium on the
previously unproduced play at 9 p.m.
East-West K lw anla Club. 8 a in,. Airport
Restaurant. Sanford.
Sanford W om ens' AA, 1201 W, First SL. 2
p .m , closed.
Casselberry A A Step. 8 p.m .. Ascension
Lutheran Church. Overbrook Drive.
Rebos and Live Oak AA. noon. Rebos Club, 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry {closed). Clean Air
AA for non smokers, fit at floor, same room, same
place and time.
SU N D AY, SEPT. I
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. open dlacuaalon.
Florida Power and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue. Sanford.
Alanon meeting. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St..
Sanford.
M O N D AY, SEPT. 2
Bowling league for mentally handicapped.
4-3:45 p.m.. Altam onte Lanes. 280 Douglas Ave.
Call 862-2500 for Information.
Rebos Club A A. noon and 3:30 p.m., closed. 8
p.m.. step. 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry,
Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed.
Apopka Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p .m , closed,
Apopka Episcopal Churrh. 615 Highland.
Al Anon Step and Study. 8 p.m.. Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior citizens. B p.m..
closed. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.

WINTER SPRINGS

Inm

I M *• 19

fiir*

W A L L Kastlag, la*.
1007 &amp; S c n t o f d A « *
S a n lo r d

C L O S E D M O ND AY N1TES

•"'SfTCf 4 Hrtff

Itrw crviillonn S u ggested

321-3600

323-7152

M. ml

I tnlri I ard*
AmpINt

H#vrf 4 mtnlmmr

Catered I’.uilr* for Sat A Sun Afternoon. Call Inr Information

_____

LA B O R D A Y H O LID A Y
R E FU S E S C H ED U LE
DEAR REFUSE CUSTOMER,
THERE WILL BE NO GARBAGE PICKUP FOR
CUSTOMERS SERVED BY THE CITY OF SANFORD REFUSE
DEPARTMENT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1985.
MONDAY'S PICKUP WILL BE MADE TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 3, AND TUESDAY'S PICKUP WILL BE
MADE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1985.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL THE REFUSE
DIVISION OFFICE, AT 322-3161 EXT. 285.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR COOPERATION.

�E v e n in g H erald

BEN

IU SPS M U M )

WATTENBERG

A Message To (Rep. Robert) Garcia

300 N FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Codr 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Friday, Auguit 30, 1985—aA
W«yn« L . Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Molvln Adkins, Advertising Diroctor
llortlr IJrilvrry; W t-rk. A) |0 Mouth $4 75 J Montln
t i t 25; 6 Month*. S 2 7 fJO Year $51 0 0 liv M ill Week,
i t V ) Month t f i DO 3 Month* $18 00 0 Months. $32 50

Vrnr. MO 00

And On
Bright Side
T o this y e a r 's drum roll o f ann iversaries,
add one m ore: It w as 20 yrars a g o this August
that 35 p erson s w ere killed and m o re than
4.000 arrested d u rin g the rioting hy blacks In
the Watts area o f Los Angeles. W a tts w as not
the first of the terrible riots that boiled out of
A m erica 's b la ck ghettos du rin g the 1060s,
but It w as a m o n g the very w orst. And It
shocked the n ation into a realization o f what
m ight be e x p e c te d If m ore blacks w ere not
jrerm llted a b e tte r chance at the A m erican
dream .
So. 20 years a lter Watts it’s w orth con sid­
erin g what has been achieved A re blacks In
fact better o ff or are the In d ica tion s of
progress m ere ve n ee r? Many In clin e toward
the latter view
Is It not t r u e , a fte r a ll. th a t b la c k
unem ploym ent ra le s are rou ghly tw ic e those
for whites? Is not median fa m ily In co m e for
blacks only 58 percen t o f that for w h ile s ? A n ­
nul blacks tw ic e as likely as w h ite s to be
v ic tim s o f s e r io u s , v io le n t c r im e : and
statistically far m ore likely to c o m m it vlnfrnt
crim es? And, m ost w orrisom e o f all. is It not
true that th e fa m ily stru ctu re o f black
Am ericans Is deterioratin g, with n early half ol
all black fa m ilies today headed b y fem alrs
com pared to o n ly 21 percent In I9 6 0 ?
Yes. all o f th is Is true. And yes. It Is also
m uch less than the full story.
The case fo r a steadily Im p rovin g, pro
greasing black A m e ric a was rn m p eltln g ly put
tiy author a n d p o litical com m en ta tor Hen J.
W allen b erg in h is 19B4 trunk, T h r G(xxl Newft
/s The Had News Is Wrong. Mere Is som e of
what Mr W a lle n b e r g found sign ifica n t, and
s lg n lllc a n t ly h e a r t e n in g , a b o u t b la c k
Am erica:
— 6.2 m illion blacks now live in suburbs
com pared in 2 .5 million in I9 6 0 and I 7
m illion in 1950. A s a percentage of the black
population, th a t's 23 percent com p ared to 13
percent In 1 9 6 0 an d 1 2 percent In 1950.
— 44 percent o f ull black fam ilies now own
their homes T h e figure was 35 percent In
I9 6 0 and 38 percen t in HMK)
— As ol 1962, I I million b lo ck s wenenrolled In c o lle g e , In 1970, the n u m ber was
Just over 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 ; utul In 19&lt;&gt;0 it was
227.000
— Hy 1982. black Am ericans betw een the
ages oi 25 and 29 w ere only tw o tenths of a
year behind w h ite s In that a g e grou p lu
m edian years o f school com pleted (12 7 years
for blacks to 12.9 years for whites).
— Th e n tu n liers o f blacks In tin- most
lu crative o c c u p a tio n a l ca te g o rie s — pro
fesslottal, te c h n ic a l, m an agerial, and ad
m lnlslratlve — Increased an a sto u n d in g 9 !
percent In the 12 years from 1970 to 19H2
(from 802,000 In 1970 to 1.533,000 In 1982)
Per c a p ita In com e (m easured In constant
dollars) for b la ck s Increased by 21 percent
from 1970 lo 1980 while Whites exp erien ced
an increase o f o n ly Hi percent
one o f many
Indications that black A m ericans arc run
row ing the e a rn in g s gap with w h iles
— The p ercen ta g e o f blacks liv in g below the
poverty line d e clin ed from 33.5 percent In
1970 to 21 5 percent In 1980 HI n on ca sh
Income Is cou n ted ).
Three years a lte r the Watts riot the Kcrncr
C om m ission — appointed by then-l'resldetit
Lyndon J oh n son — surveyed n landscape ol
urban rioting and racial discord and reached
a celeb ra ted co n clu sio n
S a id the c o m ­
mission: "O u r nation Is m ovin g tow a rd two
societies, o n e black, one w hite — separate
and unequal "
Events s in ce then show c o n v in c in g ly that
the Kcrncr C o m m issio n was w ro n g That Is
som ething &lt;&gt;l w h ich all A m erica n s con Isproud even as they recognize that much
rem ains in b e accom plished

Th e Census Bureau has Just released the
poverty numbers for 1984. Watch this space for
comment soon There will be comment, from
me and others, because the bureau served up
data that are honest and comprehensive —
Including 10 different ways of measuring
jxjvrrty.
You don't get an argument anywhere in the
world if you say the U.S, census operation Is the
best there is. Over the years, the bureau has
fought off attempts to put political spin on Its
statistics Crnsusdata are credible. They tell us
where we've been and where we are — I hereby
enabling us to try to Bgure out where w r're
going
You cart forget all that If Rep Robert Garcia.
D-N Y has his wav. In an Orwellian spasm
Garcia has taken It upon himself to try to write
and rewrite the history o f our time, John Peter
Zenger. wake up! Numbers, as well as words
can be victims of censors..
Here's the Issur; Until recently. Ihe bureau
pu blished one " o f f ic i a l " poverty rate. It
measured only cash Income. That rale Is
Important, but it doesn't tell the whole story
After all. in recent decades America started

huge programs for food stamps rent supple­
ments and Medicaid, just to begin a long list
These programs — more than S I 00 billion
worth per year — help poor people even though
they are not "cash .” Go to a supermarket with
food stamps and you come out with groceries
Because statistics should reflect reality, the
bureau began publishing several rates dial
measured p o verty by including non-cash
benefits.
Enter Gam a He is chairman o f the House
Subcommittee on Census and Population He's a
smart man knows a lot aboui social statistics,
and Is usually a Irtend of the rrnsus But he
comes Irom a district In the Bronx that is thr
poorest In America He knows that If you count
non-cash income, the poverty rale comes down
— for example Irom a 1983 otllclal" national
rate of 15 percent in poverty in an adjusted ratr
that goes as low as lO percent
Garcia Is apparrnlly worried that it the
American people arc Informed that there Is less
real poverty now and less than there- used lo be.
they won't support poverty programs So he
quletlv arranged that Ihr House Appropriations
bill contain "report language direr ling ihe

Census Bureau to cease publishing the nasty
numbers
If you don't like tt. dump It. That's what
happens when the Soviets rewrite history tn
their official encyclopedia. It's what happened
when Galileo was forced by the church to deny
that the earth moved around the sun (although
thccarth kept doingltfGarcla challenges the validity ol the data. He
maintains that what he wants is a broad study
of the Issue That's not a bad idea: Iherr are no
glitch-free statistics But conducting a study Is
no rrason to close down a data scries that
already has five years on it. Like many wines,
economic numbers take on value as they age.
revealing the Impact of recessions, booms and
policy changes
Now the legislation moves to the Senate It
Sen Paul Laxalts subcommittee doesn't act.
Garcia's gambit may well prevail
Thr message Irom Garcia ts not only Intellec­
tually corrosive, but politically foolish On the
Inteliertual front. It would announce that the
Census Bureau Is engaged in politics, not social
science Who would believe anything they pul

out?

SCIENCE WORLD

FARMING WORLD

New Drug
May End
Leprosy

Asian
Sales
Upward

By Rem jrs Tb sm bu sw sm y
SHAHDRA. India tu ril - A com
btnallon drug treatment promises
Ihe eventual elimination of leprosy,
but the fear and social stigma
attached to the age-old scourge
prevent people from coming to get
the medicine
There are I I million lepers in the
world today, and 4 million of them
are In India, more than any other
country
The therapy, called Multi-Drug
Treatment (MDTl. has been In­
troduced In Asia over Ihe past few
years to bring the crippling disease
under control It has been used In
the United States for nearly a
decade.

WASHINGTON IIJI'll - The govcrm ntiil predicts US agricultural
s . i |i s u&gt; South Asia will increase by
19 percent in ihr coming fiscal year,
largely bn .insc of heavy wheat
sales in Pakistan.
Ih e me reuse will place South
Asian purchases of US (arm goods
at .i Imiiii S7t&gt;o million in llscal I9HH.
ihe Agriculture Department said
In ns South Asia Outlook and
Situation Summary, the depart­
ment s Leon until Research Service
said India and Pakistan are likely lo
mi ic .im - I heir edible nil imports in
llscal I9HII
Hut no signlleant g a in s are
exprt le d lor U S soybean nil
Imi ausr ol tin still compel it ion from
palm ml marketed by oilier nations
I 'S cotton cxjMirtrrs will proba­
bly l.n i- a Ilium d market because of
n i otd i spoil,d&gt;lr i niton supplies In
Pakistan, the research service said
I tn agent v said exports tci Smith
Asia ate down lo $641 million tn Ihr
current llscal year oft about 25
pelt i mi 11 ont Iasi year
Win at sales are oil nearly 2D
percent despite larger exports to
il,ingl.idi-sli tM-eause India ended
i ointtii tt lal wheat Im ports and
■limpetllurs met inosi ol Pakistan x
nit teased demand
the agency
s a lt I

I s
e x p o rts ul so yb ea n oil
dii&gt;p|H-d about 25 jiereent. largely
because nl unproved South Aslan
oilseed Itatvesls and com p elllluil
limit pull it oil l lie ir|K&gt;rl added
Cotton exports 1mm the United
M alts plunged 70 percent below
last veai s levels largely- because
Pakistan stopped lis imports and
icnew ed its competition hi the
ll.ingbidcsti market ihe report said

Please Write
L e tte r s to the e d ito r are
w elco m e for pu blication. A ll
le t t e r e muet be elgncd and
In c lu d e ■ m ailin g a d d re s s
sod. If posslbls, s telep h o n e
num ber. The Evening H erald
r e s e r v e s the right to e d it
le t t e r e to avoid lib e l end to
accom m odate space.

"T h e new MDT Is very effective."
said Dr R H ThangaraJ. head of the
International Leprosy Association.

VIEWPOINT

MDT. which consists of three
drugs, rtfamplcln. clnta/lmlnr and
dapsone. “ will shorten the duration
of the disease and kill Ihe bacilli, Ihe
causative of leprosy, anywhere be­
tween two weeks to three months."
he u ld.
The treatment was developed five
years ago m India, but It has still n o t'
been used on a wide scale

Women In Birth
By P a tric ia McCormack
NEW Y O R K lU PU — Armed with
new evidence thill American women
arc widely inlsinloinicd Ji I k h i I blriti
control, the American College ol
Obstetric* and G ynecology lias
launched its first In fo rm a tio n
campaign ever tn help w om en
prevent unplanned pregnancies
" W r ' r e t a l k i n g a b o u t an
estimated 3.3 million unintended
pregnancies In thr Untied Stales
says Dr
L u r lla K lein, b o a rd
inrmber and Immediate pasi presi
drill ol tIn* American College ol
Obstetrics anti Gynecology I ACOGI
"We should have a national policy
ol m aking ronincepl Ives easily
available in all lrmales w ho want to
prevent unintended pregnancy,''
Klein said In an interview
To reach more women, especially
teenagers. ACOG has begun a
public Information program. People
can call a hotline. I HDD INTENDS,
to order a free pamphlet — "T h e
Facts What you need tn knowu I m ii i i contraceptives to make the
right choice
'W e re very much Interested lu
preventing die llrst pregnanty lor
girls In school especially." Klein
says of ihe llrst public Information
program ever funded by ACOG
T o prepare (or the campaign,
ACOG com buttoned a poll by the
Gallup organization in llutl out what
thr public knows and thinks about
contraception and teenage acxuuli
tv

tins poll showed dial American
women overestim a ted by large
margins the risks of almost all
lormsof contraception Klein said.
Three quarters o( all women Irll
dial there were substantial risks
with the hlrlli control pill. Including
die risk ol c a n c e r." she said
Actually the modern birdi coni ml
proln is against many forms nt
cancer
Only 16 percent ol women cor­
rectly said dun the risks of dying
Irom t til id l ■in h are higher than Ihe
risks ol dying from birth control
pills. Klein said
We also ftiutid that knowledge ol
die ellredvcness ol contraception
was poor and people generally
node lest limited the effectiveness by
wide margins ."

Morr than half the world's popula­
tion appears lo be Immune lo the
M y c o b a c te riu m L ep ra e w h ich
causes leprosy, and those who are
susceptible usually gel It only after
years of contact with lepers
Early detection and treatment
with ttie multi-drug therapy pre­
vents development of scars and
dr font) Hies
But Health Minister Mohslna
Ktdwal St)Id recently Ihe disease still
(loses problems. Unr of them Is that
(tie social stigma long attached to
lepers stops people from admitting
they have thr disease and coming
forward for treatment.

Klein says ihe pollsters also
learned that 9 out of evrrv 10
Americans tell that sex cdueullun
should lie taught in schools More
than H out nl ID women wanted n
i.night liefnrr high school and 54
(K-recnt lavurrd teaching It in clemeniarv school

"Those who suspert that they
have leprosy often hide It and pass
through the In fe e llo u s sta ge,
sp rea d in g th e d is e a s e ." said
Harchan Singh, occupational thera­
pist at the L ep ro sy Home In
Shahdra, 30 miles outside ol New
Delhi

"Obviously. Americans, and most
particularly American women, are
asking tor help
to help avntd
pregnancies lor their daughters."
Klein said

The disease still means ostracism
from the normal world. Leprosy
victims bold enough In udmlt their
alllletlon risk losing their Jobs and
may end up begging lo survive.
Some believe they brought the
disease on themsrl ves

Klein says birth control educa­
tion through programs such as the
ACOG hotline, and more readily
available contraceptives could stem
the rising U S abortion rale

JACK ANDERSON

BERRYS WORLD

M

o b

'B u s e s '

By Jack A n derson
And
Dale Van A tt a
W ASH IN G TO N — Ever since
Atlantic City legalized gambling
Malta lainlllrs In the Northeast have
been Irving to gtab a piece of the
action So far they have failed lo
acquire control of the casinos that
line tin- txi.irtlw.ilk — but not for
want ul trying
Crime I.unities have tried to inllltralr through various labor unions
and companies dial provide essen­
tial services lo the gambling pal­
aces They've also zeroed In on the
lucrative "superbus" Junkets for
big Maker. gamblers.
These aren't the widely udvcrtlacd
bus rides that lure older folks away
from their Bingo games with free
meal tickets and a roll of quarters
lor die slot machines. The superbus
deals are tailored for usually no
more than 25 high rollers who can
— and do — drop lar^c amounts at
the crap tables.
Our associate Tony Capaccto has
reviewed evidence gathered by New
Jersey State Police Investigators
d u rin g a tw o-year u n d erco ver

x *- I*

W

mission called Operation Eagle
They learned that at Irasi 90 of the
200 Junket operators licensed to do
business in Atlantic City have been
a s s o c ia te d w ith an In te rs ta te
network o f junket organizers con­
trolled by a reputed "c a p o " in the
Bonunno crim e fam ily. Charles
Muslllo of Staten Island. N Y
A statem ent the Jersey cops
submitted lo the President's Com ­
mission on Organized Crime last
June Identified four casino* the
n e t w o r k d id b u s in e s s w ith
Caesar’s, the Clatidge. the Trop
Icanu and the Sands None of the
casinos has been accused of any
wrongdoing on ihr contrary, they
were the victims.
Muslllo Is among 11 men who
were Indicted for a junket operation
that allegedly milked I I 6 million
from Caesar's between March and
August 1983
Muslllo refused to talk with us.
His a tto rn ey did cunflrm that
Muslllo was one of several persons
convicted In 1977 lor their roles in a
scheme that led to the collapse of
the Bank of Bloomfield. N.J Bui he

a y

In to

C a s in o s

said his client s Involvement In thr
Junket business was "m in im al."
and said that "In thou sands of
jiagrs ol grand jury testimony his
name was mentioned only once hy
one wliness '*
The stale police statement, how ­
ever. Id e n t ifie d M u slllo as a
Bonunno family member who "In d i­
rectly" rccelveid commissions from
licensed Junket operators T h e
commissions went to Casino Cara­
vans Inc., a now--defunct firm In
Fori Lauderdale. Flu , that was
In co rp orated tn late 1982 by
Muslllo's two sons
"Casino Caravans rontrolled the
artwork** operation Into (the) four
casinos m Atlantic City." the police
statement said
During Operation Eagle, thr Casi­
no Caravans ofTice manager boasted
to an undercover cop thut he "had
75 percent of Caesar's business"
since It had opened.
The In dictm en t ch aigcs that
Caesar's paid the "front" company
under Casino Caravan's control
$ 1.200 to f I .BOO per superbus. for a
total of 81.6 million during the
five month period

Thr payments were based on
ratings of the high rollers' value lo
thr casino, figuring Ihr amount
they had "dropped" at the gaming
tables during the junket The more
money the customers lost, the more
likely the networks' casino business
would increase.
But the police Investigators found
evidence that the player ratings
made by the pit man presiding over
one of Caesar's crap tables were
systematically inflated to make the
losses bigger. In one audit, for
example, the state Investigators
found that Caesar's paid c o m ­
m issions based on a total o f
8500.000 lost by about 1.000 crap
shoolcts on 61 Junkets. But when
they Interviewed the gamblers, the
police added up unly 867.200 in
total losses
A Caesar's attorney told us the
casino hasn't seen any evidence of
large-scale exaggeration of junket
customers’ losses. He added that
Caesar's stopped doing business
with the Junket firm in late 1983.
and Ihe suspect pit man quit that
year.

�SPO R TS
Seminoles Are A Hit With Coach; Scrimmage Set For Today
By Ssm Cook
Herald Sports Editor
It s two weeks and counting
for coach Have Mosurc's mighty
hand of 35 Seminole football
players. They will go through a
controlled scrimmage today at
.1.10 and lhen the coaches will
hit the road tor Cocoa Beach to
scout Titusville Astronaut In a
Jamboree.
Astronaut, one of the top 3A
powers In the state thr past
decade, will be Seminole s Sept.
13 opponent for the season
opener Reserved seal tickets are
on sale at the high school. Just
$20 will cover the five home

games along with all junior
varsity and freshman games.
Call 322-4352 and ask for Sherry
Koke or Cynthia Jones for Info.
Mosure said he Is satisfied with tackling and aggression can
the Tribe s progress, especially overcome that."
T o d a y 's s c r im m a g e Is a
In some o f the Intangible areas
" I 'm real pleased with the gamc-lype situation where the
overall team attitude, condlditon offense runs 12 plays and then
level and mental toughness." hr takes a brrak. Goal-tine and
said. "T h e y are a well dis­ overtime situations will also be
ciplined group and they love to Incorporated. All of the plays
and formations have been dia­
hit."
The first-year coach said the grammed beforehand. Only the
last quality is o f upmost Im­ strong ami weak sides will be
portance. " W e 'r e not b ig ." determined by lhe hashmarks
Mosure said. "W e're going to be (wide and short side of the field)
Mosure said the scrimmage
oulslzrd every week but gang-

Fo o tb all

will be videotaped with a narra­
tor and the organized flow of
plays gives the coaches and
players a very detailed account
and a much easier way of
o b s e r v in g s u c c e s s e s an d
mistakes during the Him review.
Seminole's backfleld will have
s o p h o m o r e J e f f B la k e at
quarterback with Dwayne Willis
and Willie Evans at running
backs in the veer Louts Brown
and Mike Levant lend depth. The
receiving corps Is comprised of
flanker Herbert HUIery, spilt end
David Rape and tight ends
Sonny Osborn or Ed Banks
Mosure said he Is especially

pleased with his blocking corps
of guards Carl Tipton and Alan
Kendall along with center James
Rowe. Wen Springfield and Jack
Jackson has moved Into the
starting tackle spots
Defensively, newcomer Clint
Hoyles and Ernest Lewis occupy
the ends while Mike Lusier and
Terrence Handers are al the
tackles. The Ifncbucklng trio,
another strong urea, ts manned
by Bryan Brinson, Jerry Littles
and Rick Kelly. Even slrongrr ts
i he the defensive secondary with
Dexter Franklin, Thrron Llggons. Horace Kntghi and Dennis
Lawrence.

Mosure said Kenny Morris and
Osborn are fighting it out for the
p u n tin g duty. M osu re said
Morns was Injured In a car
accident but should return next
w eek . IHake and W illis will
handle the placcklcklng In Ills
absence.
"H orace Knlghl has been do­
ing a hclluvu job In the second­
a ry ." Mid Mosure about the only
newcomer to the veteran group
"Offensively. Blake and Willis
have looked good. Hanks and
Obsorn are bolh plusses at light
end. We still need m ore conslstentcy at quarterback and al
wide receiver, though."

Lloyd
D rills
Reggi
NEW YORK (UP!) - For 14
years Chris Evert Lloyd has
refused to lose In the first week
of the U.S. Open, and Raffaella
Reggi wasn't up to stopping
history
Th e No. I w om en 's seed
Thursday night rolled over the
19-year-old Italian 6-0, 6-3 In a
second.miind match.
"It's sometimes hard to get
p s y c h e d up fo r the e a r ly
rounds." she said "When you're
17 or 18 It's easy. Bui al 30
years, that's when concentration
comes In. that fighting spirit.
“ And. I guess, my pride. I still
really hate to lose. 1 felt she
really had no weapon. If 1 hit It
comer to comer, she’d make ao
error eventually."
None o f the women seeds was
defeated In the third day of play.
Only No. 12 Johan Krlek among
the tnen failed to live up to
expectations, losing 2-6, 6-3. 6-4.
0-1 to O rrg H o lm e s.
In other second-round mat­
ches, top seed John McEnroe
returned to form after barely
squeaking through the first
rou n d, e lim in a t in g M a rtin
Wostenholme of Canada 6-0. 7-0
(7-3). 0-1.
Wimbledon champion Boris
Becker, the No. 8 seed and No. 1
topic of Interest, moved a step
closer to a quarterfinal meeting
with McEnroe, overwhelm ing
H uub v a n H o e c k e l o f th e
Netherlands 6-3. 6-0.0-2.
The confrontation would be
Ihetr second, McEnroe defeated
(he 17-year-old West German
6-4, 6-4 In Milan ihe Iasi week of
March
B ut T h u r s d a y M c E n r o e
needed to avoid thinking about
the past or the future and
concentrate on the present. He
escaped the first round with a
fifth-set tie breaker victory over
Shlom o G H ck strln . A ga in st
Wostenholme. he again lacked
his usual aggressiveness
"1 definitely gol tentative," the
defending Open champion said.
"I really wanted to win the
second set because I really felt
like I was just playing his game.
I got Into the same rut that I got
Into ugalnsl Shlom o."
Becker eagerly anticipates a
meeting with McEnroe.
"H e was the last Wimbledon
champion: I'm the new one."
said tennis' latest phenomenon.
"1 think he's the best player tn
the world and I'm trying to be
the best. It's going to be a good
match. I think."
The comeback of the often
Injured A n d rea J aeger, the
former No. 2 women's player,
w as s id e tr a c k e d by K a th y
Jordan 3-0.6-2. 6-2

3 Deadlocked
At B.C. Open
ENDICOTT. N Y. (UPI) - Sec­
ond-year pro Joey Slndelar has
played more rounds lhan any­
one olse on the professional golf
lour this season and says he has
never enjoyed the game more
"T h a t's 101 rounds and I
really feel great. No problems at
all." he said Thursday after hU
5 -u n d er-p a r 66 tied B ruce
Lletike and Brett Upper for the
lead In the first round of the
$300,000 B.C. Open at the En
Jote Gold Club.
" I Just can't get enough of the
gam e." said Slndelar. who grew
up less than 40 miles from the
tournament site tn Die south
central New York community o f
Horseheada.

N*f ltd fW ti buyUmmr Vlnctni

Shane Letterlo, above, beats the rush to
unload a pass In Ihe direction of, at left, Ray
Hartsfleld and Sheldon Richards, top. The
pass, lower left, fell Incomplete but Letterlo

later hooked up for a 55 yard T D bomb with
Byron Washington. The offense dominated
the defense as Lake M ary drew 2,500 fans to
Its fall sports rally Thursday night.

Rams' Offense Explodes Before 2,500 Fans
By C hris F lster
H erald B porta W r ite r
Knot ball fever la spreading like w Hill tri­

al Lake Mary High School A good
example Is the 2.500 people I hat showed
up Thursday night to watch Ihe Rams
scrimmage.
"That's the most people I've ever seen
at a scrimmage." Lake Mary coach Harry
Nelson said. "T h is Is really a first-class
operation."
Those 2,500 fans got a good preseason
look at what should be u team to reckon
wlih In )OH5 In thr Seminole Athletic
Conference and District 5A-4. Lake Mary
will compete In a Jamboree Friday. Sept.
6. al Lake Howell before opening the
season Friday. Sept, 13 at Apopka.
Nelson, starting his third year at the
helm of ihe Rams, had plenty to be
pleased with Thursday night from the
freshm an squad rlgh i on through
varsity.
Offensively for the varsity. Junior
quarterback Shane Lctlrrto looked sharp
along with senior m im ing back-receiver
Ray Hartsfleld. sophomore fullback John
Curry and Junior m im ing back Anthony

lead. Later In the quarter. Hay Hartsfleld
broke loose (or an 18-yard TD scamper.

Football

K ru su d kicked the point after for a 14-0
lend

Hartsfleld.
"L elterlo looks good back there."
Nelson said. "H e's Ihe kind o f player that
makes things happen.”
Hartsfleld. loo. has been m aking
things happen for the Ruins since he was
a freshman Tills seuson. the fleet-footed
senior will play both ways again hul hr
moMl likely won't lx- needed full-time al
quarterback with Lellerlo showing hr
could handle Ihe Job Thursday. Mike
Schmll. who shared Ihe (Jit slot with
Hartsfleld Iasi year, didn't come out lor
football tills fall.
1 lie varsity played lor 40 minutes ll
scored three touchdowns and added a
15-yard Held goal by Jeff Pommlcr Mike
Remind was perfect on two extra points
and Pommlcr added a third (or a 24-0
victory.
Soptiomoie Curry opened the scoring
tn Ihe first quarter with a 10-yard run
and Renaud kicked the I’AT (or a 7 0

"Curry and Kay both rim well and
(fu llb a ck ) B rett Molle th rew sonic
hcllacioua blocks." said Nelson. "M olle
runs the ball tough, too. As a fullback,
he's Ihe best-kept secret In Central
Florida.”
Letterlo cranked up his arm In the
secon d q u a r te r and (m ind B yro n
Washington on a 55-yard touchdown
pass. I’ommler klckrd the I’A T lor a 21-0
lead I’ommlrr added a field goal to
complete Ihe scoring
With plenty of talent at the skilled
positions. Nelson is now looking for some
offensive linemen to fill the s|xit» vacated
by the behemoths that paved the way for
a district tltlr In 1984
"The lust piece of Ihe puzzle Is the
offensive tine." Nelson said. " W e ’ ve gol
some people corning up w'ho are looking
tough."
Nelson said Ihe linemen he's counting
on Include Dave ^llira. Larry Stankovlls.

Bosco, K o zlo w ski Propel
BYU P ast Boston C o lleg e

Bucs C lo se In
On QB Young
T A M P A IU1M) — A ttorn ey
Leigh Steinberg can scramble
almost as well as his celebrated
client, quarterback Steve Young.
With little tangible evidence lo
hack T h u rsd a y 's op tim ism .
Slclnberg claimed Young and
the Tamini Bay Buccaneers are
closing In on a deal that will
b r in g Ih e d is g r u n tle d L os
Angeles Express star to thr NFL
club within iwo weeks
The Buccaneers, who own the
N F L r ig h ts to th e fo rm e r
Brigham Young star, had Young
In for a physical exam and light
workout Aug 2 as Tampa Bay
coach Lerman Bennett lookrd
on
United States Football Leugur
C o m m issio n er H a rry Usher
g r a n t e d th e B u c c a n e e r s
p e r m is s io n to In s p e c t the
merchandise, hut has m ain­
tained that his league retains thr
rights lo Young. Th r NFL has
proceeded cautiously In pursuit
o f Young because o f an antitrust
suit filed against It by the USFL.
"W e arc certain that a deal
with Tampa Bay can be worked
out. and I would expect that
something Is going to happen
within the nrxt 10 days." said
Steinberg, who negotiated a re­
cord-selling contract for Young
at L o s A n g c lc a w o r th an
estimated $40 million "Steve
wants to play tn Tampa Bay and
he's excited ubout the opportu­
nity.”

Football
Tw o very hot quarterbacks.
Joe Thelsnianu and Steve DeHrrg. m eet Friday night at
broiling Tumpa Stadium In ihe
final exhibition game for ihr
W a s h in g to n R e d s k in s and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
The RrdsKIns. 3-0. are shoot­
ing for their first undefeated
exhibition record In 25 years
while Ihe Buccaneers. 1-2, are
hoping for some impetus to lake
Into ther regular-season opener
at Chicago Sept. 8 New coach
Leeman Bennett won for the first
time as a Buccaneer last week as
Tampa Bay beat New Orleans
14 10.
“ I like playing a top team In
ihr final gamr of u pre-season.'*
said Bennett, who has had two
defensive startrrs — end Lee Roy
Srlriinit and strong safety Mark
Cotney — placed on Injured
r e s e r v e In r e c e n t w e e k s .
"Washington was un outstand­
ing team Iasi year and they've
added a great running back in
George Rogers. We need a tough
gamr to get ready for the Bears."
T h e Buccaneers Th u rsd ay
signed sixth-yclr defensive buck
I’aul Dombroskl and wulved
rookie corner hark Jlni Rockford.

Marty Hopkins and Nick Armalo.
Defensively, the Rams may have one of
the best secondaries around with a pair
o f e x p e r ie n c e d sen iors tn iiy r im
Washington and Hartsfleld and a tillentrd sophomore In Sheldon Richards.
"Richards has the kind o f ability that
he can he as good as he wants to be,"
Nelson said. "A n d he's playing back
there w ill, two very good seniors. W e've
got an excellent secondary and good
linebackers, loo."
Prior lo the varsity scrim mage, ihe
Junior vnrslty and freshman squads wen I
al It. Players to wntch for the JV this
season In clu d e q u a rte rb a c k K e lly
McKinnon and running backs Rlchurd
Burkett anil Terry "The Cat" Miller
Nelson said he wasn't too sure about
the freshman tram at first hut said It has
been progressing nicely "I dldn'1 think
the freshm an team would he that
strong." hr said "But lliey ’ re doing
prrlty w rll "
Another reason for the big crowd
Thursday night was Ihe Lake Mary High
hand which performed Inbetwrrn the JV
and varsity scrlmniagrs

N wM r w * » r Chvck UrrshM

3 Of A Kind
When Lake Brantley High
School Installed its new
football lights recently, it
m a d e th e A l t a m o n t e
Springs high school one of
the most unique and pro
gressive complexes In the
state. Lake B ra n tle y's
Booster Club moved the
old football lights to the
softball field. Brantley
now has three — baseball,
football and softball —
lighted fields on campus.

EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J
(Ul’ l) — Boston College knew
what lo expect (rum Hobble
Bosco Thursday night. Glen
Kozlowski was thr guy who
surprised them.
Kozlowski was Bosco's favorite
target on u night when the
Brigham Y ou ng quarterback
completed 35-of-53 passes for
508 y a r d s and three
tou ch dow n s. K o zlo w s k i ac­
counted tor 10 receptions. 241
. yards and a TD while making
some catchrs that frustrated Ihe
Eagles’ defense In BYU's 28-14
Kickoff Classic victory.
"Kozlowski Is u lot faster than
I thought he w as." Boston Col­
lege coach Jack Hlcknell said.
Thai’s because Kozlowski perpetualcs the myth that he's Just
another alow possession re­
ceiver Alter the gamr. he ad­
mitted he runs a 4.5 40-yard
dash but he usually tells people
how slow he la.
Against an Inexperienced sec­
ondary. Kozlowski often outran
his defender and Bosco's arm.
Bui he also treat the Eagles'
defenders back for thr hall
several limes — once for a
51-yard gain"I have the advantage when
the trail Is undrrthrown." said
Kozlowski, who split Rorrry
Perryman and Cart Pellegutu on
the 51-yard gain. "1 have a
better view Pm looking at the
trail.
"W e took advantage of some
things In thr Boston College
secondary.”
That secondary Itad Just one

Football
returning alarlrr — corner track
Nell Iton. lion had one ol four
Interceptions against Ho m o and
recovered a fumble but nothing
the Eagles tried could stop Ihr
attack that lifted U^D to Hit*
national filler lust year.
The Cougars also have the
country's longest current winn­
ing streak at 25 games.
BOWDEN BEFUDDLED
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - The
opening game of any college
football season leads to uncer­
tainty among coaches, but Muck
Brown of Tulanc and Florida
State's Bobby Bowden seem to
Ire downright befuddled as they
approach Saturday's contest.
Bowden will Ire going against a
Green Wave (earn that has a new
c o a c h and fe w r e t u r n i n g
starters. Brown will be facing a
strong Seminole offense that has
the team ranked 13th In preseuson polls, bul a squad I hut
wua 78th In (lie nation last year
on defense.
" I Just don't know what to
think of Tulanc ” ikrwdcn said.
"Preparing for a new staff In the
first game makes for a lot of
guesswork. 1 mean, we'U be
guessing all day.”
Brown, who played football at
FSU In 1971 and 1972. Is still
getting to know his players and
recently Joked lo his squad,
‘ ‘ Lost 11 men out of (he locker
room have to start.”
I

�4A— Ev.nlng H*r»ld, Sonford, FI.

Friday. Aug io, i m

Niekro Notches 297th Against Descending Angels
United Preaa In tern a tio n a l
It'n getting lime for the numbers
Kame In bavball and If the California
Angela continue to play (he way they
have been, their num ber will be up
beforr they know It.
The Angels watched their lead In the
American league East shrink to I V*
games over the Kansas City Royals
Thursday night as Phil Niekro. ringing
up some Impressive numbers of his
own. nob ned his 297lh career victory
In pitching the New York Yankees to a
4 0 triumph over the Angels.
"W e can’t keep doing this," said
C aliforn ia m anager Gene Mauch.
whose club has played only .500 ball

since Aug. 8. "W e gave the game away
In the first Inning. Tomorrow had
belter lie better."
Speaking of numbers, the Yankees'
victory enabled them to pull within
four games of the Toronto lllue .Jays In
the A L East.
Niekro scattered four hits over seven
Innings before giving way to Dave
Klghettl. who completed the shutout
with two Innings of hitless relief.
The Yankees sent nine batters to the
plate In the first Inning off starter and
ioser Kirk McCasklll. 0-9. Rickey
Henderson led off with a single and
W illie Randolph walked. Don Mat*
tlngly's fly to left advanced both

22nd home run to back the slx-hlt
pitching of Mike Boddicker and power
the Orioles.
»
R ed 8 0 s 17, Indians 2
At Cleveland. Tony Armas drove In
five runs for the fourth time in his
career and Rich Gedman hit a threerun homer In a seven-run eighth
In n in g to help Red S ox snap a
five-game losing streak. Boston starter
Bruce Hurst. 9-10. struck out I I and
allowed six hits to get the victory.
Ramon Romero. 2-3. took the loss.
T ig e rs 3. A 's 3
At Detroit. Lance Parrish's basesloaded single with none out In the
bottom o f the 12th Inning scored Lou

A.L. Baseball
runners and they both scored on Dave
Winfield's single to left.
Ron Massey singled and Don Baylor
was hit by a pitch to load the bases. It
was the 22nd time Baylor has been hit
by a pitch this season and 190th of his
career, breaking the A L record of 189
set by Minnie Mlnoso The majorleague record of 243 Is held by Ron
Hunt, a former New York Met.
O rioles 7. M ariners 0
At Baltimore. Ldrry Sheets drove In
four runs and Mike Young smashed his

Whitaker and gave the Tigers their
victory. Parrish homered In the sixth
Inning to tic the score. BUI Scherrer.
3-1. was the winner and Steve Mura.
1-1. the loser.
W h ite Sox 8, R a n gers 5
At Chicago. Reid Nichols singled
home Ozzlc Guillen from third base
with one out In the lOth Inning, giving
the White Sox the victory. Guillen led
off with a double o ff Dave Schmidt,
5-4. and Luis Salazar sacrificed.
Nichols then singled over a drawn-ln
Infield to make a winner of Dan
Splllnen 4-3. The game, delayed 67
minutes by rain at the start, ended
with a mist falling.

R o s e F in d s

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
STANDINGS
NATIONAL LIAO U I
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(Fontenotth.) » pm
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(Tlbfct 4 IS), 7 SJpm
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Near Yort at SanFrancisco
Moulton at St Loull. night
Plttthurgh at Cincinnati, night
Philadelphia at Lot Angeiet. night
Montreal at San Diego night

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ath Inn., rain

Boston I).Cleveland)
Detroit). Oakland I 11) Inning*)
Baltimore 7. Seattle t
Now York a. California 0
Chicago «. Teeas I (14 Innings)
F r id a y 's Oantet
(All Times I OT)
Oakland (Sutton t) )l at Detroit
(Morris Id f). ) Jtpm
Chicago (Bannister All) at Toronto
(Key 14*1, ) Jtpm
California (Slaton » 14or Romanict |J a)
at Now Yorii IBystrom * II. Ip m
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(Devil 77). I 05p m
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(Haas741,4 Upm
Boston (Olode SI) at Minnesota
IButcher 4 II).I Up m
Kansas City IBleck ll)| at Teaot
(Hough II I)). | it pm
Saturday's domet
Chicago at Toronto
California at New York
Boston at Minnesota. 7. twl night
Kentat City at Tatat. night
ClevandatMlIweulee night
Oakland at Detroit, night
Saattla at Baltimore, night

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C IN C IN N A TI (U PI) - Pete
Root said all he had to do was hit
the ball in the fight spot. Rose
did exactly that and the result
was hit No. 4184.
T h e C i n c i n n a t i p la y e r manager singled once In three
at-bats Thursday to move within
eight hits of breaking T y Cobb'a
all-time record of 4191. He also
walked twice and scored two
runs In the 6-0 win over Pit­
tsburgh.
The hit came In the third
Inning Eddie Milner singled to
left field off Pirate Jose DeLeon.
W ith M iln er ru n n in g. Rose
bounced his hit past second
baseman Denny Gonzalez, who
waa breaking to cover the bag.
Speculation Is mounting In
Cincinnati whether Rose will
b r e a k t h e r e c o r d In h is
hometown, but It appears Rose
will collect No ' 4 192 tn some city
other than Cincinnati.
The Reds have three more
games at hom e against Pit­
tsburgh before embarking on a'
six gam e road-trip — three
games In St. Louts and three In
Chicago.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Davis Steals Mets' Heart
open,ho $
With 3-Run Homer In 10th $ ORLANDO “HI-LI”
$
*
N.L. Baseball
F R E E A D M IS S IO N
a$
3k?
Proudly Presents

^

United P r e s s In tern ation al
Tin New York Mrts must avoid losing thrli
heart in San Francisco.
"T h is Isn’t the right way to start a road trip,"
catcher Gary Carter said Thursday after the Mrts
ti|jenrd a lO-gamr swing with a 6-3, IO-lnnlng
lots to (hr Giants
“ Wr Just hope we can come buck and play well
these next three guinea. We pluyed well on our
hint WeM Coast road trip, and wr have to do well
lirrr II wc are going to stay In contention."
Chill Davis lilt a three run homer with one out
In the iMttloin o! the lOth. lilting the Giants and
dropping the Mein three full gamrtt behind the
division-leading St. I.milts Cardinals In (lie
National Leugur East.
"These Glanls have played tin lough ull year,
even though wr have u prrtly good record against
them ." said Carter.
Davtn went 3-for-S, drove in live runts anti
scored twice In handing the Mets their third
tdrulghl loss
" I hale lor un In have to lie a spoiler," Davis
said, "W e've been a sjxtller (nr four years I want
someone to try to rt|toll l( for me I don't com e out
lirrr In lie a spollri I like (hr Mets hath lull They
are lighting lor a division I It Ir* We're not going lo
Just give Ii lo them. It wr wrrr playing Si. Louis,
we would want lo lieat litem also I want In treat
t hr in all I hale playing that s|xillrr role That's
the role of u loser."
*
Scot! Darrells. H-3. pile lied Iwo Innings In relief
lor Ihr victory.
In Ihr lOlh, Jell Leonard led oil with a single oil
Terry Leach. 2-2. anil was sarrlllrrd lo second hy
Dan Gladden Manny Trlllo walked and Davis
billowed hy slumming a 3-2 pitch over Ihr

O-Twins Falter;
Osceola Opens
Playoff Tonight
The Orlando T w in s' fading
East Division Idle hopes laded u
III tie- more Thursday night when
they lost u 9-1 decision In
Southern Leugur baseball at
Greenville. SC .
O rla n d o , w h ir l) p la y s ut
J a c k s o n v ille to n ig h t, trulls
C h a r l o t t e hy 2 Vk g a m e s .
Charlotte lost lo Columbus. 7 5.
The regular season ends Tues­
day. Sain Sorer drove In the
0 Twins only run with a ninthInning single.
While Orlando la scrambling to
hang close, Ooceola's Florida
Stale league Astros entertain
Fori Lauderdale In a besl-ofplayofl between the Central and
Southern division champions at
Kissim m ee's O sceola County
Stadium.

rlghl-cenlrr Held fence for his !2th homer of Ihr
season "I mild, hr has got lo come lo me now ."
Davis said "II fir walks me. hr loads the buses
with one mil and another left-hander coming up
(Dan Drlessertl He hung a fastball."

Braves 9. Cubs S
Ai Chicago. Bruce Benedict drove In four runs
with n three-run single In the sixth and a
groundnut in a five-run eighth, pacing the Braves
lo their fourth victory without a loss under
Interim manager llohhy Wine Rick Muhin
17-12, pitched 5 2-3 Innings lor thr victory. Leon
Pur hum till two homers for Ihr Cubs.
Expos 8 , Padres B
Ai San Diego. Andre Dawson till a three-run
double over Ihr head ot center llrldrr Kevin
McKrynotds with two out lo cap u seven-run
sevrnlh llial Idled Ihr Kx|ms. The blow came oil
iiKikle Latter McCnllrrs hut the loss was charged
to Gene Waller. 0-2. Tim Rallies slnglrd. doubled,
homered and stole Ills 51st base lor Montreal lo
raise his average to 313
Reds 0. P ira te s 0
At Cincinnati. Tom Browning. 14-9. pitched a
seven hitler and Buddy Bell went 3 for 3. Includ­
ing a three-run homer, and drove In five runs to
lead Ihr Rrds. Cincinnati playrr-manugrr Petr
Rose slnglrd once In three at-hals lo move within
rigid lids ol breaking Ty Cobh's all-time record of
4.191.
In a lair game, i’lilludrlphlu and Los Angeles
were In extra Innings

AI &amp; Pauline
Undstrom

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The Astros completed the reg­
ular reason with a double-header
sweep of Lakeland (2-1 and 3-2)
Thursday night Bob Parker waa
1 for 2 with h u 34th stolen base.
In the othrr semifinal. Fort
Myers, the West champ, takes on
St. Petersburg, the wild-card
entry.

a

Labor Day Mon., Sept. 2nd

”

�Legal Notice

Legal Notice

toot to e point on the Eatt law of
MW
SW
to,
ttwnco run
S 00 i r e r ’ E 321.210 Wat to the
SW corner ot ttw NW to ot Pw
S E to Ot m w Section 7. Pwnco
run N i r a e s r - E
along Pw
South lino of Pw NW to ot too SE
to at m W Section 7.197 « Wot to
Pw SW comer ol Pw Eo tl *» ot
Pw Watt to ot Pw NW to at Pw
SE to ot told Section 7. Pwnco
run N og-gror w
along Pw
Writ imo ot Pw S **t *&gt; ot Pw
West to ot ttw NW to ot Pw SE to
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230 00
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run
N i r t r i 3 " E *01-73 Wet to a
point on Pw E e tt lino of ttw Eatt
to ol Pw Watt to ot Pw NW to ot
ttw SE to of Mid Section J,
thane* run S OTOt o r E along
Mid Eatt llrw. 305 00 t**t to a
point on Pw South lln* ot Pw NW
to ot ttw S E to ol Mtd Section J.
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Mid South lino 317 a n W*t to ttw
SE comer ot Pw NW to ot Pw SE
to ot Mid Section J, ttwnc* run
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of Pw NW to ot ttw S E to ol Mid
Sactlon J. (27(14* leal. Pwnca
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South lln* ot Pw North 7to
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1271 342 toot to a point on ttw
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chains lets 00 Well South ot Pw
NE corner o* Pw SW to ot Mid
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E a il lino ot ttw SW to ol Mid
Section J, 7to chains 14*5 00
Wetl to a point on Pw North llrw
of Ih* SW to of Mid Sactlon 7,
Mid point being 20 00 t**i West
01 the Cantor of Mid Sactlon 7,
Pwnca
run
S ta te s* W
1741 900 tool to a point on ttw
Eattoriy R/W lln* ot InWrttat#
4 (Slat* Rood 4001, Pwnca run
5 17"JO-2* 'W
along
Mid
Eattoriy R/W lln* 2055 (24 W*1
lo a point on ttw limltod accatt
R W lln* of told InWntaW A
M&gt;4 point being ttw P C of *
curve concav* Norttwattarly
having a radlut ot 540 00 l**t
and a tangent bearing ot
S OC SO'IS' W .
thence
run
Southerly along Mid curv*
113 472 toot through a central
angle of 4) 01 I T to Ih* P.T ,
Pwnca run S *4 ‘00'S4” E along
Mia limited accatt R/W lnw,
2 7 321 taot to ttw P C. of a curve
concav*
Norttwattarly
and
having a radlut ot *40 00 teat
ttwnc* run Souttwaitarly along
Mid Curv* 420 5*0 Wot to Pw and
ot th* told limltod accott R/W
tin* ond Pw Point ot Baginning
Containing I17.7I2S acre*. Sad
SW to being tublact to th*
following detcrlbad oatomontt
An Eow m onl to locate and
maintain an advertising tign on
Itw following detcrlbad parcel
Beginning al Pw intersection ol
th* North lln* ot Pw South *90
loot ol Mid SW to and Itw
Eattoriy limltod accatt R/W
Im*
ol
IntanlaW
4 run
maintain on a d vortliln g tign on
N ** 42 33" E along Mid North
llrw, 7S 00 l#*t, Pwnca run
ttw to! lowing do t e r ,la d porcol
S 17'30‘ir 'W parolWI aim M id
BEGINNING ol th* int*r**etlon
R/W lino 40 00 t**t, ihonca run
of It* North lln* ol ttw South *K&gt;
S *t 43’3 3 'W 75 00 toot to Mid
N*t ot tald SW '4 and th*
R/W
llrw.
ttwnc*
run
Eattariy limited aecett R W
N17 J0 JS E along Mid R/W
lln* ot I A run N I f 43 IP ’ E
llrw 40 00 tool to ttw Point ol
along tald North iin* 7t oo i**t
Baginning ALSO an aatamant
thont*
run
S ir illP W .
tor a c c ttt and Utility imat to
Parai*** with la id R /w lln*
atorataid ****m *nt aver a 9*
* • N*t. thane* 4 at aj i r w
tool wide parcel lying Eattoriy
7*00 loot u taip R -w lln*.
and Northerly of Pw limited
Pwne* run N . l f i n r ' E
M00
accatt R/W lino. Mid limited
Mat to ttw POINT OF BEGIN
accatt R/W lln* b*mg mar*
NINO. ALSO an aatamant tor
particularly
dtacvlbad
at
accott and utility ilrwt to
follows
From ttw Southwall
atoroMid aaaamant ovor a IS
corner of Mid Section 7 run
toot portal lying Eattoriy and
N *e'43 19 E along ttw South
Northerly ot ttw limited Accatt
Iin* ot ttw SW to ol M id Sactlon
RrW lino; From ttw Southwotl
7, a distance of *07 *S faat to Ih*
corner ol laid Section 7. run
and ot Pw limited access R'W
N t r u ’ IY 'E . along Ih* South
llrw of Intortlaw 4 North of Lak*
lln* ot ttw SW to ot tald Section
Mary
Boulevard
aslandtd
J, a distance ot M7 IS t**t lo Ih*
South ttwnc* run N 00 03 31 W
and ot ttw limited accott R/W
along
tald
H/W
llrw
712(0
loot
lino of I 4 North ot Lake Mery
tor a Point of Boginning. Itwnc*
Boulovard a xtended
South
run NorlhavetWrly along a curv*
ttwnc* run N 0 07 41"W along
concav* Norttwattarly having a
tald R/W llrw 7*11 I* * I lor a
radlut of *to 00 toot, a tangent
Point ot beginning, Ihonca run
bearing Of S 0YS7 SY W
a
NorthwotWrly along o curye
central angl* ol laOCOT" and an
concave Norttwetteriy. having a
arc
dlttance
ot
4213*0
teat
rodlut at *0) tool a tangent
ttwnc* run N *4 00 14 W 17 US
bearing ot OOf’SI'SO'W. a
Wat lo ttw P C of a curv*
control angl* ot M 00"07 " and an
concav*
NorttwotWriy
and
arc dltlanc* ot 42* S« leal,
having a radlut of 140 00 Wat.
ttwnc* run N 44 05 So W 4
ttwnc* run NorthwotWrly along
dltlanc* at 27 4* foal lo a curve
Mid curv* through a central
concave Northeasterly having a
angle of 01017*". a ll 472 Wot.
radlut ot SO) tool a canlral
Pwnca run N 17-20 2* E 127 021
angl* ot I S O r j r ’ i ttwnc* run
tool to o point 40 to*! Southerly
NorthwotWrly along tald curve
along Pw Eattoriy R/W iin* of
an arc dlttance ot 11107 teal
InWrttat# 4 from th# North llrw
ttwnc* run N IJ 'II IY E a dH
ot th* South *10 leal ot Mid
lanes ot 137 14 l**l to s point eo
Section J and ttw and ot
Wot
Southerly
along
Itw
Wattorly llrw ot E ataman I ANO
EatWrty R/W lino ol I 4 from
ALSO
tho North llrw ot ttw South I VO
Lott I through 10. IntortlaW
toot of laid Sactlon 7 and the and
Industrial Pork, according to
of WetWriy lino of oaaanwnl
Pw plot fharao* ot recorded In
TogaHwr with ttw NW V* of Itw
Plat Boo* I*, pages 71 A 7* Ot
SE V* (L E S S North, 7&lt;y chain*
Itw Public Record* ol SaminoW
and Wtl Eatt u&gt; ol IW Watt W
County. Florid*. TOGETHER
South ot canal I, Section 7.
WITH
Commerce
at
Pw
Tewnthip 30 South. Rongo 30
Southootl corner ot itw North
Cot! Eo ti ay ol ttw Wati **
7't choint ot th# Northwest to at
South ol tonal It described at
Pw SouPwast to ot Section 7.
Bogin 317 H Wat Ea tt ol SW
Townth'p 10 South. Rang* JO
corner ot NW V* of SE V*.
Eatt and run SO PO ’ir'W
Sactlon J. Tewnthip 10 South.
along th* South llrw ol Mid
Rongo )0 E o tl. run North
North JVy choint. **7 I* laal to
00*100 07 Wail 130 foot to Pw
Itw Point ot Boginning. Pwnco
can tar urw of canal. ttwnco run
continue S t e e l 'l l ' W
along
*443 41 1)' E along told C/L ol
Mid South llrw 10* 192 toat to Pw
canal
*40.720
la*l.
ftwrvc#
Southwotl
corner
ot
Mid
North
SOOCOOI E 303 00 teal to 4
7tg
choint.
Itwrtca
run
point on tha South line ol told 40
1 Oreo'S* W JOOO toat Itwnc*
ttwnco Wail 135 FJ0 ta*t to Pw
run N OO'ltfei'W 7Vy chain*
POB
SAID
PRO PERTY
14*100 toat I t o e point on Pw
BEIN G
FU RTH ER
DE
North lln* ot pw Southwotl to ot
SCR IBED
AS
From
the
Mid Section J, Pwnco run
Southwotl comer ot told Sactlon
N t e e d j r E along Mid North
J. run N 10*43 23 E along Pw
lln*. 10 00 f**t to Pw cantor ol
South llrw ot told SW '4. a
Mid Sactlon J, Pwnco rws
dlttance ot 007 os toot to itw
N OCIOtol'W along Pw Wott
limited accatt R/W llrw ot
Imo ot Pw Southwotl to ot the
Interstate A North ot Le*a Mery
Norttsoott to. JV* choint 14*1
BouWverd.
aatondad
South,
taot). *0 th* North watt corner of
ttwnco run NOOOMI W *iong
Pw South Jte choint ot Pw
laid R/W llrw. as W*i to the
Southwotl to ot Pw Norttwotl to
North R/W llrw ot Lak* Mary
ot Mtd Section J. Pwnco run
Boulevard.
ttwnc*
continue
N i r a r i r E along Iha North
N W O J I W a dltlanc* ot 3* 30
lln* ot Pw told South 7't chains,
Wat tor o Point ot Beginning
la* 21
taot,
ttwnc*
run
thence run N « 7 17 3f 'W 1*3 7]
SOO i r o r E te*t. ttwnc* run
toot, ttwnco run N *0 43 31 E
l
o
r
a
r
t
r
’w
J
C
SO
toat
Pwnca
300 00
toot.
ttwnco
run
run S « r i r a 4 " E 7*100 toat to
S W i r V ' E 300 00 tool to the
Pw Potnl ot Boginning Con
Northerly R/W lino ot told Leas
laming *1 SM9 Acres
Mary Boulevard, ttwnco run
A Public hearing concerning
N or 41'33 E
along
Mid
Put prefect will b* hold by Pw
Northerly R/W lino. 907 TV Wot
City
ot LaO* Mery Planning and
to the Watt lino ot Pw Eatt 1*9
2an mg Board on November 94.
Wot ot Pw Wetl 1790 t l Wot 04
IMS. al 7 00 P M . or Ot toon
Pw South 090 tool ot aotd SW to.
Pwraoftor a t poatRP*. at Lea*
ttwnco run N OO'IPIA'W along
Mary City Hall. 190 NorPi
Mid
SW
V*.
ttwnco run
Country Club Reed. Lot# Mary.
N &lt; r t r i4 "W. along told Woti
Florid*, m order to review, hear
Imo *13 00 toot to Pw NW corner

C IT Y OF
LA K E M ARY. FLO R ID A
N O TICt OF
P U R LIC H E A R IN O
TO WHOM IT MAY CO N CERN
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
t*Wt Pw City *4 Lake Mery Kj*
received appllc*tw?n tor d n d
appreval lor s Devel
ot Regional lm p « i
purtuonf to Sactlon
MO 0*
Florida Statutes. tram trio SUM
at Florid*. Department ot
Cernmia'lty Attain
Pro|*CtN*me; Prim er*
s i n Ot Prolot* Approa Imate
ly 2.1It 000 tQuor* toot
Loco'ton ot Protect Tha tit*
It north
ot
Lok*
Mary
Boulevard. watt ot Rinehart
Rood ond oott ot IntorttaU 0
Prelect Gtnoral Dote rip* ion
TTi# protect will Include plat*
tor* o* 023.000 square loot he**)
■t 300 room*; commercial at
MOOO square toot, wen nett
center /sports comptee at itl.OOO
square toot, ottlcot at t.2a l 000
square loot locatod on approal
motoly li t ocrot The pro|*ct
*111 bo constructed In Itiro*
phase* between 100* and 1*00
legal Dotcrlptlon
All that part of th* SW V* *t
faction 1. Toonttnip 20 South.
Rang*
30 E a tt.
Seminole
County, Florida, lying Eattoriy
*t Slat* Road &lt;00 114) and
North of Lo la Me y Boulovard.
LE S S th* Eatt X tMt ot t o
North 21 chain* It** Moll
thereof
AND ALSO
LESS
BEGIN N ING 024. JO l**t North
ot th* S 'a Section corner ot laid
Section J. run N 04 00 00’ W
(J1.4J
loot,
th*nc*
run
N O D I W W 7)2 2) to*I. thence
run Eatt HO 40 to**, thane* run
South 40* 4* foot to Ih# ’KJINT
OF BEGIN N ING AND ALSO
LE S S Iha Eatt 112 Not ot tha
Watt 1790 I) tool ot tha South ISO
loot ot laid SW v*. AND ALSO
LESS
B EG IN N IN G
al Ih*
Northootl com*r of Ih* Watt
Its* OS toot ot tho tald SW It ot
tald Sactlon 7, run SO’ i r i f ’E
110 foot to th* North Righto*
Way Lina ot
Lak*
Mary
Boulevard
thane*
run
N t* '4 )'ir E . along tald North
Right ot Way Lina. 7M 227 teat,
thane* run N V 1(743 W 77*111
t**t. thane* run N (4 00 (0 W
SM Wt
faat,
ttwnc#
run
South***tarty 227 032 teal to th*
POINT OF B E G IN N IN G AND
ALSO LES S From Ih* Southwest
corner ol tald Sactlon 7, run
N I t o i r ' t ., along Ih* South
Lin* ol tald SW’.., a dlttance of
M7 *S I**' to tha and ol Iha
limited accott R W lln* of 14.
North ot Lake Mary Boulevard,
extended South, thence run
N 0 07 01 W a dlttance ol M II
foal ttwnc* run NO’ t r e r W
1*3.30
teat.
ttwnc*
run
N » r c n * E TOO 00 t**t. ttwnc*
run S U i r e r ' E loo Not to th*
North R/W lln* ot Lak* Mary
Boulevard.
ttwnc*
run
S.*r*3’1Y'W 300 I* to*l to ttw
POINT OF B EG IN N IN G . Said
SW V4 tjaing iut»|*ct to th*
following date* Ibad *ot*mtntt
An E*t*m *nl to locate and

at told Eatt l«S toot ol Pw watt
U tt 03 Mel ot the South 030 Wot
at MW SW’*, thonre run N
(Y4133 €
109 00 W
run N 49 23 90 E U7 032
ihonca run 1 0 4 ' i r e r o 137 l i t
toot to 4 point on Pw Cast line or
ltd SW to ot told Section 7. m M
point being l i t CJ toot North ot
too South to comer at m W
Section
J,
Ihonca
run
N o r *74 1 W along m W Eatt
Una, ISOM tool. Ihonca run
N o r w a r w s n *s W*i toonco
run N t r t l ’aV ’W 7IJ IS toot.
Pwnco run N 00 43 29 E 13*001

maneolltna to Pw Lak# Mary
City Commiaaton an Pw above
application Further a public
hearing will be hoto by Pw City
Cammliaton of Pw City of L*A*
Mery ws December 1. INS. el
J I t P M . or at toon Pw nafN r
at poaaibM, at Le*e Mary City
H ell. IS* Norm Country Club
Rood. Lake Mary Florid*, on
Pw above application That* In
attendanco will b* heard and
written common Is may b# tlWd
with ttw Planning and Zoning
Hearings may b* con

Legal Notice
llrtued Pom time to time at
found necessary Further details
available by calling 90S 223 TttO
FurP w r information pertaining
to fhlt application may b* ob
talned Pom Pw City Marvagav l
office, ISO North Country Oub
Rood. L*a*M evy. Florida
Parsons are advitad that It
Pwy dacld* to appeal any da
cltton mod* at that* meetings
they will need a record ot th*
and tor such
Pwy may rwtd to
rmture that a verbatim racer* Ot
the proceedings It modi, which
record Includes Pw testimony
and evidence upon which Pw
appeal It to b* mod*
C IT Y OF
L A K E AAARY. FLORIDA
BY CA RO L A EDWAR0S
C IT Y C L E R K
D A TED August 1*. 1*19
Publish August 30. IMS
O E I 123

N O T IC EO F
P U B LIC HEARING
T H E SEM IN O LE COUNTY
BO ARD OF COMMISSIONERS
will hold a public hearing in
Room W 130 ol th* Saminoto
County Sorvitot Building San
ford. Florida on SEP TEM B ER
3A IMS AT 7 00 P M . or as soon
•twraattor as possible to cexit'd
#r ttw following
P U B LIC HEAPING
FOR CHANOEOF
ZONING REGULATIONS
1 F R E I O A H ED G LIN R E ZONE FROM &gt;1 SINGLE
F A M I L Y D W E L L IN G D l l
T R IC T TO RC 1 COUNTRY
E S T A T E ! - P ile*1 1 1 1*1 Lot 3. Block B ol Pw Amended
Plat ot Buttons Subdivision, less
Ih* E * s l 1*0 H ot ttw South 13*
ft thereof. PB ». Pg 3S. In
S e c tio n 10 21 39. Saminoto
County (Further diKritwd at
3 1 acres mors or lets, located
|utt north of Lak* Drlvt. t a il at
Jam l# i.an* ) (DIST fll
2
E O V E O A R A A N D
C H A R L E S OIVENS S P E C IF IC AM EN D M EN T
FRO M G E N E R A L RURAL TO
LOW 0 E N S IT Y R ESID EN TIA L
A N D R E Z O N E FROM A 1
A G R IC U LT U R E TO R I a AAA
S IN G LE FA M ILY DW ELLING
D IS T R IC T - P i t * 4 t il 1(4 Parcels a. a. 7, and I In Sactlon
2*7131 (Further described as
(4 acral located on Ih* south
tide of Chapman Road, watt ol
SR 434) lD lS T .it )
3 JO S E P H W ILLIAM S —
S P E C IF IC A M EN D M EN T
FRO M LOW DENISTT R E S I
O E N T IA L TO IN D U S TR IA L
A N O R H O N E FRO M I I
S IN G LE FA M ILY DW ELLING
D IS TR IC T TO C l G E N E R A L
C O M M E R C I A L ANO
W H O L E S A L E D IS T R IC T —
P Z (* 4 t l) 111 - Ttw South 190
tl ol th* North 900 tl ol Pw East
’a of Lot 14. A E Or iffin Sub
divltion. PB J. Pg 43. In Section
7 3 1 30. S a m ln o l* County
(Further detcrlbad at on* acre
located on ttw was! tid* ot North
La k * Hotvall Road south of
Melody Lana 1 (DIST 14)
4 K A T H L E E N JOHNSON S P E C IF IC AM EN D M EN T
FRO M HIGH DENSITY R E S T
O EN T IA L TO COM M ERCIAL
A N O R E Z O N E FRO M &gt; 1
M U L T I F A M IL Y D W ELLIN G
D
I
I
T R IC T TO C l R E T A IL COM
M E R C IA L. - P II4 4 * II1 I4 —
Lot I Hats th* East at* S P and
road). Central Park. PB 0. Pg
**. In Section (21 30. Saminoto
County (Further described at
I S acres located at ttw NE
corner ot C 427 end Dogtrack
Reed I (D IST 441
5 F . B. B V W A T ER —
S P E C IF IC A M EN D M EN T
F R O M LO W I N T E N S I T Y
URBAN TO LOW IN TEN SITY
COM 74ERCIAL AND R H O N E
FRO M A I AG RICU LTU RE T O ’
O P O F F I C E O IS T R I C T P i t * 4 k i l l * * - Begin *1 417 tl
N ol Pw South llrw ol Itw SE V*
ol the SW to ot Section IS 70S
3 * E . and on tha E a t t a r iy
right ot way llrw of Pw Seaboard
C o a s tlin e R ailro ad run N
20*1* 44 E 44* 3S tl along tald
E ly ROW llrw of th* SCL R R.
thence run along Pw Wly ROW
line of SR eXI Pw lollowing a
courses N »**44 *4 la st 2*2 St
II S 70*4*11 E 57 10 M, S
14*22'42" W 111 74 ft . S 35*23 SO"
W 37* OS tl Pwnca departing
said Wly ROW lln* ot Sr 400 run
South O f «4 44 W 391 71 N to th*
Point of Beginning I Further
inscribed as live acres locatod
on th* aatl lid* ol Mar khan
Woods Rood H O IS T *3)
Further, a public tearing will
b* held by Ih* S EM IN O LE
C O U N T Y P LA N N IN G A N D
Z O N IN G COM M ISSION ON
S E P T E M B E R 4. IN I AT 7 DO
P M , or os soon thereafter as
p o s s ib le
In Rm W 120.
Seminole County Services Build
mg. Sanford. Florida. In order to
review , hear common's and
mak* recommendations to tho
Board of Cosmty Commissioners
of Somlnol* County an ttw above
appiicationli)
Those In attendance will be
heard end written comment*
may be tiled with tha Lend
M an ag em en t M anager
H earings may be continued
from time to Hm* as found
n ece ssary
Further d e ta ils
available by calling 171 1130.
Eat 441
Parsons ar* advisad that If
■twy dacld* to aepaal any do
cltton mad* al Pws* meetings.
Pwy will nood a record of th*
p ro ce e d in g s, and tar su ch
purpose. I hay may need to
ensure that a verbatim record ol
th* proceedings is mad* which
roeprd includes Pw testimony
and *v idanc* upon which th*
appeal It to bo mad*
Board of
County Commissioners
Somlnol*County, Florida
BY Marti Hardin. Director
Land Management
Publish August 10. INS
DEMOS

L E G A L NOTICE
On loptombor t. IN I. at a
public k*ki ot 12 O'clock noon *t
Central Florida Mack Trucks.
Inc . 2100 N Orlando Olotaom,
Orlando. F L 12*04. Pw tel towing
equipment will t* ottered tor
aete to Pw higtwtJ Mdstor
One ( I I 10*4 Mock truck.
M o d * ' R W S 7 I1 L S T , t 'n
IM2V2J04SCMOOHM
Terms of th* t o * will be Cosh.
Certified Check or Money Order
C I T Corporation reserves ttw
right to bto and Pw right to
rotod emr and ail bids For
further information, contact
Albert La* or Ran Dennison
C I T Corporation. 9422 Bay
Cantor UrieO. Suite 109, Tempi*.
F L 13*0*10111(7*1912.
Publish August 21 k September
I.S . ».*. INS
O E I 1*0

Evening Harold. Sanford. FI.

Legal Notice
CITY OF
LONOWOOO. FLO R ID A
N OTICEOF
PUBLIC H EARIN G
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF
p r o p o sc o o r F in a n c e
TO WHOM IT MAY CO N CERN
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by Ih * C ity ol Le n g w eo d .
Florida, that Pw City Cons
mission trill hold a public hear
tog to cant tote enactment ot
Ordinance Me M l entitled:
AN ORDINANCE a m e n d
ING TH E CODE OF TH E C IT Y
O F LONOWOOO F L O R IO A .
BY THE AM EN D M EN T OF
C H A P T E R TW O . ’ AD
M IN ISTRA TIO N " BY AOOP
T IN G A R T IC L E V II. " A D
M IN ISTRA TIV E COSTS ANO
F E E S ." AND BY TH E AOOP
TION OF SECTION 1 t*3 F E E S
FO R CO PIES OF M U N ICIPA L
R E C O R D S : P R O V ID IN G
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . C O N F LIC T S
ANDAN E F F E C T IV E P A T E
Said Ordinance was placed on
tins! reading an August 91. I N I
and me City Commission will
consider tame tor final passage
and adoption alter the public
hawring, which will be held In
Pw City Hall. I7S West Warren
A y e . LungwooJ Florida, on
Monday. Pw *th day of Sap
tomber. IN I. A 0 . p arti** may
appear and b* heard with r *
soect to Pw proposed Ordinance
This hearing may b* continued
from tim* to lima until linal
action It token by th* City
Commission
A copy Ot th* proposed Ordl
none* is posted *1 Pw City Mall.
Long wood Florida, end copies
a r* on til* with Itw Clark of Pw
Clpr and same may b* Inspected
by th? publ Ic
A taped record ol this meeting
I* mad* by Pw City for it*
convenience This record m»y
not constitute an adequate r*
cord tor purposes ot appeal Irons
a decision mad* by Ih* Com
mission with respect to Ih*
foregoing matter Any person
wishing lo ensure Iha I an ad*
dual* record ol th* proceedings
It maintained tor ap p tiiat*
purposes is advisad to m a le th#
necessary arrangements at hit
or her own (apens*
0*1* this 19th day ot August
A 0 INS
CITY OF LONOWOOO
DonalJL Tarry
C My Clerk
Publish. August 10. INS
O E I 10*

IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE CO UNTY.
FLORIOA
PROBATE DIVISION
FIN Numkar*3 &gt;34 CP
IN R E ES TA TEO F
K EN N ETH HOWARD
P ETER SO N
Deceased
N O TICEO F
ADMINISTRATION
The administration ol th*
• H a lt at Ktnnath H ow ard
P a te rso n , d e ce a se d , F l i t
Number SS 134CP, It pending In
th* Circuit Court for Saminoto
C e u n ty , F lo r id * . P r o b a ta
Division, th* address ot which It
CO
D ratrar C . S a m ln o l*
County Courthouse. Sanford
Florida 37771 Ttw names and
addresses of ttw per son#I repre
tentative and Pw personal rap
raetnlatlv* t attorney are tel
tarth below
A ll interested parsons a r*
required to III* with this court.
WITHIN T H R EE MONTHS OF
THR FIR S T P U B LIC A T IO N O F
T H II NOTICt ■ II ) e ll claim *
against Pw ttlato and (1) arty
o b |*ctlen by an In t e r f ile d
parson an wham this nolle* was
served that challenge* Pw valid
Ity of Pw will, Pw qualifications
of Pw per tore J representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol Ih*
CQtrfl1
A LL CLAIMS ANO O B J E C
TIOMS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE FO B EVER BA RRED
Publication ef this Nolle* hat
begun on August 23. IN I
Personal Representative
MARY JANE P E T E R S O N
1414 Rose Terrace
Apopka 7 lor Ida 12701
Attorney tor
Personal Representative
JAM ESM M A G EE. E S Q U IR E
to E Livingston. Suite 102
Orlande. Florida 32*01
Telephorw 1)091 411 1030
Publish August 11, 30. Ito)
O EI 14*
FICTITIOUS NAM E
Nolle* la hereby given mat I
am engaged In business at Flea
World. 17*1. Sanford. Saminoto
County, flo rid # u nd er th *
fictitious noma ef C A M P E R S
JUNCTION, and that I Inland to
register said rueme with Pw
Clark of th* C ircu it Cuwrt.
Samlnol* Ceunty, F lo rid * In
accordance with Pw prevision*
ef Pw Fktlfteus Nam# Statutes.
Tewtt Section 1*10* Florida
Statute* 1*17
a/ Carol 0 Mead
Publish August 73 90 * Sop
tomber S. 13. IMS
O E II4 7
N O TIC EO F A
PUBLIC H EA R IN G
TO C O N S IO IR
THE ADOPT ION OF
A N O flD IH A N CI
BY THE C IT Y
OF SANFORD. F LO R ID A .
Nolle* Is hereby given that a
Public Heaving will b* held at
ttw Commission Haem In Ih*
City Hall M Pw City *f Senior*
F tor id*, at 7 00 o'clock P AA an
September *. ISOS, to consider
Pi* edop'len *1 an ordinance by
Pw City ef Sanford. Florida, as
toilews
ORDINANCE NO. 1271
AN OROINANCE OF TH E
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
FLORIOA. CLOSING.
VACATING AND ABANDON
ING A PORTION OF A U T IL I
TV EASEM EN T L Y IN G BE
TW EEN F R E N C H A V E N U E
ANO HIAWATHA C IR C L E ANO
B E T W E EN O RLAN D O D R IV E
ANO SANTA B A R B A R A
OR I V I ) P R O V ID IN G F O R
■S E V E R A B IL IT Y . C O N F LIC T S
ANO E F F E C T IV E D A T E
A copy Shall ba available at
Pw 017K# of Pw City Clark tar
all parson* desiring to examine
All perlWt In
clfiient than have an epgertuni
ty to k* heard *• laid flooring
By order of Pw O ty Cant
mlteien ef Pw Clfy ef Sinterd
F torid*
A O V IC I TO TH E P U B L IC If
a pe* von decide* to appeal *
decision mods with respect to
any matter considered of Pw
above meeting or hearing, tw
may need * verbatim record ef
Including Pw
record I*
af laniard I F I )R4 (109)
° 2 f . N Timm, Jr.
Clfy Clark
Publish August * I*gs
O E I III

Friday. Aug 30, 1BBS-7A

SCOREBOARD
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Legal Notice
n o t ic e o f a

PUBLIC H I SUING
TO CONS I D t W
THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDIN ANCE
BY THE C ITY
OF SANFORD. F LO R ID A
Nolle# ly hereby given that 4
Public Hearing wilt be held al
Pw Cemmlliion Room In Pw
City Hall in Pw City ol Sanford
Florid* *• 7 00 o'clock P M on
September t IMS. lo consider
Pw adoption of an ordinance by
pw City ol Senlord Florida at
follows
ORDINANCE NO 1771
AN ORDIN ANCE OF THE
C i t y Of S A N F O R D .
F lorida, promoting
COORDINATION B E T W E E N
UNITS OF LO CA L GO VERN
M EN T F O R T H E E A R L Y
ID E NTIFICATlOtCedQfceGt V
EL O P M E N T S W H IC H MAY
HAVE R E G IO N A L L Y SIGNIF
ICANT IM PACTS: PRO VID IN G
THRESHOLDS. L E T T E R S OF
IN T E R P R E T A T IO N , PRO
VIOING FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y ,
CONFLICTS ANO E F F E C T IV E
DATE
A cagy shall be evened** al
Pw Office *1 Ih * City Clerk lor
*11 persons desiring to examine
All portlet In Interest end
clfliens shell have an apportion
ly lobe heard et told hearing
By order s i Ih* City Com
mission ef the City ot Senlord.
Florida
ADVICE TO T H E P U B L IC II
a parson decides &gt;0 appeal a
daemon mad* with rtepect to
any matter considered at th*
above meeting or hearing he
may reed a verbatim record ot
Ih* proceedings, including ttw
festimeny and evidence, which
record tl not provided by Pw
City of Senlord IF S 2 M 01911
H N Tamm, J r
City Clark
PufXIkh August 30. I M l
D EI IM
C IT V OF
LONOWOOO. FLO R IO A
N OTICE OF
P U BLIC H EA R IN O
TO CO N 1IO ER
ADOPTION OF
PRO PO l I O ORDIN ANCE
TO WHOM IT M A T CO NCERN
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
by th* C ity of Longwood,
Florida, that Ih* City Cam
mutton will hold a public hear
Ing le consider anaclmanl ol
Ordinary* No 71*. entitled
AN O RO IN A N CE AM END
ING THE COOE O F THE CITY
OF LONGWOOD FLO R IO A .
BY AM ENDING SECTIO N 7
111 R E S E R V E D . SEC TIO N
11)0 QUORUM. M EETIN G S.
H EARIN GS. S EC T IO N 1 111
(allIS) R E S E R V E D . SECTION
1 1)1 P R O C E D U R E ON
H EARIN GS: S EC T IO N ) lit
P O W E R S . S E C T I O N 1 140
P EN A LT IES . ANO SECTION
&gt;141 A P P E A L ANO BY AD
DING S E C T IO N 1 14) A 0
M IN IS T R A T IV E F IN E S .
LIEN S 1 SECTIO N | 144 OU
RATION OF L I E N ANO SEC
TION 3 U ) CONSTRUCTION
OF C H A P T ER PROVISIONS,
PROVIDING FO R CO N FLICTS.
S E P A R A B I L I T Y , AN D AN
E F F E C T IV E O A TE
laid Ordinance was placed on
first feeding on August 11. IMS.
and nw Clfy Cemmlayien will
contidtr y*m* foe final passage
and adoption after Pw public
hearing, which will b* held In
ftwTity Hall. 171 Wetl Warren
A e * . Longwood. Florida, an
Monday. Pw tin day ef Sap
tembar. IMS A D . partial may
appear and be heard with r*
level to the proposed Odmancx
This hearing may b* continued
Pam lime to lime unfit final
action la taken by tha Clfy*
Cammiaaien
A copy of Pw proposed Ordi
none* la posted at Pw Clfy Hall.
Longwood. Florida, and copws
or* an hi* wllb Pw Clark of Pw
City and soma may be impacted
by Pw public
A taped record ef this meeting
la mad* by Ih* Clfy tor Its
lOTvonwrya T h il record may
not constitute an adequate r*
card ter purposes ef appeal from
a decision mod* by Pw Com
mission with reaped to Pw
lor ageing matter Any parson
wishing to ensure that an ede
quote record ef Pw proraodrngt
IS maintained for appellate
I* advised to mak# tha
af hi*
Date PHI IIP ) day ef August
A O IM)
C IT Y O F LUN G WOOD
Donald L. Terry
City Clark
Publish August 10. IMS
D EI no

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Legal Notice
INVIT AT ION TO BID

IN V ITATIO N T O » ID
THE C IT V OF LONGWOOD
HUS THE FOLLO W IN G KIR
P L U S V E H I C L E S W HICH
W ILL B E SOLD BY SEA LED
DID V E H IC L E S MAY BE IN
1 P E C T E D AT THE PUBLIC
W ORKS COM POUND
L O C A T E O A T 110 E A S T
W A R R E N A V E N U E FROM
100AM
U N TIL 3 00 P M
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
THE C IT Y OF LONGWOOD
R E S E R V E S THE RIGHT TO
D E C L I N E A N Y B ID R E
C E IV E D
B ID S M UST BE
S U B M IT T E D TO THE CITY
C L E R K .
C I T Y O F
LO N G W O O D
171 W E S T
W A R R E N A V E N U E NO
L A T E R TH AN 4 ( 1 P M
F R I D A Y . S E P T E M B E R 1).
.IMS BID S W ILL DE OPENED
IM M E D IA T E L Y T H E R E A F
TER
It 7 l C M C P ic k u p Truck
TCDI47AvntS7 (Motor Runs)
1**7 C H E V R O L E T Pickup
Truck C S I4 7 B t l)4 4 ) tMotor
Good)
1*74 F O R D LT D *U*4H1I*»7
(Body Only)
i f i j
C h e v r o l e t
ix a t L T T ir n f t
1*73 C H E V R O L E T
CCQI43AI34404 (Scrap Onlyl
O L TERRY
C IT Y C L E R K
Publish August 30 September
I. IMS
O EI 174

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR S E M IN O LE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
File Member (9 917 CP
IN R E E S T A T E O F
MARTHA K DAVIS.
Defeated
N OTICE OF
ADM INISTRATION
Th* adm inistration al Itw
estate el M ARTHA K DAVIS,
d e c t o t e d , F l l * N u m b er
i t 917 C P . Is pending In th*
C ircu it Court ler Samlnol#
C o u n ty , F l o r i d * . Probata
Division, the address el whkh Is
Seminal* County Courthouse.
)nd F le e r . Sanlord, Florida
32771 The names and addrassas
Of th# personal represent*! Ire
an d I h * p a r s o n a l f t p r t
se n la llv e 's attorney ar* tat
forth ba tow
AM Interested parsons era
required to til* wIPi IMS court.
WITHIN T H R E E MONTHS OF
TH E F IR S T PUBLICATION OF
THIS N O TIC E (I) all claims
agemtl Pw estate and (I) any
t b lt c lio n by an interested
parson to whom this notice was
mailed that cheltong** Pw valid
Ity *f Pw will. Pw qualiftcattont
ef Pw pevtonal representative,
venue, or luritdkitan ef Pw
court
A L L C LA IM S AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
B E F O R E V E R B A R R ED
Publication ef Put Nolle* has
begun on August 21 IMS
Parsonal Representative
JOHN M McCORMICK. f a
quire
Ml E a t t Church Street
Orlande Flo rid a22(01
il Representative
JOHN M M cCORM ICK. E t
(Hair#
SOI E Church SI
Orlando. F L A 23*01
Telephone ( » ) ) 449 MM
Publish August 21. 30. IMS
O EI l »

' Watt'd bull M
r111lb* r*c»»w*d in
IK* City Manage* t oMIC* City
H a I!. Sa nf o» d F lor id* for ■

imtallAVIon andModificibon

of
Clfy H ill Irrigation
D etailed ip e td n *t on» i n
• v o i l a b l o In th* H i c n

•&gt;bon Per lit Director i office

City Hall W dord Tlorld*
Th# veiled bid* Mill b# ft
t#&gt;ved in th# City M*n#g#r %
offlco. Room TOT City Mail.
Sanford Florid# not liter than
I )fl P M W#dn#*d*y S#p
t#mb#r l|. !*•) Th# bid* will b#
publicly op#n#d i*t#r that Mm#
dot# it J 00 P M In th# City
Commit!Ion Chamber! Room
•IT. City M#1l, Senlord Florid#

a o n p r t tsp i r i% T 0-9*9 pi a
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Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It Iwrtby given that we
a r* engaged In business at 34
C a r r i a g e Hi ll C i r c l e .
Casselberry Seminole County.
F lo rid a under in# flc llllo u t
n a m e ol B J ’ t F e a t h e r e d
Friends, and that we Intend to
register said name with Itw
C la rk ol Ik* C ircu it Court.
Samlnol* County. F lo rid * In
accordance with Pw provisions
of ttw Flcfifteut Nam# Statutes
To wit Section HS 00 Florida
Statutes 1*59
/\' Barbara J Bowen
it/ Joseph J Bowen
Publish August X A September
a. ij.io . t*M
D E I 1*4

Th# City ol S#nford fti#rv#!
th# right to #cc#pl or rt|#ct Awny
And #11 bid! In the b#tV Inter oil
ot th# City
Fr#nii A F#lton
City M#n#g#r
City ol S#nford
D A T E l/fT/tS
Bid «*#/•* *0
Publlih Augutt 10.19tf
P E MOT
F IC TITIO U S MAM!
H unts It hereby given P u t I
am engaged In business at P O
Boa If*. Fern Perk. Seminole
County. F ter Id* H/JOUIW under
Pw rtcttttout name at WORDS
U N L IM IT E D and Pwt I Intend
to register sold name with Pw
C la rk ot tha Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florid* In
accordance with ttw provisions
ol Itw Fictitious Nam* Statutes,
Tew tt Section H I 0* Florida
Statutes1tS7
/*/ Rufh A Peilay
Publish August 29 » t Sep
tim ber a. II. IMS
O EI IH
N O TICEO F A
P U B L IC HFARINO
TO CON1IOE R
TH E ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE
BY T N I CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIOA
Nolle* Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing eelll ba held al
Ih# Commission Room *n ttw
City Hall In th* Clfy ol Sanford.
Florida, al 7 00 o clock P M on
September t, ISM. le consider
Ih* adoption of an ordinance by
Ih* City of Senlord. Florida, as
lol lows
ORDINANCE NO I7M
AN OROINANCE OF TH E
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
F l o r i d a ; c l o s i n g .
V A CA TIN G AND ABANDON
ING A PORTION OF A U T IL I
TY EA SEM EN T LYIN G BE
T W E E N EAST 21TM P L A C E
ANO EA ST 34TM S T R EET AND
B E T W E E N POINSETTA
A V E N U E AND V A C A T E D
PRINCETON AVENUE.
P R O V I D I N G
F O R
S E V E R A B IL IT V . CO N FLICTS
A N D E F F E C T IV E OATE
A copy shall be available al
Ih* Office of Pw City Clark tor
all parsons datlimg lo txamlne
th* same
All parlies In Interttl and
Citliant shall have an opporluni
fy lo bt heard al told hearing
By order el Pw City Com
mission ol Pw Clfy of Senlord
F lor MS#
A D V IC E TO THE P U BLIC If
e person decides to appeal a
decision mad* wifh respect to
any matter considered *1 Itw
obey* meeting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record ol
th# proceedings including the
testimony end evidence, which
record It not provided by Pw
City ot Sontovd IFSlM OteS)
M N Tamm Jr
CltyCterk
Publish August 39, l*M

Oil 1(1

____________ _

FltmiOUS NAME
Nolle* It fwraby given that I
am engaged in business at MD
P o x V alley Or
S u it a 101
Sentinel* County, Flew id* under
Itw flcllllout name ol Lasting
Impressions Hair Salon Inc and
that I Intend lo register said
name elth th* Clark ol Iha
Circuit Court. Semi note County.
Florida In accordance with th*
p ervitlen t of Ih* F lc flflo u t
Nam* Statute* To WII Section
le t os Florida Slalutea IFS7
Jenlct Pafteway
•00 r 04 Veltey Or
Longwood F 14 3272*
Publish August *. I*. 2). 30.
IM1
D E I 41

N OTICEO F A
PUBLIC H EA R IN O
10 CON) ID E R
THE ADOPTION OF
ANORDINANCE
BT THE C IT Y
OF SANFORD. F L O R ID A
Nonce Is hereby given lhai a
Public Hearing will be held al
Ih* Commission Room in Ih*
Clly Hall In tha City of Sanford
Florida al I 00 o c l n i P M on
September *, l*#l fo consider
Ih* adoption of an ordinance by
tha Clly bt Senlord. Florida, at
lol tews
OROINANCE NO If f )
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D
FLORIOA. CLOSING.
VACATING AND ABANDON
ING A PORTION O F A M EH l
CANA B O U LEV A R D L Y IN G
EAST OF ORLANDO O R IV F
(HIGHWAY 17 4 *2) AND RE
T W E E N T HE E A S T E R L Y
EXTENSION OF L A K E M A IIY
BOULEVARD AND A IR P O R T
BOULEVAHO R E S E R V IN G A
U T IL IT Y EA SE M EN T . PRO
VIOING FOR S E V E R A B IL IT V
CONFLICTS ANO E F F E C T I V E
DATE
A copy than tw available al
Ih* OHIc* of Ih# C lly Clerh lor
*11 persons desiring to examine
Ih* tern*
All par Hat In interest and
Cllifens shall have an epportum
ty lo tw twx/d xl said hairing
By nr del ol Ih* Clfy Com
mission ot th* Clly ol Senlord,
Florida
ADVICE TO THE P U B L IC II
a parson dacld** lo appeal a
decision meet* with rttp eci to
any matter considered e l Pw
abort meeting or hearing. Iw
may need a verbatim record ol
■fw proceedings, including the
testimony and evidence, which
record It no! provided by Pw
Clfy of Sontovd IFSJM O IO SI
H N Tamm. Jr
Clfy Clark
Publish August 90. IM )
D E I 143

LONOWOOO. FLO R IO A
N O TICE OF P U B L IC R IA R IN O TO C O N S IO IR
M D E R A L R E V E N U E SH A IIN O E U D O E T FOR
F IS C A L Y EA R IMS/44
A P U B L IC H EARIN O W ILL B E H E L D ON MONO AY, S E P T E M B E R ». IMS FOR A LL IN T E R E S T E D
C IT IZ E N S O F LONOWOOO F LO R ID A . TO CONSIDER THE FO LLO W IN G F ED ER A L R E V E N U E SMAR
ING B U D G E T PROPOSED FOR F IS C A L Y E A R IMS/IIM
R EVEN U ES:

w ,m

Fadarel Revenue Funds Anliclpa**R
Surplus Carried Forward

t

CA TEGO RY
F IR E
D EPA RTM EN T
S U H P LU l/C O N TIN G EN CV

J4S

417.141

Tefal Federal Revenue Sharing Funds Av*ll*x,te
E X P E N D IT U R E S
TO TAL OF A I L FU N D S

O.IJ)

R EV EN U E SHARIN G FU N O S
SS7.I

P A YM EN T ON
F IR E T R U C K S

H&gt;
197.249

TH E P U B L IC HEARIN G W ILL B E (f E L D AT LONOWOOO C IT V H A L L . I l l W IST W A R R EN A V E N U E .
LONGW OOD. FLO RIO A . FOR T H E P U R P O S E O f DISCUSSION O F T H E PROPOSED B U D O E T AT 2 »
P M T H E P R O P O S IO BU D G ET M AV E E EXA M IN ED ON WE E K S A Y I AT LONOWOOO C IT V H A LL
B E T W E E N 4 M A M AND &gt; 00 P M A L L IN T E R E S T E D C IT IZ E N S W ILL HhVE AN O P P O R T U N tT V
TOGIVI W R ITTEN AND ORAL CO M M ENT SENIOR C ITIZ EN S A R E E N COURAGI0 TO A T T E NO ANO
CO M M EN T
D O N A LD L TER R Y

CITV CLERK
Publish August 39. IMS
O EI US

�BI.ONDIE

|A—Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

F r i d a y , A u g . JO, I U J

b y Chic Young
r AT LEAST I T q

B E E T L E B A ILE Y
ik jts
UJfiutZ

T H E BORN LO SER

A R C H IE

E E K A M EEK

ULTIMATELY IT REMAINS
FOR FORTS TO DtFlUE
THE LIMITS OF LAkOUAGE

Should Lung Pumping
Be Perform ed A t H om e?

DEAR DR GOTT — A relative
o f mine had cancer, but stayed
at home and could walk unaaslsted. A home health nurse
attempted to pump fluid from
hts lungs. Thirty minutes later,
he was dead Should this pro­
cedure have been attem pted at
home?
DEAR READER - O f the two
by Mori Walkor
ways to extract fluid from the
lungs, one Is dangerous and the
h e c A k/'T
other Is unpleasant but safe. 1
KEEP HIS
assume that the nurse did not
FEET STi LL
put a tube between the ribs and
into the chest cavity o f your til
relative. This procedure should
only be performed by a doctor.
The other method — suction
Ing out mucus from the trachea,
using a small tube attached to a
v a c u u m pum p — Is o fte n
performed by nurses. It can help
a patient breathe caster by
removing secretions that block
the airway It can appropriately
by Art Sunsom be done at home. From the
sound of your question. I assume
that your relative had terminal
^TWAT’O WAT MAFL6 If
cancer and that the suctioning
.0 0 liAJLFAL LCCYJUt'l
was an emergency effort to keep
him alive.
DEAR DR. GOTT - My job as
a switchboard operator involves
sitting eight hours every day.
except for a seven-minute break
m orrtng and afternoon What Is
'«Jaw the long-term health hazard of
being so very Inactive for most of
the day?
T
O
'
DEAR READER — Your term
"h a za rd " Is probably mislead­
by Bob Montana ing. Sitting on one's behind for
seven hours and 46 minutes a
day may be boring and cause
stiffness, but it Is not a potential
problem for health Most people
who work In sedentary occupa
lions function belter If they are
permitted — even encouraged —
to get up periodically and move
around This activity breaks the
ro u tin e and s tretch e s tired
m u s c le s
P erh ap s you r
s u p e r v is o r w ou ld c o n s id e r
allow in g all the operators a
flve-mlnute break every hour. If
not. you might want to get
by H ow l* Schnaldar regular exercise after work and
on weekends
SOU RE DOING
You don't mention a lunch
break If such a time Is not set
PRETTY GOOD
aside for employees, complain to
the boss You're at least entitled
lo c a l.

DEAR DR. GOTT - 1 am 28
and have had three operations
for a curved spine. It's now 33
degrees on top and 27 degrees
on the bottom. During m y last
operation. 10 years ago. the
doctor said my curve was 25
degrees on top and aero degrees
on the bottom.
DEAR READER - 1 cannot
diagnose your particular case
but. In general, a curved spine ts
under tremendous forces exerted

by the muscles supporting the
spinal column. Special exercises
to s tr e n g t h e n th e w ea k er
muscles In your back might be a
simple and Inexpensive way to
help correct your progressive
curvature.
Sitd four questions to Dr.
t
.it I 'O Bov BM W . C/rtcl,uni Ohio 44101
Answer to Previous Pultte

Maaican ttata

ACROSS

See (Fr.)
1 16. Roman
4 Oenteble or
Sanitation
labor)
8 Rivar in Europe

12 Dm*
13 Rivar in the
Congo
14 Department ot
Franca
15 CompjM point
16 Capabla of
being mingled
IS Jipanese port
20 Mala child
2! 6ut (lit.)
22 formar
Japanaaa
•tatatman
24 At one# |al |
26 Horn Waal
30 Can wind daily
34 Purchase
35 Nona (Scot)
37 Houaatop
faatura
38 Polynesian god
40 Egyptian rivar
42 No»n auffia
43 Moving
machameal part
45 Quilt
47 Apple —
49 Container
50 12. Roman
S3 Tibetan gaielle
55 Asian country
59 Casualty rata
62 Hawaiian
instrument
63 Celebes o i
64 Concept (Fr.)

65 long inlet
66 Qraval
87 Parts ol train
68 Conclusion

DOWN
t Strango (comb
form)
2 Moving
vehicles
3 Virginia willow

Sooai grouo
Fable mritov
Yt«
Deitroytr’a tar
gati
10 Author Gardner
11 Swamp grata
17 Jakyiri
opposite
1S Outfit
23 Seaport &lt;n

Algeria
25 Which (Fr)
26 Construction
beam |comp
wd|
27 Sedan, lor one
28 Sovat refusal
29 Indigo dye
31 Hostile attach
32 Part ol the aye
33 Oned up
36 City in laraal
39 Allay_____

1

1

52
54
56
57
56

Ruttabi# mttal
Opera by Vsrdi
Immaculate
Similar in kind
Play the firat
card
60 Boy
61 Thrice Ipraf |

41 Fu'rSt

44
48
49
50

tatvif't capital
Made at (Puff)
Graak delect
December
holiday (ebbr |
51 Inner Hebrides
island

1

It
11
IB

nTT ■
IB

“

•1
BB

J

awliass t, hi a i»c

WIN AT BRIDGE
MR. MEN AND L IT T L E MISS

j

By Janiaa Jacoby

by Hargraavaa A Sallara
p o 'f o o V W J T
SAE TO S T IC K TH IS
STAAAP &lt;?N /VTSELF ?

^ 7 Do n ' t

. .7 s
B U T IT W O U LD
SPEED U P DELIVERY
am nd

IF 7t&gt;U s t r u c k IT

©FI T H E P A R C E L
' ------------

Xf

! J

“

by Warnor Brothara

BU G S BUNNY
IN V E N T E D

IT S S O T O N L Y '
-TEn D I G I T S .

There arc many challenge*
Dial a declarer imwi meet. Not
thr least of these Is anticipating
possible danger A m ici pul Inn
should lead to the right play
The defenders were playing
standard methods, and so thr
opening lead of thr two o f hearts
showed only four cards in that
suit. Still, declarer had read
about ducking plays. East was
allow ed to hold the |ack of
hearts. East continued the suit
and declarer won the king Now
a diamond was played to thr
quern West played thr nine,
and East won the ace.
East now reasoned that West
must hold lour spades und thrrr
clutis to go with hts duuhleion
diamond It one of those clubs
were the queen, something good

could happen In that ault before
declarer gave up a spade trick
Accordingly, East returned a low
dub. Declarer ducked, West won
and relum ed the &lt;lull seven
East played low on dum m y's
club, and declarer had to w in the
ace. Later, when West won the
spade king, two more club tricks
set the contract.
Although It looks urillkrlv that
the East defender would be able
to figure out the dub shift. South
should anticipate the possible
danger. He should win the first
trick In dummy with the heart
ace and forthwith play a spade to
the queen A dub shift from
West cannot sink declarer’s ship,
since dum m y's 10 9 H-2 of clubs
come Into play, Declarer can
then force out the diamond ace
with Impunity.

NOHTll

t ta r,

♦ J11
r M i

♦q j 4

+ 10 1X1
a EXT

EAST

♦ K 107 J

♦045

V g lO M

V J ll

♦ »1

♦ A* 2

♦U7J

4KJII

SOUTH
♦ AQB
VKK
♦ K 10171
♦ A 4

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer South
M r«l

N o r th

K a il

Vtiulh

Pais

: nt
I'su

P

I NT
J NT

I’au

am

I'a ll

Opening lead 5P2

HOROSCOPE
SCORPIO (Ort 24-Nov 22)
Something may arise today that
will put your leadership qualities
to a test. Don't tie concerned,
tiecause you have what It takes
YOUR B IR TH D A Y
when challenged
AUOU8T 31. 1089
SAGITTARIUS INov 23-Dec
In thr yi ur ahead, you will 21) Keep a sharper weather eye
establish a beneficial alliance out than usual today for people
with someone older and more for whom you're responsible
experienced You will be suc­ Your alertn ess will fend o ff
cessful In whatever you collec­ potential problems
tively pursue
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
VIRGO IAug 23-Sept 221 To 19) Involvem ents with new a c ­
protect your position, insist to­ quaintances may have caused
day that the |ierson with whom you to neglect old pals lately.
you miulr an agreement honors Make umends today by getting
thr terms to which he con­ in touch and letting them know
sented Major changes are ahrad you still care.
for Vlrgos In the com ing year
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb I9|
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­ Ways can be found today to
d ic tio n s today. M ali 91 to s tr e n g t h e n y ou r e c o n o m ic
Astro Graph, d o this newspaper. foundations and give you greater
B o x 1846. C in c in n a ti. OH feelings o f material security
45201.
Keep on searching
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct 23) Up
PISCES (Feb 20-March 19| If
until today you've been a poor you vent your ambitious m oods
collector regarding remunera­ today, you can get quite a bit
tion to which you're entitled If accomplished. Use your Im a g i­
you stand firm now. you'll get nation to advance your selfw hat's owed to you.
interests.

What The Day
Will Bring...

AN N IE
TUMBLEW EEDS

by T. K. Ryan

THIS MONTHTHBCOVfcTtC’ WJCK
p b a iu s * Goes to t u b *miBes
&lt; iA W G e c o L itc v o H i t w
PUFFIN' SHUFFLE* O yUCKY STUFF!

PBCEHVB PUCK, l NAMft YOU

IMPIANOF TH6 MONTH*!

V

A *•

&lt;*ee,iHATSA
TOUGH*. TuefTrseei
so m a w y g r m t
CANSCFCHUP-

r~

ARIES I March 21 April 19)
D on 't h e s it a t e to request
assistance today Irom one to
whom you've been helpful re­
cently. T h is person will be
happy to balance accounts
TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
Your chances lor getting some­
thing for which you've been
hoping are Improving with each
passing day Outside contribu­
tors will enter the picture
QEMINI (M ay 21 June 20)
Your mode o f behavior in han­
dling difficult situations will win
you the respect of ol tiers today
and enhance your rrputalnn and
status.
CANCER {June 2 1-July 22|
Happy results are likely today
regarding social plans about
which y o u 've been dubious.
What you had feared wus of your
own Imagination,
LEO (J u ly 23-Aug 22) A
solution will be discovered today
pertaining to a problem you
haven t been able to resolve for
most of the week. Now you can |
change something for the belter.

by Leonard Starr

�P EO P LE
E v M in fl H tra ld , S a n fo rd , F I.

—

F r id a y , A ug . M . 1 M J - * A

—

—

—

■

Gardening

Fungicides Prevent —Not Cure—Diseases
Fungus diseases are a common problem in Che
Florida landscape Unfortunately, fungus disease
control can be a complicated matter. Obviously.
It's essential to choose the right material for the
Job.
Fungicides work by preventing plant diseases.
They serve as shields against infection — not
cures These chemicals can t save plants that are
already Infected. They can only limit the sprrad
of a disease to healthy plants. So It's very
important to begin a fungicidal spray program at
the first signs o f attack — or better yet, even
before you notice any symptoms at all.
l*robably the most confusing thing about using
fungicides is selecting Ihe right material. A lot of
things play a part in the choice you’ll make
Seme fungicides are "spcclffe," and will control
only certain disease on certain plants. Others are
"broad spectrum ." and will control a lot of
different fungus problems on a variety of plant
types And sometimes, a lot o f different fungicides
will lie recommended for the same disease
problem. How do you know which one lo use?
Recommended fungicides .a n vary in strength
and effectiveness If the disease Is severe, either
because you waited too long to do anything about
It. or because It’s one that spreads rapidly, such
as dow ny m ildew, use th e m ost effective
fungicide you can find Vou m ay have to go to a
specialty store lor a fungicide o f this type as they

F

^

take several months to show up.
Generally, the longer the Incubation period, the
slower a disease spreads, and the more easily II
can be controlled Obviously, diseases that have
short Incubation periods, such as bacterial blights
and dow ny mildews, are the most dilhcult to
control

Bessesen
H ortlcu ltrisl
323 2SOO
Eat. 181

M
r

are not alw ays available at garden centers
If you catch the disease before II becomes
severe, a less effective fungicide may do just as
well In clearing up the problem In a garden, you
can usually apply a less effective fungicide If
you've practiced such things as crop rotation,
planting resistant varieties, and good cultural
practices. Sill), the choice of which fungicide lo
use can be confusing The best advice is to check
with you. garden supplier, or the Extension OfTlcr
and follow ihelr advice
As I said, fungicides work by preventing plant
diseases — not c u r e s When you first notice a
problem, usually leaf sjmiIs or blight, you can lxfairly sure that ihe plants have been Infected lor
at least three days, and maybe as long as two
weeks. Symptoms of bacterial leaf spots and
downy mildews usually appear three to 10 days
after Infection Other leaf diseases have Incuba­
tion periods of from seven to JO days — maybe as
tong as 10 to H days Greasy spot on citrus ran

Couple
Married
55 Years

r o iiK r r K M lr

m eal

s it e

fo r

lUlich where he Isa volunteer.
li It he parly I was beautiful
and lovely." Mrs Hardy said.
"W e rannol put Into words how
much we enjoyed It.”
The Hurdys werr married A u g
23, 1930. in D ecatu r, Ga. He w as
an auto mechanic beforr fils
rrtirrmenl in l!HK)
Mrs Hardy was a practical
nurse at Henry Grady hospital In
Allania Sire did private duty
nursing alter the couple's m ove
lo Sanford 15 years ago and
retired In l!IH3 following a

S C C

*

tl disease symptoms that have appeared seem
to get worse alter you’ve sprayed, don’t gei
discouraged Remember iha*. fungicides can only
prevent — not cure — an Infection A disease may
continue to produce symptoms for some time
after spraying However, you should notice a
slowdown in symptom development within about
ten days follow ing application of a fungicide.

Just Say No Club Helps
To Keep Kids Off Drugs

Marcus and Vlrgia (Hobble)
Harvey. 1700 W 3rd St.. Sanlord, were ih r gucsis of honor at
a celeb ration on their 55th
wedding anniversary. The party
was held at Ih r Kmghta o f
Columbus building In Sanford
during the luncheon hour.
A yellow and while co lo r
scheme was used In the decor
ami refrestununts Including a
In-aut d u lly em bossed cu k e
topped with a traditional bride
and groom Mrs. .Jessie Brisaon
made a centerpiece of money
contributed by the H a rd ys'
blends w ho regularly meet at
Ih r

Other variables, such as weather conditions,
cultural controls, fungicide toxtcliv. and spray
application techniques will have some effect on
your attempts to control a disease, loo Out. the
one thing that will have the most Influence Is the
time at w hich vou begin your spray program The
earlier you begin, the more successlul you’ll be
Inspect your plants carefully and frequently,
and la-gin spraying at the llrst sign ol Infertlon It
may apjtear that exicnsive disease symptoms
develop overnight. However, a few spots always
appear on Ihe leaves before a sodden explosion of
symptoms You should lie alert for these early
warnings.

M r. and Mrs. M arcus Hardy
stroke. She Is a past prrsldrnt of
l he Sanford senior Citterns Club,
a representative o f Ihe Silver
Haired

L e g i s la t u r e

In

Tallahassee for three terms and
past Noble Grand o f Semlnola
Rebecca Lodge N o 43. Sanford.
The couple h ave one daughler.

S e ts

The Leisure Tim e Program at
Seminole Community C ollege
announces that the following
classes w ill begin the week of
August 20 und September 3.
I OHS. ’ ’T h ese classes are selfsupported by student lees ui no
expense (o Hie taxpayer." a c­
c o rd in g to F a y C. B r a k e .
Coordinator o f Ihe Program R e g ­
istrations are bring accepted lu

Hetty J. Starnes. San Anlonio.
Texas, and two grandsons
Th e 55th anniversary party
hostess was Jo Ann Henwood.
m anager of the congregate meal
site, assisted by volunteers,
Jessie Brlsson. Jean Ulriallo.
John Blum and l&lt;olx*ri Jeffrey

L e is u r e

Ihe Registrar's O ffice at SCC.
C O N D IT IO N IN G (e v e n in g
classes — Modern day condi­
tion in g u sin g Ih e Nautilus
equipment. Selection of Individ­
ualized program Including Jog­
ging. flexibilities and calisthen­
ics.
COMMUNITY HAND (evening
class) — An organization open lo
anyone In Ihe comm unity Inter

IU

FALL
VEGGIES
ARE IN!!!
• Seeds By Fredonia
• Paks
• Pots

T im e

DEAR A B B Y : My name Is
Angel W ilt* I am il years old and
1 am a captain in one of the
"Just Say N o" clubs, helping
oilier kids to sav no lo drugs
These clubs arc Ix-lng started all
over the couutiy They were
formed last February under
Oakland Purr nix In Action, a
program to educate parents In
early drug prevention
Our aim Is to gt-i kids to say no
to drugs because drugs will mess
up th e ir m inds, hurl th eir
bodies, ruin their chances in life,
hurt their grades, make ihelr
parents sad. and gel them In
trouble with the law
If any of your readers would
like lo know how lo stnrl n " J uki
Say N o " club In Ihelr own
communities they can srnd a
long, slum ped, srlf-uddrrasrd
envelope to: Oakland Parents In
Action. 1504 Franklin Si.. Suite
HIO. Oakland t ’alll ‘ Mb 12 Or
call: (4 15| H3B-607H.

Thunk vou.
ANGEL W IL T Z
DEAR ANG E L; Glad lo help
Please give me u progress rrjxirt
DEAR A B B Y: I hope you can
offer a practical solution to me
and millions ol other lathers who

C la s s e s

AEROBIC DANCE/EXEKCISE
estrd In performing .ill styles ol
c o n rc rt band litera tu re
No Imnmlgn and allrrnoon classes)
audition Is necessary. Any hand — A physical Illness course
Involving vigorous rxcrcisc to
Instrument will l»c acceptable
J A Z Z D A N C E / E X E R C IS E music. Different routines are
(m orning and evening classes} — luiighl with Ihe emphasis on
A tota l form ol dunce und dancing for m ovrntrnl and
exercise In whlrh you are tuughl
OIL A ACRYLIC FAINTING
p r o p e r body a lig n m r n l.
coordination, discipline, flexibili­ (m orning class) — Basic to
ty and rhythm You accomplish advanced techniques In acrylic
muscle toning stamina, poise and oil painting concentrating
and confidence III yourself, along oil use o f color, cum post l Inn and
with appreciation for music and perspective us applied to prototal enjoyment Jane Fondas (rail, figure, still llle and land­
scape palm ing
workert Is taught In I his class
TENNIS I (Saturday morning
S L IM ’ N TRIM (a ftern o o n
classes) — This exercise class Is &lt;lass) — Instruction in the Ion
designed lo achieve results in damenlals of tenuis snrh as grip,
stance, forehand, backhand and
r e d u c in g body fa t. to n in g
stretching, and firming up your service, Scoring rules and regu­
b o d y . T h e r e w i l l b r a lations will also be taughl Stu­
cardlvascular workout ol aerobic dents must furnish Ihelr own
rackets, bring one unopened ran
routines and flour exercesrs
Nutritional hints are provrdrd of balls lo the first meeting, und
wear regulation lentils shoes.
by ihr instructor.
COLOR A STYLE WORKSHOP NOT JOGGING SHOES
TENNIS II ISaturday morning
(afternoon and evening class) —
T w o three-hour sessions which class) — A follow up lo Tennis I.
w ill cover personal color analy­ Designed (or those who possess
s is . m akeu p s e le c tio n and some knowledge of lennls but
application lectiniques. Class need help In developing solid
enrollment Is limited to six lo ground strokes and more ball
(hat each student m ay be given control.
as much personal attention as
possible.
G O LF I ISaiurduy mornign
and evening classes) — Designed
to leach the student ihr baste
Phil Paatoret I
techniques of playing golf - how­
to hold the club, stance and II you deal with someone you don't
sw ing Students should bring a 4 care (or. it’s business as usual Bu­
or 5 Iron to the first class reaucrat* call this ' contrurtlve
meeting.
engagement"
GO LF II (Saturday morning Wm U i ’I II be wondrrlul II they could
class| — Each session will be lavest • cocktail glass tkat dribbled
designed for ihe development of late Ike mouth instead of the 11*7
g o lf s most common shots such
as short game (putting, chip­
ping. short approach and sand
shots); the middle irons; and the
long game (Irons and woodsl.
Students should bring Ihe 4. 6 An authentic Western movie Is one in
and 9 irons to the Itrst class which ihe hero hup the hone and
meeting.
waves goodbyo to the heroine

BARBS

Seiritte
BUY 5 TRAYS
at *3 .9 9 per tray
G E T
171 w.

1

t r ., F R E E

ul m u y

t in .

LAKE MARY
L 123-6133

When applying fungicides, only use the rales
listed on the product label Sometimes, rales are
listed In ranges, such as four lo six ounces per
thousand square feet,’ ’ Generally, the tower rate
is the amount used early In the season, or when
ihe plants are small The higher rale Is used when
the plants are full-grown, or ihe disease has
become severe Sometimes It's a good Idea lo use
(he higher rale early in ihe season. This will
reduce ihr chance of disease early in ihe plant's
llle. and make any disease control that Is
necessary lalrr In Ihe season more effective.
Unless l!u product specifically stales otherwise.
It’s usually OK lo use the higher rule, right from
Ihe start.
Good cultural practices, such as sanitation In
the garden or landscape, can go a long way in
preventing disease buildup In I he Hrsl place.
Krmovlug diseased plant parts and picking up
fallen leaves Is what we mean by sanitation
U n tilin g Irrtlll/cr applications and proper
watering ale other things to watch in reducing
fungus Infections
Remember, Ireai your fungus problems as early
us possible A fungicide can I gel rid ol an
existing disease li can only krrp Ihe disease Irnm
spreading A disease that's already present will
rrmaln on the plain unill ihe plant dies, or ts
removed
Happy gardening'

BOTH

KVnUiU

oru Mai

um ji

j u i mrr. u - u

MAITLAND
•34-20*0 J

lare Ihe tallowing dilemma

A son. about lo l&gt;&lt;- married.
Invites his lather to his bachelor
party Hull lakes place Ihe utghl
lx-fore the wedding In 1085. It
seems that an X-rated, sexually
explicit Him Is shown as pari ol
the program. Fathers and pro­
spective lathers In law are In­
vited lu attend, along with Hie
b r id e g r o o m a n d h is m ale
friends.
How can a male parent who
really doesn't waul lo attend this
kind of parly decline wiihoul
making himself appear prudish
or square? Or. u hr docs attend
In order lo lx- accepted as "one
ol the boys." what Is Ihe proprr
conduct at such parlies?
OKIE FROM MUSKOGEE
DEAR OKIE; A male parent*
can decline by saying. “ Thanks,
hui If you don i mind. I think I'll
pass "
And ll he utlrnds hr should sli
In the hac k ol tin- room and lxhlmsrll

DEAR ABBY: I live In an area
ol Texas where tornadoes are aju
to occur, so I try lo learn all ihe
xalrtv precautions I can
Lately, people have been tell­
ing me that I should keep my
w in d o w s c lo s e d d u r in g a
tornado
Ahby. I've always heard tlt.it
vou should keep your windows
0 p rn
C o u ld y o u p l e a s e
straighten I his oul lor rue?
CONFUBED IN TE X A S
D E A R C O N F U S E D : My
experts say to leave at least one
window open on each side ol Huhouse- lo krrp II Iron: imploding
(T h a i's llic reverse o f "exp lod ­

ing")

D E A R A B B Y : W h a t's Huproper etiquette here? A friend
o f mine is expeeilog triplets.
Mosi everyone who attends her
baby shower give her three
presents, or Is one gill nrrcpl
able? Any suggestions?
OVER BUDGET
D EAR OVER: Give her three
gilts, one lor each baby; the t ost
01 all three should amount to
whatever you would have sjm-i i I
had sin- been expecting a single
She may appreciate a gill ccrllll
ra le for a diaper service

�10A—iv t a la f MaraW. Sanford, FI.

Friday, Aug. JO, m s

7 1 - H t l p W a n te d

Legal Notice

le gal Notice
CITY O f SANFORD. FLORIDA
NO TICITO PUBLIC
Ncf'ra it hereby given mat •
Putdk Hearing *til be held by
the Planning end Zoning Com
mlseton in the City Commlttlon
Roam . Clip H ell. San ford.
Florida ot 7 00 P M a i Thor*
day. I«»tember f. I1*J to can
eider the following chengee and
amendment! lo the Zoning Or
dlnance and am ending the
Future (.end Ute E lement of the
Camprohontivo Plan of the City
ot lan lor( Seminole County,
Florida
R e io n ln g fr o m SR I A ,
S in gle F a m ily R e ild e n lla l
Dwelling Olltrkt
To that Of SR I. Single Family
Retidenflal Dwelling Dittr irt
' That property described#*
Tract ft
Lett M through Pa. Amended
Plat of Orange Helghtt. PB 4.
P C 14
AND
Re/oning from SR IA, Single
Fam ily Reildenllal Dwelling
Olelrkt
To that el CC 7. General
Commercial Dlttrkl
T ra c in
Lott X through St and the
allay ed|ecent lo the E of Lott
7* through II end "i of vacated
allay abutting loti |1 through N.
A m en d ed P lo t o f O ra n g e
Hoighls PB4.PG44
Being more generally da
ten bed at lorried; s of ISth
Street. N of llth Street. E ol
French Avenue and W of Elm
Avenue
The planned ute of fhle pro
perty It tor reildenllal dupleree.
a commercial end retell aervlce
center and e perk
The Planning end Zoning
Commlttlon will tubmli e roc
ommendalun lo the City Cam
m illion In larer of. or aga.nel,
• ha r e q u e t lt d c h a n g e or
amendment The City Com
mlatlon will hold a Public
Hearing In the City Commlttlon
Room In the City Hell. Sanlord.
Florida at f 0* P M on Monday.
September tl. II I I lo contlder
laid recommendation!
All partiet In Inleretl end
d llien t thall have an opportunl
ty lo Ire heard el laid haar Ingt
By order of the Planning end
Zoning Commlttlon ol the City
of Sanlord. Florida fhlt Itfh day
el Augutl. Hit
John Mor rit. Chairman
City of Sanlord Planning
and Zoning Commlttlon
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC II
a per ton decide! In appeal a
dec Ilion made with ratpacl lo
any mailer contldered al Iha
above meeting! or hoar Ingt. ha
may need a verbatim record ol
the proceeding!. Including Iha
tetlimony and evidence, which
record It not provided by Iha
City ol Sanlord (ESIMOIOSI
Publish AugutM i. tn. m s
DEI III
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given Ihel we
will be eng egad in butlnati al
JUT N Orlando A v t . Samlnol*
Ceunly. Florida under the
f Ictttloue name ol FRANK'S
FROZEN VOOURT SHOPPE,
and that we Intend lo rogleter
Mid name with the Clark ol Iha
Circuit Court, leminot* County.
Florida In accordance with Iha
provlelont ol th* Flctltlout
Nam# Slotutee. To wit Section
MS ot Florid* Slttulet ItW
/%/ Frank V Sloan
/*J LauleTuip
/%/Otnald Wm ver
PvAt'leh Augutl o u t Sap
•embark. II INI
OEI 141
IN f i l l CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTEFNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF T N I STATE OF
FLORIDA. INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CIVIL ACTION
CASE NO i M 7471 CA Of O
MOL TON, ALLENANO
WILLIAMS. LTO .
Plalnlltt.
vt
JAMF S RONALD DEATON,
a ltl .
Delandanlt
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice It hereby given Ihel.
pureuent lo e Final Judgment ol
F e r e d o iu r * entered In Iha
above 1 1yled cau l*. In Iha
C irc u it Court ol Sem inole
County, florid* I will M il Iha
property tlluale In Samlnol*
County. Florid*, deter‘bed at
lo t 7. f 0 4WOOD PHASE I.
according to Iha Plat thereof at
recorded In Plal Book II, at
Pagat U through St. Inclutuvo,
Ol Iho Public M ocord t ol
Seminole County, Florida
ol public Mlo. lo Iha highetl and
trail bidder, lor cath. *1 Iha watt
Irani door ol Iho Somlnolo
County Ceurlhoute. ol Sanlord.
Florida at II M A M on Sap
lernbar » . INS. Wotl Front
OMfa
WITNESS my hand and taal
of Ihlt court on Ihlt ) l t l day of
Augutl. IN I
(SEA L)
O AVION BERRIEN
CLERK CIRCUIT COURT
By Diane K Brummell
Deputy Clerk
Publlth Augutl T). M. INS
DEI let

CLASSIFIED ADS

b u r n t orPUBLIC HEARING
THE SEMINOLE COUNTy
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
will hold a public hearing in
Room W IX of iho Somlnolo
County Sarvirat Building. Son
ford. Flor Ido on SEPTEMBER
14. IN I AT f 00 P M . or at toon
thereafter at poeeibi* to com Id
at the following
M im e ......... &lt;.. . 47C . Im*
PUBLIC HEARINO
3
cenMcutie* firm SIC a jin*
FOR CHANOEOF
1:30 A.M. • 5:30 P.M.
7 consecutive limes 52C a Hit*
JONINO REGULATIONS
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10 c*«ecwtWe timet 44C ■ Rag
I
O . W . M c V A Y
SATURDAY 9 - Noen
ASSOCIATES - S PE C IF IC
C entred A t t n AriHoM*
AMENDMENT FROM P R E ­
3 lin e s
SERVATION ANO COMMER
CIAL TO OENCRAL RURAL
AND R tZ O N C FR O M A I
DEADLINES
A G R IC U L T U R E A N O C l
RETAIL C O M M E R C IAL TO
N o o n Th© Day Befor® Publication
RM 1 T R A V E L T R A IL E R
Sunday * N oon Friday
PARK ANO CAMPSITES P Z IM M I I I I - B*g.n M It E
M
o
n
d
a y - 11: 00 A .M . Saturday
and I IS II N of Iha SE corner of
lo l &gt;4. SI Jotoph’ t Subdlyltlon.
PB I. Pg 114, Ihonco S 4t"14'II"
W X 1 ft 1 0T7T0I- E IIS II, S
w i e ' t r w iio ft. n o P D i r w
US tl. S W 14 I7"W IIS II N
7 1 - H t l p W anted
21 — Personals
w i r w " w is ft.
S IFTS4 IIW IIS II, N
00*11 41 W 144 S4 11 to Iha Sly
CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
R/Wol I 4. thane. N 41*4*'M" E
ABORTION COUNSELING
14 N. N S l » i n j E m ft. thane*
F ree P re g n a n c y T e ilt
run oleng a curve Sly. having a
C o n fid e n t ia l
In d ivid u a l
M il French Av*
radlue ot IN ft. a central angle
a u ltla n c *
C a ll le r
of 7 S * ir «". on ore distance of
appointment evening hour*
714 IS I t . Ihonc# S S**4# )4 E
evellabl*
in »~et
41« It fhonc# S 00*11 40' C
A dlytfton ©f A AA Imptoyrntiit
140 n ft. thane# S * r S 4 'll' W
Work whon you mm* Apply
23— Los! A Found
111 I f ft. t 0*11 4* " E 14 U ft. N
todAy
g r i t i r E i i ft s 0 * 1 1 4 0 e
Cell S usan................. 17100*1
I f M ft. Ihone# i p r t o 't l" W
___________ M O F B E I___________
LOST Smeil lemal* white poo
4711 It S CO- l i t # " E IN ft to
dk Lake Mary ere* K id !
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK
th# Point of Beginning, all being
pet. I yr old. unlrlmmed. no
In taellen 11. Township If.
collar m 741*_______________
N eeded lor fas* paced sales #r
Rang* 70. Samlnol* County.
genliallan with good growth
Florida
opportunities F ■par lane# In
25— Special Notices
FURTHER DESCRIBES AS
accounts payable, calculator.
10't ACRES LOCATED AO
C R T A typing required Goad
J A C C N T TO O R A N G E
• MARY K AY COSMETICS*
pay S benefits
BOULEVARD. ON THE CAST
Skin cart and color flair
SIDE o r I 4
CONNIE
........... P I 7714
NON SA40KERS PREFERRED
Further, a public hearing will
TIC Hem* Cam pa .lent. Inc.
be held by Iha SEMINOLE
Quality
Llva
let*
COUNTY P L A N N IN G AND
CbH L 14mm, 322-3M3
Or act.... - ................... 177 IH i
ZONING CO M M ISSIO N ON
A crylic Applicator* needed to
SEPTEMBER 4. INS AT 7 00
apply protective coaling on
P M . or at toon lhareal'er at
27— Nursery A
cart, boats end plenet Si to
p o i i l b l t . In R m
W 170.
SI I par hour We train For
Child Care
Samlnol* County Sar vie at Build
work In Sanford era* call
Ing. Sanlord. Florida, In order to
Tam pa i l l b is T ill
review, haar com ment! and
Babysitting in my home Re
m at* recommendation! lo Iha
ipo-mbl* mother Hoi maalt
AIR CONDITIONING
Board ol County Commissioners
H I 144* a n y t im e ___________
MECHANICS
ol Samlnnl# County on Iha above
Baby lining in my horn*. Mon
Installation Salary bated on
application! tl
Frl F *n c *d yard behind
aspar lane* plot bontfdt Paid
Those In attendance will be
Plnacratl E lam 1H H I)
v a c a t i o n a n d h o lid a y *
heard and written comment!
Babyllttlng In my horn* Mon
X S m AM I______________________
may b* Iliad with Iha Lard
Frl I 00 am lo I M pm
M anagem ent M an ager
A ir Conditioning Duct Machanlc
Fenced yard Hoi MatTk.
Hearings may be continued
Experienced only Up to I* per
7
7
3
amt______________
from lima to lima at found
hour Cell: H I *111__________
n tt e t ta r y Fu rth er details
(■ p t r la n c a d M t lh t r w ill
A L L T Y P E S JO tS
available by calling 111 Ilk)
bakyell my ham*. Fenced
S T A R T W ORK NOWI
yer* 771*1*7________________
E »t 441
Pareont ere ad cited Iha I II
they decide lo appeal any da
F
ORCE
rot
33— Real Estate
114Ion made el th*M meeting!
they will naad a record ol Iha
Courses
1 NO
^
F IE 1
p roceed in g! and lor such
Report reedy tor work at 4 AM
pu/pott. they may need lo
407 W Ilf St
Sanford
ensure that a verbatim record ol
A *
* *
3111590
Iha proceedings It mad* which
a Thinking ol fatting a a
record Include! Iha testimony
e Real Eltat* llca a ta f a
Avon Beauty C*
and evidence upon which Iha
W# altar Fre* Tvltlan
Start your own business lor SSI
appeal It lo b# made
end cant invwvt Training I
B I R R _____________
771 1*1*
Board ol
Call Dicker V k bl ter datalli
A V O N B A R N IN O IW O W III
County Commlttloners
III IW H I 7704 Eva 774 ItM
O P E N T I R R I T O R I I S NOWI 11
Samlnol* County. F loc Ida
Keyes el F ler Ida . Inc
M IR M e tW R If
BY Heft)He'din. Director
tt Yeart Esperlencal
B E A U T IC IA N
E eperltnced
Land Management
Good Mary 17*1 kxallon tor
Publlth Augutl M. INS
55— Business
growth W 7111._____________
DFI lit

Seminole

■OM

323-5176

AAA TEMP

IN TM I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR IS M tN O lB C O U N T v .
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
FM* Number II * * ! CP
Ofvltkcl PROS A T C
INRE ESTATEOF
BLANNIE KATE CLAIMON
Daces ted
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The administration ol Iha
estate ol B L A N N IE KATE
C LA IM O N d ec ea se d
F ile
Number I ) eel CP. It pending In
•h* Circuit Court lor Samlnol*
County, F lo r id a , P ro b a ta
Ol vision th* addratt ol which II
Samlnol* County CourlhouM.
Sanlord. Florida l l l l l
The
name and k d d r o tt o l Iha
personal representative and Iha
partontl representative t al
lor nay ere tat forth below
All Interested pareont are
required lo III* with th# courl.
W IT H IN THREE M ONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF TH I
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE III all claim*
agalntl lh* ettote and (SI any
o b la d lo n by on In ltra tla d
parson lo whom nolle* woe
monad that thollangae th* valid
Ity ol Iho will. Iha quantizations
of lh* per ton* I repratonlaliv*.
venue o&gt; jurisdiction ol lh*
(OUft
ALL CLAIMS AND OSJEC
TIONS NOT SO F H E O WILL
BE FOREVER BAHREO
Dale ol lh* lift! publication *1
•hit nolle* Ol administration
Augutl 11. Ittl
Per tonal Representative
MARGARET GOUGE NICE
A I!or nay lor
Ptrtonal Reprotonlallv*
M A R G A R IT A WHARTON
P O BoellFl
Oviedo Florid* H IM
Ttlaphona DOtl MS M»1
Publish August 11. IO Ittl
DEI III

X I WY D

fry

MKf n » • W|*« BlamH

TQLTCTLKWNJ

DOXTE

NTCXJ

EXWNTAWDTMQ

DOWD
MO. "

RQMB

P WR X

DOXU
-

WEX

IWNLM

RATES

Employment

p)«MN

W NN

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

by CONNif VbH Nl n

•D X

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

C ELEB R ITY CIPHER
(cMbiNl Ltohmi i f (|i«(yBm« t f |f« l B &lt; fcww
(•RRM

7 1 -H tlp Wanted

DOX

MQ

WQEWTL
OEWQR.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "I got maritod a lol m my
imaglnallofl 04 4 child But I got over Iha utga " —
AnjaKca Hutton

BLOOM CO U N TY

Orelre matur#
own transportation Rater arveae Call P I i»7l aftor 4

GAS ATTENDANT
Tap salary, h atpltalliatton,
other benefit* Call business
office tor Into » &gt; X a l_______
O E N IV A A R IA Maed mature,
rtepenelbto woman for attar
school car* In my hem* Mint
have reliable transportation
Call SfASSlt. between 7 PM
A * P M ______________________
Immediate openings tor ap
polntmant sattore 17 or older
preferred No * spar lane a not
•scary Full tlm* only Call
ere »* 7 ___________________
LABORERS
Rol labia workari needed
tor tint ehltt
Ablest Temporary Sarvicas
___________ MUMS____________

LANDSCATE MAINTENANCE
WORKER
Needed Company seeks ca
rear minded individual Inter
eeled In working In a Christian
Envlronmenl &gt;11401

TANDSCATE HELPER M Hr.
Call 34* S4M. after 7 pm

UVEIN
Mature women needed to car*
for disabled Mt
have
own transportthan
local
references Must
r I Call H I II
Far Hesrtaka
BabysnSer. S days a
&gt;*0-W». ask tor Brenda

MEDICAL OfTICE
INSURANCE BILLING CLERK
Submit return* Ip IK S M ed ical
Plata. Sulla l«*. Sanford. r L
17771_______________________ _
MEDICAL RECORDS
TECHNICIAN 7 y rv hoepllat
m edical record! a ip
re
qulrad Ceding. A abstracting
tN III* d e s ire d
C o n ta c t
personnel W. Vtlutta Mam*
rtol Hasp. 7*1 W. Ptyiwaath
Ava .Polan d FI B O I

NURSES AIDES
All ihlftt Goad almoiphara
and benalllt Apply all
Defter y Manor &lt;0 N Hw y I 7/P1
________DeBary I Q F ________

NURSES AIDES
Wanted Mutl be certified or
aep A ll ehlflt A p p ly in
parson
Lahavlew Nursing
Cantor, f l t t lnd I I . Sentord

Office Help- AR Rinds!
Cell New Herltens

H I 7X0

Oftf Thg Road Truck Driver
Call New Her Itone....... H i moo
PART TIME
Work tram ham* servicing our
customers on new telephone
program Earn up to S10 hr
Cell 4t* 4771 er 470 HU.

PAYROLL CLERK

Opportunities

CASHIERS NEEDED

W * e r* seeking a well orpan lewd
In d ivid u a l, wllh 7 1 y r i
payroll eiperiance In a com
pvterlied envlronmenl Sue
ceotful candidal*
will be
responsible tor processing a
HO employe* payroll weekly
Cantact;

Family restaurant Lew Inter
•SI assumable mortgages
Reasonable lass*
Sam*
location )0 years Full
service
Call lor details
Owner Broker 777 147*______

Tor convenience store with gat
Secottd A third stud available

MARCAR ALUMINUM M O O .
322)510.

Al— Money to Lend
N E IO M O N E V t
Evaryona does at soma lima It
you own a homo and have a
job. I t ! easier then you think
C R E D IT *

Ap*ly In per sen Tenneco Oil.
ite Lake Mery Btvd . Sentord
FI

CASHIER
Convenience store Top Salary,
hoepltalliallon. I week vac*
lion each * months, other
benalllt Apply
M l N Laurel Ave . Sentord I M
- « i X , Monday Friday

CHURCH ORGANIST

N O P R O B LE M I
EM BIBB
f R E E D L A N D E B . INC
th# Mortgage Petals
Mt I Adamant* Drive
'llctnead Martgeg* Broker

Legal Notice
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
IN ANO FOR
TH I E IO H T( I NTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
S C M IN O K COUNTV,
FLORIOA
Css* No u I I I CP
IN Ml
F stele ol HAMPER
SMITH, Deceased
A M tN D tD NOTICE
OF ACTION
NOTICE IS H F R E B Y G IV f N
dial an action ha* bean Iliad
against all parties claiming &gt;h
•tracts by. through, under or
age-nil lh* Decadent HAMPER
SMITH Th* nature at lh* action
It on# seating to determine lh#
•wire el Ilia Decedent H ARPER
SMITH Said action is filed In
th* Circuit Courl In and lor
Saminol* County, Florida, and
lh* elf la ol lh* cat* is " In Na
Ltitle Ol M AM Pf M S M ITH
You are required to serve a
C-SII ot your written detent*. It
any I* II on M O N A LD L SIMS
Petitioner* attorney what*
addratt It IIS Eael Central
Boulevard. O rlando. Florida
11*01 en ur be lor a Sapl 14 . It t l
and III* lh* original with lh*
Clerk ol Ihlt Courl adhar be lore
serv.ee en Petitioners attorney
er Im m ediately Iherealle r,
other w I la a delaull w ill b*
entered against you lor lh*
rebel demanded m lh* Petition
D A TE D o n Aug I*. I t t )
O A V O N B E M H IE N
Clack ol Iha Circuit Courl
By Bally M Capps
Deputy Clerk
Publlth Augutl I*. 11 30 Sap
•amber 4. I N I
OEI *$

Wednesday evening! end Sun
day services Send resume’
and church background to 11*
Perk A v * , Sentord H7FI
Attn Music Olreclor__ __
CHURCH SECRETAR Y
Monday through Friday. I X
A M to ) P M Office and
public ra lallen t skills r*
qulrad Apply by calling Ml
0 7 1 _________ _______________

QUALITY CONTROL
INSPECTOR
S y e a r* * ip * r l* n c * a t a
mechanical inspector Par
menont position
Never a fee I

TEMP PERM_______ 774-1341

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE
High
Earning*
Potonllell
Modern office In eecollenl
location Complete training
program Now division ot old
established firm Call now
•or
detolls on pleasant
working conditions and to
secure your future
Jim Rafferty
!74**M

Wllfi aepandad dull*! needed
tor an eeclttng and chalNng
ing Danlal Practice Part lima
hours with toll lima banalde
In Orange City X mlnutot
from lon g wood Sand return*
to
1 Pin# Meadow Courl. D ai ary
__________ Fla H i l l ________
Full and pan lima potmans new
available Mutl b* dependable
and display a pleasant par
tonality Apply In parson al
R a i'k . 1000 W HWV 414.
Long wood

by B crk e B reathed
cdJAUc:
Jn n frK ,

wm.

BAMBOO COVE APTS
to* E. Airport Bled.
t Bdrm . I I
1Bdrm . ||
PSSONB___________ XS-4M1

73— Rooms for Rent

SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR
Part lima Wed
Sunday
Evenings and areaSends O *
psndabi* Apply In person
Samksala Ford Irsearper ated
Tkrvdaf Ja* Hunting t
C a ll F u tu re s
th e y ha v e
hindrade ot |*b openings tor
1has* who want t* work

ITBdXB
CEMENT W O R K E R S A
HELPERS Eacaltont par
Star! right away 47* 4KX
DELIVERY HELPERS- no *■
parlance necessary Full tlm*
Good Starting pay STS 4X0
O E N I R l. L O F F I C E
TRAINEES
Great starting
job Severe! openings Good
pay ITS HOC
FACTORY AS S E M B LY end
PRODUCTION WORK Most
shifts open Good pay scales
STS 4X0
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN O S General Construction labor
Good pay STS 4X0
TRUCK DRIVERS Long haul
Immediate' Good driving re
cord Over 1) 471 4X0
LOCAL OR IV C R S* Straight
true Is Good pay Start right
away 47* 4KB
R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
HELPERS. CLERKS. CRT
O PER ATO RS- Im m ed iate
openings Good pay tcetos
Call 470 4X0 NOW I
WELDERS Certified Eecellent
pay scales Call today 471
PAINTERS A P AI NTER
H E L P E R S - Im m e d ia te
openings, good storting pay
Cell today art 4X0

Christ!** Apts A Hemes
TV. kitchen, laundry, maid. SX
wk A up OH a n K S - C l h i l
SANFO R D Furnished rooms by
Maid service Call X I 4X 7
&gt;7 PM a ll Palmetto A ve___
SUNLANO ESTATES Room
with bath tor rent Kitchen
pr hr1*leges tad per woe* indudes utilities Call 333 v n
THE FLORIDA HOTEL
» 0 OekA venue ......
X I 4X 4
Reasonable Areas ly Rates

77— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

m ie n

A V A IL A B L E NOW
Furnished Studio Apartments
On* Bedroom Apts
Two Badrncm Apts

m u cu M

103— HO USAS
Unfurnished / Rent

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNT
RANCH STYLE LIVINGIII

SANF0R0 COURT ARTS.
323-3301

DELTONA
1 bdrm I bath. elr. screened
porch 1H0 me 170710_______

r * 77tT0ElTONA * k *

Far* Apts ter Senior CllUens
H I Palmetto Av*
J Cowan Ne Phone Ca-H
Lovely on# bdrm Complete
privacy 1*0 par weak plus
IttO security Cell X I 77*1 or
X 1 M X _____________________
I fctrm Delyse Adult* r 1 pats
air. quiat residential 1171 me
♦ deposit X h R »t* __________
1 Bdrm hug* rooms, complete
privacy 1100 week. SIX sacu
rlty deposit Cell X3 7344 or
XJV4X______________________
4 Room e f f ic ie n c y , pelt
Jewniewn 17*0 00 mo H M 00
lit X I uR&gt;&lt;

• COUNTRY SETTING •
lA ff# I 4 ) M r m
M y H LftktvtewFamily Paaltida

OfTICE CLERK

2 Bdrm 5335. 5150dtpout
■ elr X3 X I 7 after Spm ■
1 bdrm I bath newly rsdsco
rated, central elr /heel, well to
welt cerpeting DM per me
1 7 0 0 security deposit After 1
1 BEDROOM APT FOR RCNT
1771 month, ne pets.
H I 4X0

77— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

DR YWALL- With or without
o s p o r lt n c *
Im m e d ia t e
openings Good pay Call to
dey.STBSXB

Spacious AporlmonleLokokront. pool, tonnto adultv
no pots, laundry Starting at
SIRS a mo Call XJK7Xtoeo*
1 and 7 bdrm Alto Ivmlthod
otftetoncy from S7J week UM
deposit No pots Cell 7X34X7
S 7 p m sis Palmetto_________
7bdrm/l both nice * r * a u x No
pots United Sato* Associate*.
Inc REALTORS X I X X
I Bdrm 7 Beth, central elr. ell
appliance*, pool First end
security 1433 per mo Cell
X I EBHkftor IP M

* s H O M ES FO R R E N T k k
_______ k a 1741414 n k________
L A K E MARY/SAM F O R D 1
bdrm . 1 bath, double garage,
carpets, drapes, appliances
ISM per me . 711 Jestto Way.
Orevevlew XS-W04.
Large 7 bdrm I bath elr.
fireplace 11*1 Owner/ Broker
333sen orXIBtVS__________
Lovely J Bdrm 1 baths, fenced
ten*, vertical*, nash dry 1573
mo 1X0 security 1341704 and
D * 0*01

NEW HOMES FOR RENT
Energy Cftklanl 1 bdrm. )
bath Pali* Hemal nettied in
qvtot cotmtry tatting, near
snapping 4 tchaals Cl*** to
Lebt Mary 1/4 Ealt.
Check that* Haters*
• F reel F re* Ratrtgarater
• Oarage
• Attic Storage
• Wesher/Dryer Cennectlene
• On -light Management
Children 4 Pets Wakens*.
Senior Clttraws Dtscavnt

Available Nox.Open WMUndt
Part tlm* E icellent pay Reply
to

SECURITY DEPOSIT
WITH THIS ADI

P O Be! **7. Sanford. FI. 71771
WANTED RECEPTIONIST lor
beauty salon Call H I to ll lor

MASTERSCOVE___ 323-7700
I ip « f ir H R Victorian Charm I
Two SfMKkHrt 1 bdrm ipt|,
(•ntral alr/hM t, celling 1m
%.
porch twHrtgt Merry titro tt
C lo io to towrn No p # l•
I42S I4M ♦- dtpoiil Phonw t
lo 4 M oo k d a yt. 429 009S
M e r f , rrtghH rV91V&lt;\&lt;*1

N ifs h w M t Factor)
Call New Herltens H I 7X0
W fA R E IO O K IN O FOR
A FEWOOOO PEOPLE
TO JOIN OUR C R IW I
Apply before 11 AM or eltor I
PM Musi be It er elder
Good Benefit!

MOVE IN NOW!
1100 Off I l f M o n th * Rtnfl
I Bdrm
Fw rn l»h od O r Un
furnlfthed Apertment
tC N lO H C I T I 2 I N I O liC O U N T

BURGER KING
ItM Orlande Drive

WtMtf With Ei penance
Call New Horttons

11*0

M0SSW000 A rts.

X I 7X0

32T-2U5

Vm R Mate- H*ndjm»n
Wanted One Day per toeab
l4/h*ur _____________ X I 1470

10 DtifTffT Driven
Needed Wages, lips, and
commission Musi be II wllh
car end Insurance Canted
Bob alter II TH AHO

525 Bonus »ith

this id!

Needed Immediately
Nursing
Assistants and Live In Com
pan ions | year eepertonc*
required
MEDICAL PERSONNEL
POOL
n s tvs t t n
E O E .............
M/FrH/V
l no a week to train lull and per*
lime positions Call H I 1*17
Business Dress Required

ntANKLIN ARMS ARTS
1170 Florida A v * accrett
from Lake Jennie I 4 I
Bdrmi . carpeting, central
elr. dlthwethers pool SJtf to
SIM par mo No pa'l R*l*r
trea t and tacurlly Phon#
BMM
laniard Duple ■ 1 bdrm. I
bath, laundry room, back
yard S IM p lu t dapotlt
u iH it t r m m i.

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
3 Bdrm O w ykiw ifli fM l

5340- S350
Adult* A Famlliat Welcamel
tit* Security Depot,!
Cell
H I 7*7*

Call New tor Mere Intermahen

321-3827
R E N T 4 L 4 1 4 1 bdrms near
dwntwn Sentord. Eve*. TH
m i a r (to il 771 s i l l _________
S A N F O R D Clean 1 bdrm Ito
both central e l r ’heel, garage
privacy fence, no poll 1300
pluodopoelt Coll 410 OM
Waklva River View ♦ Accttsll
J Bdrm. ito acre wooded,
privet*, fenced Horse OK
1373 mo Eva X I 447!
W INTER IPOS. 1 bdrm 1 bath
carpet, porch. *lr v Morel
1*41 Leeee/optlon lev 1111.
1 Bdrm . I Bath, tancad yard
1471 per month plus deposit
Cell X307M Aftor 3 PM
) tW m I hem kIkhan equip .
c e n tr a l elr/ h ee t. fenced,
clo t* In Reference* required
D M mo Coll I TV! ant
IB D R M HOUSE
Saoo par month plus deposit
Cell: m e iv o

105—DuplexT rip le x / Rent
D U P L E X FOR RENT
2
bdrm .Ito bath No pots Air
and appliances nashor dryer
hookup 1170 par mo Call
altar i am US teat
Largo 2 bdrm I both, vaulted
celling, appllancet, hook ups.
screened patio IHO teoo
X I X U between 4PM 4 IPM

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Additions A
Remodeling
REMOOCUNG SPECIALIST

Electrical

Landclearing

Painting

F u rn llu r* R a p o lr t 4 R *
finishing Raatonabi* Ra*nt&gt;
3rd Ganarotlon But I 43* 17ev

GENEVA LAN D C LIAR IN O
t at Landclanring
Fill d&lt;rf
Toptoil Pond* Drain ditches
lisa Preparation C n Si* trip
Nrsd BuUdoiae work dweal Call
Rkky Wynns Dorar Work V
f f l i t o Reesanebto l a*S7V3
THORNE LANDCLEARINO
FIL L O IR T o CLAY #
1HALE A H AULING
3X34X

C U N N IN G H A M AN O W IF I
Infar/E ■to* tor, Pressure Wave
CAII
__________________ X I 7SI4
Painting
Any Waikovaring
Vinyl Flooring R*f 4 Reeunobi*
Vary Rtiiakia
m e f l t l i t . I*

Th* Whole Bell Of Wee

B L UNI C0N5T.
3227029
Financing Available

Appliance Repair
Litem AggJtetKi Serwca
M h r Service Me la tre Charge!
If Y f . l i p
444MSI,... J 74-B4X

Carpentry •
All type* ot carpentry 4 re
modeling 17 yrt tap Cell
RkherdGrot* X I 3V71

Cleaning Sarvica
Carpet Cleaning Living.
Dewing Ream 4 Hall t ie to
to te 4 C h e ir .s u 111 UM
will
yewr hem# er ettica deity.
Sly *r monthly Istre m ely
_________' , C*R:M i H u
JU S T O ENIES
Professional cleaning
Call
..............
m *441

v&amp; m w t

Electrical

General Services
ROBERTS O R E IN E
Controls 4 M a ln lo n o n c *
Ip o c lo llil In E to c trlc a l 4
Pneumatic Controls n m

Landscaping
Handy M a n
Now homos* Remodeling* All
fypat ot rapolrt* L k can
tractor* HR 0013741 Phona
X I toad
or X I 14**

Horn# Improvement
Cetttor! Bqttdlng A
Me Jab Tt* Insall
I I I bvreanLena
M l-M X ____________
Naad to krfghtoa up yaw hornet
Wa altar wallpeparlng end
totorkr ai tartar painfmg w*
gaurantaaasw wqrkl
* Fraa Etftmeto* *
C eK )............. ....................X IE M V
TH OM AS B TMOBABB. H k to
repair, cleaning town car*
Cell X I uev
w n m

w e m

M

IlMnseto* M He. Service Cette
T a f t Etoclrk t o r v k a . m I 7TV
C O N TE M P O R A R Y E L E C T R IC
Compkt* F lac If kel Sarvicas
T V 4 Talapbanes......... X I 3177
D 4 1 E t*chi&lt;
123 *0M
New 4 remodeling addihans.
ten*, tacurlly Hghf* timers
ut all elac eat sk*4 Qualify
r v k o Licensed A

B

Paper Hanging
N B L Wallpeparlng Oak
F r»* E ll
Work Guaranfeod
774 ItM
X I VHJ

HAUUNG ...Fill Dirt....Top Soil

McCUUAR HOMES

n w i

Home Repairs

i

Meture Lady to Share 1 bdrm 1
teth heme with same R*to•nces SH0 ♦ to utilities
H I X7I
_______

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

A C TIO N M O W IR MART
IS** S. I L M A V I
SANFO R D. F L tlffl

E l f E R K N a D DENIAL
ASSISTANT

79— Apart menti
Unfurnished / Rent

CONSULT OUR

CLBRKS
Full and perl lime
help lor convenience store
Willing lo work nights and
week end* Sand resume’ to
P O Bos HI. Osteen. FI 11744
Computer Operator A Pregrtm m er
Cell New Horl
ton* M l 7X0_______________
Cent true I ten Workers A Laker*
All Trarias 1 Call New Horl
ions X I 7X0
O IN T A L A SSISTA N T Danlal
•■parlance necatsary tor Iasi
growing attic* Pleat* cad
IV04I771 4100
B X IC U T IV I S IC R IT A R Y
With or without sherlhandl
P r a la r r a b ly W ANG ward
procaieart Needed In Iha
Lake AAary Area
Ablest lenpsrer y Services
H I IN t
F sparlan cad Small Engine
Mechanics Apply Inpevton

P h o to M e d a l* ta r p r in t ,
catalog* etc With or without
I « p m «a t7 tor Inkers tew
PINKERTON'S new hiring M l
time security officers In San
lord area Must be abt* to
work all mitts Will train,
uniterms provided Paid III*
Insurance profit steering A
slock purchee* program Call
R H 7 II. EOE

71— Apartment*/
Horse to Share

S l f l l f i n e M i i ^ k f
remodeling No fob too email
Cell X 3 V441
Cerponfry. painting, plumbing
K o to rtH C 333dBX
W ill II MOUSE B E PAIR
...B
A ll Typat Rapdksl
Insured
X I 7744

lend

Paving

Call M l 4144 offer 1

Lawn Service
MOMl LAWNCARE
Mow
Edg.
T rgtt Trimmed
ioBii ________________ , M H m

A t Asphalt Paving, taw
Grading 4 paving otphoit ra­
pe!'*. seal coaling, fraffk
markings, drivawaye 4 park
mg lot* Free aet X I lito

I jg n H sw m j
Law T n c n
___________ a * IBM___________

Plumping

LAWNS MOWED ft TRIMMED
I prtog Yard Ctoea ops.. m -IV U

Well PI waking 4 Hagltog
tggr louWl Sentord Avanu*
Sewtard. Flarkla X 77I

QwBlity Le r b Cert
At Aftordabto Price* X I *073

Sprinklers/Irrigation

WANTED:.... In n Is Can Fat*
P k * t* coll aftor 1 1X7111

M a s o n ry

ABOUT TIM E IRRIGATION
Nan Inttaiiatlane ...... Fraa I t f
t apart Bapair* of Cempleto
Sprtrsktor Systomt
Thwart
I t r - t W l M t

IA N V TH IN O IN C O N C R E T E '
Fra* Eslim*las Otedty Oiveni
I E A U M O N D E Canaf Ca
"Wa A ^ The Baer111 !043

Music Lessons
kll agat-aii i«m it. Pr# Back
jp a M s d ^ a i ^ u i i a ^ l l i a a a a

Nursing Care

Telephone Service
Tre e Service
AN Trad Igpu.-f.
And Na
4 P 44.

CeK Aftor

b c m o ii t r i e s e r v ic e

Fraa Etfltwetotl Lew Prkael
In* Mens* Crtndtag.Tael

M

1H

m vdey sr afto

o u b b a t e i a r i l o w ib

l e k t v U . Nucktog Cantos
l i t ■ toe and M . laniard
1H 47V*

.

JOHN ACL 4 N t LAWN B T R E 8
Daed fraa remevel L k 4 Ink
F ra a *41 X I S3M

�Evening Herald. Sanlord. FI.

I l l —Resort/Vacation
Rentals

l « l -H o m e s For Sale
• T O W N ER M l M . J M r * . 1

•eecn frent Congo, Orm»«*
4. Sep* M a n Oer *r
» r* e * e m a w

Bath lorg* kite***. hoof/olr.
tlraplaca. utility rum. 1 car
ta'aga gutaf carnvr. b&gt;g oak*

Caiiai iwe.wjnfliw_

113— Storage Rentals

IM 4 U

o

117— Com m ercial
Rentals
Bofo*i 4 Office Space HO up to
1 SOOted elte tforogo eveJl
otota. m m m ____________________
1 re eld Werehoute/Office
Compto. iu o te d end up
tM l/m e Include* d rive In
doer Good location
Call n t leoo

iM in u e M iiw so isaesuttp

KISH REAL ESTATE
(30S) 321 0041
47SW 7JN» Street
Senferd. FI 72771
Laka Mary At Thu C m tin g t
FMA aitumabi* * a t | a f « J
M rm . I bath iplit pJan Pm I
A tannn naarby l l t . l R

SBAND NSW COM DO &gt; bdrm .
] betti U T I mo Cell •*&gt; H I*

mmeter

P IN E R ID G E CLU 4

LUXURY CONDOS
I.J J B&lt;Vm . , hath, aether,
dryer, vorticlet. re trig dlth
aelh t Slnrtlng at U r i
GOLD N E T MOMT .IN C

_______ t u r n s ________

S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
L e m Tetms to fit
Tout Ntedi!
furntjhtd or Unlurmthtd.
Carpertt ......... Prfuat* Pttlte
Util Lendtceome Pelt Children
W ATER OCOS A C C EP T ED !

lot for M ■ 70 NEW MOBILE
HOME I Prefer root with op
tiontobvy 727 *744

127-Office Rentals
Lett Mery dlvd

BAYHEAD CENTRE
HO 1000 tq d

Offices to Rent
fiea*or»abie and convent**!
701 N Map!# Sanford
17) W 0

H I — Homes For Sale
A V A IL A B L E NOW
Brand new ) bdrm. 7 txth
Homes and Villas in Midden
lake Children o k no pets
More in immediately upon
approve!

CALL BART
R E A L ES T A T E
REALTO R
m it ft

I bdrm J bam tcraan perch
wesher/dryer, mini blinds
Close to shopping schools. A
church Price N egiotebie1

) bdrm . 1 both situated on 7
ecres CB oir/heot. on la k e
Bvt'er In Osteen Possible
owner fmencing 140 OtX) total
price
CO U N TRY WIOC R EA LT Y
Reg R I B ro ke r........ I l l I77J

474 Hey. 41). Otleee, Fie.
• i e i « oes

STemper
D U P L E X M l.M* You bring up
•a coda and tava 0 « n a r
fin a n c in g w ith m o darala
O T H E R HOMES. LOTS.
A C R E A O E INVESTM ENT
P R O P ER T Y

CA LL ANYTIME
REALTOR
IT! tat I

•'Let the buyer b e *e re * no
longer eppiret Ail phot# in
ipecfort MB-7771._______________
O C IA R y 2 Bdrm I both. FI
room, utility, cer port lerge
lot U4 900 After 7 P M
444 4470

STEN STRO M
REALTY*REALTOR
Senlofd'i Sales leader
w e LIST A N O S ELL
M ORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE INNORTH
S EM IN O LE COUNTY
R E F U R R IS H IO I 1 Bdrm I
b ath Mama w ith ( a t In
Kltchan. E it ra Largt Intida
U M IIty . P a r c h . P r iv a c y
tancad sta.taa
T E R R IF IC II a Bdrm &gt; bath
Hama with Split Btdraam
Plan. Eat In Kltchan. Cantral
air/haat. Utltllty Raam.
tai.aaa
COZY C O TTA G EII I Bdrm I
bath Hama M tha Caantry an
On# A c r a . O inlng ra a m .
Firaplaca. Split Bdrm Plan.
Cantral atr/haat MI.M0
C O U N T R Y COM FORT!
I
Bdrm I Balh Hama with
O ra a t R a a m , F l r t R l a c t .
Eat in Kltchan. Mathar in law
O va ria n , cantral aW/baaf
UUN
OWN A CLA S S IC II I bdrm I
Rath Hama with Split Bdrm
Plpn. (p t In Kltchan. Oama
R a a m . F ir a p la c a . O u t i l
Aparlmant Only i l l m

T E R R I F I C LOCATIONI
Assume ne ge**ItTying lew te
l e n t * A r i | 4 | e ) Bdrm . )
bam. central osr heel, carptt.
geregel Fenced with trees*
Wslb »e shoppingt 444 440

3 2 3 -5 7 7 4
laaa H W t l l t )
Hddan Laka la* Wildwood Or
1 bdrm ) bath, dbi garago
parch, ca n tra l a lt Sugar
Claanl Aaaumabia sas 000
REALTO R
M ARVIN K LA IL
*al *H 3
or 1*1 HOI
In Country, tancad *1 acra I
• arm
I b ath tu rm th td
SH *00 Call TO aara

HANOTT
Thi* ana it tar you at tha right
prica a bdrm homa naar
Aawntawn b u im a i* a ra a
Graat petantial SU*00

SHAOY COTTAOS
Naaf I bdrm

home wndtr

Rear p atla. tancad Only
Sal 000 G raal tarmt avail
abtal
* RICHARD ROOME RO O ERS
Famawt a rch ltacl datignad
but unigua ana at kind Hama
with not *g f* an a targt
cornar i«« j bdrm . caram k
hi# lloart Mutt Saal I H W
•In Old Sdntard" a gnat
piacptallua
OAVIO bO O U E. baaitar/Ataac
nvm a
F w - mg i mPM&gt;
K E Y E S F LO R ID A . INC
REALTO RS

Litatima
...........Lat Rant*
SIM H it
Includat Walar Garbagv Pick up
Yard Maintananca
I mm«ei t*a Occ upanc y
Or agar y M»kin Hama* 111 tiaa
1 bdrm Mobil Homa with larga
trraanad porch and built on
living room thada trtat good
pump and atactnc U lC p*r
monin »M 000 tor tala No
pat* Call llliJ O k

111— Appliances
/ Furniture
Applianca* Far Salt all in
• Italian! canditian A lully
guarantaad ...
Ill m i
Barrel! labia
It ! while
rattan couch chain, labia*
*30 antique drum labia. 113
More furniture a'l in vary
Qoodcondition Call i l l l*M
Bruntwick Standard Sue Pool
Tabfa with accettoriet VrOC or
bat) otter Call 111 3101 alter
t P M Ath 1st U r in*
ll v c l r II Ciolhvi Dr »ri W ont
graal Almond color Fam ily
w v S i l l Call 111 3Ur attar 3
LONG WOOD 1 Bdrm J bath
utility room MOO par month
plutdopoalt Call I R I U l
Rtcandilwnrd Appliancat
tram M3 WARRANTY
B A R N ETTS
CA SSELBERRY
B lb S in ..............................BMSTU
Refrigerate* Kanmon avacado.
1* cu ft I door trot! Ira#
t iw o * botiono* m e a ia .
a R EN T TOOW Na
Color T V t . ti*rao* wathar*.
dryer*, ralrlgaratar. frooior*.
furniture, video, recorder*.
Special Iti weak’* rani *s 00
Altarnatlva TV B Appl Rental*
Zayra* Snapping Canter
_______________H I MM______________
Utad W athan Part* A Sam e*
tar Kanmarai
llia a t l
MOONEY A PPLIA N CES

WILSON MAlER FURNITURE
)I7 I I I I . 1»t I T ....
32 ) 142 2
I Ooubie Bed with bookrasa
headboard frame, or 7 Twin
Bed) with mefei frame* 4174
ca*h After S ))!

27TM STREET FURNITURE
i n w 11m si_____________ i n 1*11

183— Television /
Radio / Stereo
* COLOR TELEVISION a
/•nth 2S color talevi*ion
O rg m o l p f u l Over $100
Balance due t2*4 00 ca*h or
ta k e o e er p a y m e n t* $2S
month Still in warranty NO
MONCY DOWN Free homa
trial, no obligation Call 147

111 — Building
M a te ria ls
BU ILD IN O S all Ural 30 a 100

tll.tto .

REALTO R
m jm
V tfrra r* No Dawn Paymant }
bdrm I balh an &gt; &gt; acra* in
Gaoava Bit *00 MB H U ______
Will Trad* my «aaan fqudy tn
my ham# tar Ca*h ar Nk i
Travaf Tra.wr JZJ TUB. JU

an

wives
171 1411

211— Antiques /
Collectables
Antique* Small Rocker. Get
Library Table Rocker Heart
Chair* 77) ’8*2

213— Auctions
f o r t sr at c
C o m m ercial or Re«idehttal
Auction* A Apprai*ai* Call
Dell * Auction )7l WTO__________

215— Boats and
Accessories
Sear* i) ft Alwmmum Boa* with
f l John*on Motor
1} lb
thru** trolling motor l)M
Fieri. 771 4411___________________
14 F T Itarcrafl Runabout itfi
boat and t r a ile r
4S H P
Macufy engine 4)000 or bet*
offer Call 77) 047$ (day*) or
777 4147 (night*)______________
It ff Reman Trt hull 14$ OMC
How hour * I
with Calkin*
Trailer All aicet*4&gt;r»et m
eluded Mu** Sail' Eaceiient
condition i m i HSU41
14 C I T A T I O N I / O
140
MarCruitO' ’I 4 bownder
w alk through w in d *h i# ld
Fully equipped A ready to go
|t$00 A taka over payment*
m $447. after 4__________________

211— Wanted to Buy
t Aluminum* Can* Newspaper
Non Ferrae* Metals ... Glass
Kabtma............................ m i l f
baby bed* Strader*. Clathe*.
Playpan*. Etc
Paparback
boak* 771 8177 111 4S04

Costume Jewelry, Rhinestones
Fur*
la n d

Second Image 777 4471
wanted
Professional
Christian couple looking tor a
few private acre* toned for
mob&lt;ie home I or 7 year lease
and or option to purchase
Cdd 777 $00* or 44* 7a00
Need Crib* Playpen* Baby
furn itu re clo th ing Good
Prices Afr+y / PM
)H 174)

223— Miscellaneous

j Complete Fo'ey saw sharpening
equip
7f Moni a Wagon
Camper for Pick Up self
' *a n#d *a4 64 ’6
INSTANT CASH
217— Garage Sales
Gold Sflver, Die mend*. Ca4n*
Treasury Island iewelry
Lall
........................... 777 4174
CARPORT SALE Sat Mon t
MOVING
must salll Sofa L
$ P M Clothe* toy4. lot* of
Cha*r. Bdrm Sat Commodore
miecallarweuk Somafhlng lor
Vic 90 Computer Nothing over
everyone *04 Cher ok aa Circle.
4301 Call after $ 777 717f
Sunlentf E «***e«

T o pp bi, O n * O l A K in d

1981 VW, P/U
A/C. P/B. AM /FM

1982 Nissan King Cab, P/U
A/C. P/B

1982 Toyota P/U
P/B. A M /FM

P/B. B lu b , AM /FM

‘ 1995
‘ 3395
‘4 7 9 5
‘4 6 9 5
‘ 5395

4x4
1983 Toyota SR5
W h itt. A /C . P/B. AM /FM R ad io

1983 Toyota SR5

‘ 7495
‘ 7595
‘ 7995
*9995

1984 Nissan P/U
4/4 S T P a ck B g g , lo a d a d

Llk b N b w . A /C . P/S. P/B
N MWT 11 t |
IOHQWOOO
ORLANDO

•31-8787
BANFOAO

322-8*01

830-6688

HWY.

17-92

D EA LS

• A * film F inance
• Down Payment* 4)oo and Up
• Trade In* Accepted

DISCOUNT AUTO BALES
1901 F r eob It Are

973 1449

1980 GRAND
MARQUIS

144) R A M B L L R C L A S S I C
4! ono original mile* New
tire* brake* radiator and
front end reworked Good
condition
i $00 or best otter
Call 777 047$ i D ay*i or 777
417 &lt;nights)_____________
1*64 F IR E B IR D
Run* great
Must See' Call after 4 P M
777 *4)8 Asking *) IV)
147) DatSun )40 2 Air am tm
radio Eaced e n t condition
aicopf paint flfOQ )7I 717)
1477 GRAND MARQUIS Black
beauty
loaded Best otter
Call E vening* 1/2 77fJ
IHO Magnificent White Cadillac
Sedan Mint condition Make
otter $74 11$0
I t l l M E R C U R Y L Y NX
4
speed red d e a n $1100
Call 441 4tf 7after 4 P M
74 Chevrolet 4 Dr Nova Ic y l
standard 7770
mi $i7$g
Firm J7J 1147 or 177 $•*)
74 Tran* Am air power V I
am fm cassette Need* minor
body work Have most part*
I7t*$ Carol
771 )0$0 day*.
171 UOf ironing*
40 Mustang Ghia 41 I scarf GL
Leaded I
44$0 Dawn
Small
Manfhly payment
C H I C O A T H E MA N
*44 4*00

ft

F U L L S IZ E LU X U R Y

!

1984 LINCOLN
TOWN CARS
2 TO C H O O SE FRO M

$4995 $14,995
1983 MERCURY
ZEPHER

1982 MUSTANG
GT
TH E B O S S

A U T O . A IR . R A D IO

$5295

$6995

ECO N O M Y S P E C IA L S
1980
1981
1982
1978
1979

CHEV. MONTE CARLO *3895
FORD ESCORT S/W . *3295
FORD GRANADA . . . *4295
T-BIRD ..........................*2995
FAIRMONT S/W . . . . *2995

LO N G W O O D
L IN C O L N -M E R C U R Y

235— Trucks/
Buses/ Vans

5555 HWY
l«&gt;, Jway Pick U»
a W N .I tfrtv* Vary ctaan
E n . i i . n l Viapat « 000 Call
177 n n

1 7 &lt;12. LO N G W O O D F LA

031-0090

322-4Q04

Budget
SU PER SUM M ER S A LE
1984

1985

ESCO RT

ES C O R T
*6 1 0 0
TOPAZ
*6 7 0 0
LTD B R O U G H AM
*8000

*4 5 0 0
VW R A B B IT

*5 1 0 0
LTD

*6 1 0 0

ALL CARS FULLY EQUIPPED,
EXTRA CLEAN. LOW MILES!!!
For Moro Information On
704 Savagv Ct.
Tho«o Wholoaalo Values
Longwood, FL
Call:
Days
Nights
32750
331-5111, 430-4102
323-4949
Cart Can Alto Be Soon At Sanford Airport Trrtninal

• 1915 KAWASAKI NINJA900
950 Miles

• 1910 TBIRD
ASSUME BALANCE
2Tone. Clean
NO DOWN PAYMENT

• 1981 TRANSAMTURBO
T-Topt

UP TO (0 MONTHS
FINANCING UPON
APPROVED CREDIT

• 1981 DOOGEMIRADA
Blxk ft/Luther

Payments As Low As * 9 6 .5 0 A Month

R e n ta ls:

C R L D IT H A S S L E S ?

OVER 100 OINK REPO'S TO CHOOSE FROM!!

From, Blue Book Prices

if

n

ARISTOCRAT MOTOR CARS

321-0741
830 6688

Over 200 Cars And
321-0741 Trucks To Choose

321-0742

823 S. HWY. 17-92 DEBARY

:

j p

668*8659

REN T A C A R O F S EM IN O L E CO .

Sales:

S e rvic e :

Across THr 17-92 Bridge
V&gt; Mile On Right

ERMS

4x2
1978 GMC Sierra Classic

B lu e B o o k C a r s

if

USED CARS
T H i B I S T IN TO W N

U SED T R U C K S P E C IA L S

J im L a s h ’s

★

Buy Here, Pay Here
Big Cars • Small C ars • Tru cks

Debar y Au*o A Marme Sales
Acres* the river, to# of bill
174 Hwy 17 U Debery 444 l$4i

W IL L E T T O Y O T A ’S

40 ■ ISO 12* 440

Other* from t7 27 tq f*
I Ttl I2H (COti#&lt;f I
Wheie*ale To Fwb!»&lt; Kifchan
cabinet* vanitie* in **oc*
counter fop* araiiabt# Free
m y i t u r m i t i f i 4 t r a ile r
777 4)10. Bldf #) lonforC
Airport

322-2420

CALL BART

77) KH_______________

Garaga Sale 113 Loch Low Sat
only Aug Jt Clothing all
tliad A lot* mt*c
ONE OF A KIN D GAfiAGE
S A L E ! Everything imagin
able Saturday Only I * 704
Cherokee C ir c le
Suniand
Estates 177Q7$Q___________ _
YardSaie F n l t o 4 pm
Sat 4 to 1 pm Furniture and
household item* Park Ave
at 4th St
_______________
4 FAMI LY YARD $Al l
F r .lS a * 7*00 Lake Rot* Lane
Hwy 44 West 9q *ign* S*'ne
w are, m icro w av e, plate*
grill* w shelve* cer an *c».
glasses book*, etc Can
777 $447___________________________
$ Famine* Garage Sale' 1404 W
4th St Saturday Only I to
4 70 H.de a bed couch, chair*,
apartment sue ga* ttuve and
mu&lt;h more1______________________

1984 Ford Bronco II

C A L L A N Y T IM E

Vary Larga Hama m Ttww
With In Law Owarfar* an larga
carnar iaf P ma*i taafura* and
cwftfrurttan Sgaca tgaca
Spaca 11 A R aally Buy al
M l.000 Canttaw Irak* m

Ability Kermelt Dog boerd-ng
COurfff AtmoipfUft R flio n
able 0 ate*
7 2 ) 7 7 70
AKC Doberman Pup* • wkft
old '#d» B b lack * t2S0

B la c k P a c k a g a , Lo ad ad

P O E N E V A OSCEOLA RD P
ZO N ED FOR M O RILESI
I Acra Caantry tract*
Wall traad an pavad Rd
M X Dawn •( T rt al l l \ l
Fram SIAiaei

1341 PARK AVI---Ml Lb Mary Mud.... LA. Mary

217— Garage Sales

1983 Toyota P/U

W I L L R U IL D TO S U IT I
Y O U R LO T OR O U R tl
E X C L U S IV E A C EN T FOR
WINSONO DEV COBP.. A
C E N T R A L FLO RIO A L E A O
■ R t M O R E NOM E F O R
L E S S M O N ETI CA LL TO
DA V I

It yaa a ra laaklag lar a
t a c c a t if a l caraar ip Raal
Ettata Stanalram Raalty it
laahlng tar yaa Call Laa
Albright taday af &gt;11 JIM
Eranlng* 1 » MU

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

mo

Adult Park

M A Y FA IR V IL L A S For hole by
own#r
) Bdrm . 7 Beth
oir/heot. 7 cer garage Cell
777 SISJ offer SP M _________
Osteen 4 bdrm 7 both on )
e&lt;r#» with horse born end
posture $74 t00

I N4 11$»)H

I W3«

mmo

GOOD U S ED CARS
N O C R ED IT N EED ED

For mere details

203— Livestock and
Poultry

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

SANFOBO/ LAKE MART
Draam
Mama*
Available
Naur l All Prltat
Saminala
and Valutia Caunliat Oraat
Tar m i
Call
lar
Fraa
Camputar Saarth Tadaylt

Weliive Springs
) bdrm I
Beth Mottle with H i ecre
M eed Nice vtlllty bwtiding
Mpfk lank A veM OwwRivr
Pmenonf Ashing | )t tee

By Owner 7 bdrm. i bath
treme house Good condition
Close to hospital end shop
pmg Ashing 1)9 000 Cell
(4041 78)$1$f between S t
PM
i f Owner 1)04 Cvp'Ots Im
maculate ) bdrm w garaga
c e n t r e ! e i r / h e e t . new
ce rp et/p e in t Low Down!
Owner will fsotdTndf 17) 7)49
Bp Owner Chermmg ) bdrm 7
both spi't plen. fenced yerd
IMUW )2)04/« ))i i m
F E E HOMF PURCHASE
IN SPECTIO N

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

PR rN O M E PURCHASE
INSPECTION

...................... m i n t

S A L E S

Every Thurt Nite at 7 M PM

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

Lie Reel Estate Broker
IM I U a le r d Ave

321 0730 E v e ,-322-7443

laniard iurlding Lat
Wall with Pump Saptic. la •
*011 Shad Ownar Financing 1
Wallaca Cratt Ratify

S T A R

A U T O

Hwy U ............
Daytona Beach
1 4 4 4 4 Hold* a • • • . •

RAVENNA PARK 1 Mrm l&gt;*
bath, cant haat A Mr, u * too
By ownor/totavnon ( H i m
E va* 4 Waa«ah&lt;3*

BATEMAN REALTY

L IK E NE Wt
Completely
remodeled
) bdrm 1 both
new cerpet. fenced beeh Walk
te icheel. nwriery schael
shoeping A church
14)7 Laurel Ave 447 100

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION ★

153— Acreage__Loti/Sale

SANFORD REALTY

F IV E

Santard Art a mb » ... » i aan

* Can Buy or Sell I *

rea lto r

unm

q

D R IV E OUT

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

n Where Anybody *

U per tq ft

________ m mo________

W ALK IN

COAAMERCIAL SPECIALIST
BO I M 4ALL. JR P A
REALTOR
HM Ut

Rtarta r ______ _________ w t i n

Call teeeeeeeteti..3 2 1 1 9 1 1
123— Wanted to Rent

PR I US 000 WMaitciowtki

R E « L T O B —. ..................n i rati

0 7 t it )

TOP 0*1 lar P»&lt;d tor Junk 1
U t H car*.truck, A haavy
•guiamgnt )T&gt; M*0

1*14 Shaita Cam»l.« Trad*. 10
Ft
ta&gt;ta*m a n . .ic*itant
tondutow 3.’ SCO Call Ml I M

Bid Credit?
NoC/idit?
HE FINANCE

I acra

&gt; &gt; acra* in tha City of Laaa
M a'y on tha toutn and at am
St Iwtthin tha city limit*)
M0 000 cath It mtarattad call
n »*•:___________________________

"La* tha buyar b a**ra" no
longor apoiit* All phata Intpattort M » TTTI._____________

243-Junk Cars

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

m i l ) IT A R C R A F T CAM PER
Air n**p« 4 .ait contamag
Can 737 0414

231 — Cars

Laka Mary 1 bdrm ] bath
Adult kattion of Tha Eorott
Cantral air N a t Prkod to
*alll s u »o Ra*a Walth. Ra
altar, i n *071

RUN St Cawatity— 321-5005
121—Condominium
Rentals

Thama* Horn# Organ p*'**c»
condition Wa'«uf cabin*! with
band boi U H Call 111 MB)
eraaa »*aa

Wallaca Cratk Rtatty
Rtartar............. ...... — . H I *V 1

C A S S tLR ER R T

R E A LTO R

SANFORD

223— Miscellaneous

1 Bdrm I Bath
Handymaa Spaclall
300 &gt;g N Workthep
Huga Let.

141— Commercial
Property / Sale

__________

Friday. Aug. JC. I t U - U A

141— Home* For Salt

Quality And Fair Repairing Of
Cars And Trucks. Ask About Our
Reputation! Jim Ours • Service Mgr.

• 1911 DATSUN MAXIAM110
Fully ludtd
• 1911 MONTECARLO
Light Bluo, AM/FM, A/C
• 1980 TORDP/U
lariat

TRADES ACCEPTED
EXTENDED
WARRANTIES
AVAILABLE ON
SELECTED MODELS

365-3300
417S

t . O tU b W Or.
S A N TO R O 31771

• 1912 CADILLACCOUPE
DCVILU
Cm
• 1911 ELDORADO
Whitt/Rd Leather Interior
• 1911 CAMARO
Light Blue
• 1911 CADILLACBIARRITZ
Folly Loaded
• 1913 CHEVETTE
A/C, Autooatk

Most Inexpensive Starting At
* 9 .9 9 A Day, Cars. Vans Too!

SANFORD

F U L L Y E Q U IP P E D S ER V IC E D E P A R T M E N T
W ITH C O M P U T E R IZE D B E A R A N A L Y S IS
NOW A V A IL A B L E .

�t

\?A-|»m &lt;ng H fit d i Stilted, FI.

Friday# Aof. If, IftS

FLORIDA
IN B R I E F
Shuttle Begins Space Chase;
Crew G e t Groat View Of Elena
CAPE CANAVERAL (UP1) — Discovery'* astronauts
launched their last satellite Thursday, then gunned the
shuttle In pursuit of the disabled Syncom 3 communica­
tions station two sparewalkers will try to catch and fix this
weekend.
The five-man spare crew also got a bird's-eye look at
hurricane Elena, churning up the Cult of Mexico 218 miles
below. Commander Joe Engle said It looked like It could
grow Into a "whoomrr.*’
Elena aim ed its winds at a stretch of Gulf coast betwern
Louisiana and Florida but N ASA was prepared to move
shuttle control from Houston to a backup center near
Washington If the storm turned and threatened soul beast
Texas.
The astronauts completed the mission's No I objective
when they launched their third satrlllle, sending the
Syncom 4 sailing out of the cargo bay spinning like a giant
Frlsbee In slnw-motlon. The satellite was an Improved
model of the Syncom 3 the astronauts will attempt to
salvage.
"Syncom '* away. Houston." said astronaut James van
Moften,
"You get to wrestle with one Just like that in a couple of
days." replied astronaut David Lccstma In mission control.

Pals To Attend Bag-Lady's Burial
MIAMI (UPI) — Friends o f bag lady Mae Janecka will lxallowed to attend her butlol service today after all. and a
memorial fund ha* even been created In her honor, church
and loral officials said.
Janecka. 04. spent her days on Dlscayne Boulevard,
pushing a supermarket cart heaped with the old cans and
newspapers she collected.
She died Aug. 12 on the steps of the First Untied
Methodist Church, where she hud slept on a sheet of
cardboard every night for the last five years An autopsy
shower) she died of natural causes.
Earlier Elsie Nixon, an ow ner o f the Nlxon-F’earson
Mortuary where Janecka's body was sent, said that by law
the public could not attend today’s burial service to l»e
carried out by Dade County Jail Inmates.
But Sharll Gucnsslen. coordinator o f the Indigent burial
program, said that was not true, and Janecka's friends will
be allowed to attend. "W e welcome anyone to the
cem etery," she said.
Janet'kaa txxly lay unclaimed at the morgue lor IB days
while Investigators tried to find the two married daughters
Janecka was said to have In St. Louis
Investigator Dorothy McKendrlc found two St Land*
telephone listings In die name Janecka. but troth dented
knowing the deud woman.

Division O f Treasure In Doubt
KEY WEST llJl’ll — The call* com e In dally In Treasure
Halvors Inc. asking, when will I get my riches?
The hundreds o f Investors tn Mel Fisher's hunt for 17th
century Spanish booty have been tn an eclssy of trying to
count their money ever since Fisher's diver* Found the
"inotfier lo d e" cargo of the gullron Nuestru Senora dr
Alocha July 20. Fisher has estimated the treasure o f the
ship that sank In a 1022 hurricane off Kry West at •400
million.
Thr division of the spoils m ay (tike a long time
Dtllctuls of Treasure Salvors told The Miami Herald
Thursday they do not know yet how much the backers o f
the treasure rx|&gt;edltlon will reap on their investment ami
the payotr tuny not come until next July
Divers so far have hauled up 177 gold bars, IKK) silver
liars, about 75.000 sliver coins, many gold coins and
hundreds ol silver artifacts, said Birth M&lt; Haley, vice
president of Trensure Salvors. Every piece lias to lie
rleaned. recorded, catalogued and evaluated under court
direction and then must tie released lo Fisher's company
hy die (edrrul court.
Skeptic* contend die size o f thr treasure will not tie ( lose
to the $400 million Fisher rxu ltrd over when the first
encrusted gold bars were hauled up nftrr direr centuries
oil d ir ocean floor.

Court Grants Stay, Ignores O ther
TA LLA H ASSE E (UPJI — T h r Supreme Court Thursday
granted a stay of execution to Wllltum Lanay Harvurd hut
declined to Interfere with tire execution ol Willie Jasper
Darden.
Both men were scheduled tor electrocution on Wednes­
day.
The lustier* gave no reason for grunting Harvurd the
Slay, which will remain tn etfect until the Justice* say
otherwise.
But Hie justices said In a unanimous ruling that Darden
lulled lo prove that tils appeal lawyer mishandled any
fundamental jMilntnln his case
Darden was sentenced to die for Ihe 1973 robberymurder o f a Lakeland lorn Ilure shop owner Harvurd was
sentrnerd for the 1974 shooting death of tits former wlfr In
Hrrvurd County.

STOCKS
n * M t u X ilu n a pro* U X br iw n t o 'i X
Iho Ntlionol A m m in tw i X io n silto t Doom t
pro i op* 0 ton tot iro Into* doom (-'.» ( ( I of
mlit m olting HnJo * Into* doom morkot*
tbonpo Ibtovgbovt S t d tr P tn ot dt&gt; not
irn Unto i,lo ll mot i up morktknto
•M Aik
Atlantic Bank
X
x '«
Amenckn Pioneer&amp;AI
IS
IS
•WTwtt Sink
X
XU
F lor Id* P m i

Surgeons operated for seven
hours Thursday pulling splinters
of twine from the spinal cord of a
Sanford bicyclist paralyzed from
the waist down when his back
was broken during a hit and run
a c c ld r n t la te W e d n e s d a y
Whether the surgery will have
any effect on the 21-year-old
man's diminished mobility will
nut tie know’ll for several days,
his father said this morning.
Allen King, of 7372 Sylvan
Drive, was In serious but stable
condition today at Humana Hos­
pital Lucerne. Orlarirlo. accord
irig to a hospital s|wikcsman. The
surgery stretched (rom 2 30 to
9;30 p.m .. according lo the
young m an's father. Jim King,
also of Sanford and an Instructor
of emergency medical technician
training at Seminole Community
College
His son, an emergency m edi­
cal technician, was run down
about 9.46 p.m while riding a
bicycle northbound Irom SCC to
Seminole Community Mental
Health Center where lie held a
part-time Job.
The accident occurred near
the Foxfire Restaurant. 3221
IT S
Highway 17-92. south of

...Elena
C on tin u ed from page 1A
450 mite*. The storm was not
expected to till land until early

Saturday.
The h u rric a n e slotted Its
forward motion today, giving It
more lim e to strengthen over the
warm (iu lf waters
"W inds are now 100 mph and
Elena could become even more
dangerous before moving across
tin- coast early Saturday." the
National Hurricane Center said
In a lale advisory
Ai 9 a.m EOT. Ihc center of
Elrna was near latitude 28.0
north, lon g itu d e 87 5 w est,
abou t 160 m ile s so u th o f
Pensacola.
"There are also In il lea IIons the
steering currents are changing
and Hie hurricane Is expected to
make a more northerly course
t o d a y ." said the h u rrican e
center "It Hits occurs, the threat
lo southeast Louisiana will de­
crease unit warnings may be
lowered there later today."
Florida G ov. Hob Graham
warned rraldents of low-tying
a r r a s to rvai uate Immediately or
fuce (x i s s l b l r Injury or death,
and he dispatched 250 National
Guardsmen to Pensacola in help
with the evacuation
Escamilla County Civil De­
fense Director M K "B u ck" He
nlroc r si no.licit dial 20.000
people were evacuating Santa
Rosa Island. I'rrdldo Key and
I o w • I y I ii g a r e a s a l o n g
Pensacola's waterfront
Ma) Dli k Harlow, all ofltcer
w ith th e E scam bia C o u n ty
Stirrltr* t&gt;rpartmrnl. said a few
people chose to remain on Santa
Rosa Island
We have Hie names ol their

Sanford. King was discovered
when a motorist saw his bike
and heard him moaning. It
appears the man lay beside the
road a while before the motorist
noticed him. according to the
elder King. He said the condi­
tions were poor for riding a bike
that night — It was raining with
jxxir visibility — and " I can
understand how that could have
caused the accident." But. he
said, the driver didn't stop to
help his ailing son and that he
can't understand.
Florida

H i g h w a y

Patrol

Trooper R.E,. Davis said law
enforcement personnel are look­
ing for a flat tied truck possibly
missing a large red side or rear
rrllector. It was was seen travel­
ing north on 17-92. Davis asks
that anyone w ho may have
witnessed the Incident call the
FHPDcLand office at 323-1800
King, who received emergency
treatment at Centrul Florida
Regional Hospital In Sanford
before firing transferred lo thr
Orlando hospital, also has a
fractured pelvis, his father said.
He received on-lhe-scene care
Irom EMTs his father trained.
— Deane Jordan

next of kin," he said.
"They're staying at their own
risk." said another official.
Allen Dean Jr., who manages
a Holiday Inn on Pensacola
Beach. told guests to leave the
resort Thursday.
“ It's a heartbreakcr to have
this weekend disappear like this
because of thr storm ." he said.
In Mississippi. Gov. Hill Attain
declared a state of emergency
Thursday night for thr Gulf
Coast cou n ties o f Harrison.
Jackson and H ancock, and
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards,
catling Elena " a major hurri­
cane," declared an emergency In
14 parishes A la b a m a Gov.
George Wallace also declared an
emergency.
"This Is not a super storm like
Camille but It’s not a Danny,
either." said Harrison County
IMlss.) C ivil Defense Director
Wade Gulcr "Th ts Is more like a
Frederic o f ‘ 79 or a Betsy of ‘65
— both were killers and not to be
taken lightly."
More than 100.000 people
shuttered coastal homes, packed
belongings and Jammed coastal
highways along the Gulf coast,
where resorts w e re Jammed with
tourists anticipating one last
summer (ling during the Labor
Day holiday weekend. And some
20.000 men on oil rigs In coastal
waters also evacuated to safe
ground.
Mansions along (be Mississippi
coast, ravaged 16 years ugo by
Hurricane Camille, were boarded
up
"People are panicking and
heading In la n d ," said Carol
Harnette of the Mobile County
(Ala.) Emergency Management
Agency. "T raffic Is backing up,
gas stations are full and grocery
stores are packed. People are
scared."

British Mystery Worthy
Of Bond Spy Thriller
LONDON (UPI) - A mystery
In trig u in g Britain has the
tangled elements o f a James
Bond thriller — a curious death
notice tn the Tim es of London,
an elderly German princess
visiting Queen Elizabeth II and
the mounting West German
spy scandal.
The twisted tale began Sat­
u rday when the T im e t o f
London, one of Britain's most
respected newspapers, printed
a 33-word death notice.
It announced the death Aug.
21 of three "dearly beloved
sons" o f Countess Margarita
von Hessen and the late Count
Rlchardt in Cornwall on Bri­
tain’s west coast.
However, police began an
Investigation because no such
deaths were recorded. The
W est German Embassy In
London could find no trace of
the countess.
Genealogists dug Into their
books on myalty. The mosi
similar name they found was
Princess Margaret von Hesse.
75. who Is slaying with Queen
Elizabeth II at her Scottish
estate for the royal family's
August summer holiday.
However, the princess — a
close friend of the queen — has
no ch'ldrrn and said she was
“ bew ildered" by the whole
affair.
T h e W est G e r m a n sp y
scandal. In which eight gov­
ern m en t w orkers are sus­
pected o f being East German
agents, wss the next element
to enter the British mystery.

On W ednesday, an East
G erm a n c o u p le liv in g In
England was arrested and
charged with espionage o f­
fenses tn London.
Speculation simmered that
tht fictitious death notice had
been placed ns a coded warn­
ing for East German spies tn
Britain to Hee.
"1 think such a warning has
been suggested In novels but
we're not speculating on why
It w a s p l a c e d , " s a id a
spokesm an for the Tim es.
•The police have called ua
about It."
He said the Times does not
demand a death certificate for
death n o tice s. T h e paper
usually lakes notices by phone
ahd checks back on the caller's
number for confirmation.
The woman who took out
llu ad/rMlsement answered
the confirmation call and her
credit card payment for the
notice was accepted, he said,
but phone calls to her number
are not answered now.
Cornwall police said they
believe the death notice was an
apparent hoax, even though
they do not know what the
m o tive co u ld be. But In ­
telligence sources refused lo
discount the spy theory.
" A ll m y contacts were by
phone." a former operator for
M16. Britain's version of the
C I A . t o l d th e G u a r d i a n
newspaper "But in the look­
ing-glass world of Intelligence,
the more bizarre the story
seems, the more likely It Is to
bclrue.”

environmental problems.
“ F'roni these data alone, you
can't conclude whether Florida
has an acid deposition problem."
Continued from psge 1A
he said
,
In the Northeast, he said.
Increasing the acid levels of
la k e * and stream s and for Ilndlngs were consistent with
damaging forests, primarily In the survey team's expectations.
the Northeast. Som e experts Indicating thr existence of few
blame the problem on sulfur acid lakes.
emissions from coal fired power
O f 59 5 la k e s t e s t e d In
plants and smelters, but others M ic h ig a n , M in n e s o ta a n d
say more research Is needed to W isconsin, high acidity was
pinpoint the exact cause.
measured In 4.7 percent.
"It (the survey| really docs not
give us all the answers we need,
but It Is an essential first step.”
said Charles Elkins. E P A ’s act­
ing assistant administrator for
C ontinu ed from page I A
air and radiation. "M any people
will be expecting a lot more from
tor those with master degrees.
this survey.”
Oglctree said teachers would
Steven H ow ards of the N a ­
fight the plan “ to the biller
tional Wildlife Federation said end "
the survey did nothing to lessen
Klein's jubilant reaction to the
the environmental group's belief contract's drfeat was: "G reat!
that without corrective action, Great!" Tw o weeks ago tie and
th e a c id r a in p r o b le m Is Seminole High teacher W hlley
"doom ed to get worse."
Eckstein suggested a move to
T h r EPA Is condu cting a sturt a new teacher's union,
similar survey on lukes In the unhappy wlih the SEA negoti­
West Plans call for the agency to ated pact.
develop additional data to help
“ Teachers In thts county are
Identify causes of the acidity and discontented ... he said. "T h e
determ ine which lakes could school ixiard can do better Ilian
this."
become more acidic
Th r next scheduled school
Richard Llnthurst. leader of
ihe national surface water sur­ board meeting Is set for Sept. 1 1
vey project, warned that Ihe at the school board offices at
fin d in g s should not be in ­ 1211 S. M cllonvlllc Ave. In
terpreted as an Indication of Sanford

...Acid

...Teachers

AREA DEATHS
E V E L Y N M. BEAL
Mis Evelyn M Beal. 65. of
13209 S. Florida Ave., Floral
City, died Wednesday In North
F lo r id a R e g io n a l H o s p ita l.
Gainesville Horn Feb 2. 1920 In
Trenton. HI. she moved lo Floral
I'lty from Lake Monroe tn 1984
She was a retired electronic*
worker and was a Baptist
S u r v i v o r s

I n c l u d e

h e r

husband. David, four daughter*.
Sandra C o lvin and C a roly n
Moore. tx&gt;th of DcDary. June
Smith and Judy Cepuran. both
of Sanford, six sons. Donutd
Burk, l-akr Morinx*. l,ee Burk.
Leesburg. Duane Iturk. Sanford.
William Burk. East I’eorlu. III.,
Michael Iturk. Osteen, and Lyle
Iturk. Sanford; stepdaughter,
Sharon Floral City: brother.
Fred Trout. Salisbury. Md ; two
4 l igM
24H I4't s i s t e r s . V i o l a R o b s o n ,
FI* Progrvtt
MH 24
Springfield, 111 . Juanita Garner.
F rutteffi WivinQt
1)N 14*4
MCA
4Vl 41*4 Florence. Ala.; 2U grandchildren;
2| |g MV* one great grandchild.
HtKihift Vuptilr
HJ IQH
Mwjf r iwmva
Hrtssnn Guardian Fu n eral
NCH Corp
24 14 «
22 M*2 Horne. Sunlord. Is tn charge ot
k a lt y i
t in 1|H urrungrmrnts
Sowth«eil i«nk
11W 111*
G E R A LD IN E J. BOLTON
SuoTrutl
14 14*4
Mrs Geraldine J. Bolton. 74.
561 Alexander Ave., Deltona,
died Thursday at Central FTorldu
Regional Hospllul. Sanford. Bum
last tret wren Dx and 2 hours.
April 28, 19 M In Clrclevtlle.
Ohio, she moved to Sanford In
B r e n t L r c k l r . a ct tv t ile s
1978.
c hairman, said the theatre and
Survivors Include her son. Jay
m ad nhuws go track almost to J Bolton. Sanlord, brother. Jay
the Inception ol I tic Mormon T. denning*. Victoria. Texas;
C h u r c h and th e fo u n d e r . two grandchildren.
Brigham Young and tils Iamity
B rlsson Guardian Fu n eral
were heavily involved In the Home. Sanford. Is tn charge o f
t h e a tr e " W e arc currying arrangements.
through with that tradition In
F LO Y D K. B U TTERFIELD
th e church by having road
Mr Floyd Kevin Butterfield.
dhows. which can Ire pcrtorined 19. of Highway 131. Baker Hill.
In one s|xrt or can travel Irom Ala . died Wednesday, tn an auto
place to place,” Lecklc said
accident In Hakrr Hill. Horn
The show Is open to the public March 27. 1966 tn Dade City, he
and there is no adm ission moved Hakei Hill In 1977 from
Zephyrhtlls. Hr was a funner
charge

Mormons Host Road Shows
The De l.and Stake coni|iHsed ot
right churches ol the Church ol
Jesit* Christ ol Latter-day Saints
uill host Its annual mail shows
ul 6 pin Saturday at thr Lake
Mary High School auditorium on
Lnngsocxl Lake Mary Hoad
Mrmber* ul the Sanlord, DeLand, Daytona Beach amt Hun
Hell churches will take purl In
thr activities. Each group's ruad
sluts will last approximately 15
mltllilcs and partlclpanls will be
judged on their performance.
Radio personalities from thr
community and members ot the
Ori.uulo Slake w ill tie Hu Judge*
The overall show is expected to

Hit-And-Run Victim
Undergoes Surgery

resident of thts urea. He was a
self-employed mechanic and a
Methodist
Survivor* Include his parents.
Floyd and Sara, (laker Hill; three
sisters. Mrs. J ea n K n igh t,
Germany and Miss Dana and
Miss Sam an th a B u tterfield .

tw o d a u g h te rs . S u zu n n r
A rvunltls and Carol Murray,
both of Rochester: eight grand­
children.
A ll Faiths M em orial Park.
Casselberry. Is tn charge of
arrangements.

PAUL R. WELLMAN

Mr Paul R Wellman. 53. of
gran d m oth er. Sara Conner. 3 4 0 M l c a n o p y C o u r t .
Orals; paternal grandmother. Casselberry, died Thursday tn
Margaret B u tterfield. Deleon Blshopvllle. S.C.. Bom Feb. 23.
Springs, a niece.
1932 tn Augusta. Maine, he
Oakiawn Funeral Homr, Lake moved to Casselberry from New
Mary, is In charge o f arrange­ Jersey In 1976, He was a retired
ments
Air Force technical sergeant.
VIO LET K. M cE LR E A TH
Survivors Include hts wife,
M rs . V i o l e t K a t h e r i n e Sylvia; four sons. Dennis of
M rK Ireath. 63. o f 1473 N. G erm any, David o f Lincoln.
County Road 427. Longwood. M aine. Paul Jr. o f Bangor.
died Wednesday at her resi­ Maine, and Glen of Maine; three
dence Born August 13. 1922 In daughters. Susan Wellman of
Am es, Iow a, she m oved to Casselberry, Paula Pierce and
Uingwcxxt from there In 1935. Gall Wellman, both of Maine;
She was a homemaker.
stepson. Jeff Smith. Casselberry,
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e h e r t w o s t e p d a u g h te r s . K a th y
husband. Dewey, daughter. Ann S m ith . M yrtle B each . S.C.,
T o th . S a n fo rd : th ree sons. C ynlhta Smith, New Jersey:
Gerald D. and Don K.. both of th r e e b ro th e rs . O tto F. o f
Longw ood , and 1'aut M. o f Zephyrhllta. Clyde o f Maine,
Brandon; five sisters. Betty Lou Leroy o f Worcester. M ass: two
K rlgans. L o n g w o o d . G ladys s is t e r s . J o y c e S w e e ltn a n .
Rumlner, Walnut Ridge. Ark.. Kissimmee. Lucille Nickerson.
Lula Mae Hamilton. Hoxte, Ark.. Scott* Valley, Calif.
Susie Johnson. Sanford. Barbara
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral
Jean Hawkins. Longwood: five Home. Altamonte Springs, la In
grandchildren.
charge of arrangements.
G ram k ow F u n e ra l H om e.
M A R JO R IE A . SW ANSO N
Sanford, fa In charge of ar­
Mrs. Marjorie A. Swanson. 64.
rangements.
o f Sunny South Mobile Home
Park. 1216 S. Orange Blossom
WILBUR T. SMITH
Mr Wilbur T. Smith. 63. of 10 Trait. Orlando, died Wednesday
Lotus Drive. Caasclbeny, died at Humana Hospital-Lucerne.
Tuesday at Florida Hospital
Orlando. Bom tn Little Fails,
Altamonte. Born June 2. 1922 In
Rochester. N.Y.. he moved to
F lo w e rs F o r A ll O c c a s io n s
Casselberry from there In 1982.
He was a retired mall carrier. He
was a member of Veterans of
Foreign W ars. Orlando and
Rochester.
Survivors Include his wife.
Dorothy, son. James. Rochester;
B a k e r

H i l l ;

m a t e r n a l

(Collins

n m

m

SVK*V 323-1204

Minn. July 3. 1921 she moved to
Orlando In 1970 from Jim Falls.
Wise. She was u homemaker and
a m e m b e r o f A s s e m b ly o f
Yabweh.
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e h e r
husband. Alden E.: two sons.
Gordon J.. Alen. Hawaii, and
Jay S.. Orlando; daughter. Kerry
J o A. A n d r/ a o n . O r la n d o :
mother. Dorothy Roff, Crosby,
Minn.: brother. Gordon Roff.
Baltimore. Md.; sister. Lorraine
Olson. Bratnurd. Minn.; five
grandchildren:
Oakiawn Funeral Home, Lake
Mary, is tn charge of arrange­
ments

Fun«ral Notices
• UTTERFIILO H O YD K

- Gravotido M rv ictt lor Floy* Ktvm
Bvttorflaid m il b* hold leturday Augutt I I
• I J p m in Otfoon Camalory with Rrv P * «i
Cornwell offkiotmg Thor* win bo no * i» i »r
l« n •! **• funeral homo Oakiawn funorol
Homo, Loko Mery. In charge
SOL TO * 0 1 SAL DIN I J
-M an o rial w u c n tor Geraidm* J lotion.
J J •* •*! AtoaanOtf A VO , Deffon* rrOm dtod
Thvraday. will ba ot II a m Xeturday at Holy
Craaa Eptacopal Church with Father Loroy O
Xapar Jr officiating Britton Guardian

F &lt;xw#1Mama a in charge ef err engemeixa

B IA L . IV IL Y N M .
- Funeral teryk et tor Evelyn Baal. U. o l
Fler*! City, . i l l ba I p m Wtvrday m
BrltMn Funaral Hama chapel Burial mil to
In Do Ilona Mentor mi Gordon*
Brleoon tunorol Home, a Guardian Chapel In

dwras

1 * A X IO M S U N JO B 11 A.

- Funeral aervlce* tor Mer|arte A. I woman.
M. aI Orlande Mia dtod WaWtaoday. m il So
haw Saturday at 11 a m el m* Onkinwn
Funaral Hama Chapel -rth ma Xav Ralph
Fry attic Idling Burial In Oakiawn Memrerte!
F a rt V it nation Mr lomlty and trionde m il bo
Loturday » a m until aervlce time Oekiewn
Funeral Home In charge

�H e ra ld

ISURE

Comploto Week's TV Listings
Sanford, Florida — Friday, Auguil 30. m s

h'*f

* _vti i

r im
*

g y m s

Adm it it. The mirror
doesn't lie. It's time
- p a st tim e - for an
e x e rcise program . But
before you rush out
to buy at-hom e
equipm ent you need
to establish goals and
check your bank b alance
By Busan L od cn
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
W e’ve nil Hour cxcrrli
rra$y. At every turn I
the road there's a runne
I’nah and plain fltrivn
renters arc (topping u
faslrr titan pcrlnrak. lit
despite all this conspln
ous sweating, mint II
ness fiends shun lit
public eye and grim
groan. siren It and strut
In the privacy nf tbri
own homes
Rowing machines and
barbells are turning up in
lied rooms and dens. StaT im Groves
lion ary b lc y rlc a have
bumped out some easy chairs and fitness buds arc
pedaling away the pounds and firming up the flab
while watching lelevision
And that TV Is probably tuned *to an exercise
program like fitness guru Richard Simmons'. Or
Jane Fonda’s topselling workout tape may be
plugged Into the VCR.

Hh i U I S . I . I S r ? • » « » V tM .nl

Jack Clark w orks out In a spare bedroom of his Apopka hom e
Home exercise gear is the lop dog In the
rnultlbillion-dollar physical fitness Industry.
Consumers are snapping up everthtng from grxiey
"power putty" for hand exercises to complete
slate-of-lhc art gyms; the home exercise equipment
Industry Is well Into the high tech age.
The putty can be picked up for about $7 (you can

gel the same effect by squeezing u tennis balll while
the super gym like the Nautilus ran set you hark
about $35,000.
There Is a middle ground, and most home rowers,
hoppers, pedalrrs, lifters and grippers can rig out a
pretty sophisticated gym with all the gear they'd
Bee OTM8. page 3

�J—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Frida/ Aug, JO, IHS

Traveling Workout Appeals To Busy Execs
The jirojmsal spread by w-ordol rooolh anil soiii
aroused the curiosity ol enough men and women •«»
keep Comstock and three Instructors busv Irrun dawn
until laic at nlgln.
The key factors ire tlmr and motivation
Comstock sold
Ibey don't have enough hours in
ilielr days lo exert Ise al a club, and they always feel
there Is som rihiog else they could or should Ite
I hiuglas ( ' Comslock visits (lie hot m s ol busy doing "
The enthusiastic one-on-one parllrlpatlon and
pinleHsloiiiils whose cnrrrrs have outpaced lliclr
cncouragemenl of Comsiix k or Ids Instnieiors all
(todies.
"Th ese people reall/e tile Importance ol fitness. but wiili degrees In physical education, provides the
motivation frenzied professionals need
l l r I lie last Hum; they have lime for," Com stork said
"Still. Ibey don't want lo look or feel like Jellyfish "
Richard llronson. a -IO year o ld developer ol
A h president ol a firm providing health and shopping centers ami office buildings who also
maintenance programs at rurporutlons, the 30 year- produces rock 'n' roll concerts, maintains the kind ol
old Comstock said he nntlrcd those who didn't attend hectic |race lyplcal uf Comstock's clients.
An admitted “ sports-machine Junkie," llronson
lln- sessions were often top executives who needecl
said, " I was I hr kind ol guy who gol exciter!, ran oul
the exrrri'lne I he most.
Kiu IIchh successions o f huHlncss conferences, plume and iMiught all the equipment I could llnrl. hut could
calls and I rips were keeping many from participating never force inysrlf lo use II My home was a
In my exercise program. Comstock said. "W hat they sjMirtnman's paradise.
"I imisl have slgnrd uj&gt; lor six rllllcrrni courses at
needed was a personalized, professional service In
health centers and never showed up." he added
their homes." regard less o f the tuiur
llronson mri Ills mentor al a sports equipment
Although tin Initial attempt lo generate Inlcrcsl by
mailing 2.500 letters to prominent executives failed show where tic wcnl to buy a new treadmill.
lo spark a single response. Com stock wasn't
"Doug said he wouldn't sell mr one. that what 1
needed was motivation, not fancy gadgets '
discouraged.
llronson decided to glvr (he 13-week program a try
While visiting (Inns during the fitness classes.
Comstock talked almul bringing Ids stntr of Ihc art providing Comstock showed up al his home at 5:45
spmis rqulpiocut to the houses of rorjxiralr clients. a m .

IIAHKIlAMS'll-.l) i mm IIJI'll
( or|Kiride m m i
IIves h iim tiw Iii I III i very vcnlnr* except keeping
i Iji iiini -Ives lit ai&lt;- Hiiniiiiiii' away lliili w-iih ihr advlce
,iixl cninradery &lt;&gt;l &lt;111 r x ■&lt; is*- i inisiili.ml wlm iiiiikrs
bouse calls
Driving ■! villi loaded with li,nn|&gt;nlliien. bikes
weights, rowing mat bines. ii crosscountry ski
simulator. treadmill ami body monitoring equipment.

I needed discipline and he jnil together a plan
dial worked
llronson said, adding he lost 20
pounds has lower blood pressure and Is more
relaxed
In dealing with success-driven j&gt;eoj»lr. Comslix k
sa\&gt; lie has tried to develop a program that s
prai llcalb bill proof He enntarts Ills clients' doctors
io learn II Un-re are any special problems, and eVerv
session begins t&gt;\ measuring physical dimensions
As Comstock guides each participant through the
hour &lt;&gt;l stretching, weight lilting and aerobics, he logs
pulse rates, iuicnstty of w orkouls. repelIVltms.
durations and makes recommendations for the next
class
lint In- also makes sure the participant has fun. by
idirrnallng la-i wren the dlirercnt pieces of equipment,
exercising with them, coaxing and shouting rn&lt;ouragrineni
An insistence on meeting goals is nn essential lor
die program lo work.
l( you have a guy jxnmdlng on your door at 6
o'clock in the morning three days a week, there » not
much you can do." Comstock said. "They're paying
me $15 ar. hour for motivation. And that's how I gel
results *
I hesr jieople. corporate executives and presidents
of rmnpanirs. don't have anybody telling them what
lo do In most areas o f their lives." he said. "Hut they
admit they wouldn't exercise any other w ay."

...G ym s
C ontinued from page I
ever need lor from $2,000 to
$4 (xxi f he coal conscious can
equip a smaller hut mi III "lo la l
gym " lor idsnil our-tenth dial
price Hull loo much? fr y
shopping a lew garage sales Ini
some used weights and a ills
■aided child's Jump rope.
Tim Urovra. who presides
o v er a g lliir r lu g array of
chrome exercise equipment m
an A lt am o tile S p r in g s
shnwiooin where do-ll-yoursclf
muscle men and women can
pick a mean machine in whip
Ihcmsclvcs Into shajK- hi the
privacy nl their own home, said
lime Is a furlor. Money (days a
inlc too.
Many Illness hulls who pay
the "ex trem ely high p rice"
($ 4 0 0 a yea r and up| lo
exercise al one of the |m&gt;h! i
exercise emporiums that are
lapping up In Seminole County
Ihul It's I ihi nnieli like wutk In
make ii In (ur u workout.
(Jroves said.
They |&gt;ay Ihr fees and then
don't show up, They realize by
the lime they gel home from
work, change Into llirlr sweats
and liatllr die Uallle gelling to
ilie gym they've wasted an
hour and hgvrii't moved a
muscle In a inrantuglul way.
he said
Then It's time to wall in line
lor a turn al the machines and
a post w in knot shower. It all
lakes about (w o hours, he said,
and they could have loucd thru
museles and given ihe old
heart a workout in only 30
minutes It they had stayed at
home.
T h a t's w here 3H.ycar-old
Dove S kytrn ol hongw ond
chooses to exercise.
An arclillrcI, Skylcs said II he

p * . * kf Chvck U rrab M

John Young tests a piece ol machinery al an Altamonte Springs exercise equipment
sales showroom
had to make I Hue lo g&lt;
a they miss out on that the
gym lie Just wouldn't do II So clubgorr enjoys. Groves said. Is
hr Invested $5.(XX) in a slt-uji Ihr social asjiccl of w-alchlng
I maul amt a six-station "Illness others sweat.
trainer" where he strains and
The health spa has become
Ihe singles bur of die HOs
trains with presses mid polls
If ih at‘» not what you're
So far. he lias worked out
(althlully using a [migrant de­ after, then there's a certain
veloped hy a friend during the pleasure in knowing that byworking oul al home you can
live weeks lie's Inn) Ihe gear
"I'm Just gelling In shape." set your own parr anti your
Skylcs told. "I jircfer 11 over own lime in exrrrlse. even II
riding a hike. It's a different It's ill I I p m or 3 a in And
kind o f exercise."
ihe investment In equipment is
II Skylcs becom es a real one that should Iasi a lifetime.
dyed In the wool fitness hutf he Groves said
T h e most popular home
may Join others who have gone
as far as Investing In home exercise machine. Graves said,
Indoor tanning mnchlurs nr Is ihe rower whleli can range In
saunas. About the only thing jinre from about *200 up m a

sujH-r *550 machine that will
count tb r ca lories y o u 'r e
burning away.
"The people come In who run
only want something for Ihe
heart ami lungs like a bike or a
rower ur a treadmill, bul who'll
also purchase a Illness trainer
for about $4,000 that has
dllfcreni si at Ions where they
can do squats, bench jnc&amp;s. a
m ilita ry jtress. e x e r c is in g
various ju ris o f the Ixidy. They
go for Ihe complete Illness
program."
T h nugh individual
exerciser s goals and nerds
vary they are all generally
working to give their heart anil
lungs, ih e c a rd io v a s c u la r

system, a good workout Thai's
Ihe key to good-heakh
"T h e secret Is to gel your
heart rate up tn your target
zone, which varies depending
on your size and other factors
(but usually hovers around
125-150 beats u minute), al
least three or four times a
week. In 20-mlnute exeretse
sessions," Groves said
"Heart disease Is the leading
cause of death In our country.
People are starting to /rallze
lhat and are leading belter
lives. They're exercising and
arc eating belter. They're more
alert, they stay 111 shajie They
look tn-tlrr and (eel better, be
said.
So much for the motivation
that causes the typical home
e x e r c is e r to s h e ll out an
average of 9500 for gear. Wlial
If you don't know where or how
to Join the fitness freaks?
Most people have on Idea ol
what they want to achieve from
exercise, G roves said. "W e
kind of guide them. If they
don’ t have any Idea wbal they
are doing we will offer to come
hy their home and set up a
program for th em ." he said.
Allhough m any lake io gravi­
ty systems, which dangle you
upside down lo take pressure
o ff the spine, few go In lor
serious weight training.
"People want to tone up. but
not train like a bodybulldrr.
he said. "T h a t's A fulltime Job
Hut they do get Into ihelr
workouts and a lot of peojile are
pretty fanatical ubout It.
"It can deftnately become an
obsession. You don’ t warn to go
to that point, but you do want
lo make exercise a part of your
lifestyle, lo Incorporate some
lyjie of fitness program even tl
Its only 10 or 15 minutes a
clay." be said.
And you don't even have m
leave borne to dolt.

�E v e n i n g H e r a l d . S a n fo rd . F I.

TELEVISION
Specials Of The Week
SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

AfTERNOON

1200

1200
( I P ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL
The Mturned Mention V | V e ,
toungaleii Angel Wilton and B-»j
Beet Imd thameehea trapped n (he
mention i betameni et ttwy eltempt lo tmd the old men end hit
mntmg Icetune (Perl 3 ol IllH iq
tt) 110) THE PARCHING WINDS Of
SOMALIA A lu fit , at the Saior,
end culture ol tt*! Ahicen nation
noted lor its her an environment

1 00
0 ) (10) RIVER TOWN A doormen
ter* new ol ettortt b* the people ol
Sobberi Grove w .i lo tave the*
loan hom the devolution ol the
Kctepoo Hirer t itpeeied Itoodeig
im p
EVENING

(B (W l NISEI SOL M R STAN­
DARD BEARER FOR AN CAKED
PEOPLE Veter ant ot the much dec
orated 447nd Japan** Amerran
Reganentel Combel Teem at World
War It diecutt lhe» leeangt ol conhat et libera!on abroad etn* thee
!amit*i ee re impntoned et hem*

100
0 ‘ KFYUOHT M O A m em ot r i e r with B arb ee Waiter! Jerry
le a n teiai about tut nvehement
•■(h the Mutculer Dyttiophy a It o ­
o l lion

EVENING

TELETHON Jerry le w * • |omed by
Milton Bene L-Perete lit r e Sm*
Ire end other ce leb i'l*! n the Mut
cider DyttfOphy Atu-cieipon t an­
nuel
tu n d -ran er
National
broaocatlt horn Ne* Yurt Atlenlc
City end Ceatert Palace m Lee
vegaa

AFTERNOON

1200
6 ) 4 JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON Jerry L ew i n toned by
Melon Bene liberate lit r e Sme
Ira and other cetebritwt n H * Mut
Oder Dyttiophy Aiiociehun ■ an­
nual
tund la tter
National
broedcaitt Irom N e* Tort Atlenlc
City end Gee t e n Palace in l e t
Vega*
EVENING

600

ffi (10) SURVIVAL On location m
Sri Lam e end Indie enamelogrepher 0*1 n Plage etpavet the Me
01 the endangered Alien elephant
7 00
tt) |10» THE GLORY O f THE GAR­ |R|EJ

DEN Jemet Melon n entieea doctenenlery Mm detcntwng hoe PfiA
id&gt; de Rothechdd devgned end
creeled one ol the *ortd t moil
ipectecuier geroeni _ the Geident
ol t i bury

700

8:00

900

( D ( TO) HEPBURN AND TRACY Ihe
tt) |t0) FRANKIE AND JOHNNY J1 (JS| BENNY MKL SHOW In Ifut career t end private Wee ol Spencer
Tint 40tb ennmrtery tribute to the me hour tpeuel Dewy portreyt Tracy end nalherme Hepburn ere
Met Amencen ballet mehidel tn in­ Ihe Gey Cabenero tn g n g eboul ihe recalled through Mm d p i trcen
terne* enth Ruth Peg* the original eomen ol Spevi end a gtety ntovret m *h ch they centered
Deta Set )
Trane* end dipt tram the ISM cio*n mho brmgt cheot lo a I Stale ot the Union
et * * • at horn thote they made
production
menttMer ttore
taper e'er,

900

9 30

if i HEARTS SLANO Dorothy o

O

Lyman atari as J u m n a oayior e
ungte parent trying lo meaKem her
unity while holding doen tere&gt;al
(Ode end tee mg cere at her cnedien
Ano litre Gary Send* and Sydney
Pemy

11:30
O) III VISIONS AROUND THE
WORLD Derid Borne John Cougei
Meaencamp Men et Wore Madon­
na, Ouran Ouren. Teare lor Teere
end Robert Plant pertorm thee hot
m countret eround the eortd

4 ) JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON Jerry Leem *i pried by
MR on Berta liberate Trent S e t
lit and other i d e b u t* * in the Uuaeuler Dyttiophy Attoothon I an
null
fund r a it e i
National
broadcatte tram N e* Yart. Alientc
City end C ee l Art Perec* &lt;r\ Let
Vtget

800
tt) (TO) SURVIVAL S h e ll The
Perfect Predetort
J e*t author
Peter Benchley neralet a tone et
Ihe dtvervty ut m e t tpacet :J

EVfMNG

600
if
o
THROUGH I Ml YEARS
THE OSMONDS MTM ANNIVER­
SARY The Qtmoitdt — Al*n
Vtiynm M e fji Jay Oonny Mtue
■rtd Jimmy
p^Hijrm Dwsr current
r «ic a i«t ai «mli u M i from tfa#
PAtl m cvNfbF«i«n ot 25 y fa 'l m
•fttwi b u h m i C«jtKii Iota F•ta­
na. Andy G»tifc fhf 0 «t FUJg* Boyl,
S ta ll O ct Ctark Bob Hope.
Jmry t trait and Andy Rftlkamt

900
(D IIO) TEN WHO DARED Capten
Jam etC oot Ouwg Nt NM temnlihc voyage eound Ihe enrVl *Mch
began m i s m Gone d ieted much
ol the uneipiored Peihc

1000
tt) I TOf STING THE CONTROVER
SY O f FBI UNOERCOV1R OPERA
Ttow s John Hainan mode aim Ihtt
roundtable debate eiammmg Ihe
fB I that kxu tet on It* ut* ol po­
l e * power Vt cut ttieil** Pane
tilt mi hide FBI Attrtlenl Director
0*v*r n*v*u Abner* (aowcuiw
E d * e d h or men end ACLU conitel
Jerry Barmen

EVE NINO

600
£D MO) NATIONAL GIOGRAPHC
Jamet Wtutmor* neralet Itet r m
ot Ihe world ot ben t pail end
preaenl. and Item people hoboet
nobtiyiali en d eo rtw t IRIEJ

THURSDAY
EVENING

700
83 (W&gt; THE GLORY O f THE GAR­
DEN A tour ol the ip e cteu ie rho­
dodendron ged en t *1 Si Eibwy.
the i n i .me prowcl ot Ih* lei* Preep
de Rotheched Jenat Melon ne
relea

Sports On The Air
SA TU R D A Y

Cetot Santo* I JO I. 70 KOti rt
Oe*ey Moore (14-7. ItK O tlN irlh *

IBf

Junior

Middle* eight

1000
11 (SS) BOWLING Brunemct
(MO 000 National Teem TOIKhe

500

830
O f Ol GREAT OUTDOORS

900
J I(M l® (») WRE3TUNQ

9:05
12 WRESTUfeG

f f i ( I ) CIRCLE OF SPORTS A N o ­
how eettiy magatma hotted by
Robert Conrad depicting Ihe
• e e l t tportt tughkghli bom
eound Ihe world

T ) O « « * WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled Cod Th* Truth Wl
tame IIS-1, 17 KO*l vt Jet*# Feguion 111-0. 10 * O il m * haeryewgfil bout KtNduWd lot tt
rand* tv * bom A lien u . City N J
EVEMNQ

AFTERNOON

12:00
O S

0

o

WRESTLWQ

12:30
US

700
tl

w r e s t l in g

800
Q

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Oregon

OPEN TENNIS Cety el NeeNngton State

roundt t * « bom FluaMng Meadow
900
Corona P e t . N Y
U COLLEGE FOOTBALL Honda ( I ! O N F l PRE-SEASON FOOT­
BALL Houeton Overt at C en t
SlaN at TJen*
Loaboyl

« 0

100

BASEBALL R*»o«M core
age at Caetorrea Angela at Nh*
Yort Ten*am or CNcago Wtew
Soi at Toronto BN* J*T»

3:30
1 O

U B OPEN TENNIS CON-

400
0

-I SPORT SWORLD ScheAAed

12:30

Idle

tchedJtd Ice IS t o m b been Re
twin Clemente Stechum « Sin
Jutn P R
0 o m ig h t y m e n a n o m a g ic
M 0 M N TS Thu prew e* ol UN vpcoeeng Nataone* Fontbe* league
lemon mchrdm prohM* of tom*
NFl dreb prcei
13 BASEBALL Atlanta Brevet el
Che ego Cu%t

1030
B d iw n u r u N O

1130
0 ($ B O M V B O W O C N

(J j O U S
TMUCS

I
O U S OPEN TENMB Thed
ramd. In * bom Fluehmg Meedo*
Corona Pert. N Y

too
0 0

WRESTIPVQ

2:00

OPEN TENNIS CON
EVENING

8:00
0 O COLLEGE FOOTBALL Ale
bam* et Gaoripe
Q ) |d| BATTLE O f THE BELTS
W R ESTIN G

Q ATLANTA BRAVES PRCGAME

2:15
12 BASEBALL Atlanta Brevet M
CMcego Cube

330
(1 ) D U B
T w u ta

OPEN TENMS CON

4 30
■ 0 BPOR TSWORLD Scheduled
Taped cover eg* of Ih* M*rn**onel
B c jc e rieen c win men end r e v ­
e l amateur cM t* cyctalt bom 14
nehon* racing bom Sen Franceco

1

o

UB

HK1HIOMT8

OPEN

TENNIS

TU ESD A Y
EVEMNO

7:35
11 BASEBALL Anemia ( n e t el
Pettbiegh Peat**

12:00
0
O
US
HtOHUOHTS

OPEN

t
TENNIS

W ED N ESD AY
t v t iM a

CVENWVO

705
12 WWEiTLPVQ

100$

M ONDAY
AfTtRNO O N

12:30
d O U l OPEN TENMB Quarter
*nN rovevda tv * bom fMthmg
Me e d o * Cor one Pam h y

"Went 57ilt Ih a news show 1
think. Ifs hard to tell sometltuiH. The line hetw rrn news
and enfrrliilmuenl Ik awfully
fiiz/y ficrr Too hi/*v
T h is CHS N ew s aum nirr
imi HaJ!Inc. Ik new*, now. daring,
curing, wow! ICk a rin k *n* rtdl
operallim from ihe netw ork*
new breed T h e e x e r u llv e
producer. Andrew Luck. Is
under 40 The cnrrctt|M&gt;ndcnlK
— John Kemiglu. Iktb Stroll.
Meredith Vieira. June Wallace
— are young und frenli-faerd
Kick Ii I k nice. I'm all lor fresh.
Fresh editing teehnlqueu. Fresh
use of sound and niusle. The

problem with **Wet»l r&gt;7ih" is

Fernigla went the Urraldo
Hlveru route with his piece on
haltered wives, He actually
s(Mike with a Isillered wile, lie
.ii lually asked her how II fell to
lie tu r n e d a w a y (roin an
overcrowded shelter lie wal
died as her lllllc Imiv (minted ai
her bruised face and sold.
"Mom m y, wind's |hal?" "It
hurls." she replied.
He watched as she plumed
motels and lilrnds In search ol
HceomiuiMlatlotiN lor llic night
She ended tip tmnklng with a
lilrnd "T h is rc|Mirl has no
story-hook en d in g ," he re
|N&gt;rted. It also had no |siliit.
Iiesldes slun k value

Mlvs Vieira went to Kthiu|&gt;la
with H a rry H d a fo n tc and
Michael J a ik s o o s litolher
The Ixitloin line. It's shallow "There were i i r t i and tr,ir(nl
and self-eonm Ioun and ll's not highs," she 11 ild us "And. II on
good lotirnallsin It's ennniny cue. II started lo rain In this
drought s itickcn cuuntry An
tabloid Joninullsni.
"W est 57lh" eo ver» a eotiple Alrlcan sign n( welcome — a
more stotlrs a week than "fit) reason to ho|K-.*'
Minutes" dues It can do that
She w cn l lot heai i over
because the subjects arc less reportage. The runiera showed
complex Soil, actually. And ns grain sitting imlouched at a
llierr's very lltlle digging
d o c k . 11 s h o w e d S o v i e t
Slrott. for Inslanec. ptonird hfllcopirrn hovering overhead.
actor Chuck Norris. I knew Shr mcnllonetl II, hul didn't
very tittle uImjuI Norris I still account for II. “ The only Iwo
know very little. Slrott showed fads lhat m ailer," she said,
some film clips and d ia lled voice quavering slightly, "arc
with the guy on a sofa. Oh. and these people arc hungry anti
he spoke lo N o rris 's wife. need help."
“ Chuck,” she told us. "Is truly
The nod tiling almul "West
so at (&gt;ence with him self."
57th" Is that II can't Ik- dis­
That was It. “ Enterlalnincnl missed. It comes flout network
Ton igh t" would have given us TV's most distinguished news
more.
&lt;&gt;|icratlon. the one Ihal pro­
Miss Wallace probed the duced fvdward K. Murrow,
story of how Jon-Erik 11ex uni W alter C ru n k H c and " fit )
liv e s on. Y ou 'll re c a ll the Minutes." Its arrival signals a
actor's organs were donated major d e v e lo p m e n t In T V
when he died lust year from an news, and not a positive one.

12:00
Cl)

o BmAdw Cato

0 Q O O L F Taped cover egecJ me
U S Amateur ChampwntNp bom
MonlcJau God Chib N J

Q SPORTS PAGE

SU N D A Y

330

AFTERNOON

By David H a n dler
accident on the set of "Cover
N ew spaper E n te rp rise A ttn . Up Well, she found the fellow
*‘Wesl 57111" oflrn i Hit- lt(p- who has his heart
nriut o f "Miami V ice," iltc video
lie operates a Las Vegas
vcrltr rumrrn work of "lltll escort service "An- you a
S lrret lllurs," Ihe heart of plinp'7" she demanded llr
"Cagney A harry-"
ducked the &lt;|ticsllou She let
The only problem Is iltat him.

l l '» more Inlcresled In Hlyle
than In substance. Sensation
matters more than Information

WEDNESDAY

1000

O f (101 EVEN IHE HEAVENS
WEEP THE WEST VtRGMU MINI
WARS M A i Connor 1 nerelet the
Mary ol the 40-yee ettort by West
MORfRNQ
W g n a coal m r w t to orgenu* a
Iteiew de unon that pdmmated el
6:00
1*71, m an em ad corvbonietmn
(? ) JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY •nth U S Iroopt

M ONDAY

a

TUESDAY

600

Q (IT JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON Jerry le * t t it jeered by
Melon Berle liberate Trane Seie
Pa end other cetebritiei n the Mut
cider Dyttiophy Attocreiion t an­
7:00
nuel
lu n d ia n e i
N elion ei
tT o
WHISPERING HOPE UN­
broadcaelt horn N e* tort Atlanta
MASKING THE MYSTERY Of A lCity and Caatart Peace m Let
EHCIMER 3 DISEASE A documen
Veoae
tery about people effected »th the
degeneralive brain dieeete

JO, (ESS— J

News O r Entertainment?
'West 57th' Fuzzes The Line
Separating Style, Substance

A u g u s t 30 Thru S e p te m b e r 5

SATURDAY

F r id a y . A u g

7:35
U BASEBALL Adam* Hovel ai
Putlbiegh Pvelet

1200
CIj O
US
MOMUOHTS

OPEN

TENNIS

THU RSDAY
CVDBNG

T2O0
0
O
US
HKM JQHTS

OPEN

TENNIS

Don Ameche: A Movie Star
Who Doesn't Go To Movies
W h en Don A m e c h e quit
making movies he also ejuII
going to see (hem. Ameche
nays he saw only three — "T h e
G o d f a t h e r . " " K r a m e r vs.
K ram er" and "E .T ." — In a
10-year period.
He was well ofT financially
and came out of retirement for
a role tn “ Trading Places'' only
after he was given the same
salary that Kay Miland was to
have gotten for Ihe role.

Am eche, 77. has become
stunt thing o f a senior sex
symbol with Ills rule In "C o­
coon" but says he wouldn't
choose near -eternal life like his
charadcr In the movie
"I wouldn't g o ." he said.
"I'm a very contented, jieaceful
man."

A m e c h e . w h o has been
sepended from Ills wife for 19
y e a r s b u l w o n 't d iv o r c e
because of their Catholic fullfi.
"H ell, I'd gone for 12 years says he thinks o f himself as
without making a picture so "som eone w h o had decent
whal was Ihe difference?" he looks and could sing decently
told l ‘coplc magazine.
w e lt"

�4-Ev*iitng Herald, Sanford, FI.

F r id a y . Aug

10, I t t S

A u g u st 30

FRIDAY

SATURDAY
500

600

S

(4 H J i0 (7 &gt; 0 new s
(ISIJEFEERSONS
( l o t U A C N fll / I f H f t t n

new sm our

CO 11)1A VERNE a S H IM EY

60S
I t DOWN EO EARTH

630
Q (4 1NBC NEW S
( H O CO-1 EVE NINO NEWS

m u Aoc a

MGHT □
(II) (M| A l i c e
® (4| HAPPY

w o r id news

to-

d a y s a g a in

6 35
aX GREEN ACTUS

7:00
0 141 BALE OE HIE CENTURY
Iff O
PM
MAGAZINE r,and»
CmtN&gt; Hut la . 1944 Olympic gokl
rnmffjklit! lo tynchrorurad ««rimrriirty
Galtornt* i.4iv« &lt;&gt;wt*m r»t«*vdf» I m

ih U Ji W A H u r
(ID &lt;W| lO O C 108C FOft COM
FORI Whan tm jinni tut has a ion,
Paul vMMkt lo
him tail and*
Up Mlh B IUf|Hlifl
IB (tO ) P flO f II ( 3 O f N ATU flf
A (•) MAPf»Y DAYS AGAIN
705
I t SANTORO AND SON

7:30
0 ( 4 1 e n t e r t a i n m e n t t o n ig h t
ktfarvww Mlh Anthony P w tm i
( S ) Q W H E f l OE EOfllUN E
( 7 ) 0 JOKER S WILD
111) p$| BENSON
f f l |K » THIS WEEK WITH CHRIS
la on n A N
0 |t) A l l IN THEE AM R Y

7:35
d t A l l IN THE F AM Il V

800
O (4 ) UNIVERSITY OE FIORIGA I
11 OHIO A S TATE
UNIVERSITY
FOOTBALL HfQHLKlHTS
111 O PUFF AND THE INCREDI­
BLE MISTER NOOOOY A » m M
IM ! I I * Magic LA agon |m u by
tiurgaaa Menuliihi lea pt a kmaty
mlafkgenl y tu n giler overcom e hit
naad lor a make teUevv* blend and
to atcapl hit e r e * live abonwt at hit
oain IH)
17) O WEBSTER Wabtiru ilaali
with liMtingt ni gutll ami |*aluuiy
whan ha i k m n w i lhal Katharine t
pregnancy It tuddmily thraalanad
(Rail Z o l Z)(R|IZ
(H l(M )D A L IA S
O ) (I0| W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
ftE v irw t j
U ) (I ) MOVIE
A l a t l Cry For
Hafp (IV 7 9 )lin d * P u tl Grant G oo
day* A lu a ly young tuan agar It
datpamlely driven lo Iha ptonl ot
c ontrdei mg tun Ida a t a uOutioct fur
har ptnlOettit

805
dt
MOVIE
C harlofl* a Wab
(10711 Ananaiod A rurit pig It
Mvad from tlaughtar by a lbanning
tpldar, a ral ami a tlullm m g go o tt

8 30
( 1 ) 0 MOVIE Rocky &lt;1070) Syl
m la
SlaAuna. Taha Slur a A
cmak Iana pfHtatMpraa ho tar g a ll
a rar# ch an t* lor lama and glory
whan lata laadt han lo a llrtanlan
nul brail with a weak] champion |R)
(? ) u
M R BELVEDERE Gaorga
and Martha t h o p ** lor a nMaing
Honda vacatur. ara nun ail by Iha
antral u7 a hen■a ana and Iha tava
lallonol a attacking aacial (H|ij
0
(M ) W ALL STREET WEEK
Guaal Garaldma w « u arMar and
pubbaher, 1 Irfvetim am
Quality

000
o
(4 ) NFL PRE SEASON FOOT.
BALE San fia n c itc o 4dart al Sealt f / o K N S O N A burned r v t Gov
arnta Oalkng dacidet lo play cent
boy al a dud* r anth |R| [J

IC (Ml OLANCY
0 (10) PAVARO TTI AT MADISON
SQUARE OAROCN Tlat a * itakan
program btckidaa anaa bom Rigo
M M ." Pagkacci and I Troval o r * ' M wad aa popular aungt mc hiding O tc*a m o and Torn* a
Stotwnlo
1nun ton DutMay con
duett In* Naw Jartay Symphony
Or Chat b a With Rut* autottl Andiaa

5 30
(7 ) o
OFF THE RACK K a ta * at
lamp! lo aid an ampAiyna g a it har
In Iroubla with Iha Department of
Imirugralion (H)LJ

1000
171 O WORLEYS FUNNIEST COM
MERCIA l GOOES Robert GuKlacane and E m n t n jt l la w n laam
up lo pratanl mamorabN loul up*
by t la r t including (Jill Cotby. Jot
Narnalh, Jerry la w n l*at*r A Him
Ihr a Uultnc anil Srd Caatar (H )tJ
&lt;11)051 INDEPENDENT NEWS
CD(S) POLICE WOMAN
1005
S t HIGH CHAPARRAL
1030
( I t O S ) BOB NEWHART

1100
1&gt; I O ( 7 J a NEWS
(1J) 0 5 ) BENNY HILL
(1 0 )DAVE A l t r N AT LARGE
(•I HOGAN 3 HEROES

8

1 1 :0 5
a t F13MIN* WITH ORIANOO WIL­
SON
1130
( ) l O TAXI
I 7 l ( J ABC NEWS NIGH TUNE
OTl (15) CHICO ANO THE MAN
( A ( » HOGAN 8 HEROES
11 3 5
a t MOTORWCEK ILLUSTRATED

12:00
O ( j ) NEWS
(1 )
o
u s
OPEN TENNIS
H U M H O H TS
47) U
SOHO GOLD I lot It Lou
ILawtt. C rytlal Gayla Guaala Kan
e a rn **. Rick SpnngM d. daan
Kntghl Paul Young. Carly Simon
(mlairMna). W and Al YankovK.
Jama* Ingram and Patli Autlm (R)
O f (15) flHOOA
ClJ (■ ) MTV SUMMER CONCERTS
S ly t p a rln rm t' Mr Roboto." "R o c­
kin' Iha I'atadite.
Don I l at n
fn d ." Com a Sad Away and ofhar
hilt al Iha Saangar Thaalar at Naw
Or Want
1205
a t NIGHT TRACKS
1 2 :3 0
O (4 * f RIOAT NIGHT VTOCOfl Vi
dwot by Dna S lw l* I Monay lor
Nothing ), Hour 5 Iha Gang ( Char•kh"). Toiylium ct ( " there Mull Ba
an Angel | Madonna ( Ore** You
Up l Phil CoMmt | Don I lo a a My
Num ber"). Holy And &lt; You la Only
Human"!
I H O MOVIE Sanctuary 017 ear '
II97B) Elanurd Hughat, Kay I any
(111 (3 5 )I LOVE LUCY

1:00
(7 ) O MOVIE Palticoal P a a ta *'
119911 Charka Dr aka Arm Hay­
wood
(111 (15) l EAVE IT TO BEAVER
( A &lt;•) GET SMART
105
a ]) NIGHT TRACKS
1 .3 0
l i t ( U ) BCTV Stau hat Darid
Iketkley |Rick MoranNI do** tom *
ttia n c * he lion mvatligalion with
W altar CronailalO ava Thomatl
( I ) |() MOVIE Lola (1971|Chart**
Hr on ton, Su*an G aorg*

2:00
flD (15) PUTTIN' ON THE HITS
Song*
I hr Mar." * Oul 07 Butt
n a »»."
" lu c k y
Star."
Karma
Chamalaun
' G ood lovin '" and
Fairtai Rag
Jodgot Gragg Allman. P a liita Huahan, Ulann Star-

a tl 414) NEWS

(7 )0

2:50

MOVIE Slartay And Hutch
11975) (la n d Soul. Paul Michaal

3:05
&lt;1X HK1MT TRACKS

3:10
( B (•) MOVIE I Maf A Murderer
(1919) Jama* Maaon PamaM ham
no

3:30
a t) (M l LEAVE i f TO BEAVER

4:00
a t) (IS ) FNfOOA

O LANOOF THE LOST

fOllFTLESg
a (10) INDOOR OA ROE NS

505

AFTERNOON

600
(5 ) O BLACK AWARENESS
(7 JO OIGOLESNORT HOTEL
(1 D P S ) EDITOR'S DESK
a NEWS
a D(•) OUR GANG ANO 7R lf NOS
630
0 14, G K U G AN 3 ISLAND
( f t O THIRTY MINUTE3
1 ? O ON THE 0 0
&lt;11) (15) IT S YOUR BUSINESS

635
I I BETWEEN THE LINES

700
o (J ) INCREDIBLE HULK
1 1 ) 0 NOFU 0 TOMORROW
(7 I O KIDS INCORPORATED
III (15) JIMMY 8WAOGART
0 ) (4) MY FAVORITE MARTIAN

705
I X SATURDAY FUNNIES

7:30
O

(E lQ R lIO A N 8 LSI AND
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(71 U KIDS WORLD
( L (41 FOCUS

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7:35

ax GET SMART
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o (4 I SNORKS
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( f ) U SUPFRFRirNOS l FOE740ARY SUPER POWERS SHOW
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MOVIE Randy Rida* A lon e"
(1 9 1 4 ) John W ayna, A lb a rta
Vaughn A cowboy m hniete* an
outlaw gang lo galhar avldanca
agam tl Ihtove* who taidad an a tpraat company oftica

830
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&gt; ( ) GET ALONQ GANO
(71 O SUPER# T0END6; LEGEND­
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(16(15) CISCO KID
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CD (• ) GREAT OUTDOORS

900
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ED 110) U AOlC OF OK FAINTING
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R o b a rl Conrad daprcling Iha
week a t p o r lt highlight* from
around Iho world

1005
I X MOVIE Johnny Ocular * (1953)
Joan Crawford Slarkng Ray dan A
gurlar-playmg *■ gunman bra* lo
provtr hi* kyto To th* owrtar o l a

2:05

fl 0 ( M l QUNSMOKE

I

aX NIGHT TRACKS

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2:30

Chicago Cuba
(D (4) GREATEST
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AMERICAN

430
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1030
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41) ALVIN ANO (H e C H IP­
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17) O SCOOSY OOO MYSTERIES
^ ) ( 10) SAVING ENERGY

11.00

O (l) KtOOViOEO

(T O css

3 1OR TBREAK Zucch m Ananalad Bob Kaaahan narralaa Iha law o4 a waator aka char
actor dial atcapa* bom it* roo
ca ge and ambarki on a March lor
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(15| W K D .W K 0 WEST
( I0| FLORIDA NATURALLY

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11:30
O I f AMERICA S TOP TEN

12.00
0 f l l WRFOTUNG
&gt;Ti O
BUGS BUNNY 7 ROAD
RUNNER
(7 ) O ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL
"Tha Haurdad Mantmn M yttary"
Ynungtlart Angal Wiltrm and (Idly
Baak find Ihamtabmt trappad m fh*
m tnuon I Mkamenf at thay al
lamp! to fmd Iha old man a id hit
m u n g lortuna (Pari ? of ZIlRILJ
CUD (35) MOVIE Th* Murdr* Thai
Wouidn I O a 11940) Wdiiam Con
1 ad. Mar) Dutay A rolhaiJ cop b «
comaa mvrdtod m Iha m m itigaiion
oI a murdar that o c c u r td lorty
T W iig o
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SOMALIA A k n i y o l Iha hlttory
and cultura ol Itut African nation
no tod lor it. harth anvironmanl
Q j |4| MOVIE
Tandy * Bnda
|1974| Gana Hackman. L(v UHmann
A warm undartlanding davniopt
bal a nan a cruda pwimar r anchor
and hit naw marbcirdar la id * da
■pita Iha harth Irattmant ha gnrat
har

f f l ( 10) HEALTH MATTERS

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Schndulad Carl Th# Truth" WF
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f f i (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW g
(J) (4) MOVIN' ON

5 :3 0
(| i ANYTHING FOR MONET
(10) W A IL ITREET WEEK
Guatl Garaldina Wait*, adder and
publither
'Invettm ent Quality
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EVENING

600
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7) O NEWS
T l (IS ) BLACK SHEEP SQUADRON
(C (101 FLORIDA COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BRAIN BOWL
a ) (4) JOE FORRESTER

6 30
f ) l 4 l NBC NEWS
) O CBS EVENING NEWS
&lt;71 Q ABC'S WORLD NEW3 SAT­
URDAY Q

12:30
( U O U S OPEN TENNIS Early
roundt. kva Irom lluthm g Maadow
Corona Fart, N Y
(7 ) o
m o v ie
Cam# Emeura
(1954) Jon! McCraa. Gloria Tatbolt
A hatad calda boat taaat lo dou
bkt-crcMt Iha man who tan I turn lo

500
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7:00
( 4 1 DANCE FEVER Cntobrity
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H t« Jon Gleam |R)
(7) ( J SOLID QOLO H otl RayParkar Jr Guatl t Fraddto Jack ton
(D (101 LAST CHANCE GARAGE
l JUt Rena and Angara. Tom Jonaa.
Brad Saart atammaa car t.arao
Tl Tuesday. Rotann* Cash, comatytla m i
conlaiuat budding hit
dian Oanrvt Blaar
F n d Cobra, andebaarvaa aulomat
I I ) (JS| BUCK ROGERS
ad car talety mtpacbon m Japan
CD (TO) THE GLORY O f THE GAR­
a x COLLEGE FOOTBALL Florida
DEN Jam** M aton narrate* a dot
Stala al lutana
umantary 19m describing how PtWkp da Rolhtthod designed and
created one ot Iha world t mott
Q C4) BASEBALL Ragional c o m
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(ary maw ol ahorlt by th* paopl* ol
tost toctal awcunty numbm and ■
SoLdrart Orov* W i t . lo * • • * Iha*
1 own bom Iha davaalalun ol Iha morfim who doesn't recognize tom
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tkp into paranoia
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1:30
® (10) JUSTIN W IL S O N S LOUISI
ANA COOKIN' Preparation ol *
canned ham. eggplant crewhth c m tar Ola and garlic bread CJ

2:00

7:30

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MIGHTY MEN ANO MAGIC

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OB (Ml CHIPS

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THE MONEY Featured
calamity insurance, teaching cfto
Wan about monay. U * loophole*
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0:30
0 (1) HEART'S ISLAND Dorothy
Lyman alar* aa Johnnw Baylor a
vn gl* parent trying lo maintain her
lenity while holding down sever*i
lobs end taking ca rt ol har Chadian
A lto stars Gary 5andy and Sydney
Penny

10:00

0

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a routine murder Investigation lor
Hunter and D a* Dee lurnt mla a
larntymg c a ts involving a aeries ol
murders (R)
(111 (IS ) INDEPENDENT NEWS
® (TO) DOCTOR WHO

10:30
a t' (151 BOO NEWHART

11:00
0 &lt;J ) CD O n e w s
01 ( I S ) PU TTIN' ON THE HITS
Song* "W a k e M * Up Oelora You
G o G o .'' ” 1 Foal For You." ' Mule
Trk(n."
'9 To 8” and Boogie
Down ' and
"Do You Wanna
Touch " Judge* Missy Gold. Rob
bto Krwgar, Charka WOaon
f f i (4) HONEYMOOHCR3
Tom t
11:30.
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( 4 ) BATUROAY NIGHT LIVE
Host Joan River* MuaKal guaal*
Musical Youth ( Pass th* Dutchto,"
' Never Gonna Give You Up "L (Rl
( D O LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
ANO FAM O US A proto* ol brlkon
« r * Ad nan Khaahoggl lhal mckrda*
a tour o l hr* tuiurtou* fat and a look
al hr* mountain villa* In Spam (R|
at) (I S ) M O W How To Break Up
A Happy D ivorce" (19741 Berber*
Eden. Hal Linden
aX NIGHT TRACKS: CHAR (B U S ­
TERS
Q ) (4) VISIONS AROUND THE
WORLD David Howto John Cougar
Makancemp. Man al Work, Madon­
na, Duran Duran, l e a n lor Fear*
and Robarl Plant perform then hrIt
m counlrlee around Iha world

U’ 00
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(4) NEW SCENtER MAGAZINE
(4)NK3HT G A ILE R Y

800
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(I)
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tom tut |ob | H )g
151O AIRWOLF Raprw* ol Iha M-

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(M l MOVIE U n dergrou n d
Acat ' (1940) Dwt Hunndicl Flank
Gorthm P irk mg attendant! wreak
havoc al a twana Bavariy H urt ho
rwt (verrum* A Vietnam vat (Janlal
Michael Vincent) and hit partner
ID (TO) MOVIE Tha D art Horae
1191 J) Many Carey Noah Haary A lErrwtl Borgnma) ara caAad upon to
mv * a tlato-of tha-arl tighter plane
lulNata outlaw leedar tchamaa and
rrudarl m order lo capture a w*d ' bom taring into Soviet hand* (R)
(7) O T J HOOKER When CornklaMon
gan it accused ot thoofmg an
® (k) M O W Tha Oppoarla S at '
unarmad tu tpacl bscauM ot an oM
(10441 June A byton Ootoraa Gray
grudge, Hooaar aata out lo pvova
A happrty marnad woman la *va t lor
ih* othem t innocence | R )g
Ftomo on Iha adnea ol har It land t
a K W M O W I Wanna Mold Your
2:30
Hand ( 19TB) Suaan Kendal New­
(7 ) O M O W
Th* True Story Ol
man Marc McClure A group ot
Ja t t t Jam**'' (I9 5 T ) Robarl W ag­
*440* teon agar i la comptotaty
ner. Hop* Lang* J e tt a Jama* ac­ caught up m Iha mass byktan*
tual At* l« taan through hr* caused by Iha mueicaf and cMlurat
brother la y * *
toccata ol Th* Hatties
® (10) PROFILES OF NATURE
300
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COLLEGE FOOTBALL Oregon
0 (10) PRESENTE
al Washington State
3:30
®
&lt;•) M O W
The FBI Story "
I D O U S O PEN TENNIS C O N
( *M0| James Slewart Vara U to t
TMUCB
th * workings ol Iha FBI abaci on*
0 ( 1 0 ) TONY BRO W N'S JOURNAL
* 9ant and hr* f amity
Btoc* torn producer Otcar Mr
6*30
chaaut ■ movraa bom tha 1920*
O (4 ) OUR TIME Guaalt metud*
and 10* ara hi&lt;p«kght*d |R|
I n * louraa &lt; Udagan t laNnd l
Anthony Eittoy &lt; Hawaiian Eya )
4:00
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Para Patoraan ( The D o m e Reed
Carlo* Santo* (2 9 -1. 20 K O t) v t
Davay Moor* ( T4-2. 11 KOal tor the Show I en d K a ren Valentine
cohoat
IBF Junior M iddleweight till*
(TO) ARTHUR C CIARKE 3
achadulad lor 14 round* bom Ro­ 0
berto Clamant* S la d w n at San MYSTERIOUS WORLD

(7)

A m a lerd au . and Copenhagen
Guaal tiara include Eileen Brennan
Patrick C au rdy. Tan Copley Pal
Harrington. G e o rg * Kennedy Ctorta
teachm an and Elke Sommer iRitJ
f f l (10) FRANKIE ANO JOHNNY
Tint 401 h anmvaraary tribute lo Ihe
hrtl American banal includaa an mlarvirrw with Ruth Pag*, th* original
Frankw. and cbpa bom the 1914
productKm

9:00
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Jonathan hop e to
bonanip by runreng off lo Lae
and getting married (R )
(3) O N F l PRC-SEASON
BALL Houalon 0 9 era at
Cowboy*
(1) O LOVE BOAT
tngu* and mystery sad I
tea* a* Iha Love Boat tr

12:30
(3) O S TAR SEARCH Flnala Hotl
Ed M cMahon (R)
(7 ) O
MOW
Weatorn Union'
(19411 Robert Young. Dean Jaggar
U NIGHT TRACKS

100
0 ( I ) 2 BOCKS TONIGHT
01 (15) M O W
' Humoresque
(194T) John Gerfietd. Joan Craw
lord

1:30
NIGHT TRACKS
(4)
MOW
Night CkAar From
Oular Sp ace ( I9A5) John Sat on.
Patricia Hi

8

2:30
(7 ) O MOVIE The Proud Ona*
(19541 Robarl Ryan, W g ce a Mayo
OX NIGHT TRACKS

3:10
® (4) M O W
Ortod Agamtl Th*
Invttrbto Man (1945) Howard Ver­
non. Brm Carve

3:30
lit ( » ) M O W
He* l Kachan"
{19191 Ronald Reagan. Dead End
Kid*

aX MQHT TRACKS

(D o

4:30

MOW
"Pinky" (1940)
J a e m e Cram .w aaam lumkgan

0 NIGHT TRACKS

�SUNDAY

S e p te m b e r 1

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AFTTANOON

5 00

1200

1] |3S(NEWS
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5:30
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(jn o m o r e r e a l p e o p l e
H (35) MOVIE
thidd*&gt;i Row
AndEdd* I (9T0I JoKrvr, Ca i K Bo
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part c
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&gt; t l VIEWPOINT Off NUTRITION War tl &lt;tocu%a the* tee#mg« of con.
tl (351WV ORANT
bet at liberator* abroad efure tr*N»
II WORLD TOMORROW
famiUet rvere imprttoned at home
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(UMM WtMram Rowel mrene .Dunne
7 00
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0 4 2 3 COMPANY
to mampUat# the*r ofNerwie tpmJ O NOSERT S C H U U f R
meal painarch
t O PICTURE OF HEALTH
1 M » l BEN MADEN
12:30
'1 (T IS WRITTEN
f ) 141 MEET THE PRESS
Q) III JAMES ROBISON
(T) O U S OPEN TENNIS TN&gt;d
round, tire from Flushing Meadow
7:30
Corona Par* N r
0 I HARMONY ANO ORACE
i O ESSENCE ON TELEVISION CD O WALL STRCET JOURNAL
Ftf PORT
!! tU IC J DANIELS
H) 1101HEALTH MATTERS
i l Su n d a y f u n n ie s
CBlU W V ORANT

8:00
a 4 VOCE OF VICTORY
1 0 WORLD TOMORROW
’ Q BOB JONES
U ( » l WOOOY WOODPECKER
0 ! 110) SESAME STREET |R| g
11 ALVIN SHOW
Q) III SUPERf RIEN03

8:30
0 4 Su n d a y m a s s
) o DAY OE DISCOVERY
1 O ORAL ROBERTS
II (14)PORKY P t t
H BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
CD It) IMUNOE RBIROS TOM

9:00
Q

U HIGH CHAPARRAL

O 4 VIBRATIONS
* Q MORAL ISSUES
H IMIQOeOTS
0 )1 101 FOLKWAYS
CDf«l INSPECTOR GAOGET

9:35
’ 1 ANDY GRIFFITH

10:00

pact ol an oUk u I inquiry by tv* l*F
low phywcimt (P w l 10 04 WIIRKJ

1:30

o ( I ) TO BE ANNOUNCED
2:00
O MOVIE
Th* G r «p « Ol
Wrath (19101 H*my Fond*. Jana
D t m l B ***d on th* tlory by John
SlmnMcl Th* great 0 » * nvgr*
bon lo Cebtorni* doing lh* D*p&lt;et
won H a w * * Laitmg en p reu m on
young Tom Joad
i l ) (3i| MOYIf Romm Moaday
(19S1) Gregcay Pec* Audrey Map
bum A prncalL ta*a « I n * wdh •
newspaperman wh** on raubon *
Q ) (10) MU5C IN TIME
i l ATLANTA BRAVES PREGAME

2:15
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Chicago Cub*

2:30
( 0 (I ) MOVIE EUmgnlut*t&gt;o«» N I
A Boy* &lt; t»M ) BA BuPy 0 «n *
Bakai A t a r d t t * ptayhoy gat*
luinad wcuLd whan a Man ag* boy
appaai* Uwnung to ba hd ton

Q 1 t a k in g a d v a n t a g e
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300
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J*wi Staptoton Mwhn UMun
330
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400
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I 1*4f| A n * Atyyon D * * d Nnan A
4:30
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t*A lo ba i mwmtMr of Auitnm toy. BcyOa CIm w c wan man and aonvK*r
an im d a w (M U eyeball bom 1*
nation* m u g hom San Fimcnca
10:05
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(Ji Q QOLf T *p *d co **i*g *o f da
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10:30
MonfcMa God Club N J
O ^W RESTUNO
| O FACE THE NATION
500
h o fIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
IH O SIO AM EL BOONE
(D i i o i a l o h a c m n a
t|) (I0| FTRMQ UNE Th* R o « Ol
Song Al School Guam da Id1035
m a n ta m g n g group Th* Whdan12 MOIRE O d 14 F a Murder
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515

1 1:00
1 O T M R T Y MINUTES
O ) 101NEW TECH TWCS
1 U 0
•OBBY BOWDEN
[BLACK AWARENESS
_ THIS WEEK WITH DAVO
nufluri av
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1i PORTRAIT OF AMERICA ILLI­
NOIS

630

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PUNKY BREWSTER A

hand* and nn pionma lo nnp a
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I O WHISPERING HOPE UN
MASKING THE MYSTERY OE AL
EHEIMCR S DISEASE A documan
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dnganw Ahw t - am ditaaM
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ha* no dtoct on Ha*y who itacti lo
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anoroic
ID (MD AUSTIN CITY LIMITS J*n

11 tew s

7:05
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7:30
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bad* than* l» Cdwaid and Kata al
Iw lh* m um g bud* it hna*y total
ad on a civma tfap IParl J ol T|(R|
( S |l) NIGHT GALLERY

800
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Wuthaiiy and M Gahbngt *r*
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(J ) O MURDER. SHE WROTE Jav
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batomat imofwd mth a datoctng
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Sand Sarwc*
11*6*1 Gaerg*
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dnda rumtad caught up m anampli
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young woman to pul IhrotgH • P
iw '* tramng piogiam to bacom*
an Ofympc champnn but lha plan
guu aotn whan a mwaura! aganl

VRLD, WA.0 WORLD OF ANA

EVENMO

8.00
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[ (JSlGRLEZLT AOAJAS

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

F r i d a y , A u g . 10, 19EJ— J

G O GUIDE

SPORTS PAGE

1030
ill (SS| BOB NEWMART

i n
T O NEWS
ill (3 5 )FISH
0 110) ADAM SMITHS MONEY
WORLD
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1130
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11 35
11 JOHN ANKERIIEF4G

1200
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TELETHON CONTINUES
I O START OF SOMETHING BIG
Mott Filey* A Bn« Loo* i al how tucirtttiA pacgAa and pupuLw ihingi
got 11artad Thn wwet Mmari*
Harney Andy Wdtamt L e d ! (Wan
SdC aatar mjyaWtl Barbara Teytor
Bradford CracAm JacAt horo
trope*

it) (35) WILD K9KWOU Dawnma
Al Honcon WAdai* bnfo^tlt al
tempi lo aohr* lh* pmplaieig prob
■am of a loo- tuuwaaful rafug* tor
gaau |R)
1205
I I ROBERT SCHULLER
1230
it&gt; (35) SEEING STARS Schadutod
eitmyiawa with Taut Tu n e Chevy
Chaaa and Ftogw Moore

100
(J ) o
MOW
The Sacral In.*
non (19941 Slew art Grangar. Hal
VaAona
( I I (• ) THE AVENGERS

105

Cosmic Concert.
fcaturlug music of 7.7. T o p unit Ihc
new SIS.OfX) Argon laser, U
and 10 p tit nit Friday and
Saturday nights ilirougU Sept.
7, John Young Planetarium.
Orlando Sctenee Center, 810 E
Hollins St. In U m Ii Haven Park
Metal Mania featuring heavy
mcl.il group* at I I p.m Ailmission is
pet show per
person.
H andicap S in gles Dance.
Westmonte Park. 500 Spring
Oaks Blvd . Allattimtlc Springs,
every second ami fourth Frtday. Hours. 7 .10-9:30 p.m.
A d m is s io n 35 c e n ts . Cull
C lau dia Harris. W eal m onte
Park. 862-0090,
E x p lo re the g a la xy with
/stands In Ihc Sky. John Young
P la n e ta riu m 's new featu re
show, will continue Into Sep*
Irmtier. Monday through Friday. 2:30 p.m.: Saturday and
Sunday. 2 anil 4 p in., I^K'h
Haven Park. 8 10 E. Hollins Si .
Orlando Adults, $1: children.
students, military and senior
cttl/ens. 81.50. Members free,
Artists Three exhibition runs
thtough Sepi 22 at the Ltcli
Haven Art Center. 2416 N.
Mills Ave.. Orlando Free to the
public. Tuesday through Frlday. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday. noon to 5 p.m.; Sunday,
2-5 p m.
G enerul Sanford Museum
and Library. Fort Mellon Park,
520 E. First St., Sanford. 2-5

p .m .. S u n d a y . W e d n c s day.Thursday, and Krtilay.
Seminole County Museum,
H ig h w a y I 7 1)2 a l B ush
B o u le v a r d . In o ld A g r lCenler/Cmmty Home building,
!&gt; u ttt to 1 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Call 321-24NO
tor evening and afternoon «ppnlulmerits. Closed Sundays
through lutlMir Day.
Nature hike each Saturday,
10 a in . Weklwa Springs State
Park Extended flay hike. 12:30
p.m.. every th ird 'Saturday of
the month. Two-hour animal
and plant Identineatlon trip.
12.30p.m.. each llrst Saturday.
Call 880-3140 lor information.
Canoe lessons ruch Saturday a(
8:30a in
A tllsls League o f Orange
County gallery. Casselberry
Wllshlre Plaza. Stale Hoad 436.
Monday to Saturday 10 a.m. to
7 p.m Free to the public.
Hot dug sale and hand concert. Sepi -1. 12:30-1:43 p.m..
Seminole Community College
amphitheater,
Seminole Community College Movie Series, 7:30 p.m.,
Sept. 4, concert hall In the Fine
Arts building
C entral Florida W om en's
Show sponsored by WFTVChannel 9, Orange County
Civic Center, OrUndo. Sept.
27-29. Exhibits, fashion shows.
beauty clinics, nrumrial and
career co u n selin g, Appearnnershy Snap (&gt;|M-ra stars.

42 JM M Y SWAOGART

200
1) O

CSS NEWS WQHTWATCM

205
12 LARRY JONES

235
Q WORLD AT LARGE
250
0
a
MOW
Hippy Bethdty
W ard* Jun* (1971) Rod ile g m
Suaanrtah York

300
0 (C JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON CONTINUES
U HOGAN S HEROES
3:30
12 LUCY Snow

Social Security Disability
W r S p e c ia liz e In :
• NEW CLAIM S
• RECONSIDERATIONS • BENEFITS CUT OFF
• HEARINGS BEFORE THE JUDG E

WARD WHITE &amp; ASSOCIATES
/Over .'Ml &gt;'r* EjtprUrni e)

Free Con su ltation • No Foe Unless We Wlnl

__________________( 3 0 5 ) 3 2 1 1 3 1 9 _________________

400
I t AGRICULTURE U S A

4:30
0

a

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M ure* One* R*
Bar

monad |I971| John lortylK*
unboear* th* ptol and *a *»f • bmaBam

YES, IT’S LEGAL.

tramng thiMtona Km W*

805
I I VIETNAM THE TEN THOU­
SAND DAY WAR

.

900

0 ( J i JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON tony law** a yonad by
Maton Ban* lib an c* Fiana Sn*
ba and olhm cmitrawa n m* Uut
oAw Oytbopfty Ataoctolion I an
n u ll
lend i i i i a i
Nalional
broadcaai* bom He* tar*. AAantc
CKy and Caaur* F « M « LA*
vagu
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CRA/Y UKC A FOB Whan

Many e f a n n • la* toaf of 1909 Mm
and tom * oM bataba* card* ha
(bacoamt mat tom* paopN m*
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U PD O U NCY

905
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VIETNAM THE TEN THOU
SANOOAY WAR

woo

5:35
0

MwgaiAa

yiM and On* Pwticulai Hatbot
0 ) IS) TALES f r o m THE DARK
SOC An av* b u m u m f i bingi
hn laundry lo a umqu* dry ctoanw • on* who (leant th ru and wathat
away gudl

a

1005
«

1100

young wphannd th «f n lom Ka
Iwann KiL loyalty to N » naw inond

my Bulfatt pmioim*

dllDUANNU

11 JERRY FALWELL

700
0

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oiacm lo taka a port n lha wet! of
» Hand at Ftoudani Magrtvat*
(Pari 1 o lS t iR ig

1035

(1 4 NBC NEWS
&gt; O CBS NEWS
(J O ABC NEWS u

100
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torn** mth B u b * ! W *n*n J * rr
L*mt I l l L about Ki i mwNanwnl
mth IM Mijvculli DyatrofAry A m
MMA
(Tl O WRESTLING
f f l (W| MAStERPIECE THEATRE
" lh * DladN Andrew tacw a *•noul cbMang* to hn prcf*eaniMl

4 WORLD TOMORROW

g 30

6 05

12:50

S O 3UNOAY MORNING Sdtort 0
■tod t&gt;o)m Of t t n K n go Jo* WF
&gt;W I '(port on r t W l r . l wKO
|W1*J m lti* P la tte during Wort*
WV n tm *n m u m min wrtfmr
Stud* fw tN T Tho Good W * |
&gt; O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OE ORLAMOO
tt (33) TRANSFORMERS
® 1101 PAINTING c e r a m ic s
(£ in VOL IRON, DEFENDER O f
THE UNIVERSE

S3 I *0) SURVIVAL On l o c a l n
Sn L*n*a and India cmamnogn
p n « Dial** Fhag* atpimat r a LI*
ol lh* mdangatad Auan WfiKmi
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( £ 0 TRAPPER JOHN. MO JT.
■ Munnad ahan h* N c o w i biM
m* m a t of two pabar H bam *n
amanng l a M M m a to an* anoOtm |P&gt;
I t p D PfOEPEPOENT NEWS
MASTERPIECE THEATRE
th* bah R M Al m* tun of lha
omdury Mai Smdaa ****** to-

0 |tot

Song Of Angols
T o n y l l r n n c l l 'B
heart may Ijc In San
Francisco but his e f­
fort I n going toward
givin g L ob Angeles Ur
ow n trademark song.
"C ity o f the Angels."
"T h e city Isn't tied
together like other cit­
ie s ." he says. “ Uut
tills Is a song about
the atmosphere of L A.
It h a s th a t F red
Astaire beat that he
dances lo a lot."
W ill San F r a n ­
c is c a n s resen t hts
works on behalf of Lem
A ngeles?
"O h n o ." Hennelt
says. "T h e y've been
to o g o o d to m e .'

O s October KMr, 19*4 Prowdcnt
(amo tow * * t m | Knnu
N o w , you c m rw.tr** m o n o , tfo r tr, n * » i .
t*4nm*irt tp n tolf O v a or*A brutdred ch*nn*ti
o l ipectmcuUr tnt*rtarnm*rti O f crraUt
citar rcctptton thru u ,hou i th* boa**.
24 hour* ■ day
A n d Urudrti r u i n K *U •IftndabM
W ith m ■Mrolhly f« * f A a d n o c s b k T V .
C o n * in and tot ui t h o * you th* Ita* o f
U iudca SauDtto T fk v tiio a SytMari
T h * PrmhWst mwl* II *111*9*1.
U o u lr* u L n tl ait poaaibD

unlden

Satellite Ttkvislon Systems
U m d*n S y lfim a n ew H i n ,
*9 tor* • • 179 * 0 ’
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M en F rl. 9 I, 5*1 * I

C A LL
S I?

In

831*1566

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�( — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

Friday, Aug 10. IMS

Daytime Schedule
y n n u iu A
Mi/rwriryv#

a

7:05
41 ALVIN SHOW

500

7:10

(38| NEWS
OFT SMART (MOM. WED, THU)

5:10
5:30

COUNTRY (TU C F R I)
T i ItEVERLY H ilt Bit LIES (MOM.
W1 EVERT)
11 BOB NEWHAM HUE)

600
CJ M l JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON (MON)
0 M i NBC NEWS|TUE FHI)
fT
O
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
(7 ) 0 EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
&lt;1|j (3 5 )0 0 0 0 DAY)
I t NEWS
f f i (8) BATMAN

030
f&gt; M

7:30
111
(35) TOM ANO JERRY
ED (10) SESAME STREET (R » Q
f f l ( I ) INSPECTOR GADGET

4 2 W O A ID A T LAROC (TUE)

Q CD r s

ED ( I0| A M WEATHER

1000
Cl
Bu y e r s p o o n s (R) ( t u e FRI)
l O HOUR MAGAZINE
) a
| TOO 000 NAME THAT
TUNC
1 |i (35| BK1 VALLEY
(D 110) ELECTRIC CO M PANY (R)
f f i (S) MY THREE BOMS

1005

7:35
1 1 FUNTSTONCS

800

ft

(M l WOOOY WOODPECKER
(S)HCATHCLIEF

805

11

I DREAM O f JEANNIE

830
Hi (3 5 )RINK PANTHER
( 10) MISTER R O O E R S(R )
(l| FA I ALBERT

83 5
I I BEWITCHED

N E W S (T U f nU )
CBS EARLY MORNIftO

000
«
(T l JERRY LEWIS LABO R DAY
NEWS
TELETHON CONTINUES (M O N)
1 f t CJ ABC B WORLD NEWS THIS O 14 I DIVORCE COURT (TUE-FRI)
MOHNINO t j
(&gt; ) ( J DONAHUE
(1 Tl (39) POREYE
&lt;7 0 HARNABY JONES
I I EUNTIME
(IT, (35) WALTONS
0 ) (S) DOOOTECH
tD ( 10) SESAME STRE ET (R ) IJ
O ) |S) CAROL BURNETT AND
6 :4 5
FRIENDS
El O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
ED (TO) A M WEATHER
9 05

}l a

&lt;11 MAJEL

7 00
Q U lT O O A Y fT U C FRI)
) O CBS MORNINO NEWS
t ) 1C l OOOO MORNING AMERICA
I I (3S|EUNTSTONt8
(10) EARM DAY
) ( l ) SURE RFFW NOS

}

9:30
CJ M ) LOVE CONNECTION (TUEERI)
(D (S | CUDOET

9:35
I I I LOVE LUCY

MONDAY

S e p te m b e r 2

11 MOVIE

10:30
( 1 (J ) SALE O f THE CENTURY
(TUE-FRI)
I ( J R Y A N S MOPE
f f i ( « » VOYAQE O f THE MIMI
O ) (8) HEW DICK VAN DYKE
SHOW

11:00
O U I WHEEL O f f ORTIJNE (TUC­
FRI)
f l ) a PRICE IS RIGHT (MON-THU)
( J l O U B Of&gt;EN TENNIS (FRI)
(7 ) O ANGIE cm
111 (35| EIGHT IS ENOUGH
f f i ( I0| WE RE COOKING NOW
( D ( l ) FAMILY

11:30
O 1J i SCRABBLE (TUE FRI)
(T l O ALL-STAR BLITZ
f f i ( 10) EL ORIOAS TY l E
AFTERNOON

f f i (10) NOVA (THU)
f f i (10) SMITHSONIAN

(FW)
f f i (S) MANNtX

12:05
1 1 PERRY MASON

12:30
S 3 &gt;Tl SEARCH FUR TOMORROW
(TU E -fR I)
( D O U S OPEN TENNIS (MON.
7W)
(J ) O
YOUNG AND THE REST­
LESS (T U « THU)
~ Q LOVING
D(3S) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

•Mlh U S Troop*
10:30

(MON)

2:30
g I o CAPITOL (TUETH U)
11 (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
f f i I TO) INNOVATION (MON)
f f i ( TO) CALLIGRAPHY WTTH KEN
BROWN (TUE)
f f i ( TO) MAQJC O f O il PAINTING
(WED)
f f i (10) MAGIC BRUSH O f GARY
JENKINS (THU)
f f i (10) MAQIC O f WATERCOLORS (FRI)

Cl)

Q (1 ) DAYS O f OUR LIVES (TUEfR I)
n o O ALL MY CHILDREN
I f (35| DICK VAN DYKE
) ( 10) MOVIE (MON. TUE. THU)
(10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)
O f (S) MOVIE

4:35
50 0

o CD NEWLYWED

GAME (TUEFBI)
( D O M ' A ’ S 'M fT U f- fR U

I* JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON CONTINUES (MON)
SANTA BARBARA (TU E-fRI)
OUKKHQ LIGHT (TU E TH U )
GENERAL HOSPITAL
35) BUGS BUNNY ANO
FR )f NOfS
f f l (10) FLORIOASTYLE
(Z ) ( d HEATHCLIfF

(7)

HAZZARO
ffi { 10) OCEANUS (MON)
f f l 1*0) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
f f i (TO) NEW LITERACY INTRO­
DUCTION TO COMPUTERS (WED)
f f i ( 10) MONEY PU Z Z L t FTMU)
f f i (10) ART O f BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
£E (SI I DREAM OF JEANNIE

305

3:30

(11 HOGAN 3 HEROES (MON)
1 1 MOVIE (TUE-fRI)

130
IJ ) O
AS THE WORLD TURNS
rruE-TMui
Tl (3 5 )aO M E R PYLE
f f i 110) PAINT ING CERAMICS (FRI)

1:35
I X BASEBALL IMONI

200
O
I D ANOTHER WORLD (TUEFRI)
IT) O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
(Q) (35| ANDY GRIFFITH
(10) ALO H A CHINA (WED)
(10) ON THE MONEY (THU)
(10) FOLKWAYS (FRR

(X ) O U S OPEN TENNIS C O N ­
TINUES IMOR, FRI|
f f i 110) MISTER ROGERS (R)
f f i |S| INSPECTOR GADGET

400
O
( 4 j LITTLE HOUSE ON THr.
PFIAIRIE (TUE FRI)
f j ) O OlFF RENT STROKES (TUETHU)
( 7 ) 0 MERV GRIFFIN
11, (35) SCOOBY DOO
f f i (10) SESAME STREET ( R ) g
CD (8) SUPfRFRJf NDS

4 05
I t FlINTSTOMES(TUE-FRI)

800
f j 14 I JERRY LEWIS LABOR OAY
TELETHON Jwry lawn I* fumed By
Maloti l l « l « liberate lin n * 5m *
11■ end o t h * Lefabrilw* in in* Mu*
culAi Dystrophy L i h c u I ioii i an

nual

lund-ralsar

Nalional

h in td c u tl* Horn Hi--* Yorli. Atlantic
City and Ch u i Pataca m la a
Vagaa

(S) O 17) O NEWS
&lt;f]fJ6| JCMTRSON3
ffl
(TO) M A C N tll
NEWS HOUR

/

LEHRER

d&gt; (*) LAVERNE 5 SHIRLEY
8:05
1 2 DOWN TO EARTH

PRACTICAL JOKES Mai a ria Hail
lay and Pal M om * ara w clim * ol
practical )ok#a. bioopara By Caplam Kangaroo Ruin B urn and Da­
vid Hattatholl (R)
IJ ) a
SCARECROW ANO MRS
KING Amanda la povaorwd by a
lulhtaat darter n lop aacrwl wwapona plant. aho man oNara Laa tha
am idol* - but only m a n hang# lor
a V eytal u( truaprmlt (H)
(7 ) U COLLEGE FOOTBALL AJa
bama al Georgia
I t ) (3S) DAL LAS
f f i (T0| SURVIVAL
Shark* Tba
Par (act Pradalort- "J a w * author
P a t * BancBtay rtartalaa a loo* al
tha drvwwtr ot shark ipacraa t J
f f i I I I BATTLE OF THE BELTS
WRESTLING

8:05

0:30

4 2 MOVIE Ptoow Talk
( IBS*)
Rock Hudson. Darla Day An Inlarlor dacoralor raluclanily agraaa lo
thara a pari) Ina and la a n g * a d lo
taam Dial lha o i l * p * l y la a
romancing kongwfd*

( 1 1o CBS NEWS
m u A a c N r w s ij
ITT) (38) ALICE
CDIS) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN

6:35
12 SAFE AT HOME

9:00

700
B I D NEWS
(T O
P M MAGAZINE Jatgua*
Coustaeu a TUh Lrithday parly •
lour of to* G a tn a y Aith m SI Lou

la
f f i CJ JEOPARDY
( M l TOO CL06E FOR COM­
FORT Hanry lun* mlo an oh) Navy
ac*juamlanca unaaaia I Sal hu
h a u l W homoaaaual
f f i 1*0) HEPBURN ANO TRACY lha
ca raa ri and pm a lt l « ol Sptncer
Tracy and Kalhanna Hapburn art
recalled truougn Nm ckpe horn
m ovw * In u N d i llay coatarrad
(' Slala ol ina Union
OaaA Sal )
aa m i aa Bom too*# may mada
S flltf tlidv
( B (■) h a p p y d a y s a g a in

7:05

12 ROCKY ROAD
7:30
S

kitarira* arm

Jed* ton*

7:35
O

•

b a n f o r o a n d io n

800

Cl) TVB BLOOPERS

«

9:30
(J ) O NCWHART Joanna Ida* lo
thow Larry and lha taro Oerryts a
m o n cwairad way lo run Kw h ca l*
I«1

tin

UU O CAGNEY * LACEY R a c o v *
mg bom aurgary. Lacey co n a rd **
rata m g bom lha ponce torce.
moan aha* Cagney l cay M alotan
u yg
i l l (381 INDEPENDENT NEWS
■
&lt;t0| EVEN THE HEAVENS
WEEP THE WEST V lR O M A MME
W A RS Mvka Connort narralaa lha
story oI Via 48-yaar ahorl by Waal
Vugmv* COM matart lo orgam ra a
tta iaw d a umon Thai cubnuteled. m
T U I . In an armed conhontelron

530
o
D PEOPLE S COURT (TUEFRI)
( ! ) O NEWS (TU E-fRI)
I u NEWS
f f i ( 10) OCEANUS (M O N )
f f i ( 101 UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
f f i (TO) NEW LITERACY INTRO­
DUCTION TO CO M PUTERS (WED)
f f i ( 10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
f f i |10) ART OF BEINQ HUMAN
(FRO
f f i &lt;*) MORK ANO MINOY
I I BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

G
j

Itv o n i* vtcalion ip o ta Host Dick
C m „ rjuM I,
Angw DlCkmton R n b *t Unch. Susan Sulk
van and Jonathan W m lwa

na. Andy Gibb, lha Oak Ridge Boys.
Dan Stalk. Dick Clark Bob Hop*.
J * r y lam a and Andy Witkamt
( I ) O W H O 8 THE BOSS? Tony
moonbghtt at k chimney nm ep lo
raise enough money lo tend
Samantha on a slung trip with an
affluent tnend |R |g

12 MOVIE 55 Days Al P e k in g '
(1983) Charlton H a tto n , A ra
Gardner

S p n ln m h o r
a e p ie m D e r

TUESDAY

11:00
0 ( 4 ) 0 10 ( 7 ) 0

new s

I ll (38) BENNY HI) I
ffl ()0| DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
ffi (*) HOGAN S HEROES

11:10
I I MOVIE Sabrina ' (1B54)Audr*y
Hepburn. Humphrey Bogart

11:30
O H i BEST O f CARSON From
May I BSC John Danmr. M rclu*
Daw* and Cheryl Kmg (can hot I
Johnny Carton (R )
I I I O WKRP IN CTNCMNAT1
&gt; U ABC NEWS MOMTLME
n 1351CHICO ANO THE MAN
f f l (El HOGAN-8 HEROES

12.00
(D
O
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O P E N TENNIS
HIGHLIGHTS
(T )O T H E S A M T
(35) RHOOA
( 2 |8| MOVIE
To Eta Of Not To
Be
(IB 4J) Jack Benny Carole
lom bard

EVENING

8:00
&lt; 4 )g &gt; O iD O N E W s
(35) JEFFERSONS
(10) M ACNCIl / LEHRER
NEWSMOOR
f f i (8) LAVERNE t SHIRLEY

2

805
1 2 ANDY GRIFFITH

arnmat lha kl*. timai and week o&lt;
Mandai. lha Auguaimian
monk whose rataarch becama lha
betr* Tor lha *o*nc* ot genetic t t Hi

I ( I I NBC NEWS
JQ CBS NEWS
U ABC N E W 3 g
1(381 A i d
) |l| H A PPY DAYS AO UN

12

C A IR O L
FRtfMOS

f f i (8)

8:33
B U R N ETT

0

(|) LATE MOMT WITH DAVE)

1 r r TERM AN fr o m
Apr* 1*8?
Mortoy Satar, Ouanlm Crisp, carta
par turn** Ma.hu cucu* o a m * Kan
nath Fatd (Hi
U ) CT MOVIC
Cry For Hi#
Slrangw*
( I M Z ) Patrick DuNy.
Cmdy Pick all
I t ) (34) I LOVE LUCY

100
(D o
MOVIE
Primrose Path
11*40) Q m g * H o g * t J o * McCra*
1 1 (38| LEAVE (T TO BEAVER

1:30
41 (38| 8CTV SkaTcha* Johnny
laRua (John Candy) aultart a de­
motion Brook# Shtalda iCilhwm a
0 Rar a I koala her o * n t h o *

1:35
12 M O W
State Ot Tha Umon
( l*4l| S p a n c * Tracy. K a rn *rw

ANO

7.00
(J ) BALE O f THE CENTURY
O
PM
MAOAZME Gene
Hackman an Idaho man aho has
apanl a ttatrm* tludymg badt o l

*

l * U JEOPARDY
(fb (34) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT J a c k * dtcida * la l-eva a
breetl mptant o p *a lie n m o r d * lo
make h * t a r l myra allraclrv*
W (TO) NATURE O f THUGS Fee
hired tha origin* ol lha prpa tugan
and Its rote m N W o p n g Wat tarn
r.ajMc
f f i |() H A P P Y DAYS AGAIN

7:05

12 M ARY TYLER MOORE
7:30
0 (D e n t e r t a in m e n t t o m o h t
In lw vta * mlh Baa Arthur
( D n WHEEL OF FORTUNE
U JOKER S WILD
(38) BENSON
( I ) A L L M THE FA5M.Y

7:35
12 BASEBALL Atlanta Braves M
Pittsburgh Pa ala*

2:00
U P 8 ) BIZARRE

2 :3 0
I C M NEWS MQMTWATCM

2:50
ffi O
M O W ' The V ia * From
Pompey I Head " (1885) Rchard
(gan. Dana Wynlar

3:30
41 (38) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

(III |35| DALLAS
f f i (TO) NOVA Thu docudrama

10:20

10:30
41 (35) BOO NEWHART

11D0
0
H
ffi
ffi

(4 KJ O CD O NEW3
(35) BENNY HILL
( 10) DA VC ALLEN A T LAROE
(l| HOGAN'S HEROES

Gregor

830

12:30

10:00

CD ENTERTAINMENT T O M M Y

Marta Gibb*
i l l O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
lT&gt; O j o k e r s w k o
I f (35) BENSON
( t ( S ) A L l IN THE FAMILY

0 CD M O W A Change Of Sea
io n * |IB M ) Shu Wy Mac Lam* An­
thony Hop* mi A m iddle-aged cou­
ple try out young* partrwra during
a mountain vacation CJ
1 J) O KATE 5 A L L * J c m e • lata
iKMiitvp wtth a Mphtahcelad and
■orIdly Blond nornsa Alb* (HI
|39| CHANCY
(B0| ON STAGE AT W OLF TRAP
A WaM lo llta N o * Orlaana FisncB
O u w l * and lha hull ihal g a v * lha
band At name rugnaght ina Pi a t *
valKm Hal Jarr Hand » p w lo im
s( traiMional N e * Or leant

5:05
12 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

5:35

4:20
(£b BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS

1 f) (38) BOB NCWHART
EVENINO

a LETS MAKE A DEAL

I t (35) DUKES O f

11 BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS
(TUE rRI|

1:05

4:30
THREE 8 C O M PAN Y (TUE-

( Q BRADY DUNCH

3:00

a

a

THU)
1C (M ) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
O f THE UNIVERSE
CD (•) VOLT RON. DEFENDER O f
THE UNIVERSE

P

100

IfcOO
n (1 ) JERRY LEWIS LABOR DAY
TELETHON (M O N)
O &lt; MIOOAY (TUC FRI)
(T) O ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
11 (35) BEWITCHED
f f i (10) FLORIDA COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BRAIN BOWL (MON)
f f i (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
f f i 110) MYSTERY! (WED)

WORLD

800
t o 3 ) A TEAM Tha learn Iradet m
lha i an l*e a lency cor and pursue*
■ crooked B ev *ty MMa * 1
who t tuapected ot murdw (R)tJ
Jl O
th r o u g h the t e a r s .
THE OSMONOB ?5TH ANNFVIfkSAAY Tha Osmonds Alan,
Wayna. M a r ,* Jay. Donrvy M e *
au ccerant
Ol 38 &lt;
Gusata LaM Tala

M O W Ena M4kon V * * t
To E * t h
| l»8 tl Jamal Donald.
Andrew Kwr An unearthed lima
capaula conlam* due* to a prehis­
toric Mar I.an malt to Earth

11:30
Q 3 ) TOMOHT Hoot Johnny Car
ton
Scheduled
nounrsl Uadi*
Satar no-Sonnenbwg. Robert Btakt
1 Had Town |
(J i Q WKRP IN CINCWNATT
(7 ) Q ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
1J (35) CMCO ANO THE M AN
(1 ( 8) H OGANS HEROES

8 30
ffi O

THREE'S A CROWD

900
O 3 ) r ip t id e ih# boy* com # io
the atd ot I Utanl Nm t l * . rnrokm
l * f y matitubonaluad tot 50 year*
who clean* lha hcAdt tha dead to k
mummdion-dokta marina comptar
(R&gt;
ffi O MOONLIGHTING Mkddta

and Da tad back down a laMMa
r»»e&lt;to«• what p*ncrpatmg in *
murdw-my*l*y tram tup ccmlsal
(R)
4 1 (38) BALK GRAHAM CRUSADE
( i I &gt;0) TEN WHO OARED Caplam
Jama* Cook ' During tot N i l tew n
Id le voyage around lha world, which
began m 1588. Cook cftarlad much
ot tha unaipkesd Pacific

1000
ffl 3 )
1 Q
ffi D

REMINGTON S T E E L E
w est sm h

MACORUOCR 8 LOUO An

meap*tancad orkew hamper* Mai
Coen i shunt to knd the armed
ro b b *a aho wounded Jenny during
achaaa | R )g
I f (38) MOEPENOENT NEWS
f f i |T0) STING THE CONTROVER­
SY OF Fto UNDERCOVER OPERA
T l O M John Kaplan m o d * a le* the
roundtabto dabala acammmg me
Fto that tocuaaa on ina use or po­
ke# power r t chnl bbwtraa Panel
talk mcArda FBI Atawlanl Du actor
I d w * d Kerman and ACLU c o u n t*
&lt;B) GRAND TOUR From lha
ol Vamca Italy to to * iki
ttopaa ot VML Goto . ettabnha* wad

12:00

IJ)
&lt;3
u s O P E N TENNIS
HK3HUOMTS
n
u
I O SEARCH FOR W EALTH
l(3S| RHODA
( 8) M O W "Third F b ig * . Left
Hand" (1841) Myrna Lby. Mahryn

l1

12:30
O f ® LATE NIGH? WITH OAVK)
ICTTtRMAN f tom Apr* 1887 Jan*
Pautay Don King (R)
D O M O W Key Waal" (I8T?)
Staphan Boyd. Woody Skoda
~ O THE SAINT
(38) I LOVE LUCY

1:00
41 04 1 LEAVE IT TO BEA V ER

1:30
ffi Q

MOW

Night Must Fa*
(1884) Albert Finney. Shade Han­

cock
4 1 (38) 8CTV Sketches Or Tongue
(John Candy | and ccihorl Bruno It ugene Lavy) gat lop-brtong m ■hotior mow# p n g * Tom Monroe (totk
Morana) miwpratt new wave ma­

ke

1:35
12 M O W "Th* Buccaneer " (18581
Y-jI Bryiutaf, CharMon Hatton

£00
41 (38) BIZARRE

tao

(JD Q C M NEWS MOHTWATCH
I t (3S| QUNSMOKE

3:30
f f i O M O W Th* Enamy Bstow
(1857) Rob* i Mitcnum Curl Jur-

�Miss America Pageant On NBC Sept. 14

E v e n in g H e ra ld , S an ford , F I.

F rid a y , A u g. 10, 1 **5— 7

H ere She C o m e s ...A g a in
By Joan Itanauer
U P IT V R e p o rter
\KW YORK (UlMl - Here she rom rs
— lor the 32nd year nil television —
Miss America.
I ho grealesl sport In America Is not
loothall nr b a seb a ll,” stockbroker
Albert Marks Jr., said. " It 's girl
wal* hlng and I llnd nothing wrong with
lhal "
Marks's Interest In glrl-walchlng
conies naturally — professionally he
deals with slocks but his hobby for the
Iasi 32 years has been the Miss
America Pageant, of which he Is ihr
unpaid chairman and chief executive
The pageant, hosted by Gary Collins,
airs this year on Sept. 14. 10 p m to
midnight on NBC and Marks pointed
out that the girlwatching Involved is
done more by women than men The
current audience makeup Is about 65
|&gt;errrnt female. 35 percent male.
Ihr greater part of our audience Is
female.'' Marks said. "T h e perspective
and Identification depends on lhe age ol
the female Involved

WEDNESDAY

'T h e se k id s k n o w w h o th e y a r e . w h a t th e y w a n t, a n d
m o st im p o rta n t, h o w to g e t w h a t th e y w a n t. T h e ir
s m a rts s h in e th ro u g h .'
- p a g e a n t c h a irm a n A lb e rt M a rk s J r .
'"lh e III tic girl 10 or I I years old number*. I am lold. The kidsol that era
looks with stars In her eyes attd are largely the Yuppies of thlsera "
wonders. 'Can I ever grow up to look
Every year some HO.OOO young
like that?' The 25-to-K) year old say*. women compete In umosl 3,000 local
'Gee. do I still look like that?' The older pageants In I i o |m * s ol winning crowns —
ones ask, 'Did I ever look like that?' and a share In lhe almost $5 million In
And the grandmothers who grew up scholarship money the pageant genet
ales,
with unsay, 'Isn'l II wonderful?’"
Marks expressed hi* continuing h u t
Marks |&gt;otnted out lhal hr had
prise utsiul lhe hostility ol the women's
omitted one age group — women IH to
movement — which hr thinks Is "a
25
little over the hill" — to the Miss
"W e lost them almost completely In America Pageant.
the lair !96l)s and early 1970s." he
"T h e rrtllelsm seems to concentrate
said, "what with the women's move­ on the swimsuit competition." Marks
ment. the Vietnam war and (he fact said. " A s a nonchauvlnlslle male. I
that they fell lhe values of their elders have yet to see anything prurient about
weren't worth a damn
it I see bathing suits on the beaches 1
"T h ey are returning to us In large wouldn't permit my daughter to wear

S e p te m b e r 4

Martin Tha laadar of a Chicago
gang donalaa a larg* amount of
monay lo cm* of lha city's orphanago*

8:00
t
I f ' 0 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
I (M|J€FFER30NS
II) (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
KEWSMOUR
(II IS) LAVERNE t SHIRLEY

f

605
6:30
O 4' NBC NEWS
I O CBS NEWS
n o ABC NEWSQ
TT|JS) ALICE
QD (8) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
635
BURNETT

ANO

7.00
(1 4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
' O p u MAOAZWI A coOacto*
o* Marilyn Monro* mwnoisMi.
•*“ '* walar raft gutda* on ms
Ot o « « Rivar Si I s i n m i l
1 O JEOPARDY
f t (JSI TOO CLOSE FOR COWTORT Th# Rum**- houi* Is tchadutKl lor damektlon wlwn Ih* cMy
plant lo construct S two tu b* a,
Msilon
0 ) (M| SMITHSONIAN WORLD A
•oos si attorn 10 prassrvs l sonar&lt;*&gt; da Vinci's "Tha Las* Suppar,
•tnranmg African tribal hatb curst
snd ms Pr&gt;awai**&lt; Sorts, a Survivor
bom prafutlorte Mmas Q
(B 1*1 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
_
7 :0 5
11 MARY TYLER MOORE

7:30
Q (D ENTERTAINMENT TONKIN T
Intar n an with actrat* Molly
fbnowahl
® O WHEEL O f FORTUNE
a U JOKER 8 WILD
” IM I BENSON
CD (• ) A l l W THE FAMILY

7:35

13

BASEBALL Atlanta Bravaa at
PsiitXrtR P*als»

«B

rv,

800

(3) MOVIE - Famar Of Ha*
Toan - (1*B$| Robart Brats WbMman Mayo A rnmm.atMal n -con
« 1 lurnad pnaat slruggMa 10
I upgrada hr* mnar-uty gnaito
•nd ksap a enmadraa (RKJ
d O I NAD TH RU WIVES Wacky
1

l

1

(Hi (Ml DALLAS

0

HO) NATIONAl GEOGRAPHIC

Jams* WNImora narrala* Ihr* maa
of lha worM of tram*, past and
prstsni, and tram paopla hoboes,
hobbyists *nd arOHaii (R)CJ

11 ANOV ORimTN

IX CAROL
ERJCNOS

Raich ( IM I) Rulgar Mauar, Blyth*
Oannar llaaad on Iba autotMography of AJbsri Spaa* Daaprta Iba
misgiving* Of hr* paran il and rva
aifa, an idaak*1K young man n u t
lo promnanca a* chraf archilacl lor
tha Nan* |Par1 1ol7l(R|CJ

dnch| aaki Basudms lo protacf hat
brother bom a pa* of loan vhark*
CZ) O M O V* maada Tha Tiard

01 (*l MOVIE
Coma Bac*.
Chartaston Bfua' 11*12) Oodfray
Cambridge Raymond S i J*cqu#»
Two black daiactrva* myaatlgat* •
narcotic i oparalon m Mariam tbal
ta caught m a poanr itruggla Pa
taaan i r * n and tha Malta

900
( D O MOVIE licanaa to AST
(1M4| Jama* faranlmo Don Mur­
ray Whan a young gal &gt;« *AWd by a
drunkan driver lha ansumg lagai
fight Ihmatan* lo d*»lroy lha Hehm * tamrly and Ih* auapacl |R |Q
d J (M| BILLT GRAHAM CRUSADE

w |10| A WAL* THROUOH THE
&amp;
JOTH CENTURY WITH BILL
MOYERS Tha »ma* loam ahara ha
and cir* rtgMS laadar Jama*
Farmar graa up r* m# aubiacl of
Moya* arammalron of changa m
rural Amarica |R|IJ

1000

0 (D ST. ELSEWHERE Waatpha*
Craig and Auathtandar vwd tha
lob* al Chaar* Auachfandar l
art* undargoa* opan-haarl angary
(R)

U

10:20

bh .l t g r a h a m c r u s a d e

1030

11.00
n ew s

n (JSI BENNY MILL
i t ( IJ) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
S t » ) HOGAN'S HEROES

11:20

■pondant
(1940)
lay am* Day

Joaf

McCta*.

12:30
D (3 ) LATE MONT WITH DAVO
LETTERMAN From Apr* IM F OHk
Schapp l army Schu-r cast horn
lha mom*' Ouaal For Fa* " (R)
if)
M OV* "Avaianchg (1*71)
Rock Mudkon M a Farrow
m o THE SAINT
(ft (JSI I LOVE LUCY

a

1:00
(H |MI CHILDREN BETWEEN UFE
ANO DEATH

a

1:30

(D
M O V*
A Slolan U N '
|l*4Si Ban* Dam*. Giann Ford

200
(MIBUARRC
_ M O V* Hout* Of Waa ' (l* S )l
Vmcani Pdca. Frank Lovaycry

2 :3 0
a

3:30

M MOV* Rcbm And Tha Sevan
Hood* HM4I Fran* Smaw* Oaan

(I® |M| LEAVE (T TO BEAVER

400
(M l RHOOA
HOOANB HEROES

4 :3 0
(M l RHOOA
ALL I t THE FAJMLY

"The young women we deal with
today tire different Iront those of. say.
25 years ago," Marks said. "About 99
IN-rcenl ol all our kids today are college
women.” Marks said, "and lhal was mil
true 25 years ago
"These kids know who I hey are.
what they want and. most important,
how to grl what they want. Their
smarts shine through."
10 parlrcipala m a rat a bom Marion
Matt lo Oaimuda. mtarvtaw with
Bally RoMn. a woman who hatpad
har lamunaky d moltwr comnvH tur
c.da tJ

EVENING

600
1(1) ( J ) Q &gt; 7 ) 0 NEWS
(M|
JEFF11
ERBONS
(10) MACNFIL / LIHRER
NCWSHOOR
a (*l LA VERNE A SHIRLEY

2

6:05
IX ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30
1(1) NBC NEWS
(C S S NEWS
I ABC NEWS I J
bIM I ALICE
) |*| HAPPY OATS AGAIN
BURNETT

wif*. an IdaakMK young man naat
In prommanc* at thraf arthrtatl lor
lha N utt (Part 2 of 7)(R)[J
(Ul (M ) DALLAS
8 ) (10| WILD AMERICA ttua*
U d m ratalivat of Ih* grant panda
ars laalursd Ih* raccoon, rmgtad
and coatwmmdi (J
CE (SI M O V * Or sal Calharm*
|1M*I Palar O TooN. Jsanna
Mwsau Faacmalad by a nawly ar
rrvad (Wilikhar Calharm* Ih* Graa I
ha* hrrr impriMnsd and playkidy
lor marl* tarn

ANO

700
B (4) SALE OF THE CENTURY
111 O F U MAGA/WE Irtaturs
hunt a. Mai l i J w . Ih* Baatlaa
RotlRoyCa
Q9 O JEOPARDY
f t (&gt;S| TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Harvy» Ida la Uvaalanad
whan h* a lha only ayawilnata n *
robbary
O ) ( tot THE GLORY OF THE GAM
DEN A lour of th* tpactacidai rhododandron gar dan* al Si Eibury
lha Malan* proyacl ol Ih* lala Phdkp
da Rothachnd Jama* Maaon nar
Q (• ) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN

ItX M O V *
Angid City I I f SO|
Ralph Wad* Paul Wmlwk) A poor
Waal Vagmt* lamdy loo* a Ih mtgrant work m I lor kla and hnd* itaad
living m squalor al a labor camp
conlrokad by • grasdy conlraclcr

6:30
0 &amp; ) FAMILY TIES Slavan and hu
brolhar Robarl Iry lo taHIa thaw dri
Mranca* lo hasp thaw ratariiy and
owad moftwr bagm a now kfa (Pari
1 of ?)[R|
W (10) THIS OLD HOUSE M o lar
cabmalmakar Jack Cronin

9.00

ID 3 ) CH EERS Carla halchw* a
karf alyWO pioi lor ravanga agamtl
har Ivgh-achrnt prmupal whan tha
marl* Ih* bar |H|
(I)

7:05
7:30

ENTERTAINMENT TOMOMT
Irdarnw with Gragory Mar naon
m O W H E I l OF FORTUNE
i f ) o JOKERS WILD
(fb(M | BENSON
(B (B| ALL M THE FASM.V

o

SIMON

*

SIMON

th *

Simon* mvattrgatwm ol a carvn*
kidnapping it compact lad by th*
Ihafl of Rick t pooch Marlow* |R)
|M| BILLY GRAHAM CMJBAOC

OX MARY TYLER MOORE

B (D

Ifi (MlINOfPCNOENI NEWS
(0 (M l NEW YORK'S MASTER
CHEFS
(S O IP O LIC E WOMAN

1005
IX BILLY ORAMAM CRUSADEQ

1030
(II) (M )B O B NEWMART
0 (M| FANTASY OF FLORIDA

1100

( f x i l 0 ( 1 ) 0 NEWS
(M| BENNY HILL
110) DAVE ALLEN AT LARQE
0 } HOOANB HEROES

6:05

6 35
1Z C A R O L
FRKN06

CSS NEWS NWHIW AICH

(JSI GUNS MORE

Susan Hayward

g

(Ft) (M l BOB NEWMART
■ (W| NEVER TOO OLD Four padpla who dafy m* traditional concapt* of “ old'' - choraograpnw
Agoal Da MM*. hrMonan Falhar
Manual Tatar* Japan*** phdarv
lhrop.il Ryoicni Sasataw* and
■argar Roabuc* Pop' Slap*** —
arapr0*4*0 0*c* Cava*I boat.

B (D il i O C B O

12:00

(1) O
U B. OPEN TENNIS
MlOMLOHTS
(T) O SEARCH FOR WEALTH
1 I (M l RMOOA
0
(*| MOVIE
Foreign Con*

(7) B M O V * ' D*m#*r*j* And Th*
OMdMIort ' ( l*S4| Valor Matur*

(M l INDEPENDENT NEWS
(l| POLICE WOMAN

a

0 (J) TONIGHT Host Johnny Car
Kin tkhadulad tuba ptayar Rogar
Bobo. Jan* Fonda, mrnv* Gaorg*
Carl
( I IO WKRP IN CWfCWHAII
m O ABC NEWS NK1HTIM4E
f t (M| CHICO ANO THE MAN
0 ) (*) HOGANS HEROES

Marks was president ol the Chamber
ol Commerce In Atlantic ('lly . N.J. hack
In 1954 w h en b a n d le a d e r Pau l
Whiteman sold his s|tonsor. I’hllco. on
the Idea ol pulling lhe (Mgriml on t h e
new medium ol television. Whiteman
sought local assistance and (omul It In
Marks, who brramc I he pageant's llrst
and only television chairman.

September 5

THURSDAY

11:30
EVENS*}

- well tl 1 had anything to sav ut*nui u
She's 32
"Mul I l.ill In see lhe dllleienee
b flw r e n .lo r Itlow som ew h ere in
i'ennnylvanla gelling a scholarship lot
playing siar luoiltall lot the University
ol Texas, and young women having the
same opportunity to win scholarships
on (hen own terms "

tl) (W) UNOCRSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
9.30
Q ( I ) NIGHT COURT Harry and
company com * lo Ih* ard of tha*
Inand Yakov whan h* * * * * * halp m
gatim g hr* broltwr poancal aaykjm

7:35

IR)

6:00

0 ( D W LL STREET BLUES Hunlar

B 9 ) COSBY SHOW CMf t coBaga
Back coach (AJ Fraaman M I convmcaa hwn lo run a match rata
agamM a lor mar tI.ai (R)
i II a MAGNUM P i Magnum and
*kggm* ambark h i • parSou* fournay la Souahaaal Aaw lo aaarch lor
d mutual Inand on* of lha Vwlnam
War M.A* (Pad I of 2] ("I
7,' O M O V * mud* Th* Third
R a d i" (1BSII Rut gar Kauai BFylh*
Oannar tUaad an tha autobiogra­
phy of Alban Spsar Daspd* th*
of in* paranu and N »

dn palch** a moo.had lank to • nar c a lc * ra 1. Coftay poaa* a* a mala
proaldut*. Fur d o plana lo m a t* an
aalrtvaganl annrvartary purchas*
lor Davanport (R|
CD O
HOMETOWN Much to
Jana a chagrin. Joay'k *a wda Dar­
ryl Nathan lhancy Paul) arnva* m
town dafarmmad Id raamdi* tha
Rama* of thwa romanca
CD O » I * Schadulad » y * a r *
kflar embarkmg on a 6 000 maa
ocaan voyag*. Hugh Downa punt
in* craw o f GarNdo Rhrara'a yacM

0B A N F O N O A N O S O N

1000

1105

ax

M OV*
A lio n It In Th*
filr a a l* ' (t*S3| Jama* Cagnay.
Barbara Hal*

0

11:30

(J) TONIGHT Mott Johnny C*T-

aon Schadulad tm gw Paul Young

( 1 1Q WKRP IN CP4CINNA Tl
I U ABC NEWS hUOHTUNE
'H (JS| CHICO ANO THE MAN
0 ( l | HOOAN B HEROES

12:00

(1 ) O
US
OPEN TENNIB
KGKU0HT8
7, O THE PAINT
11 |1S) RHOOA
0
( * ) M O V * "Without (o v a '
1 IM S) Spancar Tracy. Kalharma
Hapburn

12-.30
O &lt;«) LAIC NIGHT WITH D A W
LETTERMAN From Apr* IM I San
Oantal p Moytuhan im n r mad |R|
( £ O N O V * Si art Ih * Ravokruon Wdhoul M* 11970| Gan* Wad
*r. Donald Sulharland
( I I (JS) I LOVE LUCY

100
(7 ) O M OV*

One* Upon A Hon
aym oon" ( l*4E| Cary Oran). Gmgar

HoQtft
I■■)
I P
(M|
LI
4 I LEAVE
IT TO BEAVER
OV*
Tha Pune* And Tha
&lt;Q M
MOV
ra gar ( l*S7) Marilyn Monro*
Showgar
laurwaa Oknar

130
( U (M ) SCTV Skatcha* Th* Day*
of lha Wa*k." an riavaram naw
koap opart lu Taylor iCamarma
O'Hara) and Bob Hop* IDava
Thom*!I talk about thaw pal

M0
(D (M )B U A R R E

2:30
O CBS NEWS MQHTW ATCH

m iauMBMoni

�^ n r r r r r r n r r r iT T iT T T T T

Friday. Aug JO. Ills

I —Evening Herald. Santord. FI

How'd

YouLike To Be A Star?

Here's you big rhancr ul
stardom. In ci|h *it ul I lie Orange
( ’oiinly C'lvlr O n lr r Nov 2 lor
llir Marlboro Country Musli
Concert uml win o $5.(KM) (irsi
prize*.

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                    <text>Builders Hint At Lawsuit If Impact Fees Raised
Bjr Donna Estes
Herald S ta ff W riter
A h in t from a r e p r e s e n t a t iv e o f th e
Homebuilders of Central Florida that a lawsuit
may lie the builders' answer lo higher "voluntary
impart fees" from new construction for roads
stalled county commission action on the pro­
mised hike Monday
.John Wright, of the Homebuilders Association
of Mid-Florida, told commissioners that builders
are not opposed lo paying a livable or reasonable
fre. but the proposed 91.000 per single family
home Impact fee would be outrageous He said It

would be the second highest In (he state, second
only lo Monroe County.
The county should do a "lot more research
first." Wright said, and asked that the county not
levy such a "devastating fee."
Wright predicted the county will be seeing
"class-action lawsuits" If the fees are adopted.
Both Public Works Director Larry Sellers and
County Engineer Jerry McCollum said they will
go back to the drawing board and discuss the fees
further with the homebuilders association.
Uut County Administrator Ken Hooper said
Sellers and McCollum after further discussion

with the homebuilders about the "voluntary fees"
will be back with a firm recommendation at a
July 22 workshop for formal adoption on July 23.
Th e fees recommended by Sellers and Mc­
Collum. under a three choice plan, range from
81.000 per single family home to 8610 per
apartment and from 84.000 per 1.000 square feet
of retail, manufacturing, hospital and warehouse
space to 819.200. McCollum said the fees are
based on the number of trips upon the highways
each type of construction would generate.
And Hooper made It clear other "voluntary
commitments" from developers of payments for

Teachers Ask
29% Pay Hike

He said teacher salaries are based on
on Index scale determined by years of
experience and degrees held.
Marshall Oglelree of the Seminole
Education Association, which Is the
union representing Sem inole County's
school employees, said the 29.7 percent
Increase would raise starting pay for
beginning teachers lo 817,000, up
83.288.
SEA Is hoping that monclury con­
tract talks will gel under way by July
22. Ogletree said.
See PAT, page 8A

Resembles Man
Who Took Regina,
Authorities Say
COCOA HEACII.
Flu (IJI'II - The
d e s c r ip t io n of a
man who abducted
a n d q u ic k ly r e ­
leased an 8-year-old
bo y r e s e m b le s
those o f suspects In
tw o o ilie r abduc­
tion cuscs. Includ­
ing th e June 18
kidnapping of an
OrUitUa Ivtpvct
Orlundo girl who Is
still missing, police
say.
Police In Orlando
and Cocoa llrach
h a v e u g r e e d lo
work together In
the th r e e cases,
w h ic h h a v e o c ­
c u r r e d w ith in u
m o n th . C ocoa
lle a c h D e l. Sgt.
Harold Lewis says
S,*««rS
»
th e d e p a rtm en ts
w ill In fo r m one
another dally on (heir progress
An 8-year-old Cocoa Beach boy was
lifted olt a sofa In the fam ily room of his
house around 4 am . EDT Monday and
carried outside by u man who dropped
him off In u vacant lot about 50 yards
uwuy. Lewis said.
The boy told police the man was
white, about 6 feet tall. 180 lo 200
pounds with brown, bushy hair, a
mustache and dark eyes. The boy did
IMM rernemlier whal hr was wearing
Thai description nearly matches that
ol the suspect In a similar abduction of
a 7-year old Cocoa Beach girl June 15.
(Miller said In that case, the abductor
had no mustache und was wearing
ladrd. cutoff jeans
"T h e y 're close enough that we feel
they're ihr same person." Lewis said
Police would not release names of the
lw o victims.
Authorities say the descriptions are
similar to one of a man who grubbed
Itegina Mar Armstrong. 6. as she was
playing with friends in front of an
Otlando apartment complex around 4
p in .J u n e 18
Her kidnapper Is described as white.
30 lo 40 veurs old. about H feel tall with
dark brown hair
Lewis said Cocoa Beach poller don't
think the same man commuted all
three abductions In the two elites,
about 50 miles apart, but admitted
•here Is a chance
“ We feel there’s always that possibili­
ty due to the similarity o f the compos­
ites." the detective said.
Orlando police spokesman Robert
laiBreck said he didn't know If the
ruses were connected.

The transportation Impact fees would double
the 820 million estimated over 10 years from the
4-cents-per-gallon gasoline tax adopted In 1982
and the 2-cents-per gallon gasoline tax. expected
to be levied by county commissioners today. The
revenues from the transportation Impact fees arc
expected lo bring In more than 820 million over
10 years. Sellers said He said the estimates for
See FEES, page SA

Sanford Vote
Kills Gas Tax
Agreement

By Richard Truett
Herald Staff W rite r
The Seminole Education Association
(the teacher s union) has requested a
29 7 percent Increase In starting pay
for teachers In Seminole County for the
19R5'86 school year
Hut Ernest Cowley, chief negotiator
for the school board, said as a mutter of
procedure, the board will only offer last
year's starting pay of 8 13.712.
Cowley said that any pay Increases
would affect all of the county's 2.200
teach* rs
Experienced teachers would also re­
ceive a pay raise, based on how many
years experience they have. Cowley
said.

Boy's Abductor—

impacts on schools, police and fire protection and
the donation of road rlghts-of-way would also be
expected to continue.

A Moment in Time

r * « t » kv I m m i VIk m H

Em cee Douglas Stenstrom addresses a crowd of about 200 people who
gathered at Sanford's Magnolia Mall today to share a moment In time —
the rededlcatlon of the downtown Clock. After opening remarks, the
Clock was turned on at noon. The timepiece, torn down In 1961, represents
the best of Sanford's past and Its future, Stenstrom said Stella Orltf,
whose grandfather, A H. Moses, first erected the Clock downtown In the
1920s, was ecstatic: *'My whole family would be excited We didn't think
this day would ever com e."

pie unfair
By Rick Brunson
The agreement called for Ihe county
Herald Staff Writer
Rescinding Its approval of a coun­ to levy a 2 cents per gallon gasoline tax
ty-imposed 2-conls-per gallon gasoline lor 30 years The county would have
gotten about 65 percent of Ihe revenues
tax. Ihe Sanford City Commission
and Ihe other 35 percent would have
Monday effectively killed an Interlocal
been divided up among Sem inole
agreement that would have allowed for
ch anging d istrib u tion percentages County's seven cities
"W e acled two weeks ago without lull
among Ihe county and cities.
As a result. If Ihe county decide* lo explanation of what was presented to
us." said Commissioner David Farr,
levy Ihe tax for 30 years, the dlstiibu
lion percentages set by state formula, m oving to rescind Ihe agreement.
Voting with him were commissioners
will be frozen for Ihe entire 30 year*,
according to Seminole County C om ­ Milton Smith and Robert Thomas
Mayor Uetlye Smith and Commissioner
missioner Bill Klrchhoff. who upprared
.John Mercer voted no
before Ihe city commission.
Sanford's action means Ihe counly
Early loday Ihe Seminole County
Commission postponed Its vole on Ihe will have to adopt a stale-approved
lax to tonight County Attorney Nikki distribution formula which may mean
Clayton said she had not had time to II will get less money from the (ax and
Ihe cities more Bui It may also mean
rewrite Ihe resolution from Ihe version
reflecting Sanford'a approval (If cities the figures stay Ihe same as under the
representing SO percent of the Incorpo­ agreement. KlrchholT said The counly
rated arm did not approve, the In­ can stilt levy the lax. as It la expected lo
terlocal agreement couldn't go ihto do loday al lls regular meeting
The percentages under the agree­
effect). The new resolution must reflect
revenue distribution by stale formula.
ment were. accoiJlng lo City Clerk
By a 3-2 margin Ihr commission Henry Tam m ; Altam onte Springs.
reversed Its June 24 decision to
10 72 percent; Sanford. 8 69 percent.
approve the agreement because the Casselberry. 5.95 percent: Longwood.
majority of commissioners said the city 4 79 percent: Winter Springs. 2.92
should gel a fixed percentage of Ihe percent; Oviedo, 1.20 percent; and
revenues from the tax; not a fluctuating l-ake Mary. 84 percent.
percentage as the agreement proposes
Bui Ihe cities' percentages would
The commissioners also called Ihe have been reflgured every five years.
county's 65 percent cul of Ihe revenue
Bee OA8 TAX. page BA

Disney, MGM Team Up For Studio Theme Park
TALLAHASSEE |UPI| - Walt Disney
World officials have targeted central
Florida for u 8300 million fantasy
factory that will feature film, televlson
and animation studios
According lo Wall Disney Produc­
tion* chief executive Mlrharl Eisner.
Ihe project will also Include u theme
park where lourtsls will wander among
the characters and sets made memora­
ble in productions by both ihe Disney
organization and MGM. which has also
signed on In Ihe deal
Gov. Bob Graham Joined Eisner and
Disney character Mickey Mouse In
unveiling plans for Ihe complex during
a news conference Monday outside the
stale Capitol. A marching band added
lo the commotion and attracted a group
of about 20 pre-schoolers and their
teacher* lo wave at the famous mouse

Graham has been a driving force
Ix-hlnd state efforts lo lure the motion
picture Industry lo Florida — a stale
whose climate attracted filmmakers In
ihe early day* of the Industry but
whose political leuders subsequently
drove them away as undesirables
"T h is project represents the next
critical step In that (recruitment) pro­
le s s ," Graham said. "W ith this new
sludlo. Florida will offer full production
facilities to produce major theatrical
features without ev er leuvlng the
stale."
Graham said he plans to meet with
executives of Universal studios to
determine what Impact Ihe Disney
move will have on Universal * proposal
lo borrow 8150 million from Ihe state
workrr pension fund for u project
similar lo Disney's. The Universal

Youths Nabbed In Vandalism,
Thefts Of Motorcycle, Bikes
Five Sanford boys were In Ihe
custody of their parents today after
being charged with breaking Into a
Sanford auto dealership, stealing a
motorcycle and doing about 86.400
worth of damage to thrre Jeeps.
In Lake Mary, police, working In
ronjuctlon with Ihe Maitland Police
D ep a rtm en t, h a ve a rre a le d and
charged a 19 year old man and hla
Juvenile accomplice with stealing two
bicycles. It was later diacovered that
Ihe man Is wanted In Sanford. North
Carolina, for grand theft and burglary.
The Sanford boya entered Ihe fenced
compound of ihe dealership al about
noon Sunday and drove a black 1965
Jeep Wagonerr through the garage
door o f the building, according to a
police report. Once inside, they stole a
Kawasaki ATV three-wheel motorcy­
cle. the report said.
To get the motorcycle outside ihe
compound, ihe boys rammed another
Jeep — a 1985 white Wagoneer —
through the fence, according to the
report
Another 1980 Jeep was backed Into

Ihe fence and then two of Ihe boys
drove the motocyclc Into some nearby
woods, the report said.
. W hile In the compound, one of the
youths reportedly brut a dog with
stick, according to Ihe report.
All o f the vehicles were unlocked
and contained a set of keys, according
tuCapt. Herb Shea.
The two 1985 Jeepn were Limited
Editions worth 917.000 each, accord­
ing to Shea. The black Jeep received
93.500 damage, while the white Jeep
and 1980 Jeep received 92.000 and
9900 damages respectively, the report
•aid.
Sanford poller Sgt. Charles Tate
found the motorcycle abandoned at a
park near Lake Monroe Terrace al
about 1:30 p.m. Sunday, according lo
Shea. Suspecting It was stolen from
Saniord Motor Co.. Tate went to thr
dealership where he found two youths
climbing over the fence. After nabbing
I hem. the boys gave police the names
of three other boys allegedly Involved
Bee THEFTS, page 9A

sludlo lour center would also be built
near Orlando
Eisner said the Disney project, lo be
located on Ihe 28.000-acre Walt Disney
World spread near Orlando, is a key
pan of plans to expand Ihe corpora­
tion's output of films, movies and
animated features
Eisner said Ihe complex will Include
ut least four film soundstagea. a video
production theater, a back lot and an
animation sludlo He Mid at least one
fu ll-tim e a n im a tio n crew — and
perhaps as many as thrre — will be
p e r m a n e n t ly t r a n s f e r r e d fr o m
California to Orlando
Jeffrey Kalzenberg. chairman of Wall
Disney Pictures and Televlson. said the
facilities will produce 15 or more
live-action films per year. 15 or more
television movies and six movies for

Sprinklers
A 'Must'
By Rick Brunson
Herald Staff Writer
Over the objections of a Sanford
contractor, the Sanford City C om ­
mission has given Initial approval to an
ordinance requiring sprinkler systems
In some new buildings
The ordinance requires the systems
In ce rta in ty p e s o f a p a rtm en ts,
townhousrs. condominiums, hotels and
commercial buildings.
Sanford Assistant Fire Chief Ron Neel
said Ihe sprinklers would suppress fires
and Mve lives.
Bui Kevin Spolskl. owner of Designed
Structures. Inc., a Sanford contracting
firm, lold the commissioners Monday
night that requiring sprinklers was
unfair and would drive up building
costs and stifle growth tn Ihe city.
" l l s an absolute detriment to the
future. Ihe good growth, of Ihe city of
Sanford." Spolskl said.
Commercial building costs would
Jump 15 lo 20 percent. Spolskl pre­
dicted. because of such an ordinance
A s an e x a m p le he c it e d an
Bee S P R IN K L E R S , page BA

pay television Eisner added (hat he
hopes to produce one lu ll-length
animated feature per year In central
Florida, plus Saturday morning TV
farr.
"W e also hope our production facili­
ties will Ik- a catalyst for Ihe growth of a
satellite motion picture and television
Industry In central Florida." Katzenbergsald.
The complex will also feature sludlo
tours, amusement park rides with
m o v ie th e m e s , th e D isn ey film
archives, a wardrobe center, restau­
rants and shops MGM has lent lls
name, archives and logos — Including
lls trademark lion — to Ihe enterprise
Eisner predicted no Immediate pro­
duction cost savings from the move
from California to Florida. And he
slrrssed Disney Is not abandoning lls
California studios.

TODAY
Action Reports..................... ___3A
Calendar............................
3B
Classifieds............................. ..4,50
Dear Abby.....................
..... IB
Deaths..........................
..... BA
Editorial...........................
4A
Florida...................
2A
Hospital..................................
2A
Nation.................................... .... 2A
People...............................
IB
Sports.. ................................ ...5-7A
Television..............................
IB
Weather......................................8A
World
..................................BA

Sturm In France
Seminole Counly Commissioner
Bob Sturm Is In France loday lo
rxarnine a light rail transportation
system. He Is part of a Central
Florida delegation Including sever­
al Orange County Commissioners
and Florida legislators Sturm's
expenses are being paid by the
Greater Seminole County Chamber
of Commerce. Altamonte Springs
He Is expected lo be back Monday.

.1
- i

�l A - E y f W m Bsfstd, Sanford, FI.

Tutvdoy, J u ly *, 1U$

NATION

Reagan's Dilemma In Dealing With Terrorism
By Helen Thomas

IN BRIEF

U P I White House Reporter

Creation-Science Law
Unconstitutional, Court Says
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) — A federal appeals court has
upheld a ruling finding Louisiana's creation-science law
unconstitutional, criticizing the statute as an attempt to
Inject religion In Ihe classroom
Opponents of the law applauded Monday's ruling by the
5th U.S. Circuit Court o f Appeals, hailing the decision as
l he death knell for the 4-year-old law.
Circuit Judges wrote In their opinion the law. requiring
the teaching o f the biblical theory of creation In public
schools, violated separation of church and stale guaranteed
In the First Amendment.
State Attorney General William Guste said he needed to
study the ruling before deciding whether to appeal to the
Supreme Court.
Circuit Judges said the creation-science law's sole
purpose was to promote a religious belief In public schools.
The doctrine of creation-science entailed teaching the
existence of a divine creator and Ihe concept of a creator
was an Inherently religious tenet, the district court ruled.

Sanctions Spark Heated Debate
WASHINGTON (UP!) — Accusations of Implicit racism
and Ignorance of Soviet subversion boiled up In .Senate
debate on a blit that would Impose sanctions on South
Africa to pressure that regime to end Its policy of racial
separation.
Sen. Alan Cranston. I) Calif., called on the Senate to end
delaying tactlrs and a threatened filibuster against Ihe hill
by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.
“ There seems to be. at the heart of Ihe American
ultra right wing movement, an undercurrent o f racism that
rises to the surface every now anti then," Cranston said,
mentioning no names.
The bill would Impose an Immediate ban on bank loans
lo South Africa, block the sale of computer equipment that
police may use to track dissidents and bans the sale of
nuclear technology to Pretoria.
Cranslon, who lias culled for even tougher sanctions
against South Africa, said some senators oppose any
actions against South Africa because it Is anti-communist.
“ To them, any evil Is acceptable — even I hr evil of
apartheid — if It cun be enlisted In the unholy crusade of
blind, uncritical anti-communism."Cranston said

Sniper Dies In Blaze After Killing
MADISON, N.C. (UPI) — Authorities say the rubble of an
abandoned, two-story warehouse holds Ihe laxly of a'an Iper
who lorehed Ihe building after killing his boss, wounding
I wo other people and holding police at tray for 14 hours.
"Our presumption Is he's still In ihe building. We see
lltllr chance o f anyone surviving the fire.” City Manager
Steve Knuth suld today of suspected sniper Dolpheun
"H u d" Zlgl.n
Authorities said Zlglur, who withstood two police tear gas
barrages and refused In talk lo relatives, apparently died In
u fire he set Monday night that gutted the warehouse where
he hud been holed up since 7 a m.
Police suld Zlglar. an employee of Suburban Sanitation,
apparently got In an argument atxiui Ills paycheck early
Monday, went home, got u rifle and look up a position In a
second story window of an uhundnnrd warehouse across
the street from Suburban Sanitation
Aboul 7 a.m., poller Mid Ihe ml|wr opened fire from Ihe
warehouse window, falully wounding Tom m y Shar|&gt;c, a
ro owner of Suburban Simulation

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Lawyer: Retired General
Did Not Steal Spy Funds
WEST PALM I1EACII (UPI) — The lawyer for a retired Air
Force grnerul accused of embezzling II,S- spy funds he was
usslgnrd In manage says Ills client did not steal u hit of the
money, but transferred It In another hank account.
Lawyer Stephen Hronls said Monduy that ex MuJ. Gen.
Richard II. Collins controlled spy m oney so secret that
Congress, which funds all military actions, did not know
about Its existence.
In his opening stulrmrul ill Collins' federal trial, Hronls
said his rllrrtl followed orders and did not steal u single
|tenny of Ihe spy money.
The government accuses Collins, 55. a much-decorated
ex-fighter pilot, ol diverting about $ 145.000 of monry In u
sr« ret account In his own Swiss bunk accounts ami
keeping 1 10,000 In Interest
Collins has threatened to tcvral national secrets to prove
his Innocence during the trial about Hie use of U S. lunds to
bankroll covert CIA n|&gt;eruttnns In Southeast Asia and
elsewhere.
If convicted o f the six counts ol einbezxlemenl. Collins.
55, faces up to 00 years In prison and 960.000 In lines

Murder Suspect Denied Bond
MIAMI (UPI) — An adult movie projectionist who Is
accused (if killing his bruin damaged daughter has been
drilled bond even (hough a psychologist told the court he
doubted the 25-year-old would hurt anyone or try to lire
Hut Circuit Judge Edward D, Cowart Monday did not rule
out freeing C harles Griffith, who Is rhargril with
first-degree murder, from Jail under bond at an arraign
tnrnl hearing July 1H
Police say GrtfTlih entered u room at Miami Children's
Hospital about t) p m . June 28 where his 3-ycar-old
daughter. Joy, lay comatose He sat by her crib lor more
Hum two hours, then drew a 32 rubber pistol and shot her
twice In the cheat.
Griffith told Investigators he (Ired (hr shots lo end the
child's suffering If convicted of the murder charge, hr
could be sentenced to death In the electric chair.

HOSPITAL NOTES
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Pactar A llanw iW iertng i

Rhetoric Or Retribution?

la a X n jfM
m

I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - There was a lot of
fire and fury In President Reagan's talk on
International terrorism to the American Bar
Association.
Out It may take time to figure out Its
significance and whether he wants rarte
blanche to act riexl time without congres­
sional approval.
Obviously still smarting from the Beirut
hostage crisis. Reagan Monday appeared lo
be back lo making threats like those that got
him In trouble during the 17 days of
backstage negotiations and compromises
that no one would acknowledge were
occurring.
Again. Reagan appears to be threatening
action But of what kind?
While House spokesman Larry Speakes
told reporters; " I would say this Is a part of
the eonllnulng effort on Ihe part o f the
president to speak out on terrorism."
In Ihe aftermath of the crisis, Reagan's
conservative constituency who wanted him
to act out his “ gunslinger" Image was
disappointed T o them, the United States
appeared a paper tiger.
Moderates and liberals praised Reagan for
exercising patience and restraint. The

A N A L Y S IS
result, they said, was lhal the 39 hostages
got home alive.
In his address Monday. Reagan cited Iran.
Libya, North Korea. Cuba and Nicaragua as
members o f an international "Murder Inc."
that have a fanatical hatred of America and
are Instigating worldwide terrorism.
He said their aim Is to Isolate and expel
“ America from the world'* so they can
continue th eir totalitarian revolutions
without U.S. Interference.
“ Their terrorist states are now engaged in
acts of war against ihe government and
people o f the United Slates." he said. “ And
under International law. any slate which Is
the victim o f acts of war has the right to
defend Itaelf."
Terrorist arts can be the spark that
touches off a war. as U was for World War I.
But Hragan was not clear on what interna­
tional law describes a terrorist act as an act
of war.
The solution may be In an Interpretation
Reagan has yet to makr.
In the meantime, he must differentiate
between retaliation and revenge: rhetoric
and retribution.
In the midst o f a crisis as public as Ihe

Beirut hijacking, his dilemma — In the land
of the free and the home o f the nuclear
missile — becomes crystal clear.
The president told a news conference last
month that wanton retaliation would be “ a
terrorist act" In Itself. Innocent lives, no
doubt, would be lost.
A top W hile House ofTlctal said. "V en ­
geance Is not our policy."
But national security adviser Robert
MrFartane spoke of this possibility: attack
training camps for terrorists In Lebanon.
Without an outright endorsement, the
president said: “ The American people are
not going to tolerate Intimidation, tenor and
outright acts of war against this nation and
Its people.”
But again he slopped short o f saying what
hr intends to do about this "confederation of
criminal governments."
On an extreme side, ihere was some
speculation that Reagan might seek a Gulf
of Tonkin-style resolution that would give
him the authority to hit targets without
congressional approval. Hut that does not
seem likely now.
President Lyndon Johnson, who sought
Ihe Gulf of Tonkin resolution during the
Vietnam War. lived to regret It and so did
Congress

A n t i -T a x , Pro-D efense Stand
Blocking Budget C o m p ro m is e
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A leading Democratic
budget negotiator says President Reagan could be
Helpful in formulating a compromise budget but
not If he continues his tough stance for military
s|x-ndlngand against taxes.
While House spokesman Larry Speakes said
Monday that Reagan has Invited congressional
budget conferees lo meetings today and Wed­
nesday In an effort lo forge a budget compromise
but will resist any move lo Increase taxes.
The conferees have been stymied since begin­
ning talks last month In Ihelr attempts to find a
compromise between the House- and Senatepassed budgets.
Hut more than a week ago. Ihe conference
decided to look closer at a plan offered by Sens.
Ixiwton Chiles, D Lakeland. Fla., Slade Gordon.
R-Wash , and others
That plan would cut the deficit by nearly $70
billion In fiscal 1986 hut also rails for raising
about $60 billion In taxes over three years.
Chiles Mid Monday hr was pleased Reagan Is
getting Involved hut. "Obviously, I'd like It better
If they (til Ihe W hile House) weren't lulklng a
lough line.”
Chiles defended his budget plan, saying If the
president Is "talking significant deficit reduction.

1don't know how else he's going to do It."
The Chlles-Gorton plan would freeze military
spending, as the House budget d(x-s, and would
scrap next year's cost-of-llvtng raise for Social
Security recipients, as Ihe Senate budget pro­
posed. except for Ihe very poor.
Thr House and Srnalr budgets cul $56 billion
from the deficit. The House protected Soctul
Security and the Senate allowed an Inflationrelated Increase for the Pentagon
Over the weekend. Reagan said he would rrslsl
any effort to cut military spending further.
Speakes said Monday, "W e have continued to
work wllh (the budget conferees) but they have
not come to grips with the major Issues."
referring lo Social Security and defense.
Speakes said Reagan would not go along with
the Chlles-Gorton budget because of Its tax
provision.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole also said
the Chlles-Gorton budget Is "a good effort but l
don't believe either the House or Senate will
accept taxes."
But Sen. Ernest Holllngs. D-S.C., a primary
hacker of the bipartisan budget, said thr
conferees have "looked at all the spending cuts
that can be made. W e've cut and cut and cut. The
time has come lo look at revenues."

Couple W ere Out For A Walk

Sanford Man On Trial For Rape
A Sanford man wrnt on trial
today accu sed o f raping a
woman while they were out
taking an early-morning walk.
On trial and held without bond
In Ihe Seminole County fall since
his Feb 3 arrest la Terrance
Frank llrurnlldge, 25. ol 88
Castle Brewer Court. Sanford.
Jury selection In the trial
lx*fore Seminole Circuit Judge
Robert ft M cG regor began
Monday.
According lo court records, a
24-year-old Sanford woman was
walking wllh a man shortly after
I a.m on Feb 3 when he
at lacked Iter on Third Street

near Poplar and Cedar avenues
In Sanford, according to u (toller
report.
T h e man then drugged thr
w om an Into u ditch and beat her.
Ihe report suld

The victim lulrr told jxillce the
man threatened lo kill her before
he raped her.
T h e w om an's scream s atIracted the attention of two
teenage troys who saw Ihe
struggle, ran and got help, the
report said. They bruugiit a
44-year-old man hack lu the
scene and he forced the man to
s lo p (h e a ssa u lt. He then
followed the couple to Third

Slrrel and French Avenue where
he (tagged down officer Tom
llernosky who was responding lo
the scene The man was taken to
the Sanford Police Department,
questioned and arrested at 3:25
a.m
Bernosky noted In his report
that the woman was bruised and
scratched, and that articles of
her clothing werr found In the
dllch
If convicted of the charge.
Brundldge faces up lo life In
prison, acrordlng lo Assistant
Slatr Attorney Steven Plotnlck
—Deane Jordan

M a ssa ch u se tts
G ettin g C h e e k y
With Snuff U sers
BOSTON |UPI) - The stale
h e a lt h c o m m i s s i o n e r Is
expected lo Issue an order this
week muking Massachusetts
th e fir s t s la t e r e q u ir in g
w a rn in g s on p a c k a g e s of
smokeless tobacco, a known
cause of mouth cancer.
"W e have a chemical time
homb ticking In ihe mouths of
lens of thousands of boys In
ibis country and at least they
deserve a warning." said Dr.
Gregory Connolly, chief of the
state's Dental Health Division.
“ We could face an epidemic
of oral cancer In the country by
the year 2000 unless we act
aggressively now."
Connolly has recommended
lhal all snuff packages sold In
Massachusetts carry the label.
"Warning. Use of miulf cun be
addictive and can cause mouth
cancer and other mouth dis­
orders." •
Sources said Monday that
Public Health Commissioner
Bullus Walker Is expected to
Issue an order Wednesday re­
quiring makers of smokeless
tobacco products to pill the
warning on packages sold In
Massachusetts.
Similar warnings are being
considered in other states, but
so fur none have taken action.
Connolly said at least two
dozen studies have linked
smokeless tobacco to serious
dental problem s. Including
gum disease and tooth loss.
And a World Health Organiza­
tion report In November 1984
concluded Ihere was "sufficient
scientific evidence to declare
snuff a human carcinogen," he
said.
O fficials of U.S. Tobacco
Corp. In Greenwich. Conn ,
maker of Skoal, one of the most
popular brands o f snuff, could
not be reached for commrnt.

Four Sentenced On Drunk Driving Charge
The following (rersons have either pleuded
or been found guilty of driving under the
Influence nr having an unlawful blood
alcohol level.
The first-time offenders have had Ihelr
driver's license suspended for six months,
lx-cn ordered to pay a $250 fine* and court
costs of $27.50. and complete 50 hours of
community service. When a guilty or no
contest plea la entered or If the defendant ts
found guilty of an alcohol related charge,
other cltarges are usually either not pro­
secuted or dismissed. Most of Ihe first lime
offenders are allowed to apply for busi­
ness-only driving permits. In cases where
the sentence differs, the actual sentence Is

reported:
—Kenneth Drew. •Jb. of Forest Ctly. arrested

April 2 after hr was found passed out In Ills
truck at Live Oaks Center. U.S. Highway
17 92. Casselberry.
—David Eugrne Wyant. 21. of 3040 Aloma
Avr.. Winter Park, arrested March 8 alter
his car failed to maintain a single lane on
Wcklva Springs Boulevard. Longwood
—Robert H. Bomaster. 34. no address given,
arrested Dec 22 after his motorcycle almost
fe ll o v e r on U .S , H ig h w a y 17-92.
Casselberry. He pleaded no contest to the
charge and is scheduled to tie sentenced
Aug. 26.
—Eric Brandi. 21. of 223-B Sharon Drive,
Altamonte Springs, arrested Feb, 9 on
Interstate 4. Altamonte Springs
—Al Roy Brooks. 29. of I’ O, Box 303. Butler
Boston Court. Oviedo, arrested April 7 on
State Road 426. Oviedo, after his car failed

to maintain a single lane He pleaded no
contest to the charge and Is scheduled to be
sentenced Aug 26
—James R. Dawson. 31, of 471 Rlvervtew
Avc,, Sanford, arrested Feb 8 after hla car
was Involved In a single car accident on
Orange Boulevard. west of Sanford. The
charge was amended to willful and wanton
reckless driving He was given the usual DU1
sentence.
*
— Archie Lee Cuvier Jr.. 26. of 420 Dunbar
St.. Altamonte Springs, arrested Nov. 28
alter his car crossed thr lanes o f Stale Road
46 In Seminole County. He Is scheduled to
lx- sentenced Aug 26
—Mamie Griffin. 26. of Snow Hill Road.
Geneva, arrested Feb 15 after her car was
seen traveling with a flat tire on U.S.
Highway 17-92, Sanford — Deane Jordan

Surplus Food Distribution Set For 3 Days A t Crooms
Some 5,000 disadvantaged
Seminole County fumlltes are
scheduled to receive cheese,
butler urul rice In the surplus
government food distribution
p rogra m on W e d n e s d a y .
Thursday and Friday.
The food Is supplied by the
U S. Department of Agriculture
ihrnugh the slate Department of
H ea lth a n d R e h a b ilit a t iv e
Services. It Is distributed by the
Central Florida Chapter of the
American Red Cross
On Wednesday from B am . to
3 p m . the food wilt be distrib­
uted at Crooms High School.
2200 W. 13th St.. Santard. for
persons living In Sanford (ZIP
code 32771). Lake Mary (32746),
Lake Monroe (32747) and the
Springs ares (32779).
On Thursday from 10 a m. to 3

p in. at the Altamonte Commu­
nity Chapel. 825 State Road 436.
Altamonte Springs, for persons
livin g In Altam onte Springs
132701). Casselberry 132707).
Winter Springs (32708), Forest
City (32714). Fern Park (32730).
Goldenrod (32733). Longwood
(32750). and for those living In
Sem inole County but whose
m a ilin g address Is A pop ka
132703). Maitland 132751) or
Winter Park (32792).
Friday. 10 a.m to noon. Bap­
tist Church. Lake Mills Drive.
Chuluots. for those living In
Geneva (32732). Oviedo (32765)
und Chuluots (32766).
Sem in ole County residents
who believe they are eligible, but
have not yet registered for the
surplus food program may do to
at their ZIP code location and

or that som r public-spirited
may receive food the same day.
Those with questions on eligi­ person or company will help
bility may call thr Red Cross tn defray the cost." Mrs. Merrill
Longwrxxl at 831 3000
Mid
— Doans Estss
Kay Merrill, director of market­
ing and public relations for the
Red Cross, said the group Is sill)
looking for someone who will
donate refrigeration space for the
program.
The food commodities are now
trucked In from the Lake Wales
central w arehouse for each
month's three-day distribution
Enough food Is delivered to
Crooms for the Wednesday dis­
tribution and the balance ts
loaded onto a rented refrigera­
tion truck.
S h e s a i d t h a t Is v e r y
expensive. "W e hope we can
come up with some kind of
refrigeration In Seminole County

E v e n i n g Ilc ru k J
(Uses ui &gt;•«&gt;
Tuosdsy, July », IMS
Vol 77. No J/4
P ublithrd Doily snd io n S o y . t x i f l
Vitwrdsy Or Th* lo n to rd Htc «ld.
Inc )0S N . F ro n d , A x . M n lo rd .

Flo. n m .
W csnd Class P stt*«o Potd s i M n lw d .

Flood* urn
Horn* Dslivsry. Wooh. It.IS, Month.
H ill 1 AAonths. 114.21, 4 Month,.
Ur M, Ysor. UI St Dy Mail W »h
IM S, Month. M M ; t Month,
SIS.Ml 4 Month,. SJJ J4, Vo*r.
M 44
PSono ( ) U ) U I 1411.

�Evening Haratd, Sen ford, Ft.

Tuawlay. July *, tH J-JA

Affirmative Action Tops Court's Fall Agenda
WASHINGTON IUPI) — President Reagan, short
on victories In tills Supreme Court term, will have
plenty of chances to push hts conservative views
on abortion. aiTlrmatlve action and religion when
the Justices return In the fall
The court recessed for the summer last week
after handing Reagan defeats In four major cases
Involving religion In public life. However, many of
the same Issues — and others more divisive — are
among the more than 70 cases already on the
docket for the 1985-86 term.
It looks like It's going to be an Interesting term
and one of the more Important term s." said
former Solicitor General Rex Lee. who argued
many key cases for the administration. " I predict
the most Important single Issur on the court's
plate next year Is affirmative action."
When the Justices return to work on the first

Monday o f October. Reagan will resume his drive
to extend application of a 1984 Supreme Court
derision striking down racial preferences In
hiring and layoffdecisions.
The administration will argue. In an appeal by
while Jackson. Mich, teachers, that even an
affirmative action plan agreed to under a union
contract Is unconstitutional.
Some cases next term address racial discrimi­
nation in the criminal Justice system: the
propriety o f a murder conviction based on an
indictment from an all-white grand Jury, whether
lawyers should be able to strike people from a
Jury because of rare and If people facing the death
penalty have a right to ask prospective Jurors
about racial biases.
Hut the majority of cases represent efforts by
the conservative right to return to the days when

abortion was Illegal, religion was practiced In
public school and pornographic movies werr
virtually non existent.
Carl Loewenson Jr., a lawyer for the American
Civil Liberties Union, sees abortion as one Issue
where the court m ay make changes.
Th e landmark 1973 Roe vs Wade decision
legalizing abortion "m a y be re-examined and
could potrnllaity be either modified or overrruled." he said.
Th e court will review Pennsylvania and Illinois
laws that restrict a woman's right to an abortion
The administration Is expected lo file "friend of
the court" briefs In at least one of them
Also before the court for decisions by next
summer:
— Four major church-state cases In one. the
administration Is pushing the right of public high

Does Reagan Belong Up There
With Washington And Lincoln?
STURGIS. Mich. (UPI) - ML
Rushmorc Is a dandy monu­
ment. says Jack VanSchoIck.
but he thinks 'll would be a lot
d n n d l e r " w it h P r e s id e n t
Reagan's face among the Images
of greal American presidents
Van Schotck Is w agin g a
campaign from his Sturgis home
to make Reagan a permanent
fixture on the South Dakota
mountain
" I t ’ s a d a n d y n a t io n a l
monument." VanSchoIck said,
'but It would be a lol dandler if
Ronald Reagan was up there
too."
VanSchoIck. 61. Is so serious
about the Idea that he placed
*300 worth of classified ads In
the newspaper USA Today to see
If other people feel the same
way.
The feeler drew enough ten­
tative responses to encourage a
continuing rampalgn.
'T 've gotten 25 or 30 letters
and aboul *50 in contributions,
so far," he said, "but this thing
Is Just beginning to grow I figure

Hitler Forgers
May Get Away
With $1 Million
HAMBURG, West Germany
(UPI| — More than SI million
paid an artist and a Journalist
convicted of forging and selling
60 volumes o f A dolf Hiller
diaries lo a m agazine may
never be recovered.
Almost *1.6 million o f the
money Stern magazine paid to
K o n r a d K u ja u a n d G c rd
Heidemann has nol been found
an cl J u d g e H a n s U lr ic h
Schroeder. sentencing the men
Monday, made II clea r be
thought Heidemann bad most
of the missing money.
Kujau, a 47-ycar-old Stut­
tgart artist and Nazi relics
dealer who forged the 60 vol­
umes of diaries and other
related manuscripts, was sen­
tenced to 4W years In prison
Heidemann. 53. a former
S ie r n m a g a z in e r e p o r t e r
charged with supplying ihe
bogus diaries lo his employer,
was sentenced lo four years
and eight months.
Kujau s g irlfrie n d . Edith
L l r b l a n g . w a s g i v e n an
eight-month sentence for her
part In the scheme

Shortage Critical

Abuse Rampant
In U.S. Indian
Housing Program

If 1 can c o lle d 20 m illio n
signalurcs by the end o f (he
summer, we can gel the right
people In Congress to pay some
serious attention "
VanSchoIck. a catastrophe In­
surance adjuster, said he has
received favorable letters from
several Voung Republican clubs
around thr country and from
pro-life organizations In New
Vork and California.
Hut not everyone agrees Presi­
dent Reagan should Join George
Washington. Abe Lincoln.
Thomas Jefferson and Theodore
Roosevelt In the Black Hills of
South Dakota
One letter wrller olfered a
s u b s t a n t ia l d o n a t io n If
VanSchoIck would agree to have
Reagan's likeness carved on
volcano-wracked Ml Si. Helens
in Washington stale Instead.
V a n S c h o Ic k . d e s c r ib in g
himself as a patriotic World War
II veteran, said lie would w el­
come signal ores from both pnlllleal parties.

school students lo meet for prayer and Bible
discussion on the same basis as other school
groups
—Whether cities can ban theaters that show
sexually explicit movies from locating near
churches, schools, residential neighborhoods,
public parks and other establishments.
—Whether the federal government can deny
money lo hospitals that com ply with parents'
wishes lo withhold lifesaving treatment from
severely deformed babies
During the 1984 85 In in , many of the most
controversial cases on religion and elvil rights
were decided on 5-4 votes Those narrow margins
disturb the ACLU. Loewenson said, because "a
shift of one vote could Imperil all the church stale
decisions A shift of two votes could place the
equality and due process decisions In |eopurdy."

The Sanford Rotary Breakfast Club recently presented
benches for Sanford's Good Samaritan Home and Bram
Towers Seated is Bram Towers president Carl Engstrom.
and GSH administrator Thelma Mike. Standing, left to right,
are Ernie Cavallaro, Rotary club president, Mary Smith,
GSH beautification committee chairman; and Wen Stocksett,
the Rotary club member who made the benches

Historian: Major Nazi War Criminal
Advising Syrian Government In Torture
STANFORD. Calif (UPII — A historian asserts
that notorious Na/1 war criminal Alois Brunner Is
apparently living In Damascus, where he has
served as a rnnsullant In torture lor the Syrian
government.
Professor Mary Frlsllner told Untied Press
International that Brunner nppurently Is living In
Syria under the alias Georg Fischer, He is
believed lo be In good health at Ihe age of 70.
even though a letter bomb cost him an eye and un
arm some years ugo
He Is accused of having sent more than
128,000 Jews to Nazi death camps.

the anti-Semitic riots of 1938 In Vienna At his
own request he was assigned lo ihe office of
Jewish emigration In Vienna and became Adolph
Rich man's personal secretary.

Felstlner ts a professor of history al San
Francisco Slate University and a visiting scholur
at Stanford University. She gathered her In­
formation about Brunner from document* at thr
Hoover Institution at Stanford, other wartime
archives and Inlervlews with researchers In
Europe.
A sjaikeswomiin at the Simon Wlesenthal
C enter In Los Angeles, which traces ihe
wherrahouts of Nazi criminals, said Brunner Is
now ihe "m oat•notorious" fugitive on ilielr list
and agreed that Brunner Is In Syria

Despite his violence and haired o f Jews.
Hrunner wus able lo get cooperation from some
Jewish organizations. "H e wus able lo gain help
from them by granting small concessions in
return for which they were forced to help him
round up oilier J ew s," Felstlner said

Felstlner said Brunner was thought to have
been a consultant In lorture (or Ihr Syrian
governmenl Itt recent years
Brunner Joined the Nazi Parly In Austria al the
age of 19. He became a m r m lr r of the SS after

Felstlner said Brunner "was extrem ely violent,
lie couldn't speak to a Jew without cursing.
Every time he talked to a Jew he called the
l&gt;erson a pig Jew .' He would suddenly burst into
violence during un Interview. He hud a pistol
pointed at the person he waa talking In
throughout the Interview and very often tried to
strangle ihe person he was talking to." Felstlner
said.

But he always deported all Ihr Jews he could,
sending I rainload altrr trulnloud lo Auachwliz,
she added.
Felstlner said Brunner Is accused nf rounding
u|&gt; 4H.000 Jews from Austria. 43.000 from
Greece 23.500 from France and 14.000 trout
Slovakia.
Felstlner said ihr euar against Brunner Is well
documented. A death verdict stands against him
In France and West Germany has »&gt;crn Irylng
since Ihr war to capture him

W A S H I N G T O N 1UPI I —
M ism an agem en t of h ou sin g
construction programs lor Amrr
lean Indians has wasted $65 5
million at a time when rrsrrvalions face a critical housing
shortage, government auditors
have found
Department of Housing and
Urban Development auditors
cited "m ism anagem ent" in the
a g e n c y 's In d ia n p r o g r a m s
division In Denver for - cost
overruns, "non-existent" pro­
ject* and 91 I homes that should
h a vr been available lor orrupancy by Dccrinltrr 1983 but
» err never completed
Grady Majdes. HUD's regional
director In Denver, said his office
Is responding to the inspector
general's March audit with u
"new management train to cor­
rect the problems and get the
jtlpellne moving again."
The Denver office oversees
Indian housing progrums in
U ta h . C o lo r a d o . M o n ta n a .
W y o m in g , North and South
Dakota and Nebraska
"F r o m u social conscience
point of view. It's u very un­
d esira b le situ a tio n ." M aples
said,
Despite the mismanagement
In tire Denver region, HUD has
no plans to audit housing pro­
g ra m s In oth rr region s, an
agency official In Washington
said.

With more than 33,000 hom e­
le s s A m e r ic a n In d ia n s n a ­
tionwide. "Ih e situation Is soon
lo be disastrous." said Jim
Wugenlandcr. a Denver lawyer
who specializes In Indian law.
"W e 'll lie back in the 'HOs. with
jreople living In cars and chicken
coops."
"T h ere are some gaps." ac­
k n o w le d g e d J oh n M e y e r s ,
director of HUD's Indian housing
program in Washington. " I don't
Ihlnk anyone would try to sell
you the notion that we're Hirel­
ing Ihr need."
Census Bureau statistics show
that 47 percent of ihe 11.888
residents of thr Oglalu Sioux
reservation In South Dakota live

Iwlow ihe poverty level
The H o u s in g A s s is ta n c e
Council, a non-profit housing
group in Washington, estimates
tit) percent of the Og1.il,i rest
dents live In houses tfiat have no
Indoor toilet facilities and lltllr or
no Insulatino Nearly all are
overcrowded
"A lot of them (tumiliesl are
doubled uj&gt;." said John Rich­
ards. an official at the Oglala
Sioux Housing Authority "A lot
of houses have three or four
larnllles W e've got about 1.300
units but there's a real nerd lor
about 2.600 "

A 27-year-old ntothri ol live.
who asked not to to- Identified,
said she has been on a bousing
walling list lur seven years at the
Northern Cheyenne reservation
lit L a m e D e e r . M ont H er
husband Is unemployed.
"I live In a 60 foot mobile
bottle with toy husband and
children." she said, "There are
seven of us. Mv only electrical
hookup Is by extension cords
plugged Into an outlet on un
electrical pole.
" I don’t have running water.
There Is a house next door and
we get our water from a fsucelj
outside. It's really hard, but
there's Just nothing available.”
She said her family bathes at
another hom e "about every
other day.”
Richards said tfir Oglala reser­
vation will get only 85 of 2.000
houses scheduled for develop­
ment by HUD nationwide Oils
year.
Among Ihe problems undercovered by the auditors
— Funds Intruded for c o n ­
st ruction o f a 50-home develop­
ment In South Dakota were used
tor operating expense* by Ihe
Oglala Sioux housing authority,
resulting In a 91 23 million loss
Thirteen units w eir eventually

hull)
—C ost o v e r r u n s to ta lin g
n e a r ly $2 1 0 ,0 0 0 on w ork
budgeted at Just over *380,000
in four projects In Montana and
Wyoming

Two Arrested After Police Find Marijuana In Vegetable Garden
A crop of 42 marijuana plants
nestled among thr vegetable* In
a Longwood backyard garden
have brought arrest of the couple
accused of cultivating Ihr Illegal
crop.
Seminole County drug tusk
force agents, arm ed with a
warrant, searched the couple's
properly at 118 Lenon Lane al
aftout 6:55 p.m. Monday, a
sheriffs rrjxirt said
L a w m en fou n d ih e crop,
harvested It for evtdence and
arrrsled the couple, thr rejjort
-wtlll

Longwood police detectives
had lipped Ihe drug agents to
the location of the pot crop,
police detective Smokey Parr
said. A citizen had reported the
suspicious plants to Longwood
police who confirmed their pre­
sence and turned the caae over
to the task force. Parr said.
Theodore Charles Wayt, 24.
and Donna Marie Pedlcone. 28.
were both charged with cultiva­
tion and poaaesslon of mari­
juana. They have been released
Irom the Seminole County Jail on
•5 .0 0 0 bond each add are
scheduled to appear In court
July 29.
LIOHTER THEFT
A man who was being chased
on foot by three persons when a
Seminole County sherlfTs depu­
ty stopped them along State
Road 436. Casselberry, lias been
charged with burglary to a
conveyance and poaaesslon of
less than 20 grams of marijuana.
The suspect, who was nabbed
at Gooding's Plaza. Iiad been
pursued from nearby Summit

Plaza where witnesses said be
had been seen Inside a parked
pickup truck, u slier Ill's report
said.
The owner of Ihe truck said a
jar of change, several cigarette
lighters and mulches werr miss­
ing from Ihr truck. The deputy
reported finding In the suspect s
posscsson two cigarette lighters
the victim rejxtrtedly Identified
as his and a small quantity of
marijuana
Victor Thomas Wood. 28. o f
2660 Red Bug Lake Road.
Casselberry. was arrested at
about 11:45 p in. Sunday. He
was being held In lieu of *8.000
bond.
BATTERED WIFE
A 2 4 -year-old C asselb erry
woman told police her husband
p u n ch ed h er In the h ea d ,
grabbed her by the neck, tried lo
throw her Into a bedroom and
put a pair of scissors lo her
throat. Police charged the sus­
pect with battery’ spouse abuse
Rosana Aqulrre. 24. of 11
Summerset Ten. had a knot,
bruises and red marks on her
face when she reported the
alleged attack lo Casselberry
police al about 3 40 p.m. Satur­
day.
Guillermo Aqulrre. 24. was
arrested at his home and has
been released on *500 bond. He
Is scheduled to appear In court
July 16.
DUI ARRESTS
Th r following persons have
been a rre s te d In S e m in o le
County on a charge of driving
under the Influence:
- E r ic F. Benton. 36. o f 113

approached Miller gol buck In
the car. The en gin e of the
vehicle wus running, a sheriffs
report said He was charged with
* F/res
DUI and claimed lo have no
Identification. When he was be­
* C o u rts
ing bookrd Into Jail deputies
found he had several Items of
* P olice
Identification and a charge of
obstruction by (alsr Information
ILtniry Drive, luikr Mary, was was added
—Ronald Norman Evans. 39. of
arrested at 2:35 u.m Sunday
120 S. Sunland Drive. Sanford,
after his car failed to maintain a
single lane on U.S. Highway at 12 30 u.m Saturday after hts
car was seen weaving on U.S.
17-92. Casselberry.
Highway 17-92. Longwood
—Timothy Edward Myers. 27. of
Richard Lee Hodman. 45. of
2369 Pine St.. Oviedo, by Oviedo
UUI E. Ballard Ave., Altamonte
police at 2:38 a.m. Saturday on
Springs, at 3:55 a m Saturday
on State Road 430, Allamontc
Alafava Woods T rail. Oviedo.
B U R O L A R IE S * THEFTS
Springs, after hi* vehicle re­
Ceiling fans and other Hem*
portedly almost hit a vehicle
exiling from a parking lol. He with a combined value of about
was also charged with reckless *400 were stolen along with a
*300 swimming pool pump from
driving
—Richard Clarence Plummer. a home construction site at 2068
38, of H I3 Magnolia Ave.. San­ Hutton Point, lol 41. Longwood.
ford. at 11:52 p m . Saturday on Saturday or Sunday. The
after he was found sitting In his Items belong lo John N West.
car with Ihe headlights on and 41. of Holly Hill. Longwood.
key In the Ignition while parked
Stereo gear and cosset I e tapes
across a sidewalk on Hlh Street
with u combined value of ubout
in Sanford.
—Ronald £. Morris. 37, of 1102 *160 were stolen from Gerald
Lisa Lane. Apopka, was arrested Lucas, 30. of 1709 Tiffany
at 12 35 a.m. Saturday after his Square Apartments. Fern Park,
rat failed lo maintain a single on S atu rday o r S u n d ay, a
lane on U.S. Highway 17-92. sheriffs report said.
Longwood.
A thief look the tires and
—Larton Henry Miller. 41. of
wheels from the rur of David A.
Cape Coral, al 9:18 p.m. Friday
on Stale Road 46 east of In­ T a y lo r. 25. of V a lley Forge
Apartments *1-D. 391 E. Alta­
terstate 4. Sanford. A sheriff's
monte Drive. Altamonte Springs,
deputy reported spotting Miller
while the vehicle was parked at
outside his car standing In the
his home between 7 and 8 a.m.
r o a d . W h e n th e d e p u ty

Action Reports

Friday, a sheriffs report Mild.
Donald P Browning. 42. of
6 0 6 F o x V a lle y D r iv e .
Longwood, reported lo deputies
ibat a 45-eallber autom atic
handgun valued al *750 was
stolen from hi* home between
June 18 and Sunday
A shotgun worth *200 wus
s t o l e n fr o m th e h o m e o f
Christopher J. Brown. 23. of
8181 Via Bonita St., Sanford,
between June 1 and Saturday.
Deputies have the name o f a
suspect In the case
A thief took a 91.000 Suzuki
motorcycle from the garage of
Alan J
M yers, 39. o f 100
Sunland Drive. Sanford, on Fri­
day or Saturday. The cycle Is a
1983 model, deputies reported

A $400 motor w as stolen from
a cement m ixer at a construction
site on Howell Brunch Road to
southeast Seminole County. The
engine was stolen Friday or
Saturday, a slie rllfs rejMirt said,

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Tuesday, July 9, 1985—4A
Wayn* 0. Doyit, Publisher
Thoms* Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director

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How To Unite
Against Terrorism
The president's threat recently to retaliate
against Lebanon If Ibc hostages weren't freed
didn't so much reflect American bluster as It
did the lack of any concerted response of all
civilized nations to International terrorist
attacks We consider going H alone because
(here In neither machinery nor agreement
about ihe whole world going together.
There was a time when. In the absence of
effrctlvr Cuban sanctions against hljnckcrs.
American airliners were routinely seized and
diverted to Havana. That stopped when the
Cuban government stopped giving the hi­
jackers safe haven. Parts of the Middle East
now serve a similar purpose, with one
exacerbating difference, and that's the Implic­
it — and sometimes explicit — encourage­
ment provided terrorists by certain govern­
ments: Iran Is still harboring the hijackers of
a Kuwaiti airliner who murdered two Am eri­
can passengers: Libya Is still cheering on
lerrorlsts and. more than likely, training
them and financing their activities: Syria
sponsored and hostrd the Lebanese militias
that held Americans hostage In Beirut.
Lebanon Is still a training ground for
terrorists of every stripe.
To Isolate those nations from International
air traffic would not pul all hijackers out of
business: certainly It wouldn't rnd all terror­
ism. Hut a declaration from the world's
civilized nations ihui unless such sponsorship
ol terrorism ceases, their airlines will boycott
the offending countries — and all airports
abroad will be closed to their airlines — would
send a powerful message.
To be effective, such a policy would have to
Include boycotts of airlines and airports that
continued to traffic with the friends and
sponsors of terrorism, which Is to say that II
will require more than lip service from the
International community. Hut unless such
steps are taken, terrorism will Increasingly
become an Instrument of national jxdley and.
even among civilized nations, an element to
be bargained over and compromised with.
And the more that occurs, the more we will
all tie hostages.

Step Down, Judge
The arrogance of some high-placed public
officials can be oppressive. Not only for the
public that those officials are Heeled or
appointed to serve, hut for the employees
those officials hire to help them.
Hlclmrd Neely, the chief Justice nl the Wesl
Virginia Supreme Court, fired his 5U-year-old
secretary lor refusing to continue to baby-sit
lor his 5-year-old son.
The secretary said that the baby-sitting
demands had become (on much She had
watched tin- child right consecutive days In
May und "on and off" for three weeks since
then. She saltl she hud stayed with the fx»y
either id Neely's home or her home, und that
it was beginning lo affect her health.
The National Organization for Women Is
asking lor Neely's resignation.
Neely says that lie asked his secretary lo
baby-sit only when he was away on business
and that his stall serves at Ills "will and
pleasure."
To what extent Is an employee expected to
go In serving the personal needs of a boss?
How does an em p loyee deal with the
des|M*tism ol a Judge Hlclmrd Neely?
Neely abused his public poslltori by even
asking the secretary to baby-sit. He should
resign, lake oil his black robe, step down from
Olympus and come back to earth.

BERRYS WORLD

DICK WEST

M o r e P a n d a m o n iu m A t T h e National Zoo
WASHINGTON (UP1I - National Zoo officials,
who are nothing If not potlyamuilsh where
pandas are concerned, now arc hoping LlngLlng and Tslng-Tslng, gifts to the United Stales
from China, will produce a cub In October
through natural causes.
I hope so. too. but after 13 years I have
become more ling hngish than pollyannlsh.
Frankly, my faith In the abllllty of these pandas
to reproduce In captivity Is wearing a bit thin.
The current optimism Is based on the faci the
couple set a coupling record — twice In one day
by actual count — last week.
Once before, they tried artificial Insemination.
If the hormone Injections that apparently
Induced Llng-Llngs brief and fragile mating
cycle this year don't live up to expectations. I
suggest trying X-rated movies next time.
It Is Irur that risque films haven't been very
effective at stimulating gorillas According to
U f r magazine. Michael and Koko. two California
apes who have learned sign language but have
no heirs lo Inherit that knowledge, have seen
both "a gorilla sex film made In a Swiss zoo"

and a rented X-rated movie.
Neverthless. U f r reports, their relations havr
remained strictly platonic.
Pandas, however, m ay be different. So
perhaps a little panda pornography Is worth a
try.
The main difficulty may be obtaining suitable
malertal
Salacious films are easy to obtain. Virtually
any good porno parlor renting video cassette
movies for home viewing could be a source of
supply.
Hut there Is no guarantee that pandas, like the
San Francisco g o rilla s . "Im ita te hum an
be ha vlor." To the contrary
H sing-H slngs love-making technique has
been described as Inept, whereas male porno
sta rs g e n e ra lly are c re d ite d with b e in g
extrem ely ept. If there is such a word. Anyway,
you get the picture.
Nor Is there any assurance that Llng-Llng and
Hslng-Hslng might be turned on by private
screenings of a gorilla sex film h seems as likely
they would Imitate human behavior as ape apes
A more productive route might be to persuade

China to make a panda sex film. Switzerland
being notoriously short of such animals. But you
know how the Chinese are.
A more fertile course might be to persuade a
couple of human porno stars to don panda
costumes. That way. they could serve as role
models for Llng-Llng and Tslng-Tslng,
However, even a genuine pseudo-panda sex
film In living color might not achieve the desired
results. Not all females, the experts tell us on the
Phil Donahue show, are aroused by porno­
graphy. If that be the case In the animal
kingdom. LJng-LIng might not be excited by the
sight of a male actor cavorting around In a
panda suit.
And It would no good to get Hslng-Hslng In
ihe mood If Llng-Llng only wants to watch soap
operas, or w h atever Pandas do In those
circumstances
Such n film seemingly has better possibilities
than teaching the pandas sign language,
however. Ling-Ling s first achievement probably
would be to master the sign for "N ot tonight. I
have a headache."

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

EDWARD J. WALSH

Congress
Changes
Its M i n d

F a c to rie s :
End O f
A n Era
Americans were relieved to see
that the economy grew u healthy
3 1 pcrrrnt In the second quarter —
healthy, that Is. In rebound from the
pructkally nonexistent growth of
0.03 percent lor the first I lu ce
months of I he year The recovery Is
now thirty-three months old. con­
founding the iK-ssImlsts.
It has not. however, been u
consistent recovery. While certuln
Industries, such us automobiles and
construction are (looming, the U.S.
economy has developed a spilt
|iersonnllly. Since July ItlH-t. out­
put from the nation's mines and
factories has lieen flat, even while
GNP grew 2.5 percent overall. In the
past year, 2.5 million Jobs have
been created in service Industries,
while manufacturing employment
has stagnated. The trend goes buck
lor years: In the past decade.
America's "Fortune 500" compa­
nies have lost 1 5 million Jobs. In
the same period overall em ploy­
ment In the U.S (ms grown 37
percent.
The black-and-white picture Is
also reflected geographically. Cities.
Ill genrrul. are doing well — even
New York lias finally balanced its
books The growth of the service
sector, particularly In International
banking and trade has again made
cities Im portant and attractive
places lo live and work, fostering a
hull market In urlian real estate.
The durk cloud wllliln that silver
lining, though, Is the decline of
small towns and rurul communities.
A recent paper by Daryl Hobbs,
director of the Office of Social and
Economic Analysis ol the University
ol M issouri, published by the
Southern Growth Policies lk&gt;urd.
explains that the small. Indepen­
dent manufacturing firms wlcli for
years have provided Jobs In rural
communities have Ix-en till hardest
by the llallenlng ol the durable
goods sector nationwide. The tradi­
tional attractions of small towns to
Industry: low wages, rock-bottom
taxes, and no unions are less
lmporlunt lo business today. If
wages are low In the South, they are
lower still In Singapore.
E v e n w o r s e , th r g e n e r a lly
mediocre quality ol elementary und
secondary school education In rurul
towns — once u sure sign of low
taxes, advertised to new linns — Is
now u waving red Mag Thus young
people graduate In Jobs at tilling
stations or last-loud etiqmrtuma. nr.
more and more, simply move awuy.
Nevertheless. It remains that
manufacturing — the produellon ol
goods — Is uncqualed In providing
jo b s a n d p r o s p e r it y .

»

In refusing lo extend a bun on
U.S. military support for freedom
lighters In Nicaragua, the U.S
House o f Representatives made a
dramatic change In the congressio­
nal approach to communist adventin Ism In Central America. The will
of Ihe Congress Is hardening In the
direction of aid lo Nicaraguans who
w a n t to e s c a p e c o m m u n is t
thralldom.
The Sandlnlala regime and ils
friends and apologists In the United
Stales In effect have Invoked the
Brezhnev Doctrine, which Is that a
country, once under communist
control, will not la- allowed to
escape. The aid authorized for the
Irredom fighters clearly Imtks to
emancipation o f thr Nicaraguan
|K-ople.

JEFFREY HART

Bom b Shiite Enclaves
II was not a happy ending. Th e
hostages und Ihclr families have
every right to em brace Welsbaden
and (Nipping cham pagne corks to
celebrate Ihe release of loved ones
All ol that Is flue on the personal
level

Hut the Just ended ordeal of the
hostages was a complete irhunph
for International terrorism, and the
Oval Olflie can take no comfort In
the result The terrorists have at­
tacked U S cltl/eriH. and U.S. pro
(&gt;erty In the (orm ol Ihe TW A plane,
and so far thry have gotten away
with It completely This In Itsell was
a major terrorist achievement, an
astonishing political victory
Second, they have been able to
pul their case on the Inin national
media, with the psychologically
terrorized hostages telling us all
whal nice fellows Ihe hijackers are
This Is a lamlllar syndrome under
such circum stances Sometimes
women even "lull in love" with the
te r r o r is ts w h ile In c a p t iv it y ,
thunklul evidently that they huve
not been raped or murdered
Third, no one Is lonlrd by the
denial of any connection l&gt;etween
I be release o f the U.S, hostages and
the forthcom ing release by the
Israelis of their 700 Shtttr prisoners
Thai situation Is complicated, ihe
Shiites tx-lng detained were to some
degree hostages themselves, held hy
Israel to guarantee gi*xl bchuvlor by
the Shiites in southern Lebanon In
due course. Israel was going to
release most of them anyway. But
no one doubts that their release bus
been speeded up because o f Ihe

T W A hl|arklng. and that the
s(M-cdup Is purl of a U.S.-Israeli
understanding Even l( It were not.
It would look that way. und that's
what counts In politics at this level.
So ihe Shllles have got absolutely
everything they could want as a
resuit of the hijacking, and al no
dlacernuble cost whatsoever. They
have even gol awuy with the brutal
murder of Robert Strlhcm. all of
whose ribs were broken and whose
lace kicked unrecognizable before
he was shot Nothing has happened,
nr apparently Is happening, about
that
It Ls the Shllles und the hijackers
who should lx- celebrating, drinking
w h a t e v e r It Is t h e y d r in k
I'hroughoul the Middle East, and
in d eed w h e r e v e r som e group
Ix-lleves (hat It has a grievance,
thuughtlul (tropic must tx* seriously
considering going Into the hijacking
and terror bu sin ess President
Reagan has indicated to them that It
Is alxtolulely risk free
Ills own statements throughout
the crisis have been mind boggling
Mow could a prraldrul of Ihe United
States (Nisxlbty say that his highest
priority was to save thr lives of Ihe
hostages? It President Franklin
RtNisevelt had made It his hlghrst
priority to save U.S, lives, we would
havr never landed lit Normuudy —
where President Reagan recently
made such eloquent remarks The
president ol the U.S. takrs an oath
ol office, and alter hr takrs that oath
he Is not a private person. In whom
p ity (or In d iv id u a ls may well
become the highest priority.

Equally important, the change In
the opinion of the House indicates
the growing emancipation o f a
section of the U S population from
Nicaraguan disinformation in uKface of a massive communist arms
buildup tn Nicaragua, the blends ol
that regime have maintained that
Ihe United Stutes Is the oppressor
and threat to peace The visit of Ihe
Nicaraguan political chief to his
masters In Moscow opened the eyes
o f many people in and out of
f 'ongress
Unfortunately. not everyone has
abandoned ihe Nicaraguan regime.
A notable ease In |xunt Is U.S Rep.
Hill Alexander ol Arkansas who Is u
prominent figure In Ihe radical
cam p Hr has taken tn referring to
t h e Ir r e d o m * f t g h t e r s a s
Keuganlslas." This Isn't surprising
In-cause Congressman Alexander,
who surely Isn't representative of
his district or state on lilts Issue,
already has dismayed the folks at
home by going lo Cuba and pulling
around will* Fidel Castro.
Congressman Alexander Is out In
h-lt field on this Issue. Hr angrily
attacks ihe President's support lor
(lei, iocrutlc forces In Nicaragua as a
"c ry uncle strategy" and charges
I hat thr U.S. w ill he "directly
Involved" In Nicaragua.
Rep Alexander misses the mark
The need al this time Isn't for
dispatch of a division of U.S
murines but a tightening up of
restrictions on the disinformation
activities of Nicaragua's totalitarian
regime.
Up lo this point, for reasons that
are hard to understand, the U.S. has
allowed (he Nicaraguan Junta to
send Its political emissaries to the
U nited Stutes to propagandize
against effective action In support of
democratic forces

JACK ANDERSON

Bankers Set To Fight Checking Reform

- Z 0 L -—iQt/Xr^y.—,

"AND — IF ELECTED PRESIDENT IN 88 —
ILL PUT AT&amp;T BACK TOGETHER AGAIN!"

*0 -* * #

i»H* tm**

•&gt;

I.. ^ ** &gt;'»*»•* '8#.-« «.

By Jack Anderson
and Joseph Spear
W ASHINGTON — The holdup
men are on ihe other side o f the
counter these days at your friendly
neighborhood bank — and the
m oney m oguls o f the banking
industry are determined lo see that
II slays that way.
They're gearing up lor u massive
lobbying effort against u proposed
law that would let customers use
the money they deposit right away
Instead of a week or two later.
For years, bankers have Insisted
that "clearin g" a deposited check —
making sure there are funds to
cover it In the bank account on
which It was drawn — Is a timeconsuming process that can't be
telescoped without shaking the
Inundations or the banking In­
dustry. Hut in this era of computers
and high-tech communications, the
Image o f quill j»ens and celluloid-

t

i »

slrrve guards Is dlslortrd
It's no mystery why the tiankers
cherish thr clearance myth. When
they cun clear a deposited check In
a matter of hours hut make the
customer wait 10 days lo two weeks
before he can write checks on hts
deposit. Ihe banks get free use of the
Idle money for a while Multiplied by
millions of rhecks and millions of
days, this gives the hankers Interesl-lree loans from their customers
amounting to billions of dollars a
year.
The difference between Ihe time u
check la deposited und the lime the
custpmer is allowed to use It Is
called Ihe "flo a t." and the bankers'
slogan Is "V ive la difference!" — as
long os they re the only ones who
are allowed to use the technique.
The way the law stands now. the
bankers are the only ones who can
use the float legally. You'll recall the
pious horror the banking Industry

expressed — not heard since the
days of Bonnie and Clyde — when
the brokerage firm of E.F Hutton
was caught floating rhecks on u
systematic basis to get millions of
dollars worth o f interest free loans
at Ihe bunks' expense.
A few perspicacious observers
(xilnted out that the bankers' In­
dignation was hypocritical, a selfserving exercise In outrage at the
Idea that a mere stockbroker had
the effrontery to pirate the banking
fraternity's ex clu sive swindling
technique.
Such diverse politicians as Sen.
AUonse D'Amato. R-N.Y,. and Rep.
Fernand St Germain. D-R.l.. agree
that It may be time to put an anchor
on thr bankers' float.
St Gennaln ctlrd these typical
abuses to our associate Les Whitten:
— A Pennsylvania man deposited
a federal tax-refund check for more
than 81.000,.w alled nine days for It

I

to clear and l hen wrote a check on
it The bank bounced his check and
charged him a 830 overdraft fee. It
was poetic Justice: He was a retired
banker and his wife had been a
bank regulator.
— In a small California town, u
customer deposited In his checking
account a check for 81.203 drawn
from hts savings account tn a bank
Just down the street. He had lo watt
seven days for the deposited check
to clear.
— A New York City man got u
8 1.000 check from hts credit union
and deposited It tn his checking
account at a bank a few miles away.
Six days later he wrote a check for
8800 to pay a credit-card bill. It
bounced. The banka claim It would
be too burdenaom to wire or tele­
phone the bank that a deposit check
is written on to make sure It's good
— though many credit unions wlU
do this while the customer waits.

i

�SPORTS
Prom Fans 16,
But Altam onte
Falters In 12th

Sanford A m t f k m i ( M l *
Sub 0»itr»ct m v t t i

N»m#
AB H AVO.
714
)
To»iy Dvvkl
t
Alter! Anterton
......
t
S
113
Floyd H n S f l d l ___
• 4
300
Erm iny Howard .....
|
1X3
...... 4
Al Ptrkmi
y
1
Hdrvay Clin®** . .. . . .
J 1
143
Jamak JK k io n
o
......... to
000
Bay Adcock
o
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ooo
Eric WktMnglon
4 o
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Johntll 6 - rr»ingIon
0
000
2
Loronio Polk
2
0
ooo
C h ill Viada
. . ..... 1
0
000
Lokoicio Konnon ....
0
0
ooo
Ell Blanton
0
0
ooo
®*h*» — Andorion 3 H tndvrion 1. N r t l m f,
Howard 3. Duval C linger Kennen. Jackson,
Washington, Adcock
K i l t - Anderson |. Ptfhtnt }. Cllnger 7.

Henderson, Howard

Doubles - Duval. M»fx)*'VDr
Ham#* f a n

—

Anderson. Perkins. G in g e r,

Howard
SaMard M«tinnel« &lt;S»3&gt;«
Safe Ottfncf f#W t%

Nam*
Ruteri fitddmg
Colvin Oonakhon
Anthony Roterti
Tommy Mompton
Mika Dillon
Dovid Dunn
Rrton Grayton __
* ion to Brundidgo
Dor roll Canada
Domolrlut Prttloy
Al Diaon
Vcott Soitok
Sho*n Wothmgton
Jo* Wigg-nt
* “*■ H*y»«
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AVO
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400
3*4
103
Ml
230
231
200
141
111
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Canada

1,

trvndidge j. pr.tin/ j Robert* J Hampton
7 Crayton 2. Sestafe j

Dnnakfton 2. Dlaon.

Wiggins Padding
« IU

— D iion 3, tXnaldton J

Crayton 3. Hamptori

Rober** ?

Mayes. Dillon

Doublet — Roberts, C ra yto n . Prat lay

Tf »p*t - Dona idton
Hama Bunt — Crayton. Duon
Santord juniort (2 2 )0
District 4 r n y tt i

Name
Dwight Brinson
fiiy WIHlirrtft
Ronald Co*
Will# McCloud
Mife# M#ftftl#
Sammy Ed wards
JimbO Luci«
Hurn#tt Washington
N iffy Chit)b#rton
j#ff Smltfi
Kevin Nathan
Bernard Mitchell
Anthony Mcrthte
Oscar E dwards
S&lt;00t#r Leonard
Leonard Richardson
Vow Eric Small

At
.13
11
12
10
12
12
II
1
0
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to
1
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0
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0

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3
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AVO
343
112
417
100
000
333
27J
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700
1 000
SCO
ooo
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Runt — Mitchell 4 Brinson 3, Williams J. Co*
) Leonard M cCloud. Luc at A Mecthte, S

Edwards
H ilt
M cCloud 1 . B rin ton J Williams 3 ,
Co* J Mitchell 2 S Edw ards M Merthie
Doublet — M cCloud 7 S Edw ards Co*

Trtple - Mitchell
Mens#run —Co*

Stolen bate* — M itchell 3. Brm ton a Co* a, $
f dw ardl 2 W illiam s
"won tub dlafrlct tournament

•rynnerup In tub district
t funnarup In district

Harald Photo by Tammy Vincent

Darrell Canada, right, fights to get back to third against Ray Adcock.

Sun Bank Forfeits Titles
Llttlr American League champion Sun (tank,
which wen! 17-0 and swept Iwo straight over
First Federal in I tic* City Championship Series.
W’ l l l forfeit all Us (fames and the City Cham pion­
ship. according (o Sanford Superintendent of
Parks and Recreation JefT Monsori.
Ii was learned ilial Derrick Taylor, the top
pitcher for Sun Dank, is 13-years-old and
Ineligible.
Monson Mid prior to the Sub-District 3
Tournament began. It was discovered Taylor's
birth certificate had been altered. Another
player on the Sanford American League allslurs. Tony Chavers, was also ruled Ineligible
because he Is 13,

H f (Taylor) admitted II Ilial he doctored tils
birth certificate.*' Monson said. “ You can tell by
looking at It This one looks like Its been allrrrd
It's usually typed but In this case the typing was
written over.”
Taylor, who was born on Dec 27. 1971.
should have been playing In the Sanford Junior *
Major League which Is lor 13 14 year olds
Chavers. who never produced a birth certificate
but. according to Monson adm itted he too was
13. should also have Ix-rn In the Junior League
"It's really a shame." Monson said "Derrick's
really u good kid I don't know why he did II. 1
don't think he really realized the extent of what
he was doin g."
— Chris Plater

By Kevin G ross
Special to th e H erald
MAITLAND/OVtEDO - Don't
d o a double la k e on that
d a t e lin e . M o n d a y 's n ig h t's
opening Little League Baseball
District 14 Division 2 All-Star
Tournament game was such an
extravaganza it look two cities,
tw o fields and 12 Innings to
complete,
M a itla n d 's N a te H osk in s
dashed home on a passed kill
with two outs In the lop of I hr
12th inning as Maitland claimed
a 4 3 victory over Altamonte
Springs In Senior League AllStar action In ihr hist Inning at
Oviedo's Lllllc League complex
" l l was big win for us." wild
M a 111 a n d m a n a g e r J I m
Sandberg
"Oviedo (Maitland's
r.exl imponrnii has jusr one
pm Lw That's Alan Greene. If
we blow turn out. we have the
gam e."
Altamonte, meanwhile, takes
on Deltona, an I K I loser In
Oviedo Monday at 7 30 pm
Tuesday at Dellona
Monday's llrst I I Innings were
p la y ed at M a itla n d 's L illie
League complex, which does not
h.wr lights Alter Ihr teams
played to a 3-3 deadlock. It
Iteramr too dark to rontlnue.
The umpires then moved the
game to Oviedo, w lirrr there are
lights
(Jure there. Richard Davis
grounded oul to open the I*21li
Inning against Corey Prom, who
relieved Andy Anson in the third
inning Hoskins then lined a
single lo trll tlobby Ltrflalldrr
sacrificed Hoskins to second
With Willy Daunle at the plate,
consecutive passed tiulls allowed
Hoskins (o come around with Ihr
tie-breaking run.
T h r s e tb a c k m a r r e d an
otherwise herculean ellort by
Prom . The crafty left-hander

Davis, Cozart Stir Interesting
Twist Into Tonight's Collision
anyway.
It's Oviedo and Altamonte
Springs. IPs country vs city It s
a program on the rise vs. a
program entrenched In tradition.
It s kise hits vs. powrr. It’s
pm lung vs. pitching
And It's a natural. Oviedo's
Majors, the nurelua derived from
manager Wayne Jacobs' league
champion A n gels, and Altum n n lr A m e r ic a n Leagu ers,
whose b a s e Is formed by manag­
er Mike M o i t o ' s league kingpin
Tigers, have collided twice a l­
r e a d y In t h e T o p T e a m
Tournament.
Morro's Tigers pulled oul an
extra itinlng victory the first
time around and then blew oul
the Angels In the chumplonshlp
ante. Round 3 will lie tonight at
30 p m . at the Altamonte
Springs Eastmonte complex lit
the o p e n in g game of the Lillie
League B aseball District 14
All-Slur tournament.
The adrenalin started to (low
as soon as the pairings were
announced. "W e re as ready as
ready can g e l," said Jacobs
Monday night. "W e want lo beat
them bail Th e boys remember
that last Top Team game."
Louie Tulp. wt o serves as
Jacobs' coacb said he knows
exactly how to beat ihe Am eri­
cans "W e have to keep the ball
111 the park." he said Monday.
"They can't beat us defensively.
And we have more pitching
depth. We have six plUhers we
Can throw at them ."
Tulp said In Altamonte's 11 •I
tIIIs* game romp. 10 o f the
Tigers' runs were courtesy of
homers. " W e gave up some
walks which hurt us but Just
a knit all o f their runs came by
homers," said Tulp, "They have
to hit the ball out of the park to
beat us."
Tulp doesn't need a&gt; good
memory to recall the power
show. Chuck Lamb. John Jump
and Terry "D ow ntow n" Drown
jacked consecutive talers to
erase a 1-0 Oviedo first-half
Inning lead Jum p added a

Baseball
another homer later along with a
ground rule double and a single.
Chris Jackson unloaded u grand
si.im In lhai game Jackson shul
the Angels down on one hit to
pick up the victory
The Ovledoans have several
new additions which Jacobs said
hr ho|&gt;es will make a difference.
Danny Phillips adds a smooth
glove and a solid k it al shorstop.
Shelly Elliott. an all-star Iasi
year. Is one of I hose six pitchers
who also patrols ccn lrr field.
Ikith played (nr manager Dalr
Phillips second-place Dodgers
Th e next Iw o additions —
11 -year old Craig Cozarl and
12-year old Russell Davis — stir
an Interesting twist Into the
game. Both played In I tie Alta­
monte program last year before
the boundaries were strirtly en­
forced They live in Winter
Springs, so they were always In
the Oviedo district.
Jacobs and Tulp were more
than happy lo welcom e Iheiti
aboard "Cozart Is one of the
best hustlers I've ever seen on a
Lillie League field ." said Tulp
" I f you had eight m orr like him.
you'd never get beat ."
And Davts? Well. Jacobs and
Tulp think enough of him to
hand him Ih e b a ll for the
sta rlin g assignm ent tonight
against some of his ex leaguers
"Russell's a big boy (5-8. 140)
and he throws hard." said Tulp.
"H is best pilch Is Ihe fastball but
he's got a little bit of a curve,
loo."
Tulp said Cozart and Davis
were a bll reluctant to leave
Altamonte's program, as might
be expected after the outstand­
ing success (three tcums In the
final two of Ihe World Series the
post two years! Its had.
" W h e n th ey fir s t started
practicing with us. they proba­
bly thought th at a n y time
Oviedo played Altamonte that
Oviedo was going to get beat."
said Tulp “ But after watching
us practice and play, they've
been Impresaed. Th ey think we
can take Altamonte n ow ."

struck 16 batters and allowed
Just four hits, During one stretch
from (he sixth through the
eighth Innings. Prom fanned
eight consecutive hitters He also
Struck out the side In the lOth
A lta m o n te, which pu sh ed
across a two-out run In thr
seventh to send the game Into
extra frames, couldn't com e
kick in Its Iasi chance Prom
sent the center fielder to deep
center for the first out, Catcher
Pat DcLuca followed with a
single lo left center Kenny
Jackson followed with another
base hit to ccnlrr to push
DcLuca to second Llrllondrr,
who relieved Dannie In thr 11th.
induced Chad Cochran to |xip up
lor the second nut Penny SIqurrtos look a pilch on Ihr lell
shoulder lo load the bases hut
Warren Woodard grounded out
lu the second k l n r to end the
game Llctlander hustled over to
la k e t h e th ro w a n d b e a t
Woodard to the the k ig
"C orey Prom showed a lot of
heart." said Ralph Cochran, who
w as m a n a g in g In p la ce ol
Woodard who was on a business
lrip to Texas ‘‘ Prom wanted lo
stay lu even alter the (one hourl
break."
Prom said Iris arm never
weakened "I fell good.' he said
They Just got the lucky breaks
We didn't get the clutch hits and
we blew loo many chances."
Prom was referring lo u missed
suicide squeeze lit the lOth
Inning which would have won
the game for the Seniors.
Altamonte did cash In on Its
llrst opportunity In the second
Inning Jackson singled to left
S e * ALTAMONTE, Page 7A

E v e re tt
Sm okes
D elto n a

O v ie d o T a k e s
O n A lta m o n te
By Sam Cook
Herald S p o rts Editor
This game needs no hype —
htil you're going to gel some

Baseball

J e r e m y Hill

M a n r l n Pore

D a n n y P h illip s

Derek B e ll

play first base. Cozart will han­
dle the hot corner Blanton Is
(H-nclled In for right field Kevin
illagg and Todd Woodard are
neck and neck for the left field
spot. Eleven-year-old Maurice
Jacobs and Derek Belt supply

By Chris F ls te r
lle r s ld Sports W r ite r
DELTONA — Tile Deltona Se­
nior League roaches muM like
punishment. They lust couldn't
gel enough of ll Monday ulghl.
Exerpl for one Inning. Dellona
couldn't touch Dwight Everett
and Deltona's defense couldn't
handle Oviedo's sperd. Pilcher
Don Newhouser ran out of gus in
the sri'iinil Inning, htil the
coaches lell him In the whole
way.
After Oviedo took a 13-1 lead
ul the end of five Innings.
Deltona could have conceded
since thr gumr was. for all
Intents and purposes, over. Hoi
Dellonu chose to kerji on play­
ing. so thr O viedo S en iors
punished It some more
T w o Innings luler, O viedo
walked away will) an IH-I victo­
ry In Ihe ojienlng round of (hr
District 14 Division 2 Toimiu
in e n I a t t h e C h a r l i e
Putilus/Dcllonu Little League
Field.
"S in ce they (l&gt;rlt&gt;nlul didn't
concede I Just turned Ihr guys
loose on the bases," Oviedo
manager David Austin said "W e
ran them right ou l o f the
ktl Ipark."
Everett tossed u five hitter
with ihe only run he gave up
com ing on a Iratloll homer In Ihe
third by Johnny Proctor. Everett
struck out seven und walked
none
"K vrrclt was blowing some
sm oke," Ausltn said. "A n d ihe
defense was outstanding behind
h im ."
Tonight ul 7:30 at Ihe Oviedo
Lltlle League complex. Oviedo
goes up against Maitland. Austin
will go with ace Alan U rrenr on
the mound. The big right-hander
was a key factor us the Oviedo
A s tro s won the T o p T e a m
Tournament title.
After he heard Maitland said
Ihut they wanted Oviedo. Austin
sr Id. "T h ey got us. And they’ve
got all 6-3. 190 jMjiuuls of Alan
G reene."
Oviedo jumped on Newhouser
for one run In the top o f the first.
Derek Mays, who played an
"a w e s o m e " game at second
base, led off with u single, stole

See COLLISION. Page 7A

Sec SMOKE, P a ge 7A

S h e l l y Elliott

David B l a n t o n

W ayne Jac o b*

L o u i e T u lp
H*v*M Swl»i ky T»mmt Visual

O viedo has one of the most
exciting players In the area In
catcher Dana Allen "Dana Is Ihe
fastest Lltlle Leaguer I've ever
seen ." said Tulp " If he hit* a
gruundkill anywhere but to the
pitcher, they're going lo have
Irouble throwing him ou t."
B e h in d D avis. T u lp lis ts

#*# %

Marvin "liu b b a " Fore. Cozart.
ll- y e a r - o ld D avid B lan ton .
E lliott and J ere m y H ill as
O v ie d o 's pitch ers. Hill and
Foster Cole are also fighting It
oul for second base,
Fore, who was the spearhead
on Ihe mound and at the plate
behind the Angels’ success, will

I

�4A— Evtnlng H#ffM, Sanford, FI.

Tw tuUy, J f t t f f j f t f

F ris k y

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
A M E R IC A N
(M l

ST A N D IN G S
N A T IO N A L
IM

LEAGUE
w
if
41
44
il
U
V

Si Loud
N r . Yor*
Montreel
CTtKsgs
PTiileNetfTMs
PiTt*6u*g7i

i
33
33
3*
3t
*t
13

GS
Pd.
m —
su
**i JW
S3S sw
*K l i d
143 30

a
4)
4?
41
IS
J1

Sen Diego
L « Angeie*
CttKlfmeO
h o o t *«n
Aden**
Sen Frertdtco

34 M3
M *44
M 11*
il MO
i t 4N
11 371

See h o
V M M -Ill
Oecaoi
W M Pi — I I I
May* Deiean ill ana larky Trad.
('«*&gt; al Vw* 1*1 an. On* e ■h u e
i*II L-0*lan o n n l j - CNcag*
• *'•(••« |]|. Deriaw 1111

i f M MO . .
Cel dorm*
Oeliiend
i l 3* LI* S
41 1* 111 I d
K to te t City
*0 N 111 Sd
CAlcego
41 tt) ttt *
Seem*
u u
4M 10
MlrmetoT*
T e ie t
] l 31 170 M d
MenNey'i Netudt
Chicago*. Ootroita
Cleveland* Ta ia to
Mlnnotota 7. Baltimore 4 110 Mnlngtl
Vante*City J. New York J
Calltornla 1. Milwaukee 1 ( 11 Inning*).
(lotion I, Oakland I
Toronto 4, Seattle 0
T u e t d a y 't C a m p *
(All Time* E O T )
Chicago (Burn* I t ) at Detroit I Terrell
*41,7 M p m
Teaat
IMoo'on 4 7)
al
Cleveland
IBIyieven 711. 7 l i p m
Minnetota (Strom 7 7) at Baltimore
ID Martinet 7 SI, 7 J lp m
h an tat City (Black S f I at New York
IDuldry 10 l l . l p n
Milwaukee (Heat 7 41 al CaHtornla
(lu g o l l| ,l 30 pm
Botlon IBoyd *7) al Oakland (Blrttat
4 11. 10 I t p m
Toronto (Filer 001 al Seattle (Young 7
* 1, 10 3 1 p m
Wednetdey i Garnet
¥ ante* City at New York
Chlcagoal Datroit. nlghl
Tore* at Cleveland, night
Minnetota al Baltimore, nlghl
Mllweukee at CaHtornla. nlghl
Botlon at Oakland, night
f or onto at Seattle, night

—
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7
11
17

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phlla4ai»nia 7, Mouttan 4
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Lot Angela* at PittiLurgh. night
New fork at Cincinnati, night
Atlanta at ’ Aonlreal. night
Philadelphia at MoutTon. nlghl
Ian FrancUcoatSI lo u it, night

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Thinned Pitching Leaves Cubs Limp
U nited Ptcab In tern A tion el

N.L. Baseball

W itInnit lliclr NtarU’n*. ihrCubn are finished.
f'hleafo, wtilcli
frpelyovrr the wlnirr to retain
(he core o f llh pltcliln* Hlalf. It liiins&gt;lntl prerarlotiNly
near a lout hc.ihoh
Alter (Iroppink an H-4 decision to the San DIcko
Padres Monday, the Cubs Irall first-place St Louis by
si* f(amrs In (he loss column. The season is only half
over but they could surr usr a solid start l(Klay from
Sieve Trout.
"A s Is apparent, our pitching slalf Is pretty thinned
out.” Chicago manager Jim Frey said, referring lo I he
Injury problems of Hick Sultlllfe and Dennis Kckcrnlry
Not only are our slartrrs hurt, tail because of II (lie
biillpen has l&gt;eriL taxed. What we need Is a long ellort
out o f one ol our slarlers the next few d a y s.'
Kevin MeHeynolds hit a two-run double, tripled aud
scored, and lill a two-run homrr to lead the Padres'
M bit attack. The decision came after the Cubs won a
suspended game 0-3. Chicago led 4-2 allrr si* Innings
when the game was t ailed because of darkness on May

2*3 Innings of scoreless, one-hll relief for stutter Kd
Wojna.
"Th at's a start." he said "He came In and did thr
|oh W e’ve had a struggling bnlljien except for Gossagr
lie fStoddardl told me It wasn't the |)rettlest thing (will)
five walks), bol It got the Job done "
Stoddard was with the Cutrs last season. They could
us** him now,
" I though! our ballrluh worked uwful hard to get
hark into it." Frey said of the game
They may have to work even harder tn remain In the
pennant race.
M ets 7, Reds B
Al Cincinnati. Keith Hernandez went 4-for-S, In­
cluding a two run homer and an KHI single- to spark a
four-homer attack that powered New York to Its
seventh strlghl victory. Red* player-manager Pete Rosr
went l-for-5 and needs 36 hits to break T y Cobb’s
all-time hit record of 4.101
D odgers 4, P ira te s 3
At Pittsburgh. Dave Anderson singled home two
runs In the (mirth Inning and Fernando Valenzuela
scattered eight hits to lead L o n Angetes. Valenzuela
hurled Ills ninth complete game lo Improve to 9-8, Jose
DeLeon, 212. suffered the defeat.
B raves 7, K ijra t 1
At Ailanta. Rick Mahler fired a seven-hitter for his
J2ih victory and Dale Murphy drilled his league­
leading 21st home run in slop Montreal. Mahler. 12-7.
struck out three and walked one. Bill ( in Hickson, 7-6,

S.

"H e Jusl liusn't been finding (be holes," said Sun
Diego manager Dick Williams of McHrynolds. "H r
hasn't Itreii bitting die hull hard Hut on this road trip
he's been Cotiling out of It "
M r H e y n o t d n le a d s t h r le a g u e I n g u m e - w l n n l n g R B I
a m t Is tie d l o r s e v e n t h I n K i l l , b u t h a s s t r u g g l e d l a le ly ,
li e w c n l O - f d r - 2 8 a l o n e |k j I i i i a n t i w a s O - l o r - 5 2 1 .1 7 3 ) In *
h i* p r e v i o u s 14 g a m e s
" A f l r r t h e s t r i n g o f n o h it s I 'v e h a d . t i l l s w a s n i c e . "
s a id M c H r y n o l d s , " T h e ju ra t f e w t l a y s . I 'v e h it t h e h a ll
I t e lle r M a y b e I ' m c o r n i n g o u l o f I I . "

Padre reliever Tim Stoddard. 1-3, gave San Diego 3

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Faulk Sneaks In For Late
Kinley Goes Wild In Street Stock, Blows Doors Off Chevies
NEW SMRYNA UEACH - Following u Iasi lap
restart. Lee Faulk, driving the Elite Tow
Ingdtemco Firebird, squeezed under ihe slunnrd
Ironi runners lo win the 23-lap laic model lealurc
nil Srdurday nlghl at New Smyrna Sjiccdwiiy.
LeRuy Poller was second, closely followed by
luslrsl qnallller Hick Wilson. Greg Froemmlng
and llruce Lawrence.
•John Cochrun led Ihe ihunderrur main until
Ihe last two laps Kick Lokry then look aver when
Cochran went high In turn two. and moved on for
Ihe win over Cochran. Jeff Hlehr. Muddy Teed
and Tommy Patterson Lokey was also ihe
winner of Thuritduv night's feature.
Cochran's !»ud luck held In Ihe jMiwder pull
when his wife Muna tangled with a lour cylinder
car coming down for Ihe checker- Cochran's car
then Hipped and look down a good 50 (eel of the
hum stretch wheel fence. The four-cylinder car
also lurirl-rolled twice and both lady drivers were

Auto Racing
qulle lucky (o Irall oul without serious Injuries.
Once uguln. Osteen's "W ild B ill" Klnley'a
Cougar blew the Chevies' doors off to win the
slteet stock finale Jerry Symons, in the Cycle
Care Pinto, won on Saturday while the Skip's
Shoes and Weslern Hoots Pinto of Hobby Sears
took Ihe win on Thursday.
The annual Powder Pull Derby went to Lauru
Colliding. Second and third were Candy Pat­
terson and Diane Martin
Allan Walker survived Thursday night a demo­
lition derby, with the Hell brothers. Brian and
Nell, scoring another win In the Great American
Sack Race.
Raring Kesu/ls In S C O R E B O A R D

J im F rey
.b e m o a n s Injuries

Rick M a h l e r
... 12th v i c t o r y

was the loser. Tim Raines was 0 lor 4 (or the Expos.
Cardinals 6, Giants l
Al St. Lout*. Joaquin Andujar scattered 12 singles to
win his major league-leading 15th game and set down
San Francisco. Andujar'» third consecutive complete
game upped his mark to 15-3. Dave LaPoint took the
l o s s t ni slide
i
Ic 3-8
to
C h illies 7. A stros 4
At Houston. Glenn Wilson smacked three RHt singles
and Von Hayes. Ozzle Virgil and Rick Schu all rapja-d
out three hii* lo pace a 20-hit attack, lifting
Phlladcljihlu. Charles Hudson. 4-7. scattered seven hits
over 7 2-3 Innings, Mark Knud son, 0-1. look the loss

Hofmann, Duncan Key
Lions' Sweep; Davis,
AWS Lock Up Division

j

Rips 2 HRs\
Chisox Win
Ualted P tcss International
J u st w h e n you th o u g h t
Carlton Fisk might be washed
up...
i
"H e's making a believer out of
a lot o f people who had doubts
about him In the past." said
Lance Parrish after Fisk hit a
solo home run and a grand slam
Monday night to power Hie
Chicago W hile Sox to a 9-4
victory over the Detroit Tlgerf.
" I 'v e a lw a y s fell he was a
trrmendous ball player."
History will bear oul Parrish's
assessment. Fisk's two homcni
Increased his career total to 251.
with 242 coming as a catcher,
moving the 1972 Rookie o f th£Year into a tie with Roy Cant
panetla for third place on that
all time list. Only Johnny Bench
and Yogi Berra have hit m ort
home runs as catchers.
"H e's an Inspiration to us
young gu ys," said Detroit's Par­
rish. who at 29 Is eight year*
younger than Fisk
"H e's had problems physically
I hr last few years, but I urv
dersland h e’s gonr Into a weight
training program I'm glad to see
anyone try to Im prove him self.' :

Fisk was hamjiered all lara
season by an abdominal muscle
pull, and his batting average fell
more than 40 points below his
career norm. "Pu dge" worked
four hours a day. five days a
week during the offseason on a
training program to prepare his
body for another season behind
the plate and at It. and ohvlousljr
II has paid off.
Fisk's total o f 21 home runs
this year Is five shy of his
personal high, reached Ih rcf
limes With 50 KHI. he has a
shot at reaching 100 for th*
second lim e in his career.
Last year, the timing of Fisk s
hitting w as peculiar. His 2 1
homers drove in only 24 runs as
he found his hom rr stroke when
no one was on base This year h&lt;
hit a different rut
"I went through a thrcc-werk
stretch where 1 got six hlts.'f
Fisk said, "nnd four of them
were home runs. HojN-fully. I'll
have a few more multiple hit
games n ow ."
Elsewhere. Cleveland shut out
Texas 4*0. Kansas City downed
Nrw York 5-2, California nipped
Milwaukee 3-2 In 11 Innings*
Minnesota dumped Baltimore
7-4 In lO Innings. Toron to
tilunked Seattle 4-0 nnd Boston
topped Oakland 2 -1
In thr National league. It wan:
Chicago 6. San Diego 3 in the
completion o f a May 5 suxperislon: San Diego H. Chicago -fc
Los Angeles 4, Pittsburgh Ifc
New Y ork 7. C incinnati 5j
At l ant a 7 . Mont r e al
I\
Philadelphia 7. Houston 4: Sti
Louis6, San Francisco 1.
Indians 4. R a n gers 0
Al Cleveland, Neal Hralor)
pitched a six-hitter for his flrs|
victory In seven starts and
Carmen Castillo cracked a solo
homer to beat Texas Heaton.
510. struck out four and walked
two. Mike Mason fell to 5-8
Royals 5. Y a n k ee s 2
At New York. George Hretl
went 3-for-4 with two RUI and
Lonnie Srnllh homered and
scored three runs to pare Kansas
City. Ilrrt Saberhagen. 9-4,
Ihrrw bis fourth complete gam*
10 snap the Yankees' four game
winning streak and make a losef
of PlillNiekro. 7 8

Mark Hofmann clobbered an
eight b inning hom rr to win one
game and Craig Duncan hurled a
thrrcjhlller to lake rare of ihe
second contest as the Oviedo
In Ihe second game. Duncan
Lions swept a double-header
from the Oviedo Semlnoles. 4*2 was In complete control. Hr
and 4 1 . Sunday in Hlg League allowed Just three hlls. struck
baseball al Ihe Oviedo Little out eigh t and w alk ed tw o
League com j ilex.
D A V IS DRIVES IN B RUNS
Coupled with Ihe Semlnoles'
Apopka-Wesl Seminole sewed
5-3 setback lo Oak Ridge Satur­ uj» It division of Ihe District 14 Angels 3. Brew e rs 2
Al Anaheim. Calif., Doug Dr.
day. manager Mike Ferrell's Hlg League tide Sunday with a
leant finished lls first season In d o u b l e - h e a d e r r o m p o f Clnces' single with one out In
Ihe Hlg League with a 8-19 Southwest Volusia ul Orange the bottom of the llfit inning
record
scored Brian Downing from sec
City.
Sunday's flrsi game was a
Mike Davis had quite a day al ond base and gave the Angels
heurtbreaker for right-hander ihe plair for AWS as he had six file triumph. Donnie Moore. 6-3.
H r I an S h e f f i e l d . T h e
hits In second at-bats for Ihe day got two ouls for the victory while
kuucklrhalllng senior curried a and drove In nine runs as AW S Milwaukee reliever HobVlIbson.
5. took the loss
no hitler Inia ihe sixth Inning ran Its record to 23-2 with two 6Twins 7, Orioles 4
when "all of a sudden the strike games remaining.
zone started to shrink." accord­
At B a ltim o re. Mark Salas
M a n a ger Richard C o ffe y 's
ing lo Ferrell
powerhouse ends thr regular singled home Gary Gaettl to
The Semlnoles held a 1 O lead season with two home games. trlggrr a thrcc-run 10th Inning
entering Ihe sixth hm Mark Tuesday against Oak Kldgc and that helped Minnesota snap a
Merchant drew a one-out walk Thursday against Eustls. Both four-gam e lo s in g streak. It
and stole second Duncan was games are 7:30 p m. starts ul marked the first managerial
c o n fr o n ta tio n betw een the
hit hit by a pitch. Clint (laker l^ike Hranlley High
and Glenn Rctchlc then drew
in Sunday's first game. AWS T w l n s ' R a y M i l l e r a n d
walks, the second forcing In a broke open a close game with Baltimore's Earl Weaver, under
run fo r a l - l tie
Randy
live runs In the fifth Inning and whom Miller served as pitching
coach for flvr seasons
F e r g u s o n fo llo w e d w ith a went on to claim a 11-6 victory.
groundnut to push across the
DavU crunched a three-run
tie-breaking run and llohmum
homer lo hlgllghl the fifth. Jason Blue Jays 4, Mariners 0
drew another walk to reload the Andrews added an KHI single
Al Seattle. Dave Stleb and Jim
buses. Al that Juncture. Ferrell and scored (he fifth run on a wild Acker combined on a seven(lulled a distraught Sheffield and pilch.
hitter. leading Toronto to victo­
David Rape retired the final
Also collecting KHI singles for ry Stleb, 9-5. struck out five and
biller on a fly ball to center.
AW S In game one were Kevin walked one while allowing five
The Semlnoles sent the game Hass in the first Inning. Bruce hits over seven innings as he
Into the extra fram e In the Carlson and Davis In the second lowered his American Leagues
s e v e n th w hen R ic k y Kidd
leading ERA to 1 84 In his past
ami J oe Varltck In t'.e third.
doubled and Rape singled him to
11 starts In which he has won
A W S exploded lor 19 runs on
third. Rape then stole second
slx-of-elght decisions, he hoi
16 hits In the second game and compiled a I 04 ERA.
Tw o outs lalcr. Jcfl Grelslng hit
a slow roller down Ihe third base Ken Chapdlalne and Mike Brown Red Sox 2, A 's I
line which he beat oul for a hit to combined on a three-hit shutout.
At Oakland. Calif.. Dwight
Davts continued his offensive
score Kidd.
Evans drove in the tie breaking
Hofmann clubbed his two run surge with a 3 for 3 performance run tn the fifth Inning and threw
that Included u homer and five
burner In the lop ul the eighth
out the jxuentlal lying run at the
Kills. Bass was 4 for 4 with a
and Ellis Hell made u nifty play
plate tn the ninth to lead the Red
pair
of
doubles,
a
home
run
and
on Rape's slow roller to third for
Sox lo victory. Bruce Hurst. 5-7,
t h e f i n a l o u l t o s e v e r a five rlbbles. Mark Coffey drove In statterrd seven hits, struck out
three runs with two lilts, one a
Semlnoles' rally In the bottom ol
six and walked one over 7 1-3
homer. Chapdelalnc was 2 for 3
Ihe Inning.
Innings, with Steve Crawford
with
a
round
tripper
and
two
Sheffield finished with five
surrendering four hits over the
KDIs and Brown was 2 for 2 with
strikeouts sod seven walks
last I 2-3 Innings to notch his
a double
Kajre was the loser.
second save.

Baseball

�Evening HaraM. Sanford. FI.

El

SPORTS

Savages Search For Peak

IN BRIEF

Seminole's 15 And Unders Need To Improve Finish

Becker Feat Amazes Krlcksteln;
Pernfors Wins U.S,-Pro Opener
BROOKLINE. Mass. (UPI) — The birth of one tennis star
and the possible rebirth o f another were the focus of
attention on the opening day o f the U.S. Pro Champion­
ships at Long wood CMckrt Club.
One day after 17-year-old Boris Becker won Wimbledon.
Aaron Krlcksteln. the previous boy wonder o f the men's
pro circuit. Monday admitted astonishment at the latest
wunderklnd's triumph.
I knew he’d be a good player, but I'm stunned that he
won Wimbledon at that age.” said Krlcksteln. also 17.
"H e Is a hell of a competitor." ronceeded Krlcksteln. who
Is seeded fourth at the U.S. Pro and received a first-round
bye. as did the other seven top-seeded players.
Unseeded Guillermo Vilas of Argentina, seeking to
rebuild his flagging career, defeated Diego Perez of
Uruguay. 6-3.6-2 In one o f Monday's first-round matches.
In a m inor upset, ninth-seed Victor Pecclof Paraguay lost
7-5. 6-3 to John Frawley of Australia. In other first-day
matches. Yugoslavian Slobodan Zlvojlnovlc. who ousted
Wllander from (he All-England championships, lost 6-7
(3-7). 6-3. 6-4 to 13th seed Tim Wtlklson of Asheville. N.C.;
and IOth seed Francesco Cancellott! of Italy eased past
Jose Lopez-Marso of Spain. 6-3. 6-2.
Also, Bruno Oresar of Yugoslavia defeated Alejandro
Ganzabal of Argentina. 6 1. 4 6. 6-2: former SCC and
Georlga All-America Mikael Pemfars of Sweden topped Jay
Berger o f Clemson. S C.. 6-3. 3-6. 6-2.

By Chris Flater
Herald Sports W riter
W hile third place Is pretty respectable In a
tournament with a lot o f talented teams. Its
getting close to the time when the Seminole
Savages can no longer settle for third place.
This past weekend, at the Satellite Beach
Tournament, the Savages. Seminole Softball
Club's 15 and under all-star team, had a
chance to win the tourney outright In round
robin play, but couldn't do It and wound up
losing In the playoff round to tournament
champion Jacksonville River City.
The Savages, who have made It a habit of
coming In third place, will have to break
that habit In a couple of weeks In the Metro
Tournament (July 20-21). the qualifying
tournament for the ASA Southeast Re­
gional*. The top two teams from Metro go to
regional*.
Going Into the final gam e of round robin
play, which started Saturday at about
midnight, the Savages had a 6-1 record
while every other team had at least two
losses A win over the Satellite Beach Mets.
who had lost three games, would give
Seminole the title
But a defensive breakdown In the fifth
Inning enabled the Mets to scored six runs
to break a 2-2 tie en route to an 8-3 victory.
After Saturday's late-night loss, the Sav­
ages had to come right back Sunday
morning at 9 to play River City, who had
beaten the Savages. 9-0, In round robin
play.
River City broke the game open with nine
runs In the third In n in g when nine
consecutive butter* reached safely one way
1 or another. Jacksonville, which also won the
Savages Invitational, went on to claim an

(

Sports Festival Selects McDaniel

r •*

S a n fo rd 's Bill McDaniel, w ho developed q u a lity
weightlifting programs at two area high schools, has been
selected to couch the welghtllfters at the National Sports
Festival In Baton Rogue. La. The festival runs from July 31
through Aug. 6
McDaniel worked at Seminole High School where he was
Intstrumental with the weight training for former Florida
State football standout Mike Good. McDaniel moved to
Lake Mary when It opened four years ago He also coaches
Junior varsity football for the Rnms
Presently. McDaniel Is organizing a contingent to
participate In Saturday's Golden State Games competition
In Tampa.
' W e'd like to take a real good team." Mid McDaniel.
"A nybody 13 years old and up Is eligible." Call McDunlel at
323-2110 for Information

Owners, Players Still Haggling

k

NEW YORK IUPII — Major-league players and owners
Monday haggled over the financial condition of Individual
clubs In an effort to reach a collective bargaining
agreement.
The negotiation session, the 29th over the last nine
months, lasted 2 Vy hours and left both sides In dispute
over the data the owners have put forth In hopes of
convincing the players o f the woes they claim plague
baseball.
Donald Fehr. acting executive director of the Major
League Baseball Players Association, said figures were
examined for 12 American 1-eague clubs. He has asked the
owners to review the club flnunces submitted for 1984.
"W e 'v e asked them to tell us How much are you trying
to save.’ " Fehr said "Th ey still haven't told us and w e’d
like them to tell us quickly."

Astros Fall; Twins Rained Out
The Osceola Astros dropped a 5-1 decision to Miami In
Florida State League baseball Monday night at Miami but
retained a 2V4 game lead In the Central Division as Winter
Haven also lost. 3-0. to Vero Beach.
The Astros. 51-39. play at Fort Lauderale tonight. Bob
Parker went I for 4 Jtm O'Dell produced the lone Astro
tally with a sacrifice fly In the third Inning.
In other minor league action, the Orlando Tw ins were
rained out at Tinker Field against Chattanooga A
double-header Is slated for tonight at 6 30. The O Twins led
the East Division of the Southern league by 1 ^ games
over Charlotte. Greenville and first half winner Columbus

Cheerleaders To FCA Retreat
Tw elve members of the Seminole High chapter of the
Fellowship of Christian Athletes, along with sponsor
Donalyn Knight, left Sunday morning to attend the
National FCA Conference In Black Mountain. N.C.. at the
YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly on July 8-12.
Those unending Include Beth Nelson. Leslie Crabtree.
Suzt Nye. Julie Nye. Shawna Cole. Karen Edgemon.
Christy Gonzales. Lori Swain. Michele Hlslgnl. Jennifer
McKlbbtn. Lori Hall and Rose Speer.

...Sm oke
Continued from BA
second and scored on a single off
the bat of W illie Gainey.
After Everett mowed down
Deltona In the bottom of the
first. Oviedo scored tlx runs on
no hits In the top of the second.
Hon Veres and Richard Cobb
txnh walked and moved up on
Everett's sacrifice bunt. A wild
pilch allowed V rrrs lo score and
Cobb scored on the same play
when Ihe catcher overthrew the
pitcher covering home.
F le e t-fo o te d Joh n B oston
followed with a walk, stole sec­
ond and took third on a wild
pilch. Mays then drew a walk
and Boston scored when Chad
Duncan reached on a fielder's
choice. Then Deltona pulled a
illt le t r ic k e r y w h en , a fte r
Duncan alole aecond. second
baseman Bobby Berkms said
foul ball and Duncan alartrd to
trot back to first. When he tried
to go back to second. Duncan
was thrown out but Deltona
forgot about the runner on third
and Maya scored for a 5-0 lead.
Gainey then drew a two-out
walk, alole aecond. went lo third
on a wild pitch and scored on a
passed ball. Greene also walked,
took second on a pasted ball,
stole third and scored when the
catcher's throw skipped Into leii
field to make It 6-0.

Everett set Deltona down In
order In Ihe botiom of ihe second
with an excellrnl lunging catch
of a line drive by Maya saving a
hit
Oviedo went down quietly In
the top of the third and Deltona
scored Its only run In the bottom
half when Proctor slammed a 1-0
fast ball over the 317-mark In left
center.
Newhouaer set Oviedo down tn
order In Ihe fourth and an
excellent pickup and tag by
Mays caught a runner stealing to
end Ihe bottom o f Ihe Inning.
Oviedo tacked on six more
runs In Ihe fifth with key hits
Including two-run singles by
M ays and D u ncan. C harles

another excellent game as she spun a two
hitter with one Intentional walk. Lawson.
Tammy Jenerelte and Bonaventure. Jaudon
Jonas and Heather Meyer had two hits each.
The biggest win o f the tournament for the
Savages came In game five when they I -eat a
strong Miami Waves squad. 1-0 In eight
Innings. The Waves were undefeated going
Into the game. Seminole scored the winning
run In the bottom of the eighth.
Meyer singled to leadofT but was forced at
second by Bridget Jenerelte. Lawson hit
another fielder's choice but. when the ball
was dropped, both runners were safe.
Mamie Frey then pinch hit and moved the
runner* up on a long fly ball. After an
Intentional walk to Bonaventure to load the
bases with two outs. Tammy Jenerelte lined
a shot off the left fielder's glove to drive In
pinch runner Val Smith with the winning
run. Burke was the winning pitcher as she
held the Waves to five hits.
In gam e six. the Savages trim m ed
Pembroke Pines. 4 2 with Burke tossing a
four-hitter. The Savages Jumped out with
two runs In the first. Lawson led off with a
single and scored on a triple off the bat of
A re th a R ig g in s . R ig g in s s c o re d on
Bonaventurr's sacrifice fly. Seminole added
single runs In the third and sixth frames
The Savages won another game In round
robin by forfeit over Rockledge Rocko
Lawson was Seminole's leading hitter for
the tournament as she went 13 for 26 (.500).
Bonaventure wus 9 for 17 (.529) with five
walks She reached base 14 out o f 22 times
I 636 on base percentage)
The Savages will have this wrek off before
competing In the Metro Tournament at Lake
Falrvlew In Orlando on July 20

Softball
11-5 victory The highlight of the game for
the Savages w as Lom lcla W h ita k er's
three-run homer
In the tournament opener, the Savages
encountered River City for the first time and
the powerful team from Jacksonville rolled
to a 9-0 victory River City banged out 15
hits In the game and Its defense played
errorless ball. The Savages had nine hits but
c o u ld n 't push a cross a run. Sharon
Honaventurc was 2 for 3 to lead the way.
In game two. the Savages pulled out a 2-1
v ic to r y o v e r the M elb ou rn e Sharks.
Seminole scored the winning run In the
bottom of the fifth when Whitaker's single
eluded the left fielder, enabling pinch
runner Dldl Gibbs to score. Corrie Lawson
had 2 of the four hits In the game for
Seminole Nlkl Burke was the winning
pitcher, allowing four hits and walking
none. A pair of defensive gems got the
Savages out of a possible Jain In the fourth
Inning Katrlnu Shuler made a nice stab of n
low line drive In left center and first
husemun Val Smith dug out a low throw to
save an error
The Savages' bats came alive In game
three as they stomped the Jacksonville
Astros. 12-2 Tammy Jenerelte was 3 for 3
with a double and three runs. Lawson was 2
for 3 with three runs and Bridget Jenerelte
added a pinch triple. Burke was ugaln the
winning pitcher with a six hitter.
Seminole kept up the momentum In game
four with an 11-0 whitewashing of the
Melbourne Sharks 85 llurke Ditched

, Security

Another Cajun QB Seeks
SAN LEANDRO. Caltl. (UPI) Defenses throughout the Na­
tional Football League have had
to contend with the l-milslana
lightning arms of quarterbacks
Bert Jones. Terry Bradshaw and
Joe Ferguson over the last 15
years.
Now. another strong-armed
Cajun may be ready to enter the
league.
Bobby Hebert, the talented but
e r r a tic q u a rte rb a c k o f the
Oakland Invaders, leads his
te a m In to S u n d a y 's U S F L

...C o llisio n
Continued from BA
Infield depth. Anthony Mays Is
the backup catcher.
Morro. who said Davis would
lx- one of hla pitchers If he were
still tn Altamonte, was surprised
at Oviedo's choice to start the
game. " I will be very suprlsed If
Dubba Fore Isn't on the mound

...Altamonte
Continued from BA
and Anson forced Jackson at
second. Anton moved to second
on a passed ball Slqurrlon filed
ou t to c e n t e r hut J im m y
K r e in e r . w h o r o b b e d T e d
Schleffelln of a home run with
spectaculur fence smashing grab
to end the top of the second,
came through with a clutch
single to right for the 1-0 lead.
Noah Talesnlck followed with a
single ofT second base but Mark
A postolldrs grounded Into a
force out at third.
Maitland bounced back to tie
the gum r in the third. J.C.
Sandberg walked. Wayne Kemp
fo rc ed Sandberg on an a t ­

championship game with his
future undecided
Hebert's contract expires with
the Invaders after this season
and It Is uncertain what effect
the current USFL-NFL antitrust
lawsuit will have on his signing
with the NFL.
T h e p e r s o n a b le y o u n g
quarterbark has chosen to talk
more of the present than the

lu m rr over the last month, market u true free ngrnt because
rrfrrriug all contract qurstlonx the league's 1984 supplemental
draft did not Include players who
to his agent.
"We feel Bobby will have a had lieen In the USFL from the
tremendous vulue on the open sturt A bidding war. similar tn
market." Helicrt's agent Greg the one that erupted when
Campbell said
"lie has three Houston's Warren Moon came to
the NFL from Canada a year ago.
years experience on the pro
fcsslonal level und Is on his way Is expected to break out between
to his second USFL champion­ quarterback-poor NFL squad*
"Bobby has hud u relatively
ship game at the age of Just 24.
Sure, the USFL Is not the NFL Injury-free year." Campbell said.
but It still Is (letter than college "H e feels he Is strong enough
that he could possibly head Into
football "
Hebert will enter the NFL the NFL and h e lp ."

against us Tuesduy." said Morro
"He's got the experience and we
haven't faced him. But 1 don't
think It really matters w ho
pitches for them ."
Morro said additional hitting
strength should give his team
the ed ge, plus the previous
encounters. "W e have added
hitters comparable to the ones
we already have I'd say wr have
the better lineup on paper.

" I also think that we have the
etlge because we huve beaten
almost the same team twice
before. Our outfield has also
been greatly Im proved."
Morro said he has no In­
decision on whom will start.
"W e'll start Chris Jackson." he
said. "H r one-hit them before
and hr ulso pitched a no-hltter In
the Top Team Tournament. W r
Irel confident with him ."

Football

tem p ted s a c r ific e . H oskin s
fanned for the second out but
Llrflandrr kept the Inning going
with a walk. Duunlc followed
with a soft liner to left for the
RBI
Maitland took a 2 1 lead In the
top of the fourth Schlrfjelln
drew u two-out walk and stole
s e c o n d . He s c o re d w h en
Sandberg's two-out fly ball wus
dropped In center field
Alturnontr squared the game
In the bottom of the fourth. With
our out. Cochran, pinch hitting
for Anson, singled to left. A balk
moved him to second. T w o
passed balls allowed him to
score for u 2-2 deadlock.
Maitland rrassumed the lead,
again with two outs Kevin
O'Brien rtpjied an 0 2 rurvrball

Everett allowed only one more
hit In the last three Innings while
Oviedo scored one more In the
sixth and four In the seventh.
W arner's groundout drove tn
Greene, who had doubled, for
ihe run In the sixth. In the
seventh, the big hit was an RBI
double down the third base line
by Billy Moorehead
On the bases Monday night.
Oviedo swiped 15 bases and
wasn't thrown nut once. Boston
led the way with four aleais
while Greene and Gainey swiped
three each.

down the left Held line (or a
double. Berry Teague lined a
single to right Held to chase
home O'Brien.
It stayed that way until Alta­
monte pushed across Its run In
the iMitlom of the seventh to
force the extra Innings und
cliangr of site.
Manager Cochran said hr
w ou ld sturt G r e g M e tz g e r
against Deltona. "W e hope to get
a complete game from Greg."
said Cochran " I f not. Stqurrln*
will relieve."
Manager Sandberg said hr
w ou ld p ilc h B erry T e a g u e
against Oviedo "T e ll them we're
ready." said Oviedo manager
David Austin
We ll play them
right now ( I I p m I. Bring 'em
on."

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•
•

D I I T U I C T 14 U T I L E L E A O U I
M*|*r l a i | M All tt»r
Tovfnam .nl D fv llf.n l
ta .v d « r J » t y »
7 JO p m st Allamont* Spring* —
Adamant* A mar Kan v» Ovtado
7 JO p m t l Daland — Allamanlf
National v* Wall Voluv*
JvMar laagu* AH !l* r
Tavrnam .nl Dtrlilan I
Friday. Jv lr I
Adamant* II. Dalton* 1
latw Aay, M l *
Allsman** II. Ovlado 0
Irid tr. M r 1
Adamant* I). Maitland )
I r U i l Jalr It
7 JO p m at Ovl*do — Ovlado vt Watt
Volusia
Monday. July 11
7 X) p m at Ovlado — Adamant* &gt;«
survivor ot losars' brack*!
t*M*r laaga* Alt ttar
Taarnamanl Dtvlstaa 1
Monday. July I
Ovlado IS. Dalton* I
Maitland t. Allamont* 1. II innings
T vasday. Jvlr *
7 X) p m at Ovlado — Ovlado vs
Maitland
7 JO p m at Dalton* — Allamont* v*
Dalton*

Designed and engineered lor a
smooth ride and long mileage
Lifesover XLM' whitewall

CORDOVAN JET STAR

Warner added an RBI Infield
single and Richard Cobb drove
In a run with a sacrifice fly.

J
A

Tvgstfav. July f. l » * J - 7A

SANFORD

W *v*t*iri*rr

�*A —Evsots* Msraid, Santsed. PI.

Suspected Sex Killer Ng
Judged Fit To Stand Trial

Tvssdsy, July t, ItM

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
China To Sign 5-Year
Trade Pact With Soviets
. PEKING (UPI) - Vice Premier Yal Ylllti left for Moscow
today to sign a major, five-year trade pact expected to
quadruple trade between China and the Soviet Union by
1900.
Crowning the eight-day visit w ill be the signing of a
1986-1900 econom ic and trade pact (hat W estern
diplomats say is expected to Increase Slno-Sovlel trade
fourfold — to $6 billion — by the end of the decade.
Trade between the Soviets and the Chinese this year Is
projected at $ 1.6 billion compared to I 1.2 billion In 1984
Western diplomats say Yno and Soviet officials also will
discuss possible Soviet aid In renovating up to 400,000
Chinese factories — many built under Soviet guidance
during I he 1950s. Several w ere left Ill-equipped or
Incomplete when Moscow recalled more than 1.300 Soviet
experts from China In I960 as Idrdloglcal and territorial
disputes ruptured relations betwten (he former communist
allies.

Police Kill 7 Black Rioters
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) - Police shot and
killed seven black rioters In a lownshlp near Johannesburg
early unlay In the bloodiest confrontation since officers
killed 20 blacks In Ullrnhage three moi.tJv* «yo
A police spokrswotnan In Pretoria said Ihe shootings
look place about 1:30 a m. In Kwa-Thema. a black
townsidp about 25 miles east of Johannesburg
Police said In a biirf slaternrnl tlicit five men were killed
and two were Injured when officers fired pistols arid
shotguns at a mob Dial tried to burn the home of a black
police officer.
'In a similar Incident In Ihe same area, two men were
fatally wounded whrn police dispersed the mob with
blrdshot." the statement said. Police said they could give
no further details
At least 37 tilacks were arrested as [roller used shotguns,
rubber bullets and trargas to disperse Holers In KwaThema and In other black townships near Port Ellzubeth,
about 600 miles south of Johannesburg.
Today's shootings followed a wave of black violence
spurred by the slayings of five blacks In a police raid Krtday
In the township of Dudza. about 5 miles south o f
Kwa-Thema.

OH Tanker Bombed, Leaking
BEIRUT. I.eb.mon |UPU — A missile (relieved fired by
Iraqi warjrts hit a large Turkish tanker In the Persian Gulf
early today, set ting It on fire and triggering an oil leak from
the vessel, shipping Insurers said
Agents for the Lloyds of London shipping Insurers In
hahrnln reported the l HH.668-Ion Turkish tanker M Vutun
broadcast a distress signal.
Nueasnaliien were reported.
Valan's SOS signal passed on Ur l.loyds by Bahrain radio
sold It was struck by a missile on lls port side and was
positioned not tar (mm Iran's m ain oil terminal at Kharg
Island, a frequent target for Iraqi ulr attacks
The mayday m il said nil was leaking from the sturlxiarcl
side of Ihe ship, which was built In 1976 and Is owned by
an Istanbul company
Lloyds casually reporting officer Roger Iaiwrs said the
Viltan is Die fargrst vessel attacked In Die 'Tanker w ar" —
an offshoot o f Die nearly 5-year-old Iran Iraq war — and
(Misslbly Ihe largest cargo ship by tonnage ever attacked,

WEATHER
A R E A F O R E C A B T t Today
partly sunny und rather hoi wllh
s c a tte re d a tle rn o o u n thu n­
derstorms. High mid to upper
90s. Light and variable wind
except strung and gusty near
ihundeislonns. Ruin chance -10
percent. Tonight widely scat­
tered evening Ihunderstnriiis
otherwise fair. Low mid 70s.
Light variable wind. Ruin chance
20 percent. W ednesday partly
sunny and rather hot with scattcred afternoon thunderstorms.
High mid to upper 90s. Light
and variable wind Ruin chance
40 iiercetil.
NATIONAL REPORT! Walls
of name feeding on sun dried

...P a y
Continued form page 1A
Karen Coleman, a spokesman
for the school board said that
before n e go tia tio n s can gel
started, u lenlallve budget must
lie approved by Ihe school board.
Supt, Robert Hughes Is sched­
uled lo present his pruposed
budget on July 15 at (he school
Imard'a 2 pm meeting. Howev­
er. school board nlllcluls said
that Die budget would not be
completed until sometime Sat­
urday nr Sunday and that (hey
would be at Ihe school hoard's
Office on M rllon vllle Avenue
working on It this weekend.

grass and Umber scorched nine
Western states loday us record
beat seared Die nul Ion from
CaUfornla In the Great Lukes und
lliunderstornis sparked more
blazes wllb lightning
A R E A READINGS (0 a.m .]i
temperatures 85; overnight low
7 7 ; M o n d a y 's h i g h : 9 4 :
barometric pressure; 30.07; rela­
tiv e h u m id ity: 63 p e rc e n t;
winds: west-northwest at 6 mph.
rain; a trace; sunrise: 6:34 u rn,,
sunset 8:26 p m
WEDNESDAY TIDESt
Daytona Beach: highs. 2:42
a in.. 3 :16 |i.in.: Iowa. 8:50 a m..
9 35 p m .; Port C an a vera l:
highs, 2:34 urn,, 3:08 prti.i
lows. 8:41 a.III., 9:26 p m.s
H ayp ort: highs. 7:18 a m.. 8:37
p in,; lows, 1:09a,m,, 2:39p.m .
BOATING FORECAST) St.
Augustine lo Jupiter Inlet out 50
m ile* — Variable wind 5 to 10
k n o ts th ro u g h W e d n e s d a y
except for easterly seubreeze
around 10 knots near the coast
In the uftenuKins. Sett 2 feet or
less but up to 3 feet In the
.(l|grniM)ii Widely scutterrd aflern u on und e v e n in g thunderslonna,
EXTENDED FORECABT:
Thursday through Saturday —
Fair night* and partly cloudy
days. Chance of afternoon und
evening thunderstorms. Lows
near 70 north lo around 80
south Highs near 90 to mid 90s,

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Flowers For A ll Ort-as/ons

(fiulltna

Lt. George Kowalski, chief o f the police
homicide squad tn San Francisco, said Monday
Ng (old Canadian authorities Lake killed at least
six o f Ihe people.
Kowalski said Ng's remarks came Sunday
during a five-hour Interrogation by two San
Francisco police investigator* tn Calgary.
"H e's blaming Lake. Leonard Lake, for what
went on In W llseyvllle,’* Kowalski told the Los
Angeles Times. "T h is Is nothing we didn't expecl.
He's blaming Ihe other guy, Ihe dead gu y."
The officer said Ng told Investigators that Lake
killed Paul Cosner: Harvey and Deborah Dub*
and their I Vi-year-old son. Sean. Jeff Gerald, and
Cliff Peranleau. all from San Francslco.
The six are among Lhose listed as missing and
linked to Ng and Lake.
Nine bodies and about 40 pounds o f human
bone fragments were dug up on the grounds of
the mountain ca b in where Lake lived In
California. Sheriff*s deputies also found a con­
crete bunker wllh a cell like room equipped wllh
leg and arm restraints, allegedly used for
sex-torture sessions.
Ng was charged wllh three rounts o f kidnap­
ping and false Imprisonment after authorities
discovered bodies near Die cabin
On Monday. San Francisco District Attorney
Arlo Smith said It will be about a week before
Canada Is formally told of the extradition request
But Devlin. Ng's lawyer, vowed to fight his
extradition under an article of Ihe Canada-U S
extradition treaty that says Canada does not have
to comply with such a request when the accused
faces the death penalty In America.
Canada has no death penalty and Its Judges In
the past have been reluctant to extradite people
who could face the death penalty In other
countries

...Gas Tax

Altamonte Springs and Winter
Spring* upprovrd It bul San­
ford's uctlon on It up until
Monday has been unclear.
Continued from page 1A
with more money
going (o
The city commission approved
Ihe elites
that spend
ihe Die "Intent" of the agreement
most, proportionally, on roads, June 24 hut refused lo sign It
because of a paragraph which
Klrrblind said
The distribution of revenues Ihe commissioners said made It
from the existing 4 cenia-per- appear the cities were asking Die
gullon tax would remain the county lo levy the tax. They said
same With tile routtly getting 65 II was the county's responsibility
percent und Dir cities getting 35 to levy (he tax. noi the cities.*
County Deputy Attorney Rob­
percent. But under the agrre
inrnt. Dir (ax and Dir formula ert McMillan then appeared be
would lx- extended lo 30 years fore the city commission last
instead ol 10 years. Klrchholf week asking lor u clearer In­
terpretation of lls action. The
said.
The county needed elites rep- commissioners said they would
rrsriilln g 50 percent ol the send a Inter o f approval to Ihe
Inrorporalrd area of Die county county but would not sign (hr
lo sign Ihe agreement by July 1 agreement because of the para­
lor II lo become rflretlvc. That graph.
On Monday. Ihe county asked
was the day Dir stair legislature
required the agreement to be Hanford for u clearer stand on
Dir agreement. An amended
signed or rise tin- county would
have In use Die stair-approved agreement culling Tor the county
lo levy ihe tax wus also pres­
distribution formula

...Thefts

...S p r in k le r s

ented (o Ihe commission
K lrch h ofl and C ounty Allo m ey Nikki Clayton denied the
ropnty was trying to persuade
Sanford to approve the agree
ment. saying the county may
nol lose money under Die stale
distribution formula.
"W c don’t care whether you
sign or not," Ms Clayton said,
adding that she and Klrchtmlf
Just needed a firm, clear decision
Irom Sanford on ihe matter so
tlie county can m eet stule
deadlines
But Klrchhofl did say tfie
"rolling formula" called lor In
the agreement would be "In the
best Interest o f Ihe c itie s "
heruuse It gives each a chance lo
up Its share of the revenues If II
spends more for mads,
Bul Farr, who called for the
reversal o f ihe city commission's
approval of the agreement, said.
Die county's 65 percent cut was
unfair.
Becuuse Seminole cities are

Bul Neet said Ihe size of ihe
building Isn't ns Important as
what Is stored there Such build­
ings usually house combustlhle
material, he said
Spolskl disagreed, saying If
someone siorrs combustible ma­
terials In u commercial building
they have lo gel a permit from
*lie city. If It Is determined
combustlhle materials urr stored
In a building, then require a fire
wall or other means to prevent
fires, he said
But after Ihe meeting. Spolskl
said If u commercial building
c-ulches fire, " l e i It bu rn,"
because "Dial's whal Insurance
Is for.'*
But C o m m is s io n e r J o h n
Mercer said the the commission
should think first o f the safely of
Sanford's citizens, nol the cost
to a developer.
City Manager Frank Faison

C ontinu ed fro m page 1A
Continued fro m page 1A
In ihe Incident. They w ere
8 , 0 0 0 - s q u a r e - to o t m e ta l
pli ked up by Investigator Karen
warehouse, one of Ihe type of
Reynolds later In the (lay.
buildings covered under Dir or­
The live youths range from 9 dinance and whal be called one
lo 13 years of age Their names o f the must popular storage
•were wtlticld because Ihcy are
buildings being used In Sanford.
Juveniles. They were charged
The cost for Ihe building Is about
wuh burglary, grand (heft und $56,000 but with a sprinkler
crlmlnul mischief. They were
system It would cost $8,000
relrused lo thrlr parents
more, tie said.
In Die bicycle thelts. a police . C om m ission er D avid Furr
report said Dial the man und his agreed wllh Spolskl. calling the
friend were walking 5th Street
o r d i n a n c e t h o r o u g h bu t
und W ilbu r A vrn u r Monday
"excessive." He said he agreed
when they noticed lwo bicycles w llh requiring sprinklers tn
parked In a wooded area neur a upuriments and condominiums
lake.
but not sm aller commercial
The two apparently saw Ihe b u ild in g s
C o m m is s io n e r s
blrycles und stole Iheqi A wit­ should talk lo builders before
ness, Thom as LaCrosse. 195 passing Ihe requirement, Farr
Wilbur Ave,, told poller that he said,
saw Ihe two leave the wooded
area on bicycles
The bicycles belong to Henry
llrldgrmun and Shane Douglas,
two Lake Mary Youths who were
fishing during the thcfl.
Continued from page 1A

...Fees

A computer check of Stephen
Baldwin W riter. 19. of 414
Oak wood Ave.. Sanlord North
Carollnu. showed several war­
rants Issued by that city's police

department.
Writer Is wanted for grand
thrfl auto, burglary and parole
violation. Ill a [Killer Interview.
Writer lold Investigators that he
und his Juvrnllr friend rode the
bicycles from Lake Mary lo his
brother's apartment in Maitland.
Lake Mary Police contacted
Ihe Maitland Police Department
which arrrsted Writer.
— Rick Brunson, Richard Truett

revenues from Ihe gasoline taxes are con­
servative, allowing nothing for growth In those
revenues
Count^commissioners are also slated todav to
extend bolh gasoline taxes from the original 10
years envisioned earlier to 30 years
Hooper noted the Impact fees for transportation
being recommended by stafT are lo remain In
efTeci until a consul tan I yel to be hfrrd does a
comprehensive study on Impacts created by new
development on Die county road system
There Is no fixed dale for the hiring of ihe
consultant or for his study to begin or be
completed.
Meanwhile, as commissioners discussed In
workshop other ways lo raise money to Improve
roads. Commissioner Uaihara Christensen urged

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) —
Leaders of Lebanon's Druze.
S u n n i and S h iite M o slem
co m m u n ities today Issued
sweeping proposals lo disarm
and dismantle all militias In
war-tom Beirut and rewrite the
constitution.
L eb an ese Prim e M in ister
Rashid Karaml Issued a state­
ment al dawn on a "n e w
national plan" drawn up by 12
M oslem leaders du rin g an
1 l-haur meeting in the Syrian
capital of.Damascus Monday
and today.
The 12 agrred lo "collect all
w e a p o n s and end all
m llllla m en . to d issolve all
m ilitias" and lo "rebuild a new
army so R will be capable of
carrying out Its national role
against Ihe Israeli army and
defend the country."
The Damascus meeting was
held under the auspices o f
Syrian Vice President Abdel
Halim Khaddutn. Leban ese
Moslem leaders attending In­
cluded Karaml. Druze warlord
W a lld J u m b la t t . w h o Is
Lebanon's tourism minister,
and Shiite Amal mltllla chief
Nablh Uerri. the nation’s Justice
minister.
Their plan pledged " to draw
up a new constitution Dial will
achieve unity for Lebanon and
affirm Its Identity and national
role" and end "sectarian des­
potism."
Never before have so many
Moslem leaders made such an
explicit call.

annexing more land they will
need more money for roads, hr
said.
"In 30 years there may be less
county Hand) than there arc
cities." Farr said
But Mercer and Mayor Smith
said Die "rolling formula" would
probably mean Sanford would
gel more money for Its future
road needs, although they both
said that wasn't assured
"W e 're buying a pig 111 a [Mike,
let's face It," Mayor Smith said.
"Bul al Irast it's a pig and not
some other animal. "
She based [&gt;ari of her support
nil the lurt that Sanford Is
getting "a lion's share," utxiul
10 percent, of Die revenues from
Ihe 4 cent lax.
The Seminole County Com ­
mission Is expected lo approve
the 2 cent lax today al lls
regular meeting If approved, ufl
expected, the tax Is scheduled to
go Into effect Sept l

said Dir ordinance I* needed.
And In whal seemed a dispute of
Spolskl'* claim that the law
would stifle growth. Faison said
that elites with sprinkler re­
quirements are booming
"Strong construction goes to
those areas wllh strong codes."
he said
Former City Manager Warren
"P e te " Knowles. upiH'urlng liefore Ihe commission, said (he
"bottom line " of builders’ op­
position to sprinklers Is Die cost.But, be addrd. the rlly 's first
obllgailou^bould be Dir safety of
Ihe citizen*, not cosls lo the
builder
Th e commission voted 4-1,
with Farr opposing, lo give
Initial approval lo the ordinance.
The ordinance will lx' given a
final hearing July 22

that Ihe commission levy a "transfer fre" against
existing homruwnrrs when they sell thrlr homes
She said (he existing homruwnrrs are also
creating Impacts on Ihe road system and should
be helping (o pay Die costs
Commissioner Sandra Glenn said before a
transfer fee could be levied against existing
homeowners who sell their homes, a special or
general act of Ihe Legislature would have lo be
adopted. She urged lhal discussion of such a fee
be kept separate and apart from other impact
Ires
She advised Mrs. Christensen to lake her Idea
lo ihe legislative delegation and lo ihe transporta­
tion committer of (hr state Association of County
Commissioners to see if she can gel support
Wright suggested that Die county endorse a
doubling of Ihe cost ,of vehicle license lags and
lhal the additional money be used for roads Mrs. *
Glenn said the Legislature might go along with
Increasing lhal fee bul would most likely keep the
resulting revenue* lor the state

AREA DEATHS

STOCKS

AllentU

CALG ARY. Alberta |UPI) — Charles Ng. sus­
pected o f up to 25 gruesom e slayings In
California, was Judged menially hi to stand trial
on attem pted murder and theft charges In
Canada and was ordered to return to court next
week.
"I presume they will proceed wllh Ihe trial
here," Ng's law yer Brian Devlin said Monday
after the 24-year-old former Marine underwent a
psychiatric exam ination and then made a brief
appearance at the parked Calgary courtroom.
Ng was ordered to reiurn to court July 15 when
he Is expected lo enter a plea. A court-appointed
psychiatrist ruled that he was menially fit to
stand trial on charges of attempted murder and
Dirft In Canada.
The developments could delay plans by U S.
authorities to have Ng extradited to California to
aland trial for hi* alleged rob* In Ihe sex-torture
slayings o f as many as 25 people al a mountain
hideaway near Wllseyvllle. Calif., about 125 miles
northrast of San Francisco.
A monthlong International manhunt for Ng
ended Saturday when he was arrested In a
Calgary department store for attempted murder,
possession of a firearm and theft.
Al the time o f his arrest. Ng was carrying a bag
of groceries, 50 feel of nylon rope and two books
Police said Ng shot one security guard In ihe
hand with a 22 caliber handgun as he and
another guard subdtird the fugitive
Ng. a native of Hong Kong who had sworn
never to be taken alive, has been under a suicide
watch In a special vldeo-monllored cell at the
Calgary Remand Center since his rapture.
His a lleged accomplice In Die California
slayings, [.canard Lake. 39, an cx-Marine.
commuted suicide by swallowing a cyanide
capsule after he was arrested In a shoplifting
Incident June 2 tn South San Francisco.

M oslem s A g re e
To End Fighting

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Freedom Sevtngi
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LESTER P. HARPER
Mr, l.esier I*. Harper, 70, of
Slate Road 426, Geneva, died
Sunday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospllal. Sanford Bom
June 1. 1915 In Orlando, he
moved lo Geneva Irwn there In
1915, He was a retired citrus
employee and a member of First
Baptist Church. Geneva He was
an Army veteran of World War
II. and a member of the C.B.
Yellow Jackets. Orlando.
Survivors Include his wife,
Pearl; five daughters. Bertha
Kdrnfleld. B elly Moran, both of
Geneva. Doris Brown, Sanford.
Sarah Jaeger. Winter Park, and

Susan Yarborough. Biloxi. Miss.;
son. Robert Phillips, Geneva;
three sitters. H azel Pedone,
Sanford. Mabel Raulerson and
Grace Lindsey, bolh o f Geneva:
17 grandchildren: 12 great­
grandchildren.
Britton Funeral Home. San*
lord. Is In charge of arrange­
ment*
OLIVE E. LO W R Y
Mrs Olive Elizabeth Lowry.
6 9 , o f 1561 O ak L a n e,
Casselberry, died Saturday at
Winter Park Memorial Hospital,
Born June 23. 1916 in Cincin­
nati, she moved to Casselberry

from Dayton. Ohio in 1983, She
w a s a h o m e m a k e r and a
Catholic.
She Is survived by her son,
Preston. Casselberry, und two
grandchildren.
Winter Park Funeral Home.
Winter Park. Is In charge of
arrangements.
HERMAN C. THURM
Mr Herman C. Thurm, 82. of
989 Orienta Ave., Altamonte
Springs, died Monday at Life
Care Center. Altamonte Springs.
Bom Sept. 21. 1902. tn Bran­
ford. Conn., he moved to Alta­
monte Springs from New Haven.
Conn. In 1976. He was a retired

plumber und a Protestant.
Survivors Include his
Thelma. Westwood. Calif.

wife,

Ha I d w I n -Fa Ire h l Id Fu tier a I
Home. Altamonte Spring*. Is In
charge of arrangements

Funeral Notice
MABPER. l i m i t P
-O ra .en d e tuner el te r,n e t tor L*tl*r P
Hsfptr, 713 Si»W
04 0en o n , *bo died
lender win b* M d 4110 4 m W «* * * d * r In

p*n*»*

wiit,

Htvl L

Wwrwcod end WillWm VWuld.n olflcwnna
Frwnd* m e , C4&lt;t •( t«w f w * ,,! ^
lwj4'
l i p m Arr*ng*n&gt;*nH by B rliu n Fun*y*|
Home, # G u e rd o n thepe i

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sin ford, F|.

First County
Teacher In LD
Program Retires
L illian Robinson Hall was
honored a) a retirement ban­
quet, as well as her birthday, on
June 15- Born In Sanford, Mrs
lla llg ra d u a trd from C room s
H igh S ch ool and B ethu m rC ook m a n C o lle g e , D a yton a
Beach, with later atudeis at
Strtdon University. University of
South Florida and Atlanta Uni­
versity.

Male Nurses Carry On
In Face Of Prejudice
D EAR ABBY: 1 read your
column about male nurses, and
having been one for the last 13
vear*. 1must comment
Did you know that m ale
nursing dates back in 1190
when th- Teutonic Knights were
founded to care for the wounded
du rin g 1be C rusades? Also,
d u r in g B ib lic a l t im e s , the
Knights of St Lazarus were
founded to tend the lepers

Learning Disabilities Program.
She was the first teacher to be
hired and has served the stu­
dents In the program for 17
years, according to the June
edition of "Exceptional Educa­
tion Newsletter.”
Serving as toastmaster for the
special evening was Sanford City
Commissioner Robert B. Thom ­
as. also an educator. The In­
vocation was given by Rev. S.S.
Robinson of Jacksonville, Mrs.
H a ll's old est brother. " T h e
Lord's Prayer" was sung by
KavllaGivens. Mrs Hall's nclce

Mrs. Hall began her bridgebuilding career as a teacher at
Midway Elementary. From there
she taught In a one room school
at Snow hill followed by Jackson
Heights Elementary. Oviedo She
served as Itinerant teacher of
sjH-clal education for Jackson
Heights and Lawton Elementary.
She Itnishcd her many years of
teaching at Easibrook Elrmrnlary.

Lillian R. Hall
lire honoree from her nephew.
Robert Robinson, and family of
Philadelphia.

The occasion was given BcverIv Mitchell Acknowledgements
of guests and family members
w e r e g i v e n b y M rs . E lla
Robinson. Mrs. Ophelia Mtiorr.
friend and former co-worker,
gave reflections of the life and
teaching career of the honoree.
Special presentation was made
by Mrs Katie Robinson Burke to

Mrs Hall holds the Seminole
County record for leaching the
most yea rs In the S p e c ific

Family members and friends
from out-of-town w ere from
Atlanta and Jacksonville.
Mrs. Hall plans to keep busy as
she contin ues her work as
m usician at T rin ity United
Methodist Church and serving
where she Is needed In her
community — M arva Hawkins

Gwynn Receives Scholarships
Christian t) liwynn of Oviedo, has been
awarded scholarships to attend Central Methodist
College in Fayette Mo . lor the 1985-86 academic
year
Christian will hr receiving an Academ ic
m holarshlp K u rd oil Ids mastery &lt;&gt;l the academic
curriculum at Lake Howell High School and lor
having achieved such outstanding SAT scares.

ToowJiy, July f, I f U - I D

He Is also receiving a Lcrdershlp scholarship for
serving as co-captain ol the football team, for
K in g a Master Councilor in the DrMolay Chapter
and (or having completed the Lcrdershlp Corre­
spondence Course Hr has also been awarded a
Tool hall Scholarship
Christian Is the son of Mr A Mrs James |.
Gwvnn o f Oviedo.

I have had to face a great deal
o f prejudice while practicing mv
chosen profession |No. I didn’t
ever want to be a doctor And
yea, I care for female patients
lust as a female nurse would.)
I fed that I am rendering a
humanitarian service regardless
of whether the [Nillent ts man or
wemen. rich at p-mr black,
white or yellow My wile, who Is
also a registered nurse, has been
very supportive I realize (list I
am not alone and must do my
part in bring the male nurse to
an equal looting Until recently,
1be armed forces did not grant
equal rank or |&gt;ay lo male
registered nurses although our
training was identical (Female
nurses enjoyed officer status
automatically. Male nurses did
not l
Su here 1 stand, heterosexual
and proud lo lie a nurse and a
m ail Physicians G od bless
them, spend a relatively short
period ol llnir with Ihelr pa­
tients, bui nurses are I litre
a ro u n d the c lo c k , fa ith fu l

D ear
Abby
advocates o f (hr patients' rights
and needs
Thunk you. Abby. for an
opportunity lojilr my thoughts.
R A Y M O N D EARL STA N F O R D .
R.N.. SA V A N N A H . G A .
D E A R NURSE STAN FO R D :
Well said Mv mall these last few
w e e k s has been f i l l e d to
overflow ing with kudos for the
mule nurse
Head on for a Irtirr that says u
all
D EA R AHBY: What's all this
sialic about whether or nol a
male nurse should care lor
women patients in "In tim ate
si l nations''?
1 am a laxl driver, and on iwo
separate occasions 1 assisted In
delivering a baby, And how
uKmt all those policemen who
have done ihe same?
When a woman needs help,
Intxe m odesty goes out the
window
"D O C ”

(MY NICKNAME NOW )
D EAR ABBY: I can't believe
the prejudice of some women
Inward male nurses

Women arc fighting for ripm l
rights and want to be accepted
In a m an's world, but they don't
want men In lheirs How about
equality for men? I am a young
woman, but 1 am personally
more comfortable with a male
doctor than a female doctor
Who knows? The It-malr doctor
could be a lesbian, right?
And as for "ta ils," who said.
Child molesters, perverts, wile
beaters, etc. were m e n " —
w om en c a n a ls o be c h ild
molesters, perverts, husband
K-alcrs. elc ., right?
So. In conclusion, li doesn't
really matter who lakes care o f
you when you're sick as long as
von receive jiroper medical a t­
tention
N U R SE'S DAUGHTER
IN J A P A N
D E A R A B B Y : I c o u ld n 't
K-lleve the letter from "Lois in
New York." who wrote. "II I had
to go to a hospital. I'd give sirlcl
orders tun to send mr a m ale
nurse to even give me a bedpan.
II would sooner Ite ItKtked alter
by the cleaning woman I"
The gall o f that woman! II tails
should go Into cardiac arrest
when ihe cleaning woman and a
male mime are llie only people
around. 1 hope Ihe cleaning
woman knows whether to a d ­
minister epinephrine, lltloculne
or atropine, since she'd rather
have lb*- cleaning woman Imtk
ullrr her Ilian a male nurse
L.B. IN 8 .C .

TONIGHT S TV
TUESDAY
EVENING

6 00
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____ WEDNESDAY

1000
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© | 1 0 ) THE OA THERMO A documortar* on a tounion ot Jowl*n

© (I) POLICE WOMAN

1020

12 MOVIE Throa Taco* Wait
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11:00

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4:50

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114) 0AVS ALLEN AT LARGE
(SI HOGAN S HEROES

11:30
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4 TONIGHT ( 100*1 hot! Joan
Tkvar* SchaduUd Sandy CKmcan.
Tommy Tima

1 O

4:55
0
O MOLLYWOOO ANO THE
STARS (MON, THU. Fto)

5:00
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12 ALL IN THE FAMILY
0
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5:30
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600
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6 35

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(Him TWhardt) bam a potential

O f TODAY
J O CBS MORFMNQ NEWS
(7 O OOOO MORNING AMERICA
IT (M IFU NTSTO N U
© (14) FARM DAY
© (SI BUREAFRWHOS

12:05
12 WORLD OP AU0UR0N IS A
proMa oT John Jtmo* Audubon a
comunahon onh angar tongwrOar
Corora king on tha Idaho andarnoaa
and a look *1 Air can ■MMa to T « .

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1230
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LETTERMAN Schadutod acnott
l a « i Anna Down.
I T (M l I LOVE LUCY
0

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Tha Snaba PR

1* 4Fi Okwa da Hardland Mark

7:15
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7:35
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3.30

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© (10) THE HEART OF THE DRA­
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© Id M A N H U

12:05
12 u m i HOUSE ON THE PRAI
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12:30
O 4 1SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
111 a
VOL04Q ANO THE REST­
LESS
7 0 LOVING
1( (M l BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

8

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(101 THE JOURNEY INWARD
M AG I S OF THE SRAM (WTO)

© HO’, FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(TRn
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1:05
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©

|10| MAOIC OF OIL PABTUNQ

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© I SOI FLORKMITYVE
© (t l MEATHCUFF

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4:30

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©
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T l AOOAMS FAMILY

10.30

NSW DICK VAN OYKI

FAMOUS RECIPE
WEEKLY SPECIALS

Tl n OUCOtOLIGHT
0 a GENERAL HOSPITAL
ifD ( I I ) BUGS BUNNY

■ 0 SALE OF t &gt; * CENTURY
T O ALL-IT AS BUTE

4.00

I r jR o y d T h — trw*|

The Herald welcomes organization and jH-rsonal news
Ihe following suggestion* are recommended to czjiedUe
publication:
1 Releases should be typed i lower and upper easel,
double spaced, and wrilten narrative style (third person).
2. Do not abbreviate.
3 A contact person's name and phone number Is
necessary.
4 Keep releases simple.
5. Organization releases (the program should lead the
meeting account! must be submitted no later than two
days alter the event.
6. Advance notices should be submitted one week prior
to publication date.
7. Photographic coverage requests should be made one
week in advance.

4 SAJVTA BARBARA

Q ( » l HE-MAN ANO MASTERS
OF THE UNIVERSE
© It) VOLT RON. DEFENOEN OF
TH E U M VtR M

11 GET SMART

Nash, Education department; Emy Bill,
Home Life Department; H aiel Cash, Public
Affairs Department; and Pat Foster, install
ing officer.

When the Woman's Club of Sanford resumes
Ihe 1985 86 season In October, fhe following
department chairman will serve, from left:
Florence Korgan, Arfs Department; Kate

2:30
J i O CAPITOL
H (M| GREAT SPACE COASTER
© (101 NNOVAnON (U0N)

Q WOMANWATCH (WEDl

000

P»wt« by Timmf

IX MOV* (FRI)

8 :3 5
Q BEWITCHED

S

Woman’s Club Department Chairmen

Publicity Procedure

O I DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
3 1 (M l DICK VAN DYKE

© (*0| MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FAT)

I I (M)FAJRLY AFFAIR

’ 3:50

S

I t (M l PRO* PANTHER
I *01M N TIR ROGERS (R)
( d FAT ALBERT

I t (SI| LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
12 M O V* Too Lara Tna Haro’
O f TO) Mchaar Como, Ckfl RoBorlton

THINGS

(TU I)

6:45
0 O EYEWITNESS DATBREAK
© (* 0 1 A M WEATHER

700

(J ' O THE SAINT
11 ( M l RMOOA
© |S| M O V* Or Joky* And Mr
Hydo (1941) Sponcor Tracy. Ingrid
fiargman

12:00
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JJO 0O NCW B
It ( M l BEWITCHED
©
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100

0 1 4 NEWS
0
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NEWS

© I *4) FLOROASTYLE
AFTERNOON

© (101 MASTERPIECE THEATRE

1200

raw |R|

11:30
r y a m b more

(MON)

5:25

H FUNTIME (FRfl

tlx 1

7 O ARC NEWS NIOMTLINE
II (M l CHICO ANO THE MAN
© |S) HOGANS HEROES

f a m il y

7&gt;o

11 00
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©
©

(M l IIQHT IS ENOUGH
I *01 W I RE COOKJMQ n o w

© Id

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Ur • daath comp*

700
f ) 0 SALE OF THE CENTURY
i j j Q P U MAOA/1NI An attar-

m i mis

8 ) |*0) TEN WHO OARED

4:35

99

m9

9

■*»

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Business
Review

Wt NAVI SUPU

m a n u im i

r w i w arn f v i K i K u r f i l l u i

h v i -k

Get Tune Up At Volkshop
Before Leaving On Trip
Before you tilt I he
mad fur yimr summer
va ca tio n w ith you r
Volkswagen. Toyota or
II a I « u n , l e i t h e
Volkshop check your
car over to make sure It
Is working properly,
Take a d v a n ta g e o f
their July special on
lune ups. brakes and
mufflers Call 321-0120
in find the price for
your particular make
and model car.
Volkshop Is conve­
niently located at 214
P a l me I In A v e . . In
downtown Sanford
Owner Marvin
Wright and his tram of
e x p e r ie n c e d t e c h n i­
cians special In VWs.
Toyalus and Datsuns.
All of I heir work Is
guaranteed
Volkshop specializes
in engine and transa x le re Ini tillin g (o r
these ears. They a.v&gt; do
lu b rica tio n , and oil
change and repairs on
brakes, fron t en ds,
t r a n s m is s io n s and
exhaust systems
As nlw avs Marvin

Marvin Wright, owner of Volkshop
will give you a tree
estimate and car In­
spection for any defects
li might have. "W e
only charge for flxln.'
we don't charge for
liMikln.’ " flu said
Volkshlp Is dedlcatrtf
in keeping your vintage
VW Hug looking and
running Its bcsl. If your
VW Is showing Us age.

repairs, you will (lnd
qualify Treuhaff and
I losch parts. Con 11nrn
tal bells and hoses and
Castrol motor oils, for
Toyotas. Datsuns and
Voikswagrns
V o lk s h o p Is open
Mnruly through Friday.
H u rn. lo 5 p m. Call for
an appointm ent for
vour car.

the folks at Volkshlp
con completely recon­
dition and refUrblah II
Irom the ground up for
only a fraction of what
a new car would cost.
T h is Inclu des tires,
poinl Jot&gt;. new engine
and brakes.
If you are one o f
ihose car owners who
tikes it) do his own

I j I- m B i l l

304 Es*t Commercial Slrtel
HOURS
Sinloid. Florida 32771
MonJFrl. 9 3:30
(305) 323-1137
Saturday 9 12 noon

PAC N ’ SEN D
Introducing Two Mew Overnight
Priority Services via UPS
Nail Day All latte

Lett** »«4 Docu-nihi

6 10,30

N«t Day Nr facial Nat Neabiaautia nent 613.50

(i it)

r « w w W M n ^ j g j f f i f J I l I l a i w w n a o i i i M ) a a w r w fK w a c ia r »r «)|

VOLKSHOP

Ipacialliing In Sarvlca 6 Parts For
W.'s, Toyota and Datsun

ALSOLINENS CURTAINS ETC. ,

(Cornar lnd A Palmatto)

S

214 $. Palmetto Ave.

econd I mage

SA N FO RD

CONSIGNMENT CLOTHING
22M 42I
27th SI. * Hwy. 17 82 •Sanlord T #

PHONE

321-0120

Distinctive Mirror Designs
FOR EVERY DECOR

BEAT THE HEAT!

S e n k a r ik G l a s s &amp; Paint
Fo r D e p e n d a b l e S e r v ic e

CAUL

GLASS

Christian Bros, j*

FOR EVERY
PURPOSE

'M’TTTTraS 322-4822
S T d i a d i u u 6 ru n
l i t MA6MOUA AVI. SANTORO

CUTTINQ — TRIMMINQ — EDOING
AVERAGE LOT *70 IM FREE ESTIMATES

(^ P le a te d

Ir a iio if li

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22's FILED

(Ar ( m a in
(or Ukfa
cllmoio,
Plralad ahtdrr
In aeml opaque 1 * " ,
or aeml aheer.
fabric a
Araltabla with
ia a la «ia f
cuttg j backing
tool

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES. MOTORCYCLES
HOMES. REC VEES
Saying Stnlord lot 2? Y it t i
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. » S

•‘CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE*1

323-7710 or 323-3866
2510A OAK AVE. SANFORD

323-4401

LEVOLOR*

Hrra'a a
window

BLAIR AGENCY

Comet of S P«ik An A 0*k

FOR C O M P LE TE
LAW N CARE

Chiistiin Bios. Ljwb Service

Senkarik Glass &amp; Paint Co., headquarters for paint, glass and mirrors.

H:\r/ Shade

\o h (
O u r best shades
at the seasons
biggest savings.
R ig h t n o w at

S en k a rik C la s s A
Paint Co has a reputa­
tion in Sanford lor good
reliable se rvice ami
quality products that
goes back more than
35 years.
Lo c a t e d a I 210
M a g n o l i a A v e . In
d o wn t o w n S a n fo rd ,
they carry Henjaintn
Moon- palm products
such as Moore's rxlerlo r house paint,
Moorgard latex with
luster. Mourglo latex
with a soli gloss (great
lor (Minting trtm and
e x te r io r d o o r s and
M o o r w o o d e x t e r io r
stains.
H e n ja in ln M o o r e
makes the finest (Mint
products at everyday

prices, arcordln g lo
J e r r y a n d E d d ie
S enkarik. who look
over the business from
thei r f at her who
founded It Thry will
take lime lo discuss
vour nerds arc always
gl.nl lo give you helpful
a d vice on painting
Thry will even to out lo
vour house to discuss
s |h-&lt; tal paint problems
you may have and give
you an overall esllinatr
of materials you will
need for I he Job.
Senkarik speclall/r*
In all types of glass
Including disk and ta­
ble lops, custom resldcnllai glazing, shower
doors, sioretront com­
mercial tort snio glass

are members ol the
replacement
S e n k a r i k h a s American Association
customized mirrors for of Retired Persons are
wa l l s and c r tlln g s
always eligible lor a
They stock Plexiglas In discount on paint and
|Mln sundries, such as
lour thicknesses.
They also carry a full brushes and rollers.
l i ne of nat i o nal l y
Senkarik also carries
liim iiu t S a n f o r d
a large selection of
m a n u fa c t u r e d Pen wallpaper drslgns In­
P a in ts .- M c L o s k e y 's cluding photo murals
Man o' War Ultra Spur and grass stock from
M arine Varnish and which to choose
H o p e ' s l w o ■s I e p
T h e y have art
m eihod of instant resupplies for beginner
llnlshlng
H o p e 's r e fln ls h e r and professional artists
removes old Itnlsh with m such quality brands
as Grumbacher. Delta.
no strip p in g , paint
brushes or sandpaper. W tn so r-N e w io n and
Follow up wtlh a finish Ltqultrx.
Call on Senkarik at
coat of Hope's Tung
322 4622 for all of your
Oil
Senior citizens who paint and glass needs.

THORNHILL INTERIORS, ETC.
STIVI KAI6

t f i / 1.

hw y

i/ t j im n

ms

tAHtoao n

H K A R IN Q T E S T S S E T
PO E SANPORD/CASSILBKRSY AREA

j t i ts/t

*ou*i uotrrai tOAMixrviAi iqi

a, w

L ive Ironic Sm cW q M

GREEN'SH ou se,
A LL CURLS
S TA R TIN G A T

B e a u ty

*4 0

C A R E FREE C U R LS •E L A S T A CURLS

PERMS
*25 up
RELAXERS * 2 5 up

SUMMER
DAY CAMP :

nt

SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR “
6 THROUGH 12 YEAR OLDS

04*fN * A ll to t PM

323-2005

WEEKLY Activities Include:
Swimming
Bowling
ftc n k t

lots Hwy. 17 92
Longwood

Skating
Motto*
Sporia

Aria 6 Craft*
Compoiar Skills

T m ii Your Chihl To An Action Packed
Sum mer CM fu n And Dally Field Trips

•

*

•

•Serving
Dully

t U L ' N T H Y ST ( &gt; H E

ALL THE FISH YOU CAN EAT
Golden Fried Or Broiled Cod Filet

tM OVERVIEW AVE.
t« MVKlt I 14

6 9 5 -6699

HKS T A t H A V r

m

f»«ry ttedntsdiy And Friday! Sctvtd 11AM 8 JO PM

&amp; u u , (? t * U t

ACCENT COLORING

$

With Ftiivch Fiwt. Rnl Mishtd. * A Q C
Oi Biktd Potato Colt Slew Or
VtgtUblt. Twttt Stuct
&gt; 6 . 9 5 ■■m.i.iu,
![ jraKSS
' ^

11 DBltona Plaza
Deltona

5 7 4 -4 0 0 0

MON.-SAT. 8-8:30
SUN. 8:30-8

l

b* 0&gt;*«n In* il Hw Orange Hoot-

•ng Aid Cto» 7 )0 1 1 OrWnWa 0&gt;. kwitore (MonM^ sntyt «nd UO
6 Hwy 17 02 C m m &lt;
Mon«*T FfMq M« M U *W
C n a « l« w o n end 6 FMlwr. w « M by ttw Nation* Hawing AM
S oO M y will tw al ttw M o ISc m M pwtarm rtva laata
•Ho H a DooNs Iw w tag w u na w tlw M M g )• walew rw
* laal u*Mf IS* lataat atvetronte iqylgissnl to
• or S w pw tlsulw loss.

•SowM h*r* • Sawing laal al Sm I onto 4 r*w II
IroubCa il Ml Sawing cWwty Iron yaagla no

ts*m cm IM Ml about ISa lalaal
T7wkN Sawing MCI aryl I

__

wook si is* CsaaMbwry »Mc« and Monday •• is* iwOwd locollan. Call tho ngmbw balao and anango *•&gt; •« gpoMawnL or

drog in al rout cmurMmca

.

H E A R IN G
IRANGE A ,D C E N T E R S

UR

120 &amp;HW1 7 *
CASSELBERRY
834-0776

2J01 s ORULNOO OR.
SANFORD. FL 12S6T02

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

-BusinessReview

COUPON
FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
HeXcut. Permeneot Were

Evening Herald

CM 322-2611
• P U T r o u p BUSIHtSS O N T H I M O V t •
ADVERTISING

WITH PARTICIPATING STYLIST
Complete Perm Includee
^

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

H e r a ld A d v e r t is e r

ADVERTISING

Of all the so-called
t r i u m p h s of the
p h a r m a r e iit lr a l In ­
dustry the "'headache
remedy’" is the most
dangerous to life and
health." according to
Or Thomas F Yandell,
who p r a c t ic e s
c h ir o p r a c tic fa m ily
health rare at Sanford
Pain C ontrol Clinic.
2 4 7 1 S. A i r p o r t
Ho u I c v a r d in th e
W inn-Dixie shopping
renter
"This Is not to say
the headache remedies
are virulent poisons. In
themselves dangerous
to life — although our
government at limes
had to prohibit dis­
trib u tion of certain
types for that precise
reason." he added.
"T h e real trouhlr Is
that the less toxic and
the more apparently
'effective' a headache
remedy Is. the more
dungeons It becomes."
he said " A mere head­
a ch e r e m e d y o v e r ­
throws or suppresses a
mere symptom, while
the trouble causing the
symptom remains to
progress in gravity,
ulien unlit a serious
condition develops."
Pain of any sort Is the
a la r m b e l l , w h ic h
n a tu re e m p lo y s to
s ig n a l tro u b le . Hrmrmber this when a
headache occurs; you
lllrt with tragedy when
you treat a heudache
rather than itncatisc
Som e h ead ach es
have u simple explana­
tion. such us those of
the "m orning after" an
e v e n in g o f o v e r I n •
diligence In drink or
fo o d Any other head­
ache. particu larly II
chronic or recurring. Is
a warning slgnul which
will send uny careful
person to his doctor or
chiropractor.

Santord

2303 Franck Avenue
Ph 30S321 54511

AUTO AIR CONDITIONING
PROBLEM S?

CALL US!!
We ll Bring Our Rolling Repair Shop To Your
Home O r B u tln e t* 0 FI* II On The Spot
Car* C Truck* • Dom eM K or Im port*

All Wot* Guaranteed

CALL 321-2391 or 321-2148

ERW 1 N ^M O T O R S

AUTO ACCIDENT
INJURED?
NECK OR BACK PAINS • HEADACHES
cm i

.* 1 2 2 * 4 7 6 2

WOODALL &amp; CUNNINGHAM
C H IR O F R A C TO It

i«oo r«t&gt;

avi

n
* II

•*• a —»—.* m•

D E L T O N A N U R SIN G S E R V I C E

Dr. Thomas F. Yandell, chiropractor
Intermediate causes
ol headache are many.
T h e y m a y In c lu d e
digestive, eliminative,
kidney and heart trou­
b le s . e y e tr o u b le s
(chiefly eve strain). In­
fected lonslls. nerve
pressure from spinal
conditions and some­
t im e s th o u g h v e ry
rarely, brain trouhlr
llsrll. In women, dis­
o r d e r s o f th e r e ­
p r o d u c t iv e s y s te m
often are the cause of
the headaches.
Dr. Yandell provides
a primary service to
prevent, diagnose and
trrat health problems
lor the whole family
through chiropractic at
his clinic. Sanford Pain
Control bus four chiro­
practors on staff and Its
open front H am . to n
p in. seven days a week
for the convenience of
|Mllentn.
D e t e r m i n i n g th e
huslr cause of an Ill­
ness and effecting Its
correction without thr

• FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS
NOW IS THE tim e t o s m o h t e n TOUR srtu 0000 EUSNITUM
• LARGE SELECTION Of NATE RIALS •QUALITY WORRMANSMIR

mg It has lieen de­
term in ed that It is
usually caused by Ir­
ritation of the upper
cervical nerves which
affect the cranial nerve
hirers and result In the
throbbing pa In
associated with m i­
graine. and which later
In t o ill rs a steady dull
puln In the te m p le
area

use nf dangerous drugs
are the special skills of
Or Yandell. So when a
headache troubles you.
call for an appolnlmrnt
at 323-5763
" D o not d el u d e
yoursel that your trou­
ble Is a simple one
which can be cuslly
corrected with an 89cent package of "pain
k ille rs.” warned Dr.
Yandell.

AFFORDABLE HOME CARE
R N 'i • LPN ’i • Aid*
Companions • Sitter* • Live-Ins
Homemakers • NN Supervision

f r o Pkkaa *|M D*R*»c»

Cuttom Mode

j-Ti DRAPES
•

• VprMol*

3 2 2 - 5 7 0Q33 • Upholstery

Mlgrulnr headache Is
particularly distress-

S N IP ‘N S N A P
HAIRCUT
A T MILLIE’S
BARBER SHOP

PHOTO SITTING

• W o lip o p d '

}&gt; s « Ro.v o,i.•
Swntotd

• Coipe'

Tlie n u m ber
you need for
your financial
needs.

Remember, heeding
the headache warning
cu n a v e rt s e r io u s
complications

Thcrek one simple nourre
fur biking can- o f your
business and |*ervitt;il
financial needs Call

ID S B
fe r t a a t l f lB B B r lil riB B B eri

Tke Base iRiestMeal ywa II n » i Mile

VIC ARNETT

3 2 1 -5 2 1 0

moTOCBAPWY

PHONE 321-1673

600 PM

B e r h p 'e o r h

• Custom thodet
• Mini blind*

OPENING WHK SPECIAL. NOON S TUES.-FRI.
t il And IIIW W. Cryital A vr. Like Mary
fSetl 7a UAf Mbps (Nr IMil

L0NGW00D, FLA.
( 305 ) 802-1600

CALL ANYTIME
24 HOURS A DAY

A LA N 'S
FABRICS AND RUGS

Certain activities und
vocations may cause
untisuul stress In the
neck. Athletes,
mechanics, hom emak­
ers. o ffic e w o rk ers ,
fa rm e rs and o th e r s
w h o must tw la t or
m a in ta in u n n a tu ra l
positions.

B # fti F o r $ 4 .3 0

N a il To S ot** • Sub Shop

574 1322

1300 Providence Blvd.
Deltona, FL 32725

Through reflex a c­
tion. this cnndltton also
may result in stomach
or liver (Mins, nausea,
vom itin g, fast heart
treat. anti other upsets
of Internal organs.

Mradachrn run. of
c o u rs e , result from
many conditions, but
research has revealed
that a common cause
of heuduehes can Ite
lraced to the urea of the
c e r v ic a l v e rte b ra e
(spinal bones of the
neck).
Ueeuuae the neck ts
e x t r e m e l y m o b ile ,
t h e r e Is c o n s t a n t
danger of displacement
of one or more of these
vertebrae, which may
compress and Irritate
the cervical nerves.

400 N . 17-02

Fn A 00 AM

ianioio

Won thru In

D AV E’S UPHOLSTERY

Won

^

COSTS NO MORE FOR US TO COME TO YOU

■■s -COUPON — — COUPON— — COUPON - —

rr •• IillM lM

*

'% taeU iH €&gt;td

ADVERTISING

S a n fo rd Pain C o n t r o l G e t s
T o T h e H e a d a c h e 's C a u s e

9

And Shampoo 6 Sal
And receive A WritIan Ouarantaa Only At 1
Htadllnart Can Now For An Appornlmanl

AmTILE

CERAMIC TILE SALES
A INSTALLATION

• W A ll &amp; FLOOR TILES

• ACCESSORIES GROUTS &amp; CLEANERS
• WELCOME-' DO IT YOURSELF CUSTOMERS”
• LOTS OF COLORS SIZES-PATTERNS

“ Say It With Balloons'*

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
w m m k Maui* or huato u rn s
^•qutnt

B allo o n Magic
-

C A L L A N Y T IM E

liuPHbncii of Hgodt

-

"Seven Days a Week’*
For Every Reason and Every Season i
0. BOX 174 • SANFORD. FL 71771 i

■ o '*

TfW

&amp;

„

Fool

Arm o x ) Sf&gt;oui(l4 P P p n

W e D e liv e r B o u q u e t * o f IIA I lo o m

9

op

N io r o u in tll
N o c k Ps*n op SfiffnoBB

305/323-0400

T

*•«

t o * B #ck op H ip Pgm
O i / i i n t i i o ' t o « B o f S lo o p

ASK
ABOUT
OUR OTHER
CHILDREN'S
CLASSES

am T«t Uoi i#( Tnt. Ub* U T«n
M i a m okw

'•4
aw4b&gt;(P»4« P
Pa* lWI i
i*#i N

A l.l

M O *0 ’H 4CV4** M s**’

••41 tfRnl I•4—4’OS C*»•••••#-•

•EE-aVO&lt;I ••••Mb’ -d» •R&lt;|*' *CR(»vM *C

• t » vm ■—4a' emw* •— • 4 pi

W0 M IO IM 'O P M6

lu a s a

U ■XAAE Ut SlObS

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
OF CHIROPRACTIC, INC.
8 AM

10 a P M

7 D «r v A W r »k

) 6 S D « » A Year

un &gt; Aiaaoat rlvo - mntoro
u x in a n im n i ' i u m i 'u i m u m n i niuiioa

hum

iW # 2 U &gt; ,r
*17 W NA

IMT &amp; US i? «t
il jnNa W— **»-. Cn I

&lt;* H «

____ /

RN

/ * ZAYRE PLAZA

Airport Blvd. G 17-92

323-4569

Sanford

This W e e k’s Special
DECORATED 6x6
WALL TILE
B O N E -A L M O N D

$ -1 1 £

I p* t
BROW N

AmTILE

207 E. 25th SI.

(323-2504)
(09-4419)

HOWS: m u b w

John A S u b ic r.irk c r

ia « «

M * m eugi
tei
m —t

Tile C o nira iior*

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES
We also make 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Commercial Real Estate
up to 1100,000.
Personal loans era available Including
Revolving Credit Line.

PALA-CARD-CRYSTAL BALL READING

P a st - P r e w a l • $ « r a r e

• u n • LOYI • BM B MI • B W B U

HEN M BUSINESS FOB SO YEARS
M rtlVACY Of MY NOME

W

HOURS I AM - 9 PM 7 Dan A Mart

LOMGWOOO

(305)
(95-7005
■ A n 4 ■**

I B M U B0BTB OF BBCTIACK BB.

v o te d Bear p s y c h ic fo r teas by
CENTRAL FLORIDA SCENE MAGAZINE

IN i

FARMER JO H N

W E T S U IT G J A C K E T
Bag. *200____________ NOW

1 3 9 9!

Package Spatial

Regulator
Octopus
Combo Gauge
B C Jacket

*34900!:

Temporary-Work
Industry Booming
By Sarah O ates
(c) 1984. The Washington Poet
WASHINGTON — Thr temporary employer
business Is booming In the Washington area,
many businesses report that thev now regularly
budget In use of temporary’ workers to avoid
having to hire workers only for a short-term
project or face evrntual layoffs II the economy
lakes a downturn
Even the federal government finds the Idea of
temporary workers uppraltng l.nst December.
IXtnald J. Devine. Ihrn director o f the Office of
Personnel Management, advised federal agencies
to hire more temporary workers In place of career
workers, claiming It offered t&gt;rtter options for
management flexibility
Edward Dunkclbrrgrr. a partner In the law ffmt
nf Covington A Hurling, said his firm has
Increasingly turned to temporary help In the last
five years "W e concluded we were better olT
maintaining a staff for minimal demand We ran
satisfy short-term Increases with temporary help
It's more cost effective and l&gt;cttcr management “
"Our business has changed from a replacement
and fill-in service to an effective lalx*r tool for
managing latxir costs." Mid Frank l.lguort. un
executive vice president of Olsten Corp.. one of
the nation's three largrst temporary agencies.
Olstrn's direct and franchise sales have leaped
Irani $233 million In 1983 to $332 million last
year, profits growing from $3.7 million to St*
million
The I I S Hurrati of Lab« r Statistics rates
temporary growth as one of the live fastest
growing industry today Thr three largrst linns,
tn addition to Olsten, are Manpower Inc. a
subsidiary of the Paiker Pen Co ami Kelly
Services Ine All I luce Units have experienced
tinge growth In trernt years Kelly reported a 41
|»errrnt growl It in sales, up from $524 million In
1983 to $741 million Iasi year, profits jumping
from $17.5 million io$27 million Manpower Inc .
tiroke $1 billion in sales tor ttit- llrst lime Iasi
vrar. rr|x*rtlng an Increase In corporate profits up
Irnm $34 million t&lt;&gt; $42 million.
Although temporary agencies stress that they
do not trll companies to lav off workers to hue
ir r .,a*rarv employers, they do encouiagr them to
tise l heir tenmorary employees rat Iter Ilian rrralr
IN'unanrnt positions Thr National Assoeullon ol
Temporary Services, whit h represents the hulk of
ihr temporary niait|»owrr business. rr|*ortrd that
5 million people worked as trm|xmirlrs Iasi year,
with »*0O.(XK) jobs tilled by trm|x&gt;rary workers In
any given week
Trnt|x&gt;r«ry help Is ullraetlvr to employers
liecause there Is no risk ot eventual layoffs In
general, thr more a company lays oil employers,
the greater the percentage of Its payroll II has to
pay into thr Irdrrut unemployment fund, since
the federal government computes that percentage
based on bow many employers a company has let
go. Hy hiring only ient|x»rury workers, a company
can keep down lbut pcrrrntugc. which ranges
Irnm I 1-2 percent to lO percent of the total
payroll, according Ihr lluremi of lailxtr Statistics
MI.S officials have rxprrsscd concent that the
use uf temporury workers Is tnusklng u growth In
the manufacturing segment of thr economy,
since employment growth In this area Is normally
trucked by the agency through lhe number o f
permanent jobs In Hie maniifarlurlng Industries.

CALENDAR
TUESDAY. J U L Y 9
Helms flu b Ay\. noon anti 5:3(1 p in . closed. 8
p m . step, 130 Normandy Hoad, fassellierry
( ’ lean Air KcbosClub. noon, closed
S.uilon! AA. 5 .’H) p m . elosetl discussion, anti 8
p in., open discussion. 1201 W. First Si
17 92 Group AA. 8 p in , closed, Messiah
Lutheran Church. 17-9*2 und Dogtrurk Hoad
O vrrea trr* Anonymous, open. 7 30 p in .
Florltla Power A Light. 301 S Myille Avr..
Hanford
WEDNESDAY, J U L Y lO
Full Gusjx-I Business Men's Fellowship In­
ternational hreaklast meeting. 0 30 a m . Holiday
Inn. Stale Hoad 430 anti W ym tirr Hoad. Allainonlr Springs. Ft&gt;r tlrbtlls call 050 4255
Central Florida Blond Bank Seminole ( minty
Branch. I30‘2 E Second St.. Sanford. 9 a m tn 5
p m Florltla Hospital Allam ontr liruneh, II am
to 7 p.m.
Sanford Klwanls Club. noon. Sanfortl Civic
Center.
C asselberry Notary breakfast. 7:30 a.rn .
Cassrllx-rry Senior Center. 2(X) N Lakr Triplet
Drive
Financial advisory service for senior tilljens
available by ap|Milntnirnt, I p.m., Cusselhrrry
Senior C rnlrr. 200 N Lake Triplet Drive. Call
831 3551. rxt. 204
Medicare help for seniors. It) a m until ntxin.
Cassellxrrry Senior Center 2(X) N Triplet Drive.

Casselberry.

MADAME KATHERINE
HELPFUL ADVICE OH ALL
AFFAIRS

Tuesday. July 9, IH J— IB

Family Credit Sorvlcos. Inc
A

Cum jum
CALL
MARTIN SCOTT. MCA

OR I R AM. REAR I t e i

T** *•* Sru —

t » R | i«t Ch

831-3400

--- - »l BtH

S T O W H O ta S ALTAMONTE M T M i * » LA* I * » * » Sun » »
LONCWOOOMF 1ST Ml ♦ ♦ fc * 164

^

Mf

# # A »y

Sunshine doggers. Iteginnrrs—7 p in. (first
night freel. Maitland Civic Center Intermediate I.
8:30 p.m For Information rail 695-0437
Rummage sale sponsored by Dnltrd Methodist
Women. 9 a in to 2 p m .. Klrtley Hall of First
United Mrlhdlst Church. Deltona
TH U RSD AY, J U L Y 11
Sanford AAHP Chapter 1977 meets at noon In
Sanford Civic Center. Covered dish luncheon
followed by talk by S illy Dykes of the Seminole
County Federation of Senior Citizens on services
for senior adults.
Alztir liner's Supjxtrt Group of Sanford. 7 p m ,
second Thursday of month. Ifow cll Place. 200 W.
Airport Blvd.. Sanford. Speaker— Dr Roger Y.
Murray of Maitland Sharing and support for
families and health givers of Alzheimer s Disease
vlrilm s Call 321 0686
Arthritis Self-help program presented by West
Volusia Hospital. 7 p m . West Volusia Medical
Services Building. 1081 Providence Blvd. DrIlona Rhrumalologlsl Dr. Gary Sladrk will speak
nutrition, weight-control und exercise (Jursllon
and answer period
Sunshine Cloggrrs. Intermediate II 11 week
session. 7 p in .; Advanced. II 13 p.m., Mankind
Civic Center. Call 695-6437 for Information.
International Training In Com m unlrallun
G i r a t e r Semi nol e Cl ub ( pr evi ousl y
Toast mistress). 7 30 p m.. Altamonte Chapel
Education Building on Slate Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays
Sanford Jaycrrs general membership meeting.
7.30 p m .. Jayi-rr building. 5th and French.
Sanford.

�f *
%

«

»*t*J

*

I

48—E w in g Herald, iawtord, FI.

TwMtay, July I, I W

Expert Counterfeiting
Ring Smashed In Asia

Legql Notice
Legal Notice

" N O TIC E TOCONTRACTORS
O F F IC E OF THE STATE
OF FLO RID A
d e p a r tm e n t of

WASHINGTON (UPI) — An International coun­
terfeiting ring baaed tn Asia that produced such
high-quality 8100 bills that even shopkeepers and
bank tellers w etr fooled has been broken up. the
Secret Service says.
Secret Service spokesman William Corbett said
Monday the service, with help from police of
several Aslan nations, led an IB month In­
vestigation to snare the counterfeiters, who
operated out o f Malaysia and Thailand.
Four people were arrested, including the
ringleader, who admitted producing more than
$2.5 million In fake dollars, Corbett said.
Agents said Ah Sin Lee, 36. of ChineseMalaysian descent, used a sophisticated printing
press and engraved plates, like those used by the
Treasury, to produce the bills.
A search o f l-ee's Bangkok home turned up
equipment used lo produce counterfeit 8100 bills
and an engraved plate that was to be used for
fnaklnga 850 hill.
"T h e quality o f the note was excellent. It's
probably best note that's been produced In the
Secret Service's career," Corbett said.
Corbett said the bill even fooled merchants and
bank em ployers — people who normally spot fake
lulls and notify authorities.
The Fedrral Heserve Bank called for the
Investigation In November I9H4 afler Ihe phony
bills surfaced all over the wot Id. particularly on
the West Coast and In Asia.
bee also printed fake Malaysian and United
Arab Emirates currencies and Visa traveler's
c hecks.Corbet: said
Authorites are holding Lee, his brother, nephew
and another man in Thailand on counterfeiting
charges. If convicted, each could receive a
25-year sentence.
The Secret Service said Lee claimed to have
learned many of his techniques from anolher
master counlerfeller. Tim Cheung W ong of Hong
Kong, who died several years ago.
Agents believe Lee started producing coun­
terfeit b ills in 1979 and begun pressing
sophisticated notes in 1962.
Lee originally based his printing business In
Malaysia but went tmderground after Ihe arrest of
some of his assistants, the Sec ret Service said.

Great Train Robber
Savors His Freedom
KIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil |UI*I) - Nestled In u
tropical hillside hideaway, Great Train robber
Ronald Biggs sipped champagne with his family
and savored his freedom on (hr 20th anniversary
of his escape from a British prison.
Biggs celebrated the anniversary quietly Mon­
day. enjoying a champagne lunch with his family
al his hillside home overlooking Rio Bay. lie said
a larger celebration would be held Wednesday for
"a lot of people who mean and have meant u lot
lo m e."
Biggs was one of 15 men who held up a
London-bound mull train in 1963 and got away
wllh 87,3 million — a daring ami methodical
crime lhal came to be known around Ihe world as
"Ihe Ureal Train Robbery.
He was caught the following year and sen­
tenced lo 30 years In Jail. Bui. on July 8. 1905. he
scaled Wandsworth prison's wall with a roue
ladder and (lrop|ied Into a hole eul In Ihe roof of a
walling f limit me- truck, He had served only 15
months.
"A s there is no lime limit for m y crime umlrr
English law. I am theoretically still wanted,"
Higgs said Monday.
Biggs Is safe In Brazil because there Is no
extradition treaty beiwrrn Brazil and Hrttain
Brazilian authorities, however, have lut|&gt;osrci
restrictions on Higgs lie cannot work, marry or
stay out at night He reports weekly to federal
police.
For a lime. Ihe man who once hoped to live In
luxury w llh his cut from the 87 million hrlsl lived
aso vim ial beachcomber — almost |K-un!lrxa
Bill he said he has found Ills niche helping Mike
- his son by Brazilian night d u b dancer
Raliminda — build a career as a singer and TV
personality,
Mike's success has been a windfall fur his
lather, who now has a part share In an Ipunemu
nightclub and a house over looking Rio Bay.

Transsexual Lotos Loglon Bid
NEW L O N D O N .
C o n n . (LJI'I) Brldgrtle Pol, defeated
III her bltl to Itecome
the llrsl transsexual
c o in in a n tie r o f an
American Legion post,
says pa I riot Ism Is In­
spiring her lu run again
next year
" li s worth It," Pol
wild idler members o(
American Lrgum Post
No. 9 voted Monday
night to re-elect Com­
mander Joseph Ottuviario. "I'm a veteran, I
have the right to be'a
Legionnaire, and 1 love
my rountry "
But Otluvluno said
thr vote proves the
jhjsI Is not ready lu
urccpl a transsexual
leader, und he again
suggested that Pol Join
Ihe women's auxiliary.
Members gave Oitavlano 25 voles to 13 for
Pot and ID for John
Cable, a til) year-old
m e c h a n ic w h o ran
"out of protest lu them
Iroth,"

The spunky, plulln u m - h a i r e d Pu I
e m e r g e d from ( hr
dosed session hopeful
Ihe Issue of her sexchange operation 12
years ago would dis­
si pate by the next
election lor Ihe [ hkiI’s
lop Job.
"I'm a Legionnaire
and damn proud ul It,"
wild Pol. 50. who grew
up In Connecticut as u
Ixiy named Rubcrl und
received lour medals
lor Air Force service
d u r in g (h e K orean

tt ,ii
Alter undergoing Ihe
sex-change operation
In Mexico, she moved
to C aliforn ia, where
she me i and married
Richard Pol. a Marine
C orps srrgetm l who
was killed In Vietnam,
lit 19HO she relurned lo
Connecticut.
Ottavhuio, 66. said
(here was only one
Issue In the campaign.
"S h e Is not a she.
She Is not u he."

TR AN SP O R T AT IO N

FIT South Woodland Boulevard
DaLand Fiona* m »

Jvwwjr, i«s
CONSTRUCTION AND
M A IN T E N A N C E PROGRAMS

M IN I C O N TR ACTS
Sealed bid* will b* received In
tha d o w m l a ln Conference
Room of itw Olitrlet Office.
Department of Transportation,
/If South Woodland Boulevard.
O a L a n d . F lo rid * (M a ilin g
Addratt P 0 Boi 0, DaLand.
Florida n m OOfll until t »
P M (DaLand Local Tima) on
T bur Way. ff&lt;* ttb ol Augutt,
ItSS for tb* following work If
•ba bid amount it graatar than
SI SO 000 00 tba Contractor mutt
ba praquaiiftad at required by
Florida S la tu fa m K i ll
N O TE
Proposal lormt will not ba
Ittuad atlar t-JO P M I OaLand
Local Tim a) Wadnatday. Augutt
7 IMS
O R A N G E
C O U N T Y
(R O U T I N E M A IN T E N A N C E
F U N O S i S T A T E PR O J E C T,
J O B N O S . / l i f t f i l l and

&gt; l* f« N 4 I. Work contltlt ot
turnltblng atpAail and making
repair* on various p rim ary
r o a d t a n d tba E a t l W a tt
E rprattw ay lb Oranga County
i w p a saioeis. sa x a u l n o C*i

andar O aytl
O R A N O E
C O U N T Y
( R O U T I N E M A IN T E N A N C E
F U N O S I S T A T E P R O JE C T .
JO B NOS
M i l * T447 and
M ««a *0*4 Work contltlt ot traa
ramoral on SR *00 II 4 ) and SR
40S (E a tt Watl Erpratiw ay)
i w e s taxnoo 1*404/4j no Cal
andar D a rt I
B R E V A R D COUNTY
IR O U T IN E M A IN T E N A N C E
F U H D I I S T A T E PR O JE C T.
JOB NO 7«4f*f1M Work con

H tti ot tb* ramoral and ro
piacamant ot Iba tutting 4"
cencrata tldawalk county wida
in B r t v a r d County IW P A
**100411 1110 Calendar O ayl)
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
I R O U T IN E M A IN T E N A N C E
F U N O S I S T A T E P R O J E C T.
JOB NO /TtoOtoSI Work con

tittt ol lurnltblng and placing
atpballic concrata adga wtdan,
Ing an an taltllng llmarock batt
on SR 4* watt ol Gonara IW PA
*410/71) IJOCalandarDayt)
C IT R U S C O U N T Y IB R R P
F U N O S I S T A T E PR O JE C T.
JOB NO ftO M lIIJ , Work con

t ltlt ot cleaning and painting ot
ttructural tlaal on Bridge No
020001 on SR JS at Iba Florid*
Barg* Canal touth ot tb* Levy
County Lin* IWPA *111*4*1 140
Calandar O aytl
NO S IO BOND R E0U ISE D

Wag* Ralat Purtuant to tba
Fair Labor Standard* Act. Iba
m inim um wag* rata* tor lb*
pro|*ctt mciudad In tbit Nolle*
shall h* SJ IS par hour
L IU ot biddart will not b*
given out 71 hourt prior lo tb*
■ailing
Tba Slat* ol Florida 0*
partmant ot Trantporlatton. In
accordantt with lb* Prontiont
ot Till* V I ot lb* Ctrl! Rlgbtt act
ot IW* ( I t Stal 7*11 and th*
Hagulatlon* of lb* Department
ol Commerce (IS C F R , Part I )
ntu#d purtuant lo tuch Act.
haraby no) 11let all biddart that It
will altlrmatlraly Intur* trial
m inarlty but matt anlarprltat
wilt b# afforded lull opportunity
lo tubmil bid* In ratpont* to thlt
invitation and will not ba dJt
c rim in a te d a g a ln it on tb#
ground* ot race, color or na
iional origin In contldaratlon tor
an award
N O T IC E T O A P P R O X IM A TE
Q U A N T I T Y S U B S C R IB E R S
N O N E F U R N IS H E D W IT H
M IN I C O N TR A C TS
A ll work It to b* don* in
accordance with tb* plant and
pro|#ct tpaclllcallont ot tb*
Slat* ot Florida Department ot
Trantporlallon
Unlatt olber w It* noil bad by
carbtlad mall, return receipt
r equalled, bid tabulation* will
b* potted In lb* downttairt
Conference Room ot tb* OaLand
D i i t r l c l O tllc #
r t f South
Boulevard. DaLand. Florida on
th* lth day from tba lattlng
dal* Upon patting. It will b* tb*
Daparlmant i Inlanl to award to
tb# low bidder Any bidder who
trait h# It adrartaly abac lad by
lb* D e p a rtm e n t’* Intent lo
award lo lb* low bidder mutt
III* with tb* Clark ot Agency
Proceeding*, *0* Suwannee
Street, Taliahatta* Florida, a
written Nolle* ol Protatl within
7J hour* Ot potting of tb* bid
i*bul*llont
A protatt Iliad prior to tba
notice ol Oocttlon lo Solicit Bldt
or tb# Intended dec I lion to
a w a rd a contract tbail b*
(teamed abandoned union re
hawed within Iba lima limit*
provided in Sublet tion III
Additionally, a formal written
protatt tatting lortb a thort and
plain tutom anl at Iba matter*
attar tad by tba prolatlor mutt
ba Iliad wllh the Clark ot Agency
Proceed-rigt within If day* ot
tb# Preliminary Nolle* ol Pro
lott In accordance with Section
170 SJ 111. Florida Statute*, fall
ure to lllo a protatt within tba
time preetnbed In Section 110 U
tSI. Florida Slatutot. than con
tlltutt a waiter ol tba proceed
Ingt under Chapter 120 Florida
Statu tat
Order* lor theta document*
thouid ba directed to T. J.
G * 0 rg* M ini Contract Ad
m ln litra to r. Department ol
Transportation r o
Boa 47
D a Land Florid* J17I1 0047
Thar* wtlt ba no charge for
contract document*
Tb# right It re ter red to ro|oct
any or all bid*
S TA TE OF FLO R ID A
D E P A R T M E N T OF TR ANS
P O R TA TIO N
C A B E N E D IC T
D IS T R IC T E N G IN E E R
Publltb July f. I*. 140J
DEM SI

rT A m oer

taasJ4I lift

CELEBRITY CIPHER

l w » wiar w ie*c«*ei liana*Iw tneawr tubat t car* PaguareC

byC O N IP t WV Fat M

CAONHBBKDE
C K Q O M. "

I YDKEHBB
IY8

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IVOB

— J KMEP MAWD

ME

KEBMEH

M W0 S 8 M
JKMEEKEK.

P R EV IO U S S O LU TIO N
A commitla* is a cut da sac down which idea* are
lured and than quietly it rang tec) ' — liar nail Cocks

a*v

(lf A^|A

7^

C A L L T O IL r S E E

C»Htl4y C aN t U lt ir y e w art Croat*# kam o a l n a * 0t larooul I

"8 L H VDTKH

*"~T

C IT Y OF
LONOWOOO. FLO R ID A
NOTICE OF
PU 1LIC MEARINO
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF
PROPOSE DOR 01 NANCE

TO W HOM IT M AY C O N CER N
N O TIC E IS H ER E B Y G IV E N
by tba C ity ol Lo n gw o o d.
Florida, that tba City Com
m illion will bold a public bear
mg to contldar enactment ot
Ordinance No 712. entitled
AN O R D IN AN CE O F T H E
C I T Y OF LO N G W O O D .
F L O R I D A . TO C O N T I N U E
TH E TE M P O R A R Y C LO S IN G
OF LAM O N T A V E N U E A N D
SHADOW TR AIL W ITH IN TH E
SHADOW H ILL SUB DIVISIO N
T H A T IM M E D IA TE L Y A B U T S
M Y R T L E LAKE H ILLS R O AD
IN S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y
F L O R ID A . P R 0 V I0 IN G FO R
C O N F L IC T S . AN D E F
F E C T IV E DATE
Said Ordinance wet placed on
l.rtt reading on Jun* 14. I4SS
and lb* City Commlition will
contldar tame lor final pattag*
and adoption atlar the public
bearing, which wilt be bald In
Iba City Hall 171 W t«l Warren
A ra . Longwood. Florida on
Monday Iba 22nd day of July.
A O . I44S. parti** may appear
and ba heard with reaper t to Iha
prnpoied Ordinance T h u hear
mg may ba continued frorn lima
to lima until line! action I* lakan
by the City Commlition
A copy of tba proposed Ordi
nance i* polled at tba City Hall.
Longwood Flerida and cop!#*
a rt on til* with Iba Clark ol the
City and tame may b* impacted
by the public
A taped racord ol ml* meeting
•* mad* by tb# City lor It*
con ran lane a Thl* racord may
not contlltutt an adequate r*
cord tor purpose* of appeal from
a daemon mad# hr th# Com
m in io n w.lb raipait to th*
foregoing matter Any panon
with mg to totur* that an ad*
qoat* racord ol tb* proceeding*
I* maintained lor appailai*
purpota* It adrltad to mak* 1b*
n*c*t**ry arrangement* at hit
or bar own tepente
Dated thl* Jttb day ot Juno,
A D ittl
C IT Y OF LONGWOOD
Garaldina D /ambrl
City Clark
Publltb July 4 INS
DEM la
C IT Y OF
LONGWOOO. FLO R IO A
NO TICE OF
PUBLIC H EA R IN G
TO WHOM IT M AY C O N C E R N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by Ihe C ity of Lon gw oo d
Florida that tba City Com
mtttion ba* *n*&lt; lad emergency
Ordinance No t i l entitled
AN E M E R G E N C Y O R O I
N A N C E OF TH E C I T Y OF
LO N G W O O O F L O R ID A
TO
C O N T IN U E TH E T E M P O
MARY CLOSING OF L A M O N T
A V E N U E AND SH AD O W
t r a il w it h in t h e s h a d o v /
H I L L S U B D IV IS IO N T H A T
IM M E D IA T E L Y A B U T S
M Y R T L E LAKE H ILLS R O A D
IN S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y
F l o r id a
p r o v id in g f o r
C O N F L IC T S . A N D E F
F E C T IV E DATE
Said emergency ordinance
wat patted and adopted an Jun*
14. INS
A copy of Ordinance No r i l l *
p o t te d a l lb* C it y H a l l ,
L eng wood Fiend* and ro p e ,
era on Ilia with lb* Clark of lb*
City and tarn* may b* Intpectad
by lb* public
A Kpad racord of thlt mealing
I* made by lb* City tor It*
con van lent# Thl* racord may
not cantlltut* an adequate r*
cord tor purpota* ol appeal from
a daemon mad* by tb* Com
m lttlo n with ratpact to tba
foregoing matter Any parton
wlthmg to antura that an ada
quale racord ot tba prCKeari ngi
It maintain** for appailai*
purpota* It adrltad lo mak* th*
nacattary arrangement* al hi*
or liar own erpama
Dated thlt 17th day of June
A O INS
C IT Y O F LONGWOOD
Garaldina 0 Zambri
City Clark
Publltb July t INS
O C H SJ
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T
F O R S IM IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLO R ID A
PRO BATE DIVISIO N
Fll* Numbar IS 111 CP
IN R E E S T A T E O F
E l L E E N L TNESSLER
Dereatad
NOTICE OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Tba adm inlttrallon ot tba
■ i l i l l ol E I L E E N L
T R E S S L E R . dacaatad Fll#
Numbar IS 111 CP. II pending In
th* Circuit Court lor Sam mo I*
C o u n ty
F lo rid a , P ro b a ta
Division. Iba addrat* ol which I*
Sammol* County Courthouse
Sanford Florida. 11171
Tb* name* and addrat*** ol
'ha partonal representative and
lb# partonal representative i
allot nay art tat lor th b*l«w
All Inlaratltd parson* art
required lo lllo with thl* court
W IT H IN TH R E E M O N TH S
FR O M THE O A T f OF TH E
F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OF
TH IS NO TICE H I all claim*
again*! lb* atlale and |]| any
oblachant by *n In la ra tltd
parton lo whom nolle* wa*
mailed that chailanga* tb* valid
lly of lb* will the qualification*
*1 lb* partonal represent*n v*
vanua or (urltdlcllon ot lb*

court
ALL CLAIMS AN D O B JE C
f IONS NOt SO F lL E O W ILL
BE FO R EV E R B A R R E D
Del# ot lb* first pubinahqn ol
Ihn not let ol administration
July I. INS
Partonal Rapratanlatlva
D A N IE L PATRICK
TRESSLER
Attorney tor
Partonal Haprtianlaliv*
F R A N K C W HIGHAM
ESQUIRE of
STE N S TR O M M d N TO S H
JU L IA N C O LBERT
A W HIGHAM . P A
P 0 Bo* 1110
San lord. F i n / T J 12JO
Telephone (JOS) i n JIM
Publltb July 2 4 INS

DEM I*

■% *r * 1f w - &gt; r

f -R“ 1”T1'"I*"*• “t

* * &lt; ■»

Legql Notice
FIC TITIO U S N A M E
Nutlc* It hereby given that I
am engaged in but m a il at Lets
C a r t e r Rd . L a k e M a r y , '
Sammol* Coimty. Florida 1174*
under th* HcliHout name of
S E C U R ITY A SOUND, and Itiaf
I Inland lo 'eg tier laid name
with tba Clark of lb* Circuit
Court. Sammol* County. Florida
in accordance with tb* pro
vision* ot Iha Fictitious Name
Statuta*. To wit Section MS 94
F lor id* Sialuios 1N7
* Wa'ier A Dorfmettlar
Publltb Jun* tl. U A Ju ly 1. f.
INS
D E G 104
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
N&gt;rlea It hereby given that I
am engaged In butinatt at 101
N
W aym an, Lo n g w o o d .
Sammol# County Florida 177SO
under lb* lieM mu* name of
J E R R E C 0 C O N S T R U C T IO N ,
and that I intend to register ta d
nam* with th* Clark of Ibo
Circuit Court Sam,not# County,
Florid* In accordance wllh th*
provision* of tb* Fictitious
Nam* Sla'u'ei To wit Section
MS 0* Florida Statutes 14S7
/ * 'JarreW Fondran
Publltb Jun* II. IS A July 2. 4.
INS
D E G 10/
F IC TITIO U S N A M E
Matk# ll hereby given mat I
am engaged in butinatt al S40
N 414. A ltam oni* Spring*.
Sammol* County. Florida under
lb# flctlllov* nam# ol J M
A U T O S A LE S A Q U A L I T Y
D E T A IL , and that I inland to
register said name with tb*
Clark ol lb* C irc u it Court.
Sammol# County. Florida In
accordant# «i!h tb* p-orltiq nt
ot in* Fictitious Nam* Statutov
To w ll Section MS Of Florid.Statute* ITS/
/»&lt; Jama* 0 Hartwell
PubiHb Jun* IS A Ju ly I . T. Id.
INS
DEG Kl
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
Notlc* It haraby g, van that I
am tngagad m butinatt at P O
Boa Sal Longwood. Sammol#
County. Fiend* 21750 under tb*
tielltlou* nam# ol D A N N Y 5
S W D C O N C R E TE P U M P IN G .
■NC
and that I Intend to
register laid nam* with tb*
Clark of tb* C ircu it Court,
Samlool* County. Florid* In
accordance with lb* provision*
ol In* Fictitious Nam* Statute*,
To w il Section MS 0T Florida
SlaM T* ITS/
,*, Daniel F Bitbar
Publltb July 1.4 la. |l, INS

OEM I
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
N&gt;bc# it tocaby giv«n Ibal I
am engaged In but,nets t l P O
B o r IT4S, W in tt r S prin g*
Sammol* County. Florida under
tb a l l c t l t l o u * n a m * o t
CARO LYN S P A R TY AND
G IF T SHOP, and Ibal I Inland to
ragitlar said name with tba
Clark ol lb* C ircu it Court,
Sammol* County, flo rid * in
accordance with lb* provision*
ol In* Fictitious Nam# Statute*
To w il Section MS 04 Flerida
Statute* itS7
/*; Carolyn L Nalparal
Publltb July 4. 14, 11. » . INS
D E H S4
IN 1 Itf C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O R S IM IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R IO A
PRORATE Ol VISIO N
Til* Number M 7*1 CP
IN RE E S T A T E O F
AUGUST M AR O M N*,k/a
AUG U ST M AROMN. JR .
(}*&lt; a* tad
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Tb* ad m m itlralion ol lb*
attala ot A U G U S T M AHOM N
deceased Fll* Numbar 45 I N
CP 14 pending in Iba Circuit
C o u rt ior O ra n g e C o u n ty .
Florida probata Division, tb*
addrat* ol which It Orange
County Courtboo** Orlando, f L
&gt;2401 Tb* name* and addftttat
ol lb* partonal representative
a n d lb* p t r l o n a l r a p r *
la ntallvt i attorney a rt t*t
lortb btiow
All imaratlad parson* ar*
raquirad tq In* with Ibtt court.
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S OF
IH E FIRST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NO TICE
111 all claim*
agamil lb* atlat* and ( 1 ) any
o b (»c li* n by an In la rtt ta d
parton on whom thl* nolle# wat
tarvad’lbal chailanga* lb* valid
lly al Iba will lb* quallllcalion*
ol ih* partonal rapratanlatlva.
vanua ar jurisdiction of Ih*
court
a l l Cl a i m s a n o o b j e c
TIONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
ISE F O R E V E R B A R H E D
Publication ol Ihil Nolle* bat
begun on July 1. INS
Partonal Rapratanlatlva
1 Michael Kohany
P O B a t*017
Orlando FL 11*0 )
A Mar nay toe
Partonal Represent*! V*
V E J G O 'eth
P O B o .to il
Orlando F L 2140)
Telephone ( WS&gt; 444 t t . l
Pubbtb J u l y l . t INS
DEH T

71— Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 f.M.
MONDAY th r a FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - No«r

7 coiiiTCutlvo tioNS S2C a I
10 codsocwtiy* times 48C a I
Contract Ratos AvaMsM#
3 Lints

Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
Monday • 11:00 A.M. Saturday

23— Lost &amp; Found
LOST I while ipayad f#m*i*
thort haired dog and I brown
balrtd mala J. j In Paola
Ana US REW ARD Call Mr
Email 272 sail

27— Nursery A
Child Care
B a b y s i t t i n g In m y h o rn *
e v e n in g * A w e e k e n d *

CarlihadA E ip 111 M i l

33— Real Estate
Courses
* *

*

*

a Thinking at fatting a a
a Real E ttaia LicanM T a
W* altar Fra* Tull Ian
andcantinutut Tratnmgl
Call Dick ar Vicki Mr detain
*11 114!.. I l l 11T0...EV*. 77* 14S4

Kiyet af F lor id* , Inc.
Sf Yaart EaparMncal

71-Help Wanted
ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E or
B o ok k eep in g b a c k g ro u n d
Good ocganliallonal queintat
Typing filing, phono tk lllt
Cat] Mary Jot i e 11SI
Acrylic Applicator* needed lo
apply protective coating on
car* boat* and planet SS to
I I I par hour W * tram For
work In Sanford area call
Tampp 111 MO 7ISI
A c la rt A c t r a t t a i M a d * It A ll
1#i#nl lor m ovie*.T V A print
work Serious only apply

Piraiwauwt Celling, 4*7 1411
AIDES carllliad and or aipari
freed Day and evening thITtt
G ood a lm o t p b a r * and
Panalltt
E O E Apply ot
DaBary Manor
40 N Hwy
17 01 DaBary_________________
A L L T Y P E S JOBS
START W O R K NOW I

-A*
LABOR

FO R C t

^

Fi l l

Rtpofl r « « d y for « o r l At % A M
l i t Sf
UAfortf

321-1518
A P P O IN T M E N T SETTERS
Morning and a von in g b o u n
a ra i’ abi* No tip o rto n c t owe
o tta ry
G u ara n teed salary
and great bonus** MO 4157
AttHlanl Manager Baauly t i p
p ra la rra d , co
b o n a lllt A
bonus Apply in person Ac*
Baauly Supply. Zayro P la t*
Airport B ird A 17 01__________
AUTO SA LESM A N Large rapu
labia U C firm naadt honatl.
aipariancad. M il m ollralln g
p a rto n
C o m m l i t i o n and
[w re fill Apply with ratum*
to BLUE BOOK C ARS Call
111 4711________________________
Avon Aaauty Campany
Full or part lima Call Immadi
*Mly m_S*l_4or 17J I(714
■ u iba yl/ W aitratta t/ W aila rt
Over IS. day A night th lllt
ava&gt;l*bl* Apply Holiday Inn.
Lake M onro* Santord

legol Notice
F IC T ITIO U S NAM E

N&gt;tict It boroby given ibal I
am engaged m butinatt al P 0
Boa 10*4 C atM lbarry. Sammoia
County. Florid* 12747 1044 under
iba Iktlliou* nam* of AM ER I
CAN D R E A M E N TE R P R IS E S
( A O E ). and that ( inland to
tagiitor M id nam* wllh tb*
Clark ol Ih* C irc u it Court.
Sammol# County. Florida In
accordance with lb* provtsient
ol in* Fictitious Nam* Statute*.
Tow il Section 4*5 Of Florida
Statute* I t V
747 Mark A Stenger
Publltb Jun* 14 A July 1. 4. 14.
INS

On* Utad 1/
Shear ba ng
Horad al Oav* Jana* Wrac*#'
tor* it# F#rn Park. FlorwSa
and lb* undersigned at Sharitl
of Sammol* County, Florida,
will I I II n A M on *h# )7th
day ol July A O INS. otter tor
t*i* and H U I* Iba high**!
bidder, for cash tub|*ct to any
and *11 t.lttln g taint, at th*
Front IW atl] Door at th* ti«p*
of th* Sammol* County Court
hquw m Sanford. Florida da
above dascribed partonal pro
party
That M id M l* It being madt
to M*i»ly th* lo rm t *1 M id Writ

of I locution

John E Polk Shoe IIt
Sammai*County. Florida
I t ha ad vac Iliad Jun* IS July L
T IA with tb* tola on July 11.
INS
D I G 04

Needed LPSI andar R.N. tor H I
th in, full time good emptoyo*
b a n tu * a n d a tm a ip h tr* .
E O l apply af
DaBary Manor
4 0 N H w y 17 t l . D aBary________

N U R S E 'S A ID E S : All tbltto
E «par lotuced or cortifdd prol*rrod Apply In porton aft
Laktvlaw N un lng Cantor, 414
E T -d S I , Sanford

NURSE RIDES ARD UYE-IR *

71-Help Wanted
CARPENTERS Hdftlt

opr^ing

Wsnt+d

Apply In parton
S H ED S A M E R IC A
ITS H w y IT 41

Longwood
I N tUC
Carpenter* A Lakarart Warded
Condo* on Airport B lv d . San
ford Graal opportunity. !&lt;*■
•bit beat Contact Todd Mot**
Call I 77SZJAJ.4RM ITPM
Carpenter* and car pawlar help
art w anted Fektbuf Sub
dlviton tot 10. days Or call)
H I 701? night*_______________
D A TA R R O C C fS IN Q M O R .
1 yrt arpartaneo- DMAS. RPG
II Syltovn 14
Parmanatd
pot11km Never a Fa*

TEMP PERM_____ 774-114#
DRIVER 'CLERK
Apply C H A M P IO N TV .
K M A R T Shopping Cantor In

Santord____________________
E L E C T R IC IA N S

E i p a r l a n c a d to w o rk at
Sammol# Cantor. E c k trd t. J
Byron’*. Walmarf A 44 Itrip
ttovet Pbon* 114 0M4. or stop
by |ob tit# at Ja/t Orlando
Drtva, Santord_______________
E X C U T I V I SE C R E T A R Y
With or without ihortbandl
Ablait Tem porary Savvlcrt
____________H I 1*44___________
E X C U T I V E S E C R E TA R Y
Front offic*. pbonat. (Oing.
typing halptul Parmananl
pot i I ion t N a v a r a F w l

IIM P PERM_____ 774-1341
Individual Needed familiar with
Rjal E tla t* Good portenan
ly Fa m ilia r w llh Dalton*
Willing to work woaktndt
Phone...........................
474 4204
J nvtntary CantrtT/

Shipping 4 Receiving

Eiparlanc* raqu'rad In product
control, inventory control,
shipping 4 receiving tor San
ford m a n u fa c tu rin g firm
I I I 0*40
__ _____________
JeAnn Fabric* will b* opening a
ttor* In Santord W* tr*
soaking applicant* lor tba
petition* ol ttor* manager A
tawing machine Mia* manag
tr
Store m anager It r*
tpontibl* tor comp lata apar a
lton af ttor* 4 kuparvtting
tavaral amployaat Sawing
machine salat manager It
r a t p o n t i b l a fa r ta w in g
mac hi In* salat Goad Mlary.
banafitt 4 training program
II interfiled, sand ratum* lo
JoAnn Fabric*. S14 Volwtla
Mall. 1700 Volusia A n n u l.
Daytona Beach, F L H4M

Private duty, tlatf duty, and
heme cert poaltlont avaKabto
E tc d H a n l pay M E D IC A L
P E R S O N N E L POOL.
X S 444*411

" E O E . M / P / V "_____________
P A N TR Y / D IN IN O ROOM
W O R K ER
Full Ti.-n# for Senior Rtfiremanf
Community Etperitncy da
sired PtoOMnl appear anc*
and pononailty raquirad
Will contldar training willing
:**m*r Good wag**
Apply al
HOW E L L PLACE
100 Airport Blvd
Santo d
Between 2 1 1 PM
Mon Fri
Or celt_________________ m o o *
P A R T T IM E CUSTOM ER
S E R V IC E
Pluth store I You’ll tmito btral
Train with p k i u n partonaN
fy tor helping evttomart and
aetlttlng m offic*

a t t s Employment

ftV d

323-5176
1111 Franck Are

SALTS
GO O D PAY
OO OD B E N E F ITS
O O O O FU TU R EI
t i t .444
-S A N F O R D AREA
W A N TED :
W* need a good butlnai
parton to operate a local Ml#
rout* tailing grocery product
and general marc bandit* 1
over 500 atlatblltbad cuttor
a rt W# otter immediate of
portunlty for tba right parse
who It wRIIng to work to
batter man edvarag* Income
W E P R O V ID E :
• Established butinatt
• 4 waakt training
• Leased vehicle

• Hotpilaliiallon
• Lit* Insurance
O Retirement plan
•Opyiarlunlty tor advanctman
W E ARE
O R O W IN O R A P ID LY
M in im u m

investm ent r t

qulrad ttcurtd by account
and in van lory
Financing Available
F o r confidential Inlarvlav
Ptoe*a call Howard Jama*
weekday! 14 AM 7 PM a
I 400 H i leas

N O T IC E

K N IG H TS
OF

LAW N S P R A Y T E C H N IC IA N '
No aipartonc* nocottaryl Full
lima and parmananl Graal
lor retired parton Ibal wants

to koap butyl

Employment

COLUMBUS

323-5176

JACKPOT * 2 5 0
B IG N
*2 5 0
B IG X
*2 5 0

» M Franck Av*.
M A ID bi weakly cleaning ot
Condo Any day. M ult ba
d e p e n d a b le , o w n I r a n i
portalton IS Op par hr » 1
M a ln ta n a n c *
M illw rig h ts ,
conveyor mechanic!. I beat
m atal e ip a rla n c * a plus
Wage* commanturato with
atparlanc* All thlftt Apply
in parton *1

CASS
835-84#-894
Tlkm. A Srr. 7 f jr.
25A4 OAK AVL,
SANTORD

S0UTMERR CYPRESS
PR00UCTS. IRC

TEMPLE SHALOM

010*

m g I . S T A T E R D 44
D E L A N O . FL.
_________ IN 4 1 7 IS R II_________
AVO N E A R N IN O S W O W III
0 F I N T E R R IT O R IE S NOW III

W U41

M O T E L ASSISTAN T
AAANA0ER
420K
But? motel naadt your
•■par lane a in metof apart
H o rn lo keep It running
tm oolhlyl Groat car**! op
portunlty)

Employment

323-5176

D E G 141

ioiiowt

itatoavr

DEADLINES

NOTICE OF SHER IFF t SALE
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that by virtue ol that certain
Writ *1 Elocution ittuad out of
and und*- m* taai ol m* County
C o u ft ol O ra n g a C o u n ty ,
Florida, upon a Imal ludgamanl
r andarad In tb* atocataid court
on th* ITth day of May A D
INS. In mat certain cat* an
titled Pawl Mom#i d l l '* Brian*
Rattaurani P ia in till
,i
Jack Stramontw. individually
and V*&lt;o Si'amonbo d b a Matt
Restaurant Equipment Oaten
dant which aforesaid Writ ot
Etacuhon was da 11raved to m#
at Sbarltl at Sammol* County
Florida, and I lvara levied upon
tb* tollewmg dater.bad property
owned by Jack Stramonbo. mdl
••dually and Veto Stramonbo
d b a Matt Rotiaurant, t*&gt;d
pro p a rty be in g lo ca te d In
Seminal* County. Florida, mort
p a r tic u la rly d e s c rib e d at

I Pot

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 6 r m ......................... 87C ■ I
HOURS
3 consocirtlvo timot SIC a I

1NO

clean up after partormanca*.
Saa Fred tAetoat:

U U F react Av*

&amp;£&amp;
BINGO
Saturday $.4} P.H.
Wadaatday 4:45 P M.
825-819-550

CdRMf
2 8250 lackpelt
1715 (I44d BM.
iCam ii Prarldiaei IN d )

Dattooa. FL

BINGO

NOW HIRING!
Outstanding Opportunity For

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION

( bu- c

CENTERS

KIWANIS CLUB
OF CASSCLHRRY
i kioar mm i f*
S1SIS4UR
ID USeiAOFtTS

S LOCATIONS IN SEMINOLE COUNTY

• Auto / Truck Refueling
• Full Line Convenience Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens
Friad Chicken Subt Oonuti

•
•
•
•
•

Top Salaries
Free Life &amp; Hospitalization
2 Paid Vacations Each Year
Profit Sharing Plan
Other Benefits
m a k e a p p l ic a t io n in p e r s o n

4HW I
M

/ I#

Lata

kitkh
t e d h iib
ty 8150 par ***47 T&gt;m
l l aa kdaal way to kdana
ISM pabJto t l rear dak

KB* t i Ba toetod*d Id

Evening lieruld

AT 202 N. Laurel Ave.. Santord
Monday Tiuu Fudiy I M AM 4 )0 PM
NO PHONE CALLS. PLEASE

C LA S S IF IE D
D E P A R TM E N T
111 J411

�KIT 'N' CARLYLE 5by Lefry Wright

17— Apartment*
Furnished / Rent

71— Help Wanted
PHONE MOM
Pa rt tlma No ivparlanca r » e * »
t*r y . will trtln Sot appoint
m ontt tfvm x/r Long wood
• otflea Starting aatary tram
U SO to St 10 par hour Im
madiata par raltaa tor in o m
who trr he'd#r Potential t ig
par hour wllhln a « w t | Call
Jim Caoa. U4M30____________

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE
High
Earnmgt
Potant'ai!
Modem oft ica In aicatlant
location Campiata training
program Nan dlviton of old
**l*binn*d firm
Call now
for
dttaiit
on
pteatant
working condition* and to
tacura yovf future
jim Baftartr___________ i f a a a ia
Part ttina Moota keeping and
cooking lot ratlroa* Tran*
portation and rttaranca* r#
quirad Good par m aat*
SALES PERSON EapartencmJ
w th Ukad car M ia* Eacallant
commliUon Good opportunity
tor advonconmorl i l l n t p

SSL Samimi Salas SSJ

SURVEY CREW Eapariancad
party ctitaf* A Inatrumanf man
wonted Permanent pot non*
with good pay A aacallant
banal lit In Orlando araa Sand
rotume te P E C. Inc Too E
Robutian St , Salta ISaa, Or
landa. FL 13*01
_______

TERMITE TECHNICIAN
On* o* Fi* '• o'Otsf p*it control
lor

Ca

tm t mind*d indi v&gt;diu«it with
« tillllifif n « t l I O' l« * r n 4
*dv*nc* Co ¥*'h»cl* 4 co
b * n « flt «

Apply

HA)

Pork

Dr tv*, S#*n&lt;*r Pott Control
Hm pPto* collt, plooto.________
Ttradal Ja* Mvntingr
C a ll F u t u f* *
th ey haya
hundrtdi ol lob opanlng* tor
Ihota a t e w ant to w ork
a n ocn
CEMENT WO R K E R S A
H E LP E R S
E a ca lla n t pay
Start right anay a n tjoo
O ELIVE RY H E L P E R S no aa
parianca naca*Mry Full lim a
Good ila 'tin g pay a n a x e
G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
TRAINEES
G raal dartin g
loo Sayatal opanlng* Good
pay anaXO
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y and
PRODUCTION W O R K M ott
thifti open Good pay tcala*
a n txn
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S
Ganaral Conttruetkan labor
Good pay * n *100
TRUCK DRIVE RS Long haul
Im m ad'aN1 Good driving ra
cord OvarlS a n a)00
LO C AL D R IV E R S
S tra ig h t
truck* Good pay Slarl right
away a n tXO
r e c e p t io n is t

Furnithod Studio Apartment*
Ona Bedroom Apt*
Two Badroom Apt*

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR C IT IZ E N S D IS C O U N T
RANCH S T Y L E L IV IN G !' &lt;

SANFORDCOUNT APTS.
_____
3233301
Lovpiy Furn 1 bdrm ay/ air.
Hying room, kltchpn. bath,
firtptoct Qutet araa
tin
mo » STOP dap H I 11*0
SPACIOUS CONDO, tupor con
onion All Itw goodia* micro,
c o b l* . v ld t o . p h o n o ,
wother dryer. pool Ownar
rotam* orw bdrm and bath tor
or cot tonal u t* a t otfico Ta
nant ha* pr.va to bdrm A
bath Virtually private uto of
onllro unit A va ilab le now.
i l n g l o * o n l y , no p o t *
Rioton b'o nagoliobla ronl
n i moo
Wtklvk H in t EtfKtency Conoo
uto Corpot. a ir Aduttt No

pot* SJal m aato___________

M o t a n and S fta k a r *,
Motl*#tor*. Laadar* and Pop
pla Into Salt Im p ro ve m en t,
and not atre'd to aarn larga
u r n ol fiw t*r Start with «
110 on* day M m inar
ACT
NOW! Call M l GO GO I aaaa I

corrjptjfisf | looking

A V A IL A B L E NOW

, o f f ic e

H ELPER S. C L E R K S . CRT
O PERATO RS
Im m a d ia la
opanlng* Good p a y tca la*
Call a n a m n o w i
WELDERS CartItlad Eacallant
pay tcala* Call today *TI

am

PAINTERS A P A I N T E R
HELPERS
Im m a d ld la
opanlng* good d a rtin g pay

Can today * n a m
D R T W A LL With or without
a ip t r la n c t
Im m a d la ia
opanlng* Good pay Call to
d jy jn o o o
Wanted D**k Clark aaparlancad
w th M icro C a th R t g ld a r
pralarrad but w ill train Apply
In parion D ay* Inn. I a A SR
aa San lord
W ANTED:
EXP A U T O M E C H A N IC
I TIRE C H AN G E R S

Apply al: Id 111 Franck Ava
__ A O K T IR E M A R T
WtMar. Layout. A Flttart
Faata Staal Corporation
Ovar lima A aacallant banalitt
Call m o n o or
Coma by
MIS Edgaw atar Dr
Orlando
E O E

*1— Apartments/
House to Share
iNGWOOD Matura tamaia to
,hara 1 B drm
laka front
io n * Call l&gt;* saaa

93— Rooms tor Rent
CkrlaNan Apt* A Hama*
TV, dtchan. laundry, m aid SKJ
w* upQrl a l l S*M &lt;3)0*14
Furn,Mod Room For Ronl Soa
ol 1BU Goto PI 1 block* oH

I and 1 bdrm . nwor town, STS
ard IAJ par wawk (ISO tocuri
ty. Call H I 4144 W aning*

1 bdrm . utlllttet furnithod VaOO
per m onth p lu * d o p o ill
Coll M l MW otter 1 PM
I Bdrm oportmont par tact tor 1
ptopio US par waaa plu* 1100
toevrity Coll
111 lit * or

. 171 &gt;,4&gt;
9?— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAMBOO COV E APTS
WOE Airport Blvd
PHONE n&gt;*4&gt;«........... m o a o i
Efficiency tram . .......H i t mo
PtKQuwt lot Son la r CWUono

•COUNTRT SETTING •
Luff* 1 I J Mr*H. A partm#nt»
Adult L*h*vR*«rF am ily P **l«td *

Auiliblt Now Open Weaken*
IIM

SECURITY D EPO SIT
W ITH THIS ADI

MUSTERS COVE...... 323 7900
Lg I bdrm w/w carpal, dith
wathar. Coni hoot A air, 1X0
mo » tat dapcwll H I 0711

RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
Limited Time Only
'1 off F lftt Month* Ronl
IU 0 Ridgewood Ava
San lord Fla
CALL

mtaio

Monday thru F r &gt;day

llo l 10

Saturday from

Small 1 bdrm , I bath. air.
appliance*, corpot Ideal tor o
couple S3W m o ♦ 1100 depot
It HI 1114 or m IQtel
___
Spec tout A patfm en t* Minute*
Iron* H a y ease Lakatront.
pool tonnl*. adult*, no pal*,
laundry Storting at I N I o mo
Caii m o m to * *#
Tired Of A partm ent liv in g !
E rporlanca th* p riv a c y ol
your own homo In ono ol our
luiury dwptoak* Lg 1 bdrm
I both, vaulted colling, a p p l.
hook up*, p r iv a te tcroened
polio, your own yord main)
It** Sterling al *1*0 Call ter
detail*. I P M fP M . n i l U l
Wrkiv* River EHtency Cano*
ut# Carpet air Aduttt. no
p#&gt;* I IM mo m a *TO
I and 1 bdrm A lto furnithod
fttletency from BJ) wook *1)0
depot!! N o pat* Coll 111 4S0’
I ! P M a ll Palm etto
I Bdrm gar ago opl on th*
rtror t lM par month Coll

m *oa»_________

I Bedroom
| Bath
no pot*
t i n * mo (100 lacurlty
____________
100*____________
13*) SPE C IAL
I A 1 bdrm from *110 L o t*
Ada F io.lb te teota H I lo w

m

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

1 't acr* homo iltet
and g r a v e tram
T o o 'm *

NI C* I b d r m . c a r p a l
throughout Stop by 1011 W
F ,r*t VaOO par m * F lr*t. let*.

D O N 'T W A IT I 10 A c * * on
Cochran Rd Genova UMO
pot *c*o llte down, lOte
lnt*rt*t Own*y financing!

OTpoi.t ftoterpneo* U S 1104
1 bath

ms

LANDSTOCK B RO KERS
j m . . ....................

1 Story 1 bdrm 1 bath, rang*
r*Irtgorotor. wathar garogt
tcraonod porch, tencad back
yard A va llo b l* Aug I MOO
par mo
t in t A tocurlty
Htteranco* roguirad 111*70

PM

____

7 bdrm

I bafh. aquip kifcban
i;S0 mo *
1200 depot if
Q jfd re n Q X m 1333

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
I Bdrm . furnlthad Matura
aduifi only No paf% Park Ava
Mobifa Park 3717PAf

574 1040
103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
H IO D E N L A K E
Beautifully
decorated 1 Bdrm . 1 both,
o p p llo n c o t, c o ilin g ton*,
vortical blind*. (Croon porch,
loncod yard i!*S Coll 111
l a M
__________________

NEWHOMES fOR RENT

n « a u p ________________ i d o&lt;»

117— Commercial
Rentals
Rafail 4 Otfica Spaca X)0 up To
2 000 iq ft alto if or age avail
abfa J7 7 *a01
_______
SANFO R D For ranf or i#*w
Nsar airport. IS ■ SO butld ^g
Ra%f room, otfica air, ISO &gt;
174 (a n c a d lot I pbata
afacfrical «ytfam
IQ horka
powar atr comprakkor P in t#
Call TAT «Oaa or 7f &gt; t)A7 affar
A PM

131— Condominium
Rentals
S IN G L E S T O R Y
L IV IN G
Lm m Ttrmt It Fit
Tout Ntods'
Furnishfd or Unfuinishtd.
Carport*
Frivol* Fatia*
Lu*h Landtcaptng Fat* Chlldran
W A TE R BED S A C C E F T E D I

Call. . . . . . . . . . 321-1911
127— Office Rentals

hi mu_______________
SANFORD Furnithod room * by
th* wook Maatonaiil# rate*
Maid tar vie# Call H I *10/
J T P M a llP o im afto Ava

T N I F L O R ID A H O T EL
MOOakAvonuo
H I ARM
Booiortobte W eakly H ite *

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Fvrn Apt*, ter Sancar L d treat
] ) • Palm oH o A vo
J Cowan N o Phone C elt*

Energy Cttlctenl 1 bdrm . 1
bath Potto Homo* n*cited In
gulol country utteng. near
cha aping A tcNoott Ctet# te
LekoMory 1/4 E (It
Chock Ihot* teoturo* I
a f rod Fro* » , n .go.ator
OMtcrowov*
a Gar at*
a Attic Iter ap*
o WaMar/Oryar Connoctw**
• On/itgtct AAanaagamant
Chaldron A Pat* Welcome
tem po
Call!

321*3827

EX C ITIN G NEW THINGS
ARE HAPPENING AT
TH E

M l— Homes For Sale

B Y O W N E R 1 bdrm 1 bath
Poof Firepiaca. *j acra on
canal to L # k « Markham
Akkum# lied monthly evith
U 000 do*n Call Bin Qofff
•31 scao Idayk) or 122 Ta m
I N t f a i l _____
BY O W N E R *\ 5 ‘ " r . LOCH ARtSOR VACANT I
idrihi . 2 bath carport ter tan
Porch US 400 37: Jiff

G n to rd Nit* 1 bedroom homo
with living room dining room
denoted temily room laundry
room workthep Col* lor In
tor mol. on J l ) IIM O' Bit 4*11
VU.400 or b**l otter
S A N FO R D Now 1 bdrm 3 hath
D D L gorag* tn trg , U v t f
B it too Crank Conttiuctlon
and Realty. FH BIO OMI
la n ia rd
R IO U C E D I
VA
a p p r o lit d . groat t lo r lo r
hem* | bdrmi , phi* don
Ouiat itroof F # « t 4 yord

By Ownar Loch Arbor V«nMd
4 Bdrm 2 bafh pool centra'
air haaf
com p lete ly ra
modalad Ownar financing
M l WOO Call «04 4 2 tft«fo r
904 427 CSM __
__ _____
bidden taka Dr Sanford By
ow nar
« b d rm
l bath
A iiu m ib lc I 'i \
N r in
throughput Ml ttlt______
Hidden Lake U t Wiidvbuod D*
3 bdrm | bath dbt garage
porch cen tra l air Super
Clean* Aikumabie la) OOO
r ea lto r
M A R V fN K LAIL
44f 11AS
or 7«1 TMT

Olfictt to Rtnt
Raatonabiaand convaniant
101 N Map fa U n fo rd

371 W O
SQOO kq ft otfica kpata avail
abfa karond floor of ad
m Iftiftrafiva fkuildi'nq Sarslord

Wilt Street Co....... 321 5005
_

S T

i^nr__J D
1411(111

KISH REAL ESTATE
JU S T L IS T ! D
3 Bdrm , 2 baffi family room
dinmg room central air and
h a a l, f ire p la c e
fenced
Assumable Mfg You won't
find one batter at M Y W
E X E C U I t V I HOME
Per tecf for entertaining Canal
front to it John % River Built
in grill in tcreened court yard
4 bdrm a1o bath home |ukt
rig h t lor F lo rid a livin g
»123.900
O V IE D O
Walk to high school 4 Bdrm 3
bath New carpal «nd paint
intide F on cod back yard
Garage til.M b
H A N O V E R WOOOS
4 Bdrm
homo with all the
amaninet Pool, ipa screened
patio
Hugo fam ily raam
o v e rlo o k in g shaded yard
Over sired deukla garage
Form al Dining Room Large
•nsida utility roam 1377,PM
O P E N SUN DAYS I la S PM

(305) 321 0041
41* W I I III Sir tot
SontofB. FI 11HI

1 Bdrm
h o rn * p l u s 3
B d rm mobilo borne both
fyrn khed Good area fiO 000
O T H E R HOMES LO IS
A C R E A G E IN V E S TM E N T
PR O P ER TY
C ALL A N Y TIM E
R E A L T O R ...............I l l A991
LIST W ITH U S I
SWIM TENNIS
Neal 3 Bdrm . 3 bath homo with
walled security Nice yard
carpets, air, padtPe Ians, 7
Qaraqes clubhouse overs'led
pool and tennis court*

CALL BART
R E A L E S TA TE
R EA LTO R
221 74»l
) bdrm J hath Innmedia to ck.
cupancy FH A Non qualifying
mortgage Low down Owner
hol ds I nd mor t gage
Lease option terms available
1S4 OOP U3 m I

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

R EALTO R

**!• Or R*nt W Opl ten 1 txjtm
n*#r downtown Larlovd *111
By Mtol *04 T! 1 4)1} liter )

REALTY-REALTOR
Sanford's S ilts leader

F I H t C R A C K I II SP E Cl AL I
Summit all ottari on m u 3
bdrm . 1 bath Fane ad back
c a r p o r t , a tta b llth a d
rtaighborhuod Ownar tinanc
kng. Ilka nan* A ilin g U f SOO

W E LIS T a n o i e l l
MORE HOM E* THAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE CO UN TY

HALL

E X C E L L E N T B U T I 1 W rm .
tencaO Oraol Locattent Walk
M all king* at tAepouigi Uo
boltovebte tetm t H U M
CO NDO 11
| hd.m 1 Both,
co n tro l alr/b o a t. caoatry
kltcNowl E o iy Torm tl 1 te
Itw*** tram ut.M 0 A B 4t.IM
SUHLAND ESTATISI 1
gartaav* haiwat I* ihaat#
tram. All thaw Aaoutttetlyl
Eoty Oriv* I* OrltnM* Only
*44.M*. U I I M A U I M

323-5774

C A S S E LB E R R Y 1 acr*. tonod
PH I *4) 000 W M4I UOwtkl
H E A l IO H
133 te« l
lin lw 4 4 *plt | l) 000 m poti
liv* C4*h How total price
I f f 000 A p ro lto d volu*
14) 000 Coll I *04 40* D M

•100 Security
Deposit

111™"'"4 *"
»

3 2 3 -7 9 0 0

Beacbsida Realty. R EA LTO R S
*04 117 1217
ogee 7 Days!

223— Miscellaneous

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

B A L D W I N P IA N O
PRO
E t-ctnc Piano f l wo Call
H I U H o H O F iP M ___________

CUSTOM BUILT METftl SHEDS
A n , , 1* Call 111 40ri

231-Cars
L ifefime
Lot Renfi

Adult Park

—
i i n tn o
includes Water Garbage P c k up
YardMam*enance
l mmed&lt;ate Occupancy
G re je ry ^^W b ri^H ^

W# Havt a lim it#* Number ol
fl#po « toi 4 k Lew At iiM Down*

NAFIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S Sanford.....321 4075
Bonne pill* PonflAc

Appliance* Far Sal* all in
aicoltent condition A fully
f oot onload—
13) tit*
R*&lt;ondlli*n*d Appli«nc*«
Iran, *4) W AR R AN TY
B A R N E TTS
C A S S ELB E R R Y
B1M1I1_______
•&gt;* »«11
■ R EN T T O O W N .
Color TV*
iteroot wothor*,
d r ,# it rtfngerolor Irooiott
lurnllur*. vldoor 4CDtd*r,
Spot tel l,i wook l ronl S) 00
Altornollvo TV A Appl Rrnt*l*
la y ro* Shoppma Confor
___________ m moo
Utod Wathar, Fart* A Sortie*
ter Ktnm ortt
111*441
M O O N E T A P P LIA N C ES

*.’
Reduced

C O U R TI3 V PONT I AC 313 2121

★ DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION ★
Hwy 42
C&gt;A» Iona B«ach
a • a t a Heidi a a a a a a

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION

1433 F 114 S',pec Cob Immoru
late, a ,king SHOO 14'* F 1W
Super Cob Groat condition.
HVTO Can 111 3431
it* I DO DOE VAN
Diablo Convortton link and ico
bo, mutt »** to appreciate!
(1000 *nd l*k* ovar payment*
L*n H I 003) alter 1 F’ M
3*Ch*vroltl Blattr
&lt; Wheel D rlvt
t*)4S
C O U R TES Y P O N TIA C H I 1111
14 F ard Branca X C T
&lt; Wheal Driva
Raducadi
Sa*t)
C O UR TESY P O N TIA C 11)1111
•1 Toyota Puk Up H 000 ml . 1
tp rtd c rv lta . I ll) whatl
AM FM air SMT) H I 1413

Every Wod N it. *t I to PM

* Where Anybody *
• Can Buy or Sell I *
f of more details
I 404 m t i l l

WILSON MUCH FURNITURE

USED C A R S

i n i n I . lit s t .............. i n t i l l

THE B I S T IN T O W N
Ig I t T E R M S

27TH STREET FURNITURE
104 W Iffh st

235— Trucks /
Buses/ Vans

Bad Credit?
NoCttditF
WE FINANCE

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

in m i

183-Television/
Radio / Stereo

lonllh M color tetevuton Orig
mol price over MOO Balance
duo 134* 00 cath or lake ov*r
payment, 13) month Still In
w o r r o n ly
NO M O N E T
DOWN Fro# homo trial no
obligation Coll 141 1144 day
or isighi

CH I IH T H A S S L E S ?
•
•
•

i e l u i w n iry iitxiut your
rreifit p ro lile m t
W e can fmnncei « lm u it
eriyone
D o w n paym ent a% lo w til
$3 0 0 0 0
W e fake iredetH
f*eytivenf ■ In N yiiur

195— Machinery/Tools

•'
B

Snapper rider *4 Inch cut. II
horte power Good condition
Coll m If!)

H IM (H IN I A l n o S A I J S

1501 Ftench A t *.
32S.IHM5

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
*1 Yamaha *10
F tectrie Start
WOO ml
Modoc ad •
sm s
C O U R TES Y P O N TIA C . H I H ll

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campon
CAM PER CAP All aluminum
lor a tm pick up White, good
condJk lo ro tte r H3 &lt;*4J____
I Fl. CAM F I N CAR- All glvml
num tor 4 pick up White, 4 »c
cond 111) Coll H I 4*01

243— Junk Cars
A N T JU N K CARS A TR UCKS
BavgM: From t i l SM A met a
C a i iw ik i a .......................m m l
TOP Doll*' Paid lor Junk A
Utadcor*.truck, A heavy
equipment I H ItW
WE PAY TO P D O LLA R FOR
JU NK CARS A N D TR UC KS
CBS A U T O P AR TS 141 4MS

To List Your Business...
Diol 322-2611 or 831-9993

S U P E R ! 1 dim 1 bate Lom*
with m u te utility tollt bdrm
Rlon, oof fit kilikyn M ir*
largo living room m oo*
C A S T A S SUM PTIO N ! I bdrm
I bote homo **l la kitchen,
&lt;*ntr*l t i r 'N a l. f*m* room
Of w ork,ho* oroo M torogc.
ftneodyord ill.***

Additions A
Remodeling
REMODELING SPECIALIST

O W N E R M O T IV A T E D t
1
bdrm I bote homo with (r**l
ro o m , (o lh o d r o l co llin g
control olr/hoat. p u t* Good
location! **0 )00

WoHandl*
Th# whole Boll Of Wo*

8. E. LINK CONST.

3227021
^ ^ ^ ^ n o n c m j^ v o iio W ^ ^ ^ ^

E N D L E S S P OS S IB ILITIES ! 1
bdrm I both bom* wifb eel in
kilcbonl Eacoflont ter otftc*
b o lld te g l C a rrtc t t* «t e f
Vatu* in fh* land I Said M "**
It" tandllMW tfS M*
Q U A L IT Y H O M E I 1 H i m 1
bafh with ***** bdrm plaa.
tarm al dimag roam, bog*
cauatry **l In kiteban. larg*
fa m ily B Florie* raam t

*01.Md

W IL L B U IL D TO S UITl TO U R
LO T OR OURSI EX CLU S IVE
A O E N t F O R W IN S O N O
D E V C O R F . A C E N TR A L
F L O R ID A LE A O E R I MORE
H O M E FOR LESS M O N E T I
CALL TO O AT I
d O E N E V A OSCEOLA E D O
ZO N E D FOR M OBILES!
) Acr* Cauatry If act*
Wall flood an j t i M Rd
M \ Down 10 Yr* *1 IIN I
Front tlBJetl
If you or* looking ter * toe
catttul caraar la Real Ettete.
S4on,tram Rooffy It teakiag
tor too Call Lao AibtigM
today *t m ION Evantngt
111 10*3

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apt*. Available
Adults and Families Welcome

Baby, Bedt, Slrwliers Clofhet,
Playpen*. Etc. Paperback
Books 111 0377 111 9SB4
NeedCribs Playpens Baby
furniture clothing Good
Prices&gt; After 7 PM
H I S7AJ
Paying CASH tor
Aluminum. Can* Copper
Brass lead Newvpaper.
G iatl Gold. Silver
XoAomoTool t i l W ut
• * 00 Sat t I 373 MOO

219— Wanted to Buy

141, FORD G R AN A D A
*4W Col! *41 todO (Day*) or
333 *113 IN it e * | ___ ________
1433 Chov’y C 10 window Von,
low mlioogo air. p * *3*00
Coll H I IH* alter a PM*
143* FO R D R A N C H ! RO MO
ISt Ctev4 lond C * Tran* p i
p b air crult* control, air
■hock* no ru 4l now point
Mcrilic* for * 1IM Call G rtg
Hm &lt;10 I H 4334 boloro * PM
1444 CH R YSLER IM P E R IA L
Pvt loci condition A , king *1000
Coll H I EDO
34 Ford L T D Landau &lt; dr now
tiro* Mr crult* AM FM
oitc window*. 13 440 ml
*1441 H I 1413
_________
•I Ponliec ilo n tA m Turbo
T Top
Loodad!
13445
C O U R TES Y P O N TIA C H I 1111
44 Pont loc F loro
Loaded
A Ono Owner t
Reduced
M44)
C O U R TES Y P O N TIA C H I l i l t

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Air Conditioning
A Heating
Wall Ptembtag A Hoollwg
loot South Sentord Avonu*
Sontord. Florida H33I

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
m i P AR K A V I .
H i Lk Mary Bird

Lk. Mary

Electrical

Landscaping

Plumbing

Anything m etrical Sine# 1*3*1
Eiflmotet 14 Hr Sarvtea Colli
To m 'i Itectrte S*r-*te* . . m 131*

TR A CTO R WORK
Boa B ad*
Buth Hog
Oitc
M # H W E L D IN G
F roe Etl
H3 lS*f

a Buddt Plumbing Baryte* a
■•pair a Rapiaca t Ramaatl
a F roo (ttlm a lo , • t i l M M a

N*w 4 romodolmg addiltont
Ion*, tacurlly ligM* Umor*
piutoilatec tarvlctt Quality
Sarvtea L&lt;c*nmd4 Bunded

Pent#
IN S TA L L SELL 4 R E P A IR
Cypra**
Cham Link
..Wood
Faaca 111 13)1

Lawn Service
ACE LAW N S E R V IC E
Mamtenawca Sodding Pruning
(loaning Thatching FortUliutg
Fra* Ethmate*...............M l 1311
law n Mo m tenonce
Lar.dte oping Buth Hog ntowlng
la* tot)

U«n Mo«in|.......Low frkBS
m 7B34

Appliance Repair
AJitRi IpfiiK i Same*
&gt;4 ha lory k g No I lira Cher gat

Home Improvement
C o lllo r, BurMM* 4 Romadotlng
4M Jab Ta* Small
H I Bortaa Lon*. Santard

moan

Bookkeeping
Nood bookkoap.ng
tar your imall bu*ln**,3
Coll U S 3441.......................... JNp

Carpentry

IM H W T IIM

e M 3 S f e $ ( * w € Apartments

M O V IN G SALE
E veryth .ng
must go' Moving out of town
Wed 7 10 Sat 7 I I 11 7 PM
Summerlin Aye Sanford

STENSTROM

Lfe. Reel Citata t/akar
1M4 Sankard Avt

•«AtM tar
atAlfa
1%*l«tk IINNHI

217— Garage Sales

Luiurteu* T Bird D 'lv g In » V #
in tel* 143* Mar i tag* Edition
with too many opltont te 11*3
Mu*t ho *een to bo opproci
•&gt;rd Coll D*v* *• H I 0041.
d*y*or H I 0011. ovo*
___
1*01 P L Y M O U TH V A L IA N T
4 cyl H I . t door P I tinted
window* **c*li*nt condition
(too 13) 4*f4 alter * P M _ ____

CONSULT OUR

BATEMAN REALTY

321-0759. Eve 322*7443

FOR E iT A T E
C b m m ff f ! 4 t or R o ild o n tlo l
Auction, B Appre&gt;**i* Call
0*i&gt; « Auction H I N30

Water front toon homes with
garage from lie IOC Con*e
men! Single story from |Sf 900
Pool, ia c u ffli club house
Groat Central location Boat
docks 'Opt(Gnat FHA and VA
financing available Mutt see
for yourw lt, Open every day
Rentals a&gt;so available Call
904 47tetM tor complete de
t iili
_____
N EW SM YRNA B EACH
2 bdrm t ha'n beach« de cot
tage with commercial ion mg,
Start your own butinet* near
tha ocean fat too

Airport. !MSO par Aq ft in

on pavad *a»ad Aktumabi'
mortgage ISS OOO

213— Auctions

CO U R TE S Y P O N TIA C , m - n i l
I* it t'u* you con buy loop* ter
*44 through th# U S govern
monlf Got te* tact* today!
Coil I H I f*l I H I E . i (14

• .C O l O k TE L E V IS IO N o’ . "
C O M M E R C IA L I P I C I A L I I T
BOB M BALL. JR F A
R E A L TO R _____________ 111 t i l l

151— Investment
Property / Sale

No O u tlitying Ntw 1 M il* . 1
both on ] «cro* Hot*** ok
Owner financing pt'm# at**

• * WE W ILL B U T t •
* O TO U R U S E D C A R # •
• CALL P H IL B E T T IS *

2 CALVES
I I M O K * or both ter *3M Call
i n te ll or **4 )0*4

e m p e r

Large a bdrm Home Eat in
kitchen 0 8 L cef garaga
large corner lot O W N E R
W IL L H O LD M O R TG A G E
Only LS9 000

★ INSTANT CASH ★

203— Livestock and
Poultry

Woctood

IH .T 1 0

ciudaa air haaf famtortal and
parking Call Sanford Airport
Authority tor dataklk 37J TTT1

1 ACRE AS Graiked and *an&lt;ad

DoBory Ante A Marino Vote,
Aero,, te* rfvor. teg of bill
134 Hwy If 01 DoBory 400k**«

s tra s io w l,

Priced Reducedf J bdrm 1 bdth
L arge lot No* 171 000

*te *00 J r t

lath St A Sanlord Aua_________
Private Homo with p rivate room
tor on oldorly porton Call

141— Homes For Sale

l\M rtVDVMl I It4

113— Storage Rentals

Ability Kownoli Dog boarding
Country AtmoagK*'* Rookor
obi * R*t *»
111 111S

* NEW SMYRNA BEACH *
VENETIAN VILLAS

*»3

taka M a r r
7 bdrm
*a%h#F df y#r 9sooNl&gt;P4 Ppp''
m e n .
quit* arts
UJO d&lt;KOurt Invasion Seal
Ty W fvw et A79 9034
L A*U MAH Y AR ( A : B4TVI9
(wtN duplqs im mad I*fa m
cupon* y USO par month pin*
1X30 i+cueity Call 791 aia* or
F 4 J W ____________________
7 bdrm 1 bath Dup»#e oH JJth
itraal Lika H r*
IJ*0 par
moafb Raion*b'n aacyriff
Can M S J*P7aH+r i PM
J BDRM i ' i bafti canirai air.
wjthar d ry tr hook up fuiiy
C dfpdM . no pati. UTO par
monfb t a il 130 Tipt ilt* f *

231-Cars

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

1 bdrm I bath Kid* okay No
pttt 1*0 wk . B in depotit
loot W Ird Stro#' Coll H I

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

C O U N TR T WIDE R E A L T Y
R »g R E flfokvf
111 M il
0TB Hwy 4 H ,Q *t*on Flo
O w n ,, F inaiKing Sanford build
mg lot S*p*lc *" n r "
Wallace Crot* Rtolty. loc
Rroltor
11I05TT

E N T E R P R IS E ) bdrm Ib o th t
St J oh n iecc o t* SIM mo

141— Homes For Site
O E lf O N A 1 Bdrm. largo cor
nor lot. near to pork* BUS par
month, lit lait *100 tocutity
Ayallabtenow Nopal*

high 4no a ry ! 14 JOC T tr m t
avoilobte

a a * lit D E L T O N A o a a
a a HOMES FOR R E N T a a
________ a a ITO-iasa a a________

TO*01

Sandalwood
1 Bdrm . 1 both,
a.r appliance*, wathar dryer
Cal* H i la A lo r yap B i l l _____

O S T E E N - 1 aero burning lot*

C E N T U R Y IT
KISH R E A L ES TA TE
R E A L T O R ....... .............. lU O pai

Mini Wirthousts

..... .... ... m tan

153— Acreage
Lots/Sale

Country largp two tte ry homo
SMOpor month

S A N FO R D
1 bdrm
fenced yard taOQ mo

Tuetdoy, July 9, I W - l l

E v g m n g H o r i l d . S a n fo rd , F I .

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

All typo* of carpentry 4 r*
modeling Jl yr* oap Call

RlchardGro**HI)4TJ^^^
Cleaning Service

Carpal CteoaMg Lie Mg.
DMtag Raam 4 Hall II* M
Sa4a 4 Cbatr, LM. H I IBM
JUST D ENIES
Ptote*Ilona I cleaning
Call
........
m 440J
BaU

Ctearing, laundry, o r
cabinet*. 111*. «*c

eoooooooee*****
Build a Btggar Butina **1
Uta 3ho Herald C total I wit,
C A LL TO O A T
H I M il
I I O t t t t l l l M I t

THOM AS 4 THOM AS Horn*
rapair, daaamg. U w n ear*
Call H i ltd*

Home Repairs
C A R P EN TER
H a p a lri and
rimadaimg No lob loo wnoil
Coll 11) 40*1
Mointononc* ol oil typo*
Corpaniry painting, plumbing
and •tec Inc 13) acj*
W ILLIS HOME R E P A IR
Ramodaling
Addittew, .,4 ...
AM Typot N a p a n Inturod No
lob taoitnaii m r u t

LANNS MOWED 1 TRIMMED
Spring Yard Cteon up*

13) 14*1

O I N E V A L A N O C llA R IN G
LpULondctearing
F ill dtrl
Topami Pond* Dr*m ditehat
Site Pragaraiian Call M* M t
TH O R N S L A N D C L E A R IN G
F tL L O lR T O C L A Y •
SHALE 4 H A U L IN C
HI MU

Sowing Machine Repair* all
moka* 10 yr* a.penance In
homo1 Rollrad H I 4311

Sprinklers/lrrlgatlon
A B O U T T IM E IR R IG A TIO N
Now ln*t*Matian*
Free l i t
t iparl Repair t al Compteio
Sprinkler Sytlom*
Timor*
Pump*
Etc
444 IBM

Quality Lawn Cart

Tile

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Pall* Orivaway Sidewalk lie
Fra* Ettimate* Gladly Grvonl
B EAU M O N O ! Cawal. Co
"W* A rt Tbo Bo*»"...... ..n i-M M
B EA L Concrete 3 Men Quality
Oparalxm Hoi lU, Driveway*
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9191 W &lt;M d V
233 4717

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Sewing Machines/
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Tree Service
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BLONDIE

Tsstd a y. Jsty *&lt; IMS

by Chic Young
ooooT

Consult Physician For
Chronic Abdominal Pain
DEAR DR. GOTT — For sever­
al months I've had pain In my
upper-right abdomen. Just under
the ribs. At first I thought It was
a pulled muscle or a bruised rib.

by Mort Walsar

BEETLE BAILEY

Now I notice that something
under the ribs — maybe the
gallbladder — is slightly swollen
and tender. Is this worth seeing
a doctor about?
DEAR READER - Any kind of
recurring abdominal pain merits
medical attention, especially If
the discomfort Is associated with
a lump. It Is beyond the scope of
this column to speculate on the
m any possible causes o f your
s y m p t o m s . An I n f l a me d
gallbladder is certainly at the top
o f the list, but there are a lot of
com plicated organs crammed
Into that space: your doctor Is
the most qualified person to
Investigate the problem.

by Art Sioiom

THE BORN LOSER

ty pulls the blood from your
bruin. Th is temporary circulato­
ry In t e r r u p tio n can c a u s e
lightheadedness and visual dif­
ficulties. The reason Is that your
blood pressure does not react
Instantaneously to force blood
a g a in s t g r a v it y w h en y o u
quickly change position. The
good news: This Is not serious.
You can avoid the symptoms by
sitting or standing with less

4 Handled
5 First rate
6 Secondnand
1 Tallow
S Sot ot garmanti 7 Mental
9 Sidaraal hour
components
angla (abbr |
B Maka laca
12 Rivar in
9 Shortly
Flandau
10 Oumantlad
13 Farm agancy
Ship
(abbr |
11 Swaatsop
14 No*, in
17 Yastarday |Fr |
15 Aawtn’t rivar
19 Cartamly
16 Rodant t homa 22 Consign
16 Triad
23 Childs gam*
D E A R DR. G O T T My 20 Drawl
24 Hindu litaratura
fingernails break und spilt easily. 21 Thraa (prat)
25 Squeatas out
Is there any kind o f vitamin I can 22 Famaia saint
26 Stranga (comb
(abbr)
take to help strengthen them?
form)
24 Annoys
27 Bovina animal
DEAR READER - Some pro 27 Sporting a Van 28 Oata
Dyka
p ie h ave b rittle fin g e r n a ils
29 Norsa lagartd
because their hands are In water 31 Sguaaiad out
30 Trade
often. Others may experience 32 Chmaia
32 Glida aloft
dynasty
nail splitting from dietary defi­
35 Mai# titla
_________ 36to
Joy
ciency. Most people whose nails 3 3
Snaky
38 Woman a nama
break easily can find no obvious 34 Lair
cause for this; occasionally, oc­ 35 Auctionaor’s
1 a
i
word
cupational factors may be Im­
36 Soft drink
IJ
portant — but most people's
37 Not Inondly
nails Just tend to become buttle 39 Causad by a
&gt;%
with age.
virus
ha
First, get your spouse to do the 40 Hocksy graat
Bobby
dishes, or use rubber gloves.
Second, make sure you are 41 Olftnss
42 Plaadar
eating a balanced diet. Third,
45 Phrssas
have a medical ch cck n o to 49 Maka propor
confirm you're In good health. 52 franch rivar
Last, try eating gelatin every 53 Wava |Sp)
day: the protein may strengthen 54 South African
your nails.
village
55 Baar (1st )
DEAR DR GOTT - If I sit up 56 Babylonian
quickly or cough hard. I see
deity
spots In front of my eyes: this 57 Craggy lulls
can Ust for a minute or so I've 58 Appear

vigor. Move more slowly and
with catlike movements; look
cool. The bad news: It may get
worse as you age

Relief notir question* 10 Dr
L.im b I ' D lkt\ 135/ H .ultoCltv
S i .i i i i h i .

.Veil York N 1 I(XIIff

Antwar to PraviouS Pufiis

ACROSS

46 Proganitor

39
41
42
43

By way of
Snsw vthiclas
Sloppy parson
Rivar in tha
Congo
44 Equal (Fr I
45 Russian
amparor

47 To be (Lat)
48 Fabric unction
50 Landing boat
51 Formar
Japsntsa
ststaamsn

n

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE
OH, M A M r P IP YOU
H EAR T H IS G U V y
V/ERONICAT HE'S N
GOING T O T E LL
HIS M O M M Y ON MET

you a l m o s t

MIT ME W HEN YOU
'W ENT THROUGH TH A T f u l l stop

9 K iN ,.

P XJM M Y'

by Howla Schnaldar

EEK &amp; MEEK

( JO O P CU &lt;/J

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by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

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6

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1 "Auld tang

DEAR READER - No. When
you sit or stand suddenly, gravl-

2 Information
agancy (abbr)
3 Skinny fish

I I I H I I bi

m

*

l««

WIN AT BRIDGE

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
r»w

experienced this since 1 was a
child. I am 26. Is this a sign of a
more serious Illness?

P E A llV

SOMETHlNS 7DCWY

By Jamea J acob y
Hrltlsh expert Victor Mollo. In
his txjok “ The Finer Arts of
Bridge.“ exposes the reuder to
lh e world of deception anti
artifice (hill exists In bridge.
Mollo Is captivated by the op­
p o rtu n ities that abound for
psvchnloglr.il ploys Herr Is his
introduction to today's deal:
“ Declarer starts with the con­
siderable advantage- of having no
p a rtn er lo mislead. He can
spread the tttosl blatant false­
hoods with Impunity, hut more
often thiin not. It Is the simple
ones which arc I hr most prof­
itable."
A fte r Eust's lea d -directin g
d o u b le o f five hearts. West
dutifully led the nine of (marts
against six spades. Declarer did
not think that East would be so
foolish as In double with nothing

In hearts, and so hr rose Im m e­
diately with the heart arc.
The acc und king of s lid e s
drew all the defenders' inimps,
and now declarer wus looking lor
either minor still quern Howev­
er. there was no Immediate n m l
lo undertake Ihul search li
could not hurt lo lead a heart
first. Hui w hich heart?
True, leading a low heart
would establish (he Jack for a
discard front dummy, hut otic
discard In dummy would avail
nothing
Keeping a |»okrr lace. South
played the heart Jack from fils
hand East won the king and uot
wishing to give declarer the
apparent nluff and ruff with
another heart, switched lo the
eight of diamonds
Curtains for the defense!

NORTH

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Vulnerable East-West
Dealer Ninth

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Opening lead TF9

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring..*
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavaa

WHEN T b f r A F T M Ip E tf AGE

YMHATX THP H A F P ft T - P f C t f l o N

y &gt; u evef? H AP T o M A K E ?

.

r

I

by Jim Davis

QARFIELD

FUNNV u o o l

[7

V.

TOUR BIRTHDAY
JULY 10. 108S
Opportunities lo add to your
holdings will develop for you In
the year ahead through a unique
set o f circumstances You could
he fortunate by being In the right
place at the rlghl lime.
C AN C ER (June 21-July 22)
Take extra pains today to protect
your resources, as well us other
prized possessions. You could
suffer some lype of loss If you get
careless. Major changes are
ahead for Cancers In the coming
year. Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today. Mall 81 to
Astro-Graph. Box 489. Radio
C ity Station. New York. NY
10019. He sure lo state your
zodiac sign.
LE O (July 23 Aug 22) People
with whom you deal today will
reflect your behavior toward
them. To receive cooperation,
you must show Indications of

ANNIE
TUMBLEWEEDS
I'M OFF ID THE COlWEKmOftJ, PEPUTV.
VttJTTC IN CHARGE WWlLD I’M COMB.
--------- — -------- --------------E J L T l " ]

♦

•

*1

by T. K. Ryan
/ F t ON 6UARP1CWT \
( LET
GefTRE VW P)
0MVPU1

as

liclng cooperative
V IR O O (A u g 23-Sept 221
Acting before thinking could
cause unnecessary problems for
you today. Consider ull of the
ramlflcutlons. even In situations
that may appear Insignificant
L4B R A (Sept 23-Oct 23)
Companions will Influence your
b e h a v io r a l p a tte rn s tod a y.
Extravagant associates could
easily Induce you lo »|&gt;rnd more
l ban you can afford
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 221
Usually when you establish ob­
jectives. you're determined lo
achieve them However. If things
don't come easily today, you
tnay toss In the towel
S A O IT T A R IU S (Nov 23 Dec
211 You could make a mistake
today similar lo one you made In
the past. Profit front your expe­
riences and don't repeat old
errors.
CAPR IC ORN (Dee. 22 Jan
I9| Keep your wits about you In
your commercial dealings today,
especially If you have to deal
with someone whose standards
appear questionable
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

You win be more effective today
If you can function indepen­
dently of others Weak associa­
tions could Impede your pro­
gress or even set you back u frw

paces.
PISCES (Frb 20 March 20) He
optimistic regarding the outtom e o f events today, tint also be
realistic. Proper e ffo rts can
overcom e your problem , but
they can't l&gt;e wished away.
ARIES IMarch 2 ( April 19|
Today you might feel used by
someone you consider an old
and trusted friend Instead of
rushing to Judgment, try lo
i omprehend the reason for his or
her behavior.
TA U R U S (April 20 May 20|
Although you may fie templed lo
do otherwise, don't Ignore the
I n s t r u c t i o n s of your nobler In­
stincts today. Mutntaln your
high standards, regardless of
frustrating conditions
GEMINI (Msy 2 1-June 20)
Guard against tendencies today
lo exaggerate personal achieve­
ments. If you fell a fish story,
your listener may produce u tape
measure

by Laonard Starr
_ m o w 9 0 you
I 6AV£ IT
KNOW ABOUT
TO YOU.
MY AA/Fg?/ ] Rf6£Hgf f f ?

�</text>
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                    <text>J u r y O u t In C a s e O f M a n C h a rg e d In W ife 's M u r d e r
A Jury of four men and eight
women began deliberations this
morning In the case o f a Sanford
man charged with the first
degree murder of his wife.
Basil Fredrick Green. 28 of
301 E. F ifth S t.. S a n fo rd .
Ieailfled Thursday that he does
not remember shooting hts wife"
and said he was an abused
spouse.
Ruby Beverly Green. 28. pf
1200 W. 8lh St.. Sanford, was

shot three tim es w h ile she
worked Feb. 25. Two shots, one
In the back and one In the upper
chest, were lethal without medi­
cal attention. The third bullet
ripped through Mrs. G reen’s
aorta causing her to bleed to
death, said Or. G.V. Garay dur­
ing testimony.
The state Is not seeking the
death penalty. Prosecuting the
case are Tom Hastings and

Norm WoMnger. stale attorney
for the 18th Judicial District o f
Seminole and Brevard counties
Green Is represented by Assis­
tant Public Defender Paul Arlt.
The trial Is before Circuit Judge
Pobert B MrG-egor
Green could receive life wiih
no parole for 25 years If con­
victed. He was Indicted on the
charge by a grand Jury March 9.
At the time of the shooting, the

Greens were separated.
Green testified his wife was
mentally and sexually abusive,
used alcohol to excess and used
cocaine He said she threatened
to have him killed If he did not
com ply with her sexual de­
mands. They married In 1982.
According to police reports
and testimony. Mrs. Green was
working at S &amp; H Fabricating
and Engineering. 2660 Jewett
Lane. Sanford, when a man

entered the company at 4 34
p m . According to witnesses,
the man walked over to Mrs
Green and shoi her In the back
with a .25-caliber handgun. She
turned and fell to the floor,
whereupon th* man leaned over,
said something, then shot her
twice In the chest. She was
pronounced dead at Centrul
Florida Regional Hospital
After the shooting, the man

turned, and carrying the pistol,
walked out of the building,
repons show.
Green, a laborer for the same
comapny. quit about an hour
before the Incident because
personal problems. He was .ar­
rested by a Sanford ofllcer at the
northwest corner of the plant He
was holding a handgun at the
time, records show.
—Deane Jordan

Seminole Jail Has 2 Of Conspirators

Bond Hearing Set
For Hypnotist
Nabbed In Postal
Child Porn Probe

4

A hypnotist and counselor arrestrd at hts
1-ake Mary office by U.S. Marshals and charged
wlih two counts of mailing child pornography
Is scheduled for a bond hearing Monday In
Orlando.
Thomas E. Baker. 49. of 240 Maureen Drive,
west of Saufurd. was arrested at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at Driftwood Village on Lake Mary
Boulevard, following an undercover Investiga­
tion by U.S. Postal Inspector Daniel Wltowskl.
Wliowskl alleges undercover postal agents
received from Baker sexually explicit photo­
graphs of nude children In June and July.
Sheriff's deputies In Seminole and Orange
counties assisted In the Investigations, and
Seminole deputies assisted In Baker's arrest at
hla Center for Counseling and Hypnosis.
U.S. Attorney Bruce Hlnshclwood said the
law under which Baker was nubbed Is a new
federal anti-chlld-pomogruphy law passed In
October 1984.
"Not u lot of cases huve been made under
this law. We've only had four of five coses In
our district, but things are picking up.*'
In Wltowskl s complaint against Baker he
alleges postal Inspectors In New Jersey re­
ceived In February a questionnaire describing
Baker's sexual preferences.
The unsolicited four-page questionnaire was
sent to an undercover operation used by postal
agents to Identify pedophiles who use the U.S.
postal service to deliver pornographic m ateri­
als, the complaint said.
The questionnaire was signed "T . Gene
Baker." and In May, Wltowskl. using a fnlse
n«M S Itltf sddfMs. be nan user—pundlng with
Gene Baker at P.O. Box 219, Lake Mary, the
complaint said.
Baker la In the custody of U.S. Marshals and
appeared before U.S. Magistrate Donald
Dietrich on Thursday In federal court In
Orlando. Dietrich set Monday's ball hearing.
If convicted Baker faces up to 10 years In
prison and a $100,000 fine on each count.
— Susan Loden

H e ld W i t h o u t B o n d
In A b o r t e d W e a p o n s

By Deane J ord a n
Herald S ta ff W r ite r
A military weapons and technology writer and
a Lebanese businessman were being held wllhout
bond today at the Seminole County jail following
their arrest for plotting to send thousands of
black market military weapons and supplies to
Iran. The U.S. Attorney asked the men be held
without bond because they have International
connections and might leave the country.
Arrested In Orlando and tuken to the Seminole
County Jail as federal prisoners were Paul
SJeklocha. 47. a writer In San Jose. Calif., and
Fade! Fadcl. 54. a Lebanese businessman living
In Calabusus. Calif. While both men have asked
for luwyers as of today no one has agreed to
represent them, said Thomas Turner of the U S.
Attorney's OfTIce. Orlando. Turner said the men
were being held at the Jail In Sanford because the
federal government contracts with Seminole
County to hold some of Its prisoners
Turner said the men will uppear la-fore a U.S.
magistrate by Monday for a detention hearing
and within 10 days a preliminary hearing on the
charges. Turner said he expects the rase to be
presented before a grand Jury within the next 30
days.
Eventually, the other defendants will be
brought to Orlundo for proceedings
Al other sites In the country, an Army colonel
Fadcl'a wife, and an Iranian who claims to be n
government ofBetal were also twin* held anil
charged with plotting to send thousands of
missiles to Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini for use In
that country's war against Iraq A fourth suspect,
reportedly a publishing associate of the writer,
was released on $25,000 bond
The alleged conspiracy stretched from Orlando
to the Pentagon weapons rommand lo California
Had It sureeeded. Iran would have tM-rii able to

m u M n a s i i Cu m U r

Special FBI agent P e rry Doran sits next to a
T O W missile In Its case during a press
conference T h u r s d a y announcing the arrest
of six people, two in Orlando, on charges of

tryin g to smuggle U.S. weaponry to Iran
The group had a m.Ml m illion dollar "shop
ping list" and were to fly the black m arket
goods out of the country on a rented 747.

resupply Its aging stockpiles of U.S. arms —
o b ta in ed w h en th e sh ah w ss in p o w e r a n d that

living In the United Hlatea on a special vtsa. She
waaarrealed In their Calahuaoa. Clail. mansion.
Also rham ed were George Nrraochl, o f Loa
Altos. CallfT. who said he was s magazine
publisher, and Amir Hossenl. 38. ol Santa Ana.
Calif., who claimed to be an trunlan government
official.
Mrs. Fadcl and Hossenl were also firing held
without bond because federal prosecutors fear
they would skip Ihr country If released

n a tion was a U .S. a lly — with m ore s o p h i s t i c a t e d

missiles, according to the m t
Topping the list of susperts In the FBI sting Is
Lt Col Wayne Gillespie. 46, an artillery specialist
and West Point graduate working for the Army
Material Command at the Pentagon. He was
arrested Wednesday night at his Alexandria. Vn.,
home and was tielng held In lieu o f $100,000
bond Fadel's wife. Farhln Sanal. 52. Is an Iranian

See JAILE D , page 11A

F a ilu re To Com m unicate
Led To Road W ork Problem s
By Donna E stes
lle r s ld S ta ff W r ite r
An apparen t m lx u p In c o m ­
munications that bus Ird lo problems
for some residents along the entrance
mad to Seminole Community College
— presently under construction —
brought Semlnolr County. Lake Mary
city officials and state officials lo the
site today.
Christine Terwllllger of Weldon
Boulevard (formerly East Hoad, re­
nam ed In honor o f the college
president and now tielng widened)
complained today lhat construction
workers widening the road to (our
lanes have Installed drulnage pl|&gt;c» In
her front yard without permission
and urc dumping trash and fill Into a
(Hind on her property Her complaints
brought the rounty and state ofllclals
together for an Inspection lour this

morning In an effort to resolve the
problem.
Here Is how It all Ix-gan:
The Seminole County Legislative
Delegation at the request of the
college decided that the Iwo-tanc
roadway ts a hazard and should be
widened und a trull It- signal Installed
at Its intersection with U.S. 17-92.
The county provided u small part of
(hr funding for the project, while Ihc
slate contributed the bulk of It. The
total cost for construction only was
$583,288, with the state paying
$520,788. plus the stale set aside
$100,000 lo uequlrr the needed
right-of-way.
S em in ole County got Involved
when the stale's share was said to be
Insufficient and pledged $62,500 In
Impact fees which normally are used
to benefit schools. The school board

gave Its blessing, said county-Public
Works Director I^irry Sellers
The eounly. also eoo|&gt;erallng with
the slate, had County Attorney Nikki
Clayton handle the condemnation of
additional rlghls-ofway along the
road, based on right-ol-way maps
prcfiured by the stale Department of
Transportation
The stale Icl a contract for the road
expansion to RC1K Construction Co.
of lxmgwtMxl which !&gt;cguti Its work
several months ago
Meanwhile. Sellers M id the slate
plans Included a note that piping
could lx- Installed, especially In the
front yard of Mrs Terw llllger's home.
If she wished to relieve flooding In a
low spot there.
This Is where the first snng In
See FAILU RE, page 1 1A

S h i m PUM St Owe* L m t s Sm

This Is retention pond woman says slate Is dum p in g fill into.

'Major Deposit On A Sea Of Red Ink'

» k

TO D A Y

f

C o n g r e s s
W A S H IN G T O N |UIM| - C o n g r e s s
approved a budget for next fiscal year that
takes a small bile out o f the federal deficit,
but nearly everyone — from President
Reagan on down — Is saying more must be
done
" It 's not greut. not what many of us
wanted, hut It's certainly heller than
nothing." added Sen. Lawton Chiles. D-Fla.
The budget that (Kissed Congress Thurs­
day night and sent lawmakers home for a
month long vacation broke a seven-week
House-Senate conference stalemate and
eap|ied a process lhat started In January.
By latest estimate the $967.6 billion
s|icnding blueprint cuts about $57 billion
from the anllcipaled deficit of $220 billion.
Earlier estimates put the deficit-reduction at
$55 billion. Some say Its cuts could run
higher.
But It still leaves a delicti of $172 billion In
1986 and $113 billion In red Ink projected
by 1988 by the committee, though the
politically neutral Congressional Budget

A p p r o v e s

'lt'$... the bigge$t budget cut
in the hi$tory of the Republic.'
Office predicted the deficit for 1988 at $161
billion
Reagan won a small spending Increase for
the Pentagon — enough In keep up with
milatlon. and with Democrats os unlikely
allies slaved oil a Senate GOP effort to curb
Social Security payments.
Medicare, agriculture, transportation und
other piograrns were cut.
Final Senate approval came late Thurs­
day. 67-32. with 37 Republicans Joining 30
Democrats to pass the plan Fifteen Re­
publicans und 17 Democrats opposed It.
Senate passage swiftly followed House
approval. 309^19. with 182 Democrat!.
Joining 127 Republicans lo approve the
spending plan. Fifty two GOP members amt
67 Democrats opposed the budget.

B u d g e t

Reagan dors not have lo sign the budget.
Hut he dors have a say on congressional
money bills and Immediately vowed to have
hla "veto pen" ready.
In an official White House statement
released when the favorable vote was
assured, Reagan said the compromise
budget "m arks only a beginning, not an
end" and pledged to examine "each and
rvrry upcoming appropriation bill line by
line
and I will not hesitate to use my veto
pen ”
Some senators, disappointed at defeat In
trying lo trim Social Security and other
programs, criticized Ihc budget for not
going far enough. Others complained It
contained no taxes — another thing Reagan
opposes.
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete
Dorncnlcl. R N M , after listening to the
crlttctsin. said " I can't see how anyone

Action Reports...... ............ 3A
B rid g e...................
Calendar............... ........... H A
C lassifieds............ .... 11 13A
Com ics.................. .......... 10A
Crossword............ ........... IQA
Dear Abby....... .
........m a
Deaths................... ............ JA
Dr. Gott................

Editorial.............................4A
.................I0A
Horoscope .
Hospital..
. ................... 3A
Nation ........... ..................2A
People............ .................I4A
Sports.............
Television
.......... Leisure
W eather.......... .................3A
W orld..............

He's Top Dog. But Speaks No English
K A TY. Texas (UPI) - Of
fleer Randy Smotts speaks no
Gennan. His German shep­
herd. Fanlo. understands no
English.
But police officers say Fanto
Is a great police deg and
t h e y 'l l train h im to u n ­
derstand English commands
"W e want loget him trained
In English In Ihr next few
m o n t h s ," K-9 S u p e rv is o r
W illia m Mycr said o f the
5 -y e a r-o ld dog b re d and

trained In West Germany.
' It's liard for an officer to
speak In German when he is
excited.
"But we will keep the attack
word In German because an
ofneer should have to think
about It before using It and we
don't want anybody else at
the scene to try to command
the dog." Myer said
" A m e r ic a n s train g o o d
police dogs, but Germans
train the best.” Mycrsald.

See BUDGET, page 11A

■, ■ . m • . .

%- ~ci ‘ *■; ** *

�%

lA — Evtnmg Htr#!d, Sanford, FI.____

Friday, Aug. 2 , l t t 5

U n e m p lo y m e n t:

NATION

W ASHINGTON iU P l) The nation's
unemployment rate In July remained at 7.3
percent for the sixth consecutive month,
thanks to a surge In construction and
restaurant Jobs, the Labor Department said
today.
Despite Hie addition o f about 500.000 new
Jobs In July, unemployment among black
workers and teenagers Increased sharply
and factory workers recovered none o f Ihc
more than 200,000 Jobs they have lost so far
this year.
Th e unemployment rate has actually
changed very little for a year and nol at all
after January, as Industrial employment has
been steadily eroded bv Import competition
but jobs In retailing, finance. Insurance and
ronslruellon have Improved.
The unemployment rate for black workers
rose a full point to 13 percent, wiping nut
what upprared lo have been a sharp
Improvement In June.
The unemployment rate for teenagers
rose slightly turn* than a point lo 19?
percent —s sirnmci Jobs were harder to ,lnd
than usual. The rate for black teenagers

Astronauts Still Postered
By Troublesome Telescope
United P r e n Internation al
Challenger's scientists put on hold today efforts to iron
the kinks out of a troublesome shuttle telescope mount and
chalked up success with their first full run o f dramatic
solar observations.
Scientists on the ground said solar observations made
with the three working t-leneopes on the IPS c c n llr icd to
be cat i Uent, altho ,gh limited by troubleshooting to fix the
wavering mount.
To compensate for the pointer’s Inability to lock onto the
sun. the crew has used tracking systems on the mount's
Instruments to do the Job Instead. More troubleshooting
was scheduled for later today.
Despite repeated attempts, an instrument on the IPS
designed to study I he sun's magnetic held h- s refused to
turn o .. a bitter M* appointment to scler' sts who hare
been planning for ChnUnger’s Spacelab mission for nearly
10 years.
Since Challenger's rocky "abort to o rb it" launch
Monday. the •hut!!» scientists have teen gathering *
bounty of science data from the $72 million array of
Instruments In (.'hallengei's payload tray.
A pair o f X-ray telescopes, an Infrared telescope and a
giant cosmic ray detector itave worked well. On Wednes­
day. the crew succeeded In transmitting the first amateur
television signal from space, u view of ham radio operator
England.

Health
Spending
Up 9 . 1%

Court Kills Nerve Gas Testing
BOSTON (Ul'll — A defense contractor In Cambridge
stopped testing five chenilcal-warfare agents after the
slate's highest court upheld the college town's ban on
testing, storage and disposal of the weapons.
The Massachusetts Supreme Court, In a 4-1 ruling
Thursday, rejected a challenge brought by Arthur D. Little
Inc., which conducted tests on nerve gas under a contract
with the Defense Department.
The Justices said I hr Cambridge regulations do not
unduly burden the Defense Department, which Is "free to
conduct Us research elsewhere."
ADL spokeswoman Alma Trlner said research, which
had continued under a lower court Injunction, ceased
Thursday. She said no decision had been made on whether
to appeal the ruling to Ihc Supreme Court.
Cambridge City Manugrr Robert Mealy hailed the ruling
for upholding a city's powrr "to protect Its citizens from
Ihc potential hazard that could result from the testing of
super toxic chemicals."
Testing began In Ihe fall of 1983 al the firm's laboratory
within several hundred feet of a busy commercial areu and
u neighborhood.

WASHINGTON IUPl) - Thanks In large
part to fewer and shorter hospital stuys.
America's health spending rose 9.1 percent
In 19H4 — Its slowest rale of climb In 20
years, the government says.
Health and Huinun Services Secretary
Margaret Heckler announced Ihe "dramntlc
decrease In health-care inflation" In a
statement Thursday. Heckler remains hos­
pitalized after undergoing n surgery Tues­
day to remove her uterus.
In 19B4, frderul figures showed that $387
billion was spenl on health care, ranging
from hospital c o n s tr u c tio n and prescription
drugs to laboratory research and doctor's
cure.
That represents an Increase of 9 I percent
from the year before, the smallest rise sincr
an 8 percent Increase In 11)65. The biggest
rise ever was registered In I960 — 15.3
percent. In 1983. II rose 10.6 percent.
Still, the relatively small Increase In
health Inflation was more than double the
nation's overall Inflation rale Iasi year — 4.3
percent
"L ow er overall Inflation accounted for u
large measure ol the reduced growth In
health cure spending, but the most Impor­
tant development warn Hie drop In use of
hospital Inpatient services," Heckler said
HHS said a survey by the American
Hospital Association found (hat community

Schroeder Going Home
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (UPI) — Artificial heart recipient
William Schroeder will return for Ihe first lime since hts
historic operation to his hometown of Jasper. Ind., to rtde
through town In a German testtval parade,
Dr. WittiMtn C. DeVries, the only surgeon federally
approved to Implant mechanical hearts, decided Thursday
Schroeder Is strong enough to make the long-awaited
Journey hom e, barring m ed ica l co m p lica tio n s, a
spokesman ul Humana Hospital Audubon said.
Schroeder will return to the hospital after the parade,

MIAMI (Ul'll — T w o sea chases, one
punctuated with gunfire, have netted the
governm ent's drug smuggling lighters two
big hauls — 2.&lt;KX) |&gt;nunds of eoralnr and
eight tons of marijuana
Before duwn Thursday, a II S Customs
patrol boul ran down u 32-foot ocean racing
Ixwii oil the upper Florida Keys. Three men
aboard (hr speed boat heaved at least 34
dultcl bags of cocaine overboard and then
tried to ram Ihe patrol Ixntl. The new n( the
|wtrol boat opened lire on Ihe speed boat,
disabling It.

IN BRIEF
Police Accused O f Complicity
In Murder Of Civil Rights Lawyer
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) — Black activists
today accused police of complicity In the murder of u
leading civil rights lawyer as police exercising emergency
powers arrester! 02 more people.
Victoria Mxcnge, who was representing 16 members of
the United Democratic Front charged with trruaon, was
ambushed and shot to death outside her home Thursday,
Police said four gunmrn took part in the attack. All
esca|&gt;rd.
Investigators said thry had not determined the motive for
the attack.
But Ihe A/anlan Students Organization said "enem y
agents" were responsible.
"W e have come lo Ire clearly convinced that these
murderers enjoy too much leniency, If not the full support
of the sophisticated police machinery," the opposition
student group said.
Mxcnge's husband, til Kilt ha. also a leading oppositionist
attorney, was stabbed to death In 1981. Hts murder has
never been solved.

WASHINGTON IUPl) - White
House doctors removed a bit ol
Irritated skin from President
Rragan's nose lor examination
amt aides ure downplaying the
significance of Ihe procedure
during hl;i recovery from &lt;ancer
surgery.
Jen neler Hlrshbcrg. Nancy
Reagan s press secretary, quoted
the lirst lady us saving Thursday
Hie president bad a "blem ish on
his nose" when he went Inin
Hethesda Naval llospliul July 12
for the removal of a cancerous
lnleslln.il growtli

BEIRUT, l ■I'.mi.n U l'll — Israeli warplanes flattened u
pro-Syrtun Lebanese mlllllu base today, killing more than
10 people In apparent retaliation lor recent suicide bomb
attacks against Israeli troops In southern Lebanon.
A spokesman for Lebanon's civil defense corps said
"m ore than 10 bodies" were removed from the rubble of u
villa In the heurt ol the Bekaa Valley town of Chtaura, 22
miles rust of Beirut. He declined to give further details.
Christian Voice of Letmnnn radio quoted civil defense
sources saying 23 dead were taken hum Ihe building and
thry frarrii I bat the (Inal druth toll might lie us high os 40.
At least lO people were reported wounded In the air strike.
Police said the (wo story building was the regional
headquarters of the National Syrian Social Parly.
Only 15 minutes before the raid, ull the pro-Syrtan
militia's Irudrrs In the Bekaa Valley filed Into the building
for a meeting Chrlsllnn Voice o f Lebanon radio said onr of
the drad was the NSSP defense chief but the report could
not Ik * Immediately confirmed.

Hlrshbcrg wild Ihe “ blem ish"
was Irritated when doctors In­

I ___ *

IS
MW

JO y
in *
HW
IJV,
2] »
........ ] i s
US
1IM

4 ‘ Watty I

MW

Souttwatt Ian*
lu n T rv tl

been a statistical problem more than art
actual decision by people to remain unem­
ployed
The figures have also benefited In recent
months by a slowdown In Hie growth of the
working age population so that the labor
lorre expanded by only I 3 million In ihe 12
months from July of last year compared to
2 I million from January to December
1984.
The jobless ratr for adult men Improved
slightly, moving from 6.5 percent to 6 3
percent, and the rale for adult women also
changed very little, down to 0.6 percent
from 6 7 percent.
T h e u n em ploym en t l a i c for black
workers, al IS percent, was more than twice
Hie 6 4 percent for white workers. The rate
for Hispanic workers Jumped to 11.2 percent
In July from June's 10.6 percent.
The continuous cuts In factory employ,
meni took the unem ploym ent rate in
heavily industrialized Ohio to 9,9 perceni In
July frori 8 6 percent In June, higher thin
it was a year ago Michigan's rate went to
10.9 perceni from 10.3 percent.

Scienfisfs To Test
Nuke Winter Theory
In Canadian Fire

HEALTH-CARE CO STS
Big increases since 1980

*
H oapilal c a ra
P h y ric ia n a a rv ic a r
V a n a d g o o d t/ to r y ic t*
P a ra a rc h . c o n rtru c tlo n .
a d m in ir tr a llo n
H u r t in g -h o m o cara

8147
849
U l
847

* 39%
♦ 32%
♦ 31%
♦40%

879

+ 28 %

TOTAL

83SS

!••«• # u B •«•«■* I

t

a*- - . *

♦ 30%
u i buawc

Most health care dollars are spent on
pallent care, but the largest percentage
Increase has been In research, building
and management.
hospital admissions dropped 3.7 percent
last year and tn-puttent days fell 8.6 percent.
The American Association of Retired
Persons complain that patients, particularly
those covered by Medicare ami Medicaid.
Hie national health Insurance programs for
the old and poor, ure being released
"quicker und sicker."
In a study taaued Tuesday, the 20th
unntvcrsary o f Medicare and Medicaid, Ihe
association also said a growing portion of
Ihcsc people's money Is going to medical
costs, pushing some toward financial ruin
and putting some care nut of reach
Government f i g u r e s allow that an averugc
o f * 1 . 8 8 0 w a s s p e n l p e r person for health In
1984. with 41 percent of It financed liy the
government ami most of that through
Medicare and Medicaid

TORONTO |UPI) - Almost 40 years lo Ihe
day after the bom bing o f Hiroshima.
American and Canadian scientists plan to
test the "nuclear winter" theory by observ­
ing a giant controlled fire set on 2,5 square
miles of Canadian fo'estland.
Scientists hope to observe a convection
column of smoke, ash and gas that would
rise 20.000 feet In the nlr when Canadian
forestry officials on Saturday bum several
thousand fir trees killed by a bud worm
Infestation.
The lire Is "a partial representation of one
aspect o f a nuclear explosion." without Ihe
blast or radiation, according to Dr. Andrew
Forester, who brought the group of scien­
tists together. "It will em body some of the
rharurtertsttrs of the firestorm Hull will
follow a nuclear blast."
Five American and live Canadian scien­
tists will tesi the nuclear winter theory
proposed In 1982 by Cornell University
astronomer Carl Sagan
The theory suggests a nuclear war would
create such a massive cover of smoke and
ash I hat the sun would be blocked oul and
the Earth's temperature would plummet,
preventing agriculture for years.
Among the scientists who will watch the
lest In the central Canadian province of
Ontario Is Richard Turco. who co-authored
wllh Sagan the first jiapers proposing the
theory.
The tire near the northern Ontario town o f
Chapleati, nboui 400 miles north of Detroit.
Is not being srt for the benefit of the
scientists. It Is one of 50 controlled fires
planned In Ontario this summer for refores­
tation pur|M&gt;ses.

J A M E S COV1NQTON JR.
Mr. James Covington Jr., 60.
Of 9 1 5 V e r s a i l l e s C i r c l e ,
Multlund, died Th u rsd ay at
F lo rld u H osp ital A lta m o n te
Springs. Born Sept. 17. 1924 in
Uennrltsvllle. S.C.. he moved lo
Maitland from Jacksonville in
1978 He was a real eslute
attorney and an Episcopalian

10 *
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MW
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Coast G u ardsm en aboard the N avy
hydrolnll Hercules boarded the 60 loot
vessel Sally Ann In the Gull ol Mexico, north
of Dry Tortugus, about 11 a nt Thursday
and found It was carrying nbout 10.000
Irounds of marijuana. Three Cuban US.
residents anti one Cuban alien were ar­
rested. Miami (.'oast Guard spokesman.
Petty Officer Joe Dye, said the eight tuns ol
murljuana was worth 96 4 million
The cocaine seizure by Customs Thurs­
day could !&gt;c worth as much as $25 million
wholesale to the smugglers or $250 million

when cut for sired sales, ll was the largest
cocaine seizure at sea and one o f Hie largest
hauls o f the year.
The largest seizure ol lllcgul cocaine In Hie
Untied Slales was 3,906 pounds. It occurred
when U S. Customs at Miami seized an air
cargo shipment from Colombia March 9.
1982.
The cocaine, marijuana, boats and Hie
seven men arrested In the two drug hauls
were turned over to agents of the vice
presidential task force.

serted a tiasn g.isirli tube and
l.qx-d it to Reagan's nose after
Ihe July Ktuprrulloh
The first lady wild the presldeni Is "allergic to tape” and.
"when ihr lulic was removed
the spot was even more Ir­
ritated."

Bui earlier Thursday. Speukes
had used the word "biopsy" to
describe the test on the patch ol
skin.
S|H-akes said ihe Irritated skin
was present lor "months. If not
longer" and. "ll was submitted
lor routine studies for Infection
and It was determined no further
White House spokesman Larry
treatment Is necessary."
Spcukca said Hie spot on ihc
Reagan's health has been
tlglit side o f Iris nose was
heavily scrutinized since his
removed Tuesday In a procedure
hospital Izut Ion and thr White
performed without unelhcsla In
House, acting In |iart on orders
(he office of While House physi­
from Mrs. Reagan, has restricted
cian T. Horton Smith
(he amount of Information re­
H lr s h b c r g said R e a g a n 's vealed atxnii his condition
doctors "w anted to look for
Dr John Hutton, another
White House physician, stressed
Infection. There was no biopsy "

Rragan Is In "su p erb " condition
Reporters and cam eramen
noticed a scab near the bridge ol
Ihr president's note Thursday
w h e n lie a d d r e s s e d I h e
evangelical broadcasters and
writers In the East Room
W e d n e s d a y , d u r in g u
picture taking session In Ihc
Oval Office with Ills daughter
Maureen. Reagan was positioned
so that the right side o f his nose
was turned away Inini photog­
rapher*.
Thr decision to have Hie small
patch of skin removed was made
by Reagan In consultation with
Smith

AREA DEATHS

STOCKS

OornoM Son*
Florida P o ««r

climbed to 41.3 percent. Ihc highest since
March.
The total number of unemployed workers,
at 8.451 million. Is Just 40.000 people less
than It was a year ago.
A particularly negative trend In the latest
report was an increase of 200,000 in Ihc
number o f the unemployed who were laid
off or fired. This was balanced somewhat,
however, by the fact that fewer people
voluntarily chose to Irave their Jobs.
Another negative was a 12-mtnute short­
ening of Ihe average work week, which
iranslalrs Into billions of dollars In payroll
Income no longer available lo the economy.
The le n g th o f the factoiy work week did not
change, remaining at 40.4 hours.
An accompanying unemployment rate,
that Includes the military as employed
workers, remained at 7.2 percent and like
the overall rate, was unchanged from
February on,
The Increase in employment by 490.000
Jobs, to 106.80 million, almost rnaHe up the
similar-sized drop I hat surprised analysts in
June — a switch that now appears to have

Reagan By A N o se : ‘Blem ish' Surgically Rem oved

Israelis Bomb Lebanese Base

Amnittn rianw UL

S to ry

Sea C h ases N et Two Big D rug Hauls

W O RLD

* light
f ‘0
rrooSom D .ln y t
MCA
Hugno,
M o n it o r !
N C ftC «r*
P s tn ,

O ld

More Construction, Restaurant Jobs Keep Rate At 7.3%:

IN BRIEF

Tht*# duofttion, pro m in i b ,
el
thr Notional 4 itocirOon of Sot ur/hti p ro .*/1
Mtardaataf sens* w *1
m U m tftu n g hido,
In Hr a n n r m a rt*'*
‘ Sang*
S » (M r l‘n ( n Or nut
mo,* down
M
Atk
A Mont,c San*
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S a m e

IIW lit*
MW UW

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l

Hr wua a member of American
Land T itle A ssociation . Ihr
A m e r ic a n , South C a ro lin a .
C a lifo r n ia , and F lorid a bar
a s s o c ia t io n s , und he w as
chairman of the Florida Under­
writers Bureau, and the Florldu
Association of Life and Casualty
Insurors and state rom m ltte on
Title Insurance.
There arc no survivors.
C ox-P srker Funeral Home.

Winter Park. Is tn charge
arrangements.

of

F u n s ra t N o t i c e

W A L T E R 81DBKRRY
Mr. Walter Sldberry. 55. of
Apt. 79. William Clark Court.
Sanford, died
Tuesday at hts
realdence. Bom May 19. 1930 in
Rock Point. N.C.. he moved to
Sanford from there In the 1950*
He was a laborer.

IID M ItR Y . W A LTER
— F m oioi M T t i u i tar Woltar lidborry. U .
•« A «) n William Clark Court lantord. .h o
dad Twatday s ill ba hold at II * m Montar

Flower* For All OtTUiUrvis

(Hollins

Survivors Include his devoted
friend. Mrs. Lulabell Davis, two
daughters, Mrs Minnie Bell Fort
and Sharon Sldberry. both of
Sanford, three brothris. Edward
Earl and Joseph. Rock Point,
and Cab. New York: two ststets.
Grace Fisher. Rock Point, and
Geraldine Sldberry. Brooklyn
N.Y.

wit* ttw H r . Ronald W Ma.pnw ofHooting
V law in* will ba tram noon to t p m Vxxtar
wit* burial ta bo In Shiloh Comotorr as
Monday lunrita f unoral noma It In chars*
ol arrongamonti

E im in g llcvu ld
•USP S i l l 1MI

Friday. August 2, 1981
Vol 77. No 791

s w a r* . 3231204

P ublithrd Daily and Sunday, n t t o t
D t u id iy by Tha la i.a e d Horrid.
Inc &gt;04 N F rtn c h A r t . . Santard.

Pis. mu.
lacand C lr n Pottaga Paid *1 Santar*.

rirrwta mil

OAKLAWN

FUNCHAL HOME CCtttTlRY
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�'Tax Hike Inevitable'
If Deficit Is To Be Cut
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep.
Dan Rostenkowskl. chairman o f
the powerful House Ways and
Means Committee, says a tax
Increase Is unavoidable If the
defied Is to be cut, and a revised
tax code would help make sure tt
Is fair.
Rostenkowskl. D ill., whose
commlltee plans to begin writing
a tax reform bill In September,
said lhat movrs to change the
tax system and stash the more
than $200 billion deficit should
not • paralyse" each other, but
that new revenues are Inevita­
ble.
"One day soon we re going to
raise la x r s ." he said. "T h e
president has no other practical
alternative. W e 'v e about hit
bottom on the spending side —
both politically and as a matter
o f practical economics.
"But when we decide to raise
large amounts ol revenue to
draw down the debt, let's have
ready a new tax code that gives

us the revenue base to do It
without hitting Anyone or any
business u n fa irly ,*’
Rostenkowskl added. " I f the tax
base Is broad, a 1 or 2 perernt
hike In the rates can raise a lol of
revenue without distorting the
marketplace."
Reagan has repeatedly said he
would veto any tax Increase — a
position Rostenkowskl tied to
the president’s campaign pro­
mise not to raise levies.
" I think that's w rong." the
lawmaker said.
He also declared "th e quest for
tax reform Is very much alive."
but hinted his panel m ay change
several key parts of Reagan's
plan. Including the number of
tax brackets and the proposal to
eliminate the Mate and local lax
deduction.
He expressed doubts, however,
that the Senate would act on a
measure this year even If the
House did.
"1 don't know whether (Senate
Republican leader) Bob Dole

wants the ball." he said.
Rostenkowskl mixed praise for
Reagan's plan with questions
about why the administration
changed parts of the Treasury
Department's original blueprint.
" A number of my colleagues
are privately suggesting a return
to som e of the options contained
In the first Treasury proposal."
he noted.
Rostenkowskl said whatever
bill comes out of his committee.
It should "stay true to the uplrlt
a n d th e la rg e p i e c e s ” o f
R e a g a n 's plan or C o n g res s
would risk losing the president's
pport.
However, he also raised the
possibility of change, especially
as a way to provide more relief lo
the middle class and to revise
some tax breaks for the wealthy.
A lth ou gl stressing nothing
was certain he hinted at the
p o s s ib ility o f c h a n g in g the
niilTtU.r o f lax L lu ik d s — w iiiili
In Reagan's plan ate 15 percent.
25 percent and 35 percent.

Evening Hers Id, Sanlord. FI.

W ill Ta x Reform
M ean Th e End O f
Christm as Tre e ?

Dan Rostenkowskl
He also alluded (o possible
changes In the president’s sug­
gestion lo drop the deduction for
stale and local taxes — a pro­
vision worth about $34 billion a
year.
He udded that In a recent
discussion with Reagan, the
president "protected lhat area
very stron gly" but did not dis­
play tin sami type of strong
commitment he had In Ihc past
on other Items.

Air Force M ay Be Preparing To Fire Whistle-Blower
W A S H IN G T O N |UPI) A. E rn est
Fitzgerald. an Air Force "whistle-blower"
who won a 13-year reinstatement fight ovrr
his 1969 firing as a systems analyst, got less
than glowing marks In his first Job perfor­
mance rallng In 18 years.
Richard Carver, the assistant Air Force
secretary who evaluated Fitzgerald and gave
him ihree sub-pur marks for work behavior,
said (he report "Is not an attempt lo Impair
Mr. Fitzgerald's career In any way. Il Is not
an attempt to fire him ."
Uul Rep. John Dltigcll, D-Mleh., who
recently elicited testimony from Fitzgerald
In an Investigation of (Discharges by defense
contractors, promptly announced be would
hold hearings to determine whether the Air
Force was preparing to do Just that, ns well
as harassing a witness, an aide said.
"W e’re going to look at It In terms of
possible Intimidation of a w itness." said
Michael Burrell, stalf director o f Dingrll's
Energy and Commerce subcommittee on
o v e r s ig h t and In v e s tig a tio n s . " T h e
chairman does not countenance actions
taken against our witnesses."
Barrel! and another Dlngell aide, noilng
that such low marks could give the Air
Force the flexibility to fire Fitzgerald again,
said Dlngell would summon Air Force
Secretary Verne Orr to testify on the matter
In September.
Both Fitzgerald, deputy assistant seerc-

'Fitzgerald . . . has lacked overall
direction In hit effort to manage
and reduce cot ft. which hat
substantially Inhibited our
ability to addrett these very
Important problems.'
-Air Fore*’* Richard Carvor
tary o f the Air Force for managrineiil
systems, and his lawyer declined comment.
Fitzgerald was evaluated .July 26 by
Carver, assistant secretary for financial
management and the form er Republican
mayor o f Peoria. 111.
In the evaluation for the period from
Marrh 20 to June 30. Carver gave Fll/grrald
only one mark of "above fully successful,"
and gave him "lx-low lully successful" for
his perform ances In prob lem solving,
working relationships and work manage*
ment
"I am convinced that Mr. Fitzgerald Is n
competent and skilled em ployee who has
lacked overall dlrccilnn in his effort lo
m anage and reduce costa, which has
substantially inhibited our ability lo address
these very Important problems.” Carver
wrote.
Noilng It took four months to negotiate u

__ Friday, Aug. 7, 1W —1A

work plan with Fitzgerald. Carver Mid hr
could not fully evaluate Fitzgerald s perfor­
mance over such a short period and that he
was optimistic FtlzgcraU! would perform
well In the future.
Th e rallng was In sharp conlrusl with a
1984 Air Force report to a federal court,
which praised Fitzgerald's numerous ac­
complishments In rooting out waste and
fraud among defense contractors.
"M r. Fitzgerald has been In the forefront
o f Air Force efforts lo reduce and control Ihc
cost of weapons and spare parts and to
Im p rove the p ro d u c tiv ity of In house
overhaul of weapons systems," the report
concluded
Fitzgerald has spent part of the last y # «r
on detail to Dingrll's subcommittee, assist­
ing In Us Investigation o f (he General
Dynamics Corp. nnd other defense con ­
tractors.
Fitzgerald was Instrumental In helping
expose a military spare parts controversy,
raised questions alxiut the performance of
the Maverick m ls s llr and ch allen ged
numerous other Air Force systems.
Fitzgerald. 59, was fired from the Air
Force In 1969 but rrgulnrd an Air Force Job
in 1973. winning about $80,000 In back pay
In a court settlement. I* took him until 19H2.
however, lo win reinstatement to a position
Involving procurement through a second
lawsuit.

WASHINGTON IUPI| - ITrsi
deni Reagan’s tax reform plan,
attacked and vilified by special
Interests across the country. Is
now accused o f threatening the
American Christmas tree.
"This proposal will, if enacted,
severely limit, If not abolish, the
production o f Christmas trees in
the Unlied States. ' Keith Jacob,
a grower from Minneapolis told
I he House W ays and Means
Committee Wednesday.
Jacob, testifying on behalf ol
the National Christmas Tree
A ssociation , added that by
dropping tax breaks used by the
industry, the United States
would not only have to return lo
looking outside Its Ixirdrrs for
real Christmas trees, but would
be giving u boost to overseas
manufacturers o f artificial trees.
Kraguu's plan, Jacob charged,
would hurl an Industry that "Is
entirely a family-oriented en­
terprise."
The victims, he said, would be
the youths who fill the estimated
30.000 summer Jobs created by
the Industry, which rmploys
about 100,000 people a year.
The p r e s id e n t 's proposal
would eliminate numerous tax
breaks. Including ones used
widely by the limber Industry,
The domestic Christmas tree
business, J a c o b contended,
would be especially hurt because
o f Its Intensive forestry efforts.
The Ways and Means Com­

mittee plans to begin writing a
lax reform bill In September. But
In tw o months o f hearings,
labeled recently by Chairman
Dan Rostenkowskl. D-lll.. a
"painful ritual." witness after
witness has com plained that
law m akers should keep tax
Hems Reagan has raim arked for
extinction.
Tax breaks for Christmas tree
grow ers were first added In
1954. The move turned the
country from one that Imported
90 percent of its Christmas trees
to one (hul produced 80-90
percent of the yuletldc tress used
In the 50 slates. Jacob Mid.
In a detailed four page state­
m ent, Jacob contended that
"changes In American tax law
without corrrs|M&gt;ndlng changes
fot I lie Canadian com pet Hors
will, of course, put our northern
n eigh b ors at a co m p e titiv e
advantage.
"Another beneficiary of die
proposals o f the Treasury De­
partment Is the Oriental manu­
facturer of plastic trees which
utilize non renewable petroleum
resources and compete directly
with our Industry," he said.
In a p artin g s h o t, Jacob
charged lhat Ihc president's plan
also could not be considered
r e v e n u e n r u tr n i " b e c a u s e
Christmas tree growers now pay
taxes and under the proposed
rules there w ill not be any
Christmas tree grow ers."

Trial Set For Man Accused
Of Selling Phony Cocaine
A September trial date has
been set for a Sanford man
accused of selling fakr cocaine, a
third-degree felony.
Darron Leroy Comer. 21. or
1809 W. 18th St., has been
charged with the fraudulent sale
of a controlled substance Ip a
police informant. Comer claimed
i be material was cocaine, but
Court records do not Indicate
with the substance actually was.
If convicted. Comer could get
up to five years In prison.
According to court records, a
man met an Informant at u

Sanford bar April 16 and (or $10
sold him a small foil parkrt
which was alleged lo contain
cocaine. Police, however, tested
the substance and determined it
was not the Illegal drug, records
said.
Comer was arrested May 10
and Is set for trial September 27
before Srm(note Circuit Judge
Kenneth M. Lrlllrr.
Comer has been released from
die Seminole County Jail on u
$500 bond. * according to jull
records.
— Dsoris Jordan

Sanford M an S e t For Trial In S e xu a l A ssa u lts On G irl, 12
Jury selection Is scheduled to
begin Monday In Ihc case o f u
Sanford man charged with six
sex crimes Involving a 12 yearold girl.
Charged with one count of
sexual activity with a child, four
counts o f lewd and lascivious
assault on a child, and one count
o f c o m m it t in g a lew d o r
lascivious act In the presence of
a child Is Thomas Leroy Davis.
38. of 141 Anthony Drive.
Hr was arrested Feb. 28 and ts
free on $4,000 bond awaiting
trial, jail officials said.
After school began in Ihc full of
1984. Ihc 12-ycar-old girl told a
slate social worker dial she was
fondled by a mun between May
1. 1983and Sept. 1. 1084.
B URG LARIES * THEFTS
Naomi Hulh Schnack. 33, of
133 Vespers Place. Lake Mary,
gave s h e r iff's d epu ties th e
namrs of several suspects who
may have stolen coins. Jewelry
and other Items with a total
value of $600 from her home
between July 27 and Wednes­
day.
A thief took $175 from the car
of Monlf A. Cohesion. 62. of 206
Lake Gene Drive. Longwood. on
July 8 or 9, a sheriffs report
filed Wednesday said.
A .38-callbcr revolver was
stolen from a nlfthtstand In the
home of Patricia S. Trotter, 28.
of 151 Heron Bay Circle. Lake
Mary, between July 25 and
Tuesday, deputies reported.
Jewelry, coins, a microwave
oven and other Items were stolen
from the home of Delores R.
Anttllcy. 38. of P.O. Box 86. E.
State Road 46. Geneva, on
Monday, depudea said.
Beatrice Ashe. 34. of 2500
•Crawford S L. Sanford, gave
: sheriff's deputies the name o f a
‘ suspect who may have stolen 20
•pounds of meat, a box of soap
;and a $500 iclevlson from her
, home on T uesday.
J A pressure pump and a $900
'conrrete handsaw belonging to
iRobert B. MacNamara. 31. o f
I Orlando, were atolcn from a
construction site on N. Dodd
iRoad In southeast Seminole
■County betw een Friday and
; Monday, a shertfTa report said.
} A thief took $4,214 worth o f
! forma) clothing Including two
’ tuxedos, two evening gowns and

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts
★ Police

a pair of rhinestone slippers were
stolen from the cur o f Carmrlu
Papurcha, 56. of 1206 Waverly
Wuy, Longwood, on July 24 or
25. The theft was rrponrd to
shertIFs deputies Tuesday,
Rosemary King. 28. of 1-akc
Monroe, reported lo sh eriff a
deputies (hat a thief raided the
home of her parents at Route I.
Box 152. E. Ohio St.. Sanford.
Monday or Tuesday while her
parents were on vacation A
$150 stereo and two circular
saw s worth $75 each were
stolen
A $750 bathtub has been
stolen from a construction site ut
4050 Galllgar lamp. Casselberry.
Builder Richard Awsumb told
deputies the tub was taken
Monday or Tuesday.
About $500 worth o f Jewelry
und other Items were stolen from
th e h om e o f M a r g a r e t A.
Scybold. 47. of 760 Francis St.,
Altamonte Springs, around 3 30
p.m. Monday, a sh eriffs report
said.
A thief took tw o gas tanks, a
water healer, a toilet and right
stove knobs from a travel trailer
parked at Rec V c r Port of
Sanford. Sanford, on Monday or
Tuesday. The loss was estimated
at about $1,000.
A $400 radio was stolen from
the car of Matiha A. Editions. 36.
of 401 Temple Drive. Sanford,
on Monday o r T u e s d a y , a
sheriffs report said.
ABUSE AR R EST
38-year-old W ln trr Park
man accused by his 15-year-old
daughter of besting her on the
face, arms and legs with a bell
has been ch a rg ed with a g ­
gravated child abuse.
Sem inole C o u n ty s h e r iff*
deputies who were called to the
girl s home at 1906 Bonanza
Court at about 9 p.m. Wednes­
day. reported seeing welts on the
body of Pamela Lynn Davis.
The girl lotd deputies her

A

father had Inflicted the Injuries
with u bell during an argument
white her mother wale lied, n
sh eriff s report said.
The girl told deputies she had
been treated three weeks ago for
simitar Injuries
Michael Joseph Davis, o f 2888
U K Circle, has Ix-en released on
$8,000 bond and Is scheduled to
appear In court Aug 19.
B A D D EA L
T w o A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s
wom en who stopped lltelr car
and were talking lo a man when
sh eriffs deputies spotted them
In an area known for drug deals
h a v e b e e n c h a r g e d w it h
possession of less than 20 grams
o f martjuanu.
Deputies uald the man fled as
they approarhrd the car and the
woman drove away from where
they had been stopped on North
Street at Marker Street In Alta­
monte Springs.
Deputies reported seeing the
passenger loss what apjrearcd to
be a bag of marijuana from the
car. O.ie deputy recovered the
bag. which reportedly contained
a small (tuanltly of marijuana,
a m i the other sto p p ed the
wom en s car. the report said.
Anne Lee Denting. 31. o f 135
Leon St., and Johnnie Watkins
Andrews. 35, of 202 Harris St.,
were arrested at 11:16 a.tit. on
M o rs e S tr e e t. A lta m o n te
Springs. Both have been re­
leased without posting bond and
are scheduled lo appear In court
A ug 14.
STOLEN R EN T AL
A Seminole County sheriffs
deputy ran a check on a Ryder
rental truck parked ut u motel
west of Sanford, found It re­
ported stolen, and charged the
driver with auto theft.
The truck was found at the
D ay's Inn. Interstate 4 and State
Road 46. at about 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
Ronald Emil Matthews. 23. of
Port Si. Lucie, has been charged
In the case and wa* being held In
lieu o f $5,000 bond.
POT IN PA NTS
Sanford police questioning
several suspects believed to have
been smoking and passing a
marijuana cigarette In a car
parked at 301 S. Sanford Ave._
arrested one of the men after
reportedly finding 11 small bags
o f m a riju an a In h is pants
pockets, a police report said.
No other arcests were made
a n d p o lice d id n 't fin d the
hand rolled cigarette which they
said drew them to the car In the

A

first place.
Thomas Lee Manrr. 30. of
1811 W. 16th St., Sanford, was
charged with possession o f less
than 20 gram s of pot and
possession of pot with Intent to
distribute. He was arrested at
10 44 p m . Wednesday and Is
being field In Hru of $5,000
bond.
DU1 ARREST
The following person has hern
arrested In Seminole County on
a charge of driving under Ihc
Influence:

— Mary Corelne Doney, 35, of
1208 Wynn st.. Sanford, at 2:17
a.m. Thursday after she drove
north In thr southbound lane of
U.S. Highway 17-92, Sanford.
—Joan A. Kroger. 29, of 832
— Linda A. Gore. 24. of 914 Hoaanlu Drive, Sanford, al 9:20
Orenlu Avr,, Apt. A. Altamonte p in. Wednesday ufter she drove
Springs, was arrested ul 10:26 cast In ihc weabound lane of
p.m. Wednesday afler her car U,S. Highway 17-92, Sanford,
was Involved In un accident on almost hitting a police car and
County Road 427 al Stale Road forcing other vehicles olf Ihc
434. Longwood. She wus also road. Shr wus also charged wllh
charged wllh making un Im­ fleeing und attempting (o elude
police.
proper turn.
—Joseph Burr Fine. 25. of 2853
S. Sunlord A vr., Sanford, at
11:30 p.m. Tuesday uflcr Ills car
was Involved In an urtidrnl on
S. Sanford Avenue.

WEATHER
A R E A FO RECAST) T o d a y
partly cloudy. Scattered mainly
afternoon thunderstorms. High
In lower 90s. Light wind. Ruin
chance 50 percent. Tonight and
Saturday partly cloudy. Good
chance o f afternoon and evening
thnndrratorms. Low In low to
mid 70s. High In lower 90s.
Light wind. Rain chance 30
percent tonight and 50 percent
Saturday.
NATIONAL REPORT)
Six-foot flood waters spawned by
record rain washed Cheyenne,
Wyo.. early today, closing roads,
culling telephone and electrical
service, chasing residents from
their homes and straining dams.
A storm , which set several
buildings ablaze wfih lightning,
soaked Cheyenne with 6.06 In­
ches o f rain in about 3W hours.

a.m..
10:19 p m.; lows. 3:36
a.m.. 3:38 p.m.; Bayportt highs.
3:22 a m-. 2:41 p.m.; lows, 8:50
a.tn.. 9.50 p.m,
BOATINO FORECAST; Si
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Wind mostly southwest
near 10 knots today then vari­
able 10 knots or less tonight and
Saturday. Sea 2 feel or less.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Elertda Hastens I HetftUI

Thursday

A D M llt lO H t
U r lord
Melba J Bee h
Salty A Beniamin
JoMtftP Dodson
I W M t Good
Raymond G Gerteau. OdS*ry
Walter A Harman. Da'tona
Lorslei J Jevben Guercio. Dallona

A R E A R EAD IN 08 (0 a.m.Ji
temperature: 75: overnight low:
74; T h u r s d a y 's h ig h : 9 3 ;
barometric pressure: 29.99; rela­
tive h u m id ity ; 93 p e rc e n t;
winds: southwest at 5 mph; tain:
.15 Inch: sunrise: 6:47 a.m..
sunset 8:15 p m .
S A T U R D A Y TIDES: Daytona
Beach: hlgha. 10:48 a.m.. 10:27
p.m.; lows. 3:45 a.m.. 3:47 p.m.;
Part Canaveral; highs. 9:53

Daa’t Gal Caught
CaM...
WMk V«s Fmu I

Wtathartron
Heal PumjVAU Condlllonar
Am bmm U U i m i m I m

100/ S Ssnlcxd * »•

Sinloid _____

Widely scattered thunderstorms
with gusty wind m ainly during
afternoon
EXTENDED FORECAST)
Sunday through Tuesday —
Partly cloudy with a chance of
mainly afternoon and evening
thunderstorms. Highs upper 80s
to mid 90s. Lows mostly In the
70s

Denise E tlaln. Dallona
Norman E Maberry.Otleen
D ltO tA S O It
U n lo rd
Angel M Carlar
C a marina 0 Johnson
M ary M Nicolai
Corolyn P Nor J Do B a r,
Varonlca f PoOail and b a t , girl
Sharon P Cook and baby boy. Orenge City

NEW KID ON THE BLOCK
N I C K M O N T E 'S

G aslight Suiter C lub
&amp; R estaurant

I

119 SO MAGNOLIA • DOWNTOWN SANFORD
S e rvin g Th e Elneal In
Seale*x) Prime Hlb. M e o kl and !»|&gt;e&lt; laity IMaheo

featuring N IC K M O N T E
singing old time favorite songs.
Also enjoy dancing to the music o f
LO U PRESTIGE and
The Gusllght Ensemble (Big Hand Sound)
OPEN FOR LUNCH MON.-FRL 11-2
D INN E R H O U R S 4 pm • T ilt? ? ?
C LO SE D M O N D A Y N1TES

•«1 • 12

!;■

Vi»r *t*»f»

M M

\ r » r t s nsitHhum

Kesrrvittions Suggest eel ,
321-.'WHHI 323-7152
*"*»•"*

C«(rrrU Parties fur Sat. &amp; S u n Afternoon Call toe Information

�Evening Herald
IUSPS 411-ISO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA 32771
Area Codr .'i05-322-2611 or 831-9903
Friday. August 2, 1W5—4A
W*yr&gt;« O. Doyls, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director

Home Delivery Week. II 10: Month. H 75 3 Month*.
• |4 25 5 Months 927 00 Year. 151 OO lly Mail Week.
• I 50 Month. 9fi 00 l Months. *1H OO O Months. M 2 50
Year. 900 no

Wasted
Charity?
T h e L iv e A id con certo In London and
r.'iiU d H p h in v. ere sm ashin g successes. rais­
ing a rep orted $70 m illion fo r A frican fam in e
relief. T h is am ount, added to the estim ated
31 b illion In aid already d on ated or pledged
by n iiv a te a gen cies and g o ve rn m en ts around
the w orld , should help sa ve m an y thousands
o f lives.
Hut, as th r respected L o n d o n E co n o m is t
notes In Its current s u rv e y o f A frica's food
crisis, aid efforts are still t&gt;clng ham pered b y
m ism an agem en t and fru strated b y political
Interference. T h en too. fr r e food m ay no
longer tie the best response to hu nger In so m e
o f A fric a ’ s 20 poorest cou n tries.
Stnrt w ith m is m a n a g e m e n t. S o m u c h
donated focal Is rottin g on the decks o f
E th iop ia's three ports that U nited N ations
officia ls h a ve suspended add ition a l d eliveries
until the b n rk log Is cle a re d . Som e o f the
donated tru cks and fo u r-w h eel-drive veh icles
that cou ld be hauling this food out to the
feed in g cam ps are s ittin g on the docks as
w ell, a w a itin g som e cu sto m s bu reaucrat's
signature or stam p o f a ccep ta n ce.
L e s s fla g r a n t but s t ill d is h e a r t e n in g
ex a m p les o f Inefficiency and m ism an agem en t
also afflict m an y o f the aid efforts elsew h ere
In Afrlcu. T y p ic a lly , this m ism an agem en t Is
less the fault o f those g iv in g uld than o f the
g o ve rn m en ts receivin g It. In any event, the
nll-too-frequent result Is thnt aid Is wasted
and m a n y w h o need It neverth eless g o
w ithout.
But at least three a d m in istra tive sh ortcom ­
ings a re u su ally not d eliberate, f'olltlcu l
In terferen ce Is. which Is on e reason It Is so
u n fo rg iva b le . T h e M arxist govern m en t o f
E thiopia still gives S oviet ships d eliverin g
arum p rio rity for u n loa d in g o v er W estern
ships d e liv e rin g grain. W orse, the Ethiopian
reg im e con tin u es to d e n y food to Eritrea and
T lg r e , reb elliou s p ro v in c e s w h ere severa l
m illion p eople are starving.
D on a ted trucks that co u ld be d eliverin g
food In E th iop ia are Instead b ein g used by the
regim e In the forced reloca tion o f clvllluns
su spected o f sy m p a th izin g w ith Insurgents.
In S u d a n , the n ew g o v e r n m e n t s e r in s
d e c id e d ly a p ath etic ab ou t a rra n g in g th e
d elivery o f food In areus In the south w h ere
gu erillas are active. In all. civ il conflicts are
d isru p tin g food distrib u tion In M ozam bique,
Chad an d Atnc la In addition to Ethiopia and
the S u dan. And lit a lm ost ev e ry case, the
villain Is a govern m en t thut w ou ld rather see
Innocent clvlllu n s starve than risk feed in g
Insurgents.
lly the best estim ates, A frica needed 7
m illion Ion s o f fond aid d u rin g the Inst 12
m ouths. T w o-th ird s o f that has been d elivered
or p rom ised , and m ore w ill no doubt soon be
on I he w a y . T h ere Is no substitute for this aid
w h ere p eo p le are actu ally starvin g. But w h ere
they a re m erely m aln ou rish ed and local
agricu ltu re Is still fu n ction in g, the w idespread
d istrib u tion o f free food can depress farm
In com es and dim inish fu ture food production:
In effect, helping to create the next famine.
T h is hardly adds up. o f course, lo u case fo r
w tlh h n ld ln g aid. It d o es su ggest the nerd for
twtter, m ore farsighted p lan n in g plus m ore
pressure on som e A frica n govern m en ts to
stop u sin g food as a w ea p on . T h ese are w a y s
lo assu re that uld dollars are not wasted and
(hut such outpourings o f generosity as the
response to the L ive A id concerts uctually
accom p lish as much g o o d us possible.

P le a se W rite
L e tte r s to the e d ito r are welcom e for
pu blication. A ll le tte rs must be signed end
Include s m ailing address and. If possible, ■
te le p h o n e number. T h e E ven in g H era ld
res erve s the right to e d it le tte rs to a void
lib e l and to accom m odate apace.

DICK WEST

O n e T a x p a y e r's Loophole Is A n o th e r's S h e lte r
W ASHINGTON (UPII - An organization
calling Itself the Fair Tax Education Fund says
the minimum tax proposed by some would-be
tax reformers Is "a problem, not a solution."
That is more or less what President Reagan
has t&gt;ern saying about Congress. You can decide
for yourself whether they mean the same thing.
On the surface, the Fair Tax Education Fund
says, the proposal that all profitable corpora­
tions be required lo pay at least a minimal lax
"sounds like a good Idea.”
Did you ever hear Reagan characterize any
congressional alternative, particularly a Demo­
cratic proposal, as sounding like a good idea''
I didn’t either, lie talks a lot about surface
noise but that Is about as far as he goes.
"Closer examination shows the minimum lax
neither remedies Inequities In the lax code nor
raises significant revenues.” the fund adds.
That sounds more like tin president we all
know.
Closer examination almost always reveals that
what mnv sound like a la x loop hole is

someone’s way of life.
For Instance. I dare say that contributions to
thr Fair Tax Education Fund are deductible.
Which would mean the organization Itself Is part
o f the problem It Is attacking.
Spokesmen for universities, museums, foun­
dations and other groups that rely heavily on
contributions recently urged that Congess allow
all taxpayers lo claim deductions If they fork
over any cash regardless of whelhcr they
Itemize their returns.
Sounds fair enough. But what of the so-called
three martini lunches?
Certain expense account lunches may be
written off. leading to complaints that other
taxpayers are subsidizing martinis without
imbibing themselves,
Why. Ii is asked, can’t the lunch bunch make
do w f b one or two martinis Instead of three? Or
simply havcH cupofcolfec?
That also sound fair. Yet, argue a certain
number of midday cocktails are needed to keep
restaurant up to standard,

With all due respect to the lax fund. Congress.
President Reagan and other reformers. I woultj.
like to complain that their suggestions don't g e l ;
anywhere near where the real trouble lies.
The main problem Is not one o f fairness and
whether a proposed reform would favor one
Income bracket over another. It's paperwork.
Why should taxpayers be obliged to keep a
small mountain o f rerords In order lo prove are
entitled to all the deductions permitted by the
tax code?
Why. for that matter, should one type of
tnrom*- be trrated any differently from another?
Are not dividends as spendable as salaries? And
arc not long term and short term gains equal In
the eyes of a department store cashier?
A,
If credit card companies don’ t ask where Ihe
money comes from. 1 don't know why the IRS
should cither. Yet. reams of paper must be
squirreled away In case returns arc audited.
Rather than save all that paper. 11 might be
belter to save martini ollvcs.Then we could

SCIENCE WORLD

EDWARD J. WALSH

TVA: Less
Than It
Once Was

Country
Lifestyle ;
Valuable

In thr spring o f 1933. thr nation
was stru gglin g lo survive the
deepest trough of the Great De­
pression, The Soulhruslrrn states
suffered particularly, having never
recovered Irorn the ravages of the
farm depression of the twenties,
during whlrh farm bankruptcies
Increased some 600 percent. The
Southeast, glflrd with fertile soil,
was at the same time handicapped
by Its dependence on agriculture.
Distances between cities were vast,
roads were poor, and rlertrlclty was
practically unknown outside urban
arras. Frequent flooding throughout
the Tennessee River basin made
navigation by the barge traffic from
eastern coal fields dllflrtill on the
re g io n ’ s Im portant w aterw ays.
Prospects for real economic growth
In the Tennessee Valley were not
auspicious.

By Jan Ziegler
UPI Science W riter
WASHINGTON (UPII - Scientist*
are finding that city people would be
better off If they brought a little
country Into their lives and put
g r e a t e r e m p h a s is on s o c ia l
networks, quiet and beauty.
A new study from Duke Universi­
ty In North Carolina, part of a
growing body of research In this
area, showed that urban dwellers
w ere twice as lik e ly to suffer
depression as those In rural areas,
"In lay and scientific literature,
the stress of modern life, which
really means urban life. Is strongly
a s s o c ia te d w ith th e on set o f
psychiatric disorders." said Dr.
Linda George, an associate pro­
fessor of psychiatry and co-author of
the study In the Archives of General
Psychiatry.
"Clearly depression Is much more
prevalent In urban areas."
The study should be taken to
mean not that people are at the
mercy of where they live, but that
they can change their live* where
they are to Include more emphasis
on relationships.
"T h e implication Is. the country
lllcstylc olfers thing* that ore valu­
able to people, and we can recreate
that." she said. "T h e cities don't
have to hr anonymous places. We
can develop relationships We can
d iv id e c itie s In to m ea n in g fu l
neighbor hoods.
"Believe me rural arras have
their problems. Th ere Is lower
Incom e, lower education, fewer
services. All is not Idyllic, but there
Is greater emphasis on close social
relationship*, people you can con­
fide In and trust."
There are also ways to control
crowding, noise and occasional ug­
liness of urban life " i f we as a
society choose to." she said.
Some researchers have contended
that city life Is healthy for those who
choose It, but George said that
selection may not be voluntary.
" I f you do a certain type of work,
you have to go to where the Jobs
urr." she said. "A ll you have to do 1s
look at all the people dreaming of
moving from the city to the country
to know what their choice would
be."
The researchers studied 3,921
adults In the Piedmont region of
North Carolina. One county In the
s tu d y w as c o n s id e r e d urban
because it contains the city, of
Durham, with more than 50,006
Inhabitants Four other counties
Included In the study were de­
scribed as rural.
Several other studies have in
dlcated higher levels of psychiatric
disorders among migrants to elite*
than among native residents,

In May of that year, Congress
created the T e n n e s s e e V a lley
Authority Corporation, a govern­
ment-owned company rmpowcrrd
to engage In a broad range ol
ucttvllles aimed at developing the
economy of the region drained by
th e T e n n e s s e e R iv e r and Its
tributaries, an area that Inrludrd all
o f Tennessee and parts of six other
stairs. The TV A Act authorized the
corporation to acquire real estate for
Ihe pur|N&gt;se of building dams utid
reservoirs, and other means of flood
control, to make contracts to pro­
duce nitrogen and other fertilizers,
lo conduct agricultural research,
ami to produce explosives for sale at
cost to Ihe U.S. government.
The production, distribution, uml
snIFof electric power was but one of
TVA's major responsibilities, all of
which had one aim: to errate Jobs.
For more than 50 yrars, the TV A
bus been ,he most important ecom im e Institution In the Tennessee
Valley It sells power, hut It also
Involved In research In agricultural
tind industrial development, pro­
vides engineer lug assistance to
communities, encourages tourism,
maintains historical documents,
and dors u vast urruy of other
things. TVA management claims to
have provided thousands of Jobs In
Its first 50 years, and served as a
"catalyst" In creating hundreds of
thousands more.
The Tennessee Valley Authortly,
unfortunately Tor all of us, lias
beroinr a creature of its own history
and Its own public relations. Its
subsidized construction and power
projects created Jobs, and provided
cheap power to the Valley In the
long lean years. Hut the problems
that remain don’t Justify a 9550
million budget mostly to support
the C orp ora tion 's grab hug of
non-power development programs.

WIUIAM RUSHER

Terror In South Africa
Two nations dec-lurid states of
emergency In southern Africa last
wrek In one case, France withdrew
Its ambassador, banned all future
Investment there, and brought thr
matter before the U.N. Security
Count'll, wlterr the offending nation
was denounced on all sides. De­
monstrators engaged In a mass
protest In front nr Us Washington
embassy, w hile angry speeches
were made In the House of Repre­
sen tatives, In the other case,
nothing hap|M-nedat all,
Thr Ural nation was South Africa.
The second was Its neighbor to the
north. Zimbabwe.
And yet Ihe case for emergency.
poller |Miwrrs would seem. If any­
thing. to I k - fur stronger In South
Africa than in Zimbabwe. Just the
other day Joe Slovo, the white
communist who heads the military
arm of the outlawed African Na­
tional C ongress, boastrd lo a
Washington Post Interviewer that
be wus behind the bomb attacks on
turgrls In South Africa that have
taken more than two dozen lives In
the past live years..
And listen to this directive to
South African blacks, broadcast In
English by the ANC'a National
Executive Com m itter from com ­
munist-controlled Ethloplu on May
6:
"Ambushes must be prepared for
policemen and soldiers., will) the
aim of rapturing weapons from
th em . Our p e o p le m ust a ls o
manufacture homemade bondtsami
petrol bombs with material that can
Ik- locally obtained. In addition, our
people must also buy weapons
where possible.
"After urtnlng themselves In this
manner, our people must begin to
Identify collaborators and enemy
agents and deal with them. Those

collaborators who urr serving In the
community councils must be dealt
with."**
Those arc 1he orders whose con­
sequences you saw on television;
the picture of a black man. "sus­
pected of bring a police Informer."
cow ering on th r ground while
Bishop Tutu pleaded with a black
mob for his life: the picture of u
bla ck w om an, s im ila rly "su speeled." soaked with gasoline by
other blacks and set afire The good
bishop was so shaken by these
events that he warned: " If (hat
happens ugaln. I am going to collect
my family and leave this country
that I love. M illions o f people
worldwide support our struggle, but
when they saw (hat on TV tnuny
said, *Uh. oh. tf these people can do
things like that, they are not ready
for freedom.
The fact Is thut the South African
government would have been far
mure open to legitimate criticism tf
It had not declared a slate of
emergency and moved briskly lo
protect the country's 20 million
blacks from the hotheads eager lo
rarry out the ANC'a murderous
orders.
And Ihe Irony Is thut all this Is
happening, not when the condition
and prospects o f South Africa’ s
blacks arc getting worse, but whrn
they arc brighter than ever before.
T o hear South Africa * critics. In the
U nited N ation s, on A m erica 's
campuses, on Capitol Hill, and In
f r o n t of I ts e m b a s s y on
Massachusetts Avenue, one would
suppose that Ihe South African
government has slammed the door
on black political participation for­
ever. On the contrary. It Is moving
with Impressive speed to devise
ways of bringing blacks Into the
political life o f the country.

JACK ANDERSON
BERRYS WORLD

‘Who armyou prmparmd to bmek In thmBURGER
WARS?”

End Of Volcker Era Won't Bother Reagan
By J a ck A nderson
and D ale Van A tta
W A S H I N G T O N - With a
minimum of fanfare and foldrml.
Ihe second most powerful man In
Washington will walk olf Into the
sunset early next year. And the
While House crowd can't wall In see
him go
He's Paul Volcker. Ihe rumpled,
oversized Federal Reserve Hoard
chairman.
He spend* most of hts time, head
In a cluud of clgur smoke, talking
largely tu himself. Few people can
lollorv hts ram b lin g discourse.
Behind his luck, some associates
call him "M u m bles." What make* It
worse la that Irw can even decipher
his h a n d -s c ra w le d n otes and
memos
Yet there Is something Intimidat­
ing about this 6-(oot-7 luinkcr with
the condescending manner. Who
else could send several Fed olllrtal*
scrambling underneath the lublc at
a board o f g o w m o c r m eeting
crawling on their hand* and knees

while trying lo disconnect an In­
tercom Volcker had accidentally
kicked on with his gangly long legs?
White House aides resent the halo
that V olcker w ears with such
hauteur. They think It's time he was
usked to explain why Ihe sky hasn't
(alien, as he so confidently predicted
It would.
The Fed chairman warned tire­
lessly that the budget deficits would
ubort the economic recovery In the
short run. When this didn’t happen,
he prrdlctrd that the recovery
would be weak. But the recovery
turned out In be fur more robust
than he tud expected.
Still, he has out-maneuvered his
critics. Including Vice President
George Bush and While House chief
of stall Donald Regan. Though
V olcker has a n ta gon ized congiesstnen. Infuriated White House
a id e * and a n n o y e d P re sid e n t
R e a g a n , th e m ea n d e rin g F ed
chairman has dominated fiscal poli­
cy and exercised almost tyrannical
power over the hanking Industry.

Now he has told Intimates, whom
he In vites to hts W ashington
apartment for spaghetti dinners,
th at g o v e r n m e n t s e r v ic e has
drained him personally and ditandally His wife has a serious form of
arthritis, which keeps her In New
York City, and Volcker commutes
constantly betw een Washington
and New York.
Whrn he walks out of his Fed
otrices for Ihe last time, he will leave
behind some ncttlcsomc problems.
The most serious will be a monelary
system that h e's been holding
together with string and glue. Hr
has used the power of the Fed and
the force of his personality to coerce
bankers Into extending loans to
governm ents that probably will
never be able to repay them.
If these governm ents form a
debtors' cartel, os Cuba's Fidel
Castro Is urging them to do, or If a
major governm ent defaults, the
monetary system could collapse,
with frightening consequences
Yet Volcker has never wavered In

his support o f the debt-ridded
countries. In August 1982. for
exam ple, he w orked an entire
weekend putting together a bailout
for the Mrxtcan government, which
could no longer pay the Interest on
Its $90 billion debt.
He warned hts Tree-market adver­
saries at Ihe Treasury Department
that there would be a global reonomic crisis If they didn't approve
the bailout. W agging his finger at
one opponent, he said It would be
his fault.
Footnote: The recent rash ' of
terrorist Incidents caused the Fed­
eral Reserve Board to take extra
security precautions. Tw o security
guards, with ear-plug walkie-talkies
and all. were stationed outside Iflr
chairman's office door to protect
him from possible kidnapping. But
kidnapping Volckr r strikes hts crit­
ics as a bit like O. Henry's "The
Ransom of Red C hief." How much
would Reagan demand that the
kidnappers pay him to lake Volcker
back?

�,

SPORTS

____________________________________________________ Evening Hsrsld, Sanford. FI.

Friday, Aug 1. I H J - 5A

Morse, Harrell Lead West Seminole Upset
B y C hris F itte r
H era ld Sports W r ite r
FOREST CITY — Because It Is the host team of
the tournament. West Seminole got an automatic
bye Into the Pony Baseball Southeast Regional
Tournament. It wasn't given must o f a chance
since the team's coming In were the best In the
South, but. Thursday night. West Seminole
proved It belonged.
Jim Morse, a big 14-year-old. drove In four runs
and pitched three Innings of hllless ball while
Todd Harrell, who Just turned 13. turned In a
gutsy performance in relief as West Seminole
downed Cadsdcn. Ala 4-3. In a game delayed
two hours by rain at Richard Coffey Field on the
; West Seminole Pony Baseball complex.
! West Sem inole advances to the winners'
bracket final which got underway today at 1 p.m.
West Seminole faces a powerful Marietta. Ga..
team which won going away In Thursday's
opener.
In a losers' bracket game at 10 a.m.. Gadsden

Baseball
went up against Lake Worth. The losers' bracket
final will be played tonight at 6
“ Not having played for six weeks didn’t help
us." West Seminole manager George Morse said.
"I thought we might be a little stale but the boys
were really up for the gam e."
Jim Morse got the ball rolling In the top of the
first Inning when he nailed Icadoff man Derrick
Grime with a fastball on the first pitch. Gadsden's
hlttets were a utile wary of Morse after that and
the big righthander mowed down the Alabama
« hamps the first three frames.
After hitting GrilTlc to lead off. Morse struck out
the next two hitters and got cleanup man Shane
Smith on a grounder to shortstop Kyle Scott to
end the Inning.
Gadsden starter Jason Oden struck nut «hr first

two West Seminole hitters but Issued a walk to
Scott. That brought up Morse who. during the
regular season, pounded out 20 home runs Oden
got Morse to bounce back to the mound though
on a half swing to end the Inning. It was the last
time Morse would be fooled.
After Morse struck out the side In the top of the
second. West Set iln dr put runners on second
and third with two out In the bottom half but
couldn't break the scoreless tic.
Morse then retired the side In order In the third
and West Seminole broke the tie In the bottom
half. Jeff Mesojedtc ripped a single to left to lead
off and Jayme Burke then dropjx-d a perfect bum
single down the third base line. Gadsden then
lifted Oden and went with Dale Simmons In relief.
Simmons walked Sentt in load the bases,
brining up Morse. Simmons had Morse looking
bad on a pair of curve balls for a quick 0-2 count.
The new pitcher then made a big mistake when
he threw un 0-2 fastball right down the pipe.

Ueberroth: 'There Is No
Substitue For Baseball'
NEW YORK ((JIM) - Using
some deft strokes with a public
relations brush. Prter Ueberroth
may have painted baseball's
negotiators Into a corner.
Ueberroth commandeered the
a tte n tio n o f b a s e b a ll fans
Thursday, pleading eloquently
agulnst a strike and offering
some proposals he hopes will
produce a settlem ent before
Tuesday's deadline.
"There Is no substitute for
baseball." hr said.
Even those w ho muttered
about a grandstand play agreed
the p erform an ce was good.
Remaining unimpressed, how­
ever. were owners' negotiator
Lee MacPhall and union head
Don Fehr. They may settle this
thing Just to keep Ueberroth out
of It.
" I think It's better If you cun
work things out between the two
parties." said MacPhall. "If you
can't, then that's something
else. I was hopeful we could. I
agree we had been having trou­
ble."
Fehr repealed earlier remarks
that Ueberroth was elected and
Is paid by the owners. He also
warned that the owners against
m o d ify in g a r b itr a tio n p r o ­
cedures or Imposing salary eapa.
" I f the clubs believe, and
accept the proposition that It's
Inappropriate for the players to
take artlflcally lower salaries ...
then It would seem to me that
we could see how quickly we
could get this thing settled." he
said.
No talks are scheduled today,
though MacPhall said he hoped
to meet with I he players. In fact,
the owners' negotiating arm
scheduled a m eeting (or tonight,
and MacPhall said he would not
respond to Ueberroth s proposal
until that body met.
Ueberroth, w ho hud not been
active In the 9-munth-long nego­
tiation process, said he decided
to Intervene because only four
d a y s r e m a in e d b e fo re the
players' strike deadline with no
solution In sight.
In a move that appeared to put
dven more distance between the
commissioner and the owners.
Ueberroth also said he would not
seek a second term as baseball
comlssloner unless the owners
agree to let players and umpires

Morse muscled the pitch Into centerlleld for a
single that scored Mesojedtc and Burke for a 2-0
lead.
“ I didn't expect him to throw a fastball." Morse
said. "But. when he did. I saw some RBls."
Since a pitcher Is allowed to throw three
Innings and still pitch In the next game. Morse
was relieved In the top of the fourth by Mark
Brackett Gadsden pulled within 2-1 In the Inning
with the help of two West Seminole errors
With one out. Mark Hamilton drew a walk and
took second on Smith's grounder to second
baseman Burke. Chrts Simmons then stepped up
and drilled a single to left for Gadsden's first hit of
the game.
When the left fielder hobbled the ball. Hamilton
was waved around third. He scored when the
throw llckrd off the cutofT man's gtoie. Simmons
went all the wav to thud on the play but Brackett
got out of the Inning when he got Tim m y Staton
una fly ball to left.
See PONY. Page 9A

L -------J

J

j J ------------ L------

Baseball
participate In the election pro­
cess
"A s far as I am concerned, five
years from now I will not tic
seeking a second term unless
other sectors are allowed to
participate In the election." he
said.
Ueberroth Issued no threats to
either the players or owners and
shied away from suylng he
would Invoke his power, under
the basic agreement between
players and owners, "to act In
the best Interests of baseball."
Ueberroth said he would pres­
ent his plans Friday morning to
negotiators for the major league
baseball owners and players.
"B y H o'clock tomorrow (Fri­
day) morning. I'm going to
submit a series o f solutions and
proposals to both sides." he said
"I am. In cfTcct. going to put
bread on the table and hope they
break bread."
Ueberroth outlined two of the
potential solutions:
First, he suggested that $45
million — representing the dif­
ference between the players'
pension fund demand and the
owners' pervious pension con­
tributions — be put In escrow.
The owners' and players' ne­
gotiators would be given 45 days
to reach an agreement on a
contribution umount or. as each
day passed, a tv 'lio n dollars
would be remove
from I hr
escrow account and be given "to
a m a t e u r b a s e b a ll to h elp
youngsters who love to play the
gum r" or another charity.
Th e second proposal, one
Ueberroth called the "plain and
simple solution." would require
the owners to offer the players a
50 to 100 percent Increase over
their present 915.5 million an­
nual contribution over a fiveyear period — about 923 million
to 931 million. The players have
asked for 960 million, one-third
of the owners' national television
revenues.
In ex ch a n g e, th e p layers
would give the owners the salary
arbitration extension they want
from two years to three and limit
the awards made by arbitrators
to double a player's current
salary.

(M es»H by Timmy Vlftcwrt

Sem inolo High's choerioading squad oxcoilod at UCF cam p.

SHS Cheerleaders Superior
Squad Takes Tw o Firsts A t UCF Camp
L a ri

B y C tiria P I « U r

H erald S p orts W riter
When the 1985 prep football sruson opens,
take a long look at the Sem inole High
cheerleaders. You’ll be looking at one of the best
squads In the state.
Seminole High's varsity cheerleaders look
home a pair of first place trophies In the
Universal Cheerleaders Association Checrleud
Ing Competition at the University of Ccntrul
Florida.
Competing against six other squuds Irom
around the state. Seminole won first place In the
Cheer Division and the Sideline Division. During
the four-day camp, the varsity cheerleaders nlso
received three superior ribbons and three spirit
sticks
" I think Its going to be an excellent group of
g irls ." varsity sponsor Gayle Tipton said.
"T h ey're all unique and have their own sj&gt;ectal
talent to add to the squad. And they all get along
beautifully. They won the respect of everyone at
camp, everyone liked them ."
The 1985 Seminole High varsity cheerleading
squad Includes seniors Linda Cushing (captain).
Debra Scsakovlc (co-captain). Sharon Gaines.
Kaylla Givens. Margaret Hall. Jodi Jones.
Rebecca Martinez and Kristin Merrtfleld along
with Juniors Kelli Castle. Nancy McQuatlers.

S w a in .

H rvn n d a

W a lla c e

and

N rn e

Workman.
The chcerleadlng squads look the cheers that
they learned ut camp and then Incorporated
their own Ideus for the conq&gt;ctlllon. They were
Judged on originality, crowd appeal, gymnastics,
pyramid building and spirit by 12 Judges from
all over the United States
Seminole's pair of first places In the competi­
tion was quite an accomplishment considering
the Tribe's squad didn't even place at the camp
last year "In fact. I can't remember us ever
placing and that's going l&gt;ack 10 years." Tipton
said.
"W r practiced for about a month before cump
to build up strength and gymnastics skills."
added Tipton. "You have to have good strength.
You can't Just Jump right Into It."
The Seminole Junior vurstty and freshman
squads also performed well In the competition at
UCF.
The Junior varsity received one superior, one
excellent, one outstanding and one honorable
mention ribbon.
Seminole's Junior varsity squad, which Is
sponsored by Paulette Thomas. Includes Leslie
Crabtree. Connie Davis. Cheryl Lykens. Jennifer
See CHEERS. Page BA

Big Leaguers
O v le d o 't M a rk M e rc h a n t
(left) takea a hefty cut while
Lym an's Clint Baker awaits
a throw on a pick off attempt.
The two Seminole County
ballplayers will be suiting up
for the District 14 Big League
ell-stars. District 14 opens
p la y In the B ig Le a g u e
Southern Region Tournam ent
(Monday night at 5 at the
U n i v e r s i t y ot C e n t r a l
: lorlda. District 14 has enoyed tremendous success
he past few years Including
hree trips to the Big League
W o r l d S e r i e s In F o r t
Lauderdale. Th e Southern
Region Tournam ent opens
Sunday with a pair of games.
See Sunday's Evening Herald
for a look at this year's
District 14 team.
Ho

TM h bn Tsana» V.«&lt;»«•

More Sports On 8-9A

Trump
Shops
For Title
NEW YORK (UPU — For two
years. Donald Trum p tried and
failed to buy a U.S. Football
League championship. Now he
wants to merge his way to the
title.
Trum p's New Jersey Generals
Thursday announced a merger
with the Houston Gamblers, who
were purchased last week by
Trum p's friend and fellow real
estate developer Steve Rosa
T ru m p said the club will
continue to be called the Getter
als and he plans to stay In New
Jersey.
The merger brings together
the U S F L 's best runner In
Hersrhel Walker and Its leading
passer In Jim Kelly.
"It's probably the Itest team In
football." Trump said "W ith a
backfleld of llerschel Walker and
Jim Kelly, and all those (Gam­
blers) receivers and our defense
... I don't Just want the best team
In the USFL. I want the best
team In football."
Trump, who Inherited Walker
In hts backfleld when he bought
(h r UcnrraJa a lte r th e ir in a u g u ­
ral IIW 3 season, w e n t out and

signed Brian Slpe from the NFL
In 1984 and Doug Flutlc out of
Boston College In January us
quarterbacks. Both took the
Generals Into the playoffs but
New Jersey failed to get past the
first round In postseason play
both years.
New Jersey finished 11-7 last
year und Houston wus 10-8.
lloth made the playoffs.
Kelly's airtval In New Jersey
means 1984 Helsman Trophy
Flutle w ill be dealt by the
Generals to another USFL team.
Although a coach w on't be
o ffic ia lly named for several
weeks, a club source said Gam*
biers coach Jack Pardee and hts
staff will be retained and New
Jersey's Walt Michaels set free.
"W e 're looking for exciting
offense. If Walt can provide
exciting offense we'll keep him.'*
Trump said of the conservative
Michaels.
Jerry Argovltz, one o f the
former Gamblers' owners, will
be Generals' Director of Football
Operations and Houston general
manager Gene Burrough will
hold the same postfbn with New
Jersey.
A r g o v llz said 22 Houston
players and 15 G enerals —
Including Flutle — will be re­
tained on the roster that must be
submitted to the league Satur­
day.
Most of the Generals' office
and public relations staff will
probably be retained.
T r u m p now has the
quarterback he's wanted ever
since he bought the Generals.He
briefly looked Into a merger with
Houston Iasi year to acquire
Kelly, before signing Flutle to a
97 million contract out of Boston
College.
After Flutle arrived. Slpe was
quickly traded to Jacksonville.
Now Flutle Is on the block, and
he'll probably end up with a new
USFL franchise In either Chicago
or Boston.
Ross, who paid over 95 million
for the Gamblers, said he orgtnally Intended to move them to
Shea Stadium In New York, but
Trump approached him about a
merger and they worked out the
deal. Trump and Ross will be
co-owners and have equal say In
running the team.
Ross said the Generals would
only leave Giants Stadium In
East Rutherford. N J ., 1/ there Is
a problem getting play Uig dates.
"Neither the Giants nor the
Jets can beat us now ." said
Trump, who repeated an old
challenge to meet one or both In
a charily game

�4A — Eotnlng H era ld , lawlerd, FI.

Friday, Aug. 2. 1*15

August 3 &amp;

O n ly !

I '

■ M S c o ttrs B

Redwood Slain
m

gy

m e ln o r
6 -6 -6

Latex
v
REDWOOD
STAIN

H

FERTILIZER

No 64-77
Gallon

50 lb hag

Reinforced
Garden HOSE
Conditions acid soil
4 0 lb bag

Pressure
Treated
LATTICE PANEL

5 / 8 " * 50',
No 5150/8500

Oscillating
SPRINKLER

For interior and
exterior use
1/4” i 2 ' « 8 '

Waters up to 2.200
sq It Model 59

KENCO CHEMICAL

Pulsating
SPRINKLER
HEAD

Spectracide”
6000 Lawn
and Garden
INSECT
CONTROL

Covers areas up to 75'
in diameter Full or part
circle Plastic
construction
No 9530C

10 lb bat)
No 53040

Home and
Garden
SPRAYER
2 liter Poly
construction
No 1985

Ig jj

m e ln o r

r |

/

■^f'll

1 Home and Garden
-----------SPRAYERS

Black Polyethylene
MULCH FILM

Features poly plunger cup, adjustable nozzle with
brass extension rod and tunnel top tank

Petards weed growth, 1 5 mil thick
3' * 50’

8' Pressure Treated
TERRACE LOGS

LANDSCAPE TIES
6x 6 x 8 ' .

2 Gallon
No 1973

jr
JL ■'
K. ^

„

____

3-Gallon
No 1975

m Gasoline
'

Ozark Wood
Products, Inc

PORCH SWING
Solid pine with walnut stain finish 4' wide
Hardware and instructions included
No 103-1
Durable web
construction in a
multicolor slnpe
No J 1 I .

K EllEJT

Electric
EDGER and
TRIMMER
No EE900

WEED
TRIMMER

116 tip gasolinepowered motor 17"
cutting swath.
No G T 800

�E ve n in g Hersld. Sanford, FI.

j*0mwL--i

S TA N LEY

Sevin 5 Dust
INSECTICIDE

3 ^ V IN 5 O u st

f r i d i y . Awg. 1. I H 5- 7A

Professional
PowerlockTAPE RULE

4 lb b a g

LIGHT B U LB S S

1" x 25', auto blade
return and blade
locking knob. Belt
clip. No. 33-425.

Limit 2, No Dealers Please.

In s id o fro s te d in 4 0 ,
60, 75 and 100 watts, j

j

Your Choice:
Limit 8. No Dealers Please

Meas«re
four

priced

Sawtfig*-

Right a.

only

Expires August 4

Bag With
Coupon

IS S 3

Each Bulb
W ith Coupon

With Coupon

Limit 2 No Dealers Please
Expires August 4

Expires August 4

GAS GRILL
341 sq in chrome plated cooking grid
24,000 Btu Dual burner Patio cart Full
length control console with Lite A M.mc
ignitor Tw o redwood side tables,
convenient storage shelf Warming rack
No 3075

GAS GRILL
225 sq in. chrome-plated cooking grid
24.000 Btu dual burner lite -A -M a tic ’
push button ignitor 201b tank included
No 9041/9054

( Sunbeam
Crdtmaster

R&lt;%.

GAS GRILL

'sunbeamJ
i„$1 2 9

"

GAS GRILL SunbeamCnHmaster

(Sw//M;///Cn«master

361 sq in chrome cooking grid 30.000
Btu dual burner Lite-A Malic' push button
ignitor 20 lb lank included
No 3 1 7 3 1 / 3 174/3175H

505 sq in rust-free cooking grid 36,000
Btu dual burner Lite A-Matic* push button
ignitor 20 lb fuel tank included
No 3384 3 3B5

Gnllmastcr

119.95

1

169.95

3

. ------------ T T T T u
_

_

_

_

_

_

_

_

9

23995

‘ ■L*
_

giaFbcific
LITEWAV
tb ±

Prefinished
BUNGALOW
PANELING

Scotty?

5/32" x 4' x 8V
Choose from autumn
oak, mushroom
hickory or tan bark

4' Fluorescent SHOP LIGHT

-V r

Indoor-Outdoor CARPET

Green Synthetic Turf
CARPET
C r A tf u f f

In green blue-green, cocoa, and Mexican
orange An economical way lo beautify
your porch or patio 12' width

No SL240-KI

6’ and 12’ widths

S

$049

vf
T k &lt;o " a *

Am

3.49

Yd

K lA S
s r o r m iiM O

C O H tM TI

MIS

Pressure Treated
STOCKADE FENCING

14" Patio
PUSH BROOM

6* x 8' section

No 9242/9244

Rid-A-Bug Home
INSECT KILLER SPRAY
REFILL

• Durable
• Economical
• Easy to install

No 913 Gallon

"leottrr

Flea Kill FOGGER
6 ox. No. 0068

CONCRETE MIX
40 lb bag

59
R*l

3.57

Per Section
‘
1

9

a

OAfSl f

FlBERGLAS

Three tab in white and colors 20 year limited warranty

M ugusi 4

OPEN

P ic k e d

B u n d le

Squere....................S S . M

PM

Square
M l KM - U T l » l »
tuiur 1 »* — i re

ORANGE CITY

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

2323 S Volusia Ave 1029E. Altamonte Dr
Highway 17 and 92 (Highway 4361
Phone 775-7268
Phone 339-8311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS

OPEN

tn

SANFORO

700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254
m i M i - u t n asa

tuiur i ia - 1m

Scotty » 6 1966

�•A— Evening Herald, Sanford, El.

Indians
Trounce
Yankees

F rid a y, Aug. I, IttS

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
S T A N D IN G S
NATIONAL L IA O U I
le a f
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to
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Montreel
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4*
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u
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44
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Clnclnnefl I. Moutton 3
Sen D&gt;*9 » l. Atlanta 0
3x d e r't
(All Time* I D T )
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(Ecterttay M ), 4 OSp m
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(Mefghlow
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IH tuK h«l| l| ,l II p m
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(BodroglonS 101.3 N p *n.
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(N to k r o lY ),I 30p rr
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K m York *t Chlcogo
Let Angtlet *1 Clnclnnell, nlghl
Monlraal •! Pltttbufgh,
Sen Prencltce el Alien!*, night
Philadelphia at It Loot*, night
San Diego *1 Moutton. night

A M I ■ ICAN L IA O U I
■eel
w L Pci.
oa
Toronto
el » A ll __
Hm York
u 4S MO u t
IM to
u *
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So*Ion
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M3 j i
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Cell fo o l*
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S4 4* 1*1 1
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u 40 SIS •
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to 40 SIO m
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Soettt*
N n 43S *
44 B eel to
Mlrvwao**
I t u JO* to
Texet
n o o d a r 't Potuitt
Oaklandl.Celltornla I
Chicago 3, hot tan i, itl
hot ton 4. Chicago 1 .3nd
T eronto t. Balt I.nor a J
Cleveland *. Maw Verk I
f , May's Or met
(Alt llntat I D T )
Ta ia t (Cook I I I at Toronto (Alexander
1041.3 I I p m
Baltimore (McGregor f t ) at Cleveland
(P u h tal 3). 3 It p m
Milwaukee (Vuckovtch S3) at Detroit
(Tenon* S 10). 3 11 p m.
Chicago (B urnt 113) at New York
(B yttrom O l ) . l &gt;0p m
Minnesota (Schrom O i l ) at Calllornl*
IM c C e ttm * D . I JOp m
Rotten I Hurt! 3*1 at Kantet City
(Black 3 I I). I l i p m
Watt la (Langtton S3) at Oakland
l l o h n l t ) , 10 l i p m
wturday‘ 1 Oemat
Seattle at Oakland
Milwaukee at Detroit
T tt a t at Toronto
Chicago at New York
Baltimore at Cleveland, night
Minnesota at California, night
Botton at kantet City, night

R ESU LTS

tlt lM d - IM I
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Bowa's Perfect Squeeze Lifts Cubs
CHICAGO IUPII — In this age of the long hall Hitter
and jxiwer pitcher, Larry Bowa and Andy McGafflgan
proved once again thal the element of surprise Is still a
most efficient weapon.
Bowa. the Chicago Cubs' wily old shortstop, used
one of baseball's oldest tricks — the squeeze hunt — to
end the longest game In Wrlgley Field this season
Thursday. Uowa laid down u perfect squeeze hunt
single to score Keith Moreland and give the Cubs a
14 Inning. 9-8 triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals.
The game lasted 5;03 and ended with barely enough
daylight left to see the ball.
Meanwhile, at Cincinnati. McGsfflgnn, only recently
rrcalled from Denver of the American Association, put
to use one of busebail's oldest pitches — the
change-of-pace — to turn back the Houston Astros and
lead I he Reds to u 5-2 triumph.
Elsewhere In the National league. Philadelphia
hlunked Pittsburgh 3-0 and San Diego trimmed Atlanta
6-0.
In American league games. Cleveland routed New
York 0 1 . Toronto topped Baltimore 9-3. Oakland bent
Californio 3-1 and Chicago ripped Boston 7-2 then lost
4-3.
Ilowa's perfect suicide squeeze hunt came with the
bases loaded and one out and scored Keith Moreland In
the bottom of the 14th. Moreland doubled off the center
field wull oil loser Ken Day ley, 3-1. with one out and
Jody DmvJs wnm walked Inlrnliurudly. Hub Dernier then
walked on a 3-2 pilch before llowa came through with
hia bunt.
" w r must have changed the signals three tlmrs on
II,*' said Bowa. who had a three-run triple In the third.

N.L. Baseball
“ I Just wanted to get the bat on the hall. I couldn't see
anything past the ninth Inning.”
Bowa tried to bunt unsuccessfully before luylng
down the bunt single on the 2-2 count.
Moreland, who had four hits, credited Bowa with
making the play work.
"G ive Ixrry the credit. The only thing I had to do
from third was not to tip it off.” Moreland said.
While Bowa completely footed the Cardinals. McGufflgun baffled the Astros with one of the best offspeed
pitches seen In the major leagues (his season.
McGufflgun struck out u career-high 11 hatters and
pitched his first major league complete game. Obtained
a year ago from the Montreal Expos, he had spent all of
this season In the minor leagues until the Reds called
him up from Denver a week ago. It was his first major
league victory since May 18. 1984.
*'He really had their minds messed up over there."
suld Reds' player-manager Pete Rose, who sat out the
game "H e got them eurly with n change-up and then
started throwing harder.
"H e pitched a game tonight like Marl*) Soto. When
you throw as hard os he does and then throw u
change up with the same motion, you're going to get a
lot o f a winds and mlaaes."
"1 was nofr to srrtke out so many because I stayed
ahead In the count." added McGafflgan. "Houston Is a
real aggressive hitting hullclub. They were over-eager

L arry Bowa
...Perfect squeese

Von Hayes
...Goes 4 for 3

and I fooled them with my change-up."
Phillies 3. P irates0
At Pittsburgh. Juan Samuel. Rick Schu and Mike
Schmidt each drove In a run and John Denny scattered
six hits to lead the Phillies to victory. Von Hayes went
4-for 5 for the Phillies and the Philadelphia Infield
turned three double plays In support of Denny. 6-8.
P a d res 6. B reves 0

At Atlanta. Cnrtnelo Martinez drove In four runs to
bark the sU-hll pitching o f Andy Hawkins and pace the
Padres to victory. Hawkins. 14-3. struck out three and
walked none In (Misting his second complete game and
first shutout of the season.

B o x e rs O u tsh in e G y m n a st s A t F e stiva l
BATON ROUGE. La. |UPI| — world champion Chinese and
Ail Olympic rebuilding process claiming the team gold medal.
With none of the American
liegan in the sports of boxing
and men s gymnastics Thursday medal winners In those t vo
nlghl and early results Indicated sports uvullnblr for compctl.ion Watkins of Tucoma. Wash.,
at the National Sports Festlvul scoring key decisions
dial boning was well aheud.
A llh o u g h the S oviet bloc this yeur. young hoxeis and
In gym nastics, meanwhile,
boycott o f the 1984 Gumcs gymnusts had their first major there were a series of nervous
clearly had un ailed on the exposure Thursday night.
performances which were far
A host of Golden Oloves and short of International standard.
boxing competition, the United
States claimed u record nine national champions took part In National champion Brian Bab­
gold medals.
the first night of semifinal box­ cock o f G arden City. Kan.,
American men rendered Ir­ ing action, with featherweight scored 56.90 points to win the
Bernard Roach of Ft. Brugg. all around title. Charles Lakes of
relevant the absence of Soviet
gymnasts when they pulled off N.C., welterweight Daryl Lat- Newhull, Calif., finished second
perhaps the largest surprise of tlinore o f Washington. D C., and with 50.70.
the Olympics by defeating the lig h t - m i d d l e w e i g h t M y lo n
Th e fin a l S p orts F es tiv a l

Festival

Cowboys Call For
Dorsett To Report
Football

T V / R A D IO
PnatrlYY I N t l M l
l t * a - ttf ft* L C*h*«* axn* ft- N
Nta * « » Ytotal II)

l|t - UVM
3IITN41
1 1 a - (131 «a*aa l*»u * M .«
M - t IBM* * r.aaaNv* HI

u contract holdout."
D orsett has m issed three
deudllnes lor reporting to camp.
The first, July 25. was pushed
buck two days because of news
thut the In tern a l R e ve n u e
Service had seized two Dallasurru houses owned by Dorsett
and had (lied liens totaling more
than $ 4 14.000 against him.
The third deadline was Tues­
day night, hours after Dorsett
was to have concluded two days
ol meetings with IKS officials.
Schramm sa!d hr docs not
know where Dorset! ts and no
new contract demands have
been submitted.
" I don't get much surprised at
a n y t h in g a n y m o r e .'* s a id
Schramm of Slushcr's appear­
ance In negotiations. "T h e y
(Doruett and Stewart) sought
him. I'd hoped It could be
worked out between Tony and I.
* 'T h e w a y he ( S l u s h e r )
explained It to me, ll'a not u
two way thing between him as
Tony's agent and Tony. Tony
has un agent. He has other
uuvtsrr*. I guess In that role, he
(Slusher) Is more trying to get
two parties together than being
the negotiator."

game by scoring four goals In
the opening period to down the
South. 6-4.

Ollier than the boxing and
gyinnustlcs action Thursday, the
ler hockey tournament finished
Its second round with two en­
tertaining games.

Elsewhere, the heat which
ruusrd Sports Festival officials
to shorten u number of long
distance races In truck und Held
last w eekend reappeared to
become u factor In the canoe and
kuyuk races held at New Rouds.
La.

Dave Maley scored the only
goal of (he third period to give
the South team a 5-4 win over
the winless West while the North
clinched a spot In the gold medal

Roger Flnnell of Montgomery.
III., was overcome by the heat
after completing his second race
o f the day and had to be given
emergency treatement.

SCOREBOARD
1*11uu

D A L L A S (UIMI H oward
Slusher, who has kept more
players out o f NFL training
camps than hamstring pulls
have. Is apparently trying to gel
Tuny Dorsett to report to the
Dallas Cow boys.
Slusher told Cowboys olllctals
Thursday he has been asked to
"bring lhe two sides together" In
Dorsctl's contractual holdout.
This Is a change of pace (or
Slusher whose list of holdouts
reuds like un All-Pro teunt. In­
cluding Dan Fouls, Mike Haynes.
Joh n llunnuh and C ow boy
Randy White, the standout defen slve tackle w ho skipped
trulnlng camp on the agent's
advice Iasi year.
C o w b o y s p r e s id e n t T e x
Schramm suld Slusher Informed
the team he was "not repre­
senting" Dorsett, but bus been
asked by the star running back
und ugenl Witt Slcwurt to In­
tercede.
The Cowboys hud taken a
lenient upprouch with Dorsett.
who ts also wrangling with lax
officials. However, since Tues­
day. they have levied the funner
Hrisinun Trophy winner with
fines of 9 1.600 a day.
" I have done all I cun do for
the running back," Coach Tom
Landry said. "I'v e been giving
him tlic benefit of the doubt.
This has the appearance of being

wrrkrnd gets going today with
the second semifinal nlghl of
Ixixlng and the women's alluround com petition In gym ­
n a s tic s . W e ig h t lift in g and
wrestling also begin

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* * *

CLEVELAND (UPH - To hear
Don Mattingly talk after Thunt
day night's game against the
Indians, you'd think he was
talking about Bert Blyleven.
"He’s got a pretty good curve,
an accurate on e." said M at­
tingly. “ He kept ua guessing all
night."
Instead, the 1984 AL batting
ch am pion w as referrin g to
Blyleven's replacement.
Roy Sm ith took B lyleven's
spot In the Cleveland rotation
f o l l o w i n g the v e t e r a n
curvebailer's trade to Minnesota
&lt;order in the day.
Smith baflled the Yankees,
limiting them to three hits and
leading the Indians to their third
straight victory over New York.
91.
" T h e g u y p it c h e d u q *
believably w ell." said Indians
manager Pat Corrales of Smith,
who struck out four and walked
one In notching his first co m ­
plete gam e after 17 starts In .a
two-year career.
*'We lost Bert Blyleven. but we
may have found Roy Smith. I'm
no doctor, but I'd say he's fully
recovered.**
Smith was making his first
start since June 30 when he was
struck Just above the right ear
by a Phil Bradley line d iive in
Seattle. The right-hander suf­
fered a concussion w u placed an
the 15-day disabled list.
"It really didn't hurt, maybe
because I had an Instant con­
cussion." said Smith. "I guess I
was lucky I really wasn't badly
Injured or even killed."
The lone run off Smith was
unearned.
Andre Thornton knocked In
three runs to pace the Cleveland
attack.
Yankee starter Phil Nlekro.
10- 9. took the loss as the
46-year-old knuckleballer failed
In un opportunity to notch his
295th career win.
The loss plunged second-place
New York 8 Ik games behind
Toronto in the AL East.
Elsewhere. Toronto trounced
Ilalllm ore 9 1. Oakland beat
California 3-1 and Boston and
Chicago spilt a double-header,
with the White Sox taking the
first 7-2 and dropping the second
43.
In the National League. It was
Chicago 9. St. Louis 8 In 14
Innings; Cincinnati 5. Houston
2; Philadelphia 3. Pittsburgh 0;
and San Diego 6. Atlanta 0.
Blue J a y s 9, O rioles 3
At Baltimore. Willie Upshuw
drove In two runs with a homer
and a single and Al Oliver added
a three-run homer to spark the
blue Jays to their 11th victory In
their last 12 games. Rookie Tom
Filer. 3-0, was the w in n er.
Toronto chased Storm Davis.
57, with a five hit attack In t
first Inning.
A 's 3, A n g e ls 1
At O a k la n d . C alif., C hrlp
Codlroll of the A's gave up *
leu doff h om e run to U rlap
D ow ning, then he and J ay
Howell blanked California the
rest o f the way. Codlroll Im­
proved to 9-8. while H ow ell
earned his 21st save. Urbano
Lugo. 3-4. was the loser.
W hits Boa 7-3, Red 8oa 2-4
At Boston. Dave Stapleton'*
RBI double — his first hit since
May 7 — and Steve Lyond*
run-scoring single highlighted h
two-run nlnth-Innlng that rallied
the Red Sox In the nightcap. Ift
the first game. Harold Baines.
Greg Walker and Oscar Gamble
each drove In two runs to back
th e s e v e n - h it p it c h in g oJ
Chicago's Gene Nelson.
B

Twins
Pick Up ;
Blyleven
C L E V E L A N D (UPI| No
vaudeville twosome ever drew
m ore la u g h s than th e Im ­
promptu comedy team o f Bert
Blyleven and Rick Sutcliffe.
Th e tw o pltch era. w h o se
lockers us well sa thetr spots In
Cleveland's rotation adjoined,
once sh ared the post-gam e
spotlight In the Indians' locker
room.
"Rk:k always made me crack
up. and I used to get him
started." said Blyleven. "A n d
the w h o le team w o u ld be
laughing, win or lose.
" T h e routine lasted three
seasons, before m anagem ent
traded Rick lost year (to the
Chicago Cubs on June 13).
That s when 1 knew I had to get
out or Cleveland."
"R ick got traded, and 1 felt he
shouldn't have been and not
because he's my buddy.
"H e subsequently wins the Cy
Young sward, of course. 1 waa
very disappointed to see him
go.

�SPO RTS
IN BRIEF
Unknown Vorplank Plunks
Way To Western Open Lead
OAKBROOK. 111. (UPlI — Tradition was upheld Thursday
when the 17th hole at Butler National golf course produced
more bogeys than pars during the Western Open.
With the wind blow ing uncustomarily out of the
northeast Instead o f the southwest, the pros Thursday were
playing the 459-yard par-4 straight Into the wind, and It
had tts effect.
"Y ou can hardly reach the green In iw o ." said Lance Ten
Broeek, who finished with a 2-under-par 70 and was one of
only 13 players to beat par. "Usually the wind Is the exact
opposite."
"Everybody In m y group had good drives, and we all had
210 yards Into the wtnd (for second shots!." said Larry
Rtnker. one of four golfers tied for second place at 3-under
par 69.
Leading the tournam ent after the first day was
2 1-year old amateur Scott Verplank of Dallas, who shot a
4-under-par 69 with five birdies and only one bogey.
The 17th green w as the only one he missed on the back
side. On the front nine, he missed six greens In regulation
but used only 10 putts.

Peterson Wary Of Lopez
TOLEDO. Ohio IUPII — Laurt Peterson finds herself
playing with one eye on the course and the othr.- on Nancy
Lopez these days.
"Actually 1 thought II was kind of tough today, teeing off
In the afternoon because Lopez." said Peterson.
The defending champion of the Jainle Farr LPGA Toledo
Classic. Peterson Thursday shot a one-under par 71.
trailing Lopez. Colleen Walker and Lauren Howe, who
carded 70s after the first round.
"You kind o! wonder what she’.n doing.*’ said Peterson,
who beat Lopez by tw o strokes In last year's tournament,
"Y o u come to the golf course and she's one under after
nine." she said
Peterson. Dianne Dailey and Dcrdcr Lasker are lied al 71
on the 6.220-yard, par 72 course.
Lopez and 16 other golfers shot par or belter In the llrst
round. The Held of 105 players and two amateurs t tuning
the *175.000 purse will be cut to 72 pros and one amulrur
after today's round.
Walker nearly had the lead to herself until the final hole
when she let a four-under edge slip with a double-bogy.

Justus Hosts Masters Program
The Justus Aquatic Center Masters Swim m ing Program
for swimmers ages 19 99 is becoming more popular under
the Instruction o f coach Larry Peck The swimmers have
access to the Aquatic Center's underwater observation
rooms, video cameras, underwater mirrors and freewelghl
room.
Justus Aquatic Center masters Iraln from 6:30 lo H p.m,,
Monday through Thursday In the Aquatic Center's So
meter Olympic (tool The mnntly fee o f *30 Includes
coaching, pool use and cqulpmeni.
For morr Inlormallon. contact coach Peck at the Aquatic
Center at 345-0505.

Apopka-West Seminole Falls
Tampa Hay erupted for six runs In the top of the first
Inning Thursday and never looked back rn route to a 12-5
victory over Apopka-West Seminole In the Junior Little
League Stale Tournament at Merritt Island.
Th e two teams will go al it again tonight a I 6 lor the state
title and a berth In the Southern Rrgtonul Tournament.
Jim m y Musselwhlte. who pitched In the Little League
World Series a year ago. will be on l he mound for
Apopka-West Seminole.
Tampa llay will also have Its strongest pitcher on the
mound tonight as Mike Harlan will start.

New Conference Seeks Logo
The new Seminole Athletic Conference Is looking for a
logo and Is asking the public for lls Input. The winning
entry lor the SAC logo will receive two free conference
passes which will be good for one year and for all athletic
events,
Entries must lx* post-marked by Aug 15. Send entries to
Don Reynolds. Lake Mary High School, Umgwood Lake
Mary Hoad. Lake Mary. 32746

Justus Holds Nutrition Seminar
The Justus Aquatic Club Is holding a free seminar on
nutrition which Is open to the public. Guest speakers are
Registered Dieticians. Roxanne M eyer and Deborah
Nicholson. The seminar will take place Thursday. Aug. 1 at
7:30 p.m In the Rudlsson Inn Justus Aquatic Center
Ballroom at K444 International Drive In Orlando.

Maitland Soccer Kicks For Girls
The Maitland Soccer Club will be fielding all-girl teams In
the under 14. under 12 and under 10 age divisions for the
1965 fall soccer season. For Information or registration,
contact Ted Johnson at 631 -8261.

500 S a y
B o yco tt

F rid a y. Aug. I, 1t U - » A

Evening H rrsld. Sanford. Ft.

w in . lose &amp; DREW

[
,» M

SOUTH BEND. Ind. IUPII More than 500 angry baseball
fans have a few words foe major
league baseball players and
owners. "Play ball — or else."

hq

MR ft
•m m .

The fans, upset over the pro­
spect of another major league
strike next week, are pledging to
boycott any gam es played this
season after the strike ts settled,
a newspaper sports columnist
said Thursday.
Th e fans a lso endorsed a
proposed boycott o f all products
advertised on m ajor league radio
and television broadcasts, said
BUI Gleason, who covers Chicago
sp orts for Hie S ou th Bend
Tribune.
"It was unanimous." Gleason
said. "I have yet to read any­
thing from a single reader who
opposes the boycott."
T h e “ d o u b le - b a r r e lle d "
boycott was first proposed by
Greg Novak, a suburban Chicago
subscriber to the Tribune.

MV)®#.-

Fans Urge U eb erro th: 'No Strike'
United Press In tern a tion al
Several baseball fans found
that the pen Is mightier then
nine months of Donald Fehr and
Lee MacPhall.
tnon Interest In serving the
ll.isrb.ill commissioner Peter
custom er." Jackson said
UelKnoth said at a Thursoa)
press conference lhat he would
“ T h ere arc two untapped
offer several proposals today to sources of revenue — unused
help brrak staffed negotiations seating capacity nnd the poten­
between major league ownrrs tial lor new broadcast contracts.
and players over a new basic By tilling the stadiums you'd
make the broadcast contracts
agreement.
Ueberroth said his proposals, m ore lucrative.
which come as the players'
“ The owners could Increase
deadline for a strike Aug. 6
a tten d a n ce by c u ttin g (adnears, were. In part, drawn from
mission) prices ... filled stadiums
suggestions fans mailed him. He
would leud lo bigger broadcast
singled out three by name al bis
revenues ... The players would
news conference. UPI reached all
then agree lo take a fixed
three by phone.
amount of the broadcast reve­
B. D avis J a c k s o n . 30, a nue. So If one side does well, the
certified public accountant front other side does w ell."
New Braunfels. Trxas. sent Ills
U e b e r r o th 's o lft c e c a lle d
letter lo Ueberroth July 18.
" I mailed I he commissioner u Jackson at tout bis letter about 2
leltrr that suggests the players p.m. EOT Thursday.
"I was elated that the letter
and owners {should| quit acting
had an Impact." he said. *i
as adversaries and Instead (work
together) as they have a com- thought It was n good Idea when

Baseball

I wrote tt. but I didn't Ihlnk the
comm issioner would do a n y­
thing about It."

British Columbia, brffevrs he
might have planted Hie seed tor
the rscrow proposal.

Ueberroth outlined two |*&gt;irnti.iI solutions Thursday. One
would place S45 million — the
difference between the players'
pension fund demand and the
owners' previous contribution —
In escrow. The sides would be
given 45 days to agree on a
contribution amount or. as each
day passed, n million dollars
would be removed from the
account and hr given to charity.

"What I suggested wuis that all
the players' salaries and all the
owners' gale receipts be placed
Into n trust fund.” McKay said
“ That lurid would grow as nego­
tiations continued and while
everybody kept playing ball
They'd even gel a talr amount ot
interest. Eventually the ncgotla
inrs would com e up with a wav
to divide that fund."
*

The second proposal would
require the owners offer a 50 to
100 percent Increase to their
current atmunl contribution. In
rxchungc. the players would
give the ow ners the salary
arbitration extension lhr\ want
Irom two years to three and limit
the awards made by arbitrators
to double a player’s current
salary.
Another fan. Dentil* McKay,
42. a la w y er from V ictoria,

Phil Sampson. 28. a settlor
financial co n su lta n t in I’ ll
tsburgb. said he wrote the com
mlssiotter out of frustration
"M y Itaste I d e a ts as follow*
emit side wants lo deny the
other side something IluaiuJ.d In
order to h ave leverage. The
players want to deny owners
their profits, while the o w n e r s
want to drtty players their
salaries s o they are financially
Imiting each other having o
strike.

John Henry
Coes Home

...Cheers
Continued from 5 A

L E X IN G TO N . Ky. (UPI1 John Henry, the richest thor­
oughbred rare horse in history
forced lo quit (hr circuit two
wreks ago treeause of an Injury,
will retire to the Kentucky Horse
Purk only a lew miles from
where he was foaled,
"I'm excited to announce that
John Henry Is coming home."
Gov Martha loiynr Collins said
al a nrws conference outside the
pastoral park's Hall of Champi­
on*.
John Henry, who collected
•6,597,947 and sevrn Eclipse
awards and twice was voted
Horse of the Year, was forced lit
retire at age 10 when he Injured
a tendon during a workout at
Hollywood I'urk July 19
The horse did not slurt out a
star. He was sold ut Kernel.mil
Race Course yearling sales In
1970 for •1,100, a paltry sum
compared with the *13 I million
paid for u yearling Just one week

MrKIbbtn. Katie Moncrlrf, Mellisea
Stafford and Tam m y Tipton. *
The freshman squad made It
lo the seml-flnuls in the Cheer
Division and received two supe­
rior. one excellent, one outstand­
ing and a gold ribbon for making
It lo the semi-finals.
"The freshmen did an excep­
tio n a l J o b , " T ip t o n s a id .
"Especially since half of the
squad came from Sanford Middle
School and the other half from
Lakevlew."
T h e S e m i n o l e fre s h m a n
squad, sponsored by Bonnie
Z a w n rk t, I n c lu d e s G in g e r
Albers. Cathy Boyer. Debbie
Bronson. T r a c e y C la y p o o l,
Lavonla Hook*. Jennifer Llndamood. Julie Nyc. Christy Pate.
Bonnie Smith. Nancy Terwllllger
and Jennifer Vernon.
Seminole also brought a new
dimension to the squad to the
cheerleading camp. The Tribe
will have a mascot roaming the
sidelines In 1985. Th e outfit has
already been ordered and II will
be called "Sam m y Seminole."
"W e took the girl who Is going
to do that to camp with us to
leant how to work with her and
the crowd and get Ideas for
skits." Tipton said
The id e n t ity o f "S a m m y
Seminole" w ill not be revealed.

‘ •K'»

H w iM f*»i* *r T » m m » Vinctni

Rene Workman, bottom, gives K ris tin M er (field a lift up.
T h e two Seminole High cheerleaders a re p/
if the va rsity
squad that captured two first places e me Universal
Cheerleaders Association Cheerleading Competillon at the
University o» Central Florida. W o rk m a n will be a |unior at
S H S this school y e a r while Merrlfield w ill be a senior.

O w n er S a m R u h ln . w h o
purchased J o h n Henry as a
3-year-old lor *2 5 000, had
promised to retire the famous
h o n e lo friend J o s e p h Tau t)*
100-acre horse farm In New
Jersey
"H r said ttiuf this would give
thr public a greater chatter lo
see him." Bassett said "ll was a
generous gesture."

\

...Pony
Contlnaed from 5A
West Seminole went down
q u i e t ly tn e lh r fo u r th and
Brackett g o * through thr fifth
after giving up a two-out single.
West Seminole then increased
Its lead to 4-1 In the bottom of
the fifth. Scott reached on an
error to lead off the Inning and
Sim m ons then got a pitch up to
Morse who promptly deposited It
over the fence In center field for
a two-run homer.
“ H e (S im m o n s ) m a d e a
mistake throwing Jim (Morse)
up high,** munager Morse said
"T h a t s his wheelhouse.”
In th e top o f th e s ix th .
Brackett retired the first hitter
and walked H am ilton. Then
came the rains and the game
was delayed for two hours (5
p.m. to 7).
After the ground crew worked
over the Held. Gadsden came
back with u run In the sixth to
rut West Seminole's lead to 4-2
The first hitter after thr deluy.
Smith, crushed u stogie to right
and Harrell then went on In
relief o f Brackett.

Harrell, who turned 13 last
week, seemed a bit nervous at
first as he walked Chris S im ­
mons to load the bases Harrell
then got pinch hitter Tom m y
White to hit Into a force play
with Hamilton out at the plate.
Oden then reentered the game
and coaxed a walk out of Harrell
to force in Smith. Harrell then
came back to strike out Dale
Simmons on a curveball to end
the Inning.
Gadsden made It close In the
top of thr seventh but Harrell
bore down and pulled Weal
S e m in o le th ro u g h . H a r r e ll
fanned Efretn Macon for thr first
out and then caught Grtffle
looking at a third strike for the
second.
Harrell then ran the count to
2-2 on Todd Fanner but hung a
curveball on the next pitch and
Farmer launched It over the
fence In left center to trim the
lead to 4-3.
Hamilton followed with a walk
and took second on a wild pitch
but Harrell got Smith to htl a
grounder lo Morse at first. Morse
hobbled the ball, but Harrell got
lo the bag lo rover and Morse

Just nipped Sm ith for the final
out.
" I was thinking. 'That's the
gam e."' Morse said of the bob­
ble. "1 didn't think I could get
him but I took a chance."
M A R I E T T A R I P S WORTH
Rusty Umphenor hammered u
pair of home runs and Eric
Smith belted a grand slam as the
East Cobb Astros out of Marietta.

Ga.. rolled to a 14-1 victory over
Lake Worth In Thursday's first
game.
Marc Plsclotta. a big |6-5|
righthander, pitched the first
three frames for Marietta and
allowed Just one hit, a thirdInning single by Carl Grlnstead.
Mtke Hilton went the next two
frames for Marietta and Smith
pitched the last Inning Neither
reliever allowed a hit.

D esign ed and s n g ln t s r s d for a sm ooth rid s and long
m U s a g e Lifssaver X L M ' w h itew all.

. ij G o o d r ic h

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RACING
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FRONT OR REAR ONLYS40.95

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Elegant Dining In our Chief Osceola Tense# Clubhouse
For Dinner Rotarvatlons Call: I0MS1O
Ir s o M iz r o w s ra x w o B iv o 0 A z ) «
o o f A s r T o t r i ; w s s o a rs

OIL CHANGE A LUBE
• ts t * i « n . m a w s o u a u i t o n
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•7 9 .9 5

7:45 P.M.

0*11. » DOUBLE

42*5
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GREYHOUND PARR

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P 1 0 5 / 7 5 R I4
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P215/75R1S
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70 U U IN O LA N. VO

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M O N - f l l . M i l l , RAT. 1-11 MOON

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to n le td , F L

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I HAP TO BRIN G BACK
SOM E SO U V eM lR SO P
TH® G R E A T VACATION

THE BORN LOSER
I'M MBlfo TTOCI&amp;-E- AX*«KTtsec&gt; m ) ^..6BT HAJLCD FCR ATFUTH l
^

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Can Block Blood
Flow; Lead To Gangrene

DEAR DR. GOTT - An older
woman I know who has diabetes
had to have her fool removed
because o f gangrene. I don't
understand the connection, but
I've heard It's not uncommon.
DEAR READER - Diabetes
ca u ses a c c e le r a te d
arteriosclerosis, a more rapid
d e v e l o p m e n t of a r t e r i a l
blockage. All arteries arc af­
by Mori Walker
fected by this process, those to
the fret as well. If the blockage
causes a profound reduction In
blood How. the tissues will not
receive enough oxygen. Over
time, the tissues may die and
gangrrne will result. Once tissue
death is evident, the destroyed
portions must be surgically re­
m o v e d . s in c e p r e v e n t iv e
measures are then of no use.
Your acquaintance's foot was
virtually loit by the lime she had
su rgery: the operation o n ly
served to prevent the dead tissue
by Art Sanaom from making hrr dangerously til.
01 course, she and her doctor are
IH IU X P DOTTED W'AR* undoubtedly concerned about
her remaining foot. If gangrene
affected one. It may soon affect
the other
DEAR DR. GOTT - For the
last few months I have had a
small hump on thr roof o f my
mouth. I* varies In size and
sometimes Is hardly perceptible.
It doesn't hurt at all What could
cause It? Should I lie concerned
about It?
DEAR READER - The lining
of Ibr mouth may often swell
by Bob Montana unexpectedly In a palchy dlsirlhu tlon , Your w axing and
waning hump probably Is due to
a low grade Inflammation or
Irritation on the roof of your
mouth. However. I suggest you
cheek It out with your dentist
because ihr hump Is new and
unusual reactions som etim es
can occur In that portion o f the
moo lb
DEAR DR. GOTT - I'm 16.
and lor Ihe past few m onths |'ve
licen ferllng very run-down and
llrrd all the time, even though
I've made efforts to Improve my
by Howrle Schnaldar sleeping habits and diet I've also
been nauseated and have had
pains In my upper abdomen.
Could I have a slight rase of
mono?
DEAR READER Your

BEETLE BAILEY

HOUSG

aa &lt;

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

ARCHIE

EEK * MEEK

symptoms are very non-specific
a n d s u g g e s t a v a r ie t y o f
possibilities. My first thought
was that you might be pregnant.
It Is true that mononucleosis Is
associated with being run down,
but most IB-year-olds with the
disease complain bitterly of sore
throats and swollen glands, nei­
ther of which you menllon.
F a tig u e , n a u s e a and a b ­
dominal pain m ay be due to
anything from anemia to Infec­

tion. You should see your family
doctor. By talking with you and
performing a simple exam ina­
tion. he may be able to find the
answer to your difficulties.

Send your questions to Dr.
Gott at P.O. Box 91428, Cleve­
land. Ohio. 44101.

Answer 10 Previous Purjle
9 Ftowtxsal item
10 Genetic
1 Stser enclosure
material
6 Turn Over •
11 Mountains
now lest
later)
12 Uncanny
14 Advise
13 Suppia
17 Invironmenl
14 Saskatchewan
agency (abbr |
capital
21 Hder
15 City in India
23 Chnt War
16 Scene
1B f ei pul |
24 Find e sum
19 Greek
28 Wes introduced
commune
to
20 Author ol "The 27 Foe
Raven"
28 Commerce
• 0 o
22 Wave (Sp|
agency labbr)
l V
25 Sooner then
i
29 Piece
2fl Supper
I
i
31 WW1I area
LL
28 Cooled
32
Royal
M
ail
29 Inclosure
40 Shows iccm
49 Heating
Service (abbr |
30 Dratted
41 Barometric
apparatus
33 Always Ipoet I
32 Disprove
pressure unit
34 Oirt ot the
50 Royal Scottish
35 And to on
43 Coat with color
Twenties
Academy
labbr.l
44 Moslem lawyer
38
Tea
agency
38 Thew
(abbr)
48 Irish king’s
labbr)
37 Modern painter
51 Summer (Fr )
home
39
Ceramic*
39 Time jone
52 Engl.sh river
48 Very |Fr.)
maker
law*.)
42 Mrs. In Madrid
4
ft
)
&gt;
libbr)
'
43 Unit of light
44 One (prat)
"
45 Schaoi organue. 14
lion |abbr)
47 More
14
overweight
50 Returned favor 11
53 Root beam
54 Shandy"i
14 13 I
Jt
creator
55 Chemical
n
14
compound
58 Charge with
31 )&gt; 34
gat
34_
J?
57 Mutt
DOWN
41
41
1 Guardian
2 leaders in
41 44
power
Originate
40 ft!
•1 1
Japanese
aborigine
14
Soft mttal
Record apeed
44
labbr |
7 Make proud

ACROSS

tel less bv lit* i«t

8 Bona

WIN A T BRIDGE
B y J a m e s Jacob y

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Hergreavee A Sailers

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

Tfc GREAT
*70 WAVE

A 5MOWER
IN T H E
MORN IMG.

’ My cu p runneth o v e r , ”
r x c la im e d South a fte r th e
opening lead of the club nine.
South wan not really that much
o f an e x p e r t on b i b l i c a l
expression*, but he was right In
that there were two wuvs to
guarantee his contract alter that
lead, lie won the club king in
hand, won dummy's queen and
Jack o f hrurts, then played the
club ace and niffrd a club. Next

simple exercise.

NORTH
♦ K7

East was wrong to double four
clubs. Sure, he might be able to

V Q J 10 J
M ill

treat that contract, hut docs he
really want a club lead II the
t)p|N&gt;nenls bid a slam? Certainly
a diamond lead might be better.

What about West? He hud
heard the opponents cue-bid
first- and second-round controls
In both clubs and spades. If he
believed them, he should have
he look the king and ace of
led a diamond on the go Then
spades and ruffed a spade. Now
poor South would have had to
he led dum m y's last club. He search his m em ory ol saerrd
could now tnakr the contract by
writings for a quip about an
throwing u diamond on that em p ty w a t e r )ur d u rin g a
club, end playing East — a drought.

net

4 A 11 2
EAST
WEST
♦ J» 1
♦ g 10454
*9 4
*45
♦ J a7 4

♦ #*

♦ K 10 S

♦ UJ 105 4
SOUTH
♦ A ll
V A K6 7 1

♦III

4 K7
Vulnerable North-South
Dealer; South
Wm
Nerlh Freil
South
IV
IV
Peas
Psss
34
44
IHil
Pen
fate
feu
4*
4V
P*i»
44
Psss
I’m*
54
Psss &amp;V
P»re
fan
Pees
Opening lead +9

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

FRANK AND ERNEST

CITY BANK

by Bob Thavet

IT V A / o c lA L
* F c u / s &gt; iT Y

C H F c K - -

MY MONTH-To -/^o n t H
P F X u ^ lT A r io N .

Tm A v s v

QARFIELD

8 1

by Jim Davit

LIBRA (Sept. 33 0ct. 33) In
com|Kllllon today. l-ady Luck
may deal you more aces than
she does o th e r s . Use your
advantages. Instead of taking
YOUR BIRTHDAY
them fur granted.
A U O U ST 3, 1889
SCORPIO (Oct. 34NOT.J3)
In the past, you have fre­
quently shown u consideration Things that alfect your selftoward others without thought interests should go smoothly
of reward or favor. In Ihe year today. This ta because you'll
ahead, your unselfish gestures benefit from past experiences
and won't repeat mlstakrs.
will be rrpuld In full,
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 33LEO (J u ly 33-Aag. 3 3 ) Con­
ditions In general lend to favor Dec. 31) Joint ventures look
you today. Even though the promising today, not so much
iteglnnlngs may Ik questionable, irom your rfforts but from ac­
the ending will Ik all for which tions taken by one with whom
you hoped. Trying In patch up a you're Involved.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 33-Jso.
romance? The Matchmaker set
ran help you understand what It IB) Partnership arrangements
might take to make the rela­ arc favored today, provided
tionship work. To get yours, you’re teamed up with a cohort
mall 83 to Astro-Graph, Box whose alms and Ideas are In
489. Radio City Station, New complete harmony with yours.
A Q U A R IU S (J s n . 30-P«b.
York. NY 10019.
VIRO O (Aug. 33-Sept. 33) IB) Opportunities to advance
Even If there Is someone elae at a your ambitious Interests will
party you attend today who prevail today. Once you spot the
you'd like to get to know better, "g o " signal, swing promptly Into
be more attentive and consider­ action.
PISCES ( r « b . 30-March IB)
ate to the person you rame with.

Tixlay your Influence over your
jtrrr group will Ik - quite strong.
Even those who usually try to
run thr show will look to you for
leadership
ARIES (March 31-Aprll 19)
If you havr special needs today,
go lo family members or rela­
tives Instead of outsiders State
your case without holding bark
any farts.
TAURUS (A pril SO-May 30)
Mixing with a large group Isn’t
apt to bring you the happiness
you require tod a y. Instead,
you'll Ik happy being alone with
one who enjoys you as much as .
you do him or her.
GEMINI (May 3 1-June 30)
Keep your attention focused on ,
financial or career matters to-;
day. Where others enjoy levity,
you'll get a bigger charge out of
adding lo your resources
CANCER (Jane 31-July 33)
Today you're likely to be a t-!
traded lo where the action Is. so
If you're not Invited to a social
gathering, go out to someplace
fun with a companion you ad­
mire.

ANNIE
TUMBLEWEEDS
THE WAR &lt;AN0B MAS C A P i\ 7 tP \
WITH TWELVE MEN A P O W !

by T . K. Ryan

by Leonard Starr
.8 0 *
0UT

THARU&amp;Jflt
M IT T rtf CURP IT

IN TH' TRASH t---

FM4H
HUOiY
WhiT-ve SOUGHT AN'
STASHfP
FOR H(6
M TS T E R O ifi tW N H &amp; T

EHMtCS!

T '

�CALENDAR
Sanford. W orkshops,
F R ID A Y , AUQUST 2
leptures. exhibits, and
Central Florida Blood
fashion shows.
Bank Florida HosplThrough August 10.
taJ-Altamonte Branch.
S a n fo rd W o m e n s '
601 E. Altamonte Ave..
AA. 1201 W. First St .
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
2 p.m.. closed.
Antique and Collect*
CasselbetTy A A Step.
ibles Show. 8 a.m. to 5
B p.m.. Ascension Lu
p . m . . F le a W o r ld .
Highway 17 92. San­ t h e r a n C h u r c h .
Overbrook Drive.
ford. Through Sunday.
Rebos and Live Oak
Weklva AA (no smok­
AA. noon. Rebos Club.
ing). 8 p.m.. Weklva
130 Nonnandy Road.
Presbyterian Church,
Casselberry (c lo s e d I.
SR 434. at W e k lva
C l e a n Ai r A A for
Springs Road. Closed.
n o n -s m o k e r s , fir s t
Longw ood AA. 8
floor, same room, same
p .m ., R o llin g H ills
place and time.
Moravian Church. SR
Sanford Senior Citi­
434. Longwood.
zen Club. noon. San­
Alanon, same time and
ford Civic Center. Bag
place.
lunch mid Bingo
Tanglewood A A . 8
p .m ., St. R ic h a rd 's
E p is c o p a l C h u r c h .
SUNDAY. A U G U ST 4
L a k e H ow ell R o a d .
A lta m o n te S ou th Alanon. same lime and
Semlnole Jaycees Va­
place.
riety Show. 2 p.m.. Jal
Sanford AA Step. 8 Alai Fronton. Highway
p.m.. 1201 W. First St..
17 -92 . F e r n P a r k .
Sanford.
Gcorglo the Clow. Sea
SATURDAY.
World Polynesian re­
AUGUST 3
vue. and amateur Jal
East-West K lw a n ls alal exhibition. Call
Club, 8 am .. Airport
Cnthy Cold at 834Restaurant. Sanford.
1078 for free tickets for
N a tio n a l Q u iltin g
community organ iza­
A s s n . 16th A n n u a l
tion s w o rk in g w ith
Quill Show and C om ­ Children or the elderly.
p e t i t i o n . S e m in o le
Ticket/, *3.50 at the
C om m unity C ollege.
door to the public.

...Jailed
Continued from page 1A
A seventh member of the alleged conspiracy.
Charles St. Clair. 50. o f Granada Hills. Calif., was
believed to lie In London and was expected fly lo
Orlando to turn him v l f In. authorities said.
The coloners role In the deal was lo assure the
buyers o f the weapons' quality. Gillespie, who has
been In the Army since hr was 17. told the FBI he
planned to rrllre this year and go Into Intrrtiullonal arms sales. Coconspiralor SJeklochJa said
he u v d Gillespie beforr to check out weapons In
Europe.
All seven were charged with conspiracy to ship
arms without a license from the Slate Depart­
ment. If convicted, they face up to 11vc years In
prison and $10,000 fines.
According lo the FBI. the group did not get any
weapons, and their urrrsl Is unrelated lo arrests
with another weapon-smuggling ring In San
Diego last week.
The aborted arms deal was an
effort by the Khomeini government to beef up Its
supply of anti-tank anti untl-alrcraft missiles, us
well as gel spare parts and other military
hardwure needed for Its bloody, 5-ycur t/ordrr war
with Iraq, the FBI said.
Crucial to cracking the ring was a undercover
agent Richard Wltkowskl who said hr rmild
supply the weaponry, the FBI said An affidavit

...Failure
C ontinued from page 1A
communications occurred. Sellers says. Mrs
Trrwtlllger says she wasn't asked whether she
wanted any pipes In her front yard. "T h e y were
Just Installed."
Al the same time she says the contractor has
allowed erosion from the rond to fall Into a pond,
also an her property, "ruining the pond, and lo
make mattrrs worse. Ihe workers have been
dumping dirt and other trash from the construc­
tion site Into thr pond."
Sellers says lhe pond Is not a Iruc pond, but
rather Is a low lying area which fills with wutrr
during rainy periods, and at other lim es It may be
dry.
Mrs. Terwllllger said she Is concerned that nol
only Is her (Kind being destroyed, but that a
nearby lake Is also being polluted with water

...Budget
C o n tin u e d f r o m page 1A

around here can say It’s the greatest But 1 also
can'l v e how $277 billion (In culs over 1986-88)
ofr the president's budget is an Insignificant Job.
It's only the biggest budget cut tn history
H o u v Budget Committee Chairman William
Gray. D-I’a . called ihe budget a "m ajor deposit
on a v a of red Ink."

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

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Lake M a ry N am es
Election Boards
The Lake Mary City Commission appointed an
Election Board and a Canvassing Board Thursday
night for the Sept. 3 city commission election.
Commissioners Russ Mcgoncgal and Paul
Tremel along with City Clerk Carol Edwards were
named to the Canvassing Board, which 1s
responsible Tor counting election returns and
verifying signatures on absentee ballots.
City residents Ethel Carlson. Pat Thompson.
Virginia Nelson. Betty Day. and Betty Deadman
were named to the Election Board, which Is
responsible for handing out ballots and signing In
voters.
A.R. *'Doc" Jore. 54. o f 589 S. Country Club
Road. Is challenging Charlie Webster. 63. of 530
Webster Ave.. for v a t I on the commission.
Buzz Pclsos and Ken King are 1o be appointed
to v a t s 3 and 5 respectively b c c a u v they had no
opposition.
Scats 1.3 and 5. held bv Colin Keogh. Harry
Terry and Burt Pcrlncluef respectively ate up for
election this year. Scats 2 and 4, held by
Mcgoncgal and Tremel. will be up for election In
1980.
Keogh. Terry and Perlnchlef all declined to run
for another term bccauv they said the com ­
mission was taking up too much of their time.
They said they needed more time for their
businesses and families.
Mrs Edwards said the election will tie held on
Tuesday. Sept. 3 from 7 a m. to 7 p.m. at the
Lake Mary City Hall, 158 N. Country Club Road.
City residents have until 4:30 p m. today to
register to vote In the election Voters can register
at city hall, or offices o f the Supervisor of
Elect Ions at the County Services Building In
Sanford or al the Sandlakc Plaza on State Road

434.
—Richard T ru ett

said H o s v n l told Ihe agent. "T h e price was nol
Importune Ills country needed weapons that
would work as a result o f the war they were
p rrv n tly engaged In "
The affidavit also said SJeklocha told the agent
he has been dealing In arms with Iran for the past
two years and has made a * 6 million lo $8 million
profit. He said his Involvement had nothing lo do
with politics. Hr said he was after money.
"SJeklocha told (Ihe agent) hr deals directly
with Hussein Zohrcl. the Iranian minister of
procurement." tlirallldavlt said.
The FBI. In a complaint filet) Wednesday In U S,
District Court in Orlando, said the "conspirators
Intended to purehav 1,140 TOW missiles at a
total cost o f $9.12 million and that they would
provide an alreralt to fly the weapons and purls to
Iran."
The Unlled States cut o ff military sales to Iran
during the 444-day hostage crisis that began tn
November 1979. The bulk o f Iran's military
equipment Is of American origin, a hangover from
Ihe years o f U.S. support o f the sliah.
The group's mulll-mllllon dollar "shopping
list" Included 5.000 TOW Missiles. 10 F-4 Jel
engines. 50 d lc v l engines, u mobll hospital. 20
French Exoeel Missiles. F-4 Jel parts. lOO
Harpoon Missiles. 300 Sidewinder Missiles. 600
Sparrow Missiles. 30 Phoenix Missiles.
Th e w eaponry was to be dow n out o f Orlando

on a rented 747 airliner

runolf from the construction.
Sellers says the problem is nol only one o f
communication — "Mrs. Terwllllger should have
been told what was going o n " — but also one of a
lack of proper construction management. With no
plant life on thr shoulders o f (he road to hold
back drainage or (o direct It. (he water and
erosion could go in any direction. Sellers said.
The fart Is. Sellers says, this Is an unusual Job
with so many players involved — ihe state
Department of Transportation, the county, the
city of Lake Mary, the contractor and the property
owners — there was a great deal of chance for
communication breakdown "and that's appar­
ently what has happened."
Sellers said he lias no doubt the contractor will
aolvd all t h e v problems Mrs Terwllllger Is
complaining about.
Meanwhile. Mrs. Terwllllger Is also contending
that Ihe four-lane road with u median Is not
necessary and was nol a hazard until Ihe road
construction began.

Senate moves to eliminate about u dozen
programs failed, and the only major prog rum
eliminated by Ihe budget was federal revenue
sharing, and that nol until 1987. The H o u v was
forced to agree to the Senate's higher military
spending figure of $302.5 billion In fiscal 1986.
Both H o u v and Senate noted the budget was
non-binding and called for further spending cuts.
" I f w r don't (pass this) the people are going to
say the people up there (In Congress) can't do
anything." said Chiles, "T h e y might well be
right...."
The budget:
• Allows Pentagon spending lo r l v with
Inflation In flv a l 1986 and grunts a 3 percent
in creu v In the next (w o years. However, due to
military budget accounting, budget officials said
$27 5 billion would be saved from the original
estimates of military spending for flv a l 1986.
• Grants a cost-of-llving In crra v for Social
Security and other government benefit programs.
• Cuts $11 billion from Medicare In 1986. The
H o u v Ways and Means Committee already has
approved $10 billion In Medicare cuts, and
budget officials recommended Ihe panel seek
more.
• Culs $7.9 billion from agriculture programs,
less than thr Senate originally wanted.
• Freezes federal civilian pay for a year, saving
$5 billion

IN AND ro w

C A S IN O IH S 4 4 C A O A P
IN A l t T H E M AR R IAG E OF
R A Y N IC E W O O E.
Petttforur,
W IL F R E D I DOE.
N O TIC E OF A C TIO N
T O W IL F R E D I OOE
C/e Raymond *nd Irvin* Do*
Shapfoigh. Main* 940’ *
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D that «n
action lor Dissolution ot M*r
rlego Km been mod ogelntt you
and you oro required lo M m 0
cosy ot row* w rits .'
It
•ny, to It on 0 H E A TO N , JR ,
E S Q U I R E . P » i m o n « r '» at
lo r n o y , w h o tt a d d re s s It
F R E E M A N . E A TO N . FOUN
T A IN A A L L E Y . Pod Office
B o« /O. Altomqnl* Springs.
Florida, m i 10079, on or baton
Aufl'.ul l i d IMS. w d flit th*
original with Mo Clerk of fhi*
Court olfKor baton service on
Petitioner’* oftornoy or Immedlotoly Thereafter. olhorwi** *
dot tv*’ «HH bo on te nd ogelntt
you tor tno n&lt;L*f demanded tn
(no Pont ion
W ITN ESS my h*nd ond lh#
tool ot tbit Court on July lots.

*MS

D A V ID N B E R R IE N
A* C fork eflh# Court
By LlndoM McNett
A l Deputy Clorfe

Publlth July If. M. August 1. f.
If*}
OEM 114

IN T N I 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
S EM INO LE C O U N TY .
FLO R IO A
C IV IL A C TIO N NO
tt no* c a m f
F E D E R A L NOME LO AN
BANK O F SAN FRANCISCO.
Ptalnllff,

v»
B E V E R L Y A. B R A Y .d e l..
Defendant*
N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
T O Beverly A Broy
M A ILIN G ADORESS
P O B o iK
Winter Perk. F L HTfO
Y O U ARE N O T IF IE D that on
oction lo toreOote o mortgage
on th# following property In
Seminole County. Florid# Unll
No 104 21. R O Y A L A R M S
C O N D O M I N I U M , e Con
dominium according to th# 0#
clontlon of Condominium ond
tihlbl** onn#»#d ttwnto. n
cordod Moy V . tf*), In Official
Record* Book 1400. Page IU4.
Public Record* ol Seminole
County, Florida, o i emended
together erltb on undivided in
for tel In th# common element*
ond limited common « foment*
declared In told Declaration of
Condominium to bo on op
purfonanco to the obovo Con
dominium Unit.
hot boon (lied ogolntl you and
you are required to lev* a copy
ol your written detente* It any
to it on Grace Anne Glovln,
Etgulre, P lo ln 'ltf* attorney,
who*# moiling a d d r»ti It 10/f
W More# Bird . Suite B. P 0
Bor HZ/, Winter Park Florida
337*0 II//. on or before Ihe l i t !
day ol Auguit If*) ond til# th#
original with th# Clerk ol fhlk
Court either before aervlco on
Ptolntitt'i attorney or Immedl
Otoly thereafter otherwise 0
default will bo entered ogolntl
you tor ihe relief dtmended In
the Cemplelnt or Petition
W ITNESS my hand and i##l
•f thtt Court on th# I4lh do* of
July, tfM
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F TH E C O U R T
By LlndoM McN#tl
Deputy Clerk
Publlth July If. M Auguit 1 .1.
If*)

OSH 111
IN TH 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 A N D FOR
S E M IN O LE C O U N TV .
FLO R ID A
CASE NO U I M f CA e* 0
TH E A M E R IC A N B AN K OF
M E R R IT T ISLAND, a corpora
lion •■tiling under the low* ol
the Stole ot Florid*.

mmy a r u r w *
m tr xecvr
K m H I PAN*,

Plaintiff,

v*

E A R L W E B E R L Y and D E A N
J O AKLEY,
RUSH IN V E S TM E N TS . INC .
Defendant, C ro n Plalnlltt.

r»

EARLW EBERLY.

N O TIC E O F
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
T H E S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
BOARD O F CO M M ISSIO NER S
will held ■ public hodrlng In
Room W tlb Of lh# Semlnofo
County Service* Building. Sen
lord. Florida an A U G U S T IT.
If*} A T 7 00 P M
or •* toon
thereafter » i poetibto to contto
er Ihe following
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
FOR C H A N O E OF
ZONING R E G U L A TIO N S
I. M A R T IN K R E ID T —
P LANNING A N D D E V E L O P ­
M E N T . IN C . R E ZONE
FROM A 1 A G R IC U L T U R E TO
R IA A S I N G L E F A M I L Y
O W E L L IN O D I S T R IC T P i l l 7 *31 /) Begin ITS H E ol
the SW comer of the SEW of
SWW ot Section 4 I I S H E
thence run N I f f ft., fhe»ce w
4*01’ W 4411 ft thence C IM ft .
thence S e4d H. thence W IS4 f «1
to beginning, le u Ihe South ZJ ft
tor rood R/W ond commence If )
ft E ot the SW comer of the
SEW of SWW of Sec 4 !1 S !t E
thence run N Jit. thence North
4*01 W I K ft. to tho point ol
boginning thence run N JZ*1TW
m S ) ft., thence E 41 f ft
thence S W E to Ihe Point of
Beginning tFurther described
e* Parcel If, or at 1 1 acre*
located on Palm Spring* Rood,
normal th e y M CA I (D lS T » l
}. C LA R A J. R IP L E Y . I T AL
S P E C IF IC A M E N D M E N T
FROM O E N IR A L R U R A L TO
IN D U S TR IA L A N D R IZ O N E
FROM A I A O R IC U L T U R E TO
C 3 O E N IR A L COA4MERCIAL
AND W H O L E S A L E D IS TR IC T
- FZ1P/M1 f t - The South MO
tool of Parcel IS In Section H
Te w n th lp IfS , Range ) I E
(Further described at 3 7 acre*
located ol the toufhweil corner
ef Celery Avenue er-d Britton
Avenue I (O IS T 4)1
) C H A R L E S N A T A L I,
C R A IG R IE C K M A N N .
M IC H A E L S H A R P S P E C IF IC A M E N D M E N T
FR O M C O M M E R C IA L AN O
O E N E R A L R U R A L T O IN
O U S T R IA L A N D R E Z O N I
FR O M A l A O R I C U L T U R E
AHO C l R E T A IL C O M M IR
CIAL T O C l O E N IR A L C O M
ME RCIAL AN O W H O LE S A LE
O D T R ’C T PZI* f AM f ) Th* Ee*' 4)0 toe! of the South
M 7 » r t ol the SWW of the SEW
ot Section 11. Townthip If South
Rang# 31 Eat*, let* the Et*t 40
tl ot tho S l/ l It Ihereof and
I#*I right ol way* tor Allantic
Coetl Lin# Railroad Company
and SR 44. and A parcol ol land
In the SE corner ot Ihe SWW ol
SEW ol Section M Its H E . to
wll Begin #t the Intortectlon ot
tho we*tern boundary line ol mo
Atlantic Coetl Lin* Rallroed
right of way with th* Northern
boundary line of the Geneve
Avenue Rood right o* way. run
thenc* Wetl along the Northern
boundary ot Geneva Avenue 40
H, thence N I/ } ft thence E 40
ft to the Atlantic Coett Line
Rallroed right ol way, thenc* S
eking told right ot way I t ) ft to
Point ot Beginning (Further
deter lb*d a* tour ecret located
on tho north tido ol SR 44. Eatl
ol Bearded M O IS T I t )
Further, a public hoering will
be hold by tho S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY P L A N N IN G ANO
Z O N IN G C O M M IS S IO N ON
A U G U S T /, If* ) A T 7 00 P M ,
or at toon theroettor at pottl
Mo. In Rm W IK . Semlnofo
County Service* Bunding. San
ford. Florida. In ardor to review,
hear comment* and met* rec
ommendetlont to the Board ol
C o u n ty C o m m l t t l o m r l Of
Semlnofo County on tho above
application! t )
Tho*# In attendance will be
heard and written comment*
moy bo tiled with the Lend
M anagem ent M anager
Hearing* m ay be tenllnued
Horn lime to time at found
n a c e tta ry
F u rth e r detail*
available by calling M l I IM
E*l 441
Pertont are advlied that If
they decide to appeal any de
Clttan mod* al I heto meeting*
they will need a record of mo
proceeding*, and f i r *uch
purpote. they may need to
onturo that a verbatim record ol
the proceeding* I* mad*, which
record Include* th* tettlmony
and evidence upon which lh*
appeal It to be mad*
Hoard ot
County Commlttlonor*
Seminole County. F fond*
B V Herb Hardin. Director
Lend Manegem*n 1
Publlth Augutt I, ltd )
D E I la

Croea Defendant
CASE NO *4 01/f C A Of G
JESSE E G R AH AM , at Tru tl
ee.
Plaintiff,

r»

EA R L W E B E R L Y and TH E
A M E R IC A N B AN K O F M ER
R IT T ISLAND.
De fondant*
SECO N D
A M l N O I O H O r i C I OF SALE
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that, pur want to the Order ot
Final Judgment entered In Ihl*
caute. In the Circuit Court ef
Seminole County. F for Ida. I will
tell Ihe property m uted In
Somine** County. F lor We. de
tented *i to&lt;tow*
The South H I * tool of Ihe
following deteribed property
The Wetl » ) feet ot the South to
el Ihe NEW of Ihe SWW ef
Section M Tewnthtp I I South.
R ang* IB E a i f . S em ino le
County. Florldo. let* the South
f l feet and lot* right ot way at
Lake l to well Rood
at public eala. to the htghot! end
bett U dder, lor caeh. ol the wetl
front door of in# Seminole
County Courthouko In Sanford
Som l nol# County, Florid# al
It 0* A M an th# M lh day of
Auoutl )M l
O A V IO N B E R R IE N
C LE R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
C O UR T
By Diene K Brum matt
Deputy Clerk
PubtHh Augutl f, f. If*}
O E I II

SOMFUYU TIM
JUTKWl TOEUllii. WU TWBI

by Bcrke Breathed
» #U0 ZMMffiMMSHtX
*9 .MIU m cu rn A
nmm.
HPUCf
THATH A ft
ArtU &lt; u » + r '
i\
r f)
^ » t s r KV

Legal Notice

IN TN I CIRCUIT COUST,
ttMINOLC COUNTY.
FLORIDA

uXMcm*

JOB

■

OTHUBMOWKTTn ■
Tr*y i m eur ad ltd

I toil'

Cell i n M M
I h w Ip i i It r v u ld

F rid a y, Aug. I. I U J - I 1A

Evening H srsld. Sanford, FI.

legal Notice

C IT Y OF
L A K E M A R Y . FLO R ID A
N O TIC E OF
P U B L IC H E A R IN S
Th* City ol Leko Mary Plan
nlng and Zoning Board ectlng at
The Local Planning Agency tor
lt«a Camprehantfve Plan will
hold a Public Mooring on Augutl
K . If*), al T E E P M . at Lake
M a ry C ity H a ll. IM North
Country Club Reed. Lake Mary.
Florida th* purpote of mil
Rubik Hearing It to dltcuM the
Comprohontlvo Plan Th* public
It Invlfod lo attend and be

heard

By:/*/ Carol A Edward*
City Clerk
Publlth A u g u tl). IS. IM )
D ll 4

C I T T O F S AN FO R D . FLO R IO A
N O TIC E O F A
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
T O C O NSID ER
AN A P P E A L O F T H E D E N IA L
O F A C O N D ITIO N A L USE.
Nolle* It hereby given Ihal a
Public Hearing will be held *1
the Com mi **ion Room In the
City Hail in the City *t Sanford.
Florid*, at / » o'ctoct F M an
Augutt 1). IMS. to consider an
Appeal ef th* Denial, by iha
P lann in g and Zoning Cam
mitaton an July II. I M L at a
Conditional U»* lor limited
manufacturing In a GC I Zone,
an a portion ef lh* property
lying between Sanford Avenue
and Palmetto Avenue and be
•waen ) l t h P la ta and )fth
Street, mere pprtkuterly do
tc r toed e* follow *
Loft 4/ and 4*. Second Add!
Han to Pork view. Public Ha
c a r d ) at Sem inal* County,
F tor Ida
Tho City Cammittton may.
aftor Pub4K Hearing, affirm,
deny, and modify th* detltlon.
finding and recommendation pf
the Flam ing end Zoning Com
mitaton, end lh* action *1 lh#
City Cammittton than b* final
All part tot in Intore*! and
(in te n t tlfoil hove an opptotuni
fy to bn hoard al told hearing
By ardor of the CHy Cam
mitaton of me City t l Sanford.
Florida
H .N Tam m Jr

City Ctofk
F.4*fltH A u gu tt). IM )
D i l &gt;t

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
l Mm
.................. 67C * lint
HOURS
3 consacutlk* time) 61C g line

$:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9

7 consftutWe times 5 K * ling
10 CdfiSdcuthg times 44C a line
Contract Rat** Available
3 line* Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
Monday - 11:00 A.M. Saturday

21 — Personals

55— Business
Opportunities

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A B O R TIO N CO UN SELIN G

Fr a* Prtgnancv TetM
C o n f id e n tia l

In d iv id u a l

iititfanee

C a l l far

appointment evening hour*
available______________ Mi &gt;*t1
Irm* Jehntten er Left pi****
call Nan Heyce* in Orlande.
1)1 *)&gt;4. day Evet 44)13)4
W A N T E D TO BORROW U 0 »
C o l l a t e r a l ( p a y i b l t 1)
(.tenth*) two Sand reply to
Bot tol. c/e Evening Herald
P O Bp* 14)3, Sanford, Fl

Lawn maintenance 1 year* old
Cnm-n#rrl*l7r#tid*niial con
tract* S33 000 grot* bated on
34 hour week All equipment,
enctoted traitor. IM4 Pick Up
* 3 1 .1 )0
C a ll
I I I 13)0
^ a n rjn ln jtl^ J IlT IlM w w k l^

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

Employment
323-5176

M/T) 14)3

____ 3133 French Av»

23— Lost &amp; Found
* R EW A R D *
tent whit* pood)* with black
col!•$ Call m 1 U )

25— Special Notices
ORDER TOUR BOOKS FROM
Otborn* t Book ind Bible
Spec tol book order* token

Otil* end Jeanne

II) SOM

* M AR Y KAY COSM ETICS *
Skin car* and color ftolr
C O N N IE
131 //la

27— N u rse ry &amp;
C h ild C a re
Baby tiffing In my horn# Man
day thru Saturday Ftnctd
yard Call I K f la t _______

33— Real Estate
Courses

****
• Thinking el getting • •
a Reel Eitot* Llcentef *
W* after Free Twftton
end continue#* Training!
Call Dick er Vicki tor detoilt
411 144/ ) ) ) IIM Eve f/4 l*M
K t y t t t l Florida , Inc
) t Year* Iap#rl«nc*l

Legal Notice

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
CLERK
We at# teeklng a well orga
niied individual with 1 to )
v**r* Account* Payable *&gt;
penence In a computerired
environment Eacellenl Ml ary
and benefit* II Intaraifad,
t#nd return* to Bo&gt; 304. t o
Evening Herald. P O Bo*
14)/. San lord. Fl* 33//) 14)7
Acrylic Applicator* naaded to
apply protective coaling on
car*, boat* end planet ) ) to
SI I per hour W* train Fpr
work In Sen lord area call
T a m p e t D Iia -f lS I______
Actor* Actrene* Medal* All
tatonl tor movie*,TV A print
work Serleut only epply
P*r » mount Ceiling. M I T U 3
Air Canditfonlng D u d Mechanic
E ip a r lencedonly Up lot*par
hour Call 131*11)___________
allT y p e sT o b )
S TA R T W O RK HO W I

■A
LA BON
MAiaOM

^

FONCt
MAIN*

IN O
▼
F ill
Nppof 1 r**dy for work At A AM
&lt;07 W
It
Sonford

321-1590

legal Notice

IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O UR T,
,
O P TH E E lO H T E E N T H
IN A N O FOR
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
IN A N O F O R
FL O R ID A
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
CASE NO M0314-CAM
FLO R ID A
Me L E A N SAVINGS AN D LOAN
C IV IL AC TIO N NO
ASSO CIATIO N ,
U DKCAPf P
Plaintiff.
AN CHO R M O R TG A G E
v*
S
E
R
V
IC
ES
. INC f/k/a SUB
JA M E S E SM ITH . R U TH M
U R B A N C O A S TA L COR
S M ITH . U N IT E D S TA TE S OF
P O R A TIO N
A M E R IC A . S T A T E OF
Plaintiff,
F L O R ID A , F IN A N C E O N E
C R E D IT O F FLO R IO A . I N C ,
M I C H A E L P P IE R C E and
T E R R Y H A M IL T O N A N D
M A R IO N P IE R C E , hit wll*.
J E A N N E T T W IM B E R L Y .
Defendant*
Do fondant*
N O TIC E OF A C TIO N
N O TIC E OF
T O M IC H A E L P P IE R C E and
FORECLOSUEESALE
M AR IO N P IE R C E ,h it wll*
N O TIC E I* hereby given that
R ES ID E N C E
/ Lynn Street.
th* underttgned Clerk of the
Enfield Middr
C ir c u it C o u rt *f Sem lnol*
London.
England
E N f O JY
County. Florida, will on the 33rd
A N D TO All pertont claiming
day of Augutl. IM ). between II
any Inforatl by. through, under
a m and ) p m a* Iha Wetl
or ogolntl fhaaforeMld par ton*
front doer of lh* Seminal#
Y O U ARE H E R E BY
County Ceurtheuk*. San lord.
N O T IF IE D T H A T an action to
F for Ida. of tor **k and M il al
torecloM
a mortgage on lh*
publk outcry M tha highttl and
following described properly
betl bidder lor rath, the follow
located In Semlnofo County,
ing described property tltuefo In
Florida
Semlnofo County. Florida
Lol *. C L U S TE R " M ' D E E R
Lol I*. AVACAD O TE R R A C E ,
R U N U N IT TI. *1 roc or dad in
according to th* plat thereof a*
Plal
Booh U, Paget 1 and 4.
recorded In Plat Book 1. Pag*
Public Racardi ot Somlnole
I). Public Record* of Somlnol*
County. Florida
County, F lo rid a A N D ! The
Together elm all ttruclurta
South l* of the Wetl 3* 44 fool *1
and Impravamanlt new end
lo t *. Block Z. FLO R ID A LA N D
herealier on teld land, and
A N D C O L O N IZ A T IO N COM
Mature* attached thereto, end
P AN Y limited Mop of lh# II
all rent*. Ittue*. proceed*, and
Gertruda Addition to lh* Town
profit* accruing and to accrue
of Sanford, according to lh* plal
tram Mid premitet. and *Im *11
Ihereof •• recorded In Plal Book
gat. ttaam. electrk. water an­
I Page* 111 and III. Public
other healing, cooking, r*
Record* of Semlnofo County.
frlgeratlng.ltghling. plumbing
Florida
•
v a n tlla lln g . Irrig a tin g , ana
purtuenl to Ihe Final Judgment
power lytlem t. machine*, ap
entered In a cat* pending In Mid
p lla n ce t. Ila lu re t. and *p
Court. Iha ttyl* at which I*
purtonanct*. which now a rt or
indicated above
may hereafter pertain to. *r be
W ITN E S S my hand and tf
uted with In. or on M id pr*
lie tol *aa) of Mid Court thl* II
ml***, even (hough they be
day of July. IM )
detached or dolachabfo
(S E A L )
hat boon filed against you. and
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
yaw are required to terv* a copy
C L E R K O F TH E C IR C U IT
ot your written dotontat. If any,
COURT
fo Ihl* action on Roger 0 Beer
R y : Diene K Brummett
*1 ANDER SO N A RUSH. At
Deputy Clerk
lerney* ter Plaintiff, who**
Publlkh Augutl 1.1. IM )
add'*** I* m
East Central
O E I K ______________ _______
Boulevard Orlande. F lev Id*
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
1MBI. and flit lh* original with
Nolle* l» hereby given that I
th* Cfork *4 the above tty tod
am engaged M buimett al IME
Court an er b*4or* me N d day of
Swnghina Tree Bird Longwood.
September. IM ). efharwiM a
Semlnofo County, Florida T im
lu d g m a n f m a y ba en tered
under the fktltleu* name ef
again*! you for th* relief de
A B R A M IN V E S TM E N TS . INC
mended in the Complaint.
D B A ' A B R E N P L U M B IN G .
W ITN ES S my fund end the
O I A L A P LU M B ER A
keel *4 told Court on mi* 30 day
E M E R O C N C V -S E P T I C , and
04 July. IMS
met I Intend fo regitfor Mid
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
name with lh* Cfork ef the
C L E R K OF T H E C IR C U IT
Circuit Court. Semlnofo County.
COURT
Florid* In accordance with lh*
By AgnetE Swfok
provision* f t Iha FUtlttou*
Dooufr Cfork
Nam* Stotofot To wii Section
Pubfktl: ,A ugutl 1.1. 14. U . IM )
M ) M Florida StotufoS I*)/
D E I If
/*/ Brendan Irani
Pubiitn July I). It M A Augv*f
). IM )
d e m at
N O TIC E U N D E R
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E LAW
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
N O TIC E IS HE RE I Y O I V I N
Nefka I* hereby given Ihal I
mol ASCCOYLE. INC deU'ek fo
am engaged in builn eu al tool
ongagt In huemet* under IN*
A l r p e r i B lv d , S a n f o r d .
lictiitou* name of Oonka tho
Semmofo County. Florida 33//1 C ip lor Company. *f JIM John
under lh* fkflHou* noma pf
Yeung Perk. Orlondo. Florid*
G R A P E V IL L S N U R S E R Y , and rae*. ard Ultandt &gt;* regular th*
fhef I inland fo fegitfor told
i« id rum* with ihe Cfork *1 foe
nemo with m* Cfork of Ihe C lr t u lf Court ter Seminal*
Clrc A l Court. Seminafo County,
County. F forM*
Florid* Id accordant* with Via
Oatod al t l P e le rtb u rg .
p ra t lalent *t I he F ic lllfo u t
F Iw id#, th** n n d day ef July
Nemo Stotofot T e wal Section
MU
14) M F tar id* Statute* IM/
MCCOY I t . INC
It/ Van Tampkfot
BY Franck J Me Peek
/*/ Shirley fernpern*
V President
Pubhth July M A Augutl L f. a*.
Publlth July M A Augutl I f . H,
IM )
IM )
D E H 1*4
D E H ISI

�11A— Evwlwt HariM, Sgntgrd, FI.

F r i d a y , A u g 2, I f IS

71— H t l p W i n l K l
71— Help Wented
KTTTNTIOR TELEMARKETERS
Th* Evening Me,* id
poti
ik w avalletoto lor phon# tone
Itofl lo nock Monday through
Friday bahwwn 4 PM and »
PM Idaal lor Iha Individual
wllh a frtondty voka and Mm#
u K l t i p r n a n t i This pos 'lon
presides w ag* g lu t cam
mtttian Inlaratiad applicants
JmM cam act Tha Evening
Harald al i m i H I M il. and
tsk tor &gt;hw Circulation Oa

AIR CONDITIONING
MECHANICS
Installation Salary baaed an
••parlance glut banaflti Paid
v a c a lla n a n d t ia ll d a y t

mmasai

“ le g a l

71— Help Wanttd

A S S E M B LE R S
Front office phone*, filing,
typing helpful Permanent
positions Never a Feel

M AIDS
Help us Clean up Call 7*71714
D river'* license r squired

TtMT PERM............ 774-1141
A S S E M B LE R S
70 needed Immediately In the
Lake M a ry Area No erparl
snea necessary
Afctost Tem porary Services
________ 771 tese
___
Avow Beauty da.
Start your otvn business tor SSI
m t e t o .................. m wig
AVON E A R N IN G S WOW I I I
O P E N T E R R IT O R IE S NOW III
_____ n n s s i o r m e a t*
Beautician Espariancad 0 4
PM Th* HeircvttlagSUttoe
Lake M a r y ................... I l l T ill

BUILDING AND DEPARTMENT
ACCOUNTANT

N o tic e

N O T IC R O P
P U B LIC H E A R IN G
THE S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
BOARD OP C O M M IS S IO N ER S
•in hold a public hearing to
(onitdar a r* quasi la REZO NE
•ha W W t n g da*u t a d or jnarl/
Nam M IA L I G H T IM DUSTRI
AL TO PUO P L A N N E D U N IT
D E V ELO P M EN T.
A D D IT IO N I T O T H E
H E A TH R O W P R O P k R TIE S
A Noel al land ba'ng a p— * 'y
al Sacllan It, Township to South.
Rang* I* Eaal. and a portion al
Section f. Township jg South.
Ranga to E t i l , S tm ln a la
County, Florida, being mora
p a r t ic u la r ly d a ic r lb a d at
•oHoan
•agin al Iha Facrfhtratf cor nor
al Sad Ion 7, Tpwnshlp to South.
Ranga 10 Eaalj T H E N C E North
tru u
East along Iha north
nno al aald Soctton t lor a
dltlanco ol Sit PJ toot. TH E N C E
South O d i r U " E a it along tho
Wastoely right al way ol tho
Atlantic Coaallln# Railroad
(p r a t a n l l y Ih a S a a b o a rd
Coot11mo Railroad), according
N Iha Right al Way T r a d Map
S A ST PRR Sanford Trilby. ••
Iliad by Iha Offlca ol Valuation
Englnaar, W ilmington. North
Carolina. In Iho yaar Itir. tar a
dltlanco ol l i t 40tool. TH E N C E
N 44*10 *l E . M at tool N Iho
P O IN T O F B E G IN M IN O f
TH EN C E S Carlo'S!" E. 174*00
l a a l ta I h a P O I N T O F
C UR V A TU R E ol a cwrva can
cava Nerfhwastocly having In lit
alamanti a radio* al I1M n tool,
a control angle ol 1S*U I t " and
on arc dltlanco ol r t » 70 tool to
•ha P O IN T OF C U R V A T U R E el
a nontangent curva haring a* IN
atomant* a radlua al 1004 17 tool,
centril angto ol 14*04'!*". arc
dltlanco ol 717 94 toot ond a
chord booring ol N t t » l M I " E.
TH EN C E along tho arc ol told
cwrva ra « l toot to tha POINT
OF TA N G E N C Y , TH E N C E N
ITM J'H " t. Mn 41 toat to iha
POINT O F C U R V A T U R F ol a
curva cancava Sauthaattarly
having aa lit alomantt a radius
al IUW 10 teal, a cantral angla
o tO O M S llf T H E N C E along tha
arc at told cwrvo an arc distance
al 11704 la a li T H E N C E N
M'4014 W. 1)0 00 laol lo Iha
Paint el Curvature al a non
la n g a n t c u r v a c a n c a v a
Northwesterly having at lit al
amenta a radlua ol to SO tool, a
cantral angle ol S»*14I7". a
chord booring of S at* I f St" W.
TH EN CE along Iho ore ol told
curva t o m N o t, t h e n c e N
rru tr' w . to 41 tool to it*
POINT O F C U R V A T U R E ol o
curve concave Southerly having
at lit tlamentt a radius ol 070 CO
tod. and a cantral angle ol
4l*0rJ0"i T H E N C E along Iho
arc ol said curve cai a tool.
TH EN CE S C d i r s t " E to Iho
P O IN TO F III G IN N IN G
Contain* 14 lid Acre*, more or
toll
Th* 4ub|ed property, II ra
toned would bo Incorporetad
In to T H E H E A T H R O W
P LA N N E D U N IT D E V E L O P
M I N T aa Addition I In oddl
Ikon. Iho oppiKont la requesting
modi lie »l Ion to tho Developers
Commitment Agreement to In
elude Increasing m a s lm u tr
building height up to 44 teal and
reducing num ber at parking
spaces In Traci* f , l*C and 140
Tha public hearing will bo
hald by Iho Planning and Zoning
Commission on August 7, INS
ond by Iho Board al Commit
t loners on August 17, I tot Both
meetings will bo held In Room
W IN at the County Service*
Building. Son lord Florida and
will tom manta a l 7 00 P M or
01 Man ttwrstller at pottlble
Parsons are advised thel II
they doc ids to appeal any da
cliton made al Hwso mealing*,
•hay trill need a record el Iha
proceedings, and Isr such
purpose, they may need ta
ootura that a vwrbellm record ol
the proceedings It made, which
record Included Iha testimony
and evidence up an which tha
appeal IS totran.oda
Boardpi
County Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
B Y Herb Hardin. Dirac tor
Land Management
Publish Augusts. IN S
0EI I

N O W

71 — H#lp Wanted

RaiacnUbto lor maintaining *&lt;l
construe non records tar lie
house Cun*true hen craw lor
S a m ln a lo C o u n ty School
Board. F t.,l| tlo s Planning
and Construction Deportment
Work Includes filing, typing
ond eccuun'.ng High Scnont
diploma or equivalent with
secr*toriel/o&lt;counting train
Ing or office aeporlanct r*
l*t*d to construction Is do
tlrable Salary
|7 tO/hour
with no School Booed banolils
Position la temporary Coll
m I I I ) , tetonslon 704 or J7»
Submit resume by August t,
H01________________________

CARPENTERS
For Son lord Orlando art*
Musi have own transportation
Call Brian, oorly morning or
evenings: SIN M l poor

DENTAL Of TICE
RECEPTIONIST
Neal appear one* E rpar tones
required 111 U t l . ask lor
l a t i R i i ______________
E X E C U T IV E S E C R E TA R Y
With or without shorthand!
P ra f a rr o b ly W A N G word
procdsaors Headed In Iho
Lota M e ry Area
Ablest Tem porary Services
____________H I 1048___________
E i parwnced Lawn Maintenance
man M u l l hove d rive r's
llcanta Pay depends on 4ipa
r tone# C all: M l *407_________

TRUSS ASSCMBURS

OR DERLY
Completion of acuta cor* nurse
a i d t r a i n i n g course a r
equivalent hospital aeparl
enc* Apply Pevtorwel. West
Voiut.a Memorial Hospital.
701 W Plymouth Av* . Oo
Land P I_____________________
Plaallc tvpo rt «o develop a
plastic trim toe window* end
dear* Background t k lllt
should bo In tho tclenc* of
plettlct Moll resume'
lo
M P C . P O bee tat*
Maitland, F L 17711_________
Pool 4 General Momtononc*
M e n - C e r lllle d Seminal*
County Pool Car* Needs to
know various aspects of main
tananca Th* Club *1 lh*
Crossings. Lake Mary. 717

n il.____________________ _

P renhool tooctisng position tor
• I 0* , ( tvy&gt;i year Hours are
( 10 to M S P M Apply Gin
Oorbroad House. JSJ* Elm
Av* . Lon lord

KITCHEN UTILITY WORKER
Perl lime Kllchon cleaning end
lood prep W ill train willing
learner Apply bo I wean t 1 Id
AM only Senior Cltiren Re
llremont Center 111 7M4
____
E O E ___
LABORERS
Rellablo workers needed
lor He al thill
Abtell Tem porary Services
111 1*40

R / manager * *
AND SELF HELP
fo r n*w T*nn#&lt;o convtfii#nct
itof# in i « k « M ir f
E i(tll« n f b * n «lili #nd mot 9
Apply In p*rton nt HoluUy
Inn, Sanford Afar in*, room
m t t A M to 4 r» m Friday
Marketing
Partonallty ond plaatanf tele
phono m onntr o m ull to*lor
(itlion m o rk tl IV you likt
pa op It, ond oro rtaaf and
attractive. coll u t lor ap
poinlmonl Port tima. 221 1440
Monday thur Friday

MECHANICS BUCK DRIVER
Wenledlor Hour under leymont
Contact

Gjpsum Floors ol FU., Inc.
I tOS I** 7*40/Weekday*

MEDICAL OFFICE
INSURANCE BILLING CLERK
Submit retumo lo I N I Medical
Plata. Suite 10*. Senior d FL
J i m ________________________

NURSE AIDES AND LIVE IN
Private duty, stall duty, end
home cate poiitiuns availably
Es&gt; alien! pay
M ED IC A L p e r s o n n e l p o o l
JOS ON 4SII
E O I
M F 'H 'V
NURSE'S A I D K I i A ll thlltt
iaporlencod or corllflod prt
lerrod Apply In person al
Lakevlovs Hurting Cantor, tit
I IndSI Son lord

NUNSES AIDES
All ihllte Good almotphert
and bonolllt Apply el Da
Hary Manor. *• H Hwy 17/01,
Da Rory R O E ________ ______

HIRING!

Ou t s t a n d i n g Op po rtu mf y For

E X P E R IE N C E D C A S H IE R S ,
G A S A T T E N D A N T S AND
F A S T F O O D P R E P A R A T IO N

Ante ports r#b*‘ld»'
C o il:..............
171407*
R N or L .P .N . lor M O oTtic*
Immediate position M l tin*
C o ll
1TYS710 between *
I I A M h ^ A . ay thru Friday

RAX NEEDS YOU!
Competitive wages, benefit*
plus Iriendly almotphere 4
people! II you ora looking tor
a permanent position ond o
Greet Bos*, m il It lh* place
for yuu nppiy In person. RAX
R E S T A U R A N T . Lang wood.
or call tx&gt; 14*4_______________

REM ESTATE
SALES PEOriE
High
Earnings
Palonlloll
Modern office Hi atcollanl
location Complete training
program New divltlen ol old
established firm Coll noo
lor
details on pleasant
working conditions ond ta
secure your future
Jim Rotlarty
&gt;74 44*4
Racapltanlsl/Typftl Full line,
good bonolllt. C E I Industrial..
Jl* 4040___________________ _

Tilt'd Chicken Subs Donuls

• Top Salaries
• Free Life'&amp; Hospitalization
• 2 Paid Vacations Each Year
• Profit Sharing Plan
• Other Benefits
.
j
MAKE A P P LIC A TIO N IN P E R S O N
AT .’02 N ' L s i ) i i e r Ave . S.vsfoid
M w d d f .f h t it i i . ( i 4 , * J 0 a m

•

4 2b A M

N i l l ’ ML*N| CAl.l S' IM t ASI

Reliable and eipecwnced homo
ond otfxo cleaning Dolly,
weekly, or monthly Reason
obi* rota* Coil 1H H it

?1— Apartments/
House to Share
F E M A L E W A N T ID T O SHARE
1 bdrm apt Call Debbie attar

s.» ) 7tag ______________
Wanted: I tamato ta mere a 1
bdrm home wilh 1 eduil* SIX)
per mo e 1/1 uflllltos Coll
W II

She'* Madam C ju n try
SI70 mo Ulllllloe 4
Included i l l 7ltt

♦3— Rooms lor Rent
C hr m ien Apts 4 Homes
T V . kitchen, laundry maid. t*0
wk 4 up o n 411 m * f i)« * io
Clc an. Cemtarlabto Raam Ma d
service 14* wk . Includes all
uUlItto*. Call U J t a U or H I
4*47_____________ _______
Furnished Reem ta Private
home I person. &gt;4* a week
U tilities included 71) l i l t
S A N FO R D Furnished room* by
tho weak Reasonable ratat
AAeld service C*« H J 4»7
S 7 PM 411 Palmetto Aye
Sleeping Room with kllchon ond
laundry privileges *40 par
week C all H J *417
___
TH E FLO R ID A H O TE L
*00 Oak Avenue
111 *M4
Reasonable WaeUy Rata*
Long weed Furnished room lor
rant Lokatronl homo, mature
person J)S &gt;44*

M inim um I yaart t

LABORER
N o M p tr lH H t n « &lt; tt M r y Mutt
fwiv* Irb o ip o rU iio n io i fron%
%top Apply «ft»f ) Jl PM
A A B R M lin f Cm
I N I M t t r t ’i
Rm 4
U N to r i
................. M l M il

TEACHERS
E a r ly C h ild h ood Education
P rrg ra m In child car* can
•e ra O p e n in g s in 4 d l y
Longwaod area Musi have
d a g r a t
H o u r s
4 10AM I I M P M . Monday
Friday Prelor mother loo*Ing
for port lim e work Work
public achool calender only
K I D S T U F F C H ILO C A R E

tai fin

between SAM A l l

TELEPHONE WORKER
Wanted full lime If yra ar
older 14 OO hr plus ticallanl
bonuses M u ll hava own
Iransportatlon Call«t*S141
fired al Jab Hunting f
C a ll F u tu re *
th e y h ave
hundreds ol |ab openings lor
I ho so who want lo work
*70 4)00
C E M E N T W ORKERS *
HELPERS
E ice llen l pay
Start right away «7S UOO
D E L IV E R Y H E L P E R S h o ts
per loneo nocastor y Full lime
Good starling pay *714)00
O E N E R A I
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
Graal ilarting
|ab Several opening* Good
pay 47* 4100
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y and
P R O D U C TIO N WORK Mott
ahllt* Open Good pay Male*
471 4)00
I M M E D I A T E O P E N IN O S
General Contlruclion tabor
Good pay *70 UOO
TR U C K D R IV E R S Long haul
Immodlalal Good drldng ra
cord Over I t *7| 4loo
L O C A L O R IV E R S Straight
truck* Good pay Start right
ow*y *70*700
R E C E P T I O N I S T . O F F IC E
H E L P E R S . C LER K S . CRT
O P ER A TO R S
Im m tdiata
Openings Good pay scotos
Call 47* 4VX) HOW I
W E L D E R S Carllllod Cicaltonl
pay scales Coll loday 471
4)00

141-Hom es F o r Sele

141— Homes Fo r Sele

n # • IN D E L TO N A n n •
• • HOM fS r o t B I N T • •
• • 114 104 • •

D E B AB Y J Bdrm . 1 bom. Fla
raam. utility room, air and
hoot, carport, large let SU.**0
attar I P M *44 4*70

R A V IN N A P AR K - J bdrm . I't
bath, cant heat 4 air. Sak.fOO
By owner salesman Da *7*4Evas 4 Weekends____________
RAVE MM4 P A R K 1 Bdrm . I't
bath, cantral air and heat
garage drapes, carpa*. Wall
cared tar Beautifully lard
Kapod By owner HJ*41*
SANFO R D D U P L E X 7*771ST*
Hghiaw n Av* Owner fmanc
Ing. no quality mg. no paints I
Bdrm . I both. *dch apart
ment over 1.000 tq ft 4 yrs
aid K ltc h a n appliances,
cantral heat and air. carpet
drapes Rental Income MOO
monthly Appointment only
Owner H J 00*7
______
S A N F O R D Oldar Charm J
b d rm . f bath Large living
roam with fireplace Formal
d in in g ro a m
R afln lah td
hardwood floors 1*7 000 Good
farms or luoso option JH
77*4 or *70 AH*_____________

NEWHOMES FOR NEXT
Energr IHKtont J b d rm , J
bath Pats* Homes nestled la
quiet country setting near
shapping 4 schools Close to
Lake Mery V a E ilt.
Check these testers*
• Frast Fraa Retr igareter
a Mtcrewsve
a Garage
a Attic Star eg#
a Washer/Drftr Cewwectien*
a On/ Sight HAenegament
Children 4 Pets Welceme
Semnr Ciluews Disc aunt
Call Now toe More Intormetien

321-3827
a Per le d N r swigli ac couple! •
1 bdrm home, control air'hoot
U J* 77) ik d 111 tale after &gt;
Rant 7 bdrm Lakstront horn#
D tB a ry 11* Angelas Rd
Beautiful vtow good fishing
a*a aa*; o r m s m ____
lo r.,or j ) Bdrm. I 1, bath living
room. carpe*ad. utility room,
cantral air/haal Security da
posit SMB. *47* mo Call be
tween 14 4 PM H J Mta
S A N F O R D Needed
L a rg s
lamlly ar lamlltos to rani 1
bedroom 1 both house 1100
par month plus utilities See al
701 Magnolia Av* Call MS
4*41 or ate 1041
_____
7 li d " " I I i'll ten * ge- * ,v
SJ7) par month 1st. Iasi, and
BMBapettrl*/ Call see 4413
J Bdrm , J bath and dan Hew
appliances Call
*77 4)14
attar * P M
__ ___
J bdrm 7 bath Large llvlnq
room with fireplace J biks
tram Lake Monroe Kitchen
equip Available Aug I 14*0
first, Iasi 4 security J H 4074

10S— DuplexTriplex / Rent
Large 7 bdrm . I bath, vaulted
calling, appliances hook up*
screened patio S li4 *400
H I 11*1 botwoon sPM L 7PM
N lct. quiet Lebe Monroe Aroo
Duple■ *14! mo First, tall, 4
security OT4T7S_____________

A V A IL A B L E NOW

1401 B Meilonvllto. 7 bdrm I
both, air appliance* SHS per
mo plus ill* security deposit
Coll 4JI M*&gt; evenings_________
1 bdrm IK b a n washer dryer
hook up. unturn , no pats Call
stter * pm DO teat

Fuf nlttod itvdH) Apartment*
On# Bedroom Aptt
Two Bo&lt;koom Aptt

2 bdim I bath 1350 mo
*700 sac 77) lose

A I Clean I bdrm Complete
privacy Perfect tor II MO'
week plus 1140 sec C o ll:
111 ll t l o r 7)1 H U _________

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SEN IO R C ITIZ EN S DISCOUNT
R AN CH S TY L E LIVINOt It

SANTORO COURT APTS.
___________323 3301
Efficiency 1215 mo 1200 sec
No pet* No children m 140*
F ik m Aptt. Hf W a w Ciflltfft
J ll PBlm#t»o Av«
___J_ Cowpn No PWon# Cjfft
L ik * M iry Oo you w p i I c u *b
furnlitod ppl for s horn#?
lo M t i l rtnf, gflltly bldg
pptko. M r— o«d porch SiogN
— rk lfg w m Hurry! 171 JftO
lo ve ly ] Horm yylltv K r — f%ed
porch Com plBf p rfw cr
week piut U M tec dtp J7J
t u t o r m n n ______________
I Bdrm ept |t| w h a
Included Security depodl
m d n ______________
1 Bedroom furni»hed eperl
monl Frivol# enlronce Coll
121 1424

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
R4LMBOO COVE APTS
C. Airport Bled
1 Bdrm , I BeiM IOim e
2 Bdrm . t Bern 1111 me

FMONI.........................IIIAdit
• COUNTRY SITTING*
Largo I 4 1 Idrns Apartments
Adult LekevivwFemily Peeittoe

AuiltbU No» Op«n Wetkend*

113— Sforagc Rentals
Mini Nuthouses
MO 4 Up

____________» 7 *470

117— Commercial
Rentals
Retail 4 OttK* Space J00 up to
7.000 sq II also storage avail
able 777 4401
Retail Store' OflK* Approe *00
sq ft lied mo 111 veeo twin*e
I Mam, altar I M pm

121— Condominium
Rentals
S IN G LE S T O R Y
LIV IN G
leata Ttirns to Fit
Your Heeds*
Futnishtd of Unfurnished.
Carports ......... Private Patie*
Lush lendscaptng Pets Children
W A TE R 410* A C C E P T E D I

Call................321-1911
127— Office Rentals
Offices lo Rant
H aa— natia and ( on van fan t
201 N Map ta U n ford
121 **0

C O M M A N D IN G B R IC K
F IR E P L A C E comas wtth IM*
&gt; Bdrm.. 1 bath hawse! Hugh
H e i r lem ily room I Large
te rts a td pallet Beautiful
fence* earner tat I Fenetfk
financing' Call es quick I
S t * .
s o t
LAR O E C O R N E R L O T carnet
with IMs 1 Bdrm. hem* ta
great tocetkuw New reef, very
c lean tow Pawn payment, law
monthly payment U7.M4

T E R R IF IC LOCATIOatl B uild
er,Owner reduces to » 10*.*001
Custom e b d rm . *v% bath ws
qutaf street over looking golf
course E itra s Include screen
porch, all new mini blind*,
m icro wove Creative flnenc
Ing aealtabla C attalbe ry
**S 741*
____________ •

STENSTROM
R E K LTY»R E A LTO R
Sanford *Sal« l**4tf
WE LIS T A N D S E L L

SANFORD REALTY

m o r e m o m es th a n

R E A L T O R ________ ____ n » » U t

A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE CO UN TY

BATEMAN REALTY

F M A Y A S P E C IA L I J Bdrm.,
IV) bath, central ale, garage,
fe n c e d y a r d , b i f c b t e
equtpped. built ta b a n tee.ee*

Lie. Real Estate broker
N V E S T
IN H O M E
O W N E R S H IP 1 bdrm I h*m
Crude Nice tar a tingle ar
retired couple Call ta be a
I awr&gt;or I J / J N

323-5774
_______ *4*4 H W Y, D -f J ________
Hidden Lake las Wildwood Dr
J bdrm/J bath, dbl garage
parch, can tra l a ir Supar
Ctoan&gt; Assumable SA* 000
R EALTO R
M A R V IN K LA IL
eel aia*
or 7*1 7M7

I ACRES
new ha
Bast altar I

tar a Mobile er
b* buta vpto

W O R K IN G M O T H E R S
DR F AM I | sue from (toman
lory School, j Mbs. from Day
Cara Confer I bdrm I bath
newly decorated hum* Act
Nose datura School Opens I
are.***

7 r i_ _ fT l
INMPISfXSft *HB\|H ISRlWtllftl

SALES ASSOC. W A N TE O I
744* Venture Ave

KISH REAL ESTATE

W H A T A B U Y I ) bdrm I beta
hare e with Wh.it trick Frw .l
An a a lln klfchan. cantral
ale/baaf. dining area, carport
with weeding tot limes HI.***
A LO V E N E S TI 7 bdrns I both
hom* ta qutaf weighbarhaed
freshly painted, eat ta klfchan.
large hack yard III.***
S TA R T H E R E ! I kdrm I kath
tome with spin bdrm ptan.
paddle tarn, tat ta klfchan.
large utility, toncod romptoto
ly. aa*. fee
LOTS OF CH AR M I J kdrm J
ka*h ham* ta rapidly Brewing
value area Split kdrm plan
dmlng room, cantral tir/haal.
arte peel 4 tennis epuets

M H )7 5 t E v t . 323-7443
BRING Y O U B O A T I4 Btfrm J
Vy b*th custom conttmpo
r#fy Lcv#ir h k Ing f»*j U l
lake R E D U C E D T O t'kiOOO
Ask tor Jan* Griggs Rtellur
Associate E R A G L O B A L
Properties *1* *000 or JJf 7T7T
lovonlngi)

CANAL F R O N T 4 bdrm / He
beta Unusual Detlgn with
Large Screened. Landscaped
C e e rly a rd . Bell* In g r ill,
central vac-rum, cenvenlenl
hlichen Fireplace IIH .N * M
O ECO BATOR TO U C H E S edd ta
Iha Charm at this J bdrm /I
beta heme Nice carpet and
drapes. Whit* Br ck Fireplace
ta Faulty Raam Calling Ians
A Real S h a rp H a m a al
4e«.e*i M

• Y OW NER U l MO J Bdrm 1
Bath, largo kitchen, haat/alr.
fireplace utility room. J car
garag*. quiat corner, big oaks
Call H I HOP or H ) 01*7
BY O W N ER
Custom bull), energy affictont
modern hom*. 1 years old
Split plan. J bdrm . 7 lull
baths, study, large dan with
ttpne fireplace. 17 X JO Fla
Room, aot In kitchen. Indoor
tawdry room, aetra largo J
car g a ra g * w ith b u ll! In
thalvas. work bench, ole
Largo shaded yard, privacy
fenced In back with full motor
hom * h o o k up
E le g a n t
landscaping Locatad *• *M
Plumose O r . Sanford U* MO
CAM H J ***4
____________
) bdrm/J both Beautiful hom*
In Loch Artror Screen room
double garage, groat room
with built In Bor B Q (hill,
largo shaded tot *70.000 down
and atlum * F H A mortgag*
No qualifying Call tor detail!
H I S7B4

O PEN SUN DAYS. I ta I PM

(305) 32!-0041
SttW llta Street
Lentord. FI &gt;7771

REALTO R
LAR OE H O M E — L A R O E LO T
Quiet street Fie up 4 save big!
I Bdrm . 7 Bath at 1471 Vale
Priced to tali U * wo

CALL BART
R IA L E S TA TE
R EALTO R
m ie t*
LOHOWOOO ) Bdrm . IV) bath
cantral air, carpeting, aetrat.
fenced eery art Only SSI *00
with MOUO down No quell
tying
Ooorga Wlllmer Assoc . Inc.
Can
0)1 asoo

NEWHOMES TON SALE!

TH E C ASUAL L IF E I J bdrm I
hath ham* wtfh 14 X H . vskem
pool, hat tub 4 spa. kltchan
t e l l y e q u ip p e d , c e n tra l
alr/haat. peddle Ians Law
priced tar tall sell 111 ITt.M t
W ILL B U IL D T O S U ITI YOUR
L O T OR O UR SI EXCLU S IVE
A O I N T F O R W IH S O N O
D E V CORP.. A C E N TR A L
F L O R ID A L E A D E R ! MORE
H OM E FOR LESS M O N EY!
C A L L TO O A Y I
e O C N E V A O SCEO LA RD *
Z O N E D FOR M O BILES!
* Acre Caunfry tracts
Wall fraud on pevod Rd
M to Down |* Yrs. * t l7 \ l
From tis.taei
It yuu ere toukmg tar a sue
ctssful career ta Real (slat*
Slanstram Realty It tanking
tar yuu Call Laa Albright
today at 171 141* Evenings
771 MdJ

CALL A N Y TIM E

322-2420
mi PARK A V E .......... Untold
tal Lk. Mary Blvd
U M try

E X C IT IN G NEW T H IN G S A R E
H A PPEN IN G AT
TH E

down no qualifying Call
Anita. 1H If47or 114 1220

NEW 3 BDRM. MFG. HOME
on t acres Geneva Tu rn Kay
Package SM.tOO H J SJ00
He Qua Illy Ing ) bdrm . J bath'
J S acres. Ganava Owner II
fencing. *7 ysq Own it s too
14**717
0*4*44- 4 bdrm , J both on I
acres with hors* born and
pastors *74.*00

t M 3 $ ie § C o v €
APARTM ENTS

New Hemet Near Osteen J
Bdrm . I beta, air heal.
*7) 000 11*00 dawn Includes
doting casts Paym antt of
U M par month

$100 SECURITY DEPOSIT
[

C O U N TR Y W ID E R E A L T Y
Rag R E Broker .......... 77)4)1*
4M H w r.4U .O ttaats.P la.
Own both suet ot lueury duple ■
Sava 14 000 In Real estate toes
tie 000 U l 1*17

S E C U R IT Y D E P O S IT......... S IM
W ITH THIS ADI

141— Horn** For Sale

1 A 2 BEDROOM APTS. AVAILABLE
ADULTS AND FAMILIES WELCOME
2714 R I O G E W O O D A V E . , S A N F O R D

323*7900

CONSULT OUR

MASTERS COVE........323 7900
Immeculota 1 bdrm 1 both
Condo
W a s h e r/ d ry e r.
garbage dispotol. drape* 4
mini blinds Watte 4 garbage
In c lu d e d
Pool F i r s ! 4
security *47* mo H I M S I
oiler I PM
L o v e ly 1 b d rm ., close to
downtown *IM wk . include*
utilities SIM tec dap Coll
111 ta li or I II 0*41
______
Near Downtown ] bdm I both
opt Carpet 4 appliance*
First mo and security No
pots H I * * » . o r m i t l f

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
I Bdrm Ouptea wilts Pool

P A IN T E R S 4 P A IN T E R
HELPERS
I m m a d la la
openings, good starting pay
Call today *rg tu c
O R Y W A L L With ar without
a a p o r la n c o
I m m t d la l*
openings Good pay Coll to
day « f t AMR________________

121 Bonus anth this id
Heeded immediately
Hurling
Assistant* and Live Ul Com
pontons I year eipofienct
required
M E D IC A L P ER SO NNEL
POOL

wsotgatii

lo t

M F/ H / V

time paoiltoni Call U l 1*U
Business Dress Required

5 L O C A T I O N S ^ S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y

• Auto / Tri/ck Rolueling
• Full Lino Convenience Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens

73— Employment
Wanted

*7— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

ROOFER

1)00 a weak to train lull and pari

( ■ (./&lt;' &lt; ! / &lt; &gt; / &gt; CENTERS

W A N T E D Ratirad man to da
light carpentry wort Coll
m MM Otter I PM

n i n il___________ _______

Grill' Counter Ftfsoft
Kilo 70 hr* per eras* M ull b*
hanasl and abla lo work
weekends Apply In person
Slue key's, 1/4 4 SI Hd 144
between I pm 4 1 pm_______ _
i r S T O V P A R T Y T IM E
A O A IN I
Homo of Lloyd now hiring led**
lo d e m o n s tra te To y / G III
peril** E arn 17000 FR E E hit.
supplies Coe/Phono Winter
Sprgi n r IMS. Sanford Lake
Mery i l l 7*S0 Cattollierry
t tt MRS. ___________________

E vporloncad preterrad. but will
trpln Cacti lent benohlt wim
compefItlvo pay Apptyat
The Lowe's T r v ll Plant
m i Aileron Circle (Airport)
Senior* twdotlrtol Park

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

EXPERIENCED
SEWING MACHINE
OPERATOR
•ALL OFtlATIOftS OflN
•MOMIN All
CMOutoKfo n a u n
• paio vaoiiior
• 7 PAID HOLIDAYS

• HIALTH CAM PtAN
• PIICI MM IAARIKS
•STtAOV MOM
• OVtinm AVAILAIll

SAN-DEL MFG.
2240 OM U . Harr Bd.
W a r d . FI 1212110

1340 SJSO
Adults 4 Familto* Wekemol
lit* Security Dapastt
Con .................................m m *
S p a c io u s A p a rtm e n t*
Loketrenl. pool tormls. adults,
no pels, laundry Sterling el
tie* u s e Cell 7714747 to soo
J and ) bdrm Alia furnished
* ttic tone y Irom |71 week 12*0
deposit No pot* Cell U l *M7
* 7 PM 41* Palmetto
I Bdrm tor single working
person UA* per me r Oeposll
1*17 Elm Ave U l W7t
I Bdrm , I bath Oelvst Apt
U7B per month D M security
deposit Call U J *IM
a m SPECIAL
I 4 I bdrm Irani SJtt Lake
Ado Ftoalkto leas* 111 *470

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
AEMOOCIING SPECIALIST
Wt Handle

Tha Whole Bell Of Was

R. (. LINK CONST.
3227029
F mane me Available

Aligns Appliance Sentce
Jake U r Vice Ha E itra Char pel
17 Y r (e p
*4*1441... *7* U l )

Carpentry
All types *• &lt;*&gt;p*ntry 4 re
modeling |7 yrs asp Call
Richard Grata U l a n

He*, lentord J bdrm J both
fully cargo tod. screened potto
SMB mo Deposit H I *7*1
Weklva River l « i acre private
wooded ond tonced I bdrm j
b a th , la m lly raam w ills
fireplace Horse OK SS7* Call
HI M
M
_______________
I B d rm Callage Complete
privacy 14* week with S700
security Call 11! Il* » ar
H J *477______________________

Cleaning Service

103—Houses

Senior* J bdrm m hom. cent
s ir , hoof washer dryer M e t.
a p p lia n ce s selling tan*,
tensed yard. SaM me e deg.
' i l l tope

Lawn Service
law n car* and fra* tar vie*
By lh* |Ob or monthly contract
feed Vihton ...................H I 1**1

Home Improvement
Appliance Repair

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

Unfurnished / Rent

General Services
Lo,m g Car* tor Vour E&gt;d*riy
W* have years of aepananca
4 good rtf H I 771* altar J or
&lt;04 7U M I4
ROBERT E G R E E N E
C a n lra lt 4 M a lnfan anca
Spadalllf m E le ctrica l 4
Pnaum alicConfrotaHJH**

Head Carpal Ctoanmq Living.
Osmng Raam i Hall II* *#
Safa 4 Ch*i. I ll )7) m e
J U S T a iN IIS
Protosaional Cleaning
Call
H i 4*47

(alliar s Rucldtag 4 Ramadeling
•to Job Ta* Small
I I I turton Lana. Santoed
H I 4*11
THOMAS 4 TH O M A S . Haws*
repair, cleaning lawn car*
Call H I )***

Home Repairs
C A R P EN TER
R epairs and
remodeling No lob too smell
Coll J ll U4&gt;________________
Maintenance ol *n f ?p*s
Carpentry, pointing plumbing
and l toetrie H I *074
W ILLIS H OM E R E P A IR
ling ... Additions
4
All T ypus Repo .c*I
Insured
N R ta 4 to o s m o H ^ _ ^ _ J 7 M N *

Landclearing
Electrical
Aayfhtag Electrical State 1*7*1
(ifim tta s 14 Hr to rtK * Calls
Tans‘% ItasftK U rsK * 771 77J*
C O N T I MPORARy I H C I H l C
Campieto (toelocal Service*
TV 4 T«l*phan*s_______ H I 1*77
D 4 S IlacfrK
.
777 M M
New 4 ' •mud*img addittoes*.
Ian*, security light* lim a n
pit* pit piac servKas Qualify
U r » ic * l tensed 1 “

O E N E V A L A N O C L E A R NG "
lot Londctoanng
' M d.M
Topsoil Ronds Orpin ditches
Si to Fr»paralton Call JaMWB
TH O R N E L A N D C L tA R IN O
F IL L O lN I a C L A Y •
SHALE 4 H A U L IN G
TH M il

Lawn Sarvic*
Lm b

flits
U J 74J*

IANNS MOMO A TRIMMED
Spring Yard Cleon up*

Painting
Florida Me Id 4 Mildew
Specialist!
11 yrs E tp
Fra* E it
Bonded
Insured
w g t r ib b v
las 1441

H I tt*l

Paper Hanging

Quality Liwr Cart
At AHardobto P rk us H t 4*71
SUM M ER ( L E A N UP
Mowing
Shrub Pruning
B i l l I S T lM A T C S ....... U9 I2M

Masonry
I ANY T H IN G IN C O N C R E TE !
Pel* Oriveway I 4 c . u l Etc
Fra* (tttm a to t Gladly O H tnl
B EA U M O N D E Cansl C*
W e Ar* Th* B a tr' ..... U l &gt;4*7

Music Lessons
Guitar Lessons
All ages, all tovuis. Pro Bock
yound Ckll Ju l*
Mlkkki

N

I L
Papa* Gale (eperl
•need Free Ellimetos. Guar
aniaed U l *I|L ar 744 17*4

Paving
A I Aspeutil Paving. Inc
Grading 4 paving asphalt ra
pair*, seal coating, fraftic
markings, drivaveayt 4 park
ing tots Fraaasl H I lata

Sprinklers/lrrigatlon
A B O U T TIM E IR R IG A TIO N
torn InstalLafiant .. F ra a C lt
E epaet Repairs of Camptata
Vprmktar Systems
Tlm trs
Pumps
E fc
its 74Sk

Nursing Care

Tile

OUR R A T K S A R E LOW ER
L a k e ,* — NuTsing Center
ft* I Second VI . Seeto'd
I H 47*7___
4 Nmol* bods kvailabto tor day.
w**k. or month care Call tor
taler motion at Southorn Ham*
Pefiremonl Cantor 171*471

A m T i L I Ceramic III*, aota*
and uselailnlian bams. near*.
707 ( ISTh SI . Santard
H I ISO H J JSBi John Parker

Painting
(•pari Pamfmg/WallPapering
Free aki motok &gt;7 a roll l/Jatl
an Palming I JJ7 104*_________

Fishers W*llp*p*i A PtiRtiB|
I’m proud pi m y week I N* |eb
too small Freaaet r n 7770

Tree Service

ECH O LS T H E ( SERVICE
Fra* Estimates' LawPeicatt
Lie-.to* Slump C*i*dtag.Tapl
H I 7770 day ar Mta
"Laffha I
JOHN A LLR N S L AW N 4 T R E E
Dead fvaa ramauai Lie. 4 tat
Fraa ash H I SH*

�S ANFO R D ljfll Palmetto k ,*
] Bdrm 4 I b**h. Hugh c a n v
lot Sopor*** oovtox garag*
Zonad CC 1. IH5O0
Wallet* C r « l R * * n ,. In*..

******.....................main
St Jo** Rive* Con*I Front 1
H rm
w ith fa m ily room
Largo M i d i* lot Mvllot Lak*
Pork Ut.000
W ill s u n ! Co ______ 321 5005
■I l l I Q I t

'
S

T

E

m

p

e

r

217— Garage Sales

1M— Television /
Radio / Stereo
• .C O L O R T E L E V IS IO N * *
Zenith IS" CMor taiovUien Ortg
Inal price over IBOC Bolonco
duo U U 00 rath or taka over
payment* i l l month Still In
w a rra n ty
NO M O N E Y
DOWN Froa horn* trial, no
obligation Call Bel I3*a. day
pr night______________________
Satellite system* complete
Stereo receiver. dish etc
t i r o Con m i srn

117—

S p o r t in g G o o d s

I M r m . I Roth VHU
than new! Vortical bllrtdi In
tvory room Ho* rang* and
r o frlg o ra to r
B ra n d no *
ta rp o lt C o rno r unit with
gar ago 55* 000

• EA CH CR U ISER . C O N CO R D
Man'* 1 Women'* AAany cal’
or* Naw with warranty |1&gt;g,
attambied PJ-* Cyct* Cantar.

P R IM E B U IL D IN G L O T In
good aroo ot San lord! I ’ MO

l l f — Office Supplies
/ Equipment

Largo homo with oat In
largo living room.
laundry, doubt* car
control air/ boat
• O o m r *11 finance

kitchen,
In door
garag*

11*000

O T N I R H O M ES. LO TS.
AC R EAG E IN V E S T M E N T
P R O P E R TY
CALL A N Y T IM E
R E A L TO R ----------------------- 111 m i
________ LIST W ITH U SI________
By Owr.tr ] bdrm , I tail,
Largo lot Spaclout 1/00 tq fl
under root 55.000 do * n .
#»»um*bt# mortgag* l-i city,
Santord n « *00 Ooy m $ » ; .
Era*. aiOBSJ

H5— Resort
Property / Sole
O C E A N V IE W
Luaurtow* 3
itory. ] bdrm , 1 bath. I year
old homo, with toparat* guett
apt la vish ly furnished In
rattan and wicker. tlroplac*
balcony, paddi* tana, O B L car
garag* laundry room. Iwlth
waahar/dryar) Immaculately
docoraiad and lu rnlah ad
Amanltlaa plua. ahow caaa
hnma I ' i t *00 Owner Hnane
Ing . Open Houle Sal
Sun .
12 S P M . &gt;510 S Atlantic Are
Now Smyrna [K U IU J I00( or
m i/fT______________________
O C E A N FR O N T
Unfurnished new I bdrm Con
dominium
M l *00 Poaalbly
no mono* down!
Baathatd* Realty. R E A LTO R S
*04 411 1111________Open 1 P a n t

149-Commercial
Property / Sale
COM M ER CIAL S P E C IA LIS T
BOR M B ALL. JR P A
R E A L T O R ..._____
m t lll

151— Investment
Property / Sale
C A S S ELB E R R Y I acr*. toned
PR 1 ULOno W Maliciowtkt.
r e a l t o r ____________ m *rt&gt;
. I t ACRES Slate Rd a* and I a
' area Income preparty with
&lt;aah How 1 homo* and &gt;
mobile* on property &lt; a
future commercial area Call I
m to o o
1 5 J— A c re a g e

Lots/Sale
O S TE E N
10 acre* ot land
Priviiaga* to St John * Rlvor
Boa) ramp, pincnlc area, tiah
Ing AAobil# hem* or aingi*
family construction T u rn *
*&lt;ail*bi* i l l . WO
H Q. R E A L T Y .................MMBB b
S I acraaa In tho City ot Lak*
Mery on Ih* aoulh and o&lt; 4th
SI I within th* city limit*)
U ) 000 caah It interacted
call Ml M70

155 -Condom inium s
Co-Op / Sale
Svtdiowood Villa* I bdrm
belh. upotalrc Pool (2S0C
" *11 1S5J

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
Pam Park 1*00 Frontier t o * » ,
I Bdrm I bath. Screened
porch, cabana air Mual b*
• moved I I WO n o lle *

E E L f
Lltotlmo
Advil Pork____ ______ Lai Rant*
tlB M H I
Include* A *'* ' Garbage Pk* UP
••
YardMatnfananca
Immadial* Occupancy
Property AAabRo Howaoo.m-IWB
J bdrm &gt; bom. central heat and
air. carpal, appliance*. Vary
low down, aaaum* payment*
m Tail attar I R . P M
_____

111— Appliances
/ Furniture
AppUaacat Far Sal* ail la
aicallaat condition A fully
...................m*r*o
G irl’* M r m *at. » piece P ranch
Provoncial. Lamp,
iabia. chair. M l BOB*
Hard Rack AAapio Dining Sot,
I able. * chair* and hutch *100
AAapie Bedroom Sat Double
bad. daubi* draaaar with
m irror and chatl. U » Sleep
or tula, floral d**ign it *
now Sloopor never mad &gt;IBB
A ll in MCOllanf cend,Hon
Call « o « « m ________________
AA*I*I datk. electric thru* baby
Clama* t month* to I year*,
play pan. all In aacallanl
Condi Hon Call M l D U

ITT S 110

Button r hones
tnetallad W a r r a w t y . u y w t
0**d C-tke Fere- Data &gt;. chair*,
table*, book****. Til* cab .
ty p e w rite r, phone*, an*
machine 122 4155

195— Machine ry/Tools
Farm

Tractor MF fa* ditk.
hog. back blade, dual
ail* trallar. I t*nra chargor
All avcaliant condition call
MS 1*0) attar 1 P M

199— Pets A Supplies
Ability K uw ait Dog hoard ng
Country Atmotphar* Ration
a b la R a to *
H I 111B

FREE KITTENS!
4 lamaiat I weak* old
C a n ______________
Ml UH
F R E E TO GOOD"~MOMES 1
mala black labrador and I
young t»mala M2 4411______
Free to good horn* 4 yr old
W almtralnor Groat family
dog AM thot* Call 121 5400
Obedience Ciattet Augutt y d .
I B A M 540 for I w**k*
Dalton* area Call M l B541
P E T S K U N K FOR SALE
Trained 515
M l 1151
P IT R U LL P U P P IE S
550 each Spot* and matk*
Ml MOO
R O T T W E IL E R
P am ela *
month* Pur# brad, M paper*.
BTO Mala*. I weak* old
Ability Kennel*
111 tile

201 — Horses
Call about our tumtnar riding
p ro g ra m
R o y a l R id in g
Academy, M l l « l »

WILSON K A J E I F U R N I T U I L
n i m t - W E T - - ........JO -99M
2/TH S T I t c f f U l N I T U I I
I9TW. E R M ............ .......n i ro *

I 1 lamUy Garag* Sa'a
B'a dod oval rug r X I 1 ‘. earth
tenet 5*0. D E L bed, ISO.
electric tewing machine with
attachment*, table model,
eieettent working condition.
US. twin bed Ipr tad curtain*,
book*, tire*, car mat. doth**
email to large, and many
M vtttiaid item*, boat and
trailer, I I ' Courtney wllh bat*
•aat*. Highland* trailer. Ilk*
new. tin* tithing boat M25
1*1* Dettun . 110 1 door coupe.
I bpood t l m i i r i
trenemktian. * eye Under, fuel
In fe c t io n , A / C . A M / F M
ttoreo. SB 000 actual mile*.
Ilk* n*w WOC I t n Duttan
510. 4 uwwd 4 door. A/C and
JL/T, great condition good tor
Itudont. 51100 Call M l MM
I01B S a r lta t t between
Hardee t and Bahama Joa*.
rain or ihlna. F rl Sat, 95 PM
Dealer* wgttoma____________
C ARPO RT SALE
Friday and Saturday. I B A M
till T. m Fairway Dr. (On#
block watt oi Up** (a l_________
C A R P O R T S A LE
1410 L4t*
Ay* Kid* Oettw* &gt;4. toy* and
mltcellenmwi. Saturday only I
P IP M
GARAGE SALE
C lo th e * .
Itwlery. mltcellanaou* Horn*
Saturday Only. | 5 P M 111
Wild*wood D r., Itdden Let*

E******

To s to p HttTfeoo:*

217—Garage Sales

231-Cars

M0 E m h Street Furniture
clothe*, bike, and miicalla
naou* Item* Frl Sat ( 1 P M

F R N IE JACKSON .....M l 15M
' l l Pontiac LaMant 4 dr
t a d t n . V/4 auto, pow er
•Nering brake* air. #m/fm
radio Dark blue with m#i
chlng Interior One owner t

t . Aluminum* Can* Newipapar
Mew Far rev* Metal* . . . . . . G»a»*
.......................125 MM
Baby Bad*. StreHan CMthet
Playpen*. Etc. Paparbacb
t MIAJ11 111TM4
Need Crib*. Playpen* Baby
fu rn itu re , clothing Good
Price* Alter 1 PM
M l 51*1

21 3 — A u c t i o n s
POR E S T A T E
C om m e rcial or R * tld * n ll* l
A uc I lorn A Appeal**!* Call
0*111 Auction m 1410_______
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday. Augutt y d . 1 BBP.M.
BRIDGES AND SON
IV* mil** a**t *4 1-4
S ANFO R D....................... SUIBBI

215— Boats and
Accessories
Houtaboal M live aboard Ileal
Ing horn* L a k e M o n ro *
I I I doe. makeotter I I I *0*4
t r Lar tan All A m tr k a t
Johnton 40 H P wllh till Ireilar
t i r o or beat oiler Coll 154
I f l l I D a y * ) o r 515-1159
(Nit**) **k lor Glenda
14 f I Waller aft Bowrldtr 10 HP
Mercury with new tloinl***
prop, galv drive on Ireiier
Etcollont condition 51000
M l MB*______________________
I***’ Century M u ita ag lilt
trellor. 140 1 0 . IV* year*
naw Excellent condition
Celt M I 1410 attar * P M

Iff* 5150 W ion Pick up with cab
over tamper Sleep* * . re trig
erehP Move, full bath tatt
contained, gond condition.
53450 pr bet) Otter 331(051
IBIS CMEVT LU V P ICK UP
W ITH T O P P E R !
L IK E HEWI ......................... (MTS
C O U R TE S Y P O N T IA C m i l H
IflB Chevy cullom van for ta x
1f l » Chavy Pick U p Cell
MY Ikl*_____________________
l t d Ford Brener Rod. Bl.KJC
M l T ill or **f 51M A»k for
Jim .
_____________________
1* Chevy Van. t ton New
motor Blown head gaikai
*1500 M5 5551
-tl DwfgaPfck Up
Lit# New !.
IS 000 mile*
Steel
No Money Down I
C O UR TESY P O N TIA C 51*2131

M l Y A M A H A V IR O G A Low
milage etcelionl condition
|IM0 JM«0k4 alter t P M

m

s i . Sat.. A T Oeik.
accettoviet.

WdlEf'l dolt*#*:, mltc ih

219— Wanted to Buy

223— Miscflhncous
Air Candltianar 31 *00 B TU .
111! TV Con*ol* w/ phono A
AM /FM tK® Call Ml 51(1

Complete Lining Room Set
Ca II

M l SIM

DIAMONDS
o I Met
O I 45 tt
o I O ld
o l lid
O 14 Ct

(2.150
(1.150
II.MO
*1.150

TR E A S U R E ISLAND
JE W E L R Y
2*011* i . U N F O R D AVE
C A LL; ........................... 311(511

231 — Cars
B id C rtd il!

N oCitdit?

W FINANCE
W A LK IN .....______DR IVE O UT

NATIONAL AUTO SALIS
b a k e d Av* E Mth Sf , 2114(11

Hwy t l .............. Daytana Beach
* * * * * Held* * * * * * *

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
Every Wad Nlfaaf l i d PM

* Where Anybody *
* Can Buy or Soil) *
Far

im m

t in

D b U tv Aula A M ariM S*la»
Ac rot •Vft# f in # , to# if Nil
n o ta r y IF
O t4 ry
iU I
C R N lC JA C K S O N ____Ml DM
*43 AAtfCvry
4 Of
Wdan Bl*ck with butgsodf
trim
On# D «n#r
71 000 #&lt;tu#l ml
E &gt;fr# Hic#l

Yard Sal* 10* Flr*t S I . Lak*
Mary Aug Jrd A am I Sal
Sun I f to I Radial arm taw
houtehoid Ham*, workahop
■had w/light* A aloe lean bo
moved), picture*, mite_______
Yard
Saturday, Aug
I M
5 109 W urn
litem*
MltcelL
1 Family Garag* Sal* Saturday
Only I *4 P M Bad* couch.
T V . toy*, cloth#* a llttl* ot
everything 141* M arthall
Av* to ll Santa Barbara.
Behind Seminole H S I_______

OVER I N

B u y He re , Pay H e re
Big C a r s • Small C a rs • T ru c k s

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

M i l l R E P O 'S T O CHOOSE F R O M !!

•NO DOWN PAYMENT
• UP TO 60 MONTHS
FINANCING UPON
APPROVED CREDIT

AVAILABLE ON
SELECTED MODELS

• 1983 CH EV ETTE
A/C, Autom atic

4 1 7 5 S . O t l.n d o D r.
S A N FO R D 32771

FULLY EQUIPPED SERVICE DEPARTMENT
WITH COMPUTERIZED BEAR ANALYSIS
NOW AVAILABLE.

Budget
nENl A CAR OF SEMINOLE CO

SUPER SUMMER SALE

E R N IE JACKSON
111 31M
(0 Toyot* Pick up 4 * 4
4cyl . a'anderd thift radio
Beige with matching Interior I
Only
(41*5

1984

1985

ESCORT

ESCORT
*6100

*4500

VW RABBIT

1981 Escort
1980 Datsun 310
1980 Monzi
1979 AMC Limited

TOPAZ
*6700

$5 1 0 0

LTD

LTD BROUGHAM

*8800
ALL CARS FULLY EQUIPPED,
EXTRA CLEAN, LOW MILES!!!

*6100

704 Sovago C t.
Fo r M o r o In f o r m a tio n O n
longwood FL
Th o s o W h o l o s a l o V a l u o s
32750
C a ll:
3 3 1 -5 1 1 1 /8 3 0 -8 10 2
Cars Can A ls o Be Seen A t S a n fo rd A ir p o r t Term inal

Token By Phone
CAM NO W

QMS
FO R D
CHRYSLER
AM C

• 1981 SED AN D EVILIE
FLEETW O O D Bronze

3 6 5 -3 3 0 0

• 1980 FORD P U
Lariat

■ R N IE JACKSO N.........M l 2MB
(2 Chevy Pick up/&gt;10
acyl tlandard. power ateering
_________ E lire me* 1

Appt

• 1982 O IO S TO R O NADO
Sunroof

WARRANTIES

• 1981 DATSUN 280 11
G lP . 1 lops

CHEVY I I I
Automatic, V/(. Air Like New!
Meet
No kAxwy Down'
C O U R TE S Y PONTIAC M l t i l l
E R N IE JA C K S O N .......221 IMO
t l Dodge Rem Pic* Up
key*. *u*o. *&gt;r. radio
I .tr* . .
I'rn rd to evil1

• W ill T o k * T r o d e t -

• 1977 CO R VETTE
Low M iles

• TRADES ACCEPTED

235—Tru cks /
Buses / Vans

*450 DOWN

• 1982 CAD ILLAC COUPE
D E V ILIE
G rit

• EXTENDED

71 CUTLASS SUPRLME

D IS C O U N T A U T O B A L E S
1 ( 0 1 p - nr* *»» 11:i I BBS

• 1981 CAD ILLAC COUPE
D E V IL IE
Light 3!ut

• ASSUME BALANCE

• 1980 1 BIRD
2 Door. Dark Blue

B**t o*t*r ...______ . 113 e*»i
It Chevrolet Hatchback Kl)
V I angina On* owner (2500
M l 0101 ____ ________
_
(I C t c o r t G L
Loaded
5*50 Down Smell Mo Payment
Ch ic o ( t h e m a n
tteeeee
'■3 B U ICK R EO A L 10* C O UP
AIN A U TO M A TIC I O W N E R
Reduced!
540*5
NO M O N E Y DOWN III
C O U R TE S Y PONTIAC 211 l i l t

# We #ew F mance
a Down Payment* (300 and Up
a Trad* In* Accepted

6 6 8 -8 6 5 9

823 S. HWY. 17-92 DEBARY

• 1979 CAM ARO
Red, Mag W heels

C H E D IT HASSLES?

Bu'id a Bigger Bu*m#t*i
u u The Herald Claatihadt
C A LL TO D A Y
JM M1I

The 17-92 Bridje
Vt Mile On Right

Actr ss

• 1981 D ELIA 88 R O TALE
Nice Clean Car

1979 Olds Cutlass
1976 Alpha Romeo

4 Family Yard Sale Furniture,
ctra m k t end mltcoUanoout
Soturoay and Sunday, T 5
P M I I I Burton Lana_________

J im L a s h ’s

GOOD USED CARS
NO CREDIT NEEDED

• 1980 FIR EB IR D
Automatic. Air. l o « Miles

U SED C A R S
T H E B E S T IN T O W N
E 2 TER M S

SALES

ARISTOCRAT MOTOR CARS

M ult Sail! 1*11 Tont Ranchero
air run* good V X or be*I
otter 1*00 ChevroXI Citation
am Im. 4 dr hatchback 11400
or be*l olter M l 5*14
1(25 N O V A Good londitlon
MOO Dattun Pickup. (400
Call » l ana________________
•*a Ply Val 225 P S tinted
window*. FM Eat Cong
M m lie o &gt;150 or beat M J (« ie
a* V W For Sex E vc el lent
ru n n in g cen dlllon
Good
Stereo V550 negotiable M3
*051
11 FORD PICKUP
Run*good thk)
__ M l 1(31
______
' l l P IN TO WAGON tkW Good
tren*portallo« Alter (. 221
0051 ____ ________
’l l Cadillac El Dart it* Sun Reel
M utt Sacnfacei
tee*
C O U R T ! I » PON T I kl. 131 J1J!

* DAYTONA AUTO#
★ AUCTION ★

TO P Dollar Paid tor Junk A
U**d cart.truck* A haary
equipment 533 &gt; m
W i P A Y T O P D O LLA R FOR
3UNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS A U T O P AR TS 3*1 4545

AUTO

5 * II'. I ’ k h tide* with a ittei
floor *450 Only Infer eded
call M l (1*4 after ( P M
Roed CIS ecrott from Lake
Monroe Pot* Oflice. green
frailer

' l l Cadillac Cauye D a V lIlt
Loaded *1 000 ml Trad* tor
i m i l l t r car or Japan***
pickup truck of eqo*l value
51500 M l IMS________________

(I 150

243— Junk Cars

F IV E S T A R

237— Tractors and
Trailers

O A R A G E SALE
M i l
G-**n,l*w D r . D E L TO N A
Saturday, 0 to 4 P M
O IA N T Y A R D SALE
thing tor everyone! Saturday.
* A M 4 P M 144 Baywood
Circle. Sunland E (tale*
• Cl*dung t i e .
held Item*, odd* A end* Set
AugS. » ? 1501 Santord Aye
M ating Sal* Hout* full ot
furniture, antique Ice boa,
mitcallenaout Aug Jrd A ath
MTS Norm Rd Santord 115
milt* from 14 Wt*t on 44 I
Alter Aug am. Cell I I I ill*
M O V IN G I A L E I A lim * ot
everything! 1500 Oak A v * .
Sen lord Sat A Sun. * t
Moving Sal* Dining room and
bedroom tat. all wood Siaopar
•ot* and other thing*. Sunday
only * I P M 15SO El Capiian
Dr . Santord M l teal
M O VIN G S A L E H Saturday A
Sunday
All Dayl
Furniture,houtehoid good* A
toy* l i t Etcambi* Dr . San
lord
R E M O D E L IN G SALE I Being
dinette H i. k lichen gadget*,
100 gal Ml drum w/ BO gal oil
1414 Orange Av* Friday A
Saturday. * till 4

GEESE $10 m c H
Great burglar alarm* I . l i m n
Laying Han*. Saa length. For
*al* IIP Orang* A r t w*tl ol
1/4 M l tea*

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes

How WEGfcTT«e Ice CC£AM MAH

m s

S A L E - Sal O n ly
E ttd rlc
rang*, fabric, craft tuppllet,
houMhold Item*, clolhat A
loT * m Club Read Laniard
Saturday enly ( A M to I P M
Twin bad*, and tablet, bowling
ball*, game*, dew clot! at,
lawelry book*, odd* and and*
i W Palmetto Av*
Yard Sale Sal A Sun . * t BBQ
grill, living room tat. *o&gt;
appliance*, tlarao. book*,
m lK FIT N Charoka* Circle
CASH O N L Y . P L E A S E !______
Yard Sale- Lott ot children*
clothing, typewrite*, aaarciw
machine, microwave mltc
IIS McKay Bird . Wathington
Oak* k t F rl A Sal__________
Yard Sale Alto wathar.dryer.
'(9 AAuetang, 2 lamlly tale,
houtehoid Item* clolhot
Myrtle Avanu* oil lllh SI
Sat. Sim. Mon O N L Y _______

235— Trucks /
Buses / Vans

C A m t f , T h a t '4 h o t

Oarage Sat* Some furniture
and miscellaneous Sunday.
Augutt tfh. 19 T. 15*0 Grenade
Av* (Behind Bahama Jo*'*)
GARAGE SALE
Including
clothe*. Saturday » * M
4
P M » La k * B ird Santord

203— Livestock end
Poultry

699*0900

B lu e B o o k C a r s
THIS FR I. NIGHT » * S A T .

3

TH E BEST

•LOW PAYMENTS ON ALL FINANCEABLE CARS

S

DEALS

&gt;1012PAYMENT SALE &gt;1012

S
O N P R E -O W N E D v ^
* 7
W HEELS
r 3

80 AMC CONCORD DL

80 D O D G E A S P E N W A G O N
4 OR.. kUTO., AIR, PIS. Pffl
MS SLANT

4 DR.. AUTO., AIR, P/B. TILT, PIS
55,000 MILES, P7W, LOADED

*2 9 9 5

$2995

O N LY

49.95 CLOSE FEE
162.25 TAX
32.00 T A G _______ __

S P E C IA L O F T H E W E E K :

S P E C IA L T H IS W E EK :
1011 H o n d a A c c o rd
A JC .
S p d S p e c ia l

4

, _

AI

-^ p ir o N Q p -

995

701 S . F r e n c h A w e .

323-7834

$2737.20 BALANCE

$2737.20 BALANCE

Payment baaed *1 M S add on ai M mo Total
amount financed U B t t M with approved credit

Payment baaed cut M S add on at 36 mo Total
amount financed 5 3 (U U wilh approved credit

* 1 0 1 .4 8 MO.

* 1 0 1 .4 8 MO.

1 9 7 3 F o r d T B Ir d , R » d .

995

P /S . A / C . F u ll y E q u i p p e d

OVER ISO ION PAYMENT VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM
*199

77 MUSTANG . .

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

“

71 BUICK ELECTRA

*350

65 BARRACUDA

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

S a n to rd A v a . A 1 2 th S I.

|

74 OUSTER . . . .......... * 4 9 5

„

12 OOOCE SWIMER . . . * 6 9 5 S

HWY. 17-92
SANFORD

321-0741

2 1 9 5
C a s h P tlca

323-1885

FIVE PO IN TS MOTORS
1 9 7 3 D o d g a C h a rg a r, W h it a
If iO O n n w u
A u t o . A / C . P/S. P / W . L i k a N a w
DUUDOW N
2 4 7 0 H w y . 427, L o n g w o o d

830-6688

D e a le r s J
T h is S p a c e C an
Be Y o u rs . . .

yVva#

321-4075 C a ll 3 2 2 2 6 1 1

D ISCO UN T A U TO SALES

1501 F r a n c h A v a .

*695
*999

*1595
321-3888
j
y

C a s h P flca

A / C , 4 S p d ., W h i t e

74 MAVERICK........

2 5 0 7 P a rk O r l v a

0

1 9 7 7 N i s s a n P ic k U p T r u c k

&amp;

1976 B u l c k C e n t u r y , 4 D o o r S e d a n
A / C , P /S . A M / F M
f »*-44 k.au

N A TIO N A L AUTO SALES

$3237.20
500.00 DOWN OR TRADE

^

V A R IETY CAR M A R T

M ARTIN M OTOR SALES

49.00 CLOSE FEE
162.25 TAX
30.00 TAP

U

4^

/ /

ONLY

$3237.20
500.00 DOWN OR TRADE

tra m U t W A R R A N TY
B A R N E TTS . C A I U L B I R R Y
B Jb tIH .........M b M il
He ago
M O O N E Y A P P LIA W CEB
V id w ia n chopping Mach, circa
IB5* blank** cheat: cofoniel
maple data, maple full *44*
bed. email oak booAcaee. 4
eek kitchen chair* reproduc
lien telly cupboard *m*n cak
drawer eek rpebar. other
mitcelleneeu* Hem* M54715

Friday. Aug. 1. 1T E S -U A

Evening Merkld. Sanlord. FI.

K IT 'H' C A R L Y L E s-b y L a rry W rlg h l
H I — H o m e s F o r S a le

323-1449

a .w .y

£ ‘Ja

ERWIN M O TO R SALES
19 7 2 V W V a n
Q ra a l E c o n o m y
S p e c ia l

*1395

I -4 A O r a n g e B i r d , L a k e M o n r o *

Z ' 2\ ''
j * J J
/
321-2391

JOE BROWN M OTORS
20 C A R S UNDER '1,200
Lo w D ow n P aym ent
16 0 0 H w y . 1 7 -9 2

323-5161

L o n g w o o d . F la .

To Reserve A Space, Call 322-2611

£

£ . ~

|

(

�PEOPLE
Paula F o ste r ,
Dr. Kennedy
Repeat Vows
In M isso u ri
I’aula Arm Kwli-r ol FT Myers .mil Or Irmi.ild
Kdw.ird Kennedy ui I'rirt I'liurlottr were married
Jimr 22. ai H |i in , ;it Christ United Methodist
Church. Independence Mr» The Kev Ross Fill tan
performed ihr double nun* rrrm ony
The hrldi* In ihr daughter of Mr .ind Mrs Paul
A. Foster. hiilr|wii&lt;lrnie. and ihr bridegroom In
thr son of Mrs Hetty Krrinrdy. formerly of
Sanford, and .lock Kennedy of Sun f ’lty. ( 'allf
The hrlde. given In marriage I*v tier patents,
wan allended by Belli Ann Gaines. Kansas City,
Mo., mold of honor. and Kay Klsrher iimt Ann
Kennedy, tirldrsrnnidn
John W Foster. Orlando, served Ihr bride­
groom an lx-sl man and unlirrs w rrr I'llllllp Fonlrr
and Torld Foster b ro llirrs o f the tirldr
Groomsniiin was Km Topouzlun. Birmingham.
Mlrh
The reeepllon was helrf &lt;il ifn- Jr League
Clubhouse. IndeperidetiM Assisilng at (fir rr
crptlon wrrr Klin Mullins, I'rniiy Harrison and
Jane Fort!
Following
wedding trip to llaibados. Ihc
lirwlvweds are making their fionie at fo ri

G a rd e n in g

Time To Start Planning
For Fall V egetable G arden

M r t. Donald E d w a rd Kennedy
Cmtrlollw where Ihr bride Is employed as
assislanl dirn tor of T.Hirlsrn Sales by her &lt;'minty
Tourist Development Count'll and the bridegroom
has a family medlt'iil praetlee

Woman Can t Get Drinking
Friend 'Out Of My System'
D E A R A H H Y : I m 22 and
fiend over heels In love wllli .1
man who is Jfi We've brrn
dating lor four months and I
ra ift gel film oil my mind I
wish I ( fluid lx 1 alise hr Inld on
right from ilu- siarl that lie
didn't waul any romiiilluii'iits
Mr was married to Ills t-x will
Iwlrr and says h&lt;‘ Is sllll to lovi
wllli her and piuhahly always
will be
L a t e l y w h e n w e g o to a
nightclub, he drinks loo min h
and I end up driving him hoim
and p u llin g him lo bed When
he's drunk hr says lie s tall 111|&gt; In
love w ith m e Onee lie asked me
lo m ove lu w llli him I 10UI him
to ask me again when In was
solier. I f e never did
I really ra re a lol lor ibis guy
Ahhy Mow 1 an I either g d him
lo love m e enough Iwhen lie’s
sober) lo m arry me. or get him
uni of m y s y s ir m '’
FRUSTRATED
D E A R F R U S T R A T E D : II you
really t are about him liy lo gel
him Into an alcohol lehahihia
Hull facility when hr will h&lt;
I r e u t e d lo t a l c o h o l i s m and
lauglil how lo slay sohri a day
at a time
which Is all any
ir m v r r l l l g ah ohollc 1 all do
Y o u c a n 't m a k e a n y b o d y
"love" you, 01 uiuirv you. hut
with counsellor; you can grl a
l&gt;etson out id yout system II
you're determined to do so
D E A R A I I H Y : I w c u l y live
years agu we lived .11 lo s s Ilu
sirret Im m a putiiilmeni al
tortiey |a widower) who died
suddenly
Ills relatives were
cleaning oul Ills home anil they
gave my husband a diawci tilled
with socks — old and new lie
was told, " l a k e what you want
nod toss the rest
As lie was sorting Mnuiigh
I tie III . lie loll lid $2 (Hkl III hills

Dear
Abby

stashed lu the socks
We irmnedlulely coiilacted the
r x r c u io r and retu rn ed the
money Ami would you believe,
the drerosed's only child la
m arried (laughter. living; In
anolhei slate) never as mm It
said "Thank you
M ore s u r p r is in g
n e a r ly
everyone wr tulil said "Yon
stroiild liave kept Die money. It
was yours
What do you think?
R M., IILOOM INGTON. ILL.
DEAR R.M.: Your first tin
pulse was light For you lo have
k'-pt the money the old gnitlr
Itill It had been liter.illy sor kltlg
away would have tieen dtshon
esl
DEAR AIIHY: Krcetiilv one ol
youi readers wrote. "Am erica is
the only country in the world
where mothers will drive their
kids to thr YM( A so they can get
some evetclse
Well I want lo tell you that
America Is the only civilised
(Oiililry where parents let thru
kids gel up helorr dawn to
di liver newspapers

I was Imm in Kornpe ami
when 1 went hack there and told
Iample ifus. they couldn't believe
III

JEANNE DUFKEY, SE ATTLE
DEAR JEANNE: Why Is lllilt
so hard to brllrvr? Marry of
America s most successful bust
nrssmeo started out us young
boys with a paper route Wh.it
to ile r way to learn tesponslhlll

ty. the value lit .1 dollar and lire
importance nl sticking wiifi ihr
)oli crime rain or shlttr?
D E A R A IIH Y I lioittsilv don 1
k n o w h o w l i t any d i u l n i c
we a r * i s t i l er* .111 111 t hi s
louniry lad I would guess that
ahoul lit to lfi pen ( ol ol (tie
I H&gt;puhit tons wear s dent orrs

I know that all d e n tin e s
should lit perlei th
lull I II
wugr-r ih.it millions do not
w lii-ii Ih-il evt i prt-sriil
seed * i* • ps unit* 1 «t
tlf III III C W lilt*'
1III
Vll l l l l l
|H
N itu
HtSalllll
riitlli|&gt;

III .1 t.isl tmill

p i.n r

Ih r

(■...it sin ker li.is in interrupt Ills
III* .||
gn s i r ■m gl i i i n 1 h r
washroom, remove tils denture
m i l net rid of die serif It hr
dix-sii t It leels liki •u* s 1 flew lilg
on a se w mu needle'
Able,
why sesame serifs m
1lie III si pluie ’ l i ny have no
t as t e a n d at&gt; an a b s o l u t e
iiuis.mce
Solution tlrdei two burger
turn tmlloms'* I In two Iasi Iihu I
plai i s 111 m\ low u |Mi I Km.ild s
and Horner Kmgi 1 barge rs ira
lot 1he switi h
I dunk d i a l s di seriiuiuuiion
ugumM dentine weaters Wlial
do volt dunk and 1 an von help

You may not realize It by
looking at your thermometer,
hut fall Is no) too far away And,
It's time to start thinking about
planting your fall vegetable
garden Start planning and tak­
ing care of some of the prelimi­
nary work dghi now Wlie 1her or
not you're a first time gardener,
there arr same procedures to
follow
First, select your site for the
garden Start small you don't
want it to overwhelm you latrr
on Pick a s|Mii that Is close lo
the house, so it's handy lo work
In And. you want It close to an
outside water faucet for case of
Irrigation.
The most Important thing you
really want lo he sure about Is
proper light The tirsl gardens
arr localrd in full sun. those
receivin g sun all day long
Sometimes this Is Impossible,
particularly on a small lol. You
may have lo choose betwrrn
morning sun or uftrrnoon sun
Plan to plant your fruiting crops,
such as tomatoes, corn, cucum­
bers and melons wtierr they will
get the most sun Leal and root
crops generally can stand a little
shade
You may want to fence the
area to keep nut dogs and kids
In some ares, w lid animals, such
as rabbits, can lx- a problem. A
fence can serve as a trellis for
(xilc lic.ins, tnmaioes. and oilier
crops that need support loo.
Tree and shrub roots will
compete wlih vegetables for
nutrients and water You may
have in proteci your crops from
tills competition To give your
crops Ihc edge, you cart dig a
trench about one and one-half
feet deep all around the garden
Line one side ol the trench with
fooling {taper or plastic him.
then tiarkllli die trench This
will Itirm a barrier against die
roots ol nearby plants
Ol course, good soil Is Impor
hint Unfortunately, most of us
will have to do I lie ties! we can
with llie kind of soil we have
You can give poor, sandy soil a
I m m is I by mixing In grnrrous
i|ii.unities ol organic materials
s i i i h as manure and compost.
Adding such amendments will
greatly Improve the icxlurc and
moist m e holding capacity o(
youi soli - rvrUMf It Is nothing
tun sand
Have your soli tented tor pH or
aridity to tie sure It Is In thr
pmpci range (or lx-st vegetable
gardening The lolks at the
Agrtiiillut.il Center In Sanford

D IS C O U R A G E D IN
J A Y . M A IN E
DEAR

D IS CO U RA G ED :

hm

opt n Isrsamc) h di 1 10 all Iasi

icsl.iur.lllls I’lr.ise o lid
v o i d d isiom ris .1 1 tunic ot Inins
w llli 01 wit limit si satin seeds .11
1101 \I1.11 barge

7

The
EYES
have it!

And So Will You With Hew Glasses. See For Yourself
How Much Better You Look And reel!!

W H ITE G LA SS LEN S ES
SINGLE VISION

* _

^

,,-

* 2 5

INCluMS

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES
Tuit* A P tx li C*i| A ttlU b W tan* D o it .it h n c i i p t w n F I M
O u s l.itltd A d ju U m tn tl 1 R tp tlrt

C ln u i

YOU* IY (C LA IM S
SAVING CtNIIR
2M4 S HUNCH AVI i l l I I I
12 J 8080 SANFORD

MflN rilltlJ FHI *1 AM A I'M s*AI *1 w t | |-\|
1 lused Wert Ai I PM Closed las* s,n &lt;11 i n, Mttnl I f

BARBS

IIS ’

have a valid { hiiiii So this is ,111

will lie in getting the soil ready
lor planting Whatever you do.
don't give In lo the temptation to
cut corners In this phase of
Urban
gardening If you do a poor job of
H o rticu ltrlst
preparing ihc soil, you can
323-2900
expert poor results from your
Ext. 181
gardrn If you're planning a
large garden, you may want to
will test soil samples for a smalt rrnl a rotottller, or even a small
fee — well worth It — If you trartor anti plow, to use In
seriously want to be successful
preparing thr soli Hut lor a
Hr lug in about a pint of your soli. small backyard garden. I In work
Select the sample from several can lx- done with a spade or
spots in your garden, dug from shovel.
the two- to six-Inc It level deep
The time to begin soli prrThoroughly mix them together {Miration is now If II Is a new
on a newspaper or plastic sheet
garden Heavy work in building
Then, select your final sample a new gardrn should lx- done 41
from this mlxturr You may or least a month Ix-fntr planting
may not need to apply dolomttlc This is the time to add the still
lime But. don't lime your soil amendments, and lime It a soil
without prtor testing and rec­ test Indicates the need Dig down
ommendations. You may create a I least six lo eight Inches and
more problems than you really turn each shovrllul completely
need
over II you're turning In weeds,
Before you ever plant I tie (Irst or a cover crop, remove all
seeds or set transplants, you woody plant material because 11
need to think about the vegeta­ won 1 decompose very well
ble varieties you want to grow
After the soil is turned, break
You could walk Inlri a garden up all clods and level with a
renter and buy whatever you rake Do this as soon as you can
see Uut. remember llie vegeta­ alter lurulng (hr soil in prevent
ble vurttles dlffrr In quality, and excess drying of ihc soil anti to
both disease resistance and maintain Hie soil lexltite Tills Is
climatic adaptability T hese can Important as a finely pulverized
he vitally Important Some of thr soil surface will make planting
varieties that you grew up nonti easier give you better s e e d
simply will not perform here
germination and help Insure a
Yes. help Is available! You can niore even slant) &lt;&gt;1 vegetables
1 hrrk with your favorite garden
If you plan to have a (all
renter or pick up a ropy of vegetable garden, siarl now with
Circular 104 — "The Vegetable your planning, s o li preparation
Gardening Guide." at thr Agrl
and selection of varieties Before
cultural Center
you know It. September will t»c
You llnd tti.it the most physi­ here — the tunc lo set mil your
cal part of vegetable gardening fall vegetable garden

Alfred
Bessesen

Phil P a s to re t

25th Street

Wt- tall uur dog " l ‘*yoff." because
she ■&gt; always lo be lound under the
table

LAW N &amp; G A R D E N C E N T E R

toiill

Whal secret adhesive makes junk
mall adhere to Ihr desk, while Impor­
tant papers wind up In the paper
baler-’

...
DEAR AIIHY: tell K.iptm/i I
Legs
Yes. It is sex d i s c r im in a ­
tion m demand dial women
shad thdi legs while men walk
allMIltd like gin 111.is
And II 'Kapuu/rl wants in go
Fairy tale tor grownups Once upon
lopless —like a lll.ill—she wo n t a tune someone planted only enough
g d any rtimplalnls Imm inr
tomato plants to feed just the family

Imnririr

A L L SUNNILAND
FERTILIZERS

25% O ff
•

LAW N

•
•

GARDEN
SHRUBS

RED IN PARIS. T E X A S
C O NFID EN TIAL TO "Y O U R
HEADER IN MAUI, H A W A II":
No ImhIv said It better than Hen
|amiu Franklin
I'n lx- pmud ol
knowledge. Is to lx- blind with
light, to lx- proud ul virtue. Is to
poison yourself wllli the an
dilute "

S W E E T
•
One n( the greatest inducements to
dine out ts the quality ol some home
rooking esperienced when dining in
si wsesrtn rs r u r s iu *u.s 1

THRU SATURDAY
AUGUST 3
G re e tin g Cards
Muskets Mugs
S lu llc d A n im als
T re n d y G ifts

V IB U R N U M

L a n d s c a p e r s F a v o r ite

• P e r fe c t F o r H e d g e s
• E vergreen
R e g . $ 7 .9 9
S a le P r ic e

LIGUSTRUM
RECURVIFOLIA
• G loony Foliage
• Proven W inner
• Cold Tolerant
R eg $7 99

Sale
Price

$4.50
IXORA

•
•
•

B e a t if u l A c c e n t F o r
Landscapes
R e d T u b u la r F lo w e r s
F u ll. B u s h y F o lia g e

Reg *3 .9 9

*5.88

Sale
Price

Wt Deliver bouquet*
O l B*ltooat t o r Every
H t t t o a A Evvry Staton

*2.66

L I N D A ’S HELPFUL HINT OF THE WEEK:
S T O P ! R e a d T h e L a b e l B e f o r e U s in g

B a llo o n M a g ic
10« i . lit St. Sonford
CALL 323-0400
O P fN AAON - SAT 9 A M. To 5 30 P M

P e s tic id e s .

HOURS: HON. - SAT. &gt;-5:30

2400 W. 25th Strsst

321-2525

SANFORD

�Comploto Wook's TV Listings
Sanlord. Florida

I
1

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff W rite r
S entral Florida Is considered by
many the choicest vacation spot In the land.
What with Its multitude of glittery attrac­
tions. shopping malls, and lush outdoor
activities, the adventurous soul should
never want for something to do. But If

Friday, A ug 1, IVS5

you're tired of dullig things, take a break,
grab n fxxik and relax
Rending Is a popular auim urrllm r
activity for Seminole Count Ian* o f all
age*.
People are reading more than ever,
a c c o rd in g to Sandra M G a llagh er,
libraries branch coordinator for thr
Seminole County Public Library System,
who expects the system's circulation to

reach one million this vrar
"Last yrar wr had a circulation of
B23.6H5. bul wr have more now ." tdir
said "People arr using the lltmiry morr
and are interested In everything
And II
(hr library dnrnn‘ 1 have a book on
whatever esoteric subject you mlghl
name. Ms Gallagher can gel It foi you
See BOOKS, page 2

J l

is Tin

TeeVee Toons Immortalizes 25 Years Of TV Theme Songs
By Irla Kraanow
UPI Feature W riter
NEW YORK IUPI) - Steve Gottlieb
hopes lhat Green Acres is where
you’d rather lx- That you'll Itsirn to
a story about a man named Jed
That you're hot to meet George
Jrtson. his dog Elroy, and Jane, his
wife ...again
T h e New York en trepreneur
producer has pul together an album
of 65 television theme songs from
the '50s and ‘60s starting with "Thr
Lone Ranger " series and ending
with the “ Tonight Show ".
"W hen I first got Involved, I did It
because I though! 'This will sell —
people love television.'" remembers
Gottlieb "Bul as I got Into the wmgs
I realized 'this Is great music ' I
mean. 'I Love Lucy* Is a swinging
number."

This Is no appendage to the trivia
craze, he Insists o f the 915 9H
''Television's Greatest H its" album
marketed by mail-order through bis
Man ha Han-based company. T reV rr
Toons Inc.
"I don't look at this as Just some
quirk that people are going to listen
to once at a party It Is history It is
the best 25 years of television." says
Gottlieb. 2H, a Harvard U iw School
graduate.
Featured on the record, which t«xik
one year from start to finish, are
such dlvrrse blasts from the past as
the melodies from "L e a v e It to
H eaver." "B onan za." "M r. Ed.."
"Get Sm art" and “ The Donna Reed
S h ow ," Others like "Secret Agent
M an" and "Dragnet" were lop hits
during their heyday.
Ills favorites are "Dnblr Gill Is" and

"Surf Side Six "
"Y ou walk down the street and
you'll find Hits music Is trrtlrr
known to most people than Elvis,"
Gottlieb says with a shake of thick
black shoulder length hair
"You ask people to sing ‘Jallhouse
Hock' or sing 'Gllllgan's Island.' and
I'm telling you more people will
know 'Gllllgan's Island.' Put these
things on ‘ Name Thai Tune,' and all
you need arr (hr snaps bis fingers)
three notes of any of these titles and
people know what they arr."
T h r album was m astered by
Hernte Gnindman. who also did
Mlcbarl Jackson's "T h riller" and
Prince's "Purple Rain "
Although hr is not a practicing
attorney. G ottlieb 's lega l back­
ground was a valuable resource In
piecing together the album.

"I had In negotiate wllh every
major entertainment company In the
counlry In g d the copyrights to Hits
music." hr recalls "Most of It was
done over the phone right here,
which Is how I goi away with my
long hair."
Hr looks around his Central Park
South apartment oilier, decorated
with '60s style kitsch reminiscent o!
"The Dirk Van Dyke Show" set
Ironically. Gottlieb grew up In New
Rochelle. N Y . "a xtour's l hmw
away" from the I Winnie Meadow
Road address that Rob. Laura and
Richie Prlrlr Immortalized on Hie
tube
"T h r deal frll apart from top to
bottom at least 20 tlrurs." Gottlieb
co n tin u es.
"No en te rta in m en t
Bee TOONS, page 3

�2— Evicting Herald, Sanford, FI.

i

*

Friday, Aug, i. 1*U

F lip T h ro u g h T h e
Pages O f Sum m er
It's C heaper Than
A Visit T o E p c o t,
A n d M ore
E n lig h te n in g
Than L y in g
O n The B e a ch

...Books
C ontinu ed from page I
"W e have the inruns tu obtain
any book that we don't have
through the Inin library loan
computer network Hooks tan
he b o r r o w e d Irom o t h e r
libraries In the state or nation
that are |uirt of the system In
shorter lime now,"
What Irooks ate hot with the
readers this sum m er? Ms,
Gallagher said there Is a long
walling list lor Hold Ih r Dream,
part ol a continuing family saga
by Haithiru Taylor llrudford,
first of the serlrs. U'ormin o f
S u b sta n ce. was dram atised
recently for television.
Also popular this summer Is
Sidney Shelton's latest fiction.
If Tom orrow Cornea, she said.
The plot deals with a young
woman Intent on the dentructloii o f the crime lords who
caused her to be sent to Jail for
a crime she didn't commit.
B.D. Hyman, daughter of film
star Bette Davis, la the latest
Hollywood offspring to write an

expose' on a famous parrnt. IH5H.
Her book. My Mother's Keeper. • If horror stories are your
Is popular In the non-Uctlon thing, there Is Stephen King's
Skeleton Crew, a collection ol
catrgory.
Alter 33 weeks on the best short stories now on the Best
seller Hal. hrnteea. n story of Seller list.
the life and times o f Chryslcr's
The swimsuit season always
llcry chief executive, is still brings thoughts of dieting and
the latest entry In the diet
populur among local readers
Other [avorltes with readers derby Is Dr. Ilerger'a Im m une
I'ow cr Diet by Stuart Berger.
this summer:
• The lamely Silver Haiti, a The eating plan Is dralgnrd to
m ystery-adventure by John help the dieter lose weight
Mclkmald. author of Ihr Travis while at the same time Im­
proving his or hrr health and
McGee series.
• The Cider House Holes by Increasing energy
Looking for business sue*
John Irving, a story uf life In a
Maine orphangr earlier In the cess? A Passion for Excellence.
by Tom I’elers. offers ways to
c e n tu ry .
• fnsJife. Outside by Herman achieve distinction ill m an­
Woulk. u traditionalist Jew's agement. while Hubert Allen
quest for Identity In contempo­ has updated his ISH2 Nothing
Down real estate Investment
rary America.
• A C re e d f o r th e T h i r d guldr.
Then there are the faithful
Mll/eiilum Is a novel by Colleen
McCullough, author o f The fans of romance novels and
Thomblrila which was made westerns. "Som e readers of
Into a successful television romance novels takr home 10
or 20 paperback* at a tim e."
mtnlserles.
• In The Claaa, author Erich said Ms. Gallagher. Then, of
Segal traces the lives of five course, there arc the perennial
fic tio n a l m e m b e r s o f the favorites — spring and summer
Harvard University class of gardening books.

Th e m o st a v id sum m er
readrrs arc the children and
the library offers a special
program for them during their
vacation from the classroom.
This year the summer read­
ing program (seven weeks long
at the Sanford branch and
eight weeks at the Casselberry
branch) had as u theme ''Foot­
loose In Florida." The kids
aren't spending all their time
with their nose in a book,
however. Th e program pro­
vides plenty of fun. They also
receive freebies, listen to folk
tales, play "footloose games"
for prUrs. view puppets, films
and slides, make crafts, get
acquainted with animals from
the zoo. watch square dancers
and doggers and even met a
real live Seminole Indian. The
library was able to gel two
classic films. Dumbo und The
Yearling, to show for the whole
family.
"W e 'v e had a real good
turnout." said Barbara McIn­
tyre. who is In charge of the
ch ild ren 's p ro g ra m at the
Casselberry branch. "I expect
to have seen 3.000 children at

the

various activities during

summer.
"O u r dally circulation la Iretween 2,000 and 3,000 and a
good half of those arc checked
oul by children." she said. "My
shelves were stocked, but I've
seen tons of book* go out of
here In the past few weeks ami
now th ey 're nearly em pty
Grades 1-4 arc really doing the
rcadlngf"
Although children still read
the things their grandparents
enjoyed — Nancy Drew and
The Hardy Hoys — they also
like books by currently popular
authors o f Juvenile fiction such
as Judy Blumc. Beverly Clary.
E lle n C on ford . and Paula
Danzlnger. Mrs. McIntyre said.
A new type of do-it-yourself
book, the Choose Your Own
Adventure series, has caught
the Imagination of the kids who
by th e ir own ch oices can
change the counc of the plot.
In case you've forgotten the
pleasure of reading on a lazy
summer day, Jog your memory
by getting yourself a good book
and turning off those summer
reruns on the tube.

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

TELEVISION

G O GUIDE

August 2 T h r u August 8

LoW* CS
( D

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C o blt Ch
(A B C ) Of londo

O J ) (3 5 )

In d rp rn d rn l
O flon do
lr»d*p*«d*nf
M rlb o u r nr

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(N B C l D jf lo n j B ro th
Oflondo

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O flon do Public
B ro o d c o ilm g l i i l t m

in Addition fa IS* tftdnntl* int*d. t o b lm u o n t u b it r i d o n m«* Iwn* in td m dostm lo nl ih jn n ti *4,
11 P o lF 'lb u rg . by Tuning I* trionntl 1. tuning to ch o nn tl 1), nfiiift tor n o t tp o r li «n d tfi* C b m tio n
Broodcoiting N rfm o ik (C B N )

Specials O f The W eek
SUNDAY

SATURDAY
a m iM o o M

AFTfANOON

12:00

300

( 7 l O « K W IIK IN O SPECIAL (D 1*0) SUAvrvAL Photograph*!
Tha WmgaO Coo B a »L on tno Tony and 111 BoVcrd rmaal lha
riiatury Amomvang Hon by b*aa of too apaciaa o« aaat found m
Batty Byars A groieg boy m l hit lha (Altar Moor dot oft Scotland a
imeta bactwna mo e»nor« ot a coat! g
horsa that appaart lo ha»a atngt
500
Stars Sam Piuont, Raanan Wynn
® O PBOTfCT Ofl NCOLECT A
Front Cady &lt;Por1 t of )| (ft) g
loo* si fortar Cam « Control Flori­
da
6:30
O &lt;D T N i PATSY AWAROB Bob
EYtMMQ
Sartor hoa't INt ■•will program
htmonng tha boat partormancaa m
800
"Otron petursa and i a m K » by O PS) BENNY MAI SHOW In thm
ammaia
on* hour apaciat. Barmy porlrsys s
toaar al (Obhoppmg man tarnchaa
MMNO
to lha iota of a maniac tarroruing a
rttago

600

( L (*0I NATIONAL « O O M F t S C
A tooa ti tha aflortt or U S and
Conodtan toanutty lo tats tha
•hooping crana Irom sitmcion (A)

H I (10) NATIONAL QEOONAPm C
A too* at tha aflortt of U S and
Canadwn actantala to Una tha
ahoopotg ctana bom aibnctWn (ft)

9

800

S (101 SUftVTVM. (behard Maay
narraiaa thia Ihidy of lha mgialmn
Of ona rndbon ahrtaaarad ta b an
Mfopa acioaa lha loma pfama of

930
O (1) AKTTMMO fO H IO V I A
Dayton Ohio baau*y shop bacomaa
lha local port « hm &gt; haadraaama
pwpofuai taarch tar Ur fbgm
Start yicAi lawanca and lawan
Tanas

CVfMMQ

FRIDAY

800
CD (10) HMOSMS1A ftCUCM
M ACD Tha commamoiMion of tha
*0th anrwatary of lha Hboahana
bombmg tatter at lha dotumaniary
"Tha Oay Atar fisvty J Robart
Oppanha.rr.ar and lha AlomK
Bomb." tha Japanaaa Broadcasting
Corporttron a tarn laroahana Tha
Paaptat lagacy and aama day
aaiodta loouga of l a a m n a i m
Japan

(VCMNO

800
11 O H OMM VISIONS OP TO­
MORROW Spaed An or arnaa of
apaca Ngrt mat mcludaa a loo* al
an atbonauta bammg and vw
proapattt of mrang m apaca Moat
hart CXRoo Guaatt Day Bradbury.
Isaac humor

10:00

WEDNESDAY
(VEMNG

CVEMNO

700

(X) O
MISS FLORIDA USA
PAGEANT from lha Parlor .lay
houaam n laudardaM IIS young
•oman bom aromd lha tiaia compata tor iht chanca lo rspraaant
f torida si lha ISM Uw t USA
Pagaam Entanammanl by bngar
Ty Harndgn Cohoari W g n a TV
partonab'y DfU lamb. ' lia r
Soon* modal Barbara Saan

TUESDAY

MONDAY

O

700

tha Sudan and lha hunting inboa
•rhoaa brat ara gorarnad by tha
harda motamanta g

800
(1) O 8 T i l l COlLAft MAN An
vutfoid daaignad tar mdtsry uaa.
aacapaa bom lha laboratory and
gstt arrohad ai a manbar of «ac* y
advanhaat at tha rad arortd Stars
Chartst hoc**. Dorian lopmlo.
Cftucfc Comon
(D (TO) NATIONAL OSOCMIAPHJC
Mat Motor oca narraiaa tha alary of
taw Amancana nma bang bt China
a shrdant. a (cwnabtt. a buamaaa
man and a laachar fft)g

CIJ O I f l l MOST f M S J M M I
BfO UOUFMTP m in* *ghih adtban. I lava Alan lahoa a root at Mm
outtaaaa Nahrmg H adam a harm
Suaan Sort Jamaa and Jana Cur
Bn. araa Jam* fart ahom tern*
taWeptbom U ‘ A'S*tf 'fftig

11:30
(1/ O U A A SEARCH JUNIOR In
tha formal ottna Stir Saarch" aa
naa. Pm apaual taaturaa pro-taono
and lamia pmtarmng tor SM OOu m
caah pritaa n ma catagonaa of
man recabtl. lamara roe anil
danca taadtng lady and lamOng
man Ouaati tony Osnia Gordon
Thornton Sana C a t and tarnwy f
Duuoufl (ft)

Sports On The A ir
SATURDAY
708

6:30

Q ) ( 8) GREAT OUTDOORS

900

400

208

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Mark Motmoa n John Cofana tar

U B AM SAIL San Frmtcaaca G&gt;anta al Attanra Brant

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bud bam Scranton. Pa
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1000
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hmrr anally magaima hoatad by
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7:38
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too

® O W Bd WORLD OP SPORTS
BcftadWad AFC-MFC Mad al farm
Gama Houatan Oama ra NmaTmt
Onraa. a n bam Carton. Ohra

WEDNESDAY

God Ctab at Oat Broca, a

a m ftN O O N

4:30
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bom Toronto NttRA World fa
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Dodgart at Atlanta B ra n t

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THURSDAY

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MONDAY

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S A S l I A l l le a Angatat
Dodgara at Aaarta B ra n t

PGA GOLF Woatarn Opan.

too

TUESDAY

Friday, Aug. I, I f t J — J

D •

M BM UM TI

Ofaraa
11:30

10th Hlnhday Zootrbratlon
al th e C e n t r a l F l o r i d u
Z o o lo g ic a l P a rk , H ighw ay
17-92. Lake Monroe, 2 p.m.
August 10. Birthday cake,
hot air balloon rides, helium
balloons, educational exhibits
and displays, painted faces and
elephant rides. Zoo is open
every day 9-5, Picnic facilities.
E x h ib it o f contem porary
sculpture by young artlsls.
through August 23. Sampson
Gallery. Stetson University.
DeLand. Monday through Fri­
day. 9 a.m. lo 3 p m Free to
the public.
National Quilting Association
Quilt Show and Conirprtlllon.
Seminole Community College.
S a n f o r d . A u g u s t 3-10.
Workshops, lectures, fashion
shows and quilling activities.
Exhibit o f prize winning quills
by Florida quitters. For In­
formation call 3 2 1-6821.
H andicap S in gles Dance.
Westmonte I’ark. 500 Spring
Oaks Hlvd., Altamonte Springs,
every second and fourth Fri­
day. HourB. 7:30*9:30 p.m.
A d m iss io n 35 cents. C all
Claudia H arris, Westmonte
Park.. 862-0090
E xplore the galaxy with
Islands fn the Sky, John Young
P la n e ta riu m 's new feature
show, will continue Into Sep­
tember Monday through Fri­
day. 2:30 p.m.: Saturday and
Sunday, 2 and 4 p.m., latch
Haven Park. 810 E. Hollins St..
Orlando Adults, &lt;1; children.

...Toons
Continued from page 1
company said ‘ yes' lhe first
time around 1 have a drawn
full of 'no' letters and angry
responses
"But In the end. there was
only one title we really wanted
that we didn't get — 'The
Mickey Muuse C lub.' W all
Disney pulled out over a couple
o f th o u sa n d d o lla r s th ey
wanted In advance, and we
weren't giving advances.”
K.ither, TeeVee Toons will
pay royalties as the records
move on the market. Since the
album's release via mailorder
a month ago. Ihe product Is
approaching &lt;100,000 In sales.
By September, Gottlieb ts going
for "blockbu ster" retail dis­
tribution.
W ith no fo rm a l m usical
training, his role as executive
producer served as a high
powerrd Berlitz course. When
many o f the original tracks
were no longer In existence,
aoundallkcs had to be errated
by studio musicians In Los
Angeles.
Hemlxlng was orchestrated
by composer Dave Erlanger.
25. a "Julltard whiz kid." and
Gottlieb was in on "all of It.
"W e had to recreate the way
a '50a guitar sounded, the
whole ‘60s style of drum or
trumpet." Gottlieb says. "For
example, the whistle on the

students, military and senior
citizens. 81.50. Members free.
General Sanford Museum
and Library, Fort Mellon t*ark,
520 E. First St.. Sanford. 2-5
p. m.. Sunday. W e d n e s ­
day .Thursday. and Friday.
Seminole County Museum,
H i g h w a y 17- 92 at Bus h
B o u l e v a r d , In o l d A g r l *
Centcr/County Home building.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday
thiough Friday. Cnli 321-2489
for evening and afternoon ap­
pointments. Closed Sundays
through Labor Day.
Exhibition of works by late
Frank Kampolla. Florida artist,
through August 11 at Lex'll
Haven Art Center. 2416 N.
Mills Ave., Orlando. Hours
10-5. Tuesday Ihrough Friday;
noon to 5 , Saturday; 2 5.
Sunday.
Nature hike each Saturday,
10 a m.. Wrktwa Springs State
Park. Extended day hike, 12:30
p.m., every third Saturday of
the month. Two-hour animal
and plan* IdentIdeation trip,
12 30 p in., each first Saturday
Call 889-3140 for Information.
Canoe lessons each Saturday al
8.30a.m.
Florida's official state play.
Crass and Swonl, tn Its 21st
s e a s o n , on H i g h w a y A I A
South. Si. Augustine presents
performances nightly at 8:30
p in. except Sundays through
August 24. For reservations
and Information, contact (904)
471-1965.
Andy Griffith song Is a synthe­
sizer. I listened to these songs
hundreds and hundreds of
times to make sure we got the
exact sound "
Nearly half of the tunes on
"T ele vis io n 's Greatest lilts "
are re-makes done by studio
m usicians. " I ’ d return the
purchase price to anybody who
rould Idcnllfy which songs are
authentic and which arc re­
m ixed ."
Is p illa gin g the treasure
chests of oldllme T V trucks
going lo gel Gottlieb rich?
"T h a t's not my goa l." he
says without skipping u heal.
"M y goal was to prove myself
as a prod u cer. Fi rst and
foremost. I wanted it lo be a
good product, true to the or­
iginals But I'd also like lo give
m y Investors a big return."
A group of Invrators, all
under age 30. came up with
$250,000 for the project.
TeeVee Toons has already
llscenscd a volum e II and
volume III to bring television
buffs up to current times. But
G o ttlie b Is aware th ere Is
nothing like the vintage stufT.
"In Ihe old days, television
w a s n 't c o n sid ered a va st
wasteland; It was treated as
more o f an art form ," he says.
"Th ese songs arc like Ihe occur
surf; U's a sound you know
You put on the music and you
remember sifting around with
your family or friends enjoying
b e in g s kid."

�F r id a y , A u g . 1. 1*»5

( - E v e n i n g H a r a ld , la n lo r d , F I.

August 2

FRIDAY
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m o je o p a r d y
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mat M i n n and how they cam* lo
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( 0 1TO) PROF ILEfl O F NATURE
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7 :0 5
5 1 SANFORD AND BOM
7 :3 0
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Inlwvtow with llo tm WMiam*
( I ) B WHEEL OF FORTUNE
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(10) THIS W EEK W ITH CHRIS
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1

7 :3 5
11 ALL IM THE FAMILY
600
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001 at Now York Yanfeaaa
|J) O ROYAL M A TC H Tha rural
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Craacanda i* aghaal whan Iha king
laA* In tova with a vrarting American
common*! S l u t Mainland Morna.
John Mouldetllrown and Tammy
( I ) O W EBSTER W abator Mama
h* bat lacyctod Unci* Ptu«HJ t Im
can aculplur* lh al Kalhaima
planned lo dnplay al an art aiMbil

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11 (IS) DALLAS
ft) (101 W ASHING TO N WEEK IN
REVIEW n
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Elmar Gantry
(IM0| Burl Lancaatar, Jaan Sanmona ARar an oppurluraalK tana
mart ynna a crcnkad aaangaaat bra
ar jkibwtHl allampla lo aipoaa
lhar kauOutonl revival ahow
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11 MOVIE ' Maalbatta " ( l*7»| Ud
MxF*y, C M * MaAapaaca A tarty
M i m a camp coxiaaFut Marti Ma
mMM diarga* kilo a no-hcAdtbanad tporta competition agatnal *
group bom * Mgh da ta camp
8 :3 0
(7 ) O COMEDY FA C TO R Y A but
band and wd* paychialitat taam
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naxoUC ralaUonalMp hatpt I ham to
haap irmt tanRy (kraal Bath How­
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9 00
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Man ( I M I ) Richard H arm Bo
Oarak A young woman la abductad
by an uncivauad wMia man who
waa tanad by apaa at lh* Ah icon
fungM (R)
( S O BENSON (Layton Ikpa Makd
and aaaumaa Benaun a idanlily
whan ha Mama lhal tha haul arrant
govern*! bat baan namad Man ol
IhaYaar |H|g
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9 :3 0
(7 ) O r C O F U D O TH E C A A D E 8 T
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a aitualion inyohnng a mala
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SATURDAY

August 3
AFTERFtOON

MORNING

by Rana Aobar fervor* ana
John llym r a* Ibay praaanl Mm
loolaga ol to n a oF lalartaion t
mamorabM Iam pat |R|rj
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03 I TO) LA S T BONO
1005
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world of tha M i r a whar* human*
ara raducad by drug* lo automa­
ton*. t man and woman mcape
Ibatr bonda and la* n km*
1 0 :3 0
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S ENTS

11:00
(1 ) I j ) 0 1 7) O MEW9
) (18) BENNY HILL
(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARQE
(S) H O G A N 'S HEROES
1 1 :3 0
O H i TO NIG HT Hotl Johnny Car­
ton SchaduMd briOarw lunger
U k Lamb a c lia u Tarata GarviN.
Carl Ramar
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m U A BC NEWS NQMTUMC
dp (S i) CHICO AMO THE MAN
Q ) (S) H O G A N 3 HEROES

12:00
(D o
MOVIE Dynaaty (1974)
Sarah Mam. Slacy Kaach
(7) □ SOLID GO LD Hotl Maktaa
Manchatlai Guaalt Kalrma and
lh* W avav Go A rm A* Supply.
Graham Patkar. Staphania Malt.
Mac Davit, Manudo. Sling (mlar«i
(IS ) RI+OOA
M O H T TRACKS
(4) M TV SUMMER CONCERTS
PM C c* w i parlor ma "I Don I Car*
Anytnota," In tha AM TortglK.'' "R
Don ! Matlar lo M* ' "You Can'l
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1

1 2 :3 0
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daoa by Dwa Sliaila ( Monay lor
Molbmg L Hick Jama* | Glow L
Slmg ( II You lo y* Somebody").
Iba M olalt ( Sham* L Mvbael
McDonald ( No lookin Back )
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1:00
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Tan It To Tha
Judga
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Hobart Cumnungt

12«0

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6:00
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(1) (4) OUR QAMQ AH0 ERIE NOB

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(IS ) JIMMY SWAOOART
(4) MY FAVORITI MARTIAN

7:05
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7:3 0
0 (43 OM JJQ ANS a iA M D
&lt; 1 ) 0 ALEXANDER O O O O BUD O Y '4 O O OO NEWS MAGAZINE
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7:3 5
11 G E T SMART

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11 C i m a r r o n s t r ip
6 :3 0
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10:00

2:00

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BUG S BUNNY 7 R OAD

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Samrbnal Lip ayncad randilru t ol
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3 :3 0
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4 :0 0
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4 :4 0
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10:35
1 1 M O W tha Advanluraa OF Ro­
lan Hood ' 11*1*1 Errol FFyrm. 0*vt*
da Havraand lh* outlaw ol Sbar
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Man conapa* lo oulwM Iba *4Wmow* Sa Guy oF Gaboon* and
hanaad wma lh* tova ol Mato U a
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1 1 .0 0
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Baity Dyart A young boy and hit
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Frank Cady (Part 1 oF 3|(R |g
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11 FTSHIW WITH ORLANDO WIL­
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51 M OTORW EEK ILLUSTRATED

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7 :0 0
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Grama. b*a bom Canton. Ohio
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(9) M O W "Cartor a Army "
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3 :0 0
(10) PRESENTl

10:20
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10:00

6 :0 5
11 WRESTLPFG

1:30
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8 :3 0
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J O CBS HEW S
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2:00

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a n u a Qianlawn pohea lore* tuccumb* lo an outbreak ol Iood po*
aonmg. ao Free and Addy argn on a*
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5 :3 0
O (J ) TH E PATSY AWARDS Bob
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honoring Iba bait partnrmanca* In
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on tha noval by Atoaamb* Duma*
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M YSTER IO US WORLD

airy toadar ol World W « 4 u p o n
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Praaidant Harry Truman
110) PROPtLSS O F NATURS
m M O W -She a Oraaaad To
M E' (197t) Etoanor Parka, Jaamca
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6 :3 0
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10:50
11 M O H T TRACKS CHARTBUSTER S

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( 7 ) 0 U F E S T V U S OF THE R C H
AMO FAM OUS totarvtowa with
Lloyd Budget. Gam* Fr arx.it Ft*
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(4) M O W "Trick Or TrM tt
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1 1 :6 0
01 M O H T TR ACKS
12:30
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(194?) Errol Flynn. Atom Smith
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1:3 0
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2 :3 0
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4 :1 0
( D O M O W -Fourtaan Hour*"
|1*5U Richard

�SUNDAY

August 4

( TI O MORE REAL PEOPLE

5:00

11(Ml NCWS
CD1*1THEaVINO*AS
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6:00
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7 O AGRICULTUREUSA
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10:30

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10:35

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6:30
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10*5
12 SPORTS PAGE
10:30
(It PS) BOBNEWHART
10*5

Evtnlng Herald, Sartlord, FI.

Friday, Aug. 1, I H I —1

Where The Action Isn't:
'Rock 7? Roll Summer Action'

T h e only m il difference was
ihul he hosted that one himself.
Nothing rise Ims changed,
“ Rock 'n' Roll Sum m er A c­
12 OA* jP Dis c o v e r y
tio n " 's a p erfectly normal It's positively creepy. T h ere arr
1100
1965 Iccn dance rIu iw . T h crr's W oodies and '57 C lirv lrs lined
r.(D0O(71ONEY»s
music and m id and u lot of up In the parking lot Th ere arr
j TPSIFMH
O l (M l ADAM SMITHS MONEY
R h iipely k id s t w is t in ' an d v in ta g e m usical gu ests like
shdkJn' on I h r sands at Malllm I'aul Revere and (hr Raiders
a (SI HONEYUOONERS
beach.
At one (mint. I said to m yself
1105
There arr kills on surfboards
12 JERRY FAlWtll
the only thing that's m issing Is
and skateboards
There arc
1130
som e kid playing the tw ngo
O 3 ) ENTtRTAMMEHT 1HW Krlsbers and beauty run trials drum s — and. sure enough,
WEEK mtwnee etth Croaby Stdto and lu g-n Tw ar battles. Th e
there onr was I mean, this
andKeen
m u s ic a l g u r s ls p lu g th e ir
O COURAGE TO BERICH
show Is In a time warp
0 AT THE MOWS Scheduled r lr c td r guitars Into the sand
FrtgW Nrghl (Roddy and lip sync alon g with Ihrlr
" T h e kinds o f things that go
■V Real Genera (VM
current hit.
on dow n here haven't changed
Our host lias p in n y ol blond much In thr past 20 y e a rs ."
11(SSI CHCOAND THEMAN
a (B MOV* Up The Sandbot
hair und w hite Icrth and says acknow ledges Atkins.
11ST?) Barbra Sbwaand, Davtd Satthings lo us like. "W e ll, hi?
T h e main thing Is sun and
by
What krpt y a ? "
fun
and good times. N othing
12*0
The only thin g thal'a odd stands still — not the bodies,
0 O MOW Sea How She
Rune ItSTTl
about “ Rock 'n ' Roll Sum mer not the music, nol the cam era
A ctio n " Is thal (his Is the Th e only lim e the kids slow
H O START op somethmq m
summer o l l!)H5, und our host. dow n Is lo answer questions
Hoat Stave Alan toots al how Auc
24-yearohl Chris Atkins, was like "W h a t's hot this sum ­
got ttarted Thw
sucking his thum b buck when m er'?" Answer: " T h e beach
Jan and Dean w ere singing and the guys, defin itely."
. Jenei Lenpr the crowAanl.
eedtbngi Mopping earn
about Dead Man'n Curve and
T h e re 's a square, m iddle(IS) WED KMQOOM U n to
I he California heath life. Most a g e d r o m lc n a m e d T h o m
Pert r e bum ecwnlelA n an Ntoto
o f the kids w ho will watch Ibis Sharp who oilers lieach lips lor
la Mudy ire evgrthon penw o t ol
caribou (R|
show weren't even born.
the overw eight. There are cur­
12*5
All of w hich says dial (h r rent music groups, like X.
12 ROBERTSCHULLER
more things change In pop
Mostly, there Is the California
12:30
music television, the more they youth culture ol thr early '60*
S C I : FANTASY NCAMO
slay the same — rsjiec tally If In all Its glory We '6 0 s teens
I T PS| BEERtll STAR* Scheduted
the show s a rr produced by have grown up In the years
mAartAMvo eeh cmabrbwa lamout
Chddren - Carre Ftoner tannee
Dirk Clark, w ho threw together thal followed. W r have, hut
Welch. Anytact Human. Tyrone
this eig h t-week ABC summer Dick Clark hasn't.
Power &gt; . ( n d t ( never Charbe
s e r ie s on e x t r e m e ly sh ort
Sheen [bee Barrymore moviegoer
T w e n t y y e a rs from n ow ,
raacbona lo ’ Baca lo Iha Future ~
notice.
when h e’s In his 70s, h e'll In­
100
Mr hasn't exactly gone oul o f duing I he same show for a
0 O M O W The Purple Plan * his w ay to Im original. In fact.
whol e new g r n r r ut I o n of
|MSN Gregory Pete Win Mm
Clark did this very same show teenagers who. like the current
Than
for ABO 20 years ago It was crop, huvr no way o f know ing
1*5
(X JMM YIW AGGART
called "W h ere the Action Is." U s all In-cii done before

By David H andler
N ew spaper E n te rp rise Assn.

ms

2:00
0 O C M HEWB MOMTWATCH
2*5

12 LARRT J0»*B
2:35
12

CHEDROfB F U W
300

0 Q MOV* Kwt Than For Me
( IMF) Cary Grant Bufy Porter
3*5
Q OCT SMART
3:35
O WORLD AT LAMM
4*0

ORMCULTUREUlBA
4:3 0
O rriY o u R i

The Boat
&amp; The Queen
When It comes lo
Uruce SprlnKbieen,
T in a Tu rn er says
w teal's marrta){c (jot
to dr) will) It?
A I h er E a i l
K u th e r fo r d . N .J .,
concert during the
weekend she sang
hi* "Dancing In the
D a r k " and m ixed
l ust and l e v i t y ,
admitting she "w as
a fte r" Springsteen.
"B u t he got m a r­
ried," Turner said.
" I t 's not loo U te.
thou gh . I h a ve n 't
given up."
The crowd loved it.

OMNI's SPACE Really Far Out
OMNI Visions of Tomorrow
launches SI'ACK. the second In
a lour-pait series of syndicated
television sjiet-Uls on future
life.
SPACE, an entertaining and
Informative look at the wonders
of our galaxy, hosted by Krlr
Dullea, Will air Aug. 9 si H p m
on W O F LTV 35.
D u lle s , sta r o f S ta n le y
Kubrick's "2001: A Space Od
ysscy," and most recently seen
In MUMAJA's. "2010: The Year
We Makr C ontact," Is weH
known for his portrayal of
David Bowman. Space Is a
subject with which Dullea Is
very familiar.
OMNI Visions o f Tomorrow's
SPACE reveals a wide-range of
the most dramatic develop­
ments In space science and
te c h n o lo g y . F rom n eu tral
bouyanry at N ASA's Goddard
Space T ra in in g C enter, lo
" fly in g lelrs co p ea ," lo ter­
raforming on Mars and com­
municating with dolphins, to
drilling for oil using spacebased cameras: SPACE brings
you closer to m an's future
exploring the solar system.
And because no develop­
ments materialize unless they
are first a part of someone's
dreams, SPACE takes s look at

some of the lanlusles. (he
dreams and I hi|m*s of man's life
In space. You'll hear from Ray
Bradbury and Isaac Asimov,
prodigious minds who Inspire
and challenge men of science to
turn dreams Into reality. And
you'll lake a fantasy tour o f the
solar s y tlr m from the In­
terplanetary space port on
Alpha Four. It's thr vacation of
the next erntury.
OMNI, (hr world's leading
consumer science magazine,
s e rv e s as In sp ira tio n and
source material for OMNI Vis­
ions o f Tomorrow. OMNI has
always hern un avid proponent
of space research and devel­
opment,
OMNI has also been a con­
sistent sponsor of Sporeweek
held July 16-24 o f each year to
commemorate America's first
flight to the moon.
The remaining specials In thr
OMNI quartet will focus on
p i o n e e r i n g ef f or t s and
breakthroughs us they relate lo
medlcul miracles and lifestyles
In the 21st C entury,, These
specials will air In September.
October, November and De­
cem ber. FUtURF.BODY. the
first In the Visions of Tomorrow
series, premiered In April.

�F rid a y , Aug. 2, l t d

E— E v a n ln g H t r t ii, Santord, F I,

Daytim e Schedule
UORMNQ

7:00
I IT) TODAY

4:58
&lt;3.1 O MOUYWOOO AWO THE
( T A M (MON, WES)

a?"**

5:00

ALL Bf THE FAMILY (MON.
tUE. THU, FRf)
5:15
Q WORLD A T LA M M (W B »

6:25
(31 O HOU.YWOOO AMO TMt
I T A M (MON, WTO)
5:30
■

( I ) t h is w a x w c o u n t r y

u yttir (MON)
9 3 &gt; r s c o u n t r y (T u s -fro
QBOSM fiW M ARI

8:00

I OOOO UOAMNO AAA MCA
?2 (M ) FUNTSTONES
{ 10) FARM DAY
ID b u p ir f r ie n o s

S

7:15
9 |*01 A U WEATHER
7:30
(It) |M) TOM AMO JERRY
ID ( 10) I U A U I I T X U T &lt;R)Q
9 (•) INSPECTOR OAOOfT
7:35
Q FU M TETO N C E
5:00
lit) (St) WOODY WOODPECKER
O I DREAM OF JtAHHT. (TUC)
Cl) ( I ) HEATHCUFF

■ GDNKMIYYaAT SUNRISE
J ) k j CM u x c r UORMNQ

8:05
Q I D M A U OF JSANNIB (MON,
w io rx n

&lt; 1 )0 EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
I I (U ) OOOO OAYt
I I NEW*
9 (E )R o b o te c m

8:30
(J I) (M ) PPtK PANTHER
IQ ( HR MNTER BOOt AS (ft)
I I BCWTTCHEOfTUE)
( B I D FAT A IM AT

5:3 0
O
C M EARLY MORNING
■ft
(7) a ABC NCWt THM UOAMNO
fj(M |P O P tY E
11FUNTIUE
5 :4 6
(7) O C Y tW rm tM DAYBREAK
(S (tO )A M WEATHER

8:35
91 BEWITCHED (UON, WBO-FM)
9.00
I (1 ) DIVORCE COURT
I O OONAMUt
7) a BARNABY J O N U
■(M ) WALTONB
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4:30
I S (EE) RHOOA

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

FritUy, Aug, 3 , I f U - F

Doctor Says Contraceptive A d Too Controversial For Networks
NEW YORK |UPI) — The three big networks are
reluctant to run a public-service television ad aimed
at preventing unwanted pregnancies because It
promotes contraception, an official of the American
College o f Obstetricians and Gynecologists says.
At least one network — CBS — has turned down the
ad and NBC Is still deciding what to do with It.
Dr. Luella Klein. Immediate past president of ACOG
and a member of its board, said she has been told the
spot, designed to reduce the 3.3 million unintended
pregnancies In America annually, was rejected
because of the use of the word "contraceptive."
She said one network ofllctal. who she did not
name, turned down the spot, which was prepared as a
centerpiece In an ACOG campaign against teenage
pregnancy, wrote:
"T h e birth control theme of the proposed message
presents an Issue that the networks regard as
controversial and not an acceptable subject for public
service messages."
"W c do not run public services announcements o f a
controversial nature." said CBS spokesman Jim
Simians. "T h is Is one of them ."
Allen Baker, vice president of NBC Press, said his
network has not accepted or rejected I lie spot.
"A t this |Hj|nl It has not been turned down." he
said. "Il Is under review and a decision will be
reached by Ihc middle of next week."
The spot shows three girls — two of whom arc
studying and not pregnant. The third is pregnant.
One girl says. "1 Intend to tic president." Girl No. 2
says. " I Intend to go back to school." The pregnant

August 7

WEDNESDAY
EVEM ND

0:00
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O (31 FACTS

900

OR LIRE Blair a rcmanca a taopwduad whan har
boyfriend agenda loo much lima
and monay on drug* |R|Q
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and oahara beta Tha Sand aay
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tha g ro u p ! I straw* concarl

9:30
0

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Dayton. Ohio baauly Shop bocomaa
1 ha local point m two hawdraaaws
par patuW aaarcii tar Mr fhght
Stan Vicki Lawranca and Lauran

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two aurlora (R )Q

vsr.

POLICEWOMAN

girl says. " I Intended to have a family — but not this
soon."
The announcer says: "N o th in g changes any
Intentions faster than an unintended pregnancy.
Unintended pregnancies have risks. Greater risks
than any of today's contraceptives. The American
College of Obstetricans and Gynecologists wants you
to have the facts. For your free booklet, call
1 800-INTENDS."
A girl at the end of the spot says: " I Intend to call
now."
Klein said she Is disappointed that "these powerful
organizations (TV networks), which can contribute so
well to the national good, define as 'controversial' an
Issue that, according to a reccni Gallup Pull, more
than 90 percent of the population feel should be

taught In schools."
She said she has written to thr presidents of each
television network asking Ihem to reconsider (heir
decisions denying public service time to this Issue.
Klein said ACOG wants Ihc networks und other
Interested parties and organizations to work with
producers of soap operas, situation comedies and
prtmc-llmr dramatic shows to Introduce responsible
attitudes towards sex and contraception In ihrlr
programming.
Th e ACOG public Information program , also
featuring radio and print public service ads. all
emphasize Ihc toll-free number through which young
people can obtain a pamphlet aland sexual responsi­
bility and contraception. Ii Is iltlrd “ The Facts."

Reagans To Hoad Fund-Raiser For Movie, TV Homo Hospital
*

pullrntit to a total o( WX)
In arrrptlng the position, the
W hile House said It was highly
unusual for the president and first
lady In lend their names to a
particular lund raising project, hill
that Reagan wished lo make an
exception In the case o f ihr fund.
Thr 050 million that organizers
Re a g a n wa s a c t i v e In the
hope lo raise In Ihc drive will form.Hive years o f Ihr hiclllty and
double the capacity of the facility was present along with Mary
for movie and television workers Pi c k fo rd . S a m u e l G o l d wy n .
from Its present 300 retirees und S h i r l e y T e m p l e und o I h e r

HOLLYWOOD (Ul’ ll - President
and Mrs. Ronald Reagan have
agreed to s e rv e as honorary
chairmen of u fund-raising cam ­
paign for thr Motion Picture and
Television Fund Country House
and Hospital.

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cares lor TV and Him workers from
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Friday. Aug J. W 5

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Television's Latest Im provem ent: Stereo
oriented programming and ts
By Joan llanauer
i n i o stereo wi t h Johnny
U PIT V Reporter
NKW YORK nil’ll — Slrrro Carson * 'Tonight* show and
IHr vision will llnally get under Friday night videos." he said
way this year. Imii don't ex|&gt;ert " I think probably In the fall
In Ik* blasted out of your soek* they will go with Miami Vice.*
Ity the s p e e d In w tilrh II They also have talked about
going stereo with 'Saturday
becomes available
Night l.lve '
There are two problem*
" A ll those shows have some
one I* buying I be hardware the
oilier Is (lie paucity nl stereo emphasis on music and NIK'
shows a certain amount of
programming
"S tereo TV Is really the foresight lo exploit that access
lust-kept secret o f the year In to the young, upwardly mobile
electronics." said James It audience that would he Inter­
Meigs, senior editor of Video ested in a feature like stereo
Hvvtcw magazine. "Few er than video."
He predicted A B C ’ s first
to station* are now broad
stereo video broadcasts probecasting stereo TV
The networks .ire Just m ov­ bly would la- one shot specials,
ing Into stereo broadcasting, particularly around Christmas
hill It won't do the viewer- — they are relatively cosy to
listener any good unless Ills p ro d u c e in *te reo — and
local afllllate has converted lo l«tss!hly sports events.
stereo. I’ llS has been d is­
CHS programming. Including
tributing in stereo around Ihe the prime lime soaps, are not
eountry tor several years so the kinds of shows to exploit
that Its memlM-r stations can the stereo formal
broadcast lire shows as KM
T h o s e upwa r dl y m o b ile
radio simulcasts
would lx- stereo TV fans must
Mi Igs. who has studied llic. buy equipment la-lore they can
lit Id in depth had some pre turn on lo ilielr new tuned lit
d l e t l o n s al i o ul wl i ai the sound
in-lwork plans might entail
Stereo television sets vary
M U ' has a lot of iiiosii
Irnm a high ol • 1.200-$I .JOO,
Meigs said. lo the SiUMl range
" T h e electronics Industry
has
moved Iasi." he said, "and
{ J la J c e 'T fto H s ia c .
most ol !»•- *el* at the high
price end on the market today
can handle stereo '
Oi«toab»t|
Mo m m O* N «| M 92
Som e television sets l i r e

*••*•«« I4 o*d WottHd

Pb Wi 1IM

now mm ntw ownmsmr
BREAKFAST
SPECIAL
DAILY LUNCH
BUFFET-iu im t«a ut
SUNDAY LUNCH
BUFFET-tu im cm mi

Miss Am erica: Here She Comes In Stereo
NEW YORK (UPI) — The 32nd live telecast of the Miss
America Pageant wUI air on NBC Sept. 14 and this year
something new la s been added — It will be broadcast In
stereo.
Gary Collins will host Ihe show for the fourth consecutive
year and the theme will be "T h e Spirit of America.” The
pageant will distribute almost $5 million In scholarships to
winners on the local, state and national levels. Whoever
succeeds Sharlene Wells as the new Miss America will receive
$30,000 In scholarship money.
What happens to Miss America after her year long reign?
Bess Myerson. Miss America of 1045. wound up In politics.
Marilyn VanDerbur. Mtaa A of 1958. founded the Motivational
Institute In Denver. The 1059 winner. Mary Ann Mobley,
became a ia c u c n a id nott icJ Gary Godina.
J^qu c’. ya Mayer. 1983 MUa America, vglu ed a strew: at
the age of 27. She made a remarkable .rcovery and has
become national spokesperson for the American Heart and
Stroke Aaaorlatlou. She spends half her time speaking lo
groups about stroke prevention and working with stroke
patients.
Show biz claims a number of fanner Miss Americas. Terry
Meeuwsen. 1973. lias her own TV show In Milwaukee. Sl»e
also has a 2-year-old son. an adopted 4-year-old Korean aon
and Is expecting a third child. Tnwny Godcn (1976) was a Los
Angeles anchorwoman who married John Schneider. Susan
Powell (lost) lives in New York City and stng* with regional

"stereo-ready " That mean*
they ran play slrrro hilt not
nri raaartly receive II For them
you need a decoder that can Ihattached lo TV set* equipped
with a multiplex IMI’XI output

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"Japan has had stereo tor a
lew years.” Meigs said, "and
sports program s are the most
|M&gt;piilar stereo shows Put a
•mike near the Held and you get
a lot o f am bie nt crowd nol*e
Just (h r sound o f being In the
pick Decoders also can Ik- used ^ stadium can Ik - very exciting In
to hook up an MPX-equIpprd Ihe view er at hom e In hockey
television set to you r own lor Instance, the m ii iu i I ol that
stereo speakers. Stereo VC’ K* . puck ricochetin g around the
rtnk can add u whole new
also are available.
Cable poses a big stumbling dimension "

opera companies and symphonies Dcbby MafTelt IIOH.q Is a
host on T V 's " I ’ M Magazine" In Lon Angeles.
Anil Kylene Barker (1079) ow ns a boutique In Palm Beach
and ha* published a book on fitness and exercise.

"Let The Professionals Do It "

,0 9 5
O

block to stereo-video because ii
transmits stereo differently
than MTS — multichannel TV
sound — which Is the signal
used by over-thc-alr broad
casters.
Mr Igs said the MTS signal
"takes up a little more space or
band w i d t h t han r r gul at
audio.'*
" I f you are hooked up to a
cable system ." he said, "wh.it
you will get depends on your
cable company. Some cable
systems tend to lop oil the
outer edges of the hand That
won't hurt anything II you
have a mono receiver, hut you
will lose some stereo quality
Some cah lr companies will
pass MTS along without even
knowing It. along with their
regular sign al. Others will
shear oil som r or all of the
stereo signal."
The advantage of stereo TV is
obviou s for m uslc-orlrnted
shows, hut another prime
target Is sports

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�</text>
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                    <text>77th

ve n in s H erald

Year, No 373 Monday, July C, m s —Sanford. Florid*

^

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H .r.,d

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,U 5 P S

a l.

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Can,,

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

By R ich ard T ru e tt
Herald S t a ff W r ite r
Sixty nine teacher* from Seminole county
|,.4,VC- rT.C*',Vrd WOrd ,h ry ‘n **■*
In Merit
' a y- ,,u l- ,h f recipients and school prlnclp.il,
anc* administrators arc unhappy with the
system that I, giving It to them..
Teacher* say the way they wrre evaluated I,
unfair because loo many good teachers didn't
win.
Principals say some teachers they evaluated
as excellent were rejected for the pay.
Administrators say that the system dlscour-

School Officials Blast Merit Pay
ages
pay and
u R t* teachers from applying for the pav
hurls morale.
Here Is how the system works: to qualify for
the award, teachers who have at least four years
of experience fill out several forms for the
Department of Education. A teat la then given In
the teacher a area of speciallzatlon. Hut teats are
not available In all teaching areas For theme
areas without tests, such as physical education.
I he teacher must have a master's degree. Those
leathers who pass the lest or have a master's
degree can request an evaluation date during
which the principal comes into the classroom

and n h a ,r v «
.--.. i__ _______
.
'
m
and observes the teacher for one class period.
The prtnclpal Is a professional who knows
The principal checks off certain Items on a form
who the teachers who deserve the award are "
evaluation and malls It to the D O E. for review
Tulllx said.
and selection.
The thing was they would give you an
They look for positive words, teaching style
evaluation and In their mind thev thought It was
and teaching method, said Mabel Mlnshali a
a good one." Tullts said
math teacher at Brantley who won the award
Karen C olem a n , a spokesm an for the
"Some o f the best teachers did not gel It .”
Seminole County School Board, said she had
" I think the evaluation was wav off base,”
beard many complaints that the classroom
said David Tullt*. a physical education teacher
evaluations were very unfair.
at Lake Brantley High School He said the
Mrs Coleman rxpialnrd that there is an Item
principals should have gotten the money to
an the evaluation form that measures how many
disburse to the teachers who descrvrd It.
See M ERIT, page SA

Holiday Ends
With Fire, 1
Traffic Death
By Deane Jordan
H erald S ta ff W rite r
A Sanlord fam ily was hom eless
today, turned out by u fire that heavily
damaged their house and consumed a
car. Arson Is suspected
Elsewhere in Seminole County, the
July Fourth weekend ended with one
traffic death reported du ring the
four-day holiday period which saw 33
fatalities statewide
Sanford firelighters were called to the
Academy Manor subdivision at 844
pm Sunday to find (lames rising
through the roof of a houw at 102
llethune Circle, according to Assistant
Sanford Ftre Chief Hon Neel. The bla/e.
which at one point totally engulfed the
structure, apparently started on the
side of the home in a carport and may
have been deliberately set. according to
Neel who said a stale lire marshal was
to begin an Investigation of the Incident
today. The 931,030 structure as well as
a Renault In the carport were de­
stroyed.
According to firelighters, the flames
spread from the east end of the home
through the attic, leaving gu lled ,
charred remains. Uuburned portions of
the house were damaged by smoke and
water.
The owner. Vivian Mr Meal, was
home at the nine with her family and
escaped without Injury. No Injuries
were reported among firefighter*.

Official Has
Plan To Save
'Head Start'
Striking Picture

H »rtM

k r Tm k , V u c m I

e a s ,4,ow? ^ s Osteen from downtown Sanford just before 10 p.m
n d «K * 'n a fu ra ,_R ew orks d isp la y was v is ib le a s thunderstorm s passed
throuah the area. Sunday evening w ind and lig h tn in g dam age resulted In
sea tered pow er outages In Sanford. G eneva, Chuluota, Osteen and
Deltona for F lo rid a Pow er &amp; L ig h t C om pany's Sanford D is tric t. A ll but
one custom er, who was on the end of a line In Chuluota, had power
restored by this m orning and crew s were s till w orking there. A F P &amp; L
spokesm an sa id 30 40 Sanford custom ers w e r e without p o w e r Sunday
night for four hours because of a broken cro ss a rm at 1003 W. S ixth St..
Sanford, w h ich o ccurred at 6 p.m. F lo rid a P ow er reported m inor
scattered outages.

S e e FIR E , page 8 A

■

Sellers Offers 5-Year Plan For Road Work
Thr Seminole ('ounty Commission
has not vet formally approved the levy
of an additional 2 cents per gallon gas
lax for roads, but county Director of
Public Works Lurry Sellers was to tell
the txwrd In workshop loday whal lie
thinks the money, along with other
revenues, should be spent on
In un report Issued before the meet-

County Hoad 427, right-of-way ac­
quisition. new construction o f a twolane rural road. 92.7 million.
• l-ake Mary Boulevard, six miles.
Irom Markham Woods Hoad to U.S.
Highway 17 92. engineering design,
right of-way acquisition, widening to
lour lanes. 917.7 mtlllpn.
See ROADS, page 8 A

lug hr Mate, that not only Is money
needed Irom the 2 cent, tax for road
construction, but ulso from llxed ’'vol­
untary IllijUic1 fe r ," Irom developers.
The projects hr Is listing for Im­
provement over the next five years
Irom those funds are
• Lake Mary Boulevard extension,
iwo miles. Irom U S Highway 17-92 to

Once Upon
A Time ...
D a v id C r a i g , 17, s h o w s
ch ild re n 's books and tapes to
Sanford p e d ia tricia n M a rltsa
P a s t is S u n d a y . R e a liz in g
nothing is m ore boring for a
young c h ild than being stuck
in a hospital, David, w ith
help from h is scouting c o l­
leagues in Troop 934, pro
duced for h is Eagle Scout
project, a set of eight sound
tapes w ith about six stories
read aloud and recorded on
each. He presented the tapes,
40 accom p an yin g books and a
sm all tape p la y e r to C en tra l
F lo rid a R eg io nal H ospital for
use In its p e d ia tric ward. The
project took about SO hours to
complete, he said. D avid is
the son of Ju d ith and Robert
C raig ol Sanford.

By Donna E stes
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
Longwood City Commissioner Perry
taolkner. who Irked his commission
colleagues with his enthusiasm for
controversy plagued Seminole Com ­
munity Action, plans in ujrplv to the
federal government for funding for
Head Start, the only program SCA had
left when It voted to disband effective
Aug I
Faulkner said he plans lo ask for the
funds on behalf of a non-profit corpora­
tion he will set up
Fuulkner said bis major Interest Is In
protecting the jobs of I he 3 1 Head Start
employees, runglng from director Portia
Spencer lo teachers and cooks, some of
whom have been Involved with the
program since It began In Seminole
County 18 years ago^

"They are good people who have
tlnne an outstanding Job." Faulkner

said, lie said tils non profit corporation
could continue the program just as It
has been administered all those years.
He said he filed a "letter of Intent"
Friday seeking funding with the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services and plans to file a charter for a
non-profit corporation with the state.
When It voted last week lo disband,
the SCA board of directors urged that
Ihe School Ikutrd be designated Head
Stan's next sponsor.
Tw o school board members — Hat
Trlson and Bill Kroll — were reluctant
lo Jump on uny band-wagon to seek the
program because of the school system's
"light budget" for fiscal 1985-86. But.
Ken Uovlo. director o f elem entary
rducatfbn for the school administra­

The study also reported:
• Nearly 60 percent of those
under life sentence released from
stale prisons In 1982 had spent
seven years or less In Jail; neatly
a quarter served three years or
less
• More than half of slate

w A • • -W

See PL A N , page 9 A

12 D ead, 46 Hurt

High Speed French Train
Hits Truck Stuck On Tracks

H srtM rust* by O U s s S«*r yk

I'AH IS. France (UIMI A
P a ris -b o u n d e x p r e s s tra in
smashed Into a truck trying to
heat It through a crossing In
northern France loday, killing
12 p eop le and In ju rin g 46
others, officials Mild.
Thr train was speeding lo thr
capital from thr English Channel
port of Le Havre at about HO
mph when It slammed Into a
scinl-trailer truck at about 9:15
am .
A loc I government official
provisionally listed 12 people
killed In the collision about 12
miles south of Rouen Another
46 people were Injured. 10 of
them seriously, hr said

Study: Prison Tim e Served Dropping
WASHINGTON IUPI) - Thr
amount of time convicts spent In
prison for all sorts of crimes
dropped to a historic low In
1982. c u lm in a tin g a trend
started nearly 60 years ago. thr
government says.
Thr study by the Bureau of
J u stice S ta tis tic s , released
Sunday, also said about half the
murderers released from stale
prisons that year had served Irsa
than six year*, while roughly
half of released rapists spent
three years or less behind bars.

tion . planned to lalk to federal
authorities In Atlanta loday to de­
termine what would have to be done by
ihe school system If It took over the
program and to ask for an application
for the federal funding.
Alter ihe Information Is in hand.
Uovlo will takr thr mailer lo Ihe school
tx&gt;ard for action or rejection, he said
Head Start became part of the SCA
anti poverty programs In 1967 and
every year since 200 children 3 and
4-year-olds from disadvantaged (amt
lies, have participated In the classes
designed to give Ihem a "head start" In
competing with their better-ofT peers
I he children were not only involved In
pre-school learning activities, bui were
fed two meals a day while at school
Faulkner said hr has discussed the
p ossib ilities with J eff Etchbcrger.
formerly the county's director of man­
age tit cut and tiudgrl and assistant
administrator and city manager of
Altamonte Springs, whom he considers
an expert tn all aspects o f financing He
said he wants Etchberger and dill
Fernandez, an Altamonte SprUtga at­
torney, on Ihe non-profit corporation's
IxMird of dlrectora.
Fuulkner said the federal government
looks at It as "a bid-type situation.”
SCA had applied for nearly 9400,000
In federal money for the program before
II withdrew Its applications last week
alter state authorities said thry would
recommend rejection of the application
The state didn't like the financial
problems SCA has had In the past, nor
Its frequent disagreements with federal
and state program administrators.

prisoners released from man­ slates and the District o f Col­
slaughter sentences had served umbia representing about 60
percent of nationwide prison
less Ilian 2.3 years.
• About half of rrleased rob- admissions and releases.
Steven Schleslnger. head of
Iters served two years or less
• More than h a lf o f thr the bureau, said. "T im e served
burglars freed that year had In prison has been dropping
during the past half century.
"T h e median (prison time) was
Sana!* debates law that
19 months tn 1920. and Ihe
would make It easier to
16 month median for all offenses
buy guns. Story, pago 2A. In 1982 was an historic low.
even though a higher proportion
of prison Inmates are now serv­
hern Incarcerated less than 1.2 in g s e n t e n c e s fo r v i o l e n t
years
crim e*.”
a Median prison time for
While about half o f the con­
those released In 1982 was 13 victed rapists released from pris­
months for auto theft and 11 on had served 36 months or lea*,
months for drug offenses, forg­ the report said the median sen­
ery. Iraud and embezzlement.
tence for rape was 10 years.
T h e re p o rt. " P r i s o n A d ­
The median Is the point at
missions and Krlruses 1962." which there are aa many above
was based on statistics from 29 zs below.

* fir

For murder, the median sen­
tence was more than 60 years —
a llgure skewed by Ihe fact 49.2
percent of convicted murderers
are sentenced lo life — bul time
served was less than tlx years
for about half those released
Th r report said lhat 52.8
percent o f those admitted to
slate prisons In 1982 w rre
whites, and 46 3 percent were
blacks.
Burglary and robbery were the
two most prevalent crimes.
Of thoee released, whiles had
served a median of 15 months
for all offenses, while blacks had
tieen Jailed for u median of 18
months — a difference attributed
to the fact a larger share o f
blacks were sentenced for more
serious crime*.

The crash threw the truck
uhout 300 yards, killing Ihe
driver, and sent five coachrs
hurtling off ihe trarks In a
tangled mass
One of lhe railway cars reItnundrd off three houses lining
thr track, killing one Inhabitant,
u television newscast said.
W itn esses said Ihe truck
b e c a m e tra p p e d b e tw e e n
automatic barriers guaidlng the
track after Its driver disregarded
warning lights and tried to cross
the rull line ahead of the train
‘ lie tried to bark up and
tx-gan sounding his horn bul hr
Just didn't make It." said a local
resident who had slopped htscar
at the crossing
T w o o f the Injured w ere
tow n speople w ho had been
standing by the trarks when the
crush occurred.
"First we heard a terrible
noise, then things started flying
around thr car and there was
white dust everywhere." aald
o n r u n id en tified passenger.
"Then all you heard was kids
crying.”
About 150 firemen rushed to
Ihe scene from surrounding
towns to help pull the dead and
Injured from the wreckage.
R etie B o u v e a u , a s s is ta n t
m a y o r o f th r v illa g e o f
Salnt-Plerre-du-Vauvray. said
the Injured wrre treated tn a
large tent that had been used on
the weekend for a country lahAmbulances and a fleet of four
helicopters ferried the seriously
Injured to hospitals In nearby
cllles.
O ffic ia ls o f th r sta le-ru n

JA
Action Reports.......
Bridge
3A
Calendar.................
Classifieds
....2,36
Com ics.................... ... .46
Crossword...............
Dear Abby ........... .......IB
Deaths
BA
Dr. GoM..................
Editorial................. .......4A
Florida................... ...... 2A
46
Horoscope..............
Hospital'................... ...... BA
N a tio n ................... ...... 2A
P eople.....................
Sports..................... .... J-7A
Television........ ...... .......IB
Weather.................. ...... 8A
World ..................

The " C lo c k , " once a
lan d m ark In downtown
S a n fo r d , w i l l be r e ­
d e d i c a t e d 11 a . m .
Tuesday at F irs t Street
and M a g n olia Avenue.

‘Wolfman' Elusive
PANAMA CITY. Panama
IUPI) - A hairy "wolfman”
who howls after dark and
frightens (hose caught on
the street after sundown
has prompted citizens In
the vlllsge of Penonome to
try lo hu nt d o w n the
creature.
A c t u a l l y *'a n o r m a l
h u m a n b e i n g . " th e
wolfman made hia debut
last w eek In the rural
village 94 miles southwest
of Panama City, according
lo Ihe government newspa­
per. C ritics

M e TRAIN. p*g* 8A

•V 4 V T w ^

. i
9 &gt;

�1A — ty e n in g Here Id, lanford, F L

Monday, July I, IttS

Largest Turnover Since Vietnam War Ended

26 U.S. MIAs Coming Home

NATION
IN BRIEF
Suspect In Sex-Torture
Slayings Nabbed For Shoplifting
United P r e s s International
Charles Ng, ft suspect In as many as 25 sex-torture
slayings In California who vowed not lu Ire taken alive, was
under a suicide watch today as he awaited a court
appearance for shoplifting.
Ng. 23. has hern held In thr Calgary Remand Center
since his capture Saturday In a department store. He faces
charges o f attempted murder, possession of a firearm nnd
theft under &gt;200 stemming from his arrest In Canada.
Th e arrest ended a monthlong International manhunt for
Ng. wanted In the gruesome slayings o f as many as 25
people at a mountain hideaway near Wllseyvllte, Calif.,
about 125 mile* northeast o f San Francisco
Calgary police would not comment on possible extradi­
tion. Neither was It clear whether Ng would stand (rial on
the Canadian charges
Canada has no death penalty, and Canadian Judges In
the past have been reluctant to extradite people who could
fare the death jwnally In other &lt;mint hr*.

HONG KONG |UPI| — Vietnam has agreed
lo return the remains o f 26 American
servicemen — the largest such turnover
since the Vietnam War ended 10 years ago,
U.S. offlelalssay.
The officials, traveling with Secretary of
State George Shultz on a 13-day tour of Asia
and the Paclflr. also said Sunday that
Vietnam agreed to provide Information on
six other servicemen declared missing In
action during the war.
Their comment* came before Shultz left
Hong Kong for Bangkok, Thailand where he
Is expeclcd to sign over $3 million In U.S.
aid for Thai border villages affected by
fighting between Cambodian guerrilla* and
Vietnamese troops
T h e S ta te D e p a r tm e n t w e lc o m e d
Vietnam's decision to return the bodies,
which resulted Irom four days o f meeting*.
In Hanot last week between the Vietnamese
government and a U.S. m llllary team
We look lorward to tins turnover, which

would be the largest since the end of the war
and In line with pledges made by (Vietnam­
ese! Foreign Minister (Nguyen Co) Thach in
high-level negotiations on this Issue since
1982." the State Department said In a
statement.
A high ranking U.S. government official
said In Hong Kong Sunday that the remains
of ihe 26 servicemen will be returned home
within six to eight weeks.
The United States has the names o f the
servicemen, but their Identities will be made
public only after the remains arc returned,
thr Identities are confirmed and their
relatives are notified, the official said.
He said greater cooperation from Vietnam
will be needed If the MIA Issue Is to be
resolved within the two-year timetable set
by both countries, and he did not rule out
sending U.S troops to Vietnam to assist In
exhumations
Since the end o f the war In 1975. the
remains of 116 servicemen listed as missing

in action have been returned to the United
State*. But 2.464 others are still listed as
missing tn action In Vietnam. Cambodia and
lotos, and Shultz Is expected to press for
information about them during his Asian
trip.
The highlight of Shultz's trip will be a
m eeting W ednesday with (h e foreign
ministers o f the Association o f Southeast
Aslan Nations, which groups Thailand.
Malaysia. Singapore. Ihe Philippines. In­
donesia and Brunet.
Much o f the focus at the ASEAN meeting
In Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia will be efforts by
the to group resolve the six-year Vietnamese
occupation of Cambodia.
During his stay tn Thailand. Shultz is
scheduled to visit the v o la tile Th aiCambodian border Tuesday, becoming the
highest ranking U.S. official to tour the area.
Shultz also will discuss the Australia-New
Zealand-U.S. alliance, which has been
shaken by New Zealand's refusal to allow
U.S. nuclear warships Into Its ports.

Senate May
Ease Firearm
Restrictions

Watermelons To Be Destroyed
SACRAMENTO. Callf.(UPI) - California officials have
decided that million* of watermelons already distributed to
retail outlets should l&gt;r destroyed, a spoke .woman for the
state Department of Food and Agriculture said.
Watermelon* tinged with Ahilnirb, a banned pesticide,
are blamed for a wave of Illnesses In the western United
States and Canada
No formal order for the melons' destruction ha* been
IsHtied, but agricultural officials are working with the state
Department of Health Services on preparing one. said
Department of Food and Agriculture *|M)keswoman Janet
Wcta cll.
Watermelons tainted with Aldlrarhare blamed for 100 or
more illnesses In California. Oregon. Washington stale nnd
British Columbia. None was believed lo be life-threatening.
Wessell estimated Ihe slate watermelon crop to number
around 30 million Aland one third of II. or 10 million
melons, arc bcllovrd lo he in Ihe retail hard chain or In the
hands o f consumer*
Inspection of the remainder of the watermelon crop Is
being llghlened so that II can la’ marketed, Wrxscll said

Will The Best\Man' Win?
NEW LONIXJN. Conn, (til'll — llrldgetle I'ol say* a
slanderous campaign by her opponents probably will keep
her from becoming the llrst transsexual commander of an
American Legion Post.
" It 's a slander ly|w situation a* much as if I were black
or Chinese or whatever," I'ol said Sunday on the eve of
tonight's balloting ill I'osl No. It
Post Commander Joseph Otlnvlano. 115. who Is running
for re-election against I'ol. said Ihe Legion "Is Just not
ready" Tor a leader who has undergone a sex-change
operation.
" I f we had a transsexual commander II may |usi ruin the
Imuge people havr ot the American Legion." Ottuvlimo
•aid. "1 olten wonder w hy she didn't Join Ihe (women's!

auxiliary.**

I'ol, 50, u tlecoralrtl Air Force pllm dm lug I tic Korrari
War. underwent a sex change operation In Mexico 12 years
ago nnd rnnrrlcd a Marine Corps sergeant Her husband
was killed in Vietnam.

IN BRIEF
Ex-Alde To Haig May Reveal
Secrets In Embezzlement Trial
W E ST PALM REACH (UPI| - A former Alexander llulg
aide accused of embezzlement says the defense In his trial,
which start* today. Includes divulging &lt;&gt;l national secrets,
and government nlllrlul* are worried
Ex Mo) Gen. Itlehard H Collins. 55. and Ids Miami
lawyers say they will release Information abuul secret U.S
cash used to Itunkrnll covert &lt; IA o|*T0 llnn* In Southeast
Aslu and elsewhere.
Government officials call the plan "gra y m a il." an
attempt lo prevent prosecution by tlirealeidng lo disclose
Ihe secrets.
A mllllary aide lo llalg when Haig was supreme
commander ol NATO forces In Europe, Collins wan director
ol plans and policies and supervised war planning lor all
U.S. military nervier*
He was once assigned lo manage spy money In Europe. A
federal grand Jury returned a six count Indictment In
Jaiuiury 1983, charging him wlih going lo Geneva in 107?
and removing $415.OOO (rum a Swiss hank account und
dejxrsltlng Ihe money Into .hi account under his own name.
The decorated ex-llghler pilot, who retired to Fort
Lauderdale In 19HI. says he moved the money legitimately
and with (hr approval ol nii|&gt;erlois

Cypress Wetlands A Battleground
JASPER lUPII — A chem ical company wants to mine
phosphate on 14 square miles o( wetlands near the
Suwannee River, and while supportrrx say Ihe plan means
Jobs and money, detractor* *av It will hurl the environ­
ment.
Occidental ha* hern m ilting phosphate In Ihe arru for the
last 20 year*, bill now wunl* lo exj&gt;and operations.
Supporters say lliai ihe company generates $50 million u
year In wages for 2.000 people, anil help* support schools
and other service* through it* tax dollar*.
Environmental!*!*, however. *uy the dredging operation
will ultcr Ihe course o f the Suwannee and doubt the
cypress wetlands can ever l&gt;e reclaimed lo their natural
slate.

HOSPITAL NOTES
t M r iif
A O M II4 IO M

Uehrt
Oaraihy M A«*&lt;**

IWM I » * «

A ),* Wunl
B a rte rs J M sr* . L*n*«o*a

DttCHAIQII

Iw M

W hat do school buses do In Ihe su m m e r?
G e n e r a lly , n o th in g . M o st of S e m in o le
C o u n ty 's buses a re stored at P in e cre st

Policeman Shoots And Kills
Woman Armed With Toy Gun

FLORIDA

Can*at r s n o aa«M*»i How '*'

Reflections Of Summer

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Senate returns from Its holiday
recess (his wrek to debate legis­
lation that would make It easier
for Americans to buy guns, with
advocates arguing "gun control
is not the same as serious crime
control."
The bill, supported by 54
senators, would be the first
change In federal gun laws since
the 1968 Gun Control Act was
passed after the assassinations
o f Martin Luther King and Rob­
ert Kennedy.
The legislation, sponsored by
Sen. James McClure. R-ldaho.
would lift thr existing ban on
Interstate sales ol guns, A buyer
from one state would be able to
go to another state (o buy a gun
over-the-counter as long as the
sale did not violate the laws of
either state.
That provision represents a
major change that gun dealers
and '.he National Rifle Associa­
tion say Is long overdue but gun
control advocates warn could
undermine state efforts to regu­
late firearms.
The bill, which goes Info
Senate debate Tuesday, also
would allow gun owners to travel
from one state to another with a
licensed firearm as long as It is
unloaded and In a car's trunk.
Marald * » * ty Tammy Vtacsnf
The 1968 law. which gun
control advocates say was not
strong enough, barred the mall
E le m e n ta ry School In Sanford. But come (all order or Interstate shipment of
firearms and ammunition. It also
Ihe buses w ill h it the roads again, fille d with
banned
Im portation of most
the sounds ot children.
firearms but not gun parts
Many gun owners and dealers,
us well as the NRA. have long
argued that the 1968 law put
u nnecessary restriction s on
th em . T h e a d m in is tr a tio n ,
which supports the legislation,
maintains the best way to han­
dle Illegal use of firearms Is to
Inqtose tougher sentences on
surrender. Alvurez said.
people who commit crimes with
"A ll three hollered at her." she said. One
guns.
witness. Francis Howard, said one of the officers ’
McClure says his bill would
yellrit, "Drop It!"
"rem ove unnecessary regulatory
Herring has worked for the Miami Police
b u rden s on the le g itim a te
Department 2W years and has been assigned
purchase of firearms by hunters
temporarily lo administrative duty pending an
and others for spoiling purposes,
Invrsllgutlon. which 1* routine whenever an and by law -abiding citizens
officer tires a gun. Stewart said.
seeking weapons for self protec­
Herring could not be reached for comment.
t io n "
Stewart said officers are trained lo use deadly
Sen. Orrln Hatch. R-Ulah,
force lo save their lives und those o f others and as another sponsor of the legisla­
a (Inal way lo capture a dangerous and armed
tion. argued that cities with the
Irion who la fleeing
toughest gun control laws, in­
"W e are trained you do not shoot to wound."
c lu d in g N ew Y o rk and
Stewart said. "II you use a weapon, you shoot to
W ashington, D.C.. have Ihe
kill "
highest rates o f lllrgal use of
Police said Ocana had threatened people with a guns
toy gun ut least once before. Records show she
In lobbying hard for the legis­
was arrested Nov 22 In on Incident that Involved
lation. the NRA says those op­
a toy gun.
posing thr bill must “ begin to
Stewart said Ocana had two daughters, aged 2 realize that restrictive gun con­
and 5. who have been In the custody of the
trol Is not the same as serious
Florldu Department of Health and Rehabilitative
crime control."
Services "for some lim e."
But Sen. Edward Kennedy,
"She was not well In Ihe head." said an
D-Mas*., a longtime hacker of
acquaintance, Carmen Betancourt, who said he
strong gun control legislation,
knew her from Cuba.
•ays he Is concerned the new bill
Betancourt said Ocana. who was single, came
would create new loopholes.
to Florida during the 1980 Martel hoatllfl tn live
Including Ihe sale o f guns Inwith her parents In Miami.
irrstale.
" I n s t e a d o f w e a k e n in g
handgun controls, we should hr
working to keep handguns Irom
falling Into (he wrong hands."
Kennedy said.
said tn his resignation letter.
Opponents say that each year
A preliminary Icderal bank examiner's report
handguns are used In more than
leaked lo the media last month said Lance had
10.000 murders and another
engaged In "numerous violations of the
500.000 violent crime*.
la w " as chairman of Calhoun First
National Bank.

l m * M Britton
VaronKa A Goal!

r toy4A imtlh

JuanltaM Booth, Daltons
Ho m M tuiana. OaOona

Wntf* v
0I1C HA S O I t

Dahrah Wasnarandtebytey. U n to*

Matin 0 Im etnlM iitiO r IM iM t'i

MIAMI llll'll — A 28-year-old mother who one
acquaintance says "w as not well In thr head"
was shot dead by a Miami [xillcrman when stir
(minted u gun at him that turned out tn be a toy
re pi leu of a ,38 revolver.
" I t ’s ti very rrallstlc-looktng toy." said police
spokesman Mlkr Stewart. "She pointed the gun,
and that's when tie pulled his service revolver
und shot her."
Marla C. Ocunu was waving the gun near an
outdoor calc and [minted the weapon straight at
officer David Herring. 23. one witness said. When
she disobeyed warnings by poller officers to drop
the gun. Herring Bred
Alter Herring shot Ocana. "h e Just collapsed on
the hood of a car." said a witness. Marie Alvarez.
"I felt so sorry for him ." she addrd.
Stewart said police were called to the corner of
Northwest 12th Avenue and 29th Street Sunday
morning about a woman wuving a gun on the
sttret, where she had been arguing with another
woman.
Ocana and Cenelda Miranda were quarreling
because Miranda had broken up a fight day*
before between Ocana and another woman, police
said.
"Marla pointed the gun. then pushed her to the
ground and roughed her up." Stewurt said.
Miranda ran off und called police
When officer* arrived, Herring upproachrd
Ocana and three other officers warned her to

B ert Lance Q uits A s Party Chairm an
A TLA N TA |UP|| — Bert Lance, who resigned as
ITestdenl Jimmy Curtrr's budget director amid
charges of trunking irregularities, has resigned as
budget director amid charges of bank­
ing Irregularities, has resigned as
chairm an of G eorgia's Democratic
Parly In ihe face of new allegations of
banking Improprieties.
Lance said In a b rief letter of
resignation dated July 3 that his tight
w lili the U.S Office o f Comptroller and
Currency "should be my light and not
the party's."
Gov. Joe Frank Harris, who was
quoted by an aide as saying thr
resignation was not unexpected, plans
to meet with party leaders this week to
discuss u replacement for Lance.
Lance had hern under pressure by
some stale party und legislative leaders
to either resign his post or become
Bert
more active In stale party affairs.
"t leave the chairmanship because I desire to
regain my status us a private citizen und not
because I have done anything Improper." Lancr

Lance

The reporl. following an eight-month
Investigation, said Lance and the
bank's directors allowed numerous
"abusive activities." The bank was sold
earlier this year.
Lance, who ran unsuccessfully for
govrrnor In 1974. could not be reached
for comment.
He resigned os Carter's budget chief
In 1977 amid allegations of banking
Irregularities
In 1981. a Jury could not reach a
verdict on charges cited in a bank fraud
Indictment und the government de­
cided not to retry the cose.

Lance made a political comeback when Walter
Mondule named him national party chairman,
snubbing national chairman Charles Manatt.

Evening Herald
IUIFI 411 JMI
Monday. July *, IfU
Vol 77. No 27J
FvBliihad Daily an* Sunday. iK iy l
lalarday ty Tha laniard Marald
lac. Mt N. Franc* Ava., laniard.
Fia urn.
Satond Clan Fallas* Fatd at lantard.
Fiartda urn
Hama DalI* try Wash. II It; Month.
M.rtl 1 Month,, 114 1), 4 Montht.
UMtj Yaar. lit.a*. By Mail Waak
ft.Ml Mam*. 44 Mi 1 Mantht,
IIIM i 4 Maatht. iU Mi Yaar,
M M *.
Ftiana ( M l) 1 U 1411.

�Shades Of Indiana Jones

Evening Htrald. Sanford, FI.

CALENDAR

American Explorer Finds Ancient City In Peruvian Jungle
LIMA. Peru (UPl) — An American explorer who
has spent more than a quarter century exploring
South America says he may have made his
greatest discovery a huge stone city that may be
one o f the largest pre-Columbian ruins ever
found
Gene Savoy. 58. who has made a career of
exploring Peru and South America, returned last
week from a 60-day expedition Into the Am a­
zonian Jungle between Peru's Maranon and
Uteuhamba rivers some 400 miles northeast of
Lima.
Hr said he discovered an ancient city stretching
for some 50 miles and covering an area of 120
square miles. He and his team of 20 machetew ie ld in g e x p lo rers cou n ted som e 24 .0 00
structures In the city, he said.
Savoy said many o f the buildings were circular,
built on platforms Others measured up to 140
feet In length. Some resembled terraced pyramids
the size of 15-story buildings, said Savoy, In

descrlblng the fortresses and buildings used for
living or religious ceremonies. He said buildings
In the city, which he named "G ran V llaya" after a
nebrby river valley, were o f sophisticated con­
struction including doorways, windows and
staircases.
"1 have never seen anything quite like It In my
many years of exploring." said Savoy, who is on
record as having found 40 ancient stone cities In
Peru's Jungles.
The ruins were remarkably well-preserved,
apparently by the thick cover o f Jungle brush, he
said.
Although he has not yet conducted scientific
aging tests. Savoy estimated the city was built
around 800 to 1.000 A D. and suggested It was
bulli and used by the Chachapoyas culture, a
pre Incan tribe about which very little* Is known.
"T h e magnitude of the Gran Vllaya ruins
m akes this u ndou btedly th e largest preColumbian metropolis In all o f the Americas." he
said.

Savoy said It will be up to archaeologists to
determine the full significance of his find. But its
sheer size will undoubtedly attract further study.
The city is located on mountain plateaus 8.000
to 9.000 feet above sea level In an area
"populated only by wild bears, monkeys and
puma." Savoy said.
He said his crew reached the site alter “ four
hard days straight up and down (mountainsides)
on mules and then we walked another day to
where the ruins began "
Savoy said he saw condors with 11-foot
wingspans circling above as he and his team cut
and crawled their way through the Jungle carpet
The rainforest was filled with "Tarzan like vines"
and so deep that daylight could not make Its way
through In places, he said
The expedition was sponsored by the Andean
Explorers Club o f Reno. Ncv Savoy, u Reno
native. Is a member of the club

Congressmen Warn Japanese: Open Your Markets To U.S.
TOKYO |UPI| — Members at a U.S. Congressio­
nal delegation have expressed doubt Japan will
open wide Its markets to U.S. goods and wanted
legislation restricting Japanese Imports to the
United States is likely If Japan keeps its own
harriers,
"W hat we've been saying Is Open up some of
your doors or we ll close some of ours','* Rep,
Sander Levin. D-MIch said Sunday
Rep. Berkley Bedell. D-Inwa and leader o f a
delegation of representatives from Northeastern
and Midwestern slates, said the group has seen
nothing to Indicate the Japanese would take
“ substantial action” he said was needed to
eliminate bureaucratic and procedural barriers to
irnfMirts American officials blame those barriers
for contributing to America's $35 billion trade
deficit with Japan in 1984.
"T h ey have been polite. They have listened.”
Bedell told a group o f American Journalists at a
briefing following meetings with Japanese gov-

emment and business leaders
But " I question personally whether we can
expect to see any substantial action on their part”
he added.
"T h e prime minister (Yasuhiro Nakasonr)
recognizes the seriousness o f the problem
somewhat more than ... the people In the Diet
IparllameuO or the business people we've met.”
he said.
"T h e trade deficit we face In the United States
Is sufficiently great that unless there Is a change.
II is quite likely that we will see some legislation
In Congress affect lng trade." Bedell concluded.
Members of the delegation, which arrived In
Japan Wednesday, said Congress is considering
quotas, tariffs and surcharges on Japanese
products entering the United States. Du; he
emphasized the United States needed to take "a
c o m p r e h e n s iv e a p p r o a c h " that Included
measures to cool (he dollar's high value In
relation to other currencies.

Levin conceded that "American suppliers are
going to have to do a better Job marketing their
products." He called for more com m ercial
attaches In U.S. em bassies and a greater
emphasis on foreign language education in the
United Stales.
But he predicted "a combination of surcharge
and quotas " on Japanese Imports If I lie Nukasone
administration falls to enlist corporate and
bureaucratic support in ellmlnailng harrirr* to
foreign goods entering Japan.
"The pressure for us to do something Is
becoming greater and the commitment to do
something Is becoming greater In Congress," said
Bedell.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohlo. said she and other
members of Congress were not optimistic that
Japan's "action plan" to be announced this
month In Tokyo would lie sufficient to redress the
problem But she added she "w ill wait and see"
lieforr throwing her weight behind any antiJapanese legislation

'R e ck le ss' M otorist A rre s te d O n G u n C h a rg e
A m otorlsl w ho a lle g e d ly
brandished a handgun when,
confronted by Irate Longwood
motel residents has been re­
leased on $5,000 bond after
being charged with aggravated
buttery.
Residents of the Lake Fairy
Motel. 920 N. U.S. Highway
17-92. reported to Longwood
police that a man sped Into the
motel parking lot. leaving skid
marks. He was confronted by
residents and stepped out of his
vehicle, a police report said.
Witnesses told police the man
brandished a handgun In a
threatening way and then fled
north on U.S. Highway 17-92 at
about 9 p.m. Saturday.
Police ran a computer check
on the license number of the
suspect's vehicle and traced him
lo his home, the report said.
One of the motel's residents.
James Apuzzo. reportedly Iden­
tified the susperl and Tory Lee
Donahue, 22. of 426 David St..
Winter Springs, was arrested at
his home at about 9:30 p in Hr
Is scheduled to appear In court
July 22
POT IN TR U C K
The driver of a truck stopped
b e c a u s e p o lic e th o u g h t
Brcrrackers were being thrown
from the v e h ic le has been
charged with possession of less
than 20 grunts of marljuuna
reported found In the vehicle
dutlng a pollre search
Sanford police slopped the
truck on French Avenue al
ubout 11:13 p m Thursday and
a small quantity of marijuana
reportedly found after the sus­
pect reportedly gave permission
for a search of Ihe truck, a police
report said.
Joseph Michael Amato. 20. of
114 Louglraf Pine Circle. San­
ford. was being held In lieu or
$500 bond.

BAD CHECK CHARGES
A 30-year-old Sanford man has
been cbarged with trafficking In
stolen property, petty theft, ut­
tering a forgery and theft, after
allegedly making transactions
with stolen, forged checks.
Sanford police reported one of
the checks had been stolen from
the Seminole County Services
Building on First Street. Sanford.
It was for $50 and had re­
portedly been forged and cashed
The other check, for $40. had
r e p o r te d been s to le n from
Claudia S. Herring and cashed al
Atlantic Bank. Sanford, on June
17. The suspect reportedly tired
to get his father to cash the other
check, but he refused on W ed­
nesday. a police report said.
Loren George Baker Jr., o f 701
E 8th St.. Sanford, was arrested
after questioning at the police
station al about 11 a m. Thurs­
day. He was bring held In lieu of
$8,000 bond

RIPPED OFF FANTB
A Tennessee man lost hla
money and hla pants during a
Sanford robbery Wednesday.
Jack Rich. 53. o f Jasper.
Tenn.. reported to Sanford poller
that he and Jack Lester. 53. of
110 Old Lake Monroe Road.
Sanford, were robbed by two
men — one they picked up In at

,S O&gt; y a

. •

officer of his suspicions" and the
woman's vehicle was slopped on
U.S. Highway 17-92 near Lake
Mary Boulevard In Sanford at
★ F ir e s
about 8:25 p m. Wednesday.
Tw o men In the car were not
★ C o u rts
charged, according lo a police
it P o lic e
report.
T h e w o m a n g a v e p o lic e
permission to search her car and
a bar and the other they picked among the Items found were u
plastic box containing pot. two
upon West 13th Street.
Rich and Lester met one man vials, a razor blade, a mirror, a
ut George's Tavern. H O I S. clip used to hold cigarettes and
French Ave. at about 9 p.m. and two partially smoked marijuana
then picked up another on West cigarettes, the report said.
Cynthia Mary Rice. 23. o f 10O
13th Street.
The four then drove to " 78 Coleman Drive, was being held
C astle B rew er Court. W h ile in lieu of $5,000 bond.
BO RRO W ED TH EFT
there, one of the men Rich and
An O rlando man who re ­
Lester picked up pulled a knife
and held It lo Lester's throat and portedly borrow ed the 1978
demanded his money, according Dodge o f a Seminole County
to Sanford police Capt. Herb ‘ woman, but didn't re I urn Ihe car
bus been charged with grand
Shea. Rich turned over $260.
At the same time the other theft auto.
Marlon Fiscus told sheriffs
man whipped out a stick and
deputies
that she loaned Ihe
beat Rich on the legs and lower
body, demanding hts money. man her car on June 26 to drive
to a Job Interview in Orlando.
Shea said.
He never returned nnd on
The bandit look Rich's wallet
containing $125 and his pants. June 29 she reported Ihe car
stolen.
The robbers then fled.
Arthur Dewey Givens Jr., of
Rich was treated at the scene
Orlando,
was arrested at about
for cuts, scrapes and bruises on
his legs, arms and back but went m idn igh t T u es d a y at Branto the hospital on his own. chwood A p a rtm en ts. W inter
Park, where deputies reported
according to a rescue report.
There are no suspects In the he had been staying He was
Itelng held in lieu uf $5,000
case. Shea said,
bond.
COKE AT HOME
C A L IF O R N IA HOLD
A 1 9 -y e a r-o ld A lta m o n te
S e m in o le C ou nty s h e r iffs
deputies acting on tip picked up S p r in g s w o m a n bus b e en
a Sanford man wanted on a charged with possession of co­
California burglary charge and caine and drug paraphernalia
after a search of her home
for fleeing prosecution there.
Fredrtc Lee Wheeler. 32. of r e p o r te d ly tu rn e d up c o n ­
8|3 Willow Ave.. was arrested at traband.
Seminole County drag task
about 6 p m . Thursday after
deputies made a traffic slop of force agen ts and Altam onte
his vehicle on state Road 46. Springs police, armed with a
west o f Sanford, sheriff's Capt. warrant, searched the home at
713 Wymore Road, *4. at about
Jay Leman said.
W heeler who Is also know as 8 30 p.m. Friday and reported
Christopher Slron. Leman said, finding a plastic bag of cocaine
was to be held In lieu of $50,000 and various Items of parapherna­
bond on the burglary charge, but lia.
Krlsh Mala Sanghl. who was
federal agents have ordered him
lo be held without bond, pend-, arrested at her home following
the search, was being held In
fog extradition to California.
lieu of $5,000 bond.
KNIFE TOM
F A K E PR ESCR IPTIO N
A 25-year-old Casselberry man
A pharmacist questioned the
who allegedly threw a knife at
his roommate during an argu­ validity o f a prescription pres­
ented by a woman and that led
ment has been charged with
to her arrest. Sanford police
aggravated assault.
report.
Donna Pttzer of 1425 Ash
David Kllngcnsmtth of Foust's
C i r c l e , C a s s e l b e r r y , t o ld
Drug Store. 407 E 1st St..
C asselb erry police the man
Sanford, reported to police that
threw the knife and then (led at
about 10 p.m. Thursday. Police
at 5:30 p.m. Friday a woman
known to him presented a pre­
searched for the suspect for
scription for Percocet *16. s pain
about 20 minutes and found him
reliever.
near his home, a police report
said.
He called Dr. Robert Smith o f
Sanford, whose name was on the
Ms. Pttzer gave them the knife
prescription, and Smith said he
she claims he threw, the report
said.
didn't prescribe the medication
for the woman, the report said.
Michael Allen Baker was being
The woman left the store and
field In lieu o f $5,000 bond.
Kllngenamtth reported the Inci­
POT SNIFFED OUT
dent to police. The suspect was
A Sanford policem an who
picked up at her home and
thought he smelled marijuana
r e p o r te d ly Id e n tifie d b y
burning In a car as be drove by
Kllngensmlth.
on U.S. Highway 17-92 anlffed
Karen Margaret Donaldson.
out a suspect who was arrested
23. of 300 S. Bay Ave.. Sanford,
for possession of pot and drug
was charged at 7 05 p.m. Friday
paraphernalia.
with attem pting to obtain a
The officer Informed another

Action Reports

controlled substance hy fraud.
She was being held in lieu of
$5,000 bond.
STO LEN CAR RECOVERED
A man who was putting gaso­
line into a disabled car (larked
on Stale Road 46 near Upxalu
Road, west of Sanford, has been
charged with possession of a
stolen vehicle.
ShertfTs deputies who spotted
the ear determined It had been
rrjH&gt;rtrd stolen and the man
with Ihe car had been Itaied as a
suspect In Ihe theft.
Warren Eugene Carter, 32. of
301 sth St.. Sanford, was Jailed
ul 5:40 p.m. Friday. He was
being held in lieu o f $5,000
bond.
B U R O LAR IE S A TH E F TS
A $500 television was stolen
from the home of Anlhony Eden.
26, of 887 N Jericho Drive.
Casselberry, on Thursday or
Friday, a sherlfTs report said.
A 1981 Bulck worth $4,430
and on consignment at Sanford
Auto Auction, Slate Road 46.
Sanford, was stolen between
May 22 and J u ly I. Sales
manager Jim Simpson reported
the theft to sherlfTs deputies and
said (lie car belongs to Jack
Lynch Chevrolet of Jacksonville.
Tw o 12-volt butteries with a
combined value o f $110 were
stolen from a boat behind the
home of Robert Palmer. 71, of
1612 S. B ea r L a k e R oad,
AjKtpku. on Thursday or Friday,
depul les said.
Johnny Southerland, 59. of
153 Whllcomb Hoad. Geneva,
reported lo deputies that a
22 caliber pistol worth $239
was stolen from his home on
Thursday or Friday.
About $155 cash. $400 worth
of costume Jewelry and a $475
police scanner were stolen from
Ihe home of Herald G. Ilartsock.
56. of 5205 Wilson Hoad. Puola.
on W ednesday, deputies re­
ported
Deputies have the name of a
suspect who may have stolen a
$1,000 watch and two handguns
with a combined value of $295
from Ihe home of Robert B,
Steiner. 62. of 725 Charlotte St..
L o n g w o o d , on T u e s d a y or
Wednesday.
A 1978 mo ped worth $230
was stolen form the garage of
Joseph Dean Stever. 41. o f 100
Magnolia Oak Court. Longwood.
on Thursday.
Caroline L. Washktll. 36, of
1156 N. Floral Way. Apopka,
told deputies a 1985 Suzuki
motorcycle worth $2,500 was
sto le n from h er ga ra g e on
Thursday.
A $300 video recorder was
stolen from Ronald E. Driggers.
34, o f 1833 C row ley Circle.
L o n g w o o d . by a t h ie f who
ransacked hla home on Wed­
nesday. according to a shertfTs
report.

Monday. July I. 1HS-JA

M ONDAT. J U L T 8
Free Steak dinner courtesy Altamonte-South
Seminole Jaycees to acquaint the public with the
organization for young adults. 18-36. 7 30 p m ,
Wlndsong Apartments clubhouse, county road
427 at Ballard Street. Altamonte Springs
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30 p m . dosed. 8
p m . step. 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed
Apopka Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p m., closed.
Apopka Episcopal Church. 615 Highland
Al Anon Step and Studv. 8 p m „ Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford A A. 8 p m . closed. 1201 W. First Si
Fellowship Group AA. senior citizens. 8 pin.,
closed. 2 0 0 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry
Overeaten Anonymous. 7:30 p m.. Weal Lake
Hospital, stale Road 434, Long wood
TUESDAY. J U L Y 9
l asselbcrrv Klwanls Club, 7 n.tn,, Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N t.ake Triplet Drive.
Casselberry
Sanford Toastmasters, 7:15 n.m.. Christos
Restaurant. 107 W. First St.. Sanford
Sanford Optimist Chib. I I 45 a m . Western
Sizzlln Kestaurani. Sanford
Sanford Lions Club, noon, Holiday Inn. In­
terstate 4. Sanford.
South Seminole County Klwanls Club. noon.
Quincy's Restaurant. Highway 17 92 and Live
Oaks Boulevard. Casselberry.
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E, Second St.. Sanford. I I a m to 7
p m. Florida Hosplidl Altamonte Branch. 601 K
Altamonte Avc.. 11 a m to 7 p.m
Sanford Senior Citizen Club, noon, Sanford
Civic Center Bag lunch and bingo.
Sanford-Duplicate litIdge Club. 1 j* m . Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 4CX) E First St.
Rebus Club AA, noon and 5:30 p m . closed. 8
pin., step. 130 Normandy Road, Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos Club, noon, closed
Sanlnrd AA. 5:30 p m , closed discussion, and 8
p m . open discussion. 1201 W Flrsl Si
17-92 Group A A. H p m ., closed. Messiah
Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Dogtruck Rond,
O verraters Anonymous, open. 7:30 p in .
Florida Rower A Light. 301 S Myrtle Avr .
Sanford.
W EDNE8DAY. J U L Y 10
lu ll Gospel Business Men's Fellowship In­
ternational breakfast meeting. 6:30 a m .. Holiday
Inn. Stale Road 436 and W ym ore Road. Alla
monte Springs For details rail 656-4255

SEMINOLE SEW &amp; VAC

SAVE ENERGY
ALL YEAR 'ROUND

1 DAY SERVICE
(ON MOST CASKS)

TRANE'S Wtithtrtien
Hut Pump in Conditional
[ill* Iltiofnt Climili
Contiol fnr ill i u w i

W A LL

F R E E E S T IM A T E
A ls o A v a ila b le
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Vscumss 4 Sawing Machlnaa
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test bmim* i &lt;i .

3229411

Please J o in W ith Us O n Tuesday,
J u l y 9th Al 11:00 A.M. When We

Will “Re-Dedicate” The “Clock”
1st St. and Magnolia Ave.

Joe &amp; Stella Oritt

Boat Insurance?
O

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*

iiiiiih

* s u \ s it lu * s t .

T TONY III)SSI INSURANCE
it
P h . 32 2-0285
* 2575 S. F ren ch A v e ., S a n fo rd

%Au to -O w n e rs In s u ra n c e
I dr, tfomr. ( ar HudiH-M. One njim-

it all.

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
Frequant H eadach es
Low BscK Of H ip Pain
Dlzzlnoss or L o s s of Sleep
Num bness o l Hands or Feel
Nervousness
N eck Pain or S tilln e s s
Arm and Shoulder Pain

75«Us» *

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Mb N$ Bsrtw.

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now os imia’ uim wmiCm it »t nroru.ro a* * niaoir Of moMitMiw n houss or aiaaos
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SANf ORD 333 5163 * A» Utual Thi» Snr.ua l» FflEl ORLANDO 849 036‘J __

ECONOMY DENTURE
CLINIC
J U L Y S P E C IA L
ECONOMY DENTURES ......*149%
DELUXE DENTURES..........*249%.
Same Day Repairs And Relines
545 HWY. 434. WINTER SPRINGS
40 AFfOHfMMT
S U 'lL V L
NECESSARY
CsnJd N. Cones DM.0.
30*1 19A 9

T

P tr u n s i

�E v e n in g H e ra ld
(U S P tU U M )
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 3277)
Area Code 305-322 201 I or 831-9993
Monday, July I. IMS—4A
Ways* D. Doylt, Publisher
Thom** Giordano, Managing Editor
Malvin Adkins, Advtrliting Olractor
Home Delivery: Week. • ) 10; Month. $4.73: 3 Month*,
• 14 23. 8 Month*, »27 OO. Year. *3100 Hy Mull Week.
• I 30, Month. HI 00.3 Month*. S1H 00; 6 Month*. *32 30.
Year. 900.00

Easing Distress
Of The Disabled
M ore than a yea r has passed sin ce the
R e a g a n a d m i n i s t r a t i o n s t o p p e d It s
o vcrzealo u s rev iew o f Social S ecu rity benefits
for disabled A m ericans.
Hut the lull In that m ean-spirited cam paign
has not brought an end to the hardship.
T h ou san ds o f d eservin g people th row n o ff
the d isab ility rolls still m ust fight their w ay
through a com p lica ted appeals process.
T h e a dm in istration could ease their plight
sim p ly by c o m p ly in g fu lly w ith the law.
W hen C on gress ordered re v ie w s o f disab ili­
ty benefits In I9H0. It en visio n ed an orderly
effort to purge the program ol m alin gerers
Vet the adm in istration used review s not
Just to d etect fraud, but to shrink the
p rogram 's $ I H billion costs.
It red efin ed elig ib ility rules and cut off
paym en ts to half a m illion handicapped,
m en tu lly III an d retard ed re c ip ie n ts by
declaring them able to work.
T h at ca p ric io u s sch em e u n leash ed the
wrath o f th r cou rts — w h ich reinstated
benefits for n ea rly two-thirds o f those w ho
appealed — und o f C ongress, w hich last fall
a pproved a law to forbid arb itra ry benefit

m cg o vern

What To Do About America Held Hostage
Launched on the rallying cry "life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness. - America has always
placed Importance on ensuring "the blessings of
liberty" for all Its people. Given our enormous
Investment In state-of-the-art security systems.
It Is no! surprising that A m ericans lecl
frustrated over our vulnerability to terrorism.
Former President Carter was the ehlef political
victim of the frustration that Americans experi­
enced during the Iranian hostage crisis. The
p r e s id e n t's c h a lle n g e r . Ronald R e a g a n ,
shrewdly exploited the public mood. assuring
voters that a different kind of president would
end terrorism.
The Irony o f all this Is that Reagan has
presided during a period when more Americans
have been seized or killed by terrorists than at
any previous time. During this crisis Reagan
adopted the same position Carter did. speaking
of his "frustration" In not being able to hit the
terrorists without Jeopardizing I lie hostages and
other Innocents.
Most Americans, I suspect, would have no
objectidn to retaliation If It could tie executed
without risking Innocent lives. Hut for ihe long
trrm, I believe we should take two more
substantive steps:

1. We need to sharpen the Intelligence
gathering capability o f the CIA so that we have a
better knowledge of the various terrorist groups
In hot spots such as the Middle East. The CIA
should Invest less time and resources In trying
to overthrow the government o f Nicaragua, and
more effort In getting on lop o f International
terrorism. Poverty-stricken little Nicaragua Is
not much of a threat to anyone — certainly not
to the power and might of the United States. But
Middle East terrorism is a daily threat to
Americans residing or traveling lit that part of
the world The CIA should recognize lhis as a
major challenge to thrtr role as a gatherer of
Intelligence Information.
2. We need a careful and critical review of
Amrrtran foreign policy lo determine. If possi­
ble, why our policies so deeply Infuriated ihe
groups that have decided to risk their lives in
these terrorist attacks against us. Is It possible
that we are pursuing policies that could be
modified w llh no loss to our nation, while
reducing some of the resentment and rage lhai
drives the terrorists against us?
For example, the Shiite Moslems were the
• h id victim s o f Israel's 1983 Invasion of
Lebanon. Although Hie Israelis finally withdrew.

they have seized more than 700 Shiites who. at
press time, are being held hostage In Israel. The
release of these Moslem hostages was the chief
objective o f the group holding the original 40
American hostages. Have our policy makers
been slow In recognizing the explosive nature o f
the Israeli occupation and the subsequent
seizure of Lebanese citizens? Have our policy
makers also considered that Ihe heavy shelling
of the Druse hills by the battleship New Jersey
and the Marine shelling o f Shiite communities
after ihe bomb attack on the Marine barracks
rnraged Ihe Shiltr people and their leaders?
Our best-informed experts on Iran tell us that
the 1953 CIA-assisted roup that overthrew
Iranian Premier Mossadegh and pill the shah on
Ihe throne has been a major cause o f Iranian
haired of America s policy, For the 25 years that
followed. Ihe shah was seen as an American
creation who systematically persecuted dissi­
dents at home while pursing military and
economic policies I ha I served U.S, objectives
ralher than those o f the people of Iran. These
and other questions need to hr considered by
our policy makers In seeking out the root causes
of acts of rage against ourclllzrnrv.

SCIENCE WORLD

WASHINGTON WORLD

Science
In The
Microwave

Party
Changers
To Watch

Ily A rn old S aw lslak
UPI Senior E d ito r
WASHINGTON (UPI| — "A ll poli­
ties Is local." Tip O'Neill has said,
cutoffs.
and the elders of his Democratic
A som ew h at abashed adm in istration tem ­ Party would do well lo puy attention
lo ihat dictum In considering Ihe
p o rarily su spended th r rev iew program even
current Republican effort to Induce
before C on gress acted.
a political realignment In the United
Hut the m oratoriu m did n oth in g for the
Sintra,
T h e R epu blicans have made
d estitu te thousands already tossed from the
much of their conversion of big
rolls,
name Democrats such as Jrane
T h e y r e m a in v ic tim s o f a m is g u id e d
Kirkpatrick, the former United Na­
a d m in is tra tio n policy: W h e n e v e r a court
tions ambassador, Ed King. Ihe
ru led that a disab led p e rso n hud been
former governor of Massachusetts,
w r o n g fu lly r e m o v e d from th e rolls, the
and Kent Ha rue. the former Texas
a d m in is t r a t io n re in s ta te d th e p la i n t i f f s
congressman.
T h e D e m o c ra ts , w ith som e
b en efits — but refused to a p p ly the court's
Justification, have noted that some
rid in g to oth er cases.
o f these well known party switchers
T h at |K)Ucy hurt m an y p eop le w h o w ere
werr people who had nowhere else
sim p ly too poor or lo o confu sed to appeal
lo go than to thr GOP alter being
their b en efit losses.
rejected by Democratic voters.
They have labeled I hear defectors
H ealth an d H u m an S e rv ic e s S ecretary
"opportunists." who were lust try­
M argaret H eckler adm itted as m u ch curlier In
Ju ne w h en she annou nced that the ad­ ing to prolong their political careers
by crossing the street, where cam ­
m in istration w ilt now follow leg a l precedents
paign funds and easy nominations
In benefit cases.
were being wuvrd.
Hut there Is more lo the story, and
Vet the new p o licy offers o n ly feeb le hope.
the Dcmncruls can Ignore It only til
T h ou gh It requ ires a d m in istra tive law Judges
Ihelr jrerll.
to g iv e cla im an ts thr benefit o f appellate
The Republicans. In making a
rulings w ith in their circu it. It Includes no
show of the defections, produced
sim ilar req u irem en t for state a gen cies (hut
about 1(X) Democratic switchers
handle Initial claim s and appeals.
front 20 stales at u While House
ceremony
last monlb More Hum 30
T h u s on ly the few cla im a n ts w ith the
of these were slate ofTleluls. most
m oney, sta m in a and tim e to press a case pant
legislators, and nearly twice that
the Initial ajipeul w ill h rn rin t from federalnumber city amt county officials
rulings.
These are thr |&gt;cnplr — the mayor
and city council memnbrrs from
That approach Ignores the real distress o f
Dry Prong. Lu., and thr state
defen seless people w ro n g ly re m o v e from the
representative from Gas City, hid .
rolls and In need o f Im m ed ia te relief.
for example — the Democrats ought
A n d as la w m a k ers at u recent House
lo be worried about,
su b c o m m ittee heurlng co m p lain ed , the jtollcy
First, they hold public office now,
lim its C o n g res s's o rd er thut th r adm in istra ­ which means Hie actual ability of
the Republicans to pul Ihelr linprlnl
tion a p p ly circu it court ru lin gs It does nut
on government has been enhanced,
plan to appeal to all cla im an ts within the
Second, Ihelr Inlluence Is ul Ihe
c irc u it. D espite these criticism s , the a d ­
stale and local level, where the
m in istration says It w ill keep th r new policy
Democrats have remained strong
and resu m e disability re v ie w s this sum m er.
despite the loss of four of thr last
C ongress should In terven e to c h a n g r the
live presidential elections and thr
a d m in istration 's law less plan.
loss o f control o f the Senate for the
first time III a quarter of a century.
Third. Ihrrr seems lo lie less of a
stigma on |K&gt;lltlcluns who switch
parties ut the lower levels o f Ihe
iuddrr than those who do so on Ihe
L e tte r s to the ed ito r e re w elcom e for
highly visible upper rungs
pu blication. A ll le tte rs m ust be signed and
When top-level |&gt;ollllclaiis switch,
Include s m ailin g address and. If possible, a
thry oltrn flop In Ihelr new (turtles
te le p h o n e num ber. Th e E v en in g H erald
re s e r v e s the right to ed it le tte r s to avoid
E x a in p i e s a r e 1) e m o •
lib e l and to accom m odate apace.
crut-tumed Republican John Con
nally, Ihe former governor o f Texas
who hasn't been elected to unylblng
since Ills change ol parties, and
Republican-lurned-Democrat John
Lindsay, (hr former mayor ol New
York.

court

Pleas* Write

BERRYS WORLD

□ y Jan Z iegler
UPI Science W r ite r
W A SH IN G TO N (U l'll Som e
p e o p le put d in n er In to th e ir
microwave and end up with rockhard sludge. Scientists at a govern­
ment laboratory did It on purpose
and ended up with a new building
material.
Hut rather than using the latest
gourmet frozen rnlree. researchers
zapped liny microbubbles o f fly ash
or glass In an ordinary kitchen
microwave and found they could
produce un Incredibly hard, strong,
featherweight foam that can be cul
and sawed

ROBERT WAGMAN

Our Global Economy
P A L A T IN E . 111. IN E A ) Dis­
c r e e t l y m o u n t e d on n w a ll
overlooking thr lobby of thr Square
D Co corporate headquarlrrn here
Is a stylized world map with almost
two dozen lights drslgnallng the
linn's global facilities.
Square D’s em ergen ce us an
International marketer and maimlac hirer, a relatively recent devel­
opment. typlllrs ihe extent to which
Ihe economies of (Ids country and
other nations have become Increas­
ingly Interdependent.
lo 1970. U S, tuqxotx and cx|x&gt;rt*
ol gorals and services totaled $125
billion. During thr past live years.
ih.il (Igurr has averaged more than
$700 trillion annually. Thus, a
fivefold Increase In glottal trade luis
Ix-cit registered In slightly more
than a decade.
The attention focused In recent
years on the nation's trade deficit
(the extent to which liiqxtrix exceed
exjx»rts| has obscured a lar more
Im portant ph enom enon — Ihe
e m e r g e n c e o f u t r u ly glottal
economy.
Indeed, thr revenues earned by
other countries from Ihelr exports to
Ihe United Stales have assumed
crucial Importance tn sustaining a
healthy domestic economy.
Only a lew years ago. economists
were warning that the federal gov­
ernment's need to finance massive
budget deficits would "crowd out"
private borrowing, drive up Interest
rules lo Intolerable levels and push
the economy Into another Inflat Innary spiral.
Hut that crow din g out never
oc cu rre d — In great m easure
because other n a tio n s' export
rurnlngs have Ix-en recyrlrd hark
Into this country In the form of

Investments or loans made to both
publlr und private borrowers
Even though exports have lagged
tx-hind Inqxirts In rercnl years. Ihe
phenomenal growlh of exports has
saved or created millions o f Jobs In
an era when Ihe domestic market
lor many good* and services has
become saiuraled.
Th e Census Bureau estimates that
every Si billion worth of exports
provides 30.800 domestic Jobs — u
r e l a t i o n s h i p c r u c|a I to th e
em ployees of companies such as
Square [)
When It was founded In 1903.
Square D had no global aspirations.
As recently as lUtiO. II wus essen­
tia lly a d om estic p ro d u c er of
heavy-duty electrical equipment.
Today, however, the firm has mar­
keting and manufacturing facilities
in Slng.i|Mirr and Spain. Ireland and
Italy, Canada and Costa Rica. Saudi
Arabia and South Africa.
M ore than one-fourth o f the
com pany's 22.HOO employees are
assigned to Its International opera­
tions, which account lor 15 perrenl
to 20 prreent of Its annual sides
An example o f the company's
International Involvem ent: Five
y e a r s a g o . F lu o r C o r p ., u
C a lifo rn ia -b u sed a rc h itectu ra l,
engineering and construction firm,
was awarded a $500 million con­
tract by I’citamlna. Indonesia's na­
tional oil coinpuny. to expand a
petroleum refinery on the Island of
Java.
Almost 150 other companies —
ranging from a heavy equipment
manufacturer In Minnesota to a
valve producer In Connecticut — as
well as uncounted thousands ol
their employees benefited from the
Indonesian rrflncry project

Like chefs, the scientists at Los
Alamos National Laboratory In Los
Alamos. N.M , are experimenting
with many Ingredients, hut the t&gt;csl
so far has been (lynsh, the airborne
ash that comes from coal-fired
|M&gt;wrr plants.
"T h e strongest loams w e’ve made
have been out of flyash. and also the
lightest roams we've made have
been out of flyash." said Tom
Meeks, a ceramic* engineer and
section lender for the advanced
&lt;r ramies project at Dm Alamo*.
Th e flyash foam weighs .012
ounces per cubic centimeter. It can
hold up under 790 pounds |&gt;cr
square Inch, or 100.000 [xiund* per
square foot. The Irnslle strength Is
alxiut 50 000 pounds
S p ra y e d -o n c o n c r e t e has a
Wright-(rearing capacity of 300 to
•too pounds |wr square Inch. Reinforced concrete, however, has a
compressive strength of 3.000 lo
4.000 pounds per square Inch.
M e e k s s a id t h e N a t i o n a l
Aeronautics and Space Administra­
tion has shown intrrest tn the
process. It may lx- |xis*ible one day
lor astronauts to place a bag of
ceram ic dust III a microwave ontxrard the shuttle, zap it and use thr
resulting material tn replace dam­
aged tiles on ihelr rratt
The process may be Ideal for
projects on a space station or lunar
imsc. where moon dust could be
used and thereby eliminate the need
lo irunspnrt raw materials from
Earth.
It may also be useful as Insulation
or as material for buoys, he said,
The process could save energy In
the making and transporting of
building materials, hut will It revo­
lutionize ihe building Industry?
"T h e Jury's out on that," Meek
said In a telephone Interview ,
"W hat Interests me and the people
here Is what we're seeing wllh the
microwave processing o f this mate­
rial. We re seeing different kinds of
chemistry going on that w r don't
understand .'*

JACK ANDERSON

U n r e s t S tirrin g S o u th O f T h e B o rd e r

"My ton, the money founder*!"

By Jack A nderson
A nd
Dale V an A tta
WASHINGTON - Not In many
years have relations bet wren Ihe
U.S. and M exican governm ents
been as cool as they are today.
Ironically, this estrungemenl comes
at a lim e when econom ic and
cultural ties between the American
and Mexican peoples are closer than
ever.
A fundamental trouble seems to
be that U.S and Mexican leaders
simply don't understand ruch othtr.
No more start ling proof of (his could
be Imagined than the private con­
versation Mexican President Miguel
de la Madrid had with two of his top
aides late last year.
T h e y w e r e n 't d i s c u s s i n g
U.S.-Mexican rrlutkuis directly. Th e
subject was the upcoming Mexican
midterm elections (held yesterday)
tn which ihe oppoaltlon National

i

Action Party — or PAN — was
expected to win two or three of
seven governorships at stake In
northern Mexico. The president and
Ills aides were discussing Ihe usual
strps that could be taken to steal
Ihe election for Ihelr Institutional
Revolutionary Party — PRI — which
has had a virtual monopoly o f
political |xmrr for more than 50
years.
Hut thr Mexican leaders were
worried ubout the violence that was
sure to erupt if PAN 's candidates
were cheated out of thrtr victories.
In the old days, tx-lore PAN emerged
os a viable opposition party, the PRI
would have had nothtqg to worry
abou t. Hut d is tu rb a n ce s have
broken out in recent years when
vote fraud had been too obvious.
Hut If thr Mexicans are still
n u rsin g p s y ch ic w oun ds o v e r
long ago grievances, there's a cer­

tain convenient amnesia on this
side of the Rio Grande. In fact, one
o f t h e b i g d i f f i c u l t i e s In
U.S. M exican rela tio n s (and In
U.S.-Nicaraguan relations. Tor thal
matter) Is the Insensitivity of Amer­
ican ofllclals to our Latin neighbors'
(ear of Yankee aggression, which to
them are solidly founded in history.
The State Department. at least,
has long been aware ol both the
d if fic u lt ly betw een the United
States and Mexico and the Im­
portance of trying to erase them.
"T h ere Iare) forces so powerful that
thr combined efforts of leaders here
and In Mexico can only influence
them at Ihe m argin ." a secret
department report states. "T h r
problems of illegal immigrants, nar­
cotics and social Inequality are
forces of this magnitude. These
problems will be important to us:
Mexican and American societies are

becoming Interwoven to the point of
symbiosis "
The State Department's concern
over Mexico and its seem ingly
Insurmountable problems Is shared
In u frightening way by the Pen­
tagon. The Defense Intelligence
Agency has actually made a secret
study o f how many A rm y divisions
It would take to seal o ff the
1.933-ntllr border with Mexico to
slop an expected deluge o f panicstrlken rrIngres In case o f revolu­
tion or widespread violence.
Footnote: Reagan administration
olflclals don't want lo talk about
Mexico's problems. Repeated re­
quests (or interviews were rejected,
and a respected private group, the
Center for International Security,
had to cancel a seminar on the
subject because no administration
official would agree lo take part In a
public discussion.

I

�SPORTS

C v M in i HaraM, SsaHerf, Ft.

. Jvtv it n

-SA

A m e rica n s H ave
it Th eir W av. 7-2
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer

Ormond
Stuns
Sanford

Baseball

T A V A R E S — B e f o r e th e
F lo rid a L ittle Major Leagu e
Sub-District Tournament began. a number o f outstanding plays
E r a k ln e H ow ard a n d E r ic
In the field but had gone hltlesa
Washington didn't figure very "5»t ,the p la te. Saturday, th e
heavily in Sanford Americans' d im in u tive second basem an
plans
cracked a solo homer lhat tied
Washington was considered the game at 1-1 and the A m eri­
the fourth pitcher on the team cans never looked back after
and would probably only be that.
called on In a Jam. Howard was
'J ic (Howard) had no business
nn alternate and not even on the being an alternate In the first
team when practice started.
p la c e ." A m e rlc a n s ‘ , * c o a c h
However, when the Americans Ronnie Slpplo said. "He should
found out that Derrick Taylor have been on the team all along.
and Tony Chavers, the top two He's a great little ballplayer."
pitchers, would not be able to
Washington pitched out o f a
p l a y b e c a u s e t h e y a r e Jam In the lop o f the first as. with
13-years-old. Washington was one out, he walked two hitters
m oved into the starting pitching and they moved to second and
rotation and Howard was moved t h i r d o n a p a s s e d b a l l ,
up to the team where tie earned W a s h i n g t o n th en c a u g h t
the starting Jobat second base.
cleanup hitter Scon Sestak look­
T h e rest, as they say. Is ing at a third strike and struck
history,
out Darrell Canada lo end the
Washington pitched his sec­ Inning.
ond strong ballgam e o f thr
The Am ericans rapped out
toum ey as he tossed a three- three hits o(T Nationals' starter
h itter and Howard, who, at David Dunn In the bottom o f the
around 4 feet 5. Is usually first, but a fine defensive play by
counted on more for his glove center fielder Calvin Donaldson
than his bat. Ignited the offense turned them away.
with two hits. Including a solo
Tony Duval, who hit over .700
hom e run as I he Am ericans for the tournament, led off w ith a
disposed o f the Sanford Na­ single to right cenlcr and. with
tionals. 7*2, Saturday morning one o u t. F lo y d H e n d e rs o n
In the Sub-District 3 finals.
singled lo left. With two away, Al
T h e Americans advance lo the Perkins drilled a single up the
District 4 Tournament which middle and Duval was waved
begins Monday (July 151 at home Donaldson came up with
Ormond Beach.
the ball cleanly and fired a strike
"E ric (Washington) was really lo Canada to nail Duval at the
a pleasant surprise." Americans plate.
coach Duane Lafolletle said. "He
The Nationals then carried the
was actually a fourth string momentum from Donaldson's
pitcher to start out with. Every­ play Into the top of the second.
thing was on Derrick ITaylor) With one out, Donaldson lined a
and Tony (Chavcm) but, when shot pasl first baseman Harvey
we lost them, Eric showed us In Cllngcr and It went for a triple.
practice that he could do It."
An error on the throw to third
In h is tw o o u t i n g s ,
enabled Donaldson lo score for a
1-0 lead.
Washington allowed a lota) of
five hits and no earned runs.
Dunn set the Americans down
Saturday, (he big right-hander In order In the bottom o f the
struck out seven and walked Jusi second und Washington did the
four.
same to the Nationals In the top
In the Americans' two pre­
vious games, Howard had made
S ee H O W ARD , Page 7 A

W I tmmy Vann)

Ersk in e H o w a rd divas in to third b a se a h e a d of tha tag by O em atrius P r e s le y .

Becker's 20 A ces Fold Curren
WIMBLEDON. England (UPt) - With a
wicked serve, an arsenal of athletic
shots, and an Indomitable will. Boris
B ecker re-wrote W im bledon hlslory
Sunday.
The 17-year-old strawberry blond with
the thunderous serve Bred 20 aces In a
0-3. 6-7 (4-7). 7-6 (7-3|. 6-4. victory over
Kevin Cunrn. becom ing the first un­
seeded player, the youngest man. and
the first German to win the All England
championship.
" I think l played a very good match
today, and I think the match was a good
on e." said Becker, who faced no one
seeded higher than fifth en roule to the
championship.
Curren, who demolished defending
champion and top seed John McEnroe
und No. 3 seed Jim m y Connors In
straight sets to reach the final, testified
to Becker s remarkable accomplishment.
"H e can be No. I In the world one
d a y," Curren said. "H e's only 17 und

Tennis
he's got a lot of tim e and a lot of room for
Improvement."
A year ago al Wimbledon, Becker,
sprained an ankle during a third-round
match against Bill Scanlon and had to be
carried off on a stretcher, Sunday, he
walked off C e n te r Court w ith the
Challenge Trophy.
Only once during the 3-hour, 1Hminute contest did Curren break service,
and he reached break points only four
other limes. Curren, who had used his
powerful serve lo win three consecutive
matches without losing a service, was
broken three lim es by Becker.
"I'v e played harder servers, but not
guys with his great placement," the
27-year-old Curren said "His return has
a dramatic topapln. He hits It so hard
and with such a dip. that perhaps It put

m eolfat lim es.”
Ironically. Berkrr. nicknamed "D oom
Boom." passed up the German Open two
months ago fearing too much pressure In
hl» homeland. Now. he Is faced with
being an Instunt celebrity.
"This Is going to change tennis In
Germany," Becker admtUed. 'M aybe
West Germans now have a tennis Idol.
And maybe It's me now. I don't k n ow ."
M A R T IN A 'S 0 T H IS SW EETEST
WIMBLEDON. England |UP1) — For
Martina Navrulllovu. the, sixth one was
the sweetest.
Perhaps the reason for this Is because
she's won the Wimbledon championship
mi often. It's difficult to remember one
from the other. Or perhaps there's a
feeling that al age 28 there’s cause to
wonder If any more will come.
To her o w n w ay o f r e a s o n in g ,
Navratilova explains It lo the fact she
wasn't the strong favorite as has been
the custom In recent years

Radcliff's Bat Sizzles;
Altamonte Sweeps 3

Tuesday
...W h ile the S e m in o le 's
Savages th ird p la c e finish
w as pretty re sp ectab le In
the Satellite B e a ch 15 and
U n d e r S o ftb a ll T o u rn a ­
m ent this p a st weekend,
m anager Don Jo n a s needs
h is g irls to Im prove their
showing as the im portant
tournam ents loom on the
horizon...
...M anager R ic h a rd Cotfey's Apopka-W est
Seminole te a m wrapped
u p th e B ig L e a g u e
T o u rn a m e n t S u n d a y as
catcher M ik e D a v is put on
a sp e cta cu la r h ittin g dis*
p lay. O v ie d o 's Sem inoles
had tro u b le w ith th e ir
n a m e sa ke s, d ro p p in g a
d o u b le - h e a d e r to th e
Oviedo Lio n s...
...Sun B a n k 's e x c e lle n t
b a s e b a ll s e a s o n w as
erased by the Inellgiblity
of D e rric k T a y lo r. Jeff
M o n son, S a n fo rd 's super­
intendent of p a rk s and
recreation, ru le d over the
weekend th a t the Little
M a|or C ity S e rie s winner
would have to g iv e up Its
trophies...

"T h is w as the most s a tis fy in g ."
N a v r a t llo v u s a id S a tu r d a y a ft e r
overcoming Evert Lloyd. 4-6. 6-3. 6 2. In
Ihr wom en's final. "I was m ore of the
underdog this time than maybe I've tieen
since the first time I won.
"I don't know what thr consensus was
among the press, but In the locker room
Chris was the majority winner."
On Center Court. Navratilova was the
unanimous winner, further establishing
her position us a Wimbledon legend.
Only tw o women. Helen W ills Moody
wllh eight and Dorothy Chainbers (7).
have won more singles than she has. and
not since Moody (1927-30) has a woman
been able to capture four titles In a row.
Of m o re Im mediate consequence,
Navratilova avenged her defeat to Evert
Lloyd In last month's French Open final,
stopped her long time rival's run of two
successive Grand Slam crowns, and In
all probability reclaimed for herself the
world No. 1 ranking.

By S o i
Herald S p a rta Editor
Even the heat took a backseat
to Chris RadcllfT Sunday. While
the temperature was sweltering against Maitland. After Jaaon
at i he 100-degree level, the Varitek doubled to open the first.
Altamonte Juniors* 13-year-old Kevin Walnscott walked, RadcllfT
center fielder continued (o swing then launched a mammoth ahot
a stilling stick as he clobbered over the right center field fence
two home runs to stoke Alta­ for a 3-0 lead.
monte past Maitland. 13-3, In
In the third, Altamonte added
District 14 Division 2 All-Star two more when Varitek singled
Tournam ent baseball at the prior to Walnscott, RadcllfT,
Maitland Little League complex.
J errey Thurston and Danny
Coupled with Friday night’s Hendricks drawing successive
18-2 demolition o f Deltona and walks for the 9-1 lead.
laratola couldn't find the plate
Saturday's 25-0 bllLx of Oviedo.
Altamonte has a 3-0 start and In the third as Maitland added Its
earned a week off before meeting final two runs. "T h e Shiek” was
the s u r v iv o r o f the losers' relieved by From who shut down
bracket Monday night. July 15 the Maitland crew the real of the
at Oviedo.
way to pick up the victory.
"it will be good for us. we're
R a d c llff, w h o m ad e a
looking forw ard to It," said spectacu lar d iv in g catch In
Walnscott. " W e 'l l get some center field to complement hla
practice and a little rest.
fine day. made a curtain call In
"W e expert the competition the top of the fourth. After
will get tougher but we also Walnscott drew a walk, the big
think we ll play better against lefty picked on a fastball and
better com petition."
rifled a screamer Just Inside the
It's g o in g to be hard fo r right-field foul pole for a two-run
RadcllfT to play too much better. homer and an 11-3 lead.
The left-handed phenom la 7 for
Altamonte tacked on Its final
7 for the three-game set with tw o two In the fifth when Jltnmy
homers and a triple. He also Hovla and Prom singled. Jamey
tossed a no-bitter Friday night.
•a s SWEEP. R ags 7A
The two homers came Sunday

B aseball

Hw ,M a w I f test Cm *

J e r r e y Thurston b a r r e ls around t h ird base and scores a ru n
in A ltam on te's 13-3 w in o ver M a itla n d Sunday.

t
q \9

4 4

• ijiJ

B y Sam Cook
Herald S p o rts Editor
Sanford's Junior Leagur All
stars tecelvrd an Indicator lhat It
wasn't going lo tie their day
Saturday m orn in g when O r­
mond Beach hung a 5 0 sc 11vack
on them In thr Florida Junior
Major League District 4 baseball
tournament.
Six hours later, however, the
Juniors found out for sure It
wasn't their day as Ormond
Beach exploded for 13 lilts en
route lo an easy 9-2 victory and
a berth In Aug 2 Junior Major
League Slate Tournament at
Key West.
"I guess It Just wasn't meant
to be," said a disillusioned Jim
Lucas whose leant nreded Just
one win Saturday to wrap up thr
Key West trip " W r lost this
tournament In the morning W r
didn't have anything left (or the
night game. That demoralized
us. Wr should have won lhat
morning gam e."
Lucas, nevertheless, said he
could take nothing awav from
Ormond Beach, which played
near perfect baseball Ormond
was surprised Monday by New
Smryna Beach. 7-6, but then
came hack wllh 9-1 (Holly llllll
and 4-1 INSH) victories to move
Into Saturday's game
Jell Grodl was the biggest
thorn in Sanford's side The slim
Orm ond B each right hander
shut down the Juniors on three
hits In the opener He si nick out
11 und kept the locals swinging
at a nose diving breaking pitch
all morning
Sanford had Us opportunities
Allrr two were out In the first,
Ronald Cox reached on an error
by Ihe catcher Willie ' Sugar
T e x " M cCloud and Bernard
Mitchell each drew u walk to
load the buses.
Sammy Edwards then hit a
soft grounder between shortstop
mul third. The shortstop gloved
the balk and just nipped Me
Cloud, w ho got n tnte start on the
play, by a step at third base to
kill the rally.
Jim bo Lucas was a surprise
starter on the mound for San­
ford "I wanted to net up their
hllterH with the ciirveball for two
or three Innings." said Lucas.
"Then bring on McCloud wllh
the speed. It would have worked
If we would have played de
fense."
Lucas got the first hitter on
strikes by Lurry Hlnglc slnglrd
lo right and Grodl rcuched on an
error try thr third baseman
Lucas cam e buck lo gel big (6-2.
2001 Billy Glenn on a |mp fly lo
second base. Hr then Induced
Ron Sapsford lo hit a routine fly
trail lo right but the rigid fielder
drupped the ball, allowing bolh
runs lo score lor a 2 0 lead
G rodl and Lucas m atched
goose eggs In thr second Inning
Sanford had uuolher gulden op­
portunity In Ihr Ihlrd when
Dwight Brinson singled, stole
second and moved lo Ihlrd on a
passed trail. Williams followed
wllh a medium lly ball to right
field. Brinson broke for the plutr
after Ihe catch but catcher Glenn
rnude a great grab and tag lo Just
nip ihe sperdy Brinson who
barrelled hrad-flrsi Into the
massive backstop.
McCloud came on b&gt; pitch thr
third, W llh one out. Ihe Ir­
repressible Grodl reached when
hr struck out and Ihr wild pitch
skipped pasl Ihr catcher. Mc­
Cloud Ihr whiffed Glenn hut
with Sapsford at trat. Grodl, who
stole second and went to third
on a wild pitch, drew a throw lo
third which hit him In lire hack
He scored as the trail curnmrd
Into foul ball lerrllory.
S a n fo r d n e v e r s e r io u s ly
t h r e a te n e d a gain . O rm o n d
picked up two more In the six
then Sapsford took McCloud
deep over Ihe left center field
fence for a homer. McCloud then
tried to pick a runner oil third
with tw o outs and threw thr bull
away for the final run
Lucas. Cox and Brinson had
the three Sanford singles
"W e came In overconfident."
said Edwards "W rju st k n e w we
were going to win Ural first
game. They spoiled all of our
rallies."
O r m o n d B each t o o k I m ­
m ediate control against loser
Cox In Ihe second game. Alter h
single by Perry Lyle and another
drupped lly ball by thr right
fie ld e r . Sapsford s lu g g e d a
three-run homer over ihe left
field fence. One out later. Phillip
H i n ib n tlom rifled a
roundtrlpper over the left center
field fence for a 4-0 lead.
Sea SANFORD. P a g e 7 A

�*A—Evening HsrsM, laniard, FI.

AAgnOoy, Jaty », I W

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
A M IR IC A M
(••1

STANDINGS
N A TIO N A L

LFAO U I
w

OS
L Pci,
u 77 HO —
u H M
u if 1S7 IV*
41 V 17* t
IS it *47
V li 14*

tf Low1!
Montreal
Hoot York
Chicago
Phtiaaoiphla
Pl!*tburgh

ns

Taranto
Detroit
Now York
Balttmar*
So* tan
Milwaukee
Cleveland

L fA O U C

w

L

4f
4S
O
41
40
34
35

n
n
IS

V
0
41
S4

RESULTS
Pet. OS
Ml
S77 14
44
Ul
n* *4
too IV*
4M 11
)1« 7)

■ M M - I II
I f lM O t - N t lt
Udar luma I7L fn a rd 17| ad
Au Ha t a r t a»»« (II. I r w 'r Iff
ad Ian* a e«w m i i - leto
I I
II
I * I rt • 0 1 a t l

g-Attp inat l-

Or t t mm* 'it Or m
I m p n r i P H t M t M ir

LEADERS
tv

Ml*** Lm «m
*r»t

mm h

L*f4«r»
i

••■•I tut »*•• in ipflifiil
• it

r I pel

Mt III
Or««tk?. 10 i f f H M r w O I I
i n r a n i U U Cm H im
W u p l m m - Matt T«r lit
Km T(t i p Mm i M itn , U * T MT III
it t m f t C lit

Yanks
Sweep
Twinbill
United Press International

Unlike last year, the second
half of this season offers more to
14 171
u a 21
r llO U w i
the New York Yankees than a
Woo*
M M ■ C 21
M UJ 4
toe Ttrk
a M a - 111
m —
tan Diego
47 n
n m « • jn
chance lo regain respectability.
y&gt; ID 1
U
W
1
at
at
m
111
i t r nm tip. vt
4
Lo* Ango'o*
43 M u t
i u n t n
to* 14
X
ftmandH McOaaa" 171 ad lay
The Yankees produced the
Cincinnati
41 tf )M 1
nm u b m
n u* 14
Lm m - A r t Or «
■a* 4»&lt;» Cant 'At. sarkrr li ad
Mow*ton
best sATcond-half record In the
41 *0 to
* tv*
i
n
u n jr
A'yMBc C*v tt Ig inMM O* * I M
4) 44* to
Cwww • &gt;rvrWi III L-VarPItn
14 41 4)0 I lls
A Menlo
xn R a n •oiMHtttt T r P
major leagues in 1984. only It
M X ) 114
p i a M - l ri
am n t p
tan Fronclkco
31 M X ) 1*4
didn't count for much because
■aHi a . - la m
Twt
«r a
rtacaadOaaHI
BaltlmaroI.
Kantat
City
1
U l v r F i y 'i b w l t i
O l h r 111. Dana in
• +
t i Prt
IMA O* * Cm m p 10 tt. iO rr C«w
the Detroit Tigers had virtually
Baa Tark
m ■ ■ - 11 1
Oakland!. Toronto!
Lo* Ange'o* I. SI Lout* )
to* in Arwaaag
tit u tt ti m
•AM t|
pi pi m - 1m i
eliminated
every team In the
Botton 7, California S
•
to#
d
l
l
L
No* Y w l at Atlanta, ppo , rain
nm m
2a ja
'•!
iM M - tttTMWdfcL or a
tar hi. &gt; » • |ti ad
Chicago*. ClOvaland 4, IIO Inning*)
it 1 Mla-Haa Tak. Cr-toy
n itj m im at
Van FrancIk o I Chicago A
Li
East with their record-setting
m
. 0m m m m cm it m w Cm
Cardr l i a i i a» &gt; r w ill fatka 'll
Minnatot# at New York, ppd . rain
NU4 M P n
Pltt*6urgh I. (an D'ogo 1
7 ti t o w IIAI Itpdn* III
- tc *
Inadl 171. C a w irt ad tow*' Pstart.
IN I tl M 21
Dotrolt 4. T r ia l 7
Howlloo Montreal I
Daring Al L-P*Q«H «II H
na m ni - a 11
Hitt
u
r
n
This season, with the division
Seattle
5.
Mllwaukaa
1
Clnctnnall *. Ptiltodelpm* 7
III
RAINES
GAUGE
Cay
m a i n . - I Mt
tmh i n
v
Sunday'l Otto It*
r
a
w going according to plan, the
Dam Inai IR. t A r'w i III Ana in
mn m u m
Sanaa y * Se*ett*
C lavaland 10. Chicago 7
- II
■
tto to )
Yankees are one of five clubs In
NI* I' * »
ad Dw a« i laMad D rm w ry l»
New Tors A, Allanla 0, lit gama
Now York J. Minne»o!a7 III Innlngtl, It*
■ pi M l - I III
tt
•
G0*v«
ad BMW a-LaMad IHI L-Oant
rixi o n a
the hunt for the AL East title.
New York I. Atlanta S, 7rvd game
M M Ittl - I tt
ri m
it II &gt;h l a w n laytol IP ' t o
Van Diego ). PHttburgA 0
w in, frana It), la w Idl
Maw York IA. Mlnnotota 1. Tnd gama
"Right now. this team's on the
0
17
(j^ w x U r*
IW
ad
kMcay
W
a
t
Hetty
Cawao
Cincinnati
1
PhiiaOaiphia
2,
110
Kantat city*. Ballimora A
91 II
Msypt *n ll C*rt. Wt it 2r iif C* U
m
o v e . " Dave W in fie ld said
HI Itavrw Ia am Dd&lt; a - f&gt;au l&gt;ll
Inning*)
California I, Botion J
tt
17
ttrtw
in ib aa - l lit
P m LA Cry C*
«IT »* G
l-Tatiaya liai HI- Cat
Sunday after New York swept a
SI Law** 1. Lot A r g u n I
Toronto*. Oakland!
_______„|
|
GPMl
■ IP fit - I It
101
1
9
Chicago*, tan F r a n c lic e l
Dattttti
Milwaukaa 7. Seattle I
MwrKtF lUfa* - iifp w i Oat J1.
double-header from the Min­
•ay Lama |t| ad Wat toCe"y
|
|
Montraal *. Moutton ), II* Innlngtl
Dptralt t. Taiat 1
ravn* III Mm i III a d naa*
• u CN If PMNftT Mm « 0*
n a n M - lii
nesota Twins, 3-2 and 14-2.
7
1
Monday'i Oamat
latnatan a i n HR L - W O S IA Al
prmw w« i ( &lt; w m GttMr 0«* ff
m i o at - it *
iitond i y't Some*
kosrt
ttt t tt ■
“ Th e teams ahead o f us know
H lt-ta a m M i d i •"•nidi Oaawd
Chicago INaltrm a 71 i t Dotrolt IPttry
M Oant III. Vtraa III,
tan Oiago (Wo|na I II al Chicago
1
I
I Il |a I AIIII
101). 7 M p m
we are starting to pick up some
(Tt a d Orady
teW'S*.
(Sortnaen M l Iglut reeumptlon ol May Jth
m m
• nr
K tt
T o ia t
lAAaton
7 7)
at
C lava land
III. hum' III. imp III ad A
tutpantlon), 1,01 p m,
K
M
Ma*"
M
t
o
a
a
a
)
ai
ground."
MkrpMv in tt C*rt H i m* » m r Cm
(Haaton 4 101,7 11pm
Dam
w
I,
war*
d
ll
l-AA
Dam
(HI
La*
Angola* (Valanjuala
III
al
CatrAwau
HI M Mi - 1 III
II f w t N I l
Minna tola IButchar M l at Baltlmora
The Yankees, who swept a
H li lar Araaaca TnHa HI. CNcayt
PlttUrurgh (O alaon J 11), 7 IIp m
•• l o * t o ) •** t o to n * » m i s
lm m wy *
Datay MrCato HI. Coer IAI ad
0 v r h a n I I II I
ID Martina; 7 II, 7 :llp rr»
four-game set with Minnesota
(mt A
Ne« York (Lynch SI) al Cincinnati
Cadnar MtCamia ad t o r P - AH
MT |i P v w tti ttrr. G+ar. Dr
Kantat City (Seberhegen I a) al Maw
r » f M iAMM. m t * 3 Hr | Mr m* m u *
IPrlca D l . M l p n
Calkin la II t-0ariar (111 HltOr. ■&lt;* M l ar*
*
and ate now winners o f 10 of
Lai in p M
id at aa - I It
York (Nla*ro7 7 l,ip m
1 | # N lw * p X E
CaAwna J im l [III iartm llll
Montraal MVullIckion I i| al Atla-la
U
M Lam
ta iD P i- M I I
Milwaukaa (Darwin a l l at Calltornla
their last 14 games, moved to
(Mahlar tl 71,7 AOp m
nwVLw Cjakita III Da III PaW in
iw m ili i » a m
■ktoada*
M M P -III
l i ohi LMM - C w w i HI kl
within 4 Vi games o f first-place
Phlladel(&gt;hle (Mj Ov v 7 7) at Moutton
ad
&gt;tagar
f«da
ad
had
a
Tw
r
DEALS
Rotten IMl rtf A 71 at Oakland ICodlroll
twaa
m M aa - I 11
McOm vt o n
On a N4u. C- N
(Knepper H I , t )Sp m
10tt l-Atatkaalltl
Toronto.
* Al, 10:t ip m
Hgwtt Anytn |*| ad Maaa Swdt
toWYilaartttn
tan fra n c Itec (LaPoint 77) at St
Toronto ISTIoOr O il •' Soottlo IMoort 7
The 17 runs they scored In the
I
r
a
W*
ITL
I
Tturtat
1
1
1
ad
tN
«r&lt;
j7*
LMM
M
T
P
H
W
a
p
Loull |Andu|ar 14 7). I 7S p m
kearney a Hpara HI) l —tom It 71
A ) , 1 0 :7 1 p .m .
Pt*t O ■ C01-*. 0m MftTttr Cm*
Mariraai
tu rn M a m m a l i - n n
d o u b le -h e a d e r s h o w e d that
Ckuft
iHLl
ArhiadA
AvdaW
la*
TuoWay'i Oamat
.
H*-taa*r«
hratatlW
a
«
m
i
v
d
Hatitta
M&lt;aai iM taam at'l-M M
Twe*da*'i Oamat
Yankees are again resembling
O r w ►*- *a tar&gt; PtaHaA v maw*
Chicago al Dotrolt
t»-wr l u l l (I) W lie* III).
tan Oiago at Chicago
a a ia - iii
CUia a n * ' &lt;a law aA "u tawvar
Toaot at ClOvaland
the Bronx Bombers o f old.
0
Catnar
;
ia). Uvne-t Iin ad
Loa Angola* at PHtaborgh
H
u
t
m
a
t
in
*
it
*
tronp l m m - M u r Hi HI
Ml nnatoto at Bo 111mora
faipaad Hatra, In * Ift. CaOw i IHI,
"W h en our lineup starts hit­
Montraal at Atlanta
H
er-to
k
cn
.a
w
a
anew
*.»
C
d
lH
lB
A
l
taana
Hatadn
III
a
d
Ftrrek
M
T
U
10
l
i
t
Goattn
M
T
II).
Hir*
Kantat City at Now York
D»hwa 1141 AAaati" nil. Pad* Itl ad
Now York at Cincinnati
Sakrt Harri* 171 I****" III m l
•a" "a (flay l a d D a w w
101l i W * AMIW
ting together we re gonna be
Aaay la ray a -» * - « II *1 l-AAaavi
Milwaukaa al Calltornla
Phllatfalphlo at Moutton
tomitof a Tam HD L-Atannilll
AWN lAuroam a d i a ' i a •# Iran
Lm m MY *1
IHI
Beaton al Oakland
awfully tough to stop In the
tan Francltco at tt LouH
H lt Datrart bauha III) forallTI
i r A i a d w fAAAi
•fry Or *1 I r ^ w i Cr tr* Tmn
Toronto at laattta
second half." said New York’s
Don Baylor, who contributed a
hom e run anil four RBI In the
nightcap.
Ken Griffey, who supplied two
three-run homers and six RBI In
the 14-2 rout, was the offensive
star for New York.
United Press International
Griffey, since coming off the
For Moil I m il Enpott reliever Floyd You mans, Simtlay
disabled list June 12. was hitting
watt a lon({. eruel rrtller roaster ride. When It finally
a mere .211 while Baylor came
stopped, the young right hander hud his llrsl majorInto ihe twinbill with Just three
league, vie lory — and n ticket bark to the minors
without Jeff Is Just rernurkable."
hits in his Iasi 23 at-bats
Before Sunday's game against the Astros — which
An error by first baseman Enos Cabell on Al
lasted )9 Innings — Youmans was Informed hr would
"W e 'v e been In Ihe same boat,
Newman's bunt In the 19th Inning allowed Vance Law
be sent hack to Indianapolis, the Expos American
w e'v e had a lough three or four
to score from third base, giving the Expos their victory.
w eek s," said Baylor. "K e n came
Association alflllale. at Its completion to make rixmi on
Montreal catcher Snl Hutera was Ihe only non-pitcher
through today, he had six RBI.
Montreal's roster for Bill Oullickson. due to come off
not used In Ihe gam e
and I contrlbuled four, so (hat's
the 21-day disabled list.
In the 19th, Law led off with a single to right off Ron
lO o f the 14 right there. You Just
After nine Innings at Houston, the score was tied 2-2,
Mathis, 3-4, Andre Uawnon singled to center, moving
have to hope for certain guys to
and the marathon was on.
Law to second W ith one out, llubte Brooks' fly out to
By the 17th Inning. Expos manager Buck Rodgers
break ou t."
right sent Law to third With both runners moving.
hud gone through four pitchers, and Youinnns was
Winfield, who went 5-for-10on
Newman bunted down the third base line and Denny
R o n Darling
Leon Durham
pressed into sendee. The Expos seorrd u run In the
the day. homered leading off the
Walling threw la Cabell, who dropped the ball,
...beats B raves
...2 home runs
IBth to take a 3-2 lead, but Youmans gave up a run In
bottom o f the 11th Inning to lift
Montreal added two more runs when Mitch Webster
the bottom of the Inning for a 3-3 lie.
the Yankees In the opener,
walked lu toad the base* and Mike F it* geraid singled to
Mete dully. Montreal scored throe run* In the lOlh.
ul thr sebbain with one otn In the 10th Inning to propel
Elsewhere. Cleveland crushed
right. h iia Iii * O a » « m i and Ntwittit).
u n it Y o u m a n s .
s
p to rtitc ) u l t h e
T a m p * tto tn a n n t
Cincinnati. Reliever John Franco. fV-1. was credited Chicago 10-3. Kansas City beat
Tim Unities singled twlre and stole two bases tn run
Heights I.lttle League, recorded Ihe final three outs to
with Hie vtcNIry and T e d Power workedHiic lOth for hla Baltimore 8-4, Toronto downed
Ills season total to 2B.
seal a 6-3 victory, giving him a 1-0 record In the big
15th save. Kent Tekulve. 4-4, took the loss
Oakland 8-2. Milwaukee shaded
Cuba
8,
G
iants
5
leagues.
M
e t* 4-8. Braves O-S
Seattle 2 1. California defeated
Al Chicago, Leon Durham hit two home runs
"7 don’t feel laid about It ut oil,*' Youmans said
Boston 8-3. and Detroll topped
Al Atlanta, the Mels' sweep gave them six straight
Including a sola shot In a three run sixth Inning, lo
following Ihe five-hour, 12-mtmitr marathon, which
Texas 5-3.
victories, while the Braves have Tost five straight. In the
power the Cubs over Ihe Giants The victory went to
lied the New York-Atlanta game begun July 4 for the
In ihe NL. New York swept s
first game. Sid Fernandez and R oger McDowell
reliever Warren Bmsslar. 2 1
longest game this season.
pulr from Atlanta. 4-0 and 8-5;
combined on a three-hllter, and Zane Sm ith fell to 5-5.
Padres 3, Pirates O
"N o on e likes to be sent down, but I'm confident that
San Diego blanked Pittsburgh
In ihe nightcap, a six-run sixth made a winner of Ron
Al I’ lllsburgh. LuMarr Hoyl pitched a six hitler for
If I do my Job down there I'll be noticed, and I'll be
Darling. 8-2.
3 - 0; C i n ci n na ti e d g ed
his ninth consecutive victory and Tim Flannery lilt u
brought back up here.”
Philadelphia 3-2 In 10 Innings;
two-run double to lead San Diego Hoyt. 114. walked
C ardinals 7. D od gers 1
Rodgers was ecstatic with Ihe work o f his bullpen,
St. Louts battered Los Angeles
none and struck out two In notching his third shutout
At Si. Louis, W illie McGee. Terry Pendleton and
luirtlculurly since ace reliever J eff Reardon Is out o f
7 - 1; Chicago nipped San Fran­
Rick Rcuachcl, 7-2, lost for the llrst time in Ills last live
O/zle Smith each hanged out three hits to stakr John
action with a tender elbow.
cisco 6-5. and Montreal beat
decisions
Tudor to his seventh consecutive victory. Los Angeles
"Our bullpen was Just super this whole series.“
Houston 6-3 In 19 Innings
R eds 3, P h illies 2
committed live errors and leuds the N L with 87 on the
Rodgers said. "Houston plays so well against us.
Al
Philadelphia.
Cesar
Cedenohll
his
third
home
tun
season.
Tudor,
9-7,
last
lost
May
29.
especially here, for us to come out o f here wtth u split
Indians 10, White Sox 3

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Bryant Sparks Stars Past Stallions
BIRMINGHAM. Ala IUP1) - Kelvin Bryant left
his mark on the USFL's best defense.
Bryunt's 70-yard touchdown j u i s s reception and
70 yard scoring run set playoif records und led
the I l.i 111more Stars to a 28-14 semltlnal victory
over the Birmingham Stallions
The Stars. Ihe defending leugur champions,
w ill he m aking their third straight USFL
c hamptonsh Ip a ppearancc.
"I gave (hem seven points," said Birmingham
(|uurlerback Cliff Stuudt. referring lo Jonathun
Sutton's Interception and 36-yard touchdown
return of hla first pass Just two minutes Into the
game.
"There were times today that I wish I could
have Just crawled Into a hole.'* said Sloudt.
"G elling behind by seven early to Baltimore Is
like gelling behind 21 or 28 points to other
opponents.
Bryant’s big plays made II 21-0 and 284). und
Ihe former North Carolina star gained 217 total
yards lo put his team In Ihe July 14 final with the
Oakland Invaders In East Rutherford. N.J.
Chuck Fusina. lO-for-16 for 210 yards, threw
touchdown passes of 30 yards to Victor Hsrrtson
and thr record 70 yards to Bryant to give thr
Stars a 21-0 hslfUme lead the Stallions couldn't
overcome.
"I have a lot of respect for Birmingham's
defense.” said Uulllinore Coach Jim Mora. "But
their defense m ay be easier to break a big play on
4hun It ta lo gain a simple four or live yards
agalnal."
The Stars, who wort thr title last year while

't S K B

,* *

~

“

“

Football
playing In i'hlladelphla. got oil lo a rocky 1-3-1
start this season and now stand at 12-7-1. They
were No. 2 In defense after the Slalltons. the
Eastern Conference chumps who wound up 14 6
Bryant rushed 13 times for 116 yards and
hauled In four p a w s fur unother 101 yards Ills
big run 2:17 Into the fourth quarter broke hla own
p l a y o f f recurd o f 54 y a r d s set a g a in s t
Birmingham in last year s semifinals, which the
Stars won 20-10.

Oakland 20, Memphis IB)
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (U PI) The Oakland
Invaders, champions ol the United Stules Football
League Efiatem Conference, made It lo the USFL
title gam e by trouncing the Memphis Showboats
28-19 at th- Liberty Bowl Saturday.
Th e Invaders will face the winner of Sunday's
Baltlmore-Ulrmlnghain match for the league
championship Sunday. July 14th ut Giants
Stadium In East Rutherford. N.J.
It was the second time this year that Oakland
had defeated Memphis, and the third since
Memphis esme Into the league two years ago.
Th e Showboats frll victim to the combination of
Invaders quarterback Bobby Hebert und wide
receiver Anthony Carter. Hebert passed (or 287
yards and two touchdowns, while Carter w as on
the receiving end nine times for 154 yards.

4

■

N icklaus F e e ls Fam iliar
Follow ing Stra n g e's Win

t »

OAKVILLE. Ontario |UPI| —Curtis Strange's victory In the
C a n a d ia n O p e n le ft J a c k
Nicklaus In a disappointing hut
lamlllar [Hisltlon
Strange took the 0650.000
tournament by two shots Sun­
day wtth a B under 279 total lo
hrromr the second golfer ever to
pass the 0500.000 mark In
single season earnings,
And who was No. 2? Nicklaus.
Again,
Nicklaus has Mulshed second
In Ihe Canadian Open so many
limes I hey may ask him lo mail
in Ills score next year and then
let thr others shoot around It. He
has never won the event played
on Glen Abbey, a course he
designed.
"Now why would I think I'm
destined to n ever win l l ? "
Nicklaus deudpannrd. "I've only
finished second seven time# —
and missed finishing second by a
shol or so three nr four other
times. I've got 34 years left."
Strange's 1-over 73 In the final
round was Just enough lo hold
off Nicklaus, who had a par 72.
and defending champion Greg
Norman, who also shot 73.
"This Is by far the biggest
lournumrnt l*vc ever w o n ."
Strange said after picking up a
check (or 086.506 11117.000
CaiuullanI that boosted his
season's earnings to 8520.081.
"Because it’s a national champi­
onship. The national champion
ship of Canada.
"It s great to win a big. big golf
to u rn a m en t," said Strange.
"And I'm not taking anything
away from the other wins I've
had."
Strange has now won three
limes (hla year and eight tlnirs
overall In a CAiecr that began In
1977. Ills career winnings are In
rxcesa of 01.9 million

Golf Roundup
LOPKZ KEEPS PROMISE

At Cleveland. Brett Butler's
bases loaded single triggered an
eight-run seventh Inning lhal
allowed the Indians to snap a
live-gam e losing streak. Tom
Waddell. 3-5. was Ihe winner In
relief. Tim Lollar. 3-5. took the
loss.
R o y a ls 8, Orioles 4
At Kansas City, Mo.. Frank
White. Jorge Orta and George
Brett each knocked In two runs
lo help the Royals avert a
fo u r - g a m e s w e e p , C h a r lie
Lcibrandt raised his record to
85 and Dan Qulscnbcrry posted
his 16th save. Storm Davis. 4-5.
was the loser.

SUGAR LAND. Texas (UPI) Nancy Lopez was true lo her
w ord even If husband Ray
Knight failed to keep his end of
ihe bargain they struck before
ihe final round ol the Mazda Hall
of Fame Tournament.
Lopez told Knight, a third
tiaseman for the New York Mels,
that If he hit a home run against
the Atlanta Bruves. she'd win
the 0300.000 tourney.
While Knight went 5-for-H at
the plate Sunday, he did not
homer Just the same. Lope*
mounted a fierce charge on the
back nine to win the Inaugural
event by three strokes over
J oA n n e Carner and Allison
Finney.
Lopez had entered the final
round trailing Carner by ihree
strokes and Amy Alcott by two
Lopez finished the day with a
4 under par 68 for a 72-hole tola)
7-under 281. Carner and Finney
finished st 284.

B rsw e rs 2, Mariners 1
At Seattle, rookie left hander
Ted Hlguem, with ninth inning
relief help from Rollle Fingers,
hurled a five-hitler and Cecil
C oop er drove In the gam ew in n e r to end M ilw a u k ee's
four game losing streak. Higuera
Improved (o 5-5 while Fingers
eurned his 10th save. Bill Swift.
3*2. was the loser.

JARUART) 10 UNDER PAR

Angels 0. Red 0ox 3

Bins Jays 0, A's 2
At Oakland. Calif., George Bell
ripped a two-run homer In his
first game back from a two-day
suspension and Ernie W hitt
added a three-run shot to power
the Blue Jays. Jimmy Key. 7-3.
held the A ’s lo five hits over
eighl Innings. Steve McCatty
slipped lo 4-4.

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS.
At Anaheim. Calif.. Ruppcrt
W.Va. (UPI) — Don January Is
Jones belted a pair of home runs
Just 01,1)0 short of becoming
and Reggie Jackson added his
the first PGA seniors tour mil­
516th career homer to Ignite the
lionaire.
Angels. Rookie Kurt McCasklll.
T h e 5 5 -y e a r-o ld J anu ary 4- 5. won for the fourth time in
pushed his lour earnings to
his last live decisions. Jim
0996.890 by firing a 6-under par Dorsey. 0-1 . took the loss.
66 Saturday to capture the
inaugural Ureenbrier-Amertcan Tigers 0, Rangers 3
Express championship.
At Arlington. Texes, Darrell
January, who has been on the Evans, hltless In 16 straight
s e n io r 's lo u r s in c e 1980, at-bats. slammed a three-run
Mulshed st 16-undrr par 200 to homer In the eighth Inning to lift
shade Lee Elder by two strokes, the T ig e r s . Frank T a n s n a ,
und Harold Henning by four. traded from Texas to Detroit lost
Henning had trailed by one month, raised his record lo 4-7,
stroke heading Into the final W illie Hernandez earned his
round of the 54-hole tourna­ league-lesding 18th save. Greg
ment.
Harris. 2-2. took the loss.

I

�E v s t s p Hsrstd, Sanford. FI._______ Mswdsy, July I , m s —7A

Altamonte Seniors Bank
On Strong Hitting Attack
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
Woody Woodard has a difficult
decision to make. The Altamonte
Senior League all-star manager
ts contemplating whether to go
with hts best on the mound
tonight or to save him for a
possible meeting Tuesday with a
strong Oviedo learn
Altamonte, the defending Se­
nior League World Champions,
opens play In the District 14
Division I Tournament tonight
at 5:30 at Maitland. Either Corey
Prom, the team's top pitcher, or
Andy Anson will get the starting
assignment.
*'l really haven't decided who
to go w ith." Woodard said. "I'm
considering a couple o f options.
If we win (Monday) we have to
play Tuesday against Oviedo. I
consider them to be the toughest
In the division. So now we're
trying to guess whether we can
beat Maitland and save our best
pitcher for Oviedo I'm leaning
toward Prom. We have to get the
first one In."
While Altamonte has a tough
decision to make. Oviedo can
save its best pitcher since It la
playing Deltona which usually
has a weak team
With Prom or Anson on the
[mound, the Altamonte Infield
[will Include Kenny Jackson at
[first base. Penny Slquerfos at
i c c o n d . G r e g M e t z g e r at
ihortstop and Noah Taleanlck at
[third base. Craig Kadzak will be
hind the plate backed up by
’at DeLura
In the outfield. Jim m y Kremer
vtll be In right. Prom will play
enter If he doesn't pitch. Shane
Stufflct will play center If Prom
pitches and Mark Apostolldes
III lie In left. Catcher will be
-ralg Kadzak back up with Pat
&gt; L u c a . Other outfielders lnludc Chad Cochran. Anson,
barren W oodard and Todd
hrlstcnsen, Christensen could
ilso play In the Infield.
■‘ T h e d e f e n s e w o n ' t
‘overwhelm anyone but we have
the kids who can do the Job."
Woodard said.
"O u r strength Is h ittin g.”
added Woodard "W e have a
good combination of power and
some kids who can come oft
bench and hit singles. W e have a

Baseball
good mixture as far as hitting
goes.”
While the Altamonte Seniors
have a pair o f excellent starters
In Prom and Anson, the pitching
staff Is not as deep as Woodard
would like.
"W e don't have five or six
starters like you would like to
have." he said. “ If you hit the
loser's bracket, you have to have
a lot o f pitchers and. ft you win.
you have to play three straight
days. Usually, you have to plan
to have two pitchers a game and
be concerned about not weurtng
them ou t."
Having seen Oviedo play In
Top Team Tournament action.
W oodard feels the Sem inole
County rivals will be the top
competition In the division.
"T h e y can beat you In a lot o f
w ays." Woodard said, "T h e y
placed five kids from the Top
Team Tournament team and
three of those wilt probably start.
I think they are beatable but
they are a strong team. They
have awesome speed, they wlil
run you to death."
But Woodard ts certainly not
looking past Maitland. That Is
the cause o f the Indecision In the
starting pitching assignment.
"Maitland knocked as oft In
the Junior Division last year."
Woodard said. " I felt we would
have went to the World Series If
we could have beaten them.
M a i t l a n d 's d e f i n i t e l y n o
pushover. We won't look past
them. W e want to play them first
and beat them, then worry about
who we play next.”
Willie Daunlc. who pitched the
Maitland Junior League to the
State Tournament last year and
who also beat Altamonte, will
probably start for Maitland to­
night although Maitland Is much
In the same situation as Alta­
monte as the winner takes on
Oviedo. Perry Teague may also
be lh e sta rtin g p itch er for
Maitland.
In the Ovlcdo-Drltona m at­
chup tonight, manager David
Austin said hr would start
Dwight Everett. "Dwight has
tournament experience," said

Two weeks ago Friday, after a
disappointing fall In the Junior
N a t i o n a l T r a c k M e e t In
E lm h u r s t , l i t . . S a n f o r d 's
Corey Prom
Shownda Martin vowed she
J im m y K re m e r
Andy Anion
Chad Cochran
would run her race the next time
she ran.
Saturday night, the 15-yearo ld S e m i n o l e H i g h
sophomore-to-be blared to a Na­
tional Track Athletic Congress
(15-16 age group) record with a
time o f 2:11.34 In the 800
meters semifinals In the Track
Athletic Congress Youth Cham­
pionships at Hempstead. N Y.
Sunday. Martin won the 800
meters with a time of 2 :13.92,
Martin, who ran In the finals
on Sunday, eclipsed the old
record o f 2:1 1.94 set In 1984 by
Shane Stufflet
Pet DeLuca
C r a ig R i d i t k
Warren Woodard
Kim Wldener of Texas.
In the meet two weeks ago,
Martin was tripped from behind
as she moved out to take the
lead on the final lap It was the
first time Martin had not won In
the 800 m rterslor 880 yards).
Dorchellr Websier, who will
also be a sophomore at Seminole
High, finished fourth In the 800
meters with a time o f 2:19.83,
Webster also qualified for the
800 meter finals with a semifi­
nals lime of 2:20.6.
In the boys 17-18 age group,
Alvin Jones, who will be a senior
at Seminole High, won the triple
GregM etzger
Noah Taleenick
Kenny Jackeon
Mark Apoetolldea
jump with a leap of 48-7 and
Units Brown qualified for the
finals In the 10O meters with a
time of 11.64. Drown finished
fifth Sunday with a time of
I I 17. Earle Marlin ran llfth on
the mile relay team composed of
West Palm Dead. Twin Lakes'
Chris Wilcox. Puhoker's Cecil
O iy d e n and D e lra y D each
Atlantic's Richard Lcllua The
foursome ran a 3:18.63 miles.
Martin and Webster trammed
with two Delray Beach runners.
J a m ie Johnson and G ladys
Everett, to finish second In the
Todd Christenaen
Penny Slquerloa
Ron Kremer
W oody W o o d a rd
mile relay with a time of 3:56.4.
The Sanford contingent will
Austin. "M r was one of our lop
Tuesday, the Altamonte Ameri­
At DrLand. Southwest Volusia return hom e Tu esday alter
pitchers Inst year
can League All-Stars host Oviedo hosts the Altamonte National louring New York City on Mon­
day.
In Little Major League action
l.ragur All Stars.it 7:30 p m
at 7:30 p m

The Nationals tied It at 2-2 In
the top o f the fourth but could
have taken the lead If not for a
baserunntng mistake. Canada
reached on an error to lead off
Continued from BA
the Inning and took second on a
of the third.
wild pitch. Demetrius Presley
The Americans grabbed back then looped a fly ball to short
tbt- momentum In the bottom of right field and It went for a
the third with two runs on two d o u b l e w h e n H e n d e r s o n
hits.
couldn't make the diving catch.
Howard, the ninth hitter In the
That put runners on second
order and smallest player on and third with nu outs. But. with
either team, led oft the Inning by Donladson at the plate. Canada
smacking a home run over the tried to score on a wild pitch and
fence in center field to tie the was thrown out Donaldson then
score at 1-1 It was the second grounded lo Cllnger at first but
homer of the year for Howard Perkins cou ldn't handle hts
who had hit one out at Fort throw to the plate and Presley
Mellon Park during the regular scored. Donaldson took second
on the play but was stranded
season.
"T h a t's my second one and I there when Dunn struck out and
wailed till the right time to hit Mike Dillon popped out lo short.
it." said Howard.
Anthony Roberts went on In
"T h a t's the biggest suqjrlsc relief o f Dunn In the bottom of
I've ever seen." said Lafollette of the fourth and the Americans
Howard's homer.
greeted him with three runs.
Dunn then hit Duval with a
Roberts walked Washington to
pitch but he was forced at lead off and a wild pitch sent
second on James Jackson's him to second. Wllh one out.
grounder to the mound. Jackson Ray Adcock's liner to right was
then stole second on the first dropped and Washington scored.
pitch to Henderson and Hen­ Howard then looped a single to
derson stroked the next pilch to right and. as Adcock went to
left center for a double that third. Howard tried for second.
drove In Jackson lor a 2 -1 lead.
The throw had Howard beat but

he Jarred the hall loose from
Robert Redding's glove.
A dcock th en w ent hume,
healing Redding's throw,to the
plalc, and Howurd tool^-thlrd
with a head first slide ahead of
Perkins' throw. Howard then
scooted home on a wild pitch,
capping o ff his baserunning
escapades with another head
first slide which gave the Ameri­
cans a 5-2 lead.
Washington shut the door on
the Nationals In the last two
Innings. In the llfth, he walked
one and gave up a single to Brian
Grayson wllh one out. but struck
out Sestak and got Canada to
pop out to shortstop Jackson for
the third out.
The Americans tacked on two
runs In the bottom of the fifth
with both scoring via Sanford
National errors The Nationals
made three errors tn the fifth
Inning. Going Into Saturday's
game, they had made only three
errors combined In four previous
games.
Washington came back to re­
tire the side tn order In the lop of
the sixth w ith plnrh hitter
Tommy Hampton grounding out
to Cllnger for the final out. It was
u tilling ending for Cllnger who
turnrd 12-years-old on Saturday.

second baseman for the third
out.
• In the fifth. Grodl made a
spectacular over-lhe-shoulder
grab to take an extra base hit
away from Williams with Just
one out.
Ormond Beach, nevertheless,
put the game out of reach In the
bottom o f the fourth when ft
broke loose for four more runs. A
two-run double by Lyle was the
big hit. McCloud made great
throw from deep left center to
rut Lyle down at third base.
Sanford added Its final two
runs In the seventh. Mitchell

beat out an Infield hit. stole
second and third. 11c scored
when Williams blooped a single
to right field. Williams stole
second and m oved lo third when
the catcher's throw went Into
center field. Cox scored him
when he reached on an error by
the shortstop.
"Ormond Beach played a fine
game." said Lucas. "They rame
In big-headed Monday, like we
did today, and lost their first
game. They didn't lose any after
that.”
And that's w hy they're going
to Key West.

...Howard

...Sanford
Continued from BA
Sanford tried to get bark Into
the game over the next four
trTnlngs but each time a line
d rive was flagged dow n by
Ormond's sure handed defense.
"Th at was unbelleveable." said
Edwards. "W e'd get something
going and then they'd make a
lucky catch."
• In the second after two were
out, Edwards reached on an
error. Lucas followed with a liner
but the third basemen pulled It
down Just as It was going past
hts head.

I

Shownda
Avenges
'The Fall'

• In the third. Mitchell singled,
stole second and m oved to third
on a wild pitch. Brinson followed
with a (ly ball to center to cut the
deficit to 4-1, Ray Wllllama then
doubled to right cen ter Cox
followed with a two-out single to
right center but Wllllama mis­
takenly held up between second
and third and couldn't score.
Cox then stole second. McCloud
followed with a rocket toward
rig h t fie ld but th e secon d
baseman caught It In self de­
fense for the third out.
• In the fourth. Lucas and Jeff
Smith rapped two-out singles.
Mitchell smacked another one
right on the nose but right st the

WE
I
BUY
MORTGAGES...

...S w e e p
ContlaiMsd from BA
Wallace drew a walk to load the
bases and Varltek stroked a
single down he left field line for
the two nip*In between RadcllfTs heroics.
Thurston. Prom and Hendricks
carried the load Saturday night.
T h u rston d rew the m ound
assignment and the tall right
hander was near perfect. He
allowed a leudoff single to Stevie
Coffle, then held (he Oviedo
squad hit less the rest o f the way.
In that fra m e. A ltam onte
broke loose for 12 runs lo cap
the rout. Hendricks, u hard­
hitting catcher, ripped a double,
two singles, scored four runs and
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They had more than enough
help. Walnscott singled and
doubled, scored two runs and
drove In a pair. Hadcllft hud
three singles. Kent Brubaker
singled twice and drove home
three. Danny Albert singled In
two and Greg James added a
sharp base hit.

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•A—Evening H*r*W, Un*on5. FI_

OPEC Won't Cut Oil Prices

Moodzy. July », i n i

WORLD

VIENNA IUPI) OPEC oil ministers
adjourned a three-day meeting with an
agreement lo maintain the cartel's produc­
tion celling and prices despite a steady
erosion of th eir share In the glutted
petroleum market.
The 13 minister* o f the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries also pledged
Sunday to eliminate cheating within their
ranks on pricing and production and agreed
to m eet a g a in J u ly 22 In G e n e v a .
Switzerland.
A panel of experts was told to com e up
with recommendations for the creation of a
new disciplinary body to enforce OPEC's
prices and production levels In time for the
Geneva meeting
OPEC has hern steadily losing market
share lo Independent producers even
though some m em ber* have been giving
discounts, undercutting official prices of
$26.50 lo $28.65 a barrrl o f crude oil.
depending on quality.
The rartcl also Is operating under a dally
production celling o f 16 million barrels a
day In un attempt lo redurr the world oil
glut and force up prices.

IN BRIEF
Protestant Leaders Vow
To Defy Ban On Marches
BELFAST. Northern Ireland IUPI) — Protestant leader*
vowed to defy .1 ban and go ahead with planned marches
through Catholic areas despite a surge of sectarian violence
that left seven people Injured over the weekend.
Th r seven were Injured Sunday when 300 batonw ielding ofTIrers dispersed a human chain o f Catholic
protesters who tried to block 5.000 Protestant extremists
from marching through a Catholic neighbor hood.
T h e Protestant Orangemen, clad In the usual bowler hats
artd orange sashes, marched two miles across the town of
Portadown and through a Catholic housing project.
Police said they arrested three people In the fourth march
In two weeks by the loyalist extremists — who back
continued llrlllsh rule — that have led to violence In the
em battled province of Ulster.
T h r ban Is likely to cause more tension as the Protestant
m arching season heads toward Us climax July 12. when
rnorr than 100.000 Protestants plan 20 separate paradrs to
murk the victory of Protestant King William of Orange over
King James, a Catholic, In the Bailie of the Boyne In 1690.
Protestants — who mukr up 60 percent of Ulster's 1.5
m illion population — have scheduled 2.200 slreel marches
and celebrations there this summer

...M erit
Continued from page 1A
lin e s In a class period a
teacher smiles
"One might assume the more
n learher sm iles In a class
period, Ihe better But It appears
that there Is some appropriate
number o f acceptable smiles. If
Ihe a p p ro p ria te num ber o f
smiles is four and a leacher
smiles eight times, that's as bad
us If he or she didn't smile at
a ll." Mrs. Coleman said.
" T h e r e w as th is m agical
number of such behaviors and
we were never sure whal that
number was and how It was
determined. Many principals
said when ihe scores came back,
that they were devastated. They
knew how they hud marked Ihe
Instruments and they were nppullrd lo he told the evaluation
was not satisfactory and the
teacher was nut meritorious."
she said.
Mrs Mlnshall explained 1h.1t
evaluulors did mu lake Into
consideration several factors like
econom ic background of the
students and their I Q.'s. Some
students are more receptive to
le a r n in g tita n o t h e r s and
therefore reflect lietter on the
teacher.
"T h e written test was very

44 Hurt In 'Running Of The Bulls'
PAMPIX)NA. Spain IUPI) — Thousands of men raced
through the streets of Pamplona pursued by five charging
bulls that gored, tossed or trampled 44 jmrt Id pants In an
annual test of dating Immortalized by Ernest Hemingway.
Forty-four of those who put their faith In their feet.
Including two Americans, were Injured Sunday In the
"ru nning of the bulls" chase.
Despite the dangers, one policeman M id he could not
rem em ber another year when tnorr people were willing to
risk the sharp horns and stomping hooves o f the bulls
The chase, made famous In Hemingway's novel "The
Sun Also Rises," Is run each day of the weeklong St.
Ferrnln festivities that began In 1591 us a religious
celebration
Hut the fiesta has become a non-stop purty of drinking,
dancing and dan-devilry given an added inystlrjue by
Hem ingway's la&gt;ok

Royal Scandal Denied
LONIXJN (UPII — Hrlllsh newspapers Imlay carried
denials that Princess Michael, cousin-in-law to Queen
Kll/alieth. had secret trysts with Texas tycoon Ward Hunt
and that her marriage was on the rocks because of him.
"T h e re Is no question of any Impropriety bet wren I he
princess ami myself. These allegations ure absolute
nonsense," I he D ully Express quoted Dullns millionaire
Hunt, who was reached In tils London apartment.
Buckingham Palace, disdainfully dismissing It as "sew ­
age journalism." refused comment on the report that first
Hurfuerd Sunday In Britain's blggrst selling newspaper, the
w rekly News of the World.
'Ill*- AustrUm-tMirn pitncess sn&lt;t her hushamt. Prince
Mlclinrl nt Krill, ilm publicly Ignnrnt the report. up|&gt;eurlng
arm-in-arm Sunday at the Wlmhlrdon lennls tournament
Prince Michael's late fattier was the brother o f the queen's
father. King George VI, and Kent Is her first cousin.

Saudi Arabia, as OPEC's market police­
man. has had to absorb most o f the decline
In OPEC's total output while other members
were exceeding their quotas and offering
discounts to sell more oil.
At the outset of Ihe thrre-day meeting.
Saudi Arabia Indicated It wanted a price cut.
hut Indonesian Oil Minister Dr Subroto.
who presided over the talks that ended
Sunday, said all 13 ministers were In
agreement In the end
The consultative meeting finished Its
work with a consensus lo continue with Ihe
present OPEC (price) structure.” Subroto
told reporters. "W e continue with the
production celling,"
Subroto also said the ministers agreed
that "direct and Indirect discounts are to be

fair. It was objective and only
about 2.(XX) passed." Mlnshall
s a id . " B u t th e c la s s r o o m
evaluation was a fluke. It could
not detect good teachers
She said teachers may have
changed their style when an
e v a l u a t o r c a m e i n t o th r
classroom. Teachers know what
the evaluators are looking for.
she said,
• ' T h e y c a m e I n t o t he
classroom and put down little
check marks and left." Mrs
Mlnshall said.
She said she knew of two other
teachers who scored as well she
did on the written test hut did
not get the award
"O n e learher scored the same
as I did on the written portion
uud did us well as I did on the
c la s s r o o m e v a lu a t io n , but
because the form and arrived a
day or two late. It was thrown
ou t," she said. "A nother teacher
forgot to put her social security
number 011 a form and It too was
thrown out."
Ann Nelswrndrr. director of
l&gt;rraoiiel for Seminole County
sch ools, said the classroom
evaluation system Implemented
by the D O E to measure teach­
ers for Merit Pay was created lo
assess Ihe ubllllles of la-ginning
teachers.
" T h a t w h o le e v a la t illo n
system wus set up to measure

C on tin u ed fron tp age I a
• Red Bug Luke Road, five
mtlrs. from Autumn Glrn Lane
to SR 426, engineering design,
right-of-way acquisition, w iden­
ing to four lanes. $ 14 4 million.

A R E A FORECAST: T o d a y
more than 310,OfX) acres in
partly sunny and rather hot with
Oregon, Washington. California.
a 30 percent chance of afternoon
Idaho. Ariznnu, Wyoming ami
iliunderstorrns. High m id d le
Nevada. However, storms In the
90s. Light and variable wind.
West h u rled llg h in ln g that
Tonight partly cloudy with u 20 sparked more fires Several new
percent chance ol .III evening
blazes broke out near Monterey.
ihnndrrstorm. laiw low to tnld Calif., and one In eastern Oregon
79s. Light and variable wind
burned 15.(XX) acres near Rome.
T u e s d a y p a r tly sunny and
AREA READINGS (0 a m.):
rather hut with a 30 percent
c h a n c e o f a ftern o o n th u n ­ Icinperuturr; 82; overnight low
7 1: S u n d a y ' s
high;
94.
derstorm s High middle 90s
barometric pressure: 30 18. relu
Light and variable wind.
N A T IO N A L REPORT; Record tlv r h u m id it y ; 77 percent;
winds southwest at 6 ittph; rain;
h e a t t hut h e lp e d s p r e a d
30 Inch (Sanford!: sunrise: 6:34
hrushllres in the Wrsl edged Into
the Midwest today. Cooling tem ­ a.til., sunset 8 26 p ill
peratures along the West ('oust
TUESDAY TIDES: Dayton
helped firefighters hauling the
Beach: highs, 1.54 a in.. 2 26
blares, but lightning sparked p in ; lows. 8 0 4 a.m.. 8 38 p in ;
more fires Hecoril highs In the Port Canaverali highs. I 46
80s, OOs and lOOs were set or
a in . 2 :18 p.rn.; lows. 7:55 a.in..
tied Sunday nt 10 locations In 8 29 p m.: Bayport: highs. 6:39
C a lifo rn ia . Idaho. M ontana. a.in., 6 5 6 p m ,; lows, 12:32
C o l o r a d o . S m ith D a k o t a , a.in., I 14 p in.
Nrhruska and Florida tn the
BOATING FORECASTS Si
I'lulns. the mercury pushed to
thr century murk us lur north us Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
Blsmark. N D , ami records as miles — Wind variable 5 to 10
high as 105 degrees were posted knots through Tuesday except
la Huron, S I ) uud Valentine Inr un euslerly *ru breeze It)
and Scnllshlull. Nrh "W e are knots near shore during the
expecting the heal lo shift u little ullcrrtoon. Scu I to 3 fret. A few
lurthrr east today Into the sho we is or an afternoon amt
M idw est." said Paul Flke. a evening thunderstorm otherwise
National Weal her Service meteo- partly cloudy.
tologlsi "T h e I’lulns and thr
EXTENDED FORECAST:
Rockies will continue to hake Wednesday through Friday —
under thr hot lempcralurrs " Partly cloudy with a chance ol
Rrllrf front the extrrme heat was thunderstorm* mainly during
expected to continue along the afternoon and evening through
West Coast where log and ctxilcr Friday Lows near 70 north to
weather Sunduy aided rMarts to around 80 south Hlglis upper
control fires that have consumed HOstn mill 90s

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Ihe performance ol a beglnlng
teacher.” Mr* Nctswender said
"It Is supposed to measure the
very basic generic competency
of a teacher In a classroom And
It works very well for that
purpose. But It was never In­
tended by the people who wrote
It to ,t&gt;e used In competition,"
she said.
Mrs. Coleman said. "I am not
surprised al all the response
from teachers Is one o f dismay
and unhappiness. What about a
15 or 20-year teacher who has
devoted a lifetime to the pro­
fession? In spite o f doing an
outstanding Job. he ts told by the
s t a t e 'y o u d o n o t m e r i t
meritorious pay.' But we know
that learher Is a meritorious
leacher For the stale to seem ­
ingly arbltrarly determine that
that teacher Is not worthy of
Merit Pay would have lo lie
Interpreted aa a slap In the face."
Mrs. Coleman also said some
teachers did not even bother to
apply for the pay because they
believed the system was unfair.
"It has been a difficult decision
for e v e r y teacher In v o lv e d .
$3,000 Is a lot of money. W e're
talking about a profession tn
which thr starting p a y -Is less
lban $15,000.
" T h e r e are a s ig n ific a n t
number o f teachers who say the
s y s te m w ill do n o th in g to

...R o a d s

WEATHER

Oi*W qutloliono ittovtdod by mombott ol
Iho N&lt;ar.un«j AuoOo lion ol tocwrifi*&gt; Dh V&gt; i
040 toetomntoUvo Inlor 000hr pt\i» * i i ol
mid morning ludS. In lot am or w i , n
1htwtfo MvovgAoul Iho dor PtKOO &lt;bo no!

discontinued and previous commitments to
offer discounts are to be phased out as soon
as possible."
One o f the main Issues of the conference
was flagrant cheating by OPEC members.
Mana Said al O telb a , U nited A ra b
Emirates oil minister and a Saudi ally, said
crude oil prices could drop "to a very lowbottom ." even lo $1 a barrel. If the market
degenerated into a competitive free-for-all.
One unspoken threat throughout the
meeting was that the Saudis. If provoked,
could drop prices and boost their dally
output to six times the current trickle of 1.7
million barrrls. driving marginal producers
(mm the market
Asked about this after the meeting.
Algt rtan Oil Minister Belkacem Nabl said:
"Saudi Arabia Is a founder of OPEC. I trust
It will respect llsengagem ents."
Nigerian Oil Minister Tam David-West also
rejected Ihe idea that the meeting was a
showdown betw-ern the Saudis and the
other 12 members.
Sheikh Ahmed Zakl Yamanl. the Saudi oil
minister, made no public statements and
was rarrlv seen outside the private talks.

• C R 427. 1 m ile, fro m
Charlotte Street to SR 434.
engineering design, right of-wuy
acqulaltlon, widening to four
lanes. $3.9 million.
H fflM Ptefv toy Tammy Vln&lt;*nt

W ith &lt;1 hole In ifs rool gaping s k y w a rd , Ihe e m p ty sh ell of a
house Is all that rem a in s today ot a hom e that w a s en gu lfed
In flam es Sunday at 162 Bethunc C ir c le , Sanford.
Fusscll was mnrtully Injured at
about • 9 p.m. when he was
struck by a pickup truck. The
youth was riding his bike In
Continued from page 1A
Geneva on Harney Heights Road
Neel said Tour m ills with crews w ithout his hike’ s lights on
responded to the scene and when he was hit hy a pickup
didn't leave until l 32 u tn. Itiul may have been on Ihe
cyclist's side of Ihe road avoiding
today
A nearby house owned by potholes. Charges are pending In
Charity and Leonard Dixon al 1hut case, according to the FBI*
The Fill* hud predicted 39
160 lielhunr Circle was also
damaged hy tin- blaze Neel said people would die during thr
some ol the windows on Ihe holiday.
Dixon house broke from the
Ih e toll Includes the death
extrem e heat and Its paint
Sunduy o f u male pedestrian In
blistered and peeled.
north Volusia County who was
On Florida's roadways. Ihe
run over after probably fulling
accident death toll reached 33
asleep on State Road 17. und a
over the holiday.
three-death car crash In Dade
The Florida Highway Patrol
County Sunday, according to
said Steven F u sscll. I I . of
reports.
Geneva, wus the sole truffle
fatality In S em in ole County
Seminole County poller agen­
during the holiday period which cies reported no serious Inci­
began ut 6 p in Wednesday and dents related to the holiday and
ended at m id n igh t Sunday. •wild It was u quiet weekend.

...F ir e

• Sanfnrd Avenue. 15 mile,
from L a k e Mary B o u leva rd
extension to Airport Boulevard,
engineering design, right-of-way
acquisition, widening to four
lanes. $4 9 million
Sellers recommended volun.lary Impact fees |&gt;er housing
unit for transportation range
from $1,100 per single family
unit to $610 per apartment and
(rum $4,000 jier I,(XX) square
fe e t

o f

r e t a il,

enhance the profession."
"You have to acknowledge
that this system could very
seriously and adversely Impact
learher morale throughout the
state of Florida.' Mrs. Coleman
said
Mrs, Nrlswender said another
concern o f the school board la
that th r p u b lic m ay th in k
Seminole county has only 69
good" leachers and that their
child may not be getting a good
education unless he or she Is In a
(lass Iwing taught by one o f the
6 9 teachers who received merit
l»uy.
"Teachers who won are almost
embarrassed about It. Or at least
embarrassed that people know
who they are." Mrs. Nrlswender
said
'When we were told how the
system was going to work by the
t) O E. hack In September, we
wrrr told that the names of
teachers who won would be kept
absolutely confidential and (hat
no one would ever tie able to get
a list
"W e asked them how In the
world could they keep that
Information confidential because
It was public record and not In
any way protected by any stat­
utes And Ihe D.O.E. said 'We
Just will' and. of course, they
just w on 't." Mrs. Nrlswender
said.

Over a live year jierlod. Sellers
estimates the counly would re­
c e iv e fro m the p r e v io u s ly
adopted 4 -cents-prr gallon gaso­
line tax. Ihe new 2-eents-pergallon gasoline tax and Impact
lees. $43.6 mil lion for road
projects.
— Donna Estes

...T ra in
Continued from page 1A
French National Hallways said
1tie train had been carrying
lietween 5&lt;X&gt; and 660 passen­
gers. many of them reluming to
Parts from a weekend at the
A l l a 11 t i c s e a s i d e I n t h e
Normandy region
Thr worst rail accident In
French history occurred Dec. 10.
1917 when a train derailed near
Hie southeastern city of Greno­
ble. killing 543 soldlrrs.

h o s p it a l,

manufacturing and warehousing
spare to as much as $ 19.200
" V o lu n ta r y tra n sp ortation
impact fees contributed by de­
v e lo p e r s to o ffs r l Im p a cts
created by new development Is
not a new concept." Sellers said,
adding Seminole Counly has
been receivin g contributions
trom developers along the Red
Hug Lake Road corridor since
1979 and subsequently from
developers along Lake Emma
Road and Counly Road 427.

...P la n
Continued from page 1A

If the fees are adopted, they
would "double transportation
funding available to the county
over the next 10 years,” he said

Faulkner was officially named
Longwood'* representative on
the S( A board of directors soon
allrr his elect ton last December,
hut t hut d e s ig n a t io n w as
withdrawn utter he began solic­
iting contributions from other
cities In the counly to help solve
SCAs financial problems
Faulkner continued on the
S( A hoard o f directors, however,
as a private Individual

retired heavy duty equipment daughters. Betty I reger of A lex­
mechanic and was a Protestant
andria and Linda Rowland of
He was a member o f Sanford Casselberry; mother. Susie Best,
Masonic Lodge and the Seminole Alexandria, stx brothers, Irvin
S h eriffs Association.
B est. C a s s e lb e rry , G o rd o n ,
Survivors Include o son. Rich­ Bruce. Roy and Nelson Best, all
ard W „ Wrsl Rutland. Vt.; three of Alexandria, and Melvin Best,
grandsons.
Fredericksburg. Va,; three sis­
G ra tn k o w F u n e ra l H om e, ters. Terry. Vera Gorham, both
Sanford, Is In charge o f ar­ o f Alexandria. Ruth Blevins
rangements
Wood bridge. Va : five grand­
children.
GRACE E. H A A S
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld F u n eral
Mrs Grace E Huas. 60. of Home. Altamonte Springs. Is in
1381 Park Drive. Casselberry. charge o f arrangements.
died Friday ut home. Born April
C. DARNELL JONES
12. 1925 In Alexandria. Va., she
Mr. C. Darnell Jones. 71. of
m oved to Coasel berry from there 741 Brooks Ide Road. Maitland,
earlier this year. She was a died Saturday at Winter Park
homemaker und a member of Memorial Hospital Born Aug
HayBrld Baptist Church.
12. 1913 In Drrulur, Ala., he
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e he r moved to Maitland from Chicago
husband. Harold; son. Allan in 1976 He was a retired
O w n b e y , C a s s e lb e r r y : tw o pipefitter and a member of thr

M essiah L u th e ra n C h u rch .
Casselberry. He was a Mason.
He is survived by his wife
Thelma.
Wixxllawn Funeral Home. Or­
lando. Is In charge of arrange­
ments.
BRIAN LEE PARSONS
Mr Brian Lee Parsons. 30. of
37 C a r r i a g e Hi l l C i r c l e .
C asselberry died Sunday at
home. Bom May 5. 1955 in
B elleville, III., he moved to
Casselberry three years ago from
Orrgon. He was cook at Season's
restaurant. He ts survived by a
daughter. Brandy, Casselberry
s is te r. S h e ila S m tg e l. L os
Angeles; brother Barry. Orlando:
parenls. Bevcrler and Thomas
Parsons of Casselberry.
G ram kow G a in es Fu n eral
Home. Longwood. ts in charge of
arrangements.

AREA DEATHS
CHARLES M. DENMARK
Mr. Charles McDonald Den­
mark. 35. of 183 Weklva I’urk
Drive, Sanford, died Saturday at
his residence. Born Muy 16,
1950 In Orlando, he moved lo
Sanford from Washington. DC.
In 1984. He was u (light atten­
dant and a m em b er o f St
M ichael's Episcopal Church.
Orlando.
Survivors include Ills father.
C harles M.. S a n fo rd ; sister.
Charlene D. Riggins. Longwood
Bald w in -F a irch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, ts In
charge of arrangements.
RICHARD GRIFFITH
Mr Richard 1. Griffith. 73. of
220 Coachman Court, Sanlord,
died Thursday at tils home. Born
Sept 10. 1911 111 Fair Haven.
Vt , hr moved to Sanford from
Winter Bark In 1980 He was u

�PEOPLE
M om 's C riticism H e r W a y
O f C o n tro llin g D a u g h te r
D EAR A B B T : Once again I
have come away from a visit
with my mother feeling severely
depressed and Inadequate, t
can’ t remember the last time she
gave me a compliment. She
always finds something to criti­
cize no matter how good I look or
what I have achieved
I could recite one example
after another, but your column
Isn't long enough. The most
recent was last week when I was
a bridesmaid at my cousin’s
wedding. I wore a beautiful
gown lhat showed off my slim
figure. My hair and makeup
were professionally done and
everyone was telling me how
fantastic I looked. My mother
came up to me and said. "You
look te r r ib le — y o u ’ re lo o
skinny!"
I have cried my eyes out from
her InsuUs. Abby. I want so
desperately to love her and feel
guilty when I don't, which Is
most the time. I'm 25. selfsupportng and have lots o f
friends. What Is the matter with
my mother? Or is It me?
BOMKWHCRB IN NEW
J E R 8E T

Babas Bequeath
Bear Books
T h e Ju n io r W o m a n ' s C lu b of
S a n fo rd Inc. m a d e (fs annual
book donation
to the
S e m in o l e C o u n t y L i b r a r y ,
S a n f o r d B r a n c h , h o n o r in g
b a b i e s b o r n to m e m b e r s
d u r in g the p as t y e a r . P r e s ­
entin g six B e r e n s t e ln Bear
Books to the l i b r a r y , from
l e f t : C l n d i G o e m b e l a nd
daughter A llis o n ,
Karen
Futch
and
dau ghter
C ourtney, L is a
Robertson
a n d son B r y a n , L i b r a r i a n
Sandy Oakley,
Libby
Vo lto llne and d a u g h t e r Leah
a n d C a ro le P e g r a m
and
d au g hter Sarah.

A card will do. if that’s all you
can afford, but I vote for a small
household appliance.

Dear
Abby

DEAR ABBY: My father-inlaw passed away five years ago.
Eight months later, his widow
passed on. They were both well
Into their 80s and are burled In
the family plot side by side.

cut those apron strings without
feeling guilty.
DEAR ABBY: Whul should be
done In rrgard to a wedding gift
for a relative who murrles twice
In four years?
1 gave a substantial cash gift to
a nephew when he entered Into
an Ill-advised m arriage four
years ago. A s e x p e c te d . It
bombed before the first year was
over.
This nephew Ik "In love" again
and Is getting married In a
couple o f months. Ills bride has
never been married and Is hav­
ing a big church wedding.
I and several o f my relatives
are In a quandary atxnil what
kind ol gift to give for the second
tim e around. T h ese second
marriages are becoming a little
loo frequent to suit me I’m
co n s id e rin g g iv in g a sm all
household appliance — about
one-fourth the value of my first
gift. Or maybe It should be Just a
nice congratulatory card?
PERPLEXED IN IOWA

As o f now. their graves have
no markers, which I think Is
disgraceful. I have mentioned
this to my husband several
times, but he hasn’ t done any­
thing about It. My husband and
his brother are the only children.
I have discussed this with my
sister-in-law. and she feels the
same way 1feel about It.

A s I u n d e r s ta n d It. m y
brother-in-law w ants to put
s o m e th in g on his fa t h e r ’ s
headstone, crediting him with
having served In the Arm y
overseas for four years, but he
doesn't know how to word It.
I can't see where It’s Important
— or even proper — to put that
on a headstone. All I see on
h e a d s t o n e s In m o d e r n
cemetarles Is the person's name,
date of birth and dale o f death.
D E A R
S O M E W H E R E :
It's
Do you think my slater andboth o f you. Your mother refuses
law and I should go ahead and
IlrrM cd In jxxxllr skirts and
to recognize that you are a
select a headstone and have It
bobby sox. two Longwood gills
grown woman, and her constant
pul up? Five years In an un­
danerd Into Ihr finals o f the
criticism Is her way of control­
marked grave Is long enough.
1985 Grand National Talen t
ling you — to assure herself that
TIRED OF W AITtNO
Compellllon for dame students
she still has power over you. And
last week at Lake Buena Vista.
even th o u gh you are selfDEAR PERPLEXED: I can
D E A R TIR ED : G iv e your
S h a n e y M eager. 14. and
supporting. you are still her understand your reluctance to husbands u deadline (no pun
A llison Bryan. 11. won top
’’little girl." trying to win her pop for another substantial gift,
Intended). And If they don't get
honors In their age group in
approval. You coutd benenflt but please consider the bride,
the Job done, you and your
Character Dancing The girls
from some counseling to help whose only “ sin" Is being No, 2.
sister-in-law should do It
jllterbugged (o 50's style music
In a stage-setting of the Interior
o f a drugstore ’ teen hangout"
complete with Juke box.
Both girls are students at
Showtime Dance Studio. They
•am* and in* Soaron Pop* OrcSaaQ) (I) FAJMLY
MONDAY
Joined winners from 20 reglonul
k*.
TUESDAY,
11:30
contests throughout the ixjuntry
030
( I ® SCHABdLI
EVCMMQ
(I: o NCWHAST At tti* B**«*r
for the four-day competition.
(J O RYAJTB HOP*
UORNINQ
lodga • roaatng ol Oawga *1 man
■ (MIFLOATOASTYl*
The twosome won the regional
ol lha foot. Oca • m a c ra c M ara
6:00
contest at Daytona this spring.
4.55
O dKCO CD O M ew s
The talented girls also' belong
guaat or honor |M)
® a
HOUYWOOO ANO TH*
I t im i J tm a a o M S
to the Showtim e Perform ing
10:00
STARS (MON. THU. FAI)
ff i IN I U A C K C X / IBM ABA
Dance Company which perform *
(D a CAONKY I LACCY Carta
MW SHOUR
9:00
and Mary Bama tucM* kwaangafor charity benefit shows held
CD(»l lavish* a swain
lllM I H C W B
throughout Central Florida.
I I ALL i f TH* FAIRLY
6:09
mg a aordKl rM UvrvN p
Shaney la the daughter o f Mrs.
t t F ATHtA KNOWS B U T
V ia wcam and N*dauaetar |A»Q
929
Lynne Meager, and Alllaon'a
9} (St) MOMIUNl MEW*
(7) O HOUYYVOOO ANO TMS
6:30
|
(M
l
NOVA
|
®
(
W)
AAJYI
FROM
OFF
CZXTIS
STARS (WON. W tOFRI)
rents are Mr. and Mrs. Allen
| f l NSCNCW S
) (101TH«
Th* potannaM ol *d*o danc* ar*
a CM sews
yan.
9:30
DON (FRI)
•iptorad In two production!
7 O xrc Mews g
a ( I I t h is W IEK M COUNTRY
(X ia iU A N N U
Par atango and W***N Pag**
I (M)AUCI
m |SfC (WON)
From in* Boo* o* Pam
At the season's final m eeting
1205
) |t) MAFFY DAYS AQAJN
Q ® r * COUNTRY (TUS-FRO
m |S) POUC* WOMAN
12 LfTTLI HOUBC ON TH* PRAP of (he Weklva Woman's Club,
11 DOB NEWHABT
6:35
M*
new ofTlrcrs for I he '85 '86 slate
12 lA ft AT HOMC
10:30
6 00
12:30
were Installed. Nancy Eaton ac­
I t (M l BOB MOVHABT
8 | W C MTV* AT SUNAM*
7:00
0 4 M A R C H FOR TOtfORMOW
S I toi MONTY PYTHONS FLYINO
) O WORMNO STRETCH
O iT) sau or Tut commv
1 O Y0UN0 ANO t h * a m t . cepted a second term as presi­
: T U EYEWITNESS DAYSRIAX
d ) o F U WAOASNC A man «no
dent; Laura Kro, was selected as
11 (MIOOOODAYt
wWoiwwd • w p N w n w m
7 0 lOVWfQ
10:40
first vice-president; Carol Rob­
CheupeeM Bar. laamon* oI St
I I NEWS
f i ttM) B lY tR L Y HR.LBK.LJU
Q
UOV1C Long Way
erts as second vice-president
ODIBIAW BAKKIR
Ti opal. Franc*
(ta rs i Otann Ford. DarW Ctrra100
7 O JfO PASO Y
Beverly Garrow as treasurer
dmo An aacapad convict bahiand*
6:30
(3 -O A Y IO F O U R U V U
(M l TOO ( X O M FOP COM­
th* lamvy of a poor praachar m th*
with C h a rleen Ph egley and
0
®
N
E
W
S
U
a
l
l
IFY
CHKOREN
POST Apr! KPama* to aflact t '»
n«N South during th* ISXta
1: O CSS EARLY WOAMHO
(M) DICK VAN DYKE
Shirley Moser as recording sec­
( W) MOVW (MON. r u t . t h u i
NCWS
bromar h* M an t ipooan to tor *0
retary and corresponding secre­
(IO| THE JOURNEY MWARD
( £ O ABC NEWS THIS ItORMNO
11KXJ
tary respectively.
B iA O U OF THE BRAJN (WED)
Q D D O D O N C vys
S t 101 FOUOWTNQ TH* TUNOAA
O) (tot FLOFKOA h o w * d r o w n
?r(S S )P O P E Y t
WOLF Pooart Aodtord narratat mt*
11 (Ml MNNYHILL
These officers will serve ns the
11 FUNTIM* (WON-TNUI
( tO) DA V* ALLIN AT LA SO I
Mm mat tracaa a 400-mi# pxvnay
club's meetings resume In Sep­
(DlSIMOVM
(t)
HOOANS
HEROES
of mo tun** voF lArougfi m*
6:35
tember.
U actan m dtatrtct of Canada*
1:06
(JJ FUNTIUE (TFS)
11:30
Norm-Mat Tvfflorta*

In Around Longwood

Girls Dance Into Finals
In National Competition

TONIGHT'S TV

Nancy
Fry®
Longwood
Correopondent
323 8893

Mosure Is president elect of the
Flust Central Florida Dietetics
A sso cia tion w h ich Includes
Seminole. Orange, Lake. Volusia
and Osceola counties
M id s h ip m a n J o s e p h V.
B e a d le s I I I w i ll re p o rt to
Pensacola for flight school the
middle of this month. Beadles,
son of Cnpt. and Mrs J.W .
Beadles. Jr. o f Longwood. grad­
u a t e d f r o m the U.B . N a v a l
Academy In Msy.
T h e s t u d e n t s In S h ir le y
Wilson’s second grade class at
Longwood Elementary made a
donation to the State of Liberty
Restoration Fund at the end o f
the school year, The students
decided that their class project
would be to put their spare
change each day Into a large Jar

K

CD If) HAPPY OATS AOAJN

7:05
12BAN F0R0AN0B0N

7:30
• CD IN TtPTAVrfdfN T TONOMT
mtamao a*ltt Magge Smith
&lt;B O WHEEL OF FONTVJN*
(71 O
*100.000 KAM I THAT
T IM
IM IM N S O N
|f| AH. Bf TH* FAJMLY

I

7:35

Q A U M T H * FAMK.V

6:00
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P R A C T C A l J 0 K U Vmtag* tool
aga kom Johnny Carton* Who
Do You TruMT". Uoo YYhotchol and
Mar? OnfWi a rt pracvcN |ok* ncOma Hocart KNm pratanu a
4trad* of horn York' Mgmont |Pi

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War* at Cmonnto Rada or Chicago
Whrta Soa M Doftoo Tigork
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£ O SIMON * SIMON Bwc* Ymcay |Stuart Whitman I ■ tormar lia r
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7:15
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7:35
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12:30
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1:00

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1:10
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(P a trick
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ahgm cid* (R)

9:00
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9:09
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9:30
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9:35

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2:30
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3:30
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10.30

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■ (MIPOUfUBfOUBS
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1100
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The Student Union plans the
general recreational activities for
the campus such us concerts,
film s, short-courses, tourna­
ments and games and schedules
speakers, travel nnd special
events.
T w o lamgwood biothrn* were
recently swarded Eagle lladgrs.
(tie highest h o n o r g lv r o In
Scouting, al an Eagle Seoul of
H o n o r C e r e m o n y h e ld a l
S a n la n d o U n ited M ethodist
Church.
Ralph. 19. and Robert Ballenline. 14. are members of Seoul
Troop 830. The boys are the
sons of Dr. and Mrs. Hob Ballentlne. Dr. Ballenllne Is Scoutmaster of his sons’ Irtxjp.

QUALITY FABRICS
AND UPHOLSTERING. INC.
[SUPER SPECIAL

&gt;URS
1YB

»
IAY
X)

2:30

S em in ole County resident.
Melva Burgess of Altam onte
Springs, graduated w ith an
Associate of Science Degree from
F a ir m o n t S la te C o lle g e o f
Fairmont. W. Va., according to
Dr. William G. Dunn, registrar.
Fairmont State College Is a
liberal arts Instltullon with ap­
p ro x im a te ly 5.100 stu d en ts
lo c a t e d In n o rth e rn W e s t
Virginia

ALL IN-STOCK
FABRIC .
$ 9 .9 9 PER YD.
AND LESS
7*44 P A R K A V I
S A N fO H O
171 1741

This Tuesday. July 9. has
been set us the dale o f the
a n n u a l O r a n g e - S c m ln o lc
BROWN(TUB
Legislative Luncheon sponsored
■ (101 WAOlC OF OR. F A S n V M
by the Winter Park Chamber of
M B
■ |10| MAOC OF WATSRCOL- C om m erce and United T e le ­
ORB(THUI
O (101 WADC OF DSCOfMTTV* phone.
Seminole County legislators (o
FAMTMIFR0
attend the luncheon-discussion
2:35
are Rep. Bobby Brantley |RO WOMAMWATCW(W1D)
Longwood I, Rep. Art Grtndle.
300
® BAMTA BARBARA
(H Altamonte Springs) and Rep
OOUUHOUOHT
Carl Selph (R-Cassclberry).
(M| OASAT M A C * COAST1R
ttts101NNOVATON (MON)
C ( t10) c a u j d r a p n y w it h k i n

8

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tM) BUDS BUNNY ANO

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(B(H*ATHCUFF

306

3:30

SWMBPCCTOR DAODET
400

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(■•UFtRFMMOB

4:06
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T H A W I COMPANY
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I M l DREAM OF

PLAZA TWIN
SANFORD

Hwy 17-92 S. • 322-7602^

South Seminole Community
H o s p it a l c h ie f o f C l i n i c a l
Dietetics Pamela Moaure. has
been selected as a "Recognized
Young Dietician" for 1985 at the
Florida Dietetics AaaoctalIon's
annual convention held In June
In Orlando.

■ D UTTU H0USS ON TH*

A *.

i
&gt;2301 ®

RAMBO
F ir s t

B l

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91

9:30 AM

.

EVERY TU ESD AY

■*)/.

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EVENING HERALD
HERALD ADVERTISER
COUPON 0T WITHOUT COUPON
SION UP PON A P M I 1ICVLCS PROM
BICYCLS CONNSCTION

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C L I N T C T IG H T
EASTWOOD
ROPE
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MOvitutv.

F R E E E S T IM A T E S
ON U P H O IS T E R IN Q

C O R N ER O F
PARK l 25th ST.

(B CAPITOL
DO

9 05

1:30
1 I(M |B C T V

1:30

D O AS THBkfORLD TURNS

Q BU00 BUNNYANOFROMM
n HAUL

M iss Lane B e m b e n c k of
Longwood tins tieen named as
president of the Donkins Student
Union for the 19H5-86 academic
year. Ueinbenek Is a student at
Wlnt loop College In Rock Hill, S
C.

12W0V1*

7:30
&lt;f|J (M) TOW ANO J*RRY
(I) (10) B U A M I STREET (A) Q
O ) (*) INSPECTOR OAOOET

on Mrs. Wilson's desk.
By the end o f the term, a
w h o p p i n g $138 w as a c ­
cumulated to send to the fund.

_J
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■0-

�F A o n d a y , J u l y I , IM S

I B — E v e n in g H e r a ld . S a n lo r d , FI.

Hostage: We
Could Have
Escaped But
To Where?
MIAMI (UPII — Former TW A hijacking hostage
Michael Drown fualri he and his fellow captives
were poorly guarded during most of their 17-day
ordeal but did nol try to escape for fear they
would be recaptured or killed.
At one point, a bewildered Amal militiaman
dashed Into the room where some of the 39
American hostages were being held and asked In
broken English, "H ave you seen m y gun?
Where's my gun? I ran'l find It,'* Drown told Th e
M iam i News.
We thought about sneaking out and walking
toward the mountains and trying to get lo the
Druze area, where they would probably have
taken us In," Drown said, "And we could have
walked over and picked up their guns because
I hey left Ihem lying around. Hut where could we
have gone? The whole place Is al war "
Drown, 27. and his new wife, Judy Dltchkus
Drown, were on their honeymoon when TW A
Flight H47 from Athens lo Dome was hijacked by
Moslem Shiite terrorists June 14. Drown returned
home Inte Wednesday after being reunited with
his wife in West Germany.
The Miami Beach couple, s v e e ih rs rls at
Virginia Tech, accepted a
&lt;d hotel s oiler lor a
Iree honeymoon package, and Michael Drown
agreed lo speak to reporters at a news conference
Saturday.
He said an unspoken "understanding" devel­
oped between the captives nnd I heir guards — an
understanding so complete that one o f the guards
handed a loaded Russian AK 47 assault rifle to
hostage Peter Hill so that Hill could lake an
Imaginary potshot at an annoying rooster.
‘ It was Just understood that (I I III) wouldn't try
anything," Drown said "Th ey knew we weren't
desperate yet. We almost always thought we were
going to gel out."
.Judy Drown and thr olJrer women aboard the
plane were freed by the terrorists a day after the
hijacking.
" I suppose lhal was the hardest part.” Drown
sold, "II was pretty difficult — Just getting
married and then being separated."
Several days uftrr the hijacking. I he original
terrorists turned Hie hostages over to the Amal
militiamen, nnd they were moved to a five-story
apartment house. Drown said the guards did nol
bother to remove a large butcher knife from thr
kllchrn of (he apartment lie nhnrrd with seven
other hostages.
"T h e y noticed we lookrd al II and they said.
What are you going lo do with It. kill yourself?'
They knew whut we knew, that we couldn't go
anywhere."
Drown said the terrorists stationed anil-aircraft
guns, rocket launchers and u "h u g e " truckmounted cannon outside the apartment building.
Initially Irurtng the United States or Israel might
launch s rescue attempt.
l hal concern quickly melted and thr hostages
amt the Amal militiamen then began to share
frars lhal rival gunmen would try lo kidnap the
Americans.
Despite that, only iwo Shlllr guards werr
regularly assigned lo guard the hostages. Includ­
ing the one who lost Ills gun. Drown said
The guard, who later found I he misplaced
weapon, (old Ihr hostages hr had learned English
In school and wanted Incom e to the l lulled States
lo live. Drown said,
“ Hr kept saying lhal hr wished we could go
home (o our fam ilies, but he couldn't do
anything He was Just following orders,'* Drnwn
said "You could tell he Just wished Ihr war was
gone."

Robbers
Generous
NEW YORK (U l'll I wo men who rnhhcd a
Manhulian bus driver
guvr the driver $H of
Iris cash back before
running oil with his
wrlstwaK h and MOO,
|roller* sa id .

Contain Gomes, 3H,
was rotrlred Just before
fi p . in . F r i d a y I n
Manhattan ns he was
utMiut lo start his bus
r o u te , said R o b e r t
Fitzpatrick, a police
s|Mikrsman.
The robber* knocked
oil thr bus door and
d ls p lu y t'd a " b l u e
s h i e l d . " W h e n he
opened I he door, Ihry
t o l d G o nt c t I h r y
wuntrd lo lulk to hint
at the irar of the bus.
Klti|ralrtck said
When Gomes got to
thr truck of the bus. the
m en told him th r y
were not police officers
and pulled out a re­
volver with a brown
handle
" W e r e here to rob
you ." they Mild.
Gomes gave thr two
m en $408 and h is
watch, hut one of the
ro b b e rs han ded BH
buck, sa yin g. " Y o u
might nerd this."

Logoi Notice
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Mollta It hereby g l . m that I
am engaged In bualnatl 01 P O
Ho* 444. G eneva
Sam lnol*
County. Florid* l l ' l l under th#
llrtltleus name ol R E M O T E
O FFIC E M A N A G EM EN T
IROM), INC . ond that I Inlond
In ragittar told nomo with tho
C le rk ol Ih* C irc u it Court.
Sammol# County, Florid* In
accordance » llh tho provisions
ol lr&gt;* I k M io u i N«m« Statutes.
To w ll Sot lion M l 00 Florid*
Statutes It IF
JS ’ Marsh# E Woll
Publish Juno U . 14 A July t. I,

Legol Notice
Legal Notice
I N T H C C IM C U IT C O U R T
o ftm eh tm

JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT,
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.

FLORIDA

C A S E MO. SS-tSSI-CA-SAP
Inro Adoption ol
JOF4N R Y A N K E L L Y BONO,
o minor
NO TICE O F ACTION
TO O tA N G A R C IA
, Goorglo
I Addrotf Unknown
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D thot 0
Socond Amondod Poll IIon lor
Adoption hot boon mod ogolnot
you In tho atovonom od Court,
ond you or* rogulrod to oorvo a
copy ol your ontwor or pNodlng
to tho PotMlon on tho Poll
Honor's ottornoy, Stophon M
Sleno, Esquire. JT1 C o il Pino
Slroot. Orlondo Florldo RS 01.
ond TIN tho orlglnol oniwor or
pleading in tho olftco ol tho
Clerk ol tho Circuit Court In ond
lor Somlnoto County, Florldo. an
orbotoro JuFylO. IFAS
II you loll lo do M. fudgmont
by default will bo token ogoimt
you tar tho rallot domondod In
tho Pttlllnn
W ITNESS my' bond ond 0**1
talk lis t d ry of Juno, MAS
(SEALI
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C lorti ol Iho Circuit Court
By Joon Brillen!
Deputy Ctayfe
Publlih Juno 14, July I. I, IS.

IMS

N O TICE
~
Notice lo h*roby gluon tho I
Tho School Board o* Somlnol*
County, Florid* *t tho regular
mooting on July It, HAS. In Ih*
B o a r d R o o m o f th o A d
m l n l i t r o l l u * O l l l c o t . 1111
Mollonylll* A v tn u t, Sofllord,
Florid* will contldor tho odop
Hon ol * r* entry policy
Tho p o licy describes pro
codurot utad tor r* entry ol
students Into Iho school lyitam
one* thoy hovo boon oipollod by
Tho School B o o 'd
Tho low
bolng Implomonlod lo 710 IS 141
Id)
Cop lot ol Ih* document or*
available lor Inspection *t Ih*
Adm lnlttrotlv* Oftlc* ol Ih*
School Hoard IIU MoHonvIll*
Avonu*. Sontard. Florldo
None r Worron. Chairman
Tho School Board ol
Somlnol* County
Publlih July I. HAS
DEM 4]
FICTITIOUS N AM E
Nolle* 10 horoby given thot I
*m ongogod In buolnooo *1 South
ot tho Intarooctlon ol Ford A
Brower S t . Altomont* Sprlngo.
Somlnol* County. Florldo undor
Ih* llc llll o u l nomo ol IN
D E P E N D E N T M ERCM AN
DISER. and thol I Inlond lo
roglolor M id nomo with tho
Clorli ol Ih* Circuit Court,
Somlnol* County, Florid* In
occordonc* with Ih* provision*
ol tho Flcllllou* Nam* Stolult*.
To w ll
Soctlon l*S0F Florldo
Slotutat its;
/»/Bonnie A Don,hi
Publish J uty A. IS. Jl, 10,1IAS
D E H Si
FACTITIOUS N A M E
Nolle* It horoby glyon that I
om ongogod In business *1 111
Loncowood Or.. Wintar Springs.
Sommol* County, Florldo UFA*
C IN O E A F E L L A TU RN KEY,
ond thot I Inlond to roglilor m W
nomo with the Clerk ol th*
Circuit Court. Somlnol* County.
Florldo In occordonc* with th*
p rovlilon* ot Ih* Fictitious
Nomo Slotutat, To w ll Section
MS Ot Florldo Slotutat MSI
/*/ Scot I Mot ho vino
Publish July I. IS. I i. IF, ItAS
DEM SI
FICTITIOU S N A M E
Nolle* It horoby given thol I
om ongogod In buslnoss *1 401
Goorg* St . Wintar Springs,
Somlnol* County, Florldo undor
Ih* llctlllout nomo el V I C E
T A B L E S A L A C A R T E , ond that
I intend to register M id nomo
with th* Clark ol th* Circuit
Court. Somlnol* County. Florida
In occordonc# wllh th* pro
visions ol th# Fictitious Nomo
Statutes. T o w ll Sodlon MS Ot
F lorid*Slolulot lost
/4/ Archie Sogers
Publish Juno 14 A July I, I. IS,
IFAS
D EG lit
FICTITIOUS NAM E
Nolle* It horoby given Ihol I
om engaged In business *• 104
H o n lry O r l v t , L o t s M a ry .
Somlnol* County. Florid* H I 40,
undor Ih* llctlluiu* name ol
M AO O F F I C E S ERVICES, ond
that I Inlond lo roglilor M id
nomo with Ih* Clerk ol th*
Circuit Court, Somlnol* County.
Florldo In accordance with th*
p ro visio n s of Iho F lclltious
Norn* Slolulot. To w ll Section
U S DO F lor Ido Slolulot ISSI
/%’ Moureon F Montai
Publish Juno lo A July I. A M.
ISAS
D E G IN

OBO-IOI
FICTITIOUS N A M E
N jfk * It hereby given Ihoi I
*m engaged In business *1 M l
Vonlondo Springs O rlr*. Suit*
0 longnrood Seminole County.
F lor id* U7M under Iho HtllHout
nom o ol A U T I S T I C
SPECIAL TIES A INTERIORS,
ond Ihol I Inlond lo register Mid
nomo with Iho Clerk o l tho
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florid* In occordonc* with tho
p ro y itlo n l o l Ih* FicliHew k
Nomo Slolulot. To wit Socttgn
M l OOF lor Ido Slolulot IMJ
P R O FILE SPORTS. INC
/ I 'J e r r y H H ilo
Publish Juno IF, i t A July I. A
HAS
UE G loJ

f T c TIT IOU SH A M E
'
Nolle* It horoby given Ihol I
om ongogod In busm en ol &gt;S2o
P o in t * I I I a A v t , S t n la r d .
Somlnol* County. Florid* S1FFI
undor Ih* fictitious rtom* ol
C L E A N P O O LS by CH UC K, ond
Ihol I inland to rogltlor M id
nomo with Pi* Clerk el th*
Circuit Court. Sommol* County.
Florldo In occordonc* with tho
p ro visio n s o l Ih* F lc llllo u s
Nam* Slotutat. To wit {action
AOS 0* F lor Ido Statutes MSI
/ s 'Charles W Loltl
Publish July t, I. IS, H . HAS
D EM F

FICTITIOUS N A M E
Notlco II horoby gluon tho I I
om ongogod In business ol P O
Bor 40*4 M o 111ond Somlnol*
County. Florid* Mrs I undor Ih*
l l c U l l o u i n om o o l L M t
ASSOCIATES, ond tho I I inlond
lo roglilor M id nomo with Iho
Clerk ol tho C irc u it Court,
Somlnol* County, Florid* In
accordance with tho P 'o .ltio rn
01 Iho Fictitious Nomo Siatutoo.
To wit Sochon SOS 00 Florldo
SlotuN* IfSF
I* ’ Slovt lltomor
/*' OonlM Stumor
PrAaath Juno I« A July I, A IS.
IMS
D E O IU

F IC T IT IO U S K A M I
Nolle* It horoby given that I
om ongogod In butlnotl *t K i t
Jackson Ct . Oviodo. Somlnoto
County. F toe Id* HISS undor tho
llctlllout noma ol TER R I LYN N
E N T E R P R I S E S , and thol I m
lend to r eg Istar MW nomo wllh
ih* Ctork ol tho Circuit Court.
Somlnoto County. Florldo In
occordonc* wllh th* provisions
ol th* F ttiritout Norn* Slotutat.
T o w ll Soctlon ASS 00 Florid*
Slalwtat I0S1
l\i Torn L Paris
Publish Juno 14 A July I. A IS.
IIU
D E O IN

C E L E B R I T Y C IP H E R
C o t k h C p w x yp to g rtm t *&gt;* iroolod fcww guolOhans h &lt;&lt;m m n w U 0*01 and proaoM
tact, factor *» WO worwr SlonOt tar wwlltor tvdOy I ro w H opuo* *

by C0F4Ni( Wlf III«
"B

P Y A A F V V W W

L C F P K

F O W R T

Z X P W V I U

FT
RJW

R

P X I-O W -T R P

IX JW O

T V J R B O I W O , "

—

R I O

O Y L B

V C W B

S R J B W V V

P R E V IO U S S O L U T I O N : Whets I o n to I t o o rear pwopta
m lArprthrtg U to* m o. il ttu tn o d
— t lm o r o Leo n a rd

P Y P H T .

W han I

* SC J,
District

Spoctal Com m ercial

Logoi Doterip!ton Bog ot NW
Cor Loti; Run SEly to a Pt 1Sft
E of SWCor Lot 1. E to SE Core
N to NE Cor; Wto POB ot Blk 1.
Tr A Town ot Sontard PB I. PC
S*
Addrost 167W 1st Slroot
Conditional Um Roguestad
Soto of alcoholic beverages tor
contumptlon on th#prwmliet.
All porltot In Interest and
clllions thou hovo an opgortunl
ty tobo hoardot Mid hearing
By order of th* Planning and
Zoning CommIt*-on el Ih* City
ol Sontard. Florida this Itth day
of Juno. ItAS
JohnMorris. Chairman
City ot Sontard Planning
ond Zoning Commission
AOVICE TO THE PUBLIC: II
* person docidol to appeal a
doc&gt;t-on mad* with rotpoct lo
any mottor conttdorod at th*
obov* mooting or hearing, ho
may nood a verbatim record ot
th# proceedings including Ih*
talllmony and ovVdonc*. which
record It not provided by th*
City ot Sontord (FS 1*4CIOS)
Publish July I. HAS
DEM 47

D E G IS4

I*41

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING TOCONSIDER
A CONDITIONAL USE
Notice It hereby given Ihol a
Public Mooring will bo hold by
tho Ptanning and Zoning Com
mission In Iho City Commission
Room, City Mall. Sanford.
Florida at 1 00 P M on Thurt
day. July I*. IFAS to contldor *
roguosl lor a Conditional Us* In

am

acto rs

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
H E A R IN G TO CONSIDER
A CONDITIONAL USE
Nolle* It horoby given thot *
Public Mooring will b* held by
th# Planning ond Zoning Com
mission In Ih* City Commission
R o o m , C it y H a ll, S o n tard.
Florid* at f 00 P M on Thurt
day, July II. IFAS to consider a
rogues' tor o Conditional U m In
o SR I. Single Fam ily Rosidon
11*1 Owolling District
lo g o i Description Lot A Blk
10, Tr G, E R Troilord s Mop ol
th* Town ot Sontord. according
to Ih# plat thereof ot recorded In
P B I, P e t M04. of th* Public
Records ol Somlnol* County.
Flo»kU
Address M7 Willow Avenue
Conditional U m Requested
Duplet
A ll parties In Interest end
cltlien t shall hov* an opportunl
ty to be heard *t M id hearing
By order of Ih* Planning ond
Zoning Commission ol the City
of Sontord F lor Ido fhlt Itth day
of Juno. IFAS
John Morris. Chairman
City of Sontord Planning
ond Zoning Commission
A D V IC E TO THE P U B LIC II
a person decides to eppool *
decision mad* with respect to
any matter conn dared *t th*
obey* mooting or hearing, ho
may need e verbatim record ot
Ih* proceedings. Including th*
testimony end evidence, which
record It not provided by the
City ol Sontord (FS IAS 01051
Publish July I. INS
D E H 4S

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT
IN A N D FO R
1EM IM O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
C A S E NO Ot IMO CA M E
IN R E TH E ADOPTION OF
D A V ID JO H N HARNESS.
A MINOR
NO TICE OF ACTION
TO Unknown Natural Father ol
David John Hornets Address
Unknown
YOU
AR E
H E R E B Y
NOT IF IE 0 that on action tor
th# Adoption ot DAVID JOHN
H A R N E S S hot boon tiled by
E R N E S T LER O Y HARNESS
tor Ih* Adoption ol DAVID
JOH N H AR N ES S and you or*
rogulrod to sovv» a copy ol your
written oblocllont II any, to
K E N N E T H M B E A N E . ESO .
Was So U S
Highway 17 t l.
CotMIbovry. Florldo 11767. and
to III* tho orlglnol with th* Clark
ol tho above styled Court on or
Iwtor* th* Fth day ot August.
INS, other wIm . th* adoption el
D A V ID JOHN HARNESS may
b# approved without your con
sent
W ITNESS my hand ond tool
ol this Court this Sth day ot July.
IFES
ISCALI
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clark
By N K Ouibury
Deputy Clerk
Publish July t. II. H . IF. IFES
D E H SI
NOTICE OF PU ELIC
H E A R IN G TO CONS ID E B
A CONDITIONAL USB
Notlco Is hereby given ihol *
Public Hearing will b* hold by
ih* Planning and Zoning Com
mission in th* City Commission
R o o m , C ity H o ll, Sontord
Florida at f 00 P M on Thurs
day, July II. IFES to consider o
roguosl for * Conditional U m in
o SR 1. Single Family Rosidon
ttal Dwelling District
Logoi Description Lots IF A
TO Blk It. Droamwold PB 4 Pg
n Somlnol*County.

Address 1100 Sant* Barbara

Drive
Conditional U m Rtguostad
Two D upioiot
A ll parties In Interest and
cllitons shall hove on opportum
•y to b* hoard *1 Mid hoofing
By order of Iho Planning and
Zoning Commission ef the City
of Sontord. Florid* this i«th day
el June. IFES
John Morris. Chairman
City *f Sontord Planning
ond Zoning Cammiaowi
AO V IC E TO THE PU BLIC II

* person docIdas to appeal a
decision mad* wllh ioomI to
any maftar considered *1 Ih*
obore mooting av hearing, ho
may nood a verbatim record *1
m* proceeding*. Including Ih*
testimony ond evidence, which
record I* nol pro*Mod by Iho
City ol Sontord ( F S lM (I E t)
Publish July l-lftl
D EM *4
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Nolle# If horoby given Ihol I
om ongogod In business al HI
Dolton* Bevtovord. Dolteno.
Velusio County. Florid* undor
Ih* fictitio u s nomo *1 D E
LT044A R E A L T Y , and Nidi I
mi*nd lb roglilor m M name
with Hid Ctork of Iht Circuit
Court. SommotaCeioity. Florida
In accordance with th* p ro
V talon* *4 Iho F leiII tom Nome
Statute*. T o w n Soctlon MS 04
F kw M o Stah/tos 1017,
D ILTD 44A CO RPO RATION
R E A L T Y C O M PAN Y
/g/MUcholto R Gorki*
Corporate Secretory
Publish Juno II. SO &amp; July I. 1
IFES

Df OKU

Legal Notice
IN T H E CIRCUIT C O U R T
F O R SEM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO RIOA
P R O B A TE DIVISION
Flto Number IS 0*7 CP

IN RE ESTATE OF
JERROLOD REEVES.
Dove* sod
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION

Th* administration of Ih*
**•*•* of JE R HOLD D
REEVES, deceased. Fit*
Number IS *Cf CP. II ponding In
Ih# Circuit Court tor Somlnol*
County, Florid*. Prsbole
Division, th* address ol which Is
Somlnol* County Courthouse.
Sontord. Florldo 11771 Th*
nemos and addresses of m*
personal representative ond m#
personal rtproMntallvO's al
lornoy or# t#i tonh bolow
All Inltrosiod persons or*
rogulrod to til* with this court,
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE II) *11 claims
against Ih* **•*•* and 111 any
*b|*cllon by on Inltrosiod
person to whom this nolle* was
mailed ihol choilongos Ih* valid
tty Of th* will. Iho qualification*
ol th# pa, tonal roprosonloltvo,
yonuo, or lurlsdlcllon ol Ih#
court
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication pi Nils Nolle* hot
begun on July!. IFES
Personal Raprosonlallv*
/*/ P A M E L A IRINE K E L S O
1140 Shepard Rood
Winter Springs, Florldo
Attorney lor

Personal Roproiontollv*
/*/L W CARROLL. JR .
Esgulr*
LAW REN CE W
C A M , O IL JR . P A

PO Sold
C oiM lborry. Florid* 11767
Telephone IJOS 141, 1700
Publish July*, If, IFES
D EM 41

IN TH E CIRCUIT CO URT
IN A N D FO R
S EM IN O LE CO UN TY.
FLO R ID A
C A S E NO IS ISIS C A «OK
IN R E I h* Marriage ol
E L D R E O W I llM c C O Y ,
H ulbond / Pal 11lonor.
and
S H IR L E Y A N N M cC O Y
W l l f / l i i p o n d i n l
NOTICE OF ACTION
TH E S T A T E O F FLO R ID A TO
SH IRLE Y A N N M cC O Y
Addrasi Unknown
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
M O TIFIEO that an action lor
O itfo lu llo n ol M arriage hot
boon tiled ogolntt you. ond you
or* rogulrod to M fvo * copy ot
your written dotanMt. II any. to
II on FR A N K C W HIGHAM .
ES Q U IR E . Attorney tor Poll
Honor, whose address It Post
Otflc* Bor IJH. Flagship Bank
Bunding. 7C0 W First Slroal.
S u lla 11. S a n fo rd , F lo r id a
11771 ILK, on or before July II.
A D iFEt ond HI* th* ortg'nol
with th* Clerk ol this Court
either bofor* torvlco on Pall
Honor's a tto rn e y or Immediately
theraotter, other wit# a default
and uHlmoto |udgm*nt will b*
entorod against you lor th*
rollol domondod In Ih* Polltlon
and your morrlogo to Polittonor
will Ho d iiio i vod
W ITNESS my hand and seal
ol this Court an Juno 1* A D

IFES

(S EA LI
DAVID B E R R IE N
Ctork oMh* Circuit Court
By JoanBrlllant
Deputy ClorS
Publish July 1.1 . 11.tl, IFES
O EM I

NOTICE U N D ER
FICTITIOUS N A M E LAW
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
Ihof the undersigned desiring to
angog* In buslnoss under tho
llctlllout nom* ol W H ISPER
L A K E S A S S O C I A T E S al
number *00 For Volley Drive.
S u it* 101. in Ih* C it y o l
Longwood, Florid*, intends to
register th* M id nom* with th*
Ctork si th# Circuit Court ot
Somlnoto County Florldo
Doled ol Fori Loudordoto,
Florida, this jnd day ol July.

IFES

H PK E N T E R P R IS E S . INC
By Carl R Trougor
SAN MARCOS
D EVELO PM EN T
CORPORATION
OF SO F L A
By Do*&gt;d J Sundttrom
THOM AS L l o S A t l E . E S Q
s llI N Fodofol Highway. 4701
Fori Loudordoto F L U M
Publish July*. 11, » 7F, IFES
O E H 47

SEMINOLE COUNTY
•OAROOF
C O U N TY COMMISSIONERS
NOTICE OF
PU ELIC H EA R IN G
J U L Y 11. IFES.
I tiM A M
Th* Board ol County Com mit
tionors ol Somlnoto County.
Florldo. will hold * public
flooring to contldor Iho follow
tag
I H O O fR T H A TT A W A V -

IIP L* J — M t Industrial Zone
- Requeil tot a Borrow Pit
Pot mil eitto W 'i of NW to of
NE to ot Soctlon 711 ». tost N
FFff of Woat ff thereof and also
•ess right ol way tor Charlotte
Street and *1*0 tost E 71tl ol NE
to ol SW to ol NW to ol NE to ol
sold Soctlon 7. Further do
scribed ot totaled on th* South
I'd* of Charlotte Slroot. to mil*
West of SR 41f IDIST 4)
This public hearing will b*
hold in Room WHO ot th*
Somlnoto County Services Build
tag. f 101 E First Sttool. San
tora. Florida, on July 11. IFES. al
IS W A M . or OF toon ihorooltar
at pottibto
W, it tan comment* litod wllh

fhe Land Manogomonl Manager

will b* conttdorod Parsons *p
peering al tho public flooring
will b* hoard Hearings may he
continued from lima to llm* os
tound nocostory Further details
ovoilobto by celling n i l l S b .
Eaf 041
Persons art advised thol. If
•hey decide to appeal any do
clstan mod* *1 this hearing, they
will nood * record el th* pro
coodtags. and. tor such pur pee*
•hoy may nood to insure Ihol *
verbatim record *1 Ih* proceed
mgs It made which record
includes Ih* taiiimony and *vi
done* upon which Ih* appeal Is
I* b* based par factual N o *10*.
Florida Statutes
BOARDOF
CO U N TY COMMISSIONS R1
SE M IN O LE C O U N TY .
F LO R ID A
B Y R O B E R T STURM .
CH AIRM AN

ATTEST:
D A V ID N B E R R IE N .
C LIR K
Publish July |. IFES
D E H SO

7 1 -H e &lt; p W anted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

322-2611

port llm# Call Immodl
ataty a iS F I O o r r o IJ7F

Corpowtors 4 Laborers Wonted

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 U m * ...................87C i I
HOURS
3 consecutive times (1C a I

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9

Full or

7 consecutive times 52C a I
10 cM sacvtha times 46C a I
Contract Ratal Available
3 Lines Minimum

D EAD LINES
N o o n T he D oy B e fo re P u b lic a tio n
S u n d a y - N o o n F rid a y
M o n d a y * 11:00 A .M . S a tu rd o y

Condo* on Airport B ir d . San
lord Great opportunity. Her
ibto boss Contort Todd Moses
Call I 77V 7141. SPM 11PM
CRT OPERATOR
Dot* entry eiperlenc* or good
typing
Permanent position
wllh growth potential Per
monent position Never • Pee

TtUP PERM....___ 774-1341
E L EC T R IC IA N S
E x p e r i e n c e d l o wo r k a t
Seminole Center. Eckerd's. J.
Byron’s. Welmort 4 40 strip
itorot Phone 11*61*6. or stop
by |ob sit* at 1*71 Orlando
Ortvo, Sontord____________
ELEC T R IC IA N H ELPER
15 00 hour Big ccenponyl Nice
cro w ! A s s is i o ta clrlc lo n t
Porm anotcareerl

Employment

23—Lost &amp; Found

71— H « !p W a n t e d

LOST I white tpeyed tomato
short hotrod dog and I brown
haired mala dog In Pool*
Arte SIS R E W A R D Coll M r
Etholl. m s«7l

ACCOUNTS R E C E I V A B L E or
B o o k kee pin g background
Good organliottanol quellltos
Typing, filing, phono skills
Coll M ery Jd-.........
«S* TIM
Acrylic Applicators needed to
apply protective coating on
cars boots and pianos IS to
III par hour w» train For
work in Sontord era* coll
Tempo 111 EM r i l l

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
Babysitting in my hem*
evenings 4 weekends
C a r llt io d lE .p M l *411

32—Real Estate
Courses
♦ ♦ ★
* IIM M In g of

*
§ «

• ■»#•'! EtUhi LiemnMi? *
Wt §H#r Frn Tuition
(•FftiAwoMt Train* rtf I
C a ll Dick Of Vicki to r f e t o ll i
• n i*4J m ) } N
Ev« m i m
K i y m i F tor Ida , Inc
If Y u r t ERpMfMftCBl

Actors A c lr t it o t - M e d o li All
lotonl tor movies.TV 4 print
work Serious only apply
Pay eon uw4 CostSwg. *47 m i
AID ES certified end or trperl
arced Day and evening shifts
Good a t mo s ph e re ind
benefits
E O E
Apply ot
OsBery Manor. *•&gt; V *hry
17 FT, P o B o ry _____________
A L L TYPES JOBS
S T ART W ORK NOWI
yAs

LABOR

■nee

~ .r

FORCt

fast m

I NO
p ig |
Hrport ready tor work ot 4 AM
407 W lit St
Seftord

legal Notice

m

u t t

A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E S S

A F F ID A V IT U N D E R
FICTITIOUS N A M E S TA TU TE
S T A T E O F F LO R ID A
CO UN TY OF O R A N O E
Th* undattHpad under oath

Myt

I This insfVumont Is bolng
*&gt;*cu1*d tor th* purpose ot
complying with Section to* 00
Florldo Valutas
1 It it th* intention ot th*
undersigned to angog* In a
business enterprise under th#
fictitious name »ol G R IFF IN
E N T E R P R IS E S , located ol 111*
H o lid a y A v o n u * . A p o p k a ,
Somlnol*County. Florldo
1 A ttoc hod hereto and mod* a
pari hereof It th* newspaper
Prool ol Publication a t rogulrod
by Mid Statute
4 Those Interested In Mid
enterprise end th# evtent ol th*
interest ot each. Isas follows
NAM E OF O W N ER
t John R Grltfln
1 Ban F Griffin, Jr
IN T E R E S T

WVM%
AOORCSS OF O W N ER
I u iFM oiutar Av#
A pep* a F L 317W
1 '0* Timber rove South
Longwood F L 1177*
Sworn to and subscribed be
tor# me *1 Apopka. Orange
County. Florldo Ihlt ICth doy ol
May IFF)
RoynondA McLeod
Notary Public
My Commission E ip ire t
March It iff*
As rotarred to In Paragraph ]
attora Proof ol Publication ot
this intent,on lo register It tiled
herewith pursuant to the pro
visions ol Section h it try Florid*
Slotutat
Publish July I.E. IS, 71, IFES
OEH 1
NOTIC I OF p u b l i c
H EAR IN G TO CO NSIDE R
A CO ND ITIO NAL USE
Nolle* It horoby given thol *
Public Hearing will tie hold by
ih* Planning ond Zoning Com
m inion In ih* City Com mltilon
Room. City M all, Sontord,
Florldo *i f CO P M on Thurs
doy. July IS. IFtS to consider a
request tor a Conditional U m In
a SR 1. Single Fam ily Rosidon
Hal Dwelling Ditto Id
Legal Description Lott IS. IS.
17. 4 IS. Blk F, 3rd Section
Drtamwoid
Address laOS, 1410. 1411. 1414
L okt Avenue
Conditional U m
Requeued
TwoOuptoaet
All perttos In Interest ond
iiH it n i thou hov* an opporlunl
ly to bo hoard *1 M id hearing
By coder ot Iho Planning end
Zoning Commission of Ih# City
of Sontord. Florida this Ird day
ot July. If**
John Morris. Chairmen
City ol Sen ford Planning
ond Zoning Commission
ADVICE TO THE P U B LIC II
a person decides to appeal a
decision mad* wllh respect to
any mortar considered el the
above meeting or heaving ho
may need * verbal Im record of
Hi* proceedings Including th*
testimony and evidence which
record H not provided bv the
C lly o l Sontard IFS1ES0IOSI
Publish July S. IFES
O EH a*
NOTICE OF P U B LIC
H EARIH O TD C O N S ID E R
A CONDITIONAL USE
Nolle* It hereby given thot a
Public Hooting will b* hold by
•ti* Planning and Zoning Com
mission in In* City Commission
Room . C ity H e ll. Sontord
Florida | M B P M on Thurt
dor. July IS Ittl to consider *
request tor a Conditional Us* In
a GC 1. General Commercial
District
Legal Description Lota 47end
‘ I
S e c o n d A d d i t i o n t*
Parkview P B 4 .P G 1
Address
11*4 S Sanford
Avenue
Conditional U w Requested
Limited manufacturing
All portlet In Intaretl and
ciHiont shall have on opportunl
&gt;y tab* hoard at M id hearing
By order of the Planning ond
Zoning Commission #4 Ih* City
ol Sontard Florida this lSth day
OlJun* Ittl
John Morris. Chairman
City ot Sontord Planning
ond Zoning Commission
AO VICE TO T H E P U B L IC : II
* person decides to appeal *
decision made wllh respect to
any mottor considered el Ih*
above meeting *r hearing, h*
may need * verb*llm record *1
to* proceedings, including th*
testimony ond evidence which
record It net provided by the
C ity *1 Sontord IFS JE S H M l
Publish July • IFES
D E H a*

Morning and tvtnlng hours
available No eiperlenc* noc
essory Guaranteed salary
end great benuses EOF4S17
ASSEM BLERS
Front e fllc* . phones, tiling,
typing helpful
Permanent
positions Never* Feet

H U P PERM............7 / 4 -I M
Assistant Manager Beauty tip
p re fe rre d , co benefits 4
bonus Apply In parson Ac*
Beauty Supply. Zoyre Plot*.
Airport B ird 4 17 FT
AUTO S A L E S M A N Lerg* tepu
labia U C firm needs honest,
tiperienced, M lt moHvstmg
p erso n
C o m m is s io n and
benefits Apply with resume’
to B L U E BOOK CARS Coll
17167*1
Busboys/WeltresMi/W elters
Over II, day 4 night ihltts
available Apply Holiday Inn.
Lok* Monro*. Sontord

CARPENTERS HELPER
Wonted Immediate opening
Apply In person
S H E D S A M E R IC A
irs M w y 17*1
Longwood
tn tM

Legol Notice
NO TICE O F PUBLIC
H E A R IN G TO CONSIOIR
A CO N D ITIO N AL USE
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held by
Ih* Planning ond Zoning Com
mission In in# City Commiiaion
Room . C it y H a ll, Sontard,
F lor id* ol J X P M on Thurs
doy. July II. &gt;*ll to consider *
request lor a Conditional Um In
a SC J. Spoctal CommorclOl
District
Logoi Description Lots t and
0. Bloch 1. Tier S. Town o4
Sontord according lo Plot Book
1, Pages so through *4 HI, 111.
111. Ila ond 117. Public Records
ol Seminole County, F lor Ido
A d d re s s
111 E a s t F irst

Street

Conditional U m
Requalled
Se&gt;* el Alco4ioi:c Beverages lor
consumption on th* premises
All parties In Interest ond
CHiiant shall hov* an opportunl
ty to be hoard *1 M id hearing
Br order ol tho Planning ond
Zoning Commission of th* City
ol Sontord, Florida this llfh doy
ol June. 1*4*
John Morris. Chairman
City ot Sanford Planning
and Zoning Commission
A D V IC E TO TH E PUBLIC II
a person decides to appeal a
decision made wllh respect to
any matter considered al Ih*
above meetings or hearings, h*
may need a verbatim record oI
m# proceedings, including Ih#
testimony and evidence which
record it not provided by the
C ity *1 Santord I F S l* a 6'6SI
P u b lis h J u l y F. IFES

D EH as

£3}

323-5176
M U french A v*.

individual Needed lomlllor with
R m I E ila t* Good personal I
ty
F a m ilia r with Dolton*
W illing to work weekends
Phono
........ STaaiOt
Shipping E Receiving
Experience required In product
co n tro l. Inventory control,
shipping 4 receiving tor Sen
fo rd m a n u fa ctu rin g firm
M l d*a0 __________________
joAnn Fabrics will be opening e
store In Santord W* ere
soaking applicants tor th*
posit Ions ol store manager 4
sewing machine Mies m i nag
or
Star* manager It r t
sponsible lor complete opera
tion ol store 4 supervising
saver *1 employees Lowing
m achine s i l l s manager It
r e s p o n s i b l e l o r s o wi n g
mochiln* M ies Good M tory.
benefits 4 training program
II Interested, tend resume to
JoAnn Fabrics. 114 Velutla
M a ll, 1700 Volusia Avenue,
Ooytone Beach. F L 061*
L E A S IN G AG EN T
People person wentod
En(oy yourself her*I Show
apartments 4 answer phones
No eiperlenc* necessary I

1* 00 hr

f t y ^

Employment
323-5176
Un Froatb Avq.

M A ID
bl weekly cleaning of
Condo Any day M u lt bo
d e p e n d a b l e , o wn i r o n s
portal ton IS 00 per hr U S
0166
Ma i n t e n a n c e
M illw r ig h t s ,
conveyor mechanics, sheet
m a ta l a ip a r it n c * a plus
W ages commansurata wllh
avper lanra A ll shifts Apply
in personal

SOUTHERN aPRESS
rHOOUCTS, INC.
ISO* E S TA TE RO *4
O f LAND. FL.
________ (*04)7T41FII________

AVON EARH1N01W0W1II
OPEN TERRITORIES NOWIII
_____ Slimier m-kolt
Needed LPM end tr R N. lor SII
shift, lull time good employe#
b e n f llt and a tm e tp h a r*
E O E apply at
DaBary Manor
SOW Hwy 17 Ol, OeBary_______
N U R S E ’ S AIDES; All shifts
Experienced or certified pr*
tarred Apply In person et
Lakevlew Nursing Cantor. *IF
E Ind SI . Sentord__________

NURSE AIDES AND LIVE IN
Privet* duty. Stoll duty, and
horn* car* positions available
f it silent pey. Coll Wend*
M l FFEOF1I
" E O C . M/F &lt;
V * __________
NUR1 E 1 N E E D E D
IM M E D IA T E LY
R N . L P N end N A 't , All
shifts available. I to bonus for
Oil now employees

NUR1E W0RL0
CALL: tieiltl
1*10 Lee *4 , wintar Park
PANTRY/ OINING ROOM
WORKER
Fu ll Tim* lor Senior Retirement
Community Eiperlenc* do
tired Pleasant
appearance
and personality ragulrad
Will consider training willing
learner Good wages
Apply *t

N O W ELL PLACE
TOO Airport Bird
Between 14 4PM
O f ceii_______

Sontord
Mon F f I
som e

Pert lima House keeping end
cooking tor retirees Trane
portetton end reference* re
qulrad Good pey i n 4674

PHONE WOW
P ert time No eiperlenc* nece*
sary, will train. Set appoint
mente from our Longwood
office Sterling Mtory from
te M to 17 M per hour Im
mediate pay raise* tor those
who try harder Potential HO
per hour within 4 weeks Call
J lm f

NOW HIRING!
Outstanding Opportunity For

EXPERIENCED CASHIERS,
GAS ATTENDANTS AND
FAST FOOD PREPARATION
C ' f t e c D o / ) CENTERS
5 LOCATIONS IN SEMINOLE COUNTY

•A u to /Truck Refueling
• Full Line Convenience Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens
F ile d Chicken Su b s Donuts

•Top Salaries
• Free Life &amp; Hospitalization
•2 Paid Vacations Each Year
•Profit Sharing Plan
•Other Benefits
M A K E A P P LIC A TIO N IN PER SO N
AT 202 N. L a u rtl A ve ., Santord
Monday Thru FtWay I » AM 4 JO PM
NO PHONE CALLS. PLEASE
I
k!

�,

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

EXCUTIVE SECRETARY
W in or Without th o r^ n o •
Ab*#tt T#mpor#r&gt; S«fylc»t
K l )9C
_______

• M l EXTATI
SALES r t o r u

W A R E H O U S E W O RKERS
Haad 18 Immediately. abH M lift
* *» Must be retiabk. own
•rantportatlan. Perm anonl
position Mover a Pao

TIM f H I M

High
Earning*
Potential I
Modam oft tea In eacelWnt
location Cem pW N training
program Maw dlvlaon at oM
established firm
Call non
•or details
on
plaatant
nor king condition* and t0
Mcwrt your fytun
Jlrn Rftftftfty____________ J74ftft$ft

SALES
good oat

GOOD BENEFITS
GOODFUTUREI
m ao
-SANFORD AREA
SVANTEO
* t n*«l a good b u sinati
person to operate a local U M
'Out# tailing grocery product!
and ganorai merchandise la
over J00 attatbiishwd cwttam
portunity lor ttw right panon
•ho l» willing to work tor a
battar than adverag* Incoma
WE PROVIDE;
a E i'ablithad business
01 weeks training
a leased vahlcla
• HotpHaliiation
a LIN Insurance
oRttlramantplan
• Opportunity lor advancamant
WE A R E
OROWINO R A P ID L Y
Minimum Invailmant ra
quirad secured by account*
and inventory
Financing Araiiabl*
Far co n lid a n lla l Interview
pleat* call Howard Jama*,
weekdays 10 A M 7 P M at
i loom ***t_____________________
x m ed u le c ler k

M VO hour Ea*y tpot to gat you
•'artad In ttabla. tait growing
company! Schadula drlvart
tor dal l car la*

Employment

323-5176
tin f '• * ' h Aa#

U S Stmiiur Sjfes SU
M o v a r i and Shakart.
Metlratort. Loadari and Pao
pla Into SolM m provam ant.
and not afraid to tarn larga
turn* ot monay Start with a
l VO ona day laminar ACT
HOW i Can lo t G O GO______
S U M M E R JOBS
Immadlata opanlngt
Day &amp; aranlng hour* I
• ClarKal
aWarahouw
Haver a Feel
TEMP f£ IM .- ...........774-1141
S URV E Y CRE W; Eiparwncad
party chlat* A Instrument man
•antad Parmanant potltlan*
with good pay A tacallant
bonatltt In Orlando araa Sand
raiuma la P E C . Inc . IN E
Rabmtan St . Smta isaa. Or
landa. P L n oal
TERMITE TECHNICIAN
On# of Fla 't oidt«l poll control
companlo* looking tor ca
faar mlndad Individual* with
a • lllln g n a t i to la a rn A
advanca Co vahlcla A ca
banatlt* A p ply l i t ! Park
Drtva. Spancar h alt Cantral
Ma phana call*, p***x______
T irad at Jek Hunting f
Call Ful ur a*
t hay hava
nundradt ot lob oponmg* Mr
l to la who want to Work
*t» 4xo
CEM ENT WORKERS A
HELPERS
Eacollant pay
Start right away t n 4X0
OE L I V E R V H E L P E R S no ai
partanco naca*tary Full lima
Good »!arling pay t n 4X0
G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
TRAI NE E S
Croat tlarting
Iob Savaral opaning* Good
pay aft 4X0
F A C T O R Y A S S E M R L Y and
PRODUCTION WORK Me**
Putt! opan Good pay scales
•ft 4X0
IMMEOIATE OPEMINQ1
Ganaral Construction labor
Good pay t f t 4X0
IRUCK D R I V E R S Lang haul
Immadlata* Good driving ra
cord O r e r U a ft 4X0
LOCAL D R I V E R S
Straight
truck* Good pay Start right
away t f t 4X0
RECEPTIONIST. OFFICE
H E L P E R S . C L E R K S . CRT
OPERATORS
Im m adlata
opanlngt Good pay KaW*
Call t f t 4X0 MOW I

f t — Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

71— H«lp Wanted

774-1141

w ,*d&gt;r. Layout. A Plttan
Paata Stwvl Car aura tun

OptimaA..^TTbrntit*

C a ll X ) * 1 X « r
Carnaby .. *425 E d g e , a Mr Or
:______
E OE

f l — A p jrtm » n ti/
Houso to Share

0 R T WA L L
With or without
a ip a rltn c a
Immadlata
opanlngt Good pay Coll IO
day tfS O B S _____________
V E N O IN O T R A IN E E
1X0 woaa Train tar established
vending route I PHI machine*
in|oy

Employment
323-5176
4

S

&gt;

Wanted Data CMrb ocpariancad
with M ic ro C a th Roglitar
pralarrad but will train Apply
In par ton Day* Inn. I 4 A SR

IPS

tA f-

ON A H D T '

m m i_____________

1101 SPECIAL
I 8 Z bdrm tram ITO Lake
Ad* FNiibNNa** niNTO

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

10 *0 *0 0 0 Metvrv lemilf to
3 Bdrm Ifth# front
Gmll W Uftt

574-1040

93— Rooms for Rent

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Apt with private bath Incl
rafrlg Complete privacy
Walk to downtown *45 wk 4
tiostac.nsnadorm tAa
Cattolberry North winter Park
Orlvo Kid* A pat* OK UOwk
piu* aaain i ___________________
Christian Apt* A Mama*
TV. kitchen, laundry, maid. IX
wk im O I 401418. an 8*18
Fvmithad Ream Far Rant Sea
al IBM Gala PI ) block* oft
ftth SI A Sanford Ava___________
SANFORD Fumlihad room* by
ttw waak Reasonable rata*
Maldtervk# Call XT) 4Hf
S &gt;PM 411 Palmetto Ava
THE FLORIDA HOTEiT
M
OOak Avenue
27I4K4
RaotonabN Weakly R»N*

♦7— Apartm ents
Furnished / Rent
A V A I L A B L E NOW
Furmsh#d Studio Ap#ctm#«ti
O * Bodroom Apt*
Two B#droom Apt*
FLfXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR CI T I ZE NS DISCOUNT
RAN CH S T Y L E LIVINOIII

SANFORD COURT HfTS.

N ice l b d rm .. c a rp e t
throughout Stop by 1011 W
Fk»i sax por mo First. last
d*po*ll R»Nr*oce* OT lip*
SANFORD- I bdrm
Nncadyard UOOme

I bath

ENTERPRISE 1bdrm 1 balh*.
SI Joint actat* UK mo

M
t « » a X l ax

141—Homes F o r Sole

141— Homes F o r Sale
By Owner Lack Arbar SanNrd
4 Bdrm , 1 bath. pool, central
alr/haat. completely ra
medaiad Owner financing
t*4 5000 Call X4 4X1111 or
•84 4178171

AU 10U NUD

I

Lovely Fu rn I bdrm ml air.
Hrlng room, kitchen, bath,
fireplace Quiet area
ill#
mo ♦ 8100dap H I 11*0
SPACIOUS CONDO, tuper con
dllion A ll the goodie* micro,
c a b l e , vi de o, phana.
wethar dryer, pool Owner
retain* on* bdrm and balh lor
occasional u*a at ottlc* T*
nant ha* prlv*l* bdrm i
bath Virtually prlvat* uta ol
anllra unit AvallabM now.
• I ngl e* o n l y , no pat*
Raatonbl*. negotiable rant
108188__________________
Waklva Rtvar Efficiency Cano*
uv# Carpet, air Adult* No
pats 1745 OT 44to_______________
I and ] bdrm . n*ar town. 175
and U S par waak |IM sacuri
ty. Call M W H avanlngi
I Bdrm adult*, no pat*, air.
qulat. ra tld a n llal 1X0 par
month plus deposit MI Ml*
I bdrm . utilities lurnlthad 1400
por mo n t h p lu s dt pos l l
Call m 50*1 attar i PM
I Bdrm apartment partacl tor I
pcepN 181 por woo* plot 1X0
security
C o lli III IM t or

ni tu t

t f — Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BAMROOCOVt APTS
M
OE Airport Bird
PHONE rn*4M.............. 771M8I
Efficiency tram..................lit) ma
Discaunt Nr Venter Cttliaw*

•c o u n tb y

setting

•

Largo I 8 I Bdrm Apartment*
Advil LaktvtawFtmily Patlltdt

h * l i b i t Now Open Naaitriih
SECURITY DEPOSIT_______IIM
WITH THIS ADI

MASTERS COVE...... 3217900
Lg I bdrm . w'w carpal, dith
wathar. Cant haal A air. 1X0
Jt m « m

IIDCEW000 ARMS ARTS
limited Time Only
i* oft P Irit Month* Rani
ISM Ridgewood As*
Sanlord Pla
CALL
1I104M.......................................m *4tl
Monday thru F nday
• N IX
Saturday from
10 N l

I Bdrm . I bath,
air. appliance*, washer dryer
Call 41114*5a rm m s
Small &gt; bdrm . I balh air.
appliance*, carpal Ideal N r a
coupla U M mo ♦ 1X0 ■
it m us* or ot ion
Tlrad Ot Aaartmawt LteNgf
EaporNnca tha privacy at
your own homo In ona ef our
luaury dupNao* Lg I bdrm .
I both, vaulted calling, appi.
hook up*. p rlvat* icraonad
Ratio. your awn yard/maud
boo Starting at 1X0 Call Nr
Art* 8*. I PM 7PM. Ml M l
WaONa Rtvar ENNwry Cano#
u*a Carpet, air Adult*, no
pot* 1X5 mo . UBS security
MMd&gt;e
_______________________
I and Z bdrm Alta furnished
tffkNncy tram t fl wwt US0
dapotit Ma pan Call m 4X I
17PM 41SPalmetto____________

BY OWNER I bdrm I bath.
Poet. Fireplace. *s acre on
canal la Laka Markham
Attuma taco monthly with
ia 000 down Call bill RotN
87 ■wa0 Idays) or 111 fax
ININS)

STEN STRO M
REALTY-REALTOR

1 bdrm . I balh Kid* okay No
pcft IX wk . 1150 dapotit
loot W &gt;* Streat Call HI
4X7

WE LIST ANOIELL
MOOE HOME 1 THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
1IMINOLC COUNTY

L a k a M ary- I bdrm .
watfwr dryer hookupt. appii
a n c a i . q u la t a r a a
L1X/discount InvatNrt Raal
ty Service* I1FRM_____________
1 bdrm . I bath Dupiat ofl 25th
tlroal Lika Naw U70 par
month Ratonabi* security
Call *411X7 attar t PM
2 BDRM . Hi balh. cantral air.
wathar dryer hook up. hilly
carpeted, no patt 1170 par
month Call IX14«a altar 4
PM__________________________________
1 bdrm | balh. equip kitchen
SIX mo m i IIM dapotn
Children OK It) 1127

107-M obile
Homes / Rent

HALL

IMMACULATE I 1 bdrm I bath
ham# with cantral air haal
Nncad Yard, sprlnk lar syslrm
dining i*wmI HI tie

lilVT m
fttftitft
It Tim IIN IB K I

113— Storage Rentals
NBftHORMl
u a io *

............................w j pax

117— Com mercial
Rentals
iBtBlI 4 OfftCM SftftCft XX) up to
2000 X) ft ftIBOfttorftg# ftvftll
atof m u n _____________________
SANFORD For rt*f or i#fti#
Nftftr ftlrport. )1 i SO
' building
R#it room, trite*. #1r. ISO ■
124’ ftncftd lot J pbfttft
• IftctrIcftl tyittm. 10 nor*#
powMf ftir competitor. P'ftftt#
Cftll n ? fOftft or m tfftl ftftor
4 PM________________________________

121—Condominium
Rentals
S I N G L E S T OR Y
L IV IN G

AFFORDA8LII
1 bdrm m l
Irg Krrawed perck. fenced
yard FHA *r VA line non* I
IX PX Cell vtavlckl
HIDDEN LAKII I bdrm I kath
tplll plan m l iitra Irg lamlly
ream Spart ling peel I Privacy
Nnca. gargaavt dveer Many
traatl AttvmtbNI

323-5774
JU lt AIOmT f OR YOU
I Bdrm . I't bath brick home I*
r*ady and priced right al
U4 W0 Recently radacoralad
Larga lot Call to tea

CALL BART
R8AL 81YAYR
RRALYOR
m tax

lumwnniwM* iw m iirift

KISH REAL ESTATE
JU1T LUTED
I Bdrm . 1 kaih. family reem.
dining ream cantral air and
heat, llrap lac*. lanced
AttvmakN Mtg Yaw won't
Had awabatter at tat X*
EXECUTIVE HOME
FwNct Nr awtartalmng Canal
treat N M ivbn'l River Bvtlt
In grill M»&lt;leaned cawrtyard
4 bdrm . Ih N ik. ham* |*tt
right tar Plarlda living
tin .x i

Lb jm Tbfiri te Tit
Tear N#Hi!
furnished « UatarRoAtV.
Carpart*.................PyNaN Pallet
lush Landscaping Pats CbiWran
WATER REOIACCIPTEDI

Cftll________ 321-1911
127—Office Rentals
O ffkestsIsRt
RaatenabN and convenient
WIN MapN.SenXrd
M3X X
W
O
O tq. ft attic* tpac* avail
abla. tacond Hoar of ad
mlnlttratlve building Sanford
Airport. M X per tq H In
cludaa air, haal. lanitorlal and
perking Call Sanlord Airport
Authority Nr datallt OT 7771

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN FEALTY
Ur Reel I INN Brtber
tax iaaNrd Ava
FIR E CRACKER IPEC IA LI
Summit all attars an tht* )
bdm . I b*m Fenced back,
c a r p a r f . a tta b lla h a d
mg. IIU naw Aiaing U f.xe
I ACREA1 Grataad and Nncad.
an paved read AsaumabN
mertgaga. VI! 000

thraughaut OT
a im

______

Hidden Laa* '&lt;** Wildwood Dr
1 bdrm i bath. 8M garage,
parch, cantral air. Sugar
CHanl AtaumabM 141088
REALTOR
NURVINK LAIL
*47 8181
ar X I 7887

COUNTRY 1IOKI
I bdrm |
balh mabiN home an I acres!
Lalatranl. dewbl* wide perch,
cantral air/haatl lit sac

|

TERRIFIC!
I bdrm I bath
ham# an larga cartsay Nil
Eat In Kitehrn
llraplac#
cantral alt/haal I 17J toe
WILL 8UILD TO 1UITI YOUR
LOT OR OUR1I E XCLUtIVE
AOINT FOR WINtONO
OEV CORP. A CENTRAL
FLORIDA LEAOERi MORE
HOME FOR L E ll MONEY I
CALL TOOAYI
nOENEVA OSCEOLA RO a
IONEO FOR MOBILES!
I Acre Cavnii y tracts
Wall It wad aa pavwd Rd
NXOam ISYrs a lllM
Im a llU n l
II yea ar* Ixblng Nr a tec
castM career N Real t ilatv
Uanstram R xlty It laXWg
Nr yau Call La* AIBrlgAI
Nday al ITT U H
Eraningi
IJJ M
OT

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
1541 PABK AVC
XI Lk Mary Bird ....

14f— C om n itr e Je I
P ro p e rty / Sole
COMMERCIAL SPECIALIST
BOB M BALL. JR P A.
REALTOR
I7I4IH

ADULTS AND FAMILIES WELCOME
0
2714 R ID G E W O O D A V E .« S A N F O R D

3 2 3 -7 9 0 0

•

•

I f f — Pets &amp; Supplies

I* * acr* ham* tiNt
Wooded
and grove from 111 750
Teams#

Ability bannals Dog boarding
Country Atmosphere Reason
a b la R a te s
111 2110

DON'T WAITl » Acres on
Cochran Rd Geneva UW0
par acr# ] l \ down. I0\
interest Owner financing'

203— Livestock and
Poultry
7 CALVES

COUNTRYWIDE r ea lty
Rag R E Brahae.................mtMS
478Hsry 411, Ottaan. Fla.

IM
Oftftch or bo** for 6210 Cftll
272 2ftf2or ftftl m«

Owner Fmanemg Sanford build
mg Ni Septic 4” wall
Wallace Crass Really. Inc.,
RanHer
n I 0577

213—Auctions
FOII ItTATC
Commercial ar Ratldanllal
Auctions 1 Appraisals Call
Dall'k Auction R) MX

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sole

217—Garage Sales

* NEW SMYRNA BUCH*
VENETIAN VIUAS

MOVINO SALE Everything
mu%9 got Movlnf out ot town
Wod f 10 Sftf F/tS 11 1 PM
ftjft Summorlin Avo Sortford

Wft*#r fronl *oxn hornet neitts
gsrSQ0 fr o m iff BO
O Conv#
lingt# story from 13* fCC
Pool. IftCUlfl. (IwLhOuS#
G'Vftt C#nfrftl Locfttion Uofti
aocBl option#I FHA ftnd VA
1'DftKVcmg ftvft iftMe Mull m
for your wM' Op#n ftvftry dfty
Dftnfftll 481MY ftvfttlftbtft CftH
*D4 42tft1M for cnmpiEtf dft

2 lf —Wanted to Buy
illy
lodv Itrolkn Ofttfwi
PlftfftftHl, Etc PftM'fcftCll
i i m u n m m4
NoodCnbi Piftfpori% (loby
twrniturft clftthing Good
s Affor 7 PM
JJi M )

tftlfft

NtW SMYRNA ftCACH
2 bdrm I bftNi hftftc hide cof
'ftQft ftith commftrclfti toning
S»»rf your o«m buvneu ne«r
»b#0Cftftn ift7 «nc

I’fty.ng CASH for
Aluminum Cftni Copfwr.
R 'ftli Ltftd Nfwipftptr
GlftU Gold SiIvor
ftoftomo Tool HI W Hi
• 1 OOSftf • I 111 1100

ft#«Lhitdft Hftftlty HCALTONI
N M &amp; tttl
OpftHiOftvit

223— Miscellaneous
157-M obile
Homes / Sale

BALDWIN PIANO
PRO
F »#&lt;frlc Plftno. #2 100 Cftll
m isiftftfftr Bpm

CUSTOM BUIH METAL SHEDS
Any sue Call Ml X II
Refrigerator and Iro a ie r,
Mirowav* used raslauranl
aquipmanl In ticallanl condl
Hon Call 11) 717*

lIMtBN

AdultP.n

CR ED IT H A S S L E S ?
8

OSTEEN I acr# burning Nf*.
high end dry 14 W
O Terms
avaiiabN

I o'R f M!
IIM t ill
Includftt WfttwY Gftrtsftg# Pick up
Vftrd AAftinfrnft/ict
Immpdtfttft OcCupftncy
l.* a^ ,r , ».L I ,

231-Cars
Bad Credit?
No Credit i
WE fINANCE

•
•
8
•

Let us worry about your
ciadit problems
W# can financa almost
anyon*
Down payment a* low a*
S300 OO
Wa taka Hade*
Payments To Bl your bsidgas

D is c o im A irro s a i l s
1501 rrxs&lt;h Ava.
325-KM5
Lnsurwvs T p.-d i
in this IF7Y Horilag* Edition
with too many option* to list
Must ba seen to b# epprecl
ated Call Oav* at RlObal.
days or Rl 0811 ava*
_
IF74 FORD ORANADA
IFV Call Ml 5*00 (Day*) or
O T 8117 ININ*) __________
IFT? Chsyy C 10 Window Van
Nw mileage, air. p/*. IXOO
Call Ml Ilia attar a PM *_____
lt7F FOOD RANCHIROxa
111 Cleveland C* Trans p/*.
p b air. cruise control, air
shocks, na rust new paint,
sacrifice for HIM Call Drag
Rm f 18 RTFPabatoral PM

To Ford LTD Landau a dr . new
tires, air cruise. AM FM.
alac windows. 47 iNO ml
trees R l 1 * 1 7 _____________
'l l Pontiac TransAm Turbo
T Tap
loacNd'
|7**S
COURT I IV PONTIAC. W i l l i
1) Chevrolet Camaro
54*15
No Money Down1
COURTESY PONTIAC 111 t ill
la Pontiac F &gt;aro
loaded
A On* Owner &lt;
W
educed
ItVS)
COURTESY PONTIAC 111 1111

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans
CAMPER CAP All ftlumlnum
tor • pick up Whit# M
cond |12&gt; CftM172 fttft)
CAMPER CAP All ftlumlnum
t©
/ ft im pick up Whit# good
cond MSoroffov 271 fttftj
Iff? F 29ft i#ft#r Cftb immft&lt;u
Iftfft ftiklng UM0 Itfft F 290
Sup#r Cftb Gfftftt condition
11900 Cftll H I 2472
7f CH#YfO*#t Blftitr
4 W^h I Olr#
$4949
COURTItY PONTIAC 3)1 31)1

PTft Ha ve ft l i m i f t d N « m W r of
Rfftt't Bor •%Lftwt i IIM DbwnI

‘tft fo r 4 lr»n(t XIT
ft Wh##l 0»ivf
R#duc#d'
u n 9
COURTEIY PONTIAC 1)1 )1)l

Appliances Far Sal* all In
eictlNnl condition A fully
guaranteed...............................1714X4

NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1170 S. Sintotd..... 371 4073

ft) ToyOf# Pick Up M000 ml . |
ip##d CfftlM t ill * h fil
AM/FM ftir iltfft 22124W

Racandltlsnad ApaHancas
tram FBI WARRANTY.
BARNBTTS... CASSILBIRRY
H F F lif.
...............................na tail
•WENT TOOWNa
CnNr TV*. sNrae* washers
dryer*. rafrlgaraNr. h**&gt;art.
furniture, vidna raewdris
Special Itl waak t rani 11W
AINrnatlv* TV 8 Appi Renlals
Zayra* Shopping Center
111 5000

BannasllWPonliac
Loaded
........

i l l — Appliances
/ Furniture

IX W TTTh SI

.
'82
Reduced

u rn

Uti

COURT 81Y PONTIAC "&gt;
m in i

★ DAYTONA AUTO ★
★ AUCTION #
Hwy f t ......................OayNna Baach
a a a a a HeldI a a a a a a

PUBLIC AUTOAUCTION

237—Tractor* and
T railer*
( I 17 ft. HO. Tifidam Traifar
Wf-BBRI

23f—M otorcycles
and Bikes

(vary Wad NINal 7; X PM

★ W hore Anybody a
a C«n Buy or Sell! *

77TH STREET fUMITURE
til X II

113— Television/
Radio / Stereo

For mor. drift'll
I fftft III tilt
Iteftftry Aut# A Mftrin# V.lei
Acrofti Nwriror. loptl Mil

i»4 H#y 12flOftlftry ftftft tlift

★ INSTANT CASH ★

/•mth 29" color f#i«viiion Oig
•n#i prlct ov#f M
OO Rftlftncft
du# IMft 00 Cftlh 0* Iftfft OF*'
p#ym#nfi US month Still In
« ftf f only
NO MON E Y
DOWN from from# triftl no
obl»gftt»on Cftll ftfti llftft dfty
or ntQhf

a eWE WILL BUY* a
a a YOUR U1EDCAR a a
e CALL PHIL RE TTH a
COURTESY PONTIAC 111 1111

81 Yamaha no
E lactnc Start
5000 ml
Radvced'
F1X5
COURTESY PONTIAC 1111111

243—Junk C a rt
ANY JUNKCARIB TRUCKS
hough* Fram 511 150 4 net*
Call 11) 1114............. m-4in
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk 4
'Jtadcars truiks A heavy
equipment n i 5X0
wr PAT TOPDOLLAR f Ob
JUNK CAR1AND TRUCK!
CBS AUTO PARTS X ) *X1

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

(303)321-0041
all W tJthttreet
IaaNrd. PI » m

REALTOR
Na Qualifying New 1 bdrm . 2
bam an I acres Martas ak
Owner financing prime araa
8 X 888 UO 1717____________
lanterd NKa I bedroom heme
with living reem. dining ruem
family room, laundry
•erkthep Call Nr in
NrmatMn rr&gt; &gt;&gt;X "» »Sa #41*

) stary hex* wSfh i
. large toxtfy max.
Ilraglac* la lla la g re a x .
11 |^|| v4M cftftllAlf Mlfttlf
with Raaaclag t#4M8

E le ctrica l

Additions ft
Remodeling
KtKOOCUNS SPECIALIST
W# MendN
The WhoN Bell Of Wa&gt;

IAN I ORD Naw I bdrm I bam
DEL garaga anargy saver
IX X* Crank CanslrvctNn

I. L UNA CONST.
322 7029
^Fjnanonj^vaUabw^^

A ir Conditioning
ft Heating
Wall Plvxbxg 8 Heating
.007 tawfh SanNrd Avanu*
SanNrd. PNyldaOTTI

■Ilit O B l

STEM PER
Larga a bdrm
kitchen. OBL
larga earner
WILL HOLO
Only IX K8

Max* Eat In
car garaaa.
let OWNER
MORTGAGE

PTNad Radmadl I bdrm . I bath.
Large let Naw 178080

Appliance Repair
AAbrb Apptunce Sbyyki
Mb larvtca H* Eifra ChargeI
I 7Tf tag
a«a 5*41
174840

Bookkeeping
*iewd
#**(,. ng
Nr yaur small butmast *
Call; M&gt;7X1.....................— .......Jim

t i a i g l ut 2

Carpentry
All types of larpwrlry * r*
modalirg 77 yrt aag Call
BkherdGraae OT XH

C le a n in g Service

1 bdrm /I bath Immadah o t
cupancy FHA Nan quality mg
mertgaga IN daw Owner
h e ld ! Ind m e rtg ag a
Laaaa/aptian term* avaiiabN

AnyfNng (NcIrKal Sima 11711
EtfimaNs If Hr SayyKa Calls
lim s BNctrii larvKa 1717*7#
O8 S ( Nctrlc
125*050
Naw 8 ramadaling addition*,
tan*, security lights tlmart
plus all alac tafyicat (Ratify
Service L k anted A Banded

Fence
INST8LL SELL 8 REPAIR
Cypratt ....Chain UaB - Waad
Faw ca.W I'f

JUST O l NI 1 1

Call

.................. ID 4

dawt. cabinets, tIN. aft
Oeed War* Lea* Rata* TOkaX

Lawn Sarvice
ACE LAWN SI RVICE
Maiwlanawa leading Pruning
Cleaning Thatching Fart lining
Prw Itllx a N t...................H I 1711
Lawn MainNnanca
Landscaping Bush Hag AApwing
IX 58*5
liw n MeeiRf.............Lew Prices
OT 78)8

LAWNS MOWED i TRIMMED
Sgrxg Yard CNaaapa

Home Improvement
0^N1lftr#ft

A Ramadaling
N M T m Satall
RvrSan law . SanNrd

TFFOMAt 8 THOMAS M
wm#
rsaair. t leaning law* care
Caff i l l pea

Home Repair*
CARPENTie

Rayaitt and
tamodallng Na lib too small
Call P I kM5____________________

Maintenance of all typx
Carpentry galnllng.plumbing
andaNcfyic 77)40)8

WILLIS HOME BEPAIB
Ramadaitwg
Additiawi
A
All Type* Repair* ln*wr*d Na
|«bN»small Ml 774*

Landclearing
OINEVA LANDCLIARINO
tin tin
I Ponds Dram ditch**
SIN PrapiratNrs Can ) * l f R
TIMMINB LAMDCL I ARUM
RiLLOiRT a Cla y a
SHALE 8 MAULING
222 14X2

ID f ill

QffBktf Ltea Cara
At AftordabN Pt e ft 1)1 a»7i

II!
_________ nfaan________

LJvlag.

* Hall tx x

LIST WITH Utl___________

1U.X8 lUXdl

•

Snapper rtdar #• Inch cut II
hors# power Good condition
Call OT 1771

OPEN lUNDAVli IN I PM

SaN 8 Chafr, M l. T O X X

]

WILSON MAIER fUlNITURE

CONSULT OUR

CALL ANYTIME
REALTOR.............. .ZtSaXI

1 ft 2 BEDROOM APT*. AVAILABLE

SanNrd
Lk Mary

patla Hvga family ream
avarlaaking tkadad yard
Over tliad daahN garage
Farmat Dining Ream Larga
intida Vttilty reax 1277AM

OTNBE ROMES. LOTS.
ACBEASI. IMVE8TMSNT
PROPERTY

D EP O SIT

in i l l E 1st ST...................n i tan

a e COLOR TELEVISION* a

Bdrm .mablld haws*, bath

$100 SECU R ETY

SanNrd 4 apt# t ’ lXOmpo#'
♦
i r t eftifti flew T«4ftl prkft
I f f . 00ft Aprftited vftlvt
m ooo c«n H04MMM

USED C A R S
TMI BEST IN TOWN
E 2 TERMS

HANOVER WOOOt
a bdrm ham# with all tha

I K in

APARTMENTS

Used Wathar# Parts 8 Bar-vtc*
Nr Kenmorat.....................JOFftT
MOONEY APPLIANCES

P IR FIC Tl
1 bdrm It* bam
bam# with peddl# tans.
cantral air/haal. aak cabinets
mart! U7.X8

OVIEDO
Walk N Mg* wheal a Bdrm . I
hath Naw carpal and pmnl
intida Pancad bach yard
Oaraga U f.Xt

NaN StrBd Ci_________321 3003

321-07S4 ■Eve 322-7A43

COME IE E THU ONII
I
bdrm It* balh ham* with
huge backyard, utility shad
cantral air/heat' SS4 ax

COOL 1PARKLINO POOL
w Nncvd &gt;t acre and Larga 1
bdrm hamal Hvga matter
bdrm Flrtalacal Cantral
h aat/alrl I w a rk tka p il
Attvnta na qualifying m l Nw
dawn' 111M*

i*a« hwy if n _________
I bdrm . large let. privacy, kid*
A pett OK U00 mo plus
Cattalbwrry tat 1111

CASSELBERRY 1 acr
PR I US 008 W Mai.ciowt#I
REALTOR_________IT? 7X1

» u i tsu rr

Siflfwd'i S«i« LoaDai

Midden LaU Or . SanNrd Ry
owner
4 bdrm 1 bath
A tiu m a B la
Naw

E X C IT IN G N EW T H IN G S A R E
H A P P E N IN G A T
THE

TO IRON
ir

____________________________121-1301
Fern. Apt* tar Senler Citllert
III Palmetto Avo
J Cowan No Phone C olli

I{A

LANOSTOCK BROKERS
M W ...................................Anytime

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

2 3 1 -C a rs

1f5— Machine ry/Tools

CENTURY II
KISH REAL ESTATE
REALTOR..............................maaai

• • a IN DELTONA a a .
* a HOMES FOR RENT . a
__________a a 174-1414 a a__________

y, July ». 1 F U - 1 I

/ Furniture

153— AcreageLots/Sele

Country Larga two Itory homo
ISOOpor month

HIODEN LAKE Beautifully
decorated 1 Rdrm . I bath
appllancai. calling Ians,
vertical blind*, icraan porch.
N«c*d yard 1S*5 Call HI
laat

F I.

181— Appliances

151 — Investment
Property / Sole

OELTONA I Bdrm i*rg* cor
nor W4. near N park* t i ll por
month. 111. last. 1X8 Security
AvallabM now Napa’t

W ELD ERS- Certified E ica lH n l
pay tealat Call today if*

PAINTERS A PAINTER
H E L P E R S - Immadlata
opening*, good starting pay
Call today *78 a x e

1 tdrm. Family ream, central
air /haal EicatMnf location
Reference* required UK por
mo plu* sacurlty dapotit

fv g fllw f Herald. Sanford

KIT ‘N* CARLYLE ‘ by Larry Wright

Masonry
BEAL CeacrXe-1Man Quality
Operation PatN* Driveways
Dart Ml TOT. Butt 227 l]2l
EXPERT CONCRETE WORK

P a id

Driveway
Sidew alk
Beau Monde Centl Ca
“ W a A r t The B e a r ........M l lB 8l

Hurting Cara
OUR RATH ARE LOWER
lekavNw Nursing CawNf
FIFE lacawd H . f
&gt;2)4787

Painting
FNrMaRNWB
II
. . 1S f t * la#
Fran (tt
Bonded
Inaurad
WGTRi BBY_______________N82B8J
Mae** PaNffwg 8 WaU Repair
YMbay malarNil
Wa lagpfy NBar T* SAVE BM
m mi

• *9

Plumbing
a Beads Plumbing Sarvk* a
Ragair • RapNc* a Ramadil
a FrxIttim aN t a 111B8H a

Sewing Machine*/
Vacuum Claanars
Sawing Machine Repair* *11
mftlfti 20 yfl • ep#r i#«v.ft In
fsom#t R tfifft P I 4F21_________

Sprinkler*/Irrigation
ABOUT 11ME IRRIOATIOFF
Naw InttanalNn*
Free 111
( apart B«petr» of CampNN
Sprmaiar SytNmt
Tlmart
Pum g »^ ^ ^ lc^ ^ ^ *lj*5a
T ilt
AmTILE Ceramic flN UN*
and matalLetIan. balh*. floort
X7E lltntt .Sanford
m ix
OTTX4 John Parker
s&lt;»nmean TIN' Car amk . Vinyl
AsbasNl. He Installed 8 re
pelted Cap. r t i , Ik Ere*
atltmatat 12)4741

Tree Servica

ir r r c r r :

And Hauling-------a P RL. ______________

C a lf A lta r

ICHOLSTBEE SERVICE
F tx I |II~* Ns I Law Prkasl
Lk. Nt . S4ex* Or lading. Tm I
715TTX day o t MN
ft *
.8
w
.NfwNa _____1- -rftft
n- aft
w
ag
1E
"a
tM
E rTexSS#Mafl

JOHN ALLEN S LAW N 8 T i l l
Dead t*x rem oval L k A n*
Ir t iw l Ml 1X8
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
EUW * Bigger Buaiwexl

Ux Tfl. Herbie Ciaxlfsedt
C A L L TOOAY

an MU

a *************

�it

-tr

■
**-

4S—Evening Herald. ten Ford, FI.

b l o n d ie

Mondey. July I. 1«3

b y C hic Young

by M o n Walkar

B E E T L E BAILEY

THE B O R N LOSER

by A n Sanaom

by B ob Montana

A R C H IE

EEK A M E E K

by H o w ls S c h n e id e r

THAT OLD L A rV C f MIK jC.

SO SHE'S CALLIN G IT
A MIL1I* SPPIPS*

R/A5 W O K 'L F O U R
MIGHTS LAST LUfclK

tSDRMKfc/UkCFAZV.

An Rh Baby's Blood
May Require
DEAR DR. GOTT — What la
the Rh factor and how docs Ik
complicate childbirth for an Rh
negative woman?
DEAR READER - Blood cells
are coated with proteins that are
like fingerprints; they Identify
t h e b e a r e r . T h e s i m p le s t
classification of blood types Is
baaed on the Rh factor. Every
living person Is either Rh posi­
tive or Rh» negative. The Rh
designation was deHved from
early blood-grouping work that
Involved the rhesus monkey.
When you are Rh positive, you
carry the Rh protein: when Rh
negative, you arc free o f It.
II an K h -n rga tive w om an
conceives a child by an Rh­
positive father, the baby may
Inherit the father's Rh-posltive
blood group. As the fetus grows
and forms Its own blood, traces
o f this blood enter the mother s
circulation through the placenta.
In an Rh-negatlve mother, the
baby's Rh-posltive blood Is Im­
m ediately perceived as a threat,
a s s o m e th in g d a n g e r o u s ly
fo r e i g n . H er ow n Im m u n e
system begins making antl-Rh
antidote to protect her. This
antl-Rh substance enters the
baby's circulation and begins to
methodically destroy th&gt;. baby's
Kh-posltlve blood cells.
At birth, such a child will be
a n e m ic and Jaundiced from
m o t h e r - in d u c e d b lo o d - c e ll
breakdown. In a fundamental
sense, the child hits been un­
controllably poisoned by Its own
mother.
Before the advent of exchange
transfusions. Rh babies suffered
a high mortality rate. Now, with
present techniques, the situation
Is completely treatable but may
require that the baby's entire
blood volume be washed out and
e x c h a n g e d with new blood.
Since the Infant after birth Is
"free-livin g.'' he can then hap­
pily go about making his own
K h -posltlve blood, w h ile the
m other makes hrr own brand of
Rh negative.
Repeated. Incompatible pre­
gnancies result In m ore and
m o r e a n t l - R h f a c t o r ; t he
m other's Immune system " r e ­
m em bers" the preceding pre­
gnancies. Therefore, while the
first Rh baby may be only mildly
affected, subsequent children
w ill be progressively more af­

'

flicted by this strange Interac­
tion between a mother and her
unborn child.
DEAR DR. GOTT - My leg stand a great deal, the pressure
veins have become prominent o f the columns o f blood In these
and swollen, and sometimes m y veins can cause the vessels to
legs feel very weak If I stand or stretch and become more pro­
lift s o m e th in g heavy. T h is minent. You can prevent further
doesn't make sense to me. since vein distension by providing
I'm athletic. In my 20s and am artificial support for the walls of
not overweight. Varicose veins the weak vessels. Use elastic
don’t run In my family. What stockings when you are on your
feet.
could cause this?
Send vour questions to Dr
DEAR READER — You proba­
bly have Inherited a weakness In L.imb. V O Ho\ 1331. Radio City
the walls of your leg veins. If you Station. Sew York. S V 10019
ACROSS
1 S««rn
7 Army trtder
13 King of ttie
•Ivss
14 Compliment*
15 Roman
philosopher

18 BsnOoo t km
17 Worthless bit
18 Trsin trsck
20 Small house
21 Lacking padaI
digits
24 Clargyman
27 Pertaining to

tsvff)
28
32
33
34

lubneatat
Novelist Zola
Fashion
Inhabitants of
Danmark
35 Mush
38 Hymn's finals
37 101. Roman
39 Thick sweat
liquid
40 Small tower
43 Tima tons
labbr)
46 Scottish cup
47'My (1st)
50 Gonosit
52 Faubourg
55 Doddering
56 Disoriented con.
duct
57 Called
58 Affirmed

Answer to Previous PuMle

8 Russian
mountsms
3 Maks an
adg-ng
10 Stone (pref.)

11 Jacob’s twin
12 Lasse payment
19 Southern state
(ebbr|
21 Skill
22 Source of
motels
23 Dirty
24 Hindu literature
25 Moslem prttst
26 Motion picture
29 Composer
Slrsvmsky
30 Something
remarkable (s i)
31 Percolate
Slowly

33 Great in alts
37 laanad over

I

&gt;

1

4

45
47
4B
49
51

Hue
Flowers
Great Laka
Resting
Baasbailer
Hodges
53 French article
54 Genus of cattle

38 Tsi agency
(abbr
41 Useful (Fr |
42 Literary
composition
43 Bookkeeping
term
44 Three (Ger)

ft

10

it

ii

so

si

11
11
If

it

110

is

at

DOWN
Mediocre
(comp, wd |
Over (Ger |
Hunter's shelter
Yorkshire river
Fabled bird
Finnish lake
Livelier

44
to

•1

II
w

J

idiass b. ma i»t

WIN AT BRIDGE
MR. M E N A N D LITTLE M IS S

by Hargraavaa A Sallara

*&gt;•.
A M P (SUABANTITEP^
WATE R P R O O F !
BELIEVE M E , £|R .

TH E FINEST
TVtAT AVYIEY

CAM BUY •

By James Jacob y
A f rubber bridge, m aking the
contract Is of paramount Im­
portance. Ovcrtrlcks arc sneered
at. the macho player being one
w ho does not make the m ax­
im um number of tricks on any
hand.
Rather, what Is most admired
Is Ihc ability to protect ugalnst
calamity and bring home the
contract. Applaud with m e If you
will the careful tactics o f today's
declarer.

7f •«

BUQS B U N N Y

by W arnar Brothara

WMACT5
T^AT.
PAPPY?

A ga in s t four hearts. West
tabled (he spade king South
won the ace and Immediately
played back a low heart to East.
ITeclarer ruffed the spade con­
tinuation low and was now In a
make-or-break posture.
You can see what happens If

declarer plays a high heart. The
fact that East began with four
trumps will place the defenders
In control. If South plays lo ihc
club queen, he will lose at leaat
two club tricks lo go with hts two
trump losers. If he cashes the
other high trump and plays on
diamonds. East will ruff In on
the third diamond and return a
spade, almost certainly defeating
the hand two tricks
South found the easy solution.
A fter tru m p in g Ih c secon d
spade, he led another small
heart Ironr his hand.
This cautious play sacrifices
Ihc ovcrtrlck when hearts spilt
3-2. but guarantees the contract
even against the less likely 4-1
division.

NORTH
♦ «&gt;
V* 7 1

r li t

♦AKy 7I

Agti
WEST
♦ MJJM4S

EAST

♦ 107:

v y J io&gt;

VI
♦ 101 1
♦ *«

♦ »i
♦ K J 101
SOLTII
♦ A
V A K 45 2

♦ JI4
♦ A7t 2

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South
West

\ irlk

East

IS
&gt;•
Paw
J*
Psss
I'au
IV
Paw
Paw
Paw
Opening lead 4 K

h a lt
IV
lV
IV
Paw

H O R O SCO P E
F R A N K A N O ERNEST

by Bob Thavaa

swsiiifiswa:

o o o o

THE LA ST T im e

X

HEAP-P

ANYONE /AY “ up; up
1 ANP

AW AY"

w ax

w h en

M Y L A N P t o R P CAME oVEf*
T&amp; P lf c u j f T H E

RE-NT.

TwAwtj 7-8

Q A n F IE L D

by Jim Davis

CAN VOO IMAGINE A CAT BEING
HAIftEP BV 6GUIRREL6 ?
IOOTTA GET EPO UTO FTM IB
TREE BEfORE IT'S TOO LATE

TUM BLEW EED S

by T. K. Ryan

9 ic A u ^ p ^ v y iv w r^ N jV '
A P M lR E \ 6 u y

M

, ,

NONCHALANCE

What The Day
Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
JULY 0. 108S
Th is will be a year of expanded
opportunities for you. Handle
what transpires wisely because
It could mean a dramatic Im­
provement In your status.
C A N C K R (June 21-July 22)
Career conditions are favorable
today, provided you don't trip
o v e r you r own sh oestrin gs.
Watch your footing. Tryin g to
p a tch up a ro m a n ce? T h e
Matchmaker set can help you
understand what It might take to
make the relationship work. To
get yours mall 12 to AStroGraph. Box 489. Radio City
Station. New York. NY 10019.
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22) Today,
you m ay agree to do something,
but when you later discover you
made a bum deal, you'll want to
back out o f It.
VIROO (Aug 21-Sept. 22)
Financial conditions look pro­

mising for you today, provided
you're prepared lo work for what
you hope to receive. Wishful
thinking won't enrich you.
L IB R A (S ept 23 Oct. 23)
You'll be fortunate today In
getting the cooperation of sub­
ordinates. but this may not
compensate for your difficulties
In d e a l i n g w i t h h i g h e r
authorities.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 22)
Setae (he Initiative today and do
things for those you love without
being asked. The bloom will be
taken from the rose If they have
to beg for your aid.
SA O ITTA R JU B (Nov. 23 Dec
21) Creative Ideaa that (lash Into
your m ind today will be of
considerable value. However,
doubting companions may do
their beat to try to convince you
otherwise.
CAPRICORN (Dec 2 2 J a n .
19) Your concepts regarding
family finances may not receive
acceptance from your mate to­
day. Later, he or she might
sheepishly admit you were right.

AQ UARIU S (Jan 20-Feb. 19|
Just because things get off to a
good start today. It does not
necessarily mean they will end
up aa they began D on i get lazy
and let your guard down.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Continue to monitor your re­
sources prudently today. You
won t get Into a bind tf you
handle your finances realls
tlcally.
A R IE S (March 2 1-April 19)
You may be receiving some good
news shortly. I f l l be more of a
personal benefit for you than for
anyone elae Involved.
TA U R U S (April 20-May 20) T o aucceed loday. you muat be
continuously optimistic. If you
atari letting n ega tive things
enter your mind, you'll severely
dilute your chances.
OBMUVI (May 21 J u n e 20)
You re apt to be In a gregarious
mood today and you'll enjoy
being with your friends. Howev­
er. when the bill la presented let
your pals participate In (he
payment.

by Leonard Starr
SACK 60
SOON
ANNIf ?

l no&amp; KEQ r v o e r m
OCT AT TK HOW r o w
YQFWF
n s. FLYNN/

- * NANTfP
YWORM ON
60W FANCY

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                    <text>71th Year, No. 6. Thursday. August 79. im -S a n fo rd . Florida

Evening

Herald

-

Homemade Lndder Used In Break

s•

3 Felons Flee Volusia Prison
Three Prisoners serving long icrms at
the Tomoka Correctional Institute near
Daytona Beach were still at large early
£day. They fled to freedom early
Wednesday after cutting through one
fence and using a homemade, wooden
ladder to climb over another. The men
are considered extremely dangerous
The escape took place sometime
between 6 a.w and 8 a.m. when prison
authorities discovered the hole In the
prison s Inner fence. They Immediately

Initiated a "lock down," not allowing
anyone In or out of the facility.
After a head count revealed the three
were missing the Institute and Volusia
County Sheriff's Department began a
manhunt using Tomoka s K-9 Corps,
the SherlfTs Department helicopter and
ground forces.
The search was hindered by rain and
a swamp located south o f the Institute,
according to the SherlfTs Department.
The three escapees are:

Truck D river
Sought By FHP

Heathrow Gets Go-Ahead
For 5-Story Office Condo
Lobbing a total of 76 fret oil two
proposed condominium lowers und
redesigning them Into office complexes
satisfied the majority of Seminole
C ou n ty com m issioners, so Jeno
I'.nilurcls Heathrow development got
ihc go-ahead for thr tall buildings west
of Lake Mary.
One ofiler romplrx will be 68-feel
high (five stories) and the other 46-feel
high (three stories.) The approval,

•••A five-story building
would be a 'more Intense
use' of the area and weaken
the Intent of the compre­
hensive plan. . . -B ill Kirchhoff
granted at a regularly scheduled meet­
ing of the Board of County Commis­
sioners Tuesday, passed 4-1 with
Commissioner Bill Klrchhod voting no.
Klrrhhof! voted against the proposal
becau se the llv e-s tu ry b u ilding
exceeded (he county's comprehensive
plan height limit of three stories.
Kirchholf said a llvestorv building

would be a "more Intense use" of Ihc
area and weaken Ihe Intent of Ihc
comprehensive plan lo hold height
restrictions in the county lo three
stories, or 46 feel
The approval followed ihe positive
recommendation of the county's Plan­
ning and Zoning commission Aug. 7.
In February county romlssloncrs
turned down a proposal by Heathrow
Land and Development Co lo build (wo
95-foot condominiums at (he plan­
ned-city site. The buildings were to
have 50 condos each.
Thr commission, apparently con­
cerned about the two times too high
buildings turned down the request even
though Ihe development company
sweetened the deal by offering to
contribute $300,000 to the county for
the purchase of fire safety equipment,
or possibly un arrtal fire truck. In
exchange
At the time of the dental. KlrchholT
said thr twin 95-foot buildings If built
would set a precedent and would have
lar reaching rllrcts on building in the
county.
—Deane Jordan

•

WASHINGTON |UPI) - The
National Council of Churches
urged President Rrugan Wed­
nesday to scrap his policy of
"constructive engagement" with
South Africa und urged him in
seek the relea se o f black
activists. Including (he Rev
Allan Boesak and Nelson Man­
dela.
"W r believe II Is In the inleresl
of the United Stales government
lo help ihe South African gov­

TODAY

Action Reports....
Calendar........ ... ........ JA
Classifieds........
Comics............... ............. SB
Dear Abby.......... .........
IQ
Deaths..........
........... tOA
Dr. Gott............ ...
SB
Editorial............

Residents of the Academy
Manor subdivision in west
Sanford will rethink their
rrquest to the city com ­
mission for a chain link fence
to he built dividing their
neighborhood and a factory.
About 10 residents asked
the commission lo allow de­
veloper Boh McKee to build
Ihc fem e instead of a block
wall. City ordinances require
a so-called "s ig h t-p ro o f
fence" lo be erected between
residential and Industrial
areas.

eminent move toward prudence
and sound Judgment through
the scrapping oi Ihc pulley of
constructive engagement and
thr signing of legislation sup­
porting economic sanctions
ugalnst the Republic of South
Africa." the ecumenical agenry
ol 30 Protestant and Orthodox
church bodies said In u telegram
to Reagan.
\ "W e also urge ihr release of
Allan Boesak and all other de8 «e CLERGY, page I0 A

Price

25 Cents

—

H&amp;lps
The E v e n in g H e r a ld has been
keeping Sanford area resident* in­
formed on local, national and world
even ts since 1808. T raged ies,
triumphs and hutnan foible* have
been chronicled on the now vrUowcd
P*|ea.
• .7'*,
, , :
To allow our renders' to relive
historic moments, selected pages have
been reproduced In two special fW r *
from the Past sections m todav'.
edition.
Rend the May 11. 1915 Issue about
the uagk sinking o f the Laslianki by

a German submarine In which 140
American* were among the mure Ilian
1.400 who lost their lives.
A page from the May 8. 1937 H r raid
shows photos o f the flerv explosions
tliat destroyed thr German dirigible
Hind-nburg and killed 34 persons.
Bui Pages Iro m the Past also
contain good news; Lindbergh s solo
flight to Farts, the surrender of Japan
at the end of World War II. and the
llrsi man an the moon
Extra copies o f this collectible Issue
are available at U tc H c ru ld oilier.

By Janie Gnat
Herald S ta ff W riter
Superintendent of Schools Robert
Hughes received a supplemental salary
Increase of 10 percent above his slate
set salary of $54,264 by 4-1 vole at
Wednesday's Seminole County School
Board meellng. bringing his tolal an­
nual salary Including Ihc supplement
and a state award lo $61,690 Board
Member Pal T elson opposed the
measure.
On a recurring matter, board mem­
bers voted uuanlmuualy lo table Indefi­
nitely a decision on whether to refund
to Altamonte Springs developer Bob
Hattaway a $20,000 downpayment on
property Hattaway chose not lo buy
after board members refused to extend
hts option lo purchase the land. The
property Is ac ross from SAnforcJ Middle
School Hattaway needed the extension
because Ihc city of Sanford had delayed
a desclslon on rczonlng Ihc land for
commercial development.
Hughes' salary supplement was
prompted by Carlton Henley, presldeni
of the Seminole Association of School
Administrators. The state association
Pa s fey Tmum * Vtscsol
was concerned. Hughes said, that the John Reichert, assistant director of personnel services, hands Jean
Seminole schools* top administrator's
ryan t, vice c h a irm a n , job descriptions tor new positions w ith the school
pay be competitive with that of super­ dBistrict.
intendents In nearby counties of the
s a m e s it e .
-JB
"objective evaluation process" but Mrs. no." Mrs. Telson said. Thai's why site
Board members okayed on amend­
Telson said because the superintendent
voted against the proposal.
ment to Henley's allowing the board lo
I*"circled lo that position she fell the
Hut Nancy Warren, school board
evaluate the superintendent's Job per­
board had no right to evaluate his Job
chairman, said. "It's our prerogative lo
fo rm a n c e b e fo r e a w a rd in g th r
performance.
award the money so we should have
supplement. Hughes told the board he
" I f It were an appointed position I'd the right Inevaluuir the performance."
was In favor of their adoption of an
say yes. but with an elected position.
Bee SCHOOL, page 10A

Farr Set To Propose Boat Ramps Toll
By Rick Brunaon
Herald S ta ff W riter
Hoatcrs may soon have to fork over
$1 lo use Sanford's public boat ramps
at Monroe Harbour marina. Commis­
sioner David Farr plans to propose u
SOcent to $1 ramp toll as soon as the
ramps are repaired.
Farr says the toll would cover the
cost of repairing the five ramps,
allegedly damaged by propulsion
coming from Ihe englnrvof large ships
using the harbor.
Support lor the proposal on Ihc
commission Is divided with one com­
missioner for It. one against It and
Mayor Beltye Smith saying she wants
to study the matter further before
taking a position. One commissioner
was unavailable for comment.
The ramps have been closed since
July while workers filled In 5-foot
dropolls at the base of the ramps and
extended the concrete slabs further Into

the water. Cost to the city for the
repairs Is about $79,000
Some of the rumps should be open by
Monday, according to City Manager
Frank Faison.
Farr says he'll ask the commission lo
consider charging a toll niter Ihe ramps
arc open.
He first brought up the Idea in July
when the ramps had to be shut down.
At that time, the commission told
Faison Hi see how feasible levying a
ramp loll would lie. how much revenue
It would raise and If other Florida elites
hud such a toll.
Faison said Wednesday hr n&gt; still
studying ihe matter and will present
hts findings to Ihe commission at a
later date
Parks and Recreation Director Jim
Jernlgun said hr conduced a telephone
survey two weeks ago and found that
out of eight Florida cities with marinas
lie called, none charged a ramp loll

Farr said, however, he iKilevrs sonic
counties charge ramp lolls, but he
uddrd he wasn't sure, lie said the loll. II
approved, would only l&gt;&lt; "a nominal
charge" and that most Imaters would
not object toll.
"Hoatrrs tell me a ramp loll Is no
problem unless Its excessive." Farr
said,. "Some may complain and say I
pay my taxes,' hut it's u user's Ire that
has nothing to do with taxes "
AI miiiI :KX) boaters use thr ramps
each weekend, according to Chuck
Volk, who operates the marina. About
90 percent ol them arr Irom out of
town, he says.
Farr said ll a loll is approved, all
houlcrs should be charged the samr

i.m i tying iii charge out*of (owners -i

higher rale than local boalrrs would txau
administrative nightmare." hr
sald. with city exilic la Is having to check
drivers' llccnsrs to drtrrmlnr who's
Bee TOLL, page 10A

Liability Moy Be $70,000
• ..

Florida................. ......... I0A
Hospital...............
2A
Nation.................. ......... 7A
People...,..............
IB
Sports................... ........ 6 9A
Television............. ..........2B
Weather...........
7A
World...................
.....2A

Residents want a fence
Instead of the wall because
(hey want to keep a breeze
flowing through the area,
according lo Willie King. 141
Belhune Circle.
But commissioners told ihe
residents they may may wish
they had a wall to block out
Ihr notse from the factory
and any olher Industries that
may set up shop behind their
neighborhood.
The residents agreed to
reconsider and the com­
mission tabled the issue until
Sept 9.
—Slick Brunson

Top Companies Avoid Toxot
N e a rly half of the nation's lop corporations paid little
or no taxes during President Reagan's firs t term .
Page 2A

mM

-

Hughes Gefs Pay Hike

Leave The Breeze , Please

*&lt;

Violence rises, page 2A

Humberto Lopez. Cuban male, age
30. 6-feet (all. 165 pounds, with black
hair and brown eyes. Lopez has a tattoo
of a mermaid above the right knee and
a scar over his left eye. Lopez Is
believed to be from the Martel Boat Lift
and was serving a 15-year mandatory
sentence for trafficking In cocaine and
three counts of battery on a law
enlorceincnt officer. He Is from Miami
and was sentenced In Broward County.
See ESCAPE, page 10A

481 280)

School Board Tables Hattaway Issue

A 21-year-old Sanford man Is
scheduled to undergo surgery at an
Orlando hospital this afternoon for
Injuries he sufTered when he was hit
by a truck as he rode his bicycle to
work late Wednesday, The truck
driver did not stop and police arc
searching for (he driver.
Allen King. 21. of 7372 Sylvan
Drive, was struck about 9 46 p m. by
what appeared lo be a large flatbed
truck os he was riding his blcvcle near
the Foxfire Restaurant. 3221 U.S.
Highway 17-92 south of Sanford. King
wus In serious but stable condition
early today In Intensive care with a
broken back arid fractured pelvis at
Humana Hospital Lucerne. He was
transferred there after receiving
em ergency treatment at Central
Florida Regional Hospital In Sanford.
King Is paralyzed from the waist
down and Is scheduled for surgery
later today, according lo his father
M*r»M SW*» K Itmmy Vtocwrt
Jlin King, who leaches emergency
B ic y c lis t H u r t In H it A n d R u n
m ed ical technician train in g at
Seminole Community College. King's
north on 17-92. lie asked that anyone
former students treated his son at the
who may have witnessed the Incident
scene of the accident, he said "They
call the FHP DcLand olTIce at 323­
did as well as they could under the
1800.
circumstances." King said.
King's hike will be taken to the
Hlghwuy Patrol Trooper R E. Davis
crime lab. Davis said. King was riding
said law enforcement personnel will
Irom SCC to Seminole Community
be looking for a flatbed truck possibly
Mental Health Center where he
missing a large red side or rear
worked a late night shift, hts father
reflector. It was last seen traveling
••Id.
— Deans Jordan

Clergy Ask
Reagan To
Move On
South Africa

(USPS

Star O f Sanford Denies Polluting
By Deane Jordan
Herald S ta ff W rite r
Star of Sanford owners could
be forced to pay up to 870.000 If
ll is determined the ship s crew
dumped raw sewage from a
holding tunk into the St. Johns
River.
T h e state D epartm en t of
Environmental Regulation has
evidence the ship dumped sew­
age for seven days with the
knowledge of ship officials and
will seek a "substantial" liability
payment, said George Clonls.
manager of DER'a enforcement
section In Orlando. He said Ihe
payment Is not a fine. The
alleged dumping took place at
Ihe Port of Sanford earlier this
year.
But Graham Norman, general
manager of Star Line Corp.
which owns the 364-passenger
Star of Sanford, said the cruise
ship has not dumped sewage
into the river. If anything did
happen It was only a "trickle"
from a loose valve on the
starboard holding tank, he aald
"W e moat emphatically are
not polluting the river." he said.
" I f we did II, It was an accident,
and we apollgizc sincerely."
Norman said company officials

OiT S %

E M

r B

r n a jD a J u m

jt

j

wm

The Star of Sanford leaves m arina on riv e r cruise.
are also Investigating Ihc allega­
tions. "A s far as wc can gather.
It was not a malicious act.” he
said"They say wc are dumping
our toilets overboard and that's a
crock...," he said. Norman said
the-material the ship Is accused
of purging into ihe river was
gray water, not sewage. He said
the ship's gray water contains
water from the kitchen, bar and
treated sewage.
In a related action stemming
from the samr alleged Incidents,
the Slate Attorney's Office was
to file a misdemeanor charge
Wednesday against the company

J ik w o -

- VTCv-

"■ *

accusing ll o f polluting the river,
which (lows In and out of Lake
Monroe.
Woody Igou, said if the ship's
owners arefound guilty of com­
mitting the misdemeanor the
line could be fined up to $500
Glonls said Star of Sanford
officials have been notified that
they are to contact hts office
within five days and schedule an
Informal meeting.
At that m e e t in g , re p re ­
sentatives for the DER and Ihr
cruise ship will try to reach an
agreement regarding the ahlp'a
liability In the caac. that is. did
Bee DENIES, page 10A

V "r ~ fT I8 fc l

S II L

s

�9A—Bygalag HinM, UMera, FI.

Thursday. Ait$. W, 1 f»

T o p B usine sses P aid

NATION
INBRIEF

40

Troubled Union Carbide
To Close Plants, Fire Workers
DANBURV. Conn. fUPI) — The beleaguered Union
Carbide Corp., facing bllllona of dollars In lawsuits over a
catastrophic chemical leak In India and a possible takeover
attempt, plans to slash coats by cutting 4.000 jobs and
closing some of Its plants.
Union Carbide Chairman Warren Anderson also said
Wednesday the giant chemical and consumer-products
company planned to buy back 10 million shares of Its
common stock in what analysts saw as a move to forestall
a takeover by GAP Corp. of New Jersey.
Union Carbide faces at least 915 billion In lawsuits from
the Dec. 3, 1984, leak of methyl Isocyanate gas at Its plant
In Bhopal, India, which killed an estimated 2,500 people
and Injured more than 100,000 others.
Another 966 million In damage suits were filed against
the company following a pesllclde leak from Its plant In
Institute. W. Va,, which Injured 134 people.
He said the 4.000 Jobs, which amount to 15 percent ol
the company's salaried domestic workforce, would be
eliminated by early 1980 by offering early retirement and
employee buyouts to minimize layoffs.

New House Sales Up 1.4%
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sales of new houses rose 1.4
percent In July, the third good month In a row. to the
highest rate In a year and n half. I he Census Bureau said
today.
The report was surprisingly strong because the bureau
revised sales figures upward sharply for the lasl several
months. June, a month In which sales originally were
reported down sllgjitly, actually saw a 22 percent
Improvement.
Builders did betler than llrst reported In April. May and
June so that July's new house sales werr running at an
annual rale of 754.000. after seasonal adjustment.
If that rate Is sustained for the rest of the year 1085 will
end up with new house sales more than 10 percent higher
than last yrar.
The sales Improvement In July took place despite a
93,300 tncreuse In the average cost of a new house during
the month, to 9101.900. That Is still under the rrcoid
average in April o f 9104.700.

Shoe Import Decision Criticized
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Criticism of President Reagan's
decision to deny Import-protection to the shoe Industry
ranged horn culling II ” a callous and deplorable act." lo
charges he "Is living In a dream world."
Shoe manufacturers, union leaders and members of
Congress had harsh words for Reagan's drclslon Wednes­
day
“ What Is our government for If not to protect Its
citizens," shoe manufacturer Don Muurn of Hot Springs.
Ark., said of the drclslon.
Rep. Mill Alexander, D-Ark., hud even morr stringent
words.
"The president Is living In u dream world surrounded by
his prosperous udvlsers who don’t understand the suffering
of unemploy merit." he mild.
The manufacturers said 105 shoe factories closed in
1984 wllh the loss of 14.200 Jobs, and 15 more have closed
or plan to dose this year
The administration suld II would cost uii unreasonable
amount to save those Jobs — 9211.300 a year, per Job In
addition, the United Stairs would have lo j«iy other
countries about 92.1 billion In compensation for the
business lost in ihr l iuin-d Slates

W ORLD
INBRIEF

Intelligence Chief Fired
In W. German Spy Scandal
BONN, West Germany (UPI) — Chancellor Helmut Kohl
resjionded to a mounting spy scandal and llrrd the head ol
his lulrlllgencr service, and Britain and Switzerland
reported the urrrslsof suspected Bust German spies
llerlbcrt Hellenbrolch. 48, who had headed the Federal
Inlrlllgence Agency lor |ust under two months, confirmed
In a television Interview late Wednesday (hat hr hud l&gt;een
dismissed
Interior Minister Friedrich Zlmmcrmaim. who is In
charge of ntute security matters, was expected lo officially
notify West German President Richard von Wrlzsaccker of
HeUenbrolch's dismissal today. tluns-Georg Wleck. 57.
West German ambassador to NATO, was expected to be
numed to sneered Hrltrnbrolch.
The firing of Hellenbrolch cap|&gt;ed a month of spy
disclosures, beginning with (he disappearance of a cabinet
minister’s secretary — Itellcvrd to be an East German
agent — and climaxing with the defer lion of Hans Joarblm
Hedge, the counterintelligence chief In charge of keeping
track of East German spies.

Police Kill 3 More Rioters
I’APE TOWN. Soulli Alrlca (UPI) — Police liallled rioters
outside Cape Town today, killing three men and raising the
toll In Ihr bloodiest 24 hours of racial violence In more than
five months lo 10 killed, dozens wounded and more than
110 arrested.
1‘ollcc spokesman U. Altit* l.tmbscbrr said police shot
three men this morning In the township of Gugulctu as
violence, triggered by a planned march to African
nationalist leader Nelson Mandela's prison, continued there
for a second day.
At least 005 people have died lu u year long nationwide
block uprising.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Ceehel FWrMe S*gwn*l
S

Santee

i

S

ii

&lt;U

ADMISSION*

M*r loot I Set on
Muter 10 Sot**11

I lm«&lt; C Oikien
lourot Cerret*

l a w I. Imira

Alvin 0 Oa»&lt;l. Deter-,
f te rm s M Milione. OelteM
Im lly L Usmans. Dsltens

a .-

F torsnes J CMWrsw LsM Monrss
DISCMABOtS
Vented
A n lu e te m * Baler
Lottie I Outert
CnerltyL t * lever,
Nancy Monty
Mater I M Meltwe
Sotiy J Ksllneell. C auelterfy
Karon L keen* and Mfcy gift. Osuona
Carol A O wning and baby girl, la ta
Mary

WASHINGTON |UPI) - Nearly half of the
nation's top companies paid less In taxes
during President Reagan's first term "than
the people who wax their floors or type their
letters." a tax reform organization says.
In a study released Wednesday. Citizens
for Tax Justice said 50 large firms paid no
federal Income tax from 1981-84 and some
received substantial refunds.
"It's a public scandal when members of
the Fortune 500 pay less In taxes than the
people who wax their floors or type their
letters." said Robert Mclnlyre. director of
the private research and lobbying group.
The study, based on the annual reports of
275 profit-making corporations, found
nearly half o f the companies paid 12 percent
or less In taxes during the period. Federal
law subjects large corporations to a 46
percent tax rate on their profits.
The 50 firms that paid no taxes — which
ranged from International corporations such
as Pepsleo to Investor-owned utilities —
made 950 8 billion In profll from 1981-84
and shared 92.4 billion In refunds,
Analysts said the survey Is good ammuni­
tion for those who back corporate tax reform
proposals tiring considered by Congress
” 1 think It Is absolutely clear that many
American corporations have gotten off

scot-free In paying taxes. Frankly It's not
fair." said Jack Albertlne. president of
American Business Conference, which rep­
resents management of medlum-stie com­
panies.
Albertlne said Reagan's tax plan "would
have the effect of lowering taxes for those
firms that now pay too much and raising
taxes for those firms that now pay too little."
The study said many large companies
avoided paying taxes because of Reagan's
1981 tax legislation, which accelerated the
depreciation rate and expanded the In­
vestment tax credit.
The Investment tax credit, which allows
companies to write ofT up to 10 percent of
their initial investment tn plant and
equipment, would be repealed under
Reagan's latest proposal.
Pepsleo spokesman Keith Anderson said
the survey seemed to place undue blame on
large companies for merely taking advan­
tage ol tax provisions written by Congress
When Uncle Sam collects, Big Business
"T h e fact Is. we do enthusiastically
support the effort for corporate tax reform in doesn't alw ays pay. Not even when
the proposals of the current administra­ p ro fits a re ro llin g In. W hy? T a x
loopholes.
tion." Anderson said.

Girl Claims Bicyclist Raped Her
The 17-yearold daughter of a Winter
Springs police officer reported to Seminole
County shrrlfrs deputies that she wa» raped
at about midnight Monday. She reported the
sexual assault after Oviedo police found tier
and a 17-vcar-old boy tn an abandoned
home and charged them both with burglary
at about 9 p m Tuesday.

at Five Points. But before she was Jailed the
girl alleged that she had been raped by a
man bellvrd to be about 20 years old, police
reported.
According to a sheriff's report, the girl
said she was walking home from work along
State Road 434 In Winter Springs at about
midnight Monday when the rapist rode by
on a bicycle.
He stopped, put his bike on the ground
Oviedo police'were on the lookout for the
girl, at the request of her father, when she and walked toward her. He grabbed her In a
was found with the boy Inaldc an aban­ choke hold with an arm around her neck
doned homr at 814 E. Broadway. Both were and held a pocketknlfe to her throat, the
i barged with burglary and booked Into the report said. He told her to be quite as be
Seminole County Juvenile Detention Center forcibly pullrd her across the highway to

Cumberland Farms.
The man repeatrdly threatened to kill her
tf she didn't cooperate, the report said. The
girl said she was raped on the ground beside
the Cumberland Farms convenience store.
Alter the attack the man threatened to kill
her If she told anyone of the attack. He fled
west on State Road 434 riding his bike, the
report said.
The girl reported the rape to sheriff's
deputies at the Oviedo police station after
deputies werr contacted by Oviedo police
following her arrest fur burglary to the home
on Broadway, police said.
-Busan Loden

Man Smashes TV, Tells Wife She's Next
A 32-year old Sanford man
who allegedly broke his televi­
sion's picture tube lo show his
wife what tier head was going lo
look like when be killed her has
been charged with asA.mll.
Priscilla Bradley, of 1018 S.
Avurado Ave,, told Sanford
(MilIce who arrived at her home
at ulMiut 3:50 a m. Wednesday
(hat during an argument her
husband hud threatened several
tunes to kill her and had broken
lire television, allegedly saying
her brad was going to look like
ltie- broken set.
No reason for the argument
was determined by police, but
they reported that Mrs. Bradley's
four rblldrrn were also presenl
during Ihr dispute. The victim
appeared to l&gt;c very fearful of her
husband, the rr|K&gt;rt said
Roosevelt Bradley. 32. was
arrested ut bis homr at 4 06 u rn.
He was later treed on $500 tiond.
UNWANTED WITH TOT
Seminole Counly sheriff's
drpullrs who responded to the
House of IMIm-s . US. Highway
17 92, Fern Park, on an "uii
wanted guest, a drunk pedestri­
an rail." nabbed a susjieci bid­
ing outside ihr topless club In u
van and (barged hint with
IMMsesslon ol less than 20 grams
of marijuana.
Club employers told deputies
On- man bad entered the van
and Ihr suspect was found Ihrrr
lying on Ihr floor behind the
driver's seal, a sheriff's report
said. Meeuiisr of a strong odor of

Action Roports
★

F ir e t

it C o u rts
■k P o lic e
burning marijuana In the vehicle
u deputy searched and found a
partially smoked pot cigarette
that was still warm and moist,
the report said.
William Brian Freeze. 25, of
Tampu. was arrested at 3:52
a m. Wednesday and released on
9500 bond
BURGLARIES A THEFTS
Richard Winslow, 46, of 515
Bramblewood Court, laingwood.
has told sheriffs deputies he
wants to die charges against
three youths who reportedly
took 9150 worth of welghllftlng
gear from u Iionic Winslow had
m uv c d o u | o f at 6 1 2
Longineadow Court. Longwood.
Winslow s son reportedly saw
the youths, former neighbors,
taking the weights on Tuesday,
The boys said they thought the
weights had been ahandondrd. a
sheriffs report said. No arrests
have been made, but Winslow
has asked for charges lo be filed,
the report said.
Alxiut 9-1.OOfl worth of sterling
stiver llatwurc and other stiver
Items were siolen from the home
of tails E. Jones. 4621 Parker

Court, Oviedo, on Tuesday, a
sherlfTs report said
A thief ransacked the home ol
John William Bishop. 49. of
5106 Tangerine Drive, Wlnler
Park, on Tuesday and stole a
dozen firearms, a video recorder,
a music box and several many
pieces of Jewelry. The value of
the naul wasn't totaled In a
sheriffs report, but It added up
to several thousand dollars
worth of goods.
A blark and white television,
stereo and a piggy bank con­
taining about 9150 In colna were
stolen from Patricia Lamarr's
borne al 409 Palmetto Ave.,
Sanford. Monday or Tuesday,
according to a police report.
Items worth about 9130 were
stolen from 1502 Summerlin
Ave.. Sanford, on Monday, police
reported. Anita Lowry. 35. who
lives at the address, did not list
what the missing Hems were on
the police report,
A 9400 radio was stolen from
the car of John and Mary Rlzza.
o f 781 G o ld w a t c r C o u rt,
Maitland, while the vehicle was
being serviced at Bob Dance
Dodge, U.S. Highway 17-92,
Longwood. between Friday and
Monday. The theft was reported
by service manager Keith Coo­
per. a sheriffs report said.

Robert A. Baird. 40. of 5213
1 Imothy Drive, Apopka, told
deputies u $160 edger was stolen
from his garage between Aug. 19
and Monday.
A lawn mower worth 8175 was
stolen from Hart Calletta's home
at 1330 Summerlin Ave.. San­
ford. al about I am, Monday,
police reported.
I
E IR E C A L L S

The Sanford Ftre Department
responded to the following calls.
Tuesday
—6:17 a.m.. Fourth Street and
French Avenue, fire. A car fire
was pul out. No damage was
reported.
—6:59 a m.. 25th Street and Elm
Avenue, rescue. A 14-year-old
girl was Injured In an aulo
accident. Laglnna M o rris , o f
1410 Valencia Court. Sanford,
was a passenger in a car In­
volved In the accident. She said
she had back and foot palna.
Rescue workers treated her at
the scene and she was taken lo&gt;
the hospital.
Wednesday
—2 05 a.in.. 3422Orlando Drive,
rescue. A 24-ycar-old man was
cut on the head after Iris car
slammed Into a telephone pole.
He was taken to the hospital.
— 10:49 a m.. 2530 Jewett Lane,
rescue. A 33-year-old woman
(Missed out but was revived. She
was taken to the hospital.

Elena Becomes Hurricane, Heads For Panhandle
Ml/* Ml lUPtl — Tropical Storm Florida I'.in handle
Elena became u hurricane today
Hr said thr ehunees of It not
.is it lolled oil C uIm with 75 mph hitting land were small
winds, picking up strength from
"OnceIt gels In the Gulf. II will
worm sum m er water, and most likely strike land." Sheets
turned to w a rd L o u is ia n a .
said. "It really can t get out
Mississippi. Alabama and the without striking land."
Florida I’unhandlr,
Upper level winds, which often
A hurricane walch was Issued shear the tops of storms and
lor the northern coast of the Gulf hinder their development, were
ot Mexico from Grand Isle. La.. not heavy In the Gulf, he said.
Iii A|Mlaehlcola Fla.
The storm's center passed
Al H a.m., Elena was centered uboul 90 miles south of Key
about 110 miles wesl of Ki y West Wednesday night Police
West.
said there were a frw minor ear
Th storm was moving toward accidents on ratn-sllckened
the west northwest at 20 mph roads, and winds caused power
and was ex|&gt;ecled to gradually lines to rub against trees, creat­
turn toward the north und slow ing sparks but no fires.
down during thr day. said fore­
Oihrr than that, the storm was
caster Miles Lawrence of the not creating problems
National Hurricane Center.
"W e re Just barely picking up
Elena Is the fifth tropical slurm a llltlc bit of winds," said Pam
of the 1985 Atlanllc-Cartbbean Russell, a Key West police dis­
Hurricane season, which begun patcher "They haven't started
June I and ends Nov. 30.
up yet. dual a frw gusts of wind
Elena was born over Cuba und a little drizzling rain."
Wednesday, developing out of a
A R B A F O R E C A S T : Today
tropical wave that limited near mostly cloudy Good chance of
Senegal. Africa, last Thursday. It showers and thunderstorms.
moved rapidly as ll swept over
Cuba, but was expected to slow
today.
Thr slow er It moves, the
longer It will Ik* over wutrr.
giving It morr time to strengthen
aatahana pra.taad b , mambart at
before hilling land, which Sheets HwOwe*
MkOsner Aaeaciettet at SatvtttKa Oteten
said could be Friday afternoon
a rt rssrsMatSWts W r s r» prtou at at
Although hr said M was too mta m arrlnf haU , infar M V marbatt
a s ig Sst the 4a , Erics* 4a act
early to pinpoint. Sheets said It (Sang*
Htt teasrataM m art m art damn
looked like the storm will begin
9M Ask
whirling more to the north tale Attenlk lank . ...... ........ ....... MW |*w
Pur e r SSL...................»W Ot
today und could hit the coastline Arwrless
IsmsMSsnS
...................
jz n
MW
between Louisiana and the FteM e Fewer

High around 90. Wind east 15 to
20 mph. Rain chance 50 per­
cent. Tonight variable cloudi­
ness. Chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Low tn mid to
upper 70s. Wind southeast near
15 mph. Rain chance 30 per­
cent. Friday partly cloudy.
Chance of showers or thun­
derstorms High In lower 90s.
Wind southeast around 10 mph.
Rain chance 30 percent.
AR E A READ IN 0 8 (9 a.m.):
temperature: 77; overnight low:
77; W ednesday's high: 90:
barometric pressure: 30.14; rela­
tiv e hum idity: 87 percent;
winds: east at 10 mph; rain: .08
Inch; sunrise; 7:02 a.m.. sunset
7:50 p.m.
F R ID A Y TID ES: D aytons
Beach: highs, 8:57 a.m.. 9 20
p.m.; lows. 2:36 a m.. 2:44 p.m.:
Fort Canaveral: highs. 8:49
a.m., 9 :12 p.m.: lowo. 2:27 a m..
2:35 p.m.. Bayporti highs. 2:15
a.m.. 1:57 p.m.; lows. B:0I a m ,
8:49 p.m.
BOAT1MO FORECAST: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50

miles — Small craft should
exercise caution south of Cape
C a n a v e r a l. W ind e a s t to
southeast around 15 knots north
part and 15 to 20 knots south of
C ape C a n averal b e c o m in g
southeast 15 knots over area late
today then 10 to 15 knota
tonight and 10 knota Friday. Sea
3 to 5 feet but up to 6 feet south
part today, subsiding to 3 to 4
feet during tonight. Scattered
s h o w e rs and a few th u n ­
derstorms.
EXTENDED FO R EC AST:
Saturday through Monday —
C lo u d y w ith show ers and
thunderstorms north Saturday
and Sunday. Otherwise partly
cloudy through period with a
chance of showers and thun­
derstorms. Lows tn the 70s
except near 80 extreme south.
Highs upper 80* to mid 90s.
E v e n in g

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T h u rs d a y . A u g u s t I t , I t t i
V ol n . No 1
F u tilitie s Oeily and lueday. e aceft
ik lw rS a r by Tke Seated MaralS
Iwc. MS N. Frenck A v e , Seniors.
Fla. a m .

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H O M E S S IN C E

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F U R N IT U R E S A L E !!

1B 88

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4 D A Y F U R N IT U R E S A L E

PRICES REDUCED 10%, 2 0 % , 3 0 % , SOME OVER 5 0 % !
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3 2 2 -7 9 5 3

p A.V

.

�E v e n in g

H e r a ld

D O N A LD LAMBRO

Gramm Recaps Tough-Budget Battle

( U S P S 411 1M)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA 3277)
Ares Code 305-322-2611 or S31-9993
Thursday. August 29, 198S—ZA
W iyns L . D o y l*. Publittwr
Thomas G iordano, Managing Editor
Malvin Adkins, Advorlising Director

Home Delivery Week. *1.10. Month. *4 75 3 Month*.
• 14 25. 0 Month*. *27 OO; Year. *51 OO lly Mall Week.
• I SO Month *6 00; 3 Month*. *18 OO. fl Month*. »32 50
Year *«0(J0

People Losing
Faith In IRS
T h e Intrrnal R ev en u e Service Is worried
about its Image. It should be.
For more than 6 0 years Americans con sid ­
ered the IRS efficien t, ruthless perhaps, but
efficient — a govern m en t service that made
sure every taxpayer paid his or her fair share.
Hut this year th e IKS has had problem s. It
has lost lax returns, sent taxpayers con flict­
in g notices and has been months behind on
refunds.
T h e IRS Is not en tirely to blame for these
boo-boos. In the past five years Its s ta ff has
been cut by 5,000. despite an ever-grow ing
workload.
A loss In IRS p erson nel and efficien cy can
lead to significant Increases In tax cheating
About 20 percent o f the population adm its In
polls on the subject that It cheats — perhaps
as much as $120 billion annually. Anti yet.
th e IKS reporls It m ust reduce the num ber of
audits It conducts to 12 for each 1,000
taxpayers this yea r, down from 14 per 1,000
In 1984. because o f manpower shortages.
T h e IRS obviou sly doesn't h ave enough
help. Each year ta x processing becom es more
com plicated and dem anding. Taxpayers write
200.fXX) Irtlcrs ea ch day. They h ave to be
read, researched an d answered. Each change
In the tax code requires that agen ts Ik*
schooled to Interpret that change.
If fax work Is to be accomplished quickly
and efficiently, It stands to reason that the
IKS Is going lo h a ve to add personnel. We
m a y end up w ith m ore IRS auditors than
taxpayers.
Clearly. It's tim e for a change. T a x returns
have Srcoinr so com plicated and tax laws are
so lull ot loopholes for those with the means
to liiul them that then* Is little wonder
Am ericans are lo sin g faith
T h e process m ust hr simplified. 11 must he
m ade lah and w ork ab le for all tax brackets II
Congress doesn't pass tax reform s soon,
cheating will he d ifficu lt tocontrol.

Although the country did not self-destruct
because of that bill, as Gramm-Latta's most
vociferous rrlllrs had warned, the economy
continued to deteriorate — a victim of punishing
double digit Interest and inflation ratrs during
the Carter years, worsened by the Fed's
relentless tight money policies, h would lake
awhile for the economy lo recover, as n
eventually did by Ihe end of 1982. thanks to the
tax cuts and some modest spending rrslralnts
Four years later. Phil Gramm Is sill I trying to
change the world, or at least Hie government, tty
"doing the Lord's work" In Congress — tills
lime as a Republican senator, having won the
seat vacated by OOP Sen. John Tower In 1984,
Hut the government, like I lie world. Isn't

Gramm's proposed tailback strategy called for
the president to veto any spending bills ihat
rxcecdrtl his original budgel proposals. "Now.
that won t get at entitlements." Gramm admits,
"hut It Is one way of controlling spending.
"The problem Is that Ihe budget docs not
fundamentally reform federal spending li pre­
vents a crisis from occurring this year, but It
doesn't eliminate the problem."

On the other hand, “ the Senate-passed budget
was a good budget." he says. "W c spent a lot ol
money to get those last few voles” — which
means that expensive budget add-ons for
senatorial pet projects were Inserted to buy the
votes o f wavering lawmakers.
In the end, says Gramm, "a lot of people voted
for It. thinking that It was a historic vote. And
then the whole damn thing collapses.” House
Republicans rebelled over Ihe package's freeze
on Social Security cost of-llvmg adjustments
(COLAsl. and the White House ended up
switching positions by suddenly opposing the
Senate COLA freeze li had previously supported
"Obviously, some people are as unhappy as
hell aboul It." Gramm now says. Republican
senators, he says, "cast some lough voles that
they are going to have lo answer for In an
eleclton. especially the 22 that are up now for
re-election next year. And," he adds, "w e're not
getting the (budget I savings' '.In rcinrn
"It's like doing good." say* Gramm, "and
when you get to the Golden Gale. St. I’cter
opens Ihe book and they haven't written ll
down."

VIEWPOINT

SCIENCE WORLD

O w ls M ay
H elp Some
D eaf Tots

K a h a n e
W

a n t s

A r a b s

O u t

B y Q e r s ld N s d le r

B y L i d i a W a s o w ic z

JERUSALEM |UPII Am eri­
can-born rabbi Melr Kahane wants
to expel all Ih e Arabs, opposes
democracy for Israel — and heads
the country's fastest growing politi­
cal parly.
"I want them out. out. out."
Kahane yells at Ib rlre-n lgb tlv
campaign rallies, which at times
lake on ihe (ireof revival meetings
Kahane. 52. was dismissed as an
al&gt;rrratlon when he wus first circled
to the Knesset 13 months ago Hut
today Ihr (Mills say Ills Kuril party
could win up lo 11 seats In thr
120*mcml&gt;rr assembly He claims
he will win 15
In addition. Kuril, whose symbol
Is a flsl Inside a Jewish star, won
two seals on Ihe council o f thr
vola l lie West Hank sett lenient of
Klryat Arbu by pledging to lire the g e o r g e
town's Arab workers

A study by Israel's Van Leer
Institute tia&lt;, found Dial 40 (tern-in
ol Israeli you I li Identify with
Kahane.
After un Israeli from Afula wus
killed (his month. Jews In Ilia!
town, screaming "Kahane Kahane,
King o f Israel." attacked Arabs and
vandalized Arab stores.
A group of congressm en Jusl back from
"O n ly the duped will loll lo
South America o n a tour of drug-producing recogn ize t h a t Melr K ah an r s
n ation s says. " T h e situation is ou t ol strength Is on llic rise." w r o t e
con trol." A hum p er crop of m arijuana and columnist Ynsl Melnian of the Duvur
coculne, they say. w ill soon find Its w ay Into newspaper. “ The proof lies not only
III t h r pogroms againsi Arabs In
the U S.
Alula I m t everywhere In the market
Rep. Charles K an gri. D-N.Y., chairm an ol place,"
the House Select Committee on Narcotics
The Knesset has banned Iron* Ihr
Abuse and Control, said:
liallllt parlies dial either espouse
"Narcotics traffickers. Increasingly In col­ racism or oppose dem ocracy
Another yrl to tie tested law would
laboration with subversive elem en ts, are
liar any holder ol dual clil/enshlp
w inning the war. even In the face o f Increased
from sluing in the legislature The
efforts by most governm ents In the region to
taigel Kahane and his U S pass
com bat the escalatin g production am i traf­
port
fick in g."
Kahane said he will light the dual
Congress approved a foreign aid bill In .July
citizenship law In U S courts and
get around thr racism law hy
stipulating that a id could hr cut oil to nations
placing an Arati convert lo Judaism
that failed lo m ake progress In ligh tin g drug
on Ills ticket
traffic. Rangel said that provision Is winning
"I want to srr Ihe Knesset and the
Hiip|M)rt lor anti-drug efforts In Latin Am erica.
Supreme Court of Israel say lh.it
W e've said ttils betorc. fail It's worth
Judaism Is racism." Kahane said
repeating The basic cause of this drug
"Hundreds ol Jews will rlsr up
trafficking Is not corrupt, greedy o r disinter­ There will I k - a revolution
ested nations o f South America, but rather
In rallies three times a day. Ihe
ltie dope-taking A m erica n public.
slightly bulli rabbi blares bis
im-snage that unless the Arabs an*
II thru- were n o demand lor Illegal drugs In
ousled they will Inundate the Jew*
the U S. ihrre w ould tie no production of
He rattles off statistics 3 2 million
them In South A m erica. We need to pul our
.lews and 750,tXX) Arabs in Israel
ow n house In o rd e r before criticizing anyone
proper. 1 4 million more Arabs In
clse's.
Ihr occupied West Hank and Gaza
Strip

Drugs: Our Fault

BERRY'S WORLD

easily changed. Take the latest budget hill, for
tnsiance. which Gramm doesn'l like “ Nclihcr
side won. but America lost." he says.
"W c adopted a very poor budget, very
marginal. I voted for It because It was better
than nothing. But It was a close vote."
Before the compromise package finally cleared
Congress in the dark of night. Jusl hours before
the August recess. Gramm had quietly worked
out a veto strategy, which he prcs&lt; nled in his
party's leadership In the Senate and to President
Reagan In case a budget failed to pass "We
seriously considered It," he says, "and II was a
close call, but we decided to go with the
compromise."

WASHINGTON — Phil Gramm of Texas
recalls climbing Into bed one night aher an
exhausting day near the end of August 1981.
s evera l months after the Gram m -Lalta
budget-cutting bill won congressional approval.
The then-Democratle congressman remembers
telling his wife. “ We changed the world, but the
world doesn't know It."

I m

M cG o v e r n

p e r i a l

P r e s i d e n c y

The Vlctnaai-Waicrgutc period of
die Johnson and Nixon administra­
tions was lalrr referred to as "Ihr
uiiperl.il presidency." Johnson In
1964 and Nixon In 1972 ImuIi won
landslide vU lories
Ronald Reagan won an equally
lopsided landslide in 1984 and there
are dear Indications that he Intends
In rule as an Imperial presidem
I his is mil to sav Ihal Reagan Is
lieaded inward another Watergate
or a new Vietnam Hut it Ihe term
luqx-rhd presidency" triers to u
-.lination in which ihe president sets
the tune and content ol publie
IMiltcv , with little or no dissent or
input bum tin* Congress, the press,
ihe public and the opposition parly,
tin'll Ihe lm|H-rlal presidency Is
tiai k Two recent puhllc develop­
ments have undersenred the near
iol.il ennlrnl ol national policy by
the Reagan administration
When Soviet President Mikhail
(inrltachrv announced recently that
die Soviet Union would hall all
nuclear lesiing lor Ihe rest ol this
year and Invited Ihr Utilled Stales
In follow Ihe Soviet example, ihr
While House rejecled the Soviet
oiler and countered wlih a silly
suggrslInn that the Soviets come to
Nevada and watdi us continue our
nuclear explosions
ll Is bad enough that an American
prcxldt-m would so airily reject
what, on ihe surface, seems like a
common-sense proposal that txiih
sides lake a bn-.idler hum nuclear
explosions Whal Is worse Is Ihe

empty-headed counterproposal of
the Reagan administration But
iiiosi disturbing of all Is Ihe near
total lark ol any critical response to
the crack-bruin scenario from the
Democrats, the pressor the public
I lu-ard one prominent nc-lwnrk
commentator nine cheerfully that
Reagan was making clear that he
was as adept at propaganda and
public relation* as Gorbachev
Maybe so, but is that Ihe new
dimension ol presidential leadership
In the nuclear age?
A seeoriil furring event was the
revelation rfi.it a member of the
president's national security slalf Is
running the so-eallrd "covert" U.S
effort lo sabotage anil overthrow the
government of Nicaragua ll Is
shocking that the US government
lx engaged in Irving lo subvert and
destroy a government (hat we
officially recognize — a government
that mine to power after a revolu­
tion that was every bit as (iistlflcd as
the revolution that gave birth to the
United Stales two centuries ago,
Congress lias tried with some
degree of aiulilvulenee. to halt the
CIA organized war against the
Snndinlstn government Apparently
tile While House has ilnnr an
end-mil around Congress hy tiring
lug a senior military officer Into the
White House lo coordinate ihr
contru operation In Nicaragua
Shocking? Yes Rot where is the
outcry from the Congress, the
Democrats, thr press, or anywhere
else?

UPI Science W riter
STANFORD. Calif (UPII — Owls
have become stor k characters in
childhood lltrraliirr, but two Stan­
ford University professors believe
the legendary wise birds can help
human babies with hearing pro
blems
Nruroblolngist Eric Knudsen and
his wife i’fivIDs are gathering data
nn how a dozen ham owls In a
man-made rave In a Stanford re­
search In fair.dory respond to s o u n d
In hopes of deciphering the com­
plicated link brtwren the sensation
of hearing and the functions o f the
brain
Some 20 million Americans have
hearing problems severe enough to
require hearing aids Statistics Rum
the March o f Dimrs Birth Delects
Foundation show 75 percent ol all
Infants younger than 11 months
who are brought lor care to u
pediatrician suffer some form o f ear
dysfunction.
I believe that understanding the
unparalleled skill of owls In hunting
In the dark and In compensating
when very young fur Impediments
lo their auditory senses will help us
to understand betirr Ihr conse­
quences of hearing defects In
human halites. Knudsen said
i iwU ,i rr ,m important link in the
search for reasons why early hear­
ing loss can lead lo permanent
hrartng deficiencies."
Ihr researcher* have learned
there Is a "erlllral period" soon after
birth during which a dysfunction of
the ear In owls and humans can be
compensated fur by Ihe brain
“ Certain parts of the brain are
able to change and form correct
nerve cell connections." Knudsen
said "A ltrr that period, the capacity
for adjustment decreases tremen­
dously."
The scientists lound that in owls
this period comprises the first two
mouths o f life
"This is no guldr to what happens
wit li human babies, however, since
an owl’s lifespan Is 10 years and Its
sexual maturity Is complete at
seven months." Knudsen said
The small amount of human dutu
available — dealing mostly with
children treated for hearing Imped­
imenta — suggest the critical |K-rlod
In humuiiH may he between 3 ami N
years of age
In early life thr brain ts plastic,
adaptable, hr said, and then at
certain (Mints In life certain aspects
of bruin lunetlon heroine fixed

JACK ANDERSON

Terrorist Attack Said Imminent

"t t ty beauty contests me an offensive throwbeck to another ere — oft, NEVER MlNOt

J

By Jsck Anderson
And
Joseph Spear
W A S H IN G TO N - T errorism
experts in the Stale Department are
expecting another attack oil Aiuert
cans hy Shiite Moslems any day
Worse, they tell us that the U S
government ts no better prepared to
res|K&gt;nd than It's been In the past
No one ha* been punished for
rrpeuted attacks on the lives and
property of Americans
The foreboding of yet anotlirr
disaster Is based on threats from
Shiite leaders, secret intelligence
reports — and the calendar.
Since April 1983. there have been
roughly 20 attack* directed by the
fundamenlallsl Moslem terrorist*
against American*. The average
liming of these Incidents ts one
every 50 days — and the last one
occurred on July 22. when the
N o r t h w e s t A ir lin e o f f i c e In
Copenhagen was bombed. That was
38 days ago.
In the woke of that attack, a

4

spokesman lor the Islamic .Jihad
claimed responsibility lor the bom­
bing amt warnrd "They are about
in know that wc can reach the heart
ul the U S, White House, the Elysec
I'a la c e . ID D ow n in g S tr e e t .
Jerusalem and the headquarters ol
any Arab foreign leader wtio coop­
erate* with reactionary forces
This threat might lx- dismissed as
pure bombast — except for the
unpleasant fact that the Shiites
have made good on their previous
boasts. Thr record is undeniable,
written In human blood and ihe
dust of ruined buildings
In telligen ce reports reaching
Washington repeatedly warn lhat
the Islamic Jihad Is stiff determined
to sirtke at American targets. Their
resolve has been buttressed by a
growing confidence that they have
nothing to (cur In Ihe way ol
retaliation by the United States
Frustrated State Department
sources told our associate Luccltc
Lagtiudo that little has been dune to
counteract the Shiite threat, beyond

numerous planning sessions, strat­
egy meetings, a mi the Inevitable
shuffling of memos back and forth
This bureaucratic routine has led lo
no concrete action
Yet, Insiders Inslsi dial not only
are Ihe Individuals who planned and
executed the anll-Amertcan attacks
known to the U.S. government, but
ihclr hideouts have been pinpointed
as well The Lebanese government
has said ll knows the Identity of the
two hijackers who first seized the
TWA plane Hying out of Athens two
mouths ago uud murdered one of
Ihe Amertcun passengers But there
has licen no move to arrest them
and bring them to trial. Nor has
there been any American undercov­
er attempt to find and punish them
[MORE)
Adding to the State Department
experts' fears of another Imminent
Irrrorlst attack Is Ihe fact that Israel
has not made good on Syrian
President Hafez Assad s promise to
the Shiites that their associates in
Israeli hands would be released In

return lor Ihe treeing of the Ameri­
can hostages.
It was to obtain the release of the
735 Shiites held prisoner by Israel
Ibal Ihe TW A plane was hijacked In
Ihe first place. Although Israel did
release most of the Shtltr prisoners,
between 200 and 300 of them are
Mill being held.
And even though Israel was not a
direct participant In the negotia­
tions that led lo Ihe understanding,
ibis reneging gives the Islamic
Jihad all thr Justification ll needs
for another strike at America, which
ts perceived by ihe Arab world as
able to dictate to Israel on matlers
large and small And the Syrian
president may well be reluctunt to
Intercede again.
The ShUte prisoners are ulso a
factor In the early timing of another
at luck. As ihe Slute Depart men I
experts explain It, the terrorists will
want to strike before Israel releases
the remaining prisoners — while
they still constitute a pretext for an
attack.

�Evtn in g Herald, Sanford, FI

Thu rid*y, Aug 1*. I*SJ — 5A

Water Conservation Rules, Fees Lifted
By Deane Jordan
Herald S ta ff W riter
Rainfall and conservation measures
have brought water consumption back
to normal levels tn Seminole County so
county commissioners Wednesday
unanimously repealed a March 26
emergency ordinance Imposing man­
datory water conservation measures
and consumption surcharges.
T he action did not lift a moratorium
on thr Installation o f residential Irriga­
tion meters. The commission's stall

recommended the moratorium con­
tinue so the number of meters won’t
Increase until a study of their Impact on
the water system Is completed later this
fiscal year. People with residential
Irrigation meters pay less for the water
they use on thetr lawns because It Is
not tied to the sewage service charge as
Is most home water consumption,
accord in g to Jim Bible, county
environmental services director
The emergency ordinance was Im­
plemented by the board In March

because . water consumption In the
early part of the year was 40 to 50
percent higher than to early 1984.
The ordinance's repeal lifts
• A surcharge on water consumption
exceeding 15.000 gallons a month.
• A ban on lawn watering cxccpi
before 5 a.m. and after 8 p m
• A ban on commercial nursery
Irrigation except before noon and after
6p.m. ■
• A ban on commercial Irrigation on
weekends

U hen ihe ordinance took effect It
doubled monthly water bills for some of
the county s 9.000 customers
for those who were using no more
lhan 15,000 monthly, the cost re­
mained 40 cents per thousand gallons
During the conservation period, the
charge per gallon for those using from
15.001 in 20.000 gallons per mouth
was increased from 70 cents per
thousand gallons to SI 40. while the
charge to those using 20,(XI l n&gt; 301KXI
gallons went Irom 80 cents t© SI GO
Customers using 30.001 gallons or

more monthly saw their base charge go
from SI |ht thousand gallons to S2
During the drought and before thr
surcharge was imposed, water use per
houshold rose from an average of 330 a
day to -150 to tHXi gallons a day
During the Iasi 45 days with almost
dally rainfall, hence less residential
need lor emmiv water. Ihe household
consumption rate per customer has
returned to the norma! 330 gallons.
No one was prosecuted during the
conservation period fur violating the
ordinance, Bible said

Pre-Big Bang
The Universe Began From Nothing And That’s Where It's Returning
In th r beginning. God created
tin- He aven and (he Earth. And
ih r Earth was W ithout form, and
vo/d .md darkness teas upon the
faceol th r deep "

—Genesis
By Glno Del Guercio
UPI Science W riter
BOSTON (UPI) - Scientists
sound more like theologians or
philosophers than physicists
these days when they discuss
thetr lairs! theory on ihe origin
ol the universe. In the beginning,
dtey say there was nothing.
Physicists have pushed their
theories liar It in bclorr the unit
ol Ihe Big Bang — the period 10
billion to 15 billion years ago
when the universe was a fireball
ol extreme density and tempera­
ture Before the Big liang, Ihe
latest theory predicts, there was
no umvity. no mailer, no spare
Not even time
There was simply nothing­
ness From tnlx nothingness, the
theory .inserts, the universe
xjxmlnnrously appeared Even­
tually die universe may collapse
and simply disappear Into the
nothingness from which it
sprang
I he theory also predicts other
universes could, and probably
do. extsi m separate dimensions
ol time and space Related
theories suggest there may lie
iMitmtl.tries within Ihe universe
di.it are Impossible in penetrate;
enormous clnncntry particles
tlnailng In space dial are only
one pole oi a magnet (either
north or south): and that our
universe is probably immensely
la r g e r than w as th o u g h t,
jtosslhiy with regions that are
still going through thetr early
evolution.
The theory, called creation ex
ulhllo. docs not contradict Ihe
Big Bang theory. Instead. II
descrtlx-s how the starting con­
ditions occurred
Edward P. Tryon. a physicist
ai Ihmter College In New York.
Ilrsi proposed Ihe theory In
1973 lie calculated Ihe energy
and mass ol the universe totals
approxim ately zero Mallei
ciint'eletl arillmaller. and die
energy hound up in matter
canceled the force ol gravity.
"In answer u&gt; Ihe &lt;|ties don of
wh&gt; It happened. I oiler die
modest pro|M&gt;sal dial our uui
verse is simply one ol those
things whic h happen from lime

Could Ihe universe have suddenly, Inexplicably appeared from celestial nothing
ness? Some physicists say yes.
in lime. ' Tryon wrote in a paper
published in die British scientific
join n.d JY.ifiirr

ll W.ls soon discovered the ex
ulhllo theory contradicted sever­
al experimental observations of

S tate Cracking D ow n O n Toll C h eatin g
ORLANDO It‘ I'll — To slop
S IM million in annual loll
cheating sialewlde. Florida Is
Insialllng mrehanlcal toll gates
on die East West Expressway,
marking Florida's Ilrsi iu»*csralc use of I lie devices
Wlih toll evasion on the rise,
the Florida D epartm ent ol
Transportation says ihe pilot
program may In- used itt Miami
and Tampa II It work* in Or
laiitio.
Engineers are studying what
structural and electrical changes
are needed ill tlie loll pla/a. and
the Orlandu-Orangc County
Expressway Authority hopes lo
Install the eight gates at the cast
plaza within three months, ac­
cording to Bdl G w yn n . the
authority’s executive director.

Olhctals worry the gates may
congest expressway truffle
Gwynn said hi* slufl will closely
monitor iraflle as well as public
reaellun In die gates during the
lest.
He said similar devices in New
Jersey and New York have not
caused traffic Jams. When the
gales malfunction, or when tral
lie Is very heavy, die gales can
Ih- left open.
Toll cheaters annually arc
responsible for $500,000 In lost
revenue to the Orlando agency
alone. In addition, the lost reve­
nue diminishes die ability to
tloal bonds to pay for construe11o it o I m u i e m l i e s o f
expressway.
Gwynn said the 5 'percent of
molorlsls who cheat are re­

sponsible lor losing enough
money to fund a half-mile ol
construction annuallyGwynn said change in state
law this year makes enforcement
ol toll collection more attractive
to lrx'itl governments. Officers
may now cite offenders without
having to up|&gt;rur In court and
Iwo-lhirds nf die $25 ticket gix-s
lu government coffers.
Currently. Gwynn said. Ids
agency budgets $12.(XX) a year
to hire off-duty Orlando (Killer to
patrol lor loll cheating.
"You'd think most of ii would
gu on ai die side ramps." Gwynn
s;tId, But thr toll plazas have
hells that gu off when somennr
doesn’t pay. and at rush hour It
sounds like Christm as out
there."

the universe, and so ll was not
lakni seriously.
The theory predicted there

D e v i c e Lets C a r C h e c k D r u n k
D E N V E R 1111*11 — D riv e rs who
dr Ink could soon dt-|xnd on diclr
ears to know their limit —
Insirad ol relying on llirlr own
somedmes foggy judgment, an
Inventor says.
Kip F itlc-r Monday unveiled
his Guardian Interlock Ignition
System, which hr said offers
"die general public an education
as tu how much they ran drlltk. "
•’The ear makes the decision
for you.” tie said.
Fuller's Invention consists ol a
blood-alcohol testing device
hooked to a car's ignition
system. A driver must breathe
into the device before the Igni­
tion will turn, and If Ids or iter
htmid-ah-ohol level Is high

enough, ihe cur won't stun
Drivers tree of alcohol would
see a green light on Diclr
dashboard, enabling them lo
start the ear Those approaching
the legal threshold of Intoxica­
tion could start their ears, tint
they would see a yellow llglil
advisingcaution.

D riv e rs

S t a l e S i- ii J l m i I. c e o I
Lakewood welcomed the device
as a wav lit prevent drunken
driving

For &lt;I k * Ills! lime Hits will
enable our society in prevent
diiuik driving lusie.nl ol merely
resorting n&gt; punitive a&lt; Hun alter
Hie ofleitse and harm lias oe
Denver District Attorney Norm euired." said Lee. a longtime
projxHienl ol tougher drunken
Early said he ts Impressed
driving laws
"It certainly seems to work
Fuller, president ol Guardian
and I think II would lx- iremrn
tlously clh'cllvc." fie said "I see Interim k t ’orp.. said he invented
no (Icgull reason why you could the $300 device with help from
not order one to be Installed In a Don f olhei former senior vice
convicted offender’s car 11 i* preshleni ol Borg Warner, and
certainly a tool to combat the John Se,dairy, a former Storage
Technology Cnrp engineer
problem."

TO TA L INSURANCE
SERVICE

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, AUOUST 20
International Training In Communication
G re a te r S cin tn ole Club (p re v io u s ly
Toast mistress). 7:30 p.m„ Altamonte Cha
pel Education Building dii Slate Road 436.
second and fourth Thursdays.
Theatre-ln the Works will present a pre­
viously unproduced play by Mordecal
Gorelik. The Feast o f Unreason. 8 p in..
University of Central Florida Black Box
Theatre. Open to the public. Admission free.
Sanford AA. 1201 W First St.. 5:30 pm..
closed discussion, and 8 p m., open,
speuker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed. First United
Methodist Church.
Overeaten Anonymous, open. 7.30 p.m..
Community United Methodist Church.
Highway 17-92. Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m. Call Jean at 830-0995 Also.
7:30 p.m.. In the annex conference room
behind Honda Hospital-Altamonte. State

should be equal amounts ol
However the spontaneous
matter and antimatter but vert creation ol a universe is souirlittle antimatter was observed
dung quite different from thr
Antimatter ts a form ol mallet fleeting gnu-ration ol a pair or
that has the exact reverse pro 11 in ol pan icles 1‘ h vstelsis
periics of most matter we an believe dial time and spacr were
familiar with. So far ll lias been also created when the universe
loond tn cosmic rays and in begat i
experiments using what an
A le x a n d e t V ile n k in
a
p o p u la rly know n as atom Russian horn phvxlcixl who now
smashers, which are ucluullv leaetit-s at I nils t ' mix ct sit \ said
accelerators designed to the Trvmi s ex tiihilo du-orx is part
subatomic particles at each ot an ancient iheologie.il 11 .nit
other.
lion Bill he is die l i i s i t o hutld a
Another object Ion was that ll m adim i.illeal model to give ii an
th e u n iv erse b e g a n Irom application tn pin si. s
nothing, physicists calculated ii
was extremely Unlikely it could
Me used the following analogy
grow as large as ll is lodav tn die 10 describe it Sii|qxixc we hod
period since Its bin It.
water Then what happens is
In the Iasi couple nt years, dial in die volume ol water you
these contradictions have Ixen get lloeiitattons
Hit It* hubbies
resolved, and so many jihyslt Ists ol vapor dial lotui amt collapse
have tx-gun to lake the theory 11 die bubble is lucky and gels n&gt;
seriously, as indicated by die dial certain critical si/«- ilicit it
(merest it grnrrated at die Thlnt expands All suberdle.il bubbles
Loyola Conference on Quantum rollapse
Theory and Gravitation held in
In this analog* the universe
New Orleans earlier this vear
'When I Ilrsi published die ts the surface ol a bubble So It
theory friends asked me w hether you Imagine as this bubble
dils was longue in cheek or was forms and then it expands, ibis
I being serious, said Tryon "I is die expanding universe Foi
replied dial I was quite serious cmilurcs which can develop on
and I thought there was one die surface ol this bubble, die
universe has a beginning "
chance tn lliree ll was correct
I've lived through periods ol
Manx phvslelsiss.iv they vlsu
doubt and as I've si-eti obstacles allze the universe as the surface
overcome. It's given me the ol a ti.illonM III lo in dimensions
feeling my theory Is Ix-ing eon- Time as we know ll exists only
tinned." hr said
inside the bubble
'Tile theory was probably not
Vilenkin's ex ulhllo model
promised earlier because creat­ suggests ihe universe most
ing something Train nothing Bkely started at about oneseems to violate the law ol trllltnntli thr size of a proton,
emuM-rvatton of enrrgy, which one ol Ihr particles lluit make up
holds that energy can neither Ik- an atom. Ai lirst. physicists
created nor destroyed But If could not explain how the mil
Tryon Is correct and the mtnl verse t-ould grow from dial size
energy content o f the universe lo the size ii is today. Then a
adds up to zero, then this law of young Massachusetts Institute ol
nature Is not violated,
Technology physics professor
I’hyslclsts have been aware for named Alan II Quill promised a
more than half a century that theory called cosmic Inflation.
pairs of panicles sjxjiitsncoiisly
According to Ihe lullatlou Idea.
uppeur from nothing. The phe­ Ihe universe went through a
nomena Is called quantum fluc­ brlrl period ol extraordinarily
tuation.
rapid lunation, or expansion,
"Quantum electrodynamics d u rin g w tilth its d iam eter
reveals dial arirlrctron. position became rnuglilv a trillion litltlon
ami photon occasionally emerge irlllton irilhmi limes larger lhan
spontaneously from a perfect (he slmidard Big Hang theory
vacuum When this happens, prertlrls In die morse nl dils
the direr- particles exist for a stiipi-ridous g ro w lh. all the
brief lime, and d im annihilate mailer amt energy in the mil
one another, leaving no dace veise could have been ereuted
Ih'Ii Iih I." Tryon wrote in Ills I mill vlriualh mailing, said
Gulh
Suture article

Road 436. Altamonte Springs
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30
Central Florida KI wants Club. 7:30 am ..
Florida Federal Savings and Loan. State
Road 436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanls Club. 7 am .,
Airport Restaurant. Sanford
Optimist Club of South Seminole, 7:30
a m.. Holiday Inn. Wymore Road, Altamonte
Springs
Centra) Florida Blood Bank Florida Hospltal-AHamonte Branch. 601 E. Altamonte
Ave.. 9a.m. to 5 p.m.
Gentle Exercise for seniors. 10:30 a.in..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake
Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Seminole County Forum sponsored by the
Area Agency on Aging to del ermine needs of
senior citizens. 1:30-3:30 p.m.. Casselberry’
C ity H a ll. 95 Lak e T r ip le t D riv e ,
Casselberry.
Seminar by Mordecal Gorelik, author.

educator and scenic designer, on scene
design, l p.m. Call Untverslly Theatre
Department at 275-2801 for details.
Lecture. Tow ard a Larger Theatre, by
Gorelik, 8 p.m.. UCF Black Box Theatre,
open to the public.
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m. Wrklva
Presbyterian Church. SR 434. at Weklva
Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills
Moravian Church. SR 434. Longwood.
Alanon. same lime and place.
Tunglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard's
Episcopal Church. Lake Howell Road.
Alanon. same time and place.
Sanford AA Step. 8 pm ., 1201 W. First
St.. Sanford.
SATURDAY.AUGUST 3 1
Kcbos and Live Oak AA. noon, Kcbos
Club. 130 Normandy Hoad. Casselberry
(closed). Clean Air AA for non-smokers, first
floor, same room, same place and time.

REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

K

A

R

IN S U R A M C I

N

S

A O IN C Y m c

413 W. First $ t
Fk- 322-3762
Ssafsfd
W illiam H. " B t ir W ight C.P.C.U.
Garald W . Meysr
Prasldant
Account Representative,

M H V | &lt; w &lt; e t r » t * iv s a « « ^ a iA g V ' U .

�SPORTS
4 A — E ve n in g H t r j l d , S a n fo rd , F I.

T h u r s d a y . A u g . J», I I I !

■~r r m:t

Chris
Fister

Jg%sZ£3£*M*isd£±,c - - - - - -

Computer Beef? Hawks Bulk Up

coaching." said Blseeglla. "He did a real
By Sam C o o k
good Job of putting It together and the kids
Herald Sports Editor
SPORTS
stuck to lL "
Mike
Ulaceglla
tried
Winn-Dixie.
Next,
he
WRITER
Epley's program covered a six-week
ventured over to Pantry Pride. Then, he
period,
which Blseeglla said Is perfect for the
walked the aisles of Albertson's. Pubtlx and
magazine. It seemed like a great program.-'
summer. Each player la tested for the
Gooding’s could offer no relief cllhcr.
Alter putting Marty Lacore, Steve Trier. program and his maximum lift is de­
Hlsecgtla, Lake Howell's fourth-year
Francisco Arias and Mike and HIU Schaefer termined A projected goal is set. Baker
football coach, had a problem last spring. He
on the scale this fall. Dlsceglla was sure of It. geared It to a series of exercises where the
ha 1 enough txef returning from his 4-6 '84
A summer of computerized training with computer programmed what weight and
football team, but he needed someone or
the weights and Nebraska's software had how many repetitions the player needed.
something to process It
turned the Hawk heavyweights Into well Every week. Ihe workout Is upgraded.
chlsled. muscular hulks.
Finally, he found the answer. But It wasn't
The results were startling:
"I couldn't believe how much weight we
In Seminole County. Far from It. He had to
• Lacore. who left In the spring weighing
added." he said. "And It wasn't fat either. 235. returned a robust 263. "It's all muscle
wheel his shopping cart 1.400 miles. All the
We are a bigger and stronger team with less weight too." said Blseeglla bout his 6-1 VS
way to Lincoln, Neb. That's where he found
Although most county high Ihe solution On the campus of the Universi­ chance of Injury. The muscle development
senior offensive tackle. "W e watched him
schools didn't have a Tull team ty of Nebraska.
was Just Incredible. "
grow all summer but we hadn't realized he
on hand for Saturday's Seminole
Ulsccglla said the software cost less than had gained that much weight. Muscle
Computer Beef.
Summertime Cross Country
$200 The program was developed by weight Is hard to detect." Lacore benches
"W e had all those big guys walking
.Jamboree, It appears the com- around." said Hlscrglla. "All we had to do
Nebraska strength coach Boyd Epley. 325 and squats 400.
M ik e Bisceglla has found a
petition within the county Ihln was tone them up. Thai's where Nebraska
Hlscrglla said he turned loose asslstanl
• Arias, a defensive tackle, increased from w ay lo process his beefy
season s h o u ld be stro n g, came In. I saw one of Its computerised
roach Doug Uaker with the finer points.
particularly unions the boys weight programs advertised In a coaching
S ilver Hawks.
See COMPUTER. Page BA
"Doug Is really Into the computer aspect ol
teams.
Lake Mary's Ramn, ranked
seventh In the state In the 4A
Preseason Poll, are favored to
win Ihe Seminole Athletic Con­
ference In the SAC's Inugural
season Lake Mary bus won the
Five Star Conference title Ihe
past two years and coach Mark
Magee has a strong nucleus
NEW YORK (UPI) - As a
returning.
parting gesture to a bitter expe­
Uut one team Dial appears to
rience. Kevin Curren suggested
be ready to come out of hiding la
"they should drop an A bomb on
Lake Howell. The Silver Hawks
practice courts for 400 players.
this place.".
did have a full team on hand at
And that was only a small You get half an hour warmup,
the Jamboree and were the top
taste of what Curren was feeling which Is absolu tely ridicu­
counly finishers as they came In
In his stomach Wednesday after lous... 11would br great for me to
third.
being dismissed In the first win the U.S Open, hut It ts over
Lake Howell had a strong
for me this year and does not
young (cam Iasi season that did
round of the U S. Open
well In Junior varsity competi­
Follow ing his rise lo the txitlier me that much."
John McEnroe, a victim of
tion nnd Ihe Hawks seem ready
Wlmhledori Bnal less than two
to move up to challenge Lake
months ago. Curren was doubly Curren at Wimbledon, ulso had u
Mary In 1083.
d isappointed at his feeble tormenting opening round here,
showing In a 7-6, 6*1, 6-2 loss to but managed to survive a filth
"T h e y 'v e alw ays had the
numbers but this year I hey
Frenchman Guy Forget, and he sol tiebreaker against Shlorno
could be contenders," McGee
didn’t hesitate to vent his feel­ Gllcksleln.
The close brush with defeat
said of Lake Howell. "Il's good to
ings about Ihe U S. Open, the
have that kind of competition In
U .S . T e n n is A s s o r la tlo n . a d d s e x t r a m e a n i n g to
the county."
Flushing Meadow and anything McEnroe's second round match
Tonight's B rig h am Young Boston Col­
today against Marlin
Another team that could
else In sight.
le g e K ic k o f f C la s s ic fr o m E a s t
challenge for the SAC lltlc Is
"Losing Is not u major dlsap- Wostenholinc.
Rutherford, N .J . w ill be televised by
Wostcn holme, a 22-year-old
Sanford's Fighting Semlnolcs.
pointmenl." the No. 5 seed said
O rlando’s W O F L channel 35 at 8 p .m .
Seminole hud Just two runners
after falling lo Forget. 7-6. 6-1. Canadian. Is ranked only 120 In
at the Jamboree but It has Its lop
6-2. "Il's almost tempting to the world, and lacks the experi­
live returning from last year's
pass this one up as I do the ence and the ex(x-rtlse to stand
tram which made U In Ihe slate
French Open. I hate corning to up to McEnroe on Center Court
meet.
New York. I hate the environ­ o f the U.S. Open. Nevertheless,
Lyman also has some good
ment and I hale Flushing Mead­ he finds hltnself In position to
ow.
young tslent and will get belter
provide an Important test of
i "It's a very difficult environ­ McEnroe'-. d(i it nitn.it Imi
as Its runners gel more exjxrlment to play In. The USTA
The dr fending ehamplnn feels
rnre.
The Individual battle should
should be shot for the way more and more the pressure of
also be Interesting with Lake
things are set up here. I bring a having Ixen No. I for most of the
Mary's Ken Rohr and Seminole’s
negative attitude to It. It's sad last five years, and at the same
Hilly Penlck Ihe top two return­
Ihe U.S. Open Is played under time he Is finding more p l e a s u r e
ing runners, Rohr, a senior,
these conditions.*’
In the world outside the tennis
finished fourth In Saturday's
When
Ihe
Idea
for
the
Kickoff
court
Among
other
things,
Curren
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J.
Jumborec nnd finished ahead of
Classic came up (three years
com plained about constant
" I’ve had Ihe pressure of being
(i rii — If Brighum Young Is lo
Penlck. sixth. In the process.
ago), I thought. That would be
movement and noise from the No l and especially during these
repeat as national champion, It
There should be some Inter­
great but there's no way we ll
cruwd and the lack of practice tournaments people talk about It
will huve to play the longest
esting bullies between Rohr nnd
more.' McEnroe said "A s far as
courts.
schedule In college football his­ ever be there,"*
Penlck tills seuson.
" I f you consider ull I lie money I'm concerned being No. I Is to
Edwards didn’ t think BYU
tory.
Fur Ihe girls. Luke Howell and
they make from the damn TV try to be the best the year round.
would be playing Jan. I In past
The Cougars, who open with
Seminole are the preseuson fa" I t has been k in d o f a
revenue und they couldn't build
Thursday night's Ktckoff Classic
seasons, nnd didn't really want
vorltrs in the Seminole Athletic
a liner farlllty nnd accommodate mixed-up year, I'vr had some
against Boston College, will play
to. As winners of the Western
Conference with Lake Howell on
(he players nnd spectators In a good rrsulls. but you've got to
Athletic Conference, the Cougars
14 games this season if they go
top. The Lady Hawks have four
better way. It Is slckrnlng." put tl together."
to a howl. They also have a
have been obligated to play In
of their top seven returning
Curren
said.
the Holiday IJowl every year
chance to jday In their first New
along with u number of young
See OPEN, Page 8 A
“ You romc and there are live
Year's Day bow! game, which
since 1078. With the Holiday
runners moving up. Also. Angle
w ould e x te n d an a lrea d y
Howl scheduled for a Sunday
Smith, a top notch runner as a
drawn (ini season.
this seuson, the Mormon-run
sophomore, returns for her se­
S till, BYU coa ch L a V ell
school has refused to lake jwrt.
nior year alter sitting out os a
Edwards la looking forward to
That would free the Cougars
Junior.
the early start.
for a major bowl, but flrsl they
Seminole High doesu'l have
Lake Mary High will hold Its
"It's bren too long Tor a lung
must survive n regular season
Ihe depth of Lake Howell hut It
Fidl Sports Rally tonight at the
time now," Edwards said of (he
which
Stretches
over
15
weeks,
Ims plenty of talent urn! four of
hlgh school A dinner of ham­
college lootliull schedule. "But
ending Dec. 7 ut Hawaii,
Its lop five ruuurrs returning
burgers. hot dogs, bean and cole
It's nothing I have a hangup
Huston C ollege's 12-gamr
from u team thul finished 10th In
slaw will lx served from 5 p m
with, we ll have lo udjust and go schedule Includes games on 11
the state last season.
Gray teams will scrimmage.
to 7 p.m. Coal Is 82 50,
for It.
straight
weeks
running
through
Luke Mary's chances of con­
The L«ikr Mary bund, which
Following the dinner will lx an
"Any big game you win Is Nov, 2. Like Edwards. Eagles
tending will rely u lot on u
(KiMlcIpntcd
tn the Mary’s Day
Introduction
of
the
lull
sjxrrts
going lo help your credibility
healthy Sue Kingsbury und (he
team s — sw im m in g, cross Parade, will also perform. Boost­
nnd tills Is u big game for us.
Bee B YU , P a g e 8 A
development of llrst-yeur run­
er Club memberships und Ram
country, volleyball and football
n ers such us 13 •y e « r -o Id
At 7 30. Lake Mary’ s Red und merchandise will be avullahle
freshman Debbie Smith
Luke Hi am Icy hud u number
ol outstanding young runners u
year ago und could move up In
'83. Lyman und Oviedo should
also lx- Improved trams with
most of their lop runners re­
turning.
By Chris Fister
Muslung 10 10). llronco [1 M 2 ) and Pony
The 1085 prep cross country
Herald Sports W riter
113 15).
seuson will open Saturday, Scpl.
Seminole Pony Baseball, Inc., held Its
Parents or guardians should bring
14 with the Luke Mary Opener ut organizational meeting Sunday with
applicants' birth certificate at time of
Lake Mary High.
Held improvements, lund raising and
registration.
"W e want to bring In some people th.it
Lake Mary takes over the publicity among t he main topics
For more information, call 327-2108.
are experience In publicity."
sruuon opener from Lyman
Board member Ed Suggs said Ihe
Suggs said officers for Seminole Pony
High The ruec will lx- run on the Improvements needed at the Five Points
CHARGES: DID KOREANS CHEAT?
Baseball will br selected Wednesday,
Luke Mary course which bus rumple* Include new llghls for the
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa |UPI) - Lillie
Sept 11at Lake Mary City Hall.
been chungrd a bit at the llronco League Held und a number of
League baseball has begun an Informal
Currently, the lead board members
beginning Ix-ruuse of Ihe new repairs on the Pony League fjrld which
Investigation Into charges the team Irom
Include Darryl Will, president; Charlie
middle school (hut was con­ has taken Its toll ihe past few years from
Seoul. South Korea, which won this
Chapman, first vice president; Jim
structed In the urea
year's chumptonshlp. violated tourna­
use und had weather.
Withrow, second vice president; Greg
ment rules, officials said Wednesday.
"The league did rrully well this year
Twiggs, treasurer: and Susan Krough.
The fall road racing calendar Is (luunetully,' Suggs said "W e'rr hoping
Dr. Creighton Hale, president of the
secrealary.
beginning to fill up with a to put the nrw lights up on the Ultimo
Little League Baseball World Scries, said
There are 25 bourd members from the
number of races scheduled for field Ixlore spring ball starts. And we're
the Investigation Is focusing on charges
four cities represented In Seminole Pony
Ihe nrxt two months throughout trying to get the Puny field In better
the tram came from a league with more
Husrbull. Sanford. Lake Mary. Longwood
the Central Florida area
teams than permitted by tournament
shape. It's In really had shape now and
and Winter Springs.
• On Saturduy, Sept, 14 at 8 needs about $25,000 to gel It back In
rules und that tt Improperly practiced
The Town Hoard chairperson* Include
a m,, the Run For My House four good shape."
before June 24
Mike Black for Lake Mary. Chester
mile road race will tie held ut
To raise money for the repairs.
Everett for Winter Springs. Paulette
"W e are having our Far East director
Dr Lund Entry fee ts Sti lx fore Loiigwnod'x Denmark's Sporting Goods
Wilbur lor Sanford and Chapman for
ronduct an Informal Investigation ol the
Aug, 30, &lt;7 txlorr Sept 0 und Is holding a fundraiser on hehulf of
Longwood.
allegations." Hales said. "It s all herrsay
AH the day of the race.
Seminole Pony Baseball. The fundraiser
at this point but. nevertheless, wc are Central Florida cheerleader Missy
Also, there will be u one mile will he u batlxcue Saturday. Oct. 5 from
looking Into the reports."
Seminole Puny Baseball lall signups
Fernald plays 11 card d raw with the
fun run for Individual and team
It a,in tu 4 p m at the Five Points
will lx held Saturduy, Sept. 7 and
Hale said It should lake several
UC F football schedule. M issy hopes
competition. Fee for the fun run rutnplrx.
Saturday. Sept. 14 from 10 a m. to 2
months for the director. T a lru zo
Is A2 befurr Aug. 30 (14 with
Getting ihe league more publicity Is
p.m. at the Seminole Pony Baseball
Mizuk.mil of Tokyo. Jupan. to complete to draw a w inner for the Knights on
t-shlrt), A3 Ixfore Sept. 8 IA5 another main concern Ihut was brought
complex on State Road 410.
his Investigation. If the charges are Sept. 7 when they host Bethune
with shirt) and A4 the day of the op In Sunday's meeting.
Cost Is A23 lor a lOweek season with
substantiated, the board of directors C o o k m a n C o lle g e a t O r la n d o
race (AO with shirt).
“ We have been slacking oil In that
would have to decide what action to Stadium . UC F plays 8 of Its 11
all games being played on Saturday.
See FISTER. Page BA
games a t home
utru the |m » i lew years." Suggs said.
lukr. he said.
Leagues Include Pintos (6-8 year olds)

F o o tb a ll

Lake H o w ell
Boys Scurry
From Hiding

Curren: Open
Needs 'A' Bomb
Tennis

BYU Begins Long
Road To R epeat
A g ain st Boston College

Rams Hold Rally Tonight
Preps

Seminole Pony Addresses Needs

R e g istra tio n Dates For Fall League A r e Sept. 7 A n d Sept. 14

Baseball

Knightly Draw

* 4 .

�Evening H o rrid . Itntord, F I,

Connors Thrives
NEW YORK IUPI) — They're going to
have to drag Jimmy Connors out of the
U.S, Open championship kicking and
screaming. Or putting it another way.
he has made up his mind to stick
around until a week from Sunday.
Call It a coincidence or not. the
winner can’t leave until then.
Jimmy Connors doesn’t only like it
here, he flat out loves it. The event, the
site, the people, the whole loud, hoo-ha
atmosphere.
He spelled all that out clearly
Tuesday after being extended a bit
more than anticipated, getting past his
first-round opponent. South Africa’s
Gary Muller. 6-4.6-3.4-6.6-2.
Kevin Currcn. on the other hand,
utterly despises this entire set-up.
Which simply goes to prove different
courses for different horses.
Currcn used the word hate" several
times to describe his feelings about
boih New York City and the U.S. Open
after being upset by France s lanky
lefty Guy Forget. 7-6.6-1,6-2.
You don’ t mean to say you've

W ide-O pen Atm osphere

forgotten Kevin Curren already. He
was the Wimbledon finalist beaten by
West Germany's Boris Becker this
year. They had him seeded fifth In this
tournament against the Forget, who
comes from Marseille, owns a big serve
and pronounces his name four-xhay.
Curren started by giving credit to
Forget. He went on to say he never
really had a chance to get his
momentum going. But then he really
opened up.

Czechoslovakian who now spends
much -more time at the home he
bought In nearby Greenwich. Conn.
Connors, who comes from Cincinnati
and now lives In Sanlbel Harbor. Fla.,
would like to spend even more time in
New York than he does.
After beating Muller he entered the
imcrvlrw room with his 6-year-old son.
Urclt. The 33-ycar old left hander was
asked whether he was having as much
fun now as when he was 2 1.
'T h a t’s an unfair question." he
laughed. "Especially with my little one
here. I enjoy playing In New York
because of the people. I’ ve played some
of my best tennis here. If not my best
tennis, then my guttlest. That's why I
love playing here because the people
have won me three titles starting with
the Panatta match."
Connors was talking about the 1978
Open here which he went on to win
after Ihe people got behind hint in his
third-round match with Adriano
Panatta and spurred him the rest of
the way.
Against Muller. Jimmy Connors

Milton
Richman
U P I E D IT O R
_

SP O R TS

Now 1 wonder what in the world ever
made him say a thing like lhat?
Ivan Lendl, who has gone to the
finals three limes in a row. is seeded
second to John McEnroe. He enjoys
playing In the Open even though he
has never been able to win It

’ ’ I hate coming to New York."
declared the 27-year-old Curren. a
native South African who now lives in
Austin. Texas. " I hate the city. 1 hate
Flushing Meadows.” he went on.
referring specifically to the site of the
National Tennis Center
Is a very
difficult environment to play tennis In.
They should drop an A bomb on this
place.”

Lendl had virtually no trouble de­
feating Jay Lapldus 0-2. 6-1. 6-3, and
after he did he said he considered the
Open lhe most Important tennis event
of the year.

Obviously, he’s not finding all the
same social and cultural benefits here
that Connors has discovered through
the years. Curren said he came Into
this event with a "negative attitude."

“ It’s the one I want to win most and
It's right behind mv bark door." said
Lendl, the tra n sp la n ted

wasn t the old Jimmy Connors and
you could tell he has lost a step.
Doctors no longer make house calls
and Connors no longer kills himself
the way he once did making some of
those impossible returns.
"Hr doesn't make Ihe shots he used
lo make and he doesn't use the court
ihe way he did." says former Open and
Wimbledon champion Tony Trabert.
doing analysts of this tournament for
CBS. "There are reasons for that. Age.
wear and year and tear, all the
matches he has played and all ihe
(raveling he has done,"
Bui i here’s something about Con­
nors' hustle and style of play that
keeps appealing lo many who sec hint
play. Hank Greenberg, the baseball
Hall of Famcr. says he has asked only
two men for their autographs In hts
life. One was Babe Ruth. The other
was Connors.
Sd far this year. Jimmy Connors has
ycl lo wtn a tournament.
1 hat s OK.’ 1he says. " I ’ve won a lot
In Ihe past. Besides. Ihe year isn’t over
yet.”

Jets
Pick Up
Jennings

B A SE B A L L R O U N D U P
STANDINGS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

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Pirates Lose 17th Straight Road Gam e
ATLANTA (UPI) — The Pittsburgh Plrulrs would
never make It to Hroadway. Any producer with
common sense- would close the show out of town.
This Is a worse road show than anything Hope and
Crosby evrr put together.
The Pirates lost their I7lh consecutive game on the
rttad Wednesday night, dropping u 5*1 decision In ihe
Atlunlu iiraves
Len Darker, who underwent surgery on his right arm
last year, and Craig McMurtry combined on a
lour hlilcr for the Hruvcs.
The Iasi National League team to suffer 16 or more
road losses In a season was Ihe 1963 New York Mets.
who lost 22 111 a row from June 16 to July 28. The 17
losses by Ihe Pirates drew them to within five of Ihe
club record lor most consecullve road losses in a
season set by the 1890 team.
"We just got beat lonlght." said Plraies manager
Chuck Tanner, never one to be critical of his team
Thai’s probably (he besl game Barker’s pliched In
about three months. McMurlry threw Ihe hull well, and
they got the runs.”
Ikirkrr. 2-6. gave up Ihrrc hits over live Innings to
earn the vlciory McMurtry tossed the final four
tunings, allowing one hit. to record his first save.
” 1was Just happy to go out there and lie able lo pitch
consistently." Barker said. "The only thing I’m worried
about right now Is bow I’m going to feel on Sunday
when 1 pitch again. If my arm we’ ll feel fine They’re
going In take It easy with me. which 1 probably should
have done al the brglnnlngoflhr year."
Bob Horner hit his 22nd homer for AtUiniu.
Reds 7, Cardinals 6
Al Cincinnati. Beds player manager Pcle Rose drew a
Itases loaded walk from Kicky Horton with two outs In
ihe bottom of the 12th Inning lo gtvr the Reds thetr
victory Rose had two hits and now nerds only nine to
break Ty Cobb’s all -lime career record of 4.191.

N .L ./ A .L . B a s e b a ll
"This proves a walk Is Just as good as a hit." said
Rose. ” 1went up there wanting to Ret a hit. but I’ll sure
lake the walk."
The loss snapped St. Louis’ seven-game winning
slrruk. but the Cardinals still enjoy a 2 h game lead
over the New York Mets In the NL East.
Astros 3. Cubs O
Ai Houston. Nolan Ryan won his first game since
June 17. snapping a personal eight-game losing streak,
and Glenn Davis rapped a two-run double to lead Ihe
Astros a victory. Ryan. 9-11. left the gume after 0 2-3
innings with a struined righi shoulder. He ullowed four
hits, walked two and struck out eight to run his
career-leading strikeout total lo 4.060.
Twins 6, Blue J sys 5
At Minneapolis, the Minnesota Twins halted the
Toronto Blue Jays’ winning ways Wednesday with a
twist of their caps and a flick of Tom Brunansky's
wrists.
After the Twins’ players decided to turn their caps
inside out in the lop of the lOth inning at the
Metrodome Brununsky broke a 5-5 tic In the bottom of
the inning with a bases-loaded single for his first RBI
since Aug. 16.
’ ’ It's lo turn things around. You turn your cap Inside
out. maybe you’ ll change your luck.” Twins managrr
Ray Miller explained ufter the 6-5 victory.
The loss. Toronto's second in Its Iasi seven games,
trimmed the Blue Jays' lead over the second-place
Yankees, who were Idle, to 4 lA games But lhat didn't
faze losing pitcher Tom Henke.
"No one Is pressing." said Henke, who fell to 3-1"W e ’re five games ahead. Wc would be pressing If we
were five game* behind."

MIAMI JUCO TRANSFER TOMES 2 TDfl

CORAL GABLES (UP11 - Junior-college trans­
fer OeofT Torretta completed 12 of 16 paaaes for
138 yards and two touchdowns Wednesday In the
University of Miami * last scrimmage before their
season opener against Florida.
The offense was Impressive In the scrimmage, a
change from a scrimmage on Saturday In which
the defense dominated.
Starting quarterback Vtnny Testaverde also

Kent Hrbek singled tu lead ofT Ihe Twins 10th and
one out later, advanced to third on a single lo right by
Randy Bush. Mark Salas, who hltvt two-run homer to
lie the score 5-5 In the eighth, was Intentionally walked
In anticipation of Ilrunansky, hilling .242. He greeted
Toronto reliever Jim Acker with a chop single over
second base lo bo&lt;»s( [wins reliever Pete Flison's
record lo 4-5.
Bnmansky. who has struggled In Ihe second half of
Ihe season after posting some fabulous slats In the first
few months, vented his frustrations a bit after the
game.
"One of these days I II put a half and half together
and help this hullclub win." said Brunansky. who has
hit Just two ol Ids 2 1 homers since the All-Star brrnk.
Indians 7, Red Box 4
At Cleveland. Julio Franco smashed a grand slam
and Janilc Eustcrly was victorious in his first start of
the season while pacing ihe Indians to their seventh In
their Iasi elglil gnincs. The loss was Boston’s fifth In a
row. Tony Armas and Dwight Evans homrred for
Boston. Tim Lollar fell lo 5 0.
W hite Sox S. Rangers 1
At Chicago. Bryan Little hit a three-run homer in the
tilth Inning lo lead the While Sox Chicago slarter Gene
Nelson raised his record lo 8 8 with Ihe vlciory. The
loser was Texas starter Dave Slrwart. 0 5. who gave up
Little's homer and a solo home run by Luis Salazar.
R oyals 8. Brewers 2
Ai Milwaukee. Darryl Motley smashed a three-run
homer and Steve Balbonl drilled a two run shot In
|H)wer the Royals. Mark Gublcza. 10-7. was Ihe
iM-neflrlury of ihe Kansas City power display, which
featured four home runs, Gubiezu hus won nine of his
Iasi 12 decisions. Pete Vuckovtch took the loss.

Switzer Hopes Voters
Are Right About No. 1

13 Gators Hit
With Injuries
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - Thirteen University of
Florida football players were hampered by
injuries as the Gators practiced Wednesday for
their Sept. 7 opener al Miami.
Orlando offensive guard Jeff Zimmerman sat
out practice In swealclolhes because of a sore
back. He is expected lo be back for a scrimmage
Thursday, but won’ t be allowed In contact play.
Backup running backs Reggie Cortew (sprained
ankle) and James Massey (bruised ribs, sprained
wrist) also sal out Wednesday.
The ofTenae worked on plays for next Satur­
day's game, and Coach Galen Hall was pleased.
” 1 fell we practiced pretty good and we worked
on some of the Miami schemes,” Hall said.
"W e’re starting to realize we have a game soon
and with a scrimmage tomorrow we’ll work on
some more things.”

T h u r u U y , Aug. I t . I W - 7 A

.1

f

Jeff Zimmerman
...sore back

R t
~

-

James Massey
...bruised ribs

had a good day. taking the No. 1 offense to a
touchdown on the first drive by hitting tight end
Charles Henry with a 1-yard scoring paaa.
" I was very pleased with the ollenae, especially
the execution on lhat first drive," said Hurricanes
Coach Jimmy Johnson. "W e dropped a few balls
which hurt our momentum at times, but on the
whole we were solid."
Johnson also said the offensive line Improved
from Its performance In the last scrimmage,
On the negative aide. Miami kickers missed six
of eight field goal attempts. Greg Cox was
two-for-six. but did hit on a 46-yardcr. Backup
Mark Seellg missed both his attempts.
Miami opens the season -Sept. 7 against Florida
In the Orange Bowl.

NORMAN. Okla. (UPli - De­
spite Oklahoma's No. I spot In
Ihe presrason ruling*. Sooner*
coach Burry Switzer Wednesday
•aid hr is reserving Judgment on
how good Ihe tram Is.
"We don’t know much about
this learn other than whal we
read ... that the pollsters around
Ihe country say we nrc (No. 1),"
said Switzer, who has a 115-23-4
record In 12 seasons as Sooner*’
coach — ihe besl among active
Div. I coaches
He hopes voters in the rating*
knew what they were doing
when many of them picked the
Sooners to win the nulional
championship. But he said his
coaching staff hat not come to
that conclusion.
"We haven’t arrived at that
opinion of how really good we
are." Switzer said.
With Oklahoma returning 51
Irltcrmcn. the most in ihe Big
Eight, and 16 starters from last
year’s 9-2*1 team, Sooner* fans
and coaches can afford some

F o o t b a ll
measure of confidence.
The biggest unknown for Ihe
Sooners Is al quurterbuck, where
sophomore Troy Alkmun must
try to fill In for graduated
w ish bon e stan d ou t Danny
Bradley.
"Thai position Is the big ques­
tion mark foi any football pro­
gram." Switzer said. " I think he
(Alkman) has all the variables,
the Intangibles that make up the
p e r s o n a lity o f a w in n in g
quarterback.
’‘ Physically, the only question
anyone would have would be his
speed versus the speed of other
wishbone quarterbacks we've
had."
He said Alkman’s 4.7 speed In
ihe 40 is "adequate." Beyond
that. Alkman draws rave reviews
from Switzer.

%

E A S T RUTHERFORD. N.J.
(UPI) — Dave Jennings may
have said goodbye to the New
York Giants this week but not to
New York or Giants Stadium.
The former All-Pro punier,
waived Tuesday idler 11 seasons
with the Giants, was claimed by
the rival New York Jets Wed­
nesday. Both New York teams
play in Giants Stadium In East
Rutherford. N.J.. so Jennings
won’t have very far to move hts
equipment.
Jennings will report to the
Jets today.
"W e feel Dave Jennings Is an
outstanding punier, who will
Improve our punting game,"
Jets coach Joe Walton said. "He
has experience and has kicked at
G ia n t s S ta d iu m . H e 's an
excellent athlete and a fine
person."
To make room for Jennings,
the Jets waived punter John
Mlsco.
Jennings, 33. Is a four-ttme
Pro Bowl selection. He lost hts
Job with the Giants to former
USFL punter Scan Landeta after
two sub-par seasons.
Jennings and Lundeta each
punted five times in the exhib­
ition season. Jennings had a
47.6 average. Including a 61yarder against the Jets Saturday
night. Landeta's average la 38 8.
However. Jennings slipped
during the last two seasons,
averaging 40.3 In 1983 and 40.0
In 1984. Hts career average la
41.7, with 1980 his best season
when he led ihe NFL with a 44.8
mark.
In other developm ents as
teams prepare for their final
pre-season games:
— The Giants announced (he
long-awaited signing of former
all-USFL center Bart Oates.
Oates, who played on USFL
championship learns with the
Philadelphia and B altim ore
Stars, agreed to a four-year *1.1
million contract with the Giants
near the beginning o f training
camp. The Slars had a right to
match the offer, however, and
claimed they would do so until
they placed Oales on waivers
Tuesday.
To make room for Oatea. the
Giants waived four-year center
Rich Umphrey.
— The prospects of curnerback
Mossy Cade playing for the San
Diego Chargers dimmed Tues­
day following a meeting lhat was
described as unproductive by
team owner Alex Spanos.
" I said, 'See you Inter,
Spanos said. "I wished him a lot
of luck, lhat'sail."
Spanos said Cade, a former
No. 1 draft pick, rejected Ihe
Chargers’ latest contract offer
during their 45-minute meeting
In Spanos’ office.
— Steclers coach Chuck Noll
announced lhat Mark Malone
will start al quarterback and
play more than half o f the game
Saturday against the Giants.
Darrell Nelson will start at tight
end In place of Bennie Cun­
ningham. who sprained his right
knee In practice Monday.
— Rosa Browner returned to
the Cincinnati Bengal* after a
six-game stint with the Houston
Gamblers of Ihe USFL.
Browner, who has spent seven
seusotia as the Bengal*' right
defensive end. came to contract
terms with Cincinnati Tuesday
and could see some playing tlmo
In Friday night's game at Indi­
anapolis.
— The Cleveland Browns ob­
tained much-needed defensive
line help by trading a draft
choice to Seattle for veteran Sam
Clancy.
CUncy. 27. will probably play
some in Friday's (Inal presrason
game against the Los Angeles
Raiders-

�I A — Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

Reagan Honors Anglers, Hunters

T h u r i d i r , Aug. if , 1*15

SPORTS

Hunters and fishermen play a key role In
America's efforts to conserve wildlife. Presi­
dent Reagan said In an official statement
Issued for an upcoming Issue of National
Hunting and Fishing Day
"Over □ century ago. hunters and fish­
ermen helped found the conservation
movement when they saw how expanding
civilization had threatened the future of
many wildlife species They requested
special taxes on their equipment and license
fees to provide the money to pay for the
programs needed to help wildlife." said the
president.
Reagan also pointed out that "the re­
stocking. management, and habitat restora­
tion program s fin a n ced largely by
sportsmen had led to dramtlc Increases In
population for many wildlife species
The president used the wood duck
white-tailed deer, wild turkey, and antrlope
as specific examples of the success of
sportsmeu-supported conservation pro­
grams.
"In recognition of the historic and conti­
nuing contributions made by America's
hunters and fishermen to our national
conservation efforts, we observe Saturday
Sept 28 as National Hunting and Fishing
D ay." said Reagan. "On this notable
occasion, I urge all our citizens to Join you In
your efforts to secure a bright future for

INBRIEF

Chris Frank Twirls 1-Hit Shutout
As Sunnlland Drops McKee, 2-0
Chris Frank hurled a one-hitter and Wayne Kelso
snapped a 0-0 deadlock with a slxth-lnnirfg single as
Sunnlland Corporation posted a 2-0 victory over McKee
Development In Sanford Men's Fall Softball League play
Wednesday night at Plnehurst Field.
In other action. Thorne Land Clearing topped Drown
Dover! Electric. 13-8. and the Tim Raines Connection
crushed Cardinal Industries. 20-0.
Chris Frank and loser Mark Smllh matched scoreless
frames through the fifth until Tollle Frank stroked a
two-out single for Sunnlland. Kelso's hit scored him and
when Nick Mrrgo reached on an error. Kelso scored
Chris Frank was almost perfect on Ihe mound, retiring
21 of the 24 hatters hr faced.
In Thome's win, Danny Gracey socked a double, triple
and homer while driving In two runs. Dllly Gracey had a
pair of singles and 3 RDI. Ricky Roscoe had a two-run
single and Stan Hrurnley had a two-run double. Oils Raines
hart two hits
For Dover), Robbie Hawaiian had a single, double and
RDI. Russell Holloman. Dob Kunzer. Jim TrrfTIngrr. Tony
Utile and Manny Silvia had two hits each, David Kunzer
and Robert Klnnalrd had RBI doubles
In Ihe Connection romp. Eddie Jackson had a pair of
doubles and two rlbbles and F'ed Washington hud a homer
and single and two RBI. Dllly Grlffllh. Burnett Washington
and Dobby Robinson had two hits and two RDI apiece.
Ernest Shuler had a double and triple.
There will he no games Monday due to Labor Day.
Aferr 'a Softball League Standings In S C O P E H O A H U

Larry
Williams

Dell Abcrncthy. owner of the Osteen
bridge Fish Camp, reported Sanford's lien
Lindsey and his wife caught 78 bluegllls just
south of the bridge Wednesday.
F IS H IN G /
Rain storms and hot weather are holding
HUNTING
down the fishermen, said Dell
We rr
hoping that hlghrr water and cooler nights
mu\ help The bluegllls are doing real well."
Dell said Maitland's John Lawton and
America * natural and wildlife resources
Ralph Cot trill caught some specks In Ihe
David Hester, of Stone Mountain. Ga won middle of Lake Monroe last Sunday with
the Military Bass Grand National Tourna­ minnows.
Dell's next Buddy Bass Tournament Is
ment, with a total catch of 13 pounds and
12 ounces Hester also won the big bass Sunday morning at first light. Entry fee Is
825 The first four places pay along with the
award for a three pound and nine ouncer
In second place was Hobby Padgett. big bass
Chlplev. with a catch of seven pounds and
Red fish Size Limits (effective Sept 12)
seven ounces. Ronald Riggs. Douglasvllle.
Minimum size limits: 16 Inches total
Ga.. was third with five pounds and two
ounces Stewart Fallaw. Martinez. Ga was length In stale waters from Fl/AI border east
fourth with four pounds and 12 unices and south to a straight line drawn from
while Dale Hart. Savannah. Ga . was filth Bowlegs Point in Dixie Co. Southwesterly
through marker 16
w ith three poundsand lOounces
18 Inches total length in all other state
Military Bass officials reported a total
catch of 32 pounds and three ounces with a waters
Maximum size limit Statewide possession
97 percent live rrlcase rate The MHGN'T Is
the newest tournament on the bass trail It limit of one 111redfish 32 Inches total length
or larger jut person
guarantees 8160.000 in rash jirizcs.

I4th seed, lost to Martin Jalte.
6-4. 2 6. 6 2 6 i and In tile
women's singles. No. 9 Kathy
Rinaldi was beaten by Andrea
Hollknva. 7-6! 7-6. and No lf&gt;
Gabrlela Saballnl. the 15 year
Continued from 6A
old Argentine, was eliminated by
Three other seeds were elimi­ Barbara Potter. a6-4 6-2
nated along with Curren In
Evert Lloyd and Martina
first-round competition Wed­
nesday. Henrik Sundstrom. the Navratilova, the lop seeded

...Open

Hanggle Lifts O-Twins To Win
The Orlando Twins, on Ihe strength of a pair of home
runs by Dan Hanggle. ujjended the Greenville Braves. 6-3.
Wednesday night In Southern League action at Greenville
The win enabled the Twins to remain two and a half
games behind Charlotte In Ihe East Division with five
games remaining The O-1'wlns art al Greenville again
Innight while Charlotte hosts Columbus.
Hanggle guvr Ihe Twins a 3-0 lead In the fourth with his
first homer of the game but Greenville battled back to tic It
al 3-3 In the filth Hanggle tilt a solo homer In the sixth, his
13th of the season, to give Orlando the lead lor good
Danny Clay picked up Ihe win for the Twins to Improve
to I3 H while Gorman Helmueller got his 14th save.
In Florida Stule League action Wednesday, Central
Division leading Osre-'-i Aslros trounced Ihe Lakeland
Tigers. 12-3, at laikelann
The Astros, who have already clinched the Central
Division tllle. host the Tigers tonight al 7 30 al Osceola
County Stadium
Maitland's Dob Parker was 0 for I In a pinch hilling role
for the Aslros

...Computer
Continued from 6A
227 to 243 "Francisco Is hard as a rock,
said Dlsreglla. "He was the first one In the
history of the school to hit the 750 club lu
total lift." Now. Arias trenches 315 and
squats 475
• Trier, a 5-11 100-pound Junior center,
didn't j*ut on as many pounds as the others
but Dlsr eglla said he Is the strongest bench
jirrsser on the team at 330 He squats 450
and “ sna|is and moves quit krr than any­
one."
• Mike Schaefer, a 6-4 sophomore otlenslvr tackle, went troin 259 to 271

No N ew Trial For Williams

C o n tin u e d fr o m 6 A

coach Jack Dlcknell Ihlnks the
big game excitement of Die
Kickoff Classic makes It all
worthwhile
"I never dreamed we'd Ik- Iii a
game like Ihls," said Dlcknell.
whose team finished 10 2 anil
won the Cotton Howl last year
"Anytime you have a chance to
play a hlg game, play the
defending national champion,
jilay the ojH-nlng game of the
season, that's worth more than a
little Inconvlrnencr ol getting
ready early
"W r look forward to Oils kind
ol game. We never dread It II wr
lose, we're not going to silt our
wrists."
Holh DYll and DC are ranked

Flag Football Tryouts A t Chase
Tryouts for the Sanford Recreation Department Flag
Football Leagues will be field Saturday, Sejit. 14 at 9 a m
at Chase Park. The two leagues are Midgets (7-9 year olds)
and Juniors 110-12).
Cost Is 83 while non-rrstdrnls must pay a 810 yearly fee
All new players must register and bring In verification ol
blrthdale to one of Die following offices. Recreation
Department at City Hull; Sanford Civic Center Youth Wing;
Weststdc RcrreaUon Center.
League play begins Sept. 30. Games will be pluyed week
nlglils at 5:30.

women, w on their opening
matehes m straight sets, as did
No 2 men's seed Ivan Lendl,
while fourth seed Jimmy Con­
nors required four seis to stoji
South African Gary Muller,
ranked 226th In the world
Evert L lo y d brat Jam nt
Thompson. 6-1. 6-3. Navratilova
routed Paso ale Paradis. 6-2, 6-1.

"Mike's fat Just melted off," said Dlscrglla
• Brother Hill Schaefer, i 6-4 senior
defenslvr tackle, wet:t from 2.H) to 245 "Hill
Is a late starter with our program hut hr
should really l&gt;c able to help us." said
litsceglla.
"Everybody Involved In the jirogram
gained weight and substantial strength.”
said Dlsr eglla T don I know l( anybody else
around this area has II but we're really sold
on ft."
Dlsreglla sold hr Is also sold oil ihe
jtsyehologlral benefits He used the younger
Schaefer as an example "Mike has tx-rii the
must jileasaul surprise
said the former
Hialeah coach Hr walked around here like
a Utile puppy dog with Ills trill between his
legs last year

Lendl defeated Jay Lapldus. 6-2.
6 1 6 3, and Connors beat
Muller. 6-4. 6-3. 4-6. 6-2.
Also winning were No 7 Yan­
nick Noah No 9 Mlloslav Mcclr.
No 11 Stelan Edberg and No 15
Stott Davis among the men and
Nn 4 pam Shrlvrr. No 6 Zina
Garrison. No 11 Steffi Oral and
No
13 Catarina Llndqvtst
among the women

The jrrogram did a lot for his selfconfidence After hr lost the fat and gained
the muscle, he began to feel better alaml
himself. He Is going It* be one helluva
football jdayer In two years, everybody is
going to recruit him."
Maybe even a Dig 8 powerhouse In
Lincoln. Neb
H A W K S N E S T - Lake Howell, which
jjosted a 4 6 record last year during what
Dlscrglla called a rebuilding year, faces the
toughest schedule In the school's history
The Stiver Hawks open al Edgrwutrr on
Friday. Sejit 13 West Orange and Seminole
are next on successive Fridays at home.
Apn|)ka. Lake Mary, Winter Park. Evans.
Lyman. Lake Brantley and Oviedo fill out
the Impressive slate

much lower In jtrrseason than
they were last January The
(!ougar» begin the season rated
seventh and the Fugles, who
finished fourth last year, are No.
20
Boston College's drop Is due
primarily to the loss of Helsman
Trophy-winning quarterback
Doug Finite lie'll be replaced by
Shawn Hallonm. who Joins lai
ruled tailback Troy Slradlord In
the Eagles' backfleld
D Y ll quarterback Robbie
Dosco was a seeond-teum All
America Iasi year and enters ihls
season as a leading llrlsnian
candidate Dosco Is Ihe latest In
a long line of successful BYU
p a s s e r s , i n c l u d i n g Jim
McMahon. Marc Wilson and
Steve Young
T h e participating Kickofl
Classic schools are guaranteed
8550,(XXI each, but the llrst two
Classics were worth lar more to
Ihe schools Involved

...BYU

NEW ORLEANS IIJI’H — The Judge whit threw out sjtorts
bribery charges agalnsl John "Hot Hod" Williams severely
criticized prosecutors while freeing the former Tulsne
basketball star from further legal uctlon.
At a hearing nearly Iwn weeks after declurlng a mistrial
In the case. Orleans Parish Judge Alvin Oser Wednesday
decided Ihe 23-year-otd former Tulanr star could not be
brought back to trial because misconduct by prosecutors
provoked defense attorney* Into seeking Ihe mistrial.
Because prosecutors Intended by thrlr actions to
"subvert the protections afforded by the double Jeopardy
clauses or (he Louisiana Constitution and the U S
('onstllullon,"

The next tournament is Sept 15 on West
Point at the Highland Marina Call (2141
380-2656 for info.

ROOFING
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PREDICTIONS

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tog t ) — T hm (M londmg njtkm ol cSom ploni
iSould Im pravo tollog* lootbolt i long*«.
winning xtrtok to 11 g « m » t l * i u w Wofc&lt;i••
Bow o t
and a M i l BC la io n d a ry laava
th* E a g .a i vuina .aij'v And witsout Ooug
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ub a d u ia tuecaatruliy
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l a i a t E l P a to ova. Air Forca (taking I I I
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d a ta n iu a *&lt;*'&lt;a.i
A ir F a re a l/ U T t P &gt;
Tu la n a ovor Florida Slat# (taking II )
Tulana can throw and Florida Stat» ha*
iroubla (loop in g tha pat* Tha iam inoiat
a rp io d v a oltanta will glva itw m a victory,
but not a covor
F lo rid a D ata M . Tu ia iw M
Cadtor ni* ovar Van Jota tla 'a I givin g 41 C i i it o r n u naadt to pick up victor it* ogam*’
non Pac 10 loam * it tl It to Sava a winning
racord Tha Baar* thould »la rt Out right
again*. San Joaa Stata

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&gt; GREGORY LUMBER
500 S. Maple A »e .

Sanford Tel. | J 0 5 | 322 0503

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�Ev«nlng Herald. Sanford. Ft.

...Fiste r
Continued from BA
• On Saturday. Sept. 21 at 7
u.m.. the Sanford Klwanls Club
■1

1— 1

I

race There Is no fee for the
quarter mile kiddy run.
• On Sunday. Oct. 13. at 8
a m., a 20 mile biathlon will be
held In DeLeon Springs. The
biathlon will Include a four mile
run and 16 mile bicycle ride.
For more Information call

and the Sanford Recrratlon De­ the Sanford Recreation De­
partment will host the 8 Kilome­ partment.
ters of Sanford Road Race with
The event will begin with a
proceeds going to the Arnold
Rainier Children's Hospital and two mile fun run followed by the
8K road race and a quarter mile
Perinatal Center.
kiddy run Entry fee Is $6 prior
For more Information, contact to race day and $8 the day of the

r

I

i f f

19041 736-0002
• On Saturday. Oct. 19. at 8
a m . Central Florida Masters
will hold a three mile cross
country meet at the DeLand
Airport For more Information,
contact John Bovle at 1904)
736 0002

TFiurtday, Aug. I f . I t U - f A

• Other upcoming events on
the Central Florida Masters
schedule include a three mile
prediction run on Dec 31 ai
Daytona Beach and a hall
marathon-5K road race on Jan.
19. 1986. at IVLeon SprltiRs
State Park

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886*8820

383*8135

West Orange Shopping Center
606 South Dillard St.

628*8790

LEESBURG

SANFORD

4050 Oak Ridge Rd.

618 South 14th St.

605 W. 25th St.

351*6766

326*2585

323*4470

877*2861

OPEN LABOR DAY!
ft*

9

�...School

HA—Evtnleg HraId, SanlTd, PI.

ThfWAy, Awf- 2», lfM
Charlotte. Florida, and was sentenced
In Broward County.
Continued from page 1A
It was determined that the men cut
through
an
Inner
fence
and
used
the
The
base salary for Hughes' position,
C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e 1 A
homemade, wooden ladder which, ac­ set by the state. Is 554.264 Hughes
Joi*e Moreno. Cuban male, age 24.
cording to prison supervisor Bill Booth,
5-fcct. 6-lncheit tall. 147 pounds, with a had been left at a work site at the said he has qualified for a state award
of $2,000 by completing workshops
ruddy complexion, black hair and
prison by construction workers, to and passing a state exam. This amount
brown ryes, lie Is also believed to be
scale an outer fence which was topped
from the Marlel Boat Lilt. Moreno has a with colled razor wire. Prison officials can be renewed each year by further
m anagem ent schooling. With the
tattoo of a female on his upper right
would not say what type of tool was $2,000 and just approved supplement.
urin. He was serving nine 20-year
used to cut the fence. The ladder was
sentences concurrently for armed bur­ left at the scene by the escapees. Booth H u gh es' annual salary will total
$61,690.
glary. armed robbery, false Imprison­ said.
The state puts 20 percent cap on
ment. kidnapping, grand theft, bur­
Officials say the escapees should be such supplements, permitting them at
glary of a dwelling with assault. Moreno
Is from Miami and was sentenced In considered extremely dangerous and the rate of 5 percent per year of service.
the public should use ‘‘extra security Hughes, who has been superintendent
Bade County.
p r e c a u t i o n s ' * u n t i l t h e y are
for four years, said the board la phasing
Vincent James Caplz/ano. also
him Into the supplemental salary
known as Antonio Vincente. Mexican apprehended.
program.
Anyone
having
Information
on
the
male, age 35. 6-foot. 1-Inch tall. 178
Henley’s proposal said. “ The recom­
pounds, with ruddy complexion, black whereabouts of the escaped prisoners Is
mendation Is designed to ... provide for
asked
to
call
the
Volusia
County
hair, green eyes, and when last seen
a rate of annual compensation which Is
had a salt and pepper beard. Caplzzano Sheriff's Department at 904-252-0485
representative of Ihe size and complex­
or
904-734-3441.
or
the
Tomoka
Cor­
was serving four life sentences and one
ity o f the school system, and which Is
rectional
Institute
at
904-257-1314.
30-year sentence for armed robbery
equitable with that paid other superin­
—Janie
Onat
and kidnapping He Is from Port

...Escape

FLORIDA
INBRIEF

Mercedes I Owners Sue
State For Sinking Ship
PALM BEACH (UP!) — In response to a $ 1 million suit by
the owners of the Mercedes I. the freighter beached behind
n Palm Beach estate, the state says the ship couldn't fight a
storm because It needed repairs and was washed ashcre.
The state Department of Natural Resources lawyer Eric
Taylor replied to the suit Wednesday, saying the ship was
unable to ride out the Thanksgiving storm that tossed It
Into u seuwall because Its owners did not make needed
repairs.
The Mercedes' owner. Dlstrlbudoro Navlera Del Caribbe­
an, claims In Its suit that the state had no right to remove
and sink their ship, which spent more than three months
stuck beside socialite Mollle Wllmot'soceanfront estate.
The Venezuelan company maintains their 197-fool ship
was ‘ ‘stout, strong, staunch and seaworthy” In every
respect and only became mired beside Wllmot's seawall
because of an act of God.
The state Department of Natural Resources had sued the
company In June to recover the $220,000 It spent hiring a
salvage firm to Inch Ihe freighter back to sea.

Investors Bilked O f $40 M illion
WEST PALM BEACH (UPI) - Thirteen former officials of
Slate Capital Corp.. a mortgage brokerage, have been
accused of swindling $40 million from 4.000 Florida
Investors.
Victor Bergrlson. 50. who held a controlling Interest In
State Capital, wus arrested ut his new office In Deerfield
Beach Tuesday night, said Tim Valentine, on Investigator
with the Palm Bench County state attorney's office.
Agents began arresting the Individuals Tuesday night
and by Wednesday afternoon had taken all but two Into
custody All were freed on b o n d "
Valentine said Bergelson was charged with one count of
racketeering, one count o f organized fraud, eight counts of
selling unregistered securities, eight counts of selling
securities by an unregistered broker and one count of
scheming to defraud. The Investigator said Bergelson faces
more thun 100 years In prison If convicted. He was freed on
$10,000 bond.

tendents In all school districts of the
state falling within the enrollment
range of 30.000 to 50.000 students."
Concerning the board's surplus pro­
perty. Ned Julian, legal counsel for the
board, advised board members to put
aside their principles and refund to
Hattaway the $20,000 because the
board could lose more If the matter
goes to court.
Hattaway submitted a bid to buy the
land for $600,000 provided he could
obtain reroning allowing commercial
development on the land. The reroning
was not obtained before the deadline on
Hattaway's option to buy the land. The
problem now Is whether the contract to
which the board agreed stipulated that
the downpayment would be forfeited or
returned. According to Julian the
understanding Initially on the contract
w as Hattaway w ould forfeit the
downpayment. However. Hattaway's
attorney. Robert B. Worman. has
threatened legal action unless hts
client's downpayment Is returned.
"... In the event It Is necessary for my

payment which could be as high
as $70,000. or $10,000 a day for
each day Ihe DER documented
the alleged Infraction.
Continued from page 1A
If the DER and the company
they do the dum ping, how cannot reach a negotiated set­
much. why. and If so. what they tlement. the case can either go
should pay for violating pollu­ before a state hearing officer or
to court, he said.
tion standards.
If It goes before the hearing
If they reach an agreement,
the company and DER officials officer, the rase will eventually
will sign a “ consent order" In end up on Ihe desk of the
which the company agrees to director of the DER. Victoria
stop the procedure and agrees to Tschlnkel. Her decision Is final,
pay the negotiated liability he said.

...Denies

client to institute legal proceedings In
order to collect the escrow deposits ... It
(Hattaway) Intends to assert a claim
against the school board ... for treble
damages and attorney's fees." Worman
said In a letter to Julian.
A motion by a board member and
approved by a majority of the board
will be needed to .ake the Issue off the
table and open It up for discussion
again.
As expected, board members also
approved an agreement between the
board and the Seminole County School
Bus Drivers Association which outlines
new salary schedules for the county's
bus drivers.
The board did not consider contracts
with other employee unions even
though such consideration was an
agenda Item, because those contracts
had not yet been ratified by the union
members. A contract between the
board and the Seminole Education
Association was voted on by Its mem­
bers Tuesday but the votes are to be
tallied today.

Sanford berth by a truck to
remove sewage since a sewage
line did not extend to Its pier
until June. H ow ever, ship
employees said the ship would
The alleged Incidents were have needed to be pumped out
Investigated after ship workers more often than that to keep Its
provided photographs and sworn tank empty during that month.
statements about the purging of Indicating the sewage was
Ihe ship's holding tank to fish dumped intu the lake. An In­
and game Warden Jesse Baker vestigation Into the valve on ihe
of Ihe Florida Game and Fresh ship’s holding tank showed It
Water Fish Commission.
was set to allow the tank's
Baker said In May the ship was content to flow out when the
visited four times at Its Port of tank was half full. Baki-V said.

If the case goes to court, the
DER can ask for Ihe $70,000
plus court costs and attorney
fees, he said.

C u s to m s A g e n t s S e ize
C o c a in e O n 2 E a ste rn Jets

Thomas said he doesn't think u
toll Is a good Idea.
"You Just don't bother the
Continued from page 1A
public for everything W e'rr not
that poor." hr said.
local and who's not.
MI AMI (U P II - C u stom s
Mayor Smith said a toll Is a agents said today they seized
Commissioner John Mercer
vtiil a loll would he a "reason­ “ possible solution" lo paying for $430 million wonh of cocaine
able" way to puy for the ramp Ihe repairs but at the same lime hidden aboard two Eastern
repairs He said shrimpers at the commission doesn't want to Airlines Jets arriving In Miami on
New Smyrna Beach pay a fee to "alienate" boaters who generate flights from Colombia.
get to the water so boaters using a lot of business for Ihe clly. She
No arrests have been made,
Sunford's ramps shouldn't mind. said she will talk to boaters and
but Customs officials said an
Like Farr, he said a dal fee other citizens lo see how they
would be better than churglng feel and then decide on the Issue. Investigation was continuing.
Commissioner Milton Smith
o u t-of-to w n b o a t e r s more
The cocaine was hidden In
could not be polled because he's lugRagr slashed In air condlmoney.
But Com m issioner Robert on vacation.
llonlng compartments behind
Ihe forward cargo holds on two
sent telegrams to all members of separate Eastern Airlines Boeing
Congress urging them to protest 727 Jcls — one arriving from
Boesak's arrrsi and to demand Barranqullla. Colombia, on Aug
11 and the other from Call.
his release.
Continued from page 1A
llorsak. a leader of Ihe United Colomblu. on Aug 24.
I.ilnrrs. Including Nelson Man­ Democratic I-1 out. was arrested
Euslcrn officials announced
dela." the council telegram said. Tuesday, a day before he was Ihe suspension of flights to and
The council Joined a wave of scheduled lo lead a inarch of from Barranqullla. pending u
International religious protest 20.000 people on Poolsmoor review o f security procedures.
wgalnst Tuesday * Jailing of prison near Cape Town where No Immediate action was an­
Borsuk, president of the world black national leader Mandela nounced to deal with flights to
Alliance of Reformed Churches, has been Imprisoned for 23 and from Call.
and Wednesday's arrest of the years.
Rev. Abel Hendricks, twice u
past president of South African
Methodist Church.
In addition to the telegram to
Reagan, the National Council

...Toll

...C le rg y

The seizure was announced In
Mi ami by E d w a r d K w a s .
southeast regional commissioner
for Ihe U.S. Customs Service.
Kwas said the cocaine — 894
pounds taken from the Barrunquillu High! ..nd 828 pounds
seized from the Call flight — was
turned over to agents of the U.S.
Drug Enforcem ent Agency,
which Is conducting Ihe In­
vestigation.
The seizure raised lo more
than 31.000 pounds the amount
o f cocain e c o n fis c a te d by
Customs agents In Ihe Miami
rrglon during (he fiscal year lhai
began last Oct. I .
That amount exceeds the
27.525.8 pounds seized In all of
Ihe United States In fiscal year
1984 and Is almost double the
amount taken In Ihe Miami
rrglon — 16.691 pounds —
during (hr last fiscal year.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
DEVELOPMENTS OF REGIONAL IMPACT

AREA DEATHS
LEANNE If. BROWN
L e a n n e Murle B ro w n , 2
months, of 1640 Hastings Drive.
Deltona, filed Tuesday at home.
She wus born July 7 In Sanford.
Survivors Include her parents.
Rundnll and Janice Brown. De­
lton a; one brother. J a m es
R e y n o l d s II. Cape C o r a l;
maternal grandmother. Betty
Lee Doyle, Sanford; paternul
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Willie G. Brown. Sanford
Brlsson Guardian Funeral
Home, Sanford, Is In charge of
arrangements.
MURRAY MIKE
Mr. Murray Mike. 73. of 1710
W. 15 1 It St., Sanford, died
""^ T ow ers For /UTtVciisIonjl^

(fiollitlB

JMUUJd'J

SBVSS2V 3231204
OAKLAWN
• IUMSA1 SOW • CIMUIST • 110*111
IS VMM M SI CSOKt
On local OtM t Toko* C*&gt;i Of l&lt; « | S U |

44* At Iteotorl M.
h o w As Cootrof fk&gt;W 122 42t)
tsufsrWLsko Hsrr
a*o

F e d e ra l

Wednesday at the DeBary Manor
Nursing Home, DeBary. Born
Feb. 17. 1912 In Colquitt. Ga..
he moved to Sanford over 40
years ago. He was an auto
mechanic and a Protestant.
Survivors Include his wife.
Thelma N.-, a son. Calvin Rawls.
Miami; four daughters. Charlie
Mae Cummings. Jacksonville.
Minnie L. Wolf. Newark. N.J..
Debra Williams, Sanford, und
Connie Rawls. Miami; four step­
daughters. Victoria H. Kill Ins,
Orlando. Ruby N. Lawrence.
Sanford. Amanda S. Harden.
Sanford, and Joyce Nathan,
Saratoga Springs. N.Y.: a sister,
Jessie Lee Franklin. Plainfield.
N.J. numerous grandchildren
und great-grandchildren.
Wllson-Elchelbergcr Mortuary
Is In charge of arrangements
BEATRICE C. WEBSTER
Mrs. Beatrice “ T rixie" C.
Webster. 81, of 500 Oakcrest St..
Altamonte Springs, died Tues­
day at home. Born Jan. 20. 1904
In Alexandria. La., she moved to
Altamonte Springs from Tyler.
Texas In 1976. She was a
homemaker and a member of St.
Mary Magdalen Catholic Church.
Altamonte Springs. She was a
member of the Catholic Daugh­
ters of America.

Survivors Include a son. Noble
L. Jr.. Orlando; a daughter.
Jacqueline M. Lewis, Altamonte
Springs; nine grandchildren;
nine great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. Is In
charge of arrangements.

Fu n«ral N otices
a SOWN. LI ANNI M

-GrovotiO* funorol wryten far Ioann*
OiiN Brown. I month*. 1*40 Hotting* Orly*.
Oottono. whodlo* Tuoodoy. will bo *t It* m
Prkto, ot Ooklown Momorlal Pork with tho
Rovt Arckio Bui* And Coo F King ottklot
Ing Filond* m*y coll *1 tho tunorol horn* I (
S m 1*0*, Brlwun * unoral Homo. * Guard
Ionchop*), m(horg*
MINI. MURRAY

—Runorol Mrvkoi lor Murray Mlko. &gt;1. ot
IMS W llth SI. Aonlord, who dkd Wodno*
day. will bo hold ot IS* m Saturday *1 Now
Ml Calvary MJtMnory Bop'itt Church, till
W llth SI With Mttor Goorgo W Worron
officiating Burin to follow In R**K*wn
Com*lory Colling hour* tor Iriond* will So
I I tm Prldoy ol tho chop*I Wilton
I Ichoisorgor Mortuory Inchorgo

I------ 1 UNINCORPORATED
BEMINOLE COUNTY
CZ3

H ID D E N

HARBOUR

PROPOSED BITE

MARINA

HIDDENHARBOUR AAARINA IS LOCATEO AT THE PORTOF SANFORD THE AAARINA CONTAINS
173 BOAT SLIPS. A CLUBHOUSE. SWIMMING POOL. RETAIL STORE. DRY BOAT STORAGE. FUEL
DOCK. PARKING AREA. STORM WATER PICK UP AND FILTRATION SYSTEM PHASE 2 PRO
POSES ADDITIONAL UPLAND TO BE LEASE DON THE PORT TO HOUSE MORE DRY STORAGE
WITH THE POSSIBLE INCREASE OF SO TO 75 WET SLIPS ALONG THE WEST BASIN AREA

BLACK. H IR B IR T

-Funorol Mtvkot lor Horborl "Pop" Block.
*A oMUl Conroy Rood Apt *. Orlando, who
d'od lundoy In Alton!*, will So hold *1 ) »
p m Loturdoy il Morning Glory MiuNnory
Boptitl Church, loos ■ Highway to laniard,
with potior Andrtw (von* officiating Bur1*1
to tallow In Rotliown Com*tor, Colling
hour* lor frlondo will So ) t p m Friday *1
tho (hop*I Wilton|kholSorgor Mortuary In
(horg*

B e n e fits fo r

V e te r a n s a n d D e p e n d e n ts

• ELIGIBILITY • SOCIAL
• PENSION
SECURITY
•*—
MEDICAL
T k tti and HIBay Mars F t devil
CREDITS $ Beoefiti
tertwo oo* St*low* t m n t i l
Nan AvailatW
Ittnod kookht *t Vfltrtot BoaolNl two*tty
to Sowar*) *ukor|t* Viltraai *4 to *otl

OAK LAWN'S VETERANS DIVISION
I*. 0. Boo til
Lass Mary. Florid* 11M0

LAKE MARY SHOPPING CENTER

H 0w Votermw AdotonlitlW* mm toofekte

■oioo*

THE PROPOSED LAKE MARY SHOPPING CENTER WILL BE LOCATED NEAR THE INTERSEC
TION LAKE MARY BOULEVARD AND LAKE EMMA ROAD THE PROPOSED 1S9.000 SQUARE
FEET PROJECT INCLUDES FOUR MAJOR TENANT BUILOINGS. A MOVIE THEATER AND
OTHER SHOPPING SPACE. THIS47ACRE DEVELOPMENT IS DESIGNED TOBE CONSTRUCTED
IN TWO PHASES BETWEEN 1H1 AND 1*S7.
tU
T H I SIM IN O LI COUNTY PLAMNINQ ANO 20NIN0 COMMItSION WILL COMOUCT A PUBLIC HEARING ON THE
H ID O IN HARBOUR AAARINA ANO LAKE AAARY SHOPPINO CENTER 01 VI10PM ENTS0F R IO ION AL IMPACT
108H ON WKONISOAY. SEPTEMBER I, H U . A T 7 M P A L. OR AS SOON T H E R E A F T E R AS R M I I L E I N M W
W I c d in o . not e a s t f ir s t s t r e e t , s a n f c r d F l o r i d a t h e p u r !
C O U N T Y C O M M ISSIO NERS.

Vow Bf hukop .
tfPO Bt S&lt;Mk*l|t ,

B

R E C E ,V e C 0 M M * " T S AN D M A K E REC OAAM ENDATIO NS TO T H E BOARD OF

V » { ? M a a 2 lj21! L f ? t ? 1
‘LP i S P ^ T Y O M A M I R I WILL CONDUCT A FUILIC HEARING ON TUES­
DAY, SEPTEMBER 1*. I N I AT fiM P.M* OR AS SOON THEREAFTER AS POSSIBLE, IN ROOM WIM ie m im c ii f
S S V S R &amp; V JP a !
" S H ! ! • “ V A N F O R D F L l M I M T O C O M ID E R ^ E C0MM (LH
Im p a c t * °* T H I PLAMM,H0 AM0 IO*,IMO c o m m is s io n r io a r o in o t h e s e d e v e l o p m e n t s o f r e o io n a l

I

�PEOPLE
Evening H«rald. Saqlord, FI.

Briefly

Thurulay, Aug. 29, in s—IB

Miss M arshall Weds B.L. Perkins III
Catherine Janet Marshall and
Braxton Lee Perkins III were
married at 4 p.m. on Aug. 11. in

Labor Day Weekend Carnival
Set In Winter Springs

Hatcher's Chapel United Meth­
odist Church. Claudvllle. Va . bv
the Rev. Lee Money, pastor of

ur^fCa " on'Pru^t organizations will participate In the City of
winter S p rin g Labor Day Carnival, al Sunshine Park on North
Edgemon Avenue, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.. on Aug. 31. and
This event, open to the public. Is chaired by Charles Rowell,
•past commander of Winter Springs V.F.W. Post 5405. and
co-chalred by Jean Jacobs, past president of the City of Winter
Springs Civic Association.
Among the participating organizations are: the Winter
Springs V.F.W. and Its Ladles Auxiliary: Boy Scouts and Cub
Scouts; Sertoma; Missing Children Center: Winter Springs
Civic Association: Winter Springs Fire and Police Departments:
local churches and various Homeowner Associations
The Shrlners will have Ihetr famous camel Sir Gus and
clowns to add to the festivities.
There will be games, rides, dunking tank and Ihe children
will certainly enjoy Ihe Moon Walk - food and cold
refreshments such as hamburgers, hot dogs, bar-b-que. pizza.
Ice cream, cotton candy will be available — a rummage sale
crafts and a bake side.

Public Meetings For Seniors
Seniors In Brevard, Orange. Osceola and Seminole county
will have the opportunity to voice concerns and needs for
services to help them to live Independently. Public meetings
will be held by the East Central Florida Regional Planning
Council, designated as Area Agency on Aging. District VU, on
proposed Older American Act and overall aging service
priorities for federal fiscal year 1986.
The Area Agency on Aging Is responsible for responding to
service needs at age 60+ population and supervises funds
under the Federal Older Americans Act. Proposed services for
1986 Include Home Delivered Meals. Homemaker Service*.
Home Health Services. Congregate Meals, Transportation.
Adult Day Care. Legal And Employment Services. Judith G.
Hllchuk Is director of the Area Agency.
The Seminole County public forum will be held from
1:30-3:30 p.m., Aug. 30 al Casselberry City Hall. 95 Lake
Trtplltt Drive, Casselberry

WCOU+ONOHM

M r s . B r a x t o n L e e P e r k in s

STOREWIDE

III

DEAR ABBY: For live years
my husband and I tried to have a
baby, but I couldn't get preg­
nant. so wc went to a fertility
D ear
specialist. He tested both of us
and said the problem was my
Abby
husband’s low sperm count. He
suggested that my husband's
brother (I'll call him Hob) come
In and have his sperm tested and
DEAR MOM AND POP: You:
If It was normal he could donate
some sperm to be mixed with dau gh ter and her fiancee.
my husband's and I could be Purrnts arc not rx|erinl to |tny
artificially Inseminated with the for a second wedding. Some
don't even pay for the first
combination.
Bob agreed to the plan, and he
DEAR A B B Y :
had hls sperm tested. It was
The pun Is a low lorm of
normal, and we were In seventh
heaven. Well, the day before I humor.
Though It gives satisfaction to
was to be Inseminated, Bob
you.
barked out. It seems he told hls
I'm with Turn who has written
llve-ln glrlflmcd. and she didn't
from Cambridge.
want him to father hls brother's
Latest score it) million m 2
child! Abby. litis has tnc so upset
DON
1 can hardly see straight We
DEAR DON:
tried to expl ai n that Hob
The Dexier* wrote lit and
wouldn't necessarily be " f a ­ sided with Tmti.
thering" my baby — the one tiny
Who said that my puns were a
little sperm that would fertilize Itorc
my egg would be my husband's
So since you agree wtlli Ihe
The girlfriend wouldn't change liner ot them.
her mind, and Bob refused to do
The wrote is 111million to 1
It without her blessing
P.S. Before we close the books
Now I don't want lo have on Ibis ptmny controversy, lei's
anything to do with Hob or hls hear It Irom Golden. Colo
llve-ln. but my husband says he
can see their point and wr
should not hold a grudge. Docs
Bob's girlfriend have a right to
tell him what to do with hls
B
sperm? And what do you Ihlnk I
should do?
SION ME UPSET

Seminole Dog Fanciers Association announces ■ new 8-week
series of dog classes will be held at Secret Lake Park.
Casselberry, with basic obedience beginning at 7:30 p.m. on
Thursday. Sept. 5. Conformation classes will be held
Thursday* at H.30 p in
Intermediate and advanced classes begin Tuesday. Sept. 3,
al 7:30ans8:15 p.m.
For Information, contact Eva Natheny, 831-0717. or Lenn
Stone. 678-3038.

ANOTHER
GREAT

D E A R U P S E T : Bub's
girlfriend doesn't have the right
to make decisions for Hob, but
she appears to be doing It with
hls approval. There's no future
In holding a grudge, so let
bygones be bygone*
You can still be artificially
Inseminated with the sperm of
an shonymous donor, which
could be better In the long run.

O rle M ath ieu x assists Shane and E ric Larsan In
m aking place mats for G randparents Day, Sept. 8.

W o r k s h o p G e a r e d F o r K id s
T o H o n o r G r a n d p a r e n ts D a y
In recognition of Grandparents Day. Sept. 8. the Junior
Woman’s Club of Sanford Inc. Is conducting a children’s arts
and crafts workshop to make place mats at Howell Place. 200
W. Airport Hive.. Sanford, on Saturday. Aug. 31. from 12:30 to
4 p.m.
All children, from Infants up. are welcome. The price la $1.50
per person. For Information call 323-9497.

DEAR ABBY: Our duugblrr Is
going to be married for the
second lime. We paid for her
first wedding. Her husband died
five years ago Who pays fur her
second wedding?
MOM AND POP

Proceeds from the workshop will go toward an art
scholarship to be awarded by the clubwomen.

T IP TO P...H O M E OF QUALITY FOODS AND MEATS
FR ES H

PORK

PO RK

HAN

W H O LE
FR YER S

NEC K
B O N ES

PIG
FEET

SALT PORK
BACON

Ml RESERVE TMC RIGHT
TO LENT QUAMTKS

Sanford

PRICES GOOD
FROM
TNUtt. t-29 •WtD. M

Qmttyl Unrial fevtofil
r o o o I TA M E l a riL C O M i

------ j w i i r a w n n w r a .

-

r_ ;

C

i M

r c D

W E S E R V IC E &amp; R E P A IR A N Y
s e w in g

" r

1

m a c h in e

.

o n

th e

I

!
i
J
,
1

M AKE

p r e m is e s

(6 0 D a y W a r r a n t y )

NOW
OPEN

L O C A T IO N !
A

V

I A

i l l

3832-34 ORLANDO DRIVE
H w y . 1 7 - 9 2 a t L a k e M a r y B lv d .

n

T iw tf

Y O U R CAREFUL

T O Y EOfix INSPECTION

P R E -G R A N D

u .

T T B T B S H J fC T P

O OFF

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING
SEPTEMBER 5th

49c. 29c. 2 9 V 99c

ALL
FABRICS
PATTERNS
NOTIONS
TRIMS

(Including Sale Hems)

G irlfrie n d Last W ord
On Plans For Family

Dog Obedience Classes

BOOM

le t M

ENTIRE
PURCHASE

Twenty-seven Seminole County 4-H*ers recently attended
•I II Summer Camp al 4-H Camp Ocala Members from Orange.
Volusia and Seminole counties participated In this week of fun
and teaming.
Slasl Bojanowskl. Sanlord. wus voted best camp counselor
for the week. Jaycl Bessesen, Geneva, was voted best gtrl
camper for the week.
Camp Is one of ihe many opportunities that 4-H provides to
encourage youth development through fun and education. For
Information on how in become Involved with Seminole County
4-H contact Shelda Wtlkens, 411 agent. 323-2500, Ext. 180.

S U P E R M A R K E T

(lowers and pearls and she
carried an arm bouquet of pink
roses and babies* breath with
satin streamers.
Mr s. L i s a M c E l v e e n o f
Winston-Salem. N.C.. cousin o
the bride, was matron of honor.
She wore a tea-length gown of
suede rose with sweetheart
neckline, sheer overlay and full
skirt. She carried a single,
long-stemmed pink rose with
b a b y ’ s b r e a t h and s a t i n
streamers.
Hrtdesmalds were Marty Dunn
of Sanford, sister of the groom,
and S h a r o n A p p l e t o n o f
Treasure Island. Fla. Their
gowns anti flowers were Identical
to the honor attendant's.
The bridegroom's father was
itesi man Ushers were Todd
Marshall o f Claudvillc. brother of
the bride, and Bob Lemons of
Pulaski. Va.. brother-in-law of
the groom
Im m ediately following the
wedding rrremony, Ihe parents
ol the bride entertained with an
outdoor reception at their home.
Afterwards, the bride and
groom left on a wedding trip lo
St John. U.S. Virgin Islands
They will make their home In
Tallahassee.

CLOUD MOM fO# LAZO* DAY

4’H'ers Attend Summer Camp

T I P - T OP

Bethel United Methodist Church.
Mr and Mrs Dale Marshall, Rt.
1. Claudvillc. air the parents of
the bride A gradttalc of Patrick
County High School, she re­
ceived her B A degree In ele­
mentary edui.it ion from The
College t*l William and Mary and
trachea th&lt; fifth grade in Jetferson County. Fin.
The bridegroom Is the son of
Braxton I
ir 2 119
Sanlord A m
Sanford, and the
late Mis Jc-atle Perkins A graduuti of Sctntnote High School,
Siitlurd he received hls H.S.
dcgiri to hotel-restaurant admim--tr.itk&gt;ii from Florida Stair
unit. tsity and was a member ol
the FSU soever team He Is
e m p lo yed by D ays Inn ol
America,
Given In marriage by her
'»ute .1 white
gown accented with lace and
IKNtrls. fashioned with a scoop
neckline flnunrrd and detailed
with pic,uls ,i luted bodice wuih
slightly raisj-ii waist and pull
slecy ri d! lai r . dgril with ! id lied
he ■ The ticted skill, bordered
with I.ii &gt; cvtended mio a lacetrimmed i ha pel length train.
Ihe hndi « fingertip veil was
attached I- a wrciili ul silk

P EC -G R A N D O P IN IN G
M tlCCS O N T H E S E A S O N ’ S
N EW ES T FA S H IO N FABRIC S
A N D H U N D R ED S O F OTKCN
ITEM S PRICED RIGHT!

O P E N IN G

T H R O U G H O U T

T H E

S A L E

S T O R E

THE MOST COMPLETE SELECTION OF DRESS FABRICS,
PATTERNS, UPHOLSTERY, NOTIONS, TRIM S, CRAFTS, DRAPERY . . .

.. J * u tT fy fjtw trv ri'

*to

�• •

J B — Evening Herald, tawlerd, FI.

&lt;*■***

• •

'Headline Chasers'

Th u rs d a y , A uf. i t , 1V9S

Host Invents His Own Game Show
By Joan H sn au er
U P I T V R e p o rte r

Rockin' And Sockin'
Sylvester Stallone, lett, s tars as Rocky
Balboa, a sm all time P hilad elp h ia boxer
who gets a chance at the big lim e when the
champ, C a rl Weathers, announces he will

tight the unknown pugilist, In the Oscarw inning motion pictu re "R o cky” to be
rebroadcast at 8:30 p .m . F riday on CBS,
channel 6.

Capone M ystery Could Be Solved On 1 V
C H I C / f l i O I t l l ' l i — A t e lc v liilo n c o m p a n y hat*
o ffe re d $ 5 0 .( X X ) in c r e a te a T V N p c c la l i i I m h ii ( tie
u n r t r u lln g o f a v a u lt o n c e u s e d b y g a n g n lc r A l
Capone.
T h e v u i i l l w a r* d is c o v e r e d la s t w i t t i e r III I tic
b u rti- m e n l o l I h r o ld l , r x t n g t o n H o l d t h a t C a p o n e
n u r d an I t i c h e n d q u a r t e r n o l b in l l l l c l l o p e r a t io n s .

Patricia Porter, executive director ol I tic
Stinbow Foundation. which own* lhe property,
nafd the foundallon lain been ofTered $50.(XX) by a
California firm Kf create a television rtprclal on Hie
vault.
S u r d t o w In a n o n p r o f it g r o u p t h a t u n d e r w r it e s
th e t r a i n i n g o f w o m e n In th e c o n s t r u c t i o n t r a d e *
It lia s b e e n t r y i n g I n im r H ie v a u lt m y n t e r y to h e lp
ra is e l u n d s I n t r a n s f o r m th e H i s t o r y h o t e l in lo a

m u s e u m , h o u s in g a n d o t h e r c e n t e r lo r w o m e n
C a|M &gt;ne r a n I lls m o b o p e r a t io n s I r n m H ie h o t e l
( r o in I ‘ &gt;28 lo 1 0 3 1 .
W h e n H ie v a u lt w a s d is c o v e r e d Ia s i w in t e r
d u r i n g r e n o v a t io n . H ie I n t e r n a l R e v e n u e S e r v ic e
s e r v e d S u n lt o w w i t h c l a i m s f u r $ H (X t.(X X ) In b a c k
t a x e s . I n t e r e s t a n d p e n a lt ie s It s a id th e g a n g s t e r
o w e d w h e n h e d ie d In 1 0 4 7 . T h e c la im s w e r e t ile d
In e a s e (.'a |M in e le d b e h in d s o m e t h in g o f v a lu e
w lie n h e w a s s e n ! l o p r is o n In 1 0 3 2 o n la x
c h a rg e s .
"W h y not Id

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ghallo youtn Kaiaa and Coltoy li|
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5 30

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11 (MlOOMER PYLE
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200

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730
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110|SESAME STREET |R|g
ID INSPECTOR OAOOET

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11 ATLANTA BRAVES PREQAMf

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8 35

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10:30
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T O RYANS HOPE
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530
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H O L ID A Y

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B u ffe t R e s ta u ra n t

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Featuring:

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MOVUIANOO I

R O A S T LEO O F LAM B
H O L ID A Y

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0E THE UNIVERSE
(D (D VOLTRON DEFENDER OF
1HE UNIVERSE

Ad|acent To The Holiday Inn
At The Marina

| ORoyd Theatres

400

1140 000 NAME THAT

new

For AIM!. Ihr best news was
12lh place showing ot
"Moonlighting." Jusl behind the
lop 10 and edging out NHC's
"Riptide" In Us lime |ierl&lt;Ml. with
"The In-Laws" on CHS In third
NHC’ s limited-run "ocean(Jucsi" lied lor 2 1si. winning Us
little |&gt;rr!ud against "Tile Sling"
on AIM' and a rrpeat of "The
Hlue and the Gray” on CllS.

Ih r

)|W| MISTER ROGERS (R)
|(D INSPECTOR DADQTT

Q DM-VER SPOONS (R)
|T O HOUR MAOA/INE

01 (D
SHOW

The final segment Is a replay of the headline
gume. After the fourth ami final headline, ihc
contestants can bet any portion of Ihelr winnings
on a question concerning Ihc headline. The
contestant who answers that question gets 0r»l
crack at Ihr $5,000 bonus headline.
Martlndale estimated that a conlestanl who
played a perfect game would walk away with
about $14,000 In rash.
The game show hosl has Iwo oilier games
ready to go. One Is "A License lo Steal." based oti
decoding vanity aulo license plalrs. Ttu- other Is
"Second Honeymoon.'* In which !..ds win a
second honeymoon for Ihelr pm "n.» by dr
monslratlng how well they know their elders.
"There are different kinds of game shows."
Martlndale said. "'The Price Is Right' or "Let's
Make a Deal' are game-games 'Wheel of Fortune.'
where some skilled Is Involved bul II alsri depends
on n spin of a wheel and winds up with n
shopping spree. Is a Las Vegas shopping spree
game. ‘ Headline Chasers' or 'Jeopardy' are
rdurallonal skill games.
"Stations look for different things In different
time periods. Our show Is formatted lo lead either
In or out of the news, although ll can stand
alone.”
He gets annoyed at people who call game show*
dumb — some are and some aren't, he said — and
bristles at those who object because they have no
rrdreinlng social value.
"What's Ihr redeeming social value of 'Threr's
Company?"' lie usked. "W hul's the redeeming
social value of 'Dynasty?' They make good
enlcrlalnmrnl and that's why they are on the
nlr.‘ *

m u Street Hiiu •

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"West 57lh." the new CHS
•t New hurl (CHS)
NEW YORK HJPII - NBC and
5 Miami Vice (NIK!)
CHS llrd for llrsi place In Iasi news muguzlnr. placed 4Hih on
of 50 shows.
5. Cheers INHCI
week's prlmr (line ratings race, a list
The top prime time shows for
7. (40 M tn u lra ICIIH)
hut the real news (nr C liS wan
H. Night Court INHCI
Ihr encouraging |M-rforiuancr ol the week ending Aug. 25 ac­
cording lo ihc A.C. Nielsen Co. :
9. (Ihree-way lie) Mac Grudri
"Hometown." ihr first of ihr
I . The Cosby Show (NUC|
Loud (AHC)
1985 Hfj fall season shows lo
2 Family Ties (NBC)
Circus of Ihr Stars (CBSI
premiere.
3. Kale ft Alllc (CHS)
Simon A Simon (CHS)
Ratings (or Ihr wrek ending
Aug 25. according In the A.C.
Nielsen Co., saw CHS with a 12 ti
rating and a 23 percent share ol
the audience and MU' alvi with
a 12 (J rating hut with a 22
percent share. AIK.' placed third
with an II H ruling and a 21
share.
"Ilninrtown" made Us dehul
In a special summer preview run
S E A F O O D and S P I R I T S
on Thursday nlgliis at 10 p.m .
taking die placr of "Knots Land­
ing.'' which CHS always puts on
CO M E TRY O UR HAPPY HO UR
hiatus rather than rerun the
ulghillme soap o|ieru during the
summer.
The nrw show. Inspired by Ihc
theatrical movie "The HigChlll."
llrd for 23rd In the ratings and
came In second In Us lime
1 DRINK CO CKTAIL PLUS 1 SH R IM P COCKTAIl
period, right hrhlml AHC's
4 P.M. TIL 7 P.M.
"2020" hut ahead ol NIK"s

300

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IN
(1)0*(UQM1
IS ENOUGH

F R ID A Y ,

MOON 6 SiMOH A j • *

Mk . h*p Orafilimn Sown w k Ii
to. to* tout* •
lliatonl
•So • Soon tccu—d ol muxtonng •
,antho, (I0g

7 thought o f this
Idea w hen I was
standing In tho
kitchen one d a y
at 5:30 In tho
m o rn in g roadlng

C a p o n e p o s t h u m o u s ly b u i l d t h e

b u i l d i n g lo r o n ? " P o r t e r s a id
S h e w o u ld n o t n a m e I b e t e le v is io n c o m p a n y ,
b i l l M ild s h e e x p e r t s l o r e c e iv e a s ig n e d c o n t r a c t
la t e r t i l l s y e a r.

TONIGHT'S TV
THURSDAY

NEW YORK (UPI) — Game show host Wink
Marttndalc has a vested interest In his new game
show "HeadlineChasers" — he Invented It.
Contestants are not the only winners on TV
games and Martlndale's Is the latest entry In one
of the biggest money-making areas of television.
Top-ranking ‘ 'Wheel o f Fortune." which
Mnrllndale called the most successful game show
In the history of syndication, will gross $90
million Ibis year. "Headline Chasers'* makes Its
debut Sept. 9. syndicated to perhaps as many as
140 stations nationwide, and II Is set to earn
about $30 million before II has even gone on the
air.
“ Jeopardy." with which It will bailie head-tohead In some markets such as Philadelphia,
reportedly will make $45-050 million In the
second year of Its return to the air.
Martlndale has thought up game shows before,
but this Is the first one that didn't end up In the
round file — the wastebasket.
"What really go! me started was realizing what
a news-oriented society we live Irt.” he said. "I
thought of this Idea when I was standing In the
kllrhen one day at 5-30 In the morning reading
ihc L o sA riflrlrs T lm r s.
"There was a banner headline — I don't
remember what It was — and I thought. If I look
mane of those letlers out. could I still come up
with the headline? I tried II on my wife when she
got up and she said. 'I don't know what the
headline says, but that would make a helluva
game show.' I said. ‘ I'm glad you said that
because It's exactly what I had In mind '"
Martlndale worked It nut and sold II lo Mcrv
Orlllln. a devoted games player whose gume
show. make tip a major j&gt;orllon of his $300
million TV empire.
"The show Is In three segments, spilt by the
commercials as most game shows are." Mnrtlndale said, explaining the game.
In the llrsi segment, two couples try lo figure
mil a headline, from which letters iuivc been
removed, and answer questions about the
headline story.
The second segment concerns cover stories and
voices of headliners Contestants musi guess
from clues the persons pictured on (he cover of
iwo magazines, and also must Identify iwo
celebrities, past or present, from hearing their
voices
"ll could he Clark Gable In 'Gone With The
Wind.' nr Roller! F. Kennedy, or -Jerry Fulwcll or
Jesse .Jackson or anybody." Martlndale said.

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SANFORD
lAtm m Ftaa TV* Warldl

�Colleagues Remember
Actress Ruth Gordon
EIX j A^TOWN. Mass. (UPlj —
Generations or show business
fans and colleagues today
mourned the loss of actress
Ruth Gordon whose death will
leave the world “ a colder
p l a c e , ’ ’ sai d one o f her
Hollywood costars.
Gordon, 88. suffered a fatal
stroke In her sleep Wednesday
at her s u mme r h om e on
Martha s Vineyard.
Her Irreverent attitude toward
serious matters made her a
favorite of a new generation and
her youthful outlook main­
tained her popularity through a
60-year show busness careerGordon, also known for her
work as a playwright, became a
noted character actress In her
later years, starring In such cull
films as "Where's Poppa" and
"Harold and Maude."
Her role In "H arold and
Maude" won her a new genera­
tion of fans. She played opposite
Hud Cort ns an elderly woman
who takes up with an oddly
suicidal young man and teaches
him the value of life.
"Her warmth and humanity
shown like the first patch of sun
on a dark and wintry day," Cort
said Wednesday. "The world
will be a colder place without
her enthusiastic, elegant and
adorable countenance."
Her performance In the televi­
sion movie "The Secret World
of the Very Young" earned her a

nomination In the upcoming
Emmy Awards. Her newest
film. "Maxle.” will be released
In September
Glenn Close. Gordon's eo-star
In "M a x le ," recalled. "T h e
simple Joy she brought to the
scenes we did together pul a
lump In my throat.
"Ruth exalted In life. Her
blazing professionalism and
generosity of spirit made It
obvious to me that we had In
our midst one of the greatest of
them all.”

She wrote her first novel at
age 85 in April 1982. when she
published "Shady Lad y." a
sexy story about a Midwestern
flapper who becomes a Ziegfeld
girt.
Gordon was 72 when she won
an Oscar as best supporting
actress tn "Rosemary's Baby."

In 1918 she acted In "Seven­
teen," a play based on a novel
by Hooih Tarklngton She mar­
ried a member of the "Seven­
teen" cast. Greg Kelly, and the
manage lasted until his death In
"She was unique as a charac­
1927.
ter." said Armlna Marshall,
Gordon's second marriage
director of the Theater Guild.
was to writer Garson Kanin.
"She was charming and young,
They collaborated on several
always young. "
hits, including “ Adam's Rib."
Ona Dr So usa. dining room
which starred Spencer Tracy
manager of the famed Russian
and Katharine Hepburn. On her
Tea Room In Manhattan, where
own. she wrote “ Over Twen­
Gordon lunched every day. said
ty-One. " which was a Broadway
she was shocked by the news.
success.
"She was such a dear lady."
Gordon ulso had n long liaison
DcSousa said. "She was my
with the late Broadway pro­
favolte. It (her death) took me
ducer Jed Harris. A son. Jones
by surprise."
Harris, was born lo the couple.
Funeral arrangements are
expected to be announced to­
Her stage credits include
"T h e Matchmaker" in 1955 and
day.
"The Good Soup" In 1960. both
Go r d o n was born Rut h
Gordon Jones In Quincy. Mass . on B r o a d wa y , and " T h e
on Oct. 30. 1896. She began her •Country Wife" In London In
career In sllcnl movies and
1930
made her first stage appearance
In 1984 Gordon returned to
as Nibs In Maude Ad da ms*
Quincy for Ruth Gordon Day
production of "Peter Pan" in
and the lormnl dedication of the
1915.
Ruth Gordon Amphitheater.

C a n 't Prosecute M a n
M is ta k e n For R obber
ORLANDO |UPI| He may huve much to
learn ubout "the ways
of the world." but the
muskt-d man mistaken
for an armed thief
while delivering flow­
ers to his girlfriend did
not violate the law aiul
he can t be prosecuted,
the state says.
Mike Mulligan. 26.
says hr was Just being
" r a n y " w h e n he
donned a brown paper
bag and appeared at
his new girlfriend's
place ol work toting an
armful of purple flow­
ers wrapped In paper.
But th e O r a n g e
County Sheriff's ofTlcc
received a report that
an armed robbery was
In progress, and six

deputies armed with
s h o t g u n s and the
s he r i f f ’ s h elico p ter
were dispatched.
The deputies were
f r u s t r a t e d with
Mulligan's attitude —
lie called the situation
"hilarious" — and up­
set- with how close he
and another man mist a k e n f o r an a c ­
complice came to being
shot during the inci­
dent Monday. The
deputies thought he
should face charges.
" I f this had hap­
pened at night somenne could have been
k ille d ." said Randy
Means, a sheriffs office
spokesman.
But T I m H e t z .
spokesm an for the

Orange-Osceola Stale
Attorney's Office, said
Tuesday there Is no
r r l m r wi t h w h l r h
M u l l i g a n c a n be
charged,
State law passed in
1951 to stem Ku Klux
Klan activities pro­
hibits people older than
16 Irani w earing a
hood while on private
properl y without
permission.
" T h a t statute re ­
quires there be an Intrni lo commit a crime,
hut that element wua
missing In this ease,"
said Hrlx. " I think
maybe I he sheriffs of­
fice should ask the
man to ride along with
a deputy some night.
Maybe then he would

rrall/c the serious situ­
ations they face,"
But Means said the
department temporartly has suspended Its
rlde-along program fol
lowing a recent Inci­
dent In which a deputy
wus wounded and a
rider suffered ear dam­
age when shots were
fired nt them.
"No mutter what you
do. there are some In­
dividuals who don't
understand law en ­
forcement or the ways
of the world." Means
. said. "We're going lo
let wrll enough lay.
"T h e way we res|xindrd is the way
we'll continue to rcs|Mind to save people's
lives."

Housing A u th o rity Seeks G ra n t
To R em o d el 70 H om es In S anford
By Deane Jordan
Herald S taff W riter
E n e r g y - s n u g h om es r e ­
modeled Inside and mil may tie
In store for many public hous­
ing residents il the state
approves a $70.(Kk) grunt, and
If th e S a n f o r d H o u s i n g
Authority manages lo match
the stale money with federal
funds.
The authority, w hich wauls to
renovate 70 of lls 480 unlls —
should know by late September
or early October whether Its
application Is approved or de­
nied. said Elliot Smith. SHA
executive director.
The authority has applied for
I he grant from the Governor's
Solar Energy Bank, a Florida
program that gives money lo
public housing authorities If ihc
money is used lo make the
homes more energy efficient
and if the grant Is matched with
non-stale funds. Smith said
The application for the grant
was approved Monday during a
meeting ol the authority's Board
ol Commissioners at the Red­

di ng G ardens C o m m u n ity
Center. The motion lo approve
the application passed 4 0. wllh
Commissioner Robert Fralzer
absent. The application was
mulled to the stale Wednesday
afternoon. Deadline lo apply for
the grant program this year Is
Friday.
Smith said he hopes lo mutch
the requested $70,000 stale
grunt with federal money from
the Comprehensive Improve­
ment A ssista n ce Pr ogr am
operated by the Housing Urban
Development agency.
The process to gel the monies
ts complex, but lls baste lour
steps are, SMith sand:
First, get conditional approval
for the grunt from the stale.
Two. get conditional approval
for the federal matching funds
based upon the conditional
stale approval Urtce the two
money agencies agree the hous­
ing authority Is eligible for the
rash (he authority can solicit
bids for the work It wants done.
In this case making 70 homes
more energy efficient plus Inte­

rior and exterior remodeling,
Once the bid Is approved —
step three — the authority
would get the federal matching
funds in Installments to pay the
contractor while the work Is
bring done Finally, when the
Job Is finished the authority can
get the pledged grant Irutn the
stair to finish paying the contractor.
Smith said the reasons for
seeking the stair grunt and
mutrhlng federal funds is lo
Improve (lie housing unlls. save
residents' costs by making the
units more energy efficient and
to Improve the residents' stan­
d a r d of h o us i ng , " t h e i r
habitat." he said
To make the homes energy
snug doors will lie caulked,
weal her stripping added to
windows a n d the windows in­
sulated. attic Insulation In­
stalled and efficient furnaces set
up Remodeling would Include
painting and lundseaplng on the
outside, new cabinets, floor tile
and other tile work on the
inside. Smith said.

Talk O f Gubernatorial Reprieve
For Gilbert Called 'Speculation'
TALLAHASSEE
(UP!) — A spokesman
for Gov. Bob Graham Is
w a r n i n g against
s p e c u l a t i o n t ha t
Roswell Gilbert could
yet be released from
prison through a 60day reprieve from the
governor.
S t e v e Hul l s ai d
W e d n e s d a y that
Graham has conoide r r d u s i n g his
authority lo bypass
r e l u c t a n t Ca b i n e t
members and order a
temporary release for
Gilbert. 76. The retired
engineer and Inventor
ts serving a mandatory
25-year senlencc In the
"m erry killing" of hla

t ermi nal l y III wife.
Emily.
But Hull added that
Graham Is unllkrly to
decide the mailer until
he ret urns from a
South America trade
mission next week. In
the meantime. Hull
said. Graham wants lo
avoid offering false
hope lo Gilbert or his
family.
The six-member Cab­
inet Monday turned
down G raham 's re­
quest for a condii tonal
clemency that would
have allowed Gilbert's
release from Ihc Avon
Park Correctional In­
stitution pending court
appeals. Ontv Secre­

tary of State George
Firestone and Commis­
sioner of Education
Ral ph T u r l t n g i o n
supported clemency,
Florida's constitution
also allows Graham lo
order 60-day delays In
prison sentences
without Cabinet ap­
p r o v a l . Hul l s a i d
Graham could con ­
tinue to grant Gilbert
reprieves fur us long us
he remains In office —
but polutrd out that
Gilbert s appeals might
last lunger than the
t i me r e ma i n i n g tn
Graham s term, which
expires In early 1987
Gilbert's lawyer lias
xald that even a tempo­

rary resp ite would
allow hts client to put
his affairs in nrdcr and
recover some o f the 40
pounds he has losl
since his May 9 con­
viction. Gilbert has also
suffered a blackout and
a urinary tract illness
while in prison
Gilbert has admltlcd
killing hts wife of 51
years wllh two shots to
the back ol her head
with a 9 mm Luger
pistol, but said he did
do as "an act of love"
lo end her suficring
from Alzheimer's Dis­
ease and osteoporosis,
a degenerative bone
malady.

evening mere Id. Sanford, FI

legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S K A M I
Nsfic*
* II horoby gluon Mat I
am engaged tn butlrw ti at 113
Lata Mary B ird . l i t ! Mary
Samlnol* County. Florida under
•S o f i c t i t i o u s n o i l » l
A P P L E T R E E S IF T S . *nd Mot
I Intend to rogittor tald name
wito Mo Clork ol Mo Olrcult
Court. Samlnol# County. Florida
in accordant* with Mo pro
vision* ol M o Fktlhov* Homo
Slatutot. T o w it SocHon M3 Of
F lor Ido Statutes 1*33
A T L A N T IC SUN CO AST
E N TE R P R IS E S . INC
I V Donna L . Fotoy
Pubuth August n . I t A Sap
lam bar S. II. IS U
OE 1-lJJ
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O UR T
OF T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT.
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C TIO N NO
M I t l t CA Ot F
S O U TH E A S T B A N X .N A,.
Plaintiff,
EDW AR D T
a l.

Q U IN N . J R . al

Defendants
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
R IC H A R D B BROOKE

TO
JR
R E S ID E N C E UNKNO W N
AND TO A ll parsons claiming
any Intorett by- through. unde'
or egentt to* aforesaid person*
YOU AR E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D T H A T an action lo
lor »c low o mortgage on ttw
following defer Ibed proparty
located In Sam m olt County.
F lor Ida
L d I. B'ork ' A " CO LUM BUS
HARBOR, according *o Ma plal
Mortol ** recorded in Plal Book
II. Pagtt 30 and I f ol Ma Public
R tcardi of Saminoia County
Florida
TogaMar with oil improve
m antk no w and h t r t a f t a r
erected on Ma properly and all
a a i a m a n l t . r ig h t * ap
purfenancet rant*, royalties
mineral Oil and gat right* and
profit*, water, water right*, and
water dock, and all liaturet now
or hereatiar attached to the
property. Including replace
menu and addition* (hereto
ha* been Hied again*! you and
you are required lo terra a copy
ol your written delenwt II any.
lo Ml* action on ROGER 6
BEAR ol A N D E R S O N A RUSH
Attorney* lor Plalnllll, whou
addrett It 111 E a il Central
Boulevard. Orlando Florida
JJOOi. and Ilia Me original wllh
lh# Clerk ol the above ttyled
Court on or before the JIM day
o! September, let! otherwiw a
judgm e nt m a y be entered
egamit you lor the relief de
mended in M a Complaint
W ITN E S S my hand and Me
teel ol ta&lt;d Court on Mi* 71 day
ol Augutt. less
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk ol Me Circuit Court
By Jean Brlllent
Deputy Clerk
Publith Augutt I f September
S, II. I*. IMS
DE I IM
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA
P R O B A TE DIVISIO N
File Number I I Cl* CP
IN R R i E S T A T E OF
A R TA V IO U S M A R IM O M
Oeceaied
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
AOA IN S T YHR ABOVE
ESTATE AND A LL OTHER
PERSONS INTERESTED IN
TH E ESTATE:
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I P I E 0 I k a l th e ad
minlttrallan of Me ettale of
Arlavlowt AAerlmon. defeated.
FIN Number SS ala C P . I* pend
mg In the Circuit Court lor
Sem inole C o u n ty, F lo rid * .
Probale Dlvltlen. Me address ol
which I* 300 N Park Avenue.
San lord. F L 11331 The per tana I
reprewnlallve ol the ettale I*
Linda McQueen who** addrett
It *11 Park Avenue. Apt IN .
Tllutvllle, F L
The name
and addrett ol the per tan* I
representative* attorney are
Ml torfh below
Alt pertant having claim* or
damandt egam it Mo atlale ar*
required. W I T H I N T H R E E
MONTHS FR O M T H E D A TE
OF TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A TIO N
OF THIS N O T IC E , to IIN with
the clerk ol the above court a
written itatement ol any claim
or demand May may have Each
claim m utt be In writing and
mutt indicate the bail* tor ttw
Claim. Ma nama and addrait ol
ttw creditor or hla agent or
a tto rn e y , and Ih t am ount
claimed II itw claim la not y*t
due, M* dal* whan It will
become due than be Dated II
the claim la contingent or uni I
outdated. Ih* nature ol th*
uncertainty than be tleted II
itw claim la tacured. ttw aecwrl
ly iha ll b* d ttc rlb a d Th*
claimant than deliver tuttioenl
cepwt ol Me tlolm lo Me clerk
to enable the clerk to moll one
copy to each per tone I repre
aenletive
All pertant Inleretted In Me
etlate to whom a copy ol M il
Nettct ol Admlnittrolwn hat
bean m a l lt d ar# raquirad.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FROM T H E fJA TE OF TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O T IC E , lo III* any eb
|action* they may hove Mat
challenge Me validity ol M*
decedent t will. Me guallllCB
•lena ol Itw per tonal repre
w n la l lt o , or I ho venu* or
lurltdktM nof the court
A L L C L A IM S . D E M A N D S .
A N D O B J E C T IO N S NOT SO
F IL E D W IL L BE FO R E V E R
B AR R E D
Dole Ol Itw llrtl publication ol
thli Motico ol Administration
Augutt » . its*
Linda McQueen
At Poraonal Reprewnlallve
of too Estate of
Aria viout Mar imon.
D t c iilt d
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
ROBERT D MELTON. P A
P 0 Drawer 1033
Orlande. F L S M B
Telephone IJBSISai MOO
Publith Augutt 13. It. INS
_______________________ DEI lit
NOTICE OF INTENTION
TO REGISTER
FICTITIOUS NAME
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Mai Ma undersigned, a t*:ring to
engage in buoinew under Mo
f i c t i t i o u s n a me ol P A R K
AVENUE SMOPPINO CENTER
located ol Pork Ave 1 » M SI
in Sem Mato Co. F tor Ma. inter to*
to rogittor t*td noma wllh Mo
C&gt;ert of Mo Circuit Court of
Seminole County- Ftortoa
Dated M il July It, HRS
Ted William *. Par mar
W J Carlton. Partner
toe Brentwood Drive
Sanford. Florid* HIT I
Publith Augutt H I t I t B
September f. legs
O il O

l egal Notice
CITY OF
L A K t M A R Y . FLO R ID A
N O YICE OF
P U B L IC H EA R IN G
TO W H OM IT M A Y CONC E R N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
by the City Committion of (he
City et Late Mary Florid* Mai
told Com m im on will hold a
Public Hearing at J 30 P M . an
Thurtday. September J INS to
Cantider a request tor appeal
of Ma Board ot Ad|ultmenl't
denial ol a raq j : l tor a
variance to allow lor Mo place
rvwnl ot a Irp* Handing Hgn to
be located live 111 feet wIMtn
the property line tald property
being iltuato In ttw City ot lake
Mary Florida, and deteribed at
follows:
From ttw SW corner ot ttw SE
to ot Section f. Tewnthlp 30
South Rang* 30 Eatt. Seminole
County. Florida, run thence
North along the tenter IIrw ot
Country Club Road I State Road
IS), tald centerline being alio
ttw Watt line ot Me SE to of w ld
Section *. tor a ditlonc* ol *0 00
toot, run thence South W S J S4
E eat tor a ditlonc* ot IS 00 tael
tor ttw Poinl of Beginning run
thence North along the Eait
right at way line ol Country
Club Rood tor o dltlanca o*
1*0 00 toot, run thence South
l**S314" Eatt tor a dltlanca ol
J3S 00 toot run Ihone* South tor
a dlttonc* of 1*0 00 teal to a
point on the North right ot way
hrw ol Lak# Mary Boulevard
run 'hence North 0t*ll'S4 ' Weit
along told North right ot way
line and parallel lo Ihe South
line ol ttw SE to tor e distance ol
13100 I n i I t the Point of
Beginning M c r t commonly
known at Ma Nor thee it corner
ot la ke Mary Boulevard and
Country Club Road containing
I 1*0 acre* moro or lot*
Ttw Public Mooring will bo
hold In Mo City Hall. IS! North
Country Club Rood lak# Mary
Florid*. *• 3.30 P M . on Sep
lember 3. 1*01. or at toon
th*r*a Her at pou ib lt. a I which
lima interested peril** tor and
againtt ttw request tlattd above
*111 bo hoard Said hoarlng may
be continued from lime to time
until final action It token by the
City Committion
TH IS N O T IC E tholl bo potted
In three (I t public place* within
ttw City ot Lake Mary, Florida,
at the City Mall, and pub Hiked
In Me Evening Herald, e nee*
paper ot general circulation In
ttw City ol Late Mary, ona lime
al leatl fifteen ( IS) day* prior to
tlw atoretaid hearing In addi
Han. tald notice than be potted
In trw area to ba contidered et
leatl fifteen (111 day* prior to
ttw data of Ma Public Hearing
A taped record ot M U meeting
It made by ttw City tor It*
convenience T h lt record may
not contlltuto an adequate re
cord lor the purpotet ol appeal
from a deettton mode by th*
City Committion with reipect to
tho foregoing m aile r Any
per eon wishing to ensure that on
odoquata record of Itw proceed
ing* It maintained tor appolleto
pur pot*t it advised to make th*
rwcetaary arrangement! et hit
.or her own eepante
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , FLO R ID A
I V Carol A Edward*
City Clerk
O A T I D : Augutt 13. INS
Publith I August I*. INS
D l l 111

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
F L O R I0 A
P R O R A TE DIVISION
F IL E N U M B E R : *S Stt CP
In Re
G u a rd ia n s h ip ol
B R IA N S C O TT W ITTM A N a
minor
FO R M A L NOTICE
BY P U B LIC A TIO N
TO M r Randall B Wiltman
Residence Unknown
Y O U AR E N O T IF IE D that a
Petition for Appointment ol
Guardian hot been tiled in thlt
Court and you are required to
III* your written detente* to the
Petition wilt* Me Clerk ol thlt
Court and to serve a copy
Mareol no late' Man September
X , I FES. on Petitioner'! et
tor nay whose name and addrett
It J Gary Mlllor. E squire IDE
East Control Boulevard, Or
lando. Florida 13E0I II you tell
to do to. lodgment may be
entered In due court* upon Me

Petition

W ITN E S S my hand and the
teal ol M il Court on th* lath day
ol Augutt INS
D A V ID N B ER R IE N
A t Clerk ottheCourl
By Belly M Ceppt
A t Deputy Clerk
First publication or potting cm
Aug 3*. INS
Publish Augutt If A September
S, If. It. INS
D E I II*
FICTITIOUS NAME
H oik* It hereby given Mat w*
ar* engaged In butlrwti at S13
Sugar Rldg* Ct long wood,
Somlnolr County. Florida under
Itw tlctlttoui name ot lOMAR
ENTERPRISES, and that w*
Intend to register te d name
with Me Clerk ot ttw Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance wllh toe pro
v IPont of Mo Flctiflout Nam*
Statute* To wit Section MS 0*
Florid* Statute* IFS3
I V Mark A Blinder man
I V Barbara Frank
I V lo u ll Bllndorman
Publith Augutt H. I f A Sap
tamber I, 11, INS
DEI 11*
____________
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given too! I
am engaged In butlnett of
Corner of ala &amp; DeWon Street.
P O Bee 1(3*. Ovitde. Seminole
County- H its Florida under the
tlcliftout name of CUSTOM
CANDLES, end that I Inland to
reglttor tald nom# wIM Me
Clerk cf the Circuit Court,
Seminole County. Florida In
accordance wtM Itw provisions
of toe FKtlHoua Noma Statute*.
Town
Section MS Ot Flo-ld*
Statute* m r
I V Short W. Kirby
Publith Augutt I t A September
S. II. If. MU
DEI 111
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given Mat wo
are engaged In butlnett at i l l
Sugar Rldg* C l. Longwgod.
S*mtool* County. Florida under
th e f i c t i t i o u s n o m * e l
T R E A S U R E P A K O F
CENTRAL FLORIOA. and Mat
wo intend to rogittor tald nom*
otto ttw Clark ot too Circuit
Court. Seminal* County. F lor Ido
to accordance wlto th# pro
visions ol th* FletMou* Nom*
Slatutot. To wit. Section M i 0*
Florida Statute* &gt;FS3.
LO*AAR ENTERPRISES
I V Mark A Blinder men
I V Barbara frank
I V Lout* Hinder man
Publish Augutt 11 IF * Sep
m i . in s
o tn n

Thu rsda y, Aug. If , ITB3— )B

Legal Notice
N O TIC E OF A
P U B L IC H EARING
T O CONSIDER
T H E ADO PTIO N OF
A N O R O IN A N C E
BY TH E CITY
O F SANFORD, FLO R ID A
Notice It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at
th* Committion Room m Me
City Hall In ttw City ot Santord
Florida al 3 00 o clock P M on
September 11 IMS to consider
ttw adoption of an ordinance by
th* City ot Santord Florida, at
follows
O R D IN A N C E NO !33t
AN O R D IN AN CE OF T H E
C I T Y OF S A N F O R D
FLORIOA
TO A N N E X
W I T H I N TH E C O R P O R A TE
A R E A O F T H E C IT Y OF
S AN FO R D , FLO R ID A. UP O N
A D O P TIO N OF SAID O R O I
N AN C E A PORTION OF T H A T
C E R T A IN P R O P ER TY L Y IN G
B ETW EEN SR
at A N D
A BAN D O N ED SEABOARD
C O A S T L IN E R IG H T OF W A V
A N D B E T W E E N U P S A IA
R O AD A N D OREGON R O AD
S A ID P R O P E R T Y D E IN G
S I T U A T E D IN S E M IN O L E
CO U N TY
FLO R IO A IN AC
C O R O A N C E w i t h THE V O L
U N T A R V A N N E X A T IO N
P R O V IS IO N S OF S E C T IO N
i n oaa F l o r i d a s t a t u t e s
P R O V I D I N G
F O R
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , C O N F LIC TS
A N D E F F E C T I V E DATE
W H E R E A S More he* boon
lilod with Itw Cily Clerk ol Me
C lly ol Santord Florid* a
pennon containing itw name* ol
Itw proporty owner* in Ih* area
described herein attar request
ing aruweetion to the corporate
» r «* ot the City ol Santord
Florida end requesting to be
Included therein end
W H E R E A S the P ro p e rty
Aopreiter ol Seminole County
F tor Ida having certified that
Mere are three property owner*
to Me are* to be annexed. and
Mai ta d properly owner * have
signed Me Petition for Anne*a
lion, and
W H E R E A S , II hot boon do
let mined Met the property d*
s c r ib e d h e r e in a f te r It
reasonably compact end con
Hguou* to Itw corporate area* ol
ttw Clly ol laniard Florid* and
II hat further bee" defer mined
that Ih* annexation ol tald
property will not retull In Ih*
creation ol an enclave end
W H E R E A S the CHy ol San
ford Florida It In a position to
provide municipal sarvicet to
Itw property described herein
and ihe Clly Commlitlon ot Ih*
C lly ot Santord, Florida deem*
il In Itw bet! interest ol the City
tq.accept said petition and to
anna* said property
NOW TH E R E F O R E B E IT
E N A C T E D BY THE P E O P L E
OF TH E C IT Y OF SA N FO R D
F L O R ID A
S E C T IO N i That Itw pro
perfy described below situated
In Saminote County, Florida, be
and Itw ta.n* i* hereby annexed
to and mad* a pari ol Ih* City of
Santord. Florida pursuant to
Itw vofunlery annexation peg
vision * of Section I f f Baa,
Florida Statutes
P A R C E L I Lott I I to 1R and
th* North ' i ol Loft 13 and It.
M M S M IT H S TH IR D SEB
D IV IS IO N , according to Itw plal
•hereof at recorded in P lal Book
I. Pag* M. et the Public Record*
ot Sem Ino'* County. Florid*
P A R C E L 3 Loft I I and » . M
M
S M IT H S T H IR D SUB
D IV IS IO N , according to M apfat
thereof at recorded In Plat Book
I. Pag* M, of the Public Record*
of Seminole County. Florida
S E C TIO N 1 Thai upon Ml*
Ordinance becoming effective.
Ih* properly owner* and any
resident on Ihc properly de
ter ibed herein Uwll be entitled
to all Me rights and privilege*
end immuniliet a* are from
rim# to time granted to retl
dents and prsparty owner I of
the City ot Santord. Florida and
at furtotr proHdod In Chapter
III. Florida Slatutot. end shall
furtfwr be tubjecl to ttw re
ipontibllitlet ol residence or
ownership as may tram lime to
H m t b# dotormlntd by th*
govarnlng authority ot Ih* Cily
ol Santord. Florida, and th*
provision* ot tald Chapter I II ,
F tor Ida Slatutot
S E C T I O N ! It any taction or
portion ol * taction ot this
ordinance proves lo bo Invalid
unlawful or unconstitutional. It
thall not be held to invalidate or
impair Itw validity, love* or
•Hoc! ol any other taction or
par t ot Ml* ordinance
S E C TIO N t Thai all ordl
nances or parts ol ordinances In
conflict herewith ba and Ma
sama ere hereby revoked
S E C T IO N 1 Thai thlt ordi
nance thall become olfocllv*
Immediately upon III passage
and adaption
A copy shell bo available al
Mo Office ot ttw City Clark tor
all pot tuns desiring lo a &gt;amino
Ih* same
All parties in interott and
cllK ant shall has* on opportuni
•y lob* hoard ot sold Iwor ing
By order ol Ih* City Com
mission ol ttw City of Santord.
Florida
A D V IC E TO TH E P U B L IC ft
a person decides to appeal a
doc'lion mad* with rotpact to
any matter considered al the
above meeting or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record ol
Iha proceeding*, including to*
testimony and evidence which
record it not provided by too
City ol Santord IFS IM S toil
H N Tamm, Jr
City Clark
Publish August II. September
1.11. It. IMS
D E I 131
FICTITIOUS NAME
Natic# It hereby given Mai I
am engaged In bvtMatt at Rl *3
Boe *43 Oak Way. Santord
Somlnol* County. Florid# 31331
under Ifw flcfllleut name of
S E M IN O L E SIGN STUDIO, and
the* I inland M rogittor told
nama wiM the Clark of Ma
Circuit Court. Somlnol* County.
Florida in accordance with th*
p rovlalen i ol th* F lc lltla u t
Nam* Slatutot. Tostff: Section
MS 0* Florida Stolutot IBS/
I V O Svonfwlmlee
Publith Augutt IS. 11. I t B
September I. IMS

CtiiL
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given Mat I
am engaged In butlnett at IIS S
P g lm t t lo Avs . S an to r d,
Sem mow County. Florid* m i l
under the HctltWut name *«
SANFORD BLUEPRI NT
C O M P A N Y , and Mat t inland to
regular tald nom* w llh to*
C lark of th* C ircuit Court.
Somlnol* County. Florida In
accordance wiM th* provision*
*1 bw Fictitious Nemo Slatutot.
Tow n
Wctwn MSo* Fiona*
Slatutot iH f
I V Tons Thurmond
Publish August II. I* B Sop
to m b o r l.lt Iftl
d e i in

Legal Notice
NO TICE OF A
PUBLIC H E A R IN G
TO CONSIDER
TH E A D O P TIO N OF
AN O R O IN A N C E
BY TH E C IT Y
OF SANFORD. F L O R ID A
None* it hereby given met *
Public Hearing will be hold at
th* Committion Room In to#
City Hall in Ma City of Santord
Florida at 3 00 t stock P M on
September J3 IMS. to consider
to* adoption of an ordinance by
th* City of Santord Florid* at
fol &gt;owt
O R D IN A N C E N O 1131
AN O R DINANCE OF TH E
C I T Y OF S A N F O R O
F l o r id a
t o
a n n e x
w it h in

AREA

th e

c o r p o r a te

OF

T H E C I T Y OF
san ford
Fl o r id a u p o n
A D O P TIO N OF SAID O R D I
NANCE A P O R TIO N O F TH E
P R O P E R T Y L Y I N G BE
T W E E N S R t« A N 0 TH E
VACATED SEABOARD
COASTLINE RAILROAD
R IG H T OF W AY
A N D BE
T W E E N O R EG O N A V E N U E
AN D JE W E T T ROAD
SAIO
P R O P E R TY B E IN G S IT U A T
E D IN SEMINOLE C O U N TY
FL O R ID A IN A C CO R D AN C E
W I T H THE V O L U N T A R Y
A N N E X A T IO N P R O V IS IO N S
O F SECTIO N III 044 F L O R ID A
S TA TU TE S P R O V ID IN G TOR
S E V E R A B IL ITY C O N F L IC TS
A N D C F F E C T IV C O A T E
W H ER EAS there hat boon
tiled with lh* City Clork ot Ih#
C ity ot Santord F tor I da a
petition containing tlw name* ot
th* property owner* in th* are*
douched Iwroinattor request
Ing annotation to Itw corporate
area of th* City ot Sanford
Florida, and requeuing to be
Included therein: and
W H E RE A i
Ih* P ro p e rly
Appraiser ol Somlnol* County
Florida having cortiliod that
tfwra art thro* property owner*
In th* area to ba annoiad end
that *aid property owners novo
signed th* Petition lor Ann***
Hon. and
W H ER EAS II hat bean do
tormtned Mat Me property do
t c r i b o d horoi n a i l e r It
reasonably compat I and con
Ilguout to Ih* corporal* area* ol
Ih* Clly ol San lord Florida and
II ha* lurlhor boon defer mined
M at Ih* annotation ot tald
properly will nol retuil in the
Cfoobonofeny enclave and
W H ER EAS the Clly of San
ford Florida It in a petition to
provide municipal to rv u o t to
Ma property described herein,
and that Ih* City Committion ol
Ih* City Of Santord Florida
deems II In Me bed Inlet etl ol
lh* City to accept said petition
and loannav said proparly
NOW TH E R E F O R E BE IT
E N A C T E D BY TH E P E O P L E
OF TH E C ITY OF SAN F O N D
FLO R ID A
S ECTIO N I That Hi* pro
parly deter Ibed below situated
In Saminol* County. Florid* tw
and Itw tame It hereby annexed
to and made a part ol the City ol
Santord Florid* pursuant to
Me voluntary annexation pro
v ltlo n t ol Section 1310*4
Florida Stolutot
P AR C EL I V to chains ol N
JIM It ol E S chains ol N E 9
et Section If, Township i t South.
Rang* 30 t a il. (L e tt E It II I.
Containing 1 S acre*, mere or
wee,
Parrel 1 S E '* ol N r &gt; &lt; «
ol SI Gartrud* Avenue |L*ta E
3 &lt;twine and road) and E to ot
S E to Section 7». Township If
South Rang* 10 Eatt. Csnfaln
ing tot acre*, mere or tote
Parcel 1 S to ol Lett 13 and
J*. all ta li If through 44. and
Lott 33 and 34. el M M Smith's
Third Subdivision. Piet Book I.
Pag* So Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida. Con
laming 33 11 acre*, more or
tost.
Parcal 4 Lott II. If and II. ol
lh* M M Smith t Third Sub
division, and N 130 leal ot S ISO
leal ol E M leal ol Lot 30. M M
Smith t Third Subdivision. Plal
Book I, Pegs M. Public Record*
ol Seminole County. Florida
Containing 30 acre*, mors or
tot*
Parcal I Block* 11 and 14,
M M Smith » Subdivision. Plal
Book I. Page I I Public Record*
ol Seminole County Florida
Containing 30 aerst. mgr* or
tot*
SECTIO N 1 Thai upon M lt
ordlnanct twcorning alter live
ttw proparty Denar* and any
reudant on th* property da
scribed heroin shall b# anllltod
to all ttw right* and privilege*
and Immunltwt a* ar* Irorn
lima to Hm* granted to retl
deni* and property owners of
ttw Clly ol Sentoru. Florida at
furtotr provided in Chapter 131.
Florid* Slatutot. and th all
turttwr b# subject to the re
tpontiblllHet of ret,dance or
ownership et may from time to
time be determined by th*
governing authority ol Me Clly
ol Santord, F tor Ida. and Ih*
provisions of tald Chapter 111,
Florid* Stolutot
SECTION 3 II any taction or
portion ol * section ot Mi*
ordinance proves to be invalid,
unlewtol. or uncontliluhonal. il
thall nol b* held ta Impair lh*
validity, tore# or sltocl ot any
other section or part of thlt
ordinance
SECTION 4 That all ordi
nances or part* ol ordinance* in
conflict herewith be end ttw
tame era hereby revoked
SECTION i That Mi* ordi
nan** Mall become eltocllvo
1m medial*ly u p r- ttt passage
end adoption
A ropy Mall be available at
lh* Oflico Pf lh* Cl*y Clark foe
all pertant desiring to eiemino
Ih* tame
All parlwt In inter *tl and
Clbient then here on opportuni
ty fob* heard of said hearing
By o*d*r ol th# City Com
mission of Ma City of Santord.
F tot id*
ADVICE TO TH E P U B L IC It
O par ton decide* to appool *
decision mad* wiM raspect to
any matter cantidorod a* Ma
abort meeting or (waring, he
may noad a verbatim record of
ttw proceedings, including to*
totlimony and evidence, which
record It not provided By lh*
Clly ol Santord (f SJtoOiOll
H N Tamm. Jr
City Clark
Publith August JJ Ji Sap
lember L II. IM1
DEI M

*

5
call to ll f r e e

■M O 341 t i l l

�Th u rs d a y , Aug. 79, 1H&gt;

* B — Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

legal Notice

legal Notice

Legol Notice

CITY OF SANFORD. FLORIDA
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
NOTICE T O T H E PUBLIC
OF TH E l*TH
Notice It hereby given that the
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
Board
of Ad|uftmant ot tha City
IN A N O FO R
ot
Sanford will hold • regular
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
mealing on September IS, H U ,
FLORIDA
M tha city Hall at It 70 A M In
CIVIL O lVItlO N
order ta conatder a request Ior a
CASEMO IS ltW CA** C
variance In tha Zoning Ordi
JUDGE MIZE
nonce at It pertalm to aide yard
RHEA REIN.
wfback requirement* In a GC 7
pietnim.
district ta:
vt
Tha E SO It ot tha W ISO ft of
VIRGINIA R N U N LE Y mlklt
tha N l«0 ft ot tha MEN of tha
VIRGINIA R UTH N U N LE Y and
NW v. SEC It. TWP IfS, ROE
— N U N LE Y , her spouse.
M
If W f,
Being more specifically da
Defendants
scribed at locaiad I II W 1]1h
NOTICE TO SUIT
Street
TO VIRGINIA R NUNLEY
Planned uaa of Ihe property It
a/h/« V IR G IN IA R U TH
to erect an addition ta a
N UNLEY a n d --------- NUN LEY.
ling la family residence
her spout*. If eny WTO Lantbur y
B L Park Ini. Chairman
Village Drive Atlanta. Georgia
Board ot Adimtment
JOMi
ADVICE
TO THE PUBLIC It
YOU. and ia d i of YOU, ara
a par ion dec.del lo appeal a
hereby not 11tad that an action lo
decIHon made with ratpact Id
loradote I mortgage on ft**
any mattar contittered of the
following property In Seminole
above meeting or heerlng. he
County, Florida
may need a verbatim record ot
Lot », Block " E " , let* ft*
Ih proceeding! including Ihe
Wait I taut thereof, RIDGE
letlimony and evidence, which
HIGH FIRST ADDITIO N, at
record It not provided by Ihe
par plat thereof, at racordad In
Clfyol Santovd (FSTMOIOt)
Plat Book It, Paga If, Public
Publlth Auguit 7f. September
Racardt of Samlnola County.
S. IMS
O f t ITS
Florida
AND Including ttia buildingi
CITY OF SANFORD. FLORIOA
and appurtanancai locat'd
NOTICE TO TH E PUBLIC
thereon, and togathar with tha I
Notice It hereby given lhal Ihe
furnltura, furnishings and Ur
Board ot Adlutlmenl ot Iha City
lurat iltuala tharaln and loaatad
at Sanford will hold a regular
tharaon.
meeting on September II, INS,
hat baan (Had againil you and
In Ihe Clip Hell at II 10 A M In
tha ebov* namad Dafandjntt,
order to contider a roguott tor 0
and you art required lo tarya a
variance In tha Zoning Ordi
copy of your written defames. it
nanco at It pertains to tide yard
a n y , to I t on M A R K
ttiback
requirementi In a
BUCHBINDER. I S O . Plain
SR IAA district In
tltfl attorney, whota addrat*
Loti 77 A 71. Fort Me Ilor.. PB
It Oadeiand Square, Sutia S07,
i PGaa
7780 North Kandall O rlv*.
Being more specifically da
Miami, Florida Jill*. on or
scribed at located sol Sum
hatnra September f, IMS. and
marlin
Avenue
UN tha original with tha Clark ot
Planned ute ot Ihe property it
Ihlt Court althar baton wrvlca
to erotl a garage addition to a
on PlelntlM* attorney or Imme
t nglo family residence
diataly lharaattar, otherwise a
B L Porklnt. Chairman
dele.,it will be entered againil
Board ot Adlutlmenl
you frr the relial demanded In
ADVICE
TO THE PUBLIC It
tha Complaint
a per von doc Idas lo appeal a
WITNESS my hand and teal
decision mads with retpecl lo
ot Ihlt Court, on Auguit f, IW5
any mailer considered at Ihe
DAVIDN BER R IEN
above mealing or hearing, ha
Clark ottha Circuit Court
may need a verbatim record ol
ftjy; Agnes F &gt;ulak
Ih proceedings Including tha
At Deputy Clot a
letlimony and evidence, which
Publish Auguit I. If. 77. 7*.
record la not provided by Ihe
latl
City ol Santovd if S jae oiosi
DEI u
Publlth August 7». September
(IM S
D E M IT

NAME L IO A L DESCRIPTION

TAX COST

N O TIC E OF TAX SALE
Notice It hereby given that on the JOth day ol August. INS. * (XI A M
ol Ihe County Service Building In Senlord. County ot Seminole. Slate
of F lor Ido. tea tala cortlllcatot will bo told on the following described
land to pay the amount duo tor tea** heroin tot opposite the tame,
together with ell rottt ol tuch tale and oil advortiling Sale will be In
Room N 111
B o u tr o a

R o o ti

8 7 7 7 9 .* 7

a

Sac 15 Tw p 2 1 3 Hga 2 9 E
Box 5 6 6 .2 5 f t 3 o r NE C o r o f 3 V 1/4
o f NW 1/4
Hun W 1 W f t fl 1 7 * .B1 f t
V 1 * 6 .1 7 f t fl to H H/V UH 436 K l j
nloD K I t l j
H/U to a (it 3 o T tieg N to
bag ( l e n d
bog 1300 f t K It 5 2 6 .7 7 f t
K o f W 1 /* c o r 3 « c ru n W 1 2 0 ,1&lt;« f l
h i o * . 52 f t u 11 .0 3 r t n 13.50 f t k
1 1 .0 3
r t N 75.26 f t U 2 5 . *9 r t H
1 9 .1 9
r t x 1 5 .6 0 f t N 5 r t ■ 10 .70
f t a 3 r t x ?*.6 9 r t x 23.0 1 r t 1
1 8 ,9 5
f t fl 2 7 * 3 * f t X 5.92 r t fl
10.40 f t u 5 , 9 ^ r t s 93.02 f t x
7 .3 6 f t a 1 3 .3 6 f t V 7 .3 3 f t fl
6 1 .* 7 f t x 7 . * i f t a 1 3 .3 9 f t w
7 .3 9 r t a a * . 30 r t to b o g )
A a o r lc e n H t r n J d o n t iu I
P ro p e rtie d In c

1 1 1 3 6 7 .6 3

3 (C 21 T irp 2 1 3 Itge 29K
Bog * 1 9 .0 1 f t N 1 dog 52 n l n 19
fleo W o f 3 1 / * c o r ru n N 6 6 d o g 37
■ i n 12 r o c E 3 0 0 .0 1 f t H 1 dog
52 R ln 19 nnc W 1 2 5 1 .8 5 r t K l y on
o u r v o 0 5 ,5 2 f t N 2 8 dog 7 R ln 36
b o o E 5 9 2 .2 0 f t N l y on c u r v e 2 4 2 .2 0
f t N 1 do g * 2 B i n 59 ooo W 8 0 2 .7 6
f t N K ly on c u r v e 3 1 5 .ON f t N 7 5 dog
5 R ln *2 h o c E 2 2 6 .7 6 f t N l y on
c u r v o 325 r t fl BO dog 9 R ln 31 « o c
U 9 0 6 .7 1 f t B 1 dog 52 n l n 19 b o c E
1264 f t 0 06 dog 9 n l n 51 eec U
1 3 2 1 .7 * f t B 1 dog N5 tain 3 s e c E
1 3 1 1 .7 3 f t tl 60 dog 15 R ln 36 110c K
13. * . 52 r t B 1 d o g 52 n l n 19 a a c X
0 9 * .2 9 f t to beg
C o u p le to

In t e r io r s

In c

* 1 1 3 * 2 .1 5

Hoc 21 Tw p 21B Hge 30K
Bog R oot M W ly C o r L o t 1 I n d i a n
H i l l * V i l l a g e r u n H '»7 dog 12 B i n
*2 000 W 17 2.50 r t 8 *2 deg * 7
B in 10 noc W 2 2 7 ,5 0 f t N *7 d o g 12
• in *2 sea U 1 1 1 ,5 0 f t 3 N2 do g
*7 Bin 10 n o c w 35 r t ft N7 d « g 12
Bin *2 aeo U 8 6 f t H *2 deg *7
B in I B h o c E 2 6 2 .5 0 f t N &lt;*'/ dog 12
B ln n j a oc W 2 3 0 f t 3 N2 dog 47
a ln 10 aoc W 10NG f t U *7 deg
12 B i n N2 m o K 600 f t N N2 d e g
12 R ln *2 aeo V 210 f t K N2 d e g
*7 B i n 10 e e c E 2 6 0 f t fl N? d e g
12 R ln ____________
* 2 aoc U160 f t N N2 d e g N7
_______
B ln 10 00c E T O f t 3 b ? deg 12 n l n
*2 eec E 370 f t It N2 deg n '/ n l n
10 sea E to beg
G TROY HAY, JR
TAX COLLECTOR
SEMINOLE C O U N TY. FLORIDA
Publlth August i. IS, II. JS IN I
D ll U

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Up**) ttyfj l.»y4*iT»*
Ifom 1*vacfttlKJt* Iff
l«miM frtKiftf* |1«BI Mid
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PREVIOUS S O L U T IO N “ The theater &gt;t auppoaed lo
show lit# oil to people toe on a grand scale We have
banalized N ’* — Ltv Ullmann

B LO O M
0 M . M *r
6M&amp; W
x u ra p
josm cx

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
G EN ER A L
JURISDICTION DIVISION
CASE NO IS IM1CA4* P
P E N I N S U L A F EDE RAL
S A V IN G S AND LOA N
ASSOCIATION, a United S'alet
corporal Ion.
Plaintiff.
vt
D K E ITH KIRSCHGESSNER.
APR IL C. KIRSCHGESSNER.
VICKI J KIRSCHGESSNER.
ASHW OOD C O N D O M IN IU M
ASSOCIATION, INC , DONALD
H H U B B A R D . CLARA A
HU B B A RD , THOMAS J
HARMON. AND JAY COMO.
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION:
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE PROPERTY
I Fiend# Bar No I t « f } l
T O Defendants. D K E ITH
KIRSCHGESSNER and APRIL
C KIRSCHGESSNER. rend
naca unknown, and all per sent
claiming Iniaratl by, through,
under, or egalntl said Delon
dent 1
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D thal an
action lo Ior »c lose on the follow
Ing described property In
Seminole County. Florida
U N IT 10} E. In ASHWOOD
CONDOMINIUM, according lo
I ho Doctor ahon of Condominium
thereof, recorded In Official
Records Book i l l T. Peg# 1500
and emended In Official Ra
cord* Book UR. r*ge 7J4 ol the
Public Records el Seminole
County, Florid*, together with
an undivided Interest in the
common elements declared In
said d a c la ra llo n ol Con
dominium lo ba an eppurfence
lo *ha Con-tom Intom unit
hat been tiled agemst you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written defenses, it any,
lo II on JAMES W SHINDELL.
P la in t if f t attorney whose
a d d r e s s Is S m o t h e r s A
Thompson. 1501 Allred I duPont
Building, laf East Flagler
Street. Miami. Florida, on or
before September IJ. INS. end
llle the original with the Clerk ol
this Court either before service
on Platntill’i attorney or imme
dielety thereelter, otherwise a
dolaull will ba entered against
you lor Hie relial demanded In
the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and teal
ol this Court on IJIh August.
INS
ISEAL)
DAVID N UERRIEN
as Clerk ol said Court
B y ; Susan t T ebor
as Deputy Clerk
Publish August IS. JJ, Jf, Sep
lember S. INS
O EI *J
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IG H TE EN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE NO M ate CA OS Drv O
PAN AM ERICAN MORTGAGE
C O R P O R A T I O N fo rm e rly
A T I C O M O R T G A G E COR
PORATION.
Plaintiff,
vs
LAWRENCE G WARREN and
K A tH E R V N R WARREN. Me
wife, A N G E L O A N T H O N Y
P A H E 1 C and M A E A
FARESE. hit wife, and C ITY
CONSUMERS. INC
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
ANGELO ANTHONY
FARESE
MAE A FARESE
Address Unknown
YOU ARE HER EBY notified
lhal a Complaint lo foreclose e
Mortgage encumbering In# lol
lowing real property
Lol 703 SPRING OAKS. UNIT
4, at cording lo the Plat Ihereof
as recorded In Piet Book If,
Pages 111 »# Public Records el
Seminole County, Florida,
has been tiled against you and
you ara required lo serve a copy
ol your written defenses, II any.
lo d on JOHN M McCORMICK.
Attorney lot Plamllll, whose
address is Pml Office Boa Mil.
SOI East Church Street, Orlando.
Florida. JJIOI. and Ilia Ihe
original with Ihe Clark ol the
above styled Court on or before
September IJ. IN I, otherwise a
default may be anlared against
you lor relief demanded In the
Complaint
WITNESS my hand and seal
or said Court on August IJ, INS
ISEALI
DAVID N BERRIEN
Clerk ol lisa Circuit Court
l*y Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clark
Publish August IS IJ, If, Sep
lember s. left
OEI (a
F IC T H IO U IN A M I
Notice Is hereby given that I
•m engaged In business el JIM
S Orlando Orlva, Sanford
Samlnola County. Florida under
•he Itclllleul name of MOVIE
R EVUE, and lhal I Intend lo
register said name wl*h Ihe
Clerk el Ihe Clrcull Court.
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with Ihe previsions
Ol the Fictitious Name Sfelutee.
To w ll Section (aloe Florida
Slalwles INF
/*■' Rose R Merten
Publish August 1 ,1L IJ, j» let)
O EI J*
FIC TITIO US NAME
Notice Is hereby given lhal I
am engaged In business al J ill
i Orlando Drive, Sanlgrd.
Seminole County, Florida under
•he fictitious nemo of V C R .
and thal 1 Inland to regular said
name with the Clark of the
Circuit Courl Samlnola Ceunty.
Florida In accordance with Ihe
prevlkiona of the Fictitious
Name Statutes. Towll Section
M l Of Florida Statutes Itp .
I f Rosa R Marion
Publish August I. IL JJ, Jf, INS
DC I JS

C O U N T Y

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Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIG H TE EN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIOA.
INANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO M JtfJ CA *f P
GENERAL
JURISDICTION DIVISION
TALMAN HOME FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN.
Plaintiff.
vs
VIRGIL M HICKMAN. JR.,
s single parson.
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
CewstrvcJtve Servlet
TO VIRGIL H HICKMAN JR
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D lhal an action hat
been commenced to foreclose a
mortgage on tha following real
properly, lying and being and
situate In SEMINOLE County,
Florida, mart pertkuUrly do
scribed at foPowi
Lot 10. Block C. LYNWOOD
REVISION, according to tha
plat thereof as racordad In Plat
Book u , Pagas JJ and JJ. Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida, mora commonly known
a i. JU S Caulfield S tra ti.
Apopka. Florida
and you are required IJ serve a
copy ol your written defense. II
e n y . lo It on W I E N E R .
SHAPIRO A ROSE, Attorneys
lor Plaintiff, what* address Is
teds Cypress Center Drive. Sulla
MO. Tampa. Florida. Jiao? on or
baler* September It, INS. and
III* Ihe original with Ih* Clerk ol
this Court either belor* service
on Pleinllfl't attorneys or Im
mediately thereafter, otherwise
a default will tw entered againil
you lor ih* relief demanded In
Ihe Complaint
WITNESS my hand and seal
of this Court on this Ulh day ot
August, INS
( SEAL)
D A V ID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Publish August IS. JJ. It. Sep
Umber S. INS
D E I (S

_________ _______

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AN D FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CASE NO (4 IMS CA SS E
NATIO N W ID E M UTUAL IN
SURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiff.
vs
R OBERT W LUSK, Indlvldu
al l y dibit G U L F C O A S T
COMMUNICATION.
Defendant
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO ROBERT W LUSK. Indl
vidua 11, d/b/a GULF COAST
COMMUNICATION
address unknown
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D lhal an
at lion lor repayment ol monies
owed lor services rendered has
(men tiled and you are required
lo serve * copy ol your written
defenses II any. lo II on Samuel
J Weiss. Plalnlllls Attorney
whose address Is Post Office
Bo&lt; IN I. SJt B North Magnolia
Av* , Orlando. Florida JJIO) on
or belor* Sapt JJ. INS. and III*
Ih* original with Ihe Clerk ol
this court either belor* service
to Plalnlllfs Attorney or Imme
dletely Ihervattar. otherwise a
default will be entered egaiml
you lor Ih* relief demanded In
rh* Complain I
WITNESS my hand and Iha
seal ol this Court an tha Itfh day
ol August. INS
ISEALI
DAVID N BERRIEN
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By JeenBrlllenl
Deputy Clerk
Publish August JJ, Jf. Sep
Umber S. IJ. INS
DEI IJf
IN TML CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH
JUDICIAL CIRCUII
IN A N D FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
NO (S Ifjf CA OfO
PB M O H T G A G F COR
PORATION
Plelnlill,
vs
PATRICK J M ILLER elel
D*Undents
NOTICE TO D E F E N O
TO PATRICK J M ILLER
and BE T H ANN MILLER his
wile
IS Ridgevitw Drive
Silver Creek. Georgia XII IS
SUIT TO
FORECLOSE MORTGAGE
You. PATRICK J MILLER
and BET H ANN MILLER, his
wita, and all Ihosa claiming any
right, (III* or Inleresl by
through or under you or*
hereby noli lied thal a Complaint
lo Foreclose a certain mortgage
on the following described pro
petty, to wit
Lol 4. DEER RUN. UNIT 10.
according le the Plat Ihareol. as
recorded In Plal Boo* it Peg.,
SJ and U. of Ih* Public Records
ol SaminoU County, Florida,
afk/a Sat taiigrean Place,
Casselberry, Florida,
has been tiled against you. and
you are required le u iv e a copy
ot your eniwer or pleading to
Ih* compleinl on tha Plaintiff 1
a t t or ney , P A T R I C K Me
G R O TTY. ISIS N W i*t Street.
Room HOT, Miami, F lor Ida
Ulaf. and llle Ih# origin*! an
twer or pleading In Ih* elite* ol
the Clerk to Ih* Clrcull Ceurl on
or before Ih* 1st day el October.
INS
II you 1*11 to do so. |udgm*nt
by detowll will be token egelnsl
you lor the rebel demanded In
Ih* Compleinl
D A T E D this Jtlh day ol
August, H IS . at Sanlord.
Seminole County, Florida
ISEALI
OAVIO N BERRIEN.
Clerk Semtnoi* County Circuit
Court
By JaenBritlenl
Deputy Clerk
Publish August Jf. September
S. II. If. INS
DEI Iff

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Legal Notice
IN TH E CIRCUIT CO URT
OF TH E E IG H TE E N TH
JUD IC IAL CIRCUIT,
IN AN D FO R
SEMINOLE CO U N TY,
FLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION NO
as a m CAef E
SOUTHEAST MORTGAGE
COMPANY.
Plelntltl,
vs
DENNIS A HOLLAR, etal .
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HER EB Y G IV EN
that on the JOth day of Sep
Umber. INS. at II OS a m at
the WEST Front Door of the
Courthouse ot Semlnoi* Ceunty,
Florida. *1 Senlord. Florida, the
undersigned Clerk will offer tor
sal* to Ih* highest bidder for
cash the following described
reel prepertr
Lo« IJ. Block l . OAKLAND
ESTA TES 2ND SECTION. a&lt;
cording to the pit! thereof a*
recorded in Plal Buok &gt;A Pages
M and at. Public Records of
Samlnola County, Florida
Togathar with all structure*
and Improvtmanti now and
haraattor on sold land, and
(1■lures attached (hereto, and
all rents, issues, proceeds, and
profit* accruing and In accrue
from teid prem ies end el«o all
gas. steam, electric, wetor, end
other healing, cooking, re
grlgeralmg lighting plumbing,
ventilating. Irrigating, and
power system*, meets1net, ep
pllence*. Hetufet. end ep
purtenencet. which now ere or
may hereafter pertain to. or be
used wltb. in. or on said pro
mlses. even though they be
delached or dtlacnebU
This sal* is made pur suant to
Summary Final Judgment In
Foreclosure entered In Civil
Acbon No ISOJJSCAOOE now
pending In tha Circuit Court In
ar j ter Samlnola County
Florida
D A T E D this IMh day ol
August, INS
ISEALI
DAVID N OERRIFN
CLERK OF THE C IR C U IT
COURT
By DlaneK Brummell
Deputy Clerk
Publish August Jf September
S. INS
DEI lt»
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
I NANDFOR
THE E IG H TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
I NANDFOR
SEMINOLE CO U N TY.
FLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION NO 1
as traacA j» P
S JOSE PH DAVIS. JR
DIVISION P
IN T H E A D O P T I O N OF
J U L I E M A R I E
DiBAHTOlOM EO,
N O TICEO F ACTION
TO VORIS PATRICK CONNOR
ADDRESS UNKNOWN
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D thel a Petition lor
Adoption has been tiled In the
above referenced mailer and
lhal you ara required lo serve a
copy ol your Retponsa or An
swer to ih* Petition upon Ihe
P allllener’s attorney. W C
AIRTH. JR . ESQ . *1 P O Boa
m s . Or Undo. Florida lJaOJ. and
IIU tha original Response or
Answer In Ih* olllc* ol the CUrk
et the Clrcull Ceurl lor SaminoU
Ceunty, Florida, ef Senlord.
Florid*, un or belor* Ih* tffb
day ol Sepumber, INJ It you
toll to do to. a Default Judgment
will be taken againil you lor Ih*
rebel demanded In the Petition
D A TE D *1 Sanlord. Seminole
County, Florida, this ISIh day of
August, A 0 , INS
DAVID N BERRI EN
CL E RKOF
THE CIRCUIT COURT
BY Agnes Sulek
Deputy Clerk
Publish August JJ, Jf. Sep
lember S, IJ. INS
d e i n*
IN TU B CIRCUIT CO U RT
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
CIVIL DIVISION.
IN AN D FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
c ase no

utfaaC A ia

71 — H « l p W a n te d

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Sem inole
322-2611

t :3 0 A.M . ■ 5 :3 0 F .M .
MONDAY Hint FR ID AY
SATU R D AY 9 - Aden

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice l| hereby given that I
am engaged In business et ItU
Hound* Lake Drive. Winter
Perk F tor KM. U f f l Semlnote
Ceunty, Florid* under the
hum ous nem* el WI NT E R
PARK INTERIOR D ESIGN ] .
and that I Intend to register said
nem* with the Clerk et the
Circuit Court. Semlnoi* County
Florida In accordance with the
provisions *1 the Fictitious
Nem* statute*. To wit Section
(as 0* Florida Slttute* IN I
/ f Michel* L Randall
Publlth August L 11. JJ, If, INS
D EI W

I
61C i I
7 consecutir* tin e s 52C l I
10 CM M CM tlfd tin e s 46C a I
Contract K ite s Arallebla
3 U rn * Mini*
_____________ i_____

D E A D LIN E S
N o o n T h e D a y Before P u b lica tio n
S u n d a y • N o o n F rid a y
M o n d a y • 11:00 A .M . S a tu rd a y

21—Personals
CRISIS PKEGMANCT CENTER
A B O R TIO N C O U N S E LIN G
Fr o* P r a g n a n r y Test s
C o n fid e n tia l In d iv id u a l
assistance
C a l l ter
appointment evening hours
available________________ I I I feet

W A N TE D A P P L E IIE USER
G R O U P IN F O R M A T IO N in
Orlando are* Also wanting to
compare Applesoft Sqttwer*
ter system Contact Tins,
je s e fs itrt

25—Special Notices

71— H e l p W a n t e d
Avto aale*
gr***Jv* u it* people tor a
unique concept in discounted
NEW cor sates and leeting
Call MOO* 1JJ* **k Ctlnton
Avees Beauty Ca.
Start your own butirvm hr ES!
m Wto ..........................TO-IBM
AVON lA R N IN O IV rO W III
OPEN T ERRI T ORI ES HOWl It
tH JB M a r m e e if

BE EMPLOYED
Long and efeen term |abt
II N not toe yams*, a* is net to*
aid Taking epglicattoM

CALI m u ______ 322-0057
• MARY KAY COSMETICS*
Skin cere and color flair
Co n n i e
m m t
TLC Heme Como*meet.Inc
Quality Live list
Orace
,—
....... JTI M f l

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
Babysitting In my ham* R*
spanslbl* mother Hot maelt
TO t*e(. anytime____________
BebysIHmg In my hrm», Mon
Frl. Fenced yard behind
PlnecretlEUm TO STO
Babysitting In my home Mon
Frl. » DO am to ( JO pm
Fenced yard Hot Meats

TO*Mf

33—Real Estate
Courses
* * * *
• Thinking at patting a a
a Real Estate Licenset a
W* alter Fra* Tvttlen
and continuous Training I
Cell Dicker Vicki tor dauils
i f l lU f. J B -U N I v t . ft* l*U
K?v*tef Florida . Inc.
It Years Eipetiarscel

5 5 - Business
Opportunities
Family restaurant Low Inter
etl assumable mortgage*
Reasonable lee**
Sam*
location JO year*
Full
aervlct
Celt lor detail*
_ £ w w _B re k * r_jjj|* N _____^

Al—Money to Lend
NE E D MON E Y F
Everyone does at some time II
you own a home end have *
|ob. IT* easier then you think
CREDIT?
NO PROBLC Ml

F RE COLANDER INC.
The Mortgage Peeeit
fit ■ Alternant* Drive
" Licensed Mortgage Broker

71 —Help Wxnted

Employment

NOTICE OF PETITION
OF ADOPTION OF A MINOR

FICTITIOUS N A M I
Notice Is hereby given thel I
am engaged In business et J ill
S Orlando Drive. Senlord,
Samlnola County. Florida under
the llctl Itaut name el MOVIE
WORLD, and lhal I intend to
register said name with the
Clerk at the Circuit Court.
Seminal* Ceunty. Florida In
accordance with Ih* previsions
et the Fictitious Nome Statute*.
T#wit Section base* Florida
Statutes IfSf
'* Hose R Merton
Publish Auguit I. IS. n . Jf. INS
D EI U

•■p All thifto Apply In
person: Lake*lew Nursing
Center, ftf E BndH . tentord

NURSES AIDES

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 time ........... 67C .
HOURS
3 ca tstttu tiff lin e s

IN THE M ATTER OF ADOP
TION OF Two Minors by Iheir
SUplalher GARY G ME L L E N
TO TMOMASZW
HRONOWSKI
Latl Known Address
Unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D lhal * Petition tor
Adoption ol A Miner. BEN
JA M IN W ES LEY HANSEN hot
been Hied by the Petitioner end
you ere required to serve a copy
of your defense, it any, lo II on
Petitioner. GARY G M E L L E N
whose address is I0J Bunker
Lena Senlord. Florida Jiff! end
In* the original with the Clerk ot
Ihe above captioned Court on or
belor* October I. lf*S otherwise
a decree ol adoption may be
entered In Ih* above cause as
demanded .n the Petition
This nolle* shell be published
once each week lor lour con sec
uilvo week* In Ih* Evening
Herald
WITNESS my hand and Seel
ol said Court *• Sanlord Florida,
on August IJ. INS
( SEAL)
OAVIO N BERRIEN
CL E RKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY, JeenBrlllenl
Deputy CUrk
Publish August Jf. September
I, IJ. If. INS
O EI lf(

O rlando - W in te r Park
83 1-9 9 9 3

NURSES AIDES

323-5176
MJJ Frvwck Ava
Acrylic Applicator* needed to
apply protective coating on
car*. be*U end plane* U to
I I I pec hour W* train For
work m Senlord area cell
_____ Tempo ( I J Id* M il

AIR CONDITIONING
MECHANICS
Intlelletlon Salary bated on
•kperlenc* plu* benellts Paid
vacation

►U FEE I

AAA H U P
A Otvtotor* el AJLA Ewetayniaat
B E A U T I C I A N Eeperltnced
Good Hwy tf FJ location for
growth T O T ill
_______
“ CASHIERS NtEDCD
For convenience store with gat
Second L third shift available
Tenner* Oil.
ee* Lake Mery Bfvd , lentord.
Fl
C H IL D C A h l CRN IER
Needs Dedicated Teacher lor
aftornoont lake Mery. 1JJ
ITSd________________________
Child car* needed after school
Desire mature woman with
own transportation Refer
once* Cell TO KM oftor*__

CHURCH ORUNIST
Wednesday evenings end Sun
day service* Send return*'
and church background to SI?
Perk Av* . Senlord JJTTI
Attn Music Director________
CMUXCM SECRET ARY
Monday through Friday, ( JO
A M to S P M Oftlc* end
public relations skills rt
qulred Apply by celling JJI
Alt I _______________________
CLERKS
Full end pari tlm*
help tor convenience store
Willing to work night* end
week end* Send return*' to
P 0 Bom 1*1.Osteen, Fl JJfie
Computer Operator A Pr#
(ram m er Cell New Hart
tent lit ?SOS
Cenetrvctun Worbert A Labor*
All Trade*I Call New Horl
tone. H I 7SOB______________
D IN T A L ASSISTANT Daniel
eaperlence naerttary ter test
growing office Pled** cell:
IfOilfTWJBB_______________
EXECUTI VE1BCRI TARY
With or without shorthand1
Pr t l ar r ebl y W A N G word
processor* Needed In the
lake Mary Are*
Ablest Tamperary Servket
in &gt;***
Eaparlenced Smell Engine
Mac hen let Apply In person
ACTION ALOW I R MART
U N I ELM A V I
SANFORD, FL. m i l

EXPERIENCED DCNTU
ASSISTANT
With oapended duties needed
tor an taclllng end chalitng
Ing Dental Practice Pert tlm*
hours with full lime benefits
In Orange City K minutes
tram Longwood Send resume'
to
J Pina Meadow Court, OeBery,
_________ Ft* U71J_________
Ft**- 4 Hants i Day I
*4 lo LI An Hour interesting
Phone Work W# will train In a
casual atmosphere Cell D*
Full end pert lime position* new
available M ull be dependable
end dlspiar a pleasort per
tonality Apply In person el
Ret *. 1000 W HWY AM.

e nd h o l i d a y *

T O M A T O _________________
Air Conditioning Duct Mechanic
Eiperenced only Up tot* par
hour Call JJI O llt
ALL T YPES JOBS
START H O IK NOW I

OI NBV A AREA heed mature,
responsible woman tor after
u hool core In my home Mult
have reliable trensporlehan
CeM J4MJJI . between 7 PM
k t PM
________________ _

ro
romca
g,!

Immediate openings tor ep
pointmtnl setters I? or older
preferred No eaperlence nec
aeeery Full lime only Cell
iff STO____________________

LABO*
m i mm

’ p F

I HO
NT
FBI I
Report ready tor work at A AM
eot W 1st St
Sanford
m i m
ARB
fo u
I T I U
UNEMPLOYED? ARB YOU
T H IR D OP
HE ARI NG.
Wf HI LOOKING
FOR
EXPERI ENCE" ? ARE YOU
REALLY
SATISFIED
WORKI NG
FOR
THE
MINIMUM WAGE? WOULD
YOU LIKE TO R ECEIVE
TN I
NECESSARY
TRAININO TO CURE TM I
ABOVE PROBLEM?
T M I NAVAL AIN RESERVE
CAN H E L P T O U I
THE NAVAL AIN R IS IR V E
IN JACKSONVILLE
MAS
OPENINOI
IN
ALL
AVIATION
FIELD S
Al
W IL L A l M ANY OTHER
PROFUSIONS
JOIN THR

NAVAL A ll RISC NYC
AND YOU'LL T AKE A RIO
STEF
TOWARDS
YOUR
FU TU R E a OOOO PART
TIM E PAY. a TECHNICAL
TRAININO. a TH E NEW Ol
BILL THAT F U LLY PAVE *
R ETIR E M EN T a n o R LIPE
INSURANCE ARE
ONLY
SOME OP T M I R IN IP IT S
TH E NAVAL AIR R EIE R V R
HAS TO O P P IR . SOME *
EXCELLENT ROMU1II
ARE ALSO AVAILABLE TO
Q UALIFIED APPLICANTS.
DON'T WABTR AN
OPPO RTUN ITY!
CALL TO LL F R E E i

14*5211311
FOR M O R I INFORMATION.

LABORERS
Reliable workers needed
tor first shift
AMest Temper ary Servket

___________B I J N I __________

LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
N O M EI
Needed Company tee** c*
rear minded Individual Inter
tttod in working In * Chrtsllen
Environment 111 *113_______

All thins Good atmosphere
andbeneftu Apply et
OeBery Manor *0 N Hwy tf/fl
_______ DeBory E O E . _______

Otfic* Help- AM Hindi!
Celt N— Horttons ........J i t TWO

Ofdt Tlw Rood Truck DrmtCell New Horl cons
JJI fSOO
PART TIM E
Work from home servicing our
customers on new Ntaphon*
program Eem up to *10 hr
Celt **04771 eraiAM U,

PAYROLLCLERK
W* are seek Ing a wall organized
In d iv id u a l, wi l e 1 J yf .
payroll eiperienc* In * com
pvtof lred environment Sue
cettlul candidate
wtll be
reeponstbto tor processing a
X»employe* payroll weekly
rentier

KARCAR ALUMINUM 7100.
___
3225510.
P h ot o Mo d e l s tor pr i nt ,
catalog*, etc With or without
t i p T O *0*7 tor Interview

REAL ESTATE
SALES PEOPLE
High
Earning* PoNnllell
Modern office In eacellent
location Complete training
program New dlvliton ot old
•tlablished llrm Call now
tor detent on pleasant
working conditions and to
secure your Mur*
Jim Roftorty
1 *45*
SALES PEO P LE NEE » D
Large volume used car lot
E acot lent Comm E apar lance
preferred M l Ilf* B O B
S A L U P E R S O N S Beauty
supply chain Full or pert
tlm* Eacellent working con
dltlons Cotmetology beck
ground a plus Applications
now being taken by Ih* Job
Service ot Fl TOO S French
St . Sontord. S A M
I PM
Final interview* by company
SW ITCHBOARD OPERATOR
Part lima Wad
Sunday
Evening* end weekends Dt
pendebl* Apply In person
Samlnola Ford Incorporated

TELEPHONE SOUCITOI1
NEEDED
High ta m ln g t
Only

E xptr'itnttd

321 5440.
TENNFCO rO OO STORE
Now accepting applications
tor perl lime A lull tlm#
cashier*
Tannec* Feed Star*
______ Route 411. Oatoen______
Tired *1 J*b Hunting 7
C e l l F u l u r t t they hav*
hundreds el fob openings tor
Ihoae who want to work
«7» 4JOO
CEM EN T WONKENI A
H E L P E R S Eacellanl pay
start right away ar* txo
D E L IV E R Y HELPERS no aa
per tone* necessary Full lime
Good slerf Ing pay 4714*0
O C N E R A L O F F I C E
TR A IN E E S
Creel slatting
|ob Several openings Good
pay *71000
F A C T O R Y AS SEMBLY end
PRODUCTION WORK Most
shifts open Good pay scales
*7* OOO
I M M E D I A T E OPEHI NOS
General Construction labor
Good pay *7* OOO
TRUCK DRI VERS Long haul
Immediate' Good driving re
cord Over JS *7* OOO
L O C A L D R I V E R S Straight
truck* Good pay Slerl right
away *7* O X
R E C E P T I O N I S T . OFFICE
H E L P E RS . CLERKS. CRT
O P E R A T O R S I mmtdlMtM
opening* Good pay Kales
Ceil*;* o x n o w i
WE LDERS Certified Escallenl
pay x i e « Cell today *7*
PAINTERS A PAINTER
H E L P E R S - I mme d i a t e
openings, good starling pay
Celt today *7* O X
DRY WAL L - With or without
euptrltnc*
I mmedi at e
openings Good pay Call to
day *7* O X
_____________

T IT U C U R I
OFFICE CLERK
Pert tlm* E neltont pay Reply
F O_bei f f 7. Sanford, Fl II77I
TRUSS ASSEMBLERS '
For day shift E .par.anted
preferred but will train
Eacellent benellts with com
petitlvepay Apply at

LOME S TRUSS P O R T
1101 AileronClr (Airport)
Senlord Indualriel Fork
WANT E D RECEPTIONIST tor
beauty Salon Cell: 111 5*51 tor

LANDSCAPE HELPER-S4 Hr.
Cell MO LTO. after 7pm

U V E IN
Mature

to cere
Mutt her*

references M utt be nan
smoker I Ceil m Iff*
Babysitter, I day* a see**.
T O M IL **k tor Rrneda.
MANAGER TR A IN E E end Fart
lime *eto* people needed to
stork nights end weekend* *1
Family tuts censer Us tentord
Pier* Mutt be metore de
pendebi* end bondebM IS JO
hour* par etwee Call JJI efoj

W AREHOUSE WORKERS
Need I* immediately. able to lilt
50 lb* Mutt be reliable own
transportation Permanent
position Never* Fee

TEMP PERM----------774 114 1
(Nat(hogs* A Factory
Cell New Heritors* M l I n
WB ARE LOOKING FOR
A F ( W GOOD F E OF L I
T O JOIN OUR CREW I
Apply before 11 AM or attar J
PM Mutt be I* or elder
Good Benefits

BURGER RING

MEDICAL OFFICE
INSURANCE BILLING CLERK

H al Bat Nfitfe Ej p b i m i k p
Cell New Heritors*
JJI jj

Submit return# to ITO Medical
Pier*. Suit* MW. Senlard. FL

Wonted On* Day per Week

am ._________________
MEDICAL 1 1 ( 0 1 0 1
TECH N ICIAN I yrt hmpitol
medical records ftp tt
qulred. Ceding. A abafracting
ski l l * d e s i r ed Cenl acl
riel Heap., 7*5 W. Ply
A h , DtLeed. Fl. EOE

Y « 4 Mats Hajidjnun

torbror................. Hi 1*7*
525 Boa« s with this *4!
Needed imm ediately
Nursing
Aaeittent* and L iv e Us Cam
pe"toh* I year eaperlence
required

M I D I CAL PERSONNEL
POOL

EOE

JM/FlH/V

I

�\~

1

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

KIT ‘H* CARLYLE Why Lorry Wright

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

217—G arage Sales

lOMtofjDmmi
Needed. W t g t i. tip*,
eommltiton M ult he I wtfh
tdt and ln*ur*n&lt;e Contact
Hob attar 111 112CXK
UOO * M * » to train tuit and part
•Im* positions Call H I 7422
ButMott Drat* Required

73—Employment
Wanted
RtiiaMa and esptriancad homo
and otfica cleaning Dally,
weekly or monthly Reason
ati*rattt Call H I H U

*1—A partm ents/
House to Share
Mature Lady to Share J bdrm 1
bath homo with tarn* Refer
ancat UOO a Vy utilities

L A K E M AR Y 2 S A N F O ID - 1
BW™ . l bath doubt# garage,
carpet*, drape* appliance*
IUO par mo ji* j „ hk War.
b a v n la e .m t S W
R E N TA LS - 1 A 1 bdrm i mar
damtwn Sanlord. Evas M l
m &gt; o r |«M I 22Vasil
S ANFO R D Cleon I bdrm Uq
hath, central air /heat, garage,
privacy tenet, no pet* HOC
plus deposit Call 42* 42*4
Wekiva River View ♦ Accettll
] B drm . IV* acre, wooded,
prlvata, fenced Horia OK
AS11 mo E ve M l 4*2*
W IN TE R S P O l I bdrm I bath
carpet, porch, air a Moral
S44S Leaio/option |*a 1211

Ml 871

93—Rooms for Rent

1 Bdrm . | Bath, lanced yard
S42S per month plu* dapoalt
Call M l 0210 After 2 P M .

TV . b lichen. laundry, maid. 450
wk d up O rl q i SaRd/all dsie
SANFORD Furnllhed room| by
fh* atoll Reasonable ratal
Maid service Call 221 *507
5 7PM a ll Palmetto A y*
TH E F L O R ID A H O T E L

500 Oat Avenue...........

Ml *204

__^**tonatil*W lt*kljRal*

97-A partm ents
Furnished / Rent
A V A IL A B L E NOW
F urnlihad Studio Apartmantt
Ona Bedroom A plt
Too Bedroom Apt*

FLEXIBLE LEASES
SENIOR C IT IZ E N S DISCOUNT
R A N C H S T T L E L IV IN G III

SANFORD count APTS.
323-3301
Firm Apt* tor Sanler Cltiiam
111 Palmetto Av*
J Conan No Phone Callt
Lovely on* bdrm Complete
privacy MO per week plut
S »0 w iu rlfy CH I M l »* * or
MS MM
Small oarage apartment lor one
narking adult. Lady p rt
tarred S7J par naak plut
depot11 Call XO M IT
I Bdrm F u rn A pt. patio
Dead and ttraat m i mo
M l AIM
I Bdrm Delano Aduttl. no poft
air. quiet residential SMS mg
deposit w m
]

a a * IN D E L T O N A a a •
a a H O M E S FOR R E N T a a
_______ a a 574 H M . a_______

1BO RAA HOUSE
A40C per month plu* deposit
Call: MTOlan________________

Chrlillan Apts a Hemtt

f lf lt la n c la i tu rn lth a d . I
Bdrm unfurnished Start at
two par month Call MJ tu t
attar I P W

99-A partm ents
Uniurnished / Rent

FOR

RENT

2 Bdtm, 1 Bath
t i l l plu* security
Call M2 IMS after * P M

111— Resort/Vacation
Rentals
Beachfront Condo Ormond
ilaapt * Sept ? 14th D*y or
weekly rate 121 0142

113— Storage Rentals
Mini Wifthousw
» 4 A Up................ ............121*428

117— Commercial
Rentals
Retail A Office Space 100 up lo
2.000 *q ft alio itaraga avail
able 222 *401
A*"lord j unimproved lot*
Zoned C l W Malic sows! I,
R E A L TO R ............... AM 21*1
SANFORD
2 y r old Warehouse, Office
Compioa 1210 *q ft and up
52*3/mo include! drive in
door Good location
_________ Coll: M l 5400

121— Condominium
Rentals

•COUNTRY SETTING •

P IN E R ID O E CLUB

1.2,2 Bdrm., 2 bath, washer,
dryer, vertkte*. ratrlg , dish
wether Starting *1A22S

S E C U R ITY OE P O S IT.™ ..... aioa
W IT H T H I1 A D I

_______ *2)2122_______

MARINER S VI L L AG E
I
bdrm VI10. } bdrm D M and
up I Adulll only B1B4W

MOVE IN NOW!

H O I O K E Y M O M T , INC,

Sanford 2 bdrm . J balh, pool,
wether /dryer Other amenl
Hat Sl*5 mo , I *51 40*2

S IN G L E STORY
L IV IN G
L o s t Ttrm s to Fit
T o n i N ttd s !

Fuinnh*d or Unfmniihtd.
Carports............... Prtv*t* Fallal
Luth Landtraping Pali Children
W A T E R O EDS A C C tP T E O I

Call.......... 3211911

tlOO Oil H I M o n th '! Rwnft
t Bdrm F u rn tih td O r Un
luf ntihtd Aportm#ftt
1ENiOR C I T I ZENS D ISC O U N T

133—Wanted to Rent

M0SSWO0D APTS.
3272415

Lot tor 11 &gt; 20 N E W MOBILE
HOM E I Prefer rant with op
Hon to buy M l T lt l

Son lord

FRANKLIN ARMS APTS.
H I0 Florida Avo occrott
tram Lake Jennie I 4 2
B drm i . carpaling control
air. dikhaakhart, pent EJI5 to
USO par mo No patk Rater
encai and tacurlty Phono
111 USO
Santord Duple« 1 b d rm . 1
bath laundry room, back
yard I l l s plu* d e pottl
U i it it or u n t i l

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
&gt; Bdrm Duals■ ntth Peel

S340 S350
Aduiti A Fam ilial Welcome!
IIM Security Oepetlt
Call ................... ............ M l 2474
Spacious A p a r t m e n t !
Lakalronl. pool tennis, aduiti.
no pots, laundry Starting al
Alts a mo Call t l i Q7q to «aa
and I bdrm A lio turnlihad
elhtiancy from SIS weak 1210
deposit No pall Call M l 4502
S 2 PM 41$ Palmetto_________
2 bdrm/1 bath nice area S220 No
pttt United Sot** Asaocldto*.
Inc R E A L TO R S M l IBM
2 Bdrm 2 Both, central air. all
appllancet, pool First and
tacurlty 1425 par mo Call:
M IIB M a H o c S P M ___________

2 Bdrm $335. Si50 deposit.
ala 1212012 after Spm________
&gt; bdrm I bath newly redeco
rated, central air/haat. wall to
wall carpeting U2S per mo.
1208 tacurlty deposit After S

2222*11_________ ____
1 B ED R O O M A P T FO R R EN T
*221 month, no pat*.
____________2U aw*

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

125— For Lease
|iy Aero Industrial Site 2 build
Ings, total of 5500 sq II.
Fancad A Private 2T2 1252

127—O ffice Rentals
Lake M ary Bled.:

CATHEAD CENTRE
too 1000 sq tt
M par tq M
____________ 222 2220___________
Offices to R»nt
Haatonabi* and con van lent
201 N Maple Santord
M2 eotO

141 — Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real Estate Brakes
2*t0 Santord Asa
Weblve Springs
1 bdrm. 1
bath Mobile with |5y acre
fenced Nice utility budding,
septic lank A wall, Owner
Financing Asking Sit.t*a
L IK E N E W!
Camylately
ramadslad
1 bdrm I bath
new carpel, lanced back Walk
I* scnaal. nursery tebeal.
shopping A church
2411 Laurel Are M M *t

3210759 E v e . 332 7443
By Owner ] bdrm
2 b#m
Large let Spacious 1200 sq n
under root I t 808 dawn,
assumable mortgage In city.
Santord A it 800 Day 122 12*2.
t vet. M t * 0 8 2 _____________
BY C7WNCR Reduced T# Still
t room house sitting on 1 lot*,
w ith g a ro g o apt . tr a t t .
pi anti. Irrigation wo" 10* W
Itlh S t . Santord ___________

NON H OM ES TO * RENT
Energy IMtcMflt 2 bdrm.. 1
batb Palm Hamas nestled M
quiet caentry tetitag. near
shappinq A tcheeis. Clews 8*
Lets Mary 1/4 C*M.
Check Hu m features
p fra il Free Refrsgei etor
a Gar ape
e a u k Sl«-ape
P W■tber / Oryer CamsacMeaa
a0n/S4«M Management
CluWran A Pet* Welcome
Sani*v Ciiutwa Olsceenl
Call I

321 3827

t X C C L L K N T OWNER F I ­
N A N C IN G ! 2 Bdrm . It* Bath,
w ith fa m ily raamt Large
fenced yard with trull Irtas)
tt# qualifying'

323-5774
l*a* MWY IF FI

»Nmt

_________________

T h u rs d a y , Aug. it , 1H5— SB

231— Cars

231—Cars

★ DAYTONA AUTO*
★ AUCTION ★

la rj Dettun Jro 1 Ala, am fm
ra d io E ic e lltn ! condition
evcaplpamf 41400 M l 1*71
1427 GRAND MARQUIS Black
beauty . loaded Bait offer
Coll Evenings 122 224)_______

Hwy n
OayttAi Baack
* a a a a Haldt i m a i

219—Wanted To Buy

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION
4 Alummumn Cans Newspaper
Non Ferrous Metals........... Glass
Katsme___ _______
lU f ia t

Buy Owner Charming 1 bdrm 2
bath spin plan lanced yard
_ AS*.000 171 Oat*/ l i t 122*

Baby: Bads. Strollers Cfethas.
Flaypant. E tc . Paperback
Books 215 *522 122 V M M ___

Every Thur* Nit* it 2 M PM

W h ere Anybody *
* Can Buy or Sellt *

a

For m o ridttailt
_________ I 4*4 255 *211 ___
Da Bar y Auto A Marin* Salas
Across I ha riser, toe *1 k||l
111 H w y 12 42 Da Bor y *** ****

Costume Jewelry. Rhinestones

Midden Lake lie Wndwood Dr
1 bdrm j bath, dbi garage,
porch, cen tra l air Super
Clean I Aksumebla 545 0CC
R EA LTO R
M AR VIN K L A I L
*42 *1*5
or 2*1 25*2

Fyf$
S+CQTKj Imay ) ) J #431
Lind w inftdi
Prof*illortal
cfifUttiJi coup'll! looking lew a
Nw prtw it! a c rti ron*d fbr
moblif Homt I 'CNF 1 y*«f tfFiw
ind Of option fO purchift!
CiM 33) $Q01 ot M i 7400
_
NumkJ C rlb i Pijiypefit Baby
turn ' *uf!
c k il M ig
Good
P ricii A ;»if ?
331 S7i)

in Country, fenced 's acre 2
B d rm
I bath tum lshad
Sit *00 Call 222 t t lt

★ INSTANT CASH *
a • W E W IL L B UY s a
* OYOUR USEDCAR* a
a C A L L P H IL BET T I S*

191— Building
M aterials

141— Homes For Sale

(3 0 5 J 321-0041

SANFORD REALTY

A ll Wf IStWSfrMl
U nferd FI 11771

R F A L T OR .................. 112 5 »e
S A N F O R D 'L A K E M A R Y
Oream
Hamas
Available
Howl Alt Prices. Sam I no la
and Valusla Counties
Oraat
Ttrm s .
Call
lor
Freo
Computer SearchTadoylf

R E A LTO R
L ih t M ir y 2 bdrm
} b4th
Adutt tcctio* ol TS« Forttt
Central m\m h«4t PfiCAd to
I*IM $44 loo R o m Watth. Ro
47tAA77 _______________
Longwootf
f HA Atlum obio
m w rtvl9« J bdrm . J both.
3 car g ire g « Pool A ttfinti
noorby 17! too

Win S L Conipin|.....321 5005
M A T F A IR V ILLA S For M*t by
O o n t r 3 Bdrm
3 Bat*
air h*ot. ? car Qongo, Call
333 S1S3 aftyr $ P M
0*l##n 4 bdrm , } Lifts on S
aerwt with Ko t m bam ind
patturo |74,TOO
3 bdrm r | bath |Hu4l«d on 3
•&lt;f»$ CB air h#at. on I P »
Butler in O tlH o Poiiibi*
owner financing 1*0 OCO totol
| price
C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A LTY

Rag R E Broker..........222 1215
n o Hw» i n Cktrrn I la
R A V IN N A P A R K -J bdrm . 1«■*
bam. can! heal &amp; air $4t too
By owner salesmen 52* 8248.
E vet A Weekends
REDBRI CK
2 B d rm . lie bath home in
excellent condition on large
lot Ready to movt Ini Priced
|utt reduced to S4&lt; 450 Be Mar
Saell

CALL BART
REALESTATE
R EA LTO R
122 2at*
P R E H OM E PURCHASE
IN S P E C TIO N
" L e t the buyer beware ' no
longer applies All phase In
specters ta t 2221.____________

Wholesale Te Public Kitchen
cabinets, van ilia* in slock,
counter tops available Free
m a a s u rm a n lt A t r a i le r
112*118. Bldg I I , Santord
airport

199—Pets A Supplies

323 3200

V«fcrant No Down Piym ont 3
bdrm 3 bifh on 3 S s e rtt In
G f n t v l |7! »0C 34t &gt;717
W*lt Trod* m f U000 fcquity in
my homo tOf C*$h or N&gt;C!
T r a w l Traiiar 33) 7770. 323
17*3_________________________
) Bdrm, I fi!fh
Handyman fiwtlaM
$00 vq ft Wortthop
Mug* Lot
Wailaca Cratt ftaalty
Rtailor ....................... 22t 077

Ability K*nnols Dog boarding
Country Atmosphere Reason
able R a f ts
111 1210
AKC Ontarmsn Pups I wks
old. rads 1 block* 5250
M l* * !!. ____________

303—Livestock and
Poultry

USED CARS

1421 Jaap Pick Up
W h iil drive V try cltun
E x tU d n t Ship#! U 000 Call

373 2V%

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

IN S TA N T CASH
Cold. W w , Dtimondt. Cotm
T r t iiu r y Itlin d Jtw tlry
Cijl ............................
33JOIJI
MOVING
m uti t illl SOU S
C M it , Bdrm S*r. Commodori
Vic K1 Cocnpultr Nothing ovtr
130* CiM ! t t ! r S 373 3$J !
Th©mii Home Organ per feci
condition Walnut cabrnei with
band to t S)$0 Call 333 m i
Of 444 iiaa_____________

C R E D IT HASSLES7
• W# (it m F inane*
a Down Payments t k » and Up
0 Trad* Ins Accepted
D IS C O U N T A U T O B A L E S
1S O I Fre n ch A** 3 )5 l l ( J ,

If 74 S lu ili Cimping T r iiN r 70
Fl
tiiFNdffrn is )!, lu t M tn l
condiHon 13300 C ili 333 I03f
1*71 IS' ST A RCRA F T C A MP E R
Air,
i wit tooUiPHHrJ
CdH 132 0414 _____________
! Ft. H w t y Truck C im pur 3
rvfrig ito r Air condi
tio n «r g*t fu rin c i flush

'4*1 R A M C L E R CLASSI C
*1.000 original miles Nrw
lire*, brake* radtalov and
Iron! and raworkad Good
condition SI500 or beat oltar
Call M l 0*25 I Day *1 or 271
am7 (nights)____

2 3 1 -C a rs
Bid Credit?
No Citdii,'
WE FINANCE
D R IV E OUT

It t l F I R E B I R D Hunt u**rt
Mutt Sto! Call altar t P M
722 1*24 Asking 52 *50

NATIONAL AU10 SALES
Santord Av* A 11th SI

TWO CALVES
I 5*54

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
Buses/ Vans

THE BEST IN TOW N
, E-Z TERMS

Compl«$v F o liy S4w ih!rp!fiifg
•gulp
’ 7! Mon j a Wagon
C ifh ptf lor Pick Up %!&gt;f
COntjined M l 4474

WALK I N .........

l4qo AAagnittcewt White Cadillac
Sedan Mint condition Mas*
offer 52s USO
54*1 M E R C U R Y L Y N X
a
apaad rad d t a n . 52*00
Call aao tier attar a P M ___
'7* Trans Am air power V 8
am Im cassette Ntedt minor
body work Have most parts
$2445. Carol 221 1058 days
121 7104 evening!
_________
M Mustang Ghia I I Csrerl G L
Loaded'
1458 Dawn
Small
Monthly payment
C H IC O A TH E MAN
I a* 8*80

C O U R TE S Y P O N TIAC 122 1121

223—Miscellaneous

111 4425

*foi*» with holding fink SUept
4 b#Auiifut condition
337 i n ;

Can

243—Junk Cars
TO P Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Used cark.lruckk A twavy
equipment 222 5*40

222 2121

213—Auctions
FOR E S T A T E
C o m m t rc lil or R o4ld*ntlal
Auctions A Appraisals Call
Doll's Auction J l l S*J0

149 — C o m m e r c i a l
P r o p e r ty / S ale

215—Boats and
Accessories

C O M M ER CIAL S P E C IA L IS T
BOB M BALL. JR P.A.
R E A L T O R .....................121 til*

O R E S S E D U P A NO P LA C E TO
O O f 11'. 1474, B u rn tc ra tt
houseboat w/125 H P
M t r c r u lt t r
R* b u ilt.fu lly
outlined Sleeps t * 18.000
Test run a v a i l a b l e
I D tt* 15*1 days, or **« 1*55,
afttr s
14 F T. llercr*ll Runabout 14*1
boat and t r a i l e r . *5 IIP
Macury angina $2000 or bail
oiler Call 112 0*7$ (days) or
122 a**71nights)____________
‘ 14 C I T A T I O N I / O
140
AAorCruitor. II' A ", bowrldor,
walb through w in d s h ie ld
Fully aquippad A ready to go
SHOO A las* over paymenlt
&gt;15 IN I,a lta r* .

153—AcreafleLots/Sate
Santord Building Lat
Wall with Pump. Septic. I* m
40ft Shod Owner Financing I
Wallace Cratt Realty
Realtor .......................... l i t 8S22
S 5 acres In the City o l Lake
M a ry on the south and ot 4th
SI (wlthtn the City lim its )
$40,000 cash II in ttra tle d . call

Ml 8*20

155—Condominiums
Co Op / Sale

217—G a r a g e Sale s

LUXURY CONDOS

A«aiIabit Bow Opon Htiktnds

Erparionca Victorian Charm I
Two Spacious 2 bdrm a p tt.
central elnheel. celling lane,
porch in ln g t Many aitratl
Clot* to lo a n
No p o ll
1*25/1475 r dapoiil Phono *
to 4 n o a k d a y t, AT* 00IS
Mar ye, nlyhts M l 0757,10*7

PM Purfilturg iiid NoutiNhold

" L e t the buyer beware no
longer applies All phase in
spec tort M i m i ___________

2

bdrm.. Hy bath No peti Air
*p&gt;d appliance#. wether'dryer
hookup A120 per mo Cali
sherd pm u * ;***
Largo 2 bdrm I both, vaulted
tilling, appliance*, hook up*,
icroo nod patio 12*8 1*00
M l MSI, between *PM A 2PM

BR A N D N E W C O N D O 2 bdrm
2 bath SJ2S mo Cell 1*2 3*21
•r 71* **47

MASTERS COVE..........323 7900

111 PARK A V C W »d A Th u n
Aig 3tfh. A Tffh 1 P M
*

KISH REAL ESTATE

■AM RO O CO VE A P TS
J5C E . Airport Bird
I Bdrm , 1 Bath...............UOO mo
I Bdrm I Bath ........... IMS me
PHONE ... ............
MS MAI

Largo 1 * I Bdrm. Apartmantt
Adult LaktvsewFemlly Pealtlda

Ry Owner 1 bdrm, I balh
tramp house Good condition
Close to hospital and shop
ping Asking 174 000 Call:
&lt;«41 1A1 I lls between } 1
P M ________________________
PRE m o m e p u iic h a s e
IN S P E C TIO N

r\HriVHsni&lt;to\l» tv&gt;NflliFll

105— Duplex*
Triplex / Rent
OUPLE X

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

141— Homes For Sale

m

a m

D U P L E X *42.500. You bring up
lo coda and sera Owner
fin a n c in g wi t h m oderate
O T H E R HOMES. LOTS.
A C R E A G E . IN V E S TM E N T
P R O P E R TY

N E W SMYRNA B EA C H Direct
oceenlronl n furnished condo
with tennis Oittraa* Sal*I

C AR P O R T S A LE - Sal Mon . a
8 P M Clothe*, toy*, toll ol
mitcellonoou* Something lor
everyone 504 Cherokee Circle.
Sun land E stole*___________
C ARPO RT S A LE F rl . loth
Sot. Jllh 8 A M
I P M III
Country C l ub C i r c l e 1
F a mi l i e s b a b y c lo lh o t .
clothes, and miscellaneous
«“ F A M I L Y Y A R D S A L E ’
Frl A Sal 2400 Lake Rent Lana
Hwy 4* Wall to ttgne Sion*
war*, m icro w a v e , plalas.
grill* w/th*lv*». ceramics,
glasses, books, t i c
C oll
222 5**7______________________
5 Families Garogo Salot 140* W
4th SI Saturday Only * to
4 jo Hid* a bed couch, chairs,
apartment ill* g a t stove, and
much more I

Beochtto* Realty, RE A L TO R S
tea a] 2 1111........ . Open 2 Oaysl

157-M obile
H om es/Sale

C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ........... ......... H i a t t I
L IS T W ITH USI

A ll TOO NEED
TO KNOW
IN REAL ESTATE

S T EN S T R O M
F A M I L Y O R ) E N T E Ol I
bdrm l balh Spat tout Horn*
with an Eat in Kilchan. Brick
Flraplac*. Central alr/haat.
Dining roam *48.18*
L O TS O F CHARMI J bdrm 2
bath Hem* oilfi with Eat in
Klfcflan, Great Ream. Paddlv
Ian*, la law Ouartart. Large
Panfry S44.4M
JUST FOR YOUI I bdrm Jt*
bath Hem* ea baavtllelly
Weeded Greundi I elhar Lett
plus Nursery Itut may bt said
separately I74.IM
ROOMY ANO LI VABLE! *
bdrm
U t balk Es c e l l v *
Hem* with all Badreamt Up
Stairs, paddl* tans, Ouast
ream or In law Ouartart. 17 a
27 Peal and Screened Percb
Lavaly Two Story Living
Ream t i l l * * *
H U N T E R S AND ROATERS
PARAOISCI J bdrm I balh
Horn* an th* It Jeknt River,
tnfpy 14m II ■ 14 Screened
Porch Overlooking ttw Rtvor
Bool Deck. Great ream, plut
I* more Acres &gt;225.***

REALTY*REALTOR
S jn to rd 'i Sales Ldddcr
WE LIST ANO SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANVONEI N NORTH
SIMIMOLE COUNTY
W I L L B U I L D TO I U I T I
Y O U R L O T OR OUR St
EXCLUSI VE AGENT FOR
WINSOMO DEV. CORP, A
CENTRAL FLORIDA LB AO
E R I M O R I HOME FOR
LESS M ONEY! CALL TODAYI
• GENEVA OSCEOLA RO •
ZONCOFOR MOBILES!
I Acre Country tracts.
Watt tread a* paved Rd.
2* \ Dew* I* Y rt *111%I
Fram SI*. 1841
I I yea are leaking tor a
succasslul carter I* Real
Eslal*. Stamtrem Really I*
leaking tor yae Call Lea
A lb rifh i ledar al 111 J«7*
i 111 M l

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
lies p a r k a v s
*01 Lb Mary Blvd

U Mary

Lllallm *
Advil Park,.,.,,,___ ... Let Rents
11*8 5118
Includes Water Garbage Pick up
Yard Maintenance
lmrnad.il* Occupancy
Grtgory Mobile Homes 22) 52*0

i

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

CONSULT OUR

Appliances Far Sal* all la
aecallant cendltton A fully
guaranteed.......................222*244

Barrall table sal. SYS. while
rattan couch, chairs tablet.
$50 . antique drum leble, tc*
More lurnlture *H In very
good condition Call: T O ltd*

I

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Brunswick Standard i n * Peal
labia wlin accattotiat UOO or
best Ollar Call: 111 17*1 altar

t P M Atk tor L a rin a _______
Electric Ciathai Oner Works
great Almond color Family
tit* ttl* C*H 722 Side alter S
Kanmer a ka i v y duly
Washer Good condition. ISO
Call ill dltcbaloral P M
LONG WOOD l*6drm . J bath
utility room *400 per month
pi ut deposit Call W dS4l
tram s*5 W A R R A N TY
B A R N E T T S .....C A S S E LB E R R Y
M d -in i...— ................... d Jd to il
Ra Ingar* tor Kan more avac ado.
I* ttl I I . 1 doer I rot I fro*.
51SPor bail ettor l l l d d l t
• R E N T TO OW N a
Color T V s . Stereo*, washers,
dryers, reh igarator. treeiert.
lurnlture. video, recorders.
Special III week I rani U 00
Alternative TV A Appl. Rentals
Zayret Shopping Center
___________ m id * * ____________
Sal*, velvet I piece 1150 mat
thing lamp*. US each glass
topcattodtabto.l* dfS-1411
lived Washers Parts A Service

tor Kanmtres................tll-datr
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S

NILSON HAItl FURNITURE
I I I n t « . 1*1 S T .............. m -IA Z I

27TH STREET FUKNITURt
let w i r t h t i ..................u n t i l

183—T e le v is io n /
Radio / Stereo

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions 4
Rem odeling
RCUOOCUIW SPECIALIST
The Whole Ball Of Woe

I. E. LINK CONST.
322-702!
Financing Available

Appliance R ep a ir
AUotts Afpliinco Sank*

JO*&lt;_Pmrormjhl^__^^_
191— Building
M aterials
B U IL D IN G S ail ttoal 80 e MO
*11400, H i IM O H .*40,
other* from 01 &gt;0 sq ft
11ti *2»i l collect I

ROBERTE.OREINt
C a n fr s lt A M aintenance
Specialist in E laclrical A
Pneumatic Controls 122*14*

Hoad Carpel Cleaning Living
Dlalag Beam A Nall OH M.
Pad* B P a ir . OBO. m M*d
Husband wile b a m will clean
your home or afflc* dally.
rpadwiabto. C a ll: H fTO tc.
JU S T O E N IIO
Pretottianal claanlng

E le c tric a l
Aayftdag EtoCtrMat ..«4Pca 1*2*1
Eshautos 54 H r. Oarvka Calls
T*p i '» Ito ctrk Oarvlce I22 72T4
C O N TE M P O R A R Y E L E C T R IC

Camptoto C Metrical Service*
TV A Telephone*
1111522
D A S Electric ............... 222*05*
N * « A remodeling, addition*,
land security light*. Ilmart
plut *11 atoc. to n k a * Qualify

larutoi LtoWBRdA

F i r a l l i i r i R e p a ir * A R*
finishing Roesonabto Rales'
M C w sa rallon But 1 U 4 12*4

_______m-ddn
Need I* brighten up yev heme?
W* offer wallpopering end
Inferior, exterior painting Wo
gaurantoo our work I
a Fra* Estimate* a

F tor id* MaN d Mildew

Spacielisfl
lly r* Eap
Free Etl
Bonded
Intured
WGT RI BBY
2d* MBS
Pdlnllng
Any W dlkaverlng
Vinyl Flooring Rtf A Reaonablo

HAULING ...Fill 0irt....T#p Sail

C arp en try

Cleaning Service

T H O R N E LA N O C LEA R IN O
F I L L DI RT O C L A Y a
S H ALE A H A U L IN G
122 MM

McCULLAR HOMES
Nan homes a Ramodallng* All
typo* of repairs o L k con
tractor a NR 00117*1 Phono
17t lead
or i l l leaf

Collier's A wilding A Ramodallng
No Jab Taa Small
I I I Bur San Lana. Santord

All typae ol carpentry A re
modeling 17 y rt. tap Call
RIchardGroaa H I 5*71

Painting

Landscaping

Home Im provem ent

IlY rlN A ^ ^ M M ^ J T ^ U l

Landclearing

H andy M an

I*hr. Servke Na E ifra CJsargel

* COLOR TELEVISION *
Zamh I I " cator taiavittan
O rg in a l p rice o v e r g*ao
Balance due IIM 00 ca*h or
•o k t aver p a y m a n l* 111
month SHII in warranty NO
M O N E Y DOWN Free home
trial, no obligation Call 0*2

G eneral Services

......... Call N J *14* altar I

L aw n Service
HOME LAWN CARE
Edge
Tree* Trimmod

Vary Ntliabto

Paper Hanging
H A L Wallpapering Gals
Free E tl
Work Guoranleed
27* I7 li
U I t ill

111 111*

Paving

Laws Mowinj,...._L*w Prksi
827*2*

LAWNS MOWED A TRIMMED
Sprfag Y a rd C5aa* ep* m i452

Quality Lm b Cue

A I AapAalt Ftving. Inc
Grading A paving asphalt re
pairs, seal coaling, traffic
mark Ings. driveway* A pork
ingtofs Fra*ail JJ1 1#**

A l Attordebto Prlcat 111*47]

Plumbing

Celti........................ tn-zw
THOM AS A TH O M AS Ham*
repair, ctoaatog. lawn car*
Call 111 IS**

Hom o Repairs
CARPENTER

Masonry
( A N Y T H I N G I NCONCRETE!
Pro* B slime las Oiedly Given I
■ I A U M ONDE Canal.C*.
"W e Are Th* Beer'____ U I Sdtl

Repairs and

ramodallng 5to |eb too small

Call 222 teas
Maintenance of all types
Carpentry painting plumbing

and dtoctrfc B I R R
W IL L IE H OM S REPAI R
Remodeling....... Addlflens....... A

All Type* Repair*I
No lob too small
,

Insured
211 77**

L an d clearin g
O I N E V A L A N D C L E ARINO
Lot Ltndctoarirtg
Pill dirt
Tapaaii
Ponds Oram ditches
Sito Prepayefton Call 24F EWE
ilidetar w ort donqf Call
Ricky Wynn* Oecar Work *
yrt eap Raatonabl* 1*8 4141

M usic Lessons
Ail *ge*/all levels. Pre Back
ground. Call Julie
&gt;21 da*4

N ursing Care
OUR RAT ESARE LOWER
Labavtow Nursing Cantor
t i t ( Second St, Santord

111 *417 l i t . W

Wall Plumbing d Heeling"
1007 South Santord Avenue
Sen lord. F lend# 12771

S p rin k le rs /Irrig a tio n
ABOUT TIME IRRIGATION
44ew Intlallaltont
Free E tl
C apart Repair* *1 Camptoto
Sprinkler Systems
Tim ers

Pump*

Ik

**S2*S4

Tree S e rv let
All Tree Eare d ..... ...Pruning
And HaeUng
----- Can Altai
d P RA---- ------- -- ... I l l * * * *

Painting

ECHOLS T R I E I E R V I C I
Fra* ftlinsatotl Law P rkatl
kit., lat Stump Grinding.Taa l
1151214 day at afta

C U N N IN G H A M AND Wl F E
I Mac /l i t e r tor/Pr***ur* Wash
Call
U I 731*

JO H N A LLE N S LAWN A T E E S
Deadl'*elam avtl L k A in*
Fra*at! U I U N

JT1 *747

IN ".

I
ip s e a a .

�B L O N D IE

i B - E v r t t h f H erald, tsnford, FI.

T h u rs d a y , Aug. 19, I W

[,y

BEETLE BAILEY

^ I c Yoi,ing

by Mort Welker

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Snnsom

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana

EEK &amp; MEEK

IWHAT.S VOCR
SPEOAL TODAV ?

q

by Howie Schneider

VO VOU RECALL THAT CHI«£JU

I RECAUXD THAT Y
THE5-T HOURS AFTER

SPECIAL WE. HAD EAST WEEK 7

i

A it

rr

Respiratory Infection
Can Deaden Taste Buds
DEAR DR. GOTT - Three
months ago I had laryngitis for a
week, I had no fever so I didn't
go to the doctor. Since then I’ve
lost my sense of taste, except for
vinegar. I'm well except for
dlvertlculosls. What can I do to
regain my ability to taste?
DEAR READER — Taste Is
experienced through special re­
ceptors on the tongue. This
sense Is not affected by laryngi­
tis. However, we obtain much of
our •‘ taste" perception through
the organs of smell, so upper
re sp ira to ry I nf ect i ons and
allergies often can cause food to
taste "flat," even though the
taste receptors themselves are
not affected Your nose, as well
as your larynx, was probably
Infected three m onths ago.
which Is why you could not taste
at that time. A continuing taste
problem may Indicate the pre­
sence of sinus Infection. Al­
though you successfully avoided
your doctor lor the laryngitis. I
suggest you see your doctor — or
an otolaryngologist — now.
because you may have a chronic
low-grade infection that will
need treatment.
DEAR DR. GOTT — What ran
I do for a kidney problem thai
bothers me only at night? It
causes a great deal of burning
and pain.
DEAR HEADER - Hr si you
have to find out whether you
have a urinary Infection This
can be accomplished by ihr use
o f a sim ple le s t c a lle d a
"dean-catch urine culture." If
no Infection Is present, see a
urologist lo determine If (here Is
an nnaionilral reason for your
discomfort.
You don't say whether you arc
male or female. Urinary dls
comfort ts more common In
women, hut It can be more
serious lo men tweause male
urinary burning usually hi
dlenies a more deep-sealed In­
fection or blockage.
DEAR DR. GOTT - What can
be done lor llvrr spots on my

arms?

rmatologists use a chemical that
destroys this pigment and ren­
ders the skin free of pigmenta­
tion. The process shows pro­ versally as we age. Although
mise. Unfortunately, once de- many people may find them
plgmented. the affected portion cosmetically unpleasant, they do
of skin won't tan. so you may be no harm
trading In one problem for
Send v o u r questions to D r
another.
Liver spots have nothing to do O ott .11 r O B o x 9 1 4 2 3 . C lr rewith the liver: Ihey occur uni­ r .i n d O h m 4 4 l O l
Answsr to Previous Pun'S

ACROSS

4 Warn artanaa
5 Sftpspoia
6 Albanian
t Oaritabta or
ginuitron
eurraney
fabbr.)
7 Rivar into tha
Bay of Biscay
5 Young lady (Fr.
abb* |
B Group of nlna
9 Down’s nama
9 Invtntor
Franklin
10 Actor Janmnga
12 Montrs«l
11 Scruff
16 lika aarthy jau
world*a fair
20 Hiddan
13 Vast poriod of
tirna
obstacia
14 Madtcal tuffi&gt; 21 Atomic rvaapon
(comp wd |
15 Cuticlo
22 Baars (Lac)
17Wh.sk
IB Pharaoh
23 Smogs
24 Large numbar
19 Rapair thoa
26 Flaa |si |
21 Fallibla
2B Franch city
24 Ignobla
29 Bon
25 Quickly
30 Church official
27 Vova
33 fnstgy saving
rhythmically
tima (abbr)
31 CIA torarunnar
38 Tskaout ordar
32 Unit of langth
words
34 Young lady
35 Varihal
1
i
J
Dihon i
'
nteknama
if
37 Ovartook
it
39 Irata
40 Stupafy
42 Sport! figu.s
44 Not bad
46 Slackanmg bar
on a loom
47 Woody
50 Actor Murray
51 Mr». Paron
52 Raaliy
57 Nose (Fr |
SB Varva

X V L 0 i n 1
M E A N E n
A N K A R A

50
53
54
55

Raiabva of lotto
lilt la child
Mai Was) rola
Law dagraa
(abbr |
56 Cry of
affirmation

38
41
43
45
47

Uttar
labortr
Woolly
Swan Lake rote
Strangs (comb
form)
48 Actor Montind
49 Loft

1

r
1"
LL
t

10

11

It

It

&gt;0

59 Moure piaca
60 Full of (tu ll)
61 Ranaw
62 Island naar
Corsica
DOWN

DEAR READER - "L iv e r
spots’* are actually areas of
degeneration wiihln the plgmrni
layers of ihr skin Some de­

1 Word of assant
2 1090, Roman
3 Accountant
|abbr.|

Ict'S S t l&gt;, M S l»«

W IN AT B R ID G E

by Hargreaves A Sellers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

By James Jacoby
In the bidding methods uwd
by today's North-South pair. two
clubs wus a strong nnd artificial
opening, usually forcing lo
game. The two-diamond respouse was leniporlxlng ami not
a denial of values Allrr two
spades by South, the raise by
North expressed some positive
strength. If North had a very bad
hand, he could have hid three
clubs, the second negative,
allowing South to sign oil In
three spades ll the strong twobtd was marginal I don't de­
scribe these methods lo give you
a headache hut only lo demon­
strate that there Is a great deal of
sophistication In ennlrm|Mirary
bridge bidding
Declarer play Is based on
traditional values, however, and
so we come lo the play of today's

deal. The slam Is good and. on
surface Inspection, will mukc II
the spade queen comes down or
the diamond king Is favorably
located. In such eases the wise
declarer look* tor traps, and here
ll becomes apparent that playing
I he A K ot spades will he disas­
trous If one opponent has three
to ihr queen, denying declarer
entry to dummy to take tlie*
diamond finesse If declarer
plays a spade in Ihr Jack at trick
two and loses to Ihr queen, the
spade 10 will become an entry
However, a spade lo the jack
tloes not represent the best
percentage (day In that suit
The answer ts simple. The
diamond finesse should be taken
Immediately. If it loses, then at
least declarer will lie able to (all
hack on the best play In the
trump stilt, which l* to (rang
down the A IL

NOftTH
♦
Y
♦
♦

ia a

10 4 i
A II J
754
542

WEST

EAST

♦ q 7
»y j| # 9
a K 10 4 1
♦ 97J

494
YK44!
4 1962
410*6

SOI'Til
♦ A K J S51
Y7
♦ Aq

4 AK UJ

Vulnerable Neither
l)ealer South
Wnl

North

East

liu
Pan
Pass
liu
Pass
Psu

14
14
»*
4*

Pass
Pj u
Pau
Pat*
Pau
Pau

Pass

South
24
24
44
4 NT
5 NT
64

Opening lead Vq

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...
FRANK ANO ERNEST

by Bob Theves

GARFIELD

by Jim Davie

YOUR B I R T H D A Y
A U G U S T 30. 1OHS
Do not be text hasty In the year
ahead to give up what you now
have going lor you for something
new and different. You'll suc­
ceed belter by viewing old in­
v o l v e m e n t s f r o m a f r esh
perspective.
VIRG O (Aug 23-Sept 22)
1’ullcnce, tolerance and un­
derstanding will tie required in
roping will) family problems
today. If you lose your cool. It'll
make matters worse. Trying to
|iatch up a rom an ce? The
Matchmaker set cun help you
undrrsiamt what It might tnkr to
make the relationship work Tu
get yours, mail $2 to AstroGraph. c/o this n r w s p a | K - r . Box
1M-tti. Cincinnati. Oil 45201
LIBR A lSept 23-Oct. 23) This
may not be the day to experi­
ment with new methods, tech­
niques. tools or materials where
your work Is concerned. You
might not be adept at mastering
ANNIE

the unfamiliar
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 221
Desires (nr Instant grallltruttnn
could trigger a bum deal today.
Don't settle for Immediate re­
turns in a situation where you'll
gain more by waiting
SAG ITTAR IU S INov. 23 Dec.
21) This will not tie a productive
day for you If you scalier your
forces too thinly. You'll fare
beilcr In the long run by Just
doing one thing, but doing It
right.
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan.
1U) Usually you're a person who
tukes lime to think about what
you're going to say before you
speuk. Today, however, your
spontaneous remarks may re­
veal secrets.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20*Frb lit)
Think twice today before re­
questing favors from friends that
could Incovcnlrncc them finan­
cially. Your puls aren't In the
mood to be your banker.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 19)
You have the abtlltlrs lo achieve
your objectives loduy. but your
Impatience could do you In. If
things don’t come easily for you.

you may not exert a second
efforl
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
Today. 1m- mtrullul of your past
experiences, especially those
that didn't work to your advan­
tage. Don't repeat unsuccessful
tactics.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
It's not to your benefit at this
time to grt involved In a new
enterprise with an Individual
who Introduced complications
Into your life previously.
GEMINI I May 21-June 20)
You’re known lor being a quick
thinker with the ability to make
on-the-spot decisions. However,
If you rush lo judgment today,
you could be way off base.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Consistency Is important today,
especially when tackling tedious
tasks If you do things In fils and
starts, you won't be proud of the
results.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You
might meet someone socially
today who could cause your
heart to palpitate. Unfortunately,
when you get to know this
person heller, the bloom may
quickly leave the rose.
by Leonard Starr

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS
'T M A T R E A I I W P S m e u y

TWe ONE AfXXTT THE
VAMPIRE tVHATSriOWEP
UPAT A PA5EPALL fWW..

I

I

�E v e n i [ U

]H

e r a ld

g l i e r

aid

1P A G E

A d v e r t i s e r

J

P re s e n t

Thursday, Auq. n . 1HS

1

V

J

JLw i s

__________________

Jr

. e

THE SANFORD HERALD

NATION MOURNS GREAT
SEA HORROROF THE WAR

About HO Americans Lost When the
Lusitania Was Torpedoed by
German Submarine.
No Warning Given to III
Fated Craft by the
Attackers.
The nation l« rrcuTrrtng aioirl; from
the atio.k and horror &lt;-aus«l by thr
■lulling o t the »',i-arii»t)lp l.mltatila of
the Cunsr.l line, off tin. irUh coaat. a
few in il.o, outside of Queenstown har­
bor. The loaa of more thau I.dai lire*,
about lto of whom wore American
men. women nnil children, and all of
whom were nonromhatanta. hat ctiu.nl
one of the gresteat arn*at!(&gt;na of ukmI
era timra.
The submarine which
rauaeil (be ca(nttro|'bv la believed to
be one of Ibo powerful U claaa rrafL
which are held responsible fur the Ins*
of the atranialilp Fttlabn and other | « .
•enger and freight ship* In lliillib wa
tc rv

Captain Criticises Failure
ot British Warships to
Protect Utter,

lu n n h a lt
■ itrv lv o re rea chert

th e

wharves doctor* and ambulance* a r t .

waiting, and pitiful r u w were wit

naeacd there. There wa* a large pro­
portion o f women among the arrivals.
Their clothes were soaked with water
They were hatlraa and rboeleaa. and
many were uuahlo to walk.
Moat o f the aurvtVorw had .offered
aerrrr Injuries io their leg. and other
parts of their Ix.Urw. and many had to
lie placed upon alretcbrn and removed
to th* quarter* which bad been apeclally prepared for them.

What tha Captain Says.

t h il

PRESIDENT WILSON IN
S E R IO U S

S IT U A T IO N .

A dispatch from Washington
aaja;
Grate fean art felt by the ad­
ministration that tbe torpedoing
of the Lusttaula will lead to a
wave of anti-German feeling tbit
will »weep the country. Presi­
dent Wilson thus far ha. man­
aged to keep public opinion
well within bounds. and the epo
radk evidences of proalHev' fedlug have not been serious The
nett f t * days are certain to be
anxious once for tbe White
House, for they nlll show
whether the American people
will keep their balance or become
partisans In tbi-lr resentment
The fact that many Americans
were known to the Germans to
be aboerd the Lu.ltanla I. calcu­
lated to excite the populace. It I.
feared The linking of tne .hip
without warning to the unfortu
nate ptssengcra and crew, it 1.
pointed out. docs not leave a
good Impression nnd ten*!, lo the
belief that the kaiser's governmrot bolds America and Ameri­
can' In cool contempt

of reacuc. but tbe suddenness with
which the llurr plunged to the tioitnm
of St. George a channel made It 1iu|m&gt;»alblr to get off ail uu hoard
From the rrporta tInis far received,
officer* and Crete acted with tha ut- WATCHED T O R P E D O
mo.t bmrery. In the greatest *ca dls
AS IT STRUCK SHIP.
a.tcr alnce l lie .Inking of the Titanic
they went eipcdliloualy about their
U.U of getting n* many n. gnaalhle of
the pa*wngcr* away tefure the Ineel- E r n a . t C o w p .r , T o r o n t o W r l l . r , D e ­
s c rib e . A tta c k . S c a n F r o m Dock.
table inomcut when th* great bulk
they trod tuu.t nuke It. final dive to
d e l ruction
A .h a r p look out f u r s u b m a r in e s w a .
Meanwhile n|,| had .tarted from a k e p i nt-oard the l.u a lt a n la a . .h e i p
dim n dirt' Ilona, nnd noon the I kmii* p ro a c h e d the Ir is h cimv » I . a c r u n lln g to
were pl&lt; kOd up pjr .lr.ni vew*el* and E r n e e t l ’o t | w , a T b r o n t o n e w .p a ie r
•mailer craft.
Hut Iwfnrc Hit. Imp m a n , w h o w n , n n io t ig th e a u r v t r o r .
pencil the .trieken liner, with ao tunny landevl at Q u e e n .l u w n .
human »oul* .till aboard, had gone
lie »al.l that after the ahlp wa. tor
down
pedoed there way no (uinlc atiuSig Ihe
It I. known that among an many crew, hut that they went about the
rlctlma there are many Americana, and
OCEAN TRAVEL.
In the .lew o f tboae In authority here
the death of I hew, pre.elit. to the t'nlted Male* the ere al e t problem the ho*
faced during the prewenl war.

The suddenness of the attack 1. held
ree|&lt;onalhle for tile terrific loaa of life,
aa the deadly nilaallra came without
warning whllo the pnaaongcn, were
dining, and the Lusitania disappeared
Bodi*a Drought A.hupw.
beneath the ware* within fifteen uitnOne lilt to] m l I* idlea were brought
utea.
iibofe nt Queeu.lonn on ibr fun.ird
W h a t S u r v iv o r s S a y .
wtiarf from the rescue tug Mtortncock
Survivor* say that the flrat lorj-clo and other steamers, which brought over
■truck the bull of iha ahlp directly to OOO aurvIvor*. It I* aialcd that these
person* died of eihau.llun while on
the apace occupied by tbe engine room their way lo Queenstown from the
■cent o f tbe dlaaater. Tbe bodies were

Captain William T. 'Dimer of the
Utaltaula expressed no frar fur tha
safety o f hta ahlp wbcu lie sailed from
New York.
" I wonder what the Germans will
do neitT** waa hla only comment when
he read the advertisement wot out by
tbe German embassy, warning Ameii
can* I hut they aallcd at “ I heir own
flak" on llrltlab ship*, which were IL
He to destruction In the war lout.
When Captain Turner wa. questioned
regarding the ship betug met off the
Irish coaat by tlrttlab torpedo destroyera he replied:
T h e admiralty never trouble to send

T he aecond hit her cargo section. and
la thought to bare exploded an enor
inoua quantity of ammunition aaid to
hare been atom) Urvre A t any rale,
aereral explosions occurred aa the
■teamer Haled and aank bow first
Rurrirora unit*) In declaring no
warning aaa gltau. So de*|wraU&gt; were
coodlUon* that only Irn lifeboat* could
be launched, tiidfscTtl-ablo acenee wrre
enacted aa Uie balplcaa. ftassengvr*
atrugglrd for their Urea In the sea.
The ofSclal lirttlah preae bureau In
Toulon gare out the following rajiort
from the admiral In command at
Queefi.tuwn
a&lt;Tbe torpedo busts, luge an'* armed
trawler, which wrnt to the rrecue of
tbe Lusitania passenger* from Queenstown are all In. with tbe exception of
the llnruu.
Few Firet C l... PtMengere Saved.
“ Only a faw of tbe Brat claaa paae*tiger, wire sated. It la understood
that they thought the ahlp* would Boat.
She aank In from fifteen to twenty Bra
inlnutea.
“ It b reported that ahe waa struck
by

i

FROM TH E P A S

PAGE SIX

cairaut Troata .an a* l o o a op

i

N O TICE!

TRAVELLERS intending lo
embark on the Atlantic voyage!
■re reminded that * state of
wgg exitI* between Germany
and her allies and GrestDritian
and her allies; that the gone ol
war include* the waters odja
c t jl to the JJntnh latea; that.
In accordance with formal no­
tice given by the Imperial Ger­
man Government, vrawli fly­
ing the flag of Great Britikn. or
of any of her allies, are liablo to
dextructlon in those waters and
that travellers tailing in the
war xone on ships of Great
Rritian or her allies do so at
their own risk.

M HR UI GERMAN EMBASSY.
W A tm N C T tj* . D C . A F A I L Si. t«Mh.

riia iixauaa.

wasnimu

ah.

work of gelling pnacengrra Into th*
baata In a prompt amt efficient rnanurr
"Aa we Heard] the toast of Irvlaoif
aaltl Mr. Cowpcr. " w e all Jolnefi In th*
luukonL for a |ue&gt;lhle attack by a sub
marine w.a IU« sole topic of converaa
t lou.
" I was chatting with a friend at tha
rati about 2 o'clock when suddenly I
enught a gtlmtiso of the punning tower
of a submarine about l.UXI yawls dl.
tanL I Immediately ealled my fhend'a
attention lo IL Immediately we both

Noted Men Among Those on
III Faieu Liner.
VANDERBILT, FROHMAN, ETC.
V**t

Gw ynni

C lb o rf

V * n d t rb H t«

M illio n * ;

G r v it n t

of

C h ir lM

T N t o U ic o l

H u b b ird ,

th#

H iif

Lett*. U n
N a w Y o rk
L@ck.htrt, f l H
T o r v n io
Loft*!, A. l&gt; . .New io r «u
U m t i M n , and rr*4iti
Lcnay, M i«*
Luck. M r* A, C , W e F Y M ifr, I U « t
L a c k K M rtd f* CL
Luck. K «n iY f ih C

M
McConnal. J c h n W
M am pM x. la n k
l l f U i n . W ilie r S a w to rn
M c M u rrtr. L , T rro m e
M c M u rtry . K ra J a . N r * lo r *
U ic U n o t n * K . N ta lo ri
M aclHm * M r* H e n ry D . M * T o rt .
Mac k a u ri h
C a rd iff. A
Mtfton, tH flw art ft Uo*toa
IlM C m M r*
M * ih «w * A T
M o o ir m i
M aturm , I U » lia a ii VY . Otford* k n fia n d

S te w a rt C H m r ik M ontreal
Hi on* . I tar t o r t ft N f « t k&gt;r«L
W 'trauia J u iil i *. tlsim ruon. o n ! ,
S tu a rt. A'tk.afultr
S tu rd y , L K . Msintra.iL
I.
T a y lo r , fl ft*. Won I fn ii
i&gt; »* ffi1 r li
T u m i Mr*
Th o m a s , ft» A C»r&gt;!*ft,
ThomtY*.in K |lH»n «n&gt;ii*ntb
Th o m p so n . M r*
T ib e r phi**. U e a ffe ,
m %ora.
T lm n u * , K j
s * w io r*
T ckW4 i . F K i » . UurvtxJfi, K r&lt; t* rv l
T o w n -e y firo v tt lu ru n iu
T ru tn tu M iM tat F . iirtticei»ort,. C o n n
T u rn e r , tfrott. New \ or*
T u r t o n u II . Heibourhe. A uetraitA ,
T w e m o w . lit** M aiwi. New torfc.

to

F r@ h m * r»,
M «n * g * ro ;

A u th o r,

md

C h o r lo o K l# «n , P la y w r ig h t .
T b «* H i t o f f l n t r l n t
Ih e L u i H t . u U fosio*.#.

p a u fD g e n

on

A.
A'lorn*. I lo n r v , UtiVtofk.
Adorn*. Mr* lliot n
A d a m * , a II .n * w VortL
A d a m * . %V M M N*w f o r k .
A lla n , tu i.ft, anti nut id. M o n irra L
A Hart, Mia* A n n * 11unit* a I
A lla n M is* U w r n , and maid. M o n tr e a l
Alloa. N S , Now York
(Vw A y a la . Ju lia n , Cuban consul ■ «n * ra j
at l.lY«rt&gt;D(il
tl
flalior. Jamo*. Cnflan«i
M akor M is* M A ., N*w Y ork.
iUklturln, ti r
1UUI w in, M m
H am ** . M r
t t a r llr t t , t l VV l l , Londcn, R ng ta nd H a rtlo tt. M r*
Itat** L ln d o n . J r ., N «w Y ork . «a -a * a «m
_ M y m a n and author
B s ttw ra ty, J J-. StoclipofL C n f ia n t l
H r rn a r d , O llV t r . Ikiatofi
H o m a n !, C I',, Now T i n .
If Hick*., A lb a n C ., 14*« Angtl**. C a l
n il irk * Mrw
IH itls 1-Oivrndaa. A tlanta, tla.
iH ask. J J . N * w Y o rk
fl)&lt;Kimft*ld. Th o m a *. New Ytifk.
Hob an, Jam *a. To ro n to
M oulton, l i , J f .. Lrindoit, IDnflland.
llitw rin B , C li* rl*a YV . New Y o rk
(t r a it h w a it* . Mis* D oroth y, M o n tre a l.
U rarule ll. M is* Jo**|ytiin*, N e w T u r k ,
iiri-lM trk . C . T . Hooltm
H riM lrirk C loet*. W „ H.»n A nto nio , Tam ,
Hrooka. J l| .. New York
llruwrn. I I . I I
H ru w n . M r* M, C.^ New Y ork.
Horn*id*. M r* J. H., and m aid, N * w Y o rk
llru n u . tl A .. M ontclair, N. J., (Jru n o . M n
H u r g r e i. I l m r y Q
H urm tdoe M ia* lri*» New Y o rk .
Ilu * w e ll, p
fly la s t on* A . J,,. London,, ICnalandL
Hyrnw , M ich a e l O ., N*w Y ork .
C a in p tx ll-J o a n a to n , Co nw a y a .. L o n d o n .
K ne lan O .
C n m pbe tl-ra tin nlo fk , M r*
C tn ip b a li. Ainaandev. London. E n g la n d .
C k ik fx U L
M na ira aL
i f.. 1 r,., „ U r » . W . T m a M .
('h n rlo a . J I I . Ta ra a tn .
C X i r t M , U S , P o rta To ro n to
C l a r k a H o v C o w le y, London, E n g la n d
Cohan, XI . N a w T o r s
C la rk * . A . I t , T o ro n t o
C o l , b ro o k . I I . O , To ro n to .
C o n n o r, M toa D o ro ttir, N a w Torfe.
C o p p in g . U e u rg o IL , Toronlta
C o p p in g . M rw
C r ic h lo n . M r * W ltltam . N , w T o r * .
C ro m p to n , P a u l. rh lta d ,lp n in
C ro m p to n . M i a , Intant nnd nu ta w
C ro m p to n , Htaveu
C ro m p to n , J o h n
C ro m p to n . Vila* A lto n * .
C ro m p to n , M ias C a th a rin e
C ro m p to n , H u m a lly,
Croo k*. Ito b a ri W . To ro o lo .
Cross. A . IX
D.
P a ly . It . IE
P a a rb a rg h . II E.. Naw T o r t ,
tvapaga, VI m A _ N , w b u t
D in g w a ll. C A . Chicago
P o u g n ll. M ia* C .. Uuabaa.
P ra k a . A u lla r , Ita lro it. M ich,
n r -d g n . A la n , ^taw Tu rk .
P ra d g a . M rn . N a w Y ork.
D u n im u tr . Ja m a s , T o rn a te

E.
E m o n d . W . A ., (Jurban

r.
Fan w ic k . Jo h n . a w u a a rM a A
rta h a r. U r t lo w a n l, Naw f o r k .
F o rm a n . J u s tu s M , N a w T u rk .
F u n Ira. C h a rlo * F I I , N « w T o r l t
F o w ls*. M r *
F ra a m a n . K k h a r d I t . J r , IP s 1 on.
F rla d m a ta ln . J . lamdon, E n g la n d .
F rta m l. K d w ln W , I'a rm ln g to n , Co nn .
F ru h m a n . L'harloa. and valaL N a w T o rU .

U.

I’ hoto t*v Amorlt in I'rrui AmocMHovi.

U TYPE OF QERMAN SUBHAHINE THAT SANK LUSITAN1A.
V lt u r b a (la o fg * ru ru n tu
M d lb u O M i t , N pw l u r k
M iliar, l"*f t j N
M ills 1' V . N m
To m
M ilc h rll. J i t R f i i&gt; I'hllm ltip V flk
M'H mH f It T
N a w lo r n
M orail. M n M rt
it&gt;rx&gt;niu
M o m n n li J , C «IM H lk
M(»tip. li 11 Na«» 1tif h
M un ru . Mra lJt«r|M ra L
M j t r i ||rrm a n a . n * w l u r k
Myarm. J I .

N

Photo by American Praa. Aaaoctatlon.

THE STEAMSHIP LUSITANIA AS SHE APPEARED LEAVINO FOR
ENQLAND ON HER LAST TRIP
out to meet tbe Lusitania. They only taw tbe track of a torpedo followed
look aflrr tbe ahlpe that art bringing almost Instantly by an explosion. Fortbe big guna over, like tbe Orduna anti tlun* of splintered bull ware sent flyIba Trauay I* a nta. la.t voyage. On tbe lug Into Iba air. and than another tor­
last eastward trip I never saw a war­ pedo • truck. Tbe abtp began to Uat
to starboard.
ship unlit we reached Liverpool '
"Tbe crew at once proceeded to gvt
One of tbe Cunard officer* who waa
on tbe LuattanU on tier last voyage. - tbe paaaengvra Into boau In an orderly,
confirmed Captain Turner'* statement prompt and etficlvnt manner. MU*
that tbe liner bad not tlghted a atngle ■ llulrn Smith appealed to me 10 sore
warship on her toy age
n«r 1 placed her in a boat and *aw
Captain Turner stood at bU post on n*r safely away. I got Into on* of lb*
the bridge until bl* *hlp went down
1, 0 *,.
and waa reamed three hour* afterward
"Home of tbe hoota could not ba
wearing a life beit. according to D A. la uni he) a* Ibe vraael waa slnUbg. ;
Thoms*, tbe Cardiff OTair«i coal mag­ There was a large number of women
nate.
'and children |n the »«-rood cabin. For­
"Our course wa* aba|wd for abore ty of tbs children were irsetban ■ year
tmtnrdlatrly after tbe torpedo atrucL. '
old "
be aakl. 'T b e re U a difference o f optnFruiu Interviews with pa*wn.»ra It
loo ** to whether tbe *U*mablp waa
■ ppeats that when tbe torpedoes bum
(truck by tu-we than one torpedo, but I
they sent furiti anffuenttng fume*
l i e rd only on*.'

Jaffary. T , C , Chicago.
Janklna, Francta U
Jotlval. Mia* Itita. Naw York.
Jo n ,,. Mias. Naw York.
IL
Kaabla, XV, Toron to
Kaabia, M rs,
Kallatt. Francta C . Naw York.
Kaa paon . M Toronto
Kanan. O r Owan. Naw (a rk .
Kannady, M rs C H Ukton. Naw Y a m .
Kannady, Mtoa Kathryn. h „ Ta ro .
Kaaar. H a rr y J , Phltsdaiphia.
Kaaar. M rs
Kaaalar Uaorg* A.. Naw TetlL
K ing. T II . New Yora.
Klaln, Chart**. N*w tor*.
Knight. C Harwood. Uaiilrtwro.
K n igh t. M L a Eiatna H
K n o t. M N . Philadaipkla.
Lana . S ir H u g h . England.
L aaa atlar, M r * I L U . London. E n g la n d .
Lasaatta r. F . London. England.
L a u r ia t . C h a rts * E . J r , lloaion.
L a a ra y d . C A . Bydnay. A u a tr, •*.
L a a ro y d . M r a . nnd maid. U yd n e y, S u e
tra ils.
L e a ry . Ja m a * . N a w York,
le h m a n n . Is a a c
L a lg h . Kvar&gt; A . Liverpool, E n g la n d ,
ta ils . O a ra ld A . N a w York.
L a v tn io n . Joseph.
L a w tn . F (J a y

,

V a n tHraatafi M sCUii Uoodon
V a m ltrtiitl
A H rw t tJ
and vaiat.

\ orl

V a a a ir . W
V a riu in . t i

A F , Lrontlan
I* I*

Naw

|:M «iam t

A

WinIktf, li ftI „ Nrw Yc'itti
Wtlltam, T 11.haw Yurk,

W aitaflald

Mr*

A

l . N tw

f o rk

M’ .j| k R . ilr * \\ tniu'fi M ontreal
W t^ a o n , M r « A nth onjr. h aw Y ork .
W i lt s . M n C a t dan 11a k , l a k t Koraat.

N iu n u r in . F tl , N t w Y o r k
N yh lom . U u B ta r A d o lp h . C a n a d k

U
O f f , D r, J
O f f , F,

To ro n to
I*, a n d m *hiM »rTtnt« MonirvaJL.

«

Ofltiarnk M n A . H . M a m m o n , U rtL
Oatborn* M t u T O
(Padtar, M ra, C.„ t.lvarvMM l. Kticland,
Padilla. P w la rta o U . . M aatco. Canaul U « a
II arai tot M n l c u ut idaarvofift,

( ‘■aa. J 11a N r * fork.
.1 iM»uia». M.
unm

P a n rtd fa . Prank* N a w f o r k
Payntar, C lia rla a K .. ialrarpcud. tEnjJandL
P a m tar. M laa Ira n#, id v a rp o o i. K t i f i in d
Paardon. P A T o rt in t o
Paaraon. I » r f H . N a w f o r k
Paaraon. M ra., N a w Y o r k
F u r l M a jo r K IV a rra o . N a w Y o r k
P aarl. Mra.. in fa n t an d m aid
I ’aarl, Mlaa A m y W . W,* N a » fo rk .
I ’aarl, Ml*a ttuaan VV,. and m aid, haw
Y o rk
f 'a a r i l i a i i r r H tu a rt D urum n ll,
Parklna E d w in . N a w f o r d
I'a rry , r r a d a r lr li J . H ufTalo. H. f .
C a rry . Alt*ari N
jiu fTajg, N V,
PMHipa. VVailie* IL . N a w Y o r k
1*1H k Itotilnaon. H a m ilto n , U n i
Piarpuftnt, W illia m J . L l r i r t n d l , C n g lin d
Piamondon, C h a ri* * A , C h ic a fu
Piamondnn, M ra
Pul lard, l l a n r r , N a w f o r k
pupa. Mlaa T lia o x lt li. and m ild . iTarialt.ften. Cunn
|*oaan. W a i r d
P o w tli, H oorn* A . N a w Y o r k
It
JlatrllfT, N A , . Nww Y o r k
ftandin. UM&gt;art. N a w l u r k
H iif o u tra n k A L , C a rd ifT, VValak
liu Ltriton, C h a h « a I*
JftcHblnautt. M r a
ll u i f ia , P A ^ T w iu n t o
lio g a rt. M ra
Hum bla. T . W . T o r o n t o
liytraaft, Mra, U H ta riln g . To ro nto.
Hraraon, Miaa l a u r a

.

.

A L P ltlli U WT XNI VXM lddB ILT.

.

d ’ H h a rro a . M ra A i l Naw Y o r k
W lt h a r b w , Maatar A I.
Wftthfthiton, 14M hn&gt;ft». Ik&gt;»lon.

Wood, Arthur, Naw York
W rto h t. Itutearl C-

V.
Younn, J

M . Mamlllon, C»nt

Y o u n t . L ira
Y uu mg. I T il Hp. M o n t r a • I

aft
B ch w ah a ch tr, I-oo LI . H a itlm o ra
He hw » r w , A u f u a t W . N a w fo rk ,
lic h a ir n , M a x M
Now Y o rk
Bcuti. A J , C h i r a c
Hocuiuba, P a re r, Iftoatom

O a u n U a il, F r a d J . Naw Y ork.
Othaon, M a th a w
tlllp ln , O . A .. E u a la n d .
G o ra r. E d i a r . N a w York.
Orate O a e a r F , N a w York.
G ra n t. M u n ia g u T , Chicago,
O r n n h M r*
IL
H a m m o n d . F ra d a ric k I , T o ro n t o
H a m m o n d . M r*
H a m m o n d , o I L . N o w Yarik
H a m m o n d , M r*
H a rd w ic k , C. C . N o w YorlL
ll t r p a r . J. I L
H a r r is , p w l g h l C . Naw York.
H a a k in* F
»V , Chicago
H U I. C . T . Uondon. K n ila n d .
H odgaa. VVlldam A . I'hlladaiphln.
Ilu d g o t. M rs
H odgaa. XV. H . J r .
Hud***. P a a n XV, PM ladalpm n.
H u ll. XX* I I , M oltlra al
llo m a , T h o m a s . T o ro n t o
H o p k ln a A . L . N o w York.
H o u a h to n . O r J T , Caratoga.
H u b b a rd , E lb a rt. E ast A urora, N . T .
H u b b a rd . U r a
H u tc h in s o n . Alla* P , Orang*. N . J .

tW O lu f| ardor a

•The Cunard agent gtrea 2.100 aa tha
total number aboard.
‘T h # Cunard company reported tha
nationalities of tha paaaeugera aa fot
lows; Halooo—British. 171*. Amertcau.
100; Greek. 3; Swede. 1; Mexican, li
Hwlaa, L Second claee—llrtll.b. £21;
American. 03; Ituaebn. 3; Ilvlgtan. I;
Hollander.. 8: French. B: lulIan. I ; un­
known. X
" la the etrerxge (here a re aald to
bare been thirteen Americana.
Tbe tragedy look place about tea
miles off tbe l)ld Head o f Klnakla. Ae
on aa the Luiltanla'e wtreiraa call
for aaaial.nce was received at Queenatown Admiral Coke. In command of
• naval station. dbpatebed In l he
aceow all anbtaac* available
The toga Warrior. Rlurmcock and Ju
together with fire trawler, and the
lifeboat In tow of s tuf. were
d out to ees.
her mndltlone aided l’i tha work

MAY II. I 9IS

THE FIRST GLASS
PASSENGER LIST

A lf r * d

.

AMERICANS SAVED.
O E C ra b
V I , i t and lira. Paarl and tw o chtldraa,
h iu nrt (&gt; I sari and Auleay FsarL
VI r* J s &gt; i , Ta ft A " ‘l b
Chnrlsn C. Ilcrdw ita
Mr* Mtsnlty L IX U n a s
U. T lllll
Hobart lln n tln
Vila* Lonay
M rs W illiam Itonarly and in fa n t
Thom s* Phillips
W illiam M cAdam s
J II llou * h l»n
John M Hsaaiiay
Ogd*n II llanimand.
J

H

U tooks

Chari** T . Jaltry
H r* C. II Lund
A rth u r ■hapna-daue.
O r O V Hour*
C llnlon llarna'd.
Harbarl LlgllX
J. UnnaM i. Jr
Edith XVilimnis
Jsmaa J l.aary.
riiomaa MiMtll
M rs John XXolfsnd.b
Mrs Nina I lul land.
M 's Thorns* Mash.
L I . M eVlurrsy.
Hobart Kay
II. IL Law n h sri.
O w an Cannon
O w lg h t C lls r r t A
F ra d U Jodaos

Ed

M f o lia

H C XXrigni
F J O s u n tia i.
■ N K no*

l airlcs U Poonatl
M rs C y ril It lira lt.rto n ,
Uaorg* A Kaaaltr
U r a U Ilyrn*
W ASHINGTON'•

CM A ALLS rfc O M M A *, H O

«A | LU Tt

Saco in La. Miaa E U a a b a tk
Ib irid a , Victor I . . C m r u t M U
Bblaftdo. Mra

Shymar, Mra. K

D . Naw f o r k

■id urd. Ja iu m ra
S U v t. T h w ' - « j .
ftddaii T . N a w York
• m ilh . Miaa Joaato T a f t

H ra rta illa . O

■onnahork It It. Uamokra
SlacanovM. Caaimar uar J rciur, u a
dntt lift*1.4nd,
g u p n s n , M r* U
M r, and maid. M oa tfast
BM pnan* U a a 'a r J o h n I I C , and n u rta
M uons*.

VIEW.

Never sim* that April day throe
years ago. wbeu word rauia tbst lbs
T ltaulc bad gous down, bas Wssblogtoo beau so ttlrrsd ■• It Is over tbe
■labia* o f lbs l.uallAot*. T M eerly
raporia in lj tbui there bad Iwvu ou
loss of Ilf*, hut th* rsllsf that lose*
■ip leas raiiwd gate way Ut Uie greete*l tube* 111 islar wllvo It (w-v-siii*
tbown ttisl Ibara b.id Ivan uisuy
lira lb . Although Hie, are liVutuundly
m b'eiit. oltl' Isis rtwioe Hull Ibis tragm l), lb Volt lug Hie ima uf Aym-i ban
rllUehh Is likely l « bribg nbaat a
rrtala In Hie lr:’ « .Hull mal is Is I toes of
Ibe I'blirtl Nliiles

a aXna* a. . *

(

�VW

A4

3

Thursday, Auq. I t , IW1

I — E ve n in g Herojd &amp; Herald A d ve rtise r, Sanlord, FI.

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

UBLISHED
EMI-WEEKLY

THE SANFORD HERALD

ON TUESDAYS
AND FRIDAYS

I N S A N F O R D — L i b /» Viotth Lioing
VOLUME. VM

SO. '3

SANFORD, FLORIDA, TUESDAY DECEMBER II, 191*.

SANFORD, THE WONDERFUL CITY
Sanford, the
county
real
of
[‘rightly little Heminold county hak
r,(led a very aatUfirlory year, notrlthstanding the geneial financial
leprrssion which
ha*
[ire vailed
brought) ut the country, On the
*hol* Hanford resident* have much
o he thankful for, and in reviewing
.he progrea* made In varioua tinea,
.hare la every reason why the rlogan
'Lucky Sanford" hold* good, and
ill Hanfordite* realm- thia more
than e ver before.
A very thorough rtniui ol Banford and Seminole county haa been
taken during the paat year, and it I*
gratifying to learn that the popula­
tion In the two precinct* of Sanford
tuday 6,667, and the entire county
figure* a total ol It,160. T w o year*
ago when the population ol Sem­
inole wan figured for county dlvlaion purpoaea, there were torn** K.000
Inhabitant* in the area o l the pro*
po**d new county, and the recent
rtniua figure* ahow an Increaae of
1,160 people, dernonitrating that
the new county I* attracting new
people and that the older reaident*
are Increasing the family atatua,
[Vrhapa the strongest evidence
that the oulali.. world i&lt; looking
with (avor upon ua I* the fact that the
Clyde Line Steamship Company and
Southern Hell Telephone Company
have apent Ihouaand* of dollar* in
Improvnmenla In thl* city during the
paat year.
Till* fart ulone proven
(hat Sanford ia ileallried to he one
of the grrateat ritie* of Florida
where varioua popular Industrie*
will eventually lorate, and the city
will aurely develop into an irnporlanl rommercla] center.
Telephone Plain

The (juartefa of the old telephone
rompany have beep entirely remod­
eled along modern line*, and new
office*, wareroome, and operating
loom* have been provided for. The
Telephone Itulblli g contain* beyond
any question the mo-t convenient
and complete equipment lor the
transaction of hunlne** of any build■ng in the city.
The operator*'
quartet* merit epecial mention a*
being the large*!, lightest and most
rcirnforlahle of any In &lt;he Male, and
the Western electric twitch I,card
i* of the lutetl ty|ie, modern in
every parlieulrr, and * i i h »uch facilitie* a* will care for the telephone
traffic of the city for many year* to
rcimr.
The plant complete, measured In
term* ol dollar*, rcpre**nt* a value
of I HO, 000. And on Saturday De­
cember til, at I I p m . thia new
equipment will he thiown into oper­
ation; then will begin the work uf
diamantellng the old and reined
material of the former company
Much to the *atlafartion of every­
body, local Sanford men have charge
of the »y*lem, J F. Kornatx being
the manager, while It. A Hronaon
it the plant aupeiIntendent, and a*
a re«ult the people arc u**ureil ol the
lieat arrvtre and moat rourtcou*
treatment from the*e gentlemen.
t l&gt;dc Deck*
Tlie Clyde Line Stramahlp I’ ompapy w «i the &lt;ir*l In lake advan­
tage of the impinvenient* along the
lake front and have completed a
aplemllit
fireproof building nil I he
bulkhead Iront which I* 66*107 feel,
built of galvanixed Iron
Under the
one roof are Included amide bright
room fur their immen*e h.uatne** in
thit* line, while Irrge. comfortable,
well lu.nlahed. cun'* blent waiting
room* have been provided lor rhe
truvi ling pulilir
I’ lic lar ding lai d
itie* ale of rlie bent end nothing
belter loulil be deaired in lli&lt;‘ way of
Ctlnverdenie and JirartlCidillily

Of all the pleating thing* that
have occurred In Sanford during the
year III 16- perhapa the one n| great­
est magnitude i* Ibe rebuilding of a
telephone plant by the Southern
Hell Telephone Ai Telegraph C o m ­
pany, w ijo are purchaser* uf the
The old frame building* owned by
lorally owned Hnnlntd Telephone
the i nmpiny and situated but her
Company.
Early in April the propertlea of tut r I* on Conunercial tiieet have
the old rompany paxed into the been torn dowii orid in their *lend
hand* of the grealcM operator* of have bull trotted line hi irk ware­
telephone plant* in the world aud boot*-* which ale occupied by the
on the lint day of May the South­ Wiglit (iiocery Company, one o(
ern Hell Telephone Company began the wholeaale jirorperou* firm* of
Other lirlck warehouse*
ita active ownership of the Sanfoid Sanford.
Exchange. A contract with the rill- will lie errrtril shortly by ltd* cornxen* of t lie city ol Sanford, made puny for their pal run*

high order and would be a credit to
any county in the atate.
In fact,
many vDitor* pronounced it the
equal of many atate fain. The cit*
ru», vegetable and poultry exhibits
were wonderful, while the woman'*
*ection, which included hand work,
canned food*, cooked food*, flower*,
antique*, art and
many
other
thing*, wa* one of the moat importnnt feature* of thi* excellent fair
The achoo] exhibit could not have
Veen *urpa**ed in the Mite.
fir, Janie- Y. Porter and
Dr. C.
D o d d * o l the State Department of
Health fu, nLhed the state exhibit in
it* entirety, and Dr. Terry of Jack'Onvtlle furniahed the Jacksonville
exhibit. These exhibit* were visited
daily by hundred* of people and the
lecture* were well attended.
In
• hurt the fair t mbodied all of the
latest and up to the minute feature),
including gala parade*, Industrial,
civic arid merchant** fiesta*, auto­
mobile parade*, baby *howa. A th­
letic content* and hor*e rate*
&lt; hautauqua
Following close upon llu- county
lair
wax (he ihautauquu
which
brought to Sanford *ome of the lead­
ing talent -of thl* lountry.
Thl*
privilege wa* given the reaidenta of
Sanford h&gt; public spirited business
men and while not a financial auci c e , gave Infinite pleasure to those
who were fort unair enough to at­
tend.
The building record for the year
1916 ha* hern excellent and eclipsed
that of former year* to a very en­
couraging cMeni
F L. Woodruff
i* i he- owner of a new building on
First &lt;ireet and Magnolia avenue
The building include* three large
store room* and while only one
story lor the present, the founda­
tion i* made with the vliyw of mak­
ing the building three stories In
height later on. The store* were oc­
cupied »* soon a* finished by thriv­
ing liuslne** establishment*.

Evern the colored section feel*
the impetus of the building boom
and *ome luhstantial residences as
well a* fine businea* block* have
gone up in the past twelve months
Sanford possesses three bank*, alt
■plendid institution*, doing business
in handsome structure*. The busi­
ness for the past year ha* been
most prosperous, the deposit* ex­
ceeding all expectation*. These in­
stitution* would be a credit to any
rlty time time* at large ax Sanlord.
The officer* have at heart the jjomi
of their city and rourteou* treat­
ment can be relied upon.
• hurrhet
The rhurchea of Sanford have all
enjoyed many blessing*, and have
been enabled to ranrel.to a large
degree many of their obligation*, relStive to their new edifice*, especially
the Presbyterian,
Methodist and
Raptbt churches, all of which are
progressing toward completion.
The Firxt Presbyterian rhurch of
Sanford, with Itev. E D. Hrownlee
a* paktor, can rejoice In the fa^i
lhat i he past yeai has been i suecr»*ful one in all department* of
I he work.
There have been many
addition*, bringing not only newmember* but whole families Into (hr
rhurrh. The Sunday school build­
ing of the new church ha* beer
elected and paid for.
Thi* give*
u* an assembly room for public
service*
and aepaiate da** room*
for each of the Sunday school
classr*. The building i* two stories
high and of dark leil brick.

The Sunday *rhoo| ha* growh
considerably In number* and In ef­
ficiency of work done. * A well
formed plan for training and equipping teacher* haa been inaugurated,
and i* led by Supt. H C. Du Hone.
Two Sunday school member* have
been secured who look after the ah
••nine*
A comprehensive plan for
missionary education has been begun
during the year and one very In­
The Herndon building, corner of teresting missionary program given.
Second street and Park avenue haa
The work among our young peo­
a front of (nrty-one feet on Paik
ple I* one o| the mini enrouiaging
avenue, while it extends 100 feet to
feature* of the work. Our society ia
the rear
The fil*l floor la a large ilsased by the national committee
and rnmmoilioua storeroom, now* of young people’ll work a* on* o f th

‘ moMpwgrealdve' end"a7r ^ f « i or-

"I;.'"'" w

pastor, are to be congratulated upon
holding their service* once again in
their own churrh
home.
which
though not completed ha* been tem­
porarily fitted up lor the regular
servire*
The edlfire will be an ex­
ceptionally hsndxome tine, and ev­
ery effort is bring "made to hasten
the wrork.
The church ha* been
very ^active in all departments and
report* prove that much work ha*
been (lore in all line* of endeavor.
The Church of the Holy C rox* of
which Rev A S Peck I* rector, has
passed through a very promising
year
Many splendid thing* have
bex-r. done, though perhaps the most
important
work ha*
been done
through the palish hou«e
Thi*
more nearly approach** a \\ M. C
A. than anything so far in Sanford
The tiaaket ball team* of the Senior
Hrotherhnod of St. Andrew and the
girl*' lia-kethall team of the public
high school practice regularly In the
parish hou*e ami hold their public
games there, which have proven
miiil popular and an rn)oynhb- pas­
time fur the young people. Through
the work and effort* uf the senior
chapter of the Urol her hood "of St.
Andrew u new full sized new model
moving picture machine ha* been
inatallril in the parish h o u s e and
many excellent entertainment* have
afforded the, member* nnd their
friend* much pleasure
A balcony
haa been built ill the front of the
building which increases the sealing
rapacity to a very l a r i
degree,
while the outside of the building has
been much imptoved by a coat of
paint.
Improvement* have
also
been
made to the rectory, *uch as install­
ing electric light* and the putting
on of a new roof,

M. H. Thatcher of Louisville. K&gt;\.
president of the Thatcher Realty
Company,
opened
office*
sorte
month* ago, the Mork being organ­
ized with a capital stork of {200.000.
The rompany pruchased the Holden
real estate property in Sanford,
Seminole county and Volusia coun­
ty. and will aid in every poult)U
way the development of Sanford.
Several retail businesses hive been
established and have met with en­
couraging sure***.
The business
outlook for the coming year ia all
that could he hoped for, and the
merchant* are already preparing for
the ChrlatmXs trade.
A long fell want wa* filled when
Dr ()
J. Miller established * h e
Miller Hospital in part of hi* hand­
some new residence on Park avenue.
While onfy a very limited nudher
of patients ran be taken care of, t ) r .
Miller hn* made arrangement* Tfor
every detail of »urgin l work. And
many very difficult operatior* fisve
been preformed *lnce thr hojfltal
was started.
Here the patle.it ban
he assured of every comfort udder
pleasant surrounding*, and a l i o ’ rerslve the he*l in care and attention

The bulkhead of reinforced con­
crete- which was completed sonic
time ago i* beginning to assume the
proportion* that demonstrate the
great thing* nf the future, since -the
filling in t* advancing so rapidly t o ­
ward completion; arid now that the
work i* showing result* th* inhabi­
tant* of Hanford can foresee the
possibilities Of thl* great work uf
reclamation.
The big dredge ui
working iluy and night, and If all
goes well the work will he completed
The Congregational rhurrh ha*
within a comparatively abort time
ended a prosperous year nnd ure re­
and the beautification of the lake
joicing in milch work well done
-Imre wilt begin In earnest
Tin- Christian SrieiiliMn hiv in g inCrops
reused in Sanlord to u *uilllrient
nu-mber to warrant taking an Initial
The crop* have been unu-ually
step toward loomin g a church have good and at the present time the
rented the Woman'* Club room* and trucker* are jubilant over the splen­
ate holding public servicx-n every
did price* which they are nowvr*Sunday under the most fuvo able
ctivmg (or early lettuce.
E very ­
rircurwetaurw*.
thing points IV a wan-SeelwMp Aon
Mrhxiol*
' season for the trucker, and algor o f
The public srhooi* of Sanford con­ prosperity are evident on all sides.,
tinue to maintain their high stand­ A large acreage i« (wing planted and
ard under a full corps of efficient several hundred car* of fine veget­
teacher*.
Improvement* of a sub­ able* will leave Hunlard fields b e ­
stantia) nature have been made In fore the trucking season i» over.

alive
Mercantile Company.
The , ganiiatlon* for young people in the
upper floor* are fitted up for apart-'
The lociety has raised con
tnenta and la known as the Semkideralile money for the new church,
ii oli Hotel, a convenient and eom- and ha* made a reputation a* en­
lortulile Mopping (dare for the weary tertainer*.
Hut
thr*e
development*
*re
not
through and by the city council,
the building-, and •&gt;&gt; the people of
make It Imperative that the new the oidy indication* that Santonl l* traveler or the sight seeing touriat.
lioth of the
organization* for Sanford
have voted
a generous
Meal* are not *erved, hut the hotel
gaining
fame
abroad.
Within
the
ownrra o l the Kanlord plant " g e t
women, the Aid and the Missionary school bond, work wdl be begun on
i*
located
within
eaiy
walking
dlebuay" In the rebuilding plana which [last year lekeral IntpurlMtit enliven
Society have had very *urre*aful n large addition to the grammar
The
wire a purl of the agreement; there­ tion* have been held in thi* illy and lance ol aplrndtd restaurant*
year*.
They have been arll.e in school building in the early spring,
structure i* attractive, bring of
fore, in order to fulfil the promi»e to the many visitor* It ove tx pressed
education and giving, both to the while the present pri inary xchonl
buff
brick
trimmed
In
grey
stone.
make the plan nb*o1utely new by enlhutiatlir ad ml nil Ion |iq the pmlocal work and benevolent cause* will be remodeled and a new pri­
Many handsome residences have
It* hospitable
January I, IIH6, the new owner* grestlve city anil
One uf the must unusual feature* mary building erected on the west
Iteen erected on Magnolia avenue,
h»d their engineer* on the apol ul- people.
uf the work bat been the interest side of Sanfoid
The school grounds
mo*t Immediately.
Early In January
the Florida Ibi* beautiful street now presenting
are kept in ■plendid condition and a
alrno*t
.........broken
line
of
fine
*
r"
1
•
nw"
«
,h*
A runiplele commercial aludy ol State Federation " I Labor held in
hoy*.
There are regularly more progrea*ivn spirit I* frit III all drall the
pxi**i bill lie* ol San lord'a Sanlord one of l in largest conven­ borne* from Second slrert to Tenth men and hoy* at Sunday school 1
uf the work
Mreel
Among
those
erected
within
(mure growth wa* made by expert! tion* ever held In the tdatory ill I in­
than women and girl*. A prominent | In the (li-jiarltnent of city govern­
l‘rc*l- the past &gt;eur are the home* of minister from Jacksonville remarked
in thi* line ol work
Each aerlton state Federation ol Labor
ment then- ia an intrrrai and zeal
itailifl. Frank Adams,
Frank
ill the city wa* given minute inaper- (IfUll f , E Shepefd, llii- other of- 7
'&lt;l " T . LoJeha ,hU
,h ,t ,f h' h» ' ‘ ,h'
exhibited which ha* manifested ittlon, every lndu*lry inveatlgated, tlrel*. a* well a* the &lt;ielvgule* and (■tic*. J D. Ilradlonl
of the Sanford 1‘ reabytertan mm self to a remarkable degree in the
and every [iiitillc Improvement that viailor*, were loyally- entertained and the two attractive revidrrice* In hi* work in Jacksonville, he could
riumersiu* Improve me nl« »een on
owned
by
N
If
(
i
airier
The
home
»a * being made wa* carefully In­ and Idt with u desire to return
move that city for righteousness
every aide
Additional aln-els have
of
J
l*.
Ileiinett
ha*
been
entirely
again
in
the
near
In
lure
quired uhuot. Thl* wa* done with
and am i."
h**en paved, many aide walks laid,
During the n in e month the Lake remodeled ami preterit* a very ideat­
a view to unlading «uch telephone
Thl* ha* been th* mrisl *ucce*sful
-tiid a general atmosphere of order­
L. I’ . MrCuller,
equipment a* would he adequate Heglon I'res* Association and I he ing appearance
year in giving that we have eajieriline** prevail* in every district
W
I
Thigpen
and
other*
have
South
Florida
I'n-a*
A**"ciati«n
and
ten year* from now ami tn order
enred. The church has contributed
that the Increaned demand for tele­ the executive committee of the Floi- erected M-vrral pretty house* to fornething over JH.000 to various The Jiarks have tieen greatly im
prayed and are well kept
Mar
Mr. Jamrx Stewart is now
phone arrvtre could hr anticipated Ida i're** Association met In San­ rent
purpo*** during the year.
side street* have been graded and
and provided tor without havir g ford and the (arm- ol Sanford'* hn»- building a pretty home and Mrs.
The itaptitt Temple ha* enjoyed
to rebuild again within I hat f i Inc pimlit) went far uml wide. Me**t» Jvuvage'a home hat recently been a prosperous year, under the guid­ put in good condition, while a rturn
completed
In
all
parts
of
th*
city
her of street* have been opened Up
H
J
1
1
‘dly
and
Walter
M
Haynes
The reault ol thi* e*|ie(t Inspection
attractive home* ire going up and ance of the jiaator, lies', (leo II)
hich have hern rtoied for many
ol our city l* very pirating to our proving the io-kl of in—I*
man
In a statistical way. several
h,
there
are
many
more
in
contempla­
population Mure, lurnlahrd by tiie
Anolhel notable gathering wa* in
important item*
may lie noted
tion,
The mayor and city rnunril have
in*|iectora, the Southern Hell C om ­ March when the (irand Council of
One hundred and thirty member*
On French avenue, E. J. T«yl&lt;&gt;r
been wide awake to everything *hlrh
pany ha* Ju«l completed the moil the Florida lirder of Iteil Men met.
have been added to the roll ol the
meant the welfare of Sanford nnd
pirlcntiou* telephone pUnl Id the Oju* Tribe No 61 of Sanford, uhly and Judge (». C. Herring have church,
117,1 Id ha* been raised
the people have had much xaUxfac
supplemented by tin- Commercial erected beautiful home* in the past
atate.
and expended by the rhurrh in the
year which add greatly to thi* com­
tion in realizing that their town 1*
pa*t two years.
Th* average atCunatruction engineer* and ex Club and other citizens, acting a*
new neighborhood.
being governed by sincere, earnest
boala to the great gathering of clan* paratively

St. Johns River Festival

Work* will open ahortly on a large
•rale and be equipped
to do the
flneM work in their line.

The two possession* outside of
Sanford in which |ierh*p» all realdent* are most deeply concerned
are the county home and cemetery.
The former a beautiful, homelike
place, wa* purchased from J. A.
Harrold early In the year, and has
been comfoitably fitted up for the
inmate*. The place comVrieea about
forty acre* and in time can lie mbde
self supporting in a measure through
the effort* of the rounty offlejal*
and the inmate* themselves.
'A
tine hearing orange grove belong* to
the property and that alone will
yield a nire Income. Flvery coevenienre o f country life 1* provided.
The cemetery has long needed
tnought and care from (he residenta
ol Sanford and the time at last ar­
rived when a movement wa* started
to make the necessary Improvement*.
J, U Parker working in conjunc­
tion with T J. Miller has brought
about wonderful change*.
A large
pavilion ha* been built so that
open air tetviers can be held with­
out regard to the weather. A genvial cleaning up was done, plant*
and shrubbery planted, and flower*
started.
The results htvs- becq
umaxing and deierve the apprecia­
tion ol evrry resident of Sanford

Itoada

HONOR IS MAGIC

A R T S &amp; C R A F T S • F A M IL Y F U N
AT

Fort Mellon Park On Lake Monroe
Sanford, Florida “ The Friendly City"

OCTOBER 26 - 27, 1985
DOOR PRIZES • ENTERTAINMENT • LIVE MUSIC
Sponsored H y
T H E G R E A TE R

a

\ \
" 'S '

If Your Autom atic Teller Card Has Honor System
Privileges, You Can Use It To Pay For Purchases.
Now Available State Wide Thru Your Account W ith Gs.
Get Yours Today!

J~ A A /F O ffD

HOiyO/i 9

O F

CO A t W

-ICE

In C'oopcrullon With

-Seminole Art Association

_ ■ (&gt; &gt; mti

For Further Information Call

l’)f4i.'i/AW

A

322-2212

tj

FIRST FEDERAL ■
H O F SEMINOLE
Forest City 6 6 9 -6 9 00
Oviedo 365-5641

Sanford 3 2 2 -1 2 4 2
Longwood 8 3 4 -3 2 0 0

i

D e B a ry 6 6 6 -8 6 6 6

Orange City (9 0 4 )7 7 5 -6 0 0 0

l

�Evening Herald &amp; Herald Advertiser. Sanford, FI

Thursday* Aug. It , t**J— ]

THIS IS HOW WE STARTED IN 1952

of the latest inspirations of the
fashion greats . . . .
The trends and fabrics that will be
your own this Autum n will be shown
in our beautiful new modern store . .
T H U R S D A Y . O C TO B ER 2. 1 9 5 2
8 A .M .T O 1 0 :0 0 P.M .

228 East Firnt Slreet

In the past third of a century we ve grown to
twice the size! We’re still committed to g iv in g
our customers the same great styles plus quality
at sensible affordable prices.

• BRENNER
• P.B.J.
• VICKY VAUGN

TONI TODD
BRITISH VOGUE
LONDON FOG

&gt;V A K M J»w
LIFE STRIDE SHOES

HELP US KICKOFF OCR 34th YEAR
with a

THIRD OF A CENTURY

BRAS • JEA N S
T h e O w n e rs and S t a f f of R O -J A Y
w o u l d l i k e t o T h a n k a ll t h e C u s t o m e r s
fo r the p a tro n a g e and frie n d s h ip
d u rin g th e p a s t 3 3 y e a rs .
Come in and register to
HENRY LEE DRESS
• TONI TODD OR
• KORET

win one of the following gifts
• BRITISH VOGUE SWEATER
VICKY VAUGH DRESS
PAN I S SUIT

DRAWING TO BE HELD AT 3:00 P.M. SATURDAY. AUQ, 3 IH . 1985

2 1 8 *2 2 0 East First Street
Downtown Sanford
3 2 2 -3 5 2 4
MON.-THURS. G SAT. 9-3:30, I Rl. 9 8

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« — Evening Herald A Hamid A d v a rilta r, Sanford, FI.

PUBLISHED
3EM I-WEEKLY

' t -

Thursday, A ug. Jf , m i

THE SANFORD HERALD

ON TUESDAY8
AND FRIDAYS

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

VOLUME

X

SANTORD. FLORIDA. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER II. 19U

NUMBER 21

BIG WAR FUND DRIVE
STARTED YESTERDAY
WITH MONSTER PARADE
SEMINOLE AS USUAL MUST
CO OVER THE TOI*
Th* big drive for the War Fund
in Bemlnole rounty opened officially
Sunday with two merlin** on* at
twelve and anotbrr at three thirty,
both of th an at the band aland In
Cantral Park and both of them well
attended.
Last kreck Ihe various
rommitteea were busy aa heea get­
ting ready and there were good
meeting* at varlou* place* In the
tounty, among them being Geneva.
Monroe, Longwood, Altamonte and
aevrral other precinct*. Them? meeting* in the rounty will hr continued
Ihi* week and there will be a big
meeting at Oviedo on Wednesday
evening. Prominent ipeaker* of the
rounty are attending theae meeting*
and in addition all last week and
thia week there were prominent
speaker*, m»n ' and women, at the
various theatre*. It i* safe to assert
that there will not be a man. woman
or child in Seminole county that
will nut know the cumpaig i in on.

I

WORLD WAR ENDED;
GERMANY SIGNS PAPERS
THAT STOPS BLOODSHED
I

rlly and rounty and the boyi of the
state.
The meeting cloied by th* bene­
diction pronounced by Dr. lfilburn
and the big crowd left with the feel­
ing that the had been holding com­
mon

certain dealer, in Tampa. St Peter,.
burg, Jacksonville and » few other
places. The contention of the deaf
era it that they are not able to make
•
' ! “ nd*f
margin
that have t&gt;**n named, and they
through letter* and petitions have
asked for an opportunity tn present

( ; REATKST

EVENT IN

MOD*

ERN HISTORY M O N D A Y
The greatest eveat ainre the birth
o f , hrUl M ra rr(g „ ,|, o f |ock ye,J
torda) moraing whea the world war
(t(n r
,.nd

munion with the boys who are fight­
t h r i r t id e of t h e a it u A t io n
[
Th e
* * * * * * *&gt;r : » h «
ing our battlii here and over there.;
T h e meeting pli-nt tint not been 1**r f,n 1 n
ear n la ib r * At
m Id nig
Yesterday of rourte was a great
selected a, yet. but it is proOahle and the announcement was made by
day In many reapacta and when the
that It will take place In Ihe new the State Department at 2:50 yester­
news rame in at two o'clock in the
U TT
m* the greatest pleasure to tesChamber of Commerce rooms at Or- day morning when pandemonium
morning that the armistice had been
A *lfy that the work has been conducted
nndo, which were formerly occupied broke loose and in esery hamlet.'
signed and Germany had quit the
upon the broadeat line* o f aervica, not merely
sillage. town and city In the c itilitrd
by the Colonial Inn.
to the gallant soldiers o f the army o f the
city of course went wild and it aeem
Mr. Dracham desire* the pretence world otarlrd to celebrate. The t l i n
great Republic of the Weat. but to all they
ed that the opening day of th# war
of all dealer* who are interested in Ing of Ihe armistice was hastened by
could astilt. The high quality of character
work campaign would be lost in the
the matt"r, and also cornu me r, who the resolatlon that broke out I f
of those conducting thia work need# no
shuffle but Chairman Steven* waa
11
wwh to protest against any change Grrmany after the kaiser and ihf
\
v
\
i
praiae, but 1 affirm that In m v opinion it
equal to the occasion and he Imme­
in the prevailing mtegin*.
The crown prlnre and all the heirs to tha
would
have
been
impoaafble
to
have
afforded
diately arr»nged fur a big parade
throne had signed their abdication
F'ood
Administration
at
Washington
the boys that inspiration and succor they
and meeting In Central Park and
has endeavorrd to bring the prire of and rights l» ihr throne of Germany!
“ n,1 which they so richly deserveaft«*r one of the longest parades in
The ksiser and hi* son and tha
feed down to 3 l»vel as low a* pos­
without your effort*.
*
yjr history of the rounty had gone
sible without' visiting undue hard­ German general tlsIT fearing for
over the principal streets Major
— A . L l o y d G e o rfto
ship in the dealer, and the approach* thrir Hies went to llnlland Sufldav
Forrest bake .In uniform mounted
gfOftd lint tin
log conference is especte I to tiring
arr now
*bil country whera
the step. of the band stand in the
out actual fail* relativ* nr lire feed fbelr evarl "talus has mil yet been
psrk and gave tha people an Im­
business In this State
Mr.
read.- [determined.
Thor entered Holland
passioned appeal for funds for the
.im in granting a lie arm g to , i. &gt; * *** rtn * rfrril r**'lT and if ihe wat
boys
and
introduced
Judge
Kou*re­
At noon Sergeant
a
i I uaIi i
itmf &lt;MiiiTA hup?* t*» liH hiittd) *
*■**'*
would bp In*
f'irned Canadian soldier apnlte al bolder who followed with another
A#t f I** full s«*f*tttt 1 »» I m* u roni|&gt;lfi I f f i f l l bul • (hi* * af i« o u r they
the Central Park and told in Ida own Eie-t appeal that tourhed the hearts
I'rnblvm with n*»t a
• ( tljr ni«r- ,
hrrow c Ihr military p *U o n rr 4
f the sudienie anrl about 24,000 was
language aiiuut the war in all it*
»f ihi* alliri) n rm lc * to be d ? i*: ««lth
r b a n t a v. b o a:** h a n d l in g
pitas*s. lie went in at the beginning raised Ins few minute*.
la irr.
of the war and served until a few
The ladies and the men and the
The term" o f the armiklirr are sire
Victory*
months ago when lie was to badly ehlldren are nut now and the Idg
mall) as follow "I'.a r e hath her victnrira
wounded that lie win Invalid d homo thermometer at the headquarter* In
No lit* renowned than war."
Immediate
retirement
«f
ih«
unfit for duty.
Me was in all the the Deforest building will aoon reg­
W hat i glorlnu* triumph (bat the Grrman military force* from France,
fierce lighting of the early day* when ister the fact that Seminole Is over
hosts of patriot!!' 'cltUeiiS, who Belgium anil AUare-J.orrainr.
the war murhirr id Germany was and our predirtlon is that the ther­
thronged the Mills mi Tuesday, i*a»t
rolling through Belgium* and Frame mometer will do thia tomorrow if th*
Disarming and demobilisalion of
their vot.s for "tale-wide prohibi­ Ihe German armies.
and the llun* wire wreaking their people will keep up the good work.
tion’
hellish design* In hclpli-iei women
(live your money now and let us
tlrcupaliiin h&gt; the allied and
St » n
a quiets determined, inand children and rnen prisoner* and go over right now and make a gioritrierirari force" of uurh slrategif
vincible slrugi’ le thi* "(lent halt Ip
Sergeant Li-ITer* told tils riliiry III a Ions record (or little Seminole coun­
point* In Germany a* will make im}
of I allots’ N o ramit&gt;n, no hoiul •
way that brought tear* to the eye* ty, the banner county of the rt.ile
po"slide u renewal of haslililirs.
no .ij lil"n* -i.i.e, (m l th e yn i 1 C.ipof the Hinlii’ii* c nod (old it slrnigtil I tig court) I hat hn.i never fallen
WHEN TH E NEWS CAME WE ItKlH FAR WEEKLY EVENT TIE- ()».», * as If e ’ ll i (*• In,sis :tr-I It"
Detli ery of pset» rtf the Go-man
the eyettnf the audience and lidd it down on th" Job on uny proposition
WENT WILD
GINS FRIDAY NIGHT
nrrrv followed nil ’over the tn;i" Du high *«*»" Heel and a certain numbef
Iron* the ulmuldrr Ju.t like he fought sinin the war began.
s c.it cause kwept: and the while of »uh marine" to Ihr allied and
when the light seemed Impelc* lie
The war is practically over but we
Sanford went cra»y Monday t. f l .
\i ti ■•» time w n* n tha atm.** of
,ig with it* red i t **"" llo in d over tmeriran naial force".
brought tiu* ntory home to Ills undl- roust keep the buys clean until tnn
* l" 1 r,ri*d *-* - 1 -- and or the aide*
ing when ihr news came It,
Hi-urrnamen! of all other German
nor
tun rated, lo-autiful. railin' t
rnrf in i) way that will never Th * fifr- return anil tbl* fund today la doing
I r ave he* t. 1*i v ‘rlc r ,,trs if Is most
warship* under "Uprrvisiun of rhn
Florid,i'
You know what new* It wu* w i "
gnttrn and then be told of the won
just that-very thing.
lilting ’ m l tiie American people
out mentioning it specially
It n . i t U u ! ( i
...... . to "big to
What •&gt; volume of thanl "giving allied .nut Vmrrican navfe* aldrh
lin fill
work
b e in g
lo n e
the new* that Germany had null rejMrea il.t soul, tn nng praises should be ascending to the throne' *111 gusrdlhrm.
by the menu! I lie Y. M. C, A. ftttd
I t e g l s l r u n l s t a ile d
business at the old aland and Wou.d
II we mav net meet together for a
kindred bodies that have gone river
llccupalian of Ihe prlncipiil G er^
Four of the following named col­ bereafter gel a llcenre from the allicr and thanksgiving tn lltin that iloetb greet thanksgiving, we ran in th* sitluriuue aaiiunt.
and been will* the buys in the
T o t 'i t end the
ored registrant* of the local board of before attsmptltic to do anything in ! all iHilgs we I.
happy homes around thv (amity
It n U ia f « f
all I c"*| a n d A M * f l « a R
trenches anil in alt the hell of the
Seminole county Will l » entrained the nature of stop| ing 'hips n . th&gt; Music Department • *he Woman’s alt an „ ,f| oyr (he ln-eri*e ,,f great n o ld ir r *
a n d r lv l(iiin &lt; « h e ld .
reek and the murk and have kept
Club
ha"
prepiir,
•
&gt;
i
"
.
nadui
t
regu­
for ( nip Meade, Md , on Novem­ high seat, and ol her divert and sun­
f*if « r lb I f»K ' prlstinrf m in tirrtmiAy »iiht»ul nurh
the buy* rlean and noble and kept
lar weekly Community Hinge for Die gmlllude
ber Ubh, 101 At
&lt;1|roflprnfal Mr(i«»n l»j Ihr iiHmiriilnl
dry things that she ha* (men doing a-ason sail fur a runtinunue period of tlif* aMul * ur«i* nf n '
up their morale.
Me told it and
Frank Kaverly, Sanford, Fla.
IrulHf ami the iia «n
f a ifbtrioiln» gBirmmeiili,
lately.
Irft out nothing In I Ha telling and
if
the
pi'nnle
of
Sa
nford
signify
their
Itohcrt Wilson. Chuluota, Fla
iliiy of brfchtrr hnpr ami Kf»*alfr
_ —_
drmiinstrated what that noble burnt
Sunford root had the n**»* after desires of having a sing ol this kind
George Thompson, Fake Mary
|»ro*v&lt;'rit&gt;
for
&lt;»ur
fnlr
Kloriita!
of men and women are did rig over
two o'cloii* sortie lime and the rail­
Itnyrnund llnse, Hanford, Fla.
A programme rmst e»|i*ially lil­
\Va«li;lviicionf Nov. 12- T br trr mu I
there liuluy with I tie buy* etlf lire's
Kenneth Wheeler, It F. IJ. N o 1, road boys Immediately woke up, all ted lor the present t i r e up1 h. given
of t ht- ( ** riti atn itrun* lire win- r«-id
and your buys
the engine* whistled, all the shop at the Woman"* Club rooms on Dak
Sanford, Fla
in iuiifrr*,inr by
I i i n r r U J i i l f t t 11r - i f4
* l*n 'Hli nil U jIhiio at j
In the afternoon a log * rowil
Nineteen of the following named whisllfu arid all the belts rut loose avenue Friday evening, 1 o'clock,
out* i»‘« lot k till** AltfODHin, hhai*mlilnj *
W
i*,.ij»|tV
m.
K
#
n
S
,
NliV.
II
gathered and the meeting opened by colored registrants ol the local hoard at one time snd the auUiltiohilos if the people of Sanford and Sem­
|t&gt; i rtlt r i i rr«r*li!rt.t W ii«nn, Major* in th*- ball of ihr II uum*, wh«*ro oiorCount) Chairman S ie v e d « ailing on of SemUoile county will he entrained started down town and from that inole cnu.ity appreciate an i-Hurt in
trrn m«»nth" *»tfn I hi* rtniilrnt r,.«*I
Cinnifal Kmirh II f %r*MAdrr. hn* t«»*
Dr Massey for the Invocation after lor Camp Wadaworth, Spartanburg time on it was sunn tiling doing ev. r., this behalf let them show their ap­
a A* «l (nr a ii*« l ifiitDin nf war. Sen**
1
1
i«&gt;
dirtrlrd
l
hi*
f
tt’iridlAtiori
ol
a
\
minute. All the churches opened up preciation by attending this sing and
wldeh A I.. Haleb. N M C A **.■• S f* i mi November 2 l » t , UMH:
iior* nod rvftri'M-ritaii v m brarii thv *
oijlttamlimc 11raft rail*, ttim-by ulofi
ami the bells rang and I be people
ret ary now at hey West wa« Intro­
William Mathew*, 111 Mill HI.. formed impromptu parades, and the thereby give encouragement to the j#mc t ha* movi-mm! tlurim; tli** n**tf yi HfiU arhlvh hrriiltii &lt;J tin* rurototf nf •
duced. Mr Huteli hardly needs an
peace
manager* of this programme
Sanford, Fla
fivr day* of i *i» buodr* d and M l)*
staid and respr* table citlrrn* did
Intrndurtlnn a* he la a Seminole
Strictly military terms of th« *
l.ewt" Haywood, Hanford, Fla.
the Bunny Hug and the Turk#.' I Following are the names el the U h f tmtifami fio o, «rtttoi£ a*! i1n all
iminiy buy, living principal id the
Jsmr Kidiiiisi.n. 711 fith St., Han* Trot on the atreels and hugged each songs to lie sung Friday night No/rrnbrr cal!* fur *»vrr lh f«* hun* armistice -mlira, rd in eleven speel-J
Oviedo actiiinla but since the war
heatioiia include the evacuation of,
other Irrespective of introductions Look them up, learn them and join ilrrd thouMind mrn.
being in the war work at the vurintia ford. Fla
The rails for the N avy anil Mar I all invaded territories, the with-*
(we mean of course that the men In with the leaders at the proper
ramp*
l i e gave a moat Interesting
Sam Clark, Sanford, Fla
ine Corps were not effected by this draw al of German troop, from the'
hugged each otherl, and the were time.
IkIk about the Sanford b ")s at the
I’orlrr Lewis, Kolokre, Fla.
cancellation.
Secretary Baker an­ left bank of the Rhino, the surrender'
tiro
crackers,
and
cannons
and
mus­
P ro g ra m m e
vnrlmiB camp* and especially those
Tilmon Garvin, It. F. D. No. J, ket* and 'hot guns and pistols.
nounced taler that so far *• prartPal of all supplies of war
The terms;
who ere now at Kev West In the
all men who had been called anil had provide for the abandon moot b y
Sanford, Flu.
My Country, 'D* of Thee
Mayor
Davison
Immediately
opened
nafy and the great work ol the
nut- yet completed their training Germany of the treaties of Buchar­
Crown Him Lord of All
Tom Jones, It. F D. No, I, Han­ the town for the day and said all
Y. M. C. A. and kindled I.miles who
Battle Hymn of the Bepjbllc
would be immodiati’y turned bark est and llrrst-i.itovsk.
stores should dot# and everybody
are looking alter the welfare id our ford, FI*.
to civil life
Ditto Land
Itichnrd Johnson, Chuluota, Fla. should celebrate anil they did.
boys. Mr. Match i* an educator and
The naval terms provide for theJuanita
his work among the boy* I* id this
Henry Alfonso Kdward*. It F I &gt;.
surrender of one hundred and silty,
Yesterday morning the largest par­
There's a Long. Long Trail
Jame« Granger
nature and he will now tie called A , Sanford, Fla.
submarine,, fifty
deatroyers,
sit
ade ever held In thia city was gath­
Msssa's in the Cold, Cold Ground
James
Granger
passed away at hi* battle cruisers, |0 battleship*, eight
upon In leach the hoy* until the
Manld Webster Calhoun, Sanford ered together at a moment's notice,
Onward. Christian Soldier*
wsr is over snd the lory* come home
home In thia city Saturday morning light cruiser* and other miscellaneous
George Wallace Itulfln, Wagner, no on# knew just where they started
Keep the Home F'ifc* II trning
alter an illnea* rd some year* whlth ship.
We know the hoys will be sste with
All allied vessels in Germanor
just
where
they
would
go
but
Fla.
Over There
he bore with fortitude just as he had hand* are to he surrendered, tier-}
our friend Mulch and we ate glad to
(hey were all there anil they all
When
the
Wsr
is
Over
Jolly Small, Sanford. Fla.
have him here with u* this week and
lived. *e!f-tarrificing and a devoted many is to notify neutral* that they!
knew that they wanted to go some­
Joan of Are
Will Morgan, M l Sanford Ave., where mil led by Ihe Seminole
to grt this first hsml Information
son of Mrs. G. K. Granger.
are free to trade at once on all sea*,
What are You Going to Do to
Sanford. Fla.
about our buys.
with allied eountrie*
The
death
uf
Jim,
as
he
wa*
Guards under command of Lieuts.
Help the Boys?
familiarly railed has caused pro­
Ktinorr Kdward Bronson, kOO I’ a Turner and Masmell and led by
The speaker* scheduled to be here
Smile, Smile*. Smile
Financial term* include restitution;
found sorrow and regrets, fur his
Major Forrest Lake with the life
The End of a I’erfcrt Day
for damage done hy armies; restitu-;
faded to arrive on account &gt;d sick rm-tto Ave , Sanford, Fla.
tiesetlful charsDer er.dearsd him to
and drum corps and all the railroad
Will Motely, Chuluota, Fla.
Tenting on the Old Camp Ground
tion cash from National Bank of*
prss and I heir plan'* wi re ably tilled
all w h o ,knew him
T o know him
man and the Red Cross and Mother*
t»&gt;l,4 I serf h*«&gt;**,#*
Belgium, gold from
Kuaals,
Itu-'

UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN
t
) XT
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SOME DOINGS COMMUNITY
IN SANFORD S O N G F E S T
ON MONDAY

321-0741

Jim Lash’s 830-0688
Blue B o o k Cars
HWY. 17-92

Sales: over 20 0 cars and
321-0741 trucks to choose from,
Blue Book Prices.
Payments as Low as $ 9 6 .5 0 a month

Need An Extra Copy?
This keepsake edition is available in
limited quantities Tor 50* a copy. Stop
at our office today for your copy.

JL

Service: Quality and fair repairing of
321-0742 Cars and trucks. Ask about our
Reputation! Jim Durs Service Mgr.

JL

Rentals: Most inexpensive starting at
S300688 $ 9.99 A DAY. Cargo vans too!

E ven in g H e r a ld
300 N. French Ave.
------------------------------------- V

I

322-2611

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

SANFORD

&gt;

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Evening H e ra ld &amp; Herald Advertiser. Sanford. FI

G LASS &amp; PAINT
C O M PA N Y

Sw&amp;asit&amp;

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iiituii*\ j»»■.»»

-i % ;

John Senkarik Start*
HI* Own Business

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tm* ihr p»*t « if t t |r»rti f*f Ih«
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f r««trg tt H t W*-,t |*r . ’J
S tm t Pf**r I* k &gt; |f*«**t * *

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Thursday. Aug 7*. 1**5 — S

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ENTIRE STOCK LEVI’S BASIC CORDS and DENIM

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869-8394

678-2644

894-9881

• - * • »• - * * * *

*•«-•••i t - r -•

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•* *. • « 41

« 1

�##*#

If "W " f

4— Evening Herald A Herald A d v * rl.t«r , Sanford. FI.

Thursday, Aug. } » , i n s

mxiarh
S A M O K I). f l.O I H U A . S I T I B D A Y . M A Y

Celery Season Just NEWSECTIONS
Drawing To A Close HOODEDWHEN
Is Termed Failure RIVERCHANGES
ConscnnuK Of Opinion
AmongGrov.mAiui T r ip O f L i n d b e n 'h
Agents I n That All P ro jrre n s O f Ocean
Fncton Were Poor

f 'lir r a n l
| ,r l«
M I» * U »t p p l
I n l u I.O(N) A d d illo r n l M ile*
Of
W tu K U n a T r r f ll o r 'r *
—

Crumbling Ce**\es
llring New Problem

if o ra lf t

2 1 . | !»I7

Maw bar Audit Barra a Of Circulation*

NUMBER 2(4

IVES INPARIS

Celery Crop Statistics
(L a lim a ltd )
Na, A* rv*.
V ». I'nrs •Mpped

IM 4
4000(0)
U tl
m

i p .*:

1/etS.M
(..OQOIHI

O it c a (# r c-r
Trelght. New Yeth.
•M
1 rcigLit, ChkHgi*
»:
w
r
i
l
i
i
y
i
Cast per ears
»•:*. iio
Minimum price |ar crril#
11'
#?&lt;3
.'lafiinum prlct f t r tfB$a
-" •W
I ou
A i* r # g « pi if#
J JJ
U I
triJOOOOOOO
Tatcl K#rv!|*t«,
4LS00M 0 M
•.i.s ««,O »0d
* 1,000/&gt;00 00
T b til Coal
LCO.f.XI 00
soo.oouoo
S'#t rr'glpt#
Th* aliov# figwr r« w # i« inmpil#-! aft#i ct»n*uIt*tioft with
retry i *c "K m j * I auihariU#*. larg# am! imall grow#r&gt;, htadi ef
r aikfftirg agfrulta araj railrm 4 offsclat*. TF* H#raU a ttem rtr!
In strike sit svsragw a fter receiving various • atifiiatci, #11 vt
wblffSl vafiwl.

iW4itsrnSr ^ i^ions^ waitW ord
mftlmSrS
Aviator’s Daring
OFLINDBERGIIHop Across Atlantic

C ro w d * U h l l t A t t i j r T i m e I ly
D rin k in g I l m A n d M un ch ­
in g S a n d w ic h ? * A a D i f i *
newa F a ll* A n d N o “ Liady**

l e
B o u R r .r r , m . ,
:i.(iN S )_ c h .n ,.
L i n d1‘t * r jj h
f ly in g Fool
a r r iv e .) here t o n i g h t a t 1 0 :2 2 o 'c lo ck» .. c o j# jile U n g th e ep o ch a l f lig h t « h o » e p ro g re a s h a d been « ate
o y t h e eye* o f th e w o fld fo r th e pnat » 6 h o u r* ,
c ia l re c e p tio n w h ic h h » i l been p la n n e d w e n t b y the b o a rd # . '3
C i r c l i n g the aerodrom e t h r e e U m e a . he m ade a b e a u t i­
f u l la n d in g a n d th u * ended t h e g r e a t n t s in g le one m a n f e M
E n l h u O a 'm
I* S h a w n W ith i it h ic t o r y . - T h e l i n t actio n o f L in d b e r g h w a i c h a ra c te ria tfo
E i t h I n c o m in g M r w t f t O f o f a g r i n n i n g y o u n g e te r,
H e o p e n e d t h e sm all d o o r o f h lg
Y o u n g A s l a t o r ' i I’ ro g r c M C o ck p it a n d a t t u m p t r d to lift h im s e lf f r o m th e te a t.
•«
e plane w as d o w n , t h e r e w a s im m e d ia te r u s h t o
in BouRcrr- AKitoDROMr. c o n gOr an tcuelath
t e the " K i d ' ’ f ly e r a n d d e te rm in e hi* p h y s ic a l
fn R f,
— M ay ^1. — S u ip t"'*
l.e w n lr on t h , • « , , In. condition.
n x iin g
e m it*
h .r «
Iw iifM .
T h e Y o u n g A c e wa* d ra g g e d b o d ily f r o m hi*k&gt;lane b y t h w
■ v u tlB f th » n m . a l t l u p t e n f i r s t p e rs o n a to rea ch his plane., a n d h e w a s im m e d ia te ly lif t *
fo.1 “ ’
On Ik . k « „ . of oorlw r » n j .»• ed to w i lli n g shoulder* and b o r n e acroa a th e field tn g r e a t
r
m » f f . j w r t , w fflclol. tf t v t r i u m p h .
Offwlrom.
hod o a t ,n il.# I»wt
T h e c r o w d aeiled L in d b e r g h b e fore h e had a n o p p o r ­
Ll&gt;4Var&lt;i would o r r lr . V f » ot * t u n i t y t o aa y a n y t h in g , and he p r o v e d to b e too tire d to w a l k .
.clock &gt; r w Y o ik tinw. A* Ikti
T w e n t y th o u s a n d e n th u s ia s ts h a d b ro k e n the g a le a a n d
1 a’ .a-l t n j lh .r o w .r* m il no dot■
inttf rtporta apprahfftaion hagan b l t t ( d d o w n 200 &gt; ir d * of ir o n ftn e in g * d t lh l n g p t i t t h a
to m&amp;fcf tn * lf af.par#nt, hut tl#« F r e n c h g u a r d * a c rtf ii h a lf a m u # fie ld to b e ito w t h e i r wt4*
crowd* whil**| aw*y ih# um# dnna* c o m e on th e y o u n g co n que ro r o i #he a i r .
\
•ng t « r » rtrf m anchin^ ••njmichH a g w a v in g crow ds c ro w d e d a b o u t h im . and th e o ffl*
f ••
A m r i r i n i *rr- ■ fc- *r.»fn Ml I

had

Americans Display
Confidence At End

i A IK ft At F. May .’ I 1 1Vs I
f »ft
t h a t k i !jrdlj*fj*h, “IN*
t i j f -a . * t.m- let , #!*UJ +&gt;
. i r* rift the lf*»h t '*■(, *u lifding f i l t e r |* S o w S o m r .11'" M ltc *
I r « m .VnrmxiH o u r* # I » » a r d
l&lt;i * v l t t l n i |t|nit 1* 1*1**' J hf'**
t«.«UF
U C t iim O f K i p f r t *
1
Th* n pfirl If i-fm iti# S K II ilt**' •
P o o r (J iiit lit y A n t i A n
•j l me a ret Tit rtl *b#o th# fli#** * fir»*:\nrjif;, u .
M«r 21 —
O v e r P r o d u c t i o n A r e i tJ bn* n in tfi ■ • r • (•*•# a o a iu i » I.S s s t ^ T h # iniAltahh- t« rr#ul*or
I t hour* art)! I*i rmnutT*, and i t th r M|*a|a«ifrft4
l e a f l i f t Qklt j
C a lle d
I t e s p o n s i h l e t i'*fct tin • lit had tov*rt.l apj»r**i r t'aliai in point** r « ti |# |»arl*h f .
■rvlely 'ijtMt lull**. If ih#«# * * 0 fnhlJ# tin tiro la it ijt
|&gt;**t mi r»n
A wuj# liivfrKrtit* ».f uplnk-n tun mat** ara lurrcat CiAiiWrgh i • •*1 I ' I-lift# mr«t i f thr i l t t i I
|ij ng »#ry etna# to hit *rh#d#Jc « f U «l.
i a ilin g th# 4* l#i f »#«a*.»i
h*» md* • an hoar lit -hvulJ l*
drawing to a (D im * « rial* j *fl
W ith more ih «n
tlm 'l »|u*# |
aruw tri i i » l rtiatlutifi#
* t'u th*' trtbh i 0*4 &lt; by p&lt;e*n Nea) m drt **f tt# ftate Hr* *m endtr
•fw! |M f#it* on |ht ##U oiftt, I * \ ''U k liATlfpM tim#. and It# ib-jviH aw"#r, n new
nf 11 i h i u i - 1
p t a ia lly , will |tf,.b*b|y
•»* * '■* ' it in' I'ju t- I'V w f»V ltn k t 'in if hi.
I «f 'MUail nr.Ji
* *1 !
| I light, WIk#lb# I If lM'* ft*t 'Hi &gt;i -tt*
I M«n»&gt; CbUM, A * t l!a! -n l! &lt;n
| f»f m ti |-imf ....
m j |!K
I P U . A S l c Hay i\
I hel-fuli#. A" HI iVtli"* * arul T* ie- ,
V A h l l! tiT O N . M f/ 21 — (1N81 4har*t.l r#ur»# and hia motor hoUa
Th a t it ha a i')*'* lb# •Hot ft •
: i nr f J5f h I A ll V»wfh lielan j «*• hmir.# |'«riih#* It*" in th#
" i f 1 ■Th# cr»At»at dart devil of therm oi4 h# mill ita rh P a n t ’ if h# w«r#
t tt lim #t#ly bhe la*If million **•&lt; ( f ' l ie«l mltti raiitiin#At la liy f»-»i tli# f»*w »rtef rh in f* l *
t h -.
a
l
!
"
1
off la th# trmxkl#*i A tlantic
h#
la ri la tha agilaLfiii wf w fiiiff'l** r 1 1
.......ilahty
*T
* B| , m»»V through th
A i d ifulii; j
P * «*• Ih# Ir.tu K pa J Ui C a yl. rrag land i « iwy w *t#r» hundred#
ff.iiwara f%»#ftal «-f *h#i4i « i U t* i f t.mtU
l.in*It»#fjlh, *h# dallof ««*■'
r
t
...l
»
w
U
f
d
i
x
i
.
h
h,
:
i
»
%
f
#&lt;t
of
mP«a
flora
the
ihip
U
fa*.
♦if hug* laltda, i&lt;lh*i* wilt m * yu’dfig A*i)#rhan a*ip|Prl | aaainjr
I l r N#..rf |het I
f f r y mid# Mtinaf. T i n U U » r t
♦it# t -Auv m •
w*
\ naitgalor^ # «p «rta cipU inod, bain# » , »un* hly A - f ni#nt (Jut
b in an ita may to l a f i
d f the! th* / fir. .4 al'tlnk. I Me 1
LONDON, M»y 21 —
•*&gt;•&gt; 1)* •
l.u n -^ w i
t ,l(| t
v„ Ul(OT1 „f | U •Laaky Lirviiy- wouhl arri##.
IbdtIC. Alt ft*
At rifuivtiial aitd rtttl u i Iii|;h u) • f (l e Ml**itllt*|M s ell"&gt; itJ* h *|
Th # iMMitit tut It\#f fi«aVki##■ «*f a i
( I N S ) —Th» admiralty anlii^ilrTryh rva*l,thg Valtrula
i h* the rare* l.m . ..n 1 ,.
IH » h l T n ..-,
'* “ •'&lt;1 b » llv. I n f i r m .
ijig o riumlwr r,f i rvfu ihi#
* -i ll.uflti* • r «l i *c ihat i 11•* i fu m t .
At 1} o cloth t hi a afttmopn (K*
tn ml Ih* le ftr *1 \f.( M r ei In.*
n.tuned ton.flit that H. M.
s . » f Uiw iL i,u to iw r ..« .i t i if .
#**&gt;.1 •
Ait, mainly, f»*ui N nmvfttwf. a
Inland, p»nkind1 * u 'tlw li fhia t ir e
o .« **dr&gt;fl — ih# #ff*rt of wind# F r# n h rn#lrotoCka| offk# anS. Maidstone al 1:10 P. M.
•41( rfm# lit im ■l *'f I l r I &gt;«rtf i* 01" | ity t]r|^rnd up-n hi* n fit*a* i » |i»f tfii' f I Vi f f|i*in (h i-i- ICny
poumad
that
ih#
w
v
«
1 h#r in th#
I I nut: hi arrni * n f ,m , » In ft » ral
" - t i . *111 , ,t
ti'iU TT t y r *
&gt;wtft m o.in c OrpUrw.
fr am! •ff«rvrU- F llf l if 1» gCft I '*a»♦g* th* north Achiintlr alt am*
New York llnis, si third an
R itflkh cVuiii'BaV la rwrfagt. th#n»
inlUiin that tin* SI *4 If f i M ^ r • ,.,.1 t» . ■r -n ,1 1
h " J *■". ,,11 ltD"*
“ ** •(
rta lly r»ntttla«l that |lv niMith
twine *o f**e
A vPirri la blo»lnvr
'title* rnirtf.
ti.** lot ihm l*ni*» I r ini1, yi» tn wily r « l . '
arroplanr off I'lsmnuth,
1. rut I r . . . l &lt; . tU fflM
•*•«* •« . . i r e - •t (hip ia (a c f 11 mtla* an hour
t*ia ra-'t ami I hilt €fif ty had r » * 0
| It 11 h* lifted: notbfbjf ihnt. if ptii.rolnfie I • .me flr U mil#* « f h*r N i , , #
» M t h It btlltTrd to h# that
, «t ,IT#
« ' 1 n • h.
f h i.u 1 '
t,•l
IW » i l l • M
bfcmn Ui** a a#
l.*t##en
IH* rt,i r r
♦ . jy r t r
• P th R iM B l marka to *t##r hy to •p#*d U r J W r t h on hi* wijr.
th# m ill'll ahould have latntahU **■ *oeI i hnnnel
Haruml, w*#** uf 0 # rm** who a
of
Capt. IJndbfrfh. Tha
Atano-n I n y t d of funk# 2 fiti CapL Lindb.rgh Had Covered
iRinirh
&gt;jt
Ihn
H#*l
lliv
»r
and
t
**Mal
c
n
lftio
n
*
on
hit
flight,
hr
“ If h# * « (« off h it cQUrt# h# will
carried ti#
**|j!4kv**
I ipf | 1 i U k1 »* tag Ihtf® W*a«
rrrrw h and American* harl gath*
f •
nmy iMaha the ftaimay rrpat hi. *
Two TYlirda Of HU Flllht warship rrportrd that tbV
I nttVlg-t#,)' 1 ..•* th** Mg ihip# that I M f r*. may tf i#lllr.g wharf hf #i#il at L# flo u r* »t awaiting la n jf*| |M ftwi»h f#J#l f Wltan If
ruir*e
m
i
I
m
w#
t*
itnl
th
fu n Pi h i.b jirt lv i
. ir*l on# navy ««p # rt.
I*
. f(| A tla n tir. Jf
A l Eight Thli.Mocnlnc^flilp aaroplaar was filing at 4
iip fi t&lt;g&gt;ni l'i rtiH hum y ififnt
.
J t iit iP M ) 1
«4
*i| ‘iliir# *«•! i f r - 'i Vrfh** a rriva l, which w t i at.II
I T dU-rgh a fo u fj^ o in i|tt#inp1 11liar Afghef#t u hetJH 1
.
I ■irele,.
. # . i r ' ■, *I f *■rti*
I | N m l J |tPI *4 *
Traveling A l A Highspeed grrst hHght. rnd It sraa irni T.-t ,*# .' nr*’ di;la ..k *v h# h*#f-a
•
]•♦ n I t # k o i hi# ffiu rit ha w ail i hi. afhrdul#
1»I, I I* f jiffg \u liiMp, P*Jge4i)i*
il k. e 'd ila iy fligf.l u n t th# i * m &gt; I
*rantVi 0 i i T ftepoj*
I
*l.l'h
■
e
*
*
f.
ponalble to definitely dU* 7tr&gt;fU|fH &lt;hn r u » fie-l, (r.m*
to take aalrtinfifniral ob##rm1 the 'itiahtv lh#y He«io
in th' f»&gt; e o f *•» many r ilU ha
I t * tak# n • 'rarry-Atlantic hep.1
(Tn hi* a r r ira l h#r# LinilbcryS
K K W Y O R K . May l l - &lt; I N $ i r v e i T r f &lt;i
h -tm
thuhl*
!*•■(* “ ih I i
tiagnlah Ua ataiklnca.
do that, tf
.i
Ih# F f t iy NS , tii.na
H it J the f « u «,f |*i&gt;4 weir g ih* at 'i**d th# adniitatloni iT all
,l„ n . an4 h#
n. tan*i
i n . go
II h«
« „ | | N r | „ n , m . H k n such u l c
,,u.
fulatHl
a
r
h
it
fit
M
y
prmlnwtlre
th#
A
tla
n
lk
,
Ihuuah, h . M l M
, ' » » « . " « &lt;™i o » «
inuft It mount I f f tn un |iiffilffito l lord tie#might h# hit! t*#rom#
f. ra F'-ig, &lt;n *vigal*r iu p t , Colt.I ha* s ••
Sprrdtng on towards fifr
U
u
if
o
r
ar&gt;d
tdiinn
p
it
iin
n
.
't
*
.
Spirit
af
S
t
in If fit • T h lt in atilt#' *-f I ha fa"* hi
If |.ii *'b#r«h ttih l* I** h ii p f i . | m , u I V cwiliata* M V . ' i l f . "
^ v n th .
&lt;?■! H A wS w m j*"1*** &gt;** y y P * 4 * * »
goal in Parian Capt, I.indtirrgh
Jt M*e nr mil# t#d hr at m i •nfln*-* r v
Miiiia,
ha*
m#t
with
unluiown
railIt,at m great Mitmher *-f lemtnilai
imufhhgyg net fool on French aolL
'm ill drain |i»# entire Corilrn **f ' h
was reported to have Loan'
fe rtih trt ■ mer# •llgt.ilv lo a n (■'
1 ffNtPtiN, M «y 21 4INF i l rn iM ’at avehitM h* •f matei mturh
Th# “ F irin g Ftw»r* haa atm#4 th# hap, that youthful riaredlirvil of th#
i'll## (hie |t#r Ihan in !UlA*£h *ofiifirrn#«J rr|M&lt;n* w&lt;r* iii«iilal*«l
Imailnatton o f ih# French (Mopli, tlklra. Capt. Chari## Lindbergh, La sightnl passing ov»r the town
,i&lt;M Bj’a ■*&gt;e i| i *h. ♦ o'
l&lt;« inter
| he |rU* of H ale* udr»t.r**J heir bhoftly lieftir# t ti‘i 1*a |i 11* thtnofh#.ni tl
h*i arc **jm#what rortfuacl orrf today w ingin g hia may towardi Pa­ of Goletn in lha southwr«P-rw
Yu||&lt; v f f m n**.th
alight Iy and It n«m al-wiit t i leu 11' afli rniHMi (|(r A M.« N#m \ •i i
hi* alfhnam#, but r#gard hi* van- ri* at top apeed .
r-l
h .If
per* &lt;fete
It * i » e itlrna tn l i t S A. If. that rornor o f county Cork at 12 f
tur#
#* or# « f th# rm**t couragvooi
•lay hgtt liruef •tain g thul I e|.»
*t(
*1«
Hr
fiH ldil, th# freiflit Ml* i* •ini’ I.lndl *rgh liAd te'#n iyhl»*i ft-h*l ifQ .tm g au#m pta In th# mho)# Lindbergh had covered t v a -t h M l SO P. M. Llrnlbsrin waa ^
•«n# firn it 1
inf
th# T/&gt;00 mil#*' diitanra h#tmr*n ported aa hrsdsl southraat aa
i*&gt; ir y i D t lm t l t a liftiP r ttwif jw ■ VeUntia an«l VA e te ftill» . Ir t U o J
hiatafy of aviation
|u-«. , th#
!*•« •I t
a* i# r f MimltM t*"n it.an it o u l&gt; l« Th»*« f 4|e&gt;i|a m*r# later ifennd »n
l &gt; r n &gt; l « » nn t u l « u l . r . r . | , 1Ro" ” v- 1* n &gt;,n» *i»W and »*.ti» II he passed ovrr Golem
h# ««*Tif(»0H
at ill in action at that Fm r.
*n tiially iei&gt;# tt# « im |i juoJ fund • *l*i *1 rtjm it# fii^m V e.* nt n» eivl 4 ri"* &gt;if*l * Hu* r &lt; It'll- *1- »»» •lit
#&lt;-d »Hir#N 1. 0 # u l m p M French Ik#
Gideon ta aLout 65 rolUw,
hhi(M. « t *« a and radio *l at ton#
tn th# t*r.
m *» s*ni.«*ii*|y
m »ti hintth*
\Y*ti 11ill#.
■ lasf. *V*D t.ak t.r I ►
| -t | «t« «la iniU*ng
th#
N o rth Am#rican and southraat of Sroerwtck Har­
fvjm# of Ih# grrtwar# «.av (hat f* ' * 1
cloud*
and
Ih*
f
r
»«
i«
(.mrt
of
*l«
t
I#.
leu*- &lt;n*iM&lt;rt
i (h r v»#
F r o u il M r l h r c l o n l l d v n i O I Andrew a l(r«lgnw An V, H. Dry
I
Pint in h roaiit" m rrr k n pi o f on Blnrt bor, w h e r e L in d b e rg h waa re­
i » i la n#i 4m l# l* mhal ttw 4 a*4#»•
♦mftilh uf (h# iHniahril h
(Tar And 1Uyne« (io n Out lanl n u ll prayer going up that watch for tha llattnl 'n#1#* of th#
I ON D O N . M ay i l *|s \ '
D o n 's D u n e 's ll u l lin e N o
«* it them f Pther* put 4 a* tilgh
thee# fTf'iri* may nut bunt Int»
*t"l in If)#
k\ilMliin:H«ymourldOw man cun French newaparwr* pubii*h »M r#pld y^ung A m ir w in , ready to ported at 12:20 P. M. Thl*
t llh i r (V r u m ir t lT o M iih r r u I I i*.
F u ll mim# few air h mrniKrr hikllrllii |nau#ii l*f t!i Hu
aoa'h
IS#
Of New York flel 1 The Job •II avt..l«M# detail* *.f th# fitfM ■f*a,h hta poaitlon or tafenutken of w o u ld make hia average apeed
~ z , 7 \ r ^ ................... .. ................................
l i l lie I! .ich ra D e n tin a l ion
a pi. I m rd irtiun* nf the wealhef , ! 3
mi*hap to a waiting in the half hour that elapsed
n.t th# gr*"*l
U
m - . ii . v . . » » . . m . . . ........
:.rl;
' m. |ma* 4 i 1cPic i*a. Itrrn Aliutitt*
* r ‘' ,.,n
I t )&gt;t
)
*r
I
w
i*
I h t r r h#s tn .U lr »#■#»# h.. » i* i
U A M I IS U T O S . Mas i l — (|N S| *»n I the new*p«p#r ku-W* «r* U |»oildapproximately 110 mllea an
l|»* •till
4W|Hllg ll*. ig hi 1 H'
|M * " t
tl ( I N N ) - Ii.
k,|i pn i# a i r h t J at A I* # !♦#* |wiiI'll I i,4'I filial* fa ir la Iii 'li
A fte r racing up ih# Amanran hour, and it aeema probable
II. » « . f.rtu a lli k-1 .... ' i ,,,,,
-* •l-.og Fua — Th# long-awalled »! iwdown !«#• *#tg4d ai tucH new #diliun * «m n
».a (ifi that $117 mouM I*# it,# a v n n*it|v*it «|4 ily a Kul* anti »'»mr !•* »• Mi« i » r h l p f i Ifklr Ijs4 nigh’, , j | rt,f | (,
tmrvfk
Krefttary
of
|
h
#
_
T
lS
a
a
tiff/
P
*
coa*t
through
alternate
m»M,
wind
k Ikitl# f i r i b n ,
ral •Pt«a* i * \ 11
v «4&gt; gv.4
*iM 4&gt;tl.#r# l*#rH#&gt;r 11..Vs mill
I # Bewrget la to* fa r frmim (M 4 * 4 aunehlne, l.indbergh haJ turn that the f lie r ia now gaining
1 . ,T
l» U p .' A r d r . . W. M .II.O . r 4 W s irn . U .l
■ t a .g in aV fig U . ( - f .
l|n wkt,
#r J i loiieln m tit higF. N v la mi *•! mh#1
the advantage of ttw following
Ih# MBiohal flgui#
l !*-n
te r ef Farka far any great n
• It a •». »* t*.» k .'w ’ l . J
f
"
iv, I . I M I- ,, V O -.I .C , -------r » . i . i----------—
.l&gt; .^ » . —
•* —
il» —
A * ^ren
I tl
•I hrtbwm
k. I...... league,
I aaitiia to.*
hu* come
snflib ami
*1*1 reeeftN»n f* th# ftler. V i t ##*
„ 4 . I....." - ' . I N i r « * *
u '“ * I ..Vwwi »iir»
wlnda and ptek.ng up spwd. ■
W. A U h l# f « f f hgm. a d f*M*« i|m
fa .t m v i r ira vin *
1 night and t
•* I iii ' . , «i r&lt; *i ivn l liy (h-- iti*
(
mofil
from
Ht,
Johm
*
wp*icrly
,ni,
and
Pupilal
p».
ilkiafl*
m
iio
io
re
wl.
»
*,#'«*
i*
car
*r
a
bicycle
.......* » • " . . .1 i ’
t
hfiliy. |aI4 a pi |*r« *r«l**ll*i' • f T ' i*
C . . l « n la 1» mil*, north « f K » " t * 1 ho n »t
'i. itttRug it •« thetr aietiiken livuh* (t■* (deimtllg on wheeling m il to tha wiikil wg.* aiding the
lilt I' "IDIt#II JVI#!* I °
I.if M , w h ^ h v s , one cf Iko
I t#l a ill l Fa l uh ( It# tubal# (hiii*11re-'»
i theftii'ifi tl**
t|4ainahi|* *&lt;|f»ri#.
tgiig v m• *"rii draw.** ^
j fIpiOg f l * tM l 1g h| fa b# ih#f# i« flying out over th# Atbrnllc.
' 1*1.1.11. 1# I '«4*|ri rifi*| Ih# f*s#!lf|i;* j _ , ‘V*
la flS na rhl sol -r Ungborgh whan
tfgi'ih |u#*( fcriffii i |imp llw (h r lut 1 •*' .
'tv.
tv. W hy
h y *h*&gt;uM
I
when
th#
“
F
lyin
g
”
Foul"
orrtvom.
!(' M a il I*r ih# Alas*hal.il#}#
•vandillits# »*i (tin 1 1 1*rv It# If J*#t« ■“
In
all
h
u
tn
ry
uf
aviation
there
ho
first
|Ilolled his course.
14# |$i 11m g«-p IH gfHi
l,iaifb*«g!&gt;
I l u t ' l i v M ... .M a i
&lt;&gt;l I I I
ahn 4* al (Ik# iii*l of hi4»*Iki4lh*r* t
Id v r i favofat ta r»ndition# t.ind hat never be#n a flight that hat **&gt;
Th e " o n lrs l Nows roffesporrient
Mi *' .«# i- *&lt;i tl»r m i I ss« 1 *'M * T. y|
f %|*p Koy A, Ha f n*». the l ea*
- 1
i4 h »r i # f l.ir.'l
4
.
|«taiin
4
it
H
ii’
i
I
S
m
«rtM_
,
,
(- ♦■ high. ^ # 1 rnany of Ih#
,r*i **( randidat
for pfT.Kibi- heigh ih w k t ti# nff th# French ffipped the popular tmaginaDvn aa at Trs l.e e slates deflnttsly that A
' '*# A 'l hrifaiajni I '* mil1. v nf the tfurli# .
• I...W r r u . Ih . .u n .i-ie i L - - h ,n
1 '•U.ti.g Ik
i ■I
I h*
it* 11 (hr. I l l * let Mh Ida. r
I ( e #r.t) « imI 0 1 ** ) i.n ru-mmUakniterm ut M r. \Vh#tl n-ri-t before dark and hia h d tha *»n# man nir voyage uf Lind­ s i s Lindbergh's plsne v h irh |
.11, . I tkia tear ha,e II.ail.
•■«*■
I'1* "*
" • • .il&lt; ♦• *1(11 ri»- r**u»r
v fr.oi
I»
*
i
&gt;1
•
ret
C#en.
I^nrntn
t
A't- I hi r» hi.ora r,f fly in g in thr stark bergh
o r r r Hmerwtah H s t h f •' l l ?
I , re "I tr*l • *tup*
1 nn, smMi I . III. i •!•!..1 h .l... l a i r I . . I ........... •a II. ,i, ( I ,,|
........ ..
•h*‘uki b* eaay i.v rr well lightest
(I* iriturari raring th rn i »H Mu
W ith the tragK fat# »-f fopt- New York lime.
I (rdtw igh tiriluy, •lin k s , th# drv ita who we* tierIh . I If it uulo niiigiiri. ,it hl« I ’ *h| (..«)( li r t r i » "i*4(lP)i •11 Ih. |# l"fg ‘
guiding
line*.
Mi t i l t h r *(14**14 4 htruipt *(•*■#
j
"
'I'a
iU
el'clfd
by
Ati.
!•
•
N
u
n
v
tv
i
r
and
Copt.
F
io
n
ri’ia
Colt
T h e Central News rorTssp
nr - ffil'IrO .
At la
Man
4# h 11 *&gt;n liisi h r i vttut'oM # ‘•*•1 In # # (h**ir tail Tu # •da*
ii.# trritt.it 0 *r i .ik i ' ft-r tut ft. mh# i u
I t # g if a!
aean blight al I-- «till frrfeh tit Ih# ruMm mind and si T rst.ee, a town U '-&gt;•
| "Ull- gfl
wondeeinglv, “ i»ot I k*t pit hkbttlon an fuiTTm tnt on a
0 III Nltl il'il llrl.j ifl|p*Y,#M** •
1»«l (tu la ma* Ih# |»M4# f**r (In* in
T h # V a i n I *&gt;»n (hl^i i
ron pelilkaV buri-•••-Uk# baate, U*'urgct » ill I*# alight, aweep-ng in the face uf daily r#f**.ilk of and M miles
Rmerwleh
» 1 Y now that t her
what I
1 h»''rir I.iinPwiyli ftiakl# *1 Ii n tnf'im v in (ii* Mplaitfiklb-n
lit# kfit'in |#r i frill In I h ' &gt;*’*!*
I’.f -id t r t G mbH Ige, by forte of the ikora fconi ahortly after *un- daily fttorma and fog baiik* aver Itsrh o r, •»-* Lind he rgh » « - • * •
n.i * Ontv » hf 1 h#
Id * t il l »
i gir.»l |.n i»v#r hf i* iwiling ih tin t, «’lig in w f &lt; (*••!*&gt;;, ha* *1 *4 !
M fa i# Ih# war I I m* » wptltlrii-4
*&gt;
k , t, i, f e r t t in thr down
the
north
Atlantic,
l.imD-rtgh
togfII
1
(r*t
,
h#r
p
*
.iimiftMarumi
the
lag
tenants
the
Cork
,«
*
&lt;
•*' IP*- Al
•4 g'x"'( J )1 I **:* I'TMt, It* U f f i# l w#! for t.ilv flirt)
......... . .. . t Ih# I n lufg*. . It'.
tree o h , • .. w Melh. * W h a rl^ » nl#*t, apperentA M(uoritis«t 4*f FceiNh ptaikf ■ifwkialf decided In hroie alt th#*® limulee that Ih , ftsna .hould » r I •
♦■I ( «
Uni
"1
» t iln l
fire
elf
the
.te
n
th
rws.t
s
i
*
*0
(wfil*.
A
ll
mad
inn*
N
iy
#
y
I'ditt
in
a
11
is
i,
i„
,
i(|,
at,
!
U
h
i
m
h
i
i
i
'I
*n
i
#
d
ia
w
dkl*l#n
l"H*
I
up
and
ai*
r#arte
t««
tak*
*|w* . it,.
■Iris
t"
I* (. h IdI* »• ........ II
hi all mu ti I* lori'lti l#ii| *1*1(1114#r I'j '* It#
1 l e i kai ed in t l
'!. i . r h ' . 1 1 .
u t W d l f i J Ike air, ( u i . i * t h r In » t want if uN vcrtril p ro y ir fur h n »af#ty and New Yi.tV time and should l»Hd ta
.I .
tl'Jl
ill On* k»
Mi la f th i tigfoi# llir llulMiy *lull l*
far
hia
l
u
i
c
t
i
i
rat-t#
advice*
fr
m
UndtMrrgk
t»#*ng
t
ig
h
u
l
Th#*«
I r llV
1 w ' 1 letaiv Mriloi. in tha naming *4
parts st • W N » * York time
111* I'rid*
r uf th# iiiuc|ig'lii
mi m again
by him t#4#iilly 1,1
I Of an.j
' the new creh ib u^n romrytiaaionar, |'Uri«* Bt Le D ouigvt w.U bop off Faria atatrd that th# (wnyt# of ParT h t cnrresponder.t reports L in d ­
“ Th#..
«, wf,rn r iy
*oil
mtort ii'*
•hot** - a
|(.
(ha| *&lt;i* h f«&gt;.»4 ntrltti *
-.1
and at th# .am r tint# he ha* re* lo ott •* guide* to Lindkrargti ai i* are prepared to g u « Ui# young bergh flying St an altitude of l.ouC
•
•
Ih
riy
mill
he
m
k
tic*
liiu
P
r*
1
I ••".ton wl eu
I . k.t 11 *t*4U»ant
I»t 14 frmvik an #« pr»lr«| IjkPOtlat l ' v
Th*' "»"••• Iri
w a #• h# i* 1eported «,|f th# American • trepncnliO* ovation. feet end said he a a . going - e l
to'nvd
th#
kupport
of
th#
Anti-H
ai |Im- r Vkord* of i* n
(.a k, a tm*. th mi* In
I i»*'Oa U lm »t •1 «»m«w| ail*
(I liillllUl i lf|| |*.If* R i
I 1 M till" B ill k
French naval a#a I l l 4 g re e tirg . It # m #044, wauWI be s .trv a w southwest point uf Irw
I wsm le a f ut in #ait ptm g the tea fV#nl( cc«B«t,
• #r«l *'H nivnv nth- r igrat . n ef f i n ,
.•I fvr « 1*rii g*. •
1 n il
j
Hilling VMU. •.■ dkfttiri l-| 4
Andrewe— le i' plenea *■* th# #na*lal •tatinn# aft a counterpart of ike w , !r. n\P that umter fsetuahle r s s H th s s
th
in
g
'
th
•*mwt Welker m ay *ay
(Htr* huin &lt;e*t dotUta
*l#i fli#
1 to tug l r . .
luonlh* after it w u f i n t prevented. al*u |-Crier* t to a d a* gui l d f«f amailcd Nunge* #r ai d l***li In New
h m s rw k h Harbor is aa t h - most
to (w l an wHo u ih w id i a Ifm ark*
American Ynvk had they •urrvtd*d tn making r.tro m a soulhwwrl point of Irwllolh Asdrtma and ll s y M .
y » «f i|
able f.'Al
flier,
(heir
aenaattonal
flight
aucfeiafaLly,
cf the prohlbUion pi*tor# to » in#r
tsn.1 In county Kerry. It t» os I U
i|«v Hlvmwur L*»wmin, » » Lien [ Th* n o • la fe tt
the I'ur.i
th*
Throughout tha d*yhg&gt;t heurt north side of the r *
' *Is that
u 1 aml fint'ftnar of New Y o ik , and le*c»fpap#! hul let en F •m ri r»v#-,r| a « and while I.tn dh ergl o n btg.rfll»g looms on, of Use jsnju of Pkngta
cn.
2 5 0
C a rn
I 'e p p o r s
1 ..iy atki* 1* gttvpiablv t** Is# f#a-*thr 4m■
■ "
t u m ia l .Mill'­ the coo it fin# it wo* com pat* lively Pay . m , r s g g ' 1 l i ' . * p l , to the
M-ui latccni* Andiew* ott Auff . I. :«*•*»• *#•&gt; t h it L in d W i gh w i* !*\ eaty t » keep trunk nf hit pregreta, •»u th af YalaO ta the H a t where
Af th# **mr llnte, or befor#, t&gt;f.l [f ^ * tern ^ndgiu* t hen*# The Lyt wh#n h# awem rd t a il war J over tun.lherf h tad ptssned to 0 # . h thw
on latlM •In |*4**e**t * nf
ll
id
1
1
*
t!i#
chief
t
l
i
f
l
a
i
(t-ptanatk-.n
f
t
l
I.AM
AhSK
F.
F
u
.
kfai
:t
* &gt;1 b-H ifl fur 2*1 y i i n « govtrn- r,»r,h
U M S h i l *( * U i,
Al.snlw «hl, k » . U u u L l y d.f- Irish roast, sod If Iks f # i h of-,
N
(It
W
d
It*-.
I
1
I'i piera »*■ g in n u
(lurtdMd* ef t t#»h»'Me ca’la *-k
im d tiilr e-l A hi* m,in wl|&gt; flit* ficull, ow ing to th* darkhtaa and his arrival I hers ts n t m l .the u rv
if g fer i*ifriim*tl- n **#* rvning th'- .binl 4 h#m in. *!Hf##dfl Maynea.
I i'll *b#d Fltdlet tt the itiuinini ,\ f -| 1.1 i*Mi "Mg lit* itili-horitUgh . 4 H • m i g a tlit vetc
m
1
r,#
and
!■
nicknmiwed
•
M
e
iu
s
i..
.41*
get
tl-ut
l
»
w
MikHtl
sirh
flktiru
in
tb*
irg
td
lila
.r
“
Th#
F
ir
th#
dew-lot, mast* that w ai |W|mi conf.rm sd reports that hs had le ss
i ii v M ip y
k n i .i *
r c i m H , N it Havnea
l-o|wi an- riiu t it'U
•
A*tin tn fl g b lf f f'apf t’ hof
irt| Mpr* !#• I iLubettfh ha»&gt; l«e#n r*-e|sv.i *' i.r'f Th# latund Ohitf prvhibi- mg fo n t'4 ?»* th# French m.nd ^ u . only hy • f t #
seen i t Va.sntta art effectually
lli'ia i# I. Iddfaiifiiti •-I I t»e ) loitda lic k v o il tm th" fl-A'i I tin lli'-t*# Ml n Ii .» * I i g r t ‘4 ial *i
lam
hlrhnaota
th*#*
i
h
(
i
n
ie
r
tha1
.41
iiaal
tilth
t"
»«
•
»,
p
|
I
ttalra-fiit made
•ti(day U| . »• I - '
ut fast,
1#l at r a *ff . r
1 Pi* )l« * r ! J t ei»| a h » 4ame to Washington
t»f##nw .ih, Ldsnii., Wr*(. X hJ4 !#i'dli-|t.Rl
i
r
m
n
li
g
#f
atmlratn-o
' MrltnM m k ih .i iitheut ’ Ike d*V, thu*
k ig t lai-lr t ’o l|risiatl«M
I D - t i h| i r i !*r*| *ut*,r)l .« i.- day* in advei # •: i d
.* m «H t c llir d ir g adminlttratiow
1Lifts, M «st ,
| u th rf p&gt;nrill in
'F ro m Srnerwieli Harbor It it aitah ih n ho&gt; tn th# United Slat**,
I hr‘ h im iMMtri in »l I he ivf#&gt;iti I • 1 1 * i . 'i n m g
■ t* r&gt;tt ’--f ■*•■4 b»#i W nale I n ' *1 h.»»l iu»i l
the in t# r.d of th ' pihiic tn thr d o . - w in •imply ou*1#d. U t had n«»l m b*
N'#m
I.
g
Sar-si
ii
|«,rti4
"IgMma
lb#
t
n
-feted
thst f.i(utber|h will head
dMl# In Mi lU n o
i f a .a . .d m h n ' M a l f n l ' g t i'-e * F *he* # 0 i-&lt;•vert lift J, th* hill wan'd b* HL lutf rn le iw li*
**1ed 1 11 1c•ii«vetiofi at the tin r but #n Imprtaaiim mui# Utetal
a ilitr g iu y (»!*-* a* if *ek 4 in • for la n d ’s f&gt; d , where he Mould bw
1 1 |tprr&gt; el $:. i*e. 1 1 .-tie .*'4 th'• 1 l '* 1" 1 11
# a- i1- ■" I 1 - d '• 1 ni r -&lt;-&gt;
ih,n
M«M**gnreU
Dot
on
m
out
I
Th # off ii# ho* al#- M en it* m !
tm1 1h*m•I# f I v *bt '## 11*ia,. I J mlb- r«' h sighted sh .ut 1 P. U New Y o rk
Hi t aker l&gt;«\
i-i b t alikh UI 1*i iriaiiy i (tireiicd t*ai K r, and ot (ucTt id him.
trim I -Domed hi *» i|at*mri.t timt ; Ihf _Hm im [e#l “'**•b* « ' f h in g kigk mp4 l #*1 riifwi rrak* l Lump
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j'sot fi«*w» the giumi -W
|'l u p l a y ( 4 .

T h re e K e u s o n s O n
F a ilu re A d v a n c e d '

Trans*Atlantic Airman Is
CalledGreatestDare-Devil
By A me rican Naval Experts

*rtm
flipi#|o
*U

PUBLIC CR1PPH1
WITH INTEREST IN
ATLANTIC FLIGHT

^

FLIER’S MOTHER MELLON DISPUTE :
NOT WORRIED A S WITH WHEELER IS;:
SH E KEEPS VIGIL DECLARED DRAW

L

H a n n o n D e n ic B T Iia l
D in tric t W ill S h ip U iH s Im n n i^ h C o u n ty Soltm s Clash
Inli-nm* Intvrcnt In
O v e r K ill A f f c r i it iK T iim p tt C h a r tiv
Flight Shown Hcrt'

Many Men Expected
\t Church Rumiuct
liurKnoii And l*i»riitra
Defeat Tilden, Hunter

J. (t. Stamp Manager
Of Overland Company

!

SouthcuNtem Section

We bring banking to you

Of

Atlantic Bank
101 East First Street

Sanford
Member FDIC

�Evening Herald A Herald A d v e rtlie r. Sanlord. FI.

Th u nda y. Aug J*. I W S -r

SALE: AUGUST 29 THRU SEPTEMBER 2

.

P IT G R O U P

“2*4
£ &lt;

/

»ec

h

* h lo« i

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,

&gt;888
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G UN

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c h a ir

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nuhiv s Fashions uf yeslm fciy » Ptk'vs

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Rand Mall. 102 East First
Street, Downtown Sanford
And Celebrate Our Labor
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_

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oiaM

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MOVIE ADVENTURES II
ON ALL
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Ju n io r
M issy

Assorted
Colors
S. M. L Sizes

Half
Sizes

and

■s w
A :*
v* t
IV / M i l

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s500 OFF

j

Rep. 112.99

RENT ONE VCR R E N T A L
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% / A rtr* A iW ,T

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in ■—

hours

Mon. Sat 99
Sun. 1-9

v

WINN DIXIt riA IA

^ B B 8

RAND MALL - 102 EAST FIRST STREET. DOWNTOWN SANFORD

I R i n t W R I

Prestige
Year A fter Year
H O ND A Autom obiles
•Civic, Accord, &amp; PreludeAre The Unity Of
Design, Engineering,
Fuel Efficiency,
Performance, Quality
And Value. It’s Why
HONDA Has The Highest
Owner Loyalty Among All
Leading Import Cars.

□□ e g o Is The Star

Of Todays Headlines
The PRELUDE, Honda's sporty 2 + 2, offers bolh
sleek, aerodynamic styling and high performance.

The PRELUDE comes standard with power operated moon
roof, 4 speaker AM/FM stereo with auto reverse cassette,
an adjustable steering column, retractable halogen
headlights, power-assisted 4 wheel disc brakes and 4 whool
independent suspension with double wishbone in front and
MacPherson struts In rear Front and roar stabilizer bars aro
also standard

B M W 's 325e

offers high performance featuring four wheel
independent suspension with MacPherson struts In front and semitrailing arm design in the rear. A responsive power rack and pinion
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cellent handling, maneuverability and slopping.

A car built with such atten
tlveness to detail and quality
deserves to ba accompanied by
a warranty of aqua! caliber.
Every new BMW it protected by
a three-yearf36.000 mile limited
warranty agalnat dafacta in
materials and workmanship, and
a six-year limited warranty
against rust perforation.

Prestige ®BBG3ta
**

IN SANFORD

2913 Orlando Drive (Hwy. 17-92)
S A N FO R D 323-6100
•

V . --2

O R LAN D O 831-1660

�■**— — a — a* t » I

Thursday. Aug. Jf. 198}

I — Evening H a ra ld A Herald A d r»rtlip r. Sanlord. FI.

A N fN D R P K N D K N T D A IL Y N K W S P A P E B
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A . T i l l ; K A I ) A Y . it'.N K L V IM 1

CARLTON
^Hoiriis,Former Sanford
Lands
THIRDSESSION
«•
,trL
u
*
c
*
l _
of [ aw Dftnv In Germany, I hen Hops r or Lopennagei

Post And Gatty Reach Moscow, Rust

Irttfifriaturc P re p a r

b f bees
b a r* fo r 7S
/oat re n n e t r e t together
enough
lo atrom rlW h
king e e n e tr u c U v i Th e re

T A L L A H A M r e . Ji m
U —
(APJ— Tto Plartrtp U « i . U u „
• * » i W i | M« | M i| i m a I w
•ha today iM U
yraparaliaar.
nrat famarA I t r Ito m u M r t v * 1 IfOitCJW. Jwm D .- U P I —
i m t.ii&gt; to f l i r t Jm if 7. Tto rill WlUg Paat I e l Haralf
G ill*.
I n tto m « M n t f M H I a u i • » J a n t o a i « H Ito eerU lint*.
•tot i m Ifw fA ky O i w M Carl, U t~ M t o n at I I to (Rattota
t o vMto m t t o n apj tryram - H t U t / t T l e i l U t f f r**ri.a gito
talira* *ta*A at &lt;»«a ananhag Ito
•U&gt; m ti r g M l i e S u ita
to
&lt;**U&gt;l«ttata * f rtirk a l p#*k to fin
*ta*kUy l m &lt;toa m m past* Tto
fW a . n to toft M i* Yarb ratty
I M i af Walk H m m
a it i
i t i ff f l tofn a aaan . f i t totk
M itt ftoiMHi Iilll l i n t r. M.
W f i t a y Ito t i l l far tto m M
n tfa
m aiaa Ito H**a*
W a ff • itotttag fwtaailttM &lt;f I I
to f ttw a l M akal U lli narlb to
n u tf i n e at Ito mtoaMetrary

Tu fto i

m

J

UaM

to

torttn

ton i n t o t o i t a tta r**- ta
a
M f l M t l l ITMliag i f tto Atiff*
Ik ra rirto tM n auto, af Ito
II.MO.fMtto e lm t I f tto ttttia

e l Mi Itoy toyi U leaytoto to
l » Hay,.
T to ir m u
g n l m likitoL.
f*ou m l l n I tmm M am *.
B*ik

EHILV PURDON IS
FORMER SANFORD FLIER SPAN S OCEAN
G IV E N $150 FINE
BY JUDGE WRIGHT
Waa (.’evicted Of Re­
ceiving Good s She
Knew W e r e Stolen

S c o r e s Participation
In Poll tier For Selfish M o t i v e s Only

Two Danish Aviatoe*
Became Lost, Flying;
Over Spain, FYance,
And Using Up F’ liei
BEKUH June 26 —IAPI
Otta lllllif and llofgrr
H o irllo . tr a n * -A U »n tk

flfarA*,

U n d a d at K r tfr ld
In
th e
R hlneian d late U tU s S e n t t o O
a f w e S3*hour (lig h t im M
Panab o n l y laa a u k *f to*. N rurfo undlaod . » » i a f t a r r e ­
fu e lin g . e to rtn l t a r C opea *

t n l f t a M i i tat i f the a n t
f u r . f , l *y**k*tt i m la ayytor
tofu.• tto t o ll tia fiM O a k . Ito
to t M Irrtag t o it u , i f Italy
Craai ( &gt; f i iy i l Ctofrk yaatamlry
t a i M aa n M M i t Ik* .laa* af
a &gt;toft. latl yaatofil *4bi*a* at
*Tka r.ankW fmlm* i f Drm nf-

h a r m , th e ir goal.
T t o *!*»«■. l a * t o t to ffty

In n i n

ff* M Itoy i t o

kaar

*r *igp* at C a*iakilM , h i M
i k k amply fail taaki
Tto .
- U w a n K l bnm*f*4 T t o flito*.

T to S »». laittil, rmaking to.

f i , t a&gt;*r* tto i J4 K laiataa, aiat
fhen .ffiito imt r&lt; ttoy Ii ttotr
guatla. brttarrb ik»t An. ,

j ray

to m toil h i &gt;«« tto *
m i af Cayaakaiti.
. Uaan * f k f w i* t ) a t aa i a
r * n u f r n i u u n f i t t o f toeh
Snaai* attk n't fir*-y**f ylaa. aaJ
flit faa tto toag mrAaa W a n at
Italy attk ill dMlatotikiy. I I .
S ilgir Htortli. I rtgktl. aaA (Jtta fUUg. aka toAay itnptot*A tto
Afi*n f*n * aafMt Hikfi*
l*a- ■aid I tot If 4 t»*n *ry
CikamkogaM aaA p l k p lf * '1 S H
faiiab.
Iptkl Tkay plaa to tnnila tore ton * yrtarigtl ftanaf a i l f ta i n k **&gt;t*Mfil m t - v a it craMtag i f tto AbanU* Unaa ky i t r ato*
•i i u M i n t fir * k m
Hug*
tonfpkl i*A M in tto aril k « att'&gt;l.*tif to Mi llilira T to g« » - tkay laitM ttoir p it* * it K nfilA, Gr.moar aftrr * M-toar fhgkt
rraatoi. toh M ag tto Haktia !• w i­
af Ito fllgkl r4fly tiawrtua.
ly giiaariA » l Ito impart U » n
•ilm aal m t o i l , ta to r tf tto fraat Heitor (iipra, NrafakaAlan^ togM | f&gt; l*fU r karklk*. T W
ta gnat Ike Wen.
Mtra totatyu TkatoAif it
Tto rntaryiary toll laltonilag
illk to i f tk* a u t ily i t t o p ' rafartol ito a t nut for ( '- t n k u i A ttol, anginal jlnVaettoa
ID ilia I f f t o n ailtlM fH tto a i a t t l aiactgfuUy b M lffU to , Ham , I* aiU kaaaa torally, kitm g t|ant tto a&gt;inur to ri I i * ymr.
lA Ike eggaairtas ef ts tk-r yn tyan m f i t af. aaktpg itaU i*1
Otta HiUig. a to migratod In n '
****** k m i .
HAag tto (Maty AktiU f tot k*Ui aatU Ito fU .li f ir kmrp ia f tlrpA i* itor la M ay a a—ral .wto la aa *1
O arm ay to y«ar« i f * aaA
if aid akH M »tk ir aruka. firal kfmAay la ftoytoaitof t if aira tk*r n a M M m i p * tka f f l t ta M i l l i m | M ky laa.
gaa M-itrlU, a to W l I t o m i k :
, w t n t i i f ta Aa SONS ya***f ky U tk Mm.-* fc Mat mm I ***1f»r»*i arakma tto idg • t o * all Ito IrgaUltoa la tto
***** y w n i f * Ink i f f at A 14,
aorlA nilj.pat totae ik w t tk* « f
It f l k l t l (to aatngaran'niaaAltaa InraiUfaUae » ’ *1- toi c Ivan pay b m fr. r*in.
A. M. (K 8- T.k &gt;Mtorw»y tor.
- A IM t .yon* ttol will kgef fargary m tanaittiia attk
CatoakMtw. aklrk Itoy to pan t*
Ka vstkunaiin a n tto tiaaA f*&gt;l Uf.i.M : Ik* katota af *ar
. to f n o k f to total Ito tto gartartaA pa***g« at Ito rtgm aaA *a inaigiMatoA a.-*r Ito y*- ait.va kata i n f k l l , *n4 u a k l
H u h t- W Wnn » r &lt; a C'-a*"w r— H I f*f tk* a n t ••* b r m m Im af a Mil to &gt;«g«Ut* Um ptoaaiUato to pnta*. ito •umyltt.ly t o Into I* taka yartl
to g n . tkay plaatod u fly to l i l t
liaaAirtM I.I* n*l e*rap4*le4 0* Wir*, Ikat Uatty torn** uaykA la ynUtltt aatos I l f tto mail j
kg’ ! knOiptoca la C in a « y . Tkay 5
t ra to i*
i n k in i . om a n y n t t*Aiy *f up altk tto bar* wanklrpn* inA n il It k i f N U tm
&lt;all*A lto ll trip ■ - f r r rtda.*.
b f u M t to m irytkg I* Iktotor C atrlik. T lto n llU . niA • H ■law*l ak*aMarnA iff Ito fiilA , K *» la a itli u a •• *a* a f Ik* ]
C*y*akag*a It MM nitoa f t w f l
Um «/yi*prMt&gt;i&gt;* MS fir Ito r«naiam*a «lti iryort i t tto ky easrai to.Jiag aaaipjwnara Of tmaty nr*A* fir tto —nlntma — 1
Ifirte r O rtn . Tkiy w i **b*A-*&lt;
ttiy*. aaA g n ta m l aa a n t igarU I **mkn.
•
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.1*4 14 a rrln la tto toiaAiakiM#j(
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T t r u n m K k v il U A iy rale tto tto latonaattoa if aa toy A n if. | oU pitiaiyi*, i f ruaAuft akWlj
city faat kifin 7'IA. 4K. #• T k ,1
nizinjc L e 1 1 e rs To • * “
I b a v T 1 (**il|r aflar git 3 g a / rtoatol m i n af Ito U f - (k ill m *sA I.i at
I f f k i . ana ***** i n f ' f i r
ikt
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r-adiAIBtoto*. ato** »*r HtiTU.i .nAlay TaAa/ ra*l tin
VTk*n tto kiln, anA pkile W'i,— J k i u a a t M l I l l I t o I ( i t f j IM M
O u r a n 41 * f c r
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I Ilk a M K iW y. aAM g
at fr y f**R a,. ia f aktfk tear Ito
totoftoto-etftontofel In Aa- l*r uia-■*- anA alttokra. Tfci tu t
s r w r o a n . j » m j a — (A f ) - Aimagaa af I U M Irn w ia *f tka
I fA lto r
a yrtatlng anA atkat aunnr**
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la w M
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IN MANY NATIONS DEATH MYSTERY1
SURGING UPWARD .MORE P U Z Z L IN G

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I'ZitoTZ: Aimre M c IMumsoii Mussolini To Have!
z : To Continue Fijcht Conference Wi t h

‘u^tortH? Upon Tax Payment Pope To Heal Rift

Pajama Parade Singed Last Kvenin
Bathing Suits Will lie Worn Tonigl

Man Seen Slinking
From House Which
Church And Drama Had Been Ignited
League O f America
No Longer Exists

Thermometers I n
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Co To High Levels

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JUNE PORZIG REALTY
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Sanford — PH. 322*8678

* jf\

O ^ - H - f t O O

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We Proudly Introduce Our Professional Staff

FL O W E R SHOP

OUR 3 1 s t
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COMMUNITIES

JUNE PORZIG

B.ok.t

MARY TOBIN

Akkoc

PATTY HELCHER •Ataoc

HELEN M 0RQAN - At toe

ANDY WOLF Aa»oc

O u r New S u p e rb ly D esigned Facilities
/Make D ifficu lt Tim e s A Little E a sie r
W ITH E V E R Y T H IN G UNDER ONE
LOCAL O W N E R • C O S T S ARE LOW ER

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HOT AVAILABLE FOR PHOTOS ABE Wg/icp Fgbd * Ijrry Sumnar
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LOCATED O F F 1-4 IN LAKE MARY
ON 46A AT KHINEHAKT RD.

Ip .

• *••••

P 4* •

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LARRY MILLER
(Llcengcd Funeral Director)

RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL • ACREAGE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY • PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

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A N IN D E P E N D E N T D A I L Y X E W S P A P E R
H A N F O R D . F L O R ID A . M O N D A Y . O C T O B E R l» . I N I

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Face Toward Bright Future
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Chose Death Over Disability
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Ivy i«efm«p##d * S aw lnx»to«fi *n
totonl htoi M D to R xU d th# y t k i

AM,-a W *a**fu4

f

rtorp ■i:\srrr

I

BIG SAVINGS

FREE

HEARING TEST for SENIOR CITIZENS
M ONDAY THRU FRIDAY

SAVE COUNTERSPACE
W ITH SPA C EM A K C R ir
MICROWAVE OVEN
Wide S cu ft cevilp Eaip to
install »n toes man an Sour Word
Prompting Dikplap provide* pro­
gramming initruction* Tim*
Cook 1 A 2 ipf* you Mt two
powwr ! • * • ! ( w IM n one lime
cook program Auto Roatt Time
M o d e l T F X 24 FO

ofOwClockSPowPi^gvel^^

Ptiong

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IV* Sen

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c

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Sanford

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# V\ h..f V\ r Sail

rjO-

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coterw
ah
f apiruk 9 12 85

LIBERTY 11

�r, « * l .

"■ &lt;■

10— Ey*nlnfj H i r i M I H t r i l d Adv*r1ii«r, Sanford, FI.
T O IT I NEWRPAPKR
l ’uhll.hr* la Florida'*
Htarl
Tlta World, (irraltat VrsrlWr
Spot and Rirhr.1 Gardm I j m i

2

T h u rjd jy, Aug I f , IMS

THE WEATHER

(K h z
9

# m tfo rb
AX

M.mbrr AxorUlr* Praaa

IN D E P E N D E N T

D A IL Y

NEW SPAPER

Ib r a lf c *

i| i k m n laal|kt n l
T .r X .r

Orr

3

SANFORD. FLORIDA. MONDAY. Jl*LY 23. 1911

NUMBER 233

Price Fir a Cant.

Fears Felt
Wave Extends
STEADINESS Brave
RAYREVEALSBillinger Is K illed
RAISTOLD Heat
For Hyrd’s Safety N
Sway Over Nation G
ISFEATURE
IRREGULARITY
TO GAMBLE
OF BUSINESS
INPRIMARIESAfter Walking Into
ON FUTURE
W h olen a le And R e ta il
T ra d e* M adr B etter
S h o w in g la s t W e e k
Than

W eek

B e fo re .

NEW YORK, July 23 —
Ru.Inara throurh lha rountry, aalrl Dun 4 Rradatraat
In Ihrlr waakly irada ravlaw
racantly, U m.lntalnlny a
•uprl.lnjj dafrre of ilaadL
neaa, "In aplta of lha ad*
aaraa aitranrou. Influrncai,"
which It ha* had lo face.

U T T I . E A M C k K A . A n 'ir*
I k , . July n — ( A T , — Q r a r ,
rwM*,n for I X •ufuty of
A C » I „ I R &lt; I* mI fiyr-J
f .n
lo d .y . T X I , ,11 Ix d .n e la h i.
IW H lf U f l t k l f.lra rrulm f, O .lpaul • « lo t. Thu In c ta t party
• huh M l ,u t Irtd a y to X i f i ,
him l u l lo t X n u n hot# r h
l » l k &lt; II Xu W M l p f h up (ho
l u l l Thy y ,»u y « « • v&gt; nutui
**• on th* I Ahmilu run 4),.n y&gt;
flu ,* nitk «M u h a trull hud
huu. «i,rk t4 ruuld not X fau M
I * - ’ &lt; X t point, thu party y».
purled.

Advice IsRnsed On An
Kxpectatinn OfSuhstantial U p s w inst
OfHusiness In Fall

Of T l * A m m Ic I H F m m
Th a heat wave eitended Its
away a v tr a aun acujrgel m
li«n t *ia- , rmitir.g the
total
llaaa [oat to at U ia t t?S. With
even more aevert temperature*
reported in nil aectiona, *tt«ee
paid with h « t t and the eftuatry
with lieeatnck, ravaged crop*,
and fail mg water auppliea. A
lufvey of the fraught damage
from the Mtwiaaippt to
the
Rocky Mountain! ahowad thee•anda of cattlo toot, tbojaan-li
more given up at forced aale*.
and crop il«eaee at hundradi rf
theuvanda of dollar*. Mill tana
nf p e m n * who fewnd relief at
lake« gad Ui* wear bora over thr
• t eh and came 'back today In
baked ,f « vrmen ta and ateaming
ildewalka.

W A S lirM C T O N , J u ly i t - o h
i - T h i MHA lull beeii informed by
11• e i peri* t&lt;* "gamble** on ■ ■ub«t*ntJel f ill ru n In tmeine*# ami a
lea* than atual aluinp during Ike
remainder » f the l u m n r r
Lawn lleedereea. thief of the
Klee r a f le 1* reteareh ( M plan
gang (bvplen held thia renrluiien
I x . p it# i r u ' . n t o w t n n g o (
yatterdey m the Fa* a* ef § m m
wetivitj r , (He M i)»r In du itrie i
ot ila ta tR it and other data. Ill*
•M lik f
taftraat, m lu m*
advice lo N H A i i boied upon an
both lha wh#l***lv *rvt
retail
Ira d M made a lot U r
ihwwmg 515,000 S tru cture To tipectatiofl of an « p e m | .
Hrnd*rto*‘i
feeeartberi baa*
than ■ tree Ik tar lief, the r r v i t *
He Krcrted On b i t rejaarted to him that the decline
m irfl
N»*ar Court House ti.i* far tbit lu m m ir hie beta
**Tba
mort » ru’vurwging
ft
I m than nermoL and that there
porta on diminution." fwf*tlftu#d
th « ravlaw, ' e m rereleed from
rarelruttlan of a new Fpanlib ara now numerous algna of an ap
Naw F n g ltrd ,
Momth
A lla a tit, Ktyle nne-«tnp filling itatinn whirh ward trend ill buuneat geMralJy,
Middle We*terr, l i d N e rth v e e lThere la no oipteiatMrti*
bow|e f» be the future borne o f the
ant i U U i
ever, af a bocans deielupment. Hen
He mi note T*ra Mkop,
w ill begin
" I* the Mouth writ 10© de jn of
derton employe m u t careful long
neat twa w*fekl
at uege In bit e*timote of llw
drought hat* Ifw ifM a dretioct wifkin the
fu­
lo ll in moat kiaoil*^ af rum mer- f e r mart 111 Iftreat ami f*ark A
ture II* himeelf referred &gt;eiter^
f i l l te liv ilf.
D A Y T O N A H K A (-||, July l i nwe an tha lat « * • •*•••! •• • day te hie attitude aa a "ffaiHble**
f-ra tha Latiw of tb# beat
forte Grim Ihrrata again*t Mra. Fmeth
•'While retail Mlea tha
P «it miniature golf rwar*a,
W'ialt fall eunw mhat htlow
««
Tuttle Cochran and Mra.
Mat;
Tkia aniwunrement waa
tnnde flvatlabl#.
paouitione,, velum*, ■ •* bo!■terl-inl
relief worker*.
The reatarrli chief la
paying Moffitt, F F M A
by A . J - fatarean,
by aoereeefuJ rlearenre promo­ tht» iftoititag
e*p«cial attention to what be dr Have been made ih i« weak, it waa
Meaboard Oil
tion*, parlkularfir in hght w tig lii |M l ) agent tor the
nacriba* *• Id* *Twmely iindiretori-" learned! fueierdajr,
building f o r if*tame there hm* hern a gain
wearing apparel,
U tllla t
Mid ( a , who added that the
Tha pvreon or
poriuna
a la
bM»a*w*f#», with th*
f lati** would t«at i t legal IlSdWO.
in lha io la of Dvtfif1 room ftafi, 'm ale the dire a ar lung*, had eon
I to IV t e n m l |W»* tha com
Final plana far tha na w aUtien one of Ibe flret thing*
coffma
of
whkb a irw trd miaiaturo
paratjve figure* of I M X
wrra ftre ittd tale Halurday,
M r h#u*ewlv*a like to replete when w*»v*t, leafing lha name* of the
“ Daaptta tha u e r t iu in im &gt;• PeUraen takf, ami. with only a faw
welfare wnrktr* and
warning*
fund* are ■fallible.
gird in g the final aaUama of tha miner fhangwi mada by Mr. NUt
There alio baa been a decline In fompeeed of clipped lettering from
fall trope, bvrau** of tb# rapol eon and W A PatlKfc. h.* bw-mw-a
pewapopera. Th e reffine were aekf
•prtm i of the drought area#, amJ • iiMiala, they wtra returmd to the number of hotheUr*, he point*
to b ite been devieed fer dapuelt
af tha apdewit of etr»lira that the dackee»ntilla offwo of tha I'ure out In ane city* for inatarwe, the
number t f becbelora
before D^e on the iuomtvpa of the two worn
•pread a none lha ruuftlry
this fill fa- today.
dtp re*ekm w*i t o.ooo
T b it in en. The on# for Mra Cothran wai
week tha leading wMeaala tnaf
The pru)e«tad atatiun will ba rrn*ed lo ffl.000 at the Height of found Monday morning on
the
kata reported actt*itj at
tti#
built of mi ltd r owe lata with tiki
the depfririon, and ie now about •lepa of the borne ef n n»igM*or
lug heat pilch reached thu i
far
roofa N u m m u i built in featuree ggmei, |h* rap*rt cefultaion being ef Mra. Ceehrtn m ltkUer**t. Th*
Ihla pear."
needed In atery mwlern
one at*»p
that rnen with fundi are leaa feat naigbbnr turned the grueaome ok
itatiofi, and Urge, airy, and well
j#ct over to Mra. Cochran.
ful of marriage.
lighted affuaa, alack rouma,
aad
The city
adim nntration and
For anutHer thing Itenderaon1*
err atea ivume ara other feature*
“ d.juMtng up” indicator in rafer^ yaatevd^) I t haa baea iaformrd
rtf the plant.
rnce to h»J«ing thowr that fa n «»f lh* meltar »n d that atep* have
The mam building will be
eat
Hite which h air lieen crowded -«w been takan to ptolett the women
leek from the park A ienue aide
ate *pr*i4ieg out and filling va from any hern*. C ity n e c u titti
walk line about 3© feat A drtorabavfl in u r e d Sira. Cochran and
rant apartmmtn and boueaa,
llva canopy will umupy Ike (in te r
Bmell paraenal loani, hti fig- j Mra. Moffitt that the acbeme ana
O R H IN IN G . New York, Ju ly flu id jN.ition af the main building,
tied by aomvoroa merely to Mi
urta ahuw, are being paid up in
IS. I S T - A t
leaat |i
|»araona, and undei thi* nnopy will be
that
Ih*
men, women, and! ikoMren fwi# for atlrndarita to ■*j t r tinea aut&lt;»- full at an increaaing rate. The in timbdat* them, and
threati
in all lib all hood would nut
In a flaming dealN In a big mot nr bilai alirtael.
dei on tbii Itificator thowi the
be
ful
lowed
by
violence.
Chief
nf
hue pekiefi.lay, end tha
(m fivft
rete of ie paying i t a record high
"tb*1tiialn building "a wr*l wait, tin
la# II an# | refused to com man!
and
Iwlafnt
wietkagr
wav
fur tha drprta*t«iA *nd
Higher
I'aik A innur, will l&gt;e lilt
r| long,
evarrhed today for more l*o«li#»,
•a#a thin in Hit tno'riih whan eol- en tb* matter. T h e abenlf"* office
mi tile I*nglh mf the ltd.
bating
diariaimvd m rt a t a g any report.
Tb** hue, carr|lnc mur# than
that •all, the pe»*ri*-Ly will •*-# dura" bunua par men te war* larg*
The coffin t4drve*#d tu
Mrs
bo per watt* In a m h*hl#&lt;l hat#
oil fbe *iltcme right a
dnve-in eat. Similar!) the rate of t » pay* Cackran v a t *f wood,
painted
hall fame at (D ig Ming pftnciri,
n^be • h*fu M knl * l i , nm«r1. 1. , , , | meat of budding end l » m obligi* black, and bad alive? hendlta. A
plunged wildly down a ih arp hill
liena I* up, and the )innunt of un
bar
In d iv in in g , d**v» off a AO f**ot f i n • k n liu , ft.lju .lm .n t. , , u tn rented pfuperty h * lj by building vwwipapvr clipping bearing
W m*.J«
worn ay
embankment, and
buret
Into
and loan iieoaiattoiw U down, lie name waa attar bed A
! • • l u l l loom o i l ) b t thu . h o w
flame* at it D n M in a lumber
waa
eUe
tncLwad.
payment* to the bovne
owner*4
loom U h ih f .h u h , an l n n i u l m j
yard.
Mra, C a rh riR yealerday rafu*ed
loan retponUun in d farm rtedit
Mi*
Tw elve wared b«fl#l were rv to&gt;h I PI f n t to t X n il.| * u y , m il adenlmatfituia ore al»o belding up te refitment. ,N either would
X
thu
mam
a
f
f
m
.
t
X
X
l
l
a
i
y
Mery M offitt make any
atet*
msteed a* M e t aa the fire unuld
wall.
(
X
Uiu
l*|.ulf
loom
,
ami
t
x
.
i
n
k
be checked.
tlandereari at Id He waa paying meat.
loom,
Doth Mra. Cochran and
Mr*
F«*ur »»f thaac rerrued died in
i nr reeving attention to thb type
ll,aku
In
lm
*
ami
ru
p
a
l.m
,
hoep(i«ia
tif etatutirai In J ic a U r
tweao*#, Moffitt have been Ibe target «f
In .la ll..! in I X firat, it *b«wa thm d i i u c af the tfllhriam by dk*MtiaOad FF.RA
flat/ a delta paacengera aliff ■ ■ fk im ry mill X
ordinary la rm e hotter then the patron*, istitiuna taking for their
are M w r w i a l « ( fer. Th e y are t h lX * M fau.lh laipu (i.r .i.
Inta n k i.k MolviiaU may i f ,I n .
re
ruelomarj type of b u iih rie
ata iftigaation ware rirrulatad
feared dead. Tw a n t)-three nf the
A
l
t
X
.
.
l
i
t
i
x
i
i,h
t
m u , of I X
lialice, and eecoM, bet auto
it refill * among tb# latar#r* And •
paaaenfere were
in
hotpilala,
fiuiW
m
,
u
.
II
I.
f
.,.,|
f
„
.
m
|
.
.
,
k
certain
amount
of
bH
k
rnn
g
aimed
two rritlra llf burned.
tend* to got at the beginnifig (&gt;f
A n n u a , m il x • &gt; a ,k tack that the buying ytoreaa rather then » 1 the rntire h F It A act up ha*
iM it ik l Atlerney Frank C'oyn*
been prevalent for •on*#
time
'*
k
o
n
.lM
u
fiuua
r
o
u
imartial
at the and
•eltail four of the « u n bu^ea
HUnL
Muth of It a n * aplanted al maia
which b id tranefwrltd IfMU m erry
O f patliraltr aifnifiranre, Urn
Mhilu Ih , mum h uillin ii
aril derail* eaid, are the
m akria In
yaalninf,
lerrm ng
indtralor* titftlingi held art era! week* age.
|CuklJau.&lt;l On f a , a T h i n ,
them "Junk," and '‘death c«*«
&lt;1 ealliued m I'age Three)
I rapt Iona ** It* itt l teiUmony an
ok
far *board the to eke* of the
wrecked! Im* w rit1 4#W:kelly iiia d rquata,**

SEABOARD OIL CO.
WILL ERECT NEW
FELLING STATION

Federal Police Trap

7290 Votes F’olled In
Jackson County Al­
though l^ss Than
1000 Were Eligible Dillinger Pictured As
Having Been Most
T A M P A , Ju ly M — E »V X »r « • (
t W ait F I » « M , I m r v X r t t y &gt;n i X j
Dangerous Desper­
r.c.kt JniU'i^ •.* J*f!v»,d M*| ado Of Past Decade
U f In an aniVOClfMVilieftt front It-

Arrogant To ThcEnd,
HeReachwFoKlun,
Too U tc To Escape
Swift, Bloody Death

A . G ra y, if v ie ia ry af Stale, that
•f the more then TooO
pereona
t I I L A G O . July | J - The death
who voted in Jar hewn
«ounty, vf biHiagar Sunday night marked
emit f g t bed paid poll taaei for ihw jwucnfy'a end for the « * w t (
Loral weather 5aterdayi High
ISIS and that only NTS bad paid dang« roue d#«pered*» of tb : g a f '] ho, lew 71, rainfall J©
larbea;
pod ta»e* for t i l l , F a|»**i »1 « f adr.
■ Punday, high hJ, law T X ra nfall
for both i m nod n i l 1 T h e
m arbne gun ring outlaw
inrket*
legal pferequaitf fet velifig B.^|
g^erg ranged the c «untry
la the primariea, eafept i« tb# Jef
t a*hing with eff*cer«.
M l., n u . Hoy, U f rollerlor for
t* M * f eaemptefte far a i r M f *
vanishing and te erpv*r,(,f like aa
I X flly , H U r x . l U le y n l . r X r
m ilitary aervief.
m ani modern headlvw Kofeemea,
J u k w f l.in e » " ( T , m x
The Ja rk m n County let* in tb&lt;?
K»capade« of the dead men and I from
U . H. hvnaturial rare Wiki
■X „ .X X . X ,
o
hi* henchmen crowded police an
Fepper
l» U
ftala. Dilltnger bellied b»e
way &gt;hoit n o t Ion * X
" « dat&gt;”
Tiamme!|
2'*|H from the Crwwit Feint, la d . Jail;
&gt;lr. ( &gt; » ) ’* tnfermatkin a a* oH die t* through an alaUrate offi f
• _
- n io , . i
(lined uffie ally frem Ilf*. Mary
Calhoun, hupervraor of Il#g »t*a
eay eut af a federal trap tn St j ***** elir*
tion in J a c iw m ceJUtf.
Paul, moekad the largr»t a r m y ,
' „ “
«
. .u
Sheriff J . F M KIef.and dm
Th# population tn Jack*on roun the taw eier aeiembled in
the
ty a* #«rab,-he*f by ’ h* federal MkSdlewrvt,
|doe# 1 Ibia s # rn ia f that C M r Ire
C rn tiit nf t?JO la
It*nan
W ith tua aide a be a a* captured ltobina#n, negro when* ba arreat
r* i* th# rounty *#at,
j under dram a!* rlrruiwMamea ii *«i :|a*t week a* tb* man who at
J . - l - x , r « . - y r.ol,1&gt;n.r. m .4 .
A h f,
U l.
tl.
tacked Lillie L»*na uv Fine bur al
lie ieff* t uf the fact that, perenn
crime tra il again and bleat te waa aval up for life from t’utnom
unable tu pay poll tafai are p#r
freedom through a ting ef g®a* rounty I? ftaf* ago for id lin g
mltfeif1 to vet* in Democratic prt
aram ant operative* at th* Lit It*, •motiriaf ireg r.j. S b* rilf 41i C laI la nd
itiafw*. T h i» . they #iplain, i« a
P i t t a that local negro#* iuiw are
Mehe ml*' l odge In Wltfeiwlft.
rvault uf the depret*lull- Th* targ
Ih # rarpait. MUtJiigfea lighted," aaymg lhal F*biii*ua killed a San
•r perventii;# af the pepuleijet
wa« bulletined frem eoait tu tw**l. lo rd iregiu ief«iw going lo Pointren«i*t* uf fat mere and primary
Ill* nai.H a n bruited in the Sen­ ka but that h# waa irevrr appta*
time find* firtu a lly if) d thvkr
ate (Hart.h«r an 1 mojlhed en the bended for that crime. Tb # t v an*
ready ra*h tin t up tn fertiJner
woman, her akitll fractured,
ta
and new farm impleniffit*, In tb# t l i f i . It* a u the lubjhvct i f and
cation f ***** editorial*, an abject
laaaoit repaired r v f tt tiif lf *l«w|| at the
fall when they rath li
a bernald l^u gM on Memorial Itoa
and ©tber ciepa they ran. if the» te la * enforcement official!,
pital. Kvtkhaun it in tha County
dev ire, recognii# the payment of factor in politic* Hamariata found
poll le i a moral ebligetiofi in f# in him a fruitful aourra of g«a'*. Ja il.
the
turn for a p r i«liege already tie r- and acme civic authorttiea
Cyunty M«t*rfycM Officer t . T
cause af chagrin.
Cited.
Haitiil (• turned to k * dutiaa tbi*
The eignificanJe of the
Jack
morning after • nearly two week*
Some
of
the
mda
po*ta
In
the
tun county vote which teiulled in
hf* and a p M U iu la f cnnve carerf taeetiuti. Mr M im d » i * grantetJ
m ajority ef apptuiiaaataly L 0 0
•f J o h n
Dflingar, Am vnen* a uit# week lAcaiixn but an ill*
for Frp pe r le •pparent bad Ftp
ne*a conlined h in to bia home
’"worst Had man"*.
per d*ruled tu eonfevt the n u l l .
|,*D2 Burn in Meorvaville, In d . t i«ar Cbutxota and b« waa permit
It l l uiuiereiood that man; of
a ru ra l village, the ton of a highly ted a nut her wrtk'a i twe nee.
Jarkaen ro u n ty S neightief* *| n
hate a Jupted the d* pfvMion ityl*' f( *f eettil family uf tf^aker
l&gt;14 l.nlerrd MlDoreavtih* high
F K H A paid carpenUfa
were
ef voting without the iwr***ity of
«* hn«i1 In hrcittn* a tare tal] atar busy a gam tn tb* City Hall tbii
rum plying with (t ile itafutew ftniurmrig
in*t»llii»i
brutue
*er»vn«
and profirlent in hli vtudie*.
iiuiring the payment of p -tl I m *
li’ * 1 ItijUbed an ared Meorc*- tn Ih# ii if ice* i f tha cify fl* ik ,
for IE* tw o year* pfecnliof lb#
vllle merchant, Frank Morgan, of Eventually Ibe entire lower floor
jear of the pfim ari#!
tV*B, •lugging bun un the alrtoti Will He at retired, 1 he material*
ivntenred to a term of ID to S'® • r ) r |iutiha*ed by the city w i ll
yvora.
tb* I h li A aupplyiaf tbo labor*
M ay, |91T— Faraftd from
In Nearly 1M&gt;&lt;i perfuii*,
to be
died* atate priaofl at
Michigan
C ity and promptly went on a l ook r i a d , received e a r l relief through
the lucat I L K A oflwa Ml Sanford
robb ing *pit#
kept, lb , l ‘i l l — Ten coat Id a *w. and Seminole County laat week,
G R A N D R A P I lift, Mich-, July
K
raped fruhi Michigan City with t l waa reported by T h a i i l l
g l - ( A P I — In w a rd A. Ilayve. «
A pga r, dirccter of P E R A opera­
tn.i.al gomtinandoi of the Ameil*. gun* amuggUd to them by lid*
tion*, ttu* merntng. Tb»a ia an tn
iari tegiun, in an Bildteta tefoie! ‘n*e r’
I X I n u . t a l t u x l A — .I.IMH. .1
_!«. I X « m . a * ,.
*•• treaea af a b u t 100 pefauna over
I X . (X x
. X . . . . 1 t x i ' l v j * * •« 1&gt;*»&gt;*"; •e y - J J ,b**‘ th# aumbar at w#rk foe Ik# #*e
Vione week. |ji*t week'a pegr*ll
advnratoe af the f#gtmrolatU,awfT**Hfc#nr. being IraMfueeTO U
• mounted tu | I.54J 4J.
Fleven
agriculture, ami ih# m * tailed iw w jJ # ^ at M ina, Ghia.
•*m *al enter, ar# digging a grave j t&gt;ct. *•»
t reed frem Fim a pruyerta ware la pr#c#a« af coan
for the ( onatilutloa uf Ih# fa d e d l*‘l ** ^ « '« ( » e a h* bad b#lp«f de- pM i&amp; n laat v n k , a gain uf five
gtatca.**
l
D u,w Michigan t My. Nhenff over the pffvl»ue wrak.
“ 7 &lt;xtay lb# tirin g # tenet* t#ing i J*** Sarirer ef Idma waa hill# !,
Sanford g dfera wke particlpat
advocated Ibreaten the very atiuc-f
*s* D il l Rilled Policelure u|vrt w hich «u r ll(iii* n tilif I m ,B WilUam I*. O Malloy, whil# ed in the three-way g'd f match
ritltiireJup it built,'* Maya* addnJ.j robbing , n Fart t hreat#.
Im t . at Sanford Country C lub p i t t i
but be empHaM*#4 that ""tbere lc| Iwnk of IJfl.iwn, on* of • *c#fe uf day aitrrnoun ecured their I I I at
G*df
nut no* and there never #d! H#. au1 bank rnb’ errea that netted
tbi Cictury in i antral Florida
l #•■ re cempatition by foiling up
far a«, tkta national itHwiwaader ia] !»•»# i.'*©HdJ0# or mere
Jan I i, p it I
Captured
w ith . d4 point* agamit I I 1 2 point*
t*«iiu•(ficil.. any (tartrean p l i h n in
(CantfnueA on Pago Tore I
(I ’uMinuod On I'ag# Four i
anything hr *ay* ire «t,&gt;e*, Wcau*#
in I'he le g ion we an- uuly inter #*tt*l HI tailing what a » liti.a I m L
.
_
.
_ _
_

CHICAGO. J u l y
23 —
I A . F . i — D il )in * t r ‘» d f » d ; h s
x i y y r r n l f r o m a n e ig h b o rh,H&lt;l t h , * l r r l»* t n iitb t In to
r a k in c t ir e o t
r jv e rn m e n t
(r u n ,.
T o o U l e he m w t h e f le o m in * ttre t o f th e I m p X t f o r
h im . H i » h»n&lt;l w e n t lo r h i*

FER A H E A D S IN •••?'
VOLUSIA RECEIVE
GR IM T H R E A T S
.Miniature Coffins Of
Wood Sent Women
It e II e f Officials
lir RACHEL WTVFirosn

10 Die When Large
Bus Catches F i r e
A fte r 40-Foot Dive

K , Deadliest Of
New York Lawyers Seek Law To Curb Aviators’ Foes, is
Sensational And Deckles* J o u rn a lis m Finally Conquered

ru n .

Tm l*u.
T h r ..

bullex
x re
IbX
hi*
the neck, twe in the

„'*}•» IX Cily lull •»“» «•»'• *&gt;0'» IMrTr
X .IMt.rrd k
iwi WL
l*
^ *tnft
rial ,.X.k „ (X. .. .X, ki.,“"*•
x, U.p .* mj-y u au |lw^ of
BMIIJN

tu

Lc^iim Head Says
Grave Is BeingDuK
F o r Constitution

The hour waa

10

10

p. M. Coo*

Iral t b f li f M hot.ni;
Tb# pUcO waa Joat outlid# tb#
Rwgiaph Theater, a neighborhood
mu* if on lb# nerthweat aid# in a
territory where th# blood of many
a Chicago gangator Haa flowed ho*
for#.
Had th# rltm ni of tbi* bank
rtd ibr r-d# apr rarlo-blllvf *• c a r o o t
hern pre-arranged It creu'ldl h it #
hern n*» mere a«n»ational
W \ S H IN G T tlN . ja ly
(A I*l — The ge*»rnoa#wt today
baited Jeba Dilliager'a end aa
••e of Ik# meet ame*hiag Mow*
ever delivered at crime in Ike
Failed State*, tl vowed tb#
mankwal oowtd areter ccae# un*
111 It puRtabee all membero af
Ike IMIiager mol* and "aayow#
• k» ever r a n
them aay aid.
romfart. ar aaalaUnca.**
There wa* even an audrenro,
latteriag about tbe vicinity of lha
theater, drawn by Ibe preeenc* of
mi many Department of Ju*t»c*
agent*, that fur a lime nome balieteol a holdup a n planned
Ibliingrr, bin hair dy#d a darkar
hue, thr Itlllal* near* un Hi* ebrekt
lifted by plaettr aurgery, gold
1 1mined'
apeetaclea
fram ing bit
■hifly eye*. HU #■«»*# •troigbtentd,
car •fully groomed; black tnouelacbt
adorning hi* leering lip , and tbe
w hoii* uf bia finevrtip* crtililerated
Hy .arid,, atrust# through th# X X ,
and aauntered down the it r r r t .
,
lie pa»»vd, apparently without
recognition,
Melvin If
Purrta,
chief uf the f hirag# Itureau af
Ju * lirt Department.
Pum a, reeled In a parked car,
moved bia right arm in a raeual
•ignal.
M a e a l agent# leapwd b r * * t i
tire «r piatol* gleaming in the gartab
light.
Suddenly the mark o f inaoi#wew
dropped frem tbe phantom frtoboutef a countenance
Ife darted tala an allay reaching
Tor a pirt(4 for a duel ta death
A* h# vied aa a five #bnl fuaitad#
cut him down Three of the bulled
atrurk ktm. T w » mre*ed tbeir mark
and w hilled into th# tevrifiad
throng* gathered near lb# theater
at rilin g the leg* of two gaping
• urnen aper taint *,
Tb# tiifamoua fugitive ipraw'red
"ft the lavement in a rrumplad
h* ap IMImger died en route to a
hospital
In hn packet waa Gniml Juaf

Sholtz Will Sci'k M arkets For States
Products On A e ria l Good-Will Tour i? 00
f

1local i
: r * ng
nn&gt;

(Juincy EnriU'(l$2r&gt;,K29
From H m I.ifctit IMnnt

t he *|« *i h. toJd lira epapf r ir jc f t
r A V U IH U H li:. M a re , July U - era that what Mi Maya* ha, ,*«|
N K W Ytilth . July 2J ^ |AI*» peitanre. therefore, af f#itnntifig
The afug which rnd#d bia a mat*
— MfOluYW up# uf " itih r rr n l yu4i In enure tnanarr th# itr a t i»n nf |A P ) — fn g , tb# it#adl(r«t menace fruit be r*gaided puicly a* hit own* 1 A ! I A lU K S r .r ., July 2t • «• »* profitably purebare many Florida ing crime career bad struck »n lha
i.| the a iia l'ii and lire m aiirwi. ha» eapieniun at lha Lrgtun , t,#t i-unl 1tenor 0a*e bb*lt| Will **ek m a’ - prod uit* that berelBfMrn Have Ireen net k and om r*ed up ta ernerga U cial tMihuniy** f» prevent Liad by
prerun | tvrti •urev**lolly made tu direp
ren|— tied fn^m Kurwpo ur other
Q U IN C Y , July t l - T b it c ity, nrwapaprr ia fnrumitreikdrd by a vielent piejuduea and
omniand#? and net a* a rrremWr kite foe Florida pireh»(t« that
neath hif right eye
la rg # f i«m cement In rat»t,*-d fruit -h d a n l cuuiitiree » « t f I raft*port*
with leaa than HHU0 |x.pulaUun, rurnnitlUe uf the New York t’uun- ccUed upintont by ■enaallriiaJ and 1|##f,
I uf Fiona "
«hae federal man, Pureia aaid.
f
„
,n
.
.
.
.
.
Ol
I
X
.
l«|
tin 4 |K#
l
mn
to
il
I
)
4
i(e*.
psit*t«#»
a»**l
onion*
wheft
made a profit of fpt.siti during ty l.awyrr* Aaaortatlun In a teai rrrktraa Jouinalwfn, ia cltar,
w lp aU iN *d fro 1
■ ■
*
five ahnta. Ha da|
ire
ertakr*
hi*
a
tim
l
fii*d
will
tour
I ho la at IS muii tlit on iti m u ­ latta* fepuit prepared fuc
effect
ft
lha
u » i . l f r tM 1 (.I\ C S I ) I h C O V t T S | ) r O I U ‘
*fh# if fame obvinuaty ia inter- lm&gt; t. t area* h
.
f Latin Amerwan c«untr.»a in
^ lln iid a . *i
nicipally owned light and water A niviua n Iter A*h * a I ton.
flirt
tun#
la
-t
ln*ia&gt;
by
the
Mar
feielvce with the administration of
~
i#jtii*ercb#«i band iftt th* Fatih*
plant*
The re|i#it atrikwa al "aerwa Jxeltcf, or, m rffect, centempt »f ,*&lt; lureett • Institute uf Trchn*«lThe giant Pan-A w vrlcin A ir b#an Sea," the ti#ver*w*r *taled
Combined ivcalpta were
l * V t tonal *nJ fecklaa*
journaliem'* ««iurt Vlgerouc e trtria # ef the ,.gy4# Tfeaiftd H ill ir* »a u h *tat»*n
W
A
H
I
II
N
G
T
O
X
.
Jaly
g
l
h
#
c
way* plane that will »«*ar d'»wn tbe - T b # state e*t#ad* fartlrer M»utkM S,
m m birred n p h w *
were I ami rwncliidffl that eierciaw of tb#
•uimtiaiy rufilrnipt by the f«wrte at Swwtb luitnn/uth. it twiami' retai) uf |h#. Ifttarmr llaiuld L
*a*t#«n (*M*»t of M riiia a n f * *n* want Ifttu the t atiU #an than any
eummary rontempt wvulit
mek* would ie m in t lit (he«k |H# a itilt 1known Satnretav
|*kei,
nue
uf
th#
bu*l**t
uf
«H»
(H it ef tb# given M pefulltuief, [
*• *»*•#«## i f w r F a itM
tfal A m e nta and tb# *c*ulbein"I utber f e ll af the l' ailed Stale*,
adnvlnlatratlvf t r r { lu ik ip unnvr
Ilea uf th# Ihfeiiuf tip # of new* | Three mreYUtr* after rwreiln fit- ‘*l&gt;tW dealer*." |.». distectiad it
f«e El #•■» #• *x *
permanent lenprofenrenta talued
*-.#•! *»f houtb Amatiia bef«»r# re ami tu p g | » are cl«*#r l* mo*t ef
trd lain a I mi f##| lung pipe began
f iiir y ,
#•1*1**
• 1 ere# g p la i
pa|rer
without
af
feting,
m
any
i lea»t ufte luafrr in bit i peit eteftt. 1 1atn1d g ntret wa stein M*v*u w ith ; the natiune wtu#**- fch-re * are
at |tlJ&gt;Ttr were made
Irving I Goldaniitb ta chair w e ) the unbiased acreonta
uf fMurmg a averet ibrnurwl int# *
M. il uf the t let trie pewee waa
W alking duwn a lerndor
in |h j tk, (;„ k * tn -r *n-l
i# »r
i*i*e I e «
I-i
a
f
lm
il
party
J
#a*hed
Hy
tb*
*
*uM
*an
than
any
{
1
lolling
fng
which
had
mvvtf'ped
man of IH* fomniillr# making the rum inal piocredingi by IS# mure ^
i
. &gt;i
VI
purchased at a nret ef «h »* H H ,
af the 1‘fitted State*.!
iii(O l! " i tb# Rtsreml ltd ) •• large Intern ♦ H- l l.r# VI. |( gt « #t ! *ak# th* &lt;i into Ih# heart uf a othet
l
a*
V#
irfonmiefulatieni
and
(ieoige ron«e*t*li«e t y pe id publ fflt)#n
1 «o«t atigMIy leia than that uf
1
potential (tid in g area of
"Flo rid a re a V*i mil# gateway
VI
»l
■1C
tot# of f‘(d F tl It (ir«eft where
ttyltraler
I*
rie
.M
nl
with
thr
la
•
*1
tl
IM
a email amewnt uf pewer genri*
|4fU
&gt;ni
tef
.i*
lire
jifjteey
i*
t
u
»
1
.iifin,r.?
n
letw«*n
la
tin
A
metre
a
th# terbatedngy •tatinfi Ie located,
1
H
T«
#led duim g the year in the city hot i«f tesfair h and preparation
a
ii:.ul#'l[a
n
d
the
t
'
ruled
Slat**."
•I
fmdd.ng* J tmi fvrt away afnml
tl
Tire fnl| irfuinnii'iwMitun al th *
t
plant,
Ve
II
I,---.* erve - - **b« It*, beai-ng let'lor* i T ie li-ierftef e*c*eita Li advo- 1
» leai Ii revealrd again*! a W i
l
end i.f tie i hr pie i Idled ' trial Ly
••
ta
"f aval i •.|'i%r i&gt; q fruit |k* vtgte tie- ■!m** •irung Ofbag tbmgv, the u«#|
t
c
inumi
nf
t
.
ii buleail well* i f wHd*
Vi
H
Hen •paper#*4 follow*:;
than orfret by the nlmusf reffann t p.■„,„r
ia*k#f i* |h&gt;.* fhr 1» » v D&lt;&gt;
a;
t*
ta
pai*ftii*'f t and wciornpanletl hv a 1of F h&gt;r*!a *effti'ftt an 1 f.ttirepb*!* in,
C A V I M M i ARP ptM'l I.V If
44A par todkrd Jut&gt; •trikra «i gpptOtil uf Ore iHltdlf ptneia'lv
•1
ll
Tl
«1at# da p* i tiuent id fin a l will c*»«i«| tcat-n A m trh a n count rewa, li t wav'
•V
It
II
ihe heeiii of thr ad min I el r aii.m ,t 1,1
11
tb# ea p rtt. | «i
T |N N k N I «* l . k f
I l i , U 11*1 1 1
•f
fl
fer with *'#ad* uf fb* 'lit mu a adwree*J by gmernmeftt tra&lt;l# tl*
CAM I &gt;11 AD, K M , duty -M
r find rial ju*l! r iVlrrm niatnun *-f
H
it
vt
awwiltrt*# he tiilta la th# tu-fw of pa*tt« that i'M*ta Urea, for n a e p ,
tl
(A l Mr*, Flla Norman of Walter i In- quevDiifi wWihet. Ibe defend !
M
fl
*'\ Ignm ll w*# nf tide Inherent
1(1\T&gt;I)V, Jul* f l , — fj*).—, R&lt; |tinner, rttm tvu
’’Mbit** "||, tn n«taa*lftt^ Irgiie talume* l#*wren &gt;m p trl#■! t *ct*cJ##) am th of F.U*
l«
•
a
ta
tibia , era* the MMFOreMk visitor in ant i* guilty ar 'innocent of t'hr! M 'liia l atdh.1t d r , auppaited
It
*t
ft
bi raur# they bal atwat* paid tie d
wu*"
#
*h»ue tauntrb* ami F l.....Ia
■red##n rr-tnint, df apMuaimeatelf .
I*
•a
t'aiU bad ( a vein* Naliorial I 'etk crime with nkirb bn t« rb «t# I
tt
• * ...........
ro tu rtti
w.
iro l 1 f
pfly fo u r L o « J » f m
*I
Slattsyrr* g*fb#i«*l Itcrntty b t tb# *am# fra.br as th# Fl#n4a p rt- | 1*
«*
u
line# regiatralren itceuila
« # (# i*. #» e « ltally.*th# •oi# fxVkUon &gt;4 I *ml* *
*■#
M
tv
nnectaiary afinlai*tv»|it*| *n we e b f i l| P i rorh ia the ©111 I lu # t •learn tb# . ,4ng man'* eleu the Greietwut he*e iiulkated tK x l|d re f, m oft# lerent yaai, that linn i
glarlret b rrr in Janniry, li'J t .
ta
1*
VI
l tire frmilnel proeedurf, llw*
tm
af their U ndluirl.
It H i Mi
) « • il
th r 9jgllii Anre»kc*n
«M»y|
(r i iH R f i M O n p*f# T w o )
I
»
tt
II

In

His

' (T.’ xtU,. I. ts.j' '"M
'1*• ,r,'S|b,‘ * « " »

I&gt;t-|Kirtrm-nt ..... .

LOCAL WEATHER

VWjMI

i ll

T XllThTS

f!‘

■

vliftfi?.............
. »uu,r«nt*
.

f "*

.

ftd

' lionetIti

ffnwrrahlpt1*

You Can’t Turn Back
The Clock
In 1934 my father, Mr. MacTavIsh. was working in his father's furniture
store selling and installing rugs and linoleum. A 9 X 12 rug sold for
‘29.50, Inlaid linoleum *1.98 sq. yd. Store rent was '75.00 a month, a
new delivery truck cost ‘600.00 and a good handy man earned '18.00
a week. Those were the good old days??

Seutfand
Miss Miriam Isn’t easy to
please. A dancer training
under her supervision can be
certain of receiving the kind of
instruction which will prepare
them for any level of advance­
ment they wish to achieve.

,,,iv

In all honesty I can’t meet those low prices today,..but for very little more
you get wonders not even dreamed of In 1934. Mo wax vinyl • scotchguard
carpet • broadloon widths • much greater wearability and beauty.

P eq q tf, *i ¥&lt;vic U h,
VICE PRES. QEN. MGR.

All remnants (carpet, vinyl and turf) are on sale
this week at 3 3 % to 5 0 % OFF. Sale ends Sept.
7, 1985.

MacTavish Discount Carpet Inc.
2 0 7 MAGNOLIA A V E.

i

SANFORD

iool of ^Dance S^Lris
FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 3rd
Join Us For Graded Classes In

BALLET • TAP • JAZZ • MUSICAL COMEDY
Beginning, Intermediate And Advanced Classes For

C H IL D R E N - T E E N S - A D U L T S
Cull Or Slop Hy During Special Registration Hours

AUG. 29 &amp; 30 5:10 P.M. to S:00 P.M.
SAT. AUG. 31 9:00 A.M. To MOON

2500 ELM AVE.

SANFORD

Directors: Miriam Rye W right

A

323-1900

Vulcrlr Rye Weld

�Thursday, Aug. It . I t M - l l

Evening Herald A Herald A dve rllte r. Sanford. FI.

We make history!
Although we, in a sense, have been an important part of the
history of Sanford, first as Fernald-Laughton and then as
Seminole Memorial Hospital, the building of Central Florida
Regional drastically changed health care services in our
community.
Central Florida Regional, opened by Hospital Corporation of
America in 1982, is a tremendous asset to Sanford and the
surrounding communities through its expanded health care
delivery system, its positive economic impact, and its
aesthetically pleasing center on the shore of Lake Monroe.
You no longer have to drive many miles to receive
sophisticated medical services. It is in your back yard.
We revere the past and lessons learned, but everyday we
change the shape of change.
Seminole Memorial Hospital 1956-1982

We pledge to continue to flow
with the times-as long as it is lor
the b e t t e r m e n t o f o u r
community and especially you.
/es. we make history and will
continue to do so.

CENTRAL FLORIDA REGIONAL HOSPITAL
Hwy. 17/92 on Lake Monroe - Sanford
321 - 4500

An Affiliate ot

| jp A

C ru p n ra tm n

ir&lt; Aji «w « .i

i

WE WORK FOR SOUTHERN BELL
AND SANFORD.

Though the last few years have brought changes In the way Southern Bell serves you. the
most Important aspect of our Job hasn't changed.
Here In Sanford we arc working to give our customers the kind of service they expect and
deserve. We still work and live In your town, and we are committed to our community.
That means, first of all. reliable telephone service In a friendly manner at reasonable rates.
It also means, for questions you may have. "W e Can Help!” W e will be glad to answer them
at any time, any place. Wherever we might see you — at the shopping center or at community
club meetings.
W e ’re not satisfied until you're satisfied. Because, after all. we're neighbors. Continuing to
serve Sanford is as important to us as it Is to you.

S o u th e rn Bell
A BELLSOUTH Company

« Southern B*u IMS

; •‘

• • *.

�'a- I#
V.

I *

* *

l i t f ** •

•*

l l — Evening Harald A Herald A d v * riit«r, Sanford. F I.

v* •

T h u n d a y ^ A w g . 11, T i l l

PRICES GOOD
AUG. 29 - SEPT. 4 , 1985

won *&gt;;'

0*AWO»

iooxw«»

JUtCl

ju »c i

2 -L T R . $ 1 6 9
Q7.

7-UP REGULAR or DIET &amp;
REGULAR or SUGAR FREE

I

CITRUS HILL

1 2 -o *. PKG.
*

KNOCKWURST, FRANKS,
BOLOGNA, SALAMI or
CONEY ISLAND FRANKS

CANADA DRY ^
GINGER ALE ^
■ r

SHOFAR KOSHER
LUNCHMEAT
• £ J q» e
OBT 0»E.

OUD MO Mi|

DUMAMO

cHomouiwHiMiHputnciiMi

HEINZ

11.11)

SANDWICH BUI O N E . . ACTION BUT O N E .
B A G S . . . . . . GET I TREE! M S . . . . . . GET 1 FREE!
SHULTZ BUT O N E ..
nL
BU* 0N| PRETZELS . .GET 1 FREE!
JU ICE ..........GET 1 FREE1 wMimiwHiFM-Md
RUY ONE

CLEANING BUT ONE . SAUCE . . . G E T 1 FREE!
PUFFS. . . . . . C E T 1 FREE! .CAT
'
BUT O N E . .
nrrllONi. COMMNAIKMm CMIM
.n fn
rrT , r n rri

H o rm c l

HUGO
BUT O N E ..
p llvn N ,
PIZZAS. . . .GET 1 FREE' W j ' B W ONE
■ o H N U M io tviM tiu iiw M -i.
CLEANER . .GET I FREE
|11.1 SIM)
CHOCOLATECHIP1 lUQil |l*.| .1 11*1
PORK
BUT O N E . SUPERBRAND BUT O N E . .
SLABS. . . . . GET 1 FREE! COOKIES
. . G E T ! FREE!
luii u.i |i l*)
tuirnn iM.i lltti
SMOKED BUT ONE . FISH
BUT O N E . .
SAUSAGE.. .GET
1 FREE1 tu.FILLETS.
. . .GET 1 FREE!
.$ .
o i ( t min cut im . «.|
CORN
BUT O N E .. FRENCH BUT O N E . .
DOGS. . . . . . GET 1 FREE! FRIES.
. . . . . GET 1 FREE!
MOT•&gt; Mill llt.1 11 111
IITTII IAIIO jll.i. » 111)
JAMESTOWN BUT ONE GARLIC BUT O N E . .
SAUSAGE. .GET 1 FREE! BREAD . . . .GET I FREE!
m ini i i . i u ni
utn ’ tu u nit *»m i in... ii.it)
SPICED
BUY O N E . . FISH
BUY O N E . ,
LUNCHMEAT .GET 1 FREE! PORTIONS .GET I FREE!
PI'NCI in*. (IUO Ml* IM,
« « ' • »«*; * ” U " '»** »*'
ELBOW
BUY O N E .. JHICOS
BUY ONE
MACARONI GET 1 FREE! BURRITOS. .GET 1 FREE!
IOOMNIUIT (in.. El Ml
Munii wmi CUIMUI Ills., tl Ml
SWEET
BUT ONE . fE A M K BUT ONE
RELISH . . . .GET 1 FREE! SHRIMP . . .GET 1 FREE!
moihil h p m ih i i

i

HORMEL LITTLE SIZZLER

Jf SAUSAGE
LINKS

PIZZAS

i hi

0

mi

1 2 -o *.

ALL VARIETIES
DANO’S

UTTER . . . .GET I FREE!

h f m . i i .h i

V H o rm p i

2 1 -o *.

SPICED
BUT ONE
LUNCHEON GET 1 FREE!
.P .&amp;. .P. . . BUY. ONE. .
L O A F . . . . . . GET 1 FREE!
M l. (ll.tM. (I.Ml
CANADIAN BUT ONE
LOBSTER w. .r jI.I^ E .t !

9-0*.

59*

DIXIE DARLING

J tM L j
S S E L . ' , ; ! 1 1 FREE
LITE LINE BUT O N E . .
SLICES
. . . .GET 1 FREE'
Niivm mix muin i uu* mu

11. 1. duo 110Mi)

COLE
BUT ONE. .
SLAW . . . . . . GET I FREE!

8 -o x . P K G .
3 0 -C T .

GLASS PLUS
. REFILL &gt;

i ..

.

^

GLAD ‘3 PLY’ LARGE KITCHEN
ECONOMY PAK

GARBAGE .

. *»

^ » * *

HORMEL SLICED

COOKED
HAM

�Thur*day, Aufl. If, IWJ—13

E v tn in g H « r» ld A H . r i l d A d v a r t lit r . S a n fo rd . F I.

INDEX:
D A T E O F IS S U E

EVENT

M ay 1 1, 1915
Dec. 14. 1915
Nov. 12, 1918
May 2 1 . 1927
June 2 5 . 1931
O ct. 19. 1931
July 2 3 , 1934
May 8, 1937
Dec. 8, 1941
Aug. 15, 1945
May 7, 1951
Nov. 2 2 , 1963
July 16, 1969

Sinking Of The Lusitania
Sanford, The Wonderful City
End Of World War I
Lindberg Flight
Sanford Flier
Death Or Thomas Edison
Dillinger Killed
Hlndenburg Disaster
CI.S. Enters W .W . II
Japan Surrenders
Sanford, Get Acquainted Day
Kennedy Slain
First Man On Moon

SAVE THIS SPECIAL EDITION FEATURING
HISTORICAL EVENTS
S U lR in V . MW

1M7

A C T U A L VIEW S A T T H E S C E N E O F T R A G E D Y
KI. V.MINT, IIINDKMU IK; CRASHES TO KAItTH

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�11— E v tn in g Herald ft Kara Id A dvertiser, San lord. FI.

Thursday, Aug. If, 1W5

fUp.tm.1* Lntinlf 1'rut.tr. &gt;

Ssnfnrd I* Thr On!r Central

F m lt And V*ief»l*le« 'Ihm* A n )

F lo rid a l i l y A llu rd in # R a il, H if h w i)

Similar Arr» In Hmida

And Walrr Transportation

VOLUME XXXIII

l.-ljldi-hi-d In ISM

SANFOHD. rt.ORinA. MONDAY. DELEMIIEH K IM4I

Memher AooeLited P rr*«

NIMHKH as

Three Thousand American Casualties Are Reported
In Surprise Japanese A ir Attack On Honolulu
Jap Attack In Hawaii
lteflultn In :{,(»()!)

I'resident Asks Con
Hritish Troops In The Smoke Of (tattle
i W ar D eclaration Is
irrt'Hs F o r W a r lie
Passed In Senate
Ca M i a I tics With
dnrntion A g a i n s t
Hy 82 T o 0 A n d In
liR00 Fata lit lea
Trenrhcrous J a p s
House tty :tSS T o I
in* iMatltiai PlMII
II. S. Announces
rtankhn I hturn* f{« nirY*ll,
f*ii-AMlrnl *»f (lift ||A»Ift*f ffltlft*.
Uws or S
•H**apftif (ff'i.ii tlr a( 12:10 I*.
Vf hrfi.tr i jinnl mitlittf «f ih*
K«natft aink Ihr
rf it♦pf*■.
Wanhinirt«in A m ain Is
C. S. Army And Navy
MKtiliKi t«J«l:*|r U|mI |i|iH C*0(1F o r Several J a p
it ft'* fiiitr »
ratton tf war
Started Fi uht i ni f
■i4iu«t Jafuih
I'll bn And I’laniH
After Jap Attack
TO I'iftthlrKt rrftktftd fa
WASlIINi/rnv, ib. .•
(Tri** lHr
ftiurr
VkASHINCTON , D*r |
•«ft4utt i'll Amriifft** P-wilif
r/P»— Hu- Wlm • n....
—lAl’ l— 1he It‘&gt;«i*&gt;r A*!#
|« tr‘ft*i *nl Mlh* pw Hr.* "*ti»rct*
itolnf ti *• iIn* f,»»i
f,r,P WUf HI* 1IA Art linftL,
r.l Ihil ill ,*n*umjirft lift tali’ll
CMflff *»■**» ■it Mr i J r « h n«l |U
« ne*e it11nit H
i #n» M
l
it be
fur uup ilpffthftft,**
H i a I h (It M.irit ) w^ii «U #
|tl llw nne‘ 'flip •
*’ fIft*til*tin p»i»t,h Mr H.di»**
1&lt;ltd *|iiA*| Ik* ft•r at*11
*
an (»lil ♦ •1
ftftll ii.ftilv&gt;k "Thrift I* rm blink*
O tm aaif i&lt;* I • I f , « k * ikw
Mructln/i of si #V tnc* r
Ifgt at (hr fart (Hut mr i-mph,
• •If .‘«» vft'ihf *ft |Ifttl *t
uur lftpfi(fir|i 4.iri.l tint In(ftrrfttft
wimp tlitmiiifi* In ii fi n •• "
Ihii lldir
arr in iffutr ilatiiftp.
vr- #e|# ||||&lt;| ill IIII !«• • &lt;■
•'Willi rnnfMencft in nur aiwiisl
WAMItNtlTON (&gt;r«. • —
rehMvcIv Ifttifi* n *•«&lt;•»•»
forrpi with (hi* iinOmm.linir *0t VFl— |kr 5ui*l* tiiloti
|af!»«»«-«
lrtniiftalMin nf »iuf rmiplft—»r
(hi. ftf|«tu*H*n t*i tlraUra
|| *Wcd |f, |l *. i • * « •
«■ill fim Ikft in***ituHlft Ii iiimfih
•*p •« Japan T h # H «.«*«# |a
pa#
HH&lt;I l iftft*,•■a»•II * 1
—•** hrl(* *id f *i I "
trail Au li.lti.ft tgt|.
Mr lliftirtrll *.l.|rr**r,| (H^
br**i mimin'* | |.||
llnuu
ah*| Hrftalr, mfpfihft In
Th# While II ... I
WAVHINI.TON (&gt;ft, a 1'iifit iKiWii fur th# iftfnrul Oinr
Ihi' fink muIn*•&lt;’tAP) C.*nir»r»i «fttrd fup
within *i irfiftradiin Oi hft«r a
p|i|‘UOpt lit Do- Ml1'
■*r
ftgftiusi Jap#m tftdaf.
THi* pholn i h r u i In
fun* prmnilftil the A*, (tiutp« j.rrcr.Orr the
f't&lt; ihlrnt a*L f«r a ilftrlurutinn
and ra-io,iiu- i -i * »-** -* i.
(It* Hii«» •*thifi (HIlowi**a
I. Mibli-y I '» fljfif l&lt;Mti* inrr Mrnplfa of merehand!to tf
mi l|** wiip«U w*rr fc.ltinn it\( (Hrouah 4 •flAriL*. ii
itifantiy itta. k.
nmuMUt I*a liidnil f
1
• I#« is H v Ir* all#1* th# 'Ifttl.,
i * In* fwIS r »beit ftfcllf&lt; • in tn.tr m»f h•*i |if*tr *1 faMra. (but brief,
j&lt;n«ilkU|| in ih* |,khjait
Mil laf IIn C.tali' *
fttr **»!•J a.' to fl ft*r th* dll
«
*
. .u., fi-n I A. friV'l * fttift *1At t‘
Hr ^..1 Infifth Hi.l nn.lrr
II Haft III- I ft*I •.*
•(«* At.-ift
«i|ffiH‘r &lt;jffrftftlVft** rl.
fa*«■ ifinliiHf ,
Imn • n»lnr* to O-i- f tuir fi |*o»4#* *-in after *ll*ftnrf v 11*0A 4 M
Irnihnf tl.t"iialt».uI (hr FarIfir,
U111A
T (Ig.filial It* I I('■•Ii- *' *
ill. 4■wM.iwieg fi*n|
•'« *1 iinifi it"*Ini tit On* hll Ii* ftaulh Arnrnrsf» eminti*
nutihf' tHut IHr Nifif*t*hr*r i-tn] ii. Several Local
Military Heads
Home Defense
(iiriirtir f*»(t" iw M«* *n*-itl|
Nl W Vdlkh—I'vrruliAfta a#
n,.l only Mil attarkr,I |(g«4iil
IlftWHH
lr&gt;dkp| Nrft \*t*k hill* «m|
Ha •
n
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n.li Ih
|tr
# f'h
I'bilifi^
.l.pj.tr
iftft.* Hui atari Via.
II'HhIo|- KM,' - &gt;#&lt;( |. !*.„•*
nthff (manrlal m*(itulk»n« H*
Men Stationed
(tunm. Wale
i iticil in |hr i
if* *i I»
anl a MalftWifftl that **m
Him ll,"nf,liaU'
Unit To Have
Executive
Body
Major
oparkman
^.v,
a«y Iftlandi
Ht«« Franf i*t« a.I.iC th.&gt; . ■
•nn a- rit.turOanrr« m Mf
Army
hxpansion
n
,
p
.
...
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Al*lk&lt;
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will
trtn
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rr
(H
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men! Ha* ih»(* t«• &lt;t
inarkrl* *ie (** (u aitilripal*
In
Pacific
Area
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a
rm
far
of
th*
n
il
*
la
t
l.g
r
lit
Htntfj|*»ii Jaiit.it* . » i i
fd' *• a fr«tiIt .J th# J»Pf.
Of Legion Post To Visit Draft HCdihil lift,*' |ht* Frraulrftl waul
« ASIll.NUTON. It-r K-iei
#fl ill !t.f I* S |*t|Mil illJ
rr«r attark **n Ih* f nklrf
liniiieiltat* Hrui ab*( ri(wtna**ift.
“N* hinllpf h(iw h-ftft i( may
fined 1.11 in ,i In i* • •'
SIair*
Some
Known
To
Ik
,.r
hli
lid
In
iiiftprn
m
#
I
h
i*
p
n
&gt;
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,
Mmira|N.*•, i..,1 11
Ij
N
atu
ii
tin
t*.|
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O
ner*
Intetltfifiwl
To
Have
Meeting
Board 1 uesday
nifti(itafril| kftiadknn, th# Amarkran
I.*'4_ (h.*t Itntllfilve* Hair h*er.
. , . I * * r i\1 mtik;
unit* wefi* 11*-i11|- ‘ in-||&lt; I
WAVHlNC.lnN |&gt;#» g —
\t Points Attacked 1h« ii if u(‘i&gt;u |ti« l nitrd Slat. ......... fl V'* i 'ghtrt.,4% inifHt
r 5C‘(H*(lllll*(| Due To
In m* »ll«'nt|iii .1 I i .
(AP|— thr United Stated,
* a»r WftUi. fIMill Mil .*»lll», l&lt; (.ro u p Wi l l Discusa .Men I a -iivc For l*re- *•ill u*n tbu'fifh to akiMiluift air*
Ihtaaih
il* 1wwgrrwa, dr.
Hy Homhs Or Subs
fW
'FJf
•»hl 1* *'•*«••»
Present Situation •ial*d war oi* Jap#a tiftlaf,
lliillfth n- «*t. I
ftdaIn, •••''«
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h
r
O
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&gt;
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inirrprftt
th
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JnIntm , ftiniiii &gt; .t
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ingli, with gr#«|,
M anner Ol Aiding
Ii
1
vr»l Ikiat one **f
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ilk*1 tn
ftntihi Im* to rail Iittm-ifutk Iramlfii, j* arh**„ ( #*( un«t* ib.aii m mas) a
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hamlet lain- (ini I.* fl.t
A t Camp Itl andi nu
rtl fur ( niwpany r. th*- Hem, J d»f„ Ih# Senate and ll*.*.*#
n« i unit ilrffiidl nurdal*** 0* (Hr bfi.upht fth**r Inhar.ir (&gt;. ,, . flu wuild it.r.i11 a irliiin |u aluolaV
fiiffn n»t ||.*- I., ..I, I., ti,
I’onJriO No#opfp||'l
r (Ti.mlv timt of the Fiuuth b*»L*4
l*U»r||i|Mt KUlilHil
Ihi' *
i|l.'.lfii- |Srt| flf ArliiiUftft •tiuinj tli- M-iirfiAr uiiftifua*t hut avill maL* rrit f«rrw*.n« in Mfti.f .iil bftft(ti/tft i.l It.. Aiuiy |h«I. i--» Ih.-ftr *rl*-rli»r •n
lMd**l fo* a d**lat#tioA nf
lUtliliim
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•« i' m t*.iii*i!r* i»h«* lirifillt
waf ft*lh unfit*trdftMed
i'ff ■hall ftPtrr ftniliarnifftf un Kuriib#p tif |.i&lt;4| mi'll atw 41* **t "%■*»# ih-* I*»*u*.1 ||uni arliAt' duty F"» * a* 4 Ift-111I of the ftu -it. j
aimoiimr-.t l-*|.,ii t**.» V&gt; •inin i' ninth* ... imltii- mi'itinj; Oi«*
In ihr Dnalp Ihr tide ■M
dllitf (hr tlim.l f“f•r* «.( |t«- N;l l**-*a&gt;in* •«! UtB| |.4ftt th# uf* of nato.ii, ( a|dain I* f* f(ar|»n. tf l« O Th# Hawse l olg
|lHl|lr«h*i&gt;* Hit*- Mini, l.-m.*!'*•i |nltt in****i ,*l Ail.ah n il!*ru*»kt.n hjr Ihr uar in tl» |‘urif«. I It 4* in.'*
f'wilrp
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ilmnifnl tiinl Imu tutu io.*#i (*.* Ov i. f| -ittillOilt| Hit* piilttrm,
in I.| l*i| oilin i*ft(44«|i.
amt YviMmantlrr, ilaU.I thi* ft*. Hi I** |. Th# fun# tltv
i$4*m«|ji*1 id l'i nil III‘»f •* IInn* I'l *0*♦ i*l«*»i|f Awtlh .Mil |.|«II&gt; 11*1*1 lhi«l HtuiiIt*nmi, retoiikitiuiiii t«i.i.i j &gt;.f Inputd at* r«(&gt;***|#t| i n th« Jr1*nutu• Hurt, Mln ,.f vo au I Aiii*y uflifiaU at F»'t( 1. wi*. moi nma Th# irfiiUi wrrktv stafftf aa. Mi'S' Jran*iit
Mi* J I. |Out an,I Hut*It AH W'a-h, wet# upiiird aliPitdy fu ill .11 ft&lt;11 hr held tonight ,*| IIihI ir (H-Vlwni )
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.d*.t that Ihr Amritrin naval Allman, fuim#r Munf«i4 travlftplft,
• ft*# d**Iar•*hi* Mad* *»«
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fir J»J».*M*'-* ,tMi||*iMH,fl oi mil i *’I ll«« |ma,|*I*' iif tin* iiMfimt 'rf| fiu thr |hft imhiftOirii rifllrt ut O
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tl.il Hi r l «m I*%, ifmUwn H |{ if fti* o i d» » Mr* h* fhftn hie aft*i*tanlft h«.l Ivren ear. nuiffti Notth 11ftHi|ilon
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II !• III tin. *•
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Funds In Cmmtv i::,
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Total Wtilitl!
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fTilv iNews lltit'fs
ih# rwntril uliwi i*a•iv* I I e
Merchants 01' Sanford Expect
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A number «•( Uanre* gi* *.n t»( nii#ll( *41, *il Weilitly, H I Ilk ol h*t lafj.e ftogsgt metit. heal 1heh,A
o1•-,n, ng1y*.11 wllb St*eligihn
Ira* 1* owi i &lt;*&lt;*l mh‘»I. i
I'
(
V ii Ve* y o f
V«'l»'&gt;
n.41W a.M« ! 1*» the «egntjv itaff wrbeduJe (of Ih* h.'ljdai . Tin-, who Vk,n imp- of Piftifknt Hai'«e Ihhutoa
ill
til#
lUNt.lf trfMlitOfl, Hi*
tv *« bft tmiibla * t III 1 - !•■ V 1' It
&lt;
| V. Vftbeiy
|(*I* in the
.tnj lh#Udwal SetutiUy half, J*,Ir, . &lt;' I Im &lt; w .' * 1 Veils ilauifth#*!
xoalt ltal.au don ft h pant f#ain.ii I Fail , |.&lt;e-idei*t pi
tha final riada ,**u r . , &lt;i i
V|illiwtll o»" al&gt;«J 11•■V• Vwiiit .&gt;! Ikhdav* will he p•flpon* I until Clkih and th* ITV- t-ilge l.au H*-'** fhci Fail I. I'*Ml, and lo Vhair
W
in
raptuitd
•
•
&lt;
&gt;
(
su
n
k
(hr
Untied
HIeel TutifeJ•nt
aiw'iiii — I iU i i ul .
Ih*
l*i»i il hiljie*.
ii i&lt;*' gi .i»F .litre fh lM in ii* I 'u i
plahhtd heist!it halls tluruig ih- ; l«i .1in»n« nl ifi ftloi-dr |*land fbwa *lif g"peltifIn- w1*&gt;* hille*J the uti.41, ill «*rnfhtatr
*',| #nd
ittfifiKa
I ball it*#h i»ur eh.!.
•kliiieli
] U« 3«o|’ (4 (jat dm Club aj! Avbd«4 *w^ wvrbft.
iljtp f
U &lt; i . « 4 Suirday,
H I* .
U*""'&lt; i ' j 14 *14a#«
A New Cuntomer In Guiana

(,’mnany. I inly
Not Mentioned

Kegular Drill

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P'0*e&gt; With
Hoodie?

�• *

T hursday, Aug. 21. t i l l

••— Evsning Htcald 1 H erald A d vsrllts r, Sanford, FI.

fta a a a a ia a i
|M laa •• " a .

I f v . &gt; U U la fr « «i If » « &gt;kk U
laaaant h iU U a I k w le w llw M e a M U [ n far « I U I ta la ta baai M W *, m .
UaaH»«—* &gt; aaal figh t

(t h e

S r m t lx i

*

—m-raita ■■•ar.

VOLUME XXXVII

E a U b lt a h t d

AN INTtFPF.VDENT NKWSIMffcU

1*0*

S A M u U p ,

M .iiK lU A .

M K P X E s lM V

A ll.lS l

!laT *a«a«ai
,
i w k H*

» M h Hart

&gt;

li.

CM .

M m k r

A w w d iu d

M

I'r n a

M t l t l l I.

JAPS ACCEPT SURRENDER TERMS
Sanford Observes
End Of War With
Great Celebration
S a ilo r s A n d C iv ilia n *
Join
I n H o lid a y ;
U n i o n S e rv ic e * T o
B e H e ld A t C h u r c h
• a W I L f - A M COM N O L L Y

Th* |M*af0 0 f»(J quiet «if
ivtntid* cJeacthded on Hen
ford ihortlf before 7:00
o'clock

Tueadjy,

Any.

II,

IIM5, bn the minute* clicked
on the htf four Bided
clock on Firnt Street.
iw ij i

___ Hirohito Blames
~^P World Trend And
New Atom Bomb

IliL'hliKlitM Of The War With Japan

America Goes
Wild In Joyous
Celebrations

W A S I I I N O T O N . A i'tf 15. I A l ' l —
.m il i n i r l i l u 'w l In to ilr le a t , J* | u m ha* anT|&gt;t&lt;*il i i n o i n j iii.ii.il ,u r&gt;
r r t i il r r . T h u a lh«* w o rld m i m ' d a n m r m o l i r m r l n h i r
w it h g r r n t r r ju iv ln ic
A lo n g t h e li a t t lr f f o n it id t h r I W l f o - .itnl in A * i.t, tin*
m ig h t lf U f o m r a o f rfr*tr.uel)oo o u t Ii*“rrn tih u l roltisl to n
h u ll. m iltriK a w a r w h ic h U -g .in o n S«*pt. I .
w lie n t i r r m an&gt; liit a d r d IV I .ii id
I’r r a ld m t T r u m a n n n n o u th rd th o • i ii r m d i -r at \ im )
P 51 K V l Y lu «t n ig h t , s ta rt in g a tru i&lt; - o f a f r w d a y* u n til*
i t S r i i m l M i i r A r l h u r . n » th.*

Knlire

A llie d
W o r ld
Joint* In R e jo ic in g
O ve r Knd O f W a r

Japan Is Reduced
From First To
3rd Hate Power **■■■

n m n u t iM lr r M
rtvitil* |
j r r o il Tli»- I j. i - 1* n ( thi* Pot** I
|dum (lm la n &gt; tH u i.
|
Th# J uii
;-n*»m »ri| f i r f I
i‘j f *i h*»r»l fu
I
•urit*wt#r ifip it ii nr |
•no* h lik« |l*ur im yiim i »&lt;u t.ar
l
many e%«ri&gt;t that lha J ip a w ir

Ifft «**»&lt;!#« #4 P r .M »
Milium* of f *4»| I# lifted th «ir &gt;
A b r ie f f m m in u te * In te r heart* aid n »*• i-.i* » to had!
t h v clo c k w as t o t c e n te r o f a Ike dawn uf M-vre,
•
Tf #re a n a Itttr*, laughter,
f a r d if f e re n t Been# an t h e
hysteria
and
|&gt;iay*n
throw
fhwut
wall t»f ili* tie air ran] *iran
th# Allied world at Japan, last ]
form erly u.e.i far blackout* tod
P*|»en, aft
**djr e«g»«|#d fivUiaa and Naval (lnd#f#at#d
•idente lute eciU*
Th e y left nvunerd it had surrendered
’T H in k f#»l
Thanh fj«4 |t*t
r*dl*a where with heart felt
'*■' I m t r at '••A- art* wMfda r v;-#at#d |
thank• tt&gt;*r had heard lb*
and
again,
in
re try '
of J*tt*r.'i eutrender «,M ■ffaln
•knlff families pdal into rata aril U n ru a r* . The ametKlien^ inn
h#a&lt;M. hern* walling, far the «ip«truriiv* war in history s n al
daaritnuri iH ik f l.
Am*tiro flung off it* wartim*
rrn tm n , i i i i i i H H arul fears rn*
g*nd#r#d by three year* and rvMraint and «i||t^ted in tha
graatesf,
o d lrrt, rrumt ar aU tir
aiffM month* uf war. of fear «’*»i
aona, hu*L«r&gt;da and brothers and r*t#bfation *f all time H oiitrr
oua,
happy
rrowd* sang, danrr.l
sweethearts ovtfirae all i#l go
■ hd rk r* iM inf» the #wrly morn
in a wild burnt of steadily itrnunt
‘•f • itkuAiaaia U til was
**l at about ai 3i a'ilutli •&lt;• imaMl
from 'lh* Hanfard Natal A ir Hla
- ■' - —
»■— -rj ! p *WWWHT N|*
It ••• tha biggest r«iabratiun i
■ahfar«l since Armistice day up

Nt»e II. tftv
Tha flyihff af flag* and closing
«f a * r « a * ttfMi

•i ff 1hvutandr pt#| otail t#. ron*
tinu# tha fit i'll during th# two.

itay holiday proclaimed fwr

and tomorrow by tha tlnitad
Miatas and HrHIan
Erarywhara, yettran* ,J
lh#
» a r oar* |n tha fureffent ..f tha
jubiletl«m
In tha Hartftr l*lan*lai In ahal« Patnawaff a* r*a* t o u t

County Afrent Awks Double Holiday Is
M o re IJiverHiTied (ifv e n Personiu&gt;l
Crops In Sanford At Navy Station
C re w in g of rtiova diversified
vegetable crops elhef than celery
hi tha hemJrt«(« ( wanly ataa in
• ™ r ta meat future dr mu nds at
th# Hanford Ktale Farmer'i Mat
kat* » * » M a y urged by &lt;’ It,
Jiawaan, county agent, who warn
*«t that future Cuainaaa *t tha
markat may ba liayaiilatl if mm*
#*ff*taMa* a rt not grown la ra lly,
Aatd Mr Hawaaa:
"Craaa other than ralery. aurit
as cab U ea
tararolr. rarrots.
b*#t*, rauHfiowrr. tam itori, ate,
should ha grown Uwally In fill
Ih* demand al |h« Banfard fa rm
H'lata M'arlrt. h'ar » m n |
s«a*oiia tha dr mend ha* graatly
#«raa&gt;tad tha sugyly. Th in la*
nda^waU aunyly of t ( | &lt; u U n
for lha mo«t t-art orlginalad alt#
whar# ami » n kroueht here by
aula trucks fur resale. If Uses#
were «•• **the# r n i M , aur grow
ere ahouM prieltwe ihmM IffftiM
failed far by the trail# at th»
tiiiatkei in beep this market In 1
f Inil risking slat*, 'beeaus# nnre
the Tat mars* Market gaint the
reputation im on| the truth ere uf
io regular supiHce/' lh# truck
er • will klnp ralllrig by Hanford
in favor of sip h market
rater to their demiml. And whl'e
we may think mm that this
makes no difference, a hat with
uti|*rrre«teiil4ht d*mend amt uut of
eight glkres for rtlery. this «!•
to and and |ifWi strut toie ran
rnake an **alioul fscs" |n the not
Imi distent future.
” A factor which should not hr
tCeoi'owSe •• #s#s n«*|

W h a t T o D u W ith K m p e ro r R e m a in s O n e
O f M a in P ro b le m *

The Hanford Naval A ir Mtation
has rarelvwl n» dlrertiee alh#r
than to resume the full schedulat the rarifluslon of lh# |aa
V lftarv hats pjf tmlay anil Thuf
day
I hr nolufay tulifif mu.d-iri
at lh# station until P i fata y nmrn
ing for rlvklisn workers and mill
tary per monel, it was armour* ed
this nooning at a e|w* n| \ w*&gt;iry
, in f n M t f • i. ataih #
Admliitstiatlan Hulldmr by 1 apt
William T . I!a«ti»n, «|atimi com
mender
C »|t I a* ton -In fred yrtu g the
future of the itatt-m t«bJ that
" It Is hard to U A mm*# th# n 1
B ill
bait and dvV n m n *
tl#
futgra," but asMwt tl»s» Aaa(.»r«t
N a a .t 'A le dranao had Am
an
j rsfeileni Job at tliililn g fliers,
that pilot* waukl h# naedrd In
lha future, and thul h» hop'd
the Hlatlan would r f i n i . s open
far flyfn i II* polnied (tut also
that the Japanese had net r-n
slgnerl the amreiMlet n&lt;vta and
that Admlial Ifalsey'a ptlot* had
been amt winking !*■«• nrghl.
Tonight at a oil u rb u k *1 th#
A rm o ry, th# ytelion w ill rale
In ate with a Victory daric# fm *||
|ier*onnel. t apt Tastnfi ann - io.
rd , Thursday evening there »B I
t&gt;# a dance at the l.'Htt, h# olded
He also announced that l a U j ui
nswsfti a prayer fuf v tf l»r y nvei
Japan, aould Iw firuncrume I at
t a I ho Ur Mas*
The Isnfufil N u l l A ir Hi at hoi
Urthesfra op#n#d the prrtfcMm hy
I playing "Anchors Aweieit** and
M h II s s H ms Pea* r i i s l

P R O C L A M A T IO N
lllvlnr PruvUIenrii ha* i-rowiii’il t)&gt;&lt;■ iitmSr* of uur
country with vkltiry ov*r no wormy wrhlng to dr.trny
thr lllwrly of torn noil i-nuotrlr#.
In uur monirnt »f Joy fur thin victory, M u* pnu**1
to rrvrrr and honor thr brave mrn that nlowl "hr.
twrern our tuvnl #hor»» amt foul wrar'i driotation".
Wr owr our hajirlnr** in thia victory to thou
bran- mrn ind wromrn, many of whom nimlr the «uprrmr nacrlfkr to Jirotrct our wiay of living May wr
lir worthy of Ihrlr narrificr and differing and jiray
lhal Ihrlr .acriflce ha» not Irrn In vain. Our country
ha* rmerged from Ihr conflict thr mlghtlrU nation
on rarth and a»*umr« a grave r«i|un*d&gt;illly of ta u irr.
•hip of ihr world May (h d make u« worthy of that
trurl and a*&gt;l*t u» to iriatill In all mankind Ihr |irmciplra of |wace and liberty.
Th r taik of trconvrralon from war to (ware will
br trrmrndoua and will try thr tuuila of men, but ( f wr
a|i|&gt;r«ath ll without frar, uri.cl/l.hly and with confldrinr, wr will rmrrgr from thla jirriiat a* vlrtorinualv
aa our ormlr* did from thr armed conflict.
K tn V A R I) HltiCINK.
City of Sanford

Mayor

TH IS MAI* rover* |h# big*
tl#M# af lha trwarh#rnus M fn t
iS %
I *ec Y. IV*11 urt! || the de» nf tbr N

#»fIt W ar (rum the

Irflr Iff tha J«|M VM

*• | « r * offer
tit Japa attack hearI Hail* » i».« 7 •*11 * ( J i Malay ram
oaiffn started try the Jap, |h&lt; * I’•«I ( tf fjifithnpt mad# *«
M iM ", (ter. |0, | M I; ||| ||m« m , |mvm .....
•M , |Wr. i i litll;
I A| ('tin*jut#l «if I Iff I in* h# iftin, it"1
I St’I J ; i t Hi # w a|-m« a (• Ila
tit J*. |i** Teh. 1f.. |j I I . 14» A11...
'••utrd *n Hattie « f Java
H#a. !#♦- 17. IW T ; t - i P m J » *&gt;. i Isndoty un New (Sslatfl,
M irth ». I'J I J ; (f»&gt; S uifrt i.i . 1 t - , r*#!,., \|.«y «V* J’J ll * I |t»|
Jap* defeated in (*»rai Mt liitiii l|„ 1 •. |{*I5; t i l l Jafis I"*#
battt* nf M idway, iu n r if., Uj i :‘ it &gt; Vat in lam) un (ruadal

State, Nation, In
Good ConditionTo
Return To Peace

ffffftaL Aug. 7, IU IJ it if JaiM i i w I h I m |t»amat.k He* Flaili*.
Mtsirh h, I ‘ I t ; (141 Alb***: *•••.#. retaba Kt»ta, A if 1%, i34T;
( t i l Tarawa in th* tiilheil* rttaheo May h h f l 11» 4 1, 4 l«t 1 Jap
territory invaded at K w* 1*1lain, Jan tf. |!*H» t i l t |ni«.l* Mart*
ana*, June ||, It*l i 11" I fjs«tsflnff» m. l-#ytr ( M J*0*Jdt l u l l ;
(ID f I ir*t H -Jy raid* (*#*•* Mai i m w (*«*#-•, :Sm J|, Iff 14; (J llj
T a n Is land an Ltimn,. Jan '* l:»T*. (.Jft hand'tnff* un |wit
Jim*#, l&gt; h IT. I f « l : ( T i t U k m a aa m »-* i«n April t. hs|h;
1211 Atomic l*#iitib rani un II n ..* *.t*u ■ ,%uif (t, I “&gt;l 1, l+ 'll Rail*
deelaf* war on Japs invade hlarwhuiia to y f» DMA* t J ’M To k yo
ffeta Allied answer to «4lMvn&gt;l#i
ft*
|In tertill uwifit t

Govcrnmenl Ends
AH Its W artime
Manpower Rules l1

W i l l (io v e r n J u p a n

Socinl S e c u r it y
lia s
Hite U n e m p lu y m e n t
F u n d , S o H : ih S ta te

7 ,0 m U H H I

He
1 11

I'd

I II

C iv il.
..
CUT

1

i

Wa s h in g t o n . * „ i m a i -

J . i - . n &gt; u . m .j.-f ( - " . t r .1
lh ,
1. , ,
IK . *1.0 *f IK .
Nu. ,w ,
*.K*-n 1*1. I „ , l Ttu m .n . . .
iKioJ , l.i * nalUo
n*.,inr».l H u t J..i ...................
hhe nil! have ta learn that It* unc'■rvluu.nal *uti#i*d«f m,.|tint
U l l . r t . **U I K in . Iim iw o
A llw J fM TC. K . t . ................. .
frigeraut» than li* rule a » r n U &lt; i
It ••!*«»
«*• f*s* (%*#*• I

■«, **« » »i •» T h o m a s (J . S l a u l l i - r
t lv iir l

va*hiet#4 T N it absn# ahmaM anap
II
I MS t ieam
— •*•&lt;••*##
--------—U*-------i v e n Purple*

**1 |T11 »r 1 cl :i

runt red*. • ■ u 1 , u u

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

—

I li vi mi nil carrier
»-'»•#•!1 •»-•*. il ** i.
off the rvm*t *.T Ok Inawe.

i/ lf W liiH

Thun
(i iitaiitf**.
A viatMi«i
Mstkin •t's Mai# IkvMhl t Inee,
r*
1 s\.
..f
S .t.fuid .
M s , sntl
, fru*#*I sut airttrM
•sMf g»1 ill#. Ilf . ha* Im n awarded
Ill alt
Midut. the
Ike Ci dpi.
| lit an illkN» tittresl Is* *(*ifiride
wdh Japan's sat render, th# W*»
U A B M IN tiTfiN , Au#
IV •#**• | Je it nth N- aI 1hsl i( MrI idn» twunc
, t|g|i,|„,w., , i fi-i:' mi■*ipn ui.puiinred If
Mur eta ran tlaitn
at tar h e l l.-la y
lit was * t # s *1
J a ►#%eii|*tiin» ( imgiant wh&gt;ch tl men! fur any separate A Met*
: *aWt ittjJil stimulate "re* u-nver nan |l(vi*sert It l» th* l|*t It- iifi*#itiatiwn . eivrfi*&gt;ii
H
Vasal llusyntai
si*n (srtiiHis-s a*wl lh# «tt*-s*!s t#- lantry tn » h rh th# M unda Ni
Of . by &lt; apt J

,'^V':'nl.:.;:rnTu-.,^v
1 dtplusmsfit uf seletan* and

m**•» pay men I n

A l pie*fft1|i arcntiiiny in th# 1#
(m il aulimittcd by AltfiMl J Alt
mtyef. rh-uirntan of lh# lK«*rl*l fv*
ru n ty Buatd, uneifiglmmertl
H
|y*n«atiun l«erefits are much Ier than esperted In view uf w*t
prnductlen tut-back*
l(u*M *t Allm eyct ptiinted i*u^
the numbat has duuldt’d airtre A
I Im,
On August I, he •aid, hrm iy
IgU.iMHU |ter*uisa «#•# irc riitrir
weekly beiirhts In |nst1 let »*
j larcmirtl of v*ages W*t l ht sg s
uftemplcifrfteht - after
\ F
i'Mv
the number Jumped tu iim ir Ihun
SMMHKI
Aitmeyit said isrm tis states
had |M70JH)0.&lt;H)&lt;» ter unr..
ploymtnt fuMla at the stall uf
the current fiscal year
•"Tfettg" he *!#«'U i# d . T n u •
Che ratintr y rnut h b#M *1 |ifepe ir-i
la meet lha Shock uf p«*t -vs atrshslllohal tinaanglef in rat Ihv*
was the *sse at the eivd « I lh#
(I • h listfl •&gt;*» »"•#* IS lM l

IsDiven Tough Job
In P h ilip p in e s

t thannel
du»Mt#
j . # i1tfh

fighting,
-----,— .
frp« iremen* fuf tuaghe t a*«ignra»itts in the Ca in
if*
war
theater
th#
I'hiligfdne*
•sadabditv
Brig
Gfnsral J
f
Ils U liiib n
1changing H*f*e.
af Hanford Is assistant d m
I
Th# w a i’s end means
t9.
s.unal
•mtmand*r
af
Ik#
3|sl.
J.t*m tM«t suldier* will
, , i
I.f .
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*how n lh# Ha afar Hites and Flat
harg# of ,i uonjMhi tdiaa* art living up ta their ira n&gt;14nil lap ski, an*l 4ltkan aa fighting men
MMaei *ir-.*n-if luy-e.it hi
Prai-*#g Iff1 teener*t
Ol»e group, which Includes !7

tialwmesl it* aetk#| Iximh. spl.nter
»•* M»e deck with shell frag

D r m a iv r d shrapnel wounds
®f «*»• Mnly and is m w a rtmval
" " " &gt; I* " * ” ' •&lt; l*w
!»••«»
Hoe id tab
llluejacke* ftiauffer'i wife, the
former M in I, an ire Tatum, is
pnw rr idling in Hanford, Fla
He ha* twu broth#r« m the ser­
fcgi, Jtill S ta sfftr l« in the&gt;
.............. ,.| IhIIImi* U -O tl.... K.. !*•» ar.lwjl K» vice
A lli l- fc-.,4 the Pimm ariding gerwral uf the A rm y, an*| A . niton MeUlarailn
islllt uf
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nd
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the
division's
|uo mitt in the Navy
—
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d m # through Northern M'n»la
|H* alls 'Is* Arthur h«* U * b designated by C»t*ak
dent
.
na* T h u group Is th* iig.th (iu s o lin e R a t io n im :
Yi n
ii*t' i • Aid* ! t Mduandtr tu accept ih f tMiiendst uf all
r agmeer Tomka t U t ia L a.
(
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a«’d Naval furrsi and will f o r f f n Japan t«dk»e &lt;•# J . &lt; , S i U D I K i r d W i l l
T o H e D in c o n lin u e d
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,
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.
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which the t l Mutidians ar# ay
V I;w k n ith
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klushirgliii
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li .
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would biifig mi tin mediate iiupiunirni in th# newtpi tM auitpl'k *
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assistant
man*
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fiette
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and
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the
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vegefabl#*.
fuel
od
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(Riser V Jacob#s e le ia a ; M ors &gt;■*
-• ♦ I ha* l*#n pr«»* tha scores uf ktatge. wkwH r*
Nc# s; sp#t Cutitishi is
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..I ity tM
. I to months
s ilk
t&gt;»# t• t»d t*.
* • ;»i i f lh# ###ly treating Jan* had left ta sro.-k
I
!l#«
\|lk|f|SS4»
uf
•aid Imlay
*V|
I'rwe
A d m in utra iiif
Chester
A ir Tmhntsal Cowngafnl
in f # v(vi&lt;ei Vleihsi Alure m F.sslis, mg r « m along the Havre h»gk*
1 *i
• , ,* *i* I ir«4| #an
'l h # sailirst w# 1id h.. 1'»
■•fits
Bawl#* »*td th*s( meats, fata and
Theater,
istw it. I l h
I k h l W M iteoiv *d wav
tuithei rel4iati*m in cti * .up!
l.vtats » i hi* tsapi int#l •U icril an A * I n i t i k o I t ..... It ..... * T H»u*t.*n. manager of
Thiwe taMitlsmed are f U U r t f. ml*, butler sugar, *n.,*s and tires
fur n#ws|&lt;apsi*
I* * &gt;
•i-wi | kuratlai rvffiioff tuand p la # n h n h iaenie -j ol I « j the |m al Math* I d m
1Jones end Ifowtll D Cartrtdgs. •ill K'ai am th# rat bun ||a| “ u m &lt;I
,*■( *»‘(i si-ol# in uidci la iMtaidia I t t l l
11 I he fuuilh t|usi i« 1
S e« \ tk last!
Ml *Hep i a il whs# assume a hit of Jacksonville; Me, O a it a n I’.. mditjiry &lt;ptl.st k* and inert a*#1
if I* play lh# t'haii Hat u p f# y and flah* tu U *.».u # "# a o .t.* • l-Ma* *a«i# U Han- Johnson, Jr,
A N IM is tm #stJgat mg a * . •
ifd
Aubrey
I' pnaiiatf tiiiieii Id law* civilian *u|»|d»es
■ U-. alh Ihsttlst fla t* •i'w.p mi (
b#t uf iinknow ft fa*'( n il
ahni td vt.,.s
,t -ff alMMif *tt aunt ha ago fr»1d llasre*. of Hrgulehirwit T i Ll- mate aearl# in 1-**I■ nee w*ih civil*
I I ♦ Vowej| leant'* ga*pf
ran bate a vital V s n « 4 vi*»* MNWht.
i , i ■■ ----------------------V aid.. •
I. .
Mr*
hhefipar l John V. Spellman and Cvt Eli Ian ijenusni).
u tlk th# llum Ly Ifatdwaie lean
ngwacrint y i a l 1
a
\&lt;*l** dy M any h#pp!t r than » e
f k# , ,
,
. r I * « iHeir tbiee ihddiva * #t ci t % . Kaighlan, of Orlan*!n* t urn
said In a slalement. anil ka* h. #t of U i Ian it **k»dul«d fur tutHgkl fwuiw V h .r
H. O l'A . ' Ru&lt;#l#« Paid, T h a t a* f-e
•* •»«!* 1•« - Ewalts
Geargg C.
N .
raises lhal **#*# rwa»ti#*|, uiai. *,
■
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—
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as yasolin# (a concerned, the day
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has
been
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ti
Never*,
M
iam
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far west, o rj- ------------ 1
1
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rest sareting of the W at Cimt
n*s fe
tth its M#ih#r fttur ** Luke 1- Harris, of Mfami Hearhi it finatty her# when we ran drive
(ten Hi aid s r #w*pa|i#r tmlutity
fie ih
fiuita
and vegetable
«ar cats wherever we plea*#,
fas Sunil tiro* #i f W th# a tell!
gugotta J Joyner of Talla
advisory rommttte* m Washin*. 1'in. * w#t# ri«re d uodei coni rule
TK, l.* ft &lt; •an fiUHt I bar m ii ' ■*»aFt* "f lh# N inf id haisr#, C w p lo r Jl ftuCr## «f ohsn we pfet*# end a* murh as * *
tuft. is p lim W r M U
lta*tl*#St m
m *||| a.t|
i•t t-Le l . i i i hm* slsarst.gr ( M4'
•#rvad In rkSrt Her «l#&lt;i l . a* I Hue
fils ate '*

No Improvement Seen
In Newsprint Setup

1 11 V BRIEFS

TH E M c M E E IN A G E N C Y

INSURANCE
C O M U tS C tM .

Liberty
Notional
Bonk

3^

tangwKKt ll lU M lM S tIII l)M

KMC

COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE!
BUSINESS AND PERSONAL

SUTO

S S X a tA A L

HOWC

114 N. PARK AV

M&gt;AfttWCNTSLOGS

* i

|J,||i(«

In
,

th#Wiii* t.....
" u’im saaAlmwer

# 11

...you require expert financial services such as com­
mercial accounts. notary services, payroll processing.
24-hour dc|M)Hlt convenience and the availability of the
financial expertise of professional hanking people
especially trained In effective money management. Wo
provide those services — geared to allow you to save
money as well as make money. You're in business to
make money and save money — we’re In business to
help you do Just that! Come tn and talk with us today!

i/

n

S o ld ie r s

R a ck
...

wAKHi si . i

w A M ii N r r r o N , a . . . i % v &lt;
gedeta) Heeurttv Ckisf f*aim A’
McNutt made ubllr
“
u repoit t
day wkwH prrdicla.l H a l lh# en I
« f the s t r e s tiU hung a rthtsi.
Ikutfsl tn aoelaf aecurlty un#»»tpl*&lt;i

If you’re in business
for yourself...

M IN i t g i M i i m

■

fim w n
"■ ill pi*; - n rm iwior
umlri tighl A f1than! n m iiid
III itH'dti* r s r i tu inuie aar
itfJKP ar# tl* im Mf (plaid flwm
tlk#m
At a ih d iV t r* tif* ti-nre
mtUlars g*nvi *1 ■*#**! n||«rrra stmol
Hi MCHIII «RNR
iinssJ v tu mu#** ui s till th# ucrti*
A I N rs ifp itu rt* Writ#*
Jtf*an kas b o n
n th# w*r pultun tor. »-• art,! tH rtv **ut thrwv
path to I'Miff— # t r i am «t Iftffh - terms
Th# iL lirt I N r* * A gruty futha! hrr d*fr*t w ill l*V*U m#*n
I &lt;U(S#citi tltivliilu,
a t r taler J if f tm ir# in htin*- p*i!l#t| that
rfMviilli'm than th# thangt li f t j BsMrestlMg his n.tlmiv („* Itn* l .r .l
many mutt ro lh rough.
•tlivsr Inr radm. Mum#*l lh# « wr
Hntain, rh in
and the
th U ailed j f w ilf r «n twu nta&lt;» (,►*»*'
. a, ___
it lie a have aftrmunrwl t w ic e D f* l, I hat lit# i i » M „f tl.#
at ('a im and at l ,uts*lain -that * “ 0.1 we. 4 *
J h |m «i
*1 *♦
Japan a 111be cut
taarkt-» kw* *’•**! stt th*4 ' i.»i) *r
u „.d . «(•
hum# isIan*In. thesea fo*
«,
w
*•
m h nim
*
islamts •ksch lie uff t , «
*- * «&lt;• * **
■ ...
oa st Ilka lha allw altssr uf « 11*« *«!•#•
Hr*
/uncut
Together.
tHay*t#
llffohilu l**U hie eubjewia, a#alu&gt;t»l the*lie i f C a lifnrnU
luidiag t.. IV . im#,
lHd tu muh#
O m p a re that with lha ywak af O****''*’• Y‘»
I DirM ng aismng
her laud ftaba during this war fhg"v*#l*0a, !•* »••»•«* lh*.t -Irtn g lh
At i»ne time th# Mikado claim#*I
'** *•*
i&gt;. Ih r a«*c.
jwri*«fwt»un over 7jD0tl miles af MMscI*®* uf the future",
the Cue if ir area, f turn thr Kurit.-I
#•»*»*#*#
wh.» played
(sllnds un the n*#rth, south 1*1 th#
M r s tn th# m.si at# #«
I hitch Cast Indies
i*#r|r*i by . ffn iat- b#r# tu turn
f ssatrullag Half HiIIMm I 'r t w s . ,n‘l hara k m a* a re -ilt ,.f the
A l lh# peak t*wthy Japan#*# ‘i***’*1
I hs.res#« •* i - *led (rum
generals run j roll#,j th# U «r « uf J ' k»*» rsrljr l..d .\ that Japan#:
Mime MWplA&lt;i,W(l person* H u t
Miwiatri h.if m h.k 1 Aturnii
they ran try tu fit Into pra cell for
k4ullesl ^hiiniw ll In ‘ *1
f».r
living al hum# with I'J.mm.iwri 1 ” ** ^*"urr

SANFORD FLA

INSURE WITH CONFIDENCE!...

322-0331
*1

SINCE 1918

is

BOAT

J

:

�m u m m im

NOW OPEN

N&amp;PUI&amp;AI&amp;

Powell's Office Supply Co.
i.
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•
I
•
W K Wtw ,
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• In

•

• •••!•«.
» *•
•

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NEW LOCATION

1Utapf*
I **»'- &lt;iH‘«n ,i +
•“ t i«M « W li i ,

• *•*•&lt;♦» (dfc|i,^ | i '- * « i *1
• *-••** t o Me. — l u I
• I
•***.
y*»■

mN

. h A.

ALL IN-STOCK
FABRICS

• W ALL COVEMMCS • CUSTOM M A K A R S
• TOP TREATMENT • WINDOW TREATMENT

■

b# ix»,

■*f'n #■ &lt;bM *&gt;
llN* blf»&gt;. I 4i -m*.V

FREE W ALLPAPER
G n » F R E E Single Roll with
Any Wollftaper Purehmte
Ju*t mention thi* ad. Offer good thru
I0 -JJ-&amp; 5 . Mot valid with a n t other offer.

IM IV»«t||
I *&gt;

1985

Q U A L IT Y F A B R IC S
AND
U P H O L S T E R IN G , IN C

GRAND OPENING

S u p H H 'ix )*•» ««'*&gt;

• U t «i

4at|

II Taka. Hot* Thin A Good Secrtttt,
To Run An Efficient Olllci

Thuridey, Aug. « . I M J - I T

Evening Herald 4 Herald Advertiser, Santerd, FT.

$ *T 9 9
per yd.

Tow Need
rf T S i ( ! T i r C C f r C t Z f &gt; I .

PeuwCts Office Supply

20’ .-40% OFF

-

SALES • SERVICE • REPAIRS
N(W 4 USID
YiCTOIt • SMITH CORONA
CANON • OfTICt FURNITURE

O tte r G o o d

Graber V e rllca li
Levolors • Verosol
&gt;•
FREE INSTALLATION -

■ d » at i 2 I d J a

T h ru 5 c p »rm b rr

10 % O F F A L L
U P H O LS TER IN G
W ITH !N STOCK
FA B R IC S

a JCJ J i i

Winter Springs Centre

• RUBBER STAMPS
• r m w iiu R s

114 S.R. t U
1 ml. la t l at I7 »J
Nairl l« te r nett Bank

•CALCULATORS

fSotoe/Z'-'i Office

327*2420

117 Magnolia Ave., Sanford

325*51

To

HOURS:
WEEKDAYS: 9 00 6 00
SATURDAYS 9 00 4 00

O ffe r G o o d
T h r u S e p te m b e r

O ur

*d a y

September Swap &amp; Shop Show
9

321-5753

i

» « t a t w i is *

Y o u ’r e I n v i t e d

CORNER PARK AVE. A 2 5th ST.

A c u ity

fr v i (2 k u 4 t*H a &lt; i'

WE M EET NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PRICES
FREE Gift Wrap and Delivery
WE ARE OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

Aritifycteb
b»•

c u t c C m u c A

tnutn o n e ...

September 21st &amp; 22nd 10:00 AM till 6:00 PM
• MUST HAVE OWN DISPLAY OR TABLE
• NO SET-UP FEE

Don't W alt To
Inherit SPODE

"Adopt Me
For Christmas"

Start A Collection
For That Special
Someone On Your
Christmas List

Each SAMDICAST™
Animal la Hand
Caat and Hand
Colored.

TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE

Gorham Bear
Collection

Sebastian Mlnatures
Many To Select
From

WRITE OR CALL

They’re Collectable
They’re Loveable
They’re Huggable

WE HAVE A COMPLETE BRIDAL REGISTRY

■m M

1800W
. first St.
Ssntord, FI 32771
(305)3216220
(305)6450639

2 2 8 East First Street
3 2 1 -0 7 8 0

7 la * t

l a t l o n 1*4 I n f a i l 4 b ; r a t i
o n 4 b ( t i n t S t r e e t ).

Historic Downtown Sanford

Nellie A hard Coleman

_____________________________ ___

BRAN TLEYS
★
BEATS
*
THE
B IG - U N s!

tC*

LO O K!
**

.1

- V &gt;&gt; , 4 .f&gt;
-&gt; &gt; r v

'*.!**&gt;

Like a Cafeteria or
Buffet but
with F U L L SERVICE.

/jcj

"Branlley’a Build Your Own Meal!"

V (r

_________________ J O A N trS SPTCtAL_______________
Lunch Bunch

FLASH!

Starting 3rd
SPEC
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Ham Steak with Pineapple Slice or Raitm Sauce

September

Our Famous 5:00P.M

Veal Coffer

Meat loaf

Saatood Hattie*

VageteMee A Bated* - A* many a* you h*a 60* each

-

C
rJt' //

Prime

Sen&gt;opad Potato**
Barbwquad Baant
Turnip drawn*
Oreen Baant
}
Matr\»d Polaioaa
Pic*&gt;ad Beef*

$

Shrimp

^

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To*tad m/tomato
Macaroni Salad
Potato Salad
Cola Slaw

apple Sauce
Co«age CAeeae

S
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S
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p
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m
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3
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p
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n
f
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l
u
c
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anddinner day§aw
eek.
FLASH!
7

Sr#e* frier
■andmichea and Other OMnare
*
See Mom Menu
BI N Minimum

toue et the Dev

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LtA
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good
&amp;

|0 o!
c a t-**
To*1*

V

Maals * ChoKa of on# or more f2 00 each — full portion* only

o u l* '

322-9798
,

-7

2511 South Sanford Ave.
Sanford. F L

We prepare a different
m enu e very day.

G
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Evening Herald

A Herald

Thursda*. Aog 11, I9&gt;t

Advertiser. Sanlnrd, FI

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I lu re Are Many Good Ways I u
Get Acquainted And All Work

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S E P T E M B E R 3 rd thru SEPTEM BER 14 th

A LL

RICHARDS PAINTS
1 -----------------------‘

nicijji^ f

OUR BEST 100%
ACRYLIC INTERIOR
&amp; EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT
Reg. *15.90

S A LE * 1 1 . 9 3
318 S. FRENCH A V E .
S A N F O R D , FL

321-2360

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HOURS Mon Fr. 8 00 5 00
Snt H 30 I 7 00

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�Evening Herald &amp; Herald AdVfftiiar. Sanlord FI

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What docs a referee know about chancing
w
w
rates on term accounts in the m iddle o f the term?
Enough to tell us i t \ an option he’d like without
getting penalized.
I he Big E regularly asks people from all walks
o f life how they th ink we could improve banking
for them.
Your comments, fo r example, told us you’ d
like a long-term investment with some built-in
fle xib ility if rates went up later on.
T h a t’s why we developed the Big E Convertible
Term Account — a four-year certificate o f de­
posit that gives you a penalty-free option to
change to a variable rate after the second year.
You can’ t lose. If rates go down, you keep the
fixed rate. I f they go up, you can sw itch to a
variable rate indexed to the money markets.

1
.

I

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7

[

i 1

7

. ‘j

Mavbe vou have some thoughts about building a better bank. If so, write me, Paul W illax,
at Empire o f America, B.O. Box 870, Buffalo,
NY 14202.
Your input is im portant to us. It \
one o f the reasons the Bio 1 lias grow n
to become one o f the n a tio n ’s top
savings bank networks, w ith over
StS b illio n in assets and over 1300
financial service outlets in 46 states.
When it
comes to
designing a
better bank,
we talk to you
— one expert
I'A ll \ Wi l l AX
President
to another.

vrawraMI’
Umpire ol America

Em pire ofAm erica

Federal Savings Bank
Mem ber FSLIC

talk to the e xp e rts

la n h liii (Jlliin Iknnikiwl I M i IhtHitl viuno(Ac»' l«iUoav li Ihlud; Mun Ollkt. MJ S M oJU.'nl it. .loau
la lM i u a i I

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P ni Vd SAcA&gt;.•SjvtnpR. .J. Utfifadiai

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'**1). laSaalurt. Oa&lt;N OtlanAi

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Otkaf t oaKiuaal
I lixaOiia, la DtlaaA; BrinJyalnc VUUff HWa. W O N tAoodUflJ Bouksinl,’ Jl 4TTJ, |* Uikan I S H I I . V.«
la Orttuia v* D t‘. 04
J ''* « &lt; ') lal«dw /| !&lt;Kil S Hih
l i Sp. Mai raj Hraik: I WJS MUntK Avffiut K ' 1*4*
la O lM ff t «&gt;; CAi) S
'
‘ AM) la Urtaadv 1016E Semoua BuulP*tJ. &lt;Mdbcny.
la llia o tl lleai*
V
\

Thi riday

Aug J* ?*n

a

�. ^ '

JO— Evening H«r»ld * Herald Adv*rll»*r, Sanford. FI.

Thurtday, Aug. it, IMS

D ALLAS (L T D -P re s id en t Kennedy was nw.ssi- ^

® Ij? § a n fo rii f c a l i i
^

Hf

VOL. 66

C l O 0^

Jalian Utawatrwwi

U ia iU y w M l tn afgantia
flan it
It l
•ft'Uftl

pfasafiMaj • » #*#«!
»w rf f
I*

A111r

|9

mativ the affair a * m
Nat
the r t H with
Cawley,
pr**M*ft #f I Fa n*A&lt;Jnt*«t*ra
A»a##iat»*fi, wbu I* f-.f*arw#d
w llh la v In f «*ffUll#r| ••-alt
far •r-*'*afi&gt;f« i M han-l«m#*i
i I U imI i f i Ih* D 'vtrkt V Fail
March.wg C#Mest Saturday
W fM at Hrimat«»t Stadium
I ##|ey *«»d lha event u*uaj
f t ta Held in th* Spring. ft it
Imm-»'■!♦« af the tiffit ham# ■«
ftmavad 1n*m f»ntLall i m o n
when w o«t I.■r&gt;*fa if** at I halt
p**k. l n i 'f M V f«t*4 ta iff
• Fall event,.

Wr.Ulir.R: &lt; - » n » i « l l y r.ir D * ’ . . ar.&lt;l
L’nltnf J*;»n
Win
KiUVmUu IW#

R&lt;): V m tonirht In low « 0 « .
NOV EJIFIEH 22. K
SANFORD. FLORIDA

Texas Gov. John Connallv wsa shot down with him.
Tlie President, cradled in his wife s arms, had been
rushed in his blood-spattered limousine to Parkland

S a l u r f lu r ; h iirh

NO 67

Rocket Booster To Put U.S.
Far Ahead Of Russia, Savs JFK

New

Hospital nnd taken to an emerpency room. An urpont
call went out for neurosurgeons and blood.
The President, 11 years old, was shot once in the
head. Connally was hit in the head nnd wrist.
Police found a foreign-make rifle.

D ALLAS (U P D — President Kennedy and Gov. John
B. Connally o f Texas were cut down by an assassin's bul­
lets as they toured downtown Dallas in an open automo­
bile today.
The President, his limp body cradled in the arms o f his
wife, was rushed t o Parkland H o s p i t a l The governor also
was taken to Parkland
Clint Hill, n Secret Service agent nssigned to M m Kcnronr worth irn, _ nedy, said "he's dead.” as the President was lifted from
n..n.,'r ..M i
-■ iv rr o f a White House touring car, the famous "bub’rm k M ^V Iblytop" from Washington. He was rushed to an em ergen-i
M , n j»w ,rftti it win rui ik - Cy room in the hospital.
;:;r al .... *'")
other White House official were in doubt ns the corTt.» riMii.ni. r.mpnin ridors of the hospital erupted in pandemonium.
Im/TTM,.' " ' j '/rlT!
The incident occurred just east of a triple underpass
w.k.,1, o*»rui« &lt;.•’•&lt;! *&gt;«. facing a park in downtown Dallas.
i* U hn Hotel th il the rochet i
,
,
.
,
. .
, .
.
hoo.trf *iii b* the moit p*&gt;*
Reporters about five car lengths benlml trio enter execrtul in hutarjr
th# ff«nd, ettimilr.J bv cutive heard what sounded like three bursts o f gunfire.
pniif# it IJXA,
#p
Secret Sendee agents in a follow-up car quickly un­
pruttl
,
limbered
their automatic rifles.
It n i l the firet of four,
•perches the rresideot ic;»#d
The bubble top of the president's car was down.
ul-rd t-N.f jp o« « untnff ihrsuifh |
A fftn ta d re w th e ir piat'&gt;l». hut th # d a m a g e w.»a (

Most Powerful
In History,
Texans fold

Huge Gains In
Counly Farm

r a t i t i m .. * .« &gt; ,. u . m
i- '
***«•! « w r
Aammtn*a Hanford gn up Wan ttftct #f Vatkriu) Ft'fm C M f
d#y It iignlfla# that Dm* ta.ftre k 4-1 not effir*«M|r Hegia
H*i# again |&gt;t lha Herald he uni I h .! ir
jfeminute f 'm i
IF# first la With yuu a U f f i f
If i Afrirulitiral Agnit r#r|!
ChrJiUtiaa
T u f le r iiFfcH off ttw pr».
ftpaaking af th# Ywtaud#. «* • « l*#alljr (M t i w V with
aam• L U &lt; 1 ftcrwirud# faun | i M i m i m H*fr&gt;r# |H# Hanford
&lt;r rw H ifit..* will k »»» tb* | |(.,il r T Cluti on l l - . M t , in
ISrtll W • W H lM t « " - *». |lh, j , iie f c tu M b rr nl Com
fth#l» f u ll tad iaffm 1 r lawa i
r n , . « « » . . . i ik .
N . . . I A it * u i'o « will u . , '
lU U r U M
iw l for tb .lf
a big f Hfiatmws tarty fur a#(*My lufifFrAit af the O n Ik . .k iN i.n , T . »•!*«•»
11, ,| n .,r w , r;ip .,tm .n i b i.
fa# 111# #t#4|| t o «!«#• *4
th* |r*tif affir#t• hat# »Jat#t|
ith#vf »# »M f •Waif in
a Nov. tA h « i« *•&gt;« t-j !•# halvl
•t th« N atal Faihana* Hat«, ' ( a it ( rntff
Al *a, I Win M rrrn t, »o#a
aff ta yea, (a&lt;J«** W# Itu H
tit# »ai# will If# a big agr* r#** j i Hin aI afriniltur# iniinittar

nated today in a burst of gunfire in downtown Dallas.

M V J I l l l l M I S «.f h i m u . iw I !•„ I. S l n . i l w ill { w i F i i m w m i i ,* . I j i h .
m K H e m lim lr ." tu n ii'.'te in (),«• I n i l i u l U n r i i l n h itd i «&lt;ln»&gt;l In-nil n m t p .t
H o tu n la y r v rn ln ir I ' i i l u r f i t m w k n m 'lin f . S h w n -n D it im m
I r i t ) * n 'l
D n l n u V i* ilr; e U n illiiK , F r t n illo llo irjrh lll ( I r f l ) a n d D n n im I V t r t.

28BandsToCompeteDeadline Set
For Concert
InContestSaturday Membership

fort Horth. O allH ami Aus I
1m, the it at# capital H r v |a|| . tlunt*
____ and Ifouston
Th&lt;* l'r r * l d r n t • » &gt; M u re p n l o v r r in D ip h » f k .# -&lt; 1
rd han Antonio
S w i d tj~ m k . r . ^ . ’ S
o f lh r
f *c «
C o n n a lly L iy o n t h , flo o r of

the F f r t M 'n i
jt ,
lh fr,

M|„,

„ .s v
; ....... |
Ao.l • kill' k lrl u » « « l - " r | i t SiOlord J.in o r II jh Brliool.
•f f it t i., kw.
i 6*!irei«ed Thursday r ljfit'i
* » u , wo, w u ,
th ' ^ : ^ p
0, * i b i . L » « , n . t n n c . w W K « 1B« i y ; “ ,fc*
ltl*
meeting hf the CltiiUn fluH
m
lo w er.- d . 0 0 , 0 , 0 in » « h « - b u l b u U rt w o u n rt. In C o n n o U v ’o e h e .t
|
• f ' r •«* • '" ' -■J
If &gt;'•&lt;! be kern'I pier* foe**-I
J iark Ikfiti el l**ddf firsel
• p .ik in i m ou t.id. ih . Hu plainly v i . i n l r , indi calm er I n - n u n f ir r m iK h i (w * .lb ly •' "■»
m tm i
fear
imlisiduel «.r fegiity
June of fianda • cuD tanlin;
i.i
. . . i h »M - u iin t f r o m « n o u to n m tlc w r »iio n .
. b r i n . U lir r . . n . brno .in hr
fnemljR rtHip* in the M'ltuel
jrhuntf far jut i i la alared In 1
bn
,
if.
,w
n
t
(h
.
Olihl
T
h
.
r
*
*
.
r
r
t
h
r
r
*
loutl
iiu
r.l*
.
|
*»
r
»
m
«
«
»
Ih
.
P
rr.H
irm
*n.|
t efheft Also*lelleii yea'd Let
speak «t Monday a lunrhron
i h .» r .d b&lt;« . t i l (or ' m n r .r i
D » ll* » m n to rc y c lo n f f k . r , P c o r t ln g t h . P r r » b » i ' t w from Ihrw n r .
ter hurry, erritdirig te the
fne-rling of til# Nanhir.l Hie
‘ lb » m i v ( , . u u I IH^nt .ju ie k ly lntpp&gt;J fro m I h r i r lik e * a n d raced u p ' w h ,« ,h » r r . n d . o i &lt;•••
g re u p t pre iy, Vernon Mir*
inta Club IKsdd w l| rt!*t* J Twenty right bands
r«irn lb*ii r»i*e Tatnpa
» ( r &gt; . . r h ill.
jttS to I»ln th . . r n . f i . m r
Tit* )m i|« report* that Men
hla # ip# f MWre a dufilUg a fe |pfiUitg rn&gt;n# than I ia«J miy
^pt*i «or» ate r •‘i«ke«trd to
It. tuld th . rm * d lb . St
A l I h . to p o f t h « h ill, a m an and w o m a n a p i - o r * **U » » * » • » ®ui m&gt;Monetap will be The final
d «f'a llie last day.
crnl
tour
1*1 ftiii i ti nbsemng *|t»an*, mil rnniprle in Hn* octupy the west ilifbla as all'
lum r w o i b a o.lrr » u l pul
to •** h u d d lo d o n th e R rnund.
| m td ..l.lf lo t o .m . sf lb . I up
e
#
a
!L»v -ri firm ing pragiim t §i&gt;l lad mar* lung runti t i ( « n &gt;*&lt; «i*r aeeia « all be rta e rv td 1* J * ^ 'r
* * minty re
In fhfl lu r m o ll, it w u t tmiertaibl# to ife iv rm ln v sari'cai aitreialtsti m Dallas
l-cieral i eiident, Helen I U pfnredurta
MI'fsl S»y Ik g lifi H«n«lm
fur the band itirml'irii The i ilrnls to pun base memlwr th# tailed Slates far ahead of at once w h e th e r t h o S e c re t S e n ic e o n .I | ia ll«a prv * A r i l *
»ent h r a
th# Sonets In thrust and u»
W ilt, renewed an eld arqualh
Tin ke r tnfd the J a j O t i D M Aasoc|aHi*n fiisfrkl V lurid &lt;•soil j tl&lt;*IS wiil operate ships Ml Ilia Mutual f onrert
lice re tu rn e d th e g u n f ir o tha t alru ck d o w n K e n n e d y Reman Calhol* pitrst
Ih# payload it can carry,
tenre will* T V and ladle lU r ,
TH af aday «*f ih# Inctriied i* lu nfav evening at M urici a r*&gt;nrra&gt;,on itan-f. «i(H pro lisorlatumi, arrordinf to an
and
1‘o
n
n
a
lly
.
|
toerretam
aa
Jim
Wngbt of
Kennely a l* defended th#
Ir a n Alliaon, thia rnurttlng
Ida going to the lo*al Hind
productivity nf Hi# Ireluolual pal Stadium.
•nnouisrement today bv Jud i* rofttratffiiil T F X l i g h t e r
It was *l»o difficult Ml da J
fori WoftH sad botli Krone*
when the attended lion M
farmer, " In 1130". sud Tut I
rcMntwtini Lands will He Vernon Yl re. pretufetil of lb# plan# at a powerful force of lermukad immediately whether | 11 asiawte* to a half Hour b# '** tni* CemisaHy » r r « *crH
Ilafelt will compete in cla n
N e liri Ilf r »W(ail t lull i How in
er, ' I M as#ra|e farmer in Iflralinna a«rotding to achonl tlamland Jaile r High atel local n rg m ill 1ten.
irtvdoii
hurt « M .r h to i Ih , ta,R ,i,| I " * 1;
■***d ,S
lleltona, HeUn's aen, 1 HuUK**,
the Fust Lady and dr*. Cm
Amerlre eaa prwlartnf
ttirolliiieni for valingi nf *u
Ae aLeer l « Juitmr Htgh, Hay
J u lia VI*1# raid the sisn
It* a*it Ita true eswrtJi had
wet a U | « a r e i4 -aclnr In ih «
" •••
i * bL j . . .
^ . . . . ,b .
priMfufta fur eight persons, parlor, evceli'nl
good ami Ki m HeacH; Kau Lalli# Klgls, eiatkM Has arheduled a Irka h##w releUsely c sirk w k td ms aaUy off* lAjareHi
morning rejig aerial In f-hlftoth wsw ea wee# Ml the teneiuo at the hoeprtat la* ■s- |l Ipwmmu. ip*„ wbu h
»*•«*#
and by I Ho He «*• prwdae ••ertf#. All Handi wdl ions I t'lrt mwfil III vis. tironcland i f pertvtmaacfs fee the .»•
« * ( r 1* yeete age whom ah# In i Iw# nearly H Hat AarHsg him# at t i n p (M la i r » m m High, T a v if T i K atfll, t-ake «e»a MsetadlMg tilllif l K a ilf , dsaeweakeaia *4 kav Ika saw Cie, and v re e d iH ! « ■ h er •emtrt# a cteareut *Se*cy of thelri*** tn orwcletly So retry*
tract
was
a«ard#d
H ist net Kmn.
i/w inert forma of their Hu* iACidvot because the burst of tl&lt;* prveMlrnt *•» * w*lcum»#v
iHe early IH o a a tirlu it #a *'Uld Folk# #1 Ifamr/* * Hen view of Hlftler r*ardea, M wha sa s* hr dated la appear
The President opened H i
a
•
e
j pat**hn The driver wet §#rr«t
pl«s»«*a fa agrlcultural prw of Otkfa * and "Stef SpingJvd i fo*iafr ftatfIMt# ffigH of THu* here la pecembrr
Du nag second day of Ms ekirleiad bands »* tho mg car raced gunfire look only at (OfwJs
A nether Rote en Th under d u r lm lr
toward
lha hospital
Some of the srerrt acre Ice J wreMe men ft 11 C r r r r,
’ v lili, hoitfs Sumter al Ham January lha Columbaa Itoyi Ta ia i tour With a breakfast
He ran
and
has Manner •*
A lfh t’a political rally In I eng reached the point a her# one
Mrs
Kennedy
was
on
bar
•
genii
thought
the
gunfire1
'
A eeceod pawat wee eaevri.
Coolest chairman ti Truest Ir r
Lyman of I^ru'wo d Cfsoif of Prin*et«is N J haa speech l» th# Fort Worth
* eod; non* #f the candidate* farmer
knees an thr flunr of the rear was from an automatic wra rd in a few memrnte taler,
n
now producing Cowley, Hrmitedf Vfl h JLHooi New Smyrna, Ooceolg of K i« ^ e * billed The final prta* cnamb#r of Commerce
tunning for town four* t! aeata eno«gh fwaj f**r himself aml &gt;bsmlmasii r
seat with her Head loward th# pf&gt;«i firrd to the light rear oil At the bright of tho #a»ry«
Dutricl
chair- * »nm#e, Apopka lm « a flak »rntal*i»n of the iraion will
The T f X was a prime topic
•* presaed any apinion e« #■• Jl other perwini
th# Chief F ir c u D it i ear, gtnry r*-»m dia m «, * *tf|&gt;"g
men is Jimmy lin n,
tliifi. iCIsluw of O i 1a-nl.. SigH rrei# j featttrv The famed L h rd s In of r o o t m iU D i Here where’ r f l 1
panding the Houta for thr
N k # Prnakd#a1 Ljhdnn B probably from the grassy \ im u wemon tweiing a am«t|
**Co0 iec|uently,* |h# loeal land H u h ftcHnstl handmasler, of Ilaytusia beaih brmtrtole ternau nal puppet thaw
th# I f X tTarDcal lighter Fa
Johnson o n ft a car hehmd Inofl In which motor eyrie po MiHety child rwahed Into IS*
M l. Of a l.u b .li.
.ip U in r d , ■ih . pr.,Ju
Daytona Itrach iVntrirt i &lt;t of ftaaford, iotonial NitH al
Family
members"dji
•r# peri mam all t i l l be produced
I Bremen directed th n r at&lt; n Lu^fulat, where o nwra# and
«iibin ih. b„n, enwRiR I it,up of tho AmtfWoo fonntr fetary treasurer is I'tlt llu Oriufwlo, Mainland of Day- as»d»M e. arrordini to Mile by Gear i l l Dyntm trs. the Kennedy I
Theft wai no immedisle Ikon at llbey r a d ii up IH# m i intern wt nl iiawkly iu h*r
llm.l. ru.lb. , WHM .»
in.i.a.rl Ur wort dm ia r . Sauls* d JsiAb'f II 1 40 long Krarh, Masoord F %an i j Hi iddition tn 1M it li'ual mem company Ihit won the 14 hil
aid#.
rn..... :
,MlJ.nl* rfrf.nl . jug tb,
J,
J, &gt; fi„ htloMrf La ml mi aitst
itga that he was hurl In (art. slop#
af Ortcnito. SI 'bourne, Titus hefifiip* wtlh special prices lion rufitratt over
Boeing
UP I White House rrgioftfi
Mi# Kennedy gppnrvnltf
there was endear# al ap at
M k «S thrm lo.^
111&gt;.n
&lt;1
hn p r . J « ( . t w r «
J u d i n w ill Ij# Tom Wlstvp villa, ft inter l ark, itw-ria fur student! \a tlfheti M ne Aircraft
emat m.ght has* hiypwned to Merrlmia Im ith was in a ra wav safe h lri. Cuwnotly also
Ihrough all of re corded lime'* l ake ft ales Jitnathsn Hill, C d fe w itrr and |U&lt;uci« of Ur »t.s'M will be ava. ahle for
dm
telephone
•
‘
poop*
c
a
r
waa
»wft, l l appeared, Buift
In talk id # ef new Indus
Johnwia
n
n
rt
only
Uie
Pfe*
tftln Mual pp rformancei
lernandma Mrach, »n l t &lt;#r land*
On U’f Fk'fida avtne Tutk
liWs at Thursday night • pwlM rr pom fed out ih il tfu Hate's 'tea Quarii'ht Miadeninii in
ident s c»f and it* Wcret Sef« about eight caMengthi behind 1waiwen were at seined.
%1pmi#r*htps are av aklahl#
■-- - ■ .
t i n f't.kri up car weal to the
I* al rally In I umskwsmmS, and agricultural
fnsm Mrs
Halph
koslui
#v»*nomy H aalip&lt;*te*s i&lt;»l * wilt W \lr«
•splaifueg what th# ptrecnl Wen twiner than the test of | i Hi [b a n %l t'» It t » r
Haapugt
%m' H. the a»*n&lt; atlnn'i mem
alwl
foundl h .t dona to bring In lli# naliifl. primarily bnauie
% •rreafeiing motorcycle *■
tfership rha.iman or from
OrUndo re i j lent Henry N
duM iy last* tha t«w
uwn, Mayer ,
the c ir *n h and pd'itpl l i l t
f
11*1/
am mem her nf ih# hoard of Awmw-n. 11. eleaped sermus c#ft led lb« c*r * ttkwrw
A H Lot maun le
The president had landed
directors Mrs llini'H ma&gt; He injury at I t ) a m
to&gt;lay
grlting anolhtr nr
on*! * ibort time before at
rsiniacted it F t lim a
when HD suto over tar wed at
•"•I If anyone Llilnka II I* . "tn ca lly ’ T u ik rr declared a a
»■*
I FT I
U Me
mriuHei ihips
are th# in!efsect»n of latent#'# i DaUai Love Field and was
f . i v t'letk Menu T a mm r#
(Diving to th# trad# m a n u*
fulng t# ie • * Junk yard4 f ** | tWin note i ounty * an the far ,u
Ull lTiP LuJ
ported t*ii« mwrniPf that t« wee ksJ. ' Judge Vt'fe d#clar- •M CRD l l i
acco.rd.rig it» , .
,
w* i epof ted
Iblt
, , i u . eat eM'ima
M'e ||i,.’ vas had hern roll t J *w •* “ » « » " » * -“ »:• . .( .I I. P
. T. .
, (J l
.11 |
Th a ttd a yl ihey h*«e Woo ' sr^ I os, m t«o&gt; and last
hich °f
bem.nn 4# County
I* %I I k* t i l l s
I in H p n l r rlrd an 1*^.1 la tM which
of g#m
i'eutfy i&lt;
W*
s lake
take
s#r#*cw^ ■
■ at
p r»T »td
m | ,' “ lff^ **f 1hfff
»»!**»
heuitew
si
pftM
ttding
Wi&gt;*mf»rmed ** Th# m av«f *■ ir ilt u i n figured lo b# Ive h •Bhdl R »t'-| ill imp- \ bp I'lf* he r mni# A;st \ wt I
futianiai#
of th*
the a*i%
toriigt
atft.
#ia « 1 m91(
*»1
s ttfat •i e nt
«#f
. U..1
»e it ols
cn 04
O i when bhe
ls&gt;vt cow= I
f lain«d that IH# new hwikMsa 1
j j #rk| ,y nil jk n
l i m n is I this Il.-Ufe re e(f f • u» br eg these types
_i . . « « » „ B,#l
nt tb# cuffrat Tesas lour was
i*'» *»• I I'b! ti ll J ikpii-n Ht
will I-# a (Wsi ng Heuie,
t in
ii's
I'Ufsiurg n ie .1 tt.» pirser*'* V I .
.(
.................... 1.1
U 'Z t T ^ Z ^ Z
Ot ,b .
in
K ..
the willy effit* tn the whole
p'-iCi# e« i• tniifk T ..... \.r#- «. . . . , - r . f i - n . -• lb ., 4 , 1, b.. . . . . ■
ururlm fl I l f . ol Vb. U l'.felal* I p u y iM f r il ell ln*«»
)*tind(i&lt;i |{». i j t I H N tutn ' » «
M il IU S
,
„ft»»
, t .h .r l. r.a
An .ttim .l.d ISn.W, ( M p t
K m * i iimy i n i t i tbai suffer
pi i dli ted lliuiadat.
r bni b - , . i . . . , - i
A u c t io n
S la te d
- t • . « •»&lt; • '«*(«• d « i i‘b*'1
" 'o '*
bntal leases on damaged * i
S i - n dial k r ' no li weir
•
,
.. I
-b*n U b u l l . . . , •&gt; ,m
*» u “ * m
t*it" 'thia office, the mayui
IN C L I’ DKS:
I" lli in In i n II.dll: . 'I th» if
ib . r&gt; . . . t u iw *.&lt; A t r o r c s t L i t y
i „ n k -..» i
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1

Nixon Says JFK

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In Car Upset

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Taxes Collected

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THE SCHOOL
DAYS OF
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AND TODAY

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1983.

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�- -err ct »

JJ— Evening Herald t Herald Adverltior, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Aug. If, m )

Q

u

o

Wednesday, July 16, 1969 — Sanford, Florida 32771
61 at Year, No. 240
Price 10 Cent*

l APE K E N N E D Y . FI*

fA P '

— Reaching lor s dream. A.rner
lea t

T

o

A

S

p

N

e

n

i c

d

e

..

S

P

u

l a

m

m

d

F

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P

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r '

N EW YORK (AP) — Musician Duke Ellington lays he ii going to
start and end his singing career with a self-composed song Inspired by
the forthcoming flight of Apollo I I . It's entitled "Moon Malden.**
Recorded by the 70-year-olil bandleader here Monday, the song will
be broadcast for the first time at 10 p.m. Sunday, when Astronauts Ed­
win Aldrln and Neil Armstrong are espected -------------------------------------to be resting on the lunar surface.

Apollo

It

tronsuti said ihoetly after the
ipacecrafi

left

the

ground.

astronaut

' They finally gava me a win­

roared into eartn orbtt today
and patted the vital first mtlr
•'one of the voyage of it s aiet.
an attempt to lard men on 'he
moon
Civilian commander Neil A
Armvtroo* Air Force Col Ed
v i r F. Aldnn J r and A ir Forcr
Ll. Col Michael Collins elected
the journey on the awesome
poarr of a Saturn 3 vuper rock
et that thundered from Cape
Kennedy at * 31 a m E D T with
a roar heard round the globe
■Houston. be advised the t u
os! ii fo today.' one of the ••

dow to look out ."
Armstrongs fm t «ordi on
a.hiev-tng orbit were very bu»i
neatltkt
‘ The booiter hai been con
firmed for orbital flight. Both
spacecraft are looking good.”
“-e laid He referred to the tti'.l
attached third tlagt of tha Sat
urn 3 which wai to ignlta later
to boost Apollo It toward the
moon
The avttonauti were to circle
the globe for 2!» hours lo make
certain the spaceship* Ihoulands of lytte m i were function

N E W YOHK lA P ) —
Hera era tha times for
scheduled tie* tele* it ion
If entail,ili.n, from the
Apulia || (emiwand ship
Columbia tad (he lunar
mndul* Eagle — all lime*
Eastern Daylisht:
Thursday, July IT at
7:31 • ?;ST p m. — First
Irs a .minloa f r o m
the
Apollo command s h i p .
Color.
Friday. July l&gt;, at 7:327:ST p.m. — Second trefiemlasian from Ihe Apollo.
I nine,
h tlu rd a ), July It, at
4:03-1:17 pm. — Trans­
mission from the Apollo
Is lunar orbit. Color.
Sunday. Julr
70, at
I 32-2:22 p.m .— To sbuw
tho undocking and beginning of th* deoreel of
she Inner module.
Monday, July 21, i t
1:37.2:97 a as. — From
command module la lunar
orbit. Colo*. At _1 j t - l :JJ
a.m. from I h 7
showing aalronaut Nall
Armstrong selling foot
tho moon and lunar
tleltie* of Armstrong i
aetronaut
E d w in
E.
" B u n " Aldrln Jr. Hit
and white.
Wednesday, July 27. at
7:02-7:17 p.m. — Final
Wantmlatlon f r o m
the
Apollo en roule lo earth.
Color.

WEDNESDAY

Headlines
Inside THE HERALD
World News
l.ull continues over battlefields in Vietnam.
(Pago 2A)
Moon launch viewed on T V by world. (Pegs
2A)
El Salvador rejevls OAS cull fur a cease-firs
and demands that Honduran aurrendcr. (Page
2 A)

Around The Nation
C.overnmsnt charge* **vsn major drug firm*
with using a frA dulent patent. (Pag* 811)
Renata foes of Safeguard soek halt in testing
of multiple warhead offensive weapons.
Page PA)
Sen. Russell Long won't go along with surtax
extension. (Pago Hit)

fv ^ v

Sports World

1H

Tho Cardinals like to win, especially on pay
day. (Page 7A)
Gary Taylor, Herald Spuria Staffer takes a
look at Sanford City Pool operations. (Pag*
6A)
Sanford Senior League All-Slur* full to Mel­
bourne. (Pago 6A)

LBJ Tops VIPs A t Cape

Statewide
*

Stale taw i* stacked on the aids of business­
man. (Pago DA)

Local Happenings
Sliet itf Polk submits hi* annual budget to the
County Commissioners for approval; calls for
huge hike. (Page 2A)

C A P E K E N N E D Y . U s tA P i
— "It's kind of lik* standing
around Ih* hospital loom before
tour first baby It born.'' former
President Lyndon H Johnson
•sid at h* and MO other special
(u*sls marked llm* hsfoi* the
Apollo || launching
"Y o u must b* prepared In Si
rept th* w o m I but you hope |nr
th* best," Johnaon evpiainrd
Vice Ptetldenl Spiro Agnew,
like Johnaon. arrived In the

lam pecked l ape Kenned) sirs
on the eve of lh » flight to Ih*
ninnn and attended a ptivii*
dinner pail'
t u r n by Dr
Tliumev O Paine, adnumvtielur
of lb* Ntlionsl Aernneuins and
Nome Administration
Nni all lb* VIPs n*d houv.ng
n &lt;nr nnmrclulr u iin o y uf lluv
tap* Itilvle*' it*.an Flotillas
revl casil t'r l.rt V IFuiindge,
Pirvdtrlt Niton • i. irn.e adrit
ri *iavtd overnight m Orlando,
« iinlet easy
Vivo nine arobaoavl.ue ul fur
sign government. M&gt; .n in.a
morning, tv do m art u'nrt v i.
Iota
Ten t#psei*«i*ti'*s n1 me
Poor People a Campaign of
the H*v Ralph David Abel
nailiy were edited to li e Y IP l &gt;t
after * rti'f'ing w i i :&gt; P a m
They proi»»ied me nation *
Ingia tpenduig on spa. e evploia
ton lompaird to anlipoverty
pcogiama
Paine promiwd Aheinathy |0
V IP paiarv end t*id if it would
volt* lhe problems of me poor
bv wdtdN'dng ill* Apnllu II

The Only Way!
WEATHER — High yesterday of 86 was the
lowest registered In the last thrro weeks and
ths low was 74 with • j inch of rainfall.
Temperatures Thursday through Monday
will average near normal.
A weak tropical diiltn halite passed
through the Lesser Antilles Tuesday night.

7

m

,

i

hit

imiI*

• d it r titr r

* ft i&lt;4

*■?" in •til ihf

t h .n f • f nil

ltd lo m itr

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«

itfu l

HrftM

"K »*l .Ifiloa** H i m
Id
11# ftold ih« ttfrlftreiftf lit
Juftt • (lav* &lt; *11 in
t if IntfU? and furn

»m*»
your

ditn'l ittftd* Inin ra »h !

Index
Ares d-sth*
Bridge
S'tlendtr
Classified sdt
tom let
( M t v - o i J yusile
User A Iby .

Pts*
... Ill
SB
3A
TH
IH Ml

»H
all

G I 12 «d- ll rftlflffffttftf. U«
M» »Ki#t fiftiftht

EJllorlel | age

..... 4A

Entertainment
H.t u i . o?*

SB

IlnapiUl nolle
Pewlet y
- N il*
IV

4R
34
: h -h
s.,4 * l
)B

8

1

: 3

a

V*

• i .

manner uf mcP.

q u illiti Eati&lt; "■&gt; r v da' tt'ev
are id lu lllu ll a .c it t u n r s o ld
d ir * m bv w alu.n g &gt;tn end es
plonng the luna ' n i t u i p r

V :n '-tru n g and Clttiin w ill plant
ar V in e rb a n f lip .m live lu ifa ve

TJir astronaut. .u in t ie mjur

■i■*&gt; * tll tud c la im ttu» te m to rv

ay m r i

of p r * « r
trie*

b o n n e the
• .u m ao)

Hags and
lands

A nd if Hie i n . a -ir m ia u l• da
'and there is a u i i n r vtia in r
the&gt; in u ld h r - I i a i ded on the
mnofl m ill noli tw o tint s ol pt
vgen and on chance ol ir*ctie

The .Hironaut* liatr chosen
as iticrr svmboi the riiMning uf
an eadle swooping to the era
lerrd surlatr. its lal.wie grip
pin/ an olivr braiutv

&lt;• a stmbol of vonqursl

Bui

' i r ihe C ft.trd Stales Tu m a le
• I.
ra t t rv w ill leave behind
a itlwniir h e a tm i llic .i words
llm
r i r . I aone M r ptanci
la il h
E n -t i n

fma 11 ,sm ihe

iiuuw i

• Juts l-mi k n
We . a m r

in p c a « r lor

ritftftft 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 *

T O F I A C I YOUR
" F A I T AC TIO N "
S A N FO R D H IR A LD
W A N T AD
D IA L

J2 2 -U 11 OR 4IS t « J I

IrmsttO' 3 altd Aldnn ate lo
•pend abiwti 2't h.wirs outside
In all "icv »ir In be on til*
moon U
than a tl,.

BERRY’S W ORLD

il.ut no button would be puttied,
but it warn t that simple
President Niton w e in l here
10 |oin Ihe &lt;4 mayors. II giver
nos and 2ih V 5 butineis lead
e n on th* V IP lut but he lalepn.ined belt withes to astro
nauit Nail Armstrong Michael
( •mint and Edwin Aldnn J r
Nison originally was to have
11 ned with ttw Apollo II av.ro
neats on the eve of their depsr
tbi* from S.erlh But he can
cried in.s plan when ipac*
etrnv) Unitors n p t r u i d con
.t in that Armstrong, Aldrtn and
co.l.ni might catch a told or
lUnrr g rim from u * President
Niton plant to be un the air
ituft rerrier Hornet July !S
'"111 Ape lo l l spleihei doun ID
me Pa. i!u
The Apni.rt II ,rew had seas
nod mamrd potatoes with rtvtn
sutler avitnnajii
The moil important visuorsof
n.l. lo Apollo 41 commander
Atinitrong w r it his w.f* Janet
end sens Eric. 12 and Mark. (
Tie r were assigned a private
si* on t*e cep* to watch tie
liftoff

Talking
About
Dollars
C A P E K E N N E D Y . FI* (A P .
Theie are Ih* man lo the moun
machines on which the lives of
ih* ihret Apollo 11 *stror.*uti
depend
CO M M AN D SHIP Valued at
U i million, the Apollo 11 com
mand shio with Its main sngme
and equipment section attached
measurei IT (eel high and IT
leet in diamsitr
Itt cone
shaped cockpit is II leet ta l lit
hull Is built primarily of sum
lets steel and aluminum Ion
trol panel* insida permit In*
crewmen lo (rigger engines
check far malfunction! in spec*
craft subsystems, compul* iheir
flight p*ih end rammunice’e
with earns and isltonault in lh,&lt;
lunar mudu.e tl.M* larding
craft
Its
meih
29 Too
pound ihrusi engine must k ck
kpol'o tl n.in and ru,l hf mono
orbit end make tours* eorrec
■ions en roui* t* and ftom
eartb
S A T L H N i HO tKF.T Me.&lt;
u tin i
ItJ feel n il with
me
Apollo spaceship «n lop tech
Satutn i man toihe moon lock
et cotlt l i t ) million Itis the
most p ow tilil
rocket
eut
launvhed able in hurl the lotos.
Apollo sps eibip lo ih# m wn or
I V a U ) toe. pa. lued m'c earU)

Astrokids:
Whafs Up?
By M I K » COCIIRAN
Associated Press Writer
.SPACE C E N T E R . Houston (A P I — Asltrd oac* about hia
father's profession, the young son of sn Apollo astronaut re­
plied that ' daddv drives a truck in a aewrer."
Another aslrokid announced that her father was ‘ up thtra
In th* tky flying around In a big, pink balloon"
With disarming disinterest, the astronauts’ children somahow usually rrm am happily oblmioui lo the whole spies
flight butineis
llut this is nut the case with most of the children cl
Ih* moon bound Apulia II ettroaeuti.
Moonship pilot Edwin Aldnn Jr stye hit sons Michael,
13, end Andrew. II, and daughter. Janice, 12 nest month, ' all
of a sudden realire their (stber It involved in this endestor
of national Im porlsncr"
lie eddrd, howesrr, | dun I htv* a tremendous amount of
opportunity lo sit down anil discuss things with th* children.
W&gt; find tf.ll just to be able to locate them It an eveot arc-.nd
the house
Thev re fitrrm e lv independent W* do try lo hate family
g«l-together, whenever we can
Nell Afmvtmng, the Apollo ll gommandcf, says tool Erie,
12, and Vark, «. ac* very enLhutijiUc" about the moon flight

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Florida's fight over tenure for its university
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An Ellington ohaenrallen on th* Apollo It moon*

Pwo legislators ask Circuit Court to rule over
recent pay raise. (Paga 3A)

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Thursday. Aug If, I t t S - l J

LAST OPPORTUNITY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF

\OVz% Financing
Monday, Sept. 2, 6 p.m. is the last chance to take advantage of
our l O '^ r fixed rate. Buy now and save.

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Shop Early And Leisurely For The Best
Selections . . . For Your Convenience We
Have A Lay-Away Plan And Free Gift
Wrap. We Carry The Latest Creations In
The Fashion World. And Name Brands You
Know And Trust. Our Courteous Sales
Staff Is Always Glad To Help You Make
Your Selections. Our Expert Seamstress
Is Available For Alterations.

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J. H. COLLECTIBLES

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• Free Ear Piercing With The
Purchase Of Earrings
• Gift Certificates
• Ample Parking
• Cash, Check, VISA, MasterCard
Fashions To Spark Your Wardrobe
Designer Dresses And Sportswear
After-Five Fashions, Swimwear, Lingerie
Shoes, Boutique Jewelry
Cosmetics And Colognes
r&gt;"

116 W. First St.
Phone
323-4132
Historic Downtown Sanford

Sanford's Most Unique Boutique
Lois Dycus • Owner

-

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�</text>
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                    <text>Area Sting Traps 6 Shopping Weapons For Iran
By Deane Jordan
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Five men and one woman were arrested
Wednesday evening In Orlando. California and
Virginia In connection with a scheme to acquire
weapons for Iran, the FBI announced today.
Two men arrested In Orlando were to appear
before a U S. Magistrate at 2:30 p.m. today. They
are Paul SJeklocha. 47. of San Jose, C a . also
known as Paul Culler, a publisher and author of
articles dealing with m ilitary science and

technology; Fadel N. Fadel. 54. a Lebanese
national engaged In an Import export business In
Calabaaai. Ca.
They were arrested at the Marlott Hotel at the
Orlando International Airport.
FBI D ire c to r W illia m W e b ster said In
Washington. D.C.. all those arrested are charged
In a federal complaint Issued Wednesday In U.S.
District Court. Middle District o f Florida. Orlando.
They are charged with violation of the federal
conspiracy statute by conspiring to violate the

arms export control pact.
The complaint charges the conspirators In­
tended to purchase a variety of U.S. missiles
Including Sidewinder. TOW. Harpoon Sparrow
AIM-7F. Sparrow AIM-7M. and Phoenix They
were also seeking the French Exocet missile as
well as miscellaneous parts for the F4 Jet aircraft.
Additionally the complaint charges that the
conspirators Intended to purchase 1.140 TOW
missies at a total cost of $9.120.000 and that they
would provide a 747 aircraft to fly the weapons

and parts to Iran.
Also arrested were: Wayne G. Gillespie. 46. of
Alexandria. Va.. currently assigned to the U.S.
Army Mlssle Command, the Pentagon. In the
rank of Lt. Co!.. Farhln Sanal. F ad el* wife. 52. of
the same address: George Neranchl. age un­
known. of San Francisco. Ca.; Am ir Hossenl. age
unknown, who has claimed to be an official of the
Iranian government.
Bee STING. page 8 A

No Shopping Center In His Plans

D e v e lo p e r T o U p

B id

Fo r S ch o o l P ro p e rty
By Rick Brunson
H erald S ta ff W rite r
A Sanford developer, angered that his
bid to buy an 11-acre vacant lot across
from Sanford Middle School was re­
jected without discussion by the school
board, said he would resubmit another
bid today.
Stanley Sundefur. of Sandefur Pro­
perties Inc., said his plan for using the
parcel would lie more acccptlble to area
residents that the shopping center
plans of ollici developers.
Hr said he wants to build a bank on
the lot at the corner of 18th Street and
French Avenue (U.S. Highway 17-921
and donate part of the land to the city
for a park. Sandefur said he hasn't
decided what he would do with the rest
of the property. His plun does not call
for n n m 'n g ItM
ty . which Is
zoned residential, he said.
Sandefur said he will offer $610,000
to the Seminole County School Board
for the lot some time before 5 p.m.
today. His earlier bid was for $570,000.
but hr said hr was prepared to ofTcr
$600,000 at a recent school board
mretlng but couldn't get the board's
attention. The board, at the time, was
considering the bid of another devcloper excluslvcl v.
Despite the higher amount. Sannew bid m ay be useless.
Altumonte Springs developer Bob Hattaway already has the option to buy the
land and wants to put a shopping
center, a row of duplexes und a park on
the property. He has won a recommen­
dation from the Sanford Planning and
Zoning Commission for rezonlng of the
paicel to a duplex and commercial
district. Area residents have been vocal
d e f u r 's

7 feel that the school board
can g et their m oney, the
residents can b e happy and
17-92 won't b e b o ttlen eck ed .'
-D s v a lo p s r Stonlsy Sandsfur

In their opposition to the rezonlng and
shopping center plans, but If the city
commission goes along with the P A 7.
recommendation at Its Aug. 12 m eet­
ing. Hattaway can close the deal with
the school board and start building.
Hattaway Is under an Aug. 21
deadline to buy the lot. however,
according to school board Assistant
Superintendent lor Facilities Benny
Arnold. If the city commission should
delay approving the rezonlng he will
have to chose whether to buy the lot
anyway or give up a $10,000 down
payment. Arnold said However, the
school board could extend the deadline
at Its Aug. 14 meeting. Arnold said.
If rezonlng Is denied and Hattaway
lets the option run out. the land will be
up for grabs. That's what Sandefur Is
hoping for.
"M y main concern Is that a shopping
center doesn't go on the lot." Sandefur
said. He said such a center would
create traffic problems. "W e don't need
a shopping center on our main artery —
17 92."
The proposal pleases at least some of
the residents who surTound the pro­
perty and have fought two attempts to
rezone It for a shopping center.
"That would definitely better than a
shopping center." said Sylvia Smith.

Sign-Up Ends Friday
For La k e M ary V oters
Voter registration for Lake Mary's city
commission election ends Friday at 4:30. said
City Clerk Carol Edwards
The election will be at city hall Sept. 3 from 7
a.in. to7 p.m.
Planning and Zoning Board vice-chairman
Charlie Webster Is being challenged for seat I
on the commission by A.R. "D o c" Jore.
Mrs Edwards said anyone who lives In Lake
Mary and has a valid voter's rclglstratlon card
may vote.
Voters can register to vole at Lake Mary City
Hall or offices o f the Supervisor o f Elections at
the County Services Building In Sanford or at
the Sandlake Plaza on State Road 434.
Webster and Jore will square off In a
question and answer session sponsored by the
lake Mary Chamber of Commerce on August
I9at 8 p.m. at city hall.

425 W. 18th St., who has led opposition
to rezonlng the property.
Sandefur said. " I feci that the school
board can get their money, the resi­
dents can be happy and 17-92 won't be
bottlenecked.*' he said.
How the city commission may vote
on the rezonlng Is unclear. Commis­
sioner Milton Smith said. ''I don't favor
It unless the people favor It. I don't like
shoving this down peoples' throats."
Com m issioner John Mercer said
llattaway's plan was good, but the
shopping center may create traffic
problems and become a hang-out for
the students from across the street.
Mercer said he favors referring the
Issue back to the P A Z board for
further consideration because only
three of the board's nine members
voted lor It. Tw o were opposed, one
abstained and three other members
were absent at the July 18 meeting.
Commissioner Robert Thomas said
heTias "n o problem " with the rezonlng
and Mayor Bettye Smith said she Is still
studying the plan. Commissioner David
Farr could not be reached for comment.
Sandefur Is resubm itting a bid
because he believes the school board
didn't give him a fair chance to
compete for the property.
He accused the board of "Inside
playing." saying the board's negotia­
tions on the property were shrouded In
secrecy. He also charged that the board
took another developer's offer over his
without discussing the matter.
" I feel like I was wronged by the
school board's handling of those con­
tracts." he said.
But Arnold and school board attorney
Bee PR O P E R T Y , page 3A

Pornography A rrest Made In Lake Mary
Thomas Eugene Bakrr the op­
erator of a hypnosis and counsel­
ing business at Driftwood Village,
Lake Mary Boulevard. Lake Mary,
was reportedy taken Into custody
of U.S. Marshals at about 8 p.m
Wednesday on charges related to
p o rn o g ra p h y , said S e m in o le
County sheriff's deputies.
Deputies were called on to the

assist federal officers the arrest of
Baker at his business, but he was
not booked Into the Seminole
County Jail.
He w as r e p o r te d ly In the
custody of U.S. Marshals today
and was scheduled to appear
before a U.S. Magistrate In Or­
la n d o . d e p u t i e s s a id . B ut
Bee ARREST, page BA

Fk$($I f Cfcvcfc Urr$|$«

Light Switch
S e m in o le C o u n t y t r a f f ic e n g in e e r in g d e p a r tm e n t e m p lo y e e L a r r y C ro s s
o f C a s s e lb e r r y c h a n g e s a m a lf u n c t io n in g t r a f f ic s ig n a l a t U .S . H ighw ay
17 92 a n d 13th S tre e t.

Fall Opening Eyed
For New Head Start
The Head Sturt program for 200
underprivileged three-und-four-year
olds could be functioning under the
uusptces o f the Sem inole County
School Board by Oct. 15. Ken Bovlo,
director of elementary education, said
today.
Bovlo said a budget for the program
Is being worked up for submission to
the federal government for funding by
the Aug. 22 application deadline and
will be presented to the School Board at
Its Aug. 14 meeting for approval.
While the federal government had
been granting an annual budget of
$360,000 for the program. Bovlo said
the school system funding request will
to ta l about $ 5 5 0 ,0 0 0 In c lu d in g
$125,000 — a one-time cost — to build
six new portuoie classrooms lo house
the Head Start classes
Longwood City Commissioner Berry
Faulkner stated earlier he would apply
for (he funds to run Head Start on
behalf of a non-profit agency he would
start.

Defector's Return Trip To Be Easier
LONGYEARBYEN. Norway lUPI) - A waitress
who leaped from a Soviet cruise ship Into the Icy
waters off Norway and trudged through arctic
wastelands to seek refuge In the West changed
her mind after a Soviet official visited her In the
hospital.
The 29-year-old Ukrainian waitress Hew home
Wednesday after meeting with Soviet Consul
Viktor Jurgens at a hospital In Longyearbyen. a
coal mining town on the Spitsbergen Islands.

"She originally told us she wanted to leave the
Soviet Union." said Erik Framstad. a government
official on Spitsbergen, a Norwegian territory 500
miles north o f Norway's North Cape. "But after
talking to the consul today, she decided to return
lo the Soviet Union."
He refused to say what made the woman decide
lo return lo her communist homeland about a
week after her spectacular escape but noted that
"she has relatives back home.'*

War On Terrorism Preview

against the Central American Revolu­
tionary Workers Party and began two
wreka after the killings of six Ameri­
cans and seven Salvadorans In the
Zona Rosa cafe.
The 13. Including four ofT-duly
Marine guards from the U.S. Em­
bassy and tw o A m erican bu si­
nessmen. were gunned down by six
to 10 guerrillas dressed In military
camouflage uniforms.
While House spokesman Edward
Djerejlan said the Salvadoran troops
"Inflicted a major defeat on the
guerrilla organization which planned
and carried o u t" the Zona Rosa
attack.
Among the nine guerrillas taken

Bee START, page BA

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No Hot Tub Tonight

U.S. Aids Strike Against Salvadoran Rebels
W A S H IN G T O N ( U P I ) A
U .S .-a id e d m ilit a r y s t r ik e by
Salvadoran troops against a rebel
group blamed for the murders o f six
Americans has offered a glimpse of
how President Reagan will carry out
his declaration o f war on terrorism.
The adm inistration announced
Wednesday that government troops
In E l S a l v a d o r , a c t i n g o n
U.S.-supplird Intelligence, killed 21
members o f a rebel faction and
raptured nine others In retaliation (or
a June 19 terrorist attack In the
capital of San Salvador.
The Pentagon, portraying the at­
tacks us reprisals, said the strike was
carried out "In a series o f actions"

He said his primary aim was to save the
Jobs of Head Start employees Faulkner
could not be reached for comment
today.
Meanwhile. B ovlo said buildings
which had been used by the program
when It was o|teraled by Seminole
Community Action are not up to the
school system standards and have been
rejected.
lie said federal approval or dlsap
proval la expected to be received by
Aug. 29 and It will take six weeks to
construct the portable classrooms after
that. "T h e program should start for the
new school year on Oct. 15," Bovlo
said.
If approval is given, application
period for personnel to teach the
classes will be open. Those who huve
been employed In the program In l he
past will be considered for the Job* If
they apply, he said.
"W e will know In a few days how
much money will be available for the

Into custory were two senior officers.
Pentagon officials said.
"T h e Salvadoran government, with
our assistance, has taken care of. In
unc way o r another — taken prisoner
or killed us a matter of raids — a
n u m b e r o f th e p e o p le w h o
participated In that killing In the
g u e r r i l l a - h e l d s e c t i o n s o f El
Salvador." said Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger.
Weinberger also asserted in an
Interview with the Mutual Radio
Network that the action sent a strong
message to the guerrillas.
"W e have done a number of things
that are. I think, very discouraging lo
future terrorist arts." he said

However, other administration of­
ficials emphasized that there was no
concrete evidence that those killed or
captured were the trtggermen In the
June 19 attack.
The military action was one ol the
first fruits of the tough antllerrurlsm
policy laid down by Reagan after a
senes of violent acts In June that
Included the hijacking o f a TW A
jetliner, the killings in San Salvador
and airport bomb blasts In West
Germany and Japan
The reprisals fulfilled a pledge by
Reagan that the deaths of the Ameri­
cana would be avengrd.

B L L K A PARK. Colli. I t PI) - A giant crane
lifting a hot tub Into a suburban backyard
tipped over, falling on lop of one house,
dropping the hot tub on another, and
narrowly missing several children, police
said.
"T h e crane fell on one house and the spa
fell on another." Lt. Gary Rooney said
Wednesday. "I'm told they flattened both
houses."
The unidentified crane operator suffered a
broken arm and the two houses suffered
extensive damage.
Sgt. Robert Mills said a woman and her
children were In the house when the crane
suddenly started to teeter and crashed
through the kitchen, dining room and
bathroom, buckling the new $200,000 house
and popping out all the windows on the
backside.
The falling crane also cut power lines and
started a Ore in a third house.

Be# STRIKE. page BA

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T hu rsday, A tff. I, fU S

NATION
IN BRIEF; «

Protesting Apartheid
Congress Likely To Impose Economic Sanctions On
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Congress neared
passage today o f a compromise bill that
would Impose economic sanctions against
the white-minority government of South
Africa In protest of Pretoria's apartheid
policy of racial separation.
The Mnctlons were a stinging rebuke of
President Reagan s policy o f "constructive
engagement" — of quietly pressuring the
regime to end apartheid.
“ Apartheid Is the greatest moral evil of
our time and for too long the United States
has been Identified with apartheid and
repression In South A frica ." said Sen.
Edward Kennedy. D-Maaa., after a confer­
ence committee forged the bill Wednesday.
"W e will Identify ourselves with those
forces In South Africa that believe In social
Justice, human rights and opportunity and
hope for all the people o f South Africa."
Kennedy said. "The Senate and House have
stated the policy of constructive engage­
ment la dead."
C ongressional leaders tod a y sought

^ ,

I *-

Budget Negotiations
Coming Down To The Wire
WASHINGTON (UP!) - flo u t* and Senate budget leaders
early today M i d they were near agreement on a 1986
spending plan that would slash $50 billion from next
year's deficit, but several Issues remained at odds.
The leaders met In two protracted private sessions
Wednesday night and early today and emerged to say they
had closed most gaps dividing them, bul remained apart
on several. Including Medicare cuts.
An earlier disagreement over military spending appears
to have been worked out.
The two sides held the meetings In a last-ditch attempt at
a budget agreement before Congress closes shop Friday for
a month-long summer recess.
President Reagan's rejection of new taxes and curbs In
Social Security as budget-cutting tools had thrown off the
pim of the deficit reduction effort, bul the leaders were sti".
trying to hit a target cut o f $50 billion.
The military spending Issue was not as controversial as
conferees earlier hud said and that they were prepared to
agree to the Senale's higher figure of $302 billion In fiscal
1986. The House capped military spending at $298 billion.

Fire Destroys More Than
Just Arlington Race Track

Governor's Impeachment Unlikely

ARLING TO N HEIGHTS. Ill
(UPI) — The Arllnglon Park Race
Track lay In smoldering mins
today, leaving ihe future of the
truck and Its racing season In
doubt and Ihrratrntng Ihe stale
and v illa g e w ith ec o n o m ic
hardship
A two-stage, extra alarm fire
W e d n e s d a y d e s t r o y e d th e
grandstand, executive offices
and the exclusive Post and
Paddock Club at Ihe 58-year-old
track and forced ihe Indrflnllr
su8|&gt;euNlon of the racing season.
More than 150 firefighters
from 25 departments battled the
blaze, which still smoldered
early today. A spokesman said
Ihe state fire in.uMi.il had "no
reason to consider It (the flrel
suspicious yet."

.JUNEAU, Alaska (UPI) — Legislators considering Im­
peachment of Gov. William Sheffield concluded after nine
days of testimony It Is unlikely the Democrat will be
throw n out o f o ffice for his role In a w ardin g a
rnultlmllllon-dollar contract to a political ally.
Sheffield. 57, finished testifying Wednesday before the
Senate Rules Committee, which today was to go Into
closcd-door session to consider what ectlon to take.
A state grand Jury declined to Indict Sheffield but
recommended In June that he be Impeached so that the
alleged political payoff rase could be publicly aired In
detail.
The hearing marked the nation's first Impeachment
Inquiry of a governor In nearly 60 years.
The governor was accused of engineering a $9.1 million,
10 year state lease of a downtown Fairbanks office building
to favor plum bers union official Joseph " L e n n y "
Arsenault, a minority purtner owner of lire building who In
the past had raised campaign funds for Sheffield.
The governor, a successful hotel operator elected to a
four-year term In 1982, admitted sending Arsenault
background material on the project bul denied allegations
he arranged I hr specflralions so that Arsenault’s group
would be the only qualified lessor.

CALENDAR

Satellite Studies Shuttle 'Wake'

TH U R S D AY, AUGUST 1
In te rn a tio n a l T r a in in g In
C o m m u n ic a tio n G r e a te r
S e m in o le C lub (p r e v io u s ly
Tnuntmlstress). 7:30 p in.. Alta­
monte Chapel Education Build­
ing on State Rond 436. second
und fourth Thursdays.
S a n fo r d J u y c e e s g e n e r a l
membership Hireling. 7:30 p m ,
J a y r r e b u ild in g , 5th und
French. Sanford
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St .
5:30 p m., closed discussion, and
8 p m ., open, speaker.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m., closed.
First Unlled Methodist Church.
Overeaters Anonymous, open,
7:30 p.m. Community United
M ethodist Church. H ighw ay
17-92 one-half mile north of SR
436, Casselberry. Newcomers
meeting. 7 p.m. Florida Hospllul Altamonte. 7:30 p.m. In the
annex conference room behind
Ihe hospital on State Rond 436.
Not recommended for newcom ­
ers.
Charier meeting o f Sanford
Chapter of Deborah Hospital
Foundation. 8 p.m.. Church of
the N a tiv ity Parish C en ter
County Road 427. Lake Mary.
Open to the public. For Informa­
tion call Doiii DeSamo ul 3235152.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 2
Central Florida Klwunls Club,
7 :3 0 a .m ., F lorid a F ed era l
Savings and Loan. Slutc Road
436 ut 434, Allumontc Springs
Sem in ole Sunrise Klw unls
Club. 7 a m . AlrjHirt Restaurant,
Sanford
O p t im is t C lu b o f S o u th
Seminole, 7,30 a in., Holiday
Inn. 'Vyniore Road, Alt union Ir
Springs
Central Florida Blood Bank
F lo rld u H o s p ita l-A ltu m o n lr
Brunch. 601 E Altamonte A vr .
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
A n tiq u e and C o lle c tib le s
Show. 8 a m . lo 5 p m.. Flea
World. Highway 17 92. Sanford.
Through Sunday.
Wrklvu AA Ino smoking). 8
p .m , W c k lv a P r e s b y te r ia n
Church. SR 434. ul W eklva
Springs Road. Closed.
Lougwood AA. 8 pm .. Rolling
Hills Moravian Church. SH 434.
Longwood. A lam &gt;n. same lime
and p la ce.______________________
Tang.'rwood AA, 8 p.m.. St.
Richard s Episcopal Church,
Luke Howell Road. Alarum, same
time and place.

United Press International
Challenger's crew fired spiraling beams of electrons at a
spinning science satellite today and later retrieved the tiny
cruft after a unique study of the behavior of Eurth's outer
atmosphere.
The ttulcllllc studied the boat-llkc wake produced by the
shuttle us II plowed through the tenuous Ionosphere and
examined how the spaceship interacted with the thin,
electrified gas. known to physicists as a plasma.
The retrieval of Ihe "plnsmn diagnostics package." or
POP. shortly after 2 u.m. concluded an Intricately
orchestratrd six-hour free flight In which Ihe shuttle flew
two loops around the satellite to study how charged
(rurtlrlcs zip about In Earth's magnetic field like those seen
In auroras.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Freedom ’Seeklng Cubans
Float To U.S. On Inner Tubes
FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) — Three Cubans looking (or
freedom who floated uwuy In Inner tul&gt;ea from the
communist nation on the anniversary of Fidel Castro's
revolution huve been plucked from the sea and arr on
Amerlcun soil,
I he Coast Guard said I hr three exhausted, sunburned
men ended a five-day Journey when they were rescued
Wednesday off the south Florida coast, They were turned
over to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service
The men were Identified as Carlos Quintana. 24. a
( otistiunion worker; l.uls Chappottln Marin. J l. a math
professor; und Humberto Rodriguez Valdez. 27. u Havana
lour guide.
Each man lost about 15 to 20 pounds during Ihe trip,
which started 9 p in. Friday. July 211. when they snuck out
alter dark while Cuban president Castro wus speaking In
commemoration of Ihe anniversary of his communist
revolution.
The men told rescuers they carried a small amount of
watrr on board, bul later drank seawater and ate ruw fish
they runghi with their huiuts.

Treasue Hunter Fends Off 'Pirate'
KEY WEST (UPI) — A federal Judge handed Ihe rights to
u sunken $400 million treasure to the mun who searched
16 years lor It. ruling thul a rival treasure hunter's claim
was Utile more than modern day piracy and an uttempt to
move In on the riches.
U S District Judge Sidney Aronovltz erased on Wed*
nesdav an admiralty claim filed by salvor Richard Ughtncr
lhai ov-rlYpped pan o f a claim area worked by Mel Fisher*
Treasure Salvors tile.
Fisher and his divers spent millions of dollars searching
for the sc altered wreckage o f the Nuestra Scnora de
A lm aa. a Spanish gal icon that sank 41 miles west of Kry
West during a 1622 hurricane while transporting a king's
ransom In gold, silver and Jewels.
On July 20. Fisher's divers found the Am elia's main
cargo - the "mother lode" — 1.200 silver bars and chests
of gold and silver coins estimated to be worth $400 million.

E tv itin j* I lc ra id
tU S P S A ll 1M I

T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t I. I9*S
V o l. 71. N o 794
P u b lis h e d D a ily a n d S u n d a y , e e c a p l
S a tu rd a y B y T t o S a n la rd H e r a ld .
In c. JB t N F r a n c s A v * , S a n fo rd .

HOSPITAL NOTES
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passage of the bill before leaving Friday on a
month-long recess
But Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., threatened
to delay consideration of the compromise
with a filibuster.
Helms condemned apartheid but said the
sanctions were loo severe.
"W c ought not to throw the baby out with
the bathwater," he said. " I f we cause South
Africa to fall Into the arms of the Soviets, we
will live to regret It."
Legislation for the sanctions has been In
Congress for rtiost o f this year, spuned by
demonstrations on college campuses and at
South Africa's embassies and consulates In
the Unlled States.
Action today comes as the troubled nation
enters its 12th day in a state of emergency.
Imposed by President Pieter Botha to clamp
down on growing racial unrest.
A total o f 21 blacks have died — 20 of
them shot by police — since the state of
emergency was declared July 21 with the
Intent of quelling 11 months o f violence In

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S U M ) Y ea r. U l Of B y M i l l Week
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FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y,
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
Fit* N w m to r M AM C R
D t lllM n P ro b a 'r
IN R E E S T A T E O F
JO S E P H V M A L L O Y . S R .
D to n x l
N O T IC E OF
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T to A n c illa r y a d m In te r a lie n
e l IS* * tt* l* e&lt; J O S E P H V
M A L L O Y . S R . deceased FU*
N um ber IS *B0 C P , l i pending In
It* C irc u it C o u rt t e to m Ino**
C o u n ty , F lo r i d a , P r o b a l*
D ivision . th* M M . r u o* w h ic h I*
to m in o l* C ou n ty C ou rtho u se.
N orth P o rk A v e n u e SA n te d
P L T to nom * an d M d f t i l ot
tto A n c illa r y p r r io n r l ro p ra
t e n ta tiv e a n d th a A n c illa r y
p o rto n o l r * p r * M n i* t i« a 'k at
t e t o y *r» tot fo rth below
A ll In te re ste d p e rso n s * .*
required la III* w ith m l* court,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
F R O M IM F D A T E O f T H E
F IR S T P U B L I C A T I O N O F
T H IS N O T IC E
(I) a ll c la im s
against tto **t«to and III any
o b je c t io n b y a n ln t a r * it « d
par ton to a ttorn n o lle * w a i
m aned that ch allen g e* th* v a lid
Ity ot tto w ill, tto q u a lifica tio n *
ot tto p a rto n a l r*pr***ntatlva.
venue or lu r t t d lc lla n at tto
court
A L L C L A IM S A N D O D JE C
TIO N S NOT SO F I L E O W IL L
BE FOREVER BARRED
Oat* ot tto flr* l p u b lic a tio n of
Ih lt notice of a d m in is tra tio n
A u g u tt I. IMS
Per ton a l R e p re se n ta tive
/»/ D ouglas S t e t e t o m
P 0 So* 1110
Sanford F L I l t t l 1110
A ttorney tor
P e rto n a l R rp.**# ntetl v*
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IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
FU* N um ber I I 44* C P
IN R I E S T A T E O F
A G N E S M Me W A T T E R S

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N O T IC E T O C R E D I T O R S
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S O R O E M A N O S
A G A IN S T
THE ABO VE
ESTATE
W ith in three m onth* fro m th*
lim a ot tto Itrtt p u b lic a tio n at
Ihi* nolle* you a re re q u ire d to
lu * w ith tto c le rk ot t t o C ir c u it
C o u r t d l S e m in o le C o u n ly .
F lo rid a . P ro fe a lt th v lk te i. tto
a d d re tt ot w h ic h ■* Sem.no**
C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e S a n fo rd
F lo rid a D i l l , a w ritte n *****
m a n l of any c la im or dem and
you m ay t o r e a g a in st tto e t U 'e
ot A G N E S M
Me W A T T E R S

deta i le d _______
X e c k c le lm m u s f b e in w ritin g
and m ust in d ic a te the b a s is t t r
tto c la im , tto n o m a and address
at tto cre d ito r or hi* agen t or
a tto rn e y
a n d Ih e a m o u n t
c la im e d It t t o c la im H not yet
du e, t t o d a le w h en it w ill
becom e due ( h a ll So l U ' r d II
Ihe c la im I* co ntin gen t o r unit
q u ld e te d . t t o n a tu re ot t t o
u n certain ty s h a ll t o s la te d It
tno c la im it s e c u re d the eacuri
ty s h a ll bo d e s c r ib e d
T to
c la im a n t s h a ll d e liv e r su ffic ie n t
copies of tto c la im to t t o d a r k
to enable tto c le rk to m a il ana
copy *a e a c h per son* I ra p r*
* * r1*1 ,*
A L L C L A IM S A N D DE
M A N O S NOT SO F I L E D W I L L
BE FO R E V E R B A R R E D
D e le d J u ly 14 IM S
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M c W A T T E R S D e c• * ta d
A L B E R T N F IT T S
Peel O tlic * B a a W t
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black townships.
The compromise hinged on concern that
Reagan would veto a stronger measure with
punitive sanctions — such as the House
proposal of an Immediate ban on new U.S.
business Investments In South Africa.
Sen. Richard Lugar. R-Ind., chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
said the chamber would not surrender on
this point but could m aneuver on a
proposed ban on sales of gold Krugerrand
coins. The compromise followed.
The Senate agreed the South African gold
coin may be banned Immediately unless
Reagan certifies that Pretoria has made
major progress In ending apartheid — the
policy of racial separation — Including
granting blacks full citizenship and releas­
ing all political prisoners.
The Treasury estimated that Krugerrand
sales earned South Africa about $600
million In U.S. revenues last year. The
conference called for the minting of U.S.
gold mins In satisfy buyers.

NEW YORK (UPI) - A mob
hitman whose lips led the FBI to
wlretar phone calls to a con­
stru ction com pan y run by
iu r m t r L a b o r S e c r e t a r y
Raymond Donovun refused to
answer questions In the case,
taking the Fifth Amendment
140 limes.
Lawyers for Michael Orlando,
44. advised him not to testify
Wednesday In Ihe case against
D o n o v a n and n in e o th e rs
lx-cause they claimed federal
agents were trying to prosecute
i he mobster on new charges
D o n o v a n a n d h is c o dclcndants were Indicted by a
Bronx grand Jury Iasi full on
charges they defrauded Ihe city
Transit Authority o f more lhan

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F A
P U B LIC H E A R IN G
T O C O N S IO C R
T H t A D O P T IO N O F
A N O R D IN A N C E
B Y T H E C IT Y
OF S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A
N olle* It h ereb y g iv e n Itvel *
P u b lic H e a rin g w in b* to ld a l
the C o m m is sio n Room In in*
C ity H a ll In t t o C ity ot S a n te d ,
F lo rid * a l T Ob o 'c lo c k P M on
August M . 1M5. to co nsid er tto
adopt loo ot an o rd in a n ce by the
C ity at S a n to rd
Floe Ida, as
fellow s
O R D I N A N C E N O TTTI
an

Africa

Mob Hitman Takes The Fifth
In Ray Donovan Fraud Case

Joseph Joyce. Arlington pres­
ident. Mid track officials would
meet today to decide how to
salvage the 55 remaining days of
I hr racing season Among the
propoMls being considered Is
switching races to nearby trarks.
However, the biggest losers
could be the stale of Illinois,
which receives about 7 percent
of the $ 1 5 million bet each day
the track Is open, and the village
of Arlington Heights, whose
economy depends on track cus­
tomers.
Officials said the blaze nevrr
threatened the stables whrre
1,900 horses ure boused. More
Ilian vital 2.000 documents
Identifying horses lhat run at Ihe
(rack were recovered by two
truck trainers

Legal Notice

5.

o r d in a n c e

of

rn e

C IT Y
OF S A N F O R D .
F L O R I D A . TO A N N E X
W IT H IN T H E C O R P O R A T E
A R E A OF TH E C IT Y OF
SAN FO RD
F L O R ID A . UPO N
A O O P T I O N O F S A ID O R O I
N A N C E A P O R T IO N O F T H A I
P R O P E R T Y L Y IN G AT THE
N O R TH W EST C O R N E R OF
THE IN T E R S E C T IO N OF
A IR P O R T B O U L E V A R D A N D
C O U N T R Y C L U B R O A D S A ID
P R O P E R T Y B E IN G S IT u A '
E D IN S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y
F L O R ID A . IN A C C O R D A N C E
W IT H T H E V O L U N T A R Y
A N N E X A T I O N P R O V IS IO N S
O F S E C T I O N U l 04* F L O R ID A
ST A T U T ES. P R O V ID IN G FOR
S E V E R A B I L IT Y . C O N F LIC T S .
AND E F F E C T IV E O ATE
W HEREAS
there h a t bean
Iliad w ith t t o C ity C le rk ot tto
C ity o l S a n to rd . F lo r id a , a
petition co n ta in in g t t o nem os ot
tto p ro p e rty ow n ers in tto a rte
describe d h e re in a lte r request
mg arm aaation to tto corporal#
ore* ot t t o C ity o f S a n te d
F lo rid a en d req u estin g to to
included th e re in end
W H E R E A S , th * P r o p e r t y
A p p ra is e r of S em in ole County
F lo rid a , h a v in g c e rt.lie d that
there ere tw o pro p a rty owners
In t t o a re a la t o a n n e ie d and
lh a t sa id p re p a rty owner to *
signed t t o P e titio n tor Ann***
lio n an d
W H E R E A S It h a s baan de
ter m in ed Ih e I the p rop erty de
s c r i b e d h e r e i n a f t e r Is
rta s o n a b iy co m p a ct and con
ligu ou s la the c o rp o ra l* eras* of
tto C ity ot S a n t e d F la n d s end
It ha* fu rth e r bean determ in ed
lh a t in * a n n o e e tio n at ta id
p rop erty w ill net re s u lt In tto
cre a tio n o l *n e n c la v e and
W H E R E A S , t t o C ity e l San
t e d . F lo rid a , is In a position la
p r e v ld t m u n ic ip a l s e rv ic e s la
Ihe p ro p e rty d e s crib e d Seram
and that th* C ity C o m m issio n ot
tto C ity of S a n te d . F lo rid a ,
deem s 11 In Ihe best infer**! of
tto C it y to a cce p t s a id petition
and to a n n a s sauf proparty
NOW , T H E R E F O R E B E IT
EN ACTEO BY THE PEO PLE
OF TH E C IT Y O F SAN FO RD.
F L O R ID A

SE C T IO N t
That tto pro
party described below situated
in Seminole County Florida, to
and tto some it hereby anneied
fo end mad* s part of tto City e&lt;
Santed. F lorida , pursuant to
tto voluntary ann*»*h*n pro
v i l l a i n o t S a d ia s i T T l i i .
F tor id* V-el i t e
F ro m in* Southeast corner #i
Section 14 Tow n sh ip I t South.
Rang* H E a s t, ru n N orth along
■to E a ste r i f lln a of k e cto n 14
144 4 t o o l, lh o n e * W e s te r ly
p a r a lle l M the ca n to r lln a of
Cou n fry C lu b R o a d IS foot t*
the P o in t of B e g in n in g thence
r u n W e s t e r l y a l o n g IS #
N o rth e rly R ig h t o f W ay lin o of
C o u n t r y C lu b R o a d . Id
tool.thence N o rth e rly p a ra lle l fa
A .rp o rf B o u le v a rd . I M 4 teat,
thane* C a s t e ly p a r a lle l I* tto
N or t h e n , R ig h t o f W ay line of
C e im lry C lu b H oad. M foot, run
th e n ce S o u th e rly p a r a lle l to
A ir p o rt B o u le v a rd . t M 4 feat 10
tto P o in t of B eg in n in g
S E C T I O N I T h at *«wt th u
O rd in a n ce b e c o m in g aN activ*.
re sid e n t on th* p rop erty do
t e n t e d h e r o n th o ll be en titled
fa a ll t t o - Ig h tt and p fU lla g e s
and u n m u M Ite* a* a re from
t.m * la tim e g ra n ted 1* ra ti
dents a n d p ro p e rty ow ners a l
t*w C ity of S a n t e d F lo rid * , and
a s fu rth e r p ro v id e d In C h a p te r'
i n . F t e id a S tatutes en d sh a ll

$7 million on a 1979 subway
tunnel construction Job.
The former labor secretary,
on hand for the pretrial hearing
In the Bronx, said hr was
outraged by Orlando's refusal to
talk.
O rlando's m ove "disgu sts
me.” Donovan said
Donovan's lawyers are trying
to suppress evidence gained
through what they term an
Illegal wiretap
Installed In 1979 as a rrsult of
Informal Ion provided by Or­
lando. ihe wiretap provided
more than 800 hours of tapes
for (he FBI. which was con­
ducting a wide-ranging orga­
nized crime probe.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

fu rth e r be tu b|*ct to tto re
Ip o n s ib ltitle s o t resid en ce or
o w n e rsh ip a* m a y *-—— lim e in
tim e be d e te rm in e d by th*
g o v e rn in g a u th o rity o l tto C ity
ot S a n t e d . F lo rid a , and th*
p re v is io n s of sa id Chapter U t.
F t e id a Statute*
S E C T I O N J It any taction or
p o r tio n ot a ta c tio n ot th is
o rd in a n c e p rove s to to in v a lid
u n la w fu l, o r unconstitutional. II
s h a ll not bo t o ld to in va lid a te or
im p a ir Iho v a lid ity , tec# or
O tlact of a n y other section or
p a rt o l th is ord in a n ce
S E C T I O N a That a ll ordl
n a n ce s o r p ert* u l eram ance* M
c o n flic t h e re w ith t o and tto
sam e a re h ereb y revoked
S E C T IO N i
That th is ord l
n a n ce sh a ll to c o m o effective
im m e d ia te ly upon Its passage
a n d adoption
A co p y (h a lt t o a v a ila b le at
th# O ffic e ot tto C ity C le rk tor
a ll pa rso n s d e s irin g lo e ie m in *
tto ta m e
AM p a r lie s In Interesl and
c lt lie n t s h a ll h ave an upper tun!
ty to t o h o a rd s ) sa id hoar mg
B y o rd e r ot tto C ity Com
m is s io n o l tto C ity of S a n te d
F lo r id a
A D V I C E T O T H E P U B L I C It
e person d e cid e s to appeal *
d e c isio n m ad* w ith respect to
a n y m a tte r co nsid ered *1 tto
above m e a lin g o r hearing, to
m a y need e v e rb a tim re c o rd ot
tto p ro ce e d in g s in clu d in g the
to s'.m o n y end evidence, which
re c o rd Is no1 p rovided by the
C ity o l Senior J (F S it e 0101)
H N T im m , J r
C ity C le rk
P u b llk h A u gu st t, *, t l A 71.
IM l
DEI 1

C o m p a n y , in le vo r o l W illia m F
A n d e rs a n d Jea n E Anders, h is

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T ,
*
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N NO
U lR T C A f f O
B I L L M C O O P E R end L I L A P
C O O P E R , h is w ile
P O I n lltf,
v*
N I C K R B U T T IT T A , e l *1,
Defendants
N O T I C E O F A C T IO N
TO O W E N B R YSO N
B a s IM . W ils o n Road
D a v o r. N H 3M X
THE ES T A T E OF CH ESTER
W B R Y S O N , Deceased end e ll
p a rti* * c la im in g by. through,
un der o r a g a in st C H E S T E R W
B R Y S O N , or T H E E S T A T E OF
C H E S T E R W B R Y S O N . Da
ceased en d *11 p a rtie s h avin g or
c la im in g fa h ave any righ t, till*
o r Interest in t t o real property
d e s c rib e d In A ddendum " A "
a tta ch e d h ereto
Y O U
A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an action tor
D e c la ra to ry Judgm ent, to re
t e r n d o cu m e n ts to e ip u n g *
d o cu m e n ts fro m the pu b lic r a
co rd *
e n d te f o r e c lo s e *
m e rtg e g * on the follow ing pro
p a r ly In S a m ln a l* C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a
____
A dd en du m A "
T R A C T I T h a t port Ton Of tto
fo llo w in g S trip e l la n d wr. -n lies
b e tw e e n a le c k s D an * B ,
A L L E N D A L E , a cco rd in g te tto
P la t th ereof *s record ed in P la t
B ook 4. P a g * ?. P u b lic Records
* f Sam mo-# County, F t o n U .
la w it A s trip Pt la n d M t e l
Wide l a . IS t e l on each side e l
the ce n te r lin e o f the m e in fre e!
a* 't o fa rm e r Se aboard A ir lin e
R a ilr o a d C om pan y as t e m a rly
lo c a te ) In lh * S E N o l the NW*e
*1 se ctio n It. Tow nship II South.
R an g * J) E a s t Sam mot* Cunfy.
F l o r i d * , a e t a n d ln g
n o r t h e a s t w a r d l y t r a m th *
n o rth e rly lin e *1 la k e H arney
A v e n u e 110 leaf, m ore er le st to
a poin t m t t o E a s t Im* of said
SE t* o l ton NWS* of sa id Section
II, co n ta in in g t &lt;J of an act*
m a r* at le ss as shaven on a p rin t
of a p o rtio n o f ft)* rig h t o f w ay
a n a T r * { i M * o
v I F l a 'L B i t . w h ich p rin t is
a tta ch e d end m ad* a part of
th a t c e r t a in W a rra n ty D eed
em ecufad fro m Seaboard Coast
L in e R a i lr o a d C o m p a n y , a
V ir g in ia C orp oration , a* sue
cussor by m e rg e r Of the te n s e r
S e a b o a r d A i r l i n e R a ilr o a d

dbill* r*t rs»r4tert In f&gt; 0 Una*
IM F. P a g * 1JA. P u b lic R e cord s
of S em inoi# County. F lo rid *
T R A C T II B lo c k s C. 0 en d E .
A L L E N D A L E S U B D IV I S IO N
a c c o rd in g to tto P la t thereof as
re c o rd e d m P la t Book 4. P a g * t.
P u b lic R e c o r d ! at S a m ln a l*
C ou n ty. F lo rid *
C a l l i n g o u t th* fo llo w in g
p ro p e rty (ram Tree t i l end II
L E S S Lot* I, 1. I t. » and Ito
W est U l* * l ot Lot IS. B lo c k C.
A L L E N D A L E , accordin g la tto
P la t th ereof as tocorded In P la t
beef* a. P e p * r. P u b lic R e cord *
ot Sem inoi# County. F t e id a
A ls o las* t t o follow ing
B e g in at th* Intersection o l
tto South llna a t lot I I . B lo c k C.
A L L E N D A L E , accordin g to tto
P la t th ereof a s recorded In P la t
Booh 4. P a g * f. P u b lic R e co rd s
o l S e m i not* County. F lo rid a ,
and tto W e ste rly rig h t of w oy of
O ld S A L . R a ilro a d , run E a s to n
I to pro lo n g a tio n ot sa id South
lln a ot L o t II. to a pom* tOOOO
t e l E a s t o l tto Southwest ca r
nor of s o ld Lo t J l. ttonc# N o rth
10 t t o W e s te rly rig h t of w a y o l
s a id O ld S A L R a ilro a d , thane*
S o u t h w e s t e r l y a lo n g s a id
r ig h t o l w a y to th* P a in t at
B e g in n in g A ls o le st tto follow
in g
F ro m tto N orthw est co rn er ot
Lo t It o f B lock 0 . A L L E N
D A L E , a cc o rd in g te Ito P la t
th ereof a t recorded in P ie t Bub*
(. P e g * J. P u b lic R e co rd s ot
Sem inoi# County. Florid# , ru n
E a s t a lo ng th* N orth lin o o f sa id
L o t I*. 2S t e t tor a p oin t of
b e g in n in g , ru n Ihanc* South
p a r a llot to tto W est llna e l sa id
L e t IF, I X t e t . tton c* E a s t
p a r a lle l to tha N orth &gt;!(■ o l sold
L o t I*, m t e t . tto n c* N o rth
p e ra lta l to tto West llna of sa id
L a t I*. 101 t e l to Ito P O of a
c u r v e co ncave to the k ft.h a v in g
a ra d iu s e l IS t e l and a c e n tra l
a n g le of *0*. ru n tto n c* along
t t o a rc a t said c u rv e X IT t e t to
t t o P T thence West along the
N o rth lin e ot sa id Lo t It. I M t e t
to the P o in t at Bag inning A ls o
le ss tto W est II t e t a l L e t t i
an d 30. B lo c k D. A L L E N D A L E ,
an d l**k L a t II and tto E a s t u«
at L a t 10. Lat I and tto E a s t f t
of Lot ?, Lo t 1 and tto E a s t 4 of
L o t 4. B la c k C. A L L E N D A L E ,
a c c o rd in g te tto P la t thereof a*
re c o rd e d in P la l Book t. P a g * f.
P u b l ic R e c e r d i a t S e m in o le
C ou n ty. F t e id a
L E S S L o ts U U U T . I t
10. II. I t I t 14. IS. I*. IT a n d 10.
an d tto W est &gt;y of Let It. and
L o t t X and J l. *11 In B lo c k 0 at
• a id A L L E N D A L E
SUB
D IV I S I O N
h a s baan tile d agam sl you an d
you a re re q u ire d to serve e co p y
of your w ritte n defenses. (I any,
to It a n P H I L L I P H L O G A N .
A tto rn e y tor P la in tiff. P o e t O f
I&gt;ca Boa 44* S a n te d . F lo r id a
U IT T 0*a* and tM* lh* o rig in a l
w ith th* C t e k at th# above
C o u rt a n or b a t e * Septem ber J.
IM S
o th e rw is e a ju d g m e n t
m a y t o entered again st you t e
its* r e l ie f d a m io d a d in IN*
C a m p i* nt
W I T N E S S m y hand an d I to
O ffic ia l aaal of S ilt C ourt, on
th is Jtth d a y of Ju ly . 1M l
D A V ID N B E R R IE N

CLERK OF THE
C IR C U IT CO U RT
B y D ia n a K B fu m m e tt
D e p u ty C t e k
P u b lis h A ugust I. L I I B . IM S
0 1 1 IJ

�Evening H tr a ld , Sanford. PI.

...Property
Coatlnaed from page 1A
Ned Julian Jr. defended the board
Wednesday and said It did not violate
any state laws.
"By law they were well within their
bounds." Arnold said.
The Issue dates back to January
when the school board started looking
for a buyer for the property. The board
accepted sealed bids Jan. 16. but none
of them were as much as the $530,000
appraised value o f the land, Arnold
said
W'hen bids do not meet the appraised
value, the btard by law may sell the
land through public or private sale.
Julian said.
Word was put out to realtors that the
land was for sale. Arnold said, and on
Jan. 21 Orlando developer Donald
Huber bid $£35,000 for the property.
Myra Sizemore of St. Johns Realty, the
Sanford firm that represented Sandefur. said St. Johns called Arnold Jan.
28 to see If anyone had bid on the lot.
Ms Sizemore said she was told by
s o "'“one In Arnold’s office that was nol

public Information.
On Jan. 30. the board studied
Huber's bid but because It was the only
one decided to table action on It until
Feo. 13. Arnold said.
On Feb. 4. St. Johns submitted
Sandefur's bid o f $570,000 to the
school board. Ms. Sizemore said.
Between Feb. 5 and 8. St. Johns
representatives tried unsuccessfully
seven times to reach Arnold by phone
to see If their contract was acceptable,
according to Ms. Sizemore. Arnold
returned their calls Feb. I I and said
the firm could Inspect Huber’s contract.
The same day. Huber apparently
learned of Sandefur's bid and upped his
offer to $600,000, Arnold said. He also
added some clauses to the contract
saying he could cancel It If he doesn't
get to use It the way he wants. Ms.
Sizemore said she tried the next day to
find out If any more bids had come In
and how much they were. She said she
was told by Arnold’s secretary there
were two bids — Huber’s and Sandefur's — and that there was a change
In Huber's but she didn’t know what It
was.
The next day. Feb. 13. the day the
contracts Issue was to be taken up. St.

Johns representatives tried another
seven limes to reach Arnold by phone
but he was unavailable. Ms. Sizemore
said. Sandefur did not want lo up his
bid unless he knew what Huber's was.
she said.
St. Johns finally reached Arnold at 2
p.m. but he reportedly said he was on
his way to the school board meeting
and didn't have time to talk. A.B.
"Tommy" Peterson, of St. Johns, went
to the meeting not knowing what
Huber's bid was but was prepared to up
Sandefu r’ s bid to $600,000. Ms.
Sizemore said.
At the meeting Superintendent Rob­
ert Hughes recommended the board
approve Huber's contract, according to
the minutes of the meeting.
Afler some confusion over '.he lan­
guage of the contract. Julian, Huber
and Huber's attorney stepped out of the
hearing room Into the hallway to clear
up the matter, the minutes say.
Meanwhile. Peterson tried lo get Ihe
board's attention so he could offer
Sandefur's bid, the minutes and Ms
Sizemore say.
Board Chairman Nancy Warren said
ihe board was discussing Huber's
contract because It was tabled for

discussion specifically for that date.
Arnold said Sandefur's could not be
considered until Huber's tabled con­
tract was considered, according to the
minutes. Mrs. Warren said the board
had Sandefur's bid. the minutes said
But It was the bid for $570,000.
Peterson said he wanted to change It
to $600,000.
Julian said because Huber's was the
only ofTcr the board had Jan. 30. I*
should consider that offer.
‘ *1 think that It w ould not be
appropriate at this time to engage In a
bidding war because the board did not
advertise the property to be sold at
public auction." Julian said, according
to the minutes.
The board tabled the matter until
later In the meeting. Julian discussed
the language of Huber's contract and
suggested the board go along with
Hughes and approve the offer because
Huber needed the contract signed by
Feb. 15 so he could file a rezonlng
request with Sanford, the minutes say.
Peterson asked If the board had seen
Sandefur's contract. Someone on the
board answered yes. according to the
minutes. The board then voted unani­
mously In favor of Huber's contract.

4 A rre s te d In A ttack On Police Car
Five days of violence at Hig­
gins Terrace In Sanford has
brought the arrest of four men
who are charged with criminal
mischief for allegedly throwing
bottles and rocks at a Sanford
police car.
Sanford Police Chief Steve
H a rried said Ihe arrest o f
another Sanford man in the ease­
ls pending.
When being handcuffed by
Damage to the car Is estimated
detective Lt. Robert W. Butler,
at $640. a police report said It Is
the man reportedly broke away
one of two damaged Sunday
and ran. He eluded W inter
when police responded to a
Springs and Longwood poller
disturbance call at the public
during a four-day search, but
housing project on 3rd Street.
turned himself In at the Winter
The trouble at Higgins Terrace
Springs police station at about
began Saturday and police were
10:30 p.m. Monday, a police
called lo the scene several times
report said.
over the past several days.
Steven Jerome Burks. 22. of
On S u n d a y , a p r e g n a n t
749
Orange Ave.. Longwood. has
13-year-old girl told police she
been charged In the case and
had been kicked In the stomach
was being held In lieu of $H.OOO
during a fight with a 17 year old
bond.
girl Wednesday a man was hit
NO W A T TO SA T 'H I'
In Ihe face with a bottle. Other
A man who greeted a former
fights and acts of vandalism
have also been reported to schoolmate by saying. "HI." was
punched In the mouth twice on
police.
The suspects unrated were Monday by the unfriendly man
reportedly seen ntnnlng from who didn't bother to explain Ihe
the scene after Sunday's rock unprovoked attack. A suspect
and bottle throwing and were was Identified by the victim and
Identified by witnesses, police unrated Tuesday.
Thomas Perkins told police he
said.
Anested at about 6:15 p.m. greeted the man at u party at
Wednesday were: Ikibby Ken­ 2 0 6 M artin S t.. A ltu m o n te
nedy GrlfTln. 19. of *5 Seminole Springs, when Ihe man punched
Gardena, nth Street, tie waa him In ihe mouth, lonaenlng
anested near his home. Anested some teelh.
The attacker was pulled off
at Starke Park. W. 5th Street
were: Jeffrey Bernard Campbell. Perkins by Michael Sawyer of
23. o f 111 Dunbar Ave., Lake 632 Sherwood Drive. Altamonte
Monrt.
'Mllle Pringle. 24. of 21 Springs, and the pugilist (hen
Cowan h lughton Tenace. San­ turned on Sawyer and attacked
ford: and Dennis Washington 25. him before fleeing, u police
report said.
of 40 Higgins Tenace.
John Homer McCaw. 19. who
All have been released on
$500 bond each and are sched­ has no permanent address but
lives In Altamonte Springs, was
uled lo appear In court Aug. 14.
anested at Cumberland Farms.
S tate Hoad 434. A ltam on te
BURGLARIES $t THEFTS
Springs, at 12:38 p.m. Tuesday.
George E. Cheney. 49. of 141 He has been charged with ag­
Haverahum Drive, Longwood, gravated battery and was being
reported his boat and trailer and held In lieu of $8,000 bond.
other boating Items with a com ­
LET THERE BE LIOHT
bined value o f ubout $3,000
Tw o Altamonte Springs men
were stolen from a garage at 403 w ho were reportedly caught
Sinokertse Hlvd.. Longwood. be­ tam perin g with the electric
tween July 22 and Monday, meter lo their upartment after
deputies said.
falling to pay a $182 power bill
h a v e b e e n c h a r g e d w ith
Construction worker Fred R. possession o f burglary tools,
Jaynes reporlcd to sheriff s dep­ trespassing and larceny with
uties that two celling funs and a relationship lo utilities.
ladder with a total value of $475
Police were called lo 550
were stolen from a building site Huttaway Ridge *40. Altamonte
at 3336 Howell Branch Road. Sprin gs, by an unidentified
Winter Park. The theft of the person who said they heard
Items belonging to Fertakls In­ noise outside the building. Of­
ternational. 375 Lake Mary ficers spotted two suspects when
Hlvd., Lake Mary, occurred they arrived at about 2:30 a m.
Monday or T uesday.
Wednesday, a police report said
Police had heard the sound of
sawing when they approached
SUSPECT SURRENDERS
A burglary suspect nabbed the pair and when Ihe men
July 25 escaped while being spotted the police they ran. but
handcuffed, but surrendered were nabbed quickly, the report
Monday to face charges of escape said.
The men reportedly had a
In addition to burglary and
hacksaw, two pair o f pliers and a
grand (heft charges.
Winter Springs police reported lantern In their possession.
arresting the man after he Police rcporled they said they
allegedly brokr Into a home at were "trying to fix the electric
502 O s p r e y L a n e . W in te r m eter."
A Fortda Power and Light Co.
Springs, and took about $1,200
worth of goods Including stereo employee. Carl J. Horwalh. ar­
rived on the scene and told
and computer game gear.

Maitland Developer Gets
Three Years For Coal Fraud
CHARLESTON. W.Va. |UPI) A Florida real eatate developer
has been ordered to start serving
a three-year prison sentence for
his 1982 conviction on coal
fraud charges.
William Biggs. 49. of Maitland,
was found guilty by a federal
court Jury In Charleston on four
c h a r g e s s t e m m in g from a
fraudulent Investment scheme
Involving a coal mine al Dlllc In
Clay County In 1977.
Alter the trial, however. U.S.
District Judge John Copenhaver
Jr. reversed Biggs' cunv let tons
on three of the four charges. The
Judge sentenced him to three
years In prison and fined him
$10,000 on Ihe remaining count.

but Biggs was allowed lo remain
free In bond while trial court
rulings were being appealed.
In May. a federal appeals court
reinstated the original guilty
verdicts returned by the Jury,
and Biggs returned lo court
Tuesday for sentencing on (he
three other counts.
Copenhaver ordered Biggs to
serve three-year sentences on
two of Ihe charges but said they
would run concurrently with his
original benlence. The judge
ordered Biggs to serve five years
oil probation on Ihe third charge
alter hla prison term In com­
pleted.
Hr also required Biggs to pay
the $ 10 000 fine Immediately.

police that service to the sus­
pects' apartment at *37 H ai­
taway Ridge had been shut off
for non-payment. He estimated
damage to the light meter at
$-150. the report said.
The Pieter's face had been
broken and the frame bent, the
report said.
John Joseph Glounannclll Jr..
24. and Robert Scotl George. 23.
were being held In lieu of $5,000
bond each.
FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Police Depart­
ment responded lo the following
calls.
Tuesday
—7:51 u.m.. Flcrlda and Georgia
avenues, fire. A car fire sparked
by a malfunctioning carburetor
was put out. There werr no
Injuries.
— 10:54 a.m.. 1401 Semlnolr
B lv d ., e m e r g e n c y - r e lu t e d .
Firefighters stood by while a
helicopter landed at Central
Florida Regional Hospital.
— 1:28 p.m., 500 Oak A ve..
rescue. A 38-year-old mun shot
himself In the finger with a
handgun as he waa "checking"
It. a rescue report said David
Ruddrl. of the same address,
was taken to the hospital where
he was treated for a cut finger.
—3:18 p.m., 461 Sand Cove
Court, rescue. A 92-year-old man
fell out o f bed but was nol
Intured. Rescue workers put him
back Into bed.
—6:34 p.m.. First Street and
L au rel A ven u e, em erg en cy related. A gas leak was stopped
by the gas company.
— 6:4 1 p.m .. Anderson and
Country Club circles, rescue.
There was an auto accident but
no Injuries.
—8:57 p.m., N th Street and
A vocad o Avenue, rescue. A
51-year-old man with stomach
(tains was taken lo Ihe hospital.
—9:17 p.m., 84 Paddock Court.

rescue. Thomas Osborne. 86. of
the same address, was found
dead of a heart attack.
—9:24 p.nt.. Park Drive and Oak
Avenue, rescue. A 26-ycur-old
man was Injured In un auto
accident. Christopher Melghbor.
o f 2539 Park Drive. Sanford, was
driving his car on Oak Avenue
when it was struck from behind
by another vehicle. He suffered a
broken leg. as well as other neck
and hark Injuries. He was taken
to Central Florida Regional Hos­
pital.
— I I 46 p.m , 79 William Clark
Court, rescue. Walter Sldberry.
55. of the same address, was
found dead of a heart attack.
— 11:50 p.m . 2008 Summerlin
Ave.. false alarm.
-1 1 .5 3 p.m.. 1305 W. 11th St.,
rescue. A 12-year-old girl who
hud a possible seizure was left In
the care of her parents.

T h u rsd a y. Aug. 1, 1WJ— JA

Arnold said Wednesday the board
approved Huber's contract because It
was the best offer "th ey had In their
possession." Huber's bid was also
approved because he was the first
person (obld. Arnold said.
"H e put his neck on the line before
anyone else did." he said.
But Ms. Sizemore said Sandefur'*
revised contract, "w as never discussed,
talked about or shown ... they never
gave Stan a chance."
Julian said. "The school board has
one singular Interest — lo try to sell the
property."
After Huber tried and tailed to get the
land rezoned, he apparently sold Ills
option to Haitaway. That's a legal
move. Julian said, because the contract
Is "assignable." which means Hubrr
can sell It to anyone he wants.
For now. everyone will have to wait
until Aug. 12 and 14 for the results of
the scenario. The residents and Hattuway will converge on city hall Aug.
12 for the outcome o f the rezonlng
question. The school bourd meets Aug.
14 to decide whrther nr not to grant an
extension to Hattawav. If he loses.
Sandefur will have to wall, with his
pi optical In hand.

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Keep It
Reasonable
The good news on the environmental front
Is that Congress Is about to extend the federal
toxic-waste cleanup program known as
Superfund. The bad news Is that both the
House and Senate want a larger Superfund
than the Environmental Protection Agency
says It can spend effectively.
The Superfund program taxes companies
that produce toxic chemicals and uses the
revenue to finance the cleanup of abandoned
toxic dumps. It Is an efficient, equitable
method of combating the serious environ­
mental problem of toxic wastes. Even the
chemical companies that are the major
contributors to the Superfund agree the
five-year-old program should be continued
beyond Its Sept. 30 expiration date, although
they would like to share their tax burden with
users of toxic chemicals.
The Reagan administration wants a fiveyear. $5.3 billion extension of Superfund that
would tax both producers and users of toxic
materials. This compares to the $1.6 billion
r a is e d by th e p r o d u c e r ta x d u r in g
S u p erfu n d 's first fiv e years. E PA ad ­
ministrator Lee M. Thomas says the ad­
ministration's plan would enable the agency
to clean up 900 of the nation's worst toxic
waste sites by 1990.
But Congress Is determined to establish a
larger Superfund than EPA officials say they
can spend wisely. The Senate has approved a
$7.5 billion Superfund; the House bill curries
a $10 billion price tag.
Cleaning up toxic wastes should be a
national priority. But thut commitment must
be measured In the effectiveness of the
cleanup cffuit, Ikot In doiluis spent. Conglcss
should extend the Superfund for another five
years, but at the $5.3 billion funding level
sought by the experts at EPA.

On Deaf Ears
American newspapers run letters to the
editor. Soviet newspapers run letters to the
commissars — anti the commissars aren't
pleased.
It seems thut so many critical letters are
being received — 600.000 u yrar by Pravda,
the Communist Party's main piopuganda
organ — that Soviet Prime Minister Mikhail
Gorbachev hus ordered a crackdown on
‘ 'slan d erers." He also culled on Soviet
newspapers to “ psychologically remodel" the
way Soviet citizens think ubout work. In line
with his effort to blume the poor performance
of the Soviet economy on slackers, cormpt
managers and "purusltes."
It seems to us the people of the Soviet
Union are trying to send the commissars a
messuge. but the latter aren't hearing It.

Observation
What Is the nature of public opinion In
Amerlcu? Is It rutlonul? Is It the product of
reason?
Certulnly not.
What |tassrs for public dialogue Is not a
reasoning process. It Is a shallow rationaliza­
tion ol deep emotional currents moved by
history — by events, not by urguments.
Crowds commonly wunt speakers to tell
them what they already know, to Ignite their
passions and strengthen the opinions they
already bold.
It Is only the Isolated individual who Is
willing to listen to argument, to consider
dispassionately and, occasionally, to change
his mind.
It Is to this rare bird thut editorials are
uddressed.

BERRY'S WORLD

WASHINGTON — The com er bureaucracy, or
federal field office, remains one of the areas of
the governm ent that has long needed a
thorough housec leaning.
Yet perhaps no other area of the government
lias been so reslstent to meaningful reform.
More than one-third of the federal bureaucracy
exists outside o f Washington — a shadowy,
overemployed substructure o f regional, state
and district offices that rarely receive any
serious attention or oversight from Congress or
from their supervisors at the center of power.
Their growth over the years has been prolific,
thanks to legislators In both parties who have
made every effort to bring home the bacon In
the form of new or expanded federal facilities
and Jobs.
From the almost-morlbund SO-state bureau­
cracies of the Interstate Commerce Commission
to the U S . Department of Agriculture's more
than 3.000 Extension Service offices, these
expansive bureaucratic entitles are everywhere.
Yet while thousands of federal field offices
blanket the nation In m ore than 22.000
locations, their labor-intensive delivery o f
services Is In many cises much the same as It

was at the turn of the century. It is as if modem
telecommunications technology had bypassed
government completely.
Within USDA alone there are 17.000 separate
field ofTlces — one for every 137 farms In the
country — Including the Farmers Home A d­
ministration. the Agricultural Stabilisation and
Conservation Service, and the Soil Conservation
Service, to name only a few.
There are so many agricultural offices that the
average farm Is within five miles of a USDA
office In the East, and within 35 miles of a USDA
office In the West.
At a time when a mere 700.000 farms produce
most o f America's food, do we need this many
USDA offices? The Grace Commission doesn't
think so. It discovered that many of them are
less than vital to real farming needs.
Similarly, hundreds of USDA-funded County
Extension Service offices, which cost federal
taxpayers $330 million a year, have been
pitching their services to residential homeown­
ers — Issuing advice on backyard gardening,
tree planting and shrubbery pruning.
When I Iasi checked Virginia's Fairfax County
Extension Service Office, officials were, among

other things, providing a week-long seminar on
lawn-care tips for professional landscape people.
At the same time. Fred Andre, a dissident
commissioner within the Interstate Commerce
Commission, doesn't understand why. In an era
of deregulation, the ICC Is staffing at least 50
state offices to snoop Into the daily activities of
the nation's trucking companies.
Last year, a White House Interagency task
force concluded that up to $4 billion could be
saved If unneeded or duplicative field offices
were closed down or consolidated. Ambng other
things, the task force urged that the existing
l-to-4 ratio of supervisors to employees be
raised to 1 to 7.
Earlier this year, the Office of Management
and Budget came forward with an elaborate
plan to merge and cut back Washington's
overstaffed com er bureaucracy, but not a lot of
progress has been made.
The continuing obstacle: Congress.
"Each of these (field) offices Is politically well
connected," says an administration official,
"and these guys Immediately get on the phone
to their senators mid cuiigicanincn. and that's
when the hell gets raised against 'i.ose who
want to cut the budget around here."

WASHINGTON WORLD

RO&amp;mnrwALms

LBJ
Wrote
Worst
By Jim Andsrson
WASHINGTON (UPI) - As the
nation marked the 100th anniversa­
ry of Ulyases S. Grant's death, there
was general agreement that his
autobiography, turned out In a
frantic race with death, was the best
book ever written by an American
president.
But what about the worst book
ever by an American President?
Th at's a much more difficult
choice. If only because there are so
many entries. But two recent works
stand out as presidential monu­
ments to dullness, lack o f candor
and self-justification. They are (the
envelopes, please):
—First prize: Lyndon Johnson's
Th e Vantage P o in t. a Texas-sized,
sprawling apologia for The Great
Society and Its chief architect that
conceals far more than It reveals.
Among Johnson's faults (we find
from other books and recollections)
was his habit of su rrou n din g
himself with sycophants and yesmen. whom he then bullied merci­
lessly. sometimes physically. In his
book. Johnson quotes lovingly from
these courtiers, such as U.N. Am
tioaaador Russell Wiggins, who says
at a final Cabinet meeting. " I feel
confident. Mr. President, that when
the frulta o f your policies are
gathered In. Americana arc going to
say. 'How great the harvest has
b e en ."
On Vietnam, there ls no recogni­
tion to be found In the book that the
tandem Johnson policy of escala­
tion and negotiation with Hanoi was
simply not working. There Is no
apparen t rec o g n itio n that the
guns-and-butter policy. In addition
to the coat In human lives, was
going to change the economic future
of the country by creating a semi­
permanent Inflation that would
drive the American middle class to
the economic wall.
In most Issues. Johnson glosses
over the truth and shamelessly'
brags about minor pieces of legisla­
tion such os six nameless conserva­
tion measures that arc now forgot­
ten.
Second place In the presidential
bad-book sweepstakes would prob­
ably go to Jim m y Carter's recent
throwaway on the Middle East. T h e
/Mood o f A b ra h a m . which Is merely
simple-minded and dull.
As your eyes skid Inexorably off
the edge of the page. It becomes
clear thut this book was written on a
word-processor, the kind that takes
words and thoughts and blends
them into undistinguished mush.
A n y In tru d in g In te llig e n c e Is
excised by the "delete" button.
Carter's book Is embarrassing and
simple-minded but It lacks the
th u n d e r in g to n e o f s e lfcongratulation and self-deception
that clearly distinguishes Johnson's
memoirs which, fortunately, puts
the book in a class by Itself.

An Oil
Tax
For All
W A S H IN G T O N (N E A ) - A
fortuitous confluence o f events, the
decline In crude oil prices, the effort
to reduce the government's deficit
and the proposed overhaul of the
federal tax code, presents the nation
with a unique opportunity.
The Senate's Republican leaders
linked the first two elements In late
July when they called for a crude-oll
Import tax that would produce
revenues desperately needed to cut
the deficit while simultaneously
encouraging energy conservation at
a time of falling petroleum prices.
But one of the most compelling
arguments against the Import tax ls
that It would lead to an equivalent
Increase In the cost of domestic
crude oil, thus providing an un­
justified flnonctr.1 bonanza to this
country's petroleum producers.

Bad Times For OPEC
GENEVA. Switzerland (NEA) Here at the headquarters of the
Organization o f Petroleum Export­
ing Countries. 1981 Is referred to
wistfully as the "golden age."
That year ended a decade In
which oil prices soared from $3 u
barrel to more than $35, and many
oil experts predicted a permanent
price of more than $50. Money
flooded Into the oil producers' cof­
fers. and OPEC-member countries
that were mere specks on the map
suddenly becam e tnujor w orld
powers.
But then so m eth in g stran ge
happened: Almost overnight, fuel
conservation became a way of life,
and the world was uwash with oil.
There's an oil surplus of more than
10 million barrels per day. and
prices have dmpjred to about $27
per barrel. The experts who pre­
dicted a permanent price of $50 In
1981 now predict a permanent price
of $20 — or perhups even as low us
$15.
The decreased demand for oil
coincided with major Increases In
production by such non-OPEC na­
tions as Mexico, the Soviet Union.
Great Britain und the United Stutes.
leading to a major decline In OPEC
production.
In the heady days of the lute
1970s. the 13 OPEC countries
pumped out about 31 million bar­
rels each day; today, production
stands ut only 15 million buirels —
and the production and price de­
clines have radically alterrd the oil
producers' revenues.
In many OPEC countries, annual
Income has fallen 50 percent since
the start of the decade. For the more
affluent Gulf States, such os Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait, this has meant
belt-tightening, but It has meant
real hardship for less affluent pro­
ducers such os Nigeria and Algeria.

For more than a year. OPEC has
struggled with ways to combat this
change of fortune. However, this
has taken place amid Increasing
tension between member countries,
since the scramble for markets Is
turning contented allies Into hungry
rivals In their attempt to capture or
hold dw indling m arkets, many
OPEC countries are undercutting
the official OPEC price by offering
large discounts.
The major producer Is Saudi
Arabia, whose oil minister, Ahmed
Zakl Yamunl. has offered one solu­
tion to OPEC's problem: Prices, he
says, shotdd be cut sharply. Tilts
would enable OPEC members to
compete with the non-OPEC pro­
ducers. who are substantially un­
dercutting OPEC prices on the spot
market, where 60 percent of all
crude sales take place.
Yamunl says that If the world
price werr brought low enough — to
$18 to $20 per barrel — major
non-OPEC countries like Drltlan and
Norway would be removed from the
picture. Their oil comes from of­
fshore wells that arc very expensive
to run. and at $18 to $20 per barrel,
they would be selling their oil at a
loss
This prescription Is hotly opposed
by u large number o f OPEC pro­
ducers with smaller outputs, among
them Libya. Iran and Nigeria. They
claim that production should be cut
sharply, with most o f that cut
coming from the largest producers
— Saudi Arabia. Kuwait and the
other Gulf states.
Saudi Arabia still holds that If It
doesn't get what It wants — major
price reductions for high-grade
crude — It will flood the market
with cheap oil. thus forcing a price
decline.

That's where the third compo­
nent. revision of the tax code, could
be an Important elem ent In a
package offering som ething for
everybody — consumers, the oil
Industry and the federal govern­
ment. Here's how It would work:
The government would levy an
Import tax of $5 on every 42-gallon
barrel of Imported crude oil and
Impose an equivalent tariff of about
$10 on every Imported barrel of
petroleum products. That would
produce almost $9 billion In addi­
tional annua] revenues to reduce
the budget deficit.
(About 20 percent o f those funds
would be set aside to aid consumers
In the Northeast who are heavily
dependent upon oil os a heating
fuel. |
The Increased price would en­
co u ra g e c o n s e rv a tio n by d is ­
couraging unnecessary consump­
tion. The nation has come a long
way In reducing Its waste of a
limited natural resource, but much
more remains to be done.
The country last year used an
average of 16.4 million barrels of oil
dally, substantially less than the
19.2 million barrels dally consumed
during the peak year o f 1978.
Similarly, net oil Imports lost year
averaged 4.7 million barrels dally,
compared to 8.6 million barrels
dally In the record-setting year of
1977.
But the country is rapidly deplet­
ing Its reserves of crude oil. If
consumption continues at the cur­
rent rate and if there are no major
new oilfield discoveries, domestic
reserves will be non-existent before
the end of this century.
The Import duty could Increase
the price of gasoline by as much ao
12 cents per gallon, but It would
provide an Incentive for further
conservation measures that are Im­
perative for consumers' long-term
energy security.

JACK ANDERSON

Risky Daikon Shields Still In Use Overseas
WASHINGTON - Recently we
disclosed that thousands o f ninlkon
Shield Intrauterine devices being
used abroad had escaped conllkcaton despite a directive sent out
by the Agency for Internatonal
Development In 1974. when the
devices were taken off the market.
AID Investigators are searching for
any unused shields In countries
where the agency gave them out.
and are also warning users to have
them removed.
Now the National Women's Health
Network has Joined the fight. Noting
one t.»tUn*lc dial "thousands of
women In 80 countries ore still
using the Daikon Shield today." the
group recen tly got a grant to

H

i

.... - ■

-V

•

r. ‘

*-*

conduct an International Informa­
tion campaign
WATCH ON WASTE The Texas
regional office of the Labor Dep.irtinrnt's Employment Standards
Administration Is In Dallas, but the
annual management meeting this
month wus held In Houston Oneihird of the ugency staffers attend­
ing live in Dallas, so there would
have been no nerd for airfare and
prr-dlem expenses if the meeting
had been held there. As It was. the
transportation costs come to $5,370
and per-dlem coats amounted to
$14,400 — or $4,908 more than a
Dallas meeting. And eight addi­
tional. lower-echelon em ployees
could have attended In Dallas

EXECUTIVE MEMO: Health pro­
fessionals In the Agency for In­
ternational Development recently
prepared a m em o appealing to
agency director Peter McPherson to
protect them from fellow employee*
who smoke They urged him to
ensure that "all AID work areas are
designated non-smoking areas un­
less specifically and carefully desig­
nated as smoking areas " They d ie
as reasons for their concern the
Increased risk of lung and other
cancers, as well as eye Irritation and
icspUatury Infct lions, and poten­
tially harmful exposurr to 4.00U
chemicals from tobacco smoke.
MINI EDITORIAL Surely there is
a p u b lic - r e la t io n s s c h o o l In

Paraguay or someplace where the
U .S . N a v y s e n d s It s Im a g e
specialists for training How else to
ex'plaln the Naval Academy's-fatu­
ous decision a few weeks ago to
deny a diploma and a commission
to Midshipman Jay Llnoer when he
could perform only five of a required
six pullups Linder, who had an
Injured shoulder, threatened legal
action and the academy gave him
time to undergo therapy and uinlest again. He passed with seven
p u l l u p a &lt;im| was graduated i l l
mid-July. It’s difficult to explain the
Navy's stupidity, but we think there
are too many admirals around with
barnacle-encrusted brains.

t

�SPORTS

Evening Hsrild. Sjntord, FI.

Tkurvlzy. Aug. I, l t t i —JA

Rain 'Stalls' Ponies — R em em bering '81 Broncos
Even the most-spirited Ponies can't
perform too well tn puddles o f water.
That goes for ponies In rodeos and
Ponies that play baseball, too.
The Seminole Pony Southeast Re­
gion Tournament succumbed to the
afternoon and evening rain showers
Wednesday night at Richard Coffey
Field on the West Seminole Pony
Baseball complex.
W est S e m in o le president Rick
Stelnke said showers were forecast for
tonight, too^so he scheduled today's
games for noon and 3 p m The East
Cobb Astros of Marietta. Ga. take on
Lake Worth at noon. West Seminole
entertains Gadsden. Ala. at 3 p m.
Due to the shower*. *'*HnVe bus
tentatively scheduled Friday's games
for 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Today's losers
would play the earlier game while
today's winners would meet In the
later game. Th e m orning winner
would play the afternoon loser at 6
p m. Friday to determine the survivor
o f the losers' bracket.
"That would put us back on sched­
ule." said Stelnke. who several years
ago coached Lyman High School's

basketball team (1978-79) to the
school's best record ever.

Sam
Cook

The survivor of the losers' bracket
would have to beat the winners'
bracket team twice on Saturday to
cam a trip to the Southern Zone
Tournament at Tampa. The winner
there goes to the Pony World Series at
Washington. 1*3.. the home o f Pony
Baseball, which was founded In 1951.

HERALD
SPO RT*
EDITOR

Although Stelnke had to postpone
Wednesday's activities, he did get a
look at the East Cobb Astros from
Marietta and came away Impressed.
"T h ey have six players who played on
East Marietta's Little League World
Series champion." said bietnkr. "One
of those pitchers (Marc Ptsclotta) Is an
inch taller than me. He must be 6-5.
They say he can really bring It."

Although West Seminole can be
commended on hosting the Bronco
State Tournament and the Southeast
Pony Region, the tatter Is not the
highest level tournament ever hosted
in S e m in u lc C o u n ty , w hich an
advertising tabloid circulated In this
area by a neighboring county publica­
tion has led one to believe.

One Georgia parent told Kenny
Doyle that Ptsclotta pitched five In­
nings one game and allowed a foul tip
and a popup. In Marc's last televised
outing, he sent Taiwan track to the
Orient as the second-best team In the
world.

West Seminole need not look any
further than the man for whom Its Held
is named after to find the gentleman
w h o gu ided the 1981 S em in ole
Broncos ( I I - and 12-year-olds) to a
runnenip finish In the World Series at
Lafayette. La.

Yes, when Richard Coffey was call­
ing the shots, bolstered by the shrewd
coaching minds o f Dick Waring and
Greg Ebbert, the Seminole Broncos not
o n ly hosted the S ou th ern Zone
Tournament, they upset an excellent
Miami Avante team In the process to
earn the berth to the World Series.
Now, that was a team. It had power,
speed, great hunters, solid defense and
good pitching. Terry “ The C at" Miller
was the mound ace. Eddie Taubensce
and/Mark Coffey supplied the power.
Tracy Turner. Dale Stevens. Eddie
Evans. Greg Ebbert. Sean "Flake"
Flaherty. Jimmy Waring. Kirk Kozck,
K e lly H yscll. Jason B ray. Scott
Bowers. Keith Dial and Mickey Helms
completed the roster.
Allen Tuttle. Lake Mary's baseball
coach, went into the summer Ameri­
can Legion season took for replace­
ments. He lost several good seniors
from last year's 29-vlctory team. Gone
Is third baseman Kevin Hill to SCC,
catcher and E v e n in g H e ra ld Player ot
the Year Rod "C .J ." Metz, center
fielder Scott Underwood and pitcher

Eric "T h e W hip" Hagen. Metz and
Underwood are bound for Vanderbilt.
"T h e Whip” Is shopping around the
Junior colleges.
"From what 1 saw this summer, we
may have some good replacements."
said Tuttle. He said he liked Kelly
Hysell's play at third. Rob Shakar's
work on the mound and the play of
T,J. Sutton and Billy Jenkins tn the
outfield.
"S h a k a r has averaged about a
strikeout an inutng with around a 2.30
ERA. He might be In the starting
rotation. He's earned It," said Tuttle.
"K elly will sure give somebody u battle
at third As far as going after a flvball.
Billy Jenkins Is the best I've ever had.
Sutton is going to help, too. He's got
good speed."
Tuttle said he sees the Rams adopt­
ing a different style of play next year.
“ You won't ever seen n hitting lineup
like we had last year around Seminole
County a gain ," he said. " !t wns
awesome. We're going to bu.u a lot
more and play better fundamental
defense.”

Defense Paves
Way For Hawks
By Chris F later
Herald Sp orts W r ite r
Some softball trams that have
made It as far as the 12 and
under ASA Southeast Regional
Toumamenl got there by poun­
ding most of their opponents.
They may give up five or six
runs a game but they usually
score 12 or 14 or more.
Or maybe, they'll wait for the
right moment to capitalize on
the other team's mistakes. And
players who are 12 and under
will make mistakes.
But. when one of those *ilgh*
scoring teams or one that Is used
to th e o p p o s it io n m a k in g
mistakes runs Into a squad that
plays solid defense, that's when
they're are In trouble.
And that's where the Seminole
Hawks come In.
The Hawks. Srmtnote Softball
Club's 12 and under all-star
team, are as sound a defensive
club as you’ll ever see for that
agc group. They don't make
mistakes and. because of that,
they win ballgames.
The Hawks left today for the
Southeast Regional Tournament
which begins Friday In Gadsden,
Ala. This year's team ts the first
from the S em in o le Softball
Club's 12 und under age group
to qualify for the reglonala. The
top three teams from the region
a d v a n c e to th e N a t io n a l
Tournament In Ttfton. Ga.
The draw for the 24-team
tournament will be held Friday
at noon and every team will play
at least one game Friday. If there
are 24 teams (sometimes a team
that qualifies Is not able to make
the tournament) It would take a
minimum of six straight victo­
ries to win the tournament.
Seminole ts hoping Its de­
fensive prowess will once again
pOMc ’ the -way. Defense ts the
te a m 's tra d e m a rk and has
enabled It to compile an Im­
p ressive record d u rin g the
summer.
Going Into the Southeast Re­
gional. the Hawks have won 24
games and lost Just five. They
have won every tournament
they've played In except three.
In those three. Seminole finished
second twice and fourth once.
In 29 games, the Hawks have
scored 177 runs, an average of
6 .1 per game, and given up Just
72 .2.4 per game.
"W hat has carried this team
las been the defense." Hawks
manager Larry Rlsse said. "T h e
girls have played super defense

Outlook
Dim For
Baseball

S oftball
all summer long and w e've got
the
timely hitting when we
needed It. Having a good, strong
defense makes you feel good
going Into a tournament where
you don't know what thr com ­
petition Is like We know the
defense ts going to keep us In the
gam e."
The Hawks Infield Includes
Tonya HUtgtns at first base.
K e lly H a rtm a n at se c o n d .
Michelle Davis at shortstop and
Missy Martinez at third base.
Renee Savllle and Christine
Rlsse alternate as the pitchers
and Sheny Adams In the catch­
er.
Up the middle, the Hawks nre
as strong as any team around tn
th eir age group. Davts and
Hartman have combined to pull
off a number of double plays
which can be rare for this age
group. Martinez is solid at third
base and has led the team In
hitting in many of the tourna­
ments while Higgins Is also very
consistent at first.
"W e've made a lot of double
plays, sometimes as many as
two In a gam e," Rlsse said.
"T h a t's pretty Impressive for a
12 and under team. Michelle
(Davts) and Kelly (Hartm an)
have played super all summer
long And Missy (Martinez) has
made' some great plays at third
base."
T h e o u t f i e l d e r s In c lu d e
Heather Golden. Nicole Gadoury.
Tonya Diaz and Dena Moroseh.
Marty of the double plays the
defense has turned this summer
have come from the outfield.
"A ll of the outfielders have
made some great catches and
they all have good throwing
arm s," Rlsse said.
Another reason the opposition
hasn't scored much against the
Hawks ts pitching. Sanvtlle and
Rlsse both have displayed out­
standing control. With few errors
and few walks, the Hawks'
opposition has to earn every­
thing It can get. which hasn't
been much.
Providing the strength off thr
bench are outfielders Tonya
Lewis and Connie Bonaventure
and tn flclders Pat Foldeak.
Mandy Renteria and Sandy
Adams Lewis, Foldeak and Re­
nteria have also been excellent
pinch hitters for the Hawks and

Michelle Davis

Heather Oolden

M issy Martinas

T on ya H iggins

NEW YORK (UPI) - A day off
can help cure a slump, and few
people are going worse than the
baseball negotiators who have
five days to avoid a major league
strike.
Negotiators planned a tele­
phone consultation today to de­
cide whether to meet. There
were no strong Indications that
anything would happen today.
"There's no sense In meeting
If th e re 's n o th in g to meet
about," said owners
repre­
sentative Lee MucPhull.
"D o we want a signal that
they're serious?" asked union
head Don Fehr, rephrasing a
question, "T h e answer is. It
would help immensely.”
Wednesday marked one of the
worst days In the eight months
o f talks. The parties met for
about 1 Hi hours but reported no
progress toward reaching an
agreement on the divisive Issues
of pensions, salary arbitration
and club salary caps.
Union consultant Murvln Mill­
er leveled charges o f "d eceit" at
management. MucPhall coun­
tered by Indicating he would
stick by proposals that the
players have ridiculed.
"W e're firm on the proposul.
but we arc willing to negotiate."
MacPhall said.
Miller said he would resign
unless the players repudiated a
projiosa] linking pension pay­
m en ts w ith su la ry c o n s id ­
era tio n s. F eh r b la sted the
owners for even making the
proposal.

Kelly Hartman

Sherry Adams

Tania Dias

Nicola Oadoury

Dana Moraech

L ew is

"W e told them that the effect
of this proposal is at the very
least to drive the parties further
apart," he said.

K it Foldesk

Sandy Adams

they provided some clutch hits
o ff the bench In the Metro
Tournament, which Seminole
won to qualify for reglonala.
While the defense Is expected
to keep the Hawks going strong,
offense Is something the team
has been working on In the two
weeks between the Metro and
regional tournaments.
"T h e last two weeks we've
been working really hard on
h ittin g." Rlsse said. " W e ’ ve

H andy Renteria

worked on hitting to the opposite
field and advancing runners so
maybe w e’ll be able to pick up
the extra run or two we'll need."
While the top three teams
from region go to nationals,
Rlsse and the Hawks have their
eyes on the regional champion­
ship.
“ We don't like to back Into
unythlng." Rlsse said. "W e're
going up there (Alabama) with
winning the whole thing In

Connie Bonaventure

mind."
Although winning the region
Is their goat, the Hawks will
settle for a top three finish and
the team's first berth In the
national tournament. Rlsse deft-'
nltely believes Seminole has the
talent to get there.
" T h i s Is d e f i n i t e l y th e
strongest team we've ever had
for this age group." Rlsse said.
"A n d Its one of the best I've ever
seen In this area.”

Fehr said he hud vlsllrd Shru
Stadium earlier Wednesday to
explain to New York Mets and
Montreal Expos players the
proposul presented Tuesday by
the owners. It coupled a $25
million pension offer with a $13
million salary increase limit,
" T h e p r o p o s a l p ro d u ced
a n ger: It p rod u ced solid ity
among the players." said Fehr.
" I f anything. It reinforced the
overwhelming Impression the
players have had for a long time
now. that Is, the owners are not
serious about trying to reach an
agreement."
MacPhad said he was not
surprised that the players re­
jected the owners' plan.

Pantelias Ranks Hersey, Hill A s Top
By Rob Laria
Special to tbs H trald
Jack Pantelias hasn't had things easy thr past
year. After getting a little help from Oviedo High
School's Howard Mable In the fall. Pantelias again
went It alone as Seminole Community College
baseball coach.
His team, ladened with good outfielders but
short on pitching, struggled for much o f the year.
Still tl won 28 games, but finished a game sway
from the state playoffs
Pantelias adm ittedly was worn out when
recruiting time arrived Additionally, he had to
combat a slow start, plus a problem most Junior
colleges face — lack o f money. So he shopped
around In his own backyard, but like in years
past most local players sought to leave home.
Seminole County had perhaps Its most abun
dam crop of quality players In recent memory.
Pantelias. though, could only sign two. Many of
the county a better piayrisarc still In high school.
Yet. these days he Isn't complaining. The two
he landed. Seminole High's James Hersey and
Lake Mary litgh 's Kevin Hill, fit his mold
perfectly. They have made lire effort worthwhile.

B aseball
" I would rate them at the top." he auid about
Hersey and HlU who are among thr best of his
eight signers.
Pantelias says he didn't necessarily seek tnc top
talented players, but Instead looks for prospects
with other qualities, too. "I look for a kid whose
wilting to pay the price and be successful In the
class and on the field. WcTe a school ffrst. then a
place to play baseball." he asserted. " I look for
attitude, then I look for talent. Players with
average talent, who bust their butt, can win.
Losing attitudes don't win."
He adds that often he'll keep six or seven
walk-ons among the some 60 who try out. He
tikes their type of attitude.
In Hersey and Hill, he insists he Iras gotten
«&gt;list t.i * « • after.
Hill. 16. was a Uuec-ycar starter for Lake Mary
at third base. Unassuming and hard-working, he
progressed each season for the Rams. He hopes to
continue that growth In the junior college

environment.
"Junior college would be the best thing for me.
At a major college I would have to watt. Now, I
might be able to play right aw ay." said Hill.
"Anyw ay, the (prol scouts recruit from the junior
colleges."
Hill culminated the vast development during
his Lake Mary career by batting .340 In 1985 and
helping his team to the Five Star Conference title.
Defensively, the 6-foot-3, 165-pounder made Just
four errors, one coming as a pitcher. Korn coach
Allen Tuttle calls him the finest third baseman
he's had. "H e's the best third baseman I've ever
been around." Tuttle said. "H e has a great arm
and great range. He's made unbelievable im ­
provement from the 10th grade to the 12th grade
— 100 percent — and lie's still getting better."
While Pantelias has high hopes for Hill, likewise
Hill ts impressed with his new coach. "H e
disciplines his players: I like that. From what t
know. If he sees you’re starting to develop some
bad habits, he'll try to stop them ." said Hill.
In Hersey. 18. Pantelias has another player
with demonstrated ability and enthusiasm, plus
loads of raw talent. Hersey was headed for the

Jam es Heresy
...raw talent

K eVm nU l

■golden glove

Army, where he had committed to last year, until
he found out baseball was no longer played there.
Under a special clause. If he received a college
scholarship he could be freed of his obligation. So
hr chose SCC.
Hersey told Pantelias he would like to catch. In
tact, wouldn't mind playing any of the nine
positions. Pantelias agrees Hersey has the talent
to do It. but will probably opt to utilize the

Bee PANTELIAS. Page 6A

�* A — E ve ning H e ra ld , Sanford. FI.

T h u rsd a y, Au p I, IMS

BASEBALL ROUNDUP
.•

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RESULTS

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Cubs Shake Slump, Batter Andujar
CHICAGO (IJl’ l) — The Cubs made n laugher of a
grim situation Wednesday night.
Chicago, loner of four of Its previous five games and
fading fast In the National League East, could not huvr
been thrilled about the prospect of facing first place SI.
Louis and Joaquin Andujar. seeking lo become the
major leagues* first 18-game winner. Th ry | k m i ruled
Andujar for four runs In the first Inning and cruised to
a 5-2 victory.
"That's whm makes the game so great, I guess,"
Cubs manager Jim Frey said. "Here we are, facing one
o f the treat pitchers In the major leagues, ami we gel
four In the first and beat him ."
Before Andujar. 17-5, could get an out. I tie Cubs had
reached him for four runs, three on a Gary Matthews
homer. Hay Fontenot, 4-5, allowed five tills through
seven innings iu help the Culm Leal Hit Cardinal* for
the first time In eight meetings this year. Lee Smith
earned his 23rd save,
"W e 'v e got to keep II going now," said Multhews,
who hit his seventh homer of the season Inin Hie teeth
of a 13-mph wind. "W e 'v e got to beat St. Louts and
New York and we'll be buck In It."

N .L . B a s e b a l l
Atlanta over San Diego Harper led ofT with a double off
reliever Tim Stoddard, I -6 Perry followed with the
game-winning single. Reliever Bruce Sutler. 7-4,
pitched two Innings for the victory.
A stro o B. Reds 2
At Cincinnati. Glenn Davis drove In four runs.
Including a three-run homer, and John Mlzrrock hit a
three-run double, powering Houston. Mike Scoll, 10-5,
Hit tils first major-league homer. Cincinnati's Pete Hose
was 2 for -t to move within 25 hits of breaking T y
Cobh's record for hits of 4,191.
Meta 8, Expos 2
At New York, Darryl Strawberry singled In the
game-winning run and Wally Hackman had two HUI.
helping the Mrts complete a three-game sweep. New
York finished July 21-7, lying a club mark for victories
In u month. Ed Lynch. 8-5, making his first start since
July 13. earned the victory.
P lr a t s s 4 , P h illie s 3

Brave* 8 ,Padres 4
At Atlanta, plnch-hltter Gerald I’crry singled home
Terry Harper with none out In the 10th Inning, lifting

At Pittsburgh, plnch-hltlrr Slrve Kemp singled home
pinch-runner Larry McWilliams with two out In the
bottom of the 10th to cap u two-run rally, enabling the
Pirates to snap u seven-game losing streak. Ceclllo

G ary M atthew a
...Pnnnits .Inannln

Dale M urphy
...B elts 27th

Guante. 3-3. was the winner. Kent Tekulve. 4-7. took
the loss.
Otanta 7, Dodgers 8
At lx&gt;s Angrlea, Jeff t,conard hit a pair o f homers und
Alex Trevlnb added a three-run shot lo power the
Giants lo victory. Bill Laskey, 5-11, allowrd six hits
and four runs over six Innings to notch his fourth
consecutive victory. Scott Garrelts relieved and
recorded his eighth save.

Tribe
Stops
Guidry
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Who la
the most damaging hitter In the
A m erican League when the
bases arc loaded?
Eddie Murray, good guess, but
go again.
George Brett, hey another nice
try, bul wrong.
How about Pat Tabler?
Pat who?
Well. New York's Ron Guidry
beat Murray's Orioles and Brett's
Royals during his personal 12g a m e w in n in g strea k . But
Wednesday night Tabler again
proved how destructive he can
be tn a bases-full situation when
he helped the Cleveland Indians
sn a p Y a n k e e le ft- h a n d e r
Guidry's string and beat New
York D-5.
Julio Franco singled in the
decisive run and Tabler knocked
out Guidry with a three-run
double In the seventh.
Tabler Is now 5-for-5 with 13
RBI In bsses-loaded situations
this season
" I Just feet more energy when
the bases are loa d ed ,” the
27-year-old first baseman said.
Tabler was the 16th player
token in the regular phase o f Hie
1976 June draft — by the
Yankees.
"That guy (Tabler) uaed to be
In our minor-league system."
said Lou Ptnlella. who haa been
the Yankees' manager while
B illy Martin rem ains hospi­
talized with a punctured right
lung. "H e can hit. And this
Waddell guy can pitch. They
wrecked us this time."
Waddell, 5-5. allowed two runs
on five hits over six Innings In
his first major league start after
97 relief appearances In a twoyear career. Jamie Easterly and
Rich Thompson, who notched
hla fourth save, combined with
Waddell to help send Guidry to
hla first loss since April 29.
"I'm not going lo talk much,"
sold Guidry, who hid out tn the
ofT-llmIta trainer's room after the
gam e. " I didn't pitch w ell.
That’s obvious.
"T h e y hit me well. That's
obvious."
Guidry won 13 straight games
In his phenomenal 25-3 Cy Yong
Award winning season of 1978.
M suiasrs 12, Twins 8

Basketball Gold Game Highlights Sporst Festival
11ATON HOLJGE, Lo. (UPI) When the basketball gold medal
was contested al the National
S p orts F e s llv a l W ed n esd a y
night, the effort put forth was
w o r th y o f th e O ly m p ic s
themselves.
In one of the highlights of this
or any other Sports Festival,
basketball teams representing
the North and South produced
Hie kind of moves seen In the
NBA and Hie kind of Intrnslty
displayed In the NCAA finals.

" I t w as o n e trem en d ou s
haskrlhall gam e," said South
couch Davey Whitney of Alcorn
State, whose club fell (o the
North. 81-77.
"T h e other tram playrd with a
Hitler more Inlrnslly. When you
play Ihr way they did. the rod
result Is you are going lo get
bent."

Young To Be
In Tampa Friday
TAM PA, Flu. (UPI) - The
Tutnpu Bay Buccaneers will
h a ve II,S. F ootb a ll L ea gu e
quarterback In town Friday to
undergo u physical and perhaps
throw a few itasnes for coach
Leemun Brunet I.
The learn announced Wed­
nesday Young and his agent,
la-lgh Slrlutw-rg, would hr com ­
ing to Tampa wilt) the consent of
Itie USFL
Phil Krueger, assistant to
owner Hugh Culvcrhouse. said
Young, who signed a contract
with the law Angeles Express
worth u reported 840 million
after graduating from Hrlgham
Young, will la- looking over the
city.
"S ieve Young will he here

LSU).

No mailer what Hie category,
h o w e v e r, th e N orth squud
coached by Kansas' Larry Brown
had Just a little till more.

F estival
Itro w n a n d W h it n e y did
s p le n d id c o a c h in g Jobs In
bringing together two cohesive
(earns In a short period of time
and In the final giime of Ihr
S p o r ts F e s tiv a l b a s k e tb a ll
'tournament the showcased stars
turnrd out to be Danny Manning
(who plays (or Brown al Kansas)
and John Williams (who plays al

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TamjMi over, und we're going lo
look him o ver," Krueger said.
"T h rrr will I k - u physical exam
Involved. As far as him throwing
a few |&gt;assrs, there may Ih- a
|M&gt;sslhlllty, we haven't derided
yet."
Krueger said belore Young
threw a puss (or Ihr Hues, the
trum would havr lo buy an
In su ra n ce p o lic y lo gu a rd
ugulnst Injury.
"Th ere are Insurance polities,
mil very expensive, that can be
l&gt;oughi lo cover that," he said.

...Pontelias
C o a tia a s d from BA
powerfully built 6-ftrot-2. 203-pounder on the
mound, where hr was 3-7 iaal year with a 4 20
ERA. or In (he outfield.
Heraey has that kind ol potential. "W e ’ ll need
four or five slurtrm next year, so I'll probably use
trim as a pitcher. W e've gol a lot o f goiMl
oulllcldcrut tailing back," FarilelUssuld. "1 might
move him to the outllcld Ihr next year."
H en ry doesn't curr where he plays as long as It
Is between the white lines. "1 Just want to play
and if I play up to my potential I could be on a
minor league team In two y e a n ." he said
Hla high school coach. Mike Ferrell, agree*
H en ry has that chance. "H r might lx- one of
(hoar guys who become even belter when they
leave high school. I think hr lus Ills best yean In
front of him. He's an athlete who can haa an arm.
Is fast and can h it." said Ferrell "And James
gives 100 percent; he's gut that going for him "

With basketball, swim m ing
and iruck and field completed at
the Festival, the two glamour
sports remaining are boxing and
gymnastics.

SCOREBOARD
M

F o o t b a ll

W illia m s , a bu lky p o w e r
forward blessed with quickness
and speed, scored 28 points In u
losing effort Wednesday night.
Manning scored 19 and made
the key plays down the stretch
that preserved I hr North's lead
und the win.

Both of those begin tonight
with a dozen semifinal boxing
matches scheduled along with
I he men's team and ull-around
competition In gym nasi Ics.
In other action Wednesday
night!
Ella VUchr of Hayward. Calif.,
completed the Festival's softball
tournament by pitching 57 con­
secutive scoreless Innings. She
threw a two-hlttcr Wednesday
evening In shutlng out the East
tram and bringing the North a
24) gold medal victory.

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Hersey has lolly goals, for Instance, to even­
tually but .500. lots! year he hatlrd .300 bul
Insisted he could achieve the higher mark If he
doesn'l chusr Dad pilches.
As for next year, he wants *o hit u( least .351.'
while winning five games and stealing 25 hoses
With the Increased level ol play, he's confident he
could do It.
"T h e better the players are. the heller I play."
he suld. I like compel It Ion. I need somebody to
push m e."
Funtrllas knows he will tie given that push, but
Is quick to point out success won't come loo easy.
"A super kid ts going to need all o f the fall und
part of the spring tn feel conlortablc and adjust."
tie said.
He rrralls u star pupil ol hla once needed six or
seven months to assert himself. That player, lkih
Barker ol Maitland, moved on to M i s s i s s i p p i State
Univeiaity and now siarta for the Osceola Astros,
a Class A ulllllutr of the Houston Astros.
"A s good as they arc they have to work Into the
situation.
Pantrllus said. "It's not like their
going to come In and blow everybody aw ay."
He likes what hr sees In Hersey and Hill,
though.

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A O IN O A
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A U O U I T 14. I N I
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S E M IM O L l CO U NTY
BOARD OF
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B V i H O G tR P tR H A .
C H A IR M A N
P u B tlth A u g u tl I. I M )
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and

Gorman Thomas each hit their
23rd homers to power the Mari­
ners. Jim Beattie. 4-5. and Frank
Wills combined on a four-hitter.
Wllla notched hla first save.
John Butcher dropped to 8 -10,
Rajrali 8, Tigers 2
At D etroit, S teve Balhonl
cracked a tie-breaking three-run
homer with one out In the ninth
lo lead the Royals. Balbonl tied a
club record with his fourth
homer In four games. He has 21
on the year and six In the last
seven games. Dan Qulsenberry
notched hla 24th save.
n r t w c r i 8, Rangers 2
Al Milwaukee. Bill Schroeder
cracked a two-run homer and
Ben Oglivtc doubled and singled
to lift the B rew ers. J a im e
Cocanower, 2*1, scattered nine
hits In going the distance for the
first time this season. Mike
Mason. 5-10, look the loss.
Bine Jays 8, Orioles 2
At Baltimore. Jcsae Barfield
hit two home runs and George
B e ll a n d R a n e e M u llln lk s
cracked solo shots, lifting the
Blue Jays to their 10th victory tn
their Iasi 11 games, Bartleld hit
b o t h h o m e r s o f f D e n n is
Martinez, 7-7. Tom Henke. 2-0,
was the winner.
Angala 8. A 's 8
At Oakland. Calif., Bob Boone
an d R o d C a re w d e liv e r e d
etghth-lnntng RBI singles to
b r e a k a 4 4 tie a n d R on
Romanlck. 13-4, pitched a fivehitter over 8 1-3 Innings, helping
California break Ita five-game
losing streak. Carew now has
2.994 hits and needs six to
become the 16th man to reach
3.000.

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U N T ,
‘ E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC c A L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
7 L O R IO A
CASE NO B I M ) C A 4 4 P
IN R E
T H E M A R R IA G E 0 7
K A T H Y L Y N N S M IT H .
P o tiiK m w 'W lta .
D A N I E L L L O Y D S M IT H .

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�T hu rsda y. Aug. I. I t t S — 7A

E v e n in g H e rald. Sanford. FI.

SPO RTS
IN BRIEF
Ivan Upset O f Turnbull
Highlights Early Play
MANHATTAN BEACH. Calif. (UPI) - Anna Ivan, a
Stanford sophomore with "nothing to lose.*' upset Wendy
Turnbull 6-2. 4-6. 6-3 Wednesday to highlight early play at
a $250,000 remit? tournament.
No. 9 Bettitu Bunge of Monte Carlo routed Japan s
Etsuko Anlou 6-0. 6-3 In the second round and No. 10
Sylvia Hanlka of West Germany beat Susan Mascartn 2-6.
6-2.7-617-5).
The event Is sponsored by Virginia Slims.
Ivan. 19. surprised Turnbull, the No. 6 seed. The
32-year-old Australian Is ranked ninth In the world.
" I went out there with nothing to lose.*' said Ivan, ranked
189th In the world. "M y passing shots worked well today.
These are my Idols. I see them on TV. I hope I play well. If 1
lose love and love and I play well. I'll be happy.**
Top seeded liana Manllkova of Czechoslovakia was to
play her second-round match Wednesday night against
Debbie Spence. No. 8 C aring Bassett took on Tina
Mochlzukl In the final match of thf evening.

Watson Wants Western Again
OAKDROOK. 111. (UPI) — Tom Wataon's last great
moment w^s the three-hole playoff tliat decided the 1984
Western Open.
Watson beat Greg Norman with a birdie on the third
playoff hole to win his third tournament o f 1984. It was his
last championship o f the year and he has yet to win In
1985. So. the final hole of the Western has stuck In his
mind.
"1 had a 25-foot putt and when I hit It. I knew It was ln.“
Watson said Wednesday before the pro-am. "1 didn’t miss a
makeable putt all day."
Watson had a little of that magic back later Wednesday.
He shot a 3-under par 69 to finish as the low pro In the
pre-Open contest.
Watson says the Butler National course, site of the
82-year-old Western since the course was opened 12 years
ago. brings out the best In his game, and he could use that
help.
"M y game Is still In a state of dux." he said. " I didn't
play well In the British Open. 1 drove the ball poorly and
putted poorly. But I'm hitting the ball a lot better and
looking forward to the tournament."

Williams G ranted Delay In Trial
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Former Tulane University
basketball standout John "H ot Rod" Williams has been
granted a week delay In the point shaving trial that was to
begin Monday.
The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday
afternoon that the trial should be postponed seven days so
Williams' attorneys could study records revealed last week
and Information the court earlier Wednesday ordered
prosecutors to release.
That Information Included names of those Involved In the
sports bribery scandal but who never were Indicted.
The appeals court decided, however, that Williams —
who Is charged with two counts of sports bribery and three
counts of conspiracy to commit sports bribery — may not
IX
• r e s i x (M tg ra ol lfM I 7 --page
police report on lire case.

Rain Revives Anglers' Bites
Water makes everything grow, right?
Even the fish supply.
Dell Abemethy. owner of the Osteen
Bridge Fish Camp, said the afternoon
showers have been Just what the fisherman
ordered when It comes to reviving what has
been a dry past few months for local
anglers
"T h e bass and speck fishing has really
picked up the last week, thanks to the
afternoon showers." said Abemethy W ed­
nesday. "L et's not the rain keeps coming.
We could use a lot m ore."
Abemethy went on to point out that
success In pulling the big ones out of the St.
Johns River and Lake Monroe is sometimes
directly related to the water level.
"T h e water level (In the river) has picked
up six Inches In the last couple of w eeks."
said Abemethy. "W e 'v e had some people
bring In some nice big catfish and some
nlce-slied bream and specks the past
week."
Apopka's Jim Kremer caught 40 specks
last week. Son rn io's Keith and Wava Wild
also caught a nice batch of catfish and
bream. The Wilds used worms
Abemethy said the water level was still a
foot and one-half low and hr expected the
fishing would become even better with more
rain.

In other action, the commission reconsid­
ered regulation of grouper and snapper, and
voted to prohibit the use of sink gill nets to
take grouper and snapper

Larry
Williams

In 1981 the Florida Game A Fresh Water
Fish Commission began an experimental
alligator harvesting program on Orange.
Lochloosa. and Newnans lakes In northcentral Florida. The commission's goal was
to determine to what extent a given alligator
imputation could sustain a limited annual
harvest,
This program Is being expanded to six
additional public lakes Lakes being added
to the program this year Include George.
Hancock. TrafTord. Mlccosukee. lamonla.
and Oklawaha (Rodman Kesevolr).
Persons Interested In participating In the
experimental harvest must meet specific
qualifications. They must reside within a
15-mlle radius o f the center of the lake.
They must have access lo approved HRS
meat processing facilities. They must be 18
years of age or older and they must have the
equipment and knowledge to harvest
alligators.
Fur additional Information, contact the
commission's regional office In Ocala at
I 800 342 9002.

f is h in o /

HUNTING
W RITER

The Marine Fisheries Commission voted
on an Initial policy decision In establish size
limits for sea trout, and agreed to develop
further management measures In the near

future

A 12-Inch minimum size limit for sea
trout Is to be set In northwest Florida, and a
14 inch minimum size limit In all other
state waters.
For Spanish mackerel, the commission
voted to set a minimum mesh size o f 3 ^
Inches stretched mesh on gill nets on the
east coast of Florida from Nov. 15 through
March 15. However, there would be no
change established In the cxWtlng size limit
o f 12 Inches fork length for mackerel caught
by hook and line.

Polo G e n ie Runs
To Derby Crown

D silgns4 and sn g ln ssrsd for a sm ooth rids and long
m llssg s Llfs s a v s r XLM* w hltow all.

^ G o o d ric h
MB

BFG

Don Taylor doesn't look like he
lias the world by the tall, but you
Dogs
can believe that after his 3/8th
Derby victory, one of his star
greyhounds Polo Genie, he Is on
d o lla r. DJ R ou ghn eck and
top of the world.
Taylor's son Mike has been Sandman Pete plus Red Varmint
heard to say If W yldc Show Biz and Tour Dc Force made up the
can't. Polo Genie can. And the rest of the field, with Tour De
young man's words were spoken Force bring the long shot at
like a prophet and those who 27 60 on thr dollar.
believed did really well on Sat­ Wayne Strong who owned two
urday Night. July 20th. 1985 as entry's found his Sandman Pete
Polo Genie took thr measure of breaking first with rail runner
seven other greyhounds and Red Varmint following him out
won the Seminole 3/8ths Derby Just u step behind them was l)J
by four and half lengths
Roughneck and Super Klown.
The leading point getter for the
T
h e y Jockeyed for p osition
Derby Final was Super Klown
who has the early speed unit uround the first and second
once on top she Is hard to catch. turns and by the 1/8 pole. IXJ
She was the Derby favorite going Roughneck had taken a slight
off at 1.60 on the dollar. Genie lead over Super Klown wl|h Miss
was the second favorite at 1.90 Dreammnker making her pre­
on the dollar. Miss Dreamtnaker sence felt. At this point In the
who had won three 3/8ths races race Polo Genic layed fourth and
nut of the eight box was third In wus In her favorite position of
the wagering at 5.00 on the bring on the outside.

4 WHEEL M A K E JOB

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The Vero Beach Dodgers broke loose for four runs In the
top of the ninth Inning Wednesday en route to a 4-1 victory
over the Osceola Astros Florida State League action at
Osceola County Stadium.
Osceola broke a scoreless tic in the bottom of the fourth
on Tom Job's RBI single. Osceola starter Bill Cash had the
Dodges shutout through eight frames but couldn’t hold on
In the ninth as Vero Beach scored four times.
The Astros maintain a 3Vt game lead over Winter Haven
In the Central Division. Osceola hosts Vero Beach again
tonight at 7:30.
Maitland's Bob Parker was 1 for 5 for the Astros.

The Justus Aquatic Center Masters Swimming Program
for swimmers ages 19-99 la becoming more popular under
the Instruction of coach Larry Peck. The swimmers have
access to the Aquatic Center's underwater observation
rooms, video cameras, underwater mirrors and freewelght
room.
Justus Aquatic Center masters train from 6 30 to 8 p in.,
Monday through Thursday In the Aquatic Center's 50
meter Olympic pool. The montly fee of $30 Includes
soachlng. pool use and equipment.
For more Information, contact coach Peck at the Aquatic
Center at 345-0505.

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33INDI

LO W . L0\

Change For Brantley Physicals
The dates on the Lake Brantley High School football
physicals have been changed. Patriot coach Fred Almon
announced Wednesday.
The varsity physicals will be given at 6 p.m Wednesday
at the school gym. The Junior varsity and freshman
physicals will be given Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the gym.
Practice begins Thursday. Aug. 15.

N ew Conference Seeks Logo
The new Seminole Athletic Conference Is looking for a
logo and Is asking the public for Its Input. The winning
entry for the SAC logo will receive two free conference
passes which will be good for one year and for all athletic
events.
Entries must be post marked by Aug 15. Fend entries to
Don Reynolds. Lake Mary High School. Longwood Lakr
Mary Road. Lake Mary. 32746.

Castrol
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A lt t m a t o r
With intern* Begmator
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good tnrougn August*. 1964

APOPKA

LEESBURG

ORLANDO

ORLANDO

MT. DORA

WINTER OAROEN

SANFORD

123 W M*n St
BB4-BB20

BIB South 14th St
326-2460

1311 Fwrttsnki A in
at Edgewsisr Dr
•2$-6790

4060 O n
Mj
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Golden Triangle Clr
3B3-B13S

West OrengB Shopping Csnisr
406 South DUMrd St
177-2661

605 W 25th S&lt;
323-4470
C M A tu a v

A m i *!

7 DAYS A WKEKa

Wt H S U V t T * BCHT TO UMTT QUANTUM

. I

�• A — E v e n in g H e ra ld , Sanlord, FI.

Wife's Phone Pal Is Wrong Number

T h u rsd a y, Aug 1. IMS

VS/ORLD

DEAR ABBY: Several months
ago I dialed a wrong number and
found myself talking to a man
wllh a great voice and charming
manner o f speaking. (I ll call him
H.) He must have liked my voice,
loo. because we covered many
mutual Interests. Our conversa­
tion ranged from serious to
hilarious. I told H. my real name
and he told me his. and we
exchanged telephone numbers.
Now we call each other once or
twice a week to chat.
I am married with children,
which I told H. right off the bat.
H e ’ s d i v o r c e d and has a
girlfriend. (We are the same age.)
I told my husband about our
telephone conversation, and also
that I have no Intentions o f
m e e tin g the man. so lt Is
perfectly harmless.
My husband believes that even
(hough I have no Intentions of
meeting H.. J am out of line to
pursue this irlephonr friendship
In tact, he has asked me to
discontinue It. My husband has
no reason to mistrust me. but I
agreed to go along with his
wishes In order to prevent a rift

IN BRIEF

Israelis Demand Revenge
For Antt-Jowlsh Killings
AFULA. Israel (UP1| — Police dispersed hundreds of
Israelis who gathered at a police station to demand
vengeance for the slayings o f 17 Jews by Arab assailants
during the past 15 months.
At the funeral Wednesday of ihe latest victim — the third
Jew slain In a week — ma.iy of the 3,000 mourners carried
signs proclaiming: “ Death to terrorists".
Albert Duchris was shot In the back Tuesday as he
shopped on a street In Nablus on the occupied West Bank.
Cabinet Minister Ariel Sharon, representing the govern­
ment. told mourners Israel had reached the limits o f Its
patience.
“ There's a way lo make sure Jews aren’t killed." said
Sharon. " I give n lasi-minute warning to all those who
amuse themselves with PLO-style dreams: this Is the outer
limit of our patience."
Hours later, the Israeli parliament passed legislation
barring parlies with racist platforms from participating In
e!»etlon».
Parliament members said the bill was written to block
radical rabbi Meir Kahnne, who advocates ihe expulsion of
all Arabs from Israel, from running for another term In the
parliament.

...Sting

Guns Silent; Parliament M eets

Continued from page 1A

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - The Green Line battlefront
dividing Christian eusl Beirut from the Mos'-tn west was
quiet today for the first lime In three days and members of
Parliament raced lo arrange a meeting during the lull In
fighting.
Officials said that. If the calm continued. Parliament
would meet today at Its battle-scarred temporary chambers
at Villa Mansour — on the Green Line — to vote on the
nation's 1085 budget. I* would mark Parliament's first
major action since October 1084.
In southern Lebanon, a pro-Syrian suicide car bomber
rleionated his vehicle Inside Israel's so-called "security
belt" Wednesday, killing himself and u Lebanese civilian
and wounding two Isruell soldiers, the Israeli military said.
The Syrian Popular National Party claimed responsibility
for the blast and said at least 25 Israeli soldiers were killed
by the bomber. II Identified the bomber as a 22-year-old
student.

T h ey arc scheduled lo be
brought to Orlando for trial.
The FBI Is seeking Charles St,
Clair, 54. of Grenada Hills. Ca..
who Is believed lo be out of ihe
United Stales.
The arrests follow a Joint efTort
by the FBI and Ihe U.S. Customs
Service. Also Involved In ihe
Investigation were the Criminal
Investigation Command of the
U.S. Arm y the Office of Special
Investigations of (he U.S. Air
Force and ihe U.S. Attorney's
Office In Orlando.
If convicted, the maximum
penalty Ihe suspects could re­
ceive Is a *10,000 fine and five
years In prison.
In Ihe undercover sling opera­
tion. agent Richard Wllkowskl's
pul out the word he had missiles
for sale and enticed Ihe suspects
to come to Orlando to complete
Ihe deals. The operullon began
In March.
At a press conference this
morning the FBI displayed a

Uganda Gets New Civilian Leader
KAMPALA. Uganda (UPI) — The vice president and
defense minister In the government of deposed President
Milton Obolr wus sworn In today us prime minister to head
Uganda's Interim civilian Cabinet.
Pauto Muwanga. who wna second In command In the
former government, look the oath of office amid reports
thul soldiers loyal to Obotc had massed In the expresident's hometown of Lira In central Uganda.
There a!v" were growing reports of violent reprisals
against supjtoriers of Obotc'a Ugandan Peoples Congress
parly.
The new mllllary government has threatened to take
strong measures ugalnst looters and murderers seeking to
even acorca with Obotc followers.
The ruling Military Council, headed by Lt. Gen. Tito
Okrllo. has promised elections in a year and has said the
civilian Cabinet will run the government lit the interim.

...Start
C o n tin u e d fro m page 1A

------------------------C o rre ctio n -----------------------In today's quilting tabloid. It
wus Incorrectly r e t r ie d that the
Longwood Motel was built In
1081. It was Ihe Browser's Barn

nearby thut was built that year,
The hotel was built In the early
lBHOs and opened lit IHHS.

WEATHER
AR E A FO R E C A ST! Today
purliy cloudy. Scattered alter*
noon thunderstorms. High low
to mid 00s. Light southwest
wind. Wuln chance 50 percent.
T o n ig h t and F rid a y p a rtly
cloudy. Scattered mainly after­
n oon and e v e n in g lh u n dr rat onus. Low lit the low to mid
70s High low to mid lK&gt;s. Light
wind tonight uud southwest 5 to
10 inph Friday. Kuln chance 20
prrrcnl tonight and 40 percent
Friday.
N A T IO N A L REPORT!
Eastern storms that knocked out
p o w e r w it h lo r n u does In
Philadelphia and crltlcully In­
jured a Pennsylvania workman
with high winds soaked New
England tod a y, th rea ten in g
flooding with up In 4 Inches of
rain In the Boston urra Rain
deluged Ihe Plains, wllh (By
inches fulling during u 73rnlnule period In Nebruaku
Wednesday ntght. Storms ulso
doused the Pacific Northwest
and the m o u n ta in s o f the
Southwest, prompting « flash
Hood wutch in Arizona. Flash
flood warnings were Issued to­
day In the Massachusetts coun­
ties o f M id d le s e x . S u ffo lk ,
Norfolk. Bristol and Plymouth.
East Boston, Mass., received
4.15 Inches o f rain, with 2
Inches falling in one hour, in
eastern Pennsylvania Wednes­
day, u sm all plane crashed
d u r in g a sto rm In L e h ig h
County, killing the pilot, who
was Ihe only person aboard.
Officials, however, would not say
whether the accident was caused
by Ihe wrathcr. Tw o roost ruc­

tion workers were Injured, one
critically, when high winds or a
tornado blew over a home being
built In Manhelm. Pa., oldclals
said The crillcully Injured man
won (rapped by the debris and
had to Ire rescued. The Nutlonal
W e a th e r S e r v ic e sa id tw o
tornudoes touched dow n In
Philadelphia, downing trees,
telephone poles and (rower lines.

rsatt

p u t b t lumtori of

More than 750 graduates will
lie awarded degrees Friday dur­
ing summer commencement at
Ihe University of Central Florida.
As In the past, (here will be
two ceremonies — at I and 4
p.m. — In the UCF gymnasium,
Speakers for the occasion will
lx* Dr. Luis M, Perez. Sanford
physician and president of the
Florida Medical Association, and
Winter Park contractor A lim
Trovllllon. who has long been
associated wllh the university.

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If convicted, the conspirators
fare a *10,(XX) tine and up to five
years In prison.

Graduates In the Colleges of
Arts and Sciences. Education.
Health.und I.Hk t .il Studies will
hear Perez at the 1 p.m ceremo­
ny. Trovllllon will speak lo thosc
In Business Administration and
Engineering
Families and gursis of gmdu
ales should arrive In time to be
seated 15 minutes before the
scheduled starting times. Park­
ing ureas will tie designated and
UCF police will lie on hand for
assist uncr.

DEAR ABBT: You will proba­
bly not print what I have to say.
but at least I will get this off my
chest.
Before I read my newspaper. I
put on a pair of rubber gloves
and a plastic apron, as Ihe black
Ink comes off onto my bands
and the garment I'm wearing.
Needless to say. this Is not very
comfortable, but It's necessary.
I am enclosing a pair o f new
rubber gloves to show you the
condition they are In after read­
ing my newspaper. The apron la
D E A R S O U N D S : I f y ou r the same condition. Filthy!
high-pitched voice Is not due lo
C an 't so m eth in g be done
some physical abnormality, a about this?
voice coach may be able to help.
FILTHY FINGERS
Or contact the National Asaocla
tlon for Hearing and Speech
D EAR F IL T H Y FINGERS:
Action. 10801 Rockville Pike. Perhaps If enough readers In­
Rockville Md. ?OR52 The mil- quire about It. some action will
free number Is (800) 638-8255: be laken or some answers pro­
In Maryland, call (301) 897- vided. In the meantime. I don't
8682. The above agency can want to Initiate a smear cam ­
provide you wllh Ihe name of a paign concerning this annoying
certified profesalnal In your area and common problem.

Persian Gulf neighbor Iraq since
September 1980. with fighting
concentrated along their 733mtle border and spilling over
Imo missile at Licks on vessels
carrying oil from one another's
Gulf ports.
Iran began the war nearly five
years a g o w ith a stock o f
s o p h is tic a te d U.S. m ilita ry
equipment obtained before the
Is la m ic r e v o lu t io n th a t
overth rew Shah Mohammed
Reza Pahlavl in 1979. At that
time Iran claimed to have 1.985
O f f i c i a l s su ld g u id a n c e
tanks and 447 combat aircraft.
systems for the Phoenix, an
I n c lu d in g s u c h h ig h alr-to-alr missile, are missing
performance U.S. planes as F-4s,
and authorities In San Diego said
F-5sand F- 14s
It would be a breach of national
The United Stales Imposed an
securily If they reached Iran.
embargo on spare parts to Iran
Many If not all of the missiles after Ayatollah Rnhollah Kho­
involved could be useful to Iran meini's government look Am eri­
In Us war against Iraq.
can diplomats hostage In Nov­
Iran has been at war with Its ember 1979.

The sting was unrelated to a
similar operation In San Diego.
Earlier this year, seven people
were Indicted on charges of
stealing various putts for the
F-14 and Phoenix missile from
the USS Kitty Hawk and shore
Installations In San Diego. The
stolen parts were shipped from
San Diego and Loa Angeles by
commercial routes to New York
where they were forwarded to an
Iranian In London who sent
them lo Iran.

...Strike
Continued from page IA
At a solemn ceremony mark­
ing the return of the bodies of
the fou r Marines Ju n e 22.
Reagan declared: "T h ey say the
inen who murdered these sons of
Am erica escaped and disap­
peared Into the clly streets.
"But I pledge to you today,
they will not evade Justice on
Earth any more than they can
escape the Judgment o f God. We
and the Salvadoran leaders wilt
move any mountain and ford
any river lo find the Jackals and

...Arrest
Continued from page 1A
s p o k e s m e n lor Ih e fe d e ra l
marshals und a m agistrates'
representative said they had not
received a report on Ihe case
early today

bring them and their colleagues
In terror to Justice. "
On July 19. the admlnLstratlon
announced a reward of up to
$ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 fo r " In fo r m a t io n
leading to the effective prosecu­
tion and punishment" of those
responsible for the killing o f the
M arines and tw o A m erican
businessmen.
From the outset, however, the
White House ruled out the use of
military force by the United
States. Administration officials
stressed that the Salvadoran
military was capable of con­
ducting any such raids against
(hr guerrillas.

According to sherttt's deputies.
Baker lives on Maureen Drive,
wcsl of Sanford. A representative
of Driftwood Vlltage sold Baker
has had an olTlce there for about
18 months She was unaware of
his arrest and expressed surprise
that he reportedly had been
linked to illegal pornography.
— Susan Loden

INJURED?
AllTO ACCIDENT • ON JOB INJURY •
NECK OR BACK PAINS • HEADACHES •

call

322-4762

WOODALL &amp; CUNNINGHAM
CHIROPRACTORS

F U M R A l HOML'Cf UTTERV
as immtt a 1 * 1*1 m *
l***4 t m t l H * (Mb

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441 Al Restart *4.

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1

a restaurant supply company
und a i nr miter of Ihe Congrega­
tion of Libreral Judaism.
Survivors Include his wife.
Carol: son. Steven; daughter.
Slacey. all of Longwood. parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rosenthal.
Lau d erd a le L a k es; brother.
Allen, Hollywood. Fla,
Beth Shalom-Goldstein Memo­
rial Chapel, Orlando. Is In charge
of funeral arrangements
THOMAS L. OttBURN
Mr. Thomas L. Osbum. 86. of
84 Paddock Court. Sanford, died
Tuesday. Born June 16, 1899 In
Licking County. Ohio, he moved
to Sanford from Climax. Mich. In
1981. He was a retired trimmer
at a paper m ill and was a
m em ber o f the Seventh-day
Adventist Church. Sanford.
Survivora Include his wife.
Mary A.; son, Elmer J.. Portage.
Mich.; three grandchildren, two
great-grandchildren.
Bald w in -F a irch ild Funeral
Hornet Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

M on. Thru Frl. (9-12)-(2-6) Sol. (9-1)
IO U * TMJtllMMt M i l M O* U Ttll O t HO COM
to 10U m iCCOMDAMCI M L 1H» H U M 04
TOV* MtUMAMM 4QUCT

TOTAL INSURANCE
REM EM BER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SER V ES YOU F IR S T

T] ^

CSSS

■ U n iM U tU lT I

^ r w w c r &gt; f o r All OnMsiuns

OAKLAWN

14

____

After his nrrrst. Gillespie was
taken lo the Fairfax County
D eten tion C en ter and then
turned over to U.S. Marshals, a
detention center employee said.
He Is an artillery specialist
who did two years of active duly
In the Vietnam War.

who deals with tne causes ol
abnormal speech and how to
correct It If possible.

1400 PARK AVI., SANFORD. FI.
HELEN I. AABERO
Mrs. Helen I. Aaberg. 62. of
1873 Fayetteville Avc.. Deltona,
died Tuesday at her home. Bom
July 24, 1923 In Toms River,
N.J., she moved to Deltona from
there In 1981, She was a
member of Deltona Hills Golf
and Country Club und the New
Jersey Club o f Detlona.
S h e Is s u r v iv e d by h e r
husband. Vendel E.; daughter.
W endelyn Lantz. Longwood;
m oth er, G u n h llda Im sland.
Oxnard. Calif.; brother. Paul
Imsland, Linden. N.J.; staler
A m u Reich. Oxnard. Calif.; and
two grandchildren.
A lle n -S u m m e rh lll Funeral
Home. Orange City. In charge of
funeral arrangements
HOW ARD R. ROSENTHAL
Mr. Howard R. Rosenthal. 39.
of 331 W. Hornbeam Drive.
Longwood. died Wednesday at
his home Bom Sept 12. 1945 In
Lyn n . M ass., he m oved to
Longwood from Miami In 1968.
He was a sales representative for

B O A TIN G FORECAST: St.
Augustine to Jupiter Inlet out 50
miles — Wind vartuble 5 to 10
knots through tonight except
onshore sea breezes around 10
knots during the afternoon.
Wind Friday southweat near 10
knola. Sea 2 feet or leaa. Widely
scuilered thunderstorms near
the coast,
EX TEND ED PORBCABTt
Friday through Sunday — Partly
cloudy. Chance of mainly af­
tern oon and e v e n in g th u n ­
derstorms more likely north
purt. Illghs upper 80a to lower
90s. Lows moctly In the 70a.

MCA

Gillespie, who has been In the
Arm y since he was 17 and
ullrndcd West Point, told the
FBI he planned lo retire this year
and go Into International amts
sales. Ihe affidavit said.

AREA DEATHS

P R I D A T T ID E S : D a y to n a
Baach: highs. 10:01 a.m.. 10:27
p m .: lows. 3:45 a m.. 3:47 p.m.;
Port Canaveral! highs. 9:33
u.m.. 10:19 p.m.; lows. 3:36
u.m.. 3:38 p.m.: Bayport: highs.
3:22 a.m., 3:41 p.m.; lows, 8:50
urn.. 0:50 p.m.

UH
v*

TOW mlssle and a surveillance
camera al Ihe Federal Building
In Orlando, which Tampa FBI
agent Dick Ross said the sus­
pects bad seen and handled
when shopping for Ihe missies.
The FBI Is recommending no
bond for ihe suspects because o(
Ihe serious allegations and (he
suspects' connections lo other
countries.
Ross said the suspects hud u
shopping list which Included
114 thousand TO W missies a I a
cost of *10 million. They also
wanted lo buy ten F4 engines, a
m o b ile h o s p ita l and oth er
equipment.
U.S. Magistrate Donald Paul
Dietrich will preside over today's
nrralnmenls.

Dr. Perez To Speak At
UCF Summer Graduation

A R E A READINOS (0 a.m.):
temjrerature: 76; overnight low;
70; W e d n e sd a y 's h igh : 95;
barometric pressure: 30.07; rela­
tiv e h u m id ity; 84 percen t;
winds: southeast at U mph; rain:
.13 Inch; sunrise: 6 4 7 u.m.,
sunset 8:16 p.m.

A I t fM ..................
Pin Prufr# ti . . .......
f r •*dom iA tingt

DEAR W AITING : I do not
blame your husband for resent­
ing Ihe telephone conversations
between you and H. Nor do I
fault him for requesting that
they be d iscon tin u ed . How
would you feel If your husband
became charmed by a woman
wllh a great telephone voice, and
he conllnued In call her and
receive calls from her?
The most honorable people
encounter enough temptations
accidentally. Why look for trou­
ble?

positions," Bovlo said. "It's un­
In u statement. FBI Director
likely II will be the kind o f
money available lo teachers in William Webster said, "Federal
Investigative agencies aic con­
I hr school system,"
stantly alert for plots to transfer
The Head Start program was
U.S. technology and arms In
operated here by Sem in ole
violation of our laws
Community Action for 17 years
" W e w ill pu rsu e w ithout
until Ihe agency. In late July,
voted lo disband after funding ceasing such Illegal activities to
for Ihe program under their ensure that vtolutim urc brought
auspices was denied.
before the bar o f Ju stice."
—Donna Eatea Webster said.

STOCKS
Vl* Nsl.ansl AuocW 'Mn *f S*« wrriwt 0*of*r I
Sr* r«sr*Mnf«f. v* ln*r itot+r
sa of
m W fnsnw W **A*r Infer 4M4*e m srta fi
cfiww* M rw vfH xf m* a*r X r« *t ss oof

In our relationship. I believe 1
have done nothing wrong and
It’s unfair of him to deny me ihe
pleasure of talking lo H.
What do you think?
W A IT IN G TO HEAR

DEAR ABBY: I’m a 30-ycarold man with a problem that
seems to be getting worse as
lim e goes by.
The problem Is m y voice. I
sound like a woman. I'm so tired
of people thinking (and asking 10
I'm gay. I make a conscious
effort lo lower my voice when I
talk, but that doesn't seem to
help. I would even undergo
su rgery to low er this highpitched voice If I had to.
1 am at the end of my rope.
Please help me.
BOUNDS LIKE A GIRL

122424J
St»fU* »**

(H o llin s

fittS .**. 3231204

IN ftU R A N C I A M N C T r r
413 W. First SL
PR. 122-5742
W ar*
William H. “Bill" Wight C.P.C.U.
Q*r*ld W. Mayor
Prasldanl
Account R*pr*a«ntiUv*

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

TONIGHT'S TV
(15) riOMT S ENOUGH
Imi wrnc cookmo mow
(B) FAMILY
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Mendi Voska, P.W. Raymond
Wed In Double Ring Cermony
Mrndl Antoinette Voska and
Paul W. Raymond were married
June 8. at the Nativity Church,
la k e Mary. The Rev. Father
James Seibert was the officiating
clergyman for the double ring
ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Voska. Oviedo.
The bridegroom Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Raym ond.
Winter Park.
O tvrn In marriage hy her
father, the bride chose for her
vows a formal white satin gown
fashioned along a modified V ic­
torian silhouette with a high
neckline of venlse lace enhanced
with a cluster of seed pearls and
crystals. The sheer yoke and
long tapered sleeves were de­
tailed with lace and pearls. The
• k lr t . i i c H u e d w i t h a b o r d e t of
silk lace, cascaded Into a grace­
ful chapel train A matching lace
headpiece secured her tiered
fingertip veil o f Imported Illusion
sprinkled with seed pear's. She
carried a bouquet of white roses
and white, yellow and blue
daisies Interspersed with baby's
breath and greenery.
Mrs. Terry’ Ostrnnun attended
the bride as matron of honor.
She wore a floor-length |&gt;earock
blue taffets gown and carried a
single blue daisy

B rid e s m a id s were G a ll
Raymond. Tonya Mendez and Jo
Miranda. T h e ir gowns w ere
Identical to the honor atten­
dant’s und each carried a yellow
daisy.
Gary Raym ond served his
brother as best man
Ushers
were Ned A. Voska, brother of
the bride, and Rick Parker.
Groomsmen were Guy Raymond
and Ron Raymond, brohers of

M r. and Mrs. Paul W. Raymond
(h e b r id e g r o o m , and B lair
Wttherington
Following the reception, the
newlyweds departed on a wed­
ding trip lo the New England
slates. They are making their

home In St. Petersburg where
Ihc bridegroom Is employed as u
biologist for Nutlonul Marine
Fisheries Service. The bride Is a
graduate student at the Univer­
sity o f South Florida. Tumpa.

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5:30

J

IT) PEOPLE SCOURT
Q U 'A T H
O mews
(Ml UNTAMED WORLD

STARTS TODAY

Publicity Handbook Offered
The 1085-86 edition of the
Arts Council o f Greater Orlando’s P u b lic ity H a n d lxxik Is
now on sale for 6 1 2 (plus 6 2 for
postuge and handling If mailed).
Th e P u b l i c i t y H a n d b o o k Is
published annually In conjunc­
tion with the A rl C ou ncil's
Publicity Workshop which this
year had an attendance o f over
185 participants.
Over the years. Ihe P u b lic ity
lla n d lxfo k has become an Ind ls p e n s lb le t o o l fo r lo c a l
publicity persons, and It con­
tains basic Information on such
topics as news release writing.
Interviews, publicity scheduling
and budgeting, and publicity
freebies. Also contained In Ihe
P u b licity H andbook Is a com ­
prehensive listing of the Central
Florida print and broadcast
m e d ia I n c l u d i n g n a m e s ,
addressed, contacts, formats and
more.
To obtain a copy of the Art
C ou n cil's 1985-86 P u b l i c i t y
H andbook, stop by Ihc Council's
offices In ihc Arts A Community
Service Center al 1900 North

Mills Avc.. or send 6 1 4 to:
1085-86 Publicity Handbook,
Arts Council of Greater Orlando,
1000 North Mills Ave.. Suite 2

Orlando 32803-1405
For more Information, contact
C a ro lv n Nets at T H E -A H T S
(H43-27871.

From 11:30 a.m. Every Day

Alaskan Crab Legs, Shrimp,
Prime Rib Sandwiches, Seafood
Salads, Chicken Breast Sandwiches

AdjBCtnl To Th# Holiday Inn
At The Marina

Sanford

Ntiw, 4 Unique wedding gill tome* with 4
unique guarantee Only Ihe beautiful and
dMirtclivc limepiece* nI New England
(Jock (&lt;&gt; are guaranteed for half a century
Suh|ecl ui certain condlltaMU A«k R* detail*

WEDDING GIFT
GUARANTEED
UNTIL TH EIR 5 0 th
ANNIVERSARY.

ALL DRESS FABRICS • PATTERNS • NOTIONS
UPHOLSTERY • CRAFTS • EVERY ITEM IN STOCK

ACT TODAYL^REDUCED UP TO

WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING IN APOPKA
, • JcL

Piedmont Plaza 230 6 E. Semoran Blvd.

Christensen!? SALES &amp; SERVICE
Cloc ^

?

kflSwMM,cftl

331-5560

�T h u rsd a y, Aug. I, IM t

I B — Evening H e ra ld , S anford, FI.

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

im t m c c ir c u it c o u r t

O F T H E 1ITM
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IM A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
O E N E R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
D IV IS IO N
c a i e h o i&gt; s t e r C A e * o
L O A N A M E R IC A F IN A N C IA L
C O R P O R A T I O N , t / b / a C IT I
JE N S M O R T G A G E COR
P O R A T IO N . 0 to rp o ra tio n o r
g a n lia d o n ) t r i f li n g under the
l#w* or INt S l t l t e l F lor Idt
P i t In il II,
&lt;1
C H A R L E S L TO STI, a n d G I T Y
A TO STI. a / k / k G I T Y A T O S T I,
M l wtto, II liv in g . In clu d in g any
unknow n (pout* o l a n y o f H it
u i d O tla n d a n lf. II r a m a rrie d ,
and II any o l sa id O a la n d a n lt
a r t dacaaaad. INalr re s p e c tiv e
unknow n heirs, d tv la a a t. g ra n
I t M assignees. I it n o r i. c ra d l
lo r t. trust#** o r oth er parsons
c la im in g tty, through, under o r
a g a in st ttw nam ed Defendant*,
w tie a re noI known lo be dead or
a llv a i W I L L I A A A T A L G U E I R O ,
R O B E R T D J A M E S and A N N E
T
J A M E S . T ilt w i l t , a n d
G E O R G E C A N T E N IS and
V IR G IN IA C A N T E N IS .
O a la n d a n lt
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
p u rtu a n l To lha F in a l Ju d g m e n t
o l F o rtc lo tw r t d a te d Ju ly t),
IM S. entered In C iv il C a te Mg
I I H IT C A *» G o l lh a C ir c u it
C o u rt o l lh a U tn J u d ic ia l C ir c u it
In and lo r S em in ole County,
F lo rid a , w herein L o a n A m e ric a
F in a n c ia l C o r p o ra tio n , f/fc/a
CIH ran t M o rtg a g e C o rp o ra tio n .
It the P la ln tltt and C h a rio t L
T u ttl and O ily A T o ttl a k /a
G lty e T ottl. T ill w il t W illia m
Satguelro, R o h a n 0 J a m e t and
A nna T Jam a*. M l w lta. and
G eorge Can w r i t and V irg in ia
C an ter!* a r t 'ha J e le n d e r!* , I
w ill ta ll to the h lg h a il and le t !
b id d e r lo r cath . a l the w a tl Ironl
door o l ttw S em in ole County
C ourthoute, San lo rd F lo rid a a l
11 00 a m , an ttw TTrd d ay o l
A u g u tt. IttS. the lo llo w ln g da
s crib e d p rop erty a* t e l lo rth in
la id F in a l Judgm ent, to w ll
Lo t *1. G O L D I E M A N O R 1ST
A D D IT IO N , a c c o rd in g lo ttw
p lo t thereof a t re c o rd e d In P ia l
Book I). Page f t . P u b lic Ha
c o r d i a l S e m ln o lo C o u n t y ,
F lo rid a
D A T E O H ill TTrd d a y o l Ju ly ,
IM S
(C IR C U IT C O U R T S E A L I
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
C la rk of C ir c u it C o u rt
B y D iane K B ru m rrw tt
Deputy Clork
P u b llk h Ju ly JS, A u g u k l I, Ike I
O E M IM

Sem inole
322*2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 t i i M ......................... G 7 C t l i n t
HOURS
3 a n w c u t i v g t im e s 6 1 C i l i n t

1:30 A M. - 5:30 f.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 . Noon

marrlad.

N A P O L I,

and

W A N T E D T O B O R R O W 1 1 000
C o 11 a I a r a I I p s y i b l t t J
month* | *500 Sand re p ly to
B o r JOT. c / o E v e n in g H era ld,
PO
Bo* l i s t , S an ford FI

nm i*sF.

23— L o s t Rk Fou n d
LO ST E le c tr o n ic hoar Ing old
Ihot lit* In e a r W inn D ia l* *1
A ir p o r t B lv d
REW AROI
m m i ________________ _ _ _

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F S H E R I F F ’ S 1 A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
Ihol by v irfu o ot that ce rta in
W rit of E lo c u tio n ittu e d out of
and under Hw ta a l of th* County
C o u rt o t O ta n g * C o u n ty .
F lo rid a , upon a fin a l lu d g a m a n i
rtn d a ra d In H w atorasa ld court
on th* tth d ay ot Juno. A D
Ittt, In that c e rta in c a w an
lilte d A tla n tic N a lto n a l Bank ot
F lo rid a P la in tiff. — v t — M a ry
R
E l l l t . D e fe n d a n t, w h ic h
aforesaid W rit o l E x e cu tio n w*«
d elivered lo n w a* S tw r.lt ol
Samlnot* C ounty, F lo rid a , and I
have levied upon Hw follow ing
described p ro p e rty ow ned by
M a ry R Em *, taut proparty
b t l n g lo c a t e d In S a m ln o l*
C o u n ty . F lo r id a , m o re
p a r t i c u l a r l y d e s c r ib e d a t
Fuiivw*
p t Lo t I J f D e w a t W 1011 tt ot
E I0W tl of S E 'o ot SE !* Hat*
S 110* U tt I B L A C K H A M
M O C K P B I. P G 1 I
and ttw u n d e rtig n e d a* Stw rift
o l Samlnol# County. F lo rid a ,
w ill *1 II 00 A M on Hw Itth
day of A u g u tt, A D li n t ottar
lor ta la and w ll to Hw h .g h a il
bidder, lor c a th . tub|*ct to any
and a ll a a lilln g taint. *1 th*
F ron t ( W a d i D o or ot ttw *l*p*
ot ttw S em in ole County Court
ho o w In San lo rd F lo rid a Itw
a b o rt cW tcrlbed par tan a I pro
party
That ta d u l * I* being m ad*
to w t lif y Hw farm * of M id W rit
o l E xecu tion
John E P o lk , S harltf
Sam lnol* County, F lo rid a
To b* a d v a rtlw d Ju ly If. A u gu tt
I, I. It, w ith th# u l * on A u g u tt
O EM IM
I N T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T .1 ’
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
F IO R IO A
CASE NO U H R C A O I F
IN R E ; Th* M a r i lag* ot
D E N N IS J E N K S
P o tltlo rw r /Husband,
and
B A R B A R A JE N K S .
H atponden I /W l la
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO B A R B A R A J I N K S
addrat* unknow n
YO U A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that a P e titio n for
O lt t o lu llo n ot M a r r ia g e ha*
been Iliad ag a in st you. and lh a I
you a r t re q u ire d to M r v o a copy
o l your re tp u n w or p leadin g lo
the P i l l l l u n upon lh a P i l l
llorw r'* e llo rr w y , Thom ** C
Green* P o t I O ftlc* Bo* *»S
Sanford. F lo r id a l i f t I and III*
itw o rig in a l ra tp u n w or plead
Ing In Itw otflc# o l Hw C la rk of
tho C ir c u it C o u rt , Sam lrrolo
C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e S a n ford ,
F lo rid a T ltM . on or tw for* Hw
ITIh day o l A u g u tl. l i f t It you
ta ll lo do w . a d o la u ll lodgm ent
w ill b* taken ag a in st you lor Hw
ra lla l dem and ed In Hw P a llliw *
D A T E O a l Sanlord. Sam lnol*
County, F lo rid a th is Ith day ot
Ju ly IN S
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R I E N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B y /St V ic k i l B a ird
D apuly C lo rk
Publlkh J u ly II. II. ) l. A ugukl
I. I N t
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION Whpn lomoon* arguei with
you. lay. "You in nothing if not accutala. and -ou art
not a ccu ta la — Chtislopher Motfay

BLOOM COUNTY

_

Lott W h ile V ln y l^ u r s ^ ^ if h
g rey w a lle t V ic in it y o l 14th
SI 4 F re n c h on J u ly FI No
question* R E W A R D 1 U Q A
* B IW A R D a
L o tt w h it* poodle w llh black
c o lla r C a ll: U J 1ICJ__________

25— S p e c ia l N o tices
ORDER TOUR BOOKS FROM
O sborn* &gt; Book and B&gt;b**
Spec let book order* lak*n
0*11* and Ja a a n * ........ t i l M N
• M A R Y K A Y C O S M E T IC S *
S k in ca r* an d co lo r B a ir
C O N N IE
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27— N u n .*17 u
C h ild C ar*
B aby k ittin g In m y hom a AAon
d a y th ru S a tu rd a y
F tn ca d
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Long wood A ra a lo v in g , carin g
M a f f it r o* !,, w ith r* ftr# n ctt
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3 3 - R e a l E sta te
C o u rse s
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• T h in k in g of gaffing a •
• R a a l E tfa t* L tr a n M f •
W a iM t r F r n Tuition
and c o rtfln w iv t T ra ln ln g l
C a ll Dteb o r V tc k l H r Bateite

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R a s p o n tib la 'o r m a in ta in in g a ll
co n s tru c tio n record* tor In
h o u w co nstru ction crew tor
S e m in o le County Sc h o d b o a rd
F o c lt llle t . Pla n n in g 4 C a n
a true lio n Dept W ork Includes
filin g , typin g. 4 accounting
H ig h S c h o o l D ip lo m a , o r
e q u iv a le n t w ith S o c r o la r l
a l/ A c c o u n tln g T ra in in g or of
fle a e v p a rle n c o re la te d to
co n s tru c tio n I* desira ble Sal
a r y i f to par hour, w ith no
School B o a rd borw hts Pool
tlo n It te m p o ra ry C a ll J M
I1SI. e * t 34* or t i l , S u bm it
ro o u m e ' B y A u g, t, WEI.
A c S a ra A c t r e s s e s M o d e ls A ll
tk la n t tor rrprvlas.TV 4 p r lh l
w o rk
S o r lo v t o n ly a p p ly
F a r a m o u n t Casesaq, S4t M B

BUIUXNG AND HPAXTVENT
ACCOUNTANT
R e sp o n sib le tor m e ln ttln ln g *||
constru e I ion record ) tor In
h o u w co nstru ction crow tor
S e m ln o l o C o u n t y S c h o o l
B o a r d . F a c l l l t l e i P la n n in g
and C o n stru ctio n D epartm ent
W ork Include* filin g , typin g
end a cco u n tin g H igh tc h o d
d ip lo m a o r equ ivalen t w ith
* *&lt; e*!*rlal.'accounting tra m
Ing o r o ffice a ip o rw n c * r e
la ted to c o n ttru d lo n It da
• I r a b l*
S a la ry
Sf 10/hour
w ith no School B oard b o n o llti
P o s itio n t| tem po ra ry C a ll
M l D t ) •■tontion M a r O t
S u b m it return# by A u g u tl t.
I N
I _____ ____________
D E LIV E R Y
L o c a l C o m p a n y tru ck p rovided
W illin g to tra in entery level or
tire d pertort
F u ll Dorwtltt
rre
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parka

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Empkymant

K a y a t o l F lo rid a

323-5176

7 1 - H e lp W anted

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
CLERK

11)1 F ra n ck A y &lt;

OCNTAL OfTICE
RICEFDONIST
11%4

W* a re w a k in g a well orga
n lra d In d iv id u a l w ith I N S
year* A ccou n t* P a y a b le a t
p a rla n ce In a ca m p u ta riia d
an*!' m m o n l E it * ant ta la ry
and b o n o llt i
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w n d ra s u m o ' to Boa XU. b o
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Boa
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A c r y lic A pp ltca sor* r a i ded lo
acd&gt;! r protec liv e coating on
car*, boat* and piano* SI lo
111 p er hour Wo tra in F o r
w ork In San for d a re a c a ll

Tamp* sijaao n il
A ir CastdMtoalwg D uct M echanic
E apar lancad on ly U p to •* par
hour C a ll H I a m __________

AIR CONDITIONING
MECHANICS

II. INS

F W U V O O U L O V

Avon Beauty C*
S ta rt y o u r own butm os* tor LSI
r n N IP
....... » N B E

BUILDING 1 DCFARTMENT
ACCOUNTANT

A B O R T IO N C O U N S E L IN G
F r e t P r e g n a n r y T a il*
C o n f id e n t ia l
I n d iv id u a l
a t t l i l a n e a . C a l l lo r
app ointm ent e v en in g hour*
a v ti'a b W
......
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Irm a --hnston a r L e tt ******
r a il Nan H a y c a i In O r land*.
M l- N M , d e r i v e s , t o - t u p .

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N olle* it hereby g iv e n Ihat **
a r t engaged In b u tlrw tt a l 110 D
S
F re n c h A v t , S a n fo rd
Sam lnoW County. F io r in a M i l l
under Ifw llc llllo u t n am e ot C AH
D IS C O U N T A U T O P A R T S and
that we Intend to ra g ltla r la id
n am e with Itw C la r k of Hw
C ir c u it Court. Sam lnot* County,
F lo rid a In a cco rd an ce w ith Hw
p r o v liio n * a t th o F l c t lt lo u i
N am o Stalutat. To w it Sac lion
g e ts * F lo rid a Statute* IMF
it / C W o M Com b*
/*/ Bonnie J C o m b i
P id H lsh Ju ly It. 1(. I t 4 A u g u tt
I. IMS
D E M 4]

■ECHOIC

S u n d a y - N o o n F r id a y
M o n d a y * 1 1 :0 0 A .M . S a tu rd a y

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER

It

ATTlRTiON TUEM/UUCntS
Th* E v e n in g H e ra ld he* post
H o t * a v a ila b le for phon* sofic
Itor* to w ork M o n d a y through
F r id a y b ef w*n * P M and I
PM
Ideal tor ttw In dividu al
w ith a frie n d ly voice and aorrw
ta le * ta p e r lane# TM* pooltton
p r o v l d e i w a g * p lu t c o m
m iaaion in s e rts tod a p p lica n t*
th p u ld co ntact Th* E v e n in g
H e ra ld a t (IDSI i n M i l . an d
a s k to r th* C ircu la tio n D *

N o o n T h e D o y B e f o r e P u b lic a t io n

............................... i

‘ — -------- ---------

FPEV,

Co n t r i e t R i t e s A v a ila b ly

71— H « lp W anted

A V O W ( A R M IN G S W O W IIt
O P E N T E R R I T O R I E S (SOW III
« l H M te T O M F *
B o o v flc k o *
E a per I*need f *
P M Th* H a U c v ftlw f Sttfton
L a k e M a ry ..., .
T O f ll

21 — P e rs o n a l s

N A P O L I " her h utbend . a l al.
O e le n d a n lt
N O T IC E O F A C T I O N
S T ' £ OF F L O R I D A
TO C R IS T A M N A P O L I
W tiuM i a tld an ca It u nknow n
Y o u are hereby re q u ire d lo
t ile your a n tw tr o r w ritte n
d e ltn te i. It any, In lha above
p rw e e d in g wilt) lh a C la rk ot IMk
C o u rt, and In U ' « l a copy
Itwreot upon ttw P la in t if f * at
t o r n e y * . w ho* * n e m o a n d
e d d re tt appear* hereon on or
b rfo re lha k d day o l Septem ber
I t t t , ttw nature o l IM * p ro ro a d
Ing being a tu ll to ' lo ra c lo tu ra
o l m ortgage e g e in ll Ifw follow
Ing daw i Iliad proper ly , lo w ll
U n it I I I. B u ild in g TOO A L T A
M O N T E V I L L A G E I a con
d o m in iu m In a cc o rd a n c e w ith
a n d tub|a&lt;l to ttw D e c la ra tio n ol
C o ndo m inium re c o rd e d In Of
llc la l Record* Book list, Pag*
to o t
P u b lic H e c o r d t o l
S a m lnote County. F lo rid a
If you ta ll to tile your e n tw e r or
w ritten d a lt m e t In lh a above
proceed in g, on P la in t if f • a l
torney, a default w ill be entered
a g a ln tt you lo r ttw r* lie I da
m ended In lh a C o m p la in t or
P e t i t io n
D O N E A N D OR
O E H E D A T S e n io rd Sem inole
County. State of F lo rid a , th lt
Wth day ot Ju ly , leg*
ISE A L I
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
C L t Mk O f T H E
C IR C U IT L O U H T
lly S u te n E Tabor
Deputy C lark
P u b llk h August l . t . II. II. IW3
D E I II

W X

5 2 C « lin e

D E A D LIN E S

Plaln tltt,
M

7 c o n t a c u t iv t t im e s

1 0 c a t t s a t u f iv t t im e s 4 6 C t Ki m
3 U n a s M in im u m

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
O F THE E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F IO R IO A
CHASE HOME M O R TG AG E
C O R P O R A T IO N ,
vt
C R IS T A

Orlando - W inter Park
• 831-9993

71— H e lp W anted

In ita lla tlo n S a la ry b a w d on
ta p a ria n c o plu* b o rw fltt P a id
v a c a t i o n a n d h o li d a y *
» s m 4 i* i
_____
A L L T Y P E S JO B S
S T A B T W O K Jt HOW I
A k
o n
MWi *■**

l a b

/ V

V

r o fte n
r m « W»

I NO
FEE I
R t g o r l r«*Afy 'ter w ork at A A M
AOFW t i l St
U n te fd

M l l t f C ____

Legal Notice
IN T H E O E N E R A L C O U R T
O F J U S T IC E
D IS T R IC T C O U R T D IV ISIO N
IT C V D to*
IG G 4 F
f* 0 l) U l N O R T H
C A R O L IN A R O C K IN G H A M
COUNTY
E D D IE J A M E S I S L E Y . JR .
P la in tiff.
vt
M E L B A S U S A N L O V IN G S
IS LE Y.
D*tonaT*nl
N O T IC E O F S E R V IC E
OF PRO CESS
B Y P U B LIC A T IO N
TO M a lb * Susan Loving* Itley
I M F la m ln g o O 'lv o
S a n lo rd F L U ff1
TAKE
N O T IC E T H A T a
p le a d in g w a k in g ra lla l a g a in tl
you ha* bean H ied In Hw above
a n litie d c a u w The re lla l being
sought I* a t to iio w t. lo w ill
Th* p la in tiff I* w a k in g an
absolute d iv o rc e fro m Hw d*
tondent. b a w d on on* year *
contin u ou s w p e ra tto n
Y O U A R E R E Q U I R E D lo
m ak* d a to n w to Such pleading
n ol la ta r th an A ugust If, INS.
and w llh i fo rty (SO) day* alter
th * d a l e o f I h l t N o t ic e
h e ro ln e fle r M l forth, and upon
your to llu r* to do w Hw party
w a k in g w r v lc * a g a in tl you w ill
a pp ly to ttw C o u rt tor th* r tu a l
tau gh t
»hi* ttw Itth day o l Ju ly , I N t
A tto rn e y tor P le m lltt
G W Y N .G W Y N 4 F A R V E R
A ttorn ey* a l Lew
I M S M a m SI . P O Boa tv*
R t ld t v llw , N C IfU D
Phon* 1*1*1 14S AM*
P u b llk h J u ly It. I L A u gu tt I.
IN I
D E H IM

B ill BARER YW
IA1SS w oodland B lv d
__________O a La n d, FI__________

MEDICAL OfTICE
IRSURANCZ BILLING CUR*
S u b m it resu m e to I C I M e d ic a l
P la t* . Sulk* 10*. Sanford. F L
M T U ________________________

E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y

With or without ihorthondi
P t • fo r r a b l t W A N G w o rd
p t oc • f w*r t
Naorlod In1 Iho
Lofco M o r )f A f o t
Atulotf T om p o ro ry W r v K t i
_________ P i &gt;ND_________
E Iportoftco d to w n AAolntenorKo
m in
M u « t hovo d f lv ir i
IkO O M P * r OopormH on O ip o
r*on&lt;o C a ll PI U97_______

EniOOCR OPERA rot
TRAINEE
L o o k in g fo r M l f m o tW o io d
m o &lt; h o n k « lly IncHnod Indi
vidooi* l i t }nd 4 V d th lff
p o U tlo n i op#tn A pply i f

PLASTIC PROflllS, INC
)J)t« »

IT S T O Y P A R T Y T IM E
A G A IN !
H o u w ot L lo y d now h irin g ladle*
to d o m o n t lr t lo T o y /G III
p a r ti* ) E a r n 1)000 F R E E k it.
lu p p l I#) C a r / Phon* W inter
Sprg* n ; m b s S anlord L a k e
M a r y 1TJ JtIO C a t w lb a r r y
n t MAI

KITCHEN UTILITY WORKER
P a r t lim a K ltctw n clean in g an d
lucid p rep W ill tra in w illin g
le a rn e r A p p ly between f 4 10
A M o n ly Senior C itlio n Re
lif t m e n ! Center I M IMS

_________ E O E______
LABO RERS
R e lia b le w o rk e r) needed

tor tint khih
A b lest T em p o ra ry Service*

________ in nm________
LICENSED IEAUIICIAN
TOW ORK
F R ID A Y 4 SATURDAY O N LY
H O W E L L P L A C E *f S A N F O R D
N P W A it pari Blvd
C a ll tor appaSetmaal
____________ M B F It* ___________

* * MANAGER* *
AND U L/ HELP
Far new Tervwco cano n lance
•tor* In Laka Mary araa
Eicaltant banaftlt and mora
Apply In person at Hdtday
Inn. Sanford Morin*, ro
t ill* * M to* P M Frldo,

MANAGER
W* ar* waking #« appreisive
M t v H w l tor • Iter* own
c o o t p t llv k I P lt r y p a d
b o a o t it i
R a fa il a ip a rtp n c #
nacaoaary A pply a l F a m ily
D ebar Skat* *11 ■ l i t Straat
S a a ta rd . F r id a y
I I P M
8 4 X 8 . __________________ _
MarhatWsg A s tis la a l
P e r to n a lity and p ia a ta n l t*l*
phon* m a n o r a m ust Senior
d l l te n m a rk e t If you lik e
p e o p le
a n d a r* tw a f an d
a lt r a c f iv * . c a ll u* lo r *p
polntrrsenf P a r t lim a . M l SAW)
M o n da y tour F rid a y _________

MEGHANICTRUCK DRIVER
W an ted tor floor w sdarlaym qnt
C on ta ct

Gf&gt;ta« H m tf FU., Inc.
I B ^ M B I M B / W**kd«Y*

by Berke Breathed

Peat B G e n e ra l «
M a r i’ C e r t i f i e d S a m ln o l*
County Pool C o ro N eeds lo
know vario us aspect* ot m a in
lervanc* Tts# C lu b a t its*
C ra n in g *. L a k e M a r y . M l
M B l . ______.

TRUSS ASSEMBLERS
E r p a ritn c a d p re fe rre d , but w ill
tra in E e r a lia n t bonatlf* w ith
ca m pa fltlv* p a y A p p ly at
T&gt;e Law*'* Trim * P la n t
m i Alleven C Jrtto I A rrp e rf)
Santord In d u stria l P a r k

NURSE Al DCS AND UVE IN

W A N T E D : R e tire d m a n to do
lig h t c a rp e n try w ork C a ll
P I ISM a h e r 1 P M ___________

F Y lv a to duty, ktatf d u ty , and
horn* ca r* pooltlont a v a ila b t*
E a c e l lent pay
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L POOL
b t m t t ii
E O E
________ M i f t H / V

W ON0 PRO CESSO R
S3 lo 34 per hour Im m e d ia te
openings
P e rm a n e n t pm ,
lio n Never a l e e
* IB M D I S P L A Y W R I T E R
* L A N IE R ar * W AN O

N U R S E 'S M D E S ; A ll th ltt*
E e p a r lancad or c o rtlllo d p r*
to rro d A p p ly In p erso n *1
L a k e view N u rsin g C en ter. * l»
E Is d S t . Sontord________ __

NURSES AIDES
A ll th ltt* Good atm oophera
and b a n a l its A pply at
Da
B a ry M a n o r SO N H e y U r n
P a B a r y E O E _______________
N U B S E Y A S S IS T A N T
T ra in ca m p le to iy l L ik e p ia n is t
H a r t * a chance to an|oy your
hobby and m ak* m on ay to o l
NIC* Boss I

Employment

323-5176

fib

M M F re n c h A v e

O FSdALY
C o m pletio n ot acuto ca ra n u 'to
a id I n ln ln g c o u 's t o r
e q u iv a le n t h o s p ita l e r p e r i
•nee A p p ly Person n el W es!
V o lu s ia M e m o rie l H o tp H a l,
FQI W Plym ou th A v q , Oe
L a n d FI ____________________

PHONE WORK
N o o ip o r ia n c a
p ia a ta n l vole*
n o t) to work
re q u ire m e n ts
t* 30 per hour
c a ll J im

n o c tsta ry
A
and a w illin g
are the only
S ta rtin g p a y
F o r in te rv ie w
_____ * M «•*&gt;

73— E m p lo y m e n t
W anted
R a lra U * and a e p a ria n ce d hom e
and ottlc* c le a n in g
D a lly ,
w oe*ly. or m o n th ly Reason
able ra le s C a ll M l 1314

LABORER
N o •■porietsce n o ce tsa ry M u s i
h ave transportation to A fro m
shop A pply otter I X) P M

Slier#

M od~ rn Cotuntry
U70 m o U t lim m A

IpkIuM

223 rm

H A M 4 II
T ire d el Jab H oatiw gf
C a ll F u tu re s
lh a y l i t r e
hundred* a l lob opening* tor
Ih o t* w ho w a n t to w o ik
H I 4100
C E M E N T W O R K E R S 4
H E L P E R S - E e c a lla n t p a y
S ta rt rig h t aw ay 4 f t 4JOO
D E L I V E R Y M E L F E R 4 no o i
p a rlon c* n oco qtary F u ll tlm *
G ood ste rlin g pay 4f t 4J00
O E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
G re e t D a rtin g
|ab Savor *1 op e n in g s Good
p a y a f t 4J00
F A C T O R Y A S S E M B L Y a ad
P R O D U C T I O N W O R K M e t!
■tuff* opon Good p*Y seal**
A ffU B B
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S
G e n e ra l C o n s tru ctio n la b o r
G ood pay »f* * *»
T R U C K D R I V E R 4 L o n g haul
Im m a d la N I Good d r iv in g r#
ca rd O ver IS tf* a m
LO C A L D R IV E R S
S t r a ig h t
tru ck* Good pay S ta rt rig h t
aw ay a r t u o s
R E C E P T IO N IS T . O F F IC E
H E L P E R S . C L R R K S . CRT
O P E R A T O R S - I m m e d ia t e
w a n in g * Good p a y sca le s
C a ll * rt s i x n o w i
W E L 0 I R 4 C a rtitto d E s c a iia n t
C a ll tod a y *TB

P A IN T E R S 4 P A IN T E R
H I I P R R I - I m m a d la la

spsrvrqs pood starting pay
Call today UBaXIO

O R YW ALL

W ith or without

q p p a r la n c a
im m e d ia t e
ope-ungs Good p a y C a ll tp
d a y U » 4MB_________________

Ptew S m yrn a 4*8ct&gt;
1 b d rm F u m A p f
ydi
from- baach
long: te rm , m o n th ly

101 — H ouses
F u rn is h e d / R en t

104427 0t3?

Ch ristian Apt* A ISemes
TV. kitchen, la u n d ry , m a id . LJC
wk A up O rl t l ) 54k* c n k*IO

sf*

a

u p . .......... ............... m oot

117— C o m m e rc ia l
R e n ta ls

B d rm
C o tt a g *
C o m p le te
p riv a cy M 3 week w ith t I X
s e c u rity
C a ll
I I J I lk * or

R e ta il 4 O ttlc * Space XX) up to
I 300 sq n a ls o storage a v a il
able m L J I

HltoH_______________

R a ta ii S to re / O ttlc * Approe kOO
.q M U M m o m 5FW before
f X) wts. a fte r |. )0 pm

121 — C o n d o m in iu m
R e n ta ls

• * a IN D E L T O N A • e •
• • H O M ES FO R R E N T a a
__ • • 124-1 #34 a 8_______

S IN G L E STO R Y
L IV IN G
Lbam Titms U&gt;nt
Tout Xgqds!
Furnished or UnturnnMed

LARG E 2 B D R M HOME
O n rtugh lo t m l &lt;4&lt; .vU t
Cantrft) # ir/h»«t, g»r«g«, t f t
MOO

CALL BART

97— A p a rt m t n t s
F u rn is h e d / R en t

E n a ffr E H k te n l 3 t e r n , 2
M t h F a fte H om es n t if lt e in
#Utet fk M R try M tttfV f, R84F
g A K t e e l i C te tt te
U k « A A # ry 1/4 I nIt

A V A IL A B L E NOW
F u r n iy m l f tudto A p a r trrsarsti
O ra Qadiroum A p tt
Jm o B a droo m A p t t

FUIIBU LEASES
31 N IO R C I T I Z E N S D IS C O U N T
R AN CH S T Y L E L IV IN O IIt

O tfkn to Riot
Reascmabfe and convenient
JO I N M a p le Santord
U l *0*0

Che&lt; b Hu m te a tu ra t
• F ra tt F ra a B a trig a f ater
I t e t f lU YI
aG ar«# a
a A ttic it e r •#•
• W i it e r / D r y a r C annactteni
• O n / lig h t Muirvegemenf

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
L ie R u l E tfa te 6ro4#r

C h jkden 4 Pat* W elcom e
la n te r C if iia n t O tiC M o l
f

N*w W

• H V E 5 T IN
H O M E
O t e N iB S H I P I bdrm 1 B ite
Cortes N ic t ter 8 Ungte or
f t l i r t e equate C a ll lo N i
R F o te o w n o r t37.)M

AApRure ImaoiMBifitUio

321-3827

F u rn A p tt ter lam ter C itii# n»
) i| P a lm a tto A r a
J CosMin H o Phorv# C a ll*

Call How ter A ter« In term a fta*»

L a ka M a ry D o you w ant a cute
IW nltftaP apt for a hom a?
L o * a i t ra n t, u t llt ly b ld g
patio. K ra o n a d p o rch lln g ia
urorhlng m a n H u r r y I 222 If30

• Perfect to r sin g le or c a v p ls l •
I bdrm t o m s , c e n tra l a ir h a s!
S il t t f l M ae M l tsf* attar 3

2734021

99— A p e r t m tn ts
U n fu rn ish e d / R en t
BAMBOO COVE ARTS
M f E JU rp a rt B lv d
1 B d rm , I B e n ii m i s s *
I b d rm . I Beits U M ns*
R H O N E . ............ .............M I 4 M I

• COUNTRY SETTING •
La rge I B 1 B d rm A p a rtm e n ts
A d v il La ke s law Fans lly Pea Iside

LvkiULU Nee.Optn PfpeLindi
IIM

MASTERS W E ___ 323-700#
Im m a c u la te I b d rm
I hath
C tn d e
W ak h a r/ d ry e r .
garbage d isp o sa l dra p e s A
m in i blind* W ater 4 g arbage
I n c lu d e d
Peel
F lr t l 4
s e c u rity S41S ns* M l M M
S PM
) bum t b e lh
apt C a r p a l 4 a p p lia n c e *
F l r t l m o and s e c u rity Mo
pat* M l *W 0 oe m l i l t

SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
I B d rm D u y ls ■ w ills Post

S340- S3 SO
Adoffs 4 FposttSe* W atcawsai
I I M S e v e rity De pos. i

Can... ................... .m m s

EXPERIENCED
SEWING MACHINE
OPERATOR
• AU OffUTKMS OftN
• M00CIN Ail
CSNWTXMMD FAC1UTT
• PL!C MCATXM
• 7 PAID HOilDm
• HULIM CARL PLAN
• PllCt ROM LAINIRiS
• STUDY NDEK
• OVUTtME AVAUARU

SAN-DEL MFG.
2340 0U Ul Mery U.
Ibbfart, FI 3213810

W O R K I N G
M O T H E R )
D R E A M I I b it from Item on
ta ry School. I b ik t Horn Day
C a ro Contor 1 bdrm I both
nowty doc or 8 tod homo A ct
Now tu to r* School Opontf
MV.M0

Chack Ih e ie te a tu ra t
a F r a ti F ra a R a k lf a r o t e r
a M icro w a ve
aO ara#a
a Attic S te ri# a
a te# ih # r/ D r y e r Cann*tttent
• O n / U f k t M e n e fe m in t

SANFORD COURT 4PTS.
373 1301

L o r t iy I I d r m w ith tcra « n« d
porch Com ptete p r iv a c y ttO
•vaafc p lu t 12)0 *ac dap 123
n a f o r h i ta n

I A C I I E l lo m lr ter i M obil* or
now t e m i to bo bu ilt upon
4*st otter I

E n t f f r E M u ta nt ) t e r n . |
M th P i l l ’ H a m e l rw iftm f In
Mv io l c o u n try lo ttin g .near
i t e f h H * kchaalk C te ia te
LefctAAary 1/4 f a l l

Chi ter an 4 Pa»k tetlcom #
W fM X C lt lia m Dtk&lt;aunt

I

127— O ffic# R en tals

MEW HOMES FOR RENT

A 1
I W rw
C o m p lt t i
p f N ic y In tim a te tor II ' i l l '
«rt«k p lu l 1200 kac
C a ll
323 214f or 123 H J 2_______ ___

S E C U R I T Y D E P O S I T .....
W IT H T H IS A D I

Call. . . . . . ... 321-1911

NEWT HOMES FOR RENT

F e r r lt ls e d R e a m I* P r iv a t e
home 1 person. M 3 a week
U tlillie * Included M l l l f l

Langw eed F u rn is h e d ro o m tor
ra n i L a k a tro n l h om e, m a tu re
person If* see*

C a rp o rts _____ ... P r lv s l* F stla s
Lush L a n d sc a p in g Pets Ch ildren
W A T E R B E D S A C C E P T !D l

B C A L C I T A Tff
R E A L TO R
223 74ft

Clean. Cam tartakt* R aem AAaid
service M l wk . Include* *11
u tilitie s C e ll M T H M or M l
4*4)
__________ _____

______

Midi Xfirthostsrs

Waklv# R iv e r t ig a c re p riv a te
wooded a n d fenced 1 b d rm 1
b a t h , f a m i l y r o o m w it h
fireplace H o rt * O K LSfS C a ll
t i t aart_____________________
I

A ttra c tiv e
Pool.. 100'
Avaltebte
&amp; wwtkfy

113— S to ra g e R en tals

freer S a n lo rd 1 b d rm I both
fu lly ca rp e te d screen e d patio
1339 m o D e p o sit M I « f3 t

93— Room s fo r R en t

1 B ad roo m tu rn ik h a d a p a r t
mart! P riv a te a o tra n c a C a ll
223 U24

tu rn s

111 — R e s o rt/V a c a tio n
R e n ta ls

U»S S P E C I A L
I 4 1 b d rm fro m SJ19 Lake
A da F ie . ib ie taate n j M f«

n) o n _______________
M l if

S A L E S P E O P L E n e e d e d to
w a r t In y o u r a r a a
H ig h
c o m q ilit lo n p a y
C a ll
llB SIS f* ** ** ___________

K iD S T U F F C H I L D C A R E

I Bdrm . I bath, D efuse Apt
SlfO per m on th S130 secu rity
deposit C a ll r o a m _________

C a ll

) and 3 b d rm
locluctek u til
• p a rtm a n ti n aar taw n 171 and
I t S p f a a a # C a ll m t l f a
1 B d rm apt f t l w++k LIMHUat
In clu d a d
V a c u rtty d a p o k lt

E i r l y C h ild h o o d E d u c a t io n
P ro g ra m In c h ild c a r* con
to n
O p e n in g s In * c i t y
Lon g wood ore* M u s i have
d e g r e e
H o u r *
• 10 A M 11 M P M . M o n d a y
F rid a y P rtto r m other looking
tor p a r t lim p w o rk
W ork
p u b lic school ca le n d e r on ly

B drm
fo r sin g le , w orking
person MAS per m o * aeons I’
M l f E lm A v e m SflM_______ _

bdrm homo with 2 OdulH 2240

p#p mo 4 )/ ) u tiim o t

A B B k e e lin g C*
m i M e tre s Station Read
Saatord ............................ M I W i t

TEACHERS

I

) tem «i« »o khoro • )

THE F L O R ID A H O T E L
500 O a t A venue
H I A XU
Reasonable W e a k ly R a le s

ROOTER

security OTOI73_________
INI B Molianvfll*. 1 bdrm t
ham, air, appllancet BUS par
mo plus tns security deposit
Call Dt 5*45evening,______
1 bdrm tig bam. washer-dryer
hone up. untum . no pot* Call
after a pm IX) fart

t end 1 b d rm A lso fu rnished
efficien cy fro m SfS w eek M K
deposit N o pot* C a ll MT *30)
S f P M 4 t5 P * lm * tto _________

103— H ouses
U n fu rn is h e d / R ent

H N a r L P N tor M D ottlco
Im m ed ia te position fu ll tim e
C a ll
111 IM O b e t w e e n «
H A M NtoysdoyHsru F r id a y

M in im u m I r M ' l C apor Itnca

N ic* q u ie t L a e * M onro* A rea
D-jpfev s m s m o F irs t, last. 4

t. ni rm_______________

Sleeping Ream w ith k itc h e n end
la u n d ry pr U lla g e s
see per
week C a ll M I M l f

R M o g tlo A ftf/ T fO ftl
rim o
good bonolltiv C C I In d u ttrio t.,
I lf m o

S p a c io u s A p a r t m e n t s
L jk e frq n t, poof term!*, adu lts
no pat*, la u n d ry S ta rtin g at
I J t i » m e C a ll I M O ita to see

F E M A L E W A N T E D TO S H A R E
1 beffm a$»f G a il Ootxb**, a fft r

Praducttan Personnel
A uto p a rt) robuIldar
Call^
__________
M l rr? l

H ig h
fA r n in g t
f*cHtnfl*H
M o d ern i f f le t In 0ic« H « n t
locMflan
frM in in g
p ro g ru m ten* c)lvl»ion of old
firm
Cw il nom
for
(*•♦•&lt;»• on p lo o io n f
w o rk in g co nd ltlon t ond to
m k u f t fo u r fufuro
J im W&lt;ft*Fir
V tu u

L a rg * I b d rm . 1 both, vaulted
c o ilin g , a p p lia n ce*, h im ups.
s c r e e n e d p a t io
S I M 1400
M i m i between . P M 4 I P M

4 Rm House I g s c r porch I
b d rrr.. t b a th youth rq jm
ll M m o » dep osit M I I ITT

S A N F O R D F u rn is h e d ro o m t by
th* week R e a so n a b le rata*
M a id serv ice C a ll I M *30f
3 f P M 413 P a lm a ttg A vq

REAL ESTATE
SALESfEOfU .

L o v e ly I b d r m , c l o s e fa
downtown 4100 wk . includes
u tii.tie* U 5 C sac d tp C a ll
Tf) to ffe e H I **4?____________

91— A p a rtm e n ts /
House to S h a re

P ra se to o l teaching p e titio n tor
13 M school year H o u rs *r*
i B to I II p M A p p ly G in
g e rb re e d H o &gt;w I S M E lm
A v*^ Sontord

C o m p e titiv e wages, ba n a tits
plu* b la n d ly elm oeph e re 4
people! It you are lo o k in g tor
a perm anent position an d a
G re a t Boss. IM* I* Itw p la ce
tor you A p p ly In parson. B A K
RESTAURANT
L o n g w ood
oc c e ll *10 i **c
_______

105— D u p lexT r ip le x / R ent

TEMP PERM-------- 774-1 M l
U O f per wee# to sta rt
position* a v a ila b le W* tra in
C a ll T u v id a y th ru Yhur«d«y
tA M 1J Noon 121 2230

NURSE AIDES AND UVE IN
P r iv e t* .duty, *f*ff duty, an d
hom e ca re petition* a v a ila b le
E r c a lle n tp a y
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L PO O L
x » m « n
E O E .................... M r F r t s / v

RAX NEEDS YOU!

t E ip t f it n c i
m i n i . M k tor

Jew ett Lane
S a r r t o r d ___

O a L a n d V W dee lev needs I tin*
m a c h a n lc a n d I f r a m e *
E ree l lent benefit* a n d w o rk
tnfl condrton* A p p ly In p e rso n
a t:

99— A p a rtm e n ts
U n fu rn is h e d / R ent

71 — H elp W a n te d

S A L E S A S IO C W A N T E O t
2440 Sontord Av#

321 -0759 E v * . 322-7*0
B R IN O Y O U B O A T I 4 B d rm I
' i ba th , c u fto m contem po
ta ry
L o v e ly spring lad ski
laka R E D U C E D TO 11*1 &lt;XX&gt;
Ask tor Jan* G rig g s R ealtor
A s s o c ia t e E R A G L O B A L
P ro p e rtie s S it 3*00 Ot U S ISf*
la v o n tn g sl____________ _____

321-3827
Rent 1 b d rm L a k a tro n l horn*
G e tte r r
1)3 A n g e le s Md
B ea u tifu l vla w good fishing
*4* 4*4&gt; o r I I I 3 f t 3 ___
Santord I B d rm I ' ■ bath, living
room, Ca rp a re d u tility room
ce n tra l a ir / h o a t S ecu rity da
posit 1500 *4)5 m o C a ll be
t eean 3 4 1 P M O T fQ3t
t a n t i r d - ) b d r m , I b a th
W a s h a r/ d ry a r. s c ra a n td
porch P oof n e a rb y U f t m o ,
S I SO s e c u r it y . 1st m o n th s
rsn t D a r r y l M o r r t y . Real
tar (A ss o c la ta , SIS I f M . Ttw
W*N Straps Ca .. «I»I*T».
S anlord ] b d rm /1 ig bothTcant
a lr/h a a t. w ash er d ry e r In c !,
a p p lia n c e s , c a l l i n g ta n s ,
fenced y a rd *450 m o • dap
m 3004
_____________
I B d rm
I both. tone*, gar ag*
SIM par m o n th 1st la st and
1100 secur i t y C a ll *** 4 4U
] B drm . 1 bath, a n d dan Naw
a p p lia n c e s
C a ll
S f f S130
attar * P M
I bdrm I b ath L a rg * Hying
room w ith tlra p la c * 1 bibs
from L a k a M o n ro * K lic h o n
equip A v a ila b le A u g 1 1430
First la s t 4 vac u r lly U l 0070
) bdrm l l y bath, ce n tra l heat 4
a ir. la n c a d b ock y a rd S*00
m o t sec dep osit ?Xyt L is a
Court. S a n to rd
U l tM f, or

m s tti

I Story Tow nhouse 1 bdrm . I 's
baits. C e n tra l h eel end eir
K itc h e n eg viewed Cem m vm ty
peel I W a lk to grocery store!
E a s y (InaneIng! SJ4 SO#
F H A V A S P E C I A L I Law Paw n
&gt; b d rm
m l Irg s i le a n e d
p a rch , la n ca d y a rd S M k M
C a ll us q v ic k t
One bdr m hom e an nice fat w ith
low . few daw n paym ent P ie s
few, few m on th ly paym ent* I
G re a t to r th* s m a ll tensity I

tit tot

323-5774
________ M O tM W Y ITTT_______
H id d e n L e t * las W ildw ood D r
1 b d rm I bath, dbt garag*
p o r c h , c a n t r e l a lt
Supar
C le a n I A s su m a b le Sat 000
REALT O R
M A R V IN K .L A IL
*f Sikl
o r Itt m i

4

NOW HIRING!
O utstanding Opportunity For

E X P E R IE N C E D C A S H IE R S ,
G A S A TTEN D A N TS AND
FA ST FO O D PR EPA R A TIO N
( ■//C c ! '/&lt;&gt;/) C EN T ER S
5 t O C A T IO N S IN SEM INO LE C O U N T Y

• Auto / Truck Refueling
• Full Line Convenience Stores
• Fast Food Kitchens
FnotJ ChicLen Subis Donuts
I

•
•
•
•
•

•*

,fe

Top Salaries
Free Life &amp; Hospitalization
2 Paid Vacations Each Year
Profit Sharing Plan
Other Benefits

_________________ &lt; .

-*________

‘

u

M AKE A PPLIC A TIO N IN PERSON
AT 202 N L iTutqI A vo ., SdnUrtt
M o n d a y f h t u 1 .,,)# , * 'J 0 A M

A © _PM

NO P H O N f C A U S PLtASL

I

�Ml — Homes For Sale

is ir m w f liN M i

KISH REAL ESTATE
C A N A L F R O N T : « b d rm J J&gt;,
b a th U n e iv e l D tc ig n W ith
U f | t t t r w iN . U N u iw O
C tu rty trd
■ wI It In f r i l l ,
ce n tra l va cu u m . ( M lw n w o t
k itch e n fir e p la c e H 11 . too M
D E C O R A T O R T O U C H E S « M to
too Charm « l Thu } M m ')
both hsm# N k o c ir p e t *nd
t n p t t . W h itt B ric k F ire p la c e
In F i n l l i l o o n C t i lin f i« n i
A I t t l th o rp Hom o t t
to t j o t M
OPENSUNDAYS

1 to J P M

(3 C 5 ) 321-0041
O liW U t h S tro tl
S a n trrd . FI M f 71

R EALTO R
LO N O W O O O ] B d rm I &gt;, both
co n tro l olr, ca rp etin g . e#tra#
fenced ca rport O nly Ul.JOO
w ith M ODD down N o q u a il
tyin g
G oorfO W illm tr A llo c . Inc.
C I I I : I )
I
I I I I
LO O KI l a r g e o l d e r h o m e
E ic o llo n t condition Moot tC C
F a m i ly R o o m . F i r t p l t c t
M u c h m o rt C o ll to MO O n ly
too too

CALL BART
R E A L(S T A T E
m im
M e y f» if N ear golf co u rt*
]
b d rm , t befh t o m t w im Hvmg
room A fa m ily r w m
1 ft
•
U
X

M l — H o m es F o r Sale

O it t t n I b d rm
j borh on J
o c r t t w ith hoc i t born ond
p o it u r t l ’ l 000

RENTING?__________WHY?

N tw Mom i t M oor O it t t n
J
B d rm
I b o th
o lr , hoot
SJFM O SJSOO dow n Includol
d o lin g c a tty
P o y m o n tl ol
U K per m onth
C O U N T R Y W ID E R E A L T Y
R ig * I B ro k e r----- ---- i n t i l l
__ tT F H w y « is . O ttw tn . FU_
Own both l i c i t o l lu t u r y d u p it i
S o r t U DOC m R t o l rtto*e le e i
t &gt;1.000 M l H IT

SAN FO RD D U P L E X
III] 1UI
H igh town A «o O w rw r llnonc
mg. no q u o lity in g . no powt# I
B d rm
I both to c h tp o rt
m in i o v rr 1 000 i q It « y r l
e ld
K lt c h o n a p p lia n c e #
co ntrol hoot ond o lr. cor p it
d rap e! R t n to l incom o SOOO
m onthly A p p o m tm e n t only
Ow nor 131 00# &gt;

L o rg t hom o w im oot In
lorgo H ying c o n n
loundry, d o u b le c o r
c o n tro l o ir c h oot
O wnor w ill (Inane#

In

kitchon
In door
g t 'o g t
s i t 000

O T H E R H O M E S . L O T I.
A C R E A O E .I N V E S T M E N T
PRO PERTY
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R __ ______
u n t il

on I o c r t i G*n#v « T u rn K*y
P a c k a g e U iW O 313 5300

L IS T W IT H U S!

E X C IT IN G NEW TH IN G S
A R E H A P P E N IN G A T
THE

Apartments
*100 Security
D e p o s it

h itc h e n
H U N

Su bm it a ll e ft o n t

D O L L H O U S E ! I bdrm 1 both
hom o In tho country w ith on
• o l M hltchon. J pocchoi. u till
ty roo m M l . too
A P L E A S U R E I t I bdrm 1 both
I V ju b 'r Wid# M . Til# on t
• c ro c , tp iit s d rm pton G ro o t
roo m , oot In I I tc h ,, f r A w H I
to U t.O M
NO O U A L I F I C A T I O N I t I bd rm
I* i both ho h# w ith .ntn M e n
iM ii . poddlo lo n i, 1th bcitm
co u ld bo utod ot lo m ily room
G r t o t o it u mptton u o too
I S H A D Y L O T I ] bdrm I both
horn# w ith g r t o l room, c o n tro l
e tr/h o e l, poddl# lo n i. t p l ll
b d rm plon Good t iiu m o b lo
rnortgogo M l 90#
W I L L B U I L D TO SUIT! T O U R
LO T O R O URSI E X C L U S IV E
A O E NT F O R W IN S O N C
DEV
CO RP. A CENTRAL
F L O R ID A L E A D E R ! M O R E
H O M E FO R LESS M O N E V I
C A L L TODAY!
O G E N E V A O SCEO LA RO o
T O N E D F O R M O B IL ESI
I A e ro Country I ro c ti
W i l l Crowd on p r m l R d
M \ Down t« Y r l o l l l ^ t
F ro m H I SOOI

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420
l$ 4 l P A R K A V C
... Van ford
m I k . M a r y t i e d ....... L b M e ry

’M

' tt

213— A u ctio n s

181— A p p lia n c e *
/ F u r n it u r e

141— H om es F o r Sale
SAN FO RD
O ld er C h a rm
J
b d rm . I tu rn L a rg e liv in g
room w ith fire p la ce F o rm a l
d i n in g ro o m
H t t in li f t e d
hardw ood floors IS TOGO Good
te rm s or ie ai# op tion
372
2744. o r *29 4)7*
T E R R I F I C L O C A T IO N ! B u ik f
♦r Owner reduKes to UO* *00'
Custom 4 bd rm . 1'* b a th on
q v i* t street over lo o tin g golf
co urse t «tras In clude screen
porch , a ll new m in i b lin d s
m ic r o w iv e C re a tiv e f inane
Ing a v a ila b le
C a t s e ib e r y
i* S 7411_____________________
7

7 Bedroom 1 bath M o b il*
H om es on I p lu s a cre s S m i
east of Sanford
W a lla ce Cress R e a lty . Inc .
R e a lto r
____
331 OS72

3 b d r m /I bath B e a u tifu l hom e
In Loch A rb o r Screen room,
double garage
g re e t room
w ith bu ilt in B a r B Q G r ill,
la rg e shaded lot 170 000 down
and assume F H A m ortg a g e
No q u a lify in g C a ll lo r d e ta ils
121 1244
_______________

M S— R e s o rt
P ro p e rty / Sale
O C E A N V IE W
L u K u r lo u ! 1
story, I bdrm . ) b ath t year
old home, w ith ‘s eparate guest
a p t L a v is h ly fu rn is h e d In
ra ttan and w ic k e r fire p la ce
balcony, paddle tans, D B L car
gar age. la u n d ry room . I, w ith
washer d r y e r 3 Im m a c u la te ly
d e c o r a t e d a n d f u r n is h e d
A m e n itie s plu s, show case
M m # | i i * son O w n er tinarur
mg . Open House Sat
Sun
12 5 P M 3110 S A tla n tic Av*
New Sm yrn a (*04)42) 1004 or
17) 3717______________________
O CEANFRO NT
U n fu rn ish ed new I b d rm Con
d om in iu m
147 *00 P o s sib ly
no m oney d o w n '
fteachtide R e a lty , R E A L T O R S
*444)7 i ) l )
O pen 7 O e y si

M f — C o m m e r c ia l
P ro p e rty / Safe
C O M M E R C IA L 1 P E C IA L IB T
BO B M B A L I . IN P A
r ea lto r

m h iib

151— In vestm en t
P ro p e rty / Sale

t

SALE
S a t O n ly
E f t if r lc
ran g* fa b ric c ra ft tu p p ito s
hou seh old item s doth*% a
to y s 172 Club Roed Sanford
Satu rday only 9 A M to 1 P M
Tw in beds, end Tables bow lin g
b a lls gam es desk clothes,
jew e lry , books cMtds and ends
1SO* P a lm e tto Ave

FO R ESTATE
C o m m e r c ia l o r R # iid » n t ia i
A u ction * 1 A p p r e it e it C a ll
D#il t A u ctio n m S*M

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M ES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E CO UNTY

M O R T G A G E E ’S
o

R E M O D E L I N G S A L E I R e frig
dm ette set kitch en gadgets
100 g a l o il drum; * 10 gal o il
2424 O range Ave F rid a y A
S a tu rda y 9 t ill 4

L a y in g Mens Sen length For
sato LTD O ra n g e A te we*f of
I 4 372 iqe*
_________

Sanford's Sales Itadei

2 Bedroom Apts. Available
Adults and Families Welcome
3 2 3 - 7 9 0 0

M O V IN O S A L E M Saturday A
S u n d a y
A M
D a y t
F u r n itu re household goods A
toys II* E s c a m b ia D r San
ford______

203— L iv e s to c k and
P o u ltry

REALTY-REALTOR

II you o r t looking tor o lu c
c o t il u l co roor in R# tl l i l o t o .
S lon ktro m R##tiy it looking
to r you C o ll le * A lb rig h t
todoy ot &gt;11 I I H
E r o n tn g i
111 1001

*

C a ll about our t v n im t ' n d in q
p ro g ra m
R o y a l R id in g
A cadam y P I H IE

STENSTROM

i shaped porch, remodeled

P R IM E B U I L D I N G LO T
good o r t o o l Son lo r d 1 I tlO t

M o v in g Sato D in in g room and
bedroom set ah wood Steeper
sofa and other th in g s Sunday
on ly 9 1 P M 2110 E l C a p ita n
D r Sa n tor d 37? t**7
__

301— H orses

O caat b e rg ta r e la r m s l .31)4741

M l BMC

1 0 d r . il. J Both V lllo B t t t t r
thon now I V e r tic a l b lin d ! In
t v t ' y roo m N ow rongo ond
r t lr lg t r o t o r
B r o n d now
c o ' p t t l C o r n e r u n it w ith
g o ro o t SSF 0OC

M O V I N G S A L E I A little of
e v e ry th in g ! 2W0 O ak Ave
Sanford Sat A Sun. 9 ?_______

C E E S U 10 itch

HA N D Y M A N S P E C I A L ! 1
U fln n . H a be In w ith lertjriec*,

NEW HOMES FOISALEI

2 7 M « N « ..w t «w

217— G a ra g e Soles
R O T T W E IL E R
F# m # i#
t
m o n ltit Pur# brwd- no p op ort
UOO M a t* !. B ww *ki old
A M H ty K#w n»ti............... m n j o

W han you ca n own im m acw
in t o 1 b d r m
w it h m a n y
G a ra g e p lo t co rp o rt.
14 X i ) t c r t f n t d B o r B Q
b u ild in g , y g rd w ell, apfril
a n c a t Y o u ’ll never steel a
niewr little hom e tor 13S 000
L o w D o w n ) Com * s** for
y o u rta lf C o ll
B E C K Y C O U R S O N m 9470
o w n in g s
The W e ll St Co o m n t
121 MAS

SANFORD REAiri “
R EALT O R

Will S lrnt C^.........321 5005

NEW 3 BORM. MFC. HOME

i f f — P e ts a Su pplies

R A V E N N A P A R K 1 B d rm . 1&gt;|
both, c o n tro l o lr ond hoot
f o r O ft d ro p * ! COrptf. W ill
c o rtd lor
BooutltuM y &lt;ond
tcopod B y o w n p r K l u i )

iia l t o e

5% down, no Q u alifyin g C a ll
A n lta . 77* 1717 or 774 1710

E ve ning Herald, Sanford# FI. Thursday# Aug I, I H 5 - 3 B

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE ' by Larry Wright

M l — H om es F o r Sale

C A S S E L B E R R Y I per*, torw d
P R I MS 000 W M o llC lo w M I
r e a l t o r _____
in m i
I 1 A C R E S st*t« Rd M #nd I A
•rt&lt; Incom e p ro p e rty w ith
M i l l How 1 h orn et end 1
m obile# on p r o p e r ly
A lt o
lutur# e o m m e rc lo l br#o C o ll

A p p lia n c e * F» r B i l l
*11 in
• it# H unt re n d itio n A to lly

yudrlntood..........

W im

U t N R i i k w t P a r t i B Service
tor K tn m e re# .................M l t o t ’
M O O N E Y A P P L I A N C ES
V ic to ria n ch op ping b lock, c irc a
Its# b lo n k tt che»»
co lon ia l
m ap I# deck m op lu lu ll tit#
twd tm o tl oak bookcata *
oak ki*chon c h a in , reproduc
lio n |ally cu p b oa rd tm a ll oak
d r» n » r
OOk ro c k * .
othar
m itc o ila n e o u i item# 111 I D S

STO RAG E SALE
A t Storage H ic k m a n Dr
T h u rt F r l Aug 1 2 9 A M )
P M Clothes W om en |}1 })
M*n% pan ts (30 341
Su its.
ja c k e ts 111 I
4 |i. boots
M lsc 73 K aw asaki« 17}

215— Boats and
A c c e s s o rie s
H o u w b o a l M Ur# aboard H a il
In g h o m e L a k e M o n ro e
It} 000 m a ke oftor m &lt;0*1

Y A R D »*ALE C lo th e s , to y s
m iscella n eo u s F r l, Sat, Sun ,
I * P M 210* H a rtw e ll Av*

I f ' L a rta n A ll A m e rica n
Johnson no H P w ith f lit fra ile r
H 700 or best otter C a ll 134
2917 ( D a y s ) o r 32) 1 MO
(N ito s) a sk for G len da______

700 E Ifth Street F u r n itu re
cloth es b ile
and m is c e lia
neous item s F r l Sat I I P M

l i f t W e lk ra M B o w rid * ' 70 H P
M e rc u ry w ith new stain less
pro p g a lv d riv e on tra ile r
E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n STOOD
2)1 1244
_____

•07 E Ittti St . Set . I 7 Desk
console store©
a ccesso ries
toddler sdottses m is c it e m i

Iffy * C e n tu r y M n lV a f» i
t ilt
tra d e r. 140 I O . I 1* years
n ew
E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n
C a ll #7) X 7 0 a fte r a P M

in i. lit

it

............. j n - i u i

I7th s im r njiNinjiT
i#t w in* *»........... mi m i
183— T e le v is io n /
R a d io / Stereo
• • C O LO R T E L E V IS IO N • •
Zenith 21 color te le v isio n O r lg
tnal p ric e over 1400 B ila n c e
due 1244 00 ca sh or la t e over
paym ents 17 $ m onth S till In
w a rr a n ty
NO M O N E Y
DO W N F re e hom e tria l, no
o b lig a tion C a ll M2 12*4 day
o r night_______________ ______
S a t e llit e s y t f i t i s c o m p le te
S tere o r e c e iv e r , d ish , etc
» n oc C a ii m 17)7

187— S p o rtin g Good*
■ E A C H C R U IS E R , CO N CO R D
M e n 's A W om en t M a n y cot
ors New w ith w a rra n ty 112*
a ssem bled P i ' s C y cle Center
231 2*44

195— M a c h in e ry /T o o l*
F a rm T ra cto r M F #44 disk
bush hog b e e s blade dual
a il# tra ile r. I fence charger
A ll e tc e d e n t condition c a ll
37) 7401 a fte r ) P M

i f f — P e l* 4 S u p p lie s
AJMIfty K e n n e ls Dog boarding
C ou n try A tm o sp h ere Reason
a b le R a t e s
31) 1110
F R E E TO O OOO HO M ES- I
m a le bla ck la b ra d o r and I
young ta m a le 223 4477_______
F re e to good hom e 4 y r old
W elm e ra u n e r
G re a t fa m ily
dog A ll shots C a n 37) tooo
Obedience Classes A ugust )rd
I » A M 140 tor • weeks
P e ifo n e a re e C a ll 27) t U l
P IT SKU N K PO K
Team ed 17$
_
____ 23 1 7711

SALE

P IT B U L L P U P P IE S
110 e a c h
S pots a n d m a sk s

111 )t*0

Bad Credit?
No C/»dil?
WE FINANCE
W A L K IN

I A lu m in u m * Cans N ew spaper
Non F e rre u i M e ta ls
G la ss
K okem *
M l 1M*0

217— G a ra g e Sales

BmiS v E e d i. fIrgller*# Ctotfiei,
P la y p e n s , l i e
P c p e rb a ck
B ooks M3AI77 212 H M

A n n u a l I fa m ily O arag*1 ta le
B ra id e d o v a l ru g I 'X H earth
to n e s 140 D B L bed
ISO
e le c tr ic tewing; m ach in e w ith
a tta c h m e n t s , ta b le m od el,
• ic e lle n f w orkin g condition
U f tw in bed spread curtains,
books tire s ca r m at clothes
s m a ll to la rg e , and m an y
h o u s e h o ld ite m s boat end
tra ito r, 13 ' Courtney w ith bass
seats H ig h la n d s tra ile r, like
new, fin e fish in g boat M i l
1979 D a tsun HO ) door co tp *
1 s p e e d
s t a n d a r d
tra n sm issio n . 4 eye Under fuel
I n je c t io n
A /C , AM FM
stereo V i P0Q a ctu a l m ile s
Ilk* new 14700 197) Dutsan
110. 4 speed 4 door, A / C and
A / T , g re a t co nd ition good for
student |I200 C a ll 233 to4*
1019 l a r l t a i f
b e tw e e n
Mar sire % and; B a h a m a Joes,
ra in or shin# F r i Sat I V P M
P e a tor i w e l c o m e _________

N eed C rib s. P la y p e n s B a b y
t u r n it u r e
c lo t h in g
Good
P ric e s A lter 7 P M
121 $743

223— M is c e lla n e o u s
A ir ''•a d itfe rte r
73*00 B TU
117$ TV Console w phono A
A M F M HOP C a ll 171 12A3
R e f r ig e r a t o r
1 130 L it t o n
M icro w a ve , 112$ used 't s ia u
f a • K ju ip m fn l j; j 7|Je
T R U C K C A P F its
N issa n truck twd
11*0 A lso Snare
new P a id 1121
221 *a*4 or *04 79*

sta n d a rd i l
B ra n d new
Drum , lik e
asking 171
H77

2 3 1 -C a rs

B I G Y A R O S A L E t 10 t 0 7
F rid a y at jro s feim Ave
C lo th e s
a p p lia n c e s
tools
toys and m u ch m o r e 1
CARPO RT SALE
F r id a y .
. A u gu st 2 1 A M
7 M is c a lla
neous Items and nice clothes
141 C o u n try C lu b O r
_______
CARPO RT1ALE
F r id a y and S atu rday, t 00 A M
t ill 7 112 F a irw a y D r lO ne
bloc k west of U jjta la I

S a a lB rR A go B I S B B l..... M I - O T
D e B a ry Aeto A M a r in e Sales
A cross the riv e r, top of M il
179 H e r 17*2 O e B a ry *4*11*1
1*7$ N O V A
G ood c o n d itio n
1*00 D u tsu n P ic k u p
1400
C a n M i 4a**
_________ .
1*79 flu n k LeVabve
II WO C a ll between a * P M
372 7*2*
_____ ___ __
*4 P ly V e l 121 P S. tintod
w in d o w s
FM
E«C
C ond
M u st see IM O or best 1)3 t *to
73 F O R O P I C K U P
R u n sg ood 1*00
371 7431 ____________
'73 P IN T O W A G O N l » 0 Good
tra n tp o rfa tio n A fto r *. 177
0012 _ ______
____ ______
27 C a d illa c FI Dorado W n R e el
M u st S a c r it a c f
»m
C O U R T E S Y P O N T I A C 333 2121

'78 CUTLASS SUPREME
B ,,i

PUBLIC AU10 AUCTION
Iv # ry W#d Nit# a t ! &gt;0 P M

* W h e re A n y b o d y w
* C a n B u y o r S e llf «

M O V IN O Y A R O l A l t
Open
I X) A M (only) f ill 1 P M
F fl
Sat F u rn itu re fish ing
ta ck le tools 2109 Cord ova Dr
1 block E of F re n ch Av#
117 921 turn on 7)nd si (Coto
n ie l w oy to C o rd o v O r 1
M o v in g S a le
H o u se f u ll of
fu rn itu re
a n tiq u e ic e bos,
m isce lla n e o u s A ug Srd A ath
t o l l N orth Hd Sanford &lt;11
m ila s fro m I a W#t» on U )
A fte r Aug 4th C a ll 121 HT*

u s e d

T

in m i

B I E u o flG L
lo * d » d
LAW D o a n
V m all Aao F * .m # n l
c m c o t ih i m an
,###*aa
i&gt; B U I C K R E G A L &gt; Dr C O U P
A IR A U TO A A AT lC
1 OW NER
Rad u cad!
to m
N O M O N E Y D O W N ! 11
C O U R T E S Y P O N T IA C J » 1 1 J I

2 3 5 -T ru c k s/
Buses / V a n s
C H E V Y S IB
n
A u to m a tic. V a A ir L ik e New 1
14**$
H u Monv f Dow i »
C o U R I #Y rh D N T lA C H i TUI
1V "■» %1v h
‘ P it k Up e tth c ab
Over cam per Sleeps * . re frig
era for. stove fu ll bath seif
c o n ta in e d good c o n d itio n
129S0 or bes[otter 372 0014
1*71 C H I V Y L U V P I C K U P
W IT H T O P P E R I
L IK E NEW I
IM*1
C O U R T E S Y P O N T I A C 12)1121
i f 7 i Chevy custom v a n to* sa»*
1979 Ch evy P ic k U p
C a ll
L it 1*14
________
I f f ) Feed B ronco Red. 17,900
323 7291 or *** $173 A sk tor
J im _____________ ________ ____
7* C h ev y V a n . I ton
N ew
m otor
B lo w n h e a d g a t* a t
1 1$00 Jl ) $5$7
I I Dodge P ic k Up
L ik e N e w '
13 000 m i le t
14**$
No Money DOwiM
C O U R T E S Y P O N T I A C 1)3 11)1

237— T ra c to rs and
T r a ile r s
$ • It , )to ft »"d#s w ith a steel
floor 14 $0 O n ly Interested
c a ll
321 979* otter * P M
Road CIS acro ss fro m L a k e
M o n ro e P o s t O ffic e
green
tra ile r

241 — R e c re a tio n a l
V e h ic le s / C a m p e rs

F a r m ere d eta ils
1 to* l i t t i l l

OAR AOE SALE
C lo t h e s .
le w te ry , m lsceilarw cius Items
S a tu rd a y O n ly , I S P M 177
W Hdewood O r , H id d en L a k e
I s la m .
L a d le ‘i C to fM a g , 1 7 * . H eute
ht-id item s, odds A e n d i Sat .
Aug
f 7, HO) Sanford A ve

o h #,

*T( T O Y O T A C A R O L L A
Good cond 11km
I D IIW

* DAYTONA AUTO *
★ AUCTION ★
Mwy t )
D a y to n a B e a c h
e e e * • H elds a e e • e »

______ D R I V E O U T

NATIONAL AUTO SALES

21 f— W anted to Buy

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
m

2 3 1 -C a rs

a h s

T H E B E S T tN T O W N

I f ' F leete r a tt T ra ito r C om plete
w ith w ater and e le c tric ho©*
up or gas light*. I bu rn e r gas
stove w ith oven, sleeps 4 w ith
canopy Ideal for fish e rm e n or
hunters C a ir o nice* 1 1000 or
best otter C a ll 37) 437$ or see
at 3101 E Im A v e , S an ford

243— J u n k C a rs
C H I D U IIA S S L C S ?

TO P D o lla r P a id for Junk A
U##d CAM I fu c ! I A !*#•»,
x j u ly m g n l H I 1WC _

a W# C»m F l n a « ,
a D o a n P a y m a r l, BK)0 a n d U p
a Trad# In# A(&amp;»pt»d

W f PAT IO P D O L L A R FOR
JU N K C A R S A N D T R U C K t
C B S A U T O P A R T S m UBS.

D IS C O U N T A U T O S A L E S

I AOI Y,#n&lt;h At* TBS IASS

111OJ*0___________
153— A c re a g e L o ts /S a le

C O N S U LT O U R

BUSINESSSERVICELISTING

1 $ agrees in the C it y of L a ke
M a ry on the south end of ath
St (w ithin the c ity lim its )
IAS 000 ca sh
If In terested
ca n 72t &gt;170______________

AND L E T AN E X P E R T D O T H E J O B

155— C o n d o m in iu m s
Co O p / S a le

To List Your Business-

Sondl*&lt;#ood V illa # I b d rm
I
b a lh u p a ta lrt P o o l U ! 900
t V SSST

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

1 5 7 - M o b ile
H om es / S ale
F o ra P a r t 1MO Ffonlla# 10* 10
I B d ,m
I b a lh . Scra a n a d
parch, cabana a ir M u i l ba
m o,# d J 1 W I » ? ! « ________

U kN w
A d u lt P a r t ................... L o t R t a t i
BIB# BUB
Include# W*i#r barbag# P ic * up
Y a rd M a ln ta n a n c a
Im m odi ata O c c upanc *
0 » B#r| ABaAMa Naa##« &gt; » U 00
T R A IL E R FO R S A L E
Iff#
FlaahM M d T ra lla r I4XST. I
B d rm . Ia*a ovar pa# m antt
B U M d o a n at I1T1 p a r m on lh
Lot# ot *#lra&gt;. S y a a r hom#
oanar# in tw ran ca. ) Ian a ir
ca n d illa n a r. S k irlin g . at« Now
a! L a ka Side M o b il# H am a
T ra ito r P a r k . L e t FM. an IF *1
In D a L a n d C a ll G in a IM1I

F e n ce

Law n S e rv ic e

P a in tin g

8EH00EUNC SPECIALIST

IN IT A LL
B E LL. B R E P A IR
C rp re i# ....Chdin Line .... Weed
F e n ce B U I F tl________

la w n M a in ten a n ce
L a n d ic a p in g Bu#h H og M o w in g
_________ St# was__________

I m proud o l m y w ork I N o |ob
loo #mqll F r t d B F t B U F F I

W a H an dle
The W hole S a lt O t W a i

G e n e ra l S e rv ice s

Mowing......... Low Trices
________ r o w s ________
LAWNS MOWED H U M M ED

F lo rid a M a id B M ild e w
S p e c la littl
IS yr# E &gt;p
F ree E l l
B onded
Intured
W G T R IB B Y
H t M il

Addition, t
Remodeling

I E-UNI CONST.
322 7021
_ ^ ^ lw c ir ^ A » a lia b ia _ _ i

Air Conditioning
k Heeling
C A L L N O W ##r F R E E Brae Our#
o r F R I I E t lt n a t a a a
InalaU attea at En ergy
t f t lc le a t AJr 4 H a a lla g
l l i l i w# Sa a la r d H ea lin g A
Aw C# ndl»W nlng........... m I W

Applience Repair
A S e a i A a e iia e c e k o t c i
H h r lo r v k a No I a h a C k o rp d l
D j r r ^ ^ A * # M « l ;&lt;iJ F * a « M

Carpentry

111—Appliances
/ Furniture

CloffiM . # m w I N la 1 y a a rt.

A il I, p e l a t c o r p a n try 4 re
m o d elin g V yr# #&lt;p C e ll
R ic h a rd G ro e e H I B tn _______

Cleaning Service

L o v in g C a re H r You r E ld e r I»
W e h e re year# a l experien ce
4 goad ce l ] » JFBF a lte r ] or
N M FB d U IT

C en ter' i B u ild in g 4 Rem edeltng
Ne Je b Tee S m a ll
I I I B u rton L an e. Banter#

__________m e a n _________
T M O M A i a T h o m a s ' Hem e
re p a ir, d ig g in g , la w n c a ra
C a ll m ISO#

Home Repairs
CARPENTER
R e p a ir # a n d
re m o d e lin g H o |ob too tm a ll
C o m g &gt; i* 4 i________________
M a in te n a n ce ot a ll trpae
C a rp e n try pain tin g, p lu m b in g
and»tg&lt; trie r o « 0 »
W I L L I S M O M * R E F A IR
A d d tH o m
(*
A ll Type# R e g a in I
In w re d
H a jo b too im e ii
M l ttu

L a n d c le a rin g

JU ST O I N I I B
Prate»# lonal clean in g
C o il
............................. m t a a i

G E N E V A L A N D C L E A R IN G
L a t/ L o n d d o o r ln g
F ill d irt
Tapeeil
Pond#
D ra in diicha#
S ite P re p a ra tio n C a ll M l T O

A e r tM w f E le c tr ic a l U n te I t M l
E illm a te e . .1# N r ta r r tc a C elle
T e o i t IBoM rBc t o r l H . B H W
C O N T tM P O tU R Y E L E C T R IC
Csm^sot* C t o c t r lc it Jorvlte#
T V 4 Telephone#
P I U FF
0 4 1 e l e c t r i c ................ u i o m r
H ew 4 rem od elin g, addliion#.
Ion#. tocM rity light#. I lm e n
piue on e le c te r vice# Q u e ll hr
S e rv ic e L k e n to d 4 4onded

Spr in g Y a rd C le a n o p t

T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN O
F I L L D IR T a C L A Y a
S H A L E 4 H A U LIN G
M3 U U

Lawn Service
A C I LA W N S E R V IC E

n u M I

Hu, d e b it Price# M l * * »

SUM M ER CLEAN U P
Mww'iniO',
Shrub P ry h lfif;
F H I E C IT IM A T I I
&gt;49 1194

________ m -trn

Papwr H a n g in g
N

M a s o n ry
IA N Y T H IN G IH C O N C R E T E I
Pall# D rlr# w « r S td a w ilk E tc
F re e E ilim a H # O tadly G c re a l
B E A U M O N D E Ceael Co
“W . A re The Be»l "
111 S0B1

M o v in g 4 H a u lin g
L ig h t h a u lin g W ill h au l b u ild in g
m a te ria l# , tu rn llu ra , wood.
|unk. tra in , la n d d irt, ate
O N L Y SM per la rg e p ic k up
load M S U F I

Music Lessons
Ow itar Leeeoaa
A ll e g e v 'a ll le ve l# P r o B a ck
jr o j m ^ a U J u lia ^ ^ J J ^ a a M

Nursing Cere
OUR RATES A R E LO W ER
L a ka rW w N»r #&gt;ng Center
F IF E Second S t . Soaturd
___________ T O F FF I____________
# le m o n bad# a v a ila b le tor da#,
wee#, or m onth c a re C a ll tor
Intorm at'on a l Southern H om e
R e llre n .e n t C en ter, t n #BF&gt;

C le a n ing T h e lc k ia | F e d U K M g
E n a E»th##ete«..............B t# » n i

Painting

L w n c a r # and N a a ta r r tc a

E ip e r t P e m lm g / W a llP e p e rin g
F ra e e illm a te e IF a r o ll 1/1 o tl
on P a lm in g m / SFOB_________

■ r the |ob or monthly contract
Fred Vddea...... ......... m m l

H eute P a lm in g 4 W e ll R e pa ir
Yew Boy m e te r lo ll
We iwppi# lobe# Te S A V E #•»

Quality Lawn Cu e
ai a

Home Improvement

H eed C a rp et Cte a e la g U r Mg.
D ia lo g R o a m 4 H a ll B it M .
Sate 4 C A atr, m m WEB

Electrical

L ew is

Fisiwn If slip# par A T tin ting

* L P a p e r G e lt E a p e rl
■need. F re e E t lim a t o t . G u a r
e o t o e d U l Fin. or F M IFFM

Paving
A I A ip lu lt P a r la g . la c .
G ra d in g 4 p o r in g a tp lu a ll re
pair# , le a l c o o lin g , tra ffic
m a rk in g # driv ew a y # 4 par#
Ing Ht# F re e g e l M l Id*#

Sprinklers/ Irrigation
A B O U T T I M E I R R IG A T IO N
Now In ita lio lto n e
F re e E i t
I apart R epair# et C om plete
S p rin k le r S y lt o m i
Timor#
P w n g _ _ _ _ E t c i^ _ a # s u s a

Tile
A m T ILE
C e ra m ic Ilia . 10 la#
end M ita lla tia n . bath# Itoor#
m l D m # 1.S a n to rd
I I I 110 m i !Od
John P a rk e r

Tree Service
AJI Tree Sore ♦
P re a la g
And H a u lin g ................ U N A lto .

« PJA................... » N N

ECH O LS T R I E t lR V I C I
F re a I it im a t o c i L a w P r k a i l
Ik
I n S lu m p G r tnd ln g T e e l
M S IM F d a y o r otto
" L o t K&gt;a P i l l ............ . d a d "
JO H N A L L I N S LA W N 4 T R I •
Dead tree ra n . « ol t i c 4 M
F re e e e l » l UOO

�BLONDIE

Ev*nmg Hrrald. Sanlord. FI

Thursday. Aug I. |ftj

Qhjc young

N e e d To S k ip A D a y
In E x e r c is e S c h e d u le
Afo

B EETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker
ARE YOU Y YOU GJY5 ,
CODING
GO ON
W it h l/5,
WITHOUT j
SARG E* / \
AAE

THE BOHN LOSER

by Art Sansorn
B6L 1EHE it... *7
j*

P.n.AEBtEFEGTER HEPE.VW BCH .L'vE F V - I
W£IL«&gt; TvMAtf HOUA H U fAKThF R, &gt; c
‘ on

WITHA FED TD
WE sreajTMB

' .PARTUER!

B E L IE V E

IT!

_

WASHRXW'

D E A R l)R
C iO TT — My
Iniyfrlend had walking prieumo
m.i How dors that ditfrr from
real pneumonia?

i&gt; i

A R C H I E ____________
f O KA Y , M IS S J A N S E N ...
^

■

'

UK AH OK G O TT - I go to a
«ytn where I follow nn organized
regimen Thry suggest going
••very olhcr day Would there
rrally Ik- a negative effr.t if I
w rn levery day?
DEAR HEADER - Th rrr is a
current belief ih.it during slrrn
nous rxrrrlse. muscles actually
lirrak down and rrrpurr a day tif
rest to build up I his may be
irur for |K-oplr who arc comm illed to a weightlifting pro
gram but for average adults
who rxerrlse. a prescription fur
alternate dav ac llvlty is miner
••ssary
Organized exerc ise regimens
werr develo|&gt;ed 10 work certain
muscle groups II (be gym In
sirui tors insist that you do 'one
•lay on. one dav o f f exercises
vou ran uv- (he o f f day lo
participate in olher artivllles.
Mieli as running or swimming
However, you may In- able to
al* ‘ your rllual so as to spend
on*- day working on your upper
I kkI v . the next working on vour
lower
Ifow rvrr vou need noi defer
working out every dav What
vou need Is variety

I A A K C P YO U d L A W N

MENPEP YOUR f e n c e s , An P
WPAIBSP vo o a ftOOf

b\f Bob Montfina
NO. N O ’ I D O N 'T W A N T
A N Y T H I N G F I? O M Y O U
M IS S J A N S E N ’
NO NSENSE'

WHEtTE’P itXJ GET
c o o k ie , a b c h

WOULDN'T

P E S fM IT Y O U T O
OO ALL T H A T

EEK &amp; M EEK

by Howie Schneider

DEAR READER
lie proba
blv bail real pneumonia — bill
be was walking around with it
Some forms of lung infer lion are
so severe Iha Ihcv arr life
ihrealening Other less serious
ivpes cause svmpioins no more
disabling Ilian a sligfti &lt;ougb
and a low grade lever l.ikc anv
inlreiion pneumonia runs lit*gamin (rum mild lo advanced
I here seems lo Ik- more walking
pneumonia these il.ivs iK-cauMthanks lo .inllbiolit •&gt; tewr-r pa
liculs have lo go lo bed or enter
tile hospital I lii
real pnru
m oiiia vou reli r to — with
oxygen Irnls delirium and in
Maveiious Holds
is not thr
slandard pli lure in young adults
aiivmiire In lati many (tropic
wub pneumonia may mil even
know they have II unlll they See
a Din lor and have X rav s
N o n e t h e le s s
vour

iK iy lr ie n d

p le a s e

m a k e su re

la k e s

b u n s e ll a n d g e ts p in n y

ca re

ol

&lt;&gt;1 i &gt;-si

H

v o u d e v e lo p a r o u g h o r le v e r

a dnrtor. your Iriend was conlagious
DEAR DR GOTT - A friend of
mine develofteri irt-nrh mouth
iH-r-ause of stress What Is this?
How is II treated’’
DEAR READER Trench
moult) Is nol caused solely by
stress, exrrpl lo Die degree that
stress Inlrrferrs with nutrition
and good denial hygiene Trench
mouth goes by the lon gu e­
twisting name of net rmizlng
ACROSS
1 Mental
component!
Government
agant Icomp
«vd |

8 Rui!&gt;an
emperor
12 Women i
garment
13 Bounder
14 Counter
bumpem ||||
15 O ly m p ic b o a rd
la b o r |

S e n d y o u r q u e stio n s ro D r.
(io n at r o llo x 91428. C lc v c
l.m d O hio. 44101
Aniwe' to Previoul Purtle

2 A llo w to fa ll
3 8 J lp h e m o u l
act
4 A tte m p ti
5 M o u n t a in (L a t I

6 C ap ital of
T e ia i
7 R ecant Ip r e t)
8 Tie up
9 D e ttro y e r 'i tar
g a ti
10 Fit
11 C o a r ie g r a n
17 D e'aw ara
Indian
19 A c t r a n Ounne
23 Start
24 H a u l! on rope

16 Incapebie of
being dnioived
18 Movt active
20 Anciem Bntilh 2 5 K m g f iih
26 Auto failure
chariot
27 irreverent ecu
21 Tea egenc*
28 C ity in
llbbr I
N icaragua
22 Charged
29 T h u |Sp |
pertciei
31 Itinerant
24 lacquered
33 Tha m o it Ipraf |
metilwere
38 Official veal
26 C'ty m S'Cily
27 French luind
30 Unlocked
32 rrothi
34 Ritki
35 Fi|h trap
36 That girl
37 RaUa
39 Aciratt lou'ta
40 Sanihnt dHeel
4 1 Mat a angry
42 IW h j.is
45 Ja'iy
49 Lila
5 1 Univanai
'anguaga
52 Knoi
53 Afr* in
mniKitain
54 Timber tree
5 5 U n u iu a l p e r io n
41 44
I*'I
56 Pertly
«»
^•*myne^&lt;4
|UC«
w
5 7 Look al
DOWN
1 larga *adinu
b"d

:

sr-e

ulcerative gingivostomatitis It Is
caused by a particular type of
infection and usually responds
lo dental corrective measures
Antibiotics are rarely necessary
and the Infrcilon Is not generally
considered lo fie contagious

40 Difficult
problem
41 Smell inteitme
42 Strange (comb
formI
43 Yeoman
44 Neil of
pheaianti

46 Be-ge
47 U nem ployed
48 Seeport in
A la ik *
50 Printer l
m e a iu ra i

M A TIO P iA L
Q U IL T I N G
A S S O C IA T IO N

6 "‘

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WIN AT BRIDGE
MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

BUQS BUNNY
a n p

n o w

"THE O L D
W OPE

V 7T'An

J J&gt;l

by Hargreavea A Sellars

by Warner Brothers
1 W ll CLIMB ft
UP-THtWOPg. n

rw iC K .y / f

lly J a m e s J a c o b y
In today s deal there arr the
ingredients lor a Milling Unease
1be u|ieniiig id ol diamonds is
loyered by diuiittiy s |ai k and
I asl wins Die king Mat k comes
Die ipirrn ol tbibs and declarer
wins Dir ace From Du- play lu
Die llrsi trirk II is obvious that
Die re are Dure diamond losers
ami so drt later must flm) a
parking plat e lot bis club loser

immediate loser lo avoid. Dir
lulling linrssr is sti|K-rlor for
only one reason II It falls Dir
* • onlract will Ik- set only one
Dit k II Die straight finesse falls.
Die contract will Ik- sel two
trit ks
Thai is the m lr that
applies when drt larer Is playing
in a vat mini llm here declarer
lias some information

Go bat k to tfir bidding East
was the dealer and passed He
Ik-t larrt litis a straight finesse hr Id the A K of diamonds and
available by leading a heart lo apparently Dir Q J of (Tuba
Die |ark II West holds the king • mild he also have hrld the
Die are will be a discard fur •lean king'' Not In (fits ||fr.
tlrt larer s i lull It Is also (Hisslhle unless Ills bifocals were playing
to play In Die heart arc and thru lin k s on him Two trick set or
lead the tpiern playing East lor mil South took the straight
Die king That K the rolling heart tinessr and made his
lltiessr When there Is only onr i ontiai I

NORTH

* l IV

♦ g io y i

**gj
♦ QJ4

WEST

♦ 104 4
EAST

♦ «

♦ J 1

M K » 5 41
T 10142
♦ 10 9 1
♦ AK 7
♦ K 512
♦ y Jy7
SOUTH
♦ A K 74 5 2
91
0 4522
♦ AI
Vulnerable Both
Dealer East
W e lt

Pau
Pan

N r rtS

F a it

Soatk

14
I 'a u

Pau
Pau
Pau

14

A

)♦

FRANK AND ERNEST

TUMBLEWEEDS

YOIIH U IH TIID A Y
AUGUST 2 . 1989
In Dir year ahead you will
have &gt;i marvelous ()p|Mirtiinllv In
develop a channel that tan
p rovid e you w ith a second
source u | earnings It may I k something you now consider a
hobby
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Inlitl
vriiiurrs look very promising lor
you today, esjiei tally arrange
menis w here you are striving lur
stnnething lii common with Dir
one you Ime Ma|or changes arr
ahead lor l.rus in the coming
year Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today Mail 91 to
Astro-Graph. Box 489 Radio
(T ty Station New York NY
10019 He sure In stale your
/(Hilar sign
VIRG O (Aug. 23 Sept. 22) Ik
alert lor situations today where
you can M-rvr as the middle
|M-rsnn who brings two factions
together for a profitable purposr

ANNIE
by T. K. Ryan
IF ITS TORE FflD/VlYfcR \

-&gt;onsoFPftr
4V/V/E Of lne

5

T8 ASQ£f1

F F L Y t L V P ip

OHUUN^ANPMOMPEP /
0NPVAPE9TC0WTKDL /

iHAEb C M ! X

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hn o e ve rt

‘

u rrt6.

-

109

1985
L IB R A (Sept. 23 O ct. 23|
I in la y y o u w ill h a v e op
|Nirtiiriliirs lo revrrsr what has
gone against you and you can
•urn Insets into winners Make
up lor lost tune
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 N ov.22)
&lt; uplil has singled you out lur
s|K-cial attention today and all
should go well in allairs of Dir
hearl
It a n d s w i l l h r
strengthened or nrw love will hr
lound
S A G I T T A R IU S (N o v . 23D e c . 2 1) You will Ik- extremely
luckv today when you are
motivated to provide mure for
those you love Seek nut fur
youtsell hut for others
C APRIC O RN (Dec. 22-Jan.
I9| Try to keep yourself free
Iron* restrictions today so that
vou .ire able to move around
You'll have the most fun If
you're s|M)iilanrous
A Q U A R IU S (J a n . 20 -P eb .
19) Your material prospects look
very encouraging both today
and tomorrow Ways to add to
vour rrsourrrs can Ik* found If

vou probe around a hit
PISCES (Peb. 20-March 19)
Tile rule you are tn fulfill today Is
that ol a leader, so tie your own
( m' isoii instead ut letting others
tell you what to do and w hen to
do it

S e m

ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
3 our Intuitive |K-rceptlons will
•k- a great asset today, especially
insights tn your career Hr sure
to take advantage of them
TA U R U S (A p ril 20 May 20)
II your week has hern trifle
beetle, you're entitled to some
bin and relaxation Forego the
mundane Malay and plan some­
thing pleasurable
GEM INI (May 21 June 20)
Your popularity with your peers
Is now ascending and others will
see more in you to admire.
Wherever you go you're apt to
Ik- Dir center of attention
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Issues or causes In which you
Duly believe cat; be successfully
promoted lixlay Use your charm
and sense of humor to win over
new supporters

by Leonard Starr
l

g

3

&lt;ipening lead P |0

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

u

PfRnr+t'lf . | _Ff£L)N6 g f T7ffl_

C o m
C

in o le
m

u n it y

o l l e g e ,

S a n fo r d ,*
F l o r i d a

*-•

Events, Herald * Herald Advertiser.
Thursday. Aw,. 1.1WJ

•4*l»MA44A4UIVIeM»M4-m/.-ir , _________
^

.

A* V * V I V &lt; ^ I VA44# , y * v # V . A ' s e V i v i W V # 4 ^ v V .

Vf

-

�SCC Host To Quitters'
16th National Show
Between 300 and 400
quilts (mm quitters all
over the country are
expected to lie displayed
In thr health building at
S em in o le C om m u n ity
College for the National
Q uilting A ssociation 's
Ulth annual show to Ik
held August 3-10.
T h e q u ilt s w l'l be
J u d g ed an d r ib b o n s
awarded on July 31 and
August 1 prior to being
hung for public viewing
The show will tie open to
tile public on August 3.
Judges will Include Pat
M orris, o f G lassboro,
N.J.; Ruth Culver, New
York; Judy Elwood. Ouk
Ridge. Term., and Linda
Schotcn, Ohio. The verb
Oration Judge wilt be
T ti e I m a B a r r o f
Springfield, Va.
In addition to quilts
entered for competition

there will be special dis­
plays such as a quilt that
was displayed In 1933 at
the Chicago World's Fair.
It Is called the Century of
Progress by Sears quilt.
T h e a sso cia tio n a lso
hopes to have on display
(pdlts from the collection
of Mary Krlckbaum. a
founder of the NQA The
collection Is now owned
by her son ami daugh­
ter-in-law, who live In
West Palin Beach.
There will also tie an
exhibit by Seminole In­
d ia n s fro m B ro w a rd
County.
C ategories fo r qu ilt
en tries Include: hand
quilled, machine quilted,
band and machine com ­
bination. qullt-as-you-go.
made from a ktt. and
quilted clothing.
T h e classes Include
p r o fe s s io n a l, non professional, senior cltl-

len, group, dual effort,
teen, or child.
Types o f techniques
J u d ged a re p ie c e d ,
applique, m ixed tech­
n iq u es. e m b ro ld r r e d ,
wiioic cloth, and surface
design.
Entries w ill Include
quilt, In-between, crib,
original design,
medallion, wall hanging
and banner.
Special awards will be:
Stearns A Foster, Found­
er's (for first full-sized
quilt). I^ tc h w o rk P a lte r
(made from a pattern
that appeared In that
publication). Lancaster
County Rose, and scrap
quilt (must contain at
least 24 different fabrics.)
Judges awards Include:
B est o f S h o w , M ary
Krlckbaum. Bep Green.
J u d g e 's R e c o g n itio n ,
Capllot If 111. and Lynn
Harris.

Two For The Show
Rae Harper, right, chairman of the 16th annual National Quilting
Association show, and co chairman Midge Mycott display one of the
quilts to be exhibited In the Seminole Community College Health
Building. Mrs. Harper owns a Sanford quilting shop and Mrs. My cot f Is a
home economist on the SCC faculty Department.

Lectures, Workshops Part Of Quilting Show
LECTURES
Saturday, Aug. 3
1:30 p in.: Slate Until
Projects • Panel led by
Kaly ( hrlstophrrson
3:30 p.m.: How Quills
Arc Judged • Panel led by
Patricia J. Morris
Sunday, Aug. 4
It) 30 u in.: Quilting In
North Carolina • Yester­
day and Today. Jane C.
Hull
1:30 p m .i Color In
Your QuIliiiMklng Ann
W. Casque
3 30 p in.: State of the
Quilling Nation - Carter
Houck
Monday, Aug. S
10 3 0 a . m . : T h e
F inish ing Edge • Put
Itruusil
3 30 p in. Quilts of the
Early luth Century *
Irrne M&lt; L.irt n
Tuesday, Aug. tt
10:30 u.m .: C h in tz
Quills • Hetty Jo Shlrll
1:30 pin .: Careers In
Q u illin g • Jeanne M.
Spear*
3:30 p in.: Q u ills •
From Ho Hum to Ah-hul •
Jean Kit el
Wednesday, Aug. 7
10.30 a .m. G ellin g
Y o u rs elf Into Print •
Aloysc Yorkn
1:30 p.m .i Quilts A
U u lltiu u krrs o f Down
Under • Jeannette T.
Muir
3:30 p.m.; Tips on Pho
logruphlng Quilts • Ed
Barr

Thursday, Aug. 8
10:30 a.m.: How to
Hold a Quilt Show - Ruth
Culver
1:30 p.m.; Sem inole
S t r ip P ie c in g - K a y
Pclovltz
3:30 p.m.t Traditional
Quills, Then und Now •
Patrlclal Cox
Friday, Aug. S
10:30 u .m .: S fflr a l
Patchwork ■ IF* Going
Around • Jane Hill
l 30 p.m.: The Litera­
ture ol Qulllrnaklng Patricia J. Morris
3:30 p.m.t The Vaga­
bon d Q u itters • Kuy
Lukusko
Saturday, Aug. lO
10 30 a m.: Wear Your
Quill Well • Deanna II.
Powell
3:30 p m .: Louisiana
Cumlorla -Julie Mohr
WORKSHOPS
Saturday, Aug. 3
Afternoon:
1. Signing and Dating
Your Quills - Pal Brousll
2 . S t a i n e d Gl a ma
Applique Kay Lukusko
Sunday, Aug. 4
All Day:
3. Seminole Patchwork
&gt;Put Bruusil
Morning:
4. Designing Quilting
Su-nclls - Irene McLaren
3 . In t r o d u c t io n to
Trapunlo •Aloysc Yorko
Afternoon:
8.
H a s te s . H a s te s .
Basics’ • Jeannette T.
Muir
7 . C h in t z Q u ilts :

Bmdcrir Perse - Bello Jo
21. S e m in o le Strip
36. Old Neckties and
a.m.. 1-4 p.m.
Shtcll
Piecing for Curves • Kaye Other Slippery Fabrics * Half Day Classes
7 : 3 0 p . m . :
A
Pclovltz
Ruth Culver
Class fee: 1 18. plus any
“ Quilt In"; Brlng-n Drug
22. Clamshell Picture
37. Machine Applique materials • fee paid di­
Session • with C arlrr
Applique - Patricia Cox
Jeannette T. Muir
rectly to teacher
lluuck und Aloysc Yorko
Th ursday, Aug. 8
All Day Classes
Monday, Aug. S
Hours: M orning
All Day:
Class fee: S30. plus any
All Day
23. Classic Applique • matrrlula • fee paid di­ classes: 9 a.m. to noon.
8. C o n t e m p o r a r y
Paul Mi Dade
Afternoon classes: 1-4
rectly to teacher
Chintz - Jean Eitet
p.m.
Morning:
H o u r s : 8 :3 0 - 1 1 :3 0
Morning:
24. Holiday Hoops 9. String Star • Irene
Deanna Powell
McLaren
25* T e s s e lu t lo n s •
10. Q u ick M ach ine
Patricia Cox
Piecing -June C. Hull
Afternoon:
Rae Harper, owner of teaching In several local
Afternoon;
26 Color Harmonies •
P a tc h w o rk C o tta g e .
shops and homes os a
I I Pattern Drafting • Jean Eltrl
Sanford, la chairman of hobby. She opened her
Aloysc Yorko
27. English Piecing •
thr 16th annual National shop In M arch 1982
12. Spiral Patchwork:
Jeanne Speurs
Q u ilt in g A s s o c ia tio n
specializing In quilts and
t he Basics •Jane Hill
F rid a y, Aug. 0
show at Seminole C om ­ quilting accessories. She
Tuesday, Aug. 6
All Day :
m u n ity C o lle g e . She a ls o te a c h e s c la a s e s
13 lUwailuh Applique •
28. Front Traditional
began her quilting career dealing with all aspects
Ruth Culver
Block to Contemporary
in t h e m id 70s b y of the art of quilting.
Morning:
Quilt - Deanna H. Powell
14. Slurs and Stripes • Morning:
JanaC Hull
29. C h in t z Q u ilts :
15. Quilt Documenta* Broderte Perse • Betty Jo
t 1 o n - K a t y Shtcll
Chrlsiopherson
30. S e m in o le Strip
Afternoon;
Piecing for Curve* Kaye
18.
Quilt Documentu- Pclovltz
1 I o it • K a t y Afternoon:
W ELCO M E
Clihstophrrson
3 1 . t U lh C e n t u r y
17. Strip Piece Your Am ish Q u ilts • Julie
Q U I L T E R S !”
Next Quilt • Aloysc Yorko
Mohr
Wednesday, Aug. 7
32. R e v e r s ib le Log
H it QUILTERS COUPON SPECIAL— — —
All Day:
Cabin • Bonnie McCou
18. Goal: Perfectin g
Saturday, Aug. 10
Buy A Medium Or Large
Th e Q uilting Stitch • All Day:
Sub And Get A Small
Patricia J. Morris
33 . P ic k A - S lu r •
Morning:
Bonnie McCoy
Sub F R E E (Of Equal Value)
19. Traditional Piecing Morning
Caps, a/10/83
•JeanneM Spears
34. Creative Quilling
20. Spiral Patchwork Designs-Julie Mohr
. _ _ FAIRMONT PLAZA
Just 1/4
Qulllrd Portfolio • Jane
35.
S t a in e d G la ss
Mils North
Hill
Applique - Kay Lukasko
Of Huy 434
Afternoon:
Afternoon

Local Q u ilter C h a irs Show

r

831-1108 SL"-’

�E v tn in g H e ra ld

L H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Aug. V, it tS -J

y. corTAce

\
BOOKS

CLASSES

Q U ILTIN G S U P P L IE S
O V E R 800 BO LT O F F A B R IC IN C L U D IN G
H offm an

C oncord

Jenny B eyer

V .I.P

G utcheon

A m eritex

Peter Pan

Y o u r s Truly

M A IL O R D E R : F abrics an d S u p p lie s
S w a t c h e s a v a ila b le $ 3 .0 0 w ith r e f u n d on fir s t order
C O U N T R Y G I F T IT E M S

CO UNTR Y COOK S CORNER

C O U PO N

%
OFF

Q U ILT E R S S P E C IA L . ..
AUG. 3 T O AUG. 10, 1985 YOG
CAM R E C E IV E 10% O F F ON ALL
FABRIC AND S U P P L IE S WITH
TH IS COUPON.

Visit our booth in th e M erchant M all and at
The Patchw ork C ottage Q u ilt Shop
r'A T C H W O M K
f in t

S tfM i

Y
coLLtai

o

I COTTAOI

222 E. First Street
Sanford, F lo rid a 32711
(305) 321-6821
Hours 9 - 9 daily A u g . 3 • 10, 1985

�4

Evvrtirtg H e ra ld

A H erald A d re rtiv e r, Sanford, Tl

Thursday. Aug t, IH 1

Chairmen Have Impressive
Records Of Accomplishment
D ix ie l i t y w o o d
Dixie liny w o n d ,
Prnsacoln, chairman of
workshops and It-rlurrs
at Ihb year s NQA show.
Is a N Q A cert I fI rd
quiltmaking teacher who
has Ik t ii leaching on all
levels rilncc 1974. She
has hern c o n d u c tin g
workshops throughout
I he counlry Mirier 1977
including qulli eonvenI Io n i , nr m In a ra anil
sym posiu m s and has
Item lecturing lo various

groups since 1975, She
w as a J u d g e at the
Okluhomu S ta le Fair,
g u ilt D ivis io n , 19HI;
Charlotte |N,C.| Qullters
G u ild A n n u a l Show.
1983: and Azalea Clly
guilt Guild, Mobile. Ala.,
1984.
tier quilts have won
(Irst place at the Min­
nesota Qulltrrs Winter
Fantasy. 1979 and (Irst
and second place In litter,
Great G u lf Coast Art
F e s t iv a l, P e n s a c o I a ,

Deanna H. Powell
Deanna H. Powell of
M e l b o u r n e Is t h e
chairman of the Star of
Sanford luncheon. Her
specialty Is patchwork
quilts with emphasis on

F R E E P IZ Z A
L O N C W IX T O
( l / / '» ? k H \ k )

8 3 1 -3 6 7 0

c o l o r

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2 PIZZAS

* 6 . 90piu.

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Medium Size With Cheese end 1 Mem

Exphss No* lo. tees

- V T-

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1983; and Award of Dtntlnctlon. Flberworka '81,
Oklahoma City.
H er work has been
cited In T h e Wool Q u ill.
T h e Com plete B o o k o f
M a c h in e Q u illin g and
G re a t S c ra p Bag Q u ilt*
She wrote The C o n te m ­
p o ra ry C razy Q uilt P ro
J e c t Bonk In 1977 and
C razy Q u iltin g w ith a
D iffe r e n c e , 1981. and
well as contributing to
other quilting publica­
tions.

i
i
i
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i

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a n d

d e s i g n

expansion, apparel and
clothing embellishment.
C e r t i f i e d

to

l e a c h

q u 111 in ak I ng b y th e
Embroiderers' Guild o f
America. Inc., she has
taught for 15 years on all
levels canvas and quilt­
in g te c h n iq u e s . S h e
conducts workshops and
seminars nationally.
She has had published
a group correspondence

J ean n le S p e a r s

D e a n n a Pow ell

D ix ie Haywood

show . S h e has Jjeen She had a one-woman
making quilts since 1972 show at the gallery o f (he
and started to sell them W om en's Center YW C A
at craft shows. This led to In St. Paul.
She Is a NgA certified
a small manufacturing
b u s in e s s to produce judge and Judges several
quill related baby Items shows a year across the
which she designed and country. She served as
sold to children's shops chairman of the NQ A's
across the country. Lalrr t e a c h e r c e r t if ic a t io n
she begun self publishing committee for Iwo years
patterns for her designs a n d e d ite d T e a c h in g
which were carried by Baste Q u lllm aklng on
quilt shops and fabric their behalf. She Is cur­
stores. She has received rently chairman o f the
nationwide recognition N Q A's Master Quitter's
fo r h e r h a n d - d y e d , G u ild P r o g r a m . S h e
hand-quilled quills They started the Oliver Press
h u v e a p p e a r e d In to brin g oul q u iltin g
publications. In 1983.
Q ullter'a N ew slet.cr.
L a d y 's C irc le Patchwork she began p u blish in g
Qui l t s and D eco ra tin g T h e P rofession al Q u llte r.
and C ra ft Id e a s. They a hi monthly magazine
Jeannle M. Spears
have been accepted In for women Interested In
Jeannle M, Spears. St. Juried shows Including quilltlng careers. In ad­
Paul. Minn., la charge of the Q uilt National In dition she published the
the master Judge’s pro­ 1979 and 1983 and the P ro fita b le Q u illin g sertes
gram at this year's NQA Philadelphia Craft Show. o f booklets.

course. A P ro g ra m o f
C o lo r a ild D e s i g n In
Q ulltn uiklng and articles
In s e v e r a l q u i l t i n g
ou bllcallons. She bus
won many awards with
her work Including Heat
o f Show at the Sun Re­
gion 8a Needlework Ex­
h ib it . W i n t e r P a r k .
South/Southwest gu ilt
A s s o c ia tio n S h o w ,
llowston. and Tropical
U ulll Festival, Miami;
Purchase. Members Art
Exhibit , B revard Art
Center A Museum, and
People's Choice. Threads
o f Sunshine E x h lb ll,
Melbourne.

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Oak Reproductions
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Ph. 3 2 3 - 5 3 0 6
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Sanford

Hours:
Monday Thru Saturday 9:30-5
Closed Sunday

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BR EAKFAST SERVED M ON. THRU SAT. S AM.-11 A M .
SUN. 6:30 A.M.-11 AM .
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SANFORD

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ETIENN E A IG N E R * B E R N A D O • S H A D O W LIN E • CATALIN A • P A P P A G A L L O
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116 W. FIRST ST.
PH. 323-4132
HISTORIC DOW NTOW N S A N F O R D
L O I S D Y C U S - O W N ER

■m

I

r

j»

�t - Evening Herald A Herald Advertlier. Sanford, FI.

1Sunday. Aug. I, m i

W e/co m e

National
Q uiltersl
There's always good eatln'
a* a fcifTIfif
near you.
suns
‘lO T ti

Loni|wood, Miqhwov 17 ‘&gt;2
f i 'f 'i 4 1 I H

Lon&lt;)wnoil

H m |Ii w , i v

Pat Drouall
Pat Brnusll o f Columbia. Md.. Is president
o f the National Quilling
A t i o c U t l o i i . In c . A
teacher, qulllrr and drsigner, she Is the winner
o f local, state and na­
tional awards for quilts,
c l o t h i n g and w a l l
hangings.
S h e r e c e iv e d h er
b a c h e lo r 's d e g re e In
hom e economics from
In d ia n a U niversity o f
Pennsylvania: and her
m aster's degree from l he
University of Maryland In
tex tiles and consumer
e c o n o m ic s . S h e has
(ought home economics
for nine years. She hus
been a leat her of quilling
and clothing construc­
tion for 8 years In classes
offered through Howard
Community College and
Howard County Coopera­
tive Extension Service
a n d hus c o n d u c t e d
workshops In Baltimore

Sant*u&lt;i, French Avenue
»n

NQ A
Officers
Teach,
Design

III

M i l I'M l

M O N .-S A T. 10:30-9 PM
S U N . N O O N -9 P M

Pat tlrouM I
County. She Is the author
o f Seminole Patchwork
w h ic h a p p e a r e d In
P a tc h w o rk Patter,
November. 1981; and
T h e Fin ish in g Frig e, a
self-published txmklet.

P a u l M cD ade
qulllllng at shops In Ohio
and teach "*- seminars
around the country.

P a u l Is a s e n i o r
system s a n alyst with
Champion International
Corp., Hamilton. Ohio.
Paul B. McDade
Ills hobby, quilting, has
Paul B
M t: t) a d e . turned Into a second
Oxford, Ohio. I s vice pres­ vocation. He has com­
ident of the National pleted 13 quills In his
Quilting Association. Ine. spare time and probably
He Joined the NQA In has an equal number In
1977 and has attended various stages of com­
every NQA Annual Na­ pletion.
tional Show since then.
He Is one o f (he foundHe served as a Judge at
l he 198 I a n d 1982 e r a o f t h e O x f o r d
shows, Be I s an NQA Plecctnakers Chpqtrr of
c e r t i f ie d J u d g e and NQA and Is a member of
Judges the O h io and four other quilt organiza­
Kentucky state fairs as tions. He co-rhalrrd the
well as other quill com ­ 19H4 NQA show ut Miami
petitions. Hr teaches University In Oxford.

FEATURING TOP BRAND NAMES:

■Arrow*
• L E E • JO C K EY
• G O LD CUP • NORM AN
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John Alexander
Summer Slack s

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S iz e s 2 8 4 2

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first Street Clothier
" T V e 'tt SxcCutivt. O a t Sxflt«44#€
204 E. First St. Downtown Sanford

321-3211

HOURS: M O N . thru TH U RS.
* %• * * ■ « * » *

�From All Over

Thursday, Aug. I. 1W — 1

E ve ning H e ra ld 4 H a ra ld A d v t r t t w r , Santord, FI.

Quilting Teachers Listed
PAT HHOUSIL. from
Columbia. Md.. Is presi­
dent of the NQA with an
extensive background as
a teacher o f quilting and
clothing constru ction .
She holds a m aster's
degree from the Universi­
ty of Maryland In Textiles
and Consumer Econom­
ics and w as a home
economics teacher for
nine years. Her quilts,
c l o t h i n g and wall
hangings have won local,
s t a le a n d n a t i o n a l
awards
1. Signing A Dating
Your Q u ilts : V arious
techniques o f signing

quilts w ill be taught.
Participants will practice
cross stitch, back stitch
und outline stitch. $1 kit
fee.
3. S e m i n o l e P a t ­
chwork: Participants will
learn a fairly Intricate
m achine piecing tech­
nique developed by the
S e m in o le In d ia n s o f
F lorid a . A sam ple o f
strips that can be made
Into a pillow or tote hug
will be made by each
student, and ways to
In c o rp a ra te S em in ole
patchwork Into clothing
wilt hr taught. Sui table
(or beginners as well as

• F l o r i d a C y p r e s s a n d W i l l o w T w ig
• C o u n t r y O b j e c t s o f A rt- G a m o b o a r d s
• S t e n c i l e d D h u r rie R u g s

(305) 339-0667
RES. (305) 657*7770
THURS.-SUNDAY
11:00-5:30
IN THE OLD RED DARN, 1941 HWY. 17*92
(NEXT DOOR TO ANNIE 8 BAR B QUE)

experienced quitters. 81
fee.
K A T Y C H R I S T O P H E K S O N from
L o u is v ille , K y ., Is a
teacher, lectu rer and
w rite r on q u ilts am i
quilling. s h f „ # found.
ing member of the Ken*
lucky Heritage Quilt So­
ciety and served as a
consultant to The Ken­
tucky Quilt l’ro|ect which

'Kadesi

In s p ire d s im ila r u n ­
dertakings throughout
the co u n try . Knty Is
Chairman of the NQA
J u d g e s C e r t ific a t io n
Program and serves as a
m rm b er o f th e NQA
Hoard of Directors.
15 A |fi Quilt Docu­
mentation: The nuts and
holts of quilt documentst l on r e s e a r c h - In ­
t e r v i e w i n g . d a t in g .
C ontinu ed to page 8

«.

t

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112 S. Park Ave.
Downtown Sanford

75%

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Center Mall

Hwy. 17-92, Sanford

322-0408

Gunlight S u p p e r C lu b
&amp; Kestuurant
119 S. MAGNOLIA • DOWNTOWN SANFORD

WOULD LIKE TO WELCOME
THE_qUILTERSJ0 TOWN! L_
coueoN

10% O FF
[

Xddvt CmtUuOne.
a*

S A V IN G S

Nick M o n te’ s

fa v z t&amp; M

YOUR C O M P LET E J E W E L E R S
• RINGS
• CHAINS
• W ATCH ES
• CHARM S
• CRYSTA L • PLA TES
• EA RRIN GS
• R EP A IR S

•

Endless Summer Sale!

Lunch Or Ea^ly ^rd Dinners j

Open For Lunch 11-2 Moo Frt
Dlnnrrtt From 4 I'M-???
SO j

A fl

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U U

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3 2 2 -2 3 6 3

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218-220 E. lit ST.
Downtown Sanford

A

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A

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N e e d s

E v e r y t h in g

T o

W e a r!

322-3524
Hoars: Mon. Sat. 900-5:30

And AH Pleasantly Priced!

m e

W e lc o m e
Q u ilte rs

10% Off
ANY PURCHASE
FROM Rolay
Jmt Show Vs Your
Badges!

�I

f vrning Hcrzld $ H*r«)d Advtrllitr. Ssnlord. FI.

Tharsday. Ate- I, tits

fabrics which arc too
beautiful to throw away
hut loo slippery lo sew
without extreme frustra­
tio n . P r o je c t: P ie c e d
pillow or picture. Inter­
used lo create Interlockmediate level. $2 fee.
lo g designs which ran
J E A N E IT E L . from
sometimes he given real­
North Palm Beach, hits a
istic shapes $1 (ec.
lin e arts backgroun d
RUTH CULVER. from
coupled with a Itfrtlmr
K in gston . N.Y., Is an
Involvement In stitching
N Q A certified Irachcr
Her q u ilts h ave won
and Judge. Ruth Is Kir
many awards, and her
author of llo w To Hold A
designs have .qqx-ared In
Q tillt S h o w and travels
a variety of national cruft
throughout the northeast
and quill publications.
teaching. Judging, shows,
H C n n 1r in p o r u r y
lecturing and serving us
Child/: Distinctive tma quill show consultant.
|K&gt;rted chintz fabrics are
15. Hawaiian Applique: used to create a wall
W aft away an gentle hanging or fu’l size quilt.
Island breezes as you A c o n l e m p o r a r y
learn I he Intricacies as approach to design in­
well as the purr relation corporating traditional
of Hawaiian Applique. q u ill pattern s Is e n ­
Specifics litrude culling, couraged. Both calico
p la c e m e n t , a p p liq u e prints and solid color
stitch. Hawaiian quilting c h I n t z f a b r i c s a r c
m i ployed Innovative use
iim well a s Instructions fo r
a lull-sized quill. Project; of color and piecework or
2 2 " pillow or wall hang­ applique will lie used to
bring excitem ent and
ing. $2 fee.
originality to the finished
3(1. Old N rek tlrs ft piece. At day's end. de­
Other Slippery Fabrics; sign work will lie com ­
Using nerktles and other pleted and work on the
fu h rtrs. stndtnts w ill quill will tie underway.
learn In til litre those $5 fee Includes a piece of

...Teachers Listed
Continued from page 7
exploring I lie milieu of
construction, ami getting
It mi paper li it is easy
for you to tiring a quilt
(or use its n practical
(lo c o m r o t a t i o n d c •
monstrallon. please do.
PATRICIA COX. from
Minneapolis. Minn.. Is an
NQA certified teacher
and Judge whose quills
have been pictured in
many national publica­
tions She Is well known
lor her original &lt;|ulll!ng
p a t t e r n s and h a s
published l wo liooks, Log
Cabin W orkbook and
E v e ry S i Itch Counts. She
le a c h e s and lectu res
thruughoul the nation
22, Clamshell Picture
Applique- Make a picture
a p p 11 &lt;| u e u s i n g a
clamshell pattern. You
will have your choice of a
design lor each of the
four seasons $.75 (re.

2 5. T c s s e la lin n s :
Kxplorr this (asrliuitlng
m ath em atical concept

YOU CAN!

YOU CAN S T IL L G ET A D ELIC IO U S LUNCH OR DINNER FOR $3.50!

HOM E S T Y L E COOKING!
YOU CAN H A VE SOM ETHING O T H ER THAN CH IC K EN OR HAM BURGERS!
(ALTHOUGH WE H A V E THEM , TOO!)
YOU CAN S K IP TH E B U F F E T OR S A LA D BAR LIN ES !

S a n fo rd 's

Hours

Oldest Restaurant
I nrmrrly Angels,
and Hill E&gt; Betty’s
1960‘s Pricing
1960‘s Atmosphere

Mon. • Thurs.
I I a.in. B:30 p.m.
Fridays
I I a.m. - 9:00 p.m,

Relax in air-conditioned comfort, and let o u r friendly, experienced
waitresses bring you what yo u want.
If y o u ’re in a hurry, tell us and w e ll get yo u out in a h u rry.
We prepare a different menu every day. Choice of 4 meats and lots
of vegetables and salads. Homemade pics, cakes, biscuits, and
corn bread.

32^T9t B rantleys Restaurant
NO A LC O H O LIC B EV ER A G ES

2311 South S a n fo id Avc.
Sanford, Florida

TA KEO U T
Q U IC K !

C O M E O R E S S E D A S YO U AREt

G ro v e r G S h irle y W e lch , O w n e rs G O p e ra to rs

U

decorator chintz to be
selected by each student
at workshop.
26. Color Harmonies A
lectu re and hands-on
exercise designed to ac­
quaint qulllers with the
language and rhythms of
color. Various methods of
managing color will lie
explored. $5 fee Includes
fabric and supplies to
make value scale ami
color wheel.
JANE C. H ALL, front
Kulelgh. N.C.. ts an NQA
c e rtifie d Ir a c h c r and
fu dge w h o has brrn
m a k i n g

q u i l l s

a n d

leaching qulltmuklng for
o v e r 10 y e a r s . She
specializes In working
s m a ll — t r a d it io n a l
blocks tn ml tutlure.
10. Q u ic k Machine
Piecing: Use quick strip
piecing and assemblyiiur techniques to pro­
d u ce m a n y d iffe re n t
p i e c e d p a t t e r n s In
m in im u m tim e w llh
m a x im u m a c c u r a c y
Participants will do at
least Hirer dlfcrenl pat­
terns In the workshop
14. Slurs and Stripes
Make a I 2 *b Io c k
wnllhauglng of 6 " eight
pointed slurs, each dllfrrrnl. all cul from the
same piece o f striped
fabric.
JANE H ILL, from Boca
Raton, d e v e lo p e d Ihr
spiral patchwork lerh
ntquc. A home economist
wllh a master’s degree In
trxlltcs. she has laugh)
clothing and dress design
for 20 years, and Is the
owner and designer ol
lllllcruft Needlearl.
12. Spiral Patchwork T h e B a s ic s : m ake a
wreath for any season
and learn a technique
that Is seasonlcss. Spiral
(unchwork will open new
fsisslhllttlcs for creating
both traditional and con­
temporary patterns for
quilt making, dressmak­
ing and crafts. $2 fee.
20. Spiral Patchwork
Q u ilted P o rtfo lio : " A
place for everything and
everything In Its place"
— that’s exactly what
you ’ ll h ave after you
complete this workshop!
Design your own useful
carrying case utilizing
the exciting spiral pat­
chwork techniques and
crea te a p rofession a l
portfolio that Is bulb
functional and eyecat­
ching. $7 fee Includes
18" spring snap portfolio
closure.
KAY LUKASKO. from
Clunamlnaon. N.J.. ts the
i.QA education chairman
*!Pd ar. NQ A certified
Judge. S h e has been
quilling 10 year* and
teaching qulltmaklng for
seven.
2 A 35. Stained Glass
Applique The technique
to achieve a stained glass
effect will be taught. The
C o a t ln s s d to page 0

�Amish Quilts: Explore
the lifestyle and quilts of
the 19th Ccntruy Amish.
‘Select the design you
with to create and expe­
monslrallon ol methods
rience
the excitement of
for turning those long,
skinny leftovers In your working with the dark
scrap hag Into Stars. Ka* y e t v i b r a n t c o l o r s
associated with Amish
I r t d o s c o p e and
Spldcrwrh In a fraction of quilts You will design a
the usual time. Interme­ p r o je c t p r o b a b ly no
larger than one yard
diate or upper level.
square.

...Teachers Listed
Continued from pi|e B
(■lavs project will be a 12’ *
block usable as a pillow
or a panel for a tote. S3
fee for kll.
BONNIE MCCOY, from
San Antonio. Is an NQA
c e r tifie d teacher and
m a s te r Judge who Is
serving on the Teacher
Certification Committee
an d th e .lo d g e s
Certification Committee.
She Is the director o f the
Texas Heritage Quilt So­
ciety and edits newslet­
ters for the group and for
the Judges committee.
32
H e v e rs lb le L o g
Cabin: Go with two color
schemes • a quick easy
way. Th is technique may
tie used for plarcmuts.
table runners, clothing
and more. You will leave
class w ith a ' ’ take-Ithom e" class project and
Ideas for many other cre­
ations. $2 fee.
33. I’ lck-A Star: Learn
an e a s y approach to
drafting the elght polnled
star und go on to other
star patterns We will
" p lc k a -s ta r " pattern,
d i s c u s s gr ai n l i ne,
template options, mark,
cut and begin to piece $2
fee.

JU LIE MOHR, from
Baton Rouge. La.. Is a
n a t i v e of W e s t e r n
Kan.-Mia. She lived and
t a u g h t q u i l t i n g In
Ka ns as . O h i o , and
Arizona before m oving to
Loulslanna. She w-as re­
cent l y ear ned NQA
certified teachers status
3 1 . 19th C e n t u r y

*

S P I C IA l MOUXS A D O 3 IOih
M O N V A t * 3 0 9 0 0 SU N. U S

327-2914

10% Discount
Bring This Ad
In For Discount
On Ali Fabrics
Enter Our Drawing For
FREE Gifts
Drawini On Friday
August 9th
2:00 PM

BALLOON M AG IC

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1

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August 1 st - 10th
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Winter Springs, FIs

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• DOLL S H O P G HOSPITAL
* HAND M A D E CLOTHINQ • RESTORING
• SUPPLIES
Come In And Visit Our Modern, Antique
And European Doll Shop.

Phone 127-2796
I Mile E*tt From 17-92
In The Winter Spring* Centre
' ''

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W IN TER SPRINGS CENTER
(1 MILE E A S T O F 17-92 O N HW Y. 434)

W elcome To The Friendly City

I KENE MCLAREN.
fr o m M I a mI a n d
lllawaaaee. Ga . has been
t e a c hi ng q u iltm a k in g
since 1975, She origi­
nated the Sunset Quilt
Show and was director
and co-chairman of the
show for several years
She teaches alt levels of
q u iltm a k in g and does
c o m m is s io n e d w o rk .
I r e n e Is c u r r e n t l y
e n r o lle d In the NQA
Judges certification pro­
gram.

D

Continued to page 10

Q U ILTER S

PAU L MCDADE. from
O xford. Ohio, Is NQA
vice-p resid en t and an
NQA certified Judge. Ills
work has appeared on
the co ver o f Lad/cs’ C ir­
cle P a tc h w o rk Q uills and
In Q u ilt magazine. Ills
quills have won many
awards. He leaches ut
shops In Southwest Ohio
and &lt;loes workshops In
other areas.
23. Classic Applique:
Applique u cardinal on a
tree branch and learn to
handle bias stems, circle
and pointed leavrs. $4
for kit.

4. Designing Quilting
Stencils: Students will
learn to plan the quilting
from their quilts, origi­
nate designs for fancy
quilting, and make sten­
cils to fit the space cor­
rectly. including such
tra d itio n a l designs as
cables and wreaths. Suit­
able for any skill level.

34. Creative Quilting
D esign s: A m ust for
every qulltr-r from the
beginner to the more
experienced. Learn to
errate quilting designs to
lit your quilt. Ik-gin with
sim ple cross-hatching
and progress to various

CAIJCCS PATCHES

New Summer Hours
Mon.-Frl. 10-5
Set. 10-3
» 7 V ■A Y A . t

C M LIU

Take 17-92 South
to the 3rd light
Turn left onto
SR 434 0 «v e
12 mile* to the
Winter Sprmgt
Center

S R. 434

WtftfflM

CALICO
PATCHES

�I * - C » « n ln 9 h . r s ld 4 K a ra Id A J v e rfls a f, Sanford. r l .

T h u rsd a y, Aug. I, InU

...Teachers Listed
sewing Seminole hand*
In straight lin e s , I ’ ll
feather designs. Includ­
throw you a rurvel Stu­
ing wreaths and ovals.
dents will learn techSurprisingly simple.
ii 1 q u e • a d a p t i n g
PATRICIA J. MORRIS,
S e m l n n l r h a n d s to
Irnm Glnssborn. N J.. Is
curved edges (such as an
;in NQA rrrllfted Iraclirr
A-llnr skirt edge). We will
ami Judge, and assocluwork on samples. $5 50
linn secretary. In 1970
Ire includes b o o k le t,
she developed a i|ulll
i hr rail and prrrut fabric.
correspondence course
wlih students in Hie U S.,
DEANNA II POW ELL.
Canada, England,
Irom MeltMiurnr. Is a de­
Australia and China. She signer. qulllmaker und
Is a conlrlhullng rdltor teacher who has gained
for Q u ill W'orhi and her national recognition lor
nrlldes appear regularly her original quilts and
In other i|ullllng and patchwork apparel She
craft publications She le a c h e s and le c tu r e s
Iruvels Ihonghoul the thoughout (h r united
country lecturing. Judg­ S ta le s , wi th p r i ma r y
ing and teaching
emphasis on originality,
IH. Goal: Perfectin g i olor blending and lahrlc
The Unllllng Stitch: Thi s selection. One o f her
workshop concentrates newest creations. “ In
on |M*rfcrtlng the tjiillllng Celebration ... .July 4th"
si I t c h a nd w o r k i n g
was chosen for the I9H4
inward (he Ideal nl small
Purchase Award by the
e v e n s titc h e s . S te p s Harvard An Denier and
i overed arc starting and Museum In lls annual
ending u line of ipillilng. exhibit.
ipillilng ai points, coping
24 llolld u y H oops:
wi t h g r ai n p ro b le m s Create a holiday decoraw hile ipillilng. among Iton In a hoop while
others. Workshop Is for learning simple niut blue
ip illlris nl some experi­ patchwork techniques,
ence. I 'i fee.
instruction will includr
JEANNETTE T. MUIR. three different patterns,
Iroill Mimrcnlnwii. N.J., Is com plete constru ction
an NQA ccrtlllcd teacher and finishing methods
who has tiern actively wlih a touch of counted
Involved In rpilllmaklng cross stile h $2 Ice.
III the New Jersey area
2H From Traditional
since 1975 Her Work has Hlnck to Contemporary
won awards In hlnck Guilt: Use the traditional
cnnicstH and she has had quilt block to solve your
w o r k pu 111 I s h e d I n designing woes. Students
/Viffciis /or A/i/&gt;//i/i «c arn/ w i l l d e l v e I n t o t he
P/ccci/ Work, a Farm
mysteries nl color und
Journal publication. T Ills design and discover thul
spring she Icctiirrd mi everyone can lie creative.
tpilllmnklng In Auslrulla T h i s w o r k s h o p Is a
anil New Zealand.
notebook course
0 . Hu s ic s . Musi cs.
rolutlnulliig In a plrcrd
Ituslcst: As the Mile sug­ wall hanging using the
gests. this class covers design und color princi­
the most Important basic ples nullified In the class.
Icchnlipies Involved In Each student w ill pirn
quilt making: terminolo­ and execute his/her own
g y . fa b r ic s e le c tio n ,
project. 91 lee.
supplies, pledug. appli­
HETTY JO S H IE L L .
que. halting, binding and
Mom Tallahassee. Is un
much more.
&gt;17. Machine Applique: NQA rertlfled teacher,
Learn to set up your the owner of Mrs. Shtell’s
•a wing machine and to Quill Shop and the co­
m aneuver angles and author of C h ln li Q u ilt*
curves for a smooth, even Do fa d in g G l o r y . She
»u t Ill-stitc h a p p liq u e. e d i t s and p u b l i s h e s
Several Icrlmlqurs and ‘ ’ F a b r I c A r t s " , u
proh lrn is will hr d is ­ quurteily publication o(
IM ltrrn s und how to in­
cussed. $'2 fee.
KAYE PELOVITZ, from humation; und dlslrlbK lllc o ll C ity, Md.. Is u l r s und p r o d u c e s
(uriiirrly an rlrmentary specialty q u illin g pro­
nr In Nil teacher who bus ducts.
7 A 29. C hild! Quilts:
since enjoyed sharing her
enthusiasm In Seminole H ro d rrtc P e r s e : T h e
piecing with qulltrrs. In workshop Includes slides
I9M2 she begun Seminole ami examples of brodrrle
Sam pler, which oilers |M-rsc und ch illi! quills,
l l r s l g n and l a y o u t
s o l i d c o lo r c o t t o n s ,
e h ln ll, quilting books IMisalhllltles (or ultimo
squares, wallhuughigs.
and notions.
21 A 30 S em in o le clothing, and quilts will
Strip Piecing for Curves: lx’ explored Techniques

Continued to pagn i s

mm

”A Ladies Complete
Department Store”

Continued from pi|e 0

Now that you’re tiled o f

Evanlrvg Harald 4 H a ra ld A d v a r liM r , S anford, FI.

218 • 220 East First St.
Downtown 8anford
322-3524
H O U R S. Mon. • Sal.

f i r s t

it M

-

*1h c .

A COMPLETE JEWELRY STO RE
SA LE S &amp; REPAIRS

"We're Exclusive, Not Expensive"

Proprietor - Mark Shuttleworth
RataU Showroom

901 Wert Firit St. (Hwy. 46), Sanford. FL 32771

2C4 E. First St., Downtown S a n ford
HOUH Mon. Thru Thurt 1
Sot 9-3 30 Sol. 9-1

COMMUNITY
CIVIC CENTER

FLORIDA VICTORIANI
ARCHITECTURAL
ANTIQUES

S t r e e t C lo t h ie r

S A f
9 0 1 1
J Z I ' J a U

9 • 5:30

*K c u U n . f U t M

111 I. F A IR A V I .
DOWNTOWN I A N F O S O

« . . .
J Z Z ’ Z J O J

Tel. 305/321-5767

9 H C P H IS T O R IC
F I R S T 8 T . S A N FO R D

CH AM BER
O F COM M ERCE
SANFORD AVENUE

SHOE
STORE
208 E. First St.
Dow ntow n Sanford
322-0204

AUTOPARTS

HOMI
W OO

PALM ETTO

IM U tV VM

*»»
rat * r

SANFORD
FLOWER

SHOP

" B i g g e r V a lu e s A n d

S

B e t t e r Q u a lit y "

212 C. First St.

Ocwnlown Sanford

30

3 2 3 -4 3 6 6

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

Brampton
6 n r &amp; c n ?

^ (X i-fiL o n

'H* 0 * 4 &amp; V U 4 T H tyit

J
ELIZAIETHS KA0ER
FASHION
JEWELERS
SANFORD AUTO PARTS
IETTY ANNE’S HAIR SALON
CLOUSE
OOOO YEAR____________

110 East lit SI
ri
1214SM

Mon . Two* . Thurs 104
Wad . Fn 104
Sat 10 5

yu^lBIO A AUTO PARTS

U.8. 17 A 92

DRU0 STORK
*p &lt; n c q jL I L

PRESCRIPTIONS A SPEC IA LTY

SANFORD
EVENINO
HERALD

FREE DELIVERY
TO A ll SANFORD ARIA !

1322-24821
FLORIDA VICTORIANI

PATCHWORK
COTTAGE
QUILT SHOP
B00KS-SUPPUES-GIFTS
FABRICS-CLASSES-ANTiQUES
2 2 2 Eaat First St.

Downtown Sanford

M U i n s f sit

321-6821

SANFORD AUTO PA R T S
"&gt; our One Slop Store In Downtown Sanford*’

M A K E IT N A P A

B R A N D N EW

•

Serving
B R E A K F A S T • LU N C H &amp; DINNER
112 East First St.
Downtown Sanford, FL
321-8587

322-8463

B r id a l an d F o r m a l W ear

PARK AVEN UE

‘Elizabeth's
fashion Comer
HOUHS Han Thun 113 30
m 104 M. 3*1 104

we a r , e v e n t ngwear.
a cI I v e w e a r and
sleepwear
Following Ihe premier
o f “ Radiant S ta r" In
H o u s t o n b e fo r e e n ­
thusiastic audiences o f
1.200 quitters. Ihe show
Is traveling throughout
Ihe country us a pivotal
e v e n t In ot her qui l l
shows.
The show can lie seen
d u r i n g I hr Nat i onal
Qui l l i ng A ssociation 's
I bill annual show at 7 JO
p mi. Augusl b In Ihr Fine
A r t s H u 11 d I ii g at
S e m in o le C om m u nity
College

• WKIlllING GOWNS • TUXEtJOS
• INVITATIONS • ATTKNMENT DRESSES

322-2821

101-A W. 1st St. &amp; Corner Of
Park Avenue
Downtown Sanford

nouns
Mon rn as
sw an

^ o t s u s t

KNIOHTS SHOES
FIRST ST. CLOTHIER

CLOUSE
CAR CARE
G o o d y e a r Tiro C a n to r
555 W . First St.
S an ford , FL

Th e F a i r c h i l d Protensing Corp. and Con­
cord Fahrlen are proud to
announce th e ir 19H4
“ Radiant Star” fashion
show The show pre­
viewed a Quilt Murkel In
Houston on October 2H.
1984. The talented de­
si gne r s h a v e been
selected from qullters
throughout the U.S. to
participate In this prentigous showing of one-of-a-klnd quilted gartnenla. The garments re­
fled Ihr lastc and per­
sonality of each designer
and represent every oc­
casion Including daytime

H u x* 7C t “D a

MON SAt
* » S

ROJAV
PATCHWORK
COTTAQE
SUM 4 SASSY

HAMPTON 0AR0ENS
FOREVER FASHIONS

• JUNIORS • PETITES • MISSY
• LARGE 1/2 SIZES • 3-52714VY-32Vi

Fairchild Company
Sets Fashion Show

Motor Parts &amp; Machine Co.
110 W. Socortd St
Sanford. FL

LISRARY

S(i* K &amp; S &lt; U ty/ B irftV t &amp; BdUx

T h u rs d a y , A u f. 1, I H J — II

&lt;NAPfl&gt;

322-5651
118 W. First Straat, Downtown Sanlord

'P o p p y G a r d e n " b y P a t r ic ia

N e e ly

a o i io catMtai aooa h it n n u t

‘Betty A*t*tz
U N IS E X H AIR S A L O N
201 W est First S t.
Downtown Sanford
322-4 913

WEE KIDDS
FASHIONS
307 East 1st St.
Downtown Sanford
321-3424
HOURS:
161:30 TRUtV 4 F«1
164 00 MT.

Sanford
Flower Shop
“ Four Downtown Florist
Since I9 5 6 ‘‘
209 E. Commercial St.

322-1822
304 E. COMMERCIAL ST.
SANFORD, FL 32771
(306) 3261137

HOURS
Mon. Frt 6 6 3 0
Saturday 612 Noon

PAC N’ SEND

FRCX CiFTWRAP WITH IVCRY PACRA6RM A tMPPWC
A SPCCIAL a n - UNO TROPICAL FRUIT
Start At Law At S14.SS - tadodst SUfftag

'P r is m a tic " b y S a n d ra
’•*

••*••••-•

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

S ig a l
..

.

�11— E v t n ln g H tra ld ft H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r, Sanlord, FI.

Thurcday. Aug. 1, l*»J

'A f t e r A ll , Y o u H a v e
T o S ta rt S o m e w h e r e '
By Margaret Todd
Special to the Herald

On a t old ■January 31.
1970. aeven wom en met

SEMI-ANNUAL

SHOE SALE
Final Days
Quality Shoes For
The Entire Family

to form a gf oup Dial
would fo s te r and en­
c o u r a g e I n t e r r a t In
quilting, htalory o f quills,
research. am i whining
their k n o w le d g e with
others.
Although we mri In
It IV c r d a I e , Md . , we
envisioned a national
membership — afler all.
you have to Mart somewhrret
In Septem ber, 1970.
we put on our first annu­
al quilt show, held at the
Greenbelt Library, Our
iitrtiib e rs h lp g r e w —
Australia and Hawaii
appeared on our mailing
list Then Canada was
added W* were still few.

but we were dedicated
Our annual shows were
held at G rrrnbrll Library
unt i l 1977 when w e
outgrew (he spare and
moved to the gym at
Georgetown Visitation for
1977 and 1978.In 1979
we h a d to s h o w at
Greenbelt Junlro High —
and what a time we had!
Our dates wrre set. plans
made, and because of too
many storm (lays during
the winter, school was
scheduled for extra days,
running over Into our
time. So. quickly, we
irled lo gel Ihc dale
c h a n g e s o ut to t he
public. It was too lale for
magazines, but we sent
an extra mulling lo our
members.

— — — — — C O U P O N -* — — — -

W ESTERN S8ZZLIN
Q U ILT SHOW S P EC IA L

I

SAVE UP TO 75% OFF
ON NAME BRAND SHOES

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

W e lco m e

l\ r
SHO E STORE

2 for 1 PRICE
2 BROILED (8 OZ.(
SIRLOINS
2 SALAD BARS
2 BEVERAGES
•12.56 Value

I TAX

With This
Coupon

I

2 M E. First S t
Downtown Sanford

I
I

3 2 2 -0 2 0 4

I
I

Hour* Stun / h u r t A S i t . 9:3:30

frl 0 7

2900 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92)
Sanford

I-

Welcome Quilters
To Sanford

Northern

Our q u a r t e r l y
newsletter, Patchw ork
Patter, has becom e a
larger publication with
color cover. It Includes
reports of activities of the
various chapters located
all over Ihc country, and
we arr always looking for
articles of interest from
our members to share
wllh others. W e do de­
monstrations at shopping
malls, churches, civic
groups, when asked. We
have participated In the
1-aurel Street Fair two
years and the Greenbelt
Cul t ural Ar t s Cent er
Days only once, last year,
hut will be doing It aguln
t hi s y e a r . W e h a v e
various charity projects
— individual and chapter
participation.
For further Information
send SASK to P.O. Box
8 2. G r e e n b e l t , M d .
20770.

A ir p o r t B lvd . A 17-92 • S anlord

Ph. 323-4569

We Have Su p p lies
F o r A ll O f Y our Crafts

• Birthday Bears
• Sports Bears
• Remember Bears

COLONIAL
SPECIALS
■RKAKPAST S P E C IA LS 7-11 A.M. MON. SAT.

-AY-AWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS

P O R C E L A IN D O LL

R ED M ILL
H a n d c ra fte d
C o lle c ta b le s

E X Q U IS IT E FEAT U R ES
E L E G A N T L Y DRESSED

N ew Shipment
Juut A rrived
• YARN • SILK FLOWERS
• CHRISTMAS CRAFT SUPPLIES

STOREWIDE
2 0 % DISCOUNT

• A C R Y L I C P A IN T

W IT H T H I S C O U P O N

S T O R E W ID E

ronn mr i i aug in

10% Off
A ll Crafts t Craft Supplies
Aug. 1 Thru Aug. 10

Ph. 321 0781
228 E. First St.

Sanford
1M .

&lt;trm "■‘a w e

f

.

r « « e *-* f A • S . , . * i M * i e t A l f , t ( i f
•••*•*»*
*9•

BILL'S BREAKFAST
SPECIAL
GRILLED HAM WITH TWO
EGGS OR SiSCUlTS WITH
SAUSAGE GRAVt

*2.25

A B le n d OT C rushed P e ca n
S h e ll Lacquered A n d H ig h ­
lig h te d by Hand.

-------- t r

th e

Virginia chapters took on
Hit* responsibility. Rooms
and meals were available
at Marymount College
where the show was
held In 1982 we went to
New Orleans. La., and In
1983 to Bell Buckle.
Trim In 1984 (he show
was held In Oxford. Ohio.
Our membership Is
growing by leaps and
bounds. We are sill) on
an all-volunteer basts,
and II would tie so much
nicer If II could tie kept
that way. We sltll want to
help the Individual who
dors not know quilting,
get them interested, and
also krep the Interest of
th ose who do know
qutlttng.
Programs have been
set up for certification of
teacher and Judges, and
Masters Guild, Our tentporary headquarters.
Patchwork House.

ZAYRE PLAZA • SANFORD

Lovable. Muggable
Dressed And Priced
To Be The Perfect G ift
Or Greeting.

**• • • •• A•

and

located In a h is to ric
in a n s I on u n d e r t he
supervision o f Maryland
National C ap ital Park
and Planning Is a stop­
gap, Some day — some
day — we hope lo have
our own premises. We
envision a lib rary for
research, a museum for
display, classrooms for
teachi ng, w o rk sh o p s ,
adding lo the gift shop —
t here are s o m a n y
ixmlblilles. Hut we can’t
do It wllbout the help of
our members.

CRAFT
SUPPLIES

G O R H AM
BEARS

• ta W»&gt;

99

$ 9

We had previously sent
out *’ierlrrs’' to see If one
o f o u r c h a p t e r s In
another area would pul
on the show. The QuBees. Ft. Wayne. Ind..
look on the task In 1980.
and did a marvelous Job
Over 10.000 visited the
show — they came by
bus loads from Michigan.
Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky,
Maryland — It wus great!
That was the l()th annu­
al show.
In 1981 we came hack
to the Metropolitan area

• 'R e ­
**•«•»«.

1*1.75 SPECIAL
I EGG. BACON.
GRITS. BISCUIT OR
I TOAST. COFFEE AND
SMALL JUICE

DINNIX SPECIALS SERVED 4-7 P.M.

•0RRA1 HI
rtNIYAkl
STEAK 460
MMfUAt
DCLMONICO
STEAK 4.85
rmii
UNOSTUfFID
ElOURMI JSO

setcial IUMAT «(
BROILED
3.75 FISH
ISO
TMUKSlt
FRIED
3.95 CHICKEN 335
1ATUMAI
FRIEDCATrtSN
2.95 Nl'CCITS ISO

SHOAL
2.75
2.25
2.75

COLONIAL ROOM RESTAURANT
I I S (AST FIRST ST. DOWNTOWN SANFOtD

323-2999

MON

SAT 71

tint ran tmcriosnv« i

�E v e n in g H e ra ld a H e ra ld A d v e rtiie r, Sanford. FI.

Quilted Saying
From
AGilded Age
Wc have a deep snow.
No teams passed lor over
three weeks, but as soon
as the drifts could be
broken through. Mary
Scot! sent her boy Frank
around to say she was
going to have a quilting.
Everybody turned out.
Hugh drove on to the
Center where he and
several other men stayed
at the Tavern until It was
time to come track to the
S w i l l s for the big supper
and thr evening.. .One of

Mary's quilts she called
T h e Star and Crescent.’ 1
had never seen It before,
She got the pattern from
a Mm. 1rITrrts, one of the
new Pennsylvania Dutch
lamllles. and pieced tt
this winter. Tier other
quill was just an oldfnshlonrd ‘Nine Patch,"
—as q u o t e d In R i c h
F in le y s' "U h l 1‘u ich w o rk
Q u ills and t h r W om en
W ho Ma k e T h e m ’ '
f/’/il/ade/p/ila I&amp; 2 9 I

'Setfy A *utc
UNISEX HAIR STYLING

Welcome Quilters
Accentuate Your
Florida Tan!

.)

B a iiip t o n

6 n r lU ’ ii«

Serving

BREAKFAST-LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Frosting Or Hair
Highlighting
$ 2 5 ° °

Homo Style Cooking
At Moderate Prices
DAILY SPECIALS
WON TH R U T H U S ! « A M TIL * PM
P t l . t A M A L L N IG H T
IA T A SUM O P E N TIL I P M
R E O P E N * PM A L L N IG H T

MON.-SA! 8 AM - 10 PM &amp; SUN 9 AM - 10 PM

Featuring..,

Special

SPECIAL

Perm s

B U Y 1 D IN N E R
G E T 1 D IN N E R O F
EQUAL V A LU E F R E E

Thunder. Aug. t. 1*85—13

$3 5 00

Homemade Icecream
Salads •
*Q ulche
Pasta • Sandw iches
Waffles • Fresh Fruit
Pastries • Sundaes

Including Cut G Conditioner

E X P IR E S 8/10/85 — WITH THIS COUPON

-Brampton tiwtvn?

Ahhc '4.

|

CIM ISEX H AIR S T Y L I N G
MARKET

" day” &amp;” nFghT

1300 French Ava.

Sanford

gr Ill

112 East First St.

201 W est F irs t S t.
D ow ntow n S a n fo rd

D o w n to w n Sanford

322-4913

321-8587

Ph. 323 6728

S E M IN O L E

Q u a lity • B u ilt
E xtra L arg e C a p a c ity

SEWING &amp; VACUUM

WASHER

STOREWIDE
SEMI-ANNUAL

S u m m e r S ale!
EXTRA

“Welcome

20% OFF

Our Already Low
Discounted Prices!

Wholesale Commerlcal
Prices
Avai
O N E D A Y S E R V IC E
O N R E PA IR S &amp; PA R T S
(In M o s t Cases)

Stop B y And Visit
Us Today.

• Throe wa* h/rinse temperature s e l e c t i o n s
with energy-saving cold waler rinse f f f r g J469
• Two eyelet
unm
• Four weler level selections
• Porcelain enamel liniah.
SAVE *76
• Unbalanced load control system
Limited Quantity
QE. We Bring Good Things To Life
Free
Phone

322-9411
Man Jrl 9AM

Model WWA830D

7 PM

M4J.AM.'A|»*

322-3683 HOME APPLIANCE
1700 W. First SI.

Local
Delivery

— Sanford

• DRESSES
/
• S U IT S
• SLACKS
/
• S K IR T S
• CULOTTES
• JU M P S U I T S
• C L A M D IG G E R S
• B A T H IN G S U IT S
• ROM PERS
• SHORTS
• TOPS
• GOW NS
• LIN G ER IE
SIZES 3 52 / 14Vo-32Vi

Stim &amp; S*44y/
“B iffin £ BdUx
212 L Fin! St.
Dewatews Saeferd
Mm Im S W I M

�M — E v tn ln g H * r« ld a H trild _ A d v » r1 ll« r, S jn lo rd , FI.

Thursday, Aug I, lttS

"Sanford's One Stop Activewear,
Surfboard, A Skateboard
Center”
MWY. 17-W
C IN T II M AIL

P a t r ic ia M o r r is

R u t h C u lv e r

L in d a S c h o lt e n

lA N F O tD

C $ Z £ 322 0408

J u d y E lw o o d

4 Judges Well Trained

Experts To Evaluate Entries
Putrlclu J. Morris of Division o f Ulster County
Olusslxmt, N.J., will lx- Community College since
(hr head judge al thin 11173. Ms. Culver bccume
yrar'n National Quilling a certified trnrher of NQA
Associ ati on show In In 1979 amt ppduted her

B o n e s le c l and Pen n y
M orris PBS series on
q u iltin g , and vi si t i ng
museums and exhibits.

credentials in IM S sin
wus one of a group of
teachers who set up the
NQA standards for the
B a s i c Q u 111 m a k I n g
T ea ch ers C ertification
program und was u con­
t r i but or to T e a c h i n g
Basi c Q u i l l m a k i n g .
published by NQA In
1981. In 1983 she wus
one o f the Judges ut (he
NQA show In Bell Buckle.
Term. Prior to that. In
1078, she coordinated
the first Judged quilt
shuw In (he northeast
held by W l l l w y c k
Qullters Guild III Slone
Hldge. N.Y.. whrre she
und P a t r i c i a Mor r i s
f o r m u l a t e d Judgi ng
standards. She became a
NQA certified Judge In
1080.

Judy E. Elwood o f Oak
Hldge. Term., will tie the
other Judge. She has a
degree In textiles and
clothing from Ihe College
o f H om e E c o n o m ic s.
University of Tennessee.
She has been quilting for
six years and Is u NQA
certified Judge. She co­
il u t h o r e d T e n n e a r e

Su n f o r d . W r i t i n g ,
l ecturi ng and Judging
share nlxwil equal time In
her bui*y » « liedule. Sfie In
c e rtifie d an a Judge,
teacher and muster judge
by the NUA and has
jutlgrd 22 i (iinpcllllons
nlnce 1978. She hus
taught 54 basic and In­
termediate &lt;|ull t maki ng
courses, a patchw ork
portfolio I and a conetpoudrnce course with
students In the United
Staten. Canada. England.
Australia, and China.
She has conducted 50
workshops since 1070
and given 4H lectures.
She bus written quilt­
ing columns and urtlclrs
In Q u i l l W o r l d and
numennis other publica­
tions, as well as acting us
u consultant, participat­
ing In forums, giving
dem onstrations, orgunl/ing shows, and making
rudlo and T V appearantes. A gr aduat e of
la-wts University, she has
for the the past two years
pursued academic work
In the art field at the
college level.
It u t h C u l v e r o f
Kingston. N.Y., author of
/lo w T o Ito ld a Q u ill
S h o w , will also judge at
this year's show. In ad­
dition. she will lecture on
"llo w To Hold a Quilt
S h o w ' ' und t each
workshops oil Hawaiian
A p p l i q u e und Ol d
N e c k t i e s a n d Ot h e r
Slippery Fabrics. She
was Inducted Into the
Catsklll Mountain
Quitters Hall of Futne In
1982 and has coordi­
nated four mujor quilt
shows.
Q u illin g sin ce 1070
turd u quiltmaking teach
«T .W .| b c laculty ql the
(is n tlS o to g - tkdiuvxtoo

I.lndu M. Scholten of
Oxford. Ohio, will also lie
a Judge. Certified os a
NQA Judge In 1084. she
served as a voluntec'
worker and Judge's aide
ul Ihe 15th annual NQA
show ut Oxford. She won
a blue ribbon at Ihe show
for lies! amateur pieced
pillow. Currently she Is
serving on Ihe NQA Ex­
ecutive Board as Ways
und Means chairman.
She Is director of the
T-shirt project und the
cookbook project. She la
also presiden t o f Ihe
Oxford Pleremakers NQA
Chapter 118. As soon as
Ms. Scholten was old
enough, she said, she
J o i n e d t h e 4-11 and
learned to sew. Although
she has been sewing and
doing other needlework
for 25 years. It wus 19/ti
before she began quill­
ing. She Is a self taught
cpilltrr through trading.
-wuwMUug . the ■U t nrg la -.

Q u illin g D ea lg n a Thin
Patterns und wrote Q uill
E xp lo sio n In Oak Hldge
for L a d y 'a C ir c le P a t­
ch w o rk Q ullla In 1982.
She also wrote P ieced
Versus A p p llq u ed —
W hich W ins O u t? for the
C e rtllle d Q u ill J u d g e s
Q uarterly In 1984. Ms.
Elwood Is a member of
the locul Smoky Moun­
tain Chuptcr. and Ten­
nessee Valley Qullters
Assrk'latlon. und National
Quilting Association.

How To Store A Quilt
To store a quilt, fold It
In as few p la c e s as
possible and pad these
soft folds with acid-free
tissue paper or 100 per­
cent cotton fabric that
bus been washed to re­
move all traret o f starch
or other chemicals that
could harm the quilt.
Wrap the quilt In more

acid-free paper or clean
cotton fabric, then place
In an acid-free box.
hcniove the quilt from
storage once or twice a
year to replace the tissue
or wash the cotton cloth.
This will get rid of any
a d d that may have been
picked up from ihe sur­
roundings.

F l o w e r s , Pl ant s a nd
Fishes,
lleusts. Birds. Flies and

There's nothing near at
hand or furthest sought
But with the needle may
t&gt;c wrought.
(from ‘T h e R o m a n ce o f
ih e P atch w o rk Q u ill In
A m e rica " b y lla ll and
K i r l singer. 10351

Bees.
Hi l l s . D u les. Pl a i ns .
Pastures.
S k ie s , S eas. R i v e r s ,
Trees.

“ L o w e s t P r ic e s O n N a tlo a s J
B ra n d s In S e m in o le A O ra n g e C ou n tw ”

C e n t e r M a ll
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322-5783*

�T hursday. Aug. I, I t lS

U — E v tn ln g M tra ld 4 H erald A d v v r llta r , S sn lo rd . FI.

Bicentennial Gave Birth To Quilting Revival
ll'a a crazy thing about N a t i o n a l Q u i l t i n g
quilts They're warm ... Association’s 16th An­
nual Quilt Show.
and yet they're "h o t."
It was during the bi­
T h ey 're perfectly at
home In bed or showing c e n t e n n i a l yea r that
Americans began getting
off on the wall.
From tradition-minded back to their roots and
Hanford to the Hawaiian the making of quilts Is a
I nl ands w h e r e hand- part o f the American
stitched qullm sport a tradition. People became
tropical look o f floral de­ ob sa esa ed wi t h th eir
sign and color, Interest In h eritage and revivin g
— and affection for — the some o f the old crafts.
Mrs. Harper said he
A m erican qui l t Is as
tmundless an the variety popu larity o f quilting
of kaleidoscopic patterns wa n e d af t er the Dethat now dazzle count­ presalon. but there were
less a flc 'o n a d o n and s t i l l s o m e ' c l o s e t
quitters.'
quitters alike.
“ Ten years ago, there
What Is spurring the
in creased In terest in was rarely u shop you
quilts? After all. quilts could go to where you
have been and still are could find all o f the
|ust s i m p l e “ f ubr l c things you needed for
sandwiches" composed q u iltin g," Mrs. Harper
of a top layer, an Inner recalls. "You had to go
get one thing here and
f i l l i ng and a bottom
layer, all quilted or stit­ another there. Now there
ched together to keep the urr hundreds of shops
where you can get every­
filling from shifting.
The new Interest In thing you need for quiltquilts and quilling was l o g , p l u s u m p t e e n
started by the nation's p u b lic a tio n s , classes,
bicentennial celebration workshops, shows, and
In 1076. according to Kae all sorts o f supplies and
Harper, chairman of the gadgets available.

"It Is an art form as
well as a home craft."
Mrs. Harper said. "T h e
value o f quilts depends
on what part o f the
country you are In. In the
New York area new quilts
a rc s e l l i n g for
• 6 0 0 $1,000. Ant i q ue
quilts are worth up to
•2.000. Quilts are con­
s id e r e d good I n v e s t ­
ments. There was a story
in t h e W a l l S t r e e t
J o u r n a l about a man
w h o bo ught an ol d
Amish quilt for *80 0
about a year ago and
later found out It Is worth

the Cinderella of the art
world, rising tn the past
few years from Its hum­
ble patchwork roots to
places o f p re stige In
prominent museums and
art galleries. What was
once considered a func­
tional homespun craft Is
now often looked upon as
s o m e th in g m ore, the
fabric equivalent of fine
paintings.
" A number of modern
ar t i st s a r c c h o o s in g
quiltmaking os a medi­
um of expression." said
Oorts Bowman, specialist
for the Smithsonian In­
stitution's 300-plecr quilt
• 2 .0 0 0 "
s
Sanfordltes seem to collection In Washington.
prrfer the traditional an­ O.C. "It's amazing how
tique-pattern quilts over many beautiful quilts arr
q u i l t s wi t h m o d e r n being m ade."
There's also Interna­
gromctrlc abstractions or
pop art designs. Mrs. tional attention given to
Harper, who owns the quilts made In the United
Patchwork Cottage Quilt States. "Y o u can go to
Shop In Sanford, said the London. Paris, Tokyo.
most popular quilts with Milan ... all have shops
Sanford quitters are the selling American quilts."
sampler quilt, the Bible reports Robert Bishop,
quilt, and the log cabin director o f the Museum of
American Folk Art In
pattern.
Th e Am erican quilt, New York City. "T h e y ’re
moreover, has become used In contemporary liv­

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struggling actress trying
to get a Job with the
Denver Center Theater
Co. For her audition, at
her mother's suggestion,
she udaplrd a story from
"T h e Qullters" about u
young woman's first att e m p t at q u i l t i n g .
Newman didn't get the
acting Job. hut she did
draw Interest for the ma­
terial.

Artistic Director
Edward Puyson Call gave
"Q u lllers." with music lhe play a tryout In The
by Molly Newman and Lab. a small secondary
Bar bur n Duma s h r k
theater, and to direct, he
b r o u g h t In B a r b a r a
Staged earlier this year ut
Damushck. The latter felt
the Mark Taper Forum In
the series o f vignettes
Los Angeles. "Qulllers"
"cried out" for music,
featured Betty Gairelt as
the "Greek chorus" m a­ singing und dancing, and
triarch who. wi th six so the pair collaborated
other women, use quilt­ on a script re v is io n .
ing os the metaphor for Newman searched lor
I he shared experiences, new m aterial a n d at
d e t e r m i n a t i o n u n d North Platte. Neb.. In­
s t r e n g t h o f p i o n e e r terviewed a 10O-year-old
women.
womun — a m em ber of
As described by Arthur the Quitters Hall o f Fame.
Unger In The C h ristia n From then on. "o n e thing
led to another."
S cien ce Monitor.
" Q u t lt e r s " Is "a b o u t
In Novem ber. 1982.
birthing and aging, sex "T h e Quitters" made Its
and marriage, life and
m usical debut at the
death. In Its simple songs
Denver Center Theatre.
and co m p lex c h o r e o ­ Since then It has won
graphy, It pieces and awards, and also been
stltrhes a whole series of
produced In Dallas. Pit­
narrative quilt blocks —
tsburgh. I r e l a nd and
and sews them together Scotland.
hi a grand climax that
gloriously celebrates the
According to Unger, an
Joy* and the sorrows of o f f - B r o a d w a y p r e s ­
■*rilgghng for survival."
entation has been men­
tioned for this fall. and.
"QulUera" begun when
I a 111n g t h a t . “ T h e
Molly Newman, a 1976 Qullters" seem “ at least
graduate o f the Universi­ prime material for PBS or
ty of U r n vc'r."' w a s '\Y raliieTV p ^ n T u I E n T
r e c e n t

MENU
SMI
llU m |'i|ifst*iW
!*.♦»»» ^ * *7*4
M K U S Y % m IAI
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IV *****
boas I B ill
MAM

" W e A m erican s are
now taking pride tn our
own art forms," suggests
Polly Brooks, a partner In
a Washington. D.C. quill
shop called Appalachian
Spring.
Brooks r e c a lls that
when her store opened
Its doors In 1968. "you
couldn't have sold a quilt
to a man for his office for
a n y th in g ." N o w . she
says, they a re b e in g
snapped up by doctors,
lay wen* and architects as
office art. "T h e y do give
warmth and texture to a
room." she says.
People are doing more
crufts now. When they
d o n 't have as mu c h
money to go out and buy
things they can make
them th em selves and
quilts are something you
can pass on to future
generations.

Q uilting Patches
Friends Together
In addition to the quill
Itself, what's one of the
major benefits of qulltIng? O f course, the cameradcrle — the friendship
a n d shar ed Jny o f a
common enterprise.

BUY ONE

With Ihtt Coupon
(Limit One Pvt Cut tome?)

ing as art: they rarely get
to bed."
At home, the American
craving for both unllque
and contemporary quilts,
the later based on tradi­
tional patterns or stunn­
ing. Innovative designs,
has created a crowded
calendar of fairs, craft
sh ow s, gallery e x h i b ­
ition s and workshops
across the nation.
T r a d i t i o na l pat t e r n
names, often as colorful
as the quilts themselves,
recall an earlier era: Pine
Tree. Old Maid's Ramble.
Pickle Dish and Hearts
and Gizzards.
H ow ever. If you go
shopping for a genuine
antique quilt, say a piece,
solid or applique quill
dating back to 1846. you
could pay up to 54.000 at
a fashionable Manhattan
boutique.

m u s i c a l .

�Evening H e ra ld 4 H e ra ld A d v trtU e r, S an ford, Ft.

Thursday, Aug. t, IMS—U

Longwood's Historic District
Longwood resident Grace Bradford has a
favorite saying: “ When you've been handed a
lemon, make lemonade. "That's Just what
she did bank when she had the task of
decorating I he as yet unrestored BradIccMcIntyre House for a walking tour of the
historic district.
T h e tour w a s a c o m m u n ity even t,
sponsored by the Central Florida Society for
Historic Preservation, to celebrate receipt of a
grant from the Department of Interior. This
grant funded the restoration of the three-story
"Winter Cottage," which had been moved
from a site In Altamonte Springs to the
I.ongwood Historic District where It could lx*
preserved.
It bad taken more than three years of hard
work by the Historic group to have the house
placed on the National Register of Historic
Places; to move it and the equally historic
"Insldc-Outsldc House" from the explosion of
growth In Altamonte Springs to the sanctu­
ary created by the City of Long wood for
Victorian architecture: and to develop and
qualify for the restortlon grant.
Other buildings which were Included on the
walking tour have been at least partially
restored and one, Christ Episcopal Church,
has been in constant use for almost 100
years. The restortlon of the Insldc-Outsldc
House, which was being done privately by
Hetty Jo McLeod and Dorothy K. Pearson. Is
nearing completion.
There would be time only to refurbish the
exterior of the Bradlee-Mclntyre House before
the tour. Inside, the plaster walls were
cracked and crumbling from the move, and
large areas of slats with no plaster at all were
evident.
Faced with the challenge of making the
Interior presentable and showing off the
gracious proportions of the large rooms. Mrs.
Bradford and her workers came up with a
novel plan. T hey would cover the walls with
antique quilts — many of which were from
Mrs. Bradford's colletlon.

CCXL1T2AHLJ C O fctA g e
141 IV. Church Aw
Longwood, Flonda
8347220

Kitchen &amp;
Accessories

house sparkled with color, and (he tour was a
resounding success.
Since then, restoration of the BradleeMclntyre House has been completed and the
historic poclcty maintains n continual pro­
gram of rc-furnishlng It to its form er
grandeur. One can almost imagine Nathan J.
Bradlee. eminent Boston architect, and his
friends in the Altamonte Land Hotel and
Navigation Company sitting In the parlor,
dreaming of building a canal from the St.
John's River to Lake Orlenta so that they
could arrive by yacht for their w inter
vacations.
Other Buildings of Interest In Longwood’s
Historic District Include:
Chirst Episcopal Church. Its chapel or natural
woods, and with some of the original lamps
sconces still In place, and faithfully main­
tained for more than 100 years.
Inside-Outside House, constructed In panels
In New England, then sent by ship to
Jacksonville, by river barge to Sanford and by
mule cart to Altamonte Springs In the early

cottage, built In the 1880‘s. It now serves oa a
birthing center.
The original Town Hall and School, are
restored for use as a professional office.
The Civic League Building and Historic
Library, were moved In the 1920‘s from an
outlying area to Its present site. It Is now
owned by the Longwood W om en's Club.
The Longwood Hotel which was built In
1981. but which was so skllllully designed a s
to complement the historic district, that
many people think tt Is one of the original
structures which has been restored, It houses
the liunclhle S|xxm Tea Room and small
shops,
The Peter Demen House, which was built In
the 1 H 7 0 ' s . Is projected to be the centerpiece
of a proposed office complex.
Private residence In (he district arc:
Nrlm eyer House, a turn- o f • the- century
home, now* owned by Mrs. Anne Hopkins.
Mllwcc home, built around an original log
cabin and once served ns a mllllnary shop,
Shaw collage, a small dwelling preceding
the building of (hr Clouser House.
Rodriquez home, reputed to have been built
In the 1850‘s.
Several additional cottages, the histories of
which have not been researched.
A major activity In the historic district is
the annual Arts and Crafts Festival, which is
trad ition ally held the • weeekend before
Thanksgiving. Date this year Is Nov. 23-24.
Proceeds arc used to support that mainte­
nance o f the Bradlee-Mclntyre House and
other activities of the Central Florida Society
for Historic Prcscrvatllons.
— B e tty M cLeod
Adv

1870'a .
The

f

Clouser House,

a raised Vlctoraln

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How To Get To The Star
Of Sanford From ... There
Olde tymes
Connection
106 MAGNOLIA MALL
(Around The Corner From The Clock)

321-7157
A N T IQ U E S

-

SANFORD
C O L L E C T IB L E S

HOURS Mon Thru Set. 10-11
By Appointment Allrr I lour*

Whether You’re Looking For
A Gift Or AN Accessory
For Your Home, Come In
And Let Our Staff Help
You With A Selection
That Will Be An Investment.

SP EC IA L
AUG. 3 THRU AUG. 10

10% OFF™.™,,..

Directions to the Star
of Sanford, 4350 Orange
Hivd.. Building A. Port of
Sanford.
Directions from point*
west — Orlando,
Kissimmee, Long wood.
A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s ,
Casselberry.
1-4 rani lo exit 52 (U S.
Highway 17-112 and zoo
exit). An you exit 1-4.
there Is fork In the road.
Stay to your left, com e to
the stop sign. Across the
rood In the grass Is a blue
and white sign that says
Star of Sanford with an
arrow. Turn left at the
slop sign, go under 1-4
overpass and take the
first street on the right.
Follow the signs.
Directions from points
east — Daytons. De­
ll a r y . D e L s n d ,
Jacksonville.
1-4 weal lo exit 52. As
you exit 14. make a big
circle and come under
the 1-4 overpass, stay In
right lane, bare to the
right (follow signs to l -I
west) until you come to
railroad tracks and look
Tor blue and white signs
that say Star of Sanford
Cross the railroad (racks.

VALENTINO’S
0p€dieifUH^..Mtn York Style Pizza
&amp; Italian Cussine
2927 HWY. 17-92. CENTER MALL
SANFORD, FLORIDA

DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS
• HOT OR COLD SUBS • PASTA DISHES • PIZZA

• HOMEMADE SALAD BAR • SEAFOOD • STEAKS
• VEAL • PASTAS • PIZZA • BAKED PASTA
• CALALON'S • ITALIAN DESSERTS
• BEER &amp; WINE

FREE PITCHER OF
SO FT DRINK

ONE FREE
G LA SS O F WINE

WITH LG. PIZZA
WITH TWO TOPPINGS

WITH
ANY DINNER
IXVIMt tOl/M
HOURS

3 2 3 -1 3 7 4

Mon Thurt tl AM to 10 PM
Fn ft Sat 11 AM to 12 PM

econd

I

mage

PH. 323-2799
SANFORD *

OPEN MON

THRU SAT 9 A M 5 P M

' 20% OFF
A L L A C C E S S O R IE S
WITH I M I S * 0

D in * In O r
Tako O ut

A brunch Is scheduled
to be s e r v e d at t hr
Sem i note Com m unity
C ollcgr cafeteria Aug.
5-9, 7 a m in 2 p.m and
11 a m. to 2 p.m. Aug
10-11 The menu con­
sists o f carved roast href.

I

fiSS]
“1
I

After passing the zoo get
into the far left lane and
t ur n l ef t. C r o s s t he
railroad tracks and turn
right, follow signs to the
Star of Sanford.

Brunch S c h e d u le d

FU R N IT U R E f a x (fact

“Family Atmosphere Family Pricing"

the hospital and the zoo

sausage, ham. bacon,
scram bled eggs, borne
fries, grtls. fresh fruit,
mufrins, Danish. Juices,
biscuits. Jams and Jellies
and codec. Cost o f the
brunch Is $4.95.

Build your conlldrnce by
maslcrlng this basic skill
Emphasis Is on marking
fa b ric with tem plates,
Continued fr o m page 10 an NQ A lea th er and accurate stitching, grain
ju d g e , aut hor of the
lo r a p p l l q u e l n g and "C o n fid e n c e Qui l ti ng l i nes and c h a lle n g in g
rm bm dcrlng o( chintz Home Study Course" and shapes. SI fee.
27. English Piecing;
cut-outs will be demon­ "Mastering the Basics o f
strated. Student* will bc Quiltmaking." She edits Learn (he use o f paper
templates to eon lrot dif­
guldrd In the culling,
and p u b l i s h e s a b i ­
arranging, und sewing of monthly magazine. Th e ficult fabrics and unsta­
ble angles. $1 fee.
the cut-outs for an album
I*rofemtlonal Qutlicr. Her
ALO YSE YOFtKO resquare. $H fee for fabric,
hand-dyed, handqulllrd cen tly escaped to the
floss and needle.
quilts have received na­ Florida sunshine from
JEANNE M SPEARS, tional recognition.
h er f or me r h o m e In
frtxn St. Paul. Minn., is
19. Traditional Piecing; C on n ellcu t. E d ito r o f
Q u ill magazine and other
nredlecraft m agazines,
she Is ulso a quilting
teacher and a quilt col­
lector.
5.
I n t r o d u c l n g to
CONSIGNMENT CLOTHING
T ra p u n to : L e a rn thi s
1
3 2 J-9 4 2 I
age - ol d t e c hni q ue of
to
quilting and then stuffing
27th St A Mwy. 17 92. $Mlord •
♦•
or cording certain ureas
Many samples to show
various ways of using the
TOP QUALITY
Ii
techniques, expcclally In
CLOTHING
wearables. Make a pillow
top o f wall hanging.
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
11.
Pattern Drafting:
Learn to draft geometric
STYLES G P R I C E S YOU WILL
p a tte rn s , e l i mi n a t i n g
L O V t...A M D WE HAVE
dependence on pal tents
M AN Y TO C H O O S E FROM.
in publications. Includes
a slide presentation.
BEAUTIFUL WEDDING GOWNS
,
17. Strip Piece Your
Next Quilt: Learn how to
make a precise pieced
quilt without the tedium
o f cutting each piece sep­
arately. Experiment with
cut paper to pl un a
ptacctnat using a variety
303 FRENCH AVE.
of patterns

r$

DINNER SPECIALTIES

1-95 north lake the
Sanford/Mlrns exit and
turn left at the stop sign
on Route 46 Continue on
Route 46 until you come
to 17-92 and turn right,
follow 17-92 all Ihr way
down to the left, go past

...Teachers Listed

S

Family Restaurant

• xristti/u/u

come under 1-4 overpass
and take the first street
on the right. Follow the
signs l
U.S. H ighw ay 17-02
north
17-92 to Lokr Monroe
and bare to the left. Go
past the hospital and too.
After passing the zoo get
Into far led lane and turn
left (before 1-4 overpass),
stay In led lane cross thr
railroad tracks, then turn
right and go under the 14
overpass T akr the first
street on the right and
follow the signs
Direction* from —
Mi ma . T i t u s v i l l e ,
Cocoa

0 0 0 0 AUQ l . t M H O A U Q

10 .

�*.WOW!
V ' SAVE
AT LEAST
ON OUR
ENTIRE
SUMMER
STOCK!
SAVE DRASTICALLY IN A LL DEPTS.!
• SWIMWEAR • SPORTSWEAR • ROMPERS • DRESSES
• SUNDRESSES • COORDINATES • TOPS • PANTS
• SHORTS • BLOUSES • SKIRTS • LOUNGEWEAR
• SLEEPWEAR • ACCESSORIES - AND MUCH MORE!
V IS A

Maste&gt;card

Entire Stock Fall Sweaters
And Odyssey Pants
Entire Stock Coats

29"
50% Off

Entire Summer Stock

e

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from

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,
6

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Mom!

------------ VISA MASTERCARD AMERICAN EXPRESS---------------

boutique
W

&amp; More

$ 1/3 Off!

Designer Jeans

A m or E ip ro s s

20°/oOff

» » &gt; 'm c c

(fftlnci
a*

«

y

�Back-To-SchoolSale
K ID S ' S A L E

M IS S E S ' S A L E

S A V IN G S F O R M E N

25% off

20% to 25% off

Only 14.99

All Fox' palr-ups

Save on basics for women

Levi’s- jeans

Fox* lops and bottoms are bright and beauti­
fully coordinated tor a semester's worth of
comfortable looks. Stock up now for all the
kids and save 25% off the regular prices.
You'll find all their favorite patterns and colors
in easy-care fabrics like cotton, polyester/
cotton, or acrylic In sixes for big and little
girls and boys

For days on campus or weekend fun. nothing
beats the comfort of Levi'sP And now's the
perfect time to get into that famous Levi's* fit
at th'S terrifically low price Choose from your
favorite styles In the long-wearing, highquality fabrics you want. For young men's
sixes.

S ale p rice * lo r all girt* e ffe ctive through Saturday,
A u g u s t 17th. Sal* p r* * * to r b o y s effective throug h
Saturday, A ugust 24lh.

25% off
Boys' jeans, tops
Boys' go to class smarter than ever In Plain
Pockets* leans And now you can find them
at 25% off the Irregular prices Plus, save 25%
off the regular prices of boys' tops In selected
styles In oasy-care cotton and cotton/polyester. Big boys' sixes

ftat* prfc* on seamless bra effective through
Saturday. August Mth.

*4 to $8 off

Sale 15.99

Men’s slacks

Yamworks'tops

Great leisure looks for the man who's
mastered the art of relaxation. In polyester
and polyester/cotton blends
Reg
Sal*
Belted S p o r t Slack..................... . 524 1 9 9 9
Levi's* solid color Action S l ic k . . 527 21.99
Levi's* Heather tone Action Slack $29 23.M
Invinbelt* continental stacks . . . . 535 29.25

Terrific knits In textured cotton to top
off alt your fall favorites. In warm colors
Save 54 to 56 oft regular prices of pleated
rayon chains skirts In florals, patslies, or
abstracts for juniors', misses', women's sixes.

P rk * affective through Saturday. August Mth.

S a le p ric e s on Plain Pocket** effective through
Saturday, A ugust N lh

Sale 2.40 Reg S3 Antron III* nylon high-cut
brief with elastic lace trim. S.M.L.
Sale 52 Reg 2.50. Playmate” all-cotton highcut brief Sixes 5-7.
Sale 5.62 Reg 750 Front-hook seamless bra
One cup fits alt, 32-36

25% off
Women’s shoes

All girls' dresses

Sal* 21.99 to 27.99 Reg 530 to 536 We ve a
great selection of leather footworks from
IpanemaP Sutton Ptaxa,” and more, now at
25% off their regular prices! In styles and
colors that let you put your best foot forward.

Save 25% on regular prices ot all dresses for
big, little and |unior high girts Sure charmers
brightened with spanking white collars, bold
ties and more. In crisp polyester and cotton
blends that go from the first class to the last
with lots of vim and verve

25% to 30% off

25% to 35% off

All leather bags
WtoV* savings on the regular price* of all our
leather handbags. A fabulous fall collection
including shoulder bags, double handle styles
and more, in all you favorite colors and styles.
Save 25% off the regular prices of our entire
collection of small leather goods.

Kids' basics on sale
It's back to basics for kids And we've savings
on just what they need
For g irls :
Sal*
Reg
Dupont* nylon
opaque tights. S.M .L..............
2 25
1.49
Cotton briefs. 4-14..................5/6
5/600
00 S/3.M
Nylon full slip. 7-14................ 3 25
2.43
Nylon halt slip. S .M .L............. 2.75
275
1.M
Save 3.50 when you buy one package of 3
fashion anklets. Sale 3/3.SS Reg. 2 50 pr.
For boys:
Sale 3/3.SS Reg 3/5 89 Choose boys' briefs
or T-shirts Both ol cotton/Fortiel* polyester
In white only. Sixes 8-20
Sale S prV4.49 Reg 6 pr /6.23. Boys' over-the­
cal! athletic socks of Orton* acrylic/nylon/
polyester/elastic.
Save S3 when you buy two packages.
Sale 2 for $6 Reg |4 pkg of 3. Boys' grey
tube socks. Cotton/stretch nylon/potyester/
elastic.
• boys' basics effective through
August f i b .

bud

20% to 35% off
Jeans and tops

Sale 11.99
Plain Pockets-

"

B. Reg. tW . Our own Plain Pockets* jeans
sport classic five-pocket western styling.
Choose tough, rugged denim or corduroys
cut with that lean Plain Pockets* fit.

JCPenney

Our curve conscious jeans and stonewashed
denims are the back-to-school blues worth
having. Top them with a layer or two of oversixed shirts, vests and sweaters to create your
own campus style Vibrant colors In cotton,
ramie/cotton, cotton/polyester and acrylic.
Juniors' sixes.
Deep V-neck or strip* sweater,
Orlg. 526 Sale 1S.M
Oversized shirt Orlg. (18 Bat* 11.99
Vest Orlg. 523 Bat* V4.99
5-pocket jeans, Reg $17 Bale U.9B
Hunt Ctub"* baggies, Reg. $22 Sale IB M

Store Hours
Mon.-Sat.
9:30-9
Sunday
12-6

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